From eb62fc6c4c21fa4436dcf1283daa2be4e34d6f6f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Matthias Nott <mnott@mnsoft.org>
Date: Sun, 12 Apr 2026 20:53:21 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] # Add source references to German Air Law exam questions
---
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q130_aerofoil_parts.svg | 88
BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/50 - Meteorology.md | 1130
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions DE/figures/bazl_30_q08_ask21_speed_polar.png | 0
BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/40 - Human Performance.md | 565
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions DE/figures/PFP-061-icao-obstacle-symbols.svg | 73
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN FROM BACKUP/figures/bazl_501_q6.png | 0
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_76_100.md | 254
BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/80 - Principles of Flight.md | 955
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_101_125_fr.md | 250
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/bazl_501_q7.png | 0
BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_90.md | 1441
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions DE/figures/PFA-009-boundary-layer.svg | 111
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/PFP-061-icao-obstacle-symbols.svg | 73
SPL Exam Questions DE/figures/loxodrome_orthodrome.png | 0
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_26_50_fr.md | 329
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q112_boundary_layer.svg | 111
SPL Exam Questions FR/50 - Météorologie.md | 1181
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/10 - Air Law.md | 1451
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/90 - Radiotéléphonie.md | 1343
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t30_q61.png | 0
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_76_100_fr.md | 252
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/bazl_302_q5.png | 0
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_1_30_out.md | 299
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BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_31_60_out.md | 258
BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/10 - Air Law.md | 581
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/bazl_30_q11_speed_polar_450_580.png | 0
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BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q69.png | 0
SPL Exam Questions DE/30 - Flugleistung und Flugplanung.md | 684
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/60 - Navigation.md | 1597
BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/_batch_A_explanations.json | 79
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BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t30_q29.svg | 67
SPL Exam Questions DE/figures/mercator_projection.png | 0
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions DE/figures/bazl_502_q13.png | 0
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/bazl_501_q6.png | 0
SPL Exam Questions DE/70 - Betriebliche Verfahren.md | 692
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN FROM BACKUP/30 - Flight Performance and Planning.md | 1110
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN FROM BACKUP/figures/PFA-003-angle-of-attack.svg | 90
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN FROM BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions.md | 42
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_76_100.md | 249
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/20 - Aircraft General Knowledge.md | 1437
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BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_50_151_200.md | 500
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BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/90 - Communications.md | 1343
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_26_50_fr.md | 250
BACKUP/QuizVDS/scraper.py | 295
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BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t20_q90.png | 0
BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/30 - Performances et planification du vol.md | 1027
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BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN/40 - Human Performance.md | 1118
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SPL Exam Questions DE/20 - Allgemeine Luftfahrzeugkunde.md | 742
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BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions EN/70 - Operational Procedures.md | 685
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/bazl_50_q17_synoptic_alps.png | 0
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BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_80_121_150_out.md | 299
BACKUP/QuizVDS/30 - Flight Performance and Planning.md | 335
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions FR/30 - Performances et planification du vol.md | 1091
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions DE/70 - Betriebliche Verfahren.md | 1200
BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_20.md | 1482
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BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/50 - Météorologie.md | 2166
BACKUP/SPL Exam Questions FR/90 - Radiotéléphonie.md | 968
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+# Air Law
+
+---
+
+### Q1: An SPL or LAPL(S) licence holder has logged 9 winch launches, 4 aero-tow launches and 2 bungee launches over the past 24 months. Which launch methods is the pilot permitted to use as PIC today? ^t10q1
+- A) Aero-tow and bungee.
+- B) Winch and aero-tow.
+- C) Winch and bungee.
+- D) Winch, bungee and aero-tow.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-SFCL, a pilot must have completed at least 5 launches using a given method within the preceding 24 months to act as PIC with that method. Here the pilot has 9 winch launches (meets the threshold) and 2 bungee launches (also meets the threshold, as the minimum for bungee is lower). However, with only 4 aero-tow launches the pilot falls short of the required 5, so aero-tow is not permitted. Option A is wrong because it includes aero-tow. Option B is wrong because it also includes aero-tow. Option D includes all three methods, but aero-tow is not qualified. Only Option C correctly lists winch and bungee.
+
+### Q2: Which documents are required to be carried on board during an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^t10q2
+- A) A, b, c, e, f
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 6 and EU Regulation 965/2012, international flights require the Certificate of Airworthiness (b), Airworthiness Review Certificate (c), EASA Form-1 release document (d), the journey log (e), crew licences and medical certificates (f), and the technical logbook (g). Option A omits Form-1 and the technical logbook. Option B is far too limited. Option D omits critical documents like the ARC and crew papers. Option C provides the complete standard EASA enumeration for international flight.
+
+### Q3: Which type of area may be entered subject to certain conditions? ^t10q3
+- A) Dangerous area
+- B) No-fly zone
+- C) Prohibited area
+- D) Restricted area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A restricted area (designated "R" on charts) may be entered subject to conditions published in the AIP, such as obtaining prior clearance from the responsible authority. Option A (dangerous area, designated "D") contains hazards but has no legal entry restriction -- pilots may enter at their own risk. Option B (no-fly zone) is not a standard ICAO classification. Option C (prohibited area, designated "P") forbids all flight unconditionally. Only Option D correctly describes airspace that permits conditional entry.
+
+### Q4: In which publication can the specific restrictions for a restricted airspace be found? ^t10q4
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIP
+- C) AIC
+- D) ICAO chart 1:500000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) is the primary authoritative document containing permanent information about airspace structure, including the detailed conditions, activation times, and authority contacts for restricted areas in the ENR section. Option A (NOTAMs) may announce temporary changes but do not define the base restrictions. Option C (AICs) contain advisory or administrative information, not regulatory airspace definitions. Option D (ICAO charts) show boundaries graphically but do not detail the specific restrictions and conditions for entry.
+
+### Q5: What legal status do the rules and procedures established by EASA have? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5
+- A) They hold the same status as ICAO Annexes
+- B) They are not legally binding and serve only as guidance
+- C) They are part of EU regulation and legally binding across all EU member states
+- D) They become legally binding only after ratification by individual EU member states
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL and Part-MED are published as EU Implementing or Delegated Regulations under the Basic Regulation (EU) 2018/1139. EU Regulations are directly applicable law in all member states without requiring national ratification, making them immediately binding. Option A is wrong because ICAO Annexes are standards and recommended practices requiring national adoption, not equivalent to EU law. Option B is incorrect because EASA rules are fully legally binding. Option D is wrong because EU Regulations do not require individual state ratification.
+
+### Q6: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q6
+- A) 12 months
+- B) 6 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) has unlimited validity -- once issued, it remains valid as long as the aircraft meets its type design standards and is properly maintained. What requires periodic renewal (typically annually) is the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which confirms continuing airworthiness has been verified. Option A (12 months) and Option B (6 months) confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period for any certificate.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "ARC" stand for? ^t10q7
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, as defined in EU Regulation 1321/2014 (Part-M). It is issued after a periodic airworthiness review confirms the aircraft's continuing airworthiness documentation and condition are in order. Option A (Airspace Restriction Criteria), Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control), and Option D (Airspace Rulemaking Committee) are fabricated terms not used in EASA or ICAO aviation law.
+
+### Q8: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q8
+- A) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- B) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) Of the residence of the owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 8 and Annex 7, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state of registry -- the country where the aircraft is registered. That state bears responsibility for ensuring the aircraft meets applicable airworthiness standards. Option A (where the review is done) is incorrect because reviews may occur abroad. Option B (where constructed) is irrelevant since manufacturing state differs from registry state. Option D (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance.
+
+### Q9: A pilot licence issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is recognised in... ^t10q9
+- A) The country where the licence was issued.
+- B) Those countries that have individually accepted this licence upon application.
+- C) All ICAO contracting states.
+- D) The country where the licence was acquired.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 (Personnel Licensing) establishes international standards for pilot licences. A licence issued in full compliance with Annex 1 standards is recognised across all 193 ICAO Contracting States, enabling international aviation operations without individual country-by-country acceptance. Option A and Option D are essentially the same idea and too restrictive. Option B incorrectly implies case-by-case acceptance is needed. The universal mutual recognition of Annex 1 licences is a cornerstone of international civil aviation.
+
+### Q10: Which topic does ICAO Annex 1 address? ^t10q10
+- A) Rules of the air
+- B) Operation of aircraft
+- C) Air traffic services
+- D) Flight crew licensing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 covers Personnel Licensing, which includes standards for flight crew licences (PPL, CPL, ATPL), ratings, medical certificates, and instructor qualifications. Option A (Rules of the Air) is Annex 2. Option B (Operation of Aircraft) is Annex 6. Option C (Air Traffic Services) is Annex 11. Knowing the ICAO Annexes by number and subject is a standard Air Law exam requirement.
+
+### Q11: For a pilot aged 62, how long is a Class 2 medical certificate valid? ^t10q11
+- A) 60 Months.
+- B) 24 Months.
+- C) 12 Months.
+- D) 48 Months.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-MED (Commission Regulation (EU) 1178/2011), the validity of a Class 2 medical certificate depends on the pilot's age. For pilots aged 50 and over, validity is reduced to 12 months. At age 62, the 12-month rule clearly applies. Option A (60 months) applies to younger pilots under 40 in some categories. Option B (24 months) applies to pilots aged 40-49. Option D (48 months) is not a standard medical validity period.
+
+### Q12: What does the abbreviation "SERA" stand for? ^t10q12
+- A) Specialized Radar Approach
+- B) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- C) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises the rules of the air across all EU member states, implementing ICAO Annex 2 provisions at European level and adding EU-specific rules covering right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, and signals. Option A, Option B, and Option D are invented abbreviations not used in aviation regulation.
+
+### Q13: What does the abbreviation "TRA" stand for? ^t10q13
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- C) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- D) Transponder Area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace -- airspace of defined dimensions reserved for a specific activity (military exercises, aerobatic displays, parachuting) during a published period. TRAs are activated via NOTAM and differ from TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) in that they may permit shared use under certain conditions. Option A (Terminal Area), Option B (Temporary Radar Routing Area), and Option D (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations.
+
+### Q14: What must be taken into account when entering an RMZ? ^t10q14
+- A) The transponder must be switched on Mode C with squawk 7000
+- B) A clearance from the local aviation authority must be obtained
+- C) Continuous radio monitoring is required, and radio contact should be established if possible
+- D) A clearance to enter the area must be obtained
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) requires all aircraft to carry and operate a functioning radio, to monitor the designated frequency continuously, and to establish two-way radio contact before entry if possible. Option A describes a TMZ requirement (transponder), not an RMZ. Option B and Option D imply formal ATC clearance is needed, which is a CTR requirement, not an RMZ. The RMZ is defined in SERA.6005 and national AIP supplements.
+
+### Q15: What does an area designated as "TMZ" signify? ^t10q15
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- C) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- D) Transportation Management Zone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone -- airspace within which all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a pressure-altitude reporting transponder (Mode C or Mode S). This allows ATC radar and collision avoidance systems to identify and track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Touring Motorglider Zone), and Option D (Transportation Management Zone) are not recognised aviation terms.
+
+### Q16: A flight is classified as a "visual flight" when the... ^t10q16
+- A) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- B) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- C) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined by the rules under which it is conducted -- Visual Flight Rules (VFR) -- not by the prevailing weather. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) describes the weather minima required for VFR, but a flight conducted in VMC could still be flown under IFR. Option A confuses the rule set with weather conditions. Options B and C cite specific visibility values that are VMC minima for particular airspace classes, not the definition of a VFR flight.
+
+### Q17: What does the abbreviation "VMC" stand for? ^t10q17
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Instrument flight conditions
+- C) Variable meteorological conditions
+- D) Visual meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the specific minima of visibility and cloud clearance defined in SERA.5001 that must be met for VFR flight. If conditions fall below VMC, the airspace is in IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions). Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, not VMC. Option B (Instrument Flight Conditions) is essentially IMC terminology. Option C (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a standard aviation term. VMC and VFR are related but distinct concepts.
+
+### Q18: Two powered aircraft are converging on crossing courses at identical altitude. Which aircraft must give way? ^t10q18
+- A) The lighter aircraft must climb
+- B) Both must turn to the right
+- C) Both must turn to the left
+- D) The heavier aircraft must climb
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, when two aircraft are on converging courses at approximately the same altitude, each shall alter heading to the right. This ensures both aircraft pass behind each other, avoiding collision. Option A and Option D incorrectly introduce weight as a factor, which is irrelevant to crossing right-of-way rules. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge. The "turn right" rule is a fundamental ICAO collision avoidance principle.
+
+### Q19: Two aeroplanes are on crossing tracks. Which one must yield? ^t10q19
+- A) Both must turn to the left
+- B) The aircraft approaching from the right has the right of priority
+- C) Both must turn to the right
+- D) The aircraft approaching from right to left has the right of priority
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under SERA.3210(b), when two aircraft converge at approximately the same altitude, the aircraft that has the other on its right must give way. In other words, the aircraft approaching from the right (flying from right to left relative to the other pilot's perspective) has right-of-way. Option A is incorrect as turning left increases collision risk. Option B states the principle backwards. Option C describes the evasive action for head-on encounters, not the right-of-way principle for crossing traffic.
+
+### Q20: What cloud separation must be maintained during a VFR flight in airspace classes C, D and E? ^t10q20
+- A) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically
+- B) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically
+- C) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically
+- D) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, VFR flights in airspace classes C, D, and E must maintain 1500 m horizontal distance from cloud and 1000 ft (approximately 300 m) vertical distance from cloud. The key detail is that horizontal is expressed in metres and vertical in feet -- mixing these units is a common exam trap. Option A uses 1000 m horizontal (too small). Option B uses 1000 m vertical (incorrect unit and value). Option D reverses the horizontal/vertical values.
+
+### Q21: In airspace "E", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q21
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class E above 3000 ft AMSL but below FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5000 m (5 km). FL75 (approximately 7500 ft) falls within this altitude band. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum. Option C (1500 m) applies only in uncontrolled airspace at low altitude. Option D (8000 m) applies at and above FL100, not below it.
+
+### Q22: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q22
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace (including class C), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km rule applies. Option A (5000 m) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (3000 m) does not correspond to any standard SERA VFR minimum in controlled airspace.
+
+### Q23: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q23
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL125 is above FL100, so the SERA.5001 rule for high-altitude VFR applies: minimum flight visibility is 8000 m in all controlled airspace including class C. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (3000 m) and Option C (1500 m) apply only in lower uncontrolled airspace. The progression to remember is: low-altitude uncontrolled = 1.5 km, controlled below FL100 = 5 km, at or above FL100 = 8 km.
+
+### Q24: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace "B"? ^t10q24
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Where VFR is permitted in class B airspace, the cloud clearance minima per SERA.5001 are 1500 m horizontal and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertical. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance, which is insufficient. Option B states 1000 m vertical, which is far too large and uses the wrong value. Option C uses only 1000 m horizontal and the correct vertical, but the horizontal is insufficient. Only Option D provides both correct values.
+
+### Q25: In airspace "C" below FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q25
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class C below FL100 (above 3000 ft AMSL or 1000 ft AGL), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km. Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option C (8 km) applies only at and above FL100. Option D (1.5 km) applies in uncontrolled airspace at low altitudes. Glider pilots crossing class C airspace below FL100 must verify at least 5 km visibility.
+
+### Q26: In airspace "C" at and above FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q26
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace including class C, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8 km. This higher threshold reflects the greater closing speeds and reduced reaction time at higher altitudes. Option A (5 km) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VMC minimum. Option D (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q27: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q27
+- A) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ceiling is defined as the height (above ground level) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, more than 4 oktas) below 20,000 ft. Option B uses "altitude" (referenced to MSL) instead of "height" (referenced to the surface). Option C refers to the "highest" cloud layer when it should be the "lowest." Option D incorrectly limits the threshold to 10,000 ft instead of 20,000 ft.
+
+### Q28: During daytime interception by a military aircraft, what does the following signal mean: a sudden 90-degree or greater heading change and a climb without crossing the intercepted aircraft's flight path? ^t10q28
+- A) You are entering a restricted area; leave the airspace immediately
+- B) You may continue your flight
+- C) Follow me; I will guide you to the nearest suitable airfield
+- D) Prepare for a safety landing; you have entered a prohibited area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2, Appendix 1, when an intercepting aircraft makes an abrupt break-away manoeuvre of 90 degrees or more and climbs away without crossing the intercepted aircraft's track, this is the standard "release" signal meaning "You may proceed." The intercept is complete and the pilot may continue on their route. Option A and Option D imply airspace violation warnings that use different signals. Option C ("follow me") involves the interceptor rocking wings and maintaining a steady heading toward the destination aerodrome.
+
+### Q29: When flying at FL 80, what altimeter setting must be used? ^t10q29
+- A) 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) Local QNH.
+- C) 1030.25 hPa.
+- D) Local QFE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are defined relative to the International Standard Atmosphere pressure datum of 1013.25 hPa. When flying at or above the transition altitude, pilots must set 1013.25 hPa on the altimeter subscale and reference altitude as a flight level. Option B (QNH) gives altitude above mean sea level and is used below the transition altitude. Option C (1030.25 hPa) is not a standard reference pressure. Option D (QFE) gives height above a specific aerodrome and is never used for flight levels.
+
+### Q30: What is the objective of the semi-circular rule? ^t10q30
+- A) To permit flying without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP
+- B) To enable safe climbing or descending within a holding pattern
+- C) To reduce the risk of collisions by decreasing the likelihood of opposing traffic at the same altitude
+- D) To prevent collisions by prohibiting turning manoeuvres
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The semi-circular (hemispherical) cruising level rule (SERA.5015) assigns different altitude bands to different magnetic tracks -- eastbound flights use odd thousands of feet, westbound use even thousands. By vertically separating aircraft flying in opposite directions, the probability of head-on collision at the same altitude is greatly reduced. Option A is unrelated to cruising levels. Option B describes holding pattern procedures. Option D is incorrect because the rule concerns altitude assignment, not manoeuvre restrictions.
+
+### Q31: A transponder capable of transmitting the current pressure altitude is a... ^t10q31
+- A) Transponder approved for airspace "B".
+- B) Mode A transponder.
+- C) Pressure-decoder.
+- D) Mode C or S transponder.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A transponder that transmits pressure altitude information is either a Mode C or Mode S transponder. Mode C adds automatic pressure altitude reporting to the basic Mode A identity code, while Mode S provides all Mode C capabilities plus selective interrogation and data link features. Option A is incorrect because "approved for airspace B" is not a transponder classification. Option B is wrong because Mode A only transmits a 4-digit squawk code without altitude data. Option C is wrong because "pressure-decoder" is not an aviation term.
+
+### Q32: Which transponder code signals a loss of radio communication? ^t10q32
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 2000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally recognised squawk for radio communication failure. Pilots must memorise the three emergency codes: 7700 for general emergency, 7600 for radio failure, and 7500 for unlawful interference (hijacking). Option A (7700) is for emergencies, not specifically communication loss. Option B (7000) is the standard European VFR conspicuity code. Option D (2000) is used when entering controlled airspace without an assigned code.
+
+### Q33: In the event of a radio failure, which transponder code should be selected without any ATC request? ^t10q33
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a pilot experiences radio communication failure, they must immediately squawk 7600 without waiting for any ATC instruction, since by definition communication is no longer possible. This proactive action alerts ATC to the situation and triggers loss-of-communications procedures. Option A (7000) is the general VFR code and does not communicate an emergency. Option B (7500) signals unlawful interference, which is a completely different situation. Option C (7700) is for general emergencies, not specifically radio failure.
+
+### Q34: Which transponder code should be set automatically during an emergency without waiting for instructions? ^t10q34
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In any general emergency (engine failure, fire, medical emergency, structural damage), the pilot must immediately set transponder code 7700 without waiting for ATC instruction. This triggers an alarm on ATC radar displays and activates emergency response procedures. Option A (7600) is specifically for radio communication failure, not general emergencies. Option B (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code. Option C (7500) is reserved exclusively for unlawful interference (hijacking) and should never be set for other emergencies.
+
+### Q35: Which air traffic service bears responsibility for the safe conduct of flights? ^t10q35
+- A) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- C) ATC (air traffic control)
+- D) ALR (alerting service)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air Traffic Control (ATC) is the service specifically responsible for providing separation between aircraft and ensuring the safe, orderly, and expeditious flow of air traffic in controlled airspace. Per ICAO Annex 11, ATC actively manages aircraft movements to prevent collisions. Option A (FIS) provides useful information but does not direct or separate aircraft. Option B (AIS) publishes aeronautical information documents but has no operational control role. Option D (ALR) initiates search and rescue when aircraft are overdue or in distress, but does not manage ongoing flight safety.
+
+### Q36: Which services make up the air traffic control service? ^t10q36
+- A) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)
+- C) FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)
+- D) ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 11, the three constituent units of ATC are: TWR (Aerodrome Control, handling traffic at and around the aerodrome), APP (Approach Control, managing arriving and departing traffic in the terminal area), and ACC (Area Control Centre, handling en-route traffic). Option A incorrectly includes FIS, which is an information service separate from ATC. Option C lists information and communication services, none of which are ATC units. Option D mixes emergency services (ALR, SAR) with only one ATC unit (TWR).
+
+### Q37: Regarding separation in airspace "E", which statement is correct? ^t10q37
+- A) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace, ATC separates IFR flights from other IFR flights, but VFR traffic receives no ATC separation service whatsoever -- neither from other VFR traffic nor from IFR traffic. VFR pilots in Class E must rely entirely on the see-and-avoid principle, with traffic information provided where possible. Option A incorrectly states IFR is separated only from VFR (it is separated from other IFR). Option B and Option D wrongly imply VFR traffic receives some form of separation.
+
+### Q38: Which air traffic services are available within an FIR (flight information region)? ^t10q38
+- A) ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)
+- C) FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)
+- D) ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) provides two universal services throughout its entire volume: FIS (Flight Information Service), which provides weather, NOTAM, and traffic information to pilots, and ALR (Alerting Service), which notifies rescue services when aircraft are in distress or overdue. ATC is not provided throughout the entire FIR -- it exists only within designated controlled airspace (CTAs, CTRs, airways) that may lie within the FIR. Options A, B, and D either include ATC incorrectly or omit the correct pairing.
+
+### Q39: How can a pilot reach FIS (flight information service) during flight? ^t10q39
+- A) Via telephone.
+- B) By a personal visit.
+- C) Via radio communication.
+- D) Via internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS is an operational service provided to airborne pilots, and the primary means of contacting it during flight is via radio communication on the designated FIS frequency. While pre-flight information may be obtained by telephone or online, the in-flight FIS service itself is radio-based. Option A (telephone) and Option D (internet) are ground-based contact methods impractical for real-time in-flight communication. Option B (personal visit) is obviously impossible while airborne.
+
+### Q40: What is the standard phraseology to warn that a light aircraft is following a heavier wake turbulence category aircraft? ^t10q40
+- A) Attention propwash
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Caution wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO phraseology for wake turbulence warnings is "CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE," as prescribed in ICAO Doc 4444 (PANS-ATM). Standardised phraseology is mandatory in aviation to eliminate ambiguity. Option A ("attention propwash"), Option B ("be careful wake winds"), and Option C ("danger jet blast") are all non-standard phrases not found in ICAO-approved phraseology. Using non-standard terms could cause confusion and is prohibited in EASA airspace.
+
+### Q41: Which of the following represents a correct position report? ^t10q41
+- A) DEABC over "N" at 35
+- B) DEABC reaching "N"
+- C) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A standard position report per ICAO Doc 4444 must include: aircraft callsign, position (fix or waypoint), and altitude or flight level. Option C (DEABC, "N", 2500 ft) provides all three elements correctly and concisely. Option A lacks a clear altitude reference ("at 35" is ambiguous). Option B is incomplete because it omits altitude entirely. Option D uses the nonsensical expression "FL 2500 ft" -- flight levels and feet are never combined this way; it should be either "FL 25" or "2500 ft."
+
+### Q42: What kind of information is contained in the general part (GEN) of the AIP? ^t10q42
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- C) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP is structured in three parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The GEN section contains general administrative information including map symbols/icons, radio navigation aid listings, sunrise/sunset tables, national regulations, airport fees, and ATC fees. Option A describes content found in the ENR section (airspace, routes, restrictions). Option B describes AD section content (aerodrome charts, approach charts). Option C mixes items that do not correspond to any single AIP section.
+
+### Q43: Into which parts is the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) divided? ^t10q43
+- A) GEN ENR AD
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 15, the AIP is divided into three standardised parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). This structure is universal across all ICAO member states. Option B (AGA, COM), Option C (COM, MET), and Option D (MET, RAC) use abbreviations from older ICAO documentation structures that are no longer part of the modern AIP organisation. Only Option A reflects the current ICAO-standard AIP structure.
+
+### Q44: What kind of information is found in the "AD" section of the AIP? ^t10q44
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains all aerodrome-specific information: aerodrome classification, runway data, approach and departure charts, taxi charts, lighting, frequencies, operating hours, and obstacle data. Option A describes ENR (En-Route) content covering airspace and restrictions. Option B describes GEN (General) content such as symbols and fees. Option D mixes regulatory and administrative items that do not correspond to the AD section.
+
+### Q45: The NOTAM shown is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^t10q45
+- A) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- B) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM time codes use the format YYMMDDHHMM in UTC. The "C)" field in a NOTAM specifies the end of validity. The code 1305211400 decodes as: year 2013 (13), month May (05), day 21, time 14:00 UTC -- giving 21 May 2013 at 14:00 UTC. Option B misreads the date format, interpreting the month as the date. Option C incorrectly reads the year as 2014. Option D completely misinterprets the encoding. Correct NOTAM decoding is a fundamental Air Law skill for all pilots.
+
+### Q46: A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a compilation of current... ^t10q46
+- A) AIP information of operational significance assembled prior to flight.
+- B) AIC information of operational significance assembled after the flight.
+- C) ICAO information of operational significance assembled after the flight.
+- D) NOTAM information of operational significance assembled prior to flight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) is a standardised summary of current NOTAMs relevant to a planned flight, compiled and issued before departure. It filters pertinent NOTAMs for the route, departure, destination, and alternate aerodromes. Option A is wrong because a PIB is based on NOTAM data, not AIP data. Option B is wrong on two counts: it references AICs (not NOTAMs) and says "after the flight" (it is a pre-flight tool). Option C similarly misidentifies the source and timing.
+
+### Q47: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q47
+- A) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- B) The highest point of the landing area.
+- C) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- D) The highest point of the apron.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is defined as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This ensures the published value represents the most demanding terrain height aircraft must account for during approach and departure. Option A (average of the manoeuvring area) would understate the critical elevation. Option C (lowest point) is the opposite of the correct definition. Option D (highest point of the apron) is incorrect because the apron is not the landing area.
+
+### Q48: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q48
+- A) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- B) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. The three key elements are: rectangular shape, land aerodrome, and aircraft in general. Option A is wrong because runways are specific to land aerodromes (water aerodromes have alighting areas, not runways). Option B is wrong because the shape is rectangular, not round. Option D is wrong because runways serve aircraft generally, not helicopters specifically (helicopters use helipads or FATO areas).
+
+### Q49: How can a wind direction indicator be made more visible? ^t10q49
+- A) By mounting it on top of the control tower.
+- B) By surrounding it with a white circle.
+- C) By placing it on a large black surface.
+- D) By constructing it from green materials.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a wind direction indicator (windsock or wind tee) should be surrounded by a white circle to enhance its visibility from the air. The high-contrast white surround makes the indicator easier to identify against the aerodrome background. Option A (mounting on the control tower) is not a standard ICAO visibility-enhancement method and could interfere with tower operations. Option C (black surface) is not specified in ICAO standards. Option D (green materials) would actually reduce visibility against grass surfaces.
+
+### Q50: What shape does a landing direction indicator have? ^t10q50
+- A) An angled arrow
+- B) L
+- C) T
+- D) A straight arrow
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, the landing direction indicator is T-shaped (commonly called a "landing T" or "signal T"). Aircraft land toward the cross-bar of the T and take off away from it, making the landing direction immediately clear. Option A (angled arrow) and Option D (straight arrow) are not the standard ICAO shape for this indicator. Option B (L-shape) is used for a different purpose -- indicating a right-hand traffic circuit, not the landing direction.
+
+### Q51: Who bears the responsibility for ensuring that mandatory on-board documents are present and that logbooks are correctly maintained? ^t10q51
+- A) The air transport company.
+- B) The operator of the aircraft.
+- C) The pilot-in-command.
+- D) The owner of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) bears ultimate responsibility for ensuring that all required documents are on board and properly maintained before every flight. This is a fundamental principle of aviation law under both ICAO Annex 2 and EASA regulations. Option A (air transport company) and Option B (operator) have general oversight duties but the direct pre-flight responsibility rests with the PIC. Option D (owner) may not even be present at the time of flight.
+
+### Q52: Which activities may the Federal Council require OFAC authorization for? ^t10q52
+- A) Only public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- B) Parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- C) None of the activities listed above requires OFAC authorization.
+- D) Only parachute descents and captive balloon ascents. No authorization is required for powered aircraft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, the Federal Council may require OFAC (Federal Office of Civil Aviation) authorization for all listed special activities: parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights, and aerobatic demonstrations. These activities present elevated safety risks to participants and the public. Option A is too narrow because it excludes parachuting and captive balloons. Option C is wrong because authorization is indeed required. Option D incorrectly limits the requirement to only parachuting and captive balloons.
+
+### Q53: Is dropping objects from an aircraft in flight prohibited in Switzerland? ^t10q53
+- A) No, only the dropping of advertising material is prohibited.
+- B) Yes, it is strictly prohibited.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes, subject to exceptions to be determined by the Federal Council.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, dropping objects from an aircraft in flight is in principle prohibited, but the Federal Council may define specific exceptions such as parachuting, emergency drops, or authorised agricultural activities. Option A is wrong because the prohibition is not limited to advertising material. Option B is wrong because exceptions exist -- it is not a strict absolute prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is a general prohibition in place, even though exceptions are possible.
+
+### Q54: Where specifically is the certification basis of an aircraft documented? ^t10q54
+- A) In the VFR Manual.
+- B) In the annex to the certificate of airworthiness.
+- C) In the annex to the noise certificate.
+- D) In the insurance certificate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The certification basis of an aircraft (type certificate data sheet, approved operating conditions, mass limits, authorised flight categories, and required equipment) is documented in the annex to the Certificate of Airworthiness. This annex defines what the aircraft is certified to do. Option A (VFR Manual) contains operational procedures, not certification data. Option C (noise certificate annex) deals only with noise emissions. Option D (insurance certificate) covers financial liability, not airworthiness certification.
+
+### Q55: Your aircraft, not used for commercial traffic, requires repairs abroad. Which statement applies? ^t10q55
+- A) Repair work may only be carried out in Switzerland.
+- B) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized by OFAC.
+- C) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized as such by the competent aviation authority.
+- D) The work must be carried out by an EASA-certified maintenance organization.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a non-commercial aircraft requiring repairs abroad, the maintenance must be performed by an organisation recognised by the competent aviation authority of the country where the work is done. This provides flexibility while ensuring regulatory oversight. Option A is wrong because repairs are not restricted to Switzerland. Option B is wrong because OFAC recognition is not specifically required for foreign maintenance. Option D is too restrictive because EASA certification is not always required for non-commercial aircraft maintenance in all jurisdictions.
+
+### Q56: A well-known watchmaker has painted an aircraft in the brand's colours with a large watch on its fuselage. Is this allowed? ^t10q56
+- A) Yes, if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization, the operation has no political purpose and the advertising markings are limited to specific parts of the aircraft.
+- B) No, advertising is strictly prohibited on aircraft.
+- C) Yes, subject to other provisions of federal legislation. The nationality and registration marks must in all cases remain easily recognizable.
+- D) Yes, but only if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization and the nationality and registration marks remain easily recognizable.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss law, advertising on aircraft is permitted subject to other provisions of federal legislation, with only one mandatory condition: the nationality and registration marks must remain easily recognisable at all times. No special OFAC authorisation is needed for applying advertising markings. Option A imposes unnecessary conditions (OFAC authorization, no political purpose, limited placement) that are not required. Option B is simply wrong -- advertising is not prohibited. Option D incorrectly requires OFAC authorization.
+
+### Q57: Under what conditions may a person serve as a crew member on board an aircraft? ^t10q57
+- A) When that person holds a valid licence issued by their country of origin.
+- B) When that person holds a valid licence issued or recognized by the country in which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) When that person holds a valid licence issued by the country in which the aircraft is operated.
+- D) When that person holds a valid licence recognized by their country of origin.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A crew member must hold a valid licence issued or recognised by the state of registration of the aircraft, in accordance with ICAO Annex 1. The state of registration defines the qualification requirements for crew operating its aircraft. Option A and Option D reference the crew member's country of origin, which is irrelevant -- it is the aircraft's state of registration that matters. Option C references the country of operation, which is also not the determining factor under ICAO rules.
+
+### Q58: Under what conditions is it permitted to carry and operate a radio on board? ^t10q58
+- A) If a radio communication licence has been issued for the radio and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+- B) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- C) If the frequency increments of the radio are at least 0.125 MHz and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- D) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Two cumulative conditions must be met: first, authorisation to install and use the radio must have been granted by the competent authority, and second, crew members who operate the radio must hold the corresponding formal qualification (not merely informal training). Option A is wrong because a "radio communication licence" is not the same as installation/use authorisation. Option C introduces an irrelevant technical specification about frequency increments. Option D is wrong because it requires only "training" rather than a formal qualification, which is insufficient.
+
+### Q59: What must a pilot possess to be authorized to communicate by radio with air traffic services? ^t10q59
+- A) A radiotelephony course certificate and sufficient mastery of standard phraseology.
+- B) In all cases, a radiotelephony qualification. Aeroplane and helicopter pilots must additionally hold a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- C) A valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- D) A radiotelephony qualification and a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All pilots wishing to communicate with ATC must hold a radiotelephony qualification. Additionally, aeroplane and helicopter pilots must also possess a valid language proficiency attestation in the language used on the frequencies, as required under Swiss regulations. Option A is insufficient because a course certificate alone does not constitute a formal qualification. Option C omits the radiotelephony qualification entirely. Option D applies the language proficiency requirement universally, but under Swiss rules it is specifically required for aeroplane and helicopter pilots, not necessarily for all pilot categories such as glider or balloon pilots.
+
+### Q60: Your ophthalmologist has prescribed corrective lenses. Which statement is correct? ^t10q60
+- A) You need not do anything. A visual deficiency that is well corrected has no effect on medical fitness.
+- B) You are immediately unfit.
+- C) You must promptly seek advice from your aviation medical examiner.
+- D) You can simply report your ophthalmologist's decision to your aviation medical examiner at the next routine examination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any change in medical condition, including the prescription of corrective lenses, must be reported promptly to the aviation medical examiner (AME). The AME will assess whether the change affects medical fitness and whether additional restrictions or conditions must be placed on the licence. Option A is wrong because even well-corrected deficiencies may require documentation and a medical fitness reassessment. Option B is wrong because a corrective lens prescription does not automatically make a pilot unfit. Option D is wrong because waiting until the next routine examination could mean flying with an unreported medical change, which is not permitted.
+
+### Q61: In which type of airspace may a Special VFR (SVFR) flight be authorized when the ceiling is below 450 m above ground and surface visibility is less than 5 km? ^t10q61
+- A) FIR.
+- B) TMA.
+- C) CTR.
+- D) AWY.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Special VFR (SVFR) flights can only be authorised within a CTR (Control Zone), which is the controlled airspace immediately surrounding an aerodrome. When meteorological conditions fall below normal VMC minima, ATC within the CTR can grant SVFR clearance to permit operations. Option A (FIR) is too broad -- SVFR is not applicable to the entire flight information region. Option B (TMA) is terminal airspace above the CTR, not the zone where SVFR applies. Option D (AWY) is an airway where SVFR is not authorised.
+
+### Q62: What evasive action should the pilots of two VFR aircraft on converging tracks generally take? ^t10q62
+- A) One continues on track while the other turns right.
+- B) One turns left, the other turns right.
+- C) Each pilot turns left.
+- D) Each pilot turns right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, the standard ICAO evasive action for converging aircraft is that each pilot turns right, ensuring both aircraft pass behind one another and diverge safely. This symmetrical rule eliminates ambiguity about who should manoeuvre. Option A is wrong because both aircraft must take action, not just one. Option B (one left, one right) would be uncoordinated and could worsen the situation. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge.
+
+### Q63: What are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements for VFR flight in Class D airspace below 10,000 ft AMSL? ^t10q63
+- A) Visibility 1.5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+- B) Visibility 8 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 450 m.
+- C) Visibility 5 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 300 m.
+- D) Visibility 5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class D airspace below FL100 (10,000 ft AMSL), SERA.5001 prescribes VMC minima of: 5 km visibility, 1,500 m horizontal cloud distance, and 300 m (1,000 ft) vertical cloud distance. These are the same minima as for Classes C and E in this altitude band. Option A describes conditions applicable to lower uncontrolled airspace. Option B uses 8 km visibility and 450 m vertical clearance, which do not match any standard SERA values for this context. Option D omits the required cloud distance values.
+
+### Q64: Among the airspace classes used in Switzerland, which ones are classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q64
+- A) D, C
+- B) G, E, D, C
+- C) E, D, C
+- D) E, C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, airspace classes C, D, and E are all classified as controlled airspace. Class G is uncontrolled airspace. Classes A and B exist in the ICAO classification system but are not used in Switzerland. Option A omits Class E, which is controlled airspace (though VFR traffic does not receive separation in it). Option B incorrectly includes Class G, which is uncontrolled. Option D omits Class D, which is definitely controlled airspace surrounding many Swiss aerodromes.
+
+### Q65: According to the applicable rules of the air, what is the definition of "day"? ^t10q65
+- A) The period from sunrise to sunset.
+- B) The period between 06:00 and 20:00 in winter and between 06:00 and 21:00 in summer.
+- C) The period from the end of morning civil twilight to the beginning of evening civil twilight.
+- D) The period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation, "day" is defined as the period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight -- roughly 30 minutes before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset. This broader definition gives pilots additional usable daylight at both ends. Option A (sunrise to sunset) is too restrictive and is the astronomical definition, not the aviation one. Option B uses fixed clock times that do not account for seasonal and geographic variations. Option C reverses the twilight references, which would result in a shorter rather than longer period.
+
+### Q66: What constitutes an aviation accident? ^t10q66
+- A) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which at least one person is killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft that requires the aircraft to be repaired.
+- C) The crash of an aircraft.
+- D) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which a person is killed or seriously injured, or in which the structural integrity, performance or flight characteristics of the aircraft are significantly impaired.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is defined as an event associated with aircraft operation resulting in either fatal/serious injury to persons OR significant structural damage that impairs the aircraft's integrity, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify an event as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting aircraft damage. Option B is too broad -- not every repair constitutes an accident. Option C (crash) is too narrow and not the formal definition.
+
+### Q67: You wish to carry out private flights for remuneration. What formality must you complete to limit your civil liability? ^t10q67
+- A) Take out a special passenger insurance policy which passengers are required to accept.
+- B) No formality is required since the Montreal Convention releases the pilot from all liability.
+- C) Draw up a declaration to be signed by passengers releasing you from all liability.
+- D) Issue a transport document as proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded, which limits liability for damage to baggage and for delay.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Issuing a transport document (ticket) constitutes proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded between the pilot and the passenger. Under the Montreal Convention, the existence of such a contract limits the carrier's liability for baggage damage and delays. Option A is incorrect because special passenger insurance is not the mechanism for limiting civil liability under the Convention. Option B is wrong because the Montreal Convention does not release pilots from all liability -- it caps liability under certain conditions. Option C (liability waiver) is not a legally recognised mechanism under international aviation law.
+
+### Q68: What type of information is disseminated through an AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular)? ^t10q68
+- A) Aeronautical information of importance to persons involved in flight operations concerning the construction, condition or modification of aeronautical facilities and their duration.
+- B) An AIC is a notice containing information that does not meet the conditions for issuing a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but which relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative or legislative matters.
+- C) The AIC is the manual for pilots flying IFR. Its structure and content are analogous to those of the VFR Manual.
+- D) In principle, any information that justifies the issuance of a NOTAM and relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical or legislative matters may be published by AIC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular) contains supplementary information that does not meet the criteria for publication as a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but is still relevant to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative, and legislative matters. It fills the gap between urgent NOTAMs and permanent AIP entries. Option A describes NOTAM-type information rather than AIC content. Option C is completely wrong -- an AIC is not an IFR manual. Option D reverses the relationship: AICs contain information that does NOT justify a NOTAM, not information that does.
+
+### Q69: What does the aerodrome operations manual govern? ^t10q69
+- A) The certification of maintenance organizations located at the aerodrome.
+- B) The organization of the aerodrome, opening hours, approach and takeoff procedures, use of aerodrome facilities by passengers, aircraft and ground vehicles as well as other users, and ground handling services.
+- C) Employment contracts, vacation entitlement and shift work of the aerodrome operator.
+- D) The operation and opening hours of the aerodrome restaurant and other businesses located at the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome operations manual is a comprehensive document governing all operational aspects of the aerodrome: its organisation, opening hours, approach and take-off procedures, use of facilities by all users (passengers, aircraft, ground vehicles), and ground handling services. Option A is wrong because maintenance organisation certification is handled by EASA/national authorities, not the aerodrome operations manual. Option C covers employment matters unrelated to aerodrome operations. Option D covers commercial businesses, which are outside the scope of the operations manual.
+
+### Q70: What does this ground signal indicate? (Two dumbbells) ^t10q70
+> **Ground signal:**
+> ![[figures/t10_q70.png]]
+> *Two dumbbells -- signal indicating that landings and takeoffs are to be made on runways only, but that other maneuvers (taxiing) may be carried out outside the runways and taxiways.*
+
+- A) Landing and takeoff on runways only. Other manoeuvres may however be conducted outside the runways and taxiways.
+- B) Landing, takeoff and taxiing on runways and taxiways only.
+- C) Caution during takeoff or landing.
+- D) Landing and takeoff on hard-surfaced runways only.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dumbbell signal displayed in the signals area means that landings and take-offs must be made on runways only, but other manoeuvres such as taxiing, turning, and positioning may be conducted outside the runways and taxiways on the grass or other surfaces. Option B is too restrictive because it confines all manoeuvres to runways and taxiways (that would be the dumbbell with a cross bar). Option C describes a different signal entirely. Option D introduces "hard-surfaced" which is not what this signal communicates.
+
+### Q71: When two aircraft approach each other head-on, what manoeuvre must both pilots perform? ^t10q71
+- A) Each turns left.
+- B) One turns right, the other turns left.
+- C) One flies straight ahead while the other turns right.
+- D) Each turns right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210(c) and ICAO Annex 2, when two aircraft are on head-on or nearly head-on courses, both pilots must alter heading to the right, each passing the other on their left side. This mirrors road traffic conventions and eliminates ambiguity. Option A (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to pass on the wrong side and could lead to collision. Option B (one left, one right) is uncoordinated and dangerous. Option C (one straight, one turns) is incorrect because both pilots must take evasive action.
+
+### Q72: Which of the following airspaces are not classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q72
+- A) Class G airspace.
+- B) Class G and E airspaces.
+- C) Class C airspace.
+- D) Class G, E and D airspaces.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, Classes G and E are not classified as controlled airspace for VFR traffic purposes. Class G is uncontrolled airspace, and Class E, while technically controlled for IFR flights, provides no ATC separation for VFR traffic. Option A is incomplete because it lists only Class G and omits Class E. Option C is wrong because Class C is definitely controlled airspace. Option D incorrectly includes Class D, which is a controlled airspace requiring ATC clearance.
+
+### Q73: To which authority has the Federal Council delegated aviation oversight in Switzerland? ^t10q73
+- A) The Swiss air navigation services (Skyguide).
+- B) The Aero-Club of Switzerland.
+- C) The Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (DETEC).
+- D) The cantonal police forces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Federal Council delegates aviation oversight to DETEC (Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications), which in turn delegates operational supervision to FOCA (Federal Office of Civil Aviation, known as BAZL/OFAC). Option A (Skyguide) provides air navigation services but is not the regulatory oversight authority. Option B (Aero-Club) is a private association, not a government supervisory body. Option D (cantonal police) have no aviation oversight role.
+
+### Q74: For which of the following flights is filing a flight plan mandatory? ^t10q74
+- A) For a VFR flight over the Alps, Pre-Alps or Jura.
+- B) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- C) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+- D) For a VFR flight in Class E airspace.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a VFR flight plan is mandatory when the flight requires the use of air traffic control services, such as transiting a CTR, TMA, or other controlled airspace where ATC interaction is needed. Option A (Alps/Pre-Alps/Jura) does not automatically require a flight plan. Option C (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan trigger. Option D (Class E airspace) is incorrect because VFR flights in Class E do not require ATC services or a flight plan.
+
+### Q75: What minimum height must be maintained above densely populated areas during VFR flight? ^t10q75
+- A) At least 300 m above the ground.
+- B) At least 150 m above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) At least 150 m above the ground.
+- D) At least 450 m above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005 and ICAO Annex 2, the minimum height over densely populated areas is 150 m (approximately 500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-clearance-based rule ensures safe separation from structures and terrain. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacles. Option C (150 m AGL) ignores the obstacle clearance requirement. Option D (450 m AGL) is not the standard minimum height specified in SERA.
+
+### Q76: Among the aircraft listed below, which have priority for landing and takeoff? ^t10q76
+- A) Aircraft manoeuvring on the ground.
+- B) Aircraft arriving from another aerodrome that are in the aerodrome circuit.
+- C) Aircraft on final approach.
+- D) Aircraft that have received an ATC clearance to taxi.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2 and SERA.3210, aircraft on final approach or landing always have priority over all other aircraft in flight or manoeuvring on the ground. This rule exists because aircraft on final approach have limited ability to manoeuvre and are in the most critical phase of flight. Option A (ground manoeuvring aircraft) must yield to landing traffic. Option B (aircraft in the circuit) have lower priority than those on final. Option D (aircraft with taxi clearance) must also give way to landing aircraft.
+
+### Q77: What does this signal indicate? ^t10q77
+![[figures/t10_q77.png]]
+- A) All runways at this aerodrome are closed.
+- B) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- C) Only hard-surface runways are to be used for landing and takeoff.
+- D) Takeoff and landing only on runways; other manoeuvres are not restricted to the use of runways and taxiways.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown indicates that glider flying is in progress at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO ground signal placed in the signals area to warn arriving and overflying aircraft that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (all runways closed) uses a different signal. Option C (hard-surface runways only) is not what this signal communicates. Option D describes the dumbbell signal, which is a different ground marking entirely.
+
+### Q78: Who has the responsibility for ensuring that the required documents are carried on board the aircraft? ^t10q78
+- A) The operator of the air transport undertaking (Operator).
+- B) The owner of the aircraft.
+- C) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+- D) The operator of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) is responsible for ensuring that all required documents are carried on board the aircraft before flight. This is established in ICAO Annex 2 and EASA/Swiss aviation regulations. The PIC must personally verify document compliance as part of pre-flight preparation. Option A (operator of air transport undertaking) and Option D (operator) have organisational responsibilities but the direct duty falls on the PIC. Option B (owner) may not be involved in the flight operation at all.
+
+### Q79: Which of the following instructions regarding runway direction in use takes precedence? ^t10q79
+- A) The wind sock.
+- B) The landing T.
+- C) The ATC instruction transmitted by radio from the control tower.
+- D) The two digits displayed vertically on the control tower.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC radio instructions from the control tower take the highest precedence over all visual indicators when determining the runway direction in use. ATC has the most current and comprehensive situational awareness and may assign a runway that differs from what the windsock or landing T suggests. Option A (windsock) indicates wind direction but does not override ATC. Option B (landing T) is a visual indicator subordinate to ATC instructions. Option D (tower digits) provides general runway information but is superseded by direct ATC radio instructions.
+
+### Q80: In the event of a radio failure, what code must be set on the transponder? ^t10q80
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally standardised squawk for radio communication failure. Setting this code immediately alerts ATC that the pilot has lost radio contact and triggers loss-of-communications procedures. Option A (7000) is the standard European VFR conspicuity code and does not indicate any emergency. Option B (7500) is reserved for unlawful interference (hijacking). Option C (7700) is the general emergency code, not specifically for radio failure.
+
+### Q81: Is it permitted to deviate from the rules of the air applicable to aircraft? ^t10q81
+- A) Yes, but only in Class G airspace.
+- B) No, under no circumstances.
+- C) Yes, but only for safety reasons.
+- D) Yes, absolutely.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2 and SERA, deviation from the rules of the air is permitted only when necessary for safety reasons and only to the extent strictly required to address the safety concern. This is the sole legal exception. Option A is wrong because the exception is not limited to any specific airspace class. Option B is wrong because safety-driven deviations are permitted. Option D is wrong because unrestricted deviation is never allowed -- the safety justification must exist.
+
+### Q82: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 2100 m AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: Vertical / Horizontal ^t10q82
+- A) 1.5 km / 50 m / 100 m
+- B) 8.0 km / 100 m / 300 m
+- C) 5.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 2100 m AMSL (approximately 6900 ft), which is well above 3000 ft AMSL and 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima in Class E airspace are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option A describes values for low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far below the required minima. Option B has incorrect vertical and horizontal clearance values. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which does not match the Class E requirement at this altitude.
+
+### Q83: By what time at the latest must a daytime VFR flight be completed? ^t10q83
+- A) 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight.
+- B) At the beginning of civil twilight.
+- C) At sunset.
+- D) At the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a daytime VFR flight must be completed no later than sunset. Flying after sunset requires either a night flight qualification or special authorisation. Option A (30 minutes before end of civil twilight) is earlier than required. Option B (beginning of civil twilight) is ambiguous and does not correspond to the Swiss rule. Option D (end of civil twilight) is too late -- while "day" in aviation extends to the end of civil twilight, Swiss VFR completion requirements use sunset as the cut-off.
+
+### Q84: Are you allowed to use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without holding the radiotelephony rating extension? ^t10q84
+- A) Yes, provided other radio communications are not disrupted.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes.
+- D) Yes, provided I have sufficient command of phraseology.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, a pilot may use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without holding the specific radiotelephony extension, in airspaces where radio communication is required. The radiotelephony qualification is needed for certain controlled airspaces but basic radio use for ATC communication is permitted. Option A adds an unnecessary condition about not disrupting other communications. Option B is incorrect because the prohibition is not absolute. Option D adds a phraseology condition that, while good practice, is not the regulatory requirement.
+
+### Q85: Which type of flights may be conducted below the prescribed minimum heights without specific FOCA authorization, to the extent necessary? ^t10q85
+- A) Mountain flights.
+- B) Aerobatic flights.
+- C) Aerial photography flights.
+- D) Search and rescue flights.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Search and rescue (SAR) flights are permitted below prescribed minimum heights without special FOCA authorisation, to the extent operationally necessary to accomplish the rescue mission. The urgency and life-saving nature of SAR operations justifies this exemption. Option A (mountain flights), Option B (aerobatic flights), and Option C (aerial photography flights) all require specific authorisation to operate below minimum heights.
+
+### Q86: Is it permitted to cross an airway at FL 115 under VFR when visibility is 5 km? ^t10q86
+- A) Yes, but only if it is a special VFR flight (SVFR).
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes, in Class E airspace.
+- D) Yes, but only if it is a controlled VFR flight (CVFR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At FL 115 (above FL 100), the minimum VFR visibility required is 8 km. With only 5 km visibility, the VMC minima are not met, and VFR flight through an airway is not permitted regardless of airspace class or flight type. Option A (SVFR) is not applicable at flight levels -- SVFR is only authorised within CTRs. Option C is wrong because the visibility requirement applies in all airspace at this altitude. Option D (CVFR) does not waive the VMC visibility minima.
+
+### Q87: Are formation flights allowed? ^t10q87
+- A) Yes, but only with authorisation from the Federal Office of Civil Aviation.
+- B) Yes, but only outside controlled airspace.
+- C) Yes, provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand.
+- D) Yes, but only if the pilots-in-command are in permanent radio contact with each other.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, formation flights are permitted provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand, agreeing on the formation procedures, positions, and responsibilities. No special FOCA authorisation is needed. Option A is wrong because FOCA authorisation is not required. Option B is incorrect because formation flights are not restricted to uncontrolled airspace. Option D is wrong because permanent radio contact, while useful, is not a regulatory requirement for formation flying.
+
+### Q88: What does this signal mean? ^t10q88
+![[figures/t10_q88.png]]
+- A) Caution during approach and landing.
+- B) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- C) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- D) Landing prohibited.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A red square with two white diagonal crosses (St. Andrew's crosses) is the standard ICAO ground signal meaning "landing prohibited." It is placed in the signal square to warn all aircraft that the aerodrome is closed to landing operations. Option A (caution during approach) is a different signal. Option B is wrong because the signal applies to all aircraft, not just powered ones. Option C is wrong because the signal prohibits landing entirely rather than allowing direction choice.
+
+### Q89: Can a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any further formality? ^t10q89
+- A) Only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- B) No, it is strictly prohibited for VFR flights.
+- C) Only if permanent contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ (Flight Information Zone) may be transited provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. If radio contact cannot be established, the rules of the underlying airspace class apply. Option A incorrectly requires FIS authorisation and English proficiency, which are not the actual requirements. Option B is wrong because transit is not prohibited -- it is permitted under conditions. Option D is wrong because transit is not unconditional; maintaining AFIS contact is required.
+
+### Q90: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q90
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Only the crash of an aircraft or helicopter.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident includes any event related to aircraft operation in which a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained significant structural damage affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting significant aircraft damage. Option B is too narrow -- an accident is not limited to crashes. Option D is wrong because costly repairs alone do not define an accident; the damage must significantly affect structural integrity or flight characteristics.
+
+### Q91: Are observed or received signals binding for the glider pilot? ^t10q91
+- A) Yes, but only signals placed on the ground, not light signals.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes.
+- D) Yes, except light signals for aircraft on the ground.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All observed or received signals -- whether ground signals, light signals, or radio signals -- are binding for the glider pilot. ICAO Annex 2 makes no distinction between signal types; compliance with all visual and radio signals is mandatory for all aircraft, including gliders. Option A is wrong because light signals are equally binding. Option B is wrong because signals are mandatory, not optional. Option D incorrectly excludes light signals for grounded aircraft, which are also binding.
+
+### Q92: What is the minimum flight height above densely populated areas and locations where large public gatherings occur? ^t10q92
+- A) 300 m AGL.
+- B) 150 m AGL above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) 600 m AGL.
+- D) There is no specific height figure; however, one must fly in a manner that allows reaching clear terrain suitable for a risk-free landing at any time.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005, the minimum flight height over densely populated areas and large public gatherings is 150 m (500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-based rule ensures adequate clearance from structures and protects people on the ground. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacle clearance. Option C (600 m AGL) is higher than the actual requirement. Option D describes a general safety principle but not the specific regulatory minimum.
+
+### Q93: In which airspace classes may VFR flights be conducted in Switzerland without needing air traffic control services? ^t10q93
+- A) In Class C, D, E and G airspaces.
+- B) Only in Class G airspace.
+- C) In Class E and G airspaces.
+- D) In Class A and B airspaces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, VFR flights may be conducted without ATC services in Class E and Class G airspace. Class E is controlled for IFR but does not require ATC interaction for VFR flights; Class G is entirely uncontrolled. Option A incorrectly includes Classes C and D, which require ATC clearance. Option B is too restrictive because Class E also permits VFR without ATC. Option D is wrong because Classes A and B either prohibit VFR or require ATC clearance.
+
+### Q94: What does this signal indicate? ^t10q94
+![[figures/t10_q94.png]]
+- A) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- B) Caution during approach and landing.
+- C) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- D) Landing prohibited.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown indicates caution during approach and landing, warning pilots to exercise extra care due to obstacles, poor surface conditions, or other hazards at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO ground signal placed in the signals area. Option A is wrong because the signal does not indicate free choice of landing direction. Option C is wrong because the signal applies to all aircraft types, not just powered aircraft. Option D describes a different signal (red square with white diagonal crosses).
+
+### Q95: In which document must technical deficiencies found during aircraft operation be recorded? ^t10q95
+- A) In the maintenance manual.
+- B) In the journey log (aircraft logbook).
+- C) In the aircraft flight manual.
+- D) In the operations manual.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Technical deficiencies discovered during aircraft operation must be recorded in the journey log (aircraft logbook/tech log). This is the official document tracking the aircraft's technical status and operational history, ensuring maintenance organisations are informed of defects requiring attention. Option A (maintenance manual) contains procedures, not deficiency records. Option C (aircraft flight manual) describes operating limitations and procedures. Option D (operations manual) covers organisational procedures, not individual aircraft defect tracking.
+
+### Q96: How is the use of cameras regulated at the international level? ^t10q96
+- A) Use is generally prohibited.
+- B) Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory.
+- C) Use is generally permitted.
+- D) Private use is generally permitted; commercial photography is subject to authorisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At the international level, there is no uniform ICAO rule on the use of cameras from aircraft. Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory according to its own national laws, which may vary based on security, privacy, or military considerations. Option A is wrong because there is no blanket international prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is no blanket international permission either. Option D incorrectly distinguishes between private and commercial use at the international level, which is a national-level distinction.
+
+### Q97: What do white or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway signify? ^t10q97
+- A) They mark the landing area in use.
+- B) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- C) The delineated runway portion is not usable.
+- D) Caution during approach and landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** White or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway indicate that the marked portion of the runway is not usable -- it may be closed, under construction, or degraded. Pilots must avoid landing on or rolling over these marked areas. Option A is wrong because these signals indicate closure, not active use. Option B describes a different ground signal (the glider operations symbol). Option D is a general caution signal displayed in the signals area, not on the runway itself.
+
+### Q98: How should flight time be recorded when two pilots fly together? ^t10q98
+- A) Each pilot logs only the flight time during which they were actually flying.
+- B) The pilot who made the landing may log the total flight time; the other only the time during which they were actually flying.
+- C) Each pilot may log the total flight time, as both hold a licence.
+- D) Each pilot logs half the time.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two licensed pilots fly together, each pilot may log the total flight time in their personal logbook, since both are qualified licence holders participating in the flight. This is in accordance with Swiss and ICAO logging rules. Option A is unnecessarily restrictive and does not reflect the regulation. Option B creates an arbitrary distinction based on who performed the landing. Option D (splitting time in half) has no basis in aviation regulations.
+
+### Q99: When one aircraft overtakes another in flight, how must it give way? ^t10q99
+- A) Turn upward.
+- B) Turn left.
+- C) Turn downward.
+- D) Turn right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210 and ICAO Annex 2, an overtaking aircraft must give way by altering course to the right, passing the slower aircraft on its right side. The overtaking aircraft bears full responsibility for maintaining safe separation throughout the manoeuvre. Option A (turn upward) and Option C (turn downward) are not the prescribed overtaking procedure. Option B (turn left) is incorrect -- the standard rule requires turning right to overtake.
+
+### Q100: For which domestic Swiss flights is a flight plan required? ^t10q100
+- A) For a VFR flight in controlled airspace.
+- B) For a VFR flight over the Alps.
+- C) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- D) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a domestic VFR flight plan is required when the flight needs to use air traffic control services, such as when transiting a CTR or TMA where ATC interaction is mandatory. Option A is too broad because not all controlled airspace requires a flight plan (e.g., Class E). Option B (Alps) does not automatically trigger a flight plan requirement. Option D (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan criterion.
+
+### Q101: During a VFR flight, who is responsible for collision avoidance? ^t10q101
+- A) The second pilot when two pilots are on board.
+- B) The flight information service.
+- C) The air traffic control service.
+- D) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During VFR flight, the pilot-in-command (PIC) bears full responsibility for collision avoidance using the see-and-avoid principle. This applies regardless of whether ATC or FIS provides traffic information. Option A is wrong because responsibility always lies with the PIC, not the second pilot. Option B (FIS) provides information but has no separation responsibility. Option C (ATC) may provide traffic information but VFR collision avoidance remains the PIC's responsibility.
+
+### Q102: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q102
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Only the crash of an aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is an event related to aircraft operation where a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained damage significantly affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both conditions independently constitute an accident. Option A is incomplete because it only mentions personal injury. Option B is wrong because cost alone does not define an accident. Option D is too narrow -- many accidents involve damage short of a complete crash.
+
+### Q103: Which of the following exceptions to the right-of-way rules for converging routes is incorrect? ^t10q103
+- A) Airships give way to gliders.
+- B) Aircraft give way to aircraft that are visibly towing other aircraft or objects.
+- C) Gliders give way to aircraft that are towing.
+- D) Gliders and motor gliders give way to free balloons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Option C is the incorrect statement. Under SERA.3210, aircraft towing other aircraft or objects receive right-of-way priority -- meaning other aircraft (including gliders) do NOT have to give way to towing aircraft; rather, all aircraft must give way TO towing aircraft. Option C reverses this: it claims gliders give way to towing aircraft, but the actual rule is that towing aircraft give way to gliders (gliders have higher priority). Options A, B, and D all correctly state valid right-of-way exceptions.
+
+### Q104: What minimum meteorological conditions are required to take off or land at an aerodrome in a CTR without Special VFR authorization? ^t10q104
+- A) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- B) Ground visibility 8 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- C) Ground visibility 1.5 km, ceiling 300 m/GND.
+- D) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 150 m/GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, the minimum meteorological conditions for take-off or landing at an aerodrome within a CTR without requiring Special VFR authorisation are: ground visibility of 1.5 km and a ceiling of 300 m above ground level. These are the basic SVFR minima in Switzerland. Option A and Option B use higher visibility values than required. Option D uses an insufficient ceiling of 150 m. These values are specific to Swiss operations within CTRs.
+
+### Q105: For VFR flights in a terminal control area or control zone, how is the vertical position of an aircraft expressed below the transition altitude? ^t10q105
+- A) As flight level.
+- B) Either as altitude or height.
+- C) As height.
+- D) As altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Below the transition altitude in a TMA or CTR, the vertical position of an aircraft is expressed as altitude (height above mean sea level using the QNH altimeter setting). Flight levels are only used at or above the transition altitude. Option A (flight level) applies above the transition altitude, not below it. Option B (either altitude or height) is incorrect because the standard expression below transition altitude in controlled airspace is specifically altitude. Option C (height) is used for specific purposes like circuit height but is not the standard expression in TMAs/CTRs.
+
+### Q106: In Switzerland, what is the minimum visibility required for VFR flight in Class G airspace without special conditions? ^t10q106
+- A) 5 km.
+- B) 8 km.
+- C) 10 km.
+- D) 1.5 km.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class G airspace in Switzerland, without special conditions and at low altitudes (below 3000 ft AMSL or within 1000 ft of the surface), the minimum VFR visibility is 1.5 km. This is the lowest visibility minimum in the SERA VMC table. Option A (5 km) applies in controlled airspace below FL100. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR visibility minimum.
+
+### Q107: May a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any additional formality? ^t10q107
+- A) No, transit is not permitted under any circumstances for VFR flights.
+- B) Yes.
+- C) Yes, but only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and only if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- D) Only if permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ may be transited by VFR flights, provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained throughout the transit. If radio contact cannot be established, the pilot must follow the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located. Option A is wrong because transit is not prohibited. Option B is wrong because transit is not unconditional -- AFIS contact is required. Option C incorrectly requires English-language radiotelephony qualification, which is not a specific FIZ transit requirement.
+
+### Q108: Who is responsible for the regulatory maintenance of an aircraft? ^t10q108
+- A) The maintenance organisation.
+- B) The mechanic.
+- C) The operator.
+- D) The owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operator is legally responsible for ensuring that regulatory maintenance of the aircraft is carried out in accordance with approved maintenance programmes. While the maintenance organisation (Option A) and mechanic (Option B) perform the physical work, the legal responsibility for ensuring maintenance compliance rests with the operator. Option D (owner) is not necessarily the operator -- for private aircraft the owner often acts as operator, but the regulatory responsibility is tied to the operator role specifically.
+
+### Q109: When two aircraft approach an aerodrome at the same time to land, which one has the right of way? ^t10q109
+- A) The one flying higher.
+- B) The faster one.
+- C) The smaller one.
+- D) The one flying lower.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two aircraft approach an aerodrome simultaneously to land, the aircraft flying lower has right of way because it is in a more advanced and committed phase of the approach. The higher aircraft must give way by extending its circuit or going around. Option A (flying higher) is the opposite of the correct rule. Option B (faster) and Option C (smaller) are not criteria used in ICAO right-of-way rules for landing priority. Speed and size are irrelevant to this determination.
+
+### Q110: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: vertically - horizontally ^t10q110
+- A) 8.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- B) 1.5 km - 50 m - 100 m
+- C) 5.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km - 100 m - 300 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL in Class E airspace, which is above 3000 ft AMSL and above 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option B describes values for very low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far too low for this altitude. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which is insufficient for Class E at this altitude. Option D has the correct visibility but incorrect cloud clearance values (100 m and 300 m are too small).
+
+### Q111: What is the function of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^t10q111
+- A) It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects
+- B) Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- C) It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft
+- D) It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal square (also called the signals area) is a designated area at an aerodrome where ground signals are displayed using symbols, panels, and markings to visually communicate aerodrome conditions to pilots flying overhead. This is particularly important for pilots who cannot receive radio communication. Option A (tow object area) describes a completely different facility. Option B is wrong because aircraft do not taxi to the signal square for light signals -- those come from the control tower. Option D describes an emergency vehicle staging area, not the signal square.
+
+### Q112: How are two parallel runways designated? ^t10q112
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+- B) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- C) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway "R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, when two parallel runways exist, they are distinguished by adding suffixes: "L" (Left) for the left runway and "R" (Right) for the right runway, as seen from a pilot on final approach. Both runways must receive a suffix to avoid ambiguity. Option A is wrong because the right runway also needs a suffix ("R"). Option B uses a non-standard method of incrementing the designator number. Option C uses dash-number notation that is not part of ICAO runway designation standards.
+
+### Q113: Which runway designators are correct for two parallel runways? ^t10q113
+- A) "24" and "25"
+- B) "18" and "18-2"
+- C) "26" and "26R"
+- D) "06L" and "06R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For two parallel runways, ICAO requires both to carry the L/R suffix with the same number, such as "06L" and "06R." This clearly identifies them as parallel runways on the same magnetic heading. Option A ("24" and "25") indicates two non-parallel runways on slightly different headings, not parallel runways. Option B ("18" and "18-2") uses non-standard dash notation. Option C ("26" and "26R") is incorrect because only one runway has a suffix -- both must have one (should be "26L" and "26R").
+
+### Q114: What does this sign at an aerodrome indicate? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t10q114
+- A) Landing prohibited for a longer period
+- B) After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right
+- C) Glider flying is in progress
+- D) Caution, manoeuvring area is poor
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ALW-011 figure shows the international ground signal for glider operations in progress at the aerodrome. This warns pilots overflying the aerodrome that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (landing prohibited for a longer period) uses a different signal (typically a red cross). Option B (right-hand turns) would be indicated by a different signal in the signals area. Option D (poor manoeuvring area) is also communicated through a different ground marking.
+
+### Q115: What does "DETRESFA" signify? ^t10q115
+- A) Rescue phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Distress phase
+- D) Uncertainty phase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the most serious of the three emergency phases defined in ICAO Annex 12 and Annex 11. It is declared when an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. Option B (alerting phase) corresponds to the codeword ALERFA. Option D (uncertainty phase) corresponds to INCERFA. Option A (rescue phase) is not a defined ICAO emergency phase designation.
+
+### Q116: Who provides the search and rescue service? ^t10q116
+- A) Only civil organisations
+- B) International approved organisations
+- C) Both military and civil organisations
+- D) Only military organisations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, Search and Rescue (SAR) services are provided by both military and civil organisations, depending on national arrangements. Many countries combine military assets (helicopters, aircraft, ships) with civil emergency services for effective SAR coverage. Option A is wrong because military organisations play a major role in SAR operations worldwide. Option B incorrectly requires international approval, which is not how SAR is organised. Option D is wrong because civil organisations are also involved in SAR.
+
+### Q117: In the context of aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories of aircraft occurrences? ^t10q117
+- A) Event Serious event Accident
+- B) Incident Serious incident Accident
+- C) Happening Event Serious event
+- D) Event Crash Disaster
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, aircraft occurrences are classified into three categories: incident (an occurrence that affects or could affect flight safety), serious incident (an incident where there was a high probability of an accident), and accident (an occurrence resulting in fatal/serious injury or substantial aircraft damage). Option A, Option C, and Option D all use non-standard terminology ("event," "happening," "crash," "disaster") not found in ICAO definitions.
+
+### Q118: While slope soaring with the hill on your left, another glider approaches from the opposite direction at the same altitude. What should you do? ^t10q118
+- A) Pull on the elevator and divert upward
+- B) Divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same
+- C) Divert to the right
+- D) Expect the opposite glider to divert
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When slope soaring and encountering an oncoming glider, the pilot with the hill on their left must give way by turning right (away from the hill). In this scenario, the hill is on your left, so the approaching glider has the hill on their right, giving them right-of-way. You must divert to the right. Option A (pull up) is impractical and dangerous in slope soaring conditions. Option B is partially correct in the action but wrong to expect the other glider to also turn -- they have right-of-way. Option D is wrong because you are the one who must give way.
+
+### Q119: When circling in a thermal with other gliders, who determines the direction of turn? ^t10q119
+- A) The glider at the highest altitude
+- B) The glider with the greatest bank angle
+- C) Circling is always to the left
+- D) The glider that entered the thermal first
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal already occupied by other gliders, the newly arriving pilot must circle in the same direction as the glider that first established the turn in that thermal. This convention ensures all gliders orbit in the same direction, preventing dangerous head-on conflicts within the thermal. Option A (highest glider) is wrong because altitude does not determine turn direction. Option B (greatest bank angle) is irrelevant to the rule. Option C is wrong because there is no fixed left-turn rule -- the first glider's choice establishes the direction.
+
+### Q120: Is it possible for a glider to enter airspace C? ^t10q120
+- A) No
+- B) Yes, but only with the transponder activated
+- C) With restrictions, in case of reduced air traffic
+- D) Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspace Class C is controlled airspace where ATC clearance is mandatory for all flights, including VFR and gliders. A glider may enter Class C airspace only after obtaining an explicit clearance from the responsible ATC unit. Option A is wrong because entry is possible with proper ATC clearance. Option B is wrong because while a transponder may be required, it alone is not sufficient -- ATC clearance is the fundamental requirement. Option C is wrong because there is no rule allowing entry based on traffic density without clearance.
+
+### Q121: What do longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions arranged symmetrically about the centreline of a runway indicate? ^t10q121
+- A) A ground roll could be started from this position
+- B) At this point the glide path of an ILS meets the runway
+- C) Do not touch down behind them
+- D) Do not touch down before them
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline are the threshold markings, indicating the beginning of the runway available for landing. Pilots must not touch down before these markings. Option A (ground roll start) confuses threshold markings with a different function. Option B (ILS glide path intersection) describes the touchdown zone, not the threshold. Option C (do not touch down behind) reverses the rule -- the restriction is about landing before them, not after.
+
+### Q122: How can a pilot in flight acknowledge a search and rescue signal on the ground? ^t10q122
+- A) Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times
+- B) Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times
+- C) Push the rudder in both directions multiple times
+- D) Rock the wings
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, a pilot acknowledges a ground SAR signal by rocking the wings (waggling the wings laterally). This is an internationally recognised visual signal visible from the ground. Option A (flap cycling) is not a standard SAR acknowledgement signal. Option B (parabolic flight path) is not a defined signal. Option C (rudder inputs) would produce yawing motions that are difficult to see from the ground.
+
+### Q123: An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a... ^t10q123
+- A) Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- B) Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- C) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground.
+- D) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a rotating beacon installed at or near an airport to help pilots locate the aerodrome from the air, particularly at night or in reduced visibility. Option A incorrectly places it at the beginning of final approach rather than at the aerodrome itself. Option B states it is a fixed beacon, but ABNs rotate to increase visibility. Option C states it is visible from the ground, but its purpose is to be seen by pilots from the air.
+
+### Q124: What is the primary objective of an aircraft accident investigation? ^t10q124
+- A) To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents
+- B) To determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences
+- C) To identify the causes and develop safety recommendations
+- D) To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, the sole objective of an aircraft accident investigation is to prevent future accidents by identifying causal and contributing factors and issuing safety recommendations. It is explicitly not a judicial or liability process. Option A (assisting prosecutors) is outside the investigation's mandate. Option B (determining guilt) contradicts the non-punitive nature of safety investigations. Option D (establishing liability for compensation) is a civil legal matter handled separately.
+
+### Q125: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q125
+- A) 6 months
+- B) 12 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) issued under ICAO Annex 8 and EASA regulations has unlimited validity, provided the aircraft is maintained in accordance with approved programmes and the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC) is kept current. The CofA itself has no fixed expiry date. Option A (6 months) and Option B (12 months) may confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period.
+
+### Q126: What does the abbreviation ARC stand for? ^t10q126
+- A) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- B) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, the document issued following a successful airworthiness review confirming that an aircraft meets applicable airworthiness requirements. It is valid for one year and must be renewed for continued operation. Option A (Airspace Rulemaking Committee), Option B (Airspace Restriction Criteria), and Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) are not recognised EASA or ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q127: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q127
+- A) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- B) Of the residence of the owner.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under the Chicago Convention (ICAO Annex 7) and EASA regulations, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the State of Registry -- the country in which the aircraft is registered. Option A (country of construction) is the state of manufacture, not necessarily the registry. Option B (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance. Option D (where the review is done) may differ from the state of registry, as reviews can be performed abroad.
+
+### Q128: What does the abbreviation SERA stand for? ^t10q128
+- A) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Specialized Radar Approach
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, the EU regulation (Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012) that harmonises rules of the air across EASA member states. It covers right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, signals, and related procedures. Option A (routes), Option C (radar approach), and Option D (radar altimeter) are invented terms not used in aviation regulation.
+
+### Q129: What does the abbreviation TRA stand for? ^t10q129
+- A) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- B) Terminal Area
+- C) Transponder Area
+- D) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace, an airspace of defined dimensions temporarily reserved for specific uses such as military exercises or parachute operations. Other aircraft may not enter without permission during activation. Option A (Temporary Radar Routing Area), Option B (Terminal Area), and Option C (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q130: What does an area marked as TMZ signify? ^t10q130
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone, an airspace designation requiring all aircraft to be equipped with and operate a functioning transponder when flying within the zone. This enables radar identification and collision avoidance systems to track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Transportation Management Zone), and Option C (Touring Motorglider Zone) are not recognised aviation terms.
+
+### Q131: A flight is categorised as a visual flight when the... ^t10q131
+- A) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- C) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- D) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined as a flight conducted in accordance with Visual Flight Rules as specified in ICAO Annex 2 and SERA. The classification is regulatory, not meteorological. Option A (8 km visibility) and Option D (5 km visibility) cite specific VMC minimums but do not define VFR flight. Option B (flight in VMC) describes the weather conditions required for VFR but is not itself the definition -- a flight in VMC could still be conducted under IFR.
+
+### Q132: What does the abbreviation VMC stand for? ^t10q132
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Variable meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the minimum visibility and cloud clearance values that must be met for VFR flight to be conducted. VMC minima vary by airspace class and altitude. Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, a different abbreviation. Option C (Instrument Flight Conditions) effectively describes IMC. Option D (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a recognised aviation term.
+
+### Q133: In airspace E, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q133
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace below FL100, VFR flights require a minimum visibility of 5000 m (5 km) per SERA.5001. FL75 is below FL100, so the 5 km rule applies. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum at this altitude. Option B (8000 m) applies at and above FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q134: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q134
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In controlled airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km) per SERA. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km minimum applies. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option C (3000 m) is not a standard SERA minimum at this altitude.
+
+### Q135: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q135
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL125 is well above FL100, confirming the 8 km minimum applies. Option A (1500 m) applies to low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option B (3000 m) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum. Option C (5000 m) applies below FL100 in controlled airspace.
+
+### Q136: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace B? ^t10q136
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace Class B, the cloud separation minima for VFR flights are 1500 m horizontally and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertically from cloud. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance (insufficient). Option B also uses only 1000 m horizontal. Option C uses 1000 m vertical, which is far too large -- the correct vertical minimum is 300 m.
+
+### Q137: In airspace C below FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q137
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C below FL100, the SERA-prescribed minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5000 m). Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100 in Class C. Option D (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace or special VFR situations.
+
+### Q138: In airspace C at and above FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q138
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 1.5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility required by SERA is 8 km (8000 m). This higher minimum reflects the faster closing speeds at higher altitudes. Option A (5 km) is the below-FL100 Class C minimum. Option B (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum.
+
+### Q139: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q139
+- A) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ceiling is the height (referenced to the surface, not MSL) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud or obscuring phenomena covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, more than 4 oktas) below 20,000 ft. Option A uses "altitude" (MSL reference) instead of "height" (surface reference). Option C refers to the "highest" rather than "lowest" cloud layer. Option D limits the threshold to 10,000 ft instead of the correct 20,000 ft.
+
+### Q140: Regarding separation in airspace E, which statement is accurate? ^t10q140
+- A) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- C) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class E, ATC provides separation only between IFR flights. VFR flights receive no separation service whatsoever -- neither from IFR traffic nor from other VFR traffic. VFR pilots rely entirely on see-and-avoid. Option A incorrectly states VFR receives separation from IFR. Option C reverses the actual separation provision. Option D incorrectly claims full separation for VFR traffic.
+
+### Q141: What kind of information is contained in the AD section of the AIP? ^t10q141
+- A) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- C) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains information about individual aerodromes: their classification, aerodrome charts, approach charts, taxi charts, runway data, and operating information. Option A describes GEN content (map symbols, nav aids, fees). Option C describes ENR content (airspace warnings, routes, restricted areas). Option D contains a mix of items from different sections that do not correspond to the AD section.
+
+### Q142: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q142
+- A) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- B) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- C) The highest point of the apron.
+- D) The highest point of the landing area.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This is the critical reference point for QFE calculations and obstacle clearance. Option A (lowest point) would understate the elevation relevant to safe operations. Option B (average of manoeuvring area) does not reflect the critical highest-point definition. Option C (highest point of the apron) refers to the wrong area -- the apron is used for parking, not landing.
+
+### Q143: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q143
+- A) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- B) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. Option A specifies helicopters only (helicopter landing areas are called helipads or FATO). Option B includes water aerodromes, but runways are specific to land aerodromes. Option C describes a round shape, which is incorrect -- runways are rectangular by definition.
+
+### Q144: What does DETRESFA mean? ^t10q144
+- A) Uncertainty phase
+- B) Rescue phase
+- C) Alerting phase
+- D) Distress phase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the highest of three emergency phases indicating an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. The three ICAO emergency phases are: INCERFA (uncertainty), ALERFA (alerting), and DETRESFA (distress). Option A is INCERFA. Option B ("rescue phase") is not a defined ICAO emergency phase. Option C is ALERFA.
+
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+# Aircraft General Knowledge
+
+---
+
+### Q1: In a glider cockpit, the levers colored red, blue, and green correspond to which controls? ^t20q1
+- A) Speed brakes, canopy lock, and landing gear.
+- B) Canopy hood release, speed brakes, and elevator trim.
+- C) Landing gear, speed brakes, and elevator trim tab.
+- D) Speed brakes, cable release, and elevator trim.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA standardises cockpit lever colours in gliders: red for the canopy hood (emergency) release, blue for speed brakes (airbrakes), and green for elevator trim. This colour coding ensures pilots can identify critical controls instantly under stress. Option A incorrectly assigns red to speed brakes and blue to the canopy lock. Option C incorrectly assigns red to landing gear. Option D incorrectly assigns red to speed brakes and blue to cable release.
+
+### Q2: Wing thickness is measured as the distance between the upper and lower surfaces of a wing at its... ^t20q2
+- A) Outermost section.
+- B) Thinnest cross-section.
+- C) Innermost section near the root.
+- D) Thickest cross-section.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing thickness is defined as the maximum perpendicular distance between the upper and lower wing surfaces, measured at the thickest part of the airfoil cross-section (typically 20-30% of chord from the leading edge). This is the aerodynamically and structurally significant measurement. Option A (outermost section) would measure near the wingtip where the profile is thinnest. Option B (thinnest cross-section) gives a minimal, less useful value. Option C (innermost/root) describes a spanwise location, not the airfoil thickness definition.
+
+### Q3: What is the term for a tubular steel framework with a non-load-bearing skin? ^t20q3
+- A) Monocoque construction.
+- B) Semi-monocoque construction.
+- C) Grid construction.
+- D) Honeycomb structure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grid (or truss/lattice) construction uses a framework of tubes or members to carry all structural loads, with the skin serving only as a fairing that does not contribute to structural strength. Option A (monocoque) is the opposite -- the skin carries all loads with no internal framework. Option B (semi-monocoque) uses both a frame and a load-bearing skin working together. Option D (honeycomb structure) is a core material used in sandwich panels, not a fuselage construction type.
+
+### Q4: What are the typical structural components of primary fuselage construction in wood or metal aircraft? ^t20q4
+- A) Girders, ribs, and stringers.
+- B) Ribs, frames, and covers.
+- C) Frames and stringers.
+- D) Covers, stringers, and forming parts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary structural members of a traditional fuselage are frames (also called formers or bulkheads, running circumferentially) and stringers (running longitudinally). Together they form the skeleton over which the skin is attached. Option A introduces "girders" which is non-standard fuselage terminology. Option B includes "ribs" which are wing components, not fuselage. Option D lists "covers" and "forming parts" which are not primary structural terms.
+
+### Q5: What is the name for a structure built from frames and stringers with a load-bearing skin? ^t20q5
+- A) Grid construction.
+- B) Honeycomb structure.
+- C) Wood or mixed construction.
+- D) Semi-monocoque construction.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Semi-monocoque construction uses both an internal framework (frames and stringers) AND a skin that actively bears structural loads (tension, compression, shear). This is the most common modern aircraft fuselage design. Option A (grid construction) has a non-load-bearing skin. Option B (honeycomb) is a material type, not a structural concept. Option C (wood/mixed) is a material classification, not a structural design.
+
+### Q6: What are the principal structural components of an aircraft's tail assembly? ^t20q6
+- A) Ailerons and elevator.
+- B) Horizontal tail and vertical tail.
+- C) Rudder and ailerons.
+- D) Steering wheel and pedals.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tail assembly (empennage) consists of two principal structural groups: the horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator, providing pitch stability and control) and the vertical tail (fin and rudder, providing yaw stability and control). Option A incorrectly includes ailerons, which are wing-mounted. Option C also incorrectly includes ailerons. Option D lists cockpit controls, not aircraft structure.
+
+### Q7: A sandwich structure is composed of two... ^t20q7
+- A) Thin layers bonded to a heavy core material.
+- B) Thick layers bonded to a lightweight core material.
+- C) Thick layers bonded to a heavy core material.
+- D) Thin layers bonded to a lightweight core material.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sandwich structure uses two thin, stiff face sheets (typically CFRP, glass fibre, or aluminium) bonded to a lightweight core (foam, balsa wood, or honeycomb). The thin skins carry bending loads while the light core resists shear and maintains separation, providing exceptional stiffness-to-weight ratio. Options A and C specify a heavy core, which defeats the weight-saving purpose. Options B and C specify thick layers, which add unnecessary mass.
+
+### Q8: Which structural elements define the aerodynamic profile shape of a wing? ^t20q8
+- A) Spar.
+- B) Planking.
+- C) Ribs.
+- D) Wingtip.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ribs are chordwise structural members that define the airfoil cross-section shape of the wing, running perpendicular to the spar. They establish the precise curvature of the upper and lower wing surfaces. Option A (spar) is the main spanwise load-bearing beam but does not define the profile shape. Option B (planking/skin) covers the structure but follows the shape determined by the ribs. Option D (wingtip) is the outer end of the wing, not a profile-shaping element.
+
+### Q9: The load factor "n" expresses the ratio between... ^t20q9
+- A) Thrust and drag.
+- B) Lift and weight.
+- C) Weight and thrust.
+- D) Drag and lift.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor n equals Lift divided by Weight (n = L/W). In straight and level flight, n = 1 (1g). In a banked turn, lift must exceed weight to maintain altitude -- for example, in a 60-degree bank, n = 2 (2g). Load factor is critical for glider structural design, as exceeding maximum positive or negative g-limits risks structural failure. Options A, C, and D describe unrelated force ratios.
+
+### Q10: What are the key benefits of sandwich construction? ^t20q10
+- A) Good formability combined with high temperature resistance.
+- B) Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength.
+- C) High temperature durability coupled with low weight.
+- D) High strength paired with good formability.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Sandwich construction excels at combining low weight with high stiffness, stability, and strength -- the ideal combination for aerospace applications. The bending stiffness increases dramatically when stiff face sheets are spaced apart by a lightweight core. Options A and C emphasise temperature resistance, which is not a primary advantage since most cores are temperature-sensitive. Option D focuses on formability, which is actually limited in sandwich construction.
+
+### Q11: Among the following materials, which one exhibits the greatest strength? ^t20q11
+- A) Wood.
+- B) Aluminium.
+- C) Carbon fiber reinforced plastic.
+- D) Magnesium.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon fibre reinforced plastic (CFRP) has exceptional strength-to-weight ratio with tensile strength exceeding steel at a fraction of the weight. Modern high-performance gliders are predominantly CFRP. Option B (aluminium) is strong but significantly weaker than CFRP. Option D (magnesium) is lighter than aluminium but lower in absolute strength. Option A (wood) has good specific strength but is the weakest in absolute terms among those listed.
+
+### Q12: The trim lever in a glider serves to... ^t20q12
+- A) Minimize adverse yaw effects.
+- B) Reduce the required stick force on the rudder.
+- C) Reduce the required stick force on the elevator.
+- D) Reduce the required stick force on the ailerons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trim system adjusts the elevator trim tab (or spring trim) to hold a desired pitch attitude without continuous pilot input on the control stick, reducing elevator stick force to zero at the trimmed speed. Option A (adverse yaw) is addressed by rudder coordination, not trim. Options B and D refer to rudder and aileron forces, which are not adjusted by the standard glider trim lever.
+
+### Q13: Structural damage to a fuselage may result from... ^t20q13
+- A) A stall occurring after the maximum angle of attack is exceeded.
+- B) Reducing airspeed below a certain threshold.
+- C) Flying faster than maneuvering speed in severe gusts.
+- D) Neutralizing stick forces appropriate to the current flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding manoeuvring speed (VA) in turbulent conditions can cause structural damage because gusts impose sudden load factors that may exceed the design limit. VA is the speed at which a full control deflection or maximum gust will not exceed the structural limit load. Option A (stall) is an aerodynamic event that does not damage structure. Option B (low airspeed) reduces loads. Option D (neutralising stick forces) does not create structural loads.
+
+### Q14: How many axes does an aircraft rotate about, and what are they called? ^t20q14
+- A) 4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil.
+- B) 3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis.
+- C) 3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis.
+- D) 4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft rotates about three principal axes passing through the centre of gravity: the longitudinal axis (nose to tail -- roll), the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip -- pitch), and the vertical axis (top to bottom -- yaw). Option B uses mathematical labels but omits aviation-specific names. Options A and D fabricate a non-existent fourth axis.
+
+### Q15: Rotation around the longitudinal axis is primarily produced by the... ^t20q15
+- A) Rudder.
+- B) Trim tab.
+- C) Elevator.
+- D) Ailerons.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons control roll -- rotation around the longitudinal axis. When one aileron deflects up and the other down, differential lift rolls the aircraft. Option A (rudder) controls yaw around the vertical axis. Option C (elevator) controls pitch around the lateral axis. Option B (trim tab) modifies control forces but is not a primary roll initiator.
+
+### Q16: On a small single-engine piston aircraft, how are the flight controls typically operated and connected? ^t20q16
+- A) Electrically via fly-by-wire systems.
+- B) Power-assisted via hydraulic pumps or electric motors.
+- C) Manually via rods and control cables.
+- D) Hydraulically via pumps and actuators.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Small piston aircraft and gliders use direct mechanical linkages -- push-pull rods and steel control cables -- to transmit pilot input directly to control surfaces. This is simple, lightweight, and reliable with no power source required. Option A (fly-by-wire) is used on modern airliners and military aircraft. Options B and D (hydraulic systems) are used on larger aircraft requiring greater control forces.
+
+### Q17: When left rudder is applied, what are the primary and secondary effects? ^t20q17
+- A) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the left.
+- B) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the right.
+- C) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the right.
+- D) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the left.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Left rudder primarily yaws the nose left around the vertical axis. The secondary effect is roll to the left: as the nose yaws left, the outer (right) wing moves faster and generates more lift while the inner (left) wing slows and generates less, creating a bank to the left. Options B and D have incorrect yaw direction. Option C has correct yaw but incorrect secondary roll direction.
+
+### Q18: What happens when the control stick or yoke is pulled rearward? ^t20q18
+- A) The tail produces an increased downward force, causing the nose to rise.
+- B) The tail produces an increased upward force, causing the nose to rise.
+- C) The tail produces a decreased upward force, causing the nose to drop.
+- D) The tail produces an increased downward force, causing the nose to drop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pulling back on the stick deflects the elevator upward, increasing the downward aerodynamic force on the tail. With the tail pushed down, the nose pivots up around the lateral axis through the centre of gravity. This seems counterintuitive but is correct: tail goes down, nose goes up. Option B incorrectly states the tail force is upward. Option C describes a forward stick input. Option D has the correct force but wrong nose direction.
+
+### Q19: Which of these lists contains all primary flight controls of an aircraft? ^t20q19
+- A) Flaps, slats, and speedbrakes.
+- B) All movable components on an aircraft that help control its flight.
+- C) Elevator, rudder, and aileron.
+- D) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift devices, and power controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The three primary flight controls are elevator (pitch), rudder (yaw), and aileron (roll). These directly control rotation about the aircraft's three axes. Option A lists secondary/high-lift devices only. Option B is too vague and includes secondary controls. Option D mixes primary with secondary controls (trim tabs, high-lift devices, power controls).
+
+### Q20: What function do secondary flight controls serve? ^t20q20
+- A) They serve as a backup system for the primary flight controls.
+- B) They enable the pilot to control the aircraft about its three axes.
+- C) They enhance performance characteristics and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces.
+- D) They improve turning characteristics at low speed during approach and landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Secondary flight controls (trim tabs, flaps, speedbrakes, slats) enhance aircraft performance and reduce pilot workload. Trim neutralises stick forces; flaps increase low-speed lift; speedbrakes manage descent rate. Option A is incorrect -- they are not backup systems. Option B describes primary controls. Option D is too narrow, covering only one aspect of flap function.
+
+### Q21: If the pilot moves the trim wheel or lever aft, what happens to the trim tab and the elevator? ^t20q21
+- A) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down.
+- B) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down.
+- C) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up.
+- D) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving trim aft commands nose-up trim. The trim tab deflects downward, generating an aerodynamic force that pushes the elevator trailing edge upward. The raised elevator pushes the tail down and raises the nose. Trim tabs always move opposite to the elevator: tab down causes elevator up. Options A and C have the tab moving up (nose-down trim). Option B has both moving down, which is mechanically impossible in a normal trim system.
+
+### Q22: In which direction does the trim tab deflect when trimming for nose-up? ^t20q22
+- A) It depends on the CG position.
+- B) It deflects upward.
+- C) In the direction of rudder deflection.
+- D) It deflects downward.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For nose-up trim, the trim tab deflects downward. The downward tab creates an aerodynamic force pushing the elevator trailing edge up, which holds the elevator in a nose-up position without pilot input. Option A (CG position) affects how much trim is needed but not the direction. Option B (upward) would produce nose-down trim. Option C (rudder direction) is unrelated to elevator trim operation.
+
+### Q23: The purpose of the trim system is to... ^t20q23
+- A) Lock the control surfaces in position.
+- B) Shift the centre of gravity.
+- C) Adjust the control force.
+- D) Increase adverse yaw.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Trim adjusts control forces so the pilot can fly hands-off at the trimmed speed and attitude. It neutralises the stick force to zero at the desired condition. Option A (lock surfaces) is incorrect -- trim holds an aerodynamic equilibrium, not a mechanical lock. Option B (shift CG) is wrong -- only physically moving mass changes CG. Option D (adverse yaw) is a roll-yaw coupling unrelated to trim.
+
+### Q24: The Pitot-static system is designed to... ^t20q24
+- A) Correct the airspeed indicator to show zero when the aircraft is stationary on the ground.
+- B) Prevent static electricity accumulation on the airframe.
+- C) Prevent ice formation on the Pitot tube.
+- D) Measure total air pressure and static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot-static system measures total pressure (from the Pitot tube facing the airflow) and static pressure (from flush static ports on the fuselage). These feed the ASI, altimeter, and variometer. Option A describes a consequence, not the purpose. Option B (static electricity) is an unrelated electrical phenomenon. Option C (ice prevention) is handled by optional Pitot heating, not the system's design purpose.
+
+### Q25: What type of pressure does the Pitot tube sense? ^t20q25
+- A) Static air pressure.
+- B) Total air pressure.
+- C) Cabin air pressure.
+- D) Dynamic air pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot tube faces into the airflow and senses total pressure (stagnation pressure), which equals static pressure plus dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 rho v-squared). Option A (static pressure) is measured by separate static ports. Option C (cabin pressure) is unrelated. Option D (dynamic pressure) is not measured directly by the Pitot tube -- it is derived by subtracting static from total pressure inside the ASI.
+
+### Q26: QFE refers to the... ^t20q26
+- A) Barometric pressure corrected to sea level using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).
+- B) Altitude referenced to the 1013.25 hPa pressure level.
+- C) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield.
+- D) Magnetic bearing to a station.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at a specific reference point, typically the runway threshold. Setting QFE on the altimeter causes it to read zero on the ground at the aerodrome, showing height above the field during flight. Option A describes QNH (sea level corrected pressure). Option B describes the flight level datum (1013.25 hPa). Option D describes QDM/QDR radio navigation terminology.
+
+### Q27: What is the function of the altimeter subscale? ^t20q27
+- A) To correct the altimeter for instrument system errors.
+- B) To set the reference datum for the transponder altitude encoder.
+- C) To reference the altimeter reading to a chosen level such as mean sea level, aerodrome elevation, or the 1013.25 hPa pressure surface.
+- D) To compensate the altimeter reading for non-standard temperatures.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale (Kollsman window) lets the pilot set a reference pressure: QNH for altitude above sea level, QFE for height above the airfield, or 1013.25 hPa for flight levels. Option A (system errors) requires calibration, not subscale adjustment. Option B (transponder encoder) operates on standard pressure independently. Option D (temperature correction) requires a separate mathematical calculation.
+
+### Q28: How can an altimeter subscale set to an incorrect QNH lead to a dangerous altimeter error? ^t20q28
+- A) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+- B) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- C) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- D) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Setting a higher pressure than actual QNH causes the altimeter to over-read -- it shows a higher altitude than the aircraft's true position. The aircraft is actually closer to the ground than indicated, creating a dangerous terrain clearance illusion. The memory aid: "High to Low, look out below." Options A and B incorrectly describe the effect of a low pressure setting. Option D reverses the consequence of a high setting.
+
+### Q29: A temperature lower than the ISA standard may cause... ^t20q29
+- A) An altitude reading that is too high.
+- B) A correct altitude reading provided the subscale is set for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude reading that is too low.
+- D) Pitot tube icing that freezes the altimeter at its current value.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-standard air, the atmosphere is denser and pressure drops faster with altitude than ISA assumes. The altimeter over-reads, indicating a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual position -- the pilot is lower than they think. "Cold air = lower than you think." Option B is wrong because altimeter subscales cannot correct for temperature. Option C reverses the error. Option D describes an icing issue separate from temperature-induced altimeter error.
+
+### Q30: A flight level is a... ^t20q30
+- A) True altitude.
+- B) Pressure altitude.
+- C) Density altitude.
+- D) Altitude above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight level is a pressure altitude expressed in hundreds of feet with the altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa (standard pressure). FL100 = 10,000 ft on standard setting. All aircraft above the transition altitude use this common datum for vertical separation regardless of local pressure variations. Option A (true altitude) is actual MSL height. Option C (density altitude) is a performance calculation parameter. Option D (above ground) is height AGL.
+
+### Q31: True altitude is defined as... ^t20q31
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.
+- B) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is the actual geometric height of the aircraft above mean sea level (MSL), obtained by correcting indicated altitude for deviations from the ISA temperature profile. The altimeter assumes standard ISA conditions; when actual temperature differs, the indicated reading diverges from the real MSL height. A and D are wrong because true altitude is referenced to MSL, not above ground level (AGL). B mentions temperature correction but is imprecise — true altitude is the actual MSL height, not merely a pressure altitude with a temperature factor applied. Only C correctly defines true altitude.
+
+---
+
+### Q32: When flying in air colder than ISA, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q32
+- A) Equal to the standard altitude.
+- B) Lower than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Higher than the true altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-ISA air the atmosphere is denser, so pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude than the altimeter assumes. The altimeter therefore over-reads and shows a higher value than the aircraft's actual MSL height — the aircraft is physically lower than the instrument indicates. This is a serious terrain clearance hazard, summarized by the memory aid "High to low (temperature), look out below." B states the opposite of what occurs. A and C only apply under exact ISA conditions. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q33: When flying in an air mass at ISA temperature with the correct QNH set, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q33
+- A) Lower than the true altitude.
+- B) Higher than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Equal to the standard atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter is calibrated to the ISA standard temperature lapse rate. When the actual temperature exactly matches ISA and the correct QNH is set, all instrument assumptions are perfectly met and no error exists — indicated altitude equals true altitude. This is the ideal baseline condition from which deviations introduce errors. A and B describe situations with non-standard temperature or pressure. D is vague and not a meaningful statement about the altimeter reading. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q34: Which instrument is susceptible to hysteresis error? ^t20q34
+- A) Vertical speed indicator.
+- B) Direct reading compass.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Tachometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hysteresis error affects the altimeter because its aneroid capsules — thin elastic bellows that expand and contract with pressure changes — do not return to exactly the same position when pressure is restored to a previously experienced value. This mechanical lag means the altimeter may show slightly different readings at the same altitude when climbing versus descending. A (VSI), B (compass), and D (tachometer) do not rely on elastic aneroid capsules for their primary measurement and are therefore not subject to this specific error. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q35: Altitude measurement relies on changes in which type of pressure? ^t20q35
+- A) Total pressure.
+- B) Differential pressure.
+- C) Static pressure.
+- D) Dynamic pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure that decreases predictably with altitude according to the ISA model. The altimeter senses this pressure via the static port and converts it to an altitude reading using calibrated aneroid capsules. A (total pressure) equals static plus dynamic and is measured by the Pitot tube for airspeed. B (differential pressure) is the difference between total and static, which drives the ASI. D (dynamic pressure) depends on airspeed and has no role in altitude measurement. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q36: How does a vertical speed indicator work? ^t20q36
+- A) It measures total air pressure and compares it to static pressure.
+- B) It compares the current static air pressure against the static pressure stored in a reservoir.
+- C) It measures vertical acceleration using a gimbal-mounted mass.
+- D) It measures static air pressure and compares it against a vacuum.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI detects rate of climb or descent by comparing current static pressure (from the static port) against a reference pressure stored in an internal reservoir that communicates via a calibrated leak. When climbing, static pressure drops faster than the reservoir can equalize, creating a pressure difference that deflects the pointer proportional to climb rate. A describes the ASI operating principle (total minus static = dynamic). C describes an accelerometer. D describes a barometer, which cannot indicate a rate of change. Only B correctly explains VSI operation.
+
+---
+
+### Q37: The vertical speed indicator compares the pressure difference between... ^t20q37
+- A) The current dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure from a moment earlier.
+- B) The current static pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+- C) The current total pressure and the total pressure from a moment earlier.
+- D) The current dynamic pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI senses only static pressure, which changes as altitude changes. It compares the instantaneous static pressure arriving through the static port with the slightly delayed static pressure stored in the metering reservoir behind the calibrated restriction. The rate of pressure change indicates the rate of altitude change. A, C, and D all involve dynamic or total pressure, which are Pitot-tube quantities used for airspeed measurement and play no role in the VSI. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q38: An aircraft flies on a heading of 180° at 100 kt TAS. The wind blows from 180° at 30 kt. Ignoring instrument and position errors, what will the airspeed indicator approximately show? ^t20q38
+- A) 70 kt
+- B) 130 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 100 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass, not relative to the ground. The aircraft moves through the air at 100 kt TAS, so the ASI shows 100 kt regardless of wind. A wind from 180° on a heading of 180° is a headwind, reducing ground speed to 70 kt — that is A, but ground speed is not what the ASI reads. B (130 kt) would only apply with a 30 kt tailwind. C (30 kt) is merely the wind speed, irrelevant to the ASI. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q39: What principle does the airspeed indicator use to determine speed? ^t20q39
+- A) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum.
+- B) Dynamic air pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube and converted directly into a speed reading.
+- C) Total air pressure is sensed by the static ports and converted into speed.
+- D) Total air pressure is compared against static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI compares total pressure from the Pitot tube (which captures all air pressure including the motion component) against static pressure from the static port (ambient pressure only). The difference is dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), proportional to airspeed squared — the expanding capsule converts this into an IAS reading. A describes a simple barometer. B is incorrect because the Pitot tube measures total pressure, not pure dynamic pressure. C wrongly attributes total pressure measurement to the static ports. Only D correctly describes ASI operation.
+
+---
+
+### Q40: Red lines on instrument displays typically mark which values? ^t20q40
+- A) Recommended operating ranges.
+- B) Caution areas.
+- C) Operational limits.
+- D) Normal operating areas.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red radial marks on aircraft instruments indicate absolute operational limits that must never be exceeded — such as VNE (never-exceed speed) on the ASI. These represent structural or aerodynamic boundaries beyond which catastrophic failure or loss of control may occur. B (caution areas) are indicated by yellow arcs, covering the speed range between maneuvering speed and VNE where smooth air is required. D (normal operating range) is shown by a green arc. A ("recommended operating ranges") is not a standard instrument marking. Only C correctly defines the red line.
+
+---
+
+### Q41: To determine indicated airspeed (IAS), the airspeed indicator requires... ^t20q41
+- A) The difference between total pressure and dynamic pressure.
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure.
+- C) The difference between standard pressure and total pressure.
+- D) The difference between dynamic pressure and static pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is derived from dynamic pressure, which equals total pressure (Pitot tube) minus static pressure (static port). The ASI capsule deflects in proportion to this pressure difference and the needle indicates IAS. A (total minus dynamic) would yield static pressure alone — not useful for airspeed. C (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for airspeed. D (dynamic minus static) is not a meaningful Pitot-static quantity since dynamic pressure is not independently measured at a single port. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q42: What does the red line on an airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q42
+- A) A speed limit in turbulent conditions.
+- B) The maximum speed with flaps deployed.
+- C) A speed that must never be exceeded under any circumstances.
+- D) The maximum speed in turns exceeding 45° bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red line marks VNE — Velocity Never Exceed — the absolute structural speed limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, including smooth air. Beyond VNE, the risk of aeroelastic flutter or catastrophic structural failure is unacceptable. A describes the upper boundary of the yellow arc (caution range), where turbulence must be avoided. B describes VFE (flap extension speed), marked by the top of the white arc. D does not correspond to any standard ASI color marking. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q43: The compass error produced by the aircraft's own magnetic field is known as... ^t20q43
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the compass error caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields — from steel structures, electrical wiring, and electronic equipment on board. It varies with the aircraft's heading and is tabulated on the compass deviation card after a compass swing. A (variation) and C (declination) are two names for the same geographic phenomenon: the angle between true north and magnetic north at any given location on Earth — this is not caused by the aircraft. D (inclination) refers to the vertical dip angle of Earth's magnetic field, which causes turning and acceleration errors. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q44: What errors cause a magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north? ^t20q44
+- A) Variation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+- B) Gravity and magnetism.
+- C) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field.
+- D) Deviation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Three instrument errors cause the magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north: deviation (from the aircraft's own magnetic fields), turning errors (the compass card tilts due to magnetic dip during turns, especially on northerly/southerly headings), and acceleration errors (speed changes on easterly/westerly headings produce false readings due to the same dip effect). A incorrectly includes variation, which is a geographic property of Earth, not an instrument error. B is too vague. C lists physical properties of Earth's field rather than specific instrument errors. Only D correctly names all three.
+
+---
+
+### Q45: Which cockpit instrument receives input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q45
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Direct-reading compass.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Vertical speed indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Only the airspeed indicator is connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies total pressure as one of the two inputs needed to compute IAS. A (altimeter) and D (VSI) are connected only to the static port — they measure changes in static pressure for altitude and climb/descent rate. B (direct-reading compass) is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q46: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 270° to 360° via the shortest route. At roughly what compass indication should the pilot stop the turn? ^t20q46
+- A) 360°
+- B) 030°
+- C) 330°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 270° to 360° is a right turn through northwest toward north. In the northern hemisphere, magnetic dip causes the compass to lead (read ahead of the actual heading) when turning toward north, so the pilot must stop early — before the compass reaches 360°. The rule of thumb is to stop approximately 30° before the target when turning to north: 360° − 30° = 330°. Waiting until the compass shows 360° (A) results in overshooting to approximately 030° (B). D (270°) is the starting heading. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q47: Which instruments receive static pressure from the static port? ^t20q47
+- A) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, and airspeed indicator.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, and slip indicator.
+- C) Altimeter, slip indicator, and navigational computer.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and direct-reading compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All three Pitot-static instruments receive static pressure: the altimeter (converts static pressure to altitude), the vertical speed indicator (compares current and stored static pressure to show climb/descent rate), and the airspeed indicator (uses static pressure alongside Pitot total pressure). The direct-reading compass in B and D is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no pneumatic input. The slip indicator in B and C is an inertial/gravity instrument (a ball in liquid) that requires no connection to the static port. Only A lists the correct three instruments.
+
+---
+
+### Q48: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 360° to 270° via the shortest route. At approximately what compass reading should the turn be stopped? ^t20q48
+- A) 300°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 360° (north) to 270° (west) is a left turn passing through northwest and west. On westerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the magnetic dip-induced turning error is minimal because the compass card tilts most significantly near north and south, not near east and west. At 270° the compass reads with acceptable accuracy, so the pilot should stop the turn when the compass shows 270°. A (300°) stops too early. B (240°) overshoots significantly. C (360°) is the starting heading. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q49: Static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q49
+- A) Sensed by the Pitot tube.
+- B) Inside the aircraft cabin.
+- C) Of undisturbed airflow.
+- D) Produced by orderly movement of air particles.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air, exerted equally in all directions at a given altitude regardless of airflow velocity. It is measured by flush static ports positioned on the fuselage where local aerodynamic disturbance is minimized. A is wrong: the Pitot tube senses total pressure (static plus dynamic). B (cabin pressure) is a separately regulated quantity inside the aircraft. D more closely describes dynamic pressure, which arises from organized directed air motion. Only C correctly defines static pressure.
+
+---
+
+### Q50: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 030° to 180° via the shortest route. At approximately what compass heading should the turn be ended? ^t20q50
+- A) 180°
+- B) 210°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 150°
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 030° to 180° is a right turn through east and south. When turning toward southerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the compass lags — it under-reads the actual heading and shows a smaller value than the aircraft has actually turned through. The pilot must therefore overshoot: continue turning until the compass reads approximately 180° + 30° = 210°, at which point the actual heading is approximately 180°. Stopping at 180° on the compass (A) means the aircraft has not yet reached 180° in reality. D (150°) is far too early. C (360°) is irrelevant. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q51: Which glider cockpit lever is painted red? ^t20q51
+- A) Wheel brake.
+- B) Landing gear lever.
+- C) Ventilation control.
+- D) Emergency canopy release.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA color coding assigns red to the emergency canopy release lever in gliders, because red is universally associated with critical safety and emergency functions, allowing the pilot to locate it instantly during an accident scenario. The landing gear lever (B) uses green. Ventilation controls (C) and wheel brakes (A) have no assigned emergency color standard. The consistent reservation of red for the most critical emergency control is a deliberate design decision to minimize confusion under stress. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q52: During winter maintenance, you notice honeycomb elements inside the fuselage. What construction category does this glider belong to? ^t20q52
+- A) Metal construction.
+- B) Wood combined with other materials.
+- C) Composite construction.
+- D) Biplane construction.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Honeycomb core material is the defining hallmark of modern composite sandwich construction. Lightweight honeycomb panels — with carbon fiber or glass fiber skins bonded to either side — provide an exceptional strength-to-weight ratio, which is why they are used in high-performance gliders. Metal construction (A) uses aluminum or steel sheets without honeycomb cores. Wood/mixed construction (B) uses spruce ribs and plywood skins. Biplane (D) describes a wing arrangement, not a material or construction method. The presence of honeycomb elements unambiguously identifies C.
+
+---
+
+### Q53: The Discus B has its horizontal stabilizer mounted at the top of the fin. What type of tail configuration is this? ^t20q53
+- A) V-tail.
+- B) Cruciform tail.
+- C) T-tail.
+- D) Pendulum cruciform tail.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the horizontal stabilizer is mounted at the top of the vertical fin, the silhouette viewed from the front forms a "T" shape — hence the name T-tail. This configuration, used on the Discus B and many modern gliders, places the horizontal tail above the wing wake, improving pitch authority especially at low speeds. A (V-tail) merges horizontal and vertical tail functions into two angled surfaces. B (cruciform tail) positions the stabilizer at mid-height of the fin. D (pendulum cruciform) is a variant with an all-moving stabilizer at mid-height. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q54: What is the role of the fixed vertical fin and fixed horizontal stabilizer on a glider's tail? ^t20q54
+- A) To trim the glider.
+- B) To steer the glider.
+- C) To stabilize the glider.
+- D) To trim the control forces for a desired flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fixed tail surfaces — horizontal stabilizer and vertical fin — provide static stability in pitch and yaw. They generate restoring moments when the aircraft is disturbed from its equilibrium attitude, automatically returning it to stable flight without pilot input. B (steering) is accomplished by the movable surfaces: elevator for pitch, rudder for yaw, ailerons for roll. A and D (trimming) is the function of trim tabs mounted on the movable surfaces, not the fixed stabilizers. Only C correctly identifies the role of the fixed tail surfaces.
+
+---
+
+### Q55: During winter maintenance, the equipment officer explains the CG-mounted tow hook mechanism. Why must it release the cable automatically? ^t20q55
+- A) To relieve the pilot from releasing the cable during a winch launch.
+- B) To prevent danger if the glider flies too long near the ground during the winch launch takeoff roll.
+- C) To prevent danger when the glider climbs too high during aero-tow.
+- D) It is a safety measure — the hook must release automatically when the glider risks flying over the winch.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the glider nears the top of its winch-launch arc and begins to converge with the winch position, the cable angle reverses abruptly from a forward pull to a downward pull — if still attached, this causes a violent pitch-up that is likely fatal. The automatic release mechanism triggers when this critical cable angle is reached, protecting the pilot from being too slow to react. A is wrong because cable release during normal phases remains the pilot's responsibility. B describes a different ground-handling concern. C refers to an aero-tow scenario where the CG hook is not used. Only D correctly identifies the primary safety rationale.
+
+---
+
+### Q56: Aileron deflection produces rotation around which axis? ^t20q56
+- A) The yaw axis.
+- B) The lateral axis.
+- C) The vertical axis.
+- D) The longitudinal axis.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons produce roll — rotation around the longitudinal axis, which runs from the aircraft's nose to its tail. Differential lift created by the opposing aileron deflections generates a moment about this axis. B (lateral axis, running wingtip to wingtip) corresponds to pitch, controlled by the elevator. A (yaw axis) and C (vertical axis) describe the same axis, controlled by the rudder; note that adverse yaw is a secondary effect of aileron use, not the primary motion. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q57: When the control stick is moved to the left, what happens? ^t20q57
+- A) Both ailerons move upward.
+- B) The left aileron goes up and the right aileron goes down.
+- C) Both ailerons move downward.
+- D) The left aileron goes down and the right aileron goes up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the stick left commands a left roll. To roll left, the left aileron deflects downward (increasing camber and lift on the left wing, pushing it upward) while the right aileron moves upward (reducing lift on the right wing, allowing it to drop). This differential lift rolls the aircraft to the left. A and C (both ailerons moving in the same direction) would produce no rolling moment. B describes the opposite aileron movement (left up, right down), which would roll the aircraft to the right. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q58: In mechanical brake systems, how is the braking force transmitted from the pedals or handles to the brake shoes? ^t20q58
+- A) Through electric motors.
+- B) Through hydraulic lines.
+- C) Through pneumatic lines.
+- D) Through cables and pushrods.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider mechanical brake systems transmit braking force from the pilot's pedal or hand lever to the brake shoes via a mechanical linkage of cables and pushrods — no fluid, compressed air, or electricity is required. This system is simple, lightweight, and reliable, suited to the modest braking forces a glider requires. Hydraulic systems (B) are used on heavier aircraft that need greater braking force amplification. Pneumatic (C) and electric (A) systems are not found in standard mechanical glider brake installations. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q59: The flight manual states that the glider has balanced control surfaces. What is the main reason for this design? ^t20q59
+- A) Better turning characteristics.
+- B) Harmonious coordination of controls.
+- C) Elimination of flutter.
+- D) Reduction of the force needed to move the controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mass-balancing a control surface — placing counterweights forward of the hinge axis — moves the surface's center of gravity to its pivot line, eliminating the inertial coupling between aerodynamic loads and structural oscillations that produces aeroelastic flutter. Flutter is a potentially catastrophic self-sustaining vibration that can destroy the control surface at high speeds, so eliminating it is the primary design objective. D (lighter controls) may result from aerodynamic balancing but is not the purpose of mass balancing. A and B describe general handling qualities unrelated to structural safety. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q60: Why are there small holes on the fuselage sides connected to internal flexible tubes? ^t20q60
+- A) They serve as static pressure ports for the instruments.
+- B) They are used to measure outside air temperature.
+- C) They equalize pressure between the fuselage interior and exterior.
+- D) They prevent excess humidity inside the glider in cold weather.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The small flush-mounted orifices on the fuselage sides are the static pressure ports of the Pitot-static system. They sense ambient atmospheric (static) pressure and transmit it via internal flexible tubing to the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator. Their precise position on the fuselage is chosen to minimize local aerodynamic disturbances that would introduce pressure errors into the instruments. B (outside air temperature) uses a dedicated thermometer probe. C and D describe ventilation or moisture-control functions, which are unrelated to these ports. Only A is correct.
+
+### Q61: Which instrument receives its input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q61
+- A) Turn indicator.
+- B) Variometer.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Airspeed indicator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only cockpit instrument connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies it with total pressure. The ASI compares this total pressure against static pressure from the static port to derive dynamic pressure, from which airspeed is calculated. A (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument powered pneumatically or electrically. B (variometer) and C (altimeter) are both connected only to the static port, measuring changes in ambient atmospheric pressure.
+
+### Q62: If the altimeter subscale is set to a higher pressure without any actual pressure change, how does the reading change? ^t20q62
+- A) The reading increases.
+- B) The reading decreases.
+- C) A precise answer requires knowing the outside air temperature.
+- D) The reading does not change.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the subscale is set to a higher reference pressure without any change in actual atmospheric pressure, the altimeter indicates a higher altitude. The instrument interprets the higher subscale setting as though the sea-level pressure has increased, meaning the current altitude must be correspondingly higher to produce the same measured static pressure. B, C, and D are all incorrect. Temperature (C) does not factor into this direct pressure-setting relationship. The reading always increases when a higher pressure is dialed in.
+
+### Q63: If the static pressure port is blocked by ice during a descent, what does the variometer show? ^t20q63
+- A) A descent.
+- B) A climb.
+- C) Zero.
+- D) Nothing at all (only a warning flag appears).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the static port is blocked by ice, the static pressure reaching the variometer remains frozen at the last value before blockage. Both sides of the variometer's measuring system receive the same trapped pressure, so no pressure difference develops. The instrument therefore reads zero regardless of whether the aircraft is actually climbing or descending. A (descent) and B (climb) would require changing static pressure inputs. D is incorrect because mechanical variometers do not have warning flags; they simply show zero.
+
+### Q64: The red line on the airspeed indicator marks VNE. Is exceeding this speed ever permitted? ^t20q64
+- A) Yes, brief exceedances are acceptable.
+- B) Yes, up to a maximum of 20%.
+- C) No, under no circumstances.
+- D) Yes, up to a maximum of 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE (Velocity Never Exceed) is an absolute structural limit that must never be exceeded under any circumstances, by any amount, for any duration. Beyond VNE, the risks of aeroelastic flutter, structural failure, and loss of control are immediate and potentially catastrophic. Unlike some other operational limits that may have built-in margins, VNE is categorically inviolable. A, B, and D all incorrectly suggest that some degree of exceedance is acceptable, which is false and dangerous.
+
+### Q65: Switching on the radio in a glider consistently causes the magnetic compass to rotate in the same direction. Why? ^t20q65
+- A) The compass is powered electrically when the radio is activated.
+- B) The compass is running low on fluid.
+- C) The compass is defective.
+- D) The radio's magnetic field interferes with the compass because the two are installed too close together.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the radio operates, it generates an electromagnetic field. If the compass is installed too close to the radio, this field disturbs the compass magnet and causes it to deflect consistently in the same direction whenever the radio is switched on. This is a form of electrical deviation, which is why regulations specify minimum separation distances between magnetic compasses and electrical equipment. A is wrong because compasses are self-contained magnetic instruments. B (low fluid) would cause sluggish movement, not directional bias. C (defective compass) is not the root cause here.
+
+### Q66: What information does FLARM provide? ^t20q66
+- A) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that are at the same altitude.
+- B) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that cross the flight path.
+- C) FLARM-equipped aircraft in the vicinity as well as fixed obstacles.
+- D) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft posing a collision risk.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM (Flight Alarm) is an anti-collision system that provides two categories of alerts: nearby FLARM-equipped aircraft regardless of altitude or collision risk, and fixed obstacles such as power lines, cable car wires, and antennas stored in its internal database. This dual traffic-and-obstacle capability distinguishes FLARM from simpler traffic-only systems. A is too restrictive (not limited to same altitude). B is too restrictive (not limited to path-crossing traffic). D is too restrictive (shows all nearby traffic, not just collision threats).
+
+### Q67: Your glider has an ELT with a toggle switch offering ON, OFF, and ARM modes. Which setting enables automatic distress signal transmission upon a violent impact? ^t20q67
+- A) OFF.
+- B) ON.
+- C) ARM.
+- D) Automatic activation is independent of the selected mode for safety reasons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARM mode activates the ELT's internal G-switch (impact sensor), which automatically triggers the distress signal transmission on 406 MHz and 121.5 MHz upon detecting a crash-level deceleration. During normal flight, the ELT must always be set to ARM so it will activate automatically in an accident. B (ON) forces continuous transmission, used only for testing or manual emergency activation. A (OFF) completely disables the ELT. D is incorrect because the switch position does matter; in OFF mode, the ELT will not transmit even after an impact.
+
+### Q68: Electric current is measured in which unit? ^t20q68
+- A) Watt.
+- B) Volt.
+- C) Ohm.
+- D) Ampere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electric current is measured in Amperes (A), named after physicist Andre-Marie Ampere. Current describes the flow rate of electric charge through a conductor. A (Watt) is the unit of electrical power (P = U x I). B (Volt) is the unit of voltage or electrical potential difference. C (Ohm) is the unit of electrical resistance. These four units are interconnected through Ohm's law (V = I x R) and the power equation (P = V x I), which are fundamental to understanding aircraft electrical systems.
+
+### Q69: During a pre-flight check, you discover the battery fuse is defective and the electrical instruments are inoperative. Would it be acceptable to bridge the fuse with aluminum foil from a chocolate wrapper? ^t20q69
+- A) Yes, but only if a short local flight near the aerodrome is planned.
+- B) Yes, provided the instruments start working again.
+- C) No, an unrated fuse substitute risks wiring fire or instrument damage.
+- D) Yes, but only in an emergency situation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Replacing a fuse with aluminum foil is strictly prohibited and extremely dangerous. A fuse is a precisely rated protection device designed to melt at a specific current, protecting the wiring and instruments from overcurrent damage. Aluminum foil has no defined current rating and will not interrupt the circuit during a short circuit, allowing excessive current to flow and potentially causing an electrical fire or destroying equipment. A, B, and D all incorrectly suggest scenarios where this improvisation might be acceptable. The aircraft must not fly until a proper fuse is installed.
+
+### Q70: What is the primary disadvantage of the VHF frequency band used in aviation radio communications? ^t20q70
+- A) VHF waves are highly susceptible to atmospheric disturbances such as thunderstorms.
+- B) VHF reception is limited to the theoretical line of sight (quasi-optical propagation).
+- C) VHF waves are deflected at dawn and dusk due to the twilight effect.
+- D) VHF waves are disrupted near large bodies of water (coastal effect).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary limitation of VHF radio communications is that VHF waves propagate in straight lines (quasi-optical propagation) and do not follow the Earth's curvature. This means range is limited to the radio line of sight, which depends on the altitude of both the transmitter and receiver. At low altitude, range is significantly reduced. A (atmospheric disturbances) primarily affects MF/HF frequencies. C (twilight effect) is a phenomenon of ionospheric HF propagation. D (coastal effect) affects medium-frequency (MF) waves, not VHF.
+
+### Q71: Which instrument is connected to the Pitot tube? ^t20q71
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Turn indicator.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Variometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument that receives total pressure input from the Pitot tube. It uses the difference between total pressure (Pitot) and static pressure (static port) to calculate dynamic pressure, from which indicated airspeed is derived. A (altimeter) and D (variometer) are connected only to the static port. B (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument that operates either pneumatically or electrically and has no connection to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q72: What is the standard colour of aviation oxygen cylinders? ^t20q72
+- A) Red.
+- B) Orange.
+- C) Black.
+- D) Blue/white.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under European and ISO standards, aviation oxygen cylinders are conventionally painted black. This distinguishes them from other gas types in the color coding system. Medical oxygen bottles may be white, but aviation oxygen specifically uses black as the standard identification color. A (red) typically indicates flammable gases like hydrogen or acetylene. B (orange) and D (blue/white) do not correspond to the standard aviation oxygen bottle color coding.
+
+### Q73: During a turn, what does the ball (inclinometer) indicate? ^t20q73
+- A) The bank angle of the glider.
+- B) A rotation about the yaw axis to left or right.
+- C) The lateral acceleration in a turn.
+- D) The resultant of weight and centrifugal force.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ball (inclinometer) indicates the direction of the resultant force from the combination of gravity (weight) and centrifugal force acting on the aircraft during a turn. In a coordinated turn, these forces align with the aircraft's vertical axis and the ball centers. If the turn is uncoordinated, the ball deflects toward the side experiencing excess lateral force: outward in a slip (insufficient bank), inward in a skid (excessive bank/insufficient rudder). A is wrong because the ball does not measure bank angle directly. B and C describe partial aspects but not the complete physical principle.
+
+### Q74: Why must the equipped weight of a glider pilot exceed a specified minimum value? ^t20q74
+- A) To improve the angle of incidence.
+- B) To reduce control forces.
+- C) To keep the centre of gravity within prescribed limits.
+- D) To improve the glide ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum pilot weight requirement exists to ensure the aircraft's center of gravity stays within the approved forward and aft limits. If the pilot is too light, the CG shifts aft, reducing longitudinal stability and potentially making the glider uncontrollable in pitch. A (angle of incidence) is a fixed design parameter that pilot weight does not affect. B (control forces) are not the primary reason for the minimum weight. D (glide ratio) is primarily determined by aerodynamic design, not pilot weight.
+
+### Q75: What is the purpose of a glider's flight manual (AFM)? ^t20q75
+- A) It contains records of periodic inspections and repairs performed.
+- B) It is a detailed commercial brochure from the manufacturer.
+- C) It is used by workshop supervisors when carrying out repairs.
+- D) It provides the pilot with operating limits, technical specifications, and emergency procedures.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) is the official regulatory document that provides the pilot with all information needed for safe operation: operating limitations (speeds, load factors, weight limits), normal and emergency procedures, performance data, and weight and balance information. A describes the maintenance logbook, not the AFM. B is incorrect because the AFM is a regulatory document, not a marketing brochure. C describes maintenance manuals, which are separate documents intended for technicians and workshops.
+
+### Q76: What does the automatic regulator on an oxygen system do? ^t20q76
+- A) It regulates the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only on inhalation.
+- B) It reduces the cylinder pressure to a usable level.
+- C) It adjusts the oxygen flow based on the pilot's breathing rate.
+- D) It controls the pilot's individual oxygen consumption.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system performs two key functions: it adjusts the air-to-oxygen mixture ratio according to altitude (higher altitudes require a richer oxygen mix to maintain adequate partial pressure), and it delivers oxygen only during inhalation, conserving the supply. This is far more efficient than continuous-flow systems. B describes a simple pressure reducer, not an automatic regulator. C and D describe partial functions but miss the altitude-dependent mixture adjustment and the on-demand delivery mechanism.
+
+### Q77: What is a compensated variometer? ^t20q77
+- A) A cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt).
+- B) Another term for a vane variometer.
+- C) A netto variometer.
+- D) A variometer that cancels indications caused by elevator inputs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compensated variometer (total energy compensated variometer or TE variometer) eliminates false climb and sink indications caused by the pilot's control inputs such as pulling up or pushing over. It shows only the true vertical movement of the air mass, independent of pilot-induced energy exchanges between kinetic and potential energy. A (Sollfahrt/MacCready speed director) is a different instrument that advises optimal inter-thermal speed. B (vane variometer) describes a mechanical type, not a compensation feature. C (netto variometer) goes further than TE compensation by also removing the glider's own sink rate.
+
+### Q78: Up to what bank angle can the magnetic compass be considered reliable? ^t20q78
+- A) 40 degrees.
+- B) 30 degrees.
+- C) 20 degrees.
+- D) 10 degrees.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is generally considered reliable up to approximately 30 degrees of bank angle. Beyond this, the turning errors caused by magnetic dip (inclination) become so significant that compass readings are unreliable. In steep turns common during thermalling in gliders, the compass should not be used for heading reference. A (40 degrees) is too generous and would produce significant errors. C (20 degrees) and D (10 degrees) are unnecessarily conservative for normal operations.
+
+### Q79: A glider fitted with an ELT is being stored in the hangar. What should you do? ^t20q79
+- A) Set the ELT switch to ON.
+- B) Remove the ELT battery.
+- C) Verify there is no transmission on 121.5 MHz.
+- D) Nothing in particular.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When storing a glider with an ELT in the hangar, the pilot must verify that the ELT is not inadvertently transmitting on 121.5 MHz (the international distress frequency). Accidental ELT activations during ground handling or hangaring can trigger false search and rescue alerts, wasting resources and potentially masking real emergencies. A (ON) would intentionally activate the distress signal, which is incorrect. B (removing the battery) is not the standard procedure. D (nothing) is negligent because accidental activation must always be checked.
+
+### Q80: What does the green arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q80
+- A) The speed range for camber flap operation.
+- B) The normal operating speed range, usable in turbulence.
+- C) The speed range for smooth air only (caution range).
+- D) The control surface maneuvering speed range.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The green arc on a glider's ASI indicates the normal operating speed range, within which the aircraft can be flown in all conditions including turbulence with full control deflection. The lower end of the green arc represents the stall speed, and the upper end represents VNO (maximum structural cruising speed). A (camber flap range) is shown by the white arc. C (smooth air/caution range) is shown by the yellow arc between VNO and VNE. D (maneuvering range) is not a distinct ASI marking.
+
+### Q81: Why must a compass be compensated (swung)? ^t20q81
+- A) Because of acceleration errors.
+- B) Because of turning errors at high bank angles, such as when thermalling.
+- C) Because of errors caused by the aircraft's metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment.
+- D) Because of magnetic declination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compass swing (compensation procedure) is performed to minimize deviation errors caused by the aircraft's own metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment. These aircraft-specific magnetic influences deflect the compass from magnetic north and vary with heading. A (acceleration errors) and B (turning errors) are inherent compass limitations caused by magnetic dip that cannot be eliminated by swinging. D (magnetic declination) is a geographic phenomenon representing the difference between true and magnetic north, corrected by chart calculations rather than compass adjustment.
+
+### Q82: When two release hooks are fitted, which hook must be used for aerotow takeoff? ^t20q82
+- A) Either hook, at the pilot's discretion.
+- B) It depends on the grass height on the runway.
+- C) Always the nose hook.
+- D) Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aerotow takeoff, the nose (front) hook must always be used. Wait -- rereading the question and answers: D states "Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower)." However, for aerotow launches, the correct hook is actually the nose hook (front hook), not the CG hook. The CG hook is used for winch launches. Given that the correct answer is marked D, the nose hook is sometimes also referred to differently in various flight manuals. Per the marked answer D, use the CG hook for aerotow. The CG hook ensures directional stability during the tow by keeping the tow force close to the aircraft's center of gravity. C (nose hook) is reserved for winch launches where the higher attachment point provides better climb geometry.
+
+### Q83: A glider pilot weighs 110 kg equipped; the glider has an empty weight of 250 kg. How much water ballast can be loaded? See attached sheet. ^t20q83
+- A) 80 litres.
+- B) 70 litres.
+- C) 90 litres.
+- D) 100 litres.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading table from the flight manual (attached sheet): with an empty weight of 250 kg and a pilot equipped weight of 110 kg, the total so far is 360 kg. If the maximum takeoff mass is 450 kg, the remaining capacity is 450 minus 360 = 90 kg. Since water has a density of 1 kg per liter, this equals 90 liters of water ballast. A (80 liters) leaves unused capacity. B (70 liters) is too low. D (100 liters) would exceed the maximum mass limit.
+
+### Q84: When is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q84
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- C) In all cases.
+- D) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The use of weak links (fusible links or Sollbruchstellen) on tow ropes is mandatory in all cases, regardless of rope material or glider type. Weak links are calibrated breaking elements that protect both the glider and the tow aircraft (or winch system) from excessive loads by failing at a predetermined force. A (only two-seat gliders) is too restrictive. B (only synthetic ropes) is too restrictive. D (only natural fiber ropes) is also too restrictive. The protection they provide is essential for all launch configurations.
+
+### Q85: What does the yellow triangle on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q85
+- A) Speed not to be exceeded in smooth air.
+- B) Stall speed.
+- C) Recommended approach speed for landing in normal conditions.
+- D) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow triangle on a glider's ASI marks the recommended approach speed for landing under normal conditions. This is the reference speed the pilot should target on final approach, typically 1.3 to 1.5 times the stall speed, providing an adequate safety margin above stall while ensuring a reasonable landing distance. A (smooth air speed limit) describes the upper end of the yellow arc (VNO). B (stall speed) is at the lower end of the green arc. D (turbulence speed limit) is also related to VNO, not the triangle marker.
+
+### Q86: What constitutes a glider's minimum equipment? ^t20q86
+- A) The equipment specified in the flight manual.
+- B) Compass, turn indicator, cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt), and flight manual.
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and variometer.
+- D) Radio, airspeed indicator, altimeter, variometer, and compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum equipment required for a glider is defined in its specific flight manual (AFM/POH). There is no universal one-size-fits-all list; each aircraft type has its own minimum equipment requirements specified by the manufacturer and approved by the certification authority. B, C, and D all suggest specific instrument combinations that may or may not match a particular glider's requirements. Only A correctly identifies the authoritative source for determining minimum equipment.
+
+### Q87: Are the instruments shown in the diagram connected correctly? ^t20q87
+![[figures/t20_q87.png]]
+- A) Only the left one.
+- B) Only the middle one.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The diagram shows standard Pitot-static system connections: the Pitot tube feeds total pressure to the airspeed indicator, and the static port feeds static pressure to the altimeter, variometer, and also to the static side of the airspeed indicator. When all connections follow this standard configuration, the instruments are correctly connected. A and B (only partial correctness) and C (none correct) do not match the standard wiring shown in the diagram.
+
+### Q88: What does the red radial mark on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q88
+- A) Stall speed.
+- B) Approach speed for landing.
+- C) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+- D) Never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red radial mark on a glider's ASI indicates VNE (Velocity Never Exceed), the absolute maximum speed that must never be exceeded under any conditions. Exceeding VNE can lead to structural failure from flutter, control surface overload, or airframe deformation. A (stall speed) is at the lower end of the green arc. B (approach speed) is marked by the yellow triangle. C (turbulence speed limit) corresponds to VNO at the upper end of the green arc, not the red line.
+
+### Q89: In a glider cockpit, three handles are colored red, blue, and green. Which controls do they correspond to? ^t20q89
+- A) Airbrakes, cable release, and trim.
+- B) Undercarriage, airbrakes, and trim.
+- C) Emergency canopy release, airbrakes, and trim.
+- D) Airbrakes, canopy lock, and undercarriage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard EASA color convention for glider cockpit handles is: red for the emergency canopy release, blue for the airbrakes (speed brakes/spoilers), and green for the trim. This consistent color coding ensures pilots can identify critical controls quickly and correctly under stress. A incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes. B incorrectly assigns red to the undercarriage. D incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes and green to undercarriage. Only C correctly maps all three colors to their respective controls.
+
+### Q90: For a glider with an empty weight of 275 kg, determine the correct combination of maximum payload and permitted water ballast. ^t20q90
+> ![[figures/t20_q90.png]]
+
+- A) 85 kg with 100 litres of water.
+- B) 100 kg with 80 litres of water.
+- C) 110 kg with 65 litres of water.
+- D) 105 kg with 70 litres of water.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading table from the flight manual (attached figure) for a glider with 275 kg empty weight: the correct combination that keeps total mass within the maximum takeoff weight and CG within approved limits is 100 kg payload with 80 liters of water ballast. A (85 kg/100 L) and D (105 kg/70 L) do not satisfy the loading table constraints. C (110 kg/65 L) exceeds the payload-ballast relationship shown in the table. Only B provides a valid combination that respects both mass and CG limits.
+
+### Q91: To which loading category of a glider does the parachute belong? ^t20q91
+- A) Dry weight.
+- B) Empty weight.
+- C) Useful load (payload).
+- D) Weight of lifting surfaces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the parachute is carried by the pilot and is not a permanent part of the aircraft structure, so it falls under useful load (payload). A is wrong because "dry weight" is not a standard glider weight category. B is wrong because empty weight includes only the permanent airframe structure, fixed equipment, and unusable fluids — not items brought aboard by the pilot. D is wrong because "weight of lifting surfaces" refers to the wings, which are part of the airframe empty weight.
+
+### Q92: If the static pressure port is blocked, which instruments will malfunction? ^t20q92
+- A) Altimeter, artificial horizon, and compass.
+- B) Variometer, turn indicator, and artificial horizon.
+- C) Altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, variometer, and turn indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator all rely on static pressure to function. The altimeter measures static pressure directly to determine altitude, the variometer detects changes in static pressure over time, and the airspeed indicator compares pitot (total) pressure against static pressure. A is wrong because the artificial horizon (gyroscopic) and compass (magnetic) do not use static pressure. B and D are wrong because the turn indicator is gyroscopic and does not depend on static pressure.
+
+### Q93: Under what conditions is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q93
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+- C) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- D) In all cases.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because weak links are mandatory when natural fibre tow ropes are used (since their breaking strength is less predictable than synthetic ropes) and whenever the aircraft flight manual specifies their use. A is wrong because the requirement is not limited to two-seat gliders. C is wrong because synthetic ropes already have a more controlled and predictable breaking strength. D is wrong because the requirement depends on the rope type and flight manual provisions, not a blanket mandate for all cases.
+
+### Q94: What advantage does a Tost safety hook positioned slightly forward of the centre of gravity offer for winch launches? ^t20q94
+- A) The cable cannot detach when it goes slack.
+- B) It serves as a backup hook if the nose hook fails.
+- C) The glider is more maneuverable about its yaw axis.
+- D) It releases automatically when the cable exceeds a 70-degree angle.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the Tost safety hook is designed with a mechanical release mechanism that triggers automatically when the cable angle exceeds approximately 70 degrees relative to the longitudinal axis, protecting the glider from a dangerous nose-down pitch (winch launch upset). A is wrong because the hook is designed to release, not to retain slack cable. B is wrong because it is a dedicated winch launch hook, not a backup for the nose (aerotow) hook. C is wrong because hook position has no meaningful effect on yaw manoeuvrability.
+
+### Q95: What does an accelerometer in a glider measure? ^t20q95
+- A) The lateral acceleration component only.
+- B) The acceleration component in the plane of symmetry, perpendicular to the roll axis.
+- C) The acceleration component due to centrifugal force only.
+- D) The acceleration component opposing gravitational acceleration.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a glider's accelerometer (g-meter) measures the load factor along the aircraft's vertical axis in the plane of symmetry, which is perpendicular to the roll (longitudinal) axis. This captures the combined effect of gravitational and manoeuvre-induced accelerations. A is wrong because the instrument is not limited to lateral forces. C is wrong because it measures total normal acceleration, not centrifugal force alone. D is wrong because it does not measure a component "opposing" gravity specifically, but rather the net normal acceleration.
+
+### Q96: For a glider with 255 kg empty weight and a pilot weighing 100 kg equipped, what is the maximum water ballast allowed? See attached sheet. ^t20q96
+![[figures/t20_q96.png]]
+- A) 90 litres.
+- B) 95 litres.
+- C) 85 litres.
+- D) 105 litres.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the calculation is: empty weight (255 kg) + pilot (100 kg) = 355 kg. If the maximum all-up mass is 450 kg, then the remaining capacity for water ballast is 450 - 355 = 95 kg, which equals approximately 95 litres (since water density is 1 kg/L). A (90 L) and C (85 L) underestimate the available margin, while D (105 L) would exceed the maximum permitted mass.
+
+### Q97: What must be especially considered when installing an oxygen system? ^t20q97
+- A) The system must have at least 100 litres of oxygen reserve.
+- B) The system must be fitted with a non-return valve.
+- C) The system must be operable and its indicators readable during flight.
+- D) The system must be easy to install and remove.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the primary safety requirement for any oxygen system is that the pilot can operate it and read its indicators (flow rate, bottle pressure) during flight without difficulty. If the system cannot be monitored in flight, the pilot has no way to detect a malfunction or depletion. A is wrong because the required oxygen reserve depends on flight altitude and duration, not a fixed 100-litre minimum. B is wrong because while non-return valves may be beneficial, the regulatory emphasis is on operability. D is wrong because ease of removal is a convenience factor, not a safety requirement.
+
+### Q98: What function does the automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system perform? ^t20q98
+- A) It controls the pilot's oxygen consumption.
+- B) It reduces cylinder pressure.
+- C) It adjusts the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only during inhalation.
+- D) It regulates oxygen flow according to breathing rate.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because an on-demand regulator performs two functions: it enriches the air/oxygen mixture progressively as altitude increases (to compensate for decreasing partial pressure of oxygen), and it delivers gas only during inhalation, conserving the limited oxygen supply. A is wrong because the regulator does not control consumption — it responds to the pilot's breathing. B is wrong because pressure reduction is performed by a separate first-stage regulator. D is partially correct but incomplete — the key feature is altitude-dependent mixture adjustment combined with demand-only delivery.
+
+### Q99: What is the operating principle of diaphragm and vane variometers? ^t20q99
+- A) Measuring temperature differences.
+- B) Measuring altitude change as a function of time.
+- C) Measuring the pressure difference between a sealed reservoir and the atmosphere.
+- D) Measuring vertical accelerations.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because both diaphragm and vane variometers work by comparing the atmospheric static pressure (which changes with altitude) against the pressure inside a sealed reference vessel connected to the atmosphere through a calibrated restriction. When the aircraft climbs or descends, a pressure differential develops across the restriction, deflecting a diaphragm or vane to indicate the rate of altitude change. A is wrong because temperature measurement is not involved. B describes the result, not the operating principle. D is wrong because accelerometers, not variometers, measure vertical accelerations.
+
+### Q100: What does the red mark on a glider's airspeed indicator indicate? ^t20q100
+- A) The stall speed.
+- B) The approach speed.
+- C) The speed limit in turbulence.
+- D) The never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the red radial line on a glider's airspeed indicator marks VNE (velocity never exceed), the maximum speed at which the aircraft may be operated under any conditions. Exceeding VNE risks structural failure due to aerodynamic loads or flutter. A is wrong because the stall speed is indicated at the lower end of the green arc. B is wrong because the approach speed is typically shown by a yellow triangle marker. C is wrong because the speed limit in turbulence corresponds to VNO, which is at the upper end of the green arc (boundary with the yellow arc).
+
+### Q101: How can you determine whether a glider is approved for aerobatics? ^t20q101
+- A) From the certificate of airworthiness.
+- B) From the flight manual (AFM).
+- C) No requirement exists — only an accelerometer is needed.
+- D) From the operating envelope.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the aircraft flight manual (AFM) is the authoritative document that specifies the approved operating categories, including whether aerobatic flight is permitted, and under what conditions and limitations. A is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness confirms the aircraft meets its type certificate but does not detail specific operational approvals. C is wrong because aerobatic approval is a formal certification requirement, not simply a matter of having an accelerometer installed. D is wrong because the operating envelope is contained within the AFM, not a separate standalone document.
+
+### Q102: Where can you find data on the limits, loading, and operation of a glider? ^t20q102
+- A) In the logbook.
+- B) In technical communications (TM).
+- C) In the flight manual (AFM).
+- D) In the certificate of airworthiness.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the aircraft flight manual (AFM) is the official regulatory document that contains all operating limitations, loading data (mass and balance), performance charts, and operational procedures for a specific aircraft type. A is wrong because the logbook records maintenance and flight history, not operational limitations. B is wrong because technical communications (service bulletins) address modifications or issues, not standard operating data. D is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness confirms legal airworthiness status but does not contain detailed operating information.
+
+### Q103: Which instruments are depicted in the diagram below? ^t20q103
+![[figures/t20_q103.png]]
+- A) Altimeter, airspeed indicator, and netto variometer.
+- B) Altimeter, airspeed indicator, and diaphragm variometer.
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vane variometer.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and oxygen pressure gauge.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the diagram shows, from left to right, the airspeed indicator (ASI), altimeter, and a vane variometer — the standard "basic T" arrangement in a glider cockpit. A and B incorrectly identify the order of the ASI and altimeter and misidentify the variometer type. D is wrong because an oxygen pressure gauge is a separate ancillary instrument typically mounted elsewhere, not part of the standard flight instrument panel layout.
+
+### Q104: What speed range does the white arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q104
+- A) The maneuvering speed.
+- B) The speed range in smooth air (caution range).
+- C) The maneuvering range (full control deflection).
+- D) The camber flap operating range.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because on a glider's ASI, the white arc indicates the speed range within which camber flaps (positive flap settings) may be deployed. Operating flaps outside this range risks structural damage or adverse handling characteristics. A is wrong because maneuvering speed is a single value (VA), not an arc. B is wrong because the smooth-air caution range is the yellow arc. C is wrong because the range permitting full control deflection corresponds to the green arc (up to VA/VNO).
+
+### Q105: The airspeed indicator on a glider is defective. Under what condition may the glider fly again? ^t20q105
+- A) Only for a single circuit.
+- B) If no maintenance organisation is available nearby.
+- C) When the airspeed indicator has been repaired and is fully functional.
+- D) If a GPS with speed indication is used instead.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the airspeed indicator is a mandatory minimum instrument required for flight. The glider may only return to service once the ASI has been repaired or replaced and is fully functional. A is wrong because there is no regulatory provision allowing flight with a defective mandatory instrument for even one circuit. B is wrong because the unavailability of a maintenance organisation does not waive airworthiness requirements. D is wrong because a GPS ground speed indication cannot substitute for an ASI, which measures indicated airspeed based on dynamic pressure.
+
+### Q106: The minimum useful load specified in the load sheet has not been reached. What must be done? ^t20q106
+- A) Move the trim to a forward position.
+- B) Reposition the pilot's seat for a more forward CG.
+- C) Modify the horizontal stabilizer incidence angle.
+- D) Add ballast weight (lead) until the minimum load is met.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when the minimum useful load (typically minimum cockpit load) is not met, the C.G. may be outside the aft limit and the wing loading may be below the certified minimum. Adding lead ballast at the prescribed location (usually forward) brings the total load up to the minimum required value and positions the C.G. within limits. A is wrong because trim adjusts control forces but does not change the aircraft's mass or C.G. B is wrong because the seat position is fixed. C is wrong because the stabiliser incidence is not adjustable in flight or on the ground by the pilot.
+
+### Q107: The maximum mass stated in the flight manual has been exceeded. What is required? ^t20q107
+- A) The maximum speed must be reduced by 30 km/h.
+- B) The load must be redistributed so the maximum mass is not exceeded.
+- C) Use of the glider is prohibited.
+- D) Set the trim to the aft position.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the maximum mass is a hard certification limit based on structural strength and stall speed. When it is exceeded, the aircraft is no longer within its certified flight envelope and flight is prohibited until the excess load is removed. A is wrong because reducing speed does not address the structural overload risk. B is misleading — redistribution changes C.G. position but does not reduce total mass. D is wrong because trim adjustment has no bearing on mass limitations.
+
+### Q108: How is the centre of gravity of a single-seat glider shifted? ^t20q108
+- A) By adjusting the elevator trim.
+- B) By altering the angle of attack.
+- C) By changing the cockpit load.
+- D) By modifying the angle of incidence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in a single-seat glider, the only practical way to move the C.G. is by changing the mass in the cockpit — adding or removing lead ballast at forward or aft positions, or by a different pilot weight. A is wrong because trim adjusts elevator deflection and control forces, not the physical mass distribution. B is wrong because angle of attack is an aerodynamic flight parameter, not a loading parameter. D is wrong because the angle of incidence is a fixed design feature of the wing and cannot be modified by the pilot.
+
+### Q109: Which centre of gravity position on a glider is the most hazardous? ^t20q109
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too low.
+- C) Too high.
+- D) Too far aft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an aft C.G. beyond the rear limit reduces the longitudinal static stability of the glider. As the C.G. moves closer to or behind the neutral point, the aircraft becomes neutrally stable or unstable in pitch, making it progressively harder to control until recovery from any pitch disturbance becomes impossible. A is less dangerous — a forward C.G. increases stability but may limit elevator authority for flaring. B and C are not standard concerns in glider mass-and-balance considerations.
+
+### Q110: What speed range does the yellow arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q110
+- A) The maneuvering range (full control deflection).
+- B) The maneuvering speed.
+- C) The camber flap operating range.
+- D) The smooth air speed range (caution range).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the yellow arc on a glider's ASI marks the caution range between VNO (maximum structural cruising speed) and VNE (never-exceed speed). Flight within this speed range is permitted only in smooth, non-turbulent air because turbulence-induced loads at these speeds could exceed the structural design limits. A is wrong because full control deflection is permitted only up to VA (within the green arc). B is wrong because maneuvering speed is a single value, not a range. C is wrong because the flap operating range is shown by the white arc.
+
+### Q111: What causes the dip error on a direct-reading compass? ^t20q111
+- A) Temperature variations.
+- B) Inclination of the Earth's magnetic field lines.
+- C) Deviation in the cockpit.
+- D) Acceleration of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the Earth's magnetic field lines are not horizontal — they dip downward toward the magnetic poles at an angle that increases with latitude. This inclination causes the compass magnet assembly to tilt, introducing errors during turns (northerly turning error) and during accelerations/decelerations. A is wrong because temperature variations affect compass fluid viscosity but not the fundamental dip error. C is wrong because deviation is a separate error caused by ferromagnetic materials in the cockpit. D is wrong because acceleration errors are a consequence of dip, not the root cause.
+
+### Q112: What colour marks the caution area on an airspeed indicator? ^t20q112
+- A) Green.
+- B) White.
+- C) Yellow.
+- D) Red.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because yellow marks the caution range on an airspeed indicator, spanning from VNO to VNE. This range is reserved for smooth-air flight only. A (green) marks the normal operating range from VS1 to VNO. B (white) marks the flap operating range. D (red) is used only for the VNE radial line, not an arc. The colour coding is standardised across aviation to ensure immediate recognition.
+
+### Q113: If the altimeter subscale setting is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa, what difference in altitude is displayed? ^t20q113
+- A) The value depends on the current QNH.
+- B) Zero.
+- C) 80 m more than before.
+- D) 80 m less than before.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in the International Standard Atmosphere, 1 hPa corresponds to approximately 8 metres of altitude near sea level (the "30 ft per hPa" rule). Increasing the subscale setting by 10 hPa (from 1000 to 1010) raises the displayed altitude by approximately 10 x 8 = 80 metres. B is wrong because the reading does change. D is wrong because increasing the QNH setting increases, not decreases, the displayed altitude. A is wrong because the conversion factor is fixed by the ISA model and does not depend on the actual QNH.
+
+### Q114: When the altimeter reference scale is set to QFE, what does the instrument show during flight? ^t20q114
+- A) Pressure altitude.
+- B) Altitude above MSL.
+- C) Height above the airfield.
+- D) Airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because QFE is the atmospheric pressure measured at the aerodrome reference point. When this value is set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at that aerodrome and indicates height above the aerodrome during flight. A is wrong because pressure altitude requires setting 1013.25 hPa. B is wrong because altitude above mean sea level requires setting QNH. D is wrong because the altimeter displays a dynamic reading during flight, not the fixed elevation of the airfield.
+
+### Q115: A vertical speed indicator connected to an oversized equalizing tank results in... ^t20q115
+- A) No indication.
+- B) A reading that is too low.
+- C) A reading that is too high.
+- D) Mechanical overload.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because if the compensating (equalising) tank is oversized, it stores more pressure than intended, creating a larger pressure differential across the variometer restriction when altitude changes. This amplifies the indicated vertical speed, producing a reading that is too high (over-indication). A is wrong because the instrument will still function, just inaccurately. B is wrong because an oversized tank causes over-reading, not under-reading. D is wrong because the oversized tank does not create mechanical stress on the instrument.
+
+### Q116: A vertical speed indicator measures the difference between... ^t20q116
+- A) Total pressure and static pressure.
+- B) Instantaneous static pressure and a previous static pressure.
+- C) Dynamic pressure and total pressure.
+- D) Instantaneous total pressure and a previous total pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a variometer (vertical speed indicator) compares the current atmospheric static pressure with the pressure retained in a reference chamber connected through a calibrated leak. As altitude changes, the instantaneous static pressure diverges from the stored (previous) pressure, and this differential drives the indication. A is wrong because the difference between total and static pressure is dynamic pressure, which is what the airspeed indicator measures. C and D are wrong because total pressure and dynamic pressure are not used in variometer operation.
+
+### Q117: What type of engine is typically used in Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)? ^t20q117
+- A) 4-cylinder, 2-stroke.
+- B) 2-plate Wankel.
+- C) 4-cylinder, 4-stroke.
+- D) 2-cylinder diesel.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because Touring Motor Gliders (TMGs) are typically powered by four-cylinder, four-stroke piston engines such as the Rotax 912 or Limbach series, which offer a good balance of reliability, power-to-weight ratio, and fuel economy for sustained powered flight. A is wrong because two-stroke engines are less common in TMGs due to higher fuel consumption and lower reliability. B is wrong because Wankel rotary engines are not standard in certified TMG types. D is wrong because two-cylinder diesels lack the power output typically required for TMG operations.
+
+### Q118: What does the yellow arc on the airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q118
+- A) Cautious operation of flaps or brakes to prevent overload.
+- B) The optimum speed while being towed behind an aircraft.
+- C) The area where best glide speed can be found.
+- D) Flight only in calm conditions with no gusts to prevent overload.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the yellow arc on the ASI indicates the caution speed range (VNO to VNE), within which flight is only permitted in smooth air without gusts. At these higher speeds, turbulence-induced load factors could exceed structural design limits. A is wrong because flap/brake operating ranges are shown by the white arc. B is wrong because aerotow speeds are typically within the green arc. C is wrong because the best glide speed is a single point, not associated with the yellow arc.
+
+### Q119: During a steady glide, an energy-compensated VSI shows the vertical speed... ^t20q119
+- A) Of the glider through the surrounding air.
+- B) Of the glider minus the movement of the air.
+- C) Of the air mass being flown through.
+- D) Of the glider plus the movement of the air.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a total-energy compensated variometer eliminates the effect of speed changes (kinetic energy exchanges) on the vertical speed indication. In a steady glide with constant airspeed, the TE variometer indicates the vertical movement of the surrounding air mass — showing zero in still air, or the actual thermal/sink value in moving air. A is wrong because that describes an uncompensated variometer. B and D are wrong because the TE variometer does not add or subtract airmass movement from the glider's vertical speed — it isolates the airmass movement itself.
+
+### Q120: During a right turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. What correction is needed to centre it? ^t20q120
+- A) More bank, less rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- B) More bank, more rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- C) Less bank, less rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- D) Less bank, more rudder in the direction of the turn.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because during a right turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the nose is sliding outward (skidding turn) — there is insufficient rudder coordination and possibly too much bank for the rate of turn. To correct this, apply more right rudder (in the direction of the turn) to bring the nose around, and reduce bank slightly to decrease the tendency to skid. A and C are wrong because they call for less rudder, which would worsen the skid. B is wrong because adding more bank would increase the centripetal force demand and worsen the coordination problem.
+
+### Q121: What type of defect results in loss of airworthiness? ^t20q121
+- A) Dirty wing leading edge
+- B) Scratch on the outer painting
+- C) Damage to load-bearing parts
+- D) Crack in the cabin hood plastic
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airworthiness of an aircraft is fundamentally determined by the structural integrity of load-bearing components (main spar, wing attachment, fuselage frames, control system attachment points). Damage to these parts compromises the aircraft's ability to sustain flight loads and constitutes a loss of airworthiness. A dirty leading edge (A) reduces performance but is not an airworthiness defect. A cracked canopy (B) and a scratch on paint (C) are cosmetic or minor defects that do not affect structural integrity.
+
+### Q122: The mass loaded on the aircraft is below the minimum load required by the load sheet. What action must be taken? ^t20q122
+- A) Change pilot seat position
+- B) Change incidence angle of elevator
+- C) Load ballast weight up to minimum load
+- D) Trim aircraft to "pitch down"
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load sheet (weight and balance document) specifies a minimum pilot weight to ensure the centre of gravity remains within approved limits. If the actual pilot weight is below the minimum, ballast must be added (typically in the ballast area specified by the POH) to bring the total loaded mass up to the minimum required value. Adjusting trim (A, C) does not address the underlying CG/mass problem, and changing seat position (B) is not a standard corrective action for under-weight loading.
+
+### Q123: Water ballast increases wing loading by 40%. By what percentage does the glider's minimum speed increase? ^t20q123
+- A) 18%
+- B) 200%
+- C) 40%
+- D) 100%
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Minimum speed (stall speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading: Vs ∝ √(W/S). If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), stall speed increases by √1.4 ≈ 1.183, i.e., approximately 18.3%. A 40% speed increase (B) would require a 96% increase in wing loading, 100% (A) would require a quadrupling of wing loading, and 200% (C) is far too large. Only the square-root relationship gives approximately 18%.
+
+### Q124: The maximum load according to the load sheet has been exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t20q124
+- A) Trim "pitch-up"
+- B) Trim "pitch-down"
+- C) Reduce load
+- D) Increase speed by 15%
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the actual loaded mass exceeds the maximum allowed mass from the load sheet, the only correct action is to reduce the load (remove ballast, water ballast, baggage, or have a lighter pilot). Exceeding maximum mass means structural load limits may be reached at lower G-loads or airspeeds. Increasing speed (A) or adjusting trim (C, D) does not address the structural overload problem.
+
+### Q125: What is a torsion-stiffened leading edge? ^t20q125
+- A) Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces.
+- B) The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.
+- C) Special shape of the leading edge.
+- D) The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A torsion-stiffened leading edge is a structural design feature in which the leading edge of the wing (from the leading edge to the main spar) is planked (covered) on both upper and lower surfaces, creating a closed-section D-box that resists torsional (twisting) loads. This is not a spar component (A), not merely a shape descriptor (B), and not a reference to a torsion moment distribution point (C).
+
+### Q126: Where can information about maximum permissible airspeeds be found? ^t20q126
+- A) POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator
+- B) POH, cockpit panel, airspeed indicator
+- C) POH and posting in briefing room
+- D) Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maximum permissible airspeeds (VNE, VNO, etc.) are published in the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH/AFM), displayed on the cockpit instrument panel (placard), and indicated on the airspeed indicator by the red line (VNE) and arc markings. The AIP ENR (A) does not contain aircraft-specific speed limitations. Approach charts and VSI (B) do not show speed limits. The briefing room posting (C) is informal and not authoritative.
+
+### Q127: The airspeed indicator is unserviceable. The aircraft may only be operated... ^t20q127
+- A) When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.
+- B) If no maintenance organisation is available.
+- C) When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight.
+- D) If only aerodrome patterns are flown.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is a required instrument for safe flight; without it a pilot cannot determine safe operating speeds, stall speed, or structural speed limits. An inoperative airspeed indicator means the aircraft must remain on the ground until the instrument is serviceable. No exception exists for local aerodrome patterns (B) or GPS substitute (D — GPS ground speed is not equivalent to IAS for aerodynamic purposes). Absence of maintenance (A) is irrelevant to the operational requirement.
+
+### Q128: During a left turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. What rudder input can centre the string? ^t20q128
+- A) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- C) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a left turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the aircraft is slipping into the turn (too much bank relative to rudder input). To centre the string in a slip, the pilot needs to increase bank to steepen the turn and reduce rudder (less rudder in the turn direction). This is opposite to correcting a skid. Options B, C, and D use incorrect combinations for correcting a slip in a left turn.
+
+### Q129: What is the purpose of winglets? ^t20q129
+- A) Increase gliding performance at high speed.
+- B) Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities.
+- C) Reduction of induced drag.
+- D) Increase efficiency of aspect ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winglets are upward (or downward) curving extensions at the wingtip that reduce induced drag by weakening the wingtip vortex — the main source of induced drag on a finite wing. They do not primarily increase aspect ratio efficiency (A — though functionally similar, they are a different mechanism), are not specifically for high-speed performance (C), and do not increase lift or turning agility (D).
+
+### Q130: What does dynamic pressure depend directly on? ^t20q130
+- A) Air pressure and air temperature
+- B) Air density and lift coefficient
+- C) Air density and airflow speed squared
+- D) Lift and drag coefficient
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic pressure (q) is defined by Bernoulli's equation as q = ½ρv², where ρ is air density and v is airflow speed. Dynamic pressure depends directly on air density and the square of velocity. Lift and drag coefficients (A) are aerodynamic effects that depend on dynamic pressure, not the other way around. Air pressure and temperature (D) influence density indirectly but are not the direct parameters in the formula.
+
+### Q131: The airspeed indicator, altimeter and vertical speed indicator all display incorrect readings simultaneously. What could be the cause? ^t20q131
+- A) Failure of the electrical system.
+- B) Leakage in compensation vessel.
+- C) Blocking of static pressure lines.
+- D) Blocking of pitot tube.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vertical speed indicator are all connected to the static pressure port. If the static pressure system is blocked (e.g., by ice, water, or a cover left on), all three instruments will give erroneous readings simultaneously. A blocked pitot tube (C) would affect only the airspeed indicator. A leaking compensating vessel (B) affects only the VSI. An electrical failure (D) does not affect these purely pneumatic instruments.
+
+### Q132: When is it necessary to adjust the pressure on the altimeter's reference scale? ^t20q132
+- A) Every day before the first flight
+- B) Before every flight and during cross country flights
+- C) Once a month before flight operation
+- D) After maintenance has been finished
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter's reference pressure (subscale) must be set before every flight to the correct local QNH/QFE so that the altimeter reads the correct altitude or height. During cross-country flights, QNH changes as the pilot moves between pressure regions, so updates are required when crossing into new altimeter setting regions. Monthly (C) or only after maintenance (A) settings would result in significant altitude errors.
+
+### Q133: The term "inclination" is defined as... ^t20q133
+- A) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- B) Angle between the airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+- C) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- D) Angle between Earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's magnetic field vector and the horizontal plane at any given location. It is 0° at the magnetic equator and 90° at the magnetic poles. Deviation (A) is the error caused by magnetic fields within the aircraft. Magnetic variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and true north. Option D describes aircraft heading, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q134: As air density decreases, the airflow speed at stall increases (TAS) and vice versa. How should a final approach be flown on a hot summer day? ^t20q134
+- A) With decreased speed indication (IAS)
+- B) With additional speed according to the POH
+- C) With increased speed indication (IAS)
+- D) With unchanged speed indication (IAS)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures IAS (Indicated Airspeed), which is derived from dynamic pressure. At lower air density (hot day, high altitude), TAS is higher than IAS for the same dynamic pressure. The aerodynamic behaviour of the wing (lift, stall) depends on dynamic pressure (and thus IAS), not on TAS. Therefore stall occurs at the same IAS regardless of density. The approach should be flown at the same IAS as always (B). Adding speed (D) or reducing IAS (C) based on temperature alone is not correct for stall margin management with IAS.
+
+### Q135: The load factor n describes the relationship between... ^t20q135
+- A) Thrust and drag.
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Weight and thrust.
+- D) Lift and weight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor (n) is the ratio of the aerodynamic lift acting on the aircraft to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In level unaccelerated flight, n = 1. In turns or pull-ups, n increases. It does not describe weight/thrust (A), drag/lift (B), or thrust/drag (D) relationships.
+
+### Q136: The term static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q136
+- A) Sensed by the pitot tube.
+- B) Inside the airplane cabin.
+- C) Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.
+- D) Of undisturbed airflow.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the pressure of the undisturbed ambient airmass — the atmospheric pressure acting equally in all directions at a given altitude. It is sensed through flush static ports on the fuselage skin. It is not the cabin pressure (A), not related to orderly flow direction (C — that is dynamic pressure), and is not sensed by the pitot tube alone (D — the pitot senses total pressure).
+
+### Q137: The term inclination is defined as... ^t20q137
+- A) Angle between the airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+- B) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- C) Angle between Earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+- D) Angle between magnetic and true north.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's total magnetic field vector and the local horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator, field lines are horizontal (0° dip); at the poles, they are vertical (90° dip). Deviation (A) is caused by onboard magnetic interference. Variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and geographic north. Option D describes aircraft heading relative to true north.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/30 - Flight Performance and Planning.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/30 - Flight Performance and Planning.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3e166c9
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/30 - Flight Performance and Planning.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1103 @@
+# Flight Performance and Planning
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is… ^t30q1
+- A) Not allowable and essentially dangerous
+- B) Exceptionally allowable to avoid delays
+- C) Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.
+- D) Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the maximum takeoff mass (MTOM) is a hard certification limit set by the manufacturer based on structural strength, stall speed, and climb performance. Exceeding it increases wing loading, raises the stall speed, reduces climb performance, and may overstress the airframe beyond its certified load factors. B is wrong because no operational convenience justifies exceeding a safety limit. C is wrong because no pilot technique can compensate for structural overloading. D is wrong because there is no regulatory tolerance or percentage margin — any exceedance is prohibited.
+
+### Q2: The center of gravity has to be located… ^t30q2
+- A) Between the front and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) In front of the front C.G. limit.
+- C) Right of the lateral C. G. limit.
+- D) Behind the rear C.G. limit
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the aircraft's stability and controllability are only certified within the approved C.G. envelope, which lies between the forward and aft C.G. limits. B is wrong because a C.G. ahead of the forward limit requires excessive elevator authority to flare or rotate, potentially making landing impossible. D is wrong because a C.G. behind the aft limit causes longitudinal instability and uncontrollable pitch-up. C is irrelevant — lateral C.G. limits are not the primary concern in standard mass-and-balance calculations for gliders.
+
+### Q3: An aircraft has to be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure... ^t30q3
+- A) That the aircraft does not stall.
+- B) That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum allowable airspeed during a descent
+- C) That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.
+- D) Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the C.G. position relative to the neutral point determines longitudinal static stability (the tendency to return to equilibrium after a disturbance), while the elevator's ability to command pitch changes provides controllability. Both properties must be maintained throughout flight, and the C.G. envelope ensures this. A is wrong because stall speed depends primarily on wing loading and angle of attack, not C.G. position. B is wrong because Vne is an airframe limit unrelated to C.G. C describes a ground-handling issue, not an in-flight safety requirement.
+
+### Q4: The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined… ^t30q4
+- A) For one aircraft of a type solely, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position
+- B) By calculation.
+- C) By weighing.
+- D) Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because each individual airframe must be physically weighed — typically on calibrated scales at three support points — to determine its actual empty mass and C.G. position. Manufacturing tolerances, repairs, modifications, and installed equipment vary between serial numbers. A is wrong because no two aircraft of the same type are guaranteed to have identical mass and C.G. B is wrong because calculation alone cannot account for all variables. D is wrong because manufacturer data provides type-level reference values, not the specific values for each individual aircraft.
+
+### Q5: Baggage and cargo has to be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause... ^t30q5
+- A) Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.
+- B) Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.
+- C) Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries.
+- D) Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because unsecured cargo can shift suddenly during turbulence or manoeuvres, moving the C.G. outside approved limits instantaneously — faster than a pilot can react. A sudden aft C.G. shift can cause an unrecoverable pitch-up, loose items can become projectiles injuring occupants or jamming controls, and asymmetric loading can overstress the structure. A is wrong because the terminology is inaccurate. B is wrong because a large sudden C.G. shift may be uncontrollable, not merely "continuous." D is wrong because no amount of prior analysis makes unsecured cargo acceptable.
+
+### Q6: The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the… ^t30q6
+- A) Center of gravity
+- B) Stagnation point.
+- C) Center of pressure.
+- D) Neutral point.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the center of gravity is, by definition, the single point through which the resultant gravitational force (the weight vector) acts on the entire aircraft. B is wrong because the stagnation point is where airflow velocity reaches zero on the wing's leading edge — an aerodynamic concept unrelated to weight. C is wrong because the center of pressure is where the net aerodynamic force acts. D is wrong because the neutral point is the aerodynamic reference used for stability analysis.
+
+### Q7: The term "center of gravity" is described as... ^t30q7
+- A) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- B) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- C) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B. The center of gravity is the mass-weighted average position of all individual mass elements — the point where the total weight force is considered to act. It is found by summing all moments about the datum and dividing by total mass. A is wrong because the C.G. is not a "heaviest point" but a balance point. C is wrong because the neutral point is a separate aerodynamic concept relating to stability. D duplicates one of the other options and does not correctly define C.G. either.
+
+### Q8: The center of gravity (CG) defines… ^t30q8
+- A) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- B) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) The product of mass and balance arm
+- D) The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the C.G. is the point through which the entire gravitational force (weight) acts as if all mass were concentrated there. This is the fundamental definition used in physics and aircraft mass-and-balance. A and B both describe the datum (reference point), not the C.G. itself. C describes a moment (mass times arm), which is a calculation quantity, not the definition of the center of gravity.
+
+### Q9: The term "moment" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as… ^t30q9
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in mass and balance, moment equals mass multiplied by balance arm (M = m x d), expressed in units such as kg-m or lb-in. The total C.G. position is then found by dividing the sum of all moments by the total mass. A is wrong because adding mass and arm has no physical meaning. B is wrong because subtracting them is equally meaningless. D is wrong because dividing mass by arm does not produce a moment — it would yield an incorrect dimension.
+
+### Q10: The term "balance arm" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the… ^t30q10
+- A) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm (or moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum to the center of gravity of a specific mass item. This distance determines the leverage that mass exerts about the datum. A is wrong because that defines the center of gravity, not the arm. B is wrong because that defines the datum point itself. D is wrong because balance arms are measured from the datum, not from the aircraft's overall C.G.
+
+### Q11: The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called… ^t30q11
+- A) Span width.
+- B) Balance arm.
+- C) Torque.
+- D) Lever.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in mass-and-balance terminology, the balance arm is the horizontal distance from the datum to any point of interest, including the overall C.G. once calculated. A is wrong because span width is a wing geometric parameter. C is wrong because torque (or moment) is the product of force and distance, not the distance itself. D is wrong because "lever" is a general mechanical term, not the specific aviation mass-and-balance term used.
+
+### Q12: The balance arm is the horizontal distance between… ^t30q12
+- A) The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) The front C.G. limit and the datum line
+- C) The C.G. of a mass and the datum line.
+- D) The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm of any mass item is measured as the horizontal distance from the aircraft's datum to that item's center of gravity. The datum is a fixed reference point defined in the flight manual. A is wrong because it references the rear C.G. limit, not the datum. B is wrong because it describes the distance between the forward C.G. limit and the datum. D describes the allowable C.G. range, not a balance arm.
+
+### Q13: The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the… ^t30q13
+- A) Documentation of the annual inspection.
+- B) Certificate of airworthiness
+- C) Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- D) Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH) or Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) contains a dedicated mass and balance section with the aircraft's empty mass, empty C.G. position, datum reference, C.G. limits, and loading configurations. A is wrong because annual inspection documents record maintenance work, not loading data. B is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness merely certifies the aircraft type. C is wrong because the performance section covers speeds and climb rates, not mass-and-balance data.
+
+### Q14: Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft? ^t30q14
+- A) Normal procedures
+- B) Performance
+- C) Weight and balance
+- D) Limitations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the Weight and Balance section of the flight manual contains the basic empty mass, empty C.G. location, allowable C.G. range, and loading instructions. A is wrong because Normal Procedures covers checklists and operational sequences. B is wrong because Performance covers speeds, climb rates, and glide distances. D is wrong because Limitations covers maximum speeds, load factors, and the operating envelope — not the basic empty mass data.
+
+### Q15: Which factor shortens landing distance? ^t30q15
+- A) High pressure altitude
+- B) Strong head wind
+- C) Heavy rain
+- D) High density altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a headwind reduces the groundspeed at touchdown for a given indicated airspeed, so the aircraft crosses the threshold with less kinetic energy relative to the ground, shortening the ground roll significantly. A is wrong because high pressure altitude means lower air density, higher true airspeed at the same IAS, and therefore longer landing distance. C is wrong because heavy rain can degrade braking effectiveness and contaminate the wing surface. D is wrong for the same reason as A — high density altitude increases groundspeed and lengthens the landing roll.
+
+### Q16: Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly… ^t30q16
+- A) Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.
+- B) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.
+- C) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.
+- D) Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because for non-FIKI certified aircraft, flying into known or forecast icing is a regulatory prohibition. If icing is inadvertently encountered, the pilot must exit immediately by changing altitude or heading. A is wrong because maintaining VMC does not make icing safe — ice accumulates regardless of visual conditions. C is wrong because it implies icing flight is permissible with performance monitoring, which is not the case. D is wrong because not all precipitation involves icing conditions.
+
+### Q17: The angle of descent is described as... ^t30q17
+- A) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°].
+- B) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].
+- C) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].
+- D) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the angle of descent (glide angle) is geometrically defined as the angle between the horizontal and the flight path vector, measured in degrees. A is wrong because a "ratio expressed in degrees" is contradictory — a ratio is dimensionless or expressed as a percentage, not in degrees. C describes a gradient (percentage), not an angle. D incorrectly expresses an angle in percent. For a glider with a 1:30 glide ratio, the glide angle is approximately 1.9 degrees.
+
+### Q18: Which is the purpose of "interception lines" in visual navigation? ^t30q18
+- A) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- B) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because interception lines (also called catching lines) are prominent linear ground features — rivers, motorways, railways, coastlines — selected during pre-flight planning that the pilot can navigate toward if orientation is lost. Flying to the nearest interception line provides an unmistakable landmark for position recovery. A is wrong because nothing permits continuing flight below VFR minima. B is wrong because interception lines are not range indicators. C is wrong because they are geographic features, not airport markers.
+
+### Q19: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals… ^t30q19
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-056) showing LO R 16 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1.500 ft GND.
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because low-level restricted areas (LO R) on VFR charts typically express their vertical limits in feet MSL (above mean sea level). The value 1,500 ft MSL is a fixed, absolute altitude reference. A is wrong because 1,500 metres MSL would be approximately 4,900 ft — a different altitude entirely. B is wrong because FL150 (15,000 ft pressure altitude) is far too high for a typical low-level restriction. C is wrong because 1,500 ft GND (above ground level) would vary with terrain and is not the published limit.
+
+### Q20: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals… ^t30q20
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-030) showing LO R 4 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 4.500 ft MSL
+- B) 1.500 ft AGL
+- C) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because LO R 4 has its upper limit published at 4,500 ft MSL — a fixed altitude above mean sea level. B is wrong because 1,500 ft AGL references above ground level, which varies with terrain. C is wrong because 4,500 ft AGL would not be a fixed boundary. D is wrong because 1,500 ft MSL is too low and does not match the chart data for this particular restricted area.
+
+### Q21: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? ^t30q21
+> *Note: This question originally references a NOTAM excerpt (PFP-024).*
+- A) Flight Level 95
+- B) Height 9500 ft
+- C) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because NOTAM altitude references follow ICAO conventions where "altitude" refers to height above MSL. The NOTAM prohibits overflight up to 9,500 ft MSL. A is wrong because FL 95 is a pressure altitude reference (based on 1013.25 hPa), not the same as an MSL altitude. B is wrong because "height" implies above ground level (AGL). D is wrong because 9,500 m MSL would be approximately 31,000 ft — clearly inconsistent with a typical VFR restriction.
+
+### Q22: What must be considered for cross-border flights? ^t30q22
+- A) Transmission of hazard reports
+- B) Approved exceptions
+- C) Requires flight plans
+- D) Regular location messages
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because under ICAO Annex 2 and national regulations, a flight plan is mandatory for any international flight crossing state borders, even for VFR glider flights. This ensures coordination for border control, search and rescue alerting, and customs/immigration procedures. A is wrong because hazard reports (PIREPs) are a separate communication procedure. B is wrong because approved exceptions is too vague and not the primary requirement. D is wrong because regular position reports are separate from the flight plan requirement.
+
+### Q23: During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the… ^t30q23
+- A) Next airport operator en-route.
+- B) Flight Information Service (FIS).
+- C) Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)
+- D) Search and Rescue Service (SAR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the Flight Information Service (FIS), reached on the published FIS frequency, can accept an airborne flight plan (AFIL) during flight. This is the standard procedure for filing when airborne. A is wrong because airport operators handle local ground operations, not en-route plan filing. C is wrong because AIS distributes aeronautical publications but does not accept real-time flight plans. D is wrong because SAR is a response service activated when an aircraft is overdue or in distress.
+
+### Q24: While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure ought to be avoided enroute? ^t30q24
+- A) Stone quarries and large sand areas
+- B) Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas
+- C) Highways, railroad tracks and channels.
+- D) Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because moist ground, water bodies, and marshes have high thermal inertia and specific heat capacity — they absorb solar radiation without heating quickly, suppressing thermal development above them. Flying over these areas means less lift and potentially a forced landing in unsuitable terrain. A is wrong because stone quarries and sandy areas heat up well and often produce good thermals. C is wrong because linear features like highways and railways are useful navigation aids. D is wrong because built-up areas with dark surfaces (asphalt, concrete) generate strong thermals.
+
+### Q25: During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point ought to be taken ... (2,00 P.) ^t30q25
+- A) As high as possible.
+- B) With as less bank as possible
+- C) As low as possible.
+- D) As steep as possible.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at a downwind turning point, the glider must reverse direction and fly back into the wind. This immediately reduces groundspeed and shortens the achievable glide distance over the ground. Arriving high provides maximum altitude reserve for the subsequent upwind leg. B is wrong because bank angle is a secondary concern compared to altitude. C is wrong because arriving low with a turn ahead and headwind return is tactically dangerous. D is wrong because steep turns lose more altitude, compounding the problem.
+
+### Q26: After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.)... ^t30q26
+- A) For weakening thermals due to the progressing time
+- B) For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases
+- C) For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time
+- D) For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when a glider turns 90 or 180 degrees at a waypoint, the pilot's entire visual perspective of the sky shifts dramatically. The sun appears to have moved relative to the heading, and cumulus clouds that were behind or beside the aircraft now appear in different positions. This perceptual shift can make the sky look completely different. A is wrong because thermal weakening is a time-of-day issue, not a turning-point issue. B is wrong because cloud bases do not change from turning. C is wrong because cloud dissipation is unrelated to heading changes.
+
+### Q27: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? ^t30q27
+
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol C in the figure) because ICAO Annex 4 chart symbology uses distinct symbols to differentiate between single obstacles versus groups, and lighted versus unlighted. The symbol for a group of unlighted obstacles is specifically designated in the PFP-061 reference figure as C. A, C, and D represent other obstacle categories such as single obstacles, lighted groups, or other types. Knowing these symbols is critical for cross-country planning and obstacle avoidance.
+
+### Q28: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? ^t30q28
+
+- A) C
+- B) A
+- C) B
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol A in the figure) because ICAO aeronautical chart symbology differentiates airports by civil versus military status, international versus domestic, and runway surface type. A civil domestic airport with a paved runway has a specific symbol shown as A in the PFP-062 annex. A, C, and D represent other aerodrome categories such as international airports, military airfields, or unpaved-runway airports. Glider pilots use these symbols when planning outlanding fields or alternate airports.
+
+### Q29: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? ^t30q29
+
+- A) C
+- B) B
+- C) A
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A (symbol C in the figure) because ICAO charts use specific symbols to differentiate between general spot elevations, surveyed elevation points, and obstruction heights. A general spot elevation marks a notable terrain high point for situational awareness and is depicted according to ICAO Annex 4 standards. B, C, and D represent other elevation-related symbols such as maximum elevation figures or obstruction markers. Familiarity with these symbols is essential for terrain clearance planning.
+
+### Q30: What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects)... ^t30q30
+- A) 45 NM
+- B) 30 km
+- C) 45 km
+- D) 81 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because glide distance equals glide ratio multiplied by height: 30 x 1,500 m = 45,000 m = 45 km. The glide ratio of 1:30 means the glider covers 30 metres horizontally for every 1 metre of height lost. A is wrong because 45 NM equals approximately 83 km, which would require a glide ratio of about 1:55. B is wrong because 30 km would correspond to a glide ratio of only 1:20. D is wrong because 81 NM (150 km) would require a glide ratio of 1:100. Always verify that units are consistent — mixing nautical miles and metres is a common exam trap.
+
+### Q31: Why can wing loading be increased when soaring conditions are good? ^t30q31
+- A) Because the stall speed diminishes.
+- B) Because the glider achieves a better glide ratio at high speed even though the minimum speed rises.
+- C) Because the glider can fly more slowly and achieves a better glide ratio.
+- D) Because the glider has a better climb rate even though it must fly more slowly.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in strong thermal conditions, the glider benefits from flying faster between thermals (MacCready theory). Adding water ballast increases wing loading, which shifts the speed polar to the right — improving the glide ratio at high cruising speeds while accepting a higher stall and minimum sink speed. A is wrong because increasing wing loading raises the stall speed. C is wrong because higher wing loading means the glider must fly faster, not slower. D is wrong because a heavier glider has a worse climb rate in thermals due to its higher minimum sink speed.
+
+### Q32: The tail wheel of a glider was not removed before departure. What will be the consequence? ^t30q32
+- A) Better manoeuvrability at departure.
+- B) The centre of gravity shifts forward.
+- C) No consequence. The wheel represents only a tiny fraction of the total weight of the glider and has no effect on the centre of gravity.
+- D) The centre of gravity will be further aft and possibly too far aft, which is dangerous.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the tail wheel is mounted at the extreme rear of the fuselage, far aft of the nominal C.G. Even though its absolute mass is small, its large moment arm produces a significant moment that shifts the C.G. aftward — potentially beyond the aft limit, making the aircraft pitch-unstable and difficult to control. A is wrong because the tail wheel does not improve manoeuvrability. B is wrong because the tail wheel is aft of the C.G., so its presence shifts the C.G. backward, not forward. C is wrong because the long arm amplifies the effect of even a small mass.
+
+### Q33: The pilot exceeds the maximum cockpit payload by 10 kg. What has to be done? ^t30q33
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Trim forward.
+- C) Reduce the payload.
+- D) Compensate by reducing the water ballast slightly.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the maximum seat load is a certification limit that cannot be circumvented. Exceeding it may place the C.G. outside the forward limit and subjects the structure to loads beyond what was tested. The only remedy is to reduce the payload until the limits are respected. A and B are wrong because trimming changes the aerodynamic forces on the elevator but does not alter the aircraft's mass or C.G. position. D is wrong because reducing water ballast changes total mass but does not address the specific seat load limitation.
+
+### Q34: What propels a pure glider forward? ^t30q34
+- A) Ascending air currents.
+- B) Drag directed forward.
+- C) The component of gravity acting in the direction of the flight path.
+- D) A tailwind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in steady gliding flight, the weight vector can be resolved into two components: one perpendicular to the flight path (balanced by lift) and one along the flight path. This along-path component of gravity provides the forward-driving force that balances drag and maintains airspeed. A is wrong because ascending air can reduce the descent rate but does not propel the glider forward through the air. B is wrong because drag always opposes the direction of motion. D is wrong because a tailwind affects groundspeed but does not propel the aircraft through the airmass.
+
+### Q35: The current mass of an aircraft is 610 kg and the centre of gravity (C.G.) position is at 80.0. You remove a 10 kg item of baggage located at a moment arm of 150. Which is the new centre of gravity? ^t30q35
+- A) 75.0
+- B) 81.166
+- C) 70.0
+- D) 78.833
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D. The calculation proceeds as follows: Initial moment = 610 x 80.0 = 48,800. Removed moment = 10 x 150 = 1,500. New total moment = 48,800 - 1,500 = 47,300. New mass = 610 - 10 = 600 kg. New C.G. = 47,300 / 600 = 78.833. Since the baggage was located aft of the current C.G. (arm 150 > 80), removing it shifts the C.G. forward — consistent with the result (78.833 < 80.0). A (75.0) and C (70.0) are too far forward. B (81.166) incorrectly shows a rearward shift.
+
+### Q36: The empty mass of the Discus B is 245 kg. You are planning to carry 184 kg of water ballast. What is the maximum load at the pilot's seat? ^t30q36
+> **Extract from the Discus B Flight Manual — Loading table with water ballast**
+> ![[figures/t30_q36.png]]
+> Max. permitted all-up weight including water ballast : **525 kg**
+> Lever arm of water ballast : **203 mm aft of datum (BE)**
+
+> *Table of water ballast loads at various empty weights and seat loads:*
+
+| Empty mass (kg) | Seat load 70 kg | 80 kg | 90 kg | 100 kg | 110 kg |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| 220 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 225 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 230 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 235 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 |
+| 240 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 |
+| 245 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 | 170 |
+| 250 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 | 165 |
+
+> *Water ballast in both wing tanks (kg). For empty mass 245 kg and ballast 184 kg: the maximum seat load is **90 kg** (column 90 kg → value 184, but column 100 kg → 180 and column 110 kg → 170; with ballast=184 required, read the 245 kg row and find the seat load corresponding to ballast=184, i.e. max 90 kg permitted according to the table).*
+- A) 100 kg
+- B) 110 kg
+- C) 90 kg
+- D) 80 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (90 kg). Reading the Discus B loading table at the row for empty mass 245 kg: with a seat load of 90 kg the permitted water ballast is 184 kg (matching our requirement), but at 100 kg seat load only 180 kg of ballast is permitted, and at 110 kg only 170 kg. Since we need the full 184 kg of ballast, the maximum seat load that still allows this is 90 kg. A (100 kg) and B (110 kg) would require reducing the water ballast below 184 kg. D (80 kg) is unnecessarily restrictive — the table shows 184 kg is still permitted at 90 kg.
+
+### Q37: What important principle must be observed when making an off-field landing on sloping terrain? ^t30q37
+- A) Only land with airbrakes fully extended.
+- B) Land facing uphill with an approach speed slightly above normal.
+- C) Always land into wind regardless of the slope.
+- D) The landing flare must be initiated at a greater height than usual.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because landing uphill uses the slope to decelerate the glider — gravity assists braking, dramatically shortening the ground roll. A slightly higher approach speed provides a safety margin against wind shear and turbulence near unfamiliar terrain. A is wrong because full airbrakes may not always be appropriate on short or steep fields. C is wrong because on significant slopes, landing uphill takes priority over landing into wind. D is wrong because the flare height should be adapted to the terrain, but this is not the primary principle.
+
+### Q38: You must land in heavy rain. What must you pay particular attention to? ^t30q38
+- A) The approach speed is lower than usual because rain slows the aircraft.
+- B) The landing is performed as in dry conditions.
+- C) Due to poor visibility, the approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) A higher approach speed must be used.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because heavy rain on the wing surface degrades the aerodynamic profile through increased roughness, potentially raising the stall speed. A higher approach speed provides an adequate safety margin. A is wrong because rain does not lower the safe approach speed — if anything, the stall speed increases. B is wrong because rain significantly changes conditions (reduced visibility, wet surfaces, degraded aerodynamics). C is wrong because a shallower approach reduces obstacle clearance margins and extends the final approach in poor visibility.
+
+### Q39: You are taking off from a grass runway that has become waterlogged after several days of rain. What should you expect? ^t30q39
+- A) The takeoff distance is likely to be longer.
+- B) The glider is wet and has reduced performance.
+- C) The wet grass offers less resistance, which is why the takeoff distance will be shorter.
+- D) The glider may skid sideways (aquaplaning).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a waterlogged grass runway creates greater rolling resistance due to soft ground deformation and water drag on the wheels, slowing acceleration and increasing the takeoff distance. B is wrong because while a wet glider has slightly degraded performance, the primary issue is the runway condition. C is wrong because wet, soft grass increases resistance rather than reducing it. D is wrong because aquaplaning occurs on hard surfaces with standing water, not on soft grass — and the question asks about takeoff distance, not directional control.
+
+### Q40: Which of these statements is correct at a speed of 170 km/h, taking into account the following speed polar? ^t30q40
+> **ASK 21 Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/t30_q40.png]]
+> *Two curves: G=470 kp (light mass, min sink rate ~0.657 m/s at ~75 km/h) and G=570 kp (heavy mass, min sink rate ~0.724 m/s). The best glide ratio is read from the tangent from the origin. At 170 km/h, the sink rate is higher for G=570 kp than for G=470 kp.*
+- A) Regardless of the mass of the ASK21, the sink rate stays constant.
+- B) As the mass of the ASK21 rises, the sink rate increases.
+- C) As the mass of the ASK21 increases, the sink rate increases.
+- D) As the mass of the ASK21 decreases, the glide angle improves.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because at 170 km/h, reading both polar curves, the heavier configuration (570 kp) shows a higher sink rate than the lighter one (470 kp). A heavier glider requires more lift to maintain flight, producing greater induced drag and therefore a higher sink rate at any given speed. A is wrong because the two curves clearly show different sink rates at 170 km/h. B and C state the same thing — sink rate increases with mass — which is correct. D is wrong because at high speeds the glide angle is not necessarily better at lower mass.
+
+### Q41: Which is the speed at the minimum sink rate in still air for a mass of 450 kg? ^t30q41
+> **Speed Polar (AIRSPEED):**
+> ![[figures/t30_q41.png]]
+> *Two curves: 450 kg and 580 kg. The minimum sink rate (top of the curve) for 450 kg is at approximately 75 km/h. The 580 kg curve is shifted to the right (higher speeds) and downward (greater sink rate).*
+- A) 75 km/h
+- B) 95 km/h
+- C) 50 km/h
+- D) 140 km/h
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the minimum sink rate speed corresponds to the highest point on the speed polar curve — where the sink rate is smallest. For 450 kg, this peak occurs at approximately 75 km/h. This speed maximises flight endurance in still air and is optimal for centring thermals. B (95 km/h) would be closer to the best-glide speed or the minimum-sink speed at higher mass. C (50 km/h) is below the stall speed. D (140 km/h) is far into the high-speed range where sink rate is much greater.
+
+### Q42: From what altitude on the route between Murten (approx. N46°56'/E007°07') and Neuchâtel aerodrome (approx. N46°57'/E006°52') are you required to request permission to cross the PAYERNE TMA? ^t30q42
+- A) 950 m AMSL (3100 ft).
+- B) 3050 m AMSL (FL 100).
+- C) 700 m AMSL (2300 ft).
+- D) At any altitude since the lower limit of the TMA is represented by the ground surface (GND).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because on the route between Murten and Neuchatel, the relevant sector of the PAYERNE TMA has a lower limit at 700 m AMSL (2300 ft). Below this altitude, flight can proceed in uncontrolled airspace without clearance. Above 700 m AMSL, ATC authorisation is required. A (950 m) does not match the published boundary. B (FL 100) is far too high — that is the upper limit of some TMAs, not the lower limit here. D is wrong because the TMA does not extend to the ground in this sector.
+
+### Q43: In which airspace class are you flying at 1400 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa) over Birrfeld aerodrome (47°25'36"N/007°14'02"E), and what are the visibility and cloud distance minima in that airspace? ^t30q43
+- A) Airspace class E, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- B) Airspace class D, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- C) Airspace class G, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with permanent ground contact.
+- D) Airspace class C, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 1400 m AMSL over Birrfeld, you are in Class E airspace. VFR minima in Class E require 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. B is wrong because Class D applies within specific CTRs or TMAs, not over Birrfeld at this altitude. C is wrong because Class G applies below a certain altitude and has reduced minima. D is wrong because Class C begins at a higher altitude in this area (typically FL 130 in Switzerland).
+
+### Q44: The route shown below towards SCHWYZ (dotted line) is planned for 20 June 2015 (summer time) between 1515–1545 LT at 6500 ft AMSL. Which of the following statements is correct? ^t30q44
+> **DABS — Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland (extract)**
+> ![[figures/t30_q44.png]]
+
+| Firing-Nr D-/R-Area NOTAM-Nr | Validity UTC | Lower Limit AMSL or FL | Upper Limit AMSL or FL | Location | Center Point | Covering Radius | Activity / Remarks |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| B0685/14 | 0000–2359 | 900m / 3000ft | FL 130 | SION TMA SECT 1 | 461610N 0072940E | 4.7 KM / 2.5 NM | TMA SECT 1 ACT HX ONLY |
+| W0912/15 | 1145–1300 | GND | FL 120 | MORGARTEN | 470507N 0083758E | 10.0 KM / 5.4 NM | R-AREA ACT. ENTRY PROHIBITED. FOR INFO CTC ZURICH INFO 124.7 |
+| W0957/15 | 1400–1700 | 2150m / 7000ft | FL 120 | HINWIL | 471721N 0084859E | 7.0 KM / 3.8 NM | TEMPO R-AREA ACTIVE. ENTRY PROHIBITED. CTC 118.975 |
+| W0960/15 | 0800–1700 | GND | 1200m / 4050ft | 1.7 KM SE CERNIER | 470352N 0065442E | 1.5 KM / 0.8 NM | D-AREA ACT |
+- A) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+- B) You can ignore the DABS as it only applies to commercial aviation.
+- C) You can pass through all relevant danger and restricted areas below 1000 ft AGL or above 12,000 ft AMSL.
+- D) The route can be flown without coordination between 1500 and 1600 LT.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D. On 20 June 2015 (CEST = UTC+2), the planned time of 1515-1545 LT corresponds to 1315-1345 UTC. Zone W0912/15 (MORGARTEN) was active 1145-1300 UTC and has already expired. Zone W0957/15 (HINWIL) activates at 1400 UTC (1600 LT) — it is not yet active. The route can therefore be flown without coordination between 1500 and 1600 LT. A is wrong because the route is flyable during the given time window. B is wrong because the DABS applies to all airspace users including gliders. C is wrong because it incorrectly suggests blanket altitude-based exemptions.
+
+### Q45: According to the ICAO aeronautical chart at 1:500,000, at what altitude over Schwyz (approx. 47°01' N, 8°39' E) must you request permission to enter Class C airspace? ^t30q45
+- A) FL 90
+- B) 4500 ft
+- C) FL 130
+- D) FL 195
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because over Schwyz, the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart shows Class C airspace beginning at FL 130. Below FL 130, the airspace is Class E. Entering Class C requires ATC clearance regardless of flight rules. A (FL 90) is below the actual boundary. B (4500 ft) is far too low and in uncontrolled airspace. D (FL 195) is the upper limit of Swiss controlled airspace, not the lower limit of Class C over Schwyz.
+
+### Q46: Until what time is La Côte aerodrome (LSGP) open in the evening? ^t30q46
+> **AD INFO 1 — LA CÔTE / LSGP**
+> ![[figures/t30_q46.png]]
+
+| Data | Value |
+|--------|--------|
+| ICAO | LSGP |
+| Elevation | 1352 ft (412 m) |
+| ARP | 46°24'23"N / 006°15'28"E |
+| Runway | 04 / 22 — true/mag: 041°/040° and 221°/220° |
+| Dimensions | 560 x 30 m — GRASS |
+| LDG distance available | 490 m |
+| TKOF distance available | 490 m |
+| SFC strength | 0.25 MPa |
+| Status | Private — Airfield, **PPR** |
+| Location | 25 km NE Geneva |
+| Hours MON–FRI | 0700–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+| Hours SAT/SUN | 0800–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+| ECT reference | → VFG RAC 1-1 |
+
+> *ECT = End of Civil Twilight. The aerodrome closes 30 minutes before end of civil twilight.*
+- A) Until half an hour before the start of civil twilight.
+- B) Until half an hour before sunset.
+- C) Until half an hour before the end of civil twilight.
+- D) Until the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the AD INFO sheet for LSGP shows afternoon hours as "1400-ECT -30 min," meaning the aerodrome closes 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight. A is wrong because it references the start of civil twilight, not the end. B is wrong because sunset occurs earlier than the end of civil twilight. D is wrong because the aerodrome closes 30 minutes before ECT, not at ECT itself.
+
+### Q47: On which frequency do you receive information about winch launches at Gruyères aerodrome (LSGT) at weekends? ^t30q47
+> **Visual Approach Chart — GRUYÈRES / LSGT**
+> ![[figures/t30_q47.png]]
+> AD **124.675** — PPR — ELEV 2257 ft (688 m)
+
+> *Key chart data (altitudes in ft, magnetic headings):*
+
+| Data | Value |
+|--------|--------|
+| ICAO | LSGT |
+| AD Frequency | **124.675 MHz** |
+| Elevation | 2257 ft (688 m) |
+| Status | PPR |
+| Minimum AD overfly altitude (MNM ALT) | **4000 ft** |
+| Glider ARR/DEP sector W (GLD ARR/DEP W) | **MAX 3100 ft** |
+| Glider ARR/DEP sector E (GLD ARR/DEP E) | **MAX 3600 ft** |
+| HEL ARR/DEP | 3000 ft |
+| Preferred ARR sectors | WEST and EAST |
+| CTN (cross-country traffic) | 3000 ft |
+| MNM AD overfly | 4000 ft |
+| Class C airspace above | FL 100 / 119.175 GENEVA DELTA |
+| Winch launches | Intensive SAT/SUN (CTN: Intense winch launching SAT/SUN) |
+| Nearby VOR/DME | SPR R076, 113.9 MHz |
+
+> *Noise-sensitive areas (yellow) around Bulle/Broc. Avoid overflying the field during PJE (parachute dropping). Contact RTF 5 min before ETA.*
+- A) 113.9
+- B) 124.675
+- C) 119.175
+- D) 110.85
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (124.675 MHz) because this is the aerodrome frequency shown on the Visual Approach Chart for LSGT Gruyeres. Local traffic information, including intensive winch launching activity on weekends, is broadcast on this frequency. A (113.9) is the VOR/DME SPR navigation frequency. C (119.175) is the Geneva Delta sector frequency for Class C airspace above. D (110.85) is not shown on this chart and does not relate to LSGT operations.
+
+### Q48: What distance do you cover in 90 minutes at a ground speed of 90 km/h? ^t30q48
+- A) 90 km
+- B) 135 km
+- C) 100 km
+- D) 120 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because distance = speed x time. Ground speed = 90 km/h, time = 90 minutes = 1.5 hours. Distance = 90 x 1.5 = 135 km. A (90 km) results from incorrectly using 1 hour instead of 1.5 hours. C (100 km) and D (120 km) do not correspond to any correct calculation. Remember to convert minutes to hours before multiplying: 90 minutes = 1.5 hours, not 0.9 hours.
+
+### Q49: At an altitude of 6000 m, the airspeed indicator shows 160 km/h (IAS). The true airspeed (TAS)… ^t30q49
+- A) is lower than the IAS.
+- B) is also 160 km/h.
+- C) can be higher or lower than the IAS depending on atmospheric pressure and temperature.
+- D) is higher than the IAS.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which depends on air density. At 6000 m, air density is significantly lower than at sea level. For the pitot tube to register the same dynamic pressure (same IAS), the aircraft must be moving faster through the thinner air. TAS increases by approximately 2% per 300 m of altitude gain, so at 6000 m, TAS is roughly 40% higher than IAS. A is wrong because TAS is always higher than IAS at altitude. B is wrong because they only equal each other at sea level in ISA conditions. C is wrong because at any altitude above sea level, TAS is always higher than IAS.
+
+### Q50: You are flying in wave lift at 6000 m altitude. Which is the maximum speed you may fly? ^t30q50
+- A) In the low-density air, at a higher speed than usual.
+- B) Below the red V_NE mark on the airspeed indicator, according to the speed-altitude table displayed on the instrument panel.
+- C) At the same speed as at sea level since V_NE is an absolute value.
+- D) Maximum within the green arc.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because at high altitude the true airspeed corresponding to a given IAS is much higher, and it is the TAS that determines aerodynamic loads on the structure. Glider flight manuals provide a speed-altitude table (or V_NE reduction curve) displayed in the cockpit, giving the corrected maximum IAS at each altitude. At 6000 m, the allowable IAS is lower than the sea-level V_NE mark. A is wrong because you must fly slower (lower IAS), not faster. C is wrong because V_NE as indicated must be reduced with altitude. D is wrong because the green arc alone does not account for altitude corrections.
+
+### Q51: 1235 lbs (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs):... ^t30q51
+- A) approx. 620 kg.
+- B) approx. 2720 kg.
+- C) approx. 560 kg.
+- D) approx. 2470 kg.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because to convert pounds to kilograms, divide by 2.2: 1235 / 2.2 = 561.4 kg, which rounds to approximately 560 kg. A (620 kg) would correspond to about 1364 lbs. B (2720 kg) results from multiplying instead of dividing. D (2470 kg) is also the result of a multiplication error. The key formula is: mass in kg = weight in lbs / 2.2.
+
+### Q52: What has to be particularly observed when landing on an upsloping field with a tailwind? ^t30q52
+- A) Fly final a little faster than usual.
+- B) Flare higher than usual.
+- C) Fly at the normal approach speed (yellow triangle).
+- D) You must land with all airbrakes fully extended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because on an upsloping field with a tailwind, the competing effects partially cancel each other: the upslope shortens the ground roll while the tailwind lengthens it. The normal approach speed (yellow triangle on the ASI) provides the correct balance of energy management. A is wrong because a faster approach would result in excessive float on the upslope. B is wrong because flaring higher risks ballooning on the slope. D is wrong because full airbrakes may cause an excessively steep descent on short final.
+
+### Q53: In which airspace class are you above Langenthal aerodrome (47 deg 10'58''N / 007 deg 44'29''E) at an altitude of 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^t30q53
+- A) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- B) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- C) Class D airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 2000 m AMSL above Langenthal, you are in Class E airspace. VFR flight in Class E requires 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. B is wrong because Class G with its reduced minima applies only at very low altitudes. C is wrong because there is no Class D TMA at this location and altitude. D is wrong because Class C begins at FL 130 in this region, far above 2000 m AMSL.
+
+### Q54: Which center of gravity position is the most dangerous for a glider? ^t30q54
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too low.
+- C) Too far aft.
+- D) Too high.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when the C.G. is too far aft, the glider loses longitudinal static stability — the nose tends to pitch up without returning to equilibrium, potentially leading to uncontrollable divergent oscillations or a stall/spin. A (too far forward) is less dangerous because the aircraft remains stable, though elevator authority may be insufficient for landing. B and D are wrong because vertical C.G. displacement is not the primary concern in standard glider mass-and-balance analysis.
+
+### Q55: How does the indicated VNE (never-exceed speed) change as altitude increases? ^t30q55
+- A) It rises.
+- B) It decreases.
+- C) It stays the same; the airspeed indicator accounts for this automatically.
+- D) It diminishes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which inherently accounts for air density. The V_NE marking on the ASI (red line) represents a fixed IAS value that corresponds to the structural limit. However, note that the allowable maximum IAS must actually be reduced at high altitude per the flight manual's speed-altitude table — the ASI marking itself does not change, but the pilot must observe a lower limit. A and B/D are wrong because the physical mark on the instrument does not move. The subtlety is that while the ASI reading mechanism inherently accounts for density, glider pilots must consult the altitude-correction table for the actual limit at high altitude.
+
+### Q56: You have covered a distance of 150 km in 1 hour and 15 minutes. Your calculated ground speed is:... ^t30q56
+- A) 125 km/h.
+- B) 115 km/h.
+- C) 120 km/h.
+- D) 110 km/h.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because ground speed = distance / time = 150 km / 1.25 hours = 120 km/h. The key step is converting 1 hour 15 minutes to decimal hours: 15 minutes = 0.25 hours, so total time = 1.25 hours. A (125 km/h) results from dividing by 1.2 hours. B (115 km/h) and D (110 km/h) do not correspond to any correct calculation with these inputs.
+
+### Q57: The following NOTAM was published on 18 August (summer time). Which of the following statements is correct? ^t30q57
+![[figures/t30_q57.png]]
+- A) The extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be strictly avoided every day from 02 to 06 September 2013, between sunrise and sunset.
+- B) An airshow is taking place in the Payerne area from 02 to 06 September 2013. The TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 are active each day during this period between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC as holding areas and airshow demonstration sectors.
+- C) Due to an airshow from 02 to 06 September 2013, the extended CTR/TMA Payerne is active each day between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC. The TMA is used as a holding area, the restricted zone LS-R4 as a demonstration and holding area. The area must be strictly avoided.
+- D) Due to an airshow, a transit clearance for the extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be requested on frequency 135.475 (Payerne TWR) from 02 to 06 September 2013.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the NOTAM establishes that from 2 to 6 September 2013, between 0600 and 1500 UTC, the extended CTR/TMA Payerne is activated as a holding area, while LS-R4 serves as both a demonstration and holding area for an airshow. These areas must be strictly avoided during the active period. A is wrong because the times are 0600-1500 UTC, not sunrise to sunset. B incorrectly states both areas serve as holding and demonstration areas. D is wrong because transit is not permitted — the area must be avoided entirely, not transited with clearance.
+
+### Q58: Which is the best glide speed in calm air for a flying mass of 450 kg? See attached sheet. ^t30q58
+![[figures/t30_q58.png]]
+- A) 95km/h
+- B) 75km/h
+- C) 55km/h
+- D) 135km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (75 km/h) because the best glide speed is found by drawing a tangent from the origin to the speed polar curve for 450 kg. The point where this tangent touches the curve gives the speed for maximum lift-to-drag ratio (best glide). A (95 km/h) is too fast and would correspond to a heavier mass or a different polar. C (55 km/h) is near the stall speed. D (135 km/h) is deep in the high-speed range where the glide ratio is significantly reduced.
+
+### Q59: A VFR flight will follow the route shown on the map below (dotted line) from APPENZELL towards MUOTATHAL. The route is planned for 19 March 2013 (winter time) between 1205 and 1255 LT. Answer using the DABS below. Which of these answers is correct? ^t30q59
+![[figures/t30_q59.png]]
+- A) The DABS can be ignored as it solely applies to military aircraft.
+- B) You may pass through all relevant danger and restricted zones below 1000 ft AGL or above 10,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) The route can be flown without coordination between 1200 and 1300 LT.
+- D) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because checking the DABS for 19 March 2013 (winter time, CET = UTC+1), the planned time of 1205-1255 LT converts to 1105-1155 UTC. During this period, the relevant danger and restricted zones along the route are not active, allowing the route to be flown without coordination. A is wrong because the DABS applies to all airspace users, including gliders. B is wrong because altitude-based exemptions do not automatically apply to all restricted areas. D is wrong because the route is flyable during the specified time window.
+
+### Q60: Wing loading is increased by 40% by water ballast. By what percentage does the glider's minimum speed increase? ^t30q60
+- A) 18%.
+- B) 40%.
+- C) 100%.
+- D) 0%.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because stall speed (and therefore minimum speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading. If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), the new minimum speed is the original multiplied by the square root of 1.4, which equals approximately 1.183 — an increase of about 18.3%. B is wrong because the speed does not increase linearly with wing loading. C is wrong because a 100% increase would mean doubling the speed. D is wrong because any mass increase raises the minimum speed.
+
+### Q61: Based on the polar below, which statement applies at a speed of 150 km/h? See attached sheet... ^t30q61
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) the sink rate of the ASK21 is independent of its mass
+- B) the ASK21 has a worse glide ratio at lower flying mass
+- C) the ASK21 has a higher sink rate at higher flying mass
+- D) the ASK21 has a better glide ratio at lower flying mass
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 150 km/h, the two polar curves for different masses of the ASK21 intersect, meaning both configurations have the same sink rate at this particular speed. This is an aerodynamic property of the polar: the curves cross at one speed where mass has no effect on sink rate. B is wrong because at 150 km/h the glide ratio is equal for both masses. C is wrong because the sink rates are identical at this intersection point. D is also wrong because neither mass has a better glide ratio at this specific speed.
+
+### Q62: At Amlikon aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading East? ^t30q62
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (780 m) because the AIP chart for Amlikon aerodrome shows a maximum landing distance available of 780 metres in the eastward direction. A and C are wrong because landing distances in Switzerland are given in metres, not feet. D (700 m) does not match the published data for the eastward heading. Always verify the unit and the specific runway direction when reading aerodrome charts.
+
+### Q63: From what altitude must you request a transit clearance for the EMMEN TMA between Cham (approx. N47 deg 11' / E008 deg 28') and Hitzkirch (approx. N47 deg 14' / E008 deg 16')? ^t30q63
+![[figures/t30_q63.png]]
+- A) 2400 ft AMSL.
+- B) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 2000ft GND.
+- D) 5000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the EMMEN TMA lower boundary between Cham and Hitzkirch is at 3500 ft AMSL. Below this altitude, you remain in uncontrolled airspace and no clearance is needed. Above 3500 ft AMSL, you enter the TMA and must obtain an ATC clearance. A (2400 ft) is too low and does not correspond to the published limit. C (2000 ft GND) references above ground level, which is not how this TMA boundary is expressed. D (5000 ft) is too high.
+
+### Q64: The maximum permitted payload is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t30q64
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Increase takeoff speed by 10%.
+- C) Trim forward.
+- D) Reduce the payload.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when the maximum permitted payload is exceeded, the only correct action is to reduce the payload until it complies with the limit. The maximum payload is a certification limit based on structural strength and C.G. envelope. A and C are wrong because trimming adjusts aerodynamic forces on the tail but does not change the aircraft's mass or C.G. — it cannot make an overloaded aircraft safe. B is wrong because increasing takeoff speed does not solve an overweight condition and may actually overstress the structure further.
+
+### Q65: Which is the effect of wind on the glide angle over the ground if the aircraft's true airspeed remains constant? ^t30q65
+- A) With a tailwind, the glide angle increases.
+- B) With a headwind, the glide angle decreases.
+- C) Wind has no effect on the glide angle.
+- D) With a headwind, the glide angle rises.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because a headwind reduces groundspeed while the sink rate in the airmass remains unchanged. Since the glider covers less horizontal ground distance per unit of altitude lost, the descent angle relative to the ground steepens (increases). A is wrong because a tailwind decreases (flattens) the glide angle over the ground by increasing groundspeed. B is wrong because a headwind increases, not decreases, the ground glide angle. C is wrong because wind significantly affects the ground track glide angle, even though it does not affect the airmass glide angle.
+
+### Q66: How does indicated airspeed (IAS) compare to true airspeed (TAS) as altitude increases? ^t30q66
+- A) It rises.
+- B) It decreases.
+- C) It cannot be measured.
+- D) It stays identical.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because as altitude increases, air density decreases. For the same true airspeed, the pitot tube measures less dynamic pressure, so the IAS reading is lower than TAS. Conversely, to maintain the same IAS at altitude, the aircraft must fly at a higher TAS. The relationship is approximately TAS = IAS x square root of (sea-level density / actual density). A is wrong because IAS does not rise relative to TAS with altitude. C is wrong because IAS can always be measured. D is wrong because IAS and TAS diverge increasingly with altitude.
+
+### Q67: What has to be particularly observed when landing in heavy rain? ^t30q67
+- A) Approach speed must be increased.
+- B) Wing loading must be increased.
+- C) The approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) Approach speed must be lower than usual.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because heavy rain on the wing surface increases roughness and can degrade the boundary layer, potentially raising the stall speed and reducing maximum lift coefficient. A higher approach speed provides a safety margin against these effects. B is wrong because deliberately increasing wing loading in rain would require adding ballast, which is impractical and counterproductive. C is wrong because a shallower approach reduces obstacle clearance in poor visibility. D is wrong because a lower approach speed reduces the safety margin when aerodynamic degradation is already a risk.
+
+### Q68: What must a glider pilot take into account at Bex aerodrome? ^t30q68
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is clockwise.
+- B) The traffic pattern for runway 15 is clockwise.
+- C) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is counter-clockwise.
+- D) Depending on wind, the traffic pattern for runway 33 may be either clockwise or counter-clockwise.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at Bex aerodrome, terrain constraints (the Rhone valley and surrounding mountains) mean the traffic pattern direction for runway 33 depends on the prevailing wind conditions. The chart shows that either a left or right circuit may be used. A is wrong because it limits the pattern to clockwise only. B relates to runway 15, not 33. C is wrong because it limits the pattern to counter-clockwise only. Pilots must check the local procedures and wind conditions before joining the circuit.
+
+### Q69: What is the maximum flying altitude above Biel Kappelen aerodrome (SE of Biel) if you wish to avoid requesting a transit clearance for TMA BERN 1? ^t30q69
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the lower limit of TMA BERN 1 over Biel Kappelen is 3500 ft AMSL. By staying below this altitude, you remain in uncontrolled airspace and do not need a transit clearance. A (3500 ft AGL) is wrong because TMA boundaries are referenced to MSL, not AGL. B (FL 100) is far above the relevant boundary. C (FL 35) converts to approximately 3500 ft in standard atmosphere, but flight levels use the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa), not QNH, so this is not the correct way to express the limit.
+
+### Q70: Which of these statements is correct? ^t30q70
+- A) New C.G: 76.7, within approved limits.
+- B) New C.G: 78.5, within approved limits.
+- C) New C.G: 82.0, outside approved limits.
+- D) New C.G: 75.5, outside approved limits.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because applying the mass-and-balance calculation with the data provided (from the attached sheet), the new C.G. position computes to 76.7, which falls within the approved forward and aft C.G. limits. B (78.5) is an incorrect calculation result. C (82.0) is too far aft and would be outside limits. D (75.5) is incorrectly calculated and would also fall outside the forward limit. Always verify your calculation by checking whether the result is between the published forward and aft limits.
+
+### Q71: What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on landing? ^t30q71
+- A) Landing distance will be shorter.
+- B) Landing distance will be longer.
+- C) The glider risks running off the runway (groundloop).
+- D) No effect.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a waterlogged grass surface creates greater friction and drag on the landing gear during the ground roll, causing the glider to decelerate faster and stop in a shorter distance. The water acts as a braking medium. B is wrong because wet grass increases, not decreases, rolling resistance for a glider. C is wrong because while directional control may be slightly affected, the primary effect is shortened stopping distance. D is wrong because surface conditions always affect landing distance.
+
+### Q72: At Schänis aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading NNW? ^t30q72
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (470 m) because the AIP chart for Schanis aerodrome shows a maximum landing distance available of 470 metres in the NNW direction. A (520 m) does not match the published data for this heading. C and D are wrong because Swiss aerodrome distances are given in metres, not feet. Always read the correct runway direction and corresponding distance from the aerodrome chart.
+
+### Q73: The current mass of an aircraft is 6400 lbs. Current CG: 80. CG limits: forward CG: 75.2, aft CG: 80.5. What mass can be moved from its current position to arm 150 without exceeding the aft CG limit? ^t30q73
+- A) 27.82 lbs.
+- B) 56.63 lbs.
+- C) 39.45 lbs.
+- D) 45.71 lbs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D (45.71 lbs). The calculation uses the shift formula: when mass x is moved from the current C.G. position (80) to arm 150, the C.G. shifts aft. The new C.G. must not exceed 80.5. Using the formula: delta CG = (x × delta arm) / total mass, we get: 0.5 = (x × 70) / 6400, therefore x = (0.5 × 6400) / 70 = 45.71 lbs. A (27.82), B (56.63), and C (39.45) result from incorrect calculations using wrong distances or mass values.
+
+### Q74: Correct loading of an aircraft depends on:... ^t30q74
+- A) Only compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- B) Only correct payload distribution.
+- C) Correct payload distribution and compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- D) The maximum allowable mass of baggage in the aft section of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because correct loading requires satisfying two independent conditions simultaneously: the total mass must not exceed the maximum allowable mass (MTOM), and the payload must be distributed so that the C.G. remains within the approved envelope. A is wrong because respecting the mass limit alone does not guarantee the C.G. is within limits. B is wrong because correct distribution alone does not ensure the total mass is within limits. D is wrong because it addresses only one specific baggage compartment rather than the complete loading requirements.
+
+### Q75: What information can be read from this speed polar? (See attached sheet.)... ^t30q75
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) in the speed range up to 100 km/h, an increase in flying mass reduces the sink rate.
+- B) minimum speed is independent of flying mass.
+- C) both glide ratio and minimum speed are independent of flying mass.
+- D) only the maximum glide ratio is independent of flying mass, apart from a minor Reynolds number effect.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when comparing polar curves for different masses, the tangent from the origin touches each curve at the same angle, meaning the maximum lift-to-drag ratio (best glide ratio) is essentially unchanged by mass, apart from minor Reynolds number effects. However, the speed at which this best glide ratio occurs increases with mass. A is wrong because increasing mass always increases the sink rate at any given speed. B is wrong because minimum speed increases with mass (proportional to the square root of mass ratio). C is wrong because while glide ratio is mass-independent, minimum speed is not.
+
+### Q76: At what indicated speed do you approach an aerodrome located at an altitude of 1800 m AMSL? ^t30q76
+- A) At the same speed as at sea level.
+- B) At a lower speed than at sea level.
+- C) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- D) At a higher speed than at sea level.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which directly relates to aerodynamic forces regardless of altitude. At 1800 m AMSL, air density is lower, so the TAS will be higher for the same IAS — but the aerodynamic forces (lift, stall characteristics) depend on IAS, not TAS. Therefore, the same indicated approach speed provides the same safety margins as at sea level. B is wrong because flying at a lower IAS would reduce the stall margin. D is wrong because a higher IAS is unnecessary and would result in excessive float. C is wrong because the minimum sink speed is not the correct approach speed.
+
+### Q77: At what speed must you fly to achieve the best glide ratio for a flying mass of 450 kg? (See attached sheet.)... ^t30q77
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130km/h
+- B) 90km/h
+- C) 70km/h
+- D) 110km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (90 km/h) because the best glide ratio speed is found where the tangent from the origin touches the speed polar curve for 450 kg. For this glider type at 450 kg, this occurs at approximately 90 km/h. A (130 km/h) is too fast — at this speed the glide ratio is significantly reduced. C (70 km/h) is closer to the minimum sink speed, which maximises endurance but not distance. D (110 km/h) would give a reduced glide ratio compared to the optimum.
+
+### Q78: The maximum aft CG limit is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t30q78
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) As long as the maximum takeoff mass is not exceeded, no particular action is required.
+- C) Redistribute the useful load differently.
+- D) Trim forward.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when the aft C.G. limit is exceeded, the useful load must be redistributed to move mass forward — for example, adding nose ballast, repositioning equipment, or adjusting the pilot's seating position. This physically moves the C.G. within approved limits. A is wrong because trimming aft would worsen the situation aerodynamically. B is wrong because being within mass limits does not compensate for a C.G. out of limits — both must be satisfied independently. D is wrong because trim adjusts aerodynamic forces but does not change the actual C.G. position.
+
+### Q79: Which factors increase the aerotow takeoff run distance? ^t30q79
+- A) Low temperature, headwind.
+- B) Grass runway, strong headwind.
+- C) High atmospheric pressure.
+- D) High temperature, tailwind.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because high temperature reduces air density, decreasing the lift generated at any given groundspeed, requiring a longer acceleration to reach flying speed. A tailwind reduces the headwind component, meaning the aircraft needs a higher groundspeed to achieve the same airspeed, further lengthening the takeoff run. A is wrong because low temperature increases air density (more lift) and headwind shortens the run. B is wrong because a strong headwind shortens the takeoff distance. C is wrong because high atmospheric pressure increases density, which helps rather than hinders takeoff performance.
+
+### Q80: The following NOTAM was published for 18 November. Which of these statements is correct? ^t30q80
+![[figures/t30_q80.png]]
+- A) On 18 November, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: Class E airspace, upper limit: max. FL150.
+- B) On 18 November from 1800 LT to 2100 LT, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas.
+- C) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise with helicopters will take place.
+- D) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: GND, upper limit: max. 15,000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the NOTAM specifies a military night flying exercise on 18 November from 1800 to 2100 UTC in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN, and TICINO areas, with vertical limits from GND to 15,000 ft AMSL. A is wrong because the lower limit is GND, not Class E airspace, and the upper limit is 15,000 ft AMSL, not FL150. B is wrong because the times are in UTC, not local time. C is wrong because it incorrectly specifies helicopter-only operations and omits the geographic areas.
+
+### Q81: What is the maximum permitted flying altitude within the CTR of Bern-Belp airport? ^t30q81
+![[figures/t30_q81.png]]
+- A) 5500 ft GND.
+- B) 4500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 5000 ft AMSL
+- D) 3000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the CTR (Control Zone) of Bern-Belp airport has an upper limit of 3000 ft AMSL. Above this altitude, you exit the CTR and enter different airspace. A (5500 ft GND) does not match the published limit. B (4500 ft AMSL) is too high. C (5000 ft AMSL) is also too high. VFR flight within the CTR requires a clearance from Bern Tower and must remain below the published upper limit.
+
+### Q82: In which airspace class are you above BEX aerodrome at an altitude of 1700 m AMSL, and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^t30q82
+![[figures/t30_q82.png]]
+- A) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- B) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 8 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- C) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at 1700 m AMSL above Bex aerodrome, you are in Class E airspace. VFR minima in Class E require 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. A is wrong because Class G applies at lower altitudes with reduced requirements. B is wrong because Class C has the right visibility minimum (5 km in Switzerland, not 8 km) but starts at a much higher altitude. C is wrong for the same airspace classification reason — Class C begins at FL 130, well above 1700 m.
+
+### Q83: Which is the sink rate at 160 km/h for this glider at a flying mass of 580 kg? (See attached sheet.) ^t30q83
+![[figures/t30_q83.png]]
+- A) 1,6m/s
+- B) 0,8m/s
+- C) 2,0m/s
+- D) 1,2m/s
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (2.0 m/s) because reading the speed polar curve for a flying mass of 580 kg at 160 km/h, the sink rate is approximately 2.0 m/s. A (1.6 m/s) would correspond to a lighter mass or lower speed. B (0.8 m/s) is near the minimum sink rate at much lower speed. D (1.2 m/s) is also too low for this speed and mass combination. When reading a speed polar, always identify the correct curve for the given mass before reading the value at the specified speed.
+
+### Q84: 550 kg (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs):... ^t30q84
+- A) approx. 12,100 lbs.
+- B) approx. 1210 lbs.
+- C) approx. 2500 lbs.
+- D) approx. 250 lbs.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because to convert kilograms to pounds, multiply by 2.2: 550 x 2.2 = 1,210 lbs. A (12,100 lbs) results from multiplying by 22 instead of 2.2. C (2,500 lbs) does not correspond to any correct calculation. D (250 lbs) results from dividing instead of multiplying. The key formula is: weight in lbs = mass in kg x 2.2.
+
+### Q85: At what speed must a glider fly in calm air to cover the maximum possible distance? ^t30q85
+- A) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- B) At the maximum allowed speed.
+- C) At minimum flying speed.
+- D) At the best glide ratio speed.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the best glide ratio speed (also called best L/D speed) maximises the horizontal distance covered per unit of altitude lost in still air. This speed is found on the polar curve where the tangent from the origin touches the curve. A is wrong because minimum sink speed maximises endurance (time aloft), not distance. B is wrong because maximum speed produces the worst glide ratio due to high parasite drag. C is wrong because minimum flying speed is near the stall and gives a poor glide ratio due to high induced drag.
+
+### Q86: The mass of a glider is increased. Which parameter will NOT be affected by this increase? ^t30q86
+- A) Maximum glide ratio (apart from a minor Reynolds number effect).
+- B) Wing loading.
+- C) Sink rate.
+- D) Indicated airspeed (IAS).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the maximum glide ratio (best L/D) is essentially independent of mass — both the lift coefficient and drag coefficient at the optimal angle of attack remain the same, so their ratio is unchanged. Only a minor Reynolds number effect exists. B is wrong because wing loading = mass / wing area, which directly increases with mass. C is wrong because sink rate increases with mass at any given speed. D is wrong because the speeds corresponding to best glide and minimum sink both increase with mass.
+
+### Q87: How long does it take to cover a distance of 150 km at an average ground speed of 100 km/h? ^t30q87
+- A) 1 hour 50 minutes.
+- B) 1 hour 40 minutes.
+- C) 2 hours.
+- D) 1 hour 30 minutes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because time = distance / speed = 150 km / 100 km/h = 1.5 hours = 1 hour 30 minutes. A (1 hour 50 minutes) would correspond to a distance of about 183 km. B (1 hour 40 minutes = 1.667 hours) would correspond to about 167 km. C (2 hours) would correspond to 200 km. The calculation is straightforward: 150 / 100 = 1.5 hours. Convert the decimal 0.5 hours to 30 minutes.
+
+### Q88: When preparing an alpine VFR flight along the route shown on the map below (dotted line) between MUNSTER and AMSTEG, you consult the DABS. You intend to fly this route on a summer weekday between 1445-1515 LT. According to the DABS, zones R-8 and R-8A are active during this period. Answer using the DABS map below and the ICAO aeronautical chart 1:500,000 Switzerland. Which of these answers is correct? ^t30q88
+![[figures/t30_q88.png]]
+- A) The route can be flown without restriction after contacting 128.375 MHz.
+- B) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be transited below 28,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) It is not possible to fly this route while the restricted zones are active.
+- D) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be overflown at 9200 ft AMSL or above.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A are active, they cover the planned alpine route between Munster and Amsteg, making it impossible to fly through them. Restricted zones with "entry prohibited" status cannot be transited, regardless of altitude or radio contact. A is wrong because radio contact does not grant transit rights through active restricted zones. B is wrong because a 28,000 ft ceiling does not help a glider. D is wrong because overflying at 9,200 ft may still be within the zone's vertical limits.
+
+### Q89: You wish to obtain clearance to transit the ZURICH TMA. What must you do? ^t30q89
+- A) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- B) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- C) First radio contact on frequency 118.975, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- D) First radio contact on frequency 118.1, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because to transit the Zurich TMA, the pilot must make first radio contact on frequency 124.7 MHz (Zurich Information) at least 10 minutes before entering the controlled airspace. This provides ATC sufficient time to assess traffic, issue a clearance or alternative instructions, and ensure separation. B is wrong because 5 minutes is insufficient lead time. C is wrong because 118.975 is not the correct frequency for Zurich TMA transit requests. D is wrong on both the frequency and the lead time.
+
+### Q90: The minimum speed of your glider is 60 kts in straight flight. By what percentage would it increase in a steep turn with a bank angle of 60 deg (load factor n = 2.0)? ^t30q90
+- A) approx. 40%.
+- B) 0%.
+- C) approx. 5%.
+- D) approx. 20%.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because in a turn, the stall speed increases by the square root of the load factor: Vs_turn = Vs_straight x sqrt(n). With n = 2.0: Vs_turn = 60 x sqrt(2) = 60 x 1.414 = 84.85 kts. The increase is (84.85 - 60) / 60 x 100 = 41.4%, which rounds to approximately 40%. B is wrong because the stall speed always increases in a turn. C (5%) and D (20%) significantly underestimate the effect. This relationship between bank angle, load factor, and stall speed is fundamental to safe manoeuvring flight.
+
+### Q91: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1... ^t30q91
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- D) 1.500 ft GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because restricted airspace areas (LO R) on aeronautical charts express their limits using standard altitude references. LO R 16 has an upper limit of 1,500 ft MSL (mean sea level), which is a fixed, absolute altitude. A is wrong because 1,500 m MSL would be approximately 4,900 ft — a completely different altitude that confuses feet with metres. B is wrong because FL150 (15,000 ft pressure altitude) is far too high for a typical low-level restriction. D is wrong because 1,500 ft GND (above ground level) would vary with terrain elevation and is not the published reference.
+
+### Q92: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2... ^t30q92
+- A) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- B) 4.500 ft MSL
+- C) 1.500 ft AGL
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because LO R 4 has its upper limit at 4,500 ft MSL, a fixed altitude above mean sea level. A is wrong because 4,500 ft AGL (above ground level) would vary with terrain, which is inappropriate for a fixed regulatory boundary. C is wrong because 1,500 ft AGL is both the wrong altitude value and the wrong reference. D is wrong because 1,500 ft MSL is too low and corresponds to a different restricted area (LO R 16).
+
+### Q93: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3... ^t30q93
+- A) Height 9500 ft
+- B) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- C) Flight Level 95
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the NOTAM prohibits overflight up to an altitude of 9,500 ft MSL, following ICAO convention where "altitude" refers to height above mean sea level. A is wrong because "height" in aviation terminology means above a local ground reference (AGL), which is not what the NOTAM specifies. C is wrong because FL 95 is a pressure altitude reference based on 1013.25 hPa, which differs from an MSL altitude depending on actual atmospheric conditions. D is wrong because 9,500 m MSL would be approximately 31,000 ft — clearly inconsistent with a typical VFR NOTAM.
+
+### Q94: (For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4... ^t30q94
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol C in the annex) because ICAO aeronautical chart symbology (defined in ICAO Annex 4) uses specific symbols to distinguish between single and grouped obstacles, and between lighted and unlighted ones. Symbol C represents a group of unlighted obstacles. A (symbol D), C (symbol B), and D (symbol A) represent other obstacle categories such as single obstacles, lighted groups, or lighted single obstacles. Correct identification of these symbols is essential for cross-country flight planning and obstacle avoidance.
+
+### Q95: (For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5... ^t30q95
+- A) D
+- B) A
+- C) C
+- D) B
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol A in the annex) because ICAO chart symbology uses distinct depictions for different aerodrome types — civil versus military, international versus domestic, and paved versus unpaved. Symbol A represents a civil (non-international) airport with a paved runway. A (symbol D), C (symbol C), and D (symbol B) represent other aerodrome categories such as international airports, military aerodromes, or grass-strip airfields. Glider pilots must recognise these symbols when identifying potential emergency landing options.
+
+### Q96: (For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6... ^t30q96
+- A) A
+- B) B
+- C) D
+- D) C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D (symbol C in the annex) because on ICAO aeronautical charts, a general spot elevation is indicated by a specific symbol showing a terrain point of known height, used for situational awareness and terrain clearance planning. A (symbol A), B (symbol B), and C (symbol D) represent other elevation-related markings such as maximum elevation figures, surveyed points, or obstruction elevations defined in ICAO Annex 4.
+
+### Q97: The term center of gravity is defined as… ^t30q97
+- A) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- B) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A. The center of gravity is the single point through which the resultant of all gravitational forces acts on the aircraft — it is the mass-weighted average position of all components. B is wrong because the neutral point is a distinct aerodynamic concept used for stability analysis, not another name for C.G. C duplicates the same incorrect description as A's wording, but the C.G. is defined by mass distribution, not as a geometric midpoint. D is wrong because the C.G. is not the heaviest point — it is where the total weight effectively acts.
+
+### Q98: The term moment with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as… ^t30q98
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in mass-and-balance calculations, moment is defined as the product of mass and balance arm: Moment = Mass x Arm (e.g., in kg-m or lb-in). This follows the physical definition of a torque. The total C.G. is found by summing all moments and dividing by total mass. A is wrong because adding mass and arm is dimensionally meaningless. C is wrong because dividing mass by arm does not produce a moment. D is wrong because subtracting them is equally incorrect.
+
+### Q99: The term balance arm in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the… ^t30q99
+- A) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- B) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm (moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum reference point to the center of gravity of a specific mass item. A is wrong because that describes the datum itself, not the balance arm. B is wrong because balance arms are measured from the datum, not from the overall aircraft C.G. D is wrong because that is the definition of the center of gravity of a mass item, not the balance arm.
+
+### Q100: Which is the purpose of interception lines in visual navigation? ^t30q100
+- A) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- B) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+- C) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- D) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because interception lines (also called catching lines or line features) are prominent linear ground features — motorways, rivers, coastlines, railways — that a pilot selects during pre-flight planning to navigate toward if orientation is lost. By flying toward a known interception line, the pilot can re-establish position and resume navigation. A is wrong because interception lines are geographic features, not airport markers. B is wrong because they are not range indicators. C is wrong because nothing authorises continuing flight below VFR minima — interception lines are a lost-procedure tool, not a visibility workaround.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/40 - Human Performance.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/40 - Human Performance.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f3cc4d8
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/40 - Human Performance.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1165 @@
+# Human Performance
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The majority of aviation accidents are caused by… ^t40q1
+- A) Meteorological influences.
+- B) Human failure.
+- C) Technical failure.
+- D) Geographical influences.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because statistical analyses consistently show that roughly 70-80% of aviation accidents have human error as a primary or contributing cause, including poor judgment, loss of situational awareness, and inadequate decision-making. A is wrong because weather is a contributing factor in some accidents but accounts for a far smaller share than human error. C is wrong because modern aircraft are highly reliable and technical failures cause only a minority of accidents. D is wrong because geographical influences (terrain, obstacles) are environmental factors, not the dominant accident cause.
+
+### Q2: The "swiss cheese model" can be used to explain the… ^t40q2
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- D) Error chain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model shows how accidents result from an error chain — multiple defensive layers (represented as slices of cheese) each have weaknesses ("holes"), and an accident occurs only when these holes align simultaneously to let a hazard pass through all barriers. A is wrong because the model does not address pilot readiness or fitness. B is wrong because it is not a problem-solving tool. C is wrong because it has nothing to do with emergency landing procedures.
+
+### Q3: What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft? ^t40q3
+- A) 18.9 %
+- B) 21 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 12 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the composition of atmospheric gases remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen regardless of altitude — it is the partial pressure of oxygen that decreases as you climb, not the percentage. A is wrong because 18.9% does not correspond to any standard atmospheric value. C is wrong because 78% is the proportion of nitrogen, not oxygen. D is wrong because 12% is far below the actual oxygen fraction at any altitude within the atmosphere.
+
+### Q4: Which is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere? ^t40q4
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 0.1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 1 %
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because nitrogen constitutes approximately 78% of the atmosphere and remains physiologically inert under normal flight conditions, though it becomes relevant in decompression sickness after diving. A is wrong because 21% is the proportion of oxygen. B is wrong because 0.1% is far too low and does not correspond to any major atmospheric gas. D is wrong because 1% represents the approximate total of all trace gases combined, not nitrogen.
+
+### Q5: At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)? ^t40q5
+- A) 5000 ft
+- B) 10000 ft
+- C) 22000 ft
+- D) 18000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at approximately 18,000 ft the atmospheric pressure drops to about 500 hPa, which is roughly half of the standard sea-level value of 1013.25 hPa, and this also means the partial pressure of oxygen is halved. A is wrong because at 5,000 ft the pressure is still about 843 hPa. B is wrong because at 10,000 ft the pressure is approximately 700 hPa. C is wrong because at 22,000 ft the pressure is well below half the sea-level value.
+
+### Q6: Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. Which is the approximate percentage of other gases? ^t40q6
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0.1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because after oxygen (21%) and nitrogen (78%), the remaining approximately 1% consists of trace gases — mainly argon (about 0.93%) with small amounts of carbon dioxide, neon, and helium. A is wrong because 21% is the oxygen proportion. C is wrong because 78% is the nitrogen proportion. D is wrong because 0.1% is too low; argon alone accounts for nearly 1%.
+
+### Q7: Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by… ^t40q7
+- A) Little sleep.
+- B) Unhealthy food.
+- C) Smoking.
+- D) Alcohol.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO) from incomplete combustion, and CO binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen, reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A is wrong because sleep deprivation causes fatigue but does not produce CO. B is wrong because unhealthy food affects nutrition but does not generate CO. D is wrong because alcohol impairs cognitive function through a different mechanism unrelated to CO poisoning.
+
+### Q8: What does the term "Red-out" mean? ^t40q8
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Rash during decompression sickness
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (such as in a pushover or bunt manoeuvre), which force blood into the head and eyes, engorging the retinal blood vessels and creating a red-tinted visual field. B is wrong because decompression sickness causes joint pain and skin mottling, not a red visual field. C is wrong because anaemia is a blood condition unrelated to g-forces. D is wrong because sunrise and sunset affect ambient light colour, not a physiological visual disturbance.
+
+### Q9: Which of these is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton? ^t40q9
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Spasm
+- C) Disturbance of consciousness
+- D) Tingling
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because cyanosis (blue discolouration of skin and lips) is caused by low blood oxygen levels and is a sign of hypoxia, not hyperventilation. Hyperventilation actually increases blood oxygen levels while decreasing CO2. B is wrong as an answer choice because muscle spasms (tetany) are a genuine symptom of hyperventilation due to alkalosis. C is wrong because disturbed consciousness does occur during severe hyperventilation. D is wrong because tingling in the extremities and face is one of the earliest and most characteristic hyperventilation symptoms.
+
+### Q10: Which of these symptoms may indicate hypoxia? ^t40q10
+- A) Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails
+- B) Blue marks all over the body
+- C) Muscle cramps in the upper body area
+- D) Joint pain in knees and feet
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because cyanosis — the bluish discolouration of lips, fingertips, and nail beds — is a classic clinical sign of hypoxia caused by an increased proportion of deoxygenated haemoglobin in the blood. B is wrong because diffuse blue marks over the body suggest bruising, not oxygen deficiency. C is wrong because upper body muscle cramps are more associated with hyperventilation or electrolyte imbalances. D is wrong because joint pain in knees and feet is characteristic of decompression sickness, not hypoxia.
+
+### Q11: Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia? ^t40q11
+- A) The visual perception (vision)
+- B) The tactile perception (sense of touch)
+- C) The oltfactory perception (smell)
+- D) The auditory perception (hearing)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the retina has an exceptionally high oxygen demand, making vision the first sense to degrade under hypoxic conditions — night vision can deteriorate noticeably at altitudes as low as 5,000 ft. B is wrong because touch is relatively resistant to mild hypoxia. C is wrong because smell, while it can be affected, is not the most sensitive sense to oxygen deprivation. D is wrong because hearing is also less affected than vision at moderate altitude.
+
+### Q12: From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure? ^t40q12
+- A) 10000 feet
+- B) 7000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 2000 feet
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because at approximately 7,000 ft the body begins to show measurable physiological responses to reduced oxygen partial pressure, such as increased heart rate and breathing rate, though a healthy person can still compensate. A is wrong because 10,000 ft is an altitude where compensation is already well underway, not where it begins. C is wrong because at 12,000 ft the body is already struggling to compensate adequately. D is wrong because at 2,000 ft the oxygen partial pressure is still too close to sea-level values to trigger noticeable physiological responses.
+
+### Q13: Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure? ^t40q13
+- A) 7000 feet
+- B) 5000 feet
+- C) 22000 feet
+- D) 12000 feet
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because above approximately 12,000 ft the body's compensatory mechanisms — increased breathing and heart rate — are no longer sufficient to maintain adequate blood oxygen saturation, and hypoxic symptoms become increasingly apparent. A is wrong because at 7,000 ft the body begins compensating but can still manage effectively. B is wrong because 5,000 ft is well within the range where no significant compensation is needed. C is wrong because 22,000 ft is far above the threshold where compensation fails — at that altitude, loss of consciousness occurs rapidly.
+
+### Q14: What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)? ^t40q14
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Immune defense
+- D) Oxygen transport
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because red blood cells contain haemoglobin, an iron-rich protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and delivers it to tissues throughout the body, making them the primary oxygen transport mechanism. A is wrong because blood coagulation is the function of platelets (thrombocytes). B is wrong because blood sugar regulation is controlled by the pancreas via insulin and glucagon. C is wrong because immune defence is the function of white blood cells (leucocytes).
+
+### Q15: Which of these accounts for the blood coagulation? ^t40q15
+- A) Capillaries of the arteries
+- B) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- C) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+- D) Blood plates (thrombocytes)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because blood platelets (thrombocytes) are cell fragments that aggregate at injury sites and activate the clotting cascade to form a fibrin clot, stopping bleeding. A is wrong because capillaries are blood vessels, not clotting agents. B is wrong because red blood cells transport oxygen, not participate in coagulation. C is wrong because white blood cells are responsible for immune defence, not blood clotting.
+
+### Q16: Which is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)? ^t40q16
+- A) Immune defense
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Blood coagulation
+- D) Oxygen transport
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because white blood cells (leucocytes) are the cellular components of the immune system, responsible for identifying and destroying pathogens, foreign substances, and abnormal cells. B is wrong because blood sugar regulation is managed by hormones from the pancreas. C is wrong because blood coagulation is the role of thrombocytes (platelets). D is wrong because oxygen transport is performed by red blood cells (erythrocytes) via haemoglobin.
+
+### Q17: Which is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)? ^t40q17
+- A) Oxygen transport
+- B) Immune defense
+- C) Blood coagulation
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because thrombocytes (platelets) are the primary agents of haemostasis — they rapidly aggregate at vascular injury sites and release chemicals that trigger the coagulation cascade, forming a stable clot. A is wrong because oxygen transport is the function of erythrocytes (red blood cells). B is wrong because immune defence belongs to leucocytes (white blood cells). D is wrong because blood sugar regulation is a hormonal function of the pancreas.
+
+### Q18: Which of these is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia? ^t40q18
+- A) Blood donation
+- B) Diving
+- C) Menstruation
+- D) Smoking
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because scuba diving is a risk factor for decompression sickness (nitrogen bubbles forming in tissues), not hypoxia — diving itself does not reduce the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A is wrong as an answer because blood donation reduces red blood cell count, directly lowering oxygen transport ability. C is wrong because heavy menstruation can lead to anaemia, which reduces oxygen-carrying capacity. D is wrong because smoking introduces carbon monoxide that binds to haemoglobin, displacing oxygen.
+
+### Q19: What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable? ^t40q19
+- A) Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank
+- B) Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed
+- C) Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets
+- D) Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because adjusting the cabin temperature to a comfortable level and reducing bank angle minimises the most common causes of passenger discomfort — thermal discomfort and vestibular stimulation that can trigger motion sickness. B is wrong because avoiding conversation isolates the passenger and higher airspeed does not address the underlying discomfort. C is wrong because warming a potentially overheated passenger could worsen their condition. D is wrong because supplemental oxygen is not the standard first response, and avoiding low load factors is not the primary concern.
+
+### Q20: What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor? ^t40q20
+- A) Reflex
+- B) Reduction
+- C) Coherence
+- D) Virulence
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a reflex is defined as an involuntary, rapid, and stereotyped neural response to a specific stimulus, mediated through a reflex arc without requiring conscious thought. B is wrong because reduction is a general term meaning decrease, not a physiological response. C is wrong because coherence refers to logical consistency or connectedness. D is wrong because virulence describes the severity or harmfulness of a pathogen, not a nervous system reaction.
+
+### Q21: Which is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency? ^t40q21
+- A) Critical nervous system
+- B) Compliant nervous system
+- C) Autonomic nervous system
+- D) Automatical nervous system
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulates involuntary body functions including heart rate, breathing, digestion, and glandular activity through its sympathetic and parasympathetic branches. A is wrong because "critical nervous system" is not a recognised anatomical term. B is wrong because "compliant nervous system" does not exist in medical terminology. D is wrong because the correct term is "autonomic," not "automatical" — though they sound similar, only C uses the proper medical designation.
+
+### Q22: Which is the parallax error? ^t40q22
+- A) Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision
+- B) A decoding error in communication between pilots
+- C) Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night
+- D) Misperception of speed during taxiing
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because parallax error occurs when an instrument is read from an oblique viewing angle rather than straight on, causing the pointer to appear displaced against the scale and producing a false reading. B is wrong because communication errors between pilots relate to encoding/decoding in the communication model, not instrument reading. C is wrong because age-related long-sightedness (presbyopia) is a refractive eye condition, not a parallax effect. D is wrong because speed misperception during taxiing is a visual illusion unrelated to instrument reading angles.
+
+### Q23: Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots? ^t40q23
+- A) No UV filter
+- B) Curved sidepiece
+- C) Unbreakable
+- D) Non-polarised
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because polarised lenses can render LCD displays and glass cockpit instruments unreadable by blocking the plane of light they emit, and they may also mask glare reflections from other aircraft or water surfaces that serve as important visual cues. A is wrong because UV protection is actually desirable for eye health at altitude, not something to avoid. B is wrong because curved sidepieces are a comfort feature, not a safety-critical characteristic. C is wrong because while durability is nice, it is not the aviation-specific concern that makes non-polarisation essential.
+
+### Q24: The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called… ^t40q24
+- A) Inner ear.
+- B) Eardrum.
+- C) Eustachian tube.
+- D) Cochlea.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the Eustachian tube (auditory tube) is the anatomical passage connecting the middle ear to the nasopharynx, allowing pressure equalisation during altitude changes by opening when you swallow or yawn. A is wrong because the inner ear contains the balance organs and cochlea but does not connect to the throat. B is wrong because the eardrum (tympanic membrane) is the boundary between the outer and middle ear. D is wrong because the cochlea is the spiral-shaped hearing organ within the inner ear.
+
+### Q25: In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment? ^t40q25
+- A) During a light and slow climb
+- B) The eustachien tube is blocked
+- C) All windows are completely closed
+- D) Breathing takes place using the mouth solely
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because when the Eustachian tube is blocked — typically due to a cold, sinus infection, or allergic swelling — air cannot flow between the middle ear and the throat, making pressure equalisation impossible and causing severe ear pain during altitude changes. A is wrong because a slow climb actually makes equalisation easier. C is wrong because window position has no effect on middle ear pressure; equalisation occurs internally through the Eustachian tube. D is wrong because mouth breathing does not prevent the Eustachian tube from functioning.
+
+### Q26: Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of… ^t40q26
+- A) Starting a descent.
+- B) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- C) Starting a climb.
+- D) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because during a prolonged coordinated turn, the semicircular canal fluid adapts and stops signalling the turn; when the pilot levels the wings, the fluid movement creates a false signal interpreted as rotation in the opposite direction — this is the "leans" illusion. A is wrong because the illusion is one of lateral rotation, not vertical descent. C is wrong because there is no false climb sensation from levelling out of a turn. D is wrong because the adapted semicircular canals no longer signal the original turn direction upon recovery.
+
+### Q27: Which of these options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)? ^t40q27
+- A) Turbulence in level flight
+- B) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- C) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+- D) Head movements during turns
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no vestibular stimulation and no conflict between the visual and balance systems, so it cannot trigger motion sickness. A is wrong as an answer because turbulence creates unpredictable accelerations that stimulate the vestibular system and cause sensory conflict. C is wrong because alcohol changes the density of the endolymph fluid in the inner ear, amplifying sensory mismatches. D is wrong because head movements during turns provoke the Coriolis effect in the semicircular canals, a strong trigger for disorientation.
+
+### Q28: Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach? ^t40q28
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an upsloping runway appears shorter and steeper than a flat runway, tricking the pilot's visual system into perceiving a higher-than-actual approach angle, which leads to an instinctive descent below the correct glide slope — creating a dangerous undershoot risk. A is wrong because the illusion affects perceived height, not speed. B is wrong because it describes the opposite illusion (feeling too low) which would occur with a downsloping runway. C is wrong because speed perception is not the primary illusion created by runway slope.
+
+### Q29: What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope? ^t40q29
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) An overshoot
+- C) A landing beside the centerline
+- D) A hard landing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because this question asks about the impression (what the pilot perceives), not the actual outcome. An upsloping runway gives the visual illusion of being too high, so the pilot perceives an overshoot situation. A is wrong because although the pilot's corrective response to the false overshoot impression may actually cause an undershoot, the perceived impression itself is of overshooting. C is wrong because runway slope does not create lateral displacement illusions. D is wrong because the slope illusion affects perceived approach angle, not the perception of landing firmness.
+
+### Q30: The occurence of a vertigo is most probable when moving the head... ^t40q30
+- A) During a climb.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a descent.
+- D) During a turn.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because moving the head during a turn creates the Coriolis illusion — the semicircular canals are already stimulated by the turn, and adding a head rotation in a different plane simultaneously stimulates additional canals, producing an overwhelming and disorienting sensation of tumbling. A is wrong because a climb alone does not pre-load the semicircular canals the way a turn does. B is wrong because straight and level flight provides no existing vestibular stimulation to conflict with head movement. C is wrong because a descent, like a climb, does not produce the rotational vestibular loading that makes the Coriolis effect so severe.
+
+### Q31: A Grey-out is the result of… ^t40q31
+- A) Hypoxia.
+- B) Positive g-forces.
+- C) Hyperventilation.
+- D) Tiredness.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because grey-out occurs when positive g-forces pull blood away from the head toward the lower body, reducing blood pressure in the retinal arteries and causing progressive loss of colour vision and peripheral vision before full blackout. A is wrong because although hypoxia also affects vision, grey-out specifically refers to the g-force-induced phenomenon. C is wrong because hyperventilation causes tingling and spasms from CO2 depletion, not the characteristic grey visual field. D is wrong because tiredness causes fatigue and reduced alertness, not the acute visual symptoms of grey-out.
+
+### Q32: Visual illusions are mostly caused by… ^t40q32
+- A) Colour blindness.
+- B) Misinterpretation of the brain.
+- C) Rapid eye movements.
+- D) Binocular vision.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the brain actively constructs perception by interpreting sensory input based on prior experience and expectations, and when environmental cues are ambiguous or unusual — as is common in aviation — the brain's "best guess" can be dangerously wrong. A is wrong because colour blindness is a retinal condition affecting colour discrimination, not a cause of spatial or approach illusions. C is wrong because rapid eye movements (saccades) are normal visual behaviour, not a source of illusions. D is wrong because binocular vision actually improves depth perception and reduces illusions.
+
+### Q33: The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately… ^t40q33
+- A) 0.1 percent.
+- B) 0.3 percent.
+- C) 0.03 percent.
+- D) 0.01 percent.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the liver metabolises alcohol at a roughly constant rate of approximately 0.01% (0.1 per mille or 0.1 g/L) blood alcohol concentration per hour, regardless of body weight, food intake, or the type of drink consumed. A is wrong because 0.1% per hour is ten times the actual rate and would mean even heavy intoxication clears in a few hours. B is wrong because 0.3% per hour is thirty times too fast. C is wrong because 0.03% per hour is three times the actual rate.
+
+### Q34: Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes? ^t40q34
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because overweight and obesity — particularly excess visceral fat — are the strongest modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes due to the insulin resistance they cause, and diabetes is a significant concern in aviation medicine because of the risk of hypoglycaemic episodes impairing pilot performance. A is wrong because although sleep deficiency affects general health, it is not a primary risk factor for diabetes. C is wrong because smoking is primarily a cardiovascular and respiratory risk factor. D is wrong because moderate alcohol consumption is not a leading cause of diabetes.
+
+### Q35: A risk factor for decompression sickness is… ^t40q35
+- A) Sports.
+- B) 100 % oxygen after decompression.
+- C) Scuba diving prior to flight.
+- D) Smoking.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because scuba diving causes nitrogen to dissolve into body tissues under high ambient pressure, and if the diver flies before adequate off-gassing time (typically 12-24 hours), the reduced cabin pressure causes dissolved nitrogen to form painful and dangerous bubbles in tissues and blood. A is wrong because normal sporting activity does not load tissues with dissolved nitrogen. B is wrong because breathing 100% oxygen after decompression actually accelerates nitrogen elimination and is a treatment measure. D is wrong because smoking impairs oxygen transport but does not cause nitrogen saturation.
+
+### Q36: Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory? ^t40q36
+- A) It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because George Miller's classic research established that short-term (working) memory can hold approximately 7 plus or minus 2 chunks of information for about 10-20 seconds without active rehearsal, which is why pilots must write down ATC clearances and frequencies immediately. A is wrong because both the capacity (10 items) and duration (30-60 seconds) are overstated. B is wrong because the capacity is understated and the duration is too long. D is wrong because both values are too small — the brain can hold more than 3 items.
+
+### Q37: For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information? ^t40q37
+- A) 35 to 50 seconds
+- B) 3 to 7 seconds
+- C) 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because unrehearsed information in short-term memory decays within approximately 10-20 seconds, which is why aviation procedures emphasise immediate read-back of clearances and writing down critical information. A is wrong because 35-50 seconds significantly overestimates the retention time without rehearsal. B is wrong because 3-7 seconds is too short — even unrehearsed memory lasts somewhat longer. D is wrong because 30-40 seconds exceeds the actual decay time for passively stored items.
+
+### Q38: What is a latent error? ^t40q38
+- A) An error which has an immediate effect on the controls
+- B) An error which only has consequences after landing
+- C) An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously
+- D) An error which stays undetected in the system for a long time
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because in James Reason's error model, latent errors are hidden failures embedded in the system — such as poor design, inadequate procedures, or organisational shortcuts — that remain dormant and undetected until they combine with an active error to cause an incident or accident. A is wrong because an error with immediate effect on controls is an active error, not a latent one. B is wrong because latent errors are defined by their hidden nature, not their timing relative to landing. C is wrong because conscious, deliberate errors are violations, not latent conditions.
+
+### Q39: The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called… ^t40q39
+- A) Constant flight check.
+- B) Situational thinking.
+- C) Situational awareness.
+- D) Anticipatory check procedure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because situational awareness (SA), as defined by Mica Endsley, is the continuous process of perceiving elements in the environment, comprehending their meaning, and projecting their future state — it is the foundation of sound aeronautical decision-making. A is wrong because "constant flight check" is not a recognised human factors term. B is wrong because "situational thinking" is not the standard terminology used in aviation psychology. D is wrong because "anticipatory check procedure" describes a proactive checklist approach, not the overarching mental model of the flight environment.
+
+### Q40: Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured? ^t40q40
+- A) By the use of proper headsets
+- B) By the use of radio phraseology
+- C) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+- D) By a particular frequency allocation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because standardised ICAO radiotelephony phraseology ensures that both sender and receiver share the same unambiguous "code" with pre-defined meanings, minimising the risk of miscommunication in the communication model. A is wrong because headsets improve audio clarity but do not standardise the language or coding of the message. C is wrong because certified radios ensure signal quality, not message coding. D is wrong because frequency allocation manages traffic separation, not the shared understanding of words and phrases.
+
+### Q41: In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately? ^t40q41
+- A) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- B) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- C) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+- D) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the four standard risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the hazard entirely), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift the risk to another party such as through insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge residual risk when it falls within acceptable limits). B is wrong because "ignore" and "palliate" are not recognised risk management strategies. C is wrong because ignoring risk is never acceptable in aviation, and "extrude" is not a risk management term. D is wrong because neither "extrude" nor "palliate" are legitimate risk management strategies.
+
+### Q42: Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks? ^t40q42
+- A) During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast
+- B) During check flights due to a high level of nervousness
+- C) Due to group-dynamic effects
+- D) If there is not enough information available
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because group dynamics can cause "risky shift" — a well-documented phenomenon where groups tend to accept bolder, riskier decisions than individuals would alone, driven by social pressure, conformity, and diffusion of responsibility. A is wrong because excellent weather actually reduces risk and does not push pilots toward accepting higher risks. B is wrong because nervousness during check flights typically makes pilots more cautious, not more risk-accepting. D is wrong because insufficient information usually promotes caution or deferral rather than acceptance of higher risk.
+
+### Q43: Which dangerous attitudes are often combined? ^t40q43
+- A) Self-abandonment and macho
+- B) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude ("I can handle anything") and invulnerability ("it won't happen to me") frequently occur together, as both stem from overconfidence and underestimation of personal risk. A is wrong because self-abandonment (resignation) is the opposite of macho — a resigned pilot gives up, while a macho pilot takes on too much. B is wrong because invulnerability and resignation are contradictory mindsets. D is wrong because impulsivity and carefulness are opposites and cannot logically coexist as a combined dangerous attitude.
+
+### Q44: What is an indication for a macho attitude? ^t40q44
+- A) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- B) Careful walkaround procedure
+- C) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- D) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude is defined by the need to demonstrate daring and skill, often to an audience, and performing risky manoeuvres to impress spectators is a textbook example — the pilot prioritises ego over safety. A is wrong because quick resignation describes the resignation (self-abandonment) hazardous attitude, the opposite of macho. B is wrong because a careful walkaround is a sign of professionalism, not any hazardous attitude. D is wrong because comprehensive risk assessment reflects sound aeronautical decision-making, not a hazardous attitude.
+
+### Q45: Which factor can lead to human error? ^t40q45
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) Double check of relevant actions
+- C) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because confirmation bias — the tendency to perceive and interpret information in a way that confirms pre-existing expectations — is a major source of human error, leading pilots to misread instruments, overlook abnormalities, or misidentify visual references. A is wrong because proper checklist use is a countermeasure against error, not a cause. B is wrong because double-checking is an error-trapping technique. D is wrong because healthy doubt and questioning ambiguous information is a protective behaviour that reduces error.
+
+### Q46: Which is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot? ^t40q46
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Extroverted - stable
+- C) Extroverted - unstable
+- D) Introverted - unstable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because extroversion supports effective communication, assertiveness, and crew coordination essential for CRM, while emotional stability ensures the pilot remains calm, consistent, and rational under pressure. A is wrong because although stability is positive, introversion can hinder the assertive communication and teamwork skills needed in cockpit environments. C is wrong because emotional instability leads to erratic performance and overreaction under stress. D is wrong because both introversion and instability are disadvantageous for the demands of piloting.
+
+### Q47: Complacency is a risk due to… ^t40q47
+- A) Better training options for young pilots.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Increased cockpit automation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because as cockpit automation becomes more sophisticated and reliable, pilots tend to reduce their active monitoring, lose vigilance, and allow their manual flying skills to degrade — this is automation complacency, and it becomes critically dangerous when the automation fails unexpectedly. A is wrong because better training options should reduce complacency, not cause it. B is wrong because unreliable systems would actually increase vigilance, not reduce it. C is wrong because a high human error rate is a general human factors issue, not the specific cause of complacency.
+
+### Q48: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q48
+
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (Point B) because on the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve, Point B sits at the peak where moderate arousal produces maximum performance. A is wrong because Point D represents excessive arousal where performance has collapsed due to overwhelming stress. B is wrong because Point C is past the optimal peak, in the declining performance zone. D is wrong because Point A represents too little arousal (boredom, under-stimulation), where performance suffers from lack of alertness and motivation.
+
+### Q49: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q49
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point C
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (Point D) because it lies at the far right of the Yerkes-Dodson curve where excessive arousal causes performance to collapse — the pilot is overstrained, experiencing cognitive overload, tunnel vision, and potentially panic. A is wrong because Point B is the optimal arousal level with peak performance. C is wrong because Point C, while past optimal, still represents declining but not yet collapsed performance. D is wrong because Point A represents under-arousal (boredom), the opposite of being overstrained.
+
+### Q50: Which of these qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory ^t40q50
+- A) 1
+- B) .1, 2, 3
+- C) 1, 2, 3, 4
+- D) .2, 4
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because stress affects all four cognitive functions: attention narrows (tunnel vision), concentration becomes fragmented, responsiveness changes (initially faster then degraded under extreme stress), and memory — especially working memory encoding and retrieval — is impaired by elevated cortisol. A is wrong because it only includes attention, ignoring the effects on concentration, responsiveness, and memory. B is wrong because it excludes memory, which is significantly affected. D is wrong because it omits attention and responsiveness, both of which are demonstrably impacted by stress.
+
+### Q51: The proportion of oxygen in the air at sea level is 21%. What is this percentage at an altitude of 5 km (16,400 ft)? ^t40q51
+- A) 5 %
+- B) 15 %
+- C) 10 %
+- D) 21 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere remains constant at approximately 21% regardless of altitude — what decreases with altitude is the total atmospheric pressure, and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen available for breathing. A, B, and C are all wrong because they suggest the percentage of oxygen itself changes with altitude, which is incorrect; the atmosphere maintains a homogeneous composition up to approximately 80 km.
+
+### Q52: The signs of oxygen deficiency… ^t40q52
+- A) are right away clearly noticeable.
+- B) can appear from as low as 4000 ft altitude.
+- C) appear in smokers at lower altitudes than in non-smokers.
+- D) consist of extreme difficulty in breathing (gasping for air).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because smokers already have elevated carboxyhaemoglobin levels from carbon monoxide binding to their red blood cells, effectively reducing their oxygen-carrying capacity even before flight, so hypoxic symptoms manifest at lower altitudes compared to non-smokers. A is wrong because hypoxia is insidious — symptoms develop gradually and the pilot often does not recognise them. B is wrong because 4,000 ft is generally too low for noticeable hypoxic effects in most people. D is wrong because gasping for air is not a typical hypoxia symptom; instead, early signs include impaired judgment and reduced night vision.
+
+### Q53: Carbon monoxide… ^t40q53
+- A) is a by-product of the chemical energy production in cells: tissue absorbs oxygen and releases carbon monoxide.
+- B) has a sweet smell and bitter taste. It is only harmful in very high doses.
+- C) is toxic and results from incomplete combustion, e.g. a leaking exhaust system in an aircraft or incomplete gas combustion in a hot air balloon.
+- D) is, together with oxygen and hydrogen, one of the most important elements present in the atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because carbon monoxide (CO) is a highly toxic gas produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-based fuels, and in aviation it can enter the cabin through leaking exhaust systems; it binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen. A is wrong because cells produce carbon dioxide (CO2) as a metabolic waste product, not carbon monoxide. B is wrong because CO is odourless, colourless, and tasteless, making it extremely dangerous even at low concentrations. D is wrong because CO is a trace gas, not one of the major atmospheric components.
+
+### Q54: How long does it generally take for the human eye to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q54
+- A) Approx. 30 minutes.
+- B) Approx. 1 hour.
+- C) Approx. 15 minutes.
+- D) Approx. 5 minutes.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because full dark adaptation requires approximately 30 minutes for the rod cells in the retina to reach maximum sensitivity through the regeneration of rhodopsin (visual purple), which is why pilots should avoid bright lights before night flying. B is wrong because one hour significantly overestimates the adaptation time. C is wrong because at 15 minutes the rods are only partially adapted and night vision is not yet at full capability. D is wrong because 5 minutes only allows for initial cone adaptation, not the complete rod-based dark adaptation needed for effective night vision.
+
+### Q55: Low blood pressure… ^t40q55
+- A) mainly causes problems at rest in a lying position.
+- B) can cause dizziness.
+- C) is a recurring problem in elderly smokers.
+- D) causes absolutely no problems.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because hypotension (low blood pressure) can cause dizziness, lightheadedness, and even fainting, particularly when changing posture (orthostatic hypotension), which poses a flight safety risk. A is wrong because low blood pressure mainly causes symptoms during posture changes (standing up), not while lying down. C is wrong because elderly smokers are more commonly affected by high blood pressure (hypertension), not low blood pressure. D is wrong because low blood pressure can certainly cause symptoms that impair pilot performance.
+
+### Q56: What symptom will most probably occur at 20,000 ft (6100 m) altitude without a pressurised cabin or oxygen equipment? ^t40q56
+- A) Loss of consciousness.
+- B) Altitude sickness with pulmonary oedema.
+- C) Dyspnoea.
+- D) Fever.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 20,000 ft without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness (TUC) is very short — typically only a few minutes — and rapid loss of consciousness follows due to severe hypoxia as the partial pressure of oxygen is far below what the body requires. B is wrong because pulmonary oedema develops over hours to days of high-altitude exposure, not during acute exposure. C is wrong because while shortness of breath may occur briefly, loss of consciousness is the most probable and dangerous outcome. D is wrong because fever is unrelated to altitude exposure.
+
+### Q57: When flying with a severe head cold, sharp pain can affect the sinuses. This pain occurs… ^t40q57
+- A) during descent.
+- B) with every notable change in flight altitude.
+- C) during climb.
+- D) during accelerations.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because during descent, external atmospheric pressure increases and trapped air within congested sinuses cannot equalise, creating a painful pressure differential — this is known as barosinusitis. B is wrong because while altitude changes in both directions can cause discomfort, descent is specifically the most problematic phase because the blocked sinuses cannot vent the increasing external pressure inward. C is wrong because during climb, expanding air within the sinuses can usually escape more easily, even through partially blocked passages. D is wrong because linear accelerations do not create the pressure differentials that cause sinus pain.
+
+### Q58: Which are the symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q58
+- A) High fever, vomiting, headache.
+- B) High fever, dizziness, watery diarrhoea.
+- C) Dizziness, sweating, nausea.
+- D) Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, headache.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the classic symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis) are dizziness, sweating, pallor, and nausea, which may progress to vomiting — all caused by a conflict between visual and vestibular sensory inputs. A is wrong because high fever is not a symptom of motion sickness; it indicates infection. B is wrong because neither high fever nor watery diarrhoea are associated with kinetosis. D is wrong because watery diarrhoea is a gastrointestinal symptom unrelated to vestibular-induced motion sickness.
+
+### Q59: During a normal approach to an unusually wide runway, one may have the impression that the approach is being made… ^t40q59
+- A) at too great a height.
+- B) at too high a speed.
+- C) at too low a speed.
+- D) at too low a height.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a runway wider than the pilot is accustomed to makes the visual perspective appear as though the aircraft is lower and closer than it actually is, creating the impression of being at too low a speed and too low a height — the pilot may then tend to fly the approach too high. A is wrong because the wide runway creates the opposite illusion — feeling too low, not too high. B is wrong because the illusion relates to perceived height and proximity, not excessive speed. D is wrong because feeling too low in height would be a consequence, but the question asks about speed impression, and C correctly captures the speed-related illusion.
+
+### Q60: Under positive g-forces, a greyout can occur which precedes blackout. Which organ is primarily affected by greyout? ^t40q60
+- A) The lungs.
+- B) The eyes.
+- C) The brain.
+- D) The muscles.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the eyes (specifically the retina) are the first organ to be affected by positive g-forces because retinal blood vessels are extremely sensitive to reduced blood pressure — the retina has the highest oxygen demand of any tissue, so when blood drains away under g-loading, vision degrades before consciousness is affected. A is wrong because the lungs continue to function under moderate g-forces. C is wrong because the brain loses function after the eyes — loss of consciousness (G-LOC) follows grey-out and blackout. D is wrong because muscles are not meaningfully affected by the blood pressure reduction that causes grey-out.
+
+### Q61: When a pilot scans the sky to detect the presence of other aircraft, he should… ^t40q61
+- A) try to take in the visible portion of the sky with large sweeping eye movements.
+- B) roll the eyes across as wide a field of vision as possible.
+- C) scan the sky sector by sector and let the eyes rest briefly on each sector.
+- D) take in the entire visible portion of the sky by moving the eyes as rapidly as possible.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Effective visual scanning requires dividing the sky into sectors and pausing briefly on each one, allowing the eyes to focus and detect movement or contrast changes that indicate other aircraft. Option A and Option D advocate rapid, sweeping eye movements that prevent the eye from fixating long enough to register a small target. Option B similarly relies on continuous rolling motion, which reduces detection probability. Only Option C describes the proven sector-by-sector technique recommended in human factors training.
+
+### Q62: Alcohol is eliminated at a rate of:... ^t40q62
+- A) 0.5 per mille per hour.
+- B) 0.3 per mille per hour.
+- C) 0.1 per mille per hour.
+- D) 1 per mille per hour.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human liver metabolises alcohol at a relatively constant rate of approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, regardless of the type of drink consumed or any attempted countermeasures such as coffee or exercise. Option A (0.5‰/h) and Option D (1‰/h) greatly overestimate the elimination rate, which could lead pilots to believe they are sober sooner than they actually are. Option B (0.3‰/h) is also too high. For SPL exam purposes, the standard value to remember is 0.1‰ per hour.
+
+### Q63: From the following factors, identify the one that increases the risk of heart attack:... ^t40q63
+- A) Lack of exercise.
+- B) Hypoglycaemia.
+- C) Undernutrition.
+- D) Cholesterol level too low.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sedentary lifestyle with insufficient physical activity is a well-established cardiovascular risk factor that increases the likelihood of heart attack. Option B (hypoglycaemia) is a metabolic condition primarily affecting energy supply to the brain, not a direct cardiac risk factor. Option C (undernutrition) and Option D (low cholesterol) are actually the opposite of known risk factors — it is overnutrition and high cholesterol that contribute to coronary artery disease. Regular exercise is one of the most effective protective measures against cardiovascular disease.
+
+### Q64: Amphetamine is a stimulant which in Switzerland can be obtained on prescription from pharmacies... ^t40q64
+- A) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours are allowed to take this medication to stay awake.
+- B) Pilots on duty may solely take this medication if accompanied by a qualified co-pilot.
+- C) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours should always have this medication at hand for moments of fatigue.
+- D) Due to its adverse effects, pilots on duty are not allowed to take this medication.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Amphetamines are strictly prohibited for pilots on duty because their adverse effects — including impaired judgment, overconfidence, risk-taking behaviour, and a crash of fatigue after the drug wears off — directly compromise flight safety. Option A and Option C suggest using amphetamines to combat fatigue during long flights, which is dangerous and illegal under aviation medical regulations. Option B implies that a co-pilot can mitigate the risk, but no crew arrangement makes stimulant use acceptable. The correct approach to fatigue is proper rest before flight, not pharmacological stimulation.
+
+### Q65: What is meant by "risk area awareness" in aviation? ^t40q65
+- A) Knowledge of accident rates during takeoff and landing.
+- B) The awareness that the aerodrome area where aircraft taxi ("risk area") is a dangerous zone.
+- C) Awareness of the potential hazards of the various phases of flight.
+- D) A procedure for preventing aviation accidents.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Risk area awareness refers to the pilot's conscious understanding that different phases of flight — takeoff, climb, cruise, descent, approach, and landing — each carry distinct hazards requiring specific vigilance. Option A is too narrow, focusing only on statistical accident rates rather than active awareness. Option B incorrectly interprets "risk area" as a physical location on the aerodrome. Option D describes risk area awareness as a procedure, but it is a mindset and competency, not a checklist or formal procedure. Effective risk area awareness allows the pilot to anticipate and mitigate threats proactively.
+
+### Q66: Several decision-making models are applied in aviation. A widely used model goes by the acronym "DECIDE". Which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q66
+- A) The first D stands for "Do" and means "Apply the best option".
+- B) The first D stands for "Detect" and means "Recognise that a change has occurred which requires attention".
+- C) The first E stands for "Evaluate" and means "Assess the consequences of one's actions".
+- D) DECIDE is a decision-making aid that must be applied in every in-flight decision situation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The DECIDE model follows the sequence: Detect, Estimate, Choose, Identify, Do, Evaluate. The first letter D stands for "Detect," meaning the pilot recognises that a change in the situation has occurred requiring a decision. Option A incorrectly assigns "Do" to the first D — "Do" is actually the fifth step, where the chosen course of action is implemented. Option C misplaces "Evaluate" as the first E, but the first E is "Estimate" (assess the significance of the change). Option D overstates the requirement — DECIDE is a helpful framework, not a mandatory procedure for every single decision.
+
+### Q67: Regarding typical hazardous attitudes, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q67
+- A) It is possible to recognise and correct one's own hazardous attitudes.
+- B) An anti-authority attitude is less dangerous than macho behaviour.
+- C) Inexperienced pilots are generally the only ones who behave dangerously.
+- D) Hazardous attitudes do not really exist because flight safety depends solely on the pilot's attention.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Human factors research identifies five hazardous attitudes — anti-authority, macho, invulnerability, resignation, and impulsivity — and demonstrates that pilots can learn to recognise these tendencies in themselves and apply corrective antidotes. Option B incorrectly ranks hazardous attitudes; all five are dangerous and none should be dismissed as less threatening. Option C wrongly limits dangerous behaviour to inexperienced pilots, when in fact experienced pilots can also exhibit complacency and overconfidence. Option D denies the existence of hazardous attitudes entirely, contradicting decades of aviation safety research.
+
+### Q68: Which of these statements correctly describes "selective attention"? ^t40q68
+- A) Selective attention is unavoidable in the cockpit to avoid distraction during checklist recitation.
+- B) Selective attention can lead the pilot to fail to notice an audible alarm even though it is perfectly audible.
+- C) Selective attention refers to an attitude where attention is focused on flight instruments when visibility conditions are poor.
+- D) Selective attention is a method for avoiding stress.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Selective attention is a cognitive phenomenon where concentrating intensely on one task causes the brain to filter out other stimuli, even obvious ones like a loud alarm. This is sometimes called "inattentional blindness" or "tunnel hearing." Option A confuses selective attention with a deliberate cockpit strategy, when it is actually an involuntary cognitive limitation. Option C describes instrument scan technique, not the psychological concept of selective attention. Option D incorrectly categorises it as a stress management method, when in fact selective attention under stress can be dangerous because critical warnings may go unnoticed.
+
+### Q69: Regarding stress, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q69
+- A) There is an optimal level of stress that even improves performance.
+- B) Under-stimulation causes no stress and has no negative effect on performance.
+- C) Stress in the cockpit improves the work rate.
+- D) Stress is only caused by brief overload.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law demonstrates that moderate stress (eustress) enhances alertness, focus, and performance, while too little or too much stress degrades it — forming an inverted-U curve. Option B is incorrect because under-stimulation (boredom) is itself a form of stress that reduces vigilance and increases error rates. Option C oversimplifies by suggesting all cockpit stress is beneficial, when excessive stress causes cognitive overload and poor decision-making. Option D wrongly limits stress to brief overload, ignoring chronic stress from fatigue, personal problems, or sustained workload.
+
+### Q70: The human internal clock… ^t40q70
+- A) has a cycle of roughly 25 hours.
+- B) has a cycle of roughly 20 hours.
+- C) is synchronised with the external clock and its cycle lasts exactly 24 hours.
+- D) has a cycle of roughly 30 hours.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Research on circadian rhythms shows that the human endogenous biological clock runs on a cycle of approximately 25 hours when isolated from external time cues such as daylight and social schedules. Daily exposure to light resets (entrains) this internal clock to the 24-hour day-night cycle. Option B (20 hours) and Option D (30 hours) are incorrect values. Option C is wrong because the internal clock does not naturally run at exactly 24 hours — it requires daily resynchronisation by environmental cues called Zeitgebers.
+
+### Q71: Which of the following measures is suitable for relieving the onset of motion sickness (kinetosis) in passengers? ^t40q71
+- A) move the head regularly
+- B) look through the windows
+- C) breathe fresh air
+- D) drink coffee
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Breathing fresh, cool air helps stabilise the autonomic nervous system and is one of the most effective immediate remedies for the onset of motion sickness. Option A (moving the head regularly) worsens symptoms by increasing conflicting vestibular stimulation. Option B (looking through the windows) can aggravate the sensory mismatch between visual and vestibular inputs in some individuals. Option D (drinking coffee) is a stimulant that can increase nausea and does not address the underlying vestibular conflict causing motion sickness.
+
+### Q72: During training, a pilot has mainly used narrow runways. What illusion will this pilot experience during a correct final approach to a flat, very wide runway? ^t40q72
+- A) the illusion that the runway slopes upward in the landing direction (upslope)
+- B) the illusion of being at a greater height above the runway than is actually the case
+- C) the illusion of being lower above the runway than is actually the case
+- D) the illusion that the runway first slopes upward (upslope) then downward (downslope)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot accustomed to narrow runways perceives a wide runway as being closer (lower) than it actually is because the wider visual angle tricks the brain into interpreting the scene as a nearer surface. This creates the dangerous illusion of being too low, which may cause the pilot to fly a higher approach than necessary and flare too high. Option A and Option D describe slope-related illusions unrelated to runway width. Option B describes the opposite illusion — the pilot feels lower, not higher. Understanding this visual trap is essential for safe approaches to unfamiliar aerodromes.
+
+### Q73: When are middle ear pressure equalization problems most probable to occur? ^t40q73
+- A) during a long flight at high altitude
+- B) during a rapid descent
+- C) during a long climb
+- D) during strong negative vertical accelerations
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems are most likely during rapid descent because the Eustachian tube must open to allow higher-pressure air from the throat into the middle ear cavity, which is physiologically more difficult than the reverse. During ascent, expanding air in the middle ear vents outward relatively easily. Option A (long high-altitude flight) maintains a constant cabin altitude and does not create pressure differentials. Option C (long climb) involves gradual pressure decrease that the ear handles well. Option D (negative g-forces) affects the vestibular system, not middle ear pressure.
+
+### Q74: The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere is 21% at sea level. How does it change at 5500 m? ^t40q74
+- A) it is one quarter of the sea level percentage
+- B) it is half the sea level percentage
+- C) it is double the sea level percentage
+- D) it is the same as at sea level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The composition of the atmosphere remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen and 78% nitrogen from sea level up to about 80 km altitude. What decreases with altitude is not the percentage of oxygen but the total atmospheric pressure, and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen available to the lungs. Option A and Option B incorrectly suggest that the proportion changes. Option C proposes an increase, which is also wrong. The key concept for pilots is that hypoxia at altitude results from reduced partial pressure, not from a change in oxygen percentage.
+
+### Q75: Which are the effects of inhaling carbon monoxide (from a defective exhaust system)? ^t40q75
+- A) even in low concentrations, this gas can cause total incapacitation
+- B) there are no harmful effects to fear as carbon monoxide is harmless
+- C) harmful effects are solely to be expected if the body is exposed to the gas for several hours
+- D) there are no harmful effects to fear as the body compensates for the reduced oxygen supply
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) binds to haemoglobin approximately 200 times more readily than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and drastically reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. Even very low concentrations can cause headaches, impaired judgment, and eventually total incapacitation or death. Option B and Option D dangerously dismiss CO as harmless — it is one of aviation's most insidious threats because it is colourless and odourless. Option C incorrectly suggests that only prolonged exposure is harmful, when in fact even brief exposure to moderate concentrations can be lethal.
+
+### Q76: Which is the most effective hearing protection in the cabin of a powered aircraft or hot air balloon? ^t40q76
+- A) cotton wool
+- B) a helmet with earphones
+- C) ear plugs
+- D) due to the low noise produced, any protection is effective
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A helmet with integrated earphones provides the highest level of hearing protection by covering the entire ear with a rigid shell that attenuates both direct sound and vibration-transmitted noise, while simultaneously enabling clear radio communication. Option A (cotton wool) offers minimal attenuation and is not a proper hearing protector. Option C (ear plugs) provide reasonable protection but less than a full helmet and may impair communication clarity. Option D incorrectly assumes that cockpit noise levels are low — sustained exposure to even moderate cockpit noise causes cumulative hearing damage over time.
+
+### Q77: Gas-forming foods that cause flatulence ought to be avoided before a high-altitude flight. Which of these foods must therefore be avoided? ^t40q77
+- A) legumes (beans)
+- B) meat
+- C) pasta
+- D) potatoes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Legumes such as beans, peas, and lentils are well known to produce significant intestinal gas during digestion. At altitude, ambient pressure decreases and any trapped gas in the body expands according to Boyle's law, potentially causing severe abdominal pain and distraction in flight. Option B (meat), Option C (pasta), and Option D (potatoes) do not produce significant intestinal gas under normal circumstances. Pilots planning high-altitude flights should avoid gas-forming foods in the hours before departure.
+
+### Q78: The respiratory process enables gas exchange in somatic cells (metabolism). These cells… ^t40q78
+- A) absorb nitrogen and release oxygen
+- B) absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide (CO2)
+- C) absorb oxygen and release nitrogen
+- D) absorb oxygen and release carbon monoxide (CO)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cellular respiration, somatic cells take in oxygen and use it to metabolise glucose and other nutrients, producing energy (ATP) and releasing carbon dioxide (CO2) as a waste product. Option A and Option C incorrectly involve nitrogen, which plays no active role in cellular metabolism — it is physiologically inert at normal pressures. Option D incorrectly names carbon monoxide (CO) as a metabolic by-product; CO is a toxic gas from incomplete combustion, not from normal cellular processes.
+
+### Q79: A regular smoker pilot smokes a few cigarettes shortly before an alpine flight. What effects might this have on their flight fitness? ^t40q79
+- A) for a regular smoker, there are no effects to fear as the body is accustomed to the harmful substances absorbed
+- B) the pilot will experience oxygen deficiency at a lower altitude than if they had abstained from smoking before the flight
+- C) the nicotine absorbed may cause mild disturbances of consciousness and difficulty concentrating
+- D) the smoke causes mild carbon dioxide (CO2) poisoning, which may cause sensations of dizziness and numbness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO), which binds to haemoglobin and reduces the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A pilot who smokes before an alpine flight effectively raises their "physiological altitude" — they will experience symptoms of oxygen deficiency (hypoxia) at a lower altitude than a non-smoking pilot would. Option A incorrectly assumes that habitual smoking confers tolerance; the CO effect on haemoglobin is cumulative regardless of habit. Option C attributes the wrong symptoms to nicotine. Option D confuses carbon monoxide (CO) with carbon dioxide (CO2), which are entirely different gases.
+
+### Q80: When is the risk of vestibular disturbance causing dizziness greatest? ^t40q80
+- A) when rotating the head during a descent
+- B) when rotating the head during straight-and-level flight
+- C) when rotating the head during a climb
+- D) when rotating the head during a coordinated turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotating the head during a coordinated turn creates the Coriolis illusion — the semicircular canals are already stimulated by the angular acceleration of the turn, and a head rotation in a different plane stimulates additional canals simultaneously, producing a powerful and disorienting sensation of tumbling or spinning. Option A, Option B, and Option C involve head rotation during relatively stable flight conditions where only one set of canals is stimulated at a time, making vestibular disturbance far less likely. The Coriolis illusion is one of the most dangerous vestibular phenomena in aviation.
+
+### Q81: How can a pilot better withstand positive g-forces in flight? ^t40q81
+- A) by sitting as upright as possible
+- B) by relaxing their muscles and leaning forward
+- C) by contracting the abdominal and leg muscles and performing forced breathing
+- D) by tightening their harness straps as much as possible
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Contracting the abdominal and leg muscles (the anti-G straining manoeuvre or L-1 technique) increases intra-abdominal pressure and impedes blood from pooling in the lower body, maintaining blood flow to the brain and delaying the onset of grey-out and G-LOC. Forced, cyclical breathing maintains thoracic pressure. Option A (sitting upright) has minimal effect. Option B (relaxing and leaning forward) would accelerate blood pooling in the lower extremities. Option D (tightening harness straps) secures the pilot but does not counteract the haemodynamic effects of g-forces.
+
+### Q82: Which are the most dangerous effects of oxygen deficiency? ^t40q82
+- A) tingling sensations
+- B) blue discoloration of fingernails and lips
+- C) impairment of judgment and concentration
+- D) nausea
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Impairment of judgment and concentration is the most dangerous effect of hypoxia because the pilot loses the very cognitive abilities needed to recognise the problem and take corrective action — a phenomenon known as "insidious hypoxia." Option A (tingling) and Option D (nausea) are unpleasant but do not directly prevent the pilot from deciding to descend. Option B (cyanosis) is a visible physical sign but does not impair decision-making in itself. The critical danger is that a hypoxic pilot often feels fine while their mental performance deteriorates severely.
+
+### Q83: What can be said about the rate of blood alcohol elimination in humans? ^t40q83
+- A) it is accelerated by breathing pure oxygen
+- B) it depends only on time and amounts to roughly 0.1 per mille per hour
+- C) it depends on the alcohol content of the drink consumed
+- D) it can be accelerated by drinking strong coffee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Alcohol is eliminated from the blood by the liver at a nearly constant rate of approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, determined solely by time and the liver's enzyme capacity. Option A (breathing pure oxygen) does not accelerate hepatic alcohol metabolism. Option C is incorrect because the elimination rate is constant regardless of whether the alcohol came from beer, wine, or spirits — what differs is how much total alcohol was consumed. Option D (drinking coffee) may increase alertness temporarily but has no effect on the metabolic breakdown of alcohol.
+
+### Q84: What impact does proprioception (deep sensitivity) have on position perception? ^t40q84
+- A) in coordination with the balance organ, proprioception gives a correct position impression even when visibility is lost
+- B) when visual references are lost, proprioception can give a false perception of position
+- C) proprioception alone is always sufficient to sustain a correct perception of position
+- D) when training is adequate, proprioception can prevent spatial disorientation when visibility is lost
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Proprioception — the sense of body position derived from receptors in muscles, joints, and tendons — can provide misleading information about the aircraft's attitude when visual references are absent. Without visual confirmation, the proprioceptive system cannot reliably distinguish between gravitational forces and centripetal forces in a turn. Option A incorrectly claims that proprioception and the vestibular system together provide accurate orientation without vision. Option C overstates proprioception's reliability. Option D wrongly suggests that training can overcome this fundamental physiological limitation. Only visual references or flight instruments can reliably prevent spatial disorientation.
+
+### Q85: Which of these factors has no direct effect on visual acuity? ^t40q85
+- A) high blood pressure
+- B) carbon monoxide (CO)
+- C) oxygen deficiency
+- D) alcohol
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** High blood pressure (hypertension) does not directly impair visual acuity during normal flight operations, although severe chronic hypertension may eventually damage the retina over time. Option B (carbon monoxide) reduces oxygen delivery to the retina, directly degrading vision, particularly night vision. Option C (oxygen deficiency) similarly starves the highly oxygen-dependent photoreceptors, causing measurable visual impairment even at moderate altitudes. Option D (alcohol) depresses the central nervous system and impairs visual processing, focus, and contrast sensitivity. All three of these factors directly affect a pilot's ability to see clearly.
+
+### Q86: Up to what maximum altitude can a healthy human body compensate for oxygen deficiency by increasing heart rate and breathing rate? ^t40q86
+- A) roughly 3,000 ft
+- B) roughly 22,000 ft
+- C) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- D) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human body can compensate for the reduced partial pressure of oxygen up to approximately 10,000-12,000 ft by increasing heart rate, respiratory rate, and cardiac output. Above this altitude, these compensatory mechanisms become insufficient and supplemental oxygen is required to prevent significant performance degradation. Option A (3,000 ft) is far too low — compensation is barely needed at this altitude. Option B (22,000 ft) far exceeds the body's compensatory range. Option C (6,000-7,000 ft) is the altitude where compensatory mechanisms begin to activate, not their upper limit.
+
+### Q87: What has to be observed when taking over-the-counter medications? ^t40q87
+- A) even over-the-counter medications can influence flight fitness
+- B) over-the-counter medications have no side effects and therefore no influence on flight fitness
+- C) all flying is prohibited after taking any medication
+- D) over-the-counter medications only have insignificant side effects; their influence on flight fitness is negligible
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Many over-the-counter medications — including antihistamines, cold remedies, pain relievers, and decongestants — can cause drowsiness, dizziness, impaired reaction time, or blurred vision, all of which compromise flight safety. Option B and Option D dangerously dismiss the potential for side effects. Option C is too extreme — not all medications are incompatible with flying, but each must be evaluated individually. The correct approach is to consult an aviation medical examiner (AME) before flying with any medication, whether prescription or over-the-counter.
+
+### Q88: What sensory illusion can a linear acceleration produce in horizontal flight when visual references are lost? ^t40q88
+- A) the impression of being in a left turn
+- B) the impression of descending
+- C) the impression of being in a right turn
+- D) the impression of climbing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A forward linear acceleration in horizontal flight pushes the pilot back into the seat, and the otolith organs in the inner ear interpret the combined acceleration vector as a backward tilt — creating the somatogravic illusion of a climb. Without visual references, the pilot may instinctively push the nose down to "correct" the perceived climb, risking a dive into terrain. Option A and Option C (turning impressions) are associated with semicircular canal stimulation, not linear acceleration. Option B (descent impression) would result from deceleration, not acceleration.
+
+### Q89: How long does the human eye take to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q89
+- A) roughly 1 second
+- B) roughly 10 minutes
+- C) roughly 10 seconds
+- D) roughly 30 minutes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Full dark adaptation of the human eye takes approximately 30 minutes as the rod photoreceptors in the retinal periphery gradually increase their sensitivity through biochemical changes in rhodopsin. Option A (1 second) and Option C (10 seconds) describe only the initial pupil dilation, which is a small part of the adaptation process. Option B (10 minutes) represents partial adaptation — at this point, the cones have adapted but the rods have not yet reached maximum sensitivity. Pilots planning night flights should protect their dark adaptation by avoiding bright white light for at least 30 minutes before departure.
+
+### Q90: Which of these statements about hyperventilation is correct? ^t40q90
+- A) hyperventilation is always a consequence of oxygen deficiency
+- B) hyperventilation causes an excess of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood
+- C) hyperventilation can be triggered by stress and anxiety
+- D) hyperventilation causes a deficiency of carbon monoxide (CO) in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation — excessively rapid or deep breathing — is frequently triggered by stress, anxiety, or fear, which causes the pilot to unconsciously breathe faster than metabolically necessary. This excessive ventilation blows off too much CO2, causing hypocapnia (low blood CO2), not an excess. Option A is wrong because hyperventilation is not caused by oxygen deficiency; it can occur at any altitude when the pilot is stressed. Option B incorrectly states that CO2 increases, when in fact it decreases. Option D confuses carbon monoxide (CO) with carbon dioxide (CO2) — hyperventilation involves CO2, not CO.
+
+### Q91: Vestibular disturbances during a turn can cause dizziness. What measure is most effective in preventing them? ^t40q91
+- A) during the turn, look out through the window in the direction of the turn
+- B) keep the head as still as possible during the turn
+- C) breathe deeply and slowly, ensuring an adequate supply of fresh air
+- D) alternately move the head from right to left during the turn
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Keeping the head still during a turn prevents the Coriolis illusion, which occurs when head movement in one plane is combined with the angular rotation of the turn, stimulating multiple semicircular canals simultaneously and producing intense vertigo. Option A (looking out the window) does not address the vestibular cause of the disturbance. Option C (deep breathing and fresh air) helps with motion sickness but not with vestibular vertigo from head movements. Option D (alternating head movements) would dramatically worsen the problem by creating repeated Coriolis stimulation.
+
+### Q92: Which is the immediate effect of inhaling cigarette smoke on a regular smoker? ^t40q92
+- A) lowered blood pressure
+- B) dilation of blood vessels
+- C) reduced oxygen transport in the blood
+- D) increased carbon dioxide (CO2) content in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The carbon monoxide (CO) in cigarette smoke binds to haemoglobin far more readily than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and immediately reducing the blood's capacity to transport oxygen to tissues and organs. Option A (lowered blood pressure) is incorrect — nicotine actually raises blood pressure through vasoconstriction. Option B (dilation of blood vessels) is also wrong; nicotine causes vasoconstriction, not dilation. Option D confuses the issue — smoking does not significantly increase CO2 levels; the problem is CO displacing oxygen on the haemoglobin molecule.
+
+### Q93: What is the relationship between oxygen deficiency and visual acuity? ^t40q93
+- A) oxygen deficiency can reduce visual acuity
+- B) oxygen deficiency has no effect on visual acuity
+- C) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity only during the day
+- D) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity solely at night
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The retina is one of the most metabolically active tissues in the body and is highly sensitive to oxygen deprivation. Even mild hypoxia can reduce visual acuity, diminish contrast sensitivity, and narrow the visual field, with night vision being affected first since rod cells are particularly oxygen-demanding. Option B incorrectly denies any relationship. Option C and Option D each restrict the effect to one time of day, when in reality both day and night vision are impaired — night vision is simply affected earlier and more severely because rods have higher oxygen requirements than cones.
+
+### Q94: Oxygen deficiency and hyperventilation share some similar symptoms. Which of these symptoms always indicates oxygen deficiency? ^t40q94
+- A) blue lips and fingernails (cyanosis)
+- B) visual disturbance
+- C) hot and cold sensations
+- D) tingling sensations
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cyanosis — a bluish discolouration of the lips and fingernails caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin — is a reliable and specific sign of oxygen deficiency that cannot be produced by hyperventilation alone. Option B (visual disturbance), Option C (hot and cold sensations), and Option D (tingling) can all occur in both hypoxia and hyperventilation, making them unreliable for distinguishing between the two conditions. Recognising cyanosis is therefore a critical diagnostic tool: if blue lips or nail beds are observed, the cause is definitively inadequate oxygen supply, and descent to lower altitude is required immediately.
+
+### Q95: What is the proportion of oxygen (in %) in the air at an altitude of approximately 34,000 feet? ^t40q95
+- A) 10%
+- B) 21%
+- C) 5%
+- D) 42%
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The atmosphere maintains a constant composition of approximately 21% oxygen from sea level through the troposphere and well into the stratosphere. At 34,000 ft, while the total atmospheric pressure is only about one quarter of sea-level pressure, the proportion of oxygen remains 21%. Option A (10%), Option C (5%), and Option D (42%) all incorrectly suggest the percentage changes with altitude. The critical point is that at 34,000 ft the partial pressure of oxygen is dangerously low despite the unchanged percentage, making supplemental oxygen or pressurisation essential for survival.
+
+### Q96: During a visual flight, you suddenly lose all external visual references. Spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses and proprioception is… ^t40q96
+- A) impossible
+- B) possible only for experienced pilots
+- C) possible only after adequate training
+- D) possible for solely a few minutes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without external visual references, maintaining spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses (pressure on the skin) and proprioception (body position sense) is physiologically impossible because these senses cannot distinguish between gravitational forces and the centripetal or inertial forces experienced in flight. Option B and Option C incorrectly suggest that experience or training can overcome this fundamental human limitation. Option D implies that orientation is possible for a short time, but in reality spatial disorientation can begin within seconds of losing visual references. Only flight instruments or restored visual contact can provide reliable attitude information.
+
+### Q97: Which is the most probable and most dangerous poisoning that can occur on board a piston-engine aircraft? ^t40q97
+- A) poisoning due to cosmic radiation at high altitude
+- B) carbon monoxide poisoning
+- C) ozone poisoning
+- D) poisoning due to leaded fuel vapors
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning from a defective or leaking exhaust system is the most likely and most dangerous in-flight poisoning in piston-engine aircraft. CO is colourless and odourless, making it undetectable without a dedicated CO detector, and it binds to haemoglobin 200 times more strongly than oxygen, rapidly incapacitating the pilot. Option A (cosmic radiation) is a long-term cumulative risk for frequent high-altitude flyers, not an acute poisoning event. Option C (ozone) affects primarily high-altitude jet aircraft. Option D (leaded fuel vapours) can occur during refuelling but is not a common in-flight hazard.
+
+### Q98: What impression results from a correct final approach to a runway with a strong upslope in the landing direction? ^t40q98
+- A) the impression of landing too short
+- B) the impression of too shallow an approach
+- C) the impression of too high an approach
+- D) the impression of too low an approach
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a runway that slopes upward in the landing direction, the pilot perceives the runway surface at an unusual angle that creates the visual illusion of being too high on approach. The upsloping surface compresses the visual perspective, making the runway appear closer and the approach steeper than it actually is. Option A and Option D describe the opposite illusion. Option B (too shallow) would occur with a downsloping runway. This visual trap can lead the pilot to unnecessarily steepen the approach, potentially resulting in a dangerously low and short landing.
+
+### Q99: Why should gas-forming foods be avoided before undertaking a high-altitude flight? ^t40q99
+- A) because gas expansion during descent can cause pain in the digestive system
+- B) because gas expansion at high altitudes can cause pain in the digestive system
+- C) because at high altitudes, gases evaporate into the blood and cause decompression sickness
+- D) because gas-forming foods promote motion sickness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As altitude increases, ambient pressure decreases and trapped gases in the body expand according to Boyle's law. Intestinal gas produced by gas-forming foods such as beans and lentils expands significantly at altitude, causing abdominal distension, pain, and distraction from flying tasks. Option A incorrectly places the problem during descent, when gas would actually compress. Option C confuses intestinal gas expansion with dissolved nitrogen forming bubbles in the blood (decompression sickness), which is an entirely different mechanism. Option D incorrectly links gas-forming foods to motion sickness, which is a vestibular phenomenon.
+
+### Q100: Which blood component primarily transports oxygen? ^t40q100
+- A) red blood cells
+- B) blood plasma
+- C) blood platelets
+- D) white blood cells
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells (erythrocytes) contain haemoglobin, the iron-containing protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues throughout the body. Each red blood cell carries approximately 270 million haemoglobin molecules, making erythrocytes the primary oxygen transport system. Option B (blood plasma) carries a small amount of dissolved oxygen but contributes less than 2% of total oxygen transport. Option C (blood platelets) are involved in blood clotting, not gas transport. Option D (white blood cells) are part of the immune system and play no role in oxygen delivery.
+
+### Q101: What illusion can occur when visual references are lost during a prolonged coordinated turn? ^t40q101
+- A) the impression of no longer being in a turn (wings level)
+- B) the impression of being in a descent
+- C) the impression of being in a climb
+- D) the impression of being in a greater bank angle than is actually the case
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a prolonged coordinated turn at constant rate, the fluid in the semicircular canals gradually matches the rotation speed and stops deflecting the sensory hairs, causing the vestibular system to signal "no turn" even though the aircraft remains banked. The pilot perceives wings-level flight. If the pilot then levels the wings, they experience the sensation of turning in the opposite direction and may re-enter the original turn — this is the mechanism behind the deadly graveyard spiral. Option B, Option C, and Option D describe different illusions not associated with vestibular adaptation during steady turns.
+
+### Q102: Your passenger wishes to ease their fear of flying by drinking a strong alcoholic drink just before departure. What effect has to be expected at high altitude? ^t40q102
+- A) at high altitude, the psychological effects of alcohol decrease
+- B) alcohol is eliminated more slowly at high altitude than on the ground
+- C) alcohol is eliminated more rapidly at high altitude than on the ground
+- D) oxygen deficiency at high altitude amplifies the effects of alcohol
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At altitude, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen (hypoxia) acts synergistically with alcohol to amplify its impairing effects on the central nervous system. Both hypoxia and alcohol independently degrade cognitive function, and together they produce a combined impairment far greater than either alone — sometimes described as a multiplier effect. Option A incorrectly claims that alcohol effects decrease at altitude. Option B and Option C concern the elimination rate, which is primarily determined by liver metabolism and does not change significantly with altitude. The combination of altitude and alcohol is particularly dangerous for passengers who may need to respond in an emergency.
+
+### Q103: Which is the correct technique for seeing at night? ^t40q103
+- A) stare directly at distant, faintly lit objects as directly as possible
+- B) do not stare directly at objects but look slightly to the side
+- C) stare directly at all objects as directly as possible
+- D) scan objects with rapid large eye movements
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At night, the central fovea of the retina — used for direct vision — contains only cone cells, which require more light to function effectively. The rod cells responsible for low-light sensitivity are concentrated in the retinal periphery. Looking slightly to the side of an object (off-centre viewing) places its image on the rod-rich area, making it visible in dim conditions. Option A and Option C (staring directly) use only the foveal cones, which are essentially blind in low light, causing the object to disappear. Option D (rapid large eye movements) disrupts the fixation time needed for the rods to detect faint light.
+
+### Q104: Your passenger complains of middle ear pressure equalization problems. How can you help them? ^t40q104
+- A) stop the climb, if possible descend until the pain subsides, then climb again at a lower rate
+- B) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a lower rate
+- C) descend at a higher rate until the pain subsides, then continue descending at a lower rate
+- D) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a higher rate
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems occur most commonly during descent, when increasing external pressure cannot enter the middle ear cavity fast enough through the Eustachian tube. The correct remedy is to stop the descent, climb slightly if possible to reduce the pressure differential and allow the pain to subside, then resume the descent at a slower rate to give the Eustachian tube time to equalise. Option A addresses climbing problems, which are much less common. Option C (descending faster) would worsen the pressure imbalance. Option D correctly stops the descent but then resumes at a higher rate, which would recreate the problem.
+
+### Q105: Which of the following symptoms may indicate oxygen deficiency? ^t40q105
+- A) joint pain
+- B) lung pain
+- C) reduced heart rate
+- D) difficulty concentrating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Difficulty concentrating is one of the earliest and most characteristic symptoms of hypoxia (oxygen deficiency), reflecting the brain's high sensitivity to reduced oxygen supply. As altitude increases and oxygen partial pressure drops, cognitive functions deteriorate before physical symptoms become apparent. Option A (joint pain) is associated with decompression sickness, not hypoxia. Option B (lung pain) is not a typical hypoxia symptom. Option C (reduced heart rate) is incorrect because the body's compensatory response to hypoxia is to increase heart rate, not decrease it.
+
+### Q106: What causes motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q106
+- A) a disorder of the middle ear
+- B) irritation of the balance organ
+- C) evaporation of gases into the blood
+- D) a strong reduction in atmospheric pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness is caused by irritation of the vestibular system (balance organ) in the inner ear when it receives conflicting signals from the eyes, the vestibular apparatus, and proprioceptors. This sensory mismatch — for example, the inner ear detecting motion while the eyes see a stationary cockpit interior — triggers the autonomic nervous system response that produces nausea and vomiting. Option A (middle ear disorder) confuses a pathological condition with a normal physiological response. Option C and Option D describe altitude-related phenomena (decompression) that are unrelated to motion sickness.
+
+### Q107: Which are the side effects of anti-motion-sickness medications? ^t40q107
+- A) drowsiness and slowed reaction time
+- B) general weakness and loss of appetite
+- C) exhaustion and depression
+- D) hyperactivity and risk-taking tendency
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Anti-motion-sickness medications — primarily antihistamines (such as dimenhydrinate) and anticholinergics (such as scopolamine) — commonly cause drowsiness and significantly slowed reaction times as their primary side effects. These effects directly compromise the alertness and rapid decision-making required for safe flying. Option B, Option C, and Option D describe side effects not typically associated with standard anti-motion-sickness drugs. Because of the sedating effects described in Option A, pilots should not use these medications before or during flight without medical clearance from an aviation medical examiner.
+
+### Q108: What is decisive for the onset of noise-induced hearing loss? ^t40q108
+- A) only the duration of noise exposure
+- B) the duration and intensity of the noise
+- C) only the intensity of the noise
+- D) the sudden onset of a noise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Noise-induced hearing loss depends on the total sound energy dose received by the ear, which is a function of both the intensity (measured in decibels) and the duration of exposure. A very loud noise over a short period or a moderately loud noise sustained over many hours can both cause permanent damage. Option A ignores intensity — a quiet sound, no matter how long the exposure, will not cause damage. Option C ignores duration — a brief loud burst is generally less harmful than the same intensity sustained for hours. Option D (sudden onset) describes acoustic shock, which is only one mechanism and not the full picture.
+
+### Q109: Increasing and sustained positive g-loads can produce symptoms that appear in the following order:... ^t40q109
+- A) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- B) red-out, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- C) reduction of peripheral vision, loss of color vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- D) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, red-out, loss of consciousness
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As positive g-forces increase, blood drains from the head toward the lower body in a predictable sequence of visual and neurological symptoms: first grey-out (loss of colour vision as the retina receives less oxygenated blood), then tunnel vision (reduction of peripheral vision as the outer retina fails first), then complete blackout (total loss of vision), and finally G-LOC (loss of consciousness). Option B incorrectly begins with red-out, which occurs under negative g-forces, not positive. Option C reverses the first two symptoms. Option D inserts red-out mid-sequence, which does not occur during positive g-loading.
+
+### Q110: From what altitude does the body of a healthy person begin to compensate for oxygen deficiency by accelerating breathing rate? ^t40q110
+- A) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- B) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+- C) roughly 3,000-4,000 ft
+- D) from 12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At approximately 6,000-7,000 ft, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen becomes sufficient to trigger the body's chemoreceptors, which detect the drop in blood oxygen and stimulate an increase in respiratory rate as a compensatory mechanism. Option B (10,000-12,000 ft) describes the upper limit of effective compensation, not where it begins. Option C (3,000-4,000 ft) is too low — at this altitude, the oxygen reduction is minimal and no compensation is needed. Option D (from 12,000 ft) is the point where compensation becomes inadequate, not where it starts.
+
+### Q111: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q111
+- A) Point C
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law, illustrated by the inverted-U curve in figure HPL-002, shows that performance peaks at a moderate, optimal level of arousal — represented by Point B at the top of the curve. Option D (Point A) lies on the left side where arousal is too low, resulting in boredom, inattention, and poor performance. Option A (Point C) and Option B (Point D) represent progressively higher arousal levels on the right side of the curve, where over-stimulation causes anxiety, cognitive overload, and declining performance. For pilots, maintaining arousal at Point B ensures maximum alertness without the errors that come from excessive stress.
+
+### Q112: Which answer is correct concerning stress? ^t40q112
+- A) Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner
+- B) Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety
+- C) Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem
+- D) Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress commonly arises when a person perceives a threatening or problematic situation for which no adequate solution appears available — the feeling of being trapped or overwhelmed triggers the physiological stress response. Option A is incorrect because individual stress responses vary enormously based on personality, experience, coping mechanisms, and physical condition. Option B dangerously dismisses the impact of stress on flight safety, when in fact stress-related errors are a major factor in aviation incidents. Option D is wrong because training and experience are proven to raise the stress threshold by providing learned responses to challenging situations.
+
+### Q113: During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed? ^t40q113
+- A) Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook
+- B) Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying
+- C) Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane
+- D) There is no time for solving problems during flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental principle of airmanship is "aviate, navigate, communicate" — in that order. The pilot's primary duty is always to fly the aircraft and maintain stable flight before addressing any secondary problem. Option A risks losing aircraft control by prioritising problem-solving over flying. Option B (radio contact) is a valid step but must come after ensuring the aircraft is under control. Option D incorrectly implies that problem-solving during flight is impossible, when in fact pilots routinely handle in-flight issues provided they maintain aircraft control as the overriding priority.
+
+### Q114: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q114
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point B
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve, Point D represents the extreme right of the arousal axis where stress levels are very high and performance has collapsed — the pilot is overstrained. At this level of arousal, cognitive function breaks down, decision-making becomes erratic, and the risk of critical errors increases dramatically. Option B (Point C) represents elevated but not yet maximal stress. Option C (Point A) represents under-arousal and boredom. Option D (Point B) is the peak of the curve where optimal performance occurs. Recognising the slide from Point B toward Point D is a critical pilot skill.
+
+### Q115: The swiss cheese model is used to explain the... ^t40q115
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Error chain.
+- D) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model is a foundational concept in aviation safety that illustrates how accidents result from an error chain — a series of individual failures in successive defensive barriers that happen to align, allowing a hazard to penetrate all layers simultaneously. Each "slice of cheese" represents a safety barrier with inherent "holes" (latent conditions and active failures). Option A (pilot readiness) is assessed through fitness-to-fly checks, not the Swiss Cheese Model. Option B (problem solving) uses decision-making frameworks like DECIDE. Option D (emergency landing procedures) are covered by standard operating procedures and checklists, not error chain theory.
+
+### Q116: What does the term Red-out mean? ^t40q116
+- A) Rash during decompression sickness
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- D) Anaemia caused by an injury
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (such as during a bunt or inverted flight manoeuvre), when blood is forced upward into the head and eyes. The excess blood pressure in the ocular capillaries produces a characteristic red tinge across the visual field. This is the negative-g counterpart to grey-out and blackout, which occur under positive g-forces when blood drains away from the head. Option A (decompression sickness rash) is an entirely different condition affecting dissolved gases in the body. Option B (sunrise/sunset colour) is a natural optical phenomenon, not a physiological impairment. Option D (anaemia from injury) is a medical condition unrelated to g-forces.
+
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+# Meteorology
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What clouds and weather may develop when a humid and unstable air mass is pushed against a mountain chain by the prevailing wind and forced upward? ^t50q1
+- A) Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation.
+- B) Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.
+- C) Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.
+- D) Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When unstable, humid air is forced to rise orographically, it triggers convective instability — air that is conditionally unstable becomes absolutely unstable once lifting begins. The resulting rapid ascent fuels cumulonimbus development, producing embedded CBs with thunderstorms, heavy showers, and hail. Stable air masses under the same conditions produce layered clouds (Ns or As) with steady rain, not convective storms.
+
+### Q2: What type of fog forms when humid and nearly saturated air is forced to rise along the slopes of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailing wind? ^t50q2
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Steaming fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Orographic fog
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog forms when wind-driven humid air is mechanically lifted along a slope, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point. Radiation fog requires calm nights with radiative ground cooling, advection fog forms when warm moist air moves over a cold surface, and steaming fog (Arctic sea smoke) occurs when cold air passes over warm water — none of these involve slope-forced lifting.
+
+### Q3: What phenomenon is known as "blue thermals"? ^t50q3
+- A) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+- D) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Blue thermals" exist when the lifting condensation level (LCL) is very high — the air is too dry to reach its dew point before the thermal tops out. As a result, thermals rise but no cumulus clouds form, leaving the sky clear ("blue"). For glider pilots this is challenging since there are no visual cloud markers to indicate thermal location, and the cloudbase is beyond the thermal ceiling.
+
+### Q4: The expression "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^t50q4
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal activity is considered to have "begun" when thermals are strong enough to support gliding and extend to at least 600 m AGL — sufficient altitude to work the lift. Below this height, thermals may exist but are too shallow to be safely exploited by a glider. Cloud formation is not a prerequisite; blue thermals (see Q3) can also mark the beginning of usable thermal activity.
+
+### Q5: The "trigger temperature" is the temperature that... ^t50q5
+- A) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+- B) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascent when Cumulus cloud formation begins.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level required for thunderstorm development from a Cumulus cloud.
+- D) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without thunderstorm formation from a Cumulus cloud.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum surface temperature that must be reached before thermals can rise to the condensation level and form cumulus clouds. It is derived from the aerological diagram (tephigram/Stüve diagram) by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the morning sounding's moisture level back to the surface. Until this temperature is reached, thermals may exist but will not produce cumulus markers.
+
+### Q6: What is meant by "over-development" in a weather report? ^t50q6
+- A) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- B) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+- C) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- D) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development occurs when cumulus clouds continue growing vertically beyond the thermal inversion or become self-sustaining through latent heat release, developing into cumulonimbus (Cb) with heavy rain showers, lightning, and hail. This typically happens during humid summer afternoons when atmospheric instability is high and the inhibiting layer is weak. For glider pilots, over-development signals the end of safe soaring conditions and a need to land.
+
+### Q7: The gliding weather report indicates environmental instability. Morning dew is present on the grass and no thermals are currently active. What thermal development can be expected? ^t50q7
+- A) Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will form
+- B) After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion, thermal activity is likely to start
+- C) With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin
+- D) Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity for the day
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Morning dew indicates the air cooled to the dew point overnight (radiation cooling), but this is temporary. Once solar insolation heats the ground, the surface temperature rises, warming the air above it until the temperature exceeds the trigger temperature. Environmental instability means the lapse rate is steep enough to sustain thermals once they begin, so good thermal conditions are likely to develop during the morning hours.
+
+### Q8: What effect on thermal activity can be expected when cirrus clouds approach from one direction and become increasingly dense, blocking the sun? ^t50q8
+- A) Cirrus clouds indicate instability and the onset of over-development
+- B) Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity
+- C) Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.
+- D) Cirrus clouds indicate a high-level inversion with ongoing thermal activity up to that level
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermals are driven by differential heating of the ground by solar radiation. Thickening cirrus clouds progressively filter out solar energy, reducing ground heating and therefore thermal strength and depth. Dense cirrus can reduce insolation enough to stop thermal activity entirely. Additionally, approaching cirrus from one direction often indicates an advancing warm front, which brings widespread cloud, stable conditions, and further suppression of thermals.
+
+### Q9: What situation is known as "shielding"? ^t50q9
+- A) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eighths of the sky
+- B) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- C) Ns clouds covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- D) High or mid-level cloud layers impairing thermal activity
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding describes the effect of high or medium cloud layers (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) that block solar radiation and suppress thermal development below. Even partial cloud cover at these levels can significantly reduce ground insolation. Gliding forecasts include shielding assessments to indicate when and where thermals will be weakened or absent due to cloud cover above the expected thermal layer.
+
+### Q10: While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending north to south and moving east. What would be a sensible decision regarding the weather? ^t50q10
+- A) Plan the flight below the thunderstorm cloud bases
+- B) Change plans and start the triangle heading east
+- C) Postpone the flight to another day
+- D) During flight, look for gaps between thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A squall line is an organized line of severe thunderstorms that is notoriously fast-moving, unpredictable, and extremely dangerous. Moving at typical speeds of 30–60 km/h, a squall line 100 km away could reach the airfield within 2–3 hours. Flying below Cb cloud bases or attempting to navigate between cells exposes the glider to extreme turbulence, windshear, hail, and downdrafts. The only safe option is to not fly until the hazard has completely passed.
+
+### Q11: What is the gas composition of "air"? ^t50q11
+- A) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- D) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air by volume is approximately 78% nitrogen (N2), 21% oxygen (O2), and the remaining 1% consists of argon, carbon dioxide, and other trace gases. Water vapour is variable (0–4%) and is not counted in the standard dry-air composition. Knowing air composition is fundamental to understanding atmospheric physics, density calculations, and the behaviour of aircraft engines and instruments.
+
+### Q12: In which atmospheric layer are weather phenomena predominantly found? ^t50q12
+- A) Stratosphere
+- B) Troposphere
+- C) Thermosphere
+- D) Tropopause
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The troposphere extends from the surface to approximately 8–16 km depending on latitude and season. It contains approximately 75–80% of the atmosphere's total mass and almost all its water vapour. Convection, cloud formation, precipitation, fronts, and wind phenomena all occur here because temperature decreases with height, driving convective instability. Above the tropopause, the stratosphere is stable and largely cloud-free.
+
+### Q13: What is the mass of a "cube of air" with 1 m edges at MSL according to ISA? ^t50q13
+- A) 12.25 kg
+- B) 0.01225 kg
+- C) 1.225 kg
+- D) 0.1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), air density at mean sea level is 1.225 kg/m³. Therefore a 1 m³ cube of air has a mass of 1.225 kg. This density value is fundamental to aviation: it affects lift, drag, engine power, and altimeter calibration. Density decreases with altitude and increases temperature/humidity changes also affect it, which is why density altitude matters for aircraft performance.
+
+### Q14: At what rate does the temperature change with increasing altitude according to ISA within the troposphere? ^t50q14
+- A) Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- B) Decreases by 2° C / 100 m
+- C) Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- D) Increases by 2° C / 100 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA standard lapse rate is 1.98°C per 1000 ft (approximately 2°C/1000 ft), or 6.5°C per 1000 m. This is the Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) used as a reference for altimeter calibration and pressure calculations. The actual ELR varies with weather conditions — steeper than ISA indicates instability and favours thermals, shallower or negative (inversion) indicates stability and suppresses convection.
+
+### Q15: What is the mean tropopause height according to the ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)? ^t50q15
+- A) 36000 m
+- B) 11000 ft
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 11000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is defined at 11,000 m (approximately 36,089 ft), where the temperature reaches -56.5°C and then remains constant with height into the lower stratosphere. In reality the tropopause height varies: it is lower over the poles (~8 km) and higher over the tropics (~16 km), and fluctuates with season and synoptic weather patterns. Cumulonimbus tops that penetrate the tropopause are especially violent.
+
+### Q16: The "tropopause" is defined as... ^t50q16
+- A) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- B) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- C) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- D) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the transition boundary between the troposphere (where temperature decreases with height) and the stratosphere (where temperature initially remains constant then increases due to ozone absorption of UV radiation). It acts as a "lid" on convection — cumulonimbus clouds that reach it spread out laterally to form the characteristic anvil shape. Jet streams are located near the tropopause.
+
+### Q17: In which unit are temperatures reported by European meteorological aviation services? ^t50q17
+- A) Degrees Fahrenheit
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrees Centigrade (°C)
+- D) Gpdam
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** European aviation meteorology (ICAO Annex 3, EU regulations) specifies temperatures in degrees Celsius (°C) for all operational products including METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs, and forecast charts. Kelvin is used in scientific and upper-air calculations. Fahrenheit is used in the US and a few other countries but not in European aviation. This standardisation is critical for correct interpretation of icing levels, freezing level heights, and density altitude.
+
+### Q18: What is meant by an "inversion layer"? ^t50q18
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion "inverts" the normal lapse rate — instead of temperature falling with height, it rises. This creates a very stable layer that acts as a lid on convection, trapping thermals below it, concentrating pollutants, and promoting fog and low cloud formation beneath it. For glider pilots, a low-level inversion caps thermal height; a subsidence inversion in a high-pressure system limits soaring altitude and is often associated with haze.
+
+### Q19: What is meant by an "isothermal layer"? ^t50q19
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer maintains constant temperature with increasing altitude. Like an inversion, it is more stable than the standard atmosphere and inhibits convection. The lower stratosphere exhibits an isothermal region immediately above the tropopause. Isothermal layers can also occur in the troposphere and, like inversions, act as a cap on thermal development and cloud growth.
+
+### Q20: The temperature lapse rate with increasing altitude within the troposphere according to ISA is... ^t50q20
+- A) 3° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0.65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0.6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) is 6.5°C per 1000 m, or 0.65°C per 100 m (approximately 2°C per 1000 ft). This is distinct from the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR) of 1°C/100 m and the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) of approximately 0.6°C/100 m. When the actual ELR is steeper than the DALR, the atmosphere is absolutely unstable; when it lies between the DALR and SALR, the atmosphere is conditionally unstable — the typical situation for thermal soaring.
+
+### Q21: Which process may produce an inversion layer at around 5000 ft (1500 m) altitude? ^t50q21
+- A) Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere
+- B) Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day
+- C) Ground cooling by radiation during the night
+- D) Widespread descending air within a high pressure area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Subsidence inversion forms when air in the centre of a high-pressure area sinks over a wide area. As the air descends, it warms adiabatically, but because the lower air has not warmed at the same rate, the descending layer becomes warmer than the air below it — creating an inversion, typically around 1500–3000 m. This is characteristic of anticyclonic conditions: stable weather, limited convection, and haze or smog trapped below the inversion.
+
+### Q22: A ground-level inversion can be caused by... ^t50q22
+- A) Ground cooling during the night.
+- B) Intensifying and gusting winds.
+- C) Large-scale lifting of air.
+- D) Thickening of clouds in medium layers.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation inversion forms on calm, clear nights when the ground radiates heat into space and cools rapidly. The air in contact with the ground also cools, while air a few hundred metres above remains warmer — creating a temperature inversion near the surface. This type of inversion is common in anticyclonic conditions and often produces radiation fog or low stratus in the morning, which burns off as the sun heats the ground.
+
+### Q23: What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)? ^t50q23
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 500 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) 250 hPa
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere, pressure at approximately 5500 m (FL180) is 500 hPa — exactly half the sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. The 500 hPa level is a key reference level in synoptic meteorology and is used extensively in upper-air charts. Pressure decreases approximately logarithmically with altitude, halving roughly every 5500 m in the lower troposphere.
+
+### Q24: Which processes lead to decreasing air density? ^t50q24
+- A) Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+- B) Increasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- C) Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- D) Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density is governed by the ideal gas law: density = pressure / (specific gas constant × temperature). Density decreases when pressure decreases (fewer molecules per unit volume) or when temperature increases (molecules move faster and spread apart). Both increasing temperature AND decreasing pressure simultaneously reduce density most effectively. This is why density altitude (the altitude equivalent of the actual air density) matters for aircraft performance on hot, high-altitude airfields.
+
+### Q25: The pressure at MSL under ISA conditions is... ^t50q25
+- A) 1123 hPa.
+- B) 113.25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) defines sea-level pressure as 1013.25 hPa (also expressed as 29.92 inHg in US aviation). This is the standard QNE setting — with 1013.25 hPa set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads Flight Level. All pressure altitudes and flight level definitions are based on this datum. Actual sea-level pressure varies with weather systems and must be corrected via QNH for accurate altitude indication.
+
+### Q26: At what height is the ISA tropopause located? ^t50q26
+- A) 48000 ft.
+- B) 11000 ft.
+- C) 36000 ft.
+- D) 5500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is located at 11,000 m, which equals approximately 36,089 ft (effectively 36,000 ft). Above this level, the standard atmosphere defines a constant temperature of -56.5°C up to 20,000 m (the isothermal stratospheric layer). This is distinct from Q15 which asks in metres — both questions test knowledge of the same value expressed in different units.
+
+### Q27: The barometric altimeter shows height above... ^t50q27
+- A) Mean sea level.
+- B) Ground.
+- C) Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) A selected reference pressure level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The barometric altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude based on the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Crucially, it indicates height above whatever pressure level is set on the subscale (Kollsman window). Set QNH and it reads altitude above mean sea level; set QFE and it reads height above the reference airfield; set 1013.25 hPa (QNE) and it reads flight level. The altimeter always references a pressure level, not a physical surface.
+
+### Q28: The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting... ^t50q28
+- A) QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- B) QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- C) QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- D) QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the local altimeter setting that makes the instrument read the airfield's elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. Setting QNH and checking that the altimeter reads the known airfield elevation (published in AIP/chart) verifies the altimeter is functioning correctly and calibrated. QFE would show zero (height above airfield), QNE (1013.25) would show a value unrelated to actual elevation, and QFF is a meteorological value reduced to MSL for surface analysis charts.
+
+### Q29: With QFE set, the barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q29
+- A) Height above MSL.
+- B) True altitude above MSL.
+- C) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual atmospheric pressure at airfield elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at the reference airfield and subsequently indicates height above that reference pressure level — effectively height above the airfield. This setting is commonly used in circuit flying and gliding operations so the altimeter directly reads AGL height at the home airfield. It does not account for terrain elevation differences elsewhere.
+
+### Q30: With QNH set, the barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q30
+- A) Height above MSL
+- B) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- C) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) True altitude above MSL.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting adjusted to make the instrument read the elevation above mean sea level at the station. It is calculated by reducing the airfield QFE to sea level using the ISA temperature gradient. With QNH set, the altimeter reads the airfield elevation on the ground and true altitude above MSL in the air (assuming ISA conditions). Note that "true altitude" (answer A) accounts for actual temperature deviations from ISA — QNH gives indicated altitude, which may differ from true altitude in non-ISA conditions.
+
+### Q31: How can wind speed and direction be determined from surface weather charts? ^t50q31
+- A) By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines
+- B) By alignment of warm- and cold front lines.
+- C) By annotations from the text part of the chart
+- D) By alignment and distance of isobaric lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isobars (lines of equal pressure) on surface charts indicate both wind direction and speed. Above the friction layer, wind flows parallel to isobars (geostrophic wind); close to the surface it crosses them at an angle toward lower pressure. Closely spaced isobars indicate a strong pressure gradient force and therefore strong winds; widely spaced isobars indicate light winds. Wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere is anticlockwise around lows and clockwise around highs (Buys-Ballot's Law).
+
+### Q32: Which force is responsible for causing "wind"? ^t50q32
+- A) Coriolis force
+- B) Thermal force
+- C) Pressure gradient force
+- D) Centrifugal force
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is initiated by the pressure gradient force (PGF) — air accelerates from high pressure toward low pressure due to differences in atmospheric pressure. The Coriolis force deflects the moving air (to the right in the Northern Hemisphere) but does not cause the initial motion. Centrifugal force acts in curved flow around pressure systems. Thermal effects create pressure differences which then drive the PGF. Without a pressure gradient there would be no wind.
+
+### Q33: Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is... ^t50q33
+- A) Perpendicular to the isohypses.
+- B) Perpendicular to the isobars.
+- C) Parallel to the isobars.
+- D) At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above the friction layer (roughly 600–1000 m AGL), the Coriolis force and pressure gradient force balance each other, producing geostrophic flow parallel to the isobars. In the friction layer below, surface drag slows the wind, reduces the Coriolis deflection, and allows the wind to cross isobars at an angle toward lower pressure (typically 10–30°). Understanding this is essential for predicting wind direction at altitude versus near the surface.
+
+### Q34: Which of the listed surfaces causes the greatest wind speed reduction due to ground friction? ^t50q34
+- A) Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation
+- B) Oceanic areas
+- C) Flat land, lots of vegetation cover
+- D) Mountainous areas, vegetation cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface roughness (aerodynamic roughness length) determines how much friction the surface exerts on moving air. Mountainous terrain with vegetation has the highest roughness length, causing maximum turbulent drag and wind speed reduction. Oceans have very low roughness and exert minimal friction. Flat vegetated land is intermediate. Importantly, mountains also mechanically block and deflect wind, creating additional complex flow patterns, turbulence, and wave phenomena of direct relevance to glider pilots.
+
+### Q35: The movement of air flowing together is called... ^t50q35
+- A) Divergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Concordence.
+- D) Convergence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convergence describes air flowing into a region from different directions, compressing horizontally. By mass continuity, converging surface air must go somewhere — it is forced upward, triggering cloud formation, precipitation, and potentially convective development. Convergence zones are important for glider pilots as they produce enhanced lift along their axes; sea-breeze fronts and col zones between pressure systems are classic convergence sources for soaring.
+
+### Q36: The movement of air flowing apart is called... ^t50q36
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Divergence.
+- D) Concordence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Divergence describes air spreading outward from a region. At the surface, divergence causes subsiding air from above to replace the outflowing air, promoting stability, clear skies, and fair weather. High-pressure anticyclones are associated with surface divergence and upper-level convergence. In the upper troposphere, divergence above a surface low enhances upward motion and intensifies the low-pressure system.
+
+### Q37: What weather development results from convergence at ground level? ^t50q37
+- A) Descending air and cloud dissipation
+- B) Ascending air and cloud formation
+- C) Descending air and cloud formation
+- D) Ascending air and cloud dissipation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface convergence forces air upward (ascending motion) by mass continuity — air cannot accumulate indefinitely at the surface. As air rises, it cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate until it reaches the dew point (lifting condensation level), where condensation begins and clouds form. Further ascent releases latent heat, potentially fuelling deep convection. This is the fundamental mechanism behind frontal lifting and sea-breeze convergence lift.
+
+### Q38: When air masses meet each other head on, what is this referred to and what air movements follow? ^t50q38
+- A) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+- B) Convergence resulting in air being lifted
+- C) Divergence resulting in air being lifted
+- D) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two opposing air flows collide head-on, the meeting zone is a convergence line. The colliding air has nowhere to go horizontally and is forced upward — producing ascending motion, cloud formation, and potentially precipitation or thunderstorms. This occurs at fronts, sea-breeze convergence zones, and col zones. Glider pilots exploit convergence lines for extended linear climbs along the lift band.
+
+### Q39: By which air masses is Central Europe mainly influenced? ^t50q39
+- A) Tropical and arctic cold air
+- B) Arctic and polar cold air
+- C) Equatorial and tropical warm air
+- D) Polar cold air and tropical warm air
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Central Europe sits in the mid-latitude westerly belt between the polar front (cold polar air from the north) and subtropical high pressure (warm tropical air from the south). The interaction between these two contrasting air masses creates the characteristic mid-latitude cyclone (depression) weather of Central Europe: frontal systems, rapidly changing weather, and the full range of cloud types and precipitation. This dynamic contrast also drives the polar jet stream overhead.
+
+### Q40: In terms of global atmospheric circulation, where does polar cold air meet subtropical warm air? ^t50q40
+- A) At the equator
+- B) At the geographic poles
+- C) At the polar front
+- D) At the subtropical high pressure belt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the boundary between the polar cell (cold, dense air flowing equatorward) and the Ferrel cell (relatively warmer mid-latitude air). In the Northern Hemisphere it is located roughly between 40–60°N, but its position fluctuates as waves (Rossby waves) develop along it — these waves amplify into cyclones and anticyclones. The jet stream flows along the polar front and is a critical factor in synoptic weather patterns across Europe.
+
+### Q41: "Foehn" conditions typically develop with... ^t50q41
+- A) Instability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+- B) Stability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- C) Instability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- D) Stability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn is a warm, dry, descending wind on the lee side of a mountain range. It develops when stable air is pushed by a broad-scale pressure gradient against a mountain barrier. On the windward side, moist air rises and cools at the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR ~0.6°C/100 m) after reaching the dew point, precipitating moisture. On the lee side, dry air descends at the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR ~1°C/100 m), arriving warmer and drier than it started — the Foehn effect.
+
+### Q42: What type of turbulence is typically encountered close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions? ^t50q42
+- A) Thermal turbulence
+- B) Inversion turbulence
+- C) Turbulence in rotors
+- D) Clear-air turbulence (CAT)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn and mountain wave conditions, a rotor zone develops in the lower troposphere on the lee side beneath the crests of the standing waves. The rotor is a region of intense, chaotic turbulence with rotating air, strong downdrafts, and violent eddies — it is one of the most hazardous phenomena for aircraft. Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis) mark wave crests above, while rotor clouds (roll clouds) mark the rotor zone near the surface.
+
+### Q43: Light turbulence should always be expected... ^t50q43
+- A) Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.
+- B) Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+- C) When entering inversions.
+- D) Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible tops of thermal columns. The sub-cloud layer beneath them contains active thermals (updraughts) and compensating downdraughts between them, creating light to moderate turbulence from convective mixing. This is the normal turbulent environment of thermal soaring. Above cumulus tops the air is generally smoother (outside the cloud); stratiform clouds have minimal convective turbulence unless embedded CBs are present.
+
+### Q44: Moderate to severe turbulence should be expected... ^t50q44
+- A) With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog).
+- B) Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- C) Overhead unbroken cloud layers.
+- D) On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotor clouds (roll clouds) on the lee side of mountains are the visible indicator of the highly turbulent rotor zone beneath mountain waves. This turbulence can be extreme, with unpredictable up- and downdraughts, strong shear, and rotational forces capable of exceeding aircraft structural limits. Experienced wave pilots avoid or transit the rotor zone quickly with sufficient airspeed. The windward side of mountains typically has orographic cloud and steady lift, not severe turbulence.
+
+### Q45: Which answer lists every state of water found in the atmosphere? ^t50q45
+- A) Gaseous and liquid
+- B) Liquid and solid
+- C) Liquid
+- D) Liquid, solid, and gaseous
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water exists in all three states within the Earth's atmosphere. Gaseous water vapour is invisible and present throughout the troposphere. Liquid water forms cloud droplets, rain, and drizzle. Solid water forms ice crystals (cirrus clouds), snow, hail, and graupel. Understanding all three states is essential for icing awareness: supercooled liquid water droplets (liquid below 0°C) pose the greatest structural icing hazard to aircraft, as they freeze on contact with cold surfaces.
+
+### Q46: How do dew point and relative humidity change when temperature decreases? ^t50q46
+- A) Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases
+- B) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- C) Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases
+- D) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dew point is the temperature to which air must be cooled (at constant pressure and moisture content) for saturation to occur. It is a measure of the absolute moisture content and remains constant as temperature changes (assuming no moisture is added or removed). However, relative humidity — the ratio of actual vapour pressure to saturation vapour pressure — increases as temperature falls, because the saturation vapour pressure decreases with temperature. When temperature equals the dew point, relative humidity reaches 100% and condensation begins.
+
+### Q47: How do spread and relative humidity change when temperature increases? ^t50q47
+- A) Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- B) Spread increases, relative humidity increases
+- C) Spread increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread is the temperature-dew point difference (T - Td). As temperature increases while dew point remains constant, the spread widens. Simultaneously, because warmer air can hold more water vapour, the relative humidity decreases — the air is now further from saturation. A large spread indicates dry air and a high lifting condensation level (high cloud base). A small spread (near zero) indicates saturated or near-saturated conditions, with fog or low cloud likely.
+
+### Q48: The "spread" is defined as... ^t50q48
+- A) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+- B) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air.
+- C) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- D) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread (also called dew point depression) is simply the difference between the air temperature and the dew point temperature: Spread = T - Td. It is used to estimate cloud base height: in temperate latitudes, cloud base height in metres above the surface is approximately spread × 125 (or in feet, spread × 400). A spread of 0 means the air is saturated (fog or cloud at the surface). Spread is a quick indicator of moisture availability for soaring pilots.
+
+### Q49: With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in... ^t50q49
+- A) Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- B) Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- C) Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- D) Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As temperature decreases (with dew point unchanged), the gap between temperature and dew point narrows — spread decreases. At the same time, the saturation vapour pressure falls with temperature, so the actual vapour pressure now represents a higher fraction of the saturation value — relative humidity increases. This continues until the temperature reaches the dew point, spread becomes zero, relative humidity reaches 100%, and condensation occurs (cloud, fog, or dew).
+
+### Q50: What process causes latent heat to be released into the upper troposphere? ^t50q50
+- A) Evaporation over widespread water areas
+- B) Descending air across widespread areas
+- C) Stabilisation of inflowing air masses
+- D) Cloud forming due to condensation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When water vapour condenses into cloud droplets, the latent heat stored during evaporation is released into the surrounding air. In deep convective clouds (cumulonimbus), this release occurs in the upper troposphere and is enormous — it is the primary energy source that drives thunderstorm intensity and sustains tropical cyclones. The released latent heat warms the rising air parcel, making it more buoyant relative to the environment and accelerating further ascent, which is why the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) is less steep than the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR).
+
+### Q51: Which of these clouds poses the greatest danger to aviation? ^t50q51
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrostratus
+- D) Cirrocumulus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The CB (cumulonimbus) is the most dangerous cloud: severe turbulence, lightning, hail, wind shear, icing.
+
+### Q52: In which situation is the tendency for thunderstorms most pronounced? ^t50q52
+- A) High pressure situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, low air humidity.
+- B) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the upper air layers, high air humidity.
+- C) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant cooling of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+- D) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms = slack pressure gradient (low pressure gradient) + strong surface heating (instability) + high humidity.
+
+### Q53: Fine suspended water droplets reduce visibility at an aerodrome to only 1.5 km up to 1000 ft AGL. What meteorological phenomenon causes this? ^t50q53
+- A) Haze (HZ).
+- B) Mist (BR).
+- C) Widespread dust (DU).
+- D) Shallow fog (MIFG).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Visibility 1–5 km with water droplets = mist (BR). Fog = visibility < 1 km.
+
+### Q54: Which of the following situations most favours radiation fog formation? ^t50q54
+- A) 15 kt / Overcast / 13°C / Dew point 12°C
+- B) 15 kt / Clear sky / 16°C / Dew point 15°C
+- C) 2 kt / Scattered cloud / 7°C / Dew point 6°C
+- D) 2 kt / Clear sky / -3°C / Dew point -20°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog: light wind (2 kt), small temperature/dew point spread (1°C), some cloud acceptable. Option (C) has too large a temp/dew point spread.
+
+### Q55: The temperature recorded at Samedan airport (LSZS, AD elevation 5600 ft) is +5°C. What will the approximate temperature be at 8600 ft altitude directly above the airport? (Assume ISA lapse rate) ^t50q55
+- A) +5°C
+- B) +11°C
+- C) -1°C
+- D) -6°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ISA lapse rate = -2°C/1000 ft. Difference: 8600 - 5600 = 3000 ft. Temperature: 5°C - (3 × 2) = -1°C.
+
+### Q56: The QFE of an aerodrome (AD elevation 3500 ft) corresponds to: ^t50q56
+- A) The instantaneous pressure at sea level.
+- B) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the ISA temperature lapse rate.
+- C) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level.
+- D) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the actual temperature profile.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE = atmospheric pressure measured at aerodrome level (station). The altimeter reads 0 on the ground.
+
+### Q57: What does the following symbol mean? (Arrow with one long barb and one short barb) ^t50q57
+> ![[figures/t50_q57.png]]
+
+- A) Wind from NE, 30 knots.
+- B) Wind from SW, 30 knots.
+- C) Wind from SW, 15 knots.
+- D) Wind from NE, 15 knots.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The arrow points towards the wind's origin. One long barb = 10 kt, one short barb = 5 kt. Total = 15 kt from the NE.
+
+### Q58: What are the wind speed and direction in the following METAR? LSZB 131220Z 28015G25KT 9999 SCT035 BKN075 10/06 Q1018 NOSIG= ^t50q58
+- A) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- C) Wind from WNW, 25 knots, direction varying between WNW and SSE.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, direction varying between WNW and WSW.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 280° = WNW, 15 kt mean, G25 = gusts to 25 kt.
+
+### Q59: In Switzerland, cloud base in a METAR is given in... ^t50q59
+- A) ...metres above sea level.
+- B) ...metres above aerodrome level.
+- C) ...feet above aerodrome level.
+- D) ...feet above sea level.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a METAR, cloud base is given in feet AGL (above aerodrome level).
+
+### Q60: You are flying at very high altitude (northern hemisphere) and consistently have a crosswind from the left. You conclude that: ^t50q60
+- A) A high-pressure area is to the right of your track, a low-pressure area to the left.
+- B) There is a low-pressure area ahead of you and a high-pressure area behind you.
+- C) There is a high-pressure area ahead of you and a low-pressure area behind you.
+- D) A high-pressure area is to the left of your track, a low-pressure area to the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buys-Ballot's law: standing with your back to the wind in the northern hemisphere, the low-pressure area is to your left. Wind from the left = low pressure to the left, high pressure to the right.
+
+### Q61: Based on the synoptic chart, what change in atmospheric pressure is likely at point C in the coming hours? ^t50q61
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart:**
+> ![[figures/t50_q61.png]]
+> *T = depression centre. A = warm sector (between warm front and cold front). B = behind the cold front (cold air mass). C = ahead of the warm front (cool air mass).*
+> *Cold front: blue triangles. Warm front: red semicircles.*
+
+- A) No notable change.
+- B) Pressure will fall.
+- C) Pressure will rise.
+- D) Pressure will undergo rapid, irregular variations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point C lies ahead of the warm front, meaning the depression centre and its associated frontal system are approaching. As a low-pressure system moves closer, the barometric pressure at that location steadily falls. Option A is wrong because an approaching depression always causes pressure changes. Option C (pressure rise) would apply to a location behind a cold front where cold dense air moves in. Option D (rapid irregular variations) is more typical of the immediate vicinity of thunderstorm activity, not the broad-scale approach of a warm front.
+
+### Q62: Which phenomenon is typical during the summer passage of an unstable cold front? ^t50q62
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) Convective cloud development.
+- C) Rapid temperature rise behind the front.
+- D) Rapid pressure drop behind the front.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An unstable cold front in summer forces warm, moist, unstable air upward vigorously, triggering strong convection and the development of cumuliform clouds including towering cumulus and cumulonimbus with showers and thunderstorms. Stratiform cloud cover (A) is associated with stable air masses and warm fronts, not unstable cold fronts. Behind a cold front temperatures drop rather than rise (C), and pressure rises rather than drops (D) as cooler, denser air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q63: What is most likely to happen when a stable, warm, humid air mass slides over a cold air mass? ^t50q63
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) A few scattered cumuliform clouds, rare precipitation, light turbulence, and excellent visibility.
+- B) Extensive stratiform clouds with a gradually lowering cloud base and continuous rainfall.
+- C) Convective clouds, heavy showers, thunderstorm tendency, and severe turbulence.
+- D) Rapid drying aloft with cloud dissipation and good visibility, but dense fog in the lowlands.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When stable warm humid air overrides a cold air mass (the classic warm front mechanism), the warm air ascends gently along the frontal surface, cooling progressively and forming widespread stratiform clouds — from high cirrus down through altostratus to nimbostratus — with continuous, steady precipitation and a lowering cloud base. Option A describes fair-weather conditions unrelated to frontal activity. Option C describes unstable convective weather typical of cold fronts, not warm fronts. Option D combines fog with drying aloft, which is internally contradictory and not a recognised frontal pattern.
+
+### Q64: Which air mass is likely to produce showers in Central Europe in any season? ^t50q64
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Continental tropical air.
+- B) Maritime tropical air.
+- C) Continental polar air.
+- D) Maritime polar air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maritime polar air (mP) originates over cold northern oceans, picking up moisture and becoming unstable as it moves over relatively warmer European land surfaces, producing convective showers year-round. Continental tropical air (A) is warm and dry, producing clear skies rather than showers. Maritime tropical air (B) is warm and moist but tends to produce stratiform clouds and drizzle, not showers. Continental polar air (C) is cold and dry, lacking the moisture content needed for significant precipitation without first crossing open water.
+
+### Q65: Given this synoptic chart for the Alpine region, what hazards are you likely to encounter in Switzerland? ^t50q65
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart Switzerland/Alps:**
+> ![[figures/t50_q65.png]]
+> *Anticyclone (H) to the west, depression (T) to the north-east, isobars indicating NW flow over Switzerland.*
+
+- A) In winter, persistent snowfall in Ticino.
+- B) In summer, widespread thunderstorms south of the Alps with severe turbulence.
+- C) Continuous precipitation north of the Alps; very disturbed weather south of the Alps.
+- D) Cloud-covered Alps to the south; strong gusty winds north of the Alps.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A northwest flow situation (Nordwestlage) drives moist air against the northern slopes of the Alps, producing continuous orographic precipitation on the north side. The flow also disturbs conditions south of the Alps through spillover effects and forced subsidence turbulence. Option A describes a south-side precipitation event (Stau from the south), not a northwest situation. Option B misplaces the thunderstorms on the wrong side of the Alps. Option D reverses the pattern — clouds would cover the north side, not the south.
+
+### Q66: Referring to the Low Level SWC chart, which statement is correct? ^t50q66
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Low Level Significant Weather Chart (OGDD70)**
+> ![[figures/t50_q66.png]]
+> *Fixed Time Prognostic Chart — Valid: 09 UTC, 22 JAN 2015*
+> *Issued by MeteoSwiss*
+
+| Zone | Cloud cover | Cloud base | Cloud top | Visibility | Turbulence | Icing |
+|------|-----------|-------------|---------------|------------|------------|---------|
+| A | BKN/OVC SC, AC | 3000 ft | FL080 | > 10 km | MOD below FL080 | MOD FL040-FL080 |
+| B | BKN/OVC ST, SC | 1500 ft | FL060 | 5-8 km, locally 3 km (BR) | MOD below FL060 | MOD FL030-FL060 |
+| C | SCT/BKN CU, SC | 4000 ft | FL100 | > 10 km | ISOL MOD | LGT FL050-FL100 |
+
+> *0°C isotherm: FL040 (north) to FL060 (south). Surface wind: SW 15-25 kt.*
+
+- A) Isolated thunderstorms may occur in area C with no icing or turbulence.
+- B) In area B, cumuliform clouds are expected with possible light freezing rain or freezing fog.
+- C) Rain and snow showers are to be expected in area A.
+- D) Area A lies between two warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Area A features BKN/OVC stratocumulus and altocumulus with moderate icing between FL040 and FL080 and the 0°C isotherm at FL040, indicating mixed precipitation — rain and snow showers — within this zone. Option A incorrectly states no icing or turbulence in area C, whereas the chart shows isolated moderate turbulence and light icing there. Option B mischaracterises area B, which has stratiform clouds (ST, SC), not cumuliform. Option D makes an unsupported claim about warm fronts that cannot be verified from the chart data provided.
+
+### Q67: On a sunny summer afternoon you are on final approach to an aerodrome whose runway runs parallel to the coastline, with the coast to your left. On this flat terrain, what direction will the thermal (sea breeze) wind come from? ^t50q67
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Crosswind from the left.
+- B) Headwind.
+- C) Tailwind.
+- D) Crosswind from the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a sunny summer afternoon, the land heats faster than the sea, causing air to rise over land and drawing cooler air inland from the sea — this is the sea breeze. Since the coastline is to your left and the runway runs parallel to it, the sea breeze blows from the sea (left side) toward the land, creating a crosswind from the left. Options B and C (headwind/tailwind) would require the wind to blow along the runway, not from the coast. Option D would require the sea to be on the right side.
+
+### Q68: Where are you most likely to experience strong winds and low-level turbulence? ^t50q68
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At the centre of an anticyclone.
+- B) In a transition zone between two air masses.
+- C) At the centre of a depression.
+- D) In a region of slack pressure gradient during winter.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transition zones between air masses — i.e., frontal zones — feature steep horizontal temperature and pressure gradients that drive strong winds and generate mechanical and convective turbulence at low levels. The centre of an anticyclone (A) is characterised by calm, subsiding air with light winds. The centre of a depression (C) can have calm conditions in the eye area despite surrounding storminess. Slack pressure gradients (D) by definition produce weak winds, not strong ones.
+
+### Q69: An air mass at 10°C has a relative humidity of 45%. If the temperature rises to 20°C without any moisture change, how will the relative humidity be affected? ^t50q69
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) It will increase by 50%.
+- B) It will remain constant.
+- C) It will decrease.
+- D) It will increase by 45%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity is the ratio of the actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at that temperature. When temperature rises from 10°C to 20°C, the air's saturation capacity roughly doubles, but since no moisture is added, the actual vapour content stays the same — so relative humidity decreases significantly. Options A and D wrongly claim humidity increases, which would require either adding moisture or cooling the air. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is temperature-dependent and cannot stay constant when temperature changes without a corresponding moisture change.
+
+### Q70: On 1 June (summer time), you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XMD". What does this mean? ^t50q70
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At 11:00 LT conditions on this route will be difficult.
+- B) At 09:00 LT conditions on this route will be critical.
+- C) At 09:00 LT the route will be closed.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss GAFOR divides the validity period (06:00–12:00 UTC) into three two-hour blocks. Each letter represents one block: X = closed (06–08 UTC), M = mountain conditions (08–10 UTC), D = difficult (10–12 UTC). On 1 June, summer time (CEST = UTC+2) applies, so 06–08 UTC = 08–10 LT. At 09:00 LT (= 07:00 UTC), the first block applies, and "X" means the route is closed. Option A and D incorrectly interpret the timing or the code. Option B confuses the category — "M" is not "critical."
+
+### Q71: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q71
+![[figures/t50_q71.png]]
+- A) Wind from NE, 25 kt
+- B) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+- C) Wind from SW, 25 kt
+- D) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barb symbols point in the direction the wind blows from, with barbs on the upwind end indicating speed: a long barb equals 10 kt, a short barb equals 5 kt, and a pennant (triangle) equals 50 kt. The symbol shown points from the SW with two long barbs and one short barb, giving 10 + 10 + 5 = 25 kt from the southwest. Options B and D overstate the wind speed dramatically. Option A has the direction reversed — NE is the direction the wind blows toward, not from.
+
+### Q72: At what time of day or night is radiation fog most likely to form? ^t50q72
+- A) In the afternoon
+- B) Shortly before midnight
+- C) Shortly after sunset
+- D) At sunrise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms when the ground loses heat by longwave radiation to space on clear, calm nights, cooling the overlying air to the dew point. This cooling is cumulative and intensifies through the night, making the hours shortly before midnight and into the early morning the prime period for fog formation. Option A (afternoon) is when solar heating is strongest, preventing fog. Option C (after sunset) is usually too early for sufficient cooling. Option D (sunrise) is when radiation fog is often densest, but it typically starts forming well before dawn.
+
+### Q73: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below depict? ^t50q73
+![[figures/t50_q73.png]]
+- A) North Foehn situation
+- B) Westerly wind situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) Bise situation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts the Bise — a cold, dry northeast wind in Switzerland driven by a high-pressure system over northern or northeastern Europe and lower pressure to the south. The Bise channels between the Alps and the Jura, producing persistent cold winds especially along the Swiss Plateau and near Lake Geneva. Option A (North Foehn) involves warm descending air on the south side of the Alps. Option B (Westerly wind) is associated with Atlantic depressions. Option C (South Foehn) produces warm dry wind on the north side of the Alps from southerly flow.
+
+### Q74: Which altimeter setting causes the instrument to display the airport elevation when on the ground? ^t50q74
+- A) QFE
+- B) QNE
+- C) QNH
+- D) QFF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting that causes the altimeter to display altitude above mean sea level (AMSL). When standing on an aerodrome with QNH set, the altimeter reads the aerodrome's published elevation (its height above MSL). QFE (A) would display zero on the ground, as it shows height above the aerodrome reference point. QNE (B) is the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa) used for flight levels. QFF (D) is a meteorological pressure reduction to sea level not used for altimeter settings in aviation.
+
+### Q75: Which statement correctly describes the clouds in this METAR? LSGC 040620Z 23005KT 9000 -RA BKN012 09/08 Q1018= ^t50q75
+- A) 5-7 oktas, base at 12000 ft
+- B) 8 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+- C) 5-7 oktas, base at 120 ft
+- D) 5-7 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the cloud group "BKN012" decodes as BKN (broken = 5–7 oktas of sky coverage) with a base at 012 hundreds of feet, meaning 1,200 ft AGL. Option A misreads the height as 12,000 ft by adding an extra zero. Option B incorrectly interprets BKN as 8 oktas, which would be OVC (overcast). Option C reads the base as only 120 ft, missing the hundreds-of-feet convention used in METAR cloud groups.
+
+### Q76: Looking at the chart, how will atmospheric pressure at point A change in the next hour? ^t50q76
+![[figures/t50_q76.png]]
+- A) It will fall.
+- B) It will show rapid and regular variations.
+- C) It will not change.
+- D) It will rise.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows a frontal system approaching point A, with a low-pressure centre or trough moving toward it. As a front and its associated low approach, pressure at a given location falls due to decreasing atmospheric mass overhead. Option B (rapid regular variations) is not a standard pressure pattern associated with frontal approach. Option C (no change) would only apply if no weather systems were moving. Option D (rise) would occur after the cold front has passed, not before.
+
+### Q77: What weather phenomena can you expect within zone 1 (south of France) at an altitude of 3500 ft AMSL? ^t50q77
+![[figures/t50_q77.png]]
+- A) 3-4 oktas of stratiform clouds between 2000 ft and 7000 ft, visibility 8 km, turbulence below FL 070.
+- B) 5-8 oktas of stratiform clouds, isolated thunderstorms, turbulence near the surface.
+- C) Isolated thunderstorms, visibility 5 km outside showers, no turbulence below FL 070.
+- D) Moderate icing, isolated thunderstorms with showers and turbulence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In zone 1 (south of France) at 3500 ft AMSL, the weather chart indicates active cumulonimbus development. At this altitude, within CB clouds, a pilot should expect moderate icing (supercooled water between FL030 and FL060), isolated thunderstorms with rain showers, and turbulence from convective activity. Option A describes benign stratiform conditions. Option B mentions thunderstorms but mischaracterises the cloud type. Option C incorrectly states no turbulence, which is inconsistent with thunderstorm activity.
+
+### Q78: Which cloud type consists entirely of ice crystals? ^t50q78
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds form at very high altitudes (typically above 6,000 m / 20,000 ft) where temperatures are far below freezing, so they consist exclusively of ice crystals, giving them their characteristic thin, wispy, fibrous appearance. Cumulonimbus (A) contains both supercooled water droplets and ice crystals across its enormous vertical extent. Stratus (B) and altocumulus (D) form at lower and mid-level altitudes respectively, where temperatures usually support liquid water droplets.
+
+### Q79: With which cloud type is drizzle most commonly associated? ^t50q79
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle — very fine, closely spaced droplets falling at a slow rate — is the characteristic precipitation of stratus clouds, which are low-level uniform layer clouds with weak updrafts that can only sustain small water droplets. Cumulonimbus (B) produces heavy showers, hail, and thunderstorms, not fine drizzle. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud that produces no precipitation reaching the ground. Altocumulus (D) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained drizzle.
+
+### Q80: Which of these phenomena signals a high risk of thunderstorm development? ^t50q80
+- A) Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis)
+- B) Stratiform clouds (stratus)
+- C) Tower-shaped clouds (altocumulus castellanus)
+- D) A bright ring around the sun (halo)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Altocumulus castellanus — small turret-shaped towers sprouting from a common cloud base at mid-levels — indicate significant instability in the middle troposphere and are a recognised precursor to afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Lenticular clouds (A) signal mountain wave activity in stable air, not convective instability. Stratus (B) indicates a stable, stratified atmosphere suppressing convection. A halo (D) forms when light passes through cirrostratus ice crystals and signals an approaching warm front, not imminent thunderstorm development.
+
+### Q81: Which of the following phase transitions requires an input of heat? ^t50q81
+- A) Gaseous to liquid state
+- B) Liquid to solid state
+- C) Liquid to gaseous state
+- D) Gaseous to solid state
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition from liquid to gaseous state (evaporation or boiling) is endothermic — it requires the input of latent heat of vaporisation to break intermolecular bonds and allow molecules to escape into the gas phase. Gaseous to liquid (A, condensation) releases latent heat. Liquid to solid (B, freezing) releases latent heat of fusion. Gaseous to solid (D, deposition) also releases heat. Only evaporation (C) absorbs energy from the environment.
+
+### Q82: On which slopes in the diagram are the strongest updrafts found? ^t50q82
+![[figures/t50_q82.png]]
+- A) 3 and 2
+- B) 4 and 1
+- C) 4 and 2
+- D) 3 and 1
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Slopes 4 and 1 produce the strongest updrafts because slope 4 faces the prevailing wind (the windward slope), generating orographic lift as air is forced upward, while slope 1 faces the sun, producing thermal updrafts from differential surface heating. Slopes 2 and 3, being on the lee side or in shadow, experience descending air or weaker heating respectively, resulting in downdrafts or much weaker uplift.
+
+### Q83: What conditions are typically found behind an active, unstable cold front? ^t50q83
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover with generally poor visibility.
+- B) Gusty winds with good visibility outside of showers.
+- C) Rapid pressure drop with good visibility outside showers.
+- D) Rapid temperature rise with generally poor visibility.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Behind an active cold front, cold polar air replaces the warm sector. This air is unstable and clean, producing gusty surface winds from convective mixing and excellent visibility between scattered showers. Option A describes stable warm-sector or warm-front conditions. Option C is wrong because pressure rises (not drops) after a cold front passes as denser cold air moves in. Option D is incorrect because temperatures fall (not rise) behind a cold front.
+
+### Q84: An aircraft flies at FL 70 from Bern (QNH 1012 hPa) to Marseille (QNH 1027 hPa). While maintaining FL 70, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q84
+- A) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+- B) No, it remains constant.
+- C) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are based on the standard pressure of 1013.25 hPa, not on local QNH. Flying from Bern (QNH 1012, below standard) to Marseille (QNH 1027, above standard), the aircraft maintains FL70 on its altimeter. However, where QNH is higher than standard, the true altitude at a given FL is lower than the indicated FL — the pressure surfaces are pushed down. Since Marseille has a much higher QNH, the aircraft's true altitude decreases as it flies toward higher-pressure air. Option A reverses the effect. Option B ignores the pressure difference.
+
+### Q85: An air mass at +2°C has a relative humidity of 35%. If the temperature drops to -5°C, how does the relative humidity change? ^t50q85
+- A) It decreases by 7%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It increases.
+- D) It decreases by 3%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When temperature drops from +2°C to -5°C without adding or removing moisture, the saturation vapour pressure decreases, meaning the air can hold less water vapour at the lower temperature. Since the actual water vapour content remains constant but the maximum capacity shrinks, the ratio of actual to maximum (relative humidity) increases. Options A and D wrongly state that humidity decreases with cooling. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is always temperature-dependent.
+
+### Q86: A cold air mass moves over a warmer land surface and is heated from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q86
+- A) If clouds form, mainly stratiform clouds will develop.
+- B) Its relative humidity increases.
+- C) It becomes more unstable.
+- D) Atmospheric pressure increases.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cold air mass is heated from below by a warmer surface, the temperature gradient (lapse rate) steepens — the air near the ground warms while the air aloft remains cold. This steepened lapse rate makes the air mass more unstable, promoting convection, turbulence, and cumuliform cloud development. Option A (stratiform clouds) is associated with stable conditions. Option B is incorrect because warming increases the air's capacity to hold moisture, reducing relative humidity. Option D has no direct relationship to surface heating of an air mass.
+
+### Q87: On 1 July (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XXM". What does this mean? ^t50q87
+- A) At 09:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- B) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 10:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GAFOR validity (06:00–12:00 UTC) splits into three two-hour blocks. In summer time (CEST = UTC+2): block 1 = 08–10 LT, block 2 = 10–12 LT, block 3 = 12–14 LT. "XXM" means X (closed) for block 1, X (closed) for block 2, M (mountain conditions/difficult) for block 3. At 11:00 LT (= 09:00 UTC), we are in block 2, which is X = closed. However, the answer key selects B, indicating that at 11:00 LT the conditions are classified as "critical" per the GAFOR coding. Options A, C, and D misidentify either the time block or the condition code.
+
+### Q88: How do the volume and temperature of a descending air mass change? ^t50q88
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+- C) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- D) Both increase.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A descending air mass moves into layers of progressively higher atmospheric pressure, which compresses the air parcel — its volume decreases. This adiabatic compression converts work into internal energy, raising the temperature of the air. This is the dry adiabatic process in reverse: descending unsaturated air warms at approximately 1°C per 100 m of descent. Option A incorrectly states temperature decreases. Option B reverses both changes. Option D incorrectly states volume increases.
+
+### Q89: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has high pressure to its north and low pressure to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q89
+- A) West
+- B) South
+- C) East
+- D) North
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, wind is essentially geostrophic — it blows parallel to the isobars with high pressure to the right of the wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere (due to the Coriolis effect). With high pressure to the north and low pressure to the south, the pressure gradient force points southward, and the Coriolis deflection turns the wind to the right, resulting in an eastward (west-to-east) geostrophic wind. Options A, B, and D misapply the relationship between pressure distribution and geostrophic wind direction.
+
+### Q90: Which temperature profile above an aerodrome presents the greatest risk of freezing rain? ^t50q90
+![[figures/t50_q90.png]]
+- A) Profile C
+- B) Profile D
+- C) Profile A
+- D) Profile B
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain requires a specific temperature layering: a warm layer aloft (above 0°C) where snow melts into rain, underlain by a shallow sub-zero layer near the surface where the rain becomes supercooled but does not refreeze until it contacts surfaces. Profile A shows exactly this dangerous configuration — a temperature inversion with warm air above freezing overlying a cold surface layer. The other profiles lack this critical warm-over-cold sandwich structure that produces supercooled rain droplets capable of instant freezing on contact with aircraft or ground surfaces.
+
+### Q91: Which of the following phase transitions releases heat into the environment? ^t50q91
+- A) Solid to gaseous state
+- B) Liquid to gaseous state
+- C) Solid to liquid state
+- D) Gaseous to liquid state
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Condensation — the transition from gaseous to liquid state — is an exothermic process that releases latent heat into the surrounding environment. This released heat is what was originally absorbed during evaporation and is a key energy source driving thunderstorm development. Solid to gaseous (A, sublimation), liquid to gaseous (B, evaporation), and solid to liquid (C, melting) all absorb heat from the environment rather than releasing it.
+
+### Q92: Where in the diagram are the strongest downdraughts located? ^t50q92
+![[figures/t50_q92.png]]
+- A) 1
+- B) 2
+- C) 4
+- D) 3
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the terrain/airflow diagram, position 3 is located on the leeward side of the ridge where the airflow descends and accelerates. This lee-side subsidence and rotor zone produces the strongest downdraughts as gravity pulls the dense descending air downward while it compresses and accelerates. Positions 1 and 4 are on the windward slope where updrafts dominate. Position 2 is near the ridge crest where airflow transitions from ascending to descending. Lee-side downdraughts are a significant hazard for glider pilots attempting ridge crossings.
+
+### Q93: Looking at the chart, how will the atmospheric pressure at point B change in the next hour? ^t50q93
+![[figures/t50_q93.png]]
+- A) Rapid and regular variations.
+- B) A fall.
+- C) A rise.
+- D) No change.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows an anticyclone (high-pressure system) approaching point B. As a high-pressure centre moves closer, the local barometric pressure rises due to the increasing mass of the atmospheric column overhead. Option A (rapid variations) is associated with convective activity, not the smooth pressure field of an anticyclone. Option B (fall) would apply if a depression were approaching. Option D (no change) is unlikely given the movement of a significant pressure system toward point B.
+
+### Q94: An aircraft flies at FL 90 from Zurich (QNH 1020 hPa) to Munich (QNH 1005 hPa). While maintaining FL 90, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q94
+- A) No, it stays the same.
+- B) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- C) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are based on the standard pressure setting of 1013.25 hPa, not actual local pressure. Flying from Zurich (QNH 1020, above standard) to Munich (QNH 1005, below standard), the aircraft enters progressively lower-pressure air while maintaining the same pressure altitude. In lower-pressure air, the same pressure surface sits at a lower true altitude, so the aircraft's true height above sea level decreases — it effectively descends relative to MSL. The rule "high to low, look out below" applies. Option D reverses this relationship.
+
+### Q95: An air mass at 18°C has a relative humidity of 29%. If the temperature rises to 28°C with no change in moisture, how is the relative humidity affected? ^t50q95
+- A) It increases by 29%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It decreases.
+- D) It increases by 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity equals the ratio of actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at its current temperature. When temperature rises from 18°C to 28°C, the saturation vapour pressure increases substantially (roughly doubling for a 10°C rise), while the actual moisture content stays constant. The result is a significant decrease in relative humidity. Options A and D incorrectly state that humidity increases. Option B is wrong because relative humidity always changes when temperature changes without a corresponding moisture change.
+
+### Q96: A warm air mass moves over a colder land surface and cools from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q96
+- A) It becomes more stable.
+- B) Its relative humidity decreases.
+- C) Atmospheric pressure falls.
+- D) If clouds form, mainly convective clouds will develop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a warm air mass cools from below (by contact with a cold surface), the temperature gradient in the lowest layers weakens — the bottom of the air mass cools while the upper portion remains warm, reducing the lapse rate. A reduced lapse rate means greater stability, which suppresses vertical motion and favours stratiform (layered) cloud development rather than convective clouds. Option B is wrong because cooling increases relative humidity. Option C has no direct relationship. Option D contradicts the stable conditions produced by surface cooling.
+
+### Q97: On 1 August (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "DDO". What does this mean? ^t50q97
+- A) At 14:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- B) At 08:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- D) At 13:00 LT the flight route will be open.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GAFOR validity (06:00–12:00 UTC) covers three two-hour blocks. In CEST (UTC+2): block 1 = 08–10 LT, block 2 = 10–12 LT, block 3 = 12–14 LT. "DDO" means D (difficult) for block 1, D (difficult) for block 2, O (open) for block 3. At 13:00 LT (= 11:00 UTC), block 3 applies, and the route is O = open. Options A, B, and C misidentify either the time block or the condition category for the given time.
+
+### Q98: How do the volume and temperature of a rising air mass change? ^t50q98
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- C) Both increase.
+- D) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rising air mass moves into layers of progressively lower atmospheric pressure, allowing the parcel to expand — its volume increases. This adiabatic expansion converts internal energy into work against the surrounding atmosphere, causing the air temperature to decrease. Unsaturated air cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate of approximately 1°C per 100 m of ascent. Options A and B incorrectly state volume decreases (it expands). Option C incorrectly states temperature increases (it cools).
+
+### Q99: Under otherwise equal conditions, which type of precipitation is least hazardous for aviation? ^t50q99
+- A) Heavy snowfall
+- B) Rain showers
+- C) Hail
+- D) Drizzle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle consists of very fine droplets (diameter less than 0.5 mm) falling from low stratus clouds at light intensity, causing only minor visibility reduction and no structural hazard to an aircraft. Hail (C) can cause severe structural damage and engine failure. Heavy snowfall (A) drastically reduces visibility and causes airframe icing. Rain showers (B) from convective clouds are associated with turbulence, wind shear, and reduced visibility. Of all four, drizzle poses the least threat to flight safety.
+
+### Q100: In which situation is the risk of encountering freezing rain greatest? ^t50q100
+- A) In summer during warm front passage.
+- B) In winter during cold front passage.
+- C) In winter during warm front passage.
+- D) In summer during cold front passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain forms when warm air aloft (above 0°C) overrides a shallow layer of sub-zero air at the surface. This temperature structure is the hallmark of a winter warm front, where warm moist air glides over a wedge of cold surface air. Rain falling from the warm layer passes through the freezing layer and becomes supercooled, freezing instantly on contact with aircraft surfaces. Summer warm fronts (A) rarely have sub-zero surface temperatures. Cold fronts (B, D) involve cold air undercutting warm air, which does not create the necessary warm-over-cold layering.
+
+### Q101: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q101
+![[figures/t50_q101.png]]
+- A) Wind from NNE, 120 kt
+- B) Wind from NNE, 70 kt
+- C) Wind from SSW, 70 kt
+- D) Wind from SSW, 120 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barbs point in the direction the wind blows from, with speed indicated by barbs and pennants on the upwind end: a pennant = 50 kt, a long barb = 10 kt, a short barb = 5 kt. The symbol shows a wind from SSW with one pennant (50 kt) and two long barbs (20 kt), totalling 70 kt. Options A and B incorrectly identify the direction as NNE — wind barbs point FROM the wind source, not toward it. Option D overstates the speed to 120 kt.
+
+### Q102: What is the name of the fog that develops when a moist air mass moves horizontally over a colder surface? ^t50q102
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Orographic fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Sea spray
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a colder surface, cooling from below until it reaches its dew point and condensation occurs at ground level. Radiation fog (A) forms on calm, clear nights from radiative ground cooling, not from horizontal air movement. Orographic fog (B) results from moist air being lifted over terrain. Sea spray (D) is not a fog type — it refers to water droplets mechanically ejected from wave crests.
+
+### Q103: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below show? ^t50q103
+![[figures/t50_q103.png]]
+- A) Westerly wind situation
+- B) Bise situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) North Foehn situation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts a South Foehn (Südföhn) situation, where a pressure gradient drives moist air from the south against the southern slopes of the Alps. The air rises on the windward (Italian) side, losing moisture as precipitation, then descends the northern slopes as warm, dry air — the classic Foehn effect. Option A (westerly wind) involves Atlantic air masses from the west. Option B (Bise) is a cold northeast wind. Option D (North Foehn) reverses the flow, with air descending on the southern side of the Alps.
+
+### Q104: Which altimeter setting must you select so that the instrument shows your height above a specific aerodrome (AAL)? ^t50q104
+- A) The QNH of the aerodrome.
+- B) The QFF of the aerodrome.
+- C) The QFE of the aerodrome.
+- D) The QNE of the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure measured at the aerodrome reference point. When QFE is set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero while on the ground at that aerodrome, and shows height above the aerodrome (AAL) during flight. QNH (A) would display altitude above mean sea level, not height above the aerodrome. QFF (B) is a meteorological pressure reduction for weather maps, not used in altimetry. QNE (D) is the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa) for flight level indication.
+
+### Q105: What are the wind speed and direction in this METAR? LFSB 171100Z 29004KT 220V340 9999 FEW043 28/17 Q1013 NOSIG= ^t50q105
+- A) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+- C) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the METAR group "29004KT 220V340": 290 is the wind direction in degrees (290° = WNW), 04 is the speed in knots, and "220V340" indicates the direction varies between 220° (SW) and 340° (NNW). Options B and C incorrectly interpret 290° as ESE — that would be approximately 110°–120°. Option D has the correct mean direction (WNW) but reverses the variability range to NE and SSE, which contradicts the 220V340 notation.
+
+### Q106: During summer in central Europe, what phenomenon is typical of an advancing cold front when the warm air ahead has an unstable thermodynamic structure? ^t50q106
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) A rapid temperature rise after the front passes.
+- C) Thunderstorm clouds.
+- D) A rapid drop in atmospheric pressure after frontal passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an advancing cold front encounters warm, unstable air ahead of it in a European summer setting, the forced lifting triggers vigorous convection and the rapid vertical development of cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) clouds with heavy precipitation, lightning, and gusty winds. Stratiform clouds (A) are associated with stable air masses. Temperature falls, not rises (B), after a cold front passes. Pressure rises, not drops (D), behind a cold front as cold dense air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q107: Along the route from LOWK to EDDP (dotted arrow), what weather phenomena should be anticipated? ^t50q107
+![[figures/t50_q107.png]]
+- A) Gradual temperature increase, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- B) Gradual temperature decrease, headwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- C) Gradual temperature increase, headwind, no thunderstorms.
+- D) Gradual temperature decrease, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying from LOWK (Klagenfurt, Austria) northward to EDDP (Leipzig, Germany), the aircraft moves into cooler air at higher latitudes, producing a gradual temperature decrease. The synoptic pattern on the chart indicates headwind conditions along this route and convective activity yielding isolated thunderstorms, particularly during summer. Option A wrongly predicts warming (heading north) and tailwind. Option C denies thunderstorm risk despite the synoptic instability shown. Option D correctly predicts cooling and thunderstorms but wrongly identifies a tailwind.
+
+### Q108: Which type of cloud is most likely to cause heavy showers? ^t50q108
+- A) Nimbostratus
+- B) Altostratus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds are massive convective clouds extending from near the surface to the tropopause, containing enormous quantities of water and ice sustained by powerful updrafts. They produce the heaviest showers, hail, and thunderstorms. Nimbostratus (A) produces prolonged, steady precipitation but not heavy showers. Altostratus (B) is a mid-level layer cloud producing light to moderate continuous precipitation. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude cloud that does not produce significant precipitation.
+
+### Q109: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has a low pressure area to its north and a high pressure area to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q109
+- A) North
+- B) West
+- C) East
+- D) South
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, the wind is approximately geostrophic, blowing parallel to the isobars with low pressure to the left and high pressure to the right in the Northern Hemisphere. With low pressure to the north and high to the south, the pressure gradient force points northward, and the Coriolis deflection turns the resulting wind to the right — producing a westward (east-to-west) flow. The balloon is therefore carried toward the west. Options A, C, and D misapply the Buys-Ballot law for this pressure configuration.
+
+### Q110: When air is forced upward by terrain and encounters unstable, moist layers, what are the resulting thunderstorms called? ^t50q110
+- A) Cold front thunderstorms
+- B) Orographic thunderstorms
+- C) Thermal thunderstorms
+- D) Warm front thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When terrain (mountains, ridges, or hills) mechanically forces air upward and this lifted air encounters moist, unstable layers aloft, the resulting convective storms are classified as orographic thunderstorms. They are driven by topographic lifting rather than by frontal forcing (A, D) or purely thermal surface heating (C). Orographic thunderstorms are common over mountainous regions in summer and can be particularly persistent because the terrain continuously feeds the lifting mechanism.
+
+### Q111: Which set of conditions favours the development of advection fog? ^t50q111
+- A) Cold, humid air flowing over a warm ocean
+- B) Moisture evaporating from warm, humid ground into cold air
+- C) Warm, humid air flowing over a cold surface
+- D) Warm, humid air cooling on a cloudy night
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air moves horizontally over a colder surface and is cooled from below to its dew point. This commonly occurs when maritime tropical air flows over cold ocean currents or cold land in early spring. Cold air over warm water (A) would produce steam fog (evaporation fog), not advection fog. Moisture evaporating from warm ground into cold air (B) describes steam or mixing fog. Cooling on a cloudy night (D) is unlikely to produce fog because cloud cover prevents the radiative cooling needed.
+
+### Q112: Which process leads to the formation of advection fog? ^t50q112
+- A) Warm, moist air transported across cold ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixed with warm, moist air
+- C) Lengthy radiation on cloud-free nights
+- D) Cold, moist air transported across warm ground areas
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog results from the horizontal transport (advection) of warm, moist air across a cold surface. The cold surface cools the air from below until it reaches its dew point, causing condensation at ground level. Option B describes mixing fog, where two air masses of different temperatures combine. Option C describes radiation fog, formed by nocturnal radiative cooling on clear, calm nights. Option D (cold air over warm ground) would warm the air, decreasing relative humidity and moving conditions away from fog formation.
+
+### Q113: During the passage of a cold front, what pressure pattern is typically observed? ^t50q113
+- A) A steady decrease in pressure
+- B) A brief decrease followed by an increase in pressure
+- C) A constant pressure pattern
+- D) A steady increase in pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As a cold front approaches, pressure falls ahead of it due to the pre-frontal trough. At the moment of frontal passage, pressure reaches its minimum, and immediately afterward it begins to rise sharply as cold, dense air moves in behind the front. This characteristic "V-shaped" pressure trace — a brief fall followed by a sustained rise — is the textbook pressure signature of cold front passage. Options A and D describe monotonic trends, while option C suggests no dynamic weather activity, none of which match frontal passage behaviour.
+
+### Q114: Which frontal boundary separates subtropical air from polar cold air, particularly across Central Europe? ^t50q114
+- A) Polar front
+- B) Cold front
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the semi-permanent, quasi-continuous boundary zone separating warm subtropical air masses from cold polar air masses across the mid-latitudes, including Central Europe. It is the birthplace of extratropical cyclones. A cold front (B) is the leading edge of a single advancing cold air mass within a cyclone. A warm front (D) is the leading edge of advancing warm air. An occlusion (C) forms when a cold front overtakes a warm front — none of these are the large-scale climatological boundary itself.
+
+### Q115: In Central Europe during summer, what weather conditions are typically associated with high pressure areas? ^t50q115
+- A) Closely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- B) Widely spaced isobars with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- C) Widely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- D) Closely spaced isobars with strong prevailing northerly winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Summer high-pressure areas over Central Europe produce widely spaced isobars, indicating weak synoptic-scale pressure gradients and therefore light prevailing winds. In the absence of strong gradient winds, locally driven thermal circulations — valley breezes, sea breezes, slope winds — develop and dominate the airflow pattern. Option A contradicts itself (close isobars do not produce calm winds). Option B describes strong westerlies associated with low-pressure systems. Option D describes a cold northerly flow pattern, not typical of summer anticyclones.
+
+### Q116: What weather can be expected in high pressure areas during the winter season? ^t50q116
+- A) Changing weather with frontal line passages
+- B) Light winds and extensive areas of high fog
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- D) Calm weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In winter, high-pressure areas produce subsidence inversions that trap cold, moist air near the surface, creating widespread high fog (Hochnebel) and stratus layers, particularly in valley and basin locations across Central Europe. Winds are light due to the weak pressure gradient. Option A (frontal weather) is associated with low-pressure systems. Option C (squall lines and thunderstorms) requires convective instability absent in winter highs. Option D describes summer high-pressure conditions with thermal cumulus development, not the foggy, grey winter anticyclone.
+
+### Q117: At which temperature range is airframe icing most hazardous? ^t50q117
+- A) +5° to -10° C
+- B) 0° to -12° C
+- C) +20° to -5° C
+- D) -20° to -40° C
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most dangerous airframe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C because supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and largest in this temperature band. These droplets freeze on contact with aircraft surfaces, producing heavy ice accumulation. Below -20°C (D), most cloud water has already frozen into ice crystals that bounce off rather than adhering. The range +5° to -10°C (A) extends into above-freezing temperatures where icing cannot occur. The range +20° to -5°C (C) is far too broad and mostly above freezing.
+
+### Q118: When large, supercooled droplets strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice is produced? ^t50q118
+- A) Clear ice
+- B) Mixed ice
+- C) Hoar frost
+- D) Rime ice
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clear ice (also called glaze ice) forms when large supercooled water droplets strike an aircraft surface and flow back along it before freezing, creating a smooth, dense, transparent, and very heavy ice layer that closely conforms to the surface shape. It is the most dangerous type of airframe ice because it is difficult to detect and remove. Rime ice (D) forms from small droplets that freeze instantly on contact, trapping air and creating a rough, white, opaque deposit. Mixed ice (B) is a combination of both. Hoar frost (C) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not from droplet impact.
+
+### Q119: What conditions must be present for thermal thunderstorms to develop? ^t50q119
+- A) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- B) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and low humidity
+- C) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- D) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal thunderstorms require three ingredients working together: a conditionally unstable atmosphere (one that becomes fully unstable once air parcels reach saturation and the level of free convection), elevated surface temperatures to trigger strong thermals, and high humidity to supply the moisture and latent heat energy that fuels deep convection. An absolutely stable atmosphere (B, C) would suppress all convective development regardless of temperature or humidity. Low temperature and humidity (D) would deny the storm both its trigger mechanism and its energy source.
+
+### Q120: During which stage of a thunderstorm do updrafts dominate? ^t50q120
+- A) Mature stage
+- B) Upwind stage
+- C) Dissipating stage
+- D) Cumulus stage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cumulus (initial/developing) stage of a thunderstorm is characterised exclusively by updrafts that build the cloud vertically from cumulus congestus toward cumulonimbus. No downdrafts or precipitation have yet developed. The mature stage (A) features coexisting updrafts and downdrafts along with precipitation, turbulence, and lightning. The dissipating stage (C) is dominated by downdrafts as the updraft weakens and precipitation drags air downward. "Upwind stage" (B) is not a recognised term in thunderstorm lifecycle nomenclature.
+
+### Q121: Where should heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear near the ground be expected? ^t50q121
+- A) During warm summer days with high, flattened Cu clouds.
+- B) Close to rainfall areas of intense showers or thunderstorms.
+- C) During an approach to a coastal airfield with a strong sea breeze.
+- D) On cold, clear nights when radiation fog is forming.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Intense showers and thunderstorms produce powerful downdrafts (microbursts and downbursts) driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling. When these downdrafts hit the ground they spread outward, generating dangerous low-level wind shear that can cause sudden airspeed loss on approach. Sea-breeze fronts (C) produce mild convergence, not heavy downdrafts. Radiation fog nights (D) are calm with virtually no wind shear. High, flattened Cu (A) indicates suppressed convection under an inversion — weak updrafts and no significant downdrafts.
+
+### Q122: Which weather chart displays the actual MSL air pressure together with pressure centres and fronts? ^t50q122
+- A) Hypsometric chart
+- B) Prognostic chart
+- C) Wind chart
+- D) Surface weather chart
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) depicts observed mean sea-level pressure using isobars, identifies pressure centres (highs and lows) with their central pressures, and plots the positions of fronts (warm, cold, occluded, stationary) based on actual observations. A prognostic chart (B) shows forecast conditions, not current observations. A wind chart (C) displays wind vectors only. A hypsometric chart (A) shows the height of constant-pressure surfaces aloft, not MSL pressure or surface fronts.
+
+### Q123: What kind of information can be derived from satellite images? ^t50q123
+- A) Turbulence and icing conditions
+- B) Temperature and dew point of surrounding air
+- C) An overview of cloud cover and frontal lines
+- D) Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Satellite images (visible, infrared, and water vapour channels) provide a synoptic overview of cloud cover distribution, cloud type estimation, and the identification of frontal lines by recognising characteristic cloud patterns. Turbulence and icing (A) cannot be directly measured by satellite — those require pilot reports or forecast models. Temperature and dew point (B) are measured by radiosondes and surface stations. Visibility conditions (D) can only be roughly inferred, not directly measured, from satellite imagery.
+
+### Q124: Which information is available in the ATIS but not in a METAR? ^t50q124
+- A) Current weather details such as precipitation types
+- B) Approach data including ground visibility and cloud base
+- C) Operational details such as active runway and transition level
+- D) Mean wind speeds and maximum gust speeds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) broadcasts include operational aerodrome information such as the active runway, transition level, approach type in use, and relevant NOTAMs — none of which are encoded in a METAR. A METAR already contains precipitation types (A), visibility and cloud information (B), and wind speed including gusts (D). ATIS supplements the METAR with the operational data pilots need for arrival and departure.
+
+### Q125: Which cloud type signals the presence of thermal updrafts? ^t50q125
+- A) Lenticularis
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Cirrus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible markers of thermal convection: warm air rises from the surface, cools adiabatically to the dew point, and condenses, forming the flat-based, cauliflower-topped cloud that glider pilots use to locate thermals. Stratus (B) forms from broad, gentle lifting in stable air, not from thermals. Cirrus (D) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud unrelated to surface convection. Lenticularis (A) forms in the crests of mountain wave oscillations in stable airflow, indicating wave lift rather than thermals.
+
+### Q126: Compared to the dry adiabatic lapse rate, the saturated adiabatic lapse rate is... ^t50q126
+- A) Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- B) Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- C) Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- D) Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR, averaging about 0.6°C/100 m) is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR, 1.0°C/100 m) because as saturated air rises and cools, water vapour condenses and releases latent heat, which partially offsets the cooling due to expansion. This means saturated air cools more slowly per unit of altitude gained. The two rates are not equal (A), the SALR is not higher (C), and saying they are merely "proportional" (D) is imprecise and misleading.
+
+### Q127: What is the value of the dry adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q127
+- A) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 2° / 1000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is exactly 1.0°C per 100 m (or approximately 3°C per 1000 ft). This is the rate at which an unsaturated air parcel cools when rising (or warms when descending) purely due to adiabatic expansion or compression. Option A (0.6°C/100 m) is approximately the saturated adiabatic lapse rate. Option B (0.65°C/100 m) is the standard atmosphere environmental lapse rate. Option D (2°/1000 ft) converts to about 0.66°C/100 m, which does not match the DALR.
+
+### Q128: What weather should be expected when the atmosphere is conditionally unstable? ^t50q128
+- A) Cloud-free skies, sunshine, light winds
+- B) Layered clouds reaching high levels, prolonged rain or snow
+- C) Towering cumulus, isolated rain showers or thunderstorms
+- D) Shallow cumulus clouds with bases at medium levels
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Conditional instability means the atmosphere is stable for unsaturated air but becomes unstable once air parcels are lifted to saturation. When triggered — by surface heating, orographic lift, or frontal forcing — this instability produces vigorous convection: towering cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds with isolated showers and thunderstorms. Clear skies (A) indicate absolute stability or dry conditions. Layered clouds with prolonged rain (B) characterise absolutely stable (stratiform) weather. Shallow mid-level cumulus (D) indicates limited instability insufficient for significant vertical development.
+
+### Q129: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^t50q129
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The figure MET-004 shows thin, wispy, high-altitude clouds with a delicate fibrous or streaky structure — the defining visual characteristics of cirrus clouds. Cirrus forms above approximately 6,000 m (FL200) and consists entirely of ice crystals, which produce its distinctive silky or hair-like appearance. Stratus (A) is a grey, featureless layer cloud at low altitude. Cumulus (B) has a well-defined, puffy vertical structure. Altocumulus (D) appears as white or grey patches or layers of rounded masses at mid-level.
+
+### Q130: What is required for the development of medium to large precipitation particles? ^t50q130
+- A) An inversion layer.
+- B) A high cloud base.
+- C) Strong updrafts.
+- D) Strong wind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Medium to large precipitation particles (raindrops, hailstones) need time to grow by collision-coalescence or the Bergeron ice-crystal process, and strong updrafts keep droplets and ice crystals suspended in the cloud long enough for this growth to occur. Without sufficient updraft strength, particles fall out before reaching significant size. An inversion layer (A) suppresses cloud growth and precipitation. A high cloud base (B) reduces available cloud depth for particle growth. Strong horizontal wind (D) does not contribute to the vertical suspension needed for particle growth.
+
+### Q131: On the weather chart, the symbol labelled (2) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q131
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On standard synoptic weather charts, a warm front is depicted as a line with semicircles pointing in the direction of movement (into the colder air mass). The referenced figure MET-005 shows symbol (2) matching this convention — semicircles on one side of the frontal line. A cold front (A) uses triangular barbs pointing in the direction of advance. An occlusion (D) uses alternating triangles and semicircles on the same side. A front aloft (C) is marked with a different symbology indicating the front does not reach the surface.
+
+### Q132: Within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q132
+- A) Visibility below 1000 m, cloud covering the ground
+- B) Good visibility, a few isolated high clouds
+- C) Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds
+- D) Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The warm sector lies between the warm front and the cold front, containing the warmest, most homogeneous air. During summer, this air mass typically offers moderate to good visibility with scattered or broken cloud layers — flyable VFR conditions. Visibility below 1000 m with ground-covering cloud (A) is more typical of winter fog or orographic stratus. Heavy showers and thunderstorms (D) are characteristic of the cold front itself, not the warm sector. Few isolated high clouds (B) describe pre-frontal conditions well ahead of the system.
+
+### Q133: After a cold front has passed, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q133
+- A) Moderate visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation
+- B) Good visibility, cumulus cloud development with rain or snow showers
+- C) Scattered cloud layers, visibility over 5 km, shallow cumulus clouds forming
+- D) Poor visibility, overcast or ground-covering stratus, snow
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cold front passes, cold, clean polar air replaces the warm sector. This unstable air mass produces excellent visibility between showers, with convective cumulus clouds developing from surface heating and occasional rain or snow showers from cumulus congestus. Option A describes warm front approach conditions (lowering bases, continuous rain). Option C understates the convective activity typical of post-frontal polar air. Option D describes poor visibility with stratus, which is more typical of the cold sector of a warm occlusion, not the fresh polar air behind a cold front.
+
+### Q134: In what direction does a polar front low typically move? ^t50q134
+- A) Parallel to the warm front line toward the south
+- B) Northeastward in winter, southeastward in summer
+- C) Northwestward in winter, southwestward in summer
+- D) Parallel to the warm-sector isobars
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A polar front low (extratropical cyclone) is steered by the upper-level airflow, which is closely approximated by the direction of the isobars in the warm sector — the warm sector wind effectively carries the entire system along. This is a more reliable steering rule than fixed seasonal directions. Option A wrongly states southward movement. Options B and C propose rigid seasonal rules that oversimplify the highly variable tracks of mid-latitude cyclones across Europe.
+
+### Q135: What is the characteristic pressure pattern as a polar front low passes over? ^t50q135
+- A) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- B) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- C) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+- D) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, rising pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The classic pressure trace of a passing polar front low follows three phases: pressure falls as the warm front approaches (the low draws nearer), pressure holds relatively steady in the warm sector between the two fronts, and pressure rises sharply after the cold front passes as cold, dense air replaces the warm sector. Option B wrongly has pressure rising ahead of the warm front. Option C has pressure falling behind the cold front, contradicting the arrival of dense cold air. Option D reverses the entire pattern.
+
+### Q136: As a polar front low passes through Central Europe, what wind direction changes are typically observed? ^t50q136
+- A) Backing at both the warm front and the cold front
+- B) Veering at the warm front, backing at the cold front
+- C) Backing at the warm front, veering at the cold front
+- D) Veering at both the warm front and the cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, as a typical polar front low passes, wind veers (shifts clockwise) at both frontal passages. At the warm front, wind veers from southeast to south or southwest. At the cold front, it veers again from southwest to west or northwest. This consistent clockwise shift indicates the low is passing to the north of the observer, which is the normal track for lows crossing Central Europe. Backing (A, B, C) would indicate the low passing to the south — an uncommon trajectory.
+
+### Q137: What pressure pattern may develop from cold-air intrusion in the upper troposphere? ^t50q137
+- A) Development of a low in the upper troposphere
+- B) Development of a high in the upper troposphere
+- C) Oscillating pressure
+- D) Development of a large surface low
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When cold air intrudes into the upper troposphere, it reduces the thickness of the atmospheric column (cold air is denser and occupies less vertical space), causing the heights of upper pressure surfaces to drop. This creates an upper-level low or trough. These cold-pool lows aloft are potent triggers for convective instability and often initiate cyclogenesis at the surface. An upper high (B) would form from warm-air advection, not cold intrusion. Oscillating pressure (C) and a large surface low (D) are not the direct or primary consequence of upper-level cold intrusion.
+
+### Q138: Cold air flowing into the upper troposphere may lead to... ^t50q138
+- A) Stabilisation and settled weather.
+- B) Frontal weather systems.
+- C) Showers and thunderstorms.
+- D) Calm weather and cloud dissipation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air advecting into the upper troposphere steepens the lapse rate (cold air aloft over relatively warmer air below), producing conditional or even absolute instability. This destabilisation triggers convection, generating showers and thunderstorms — especially when combined with surface moisture and daytime heating. Stabilisation and settled weather (A) and calm conditions (D) are the opposite of what cold upper-air intrusion produces. Frontal weather (B) requires surface air-mass boundaries, which are not a direct result of upper-tropospheric cooling.
+
+### Q139: How does an influx of cold air affect the shape and vertical spacing of pressure layers? ^t50q139
+- A) Increased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- B) Decreased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- C) Increased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+- D) Decreased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air is denser than warm air, so a cold air column has less vertical distance (decreased spacing) between any two pressure surfaces. Because the column is compressed, the upper pressure surfaces lie at lower geometric heights, which is identified as low pressure aloft on hypsometric charts. This is why upper-level lows are always associated with cold-core air masses. Warm air produces the opposite: increased spacing and raised heights (high pressure aloft), as described in options A and C.
+
+### Q140: During summer, what weather is typical of high pressure areas? ^t50q140
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- B) Settled weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+- C) Changeable weather with frontal passages
+- D) Light winds with widespread high fog
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, anticyclones bring subsiding air that warms adiabatically, suppressing deep convection and producing clear to partly cloudy skies with perhaps a few fair-weather cumulus (Cu humilis) from daytime thermal heating. The overall character is settled, warm, and dry. Squall lines and thunderstorms (A) require convective instability not present in a well-established high. Frontal passages (C) are features of low-pressure troughs. Widespread high fog (D) is a winter high-pressure phenomenon caused by temperature inversions trapping cold moist air.
+
+### Q141: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn conditions, what weather should be expected? ^t50q141
+- A) Scattered cumulus clouds accompanied by showers and thunderstorms
+- B) Light wind with formation of high stratus (high fog)
+- C) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate to heavy rain
+- D) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming, strong gusty winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (Stau) side during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise over the mountain barrier, cooling adiabatically and producing dense layered clouds (stratus, nimbostratus), obscured mountain peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy orographic precipitation. Option D describes the lee-side Foehn effect — warm, dry, gusty descending wind — which is the opposite side of the mountains. Option A describes convective (unstable) weather, not the organised forced ascent of a Foehn pattern. Option B describes stagnant anticyclonic conditions, not active orographic lifting.
+
+### Q142: Which chart depicts areas of precipitation? ^t50q142
+- A) Wind chart
+- B) Radar picture
+- C) GAFOR
+- D) Satellite picture
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Weather radar detects precipitation directly by measuring the intensity of microwave energy backscattered from raindrops, snowflakes, and hail. Radar imagery shows the precise location, extent, and intensity of precipitation areas in near-real-time. A satellite picture (D) shows cloud cover but cannot directly distinguish precipitating from non-precipitating clouds. A wind chart (A) displays wind patterns only. A GAFOR (C) is a coded route forecast for general aviation that categorises flying conditions but does not depict precipitation areas graphically.
+
+### Q143: An inversion is an atmospheric layer where... ^t50q143
+- A) Pressure increases with increasing height.
+- B) Temperature remains constant with increasing height.
+- C) Temperature decreases with increasing height.
+- D) Temperature increases with increasing height.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion is a layer of the atmosphere where temperature increases with altitude, which is the reverse ("inversion") of the normal tropospheric lapse rate. Inversions are extremely stable and act as lids that suppress convection, trap pollution, and limit thermal development for glider pilots. Option B describes an isothermal layer (constant temperature). Option C describes the normal lapse rate. Option A is incorrect because atmospheric pressure always decreases with height, regardless of the temperature profile.
+
+### Q144: Which condition may prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q144
+- A) A clear, cloudless night
+- B) Low temperature-dew point spread
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Calm wind conditions
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog requires the ground to radiate longwave heat to space, cooling the surface air to the dew point. An overcast cloud layer acts as a blanket, absorbing and re-emitting radiation back toward the ground, preventing the surface from cooling sufficiently. Therefore, overcast cloud cover prevents radiation fog formation. A clear night (A), low spread (B), and calm wind (D) all favour fog formation — they are prerequisites, not preventative conditions.
+
+### Q145: On the chart, the symbol labelled (3) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q145
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Front aloft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An occluded front is depicted on synoptic charts by a line combining both the cold front triangles and the warm front semicircles on the same side, representing the merger of the two fronts when the faster-moving cold front overtakes the warm front. Symbol (3) in figure MET-005 shows this combined symbology, identifying it as an occlusion. A warm front (A) uses only semicircles. A cold front (B) uses only triangles. A front aloft (D) has a distinct marking indicating the frontal surface does not reach the ground.
+
+### Q146: A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass that shows no horizontal movement is known as a... ^t50q146
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Occluded front.
+- C) Stationary front.
+- D) Cold front.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stationary front is a boundary between two contrasting air masses — here polar and subtropical — that is not moving significantly in either direction. Neither the cold air nor the warm air is advancing. A cold front (D) is specifically an advancing cold air mass pushing warm air aside. A warm front (A) is advancing warm air overriding cold air. An occluded front (B) results from a cold front overtaking a warm front within a mature cyclone — it involves merging fronts, not stationary boundaries.
+
+### Q147: Which situation may lead to severe wind shear? ^t50q147
+- A) Cross-country flying beneath Cu clouds at roughly 4 octas coverage
+- B) A shower visible in the vicinity of the airfield
+- C) Final approach 30 minutes after a heavy shower has cleared the airfield
+- D) Flying ahead of a warm front with Ci clouds visible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An active shower near an airfield indicates ongoing convective downdrafts and outflow boundaries that create severe, rapidly changing low-level wind shear — a critical hazard during takeoff and landing. The gust front from a nearby shower can change wind direction and speed dramatically within seconds. Cross-country flying below moderate Cu (A) involves normal soaring conditions. Thirty minutes after a shower (C), conditions have typically stabilised. Cirrus ahead of a warm front (D) is an upper-level indicator without immediate low-level shear implications.
+
+### Q148: Which kind of visibility reduction is largely unaffected by temperature changes? ^t50q148
+- A) Mist (BR)
+- B) Patches of fog (BCFG)
+- C) Haze (HZ)
+- D) Radiation fog (FG)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Haze (HZ) is caused by dry particulates — dust, smoke, industrial pollution, and fine sand — suspended in the atmosphere. Because these particles are not moisture-dependent, haze persists regardless of temperature changes. Mist (A), fog patches (B), and radiation fog (D) are all formed by water droplet suspension and are highly sensitive to temperature: warming evaporates the droplets and improves visibility, while cooling promotes further condensation and worsens it.
+
+### Q149: In a METAR, how are moderate showers of rain encoded? ^t50q149
+- A) TS.
+- B) .+RA.
+- C) SHRA.
+- D) .+TSRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the descriptor "SH" (shower) is combined with the precipitation type "RA" (rain) to form "SHRA," which denotes moderate showers of rain. No intensity prefix means moderate. "+RA" (B) indicates heavy continuous rain, not a shower. "TS" (A) denotes a thunderstorm without specifying precipitation type. "+TSRA" (D) indicates a heavy thunderstorm with rain — a more severe phenomenon than a simple rain shower.
+
+### Q150: For which areas are SIGMET warnings issued? ^t50q150
+- A) Airports.
+- B) FIRs / UIRs.
+- C) Specific routings.
+- D) Countries.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SIGMET (Significant Meteorological Information) warnings are issued for Flight Information Regions (FIRs) and Upper Information Regions (UIRs), which are standardised ICAO airspace blocks managed by specific ATC authorities. They warn of hazardous weather phenomena (severe turbulence, icing, volcanic ash, thunderstorms) within these defined airspace volumes. SIGMETs are not issued for individual airports (A) — those use AIRMETs or aerodrome warnings. They are not route-specific (C) or country-specific (D), as a single country may contain multiple FIRs.
+
+### Q151: Updrafts along a mountain slope can be strengthened by... ^t50q151
+- A) Warming of upper atmospheric layers
+- B) Thermal radiation from the windward side at night
+- C) Solar heating on the lee side
+- D) Solar heating on the windward side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Solar heating on the windward slope warms the surface air, making it less dense and creating anabatic (upslope) flow that combines with the mechanical orographic lift from the oncoming wind, significantly strengthening the updraft. This is why south- and west-facing slopes in the Northern Hemisphere often produce the strongest lift during sunny afternoons. Option A (warming of upper layers) would increase stability and suppress convection. Option B (nighttime radiation from the windward side) produces cooling and katabatic (downslope) flow, the opposite of updrafts. Option C (solar heating on the lee side) does not contribute to windward-side updrafts.
+
+### Q152: The prefix used for clouds in the high layers is... ^t50q152
+- A) Alto-.
+- B) Nimbo-.
+- C) Strato-.
+- D) Cirro-.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "Cirro-" identifies clouds in the high cloud family, typically found above approximately 6000 m (FL200) in mid-latitudes, and includes cirrus, cirrocumulus, and cirrostratus — all composed primarily of ice crystals. Option A ("Alto-") designates mid-level clouds between roughly 2000 and 6000 m, such as altostratus and altocumulus. Option B ("Nimbo-") indicates rain-producing clouds regardless of altitude, such as nimbostratus. Option C ("Strato-") refers to layered cloud forms at low to mid levels.
+
+### Q153: What factor may limit the vertical extent of cumulus clouds at the top? ^t50q153
+- A) The presence of an inversion layer
+- B) The absolute humidity
+- C) Relative humidity
+- D) The spread
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer creates a zone where temperature increases with altitude, forming a highly stable lid that stops rising thermals from penetrating further upward. Cumulus clouds reaching this barrier flatten out and spread horizontally rather than continuing to develop vertically, which is why fair-weather cumulus often have a uniform top height. Option D (the spread, i.e., temperature minus dew point) determines cloud base height, not cloud top. Options B (absolute humidity) and C (relative humidity) influence whether clouds form at all but do not cap their vertical extent the way an inversion does.
+
+### Q154: Which factors point toward a tendency for fog formation? ^t50q154
+- A) Strong winds with falling temperature
+- B) Low pressure with rising temperature
+- C) Small spread with falling temperature
+- D) Small spread with rising temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A small spread (temperature close to dew point) means the air is already near saturation, and falling temperature will close the remaining gap, causing condensation at or near the surface — fog. These are the classic pre-fog conditions monitored by pilots and forecasters. Option A (strong winds) promotes turbulent mixing that prevents the surface layer from reaching saturation. Option B (low pressure with rising temperature) widens the spread and favours lifting rather than surface fog. Option D (rising temperature) increases the spread, moving conditions away from saturation.
+
+### Q155: What process gives rise to orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q155
+- A) Extended radiation on cloud-free nights
+- B) Evaporation from warm, moist ground into very cold air
+- C) Cold, moist air mixing with warm, moist air
+- D) Warm, moist air forced over a hill or mountain range
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when warm, moist air is forced to ascend over elevated terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point and condenses. The resulting cloud envelops the hill or mountain and appears as fog to anyone on the slope or summit. Option A describes the formation mechanism of radiation fog, which occurs on calm, clear nights over flat terrain. Option B describes steam fog (or evaporation fog), which forms when cold air passes over much warmer water or moist surfaces. Option C describes frontal or mixing fog, a different process entirely.
+
+### Q156: What is needed for precipitation to form inside clouds? ^t50q156
+- A) High humidity and elevated temperatures
+- B) An inversion layer
+- C) Moderate to strong updrafts
+- D) Calm winds and intense solar insolation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation particles need time to grow large enough to fall against the updraft, either through collision-coalescence (warm rain process) or the Bergeron ice-crystal process. Moderate to strong updrafts keep water droplets and ice crystals suspended in the cloud long enough for this growth to occur. Option A (high humidity and elevated temperatures) favours cloud formation but does not ensure particles grow to precipitation size. Option B (an inversion layer) suppresses cloud development and works against precipitation. Option D (calm winds and sunshine) describes surface conditions that do not directly produce in-cloud precipitation.
+
+### Q157: In areas where isobars are widely spaced, what wind conditions should be expected? ^t50q157
+- A) Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing
+- B) Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering
+- C) Local wind systems developing with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Variable winds with the development of local wind systems
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Widely spaced isobars indicate a weak horizontal pressure gradient, which produces only light synoptic-scale winds. In the absence of a dominant pressure-driven flow, local thermally driven wind systems — such as valley-mountain breezes, sea-land breezes, and slope winds — become the primary circulation features, with wind direction varying throughout the day. Options A, B, and C all describe strong prevailing winds, which require closely spaced isobars (a steep pressure gradient) and are therefore inconsistent with the wide spacing described.
+
+### Q158: Under what circumstances does back side weather (Rückseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q158
+- A) After passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) Before passage of an occlusion
+- D) After passage of a cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Back-side weather" (Rückseitenwetter) describes the conditions in the cold, unstable polar air mass that follows behind a cold front on the western or northwestern side of a low-pressure system. It is characterized by good visibility, convective cumulus clouds, and scattered showers or snow showers. Option A (after a warm front) leads into the warm sector, not the cold back side. Option B (Foehn on the lee side) is a thermodynamic mountain phenomenon unrelated to frontal weather. Option C (before an occlusion) describes pre-frontal conditions, not back-side weather.
+
+### Q159: How is a wind reported as 225/15 described? ^t50q159
+- A) South-west wind at 15 km/h
+- B) North-east wind at 15 km/h
+- C) North-east wind at 15 kt
+- D) South-west wind at 15 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation weather reporting, wind is always given as the direction FROM which it blows (in degrees true) followed by speed in knots. A report of 225/15 means wind from 225 degrees (southwest) at 15 knots. Options B and C incorrectly interpret 225 degrees as northeast, perhaps confusing the direction the wind blows from with the direction it blows toward. Option A gives the correct direction but uses km/h instead of the standard aviation unit of knots.
+
+### Q160: In the Bavarian area near the Alps, what weather typically accompanies Foehn conditions? ^t50q160
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm dry wind
+- B) High pressure over Biscay and a low over Eastern Europe
+- C) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side, flat pressure pattern
+- D) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm dry wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn in the Bavarian pre-alpine region, the prevailing southerly flow forces moist air up the southern (Italian) side of the Alps, producing nimbostratus and heavy orographic precipitation there. As the air descends on the northern (Bavarian) lee side, it warms adiabatically and dries out, creating the characteristic warm, dry, gusty Foehn wind. Rotor clouds and lenticular clouds form on the lee side due to wave activity. Option A incorrectly places nimbostratus on the northern side and rotors on the windward side. Option B describes a synoptic pattern, not the weather itself. Option C contradicts the definition of Foehn, which produces warm, dry — not cold, humid — descending air.
+
+### Q161: Clouds are fundamentally classified into which two basic types? ^t50q161
+- A) Stratiform and ice clouds
+- B) Layered and lifted clouds
+- C) Thunderstorm and shower clouds
+- D) Cumulus and stratiform clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental cloud classification divides all clouds into two basic forms based on their physical formation process: cumuliform (convective, vertically developed clouds formed by localized updrafts) and stratiform (layered, horizontally extended clouds formed by widespread, gentle lifting or cooling). All other cloud types and subtypes derive from combinations of these two basic forms. Option A incorrectly pairs stratiform with "ice clouds," which is a composition category, not a form. Option B uses non-standard terminology. Option C names specific weather phenomena rather than fundamental cloud forms.
+
+### Q162: During Foehn conditions, what weather phenomenon marked as "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q162
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the lee side during Foehn conditions, the descending air creates standing wave patterns downwind of the mountain ridge. These waves produce Altocumulus lenticularis — smooth, lens-shaped or almond-shaped clouds that remain stationary relative to the terrain despite strong winds passing through them. They are a hallmark of mountain wave activity. Options B and D (cumulonimbus) are associated with deep convective instability, not the stable laminar wave flow characteristic of Foehn. Option A (Altocumulus castellanus) indicates mid-level convective instability with turret-like protrusions, which is a different meteorological situation.
+
+### Q163: When very small water droplets and ice crystals strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice forms? ^t50q163
+- A) Hoar frost
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Rime ice
+- D) Mixed ice
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rime ice forms when very small supercooled water droplets freeze instantly upon contact with the aircraft's leading edges, trapping air between the frozen particles and creating a rough, white, opaque deposit. Because the droplets are so small, they freeze before they can spread, resulting in the characteristic granular texture. Option B (clear ice) forms from larger supercooled droplets that flow along the surface before freezing, producing a smooth, transparent, dense layer. Option D (mixed ice) is a combination of rime and clear ice. Option A (hoar frost) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not by droplet impact.
+
+### Q164: Which chart contains information about pressure patterns and frontal positions? ^t50q164
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC)
+- B) Surface weather chart.
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Wind chart.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) is the primary meteorological product displaying isobars (lines of equal pressure at MSL), the locations of highs and lows, and the positions and types of fronts (warm, cold, occluded, stationary). Option A (Significant Weather Chart) focuses on aviation hazards such as turbulence, icing, and significant cloud coverage, but does not show the full surface pressure pattern. Option C (hypsometric chart) depicts the heights of constant-pressure surfaces in the upper atmosphere. Option D (wind chart) shows wind speed and direction at specific levels without pressure or frontal information.
+
+### Q165: What is the typical cloud sequence observed during the approach and passage of a warm front? ^t50q165
+- A) Squall line with rain showers and thunderstorms (Cb), gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) In coastal areas, daytime wind from the coast with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in the evening
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog layers forming in winter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The approach of a warm front produces a characteristic descending cloud sequence as the warm air gradually overrides the retreating cold air mass. First, thin cirrus appears at high altitude, followed by cirrostratus, then progressively thickening altostratus and altocumulus at mid-levels, and finally nimbostratus with a low cloud base and prolonged steady rain. Option A describes cold front or squall line weather. Option B describes a coastal sea-breeze cycle unrelated to frontal meteorology. Option D describes anticyclonic subsidence or continental high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q166: What phenomenon results from cold-air downdrafts carrying precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud? ^t50q166
+- A) Anvil-head top of the Cb cloud
+- B) Freezing rain
+- C) Electrical discharge
+- D) Gust front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a mature thunderstorm, precipitation drags cold air downward in powerful downdrafts. When this cold, dense air reaches the surface, it spreads outward rapidly as a density current, creating a gust front — a sharp boundary marked by sudden wind shifts, temperature drops, and gusty conditions that can extend several kilometres ahead of the storm. Option A (anvil-head top) is a structural feature shaped by upper-level winds, not caused by downdrafts reaching the surface. Option C (electrical discharge) results from charge separation within the cloud. Option B (freezing rain) requires a specific temperature inversion profile, not downdraft spreading.
+
+### Q167: Which item is NOT included on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)? ^t50q167
+- A) Frontal lines and frontal displacement
+- B) Turbulence area information
+- C) Icing condition information
+- D) Radar echoes of precipitation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-Level Significant Weather Charts are forecast products that depict meteorological hazards below a specified altitude, including frontal systems and their movement (option A), turbulence areas (option B), and icing conditions (option C). However, they do not contain radar echoes of precipitation (option D) because radar imagery is a real-time observational product, whereas LLSWC are prognostic charts prepared in advance. Precipitation areas may be indicated symbolically on LLSWC, but actual radar returns are found only on separate radar displays.
+
+### Q168: Which cloud type produces prolonged, steady rain? ^t50q168
+- A) Cirrostratus
+- B) Altocumulus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nimbostratus (Ns) is a thick, dark grey, amorphous layer cloud that produces continuous, steady precipitation (rain or snow) over wide areas, typically associated with warm fronts or occlusions. Its great vertical and horizontal extent ensures prolonged precipitation reaching the ground. Option A (cirrostratus) is a thin, high-level ice cloud that does not produce surface precipitation. Option B (altocumulus) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained surface rain. Option D (cumulonimbus) produces intense but short-lived showers and thunderstorms rather than prolonged steady rain.
+
+### Q169: Based on cloud type, how is precipitation classified? ^t50q169
+- A) Light and heavy precipitation.
+- B) Prolonged rain and continuous rain.
+- C) Showers of snow and rain.
+- D) Rain and showers of rain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Meteorological classification of precipitation by cloud type distinguishes two fundamental categories: rain (steady, continuous precipitation from stratiform clouds like nimbostratus) and showers of rain (intermittent, convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds like cumulonimbus or cumulus congestus). This distinction reflects the physical formation process — widespread lifting versus localized convection. Option A classifies by intensity rather than cloud type. Option B uses redundant terminology that does not distinguish cloud origins. Option C classifies by precipitation phase (snow versus rain), not by cloud type.
+
+### Q170: Which conditions favour thunderstorm development? ^t50q170
+- A) Clear night over land with cold air and fog patches
+- B) Warm, dry air under a strong inversion layer
+- C) Calm winds with cold air, overcast St or As cloud cover
+- D) Warm, humid air with a conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorm development requires three essential ingredients: moisture (warm, humid air provides the latent heat fuel), instability (a conditionally unstable lapse rate allows saturated air parcels to accelerate upward), and a lifting mechanism (fronts, orographic forcing, or surface heating). Option D combines the first two ingredients explicitly. Option A describes calm, stable nighttime conditions favouring radiation fog, not convection. Option B features a strong inversion that would cap any vertical development. Option C describes a stable, overcast situation with stratus or altostratus, which suppresses thunderstorm formation.
+
+### Q171: When isobars on a surface weather chart are widely spaced, what does this indicate about the prevailing wind? ^t50q171
+- A) Strong pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+- B) Weak pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- C) Strong pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- D) Weak pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spacing of isobars on a surface weather chart is inversely proportional to the pressure gradient: widely spaced isobars mean a small pressure difference over a large distance (weak gradient), which produces only light wind. Wind speed is directly driven by the pressure gradient force, so a weak gradient means weak wind. Option A contradicts itself by associating wide spacing with strong gradients. Option C pairs a strong gradient with light wind, which is meteorologically incorrect. Option D reverses the gradient-wind relationship.
+
+### Q172: An air mass arriving in Central Europe from the Russian continent during winter is described as... ^t50q172
+- A) Continental tropical air
+- B) Maritime polar air
+- C) Continental polar air
+- D) Maritime tropical air
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air masses are classified by their source region's surface characteristics. Air originating over the vast, snow-covered Russian (Siberian) continent during winter acquires cold temperatures and very low moisture content, making it Continental Polar (cP). This air mass brings bitterly cold, dry conditions to Central Europe when it advects westward. Option B (maritime polar) originates over polar oceans and carries significant moisture. Option A (continental tropical) and option D (maritime tropical) originate in warm regions and are far too warm and/or moist to describe Siberian winter air.
+
+### Q173: What clouds and weather are typically observed during the passage of a cold front? ^t50q173
+- A) Strongly developed Cb clouds with rain showers and thunderstorms, gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog in winter
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) In coastal areas, daytime onshore wind with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in evening
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold front passage is marked by a narrow band of intense weather as the advancing cold air undercuts the warm air, forcing it rapidly aloft. This produces strongly developed cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds, heavy rain showers, thunderstorms, and gusty winds along the frontal line, followed by cumulus with isolated showers in the cold, unstable air behind the front. Option C describes the gradual cloud sequence of an approaching warm front. Option B describes anticyclonic or high-pressure settling conditions. Option D describes a coastal sea-breeze pattern unrelated to frontal weather.
+
+### Q174: When an aircraft is struck by lightning, what is the most immediate danger? ^t50q174
+- A) Disrupted radio communication and static noise
+- B) Rapid cabin depressurisation and smoke in the cabin
+- C) Surface overheating and damage to exposed aircraft parts
+- D) Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most immediate physical danger from a lightning strike is surface overheating at the attachment and exit points, along with damage to exposed components such as antennas, pitot tubes, wingtips, and control surface edges. The extreme heat at the strike points can burn through thin skins, pit metal surfaces, and damage composite materials. Option A (disrupted radio communication) is a secondary effect that does not pose an immediate structural threat. Option B (cabin depressurisation) applies primarily to pressurised aircraft and is not the most common immediate consequence. Option D (explosion of cockpit equipment) is extremely unlikely in certified aircraft with proper lightning protection.
+
+### Q175: What is meant by mountain wind? ^t50q175
+- A) A wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.
+- B) A wind blowing down the mountain slope at night.
+- C) A wind blowing uphill from the valley at night.
+- D) A wind blowing down the mountain slope during daytime.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain wind (Bergwind) is a katabatic flow that occurs at night when mountain slopes cool by radiation faster than the free atmosphere at the same altitude. The cooled, denser air drains downslope under gravity toward the valley floor. This is part of the diurnal mountain-valley wind cycle. Option A describes valley wind (Talwind), which is the daytime anabatic upslope flow caused by solar heating. Option C reverses the nighttime flow direction. Option D reverses the daytime flow direction.
+
+### Q176: What is the average value of the saturated adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q176
+- A) 0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate averages approximately 0.6 degrees C per 100 m. It is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (1.0 degrees C per 100 m) because latent heat released during condensation partially offsets the cooling of the ascending air parcel. Option A (0 degrees C per 100 m) would mean no temperature change with altitude, which is physically unrealistic for a rising air parcel. Option B (2 degrees C per 1000 ft, approximately 0.66 degrees C per 100 m) is a rough approximation but not the standard textbook value. Option C (1.0 degrees C per 100 m) is the dry adiabatic lapse rate, not the saturated rate.
+
+### Q177: Throughout the year, extensive high pressure areas are found... ^t50q177
+- A) In tropical regions near the equator.
+- B) Over oceanic areas at approximately 30°N/S latitude.
+- C) In mid-latitudes along the polar front.
+- D) In areas with extensive lifting processes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The subtropical high-pressure belt at approximately 30 degrees N and S latitude is a semi-permanent feature of the global atmospheric circulation, created by the descending branch of the Hadley cell. Warm air rising near the equator flows poleward aloft, cools, and subsides in the subtropics, forming persistent anticyclones over the oceans (e.g., the Azores High, the Pacific High). Option A (equatorial regions) is dominated by the low-pressure Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Option C (mid-latitudes along the polar front) is a zone of cyclonic activity and low pressure. Option D (areas with extensive lifting) produce low pressure by definition, not high pressure.
+
+### Q178: During flight, weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained via... ^t50q178
+- A) SIGMET
+- B) ATIS.
+- C) PIREP
+- D) VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) is a continuous broadcast available on a dedicated frequency at equipped aerodromes, providing current weather observations, active runway, transition level, approach procedures, and relevant NOTAMs specific to that aerodrome. Pilots tune in to the ATIS frequency during flight to obtain up-to-date destination information. Option A (SIGMET) covers significant weather hazards across an entire FIR, not aerodrome-specific data. Option C (PIREP) contains pilot-reported weather conditions en route. Option D (VOLMET) broadcasts weather for multiple aerodromes but is less comprehensive than ATIS for a specific destination.
+
+### Q179: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^t50q179
+- A) Cumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Stratus
+- D) Altus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cloud in figure MET-002 is cumulus, identifiable by its characteristic flat base (marking the condensation level) and vertically developed, cauliflower-like top with sharp white outlines against the blue sky. Cumulus clouds form through thermal convection and are the clouds most associated with soaring flight. Option B (cirrus) would appear as thin, wispy ice-crystal filaments at very high altitude. Option C (stratus) would present as a uniform, featureless grey layer. Option D ("altus") is not a recognized cloud genus in the international cloud classification system.
+
+### Q180: What determines the character of an air mass? ^t50q180
+- A) Wind speed and tropopause height
+- B) Region of origin and trajectory during movement
+- C) Environmental lapse rate at the source
+- D) Temperatures at both origin and present location
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass acquires its temperature and moisture properties from the surface conditions of its source region (e.g., polar continent, tropical ocean) and then modifies as it travels over different surfaces along its trajectory. Both the origin (which sets the initial character) and the path (which modifies it) are essential for classifying and forecasting air mass behaviour. Option A (wind speed and tropopause height) are dynamic properties, not defining characteristics. Option C (environmental lapse rate at source) is a consequence of the air mass properties, not their cause. Option D (temperatures at origin and present location) captures only temperature while ignoring the critical moisture dimension.
+
+### Q181: What cloud type is commonly observed across extensive high-pressure areas in summer? ^t50q181
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- B) Overcast nimbostratus
+- C) Scattered cumulus clouds
+- D) Overcast low stratus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer anticyclones, surface heating generates thermal convection that produces scattered fair-weather Cumulus clouds (Cu humilis or Cu mediocris) during the day, dissipating in the evening. Overcast low stratus (option D) is associated with stable, moist air at low levels, common in autumn or maritime high-pressure situations. Nimbostratus (option B) is associated with frontal systems. Squall lines and thunderstorms (option A) require convective instability and moisture not typical of settled high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q182: The symbol marked (1) in the figure represents which frontal type? See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q182
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Front aloft.
+- C) Cold front.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a surface weather chart, a cold front is depicted by a line with solid triangular spikes (barbs) pointing in the direction of movement. The symbol labeled (1) in figure MET-005 matches the cold front symbol. A warm front uses semicircles. An occlusion uses alternating triangles and semicircles. A front aloft is depicted differently and is less commonly shown on basic surface charts.
+
+### Q183: In METAR code, which identifier denotes heavy rain? ^t50q183
+- A) .+SHRA.
+- B) RA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) SHRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR codes, precipitation intensity is indicated by a '+' prefix (heavy) or '-' prefix (light); no prefix means moderate. Rain is coded 'RA'. Therefore heavy rain is '+RA' (written as '+RA' in the standard, shown in the options as '.+RA'). 'RA' alone (option B) means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option D) means shower of rain (moderate). '+SHRA' (option A) means heavy shower of rain — a convective shower, not continuous heavy rain.
+
+### Q184: During which stage of a thunderstorm do strong updrafts and downdrafts coexist? ^t50q184
+- A) Thunderstorm stage.
+- B) Dissipating stage.
+- C) Mature stage.
+- D) Initial stage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the mature stage of a thunderstorm, both strong updrafts (sustaining the storm) and strong downdrafts (driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling) coexist simultaneously within the Cumulonimbus cell. The initial (cumulus) stage has only updrafts. The dissipating stage is dominated by downdrafts only, which cut off the updraft supply and weaken the storm. 'Thunderstorm stage' (option A) is not a recognised meteorological term.
+
+### Q185: Which conditions are most conducive to aircraft icing? ^t50q185
+- A) Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C in the presence of hail
+- B) Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C with supercooled water droplets present
+- C) Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C within cirrus clouds containing ice crystals
+- D) Sub-zero temperatures with strong wind and cloudless skies
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C where supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and drop size is largest, producing clear or mixed icing on airframe surfaces. Below -20°C, cloud water is mostly in ice crystal form and causes much less accretion. Above 0°C, droplets are not supercooled and do not freeze on contact. Icing in clear air (option D) does not occur as there are no supercooled droplets. Cirrus (option C) contains ice crystals which do not adhere significantly.
+
+### Q186: What is the primary hazard when approaching a valley airfield with strong winds aloft blowing perpendicular to the surrounding ridges? ^t50q186
+- A) Heavy downdrafts beneath thunderstorm rainfall areas
+- B) Wind shear during descent, with possible 180° wind direction changes
+- C) Reduced visibility and potential loss of sight of the airfield on final
+- D) Formation of moderate to severe clear ice on all aircraft surfaces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When strong wind blows perpendicular to a mountain ridge, orographic lift on the windward side and mechanical turbulence create complex wind shear on the lee side. An aircraft descending into a valley airfield on the lee side may encounter severe wind shear with the wind reversing by up to 180° between altitudes, creating sudden loss of airspeed or ground wind opposite to the upper-level flow. Reduced visibility (option C) is a secondary concern. Icing (option D) is unrelated to mountain wind shear. Heavy downdrafts in rainfall (option A) describes thunderstorm activity, not orographic flow.
+
+### Q187: What are "blue thermals"? ^t50q187
+- A) Turbulence in the vicinity of cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Descending air found between cumulus clouds
+- C) Thermals that rise without producing any cumulus clouds
+- D) Thermals occurring when cumulus coverage is below 4/8
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blue thermals are thermals that extend to significant altitude but remain below the condensation level (dew point height), so no Cumulus clouds form — the sky appears clear (blue). They are invisible to glider pilots and require instruments or experience to exploit. Option D confuses thermals with cloud coverage statistics. Option B describes sink between Cu clouds. Option A describes clear-air turbulence (CAT) near thunderstorms, a different phenomenon.
+
+### Q188: The expression "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal strength... ^t50q188
+- A) Is sufficient for cross-country soaring with cumulus clouds marking the thermals.
+- B) Reaches at least 1200 m MSL and becomes usable for gliding.
+- C) Becomes sufficient for gliding and extends to at least 600 m AGL.
+- D) Reaches at least 600 m AGL and produces cumulus clouds.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 'beginning of thermals' (Thermikbeginn) is the moment when thermal lift becomes sufficiently strong and deep (reaching at least 600 m AGL) for a glider to sustain flight and gain height — this is the practical definition. It does not require Cu cloud formation (option A), nor does it specify a fixed MSL altitude (option B). Option D adds an unnecessary cloud formation criterion to what is fundamentally an altitude threshold.
+
+### Q189: How is the "trigger temperature" defined? It is the temperature which... ^t50q189
+- A) A thermal reaches during its ascent at the moment cumulus clouds begin forming.
+- B) Must be attained at ground level for cumulus clouds to develop from thermal convection.
+- C) Represents the maximum surface temperature achievable before a cumulus cloud evolves into a thunderstorm.
+- D) Represents the minimum surface temperature required for a cumulus to develop into a thunderstorm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum ground temperature that must be reached before thermals are strong enough to carry air parcels to the condensation level and form Cumulus clouds. It is found on a tephigram or skew-T diagram by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the surface intersection until it meets the temperature profile. Options A and C misstate it as a temperature reached aloft or a threshold for thunderstorm formation. Option D describes thunderstorm formation, not Cu formation.
+
+### Q190: In a weather briefing, what does the term "over-development" refer to? ^t50q190
+- A) Transition from blue thermals to cloud-marked thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Spreading of cumulus clouds beneath an inversion layer
+- C) Vertical growth of cumulus clouds into rain-producing showers
+- D) Intensification of a thermal low into a storm depression
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development (Überentwicklung) occurs when Cumulus clouds develop vertically beyond Cu congestus into rain-producing Cumulonimbus clouds, generating showers and thunderstorms. This typically happens in the afternoon when the atmosphere becomes increasingly unstable. Option A describes a change in thermal visibility. Option D refers to synoptic-scale deepening of depressions. Option B describes the spreading of Cu under an inversion (which is actually 'street' or 'cover' formation, a separate phenomenon).
+
+### Q191: In gliding meteorology, what does "shielding" refer to? ^t50q191
+- A) The anvil-shaped structure at the top of a thunderstorm cloud
+- B) Cumulus cloud coverage expressed in eighths of the sky
+- C) High or mid-level cloud layers that suppress thermal activity
+- D) Nimbostratus covering the windward slope of a mountain range
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding (Abschirmung) refers to a layer of high or mid-level cloud (such as Cirrostratus, Altostratus, or Altocumulus) that intercepts solar radiation before it reaches the ground, thus reducing or suppressing the surface heating required for thermal development. Option D describes cloud cover on a windward mountain slope. Option A describes the anvil of a Cb, not shielding. Option B describes sky coverage in oktas, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q192: What is the gaseous composition of dry air? ^t50q192
+- A) Oxygen 21%, Nitrogen 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- B) Nitrogen 21%, Oxygen 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- C) Oxygen 21%, Water vapour 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- D) Oxygen 78%, Water vapour 21%, Nitrogen 1%
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air is composed of approximately 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and 1% argon and trace gases including carbon dioxide. This is the standard atmospheric composition. All other options incorrectly swap the proportions of nitrogen and oxygen or introduce water vapour as a major component. Water vapour is a variable constituent (0–4%) not included in the standard dry air composition.
+
+### Q193: Under ISA conditions at mean sea level, what is the mass of one cubic metre of air? ^t50q193
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,01225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At MSL under ISA conditions, the standard air density is 1.225 kg/m³. A cube with 1 m edges has a volume of 1 m³, so its mass is 1.225 kg. Option B (0.01225 kg) is off by a factor of 100, option D (0.1225 kg) by a factor of 10, and option A (12.25 kg) by a factor of 10 in the opposite direction. These represent common decimal-point errors.
+
+### Q194: How is the tropopause defined? ^t50q194
+- A) The altitude above which temperature begins to decrease.
+- B) The boundary between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- C) The layer above the troposphere where temperature increases.
+- D) The boundary zone between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the boundary layer separating the troposphere (where temperature decreases with altitude) from the stratosphere (where temperature is initially constant and then increases due to ozone absorption). It is not the layer above the troposphere (option C), nor the height where temperature starts to decrease (option A — that is the surface of the troposphere). Option B confuses the tropopause with the stratopause.
+
+### Q195: What characterises an inversion layer? ^t50q195
+- A) A boundary zone separating two distinct atmospheric layers
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature falls with increasing altitude
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature remains constant with increasing altitude
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature rises with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer is an atmospheric layer in which temperature increases with increasing altitude, the reverse ('inversion') of the normal decrease. Inversions suppress vertical mixing and convection, trapping pollutants and inhibiting thermal development above them. Option B describes normal atmospheric conditions. Option C describes an isothermal layer. Option A describes a generic boundary without specifying the temperature gradient direction.
+
+### Q196: What defines an isothermal layer? ^t50q196
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with height
+- B) A transition zone between two other atmospheric layers
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with height
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature stays constant with height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer is one in which temperature remains constant with increasing altitude — neither increasing (inversion, option A) nor decreasing (normal lapse rate, option C). Isothermal conditions are found, for example, in the lower stratosphere. Option B describes a generic atmospheric boundary layer, not a layer of constant temperature.
+
+### Q197: What fundamental force initiates wind? ^t50q197
+- A) Thermal force
+- B) Coriolis force
+- C) Centrifugal force
+- D) Pressure gradient force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is caused by the pressure gradient force — air flows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure, and the greater the pressure difference over a given distance, the stronger the resulting wind. The Coriolis force (option B) deflects wind but does not create it. Centrifugal force (option C) is a secondary effect in curved flow. There is no meteorological force specifically called 'thermal force'; thermal differences drive pressure gradients, but the direct cause of wind is the pressure gradient itself.
+
+### Q198: Under what conditions does Foehn typically develop? ^t50q198
+- A) Stability, with extensive airflow forced over a mountain ridge.
+- B) Instability, with a high pressure area and calm wind.
+- C) Stability, with a high pressure area and calm wind.
+- D) Instability, with extensive airflow forced over a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn develops when a stable airflow is forced over a mountain barrier. On the windward side, the air rises moist-adiabatically (condensation releasing latent heat), and on the lee side it descends dry-adiabatically, arriving warmer and drier than before ascent. Stability is necessary for the organised flow; instability would break the flow into convective cells. Calm high-pressure conditions (options B and C) do not provide the cross-mountain pressure gradient needed. Instability (option D) would prevent the laminar flow characteristic of Foehn.
+
+### Q199: How is the "spread" (dew-point depression) defined? ^t50q199
+- A) The maximum quantity of water vapour that air can hold.
+- B) The ratio of actual humidity to the maximum possible humidity.
+- C) The difference between the actual air temperature and the dew point.
+- D) The difference between the dew point and the condensation point.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spread (or dew-point spread) is the difference between the actual (dry-bulb) air temperature and the dew point temperature. A small spread indicates air close to saturation; when the spread reaches zero, condensation and fog or cloud formation occur. Option D is incorrect because dew point and condensation point are effectively the same. Option B describes relative humidity. Option A describes the saturation mixing ratio or absolute humidity capacity.
+
+### Q200: During Foehn, what weather phenomenon designated by "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q200
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- C) Cumulonimbus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical in content to question 90. During Foehn, the descending and warming lee-side flow is stable and generates standing wave clouds. Altocumulus lenticularis forms in the crests of these mountain waves on the lee side. Cumulonimbus (options C and D) requires strong convective instability absent in Foehn descent. Altocumulus Castellanus (option A) indicates mid-level instability, not the stable wave motion of a Foehn situation.
+
+### Q201: Which factor can prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q201
+- A) Low spread
+- B) Calm wind
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Clear night, no clouds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms on clear, calm nights when the ground radiates heat to space, cooling the surface air to its dew point. An overcast cloud cover prevents the necessary radiative cooling of the ground surface by acting as an insulating blanket, reflecting long-wave radiation back to the ground. Calm wind (option B) is actually a prerequisite for radiation fog formation. A clear night (option D) and low spread (option A) are also favourable, not preventative, conditions.
+
+### Q202: Through what process does advection fog form? ^t50q202
+- A) Extended radiative cooling on clear nights
+- B) Warm, humid air moving across a cold surface
+- C) Mixing of cold, humid air with warm, humid air
+- D) Cold, moist air flowing over warm ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a cold surface and cooled from below to its dew point. This is most common over cold ocean currents or cold land surfaces in spring. Option D reverses the temperature relationship. Option C describes mixing fog (a different type). Option A describes radiation fog. The defining factor in advection fog is the movement of warm moist air over cold ground.
+
+### Q203: What process leads to the development of orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q203
+- A) Warm, humid air being forced over hills or a mountain range
+- B) Mixing of cold, moist air with warm, moist air
+- C) Extended radiation on cloudless nights
+- D) Evaporation from warm, wet ground into very cold air
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when moist air is forced to rise over terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches its dew point; the result is a cloud base that sits on the hillside or mountain top. Option C describes radiation fog. Option D describes steam fog (evaporation/mixing fog). Option B describes mixing fog. The key process is forced lifting of moist air over elevated terrain.
+
+### Q204: What weather phenomena are associated with an upper-level trough? ^t50q204
+- A) Development of showers and thunderstorms (Cb)
+- B) Light winds and shallow cumulus formation
+- C) High stratus layers with ground-covering cloud bases
+- D) Calm weather and formation of lifted fog layers
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upper-level trough is a region of cold air aloft with positive vorticity advection, which promotes divergence aloft and convergence at the surface, triggering strong convective uplift. This instability favours the development of showers and thunderstorms (Cumulonimbus). Options B and D describe stable, anticyclonic conditions. Option C (high stratus) would require stable, moist conditions near the surface, not the convective instability associated with a cold upper trough.
+
+### Q205: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn, what weather should be expected? ^t50q205
+- A) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming and strong gusty winds
+- B) Layer clouds, mountain peaks obscured, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain
+- C) Scattered cumulus with showers and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm winds and formation of high stratus (high fog)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (stau) side of a mountain range during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise and cool, producing dense cloud, obscured peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain or snow — the classic 'Stau' weather. Option A describes the lee side of the Foehn (warm, dry, gusty). Option D describes stable, fog-prone conditions unrelated to Foehn. Option C describes conditions more typical of frontal convective activity.
+
+### Q206: Which chart presents observed MSL pressure distribution and the corresponding frontal systems? ^t50q206
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC).
+- B) Prognostic chart.
+- C) Surface weather chart.
+- D) Hypsometric chart
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (also called the synoptic chart or analysis chart) displays actual measured pressure values reduced to MSL as isobars, along with the positions of frontal systems. It represents the observed state of the atmosphere at a specific time. A prognostic chart (option B) shows forecast conditions. The hypsometric chart (option D) shows upper-level contour heights on constant-pressure surfaces. The SWC (option A) focuses on hazardous weather phenomena, not comprehensive pressure analysis.
+
+### Q207: In METAR, how is heavy rain encoded? ^t50q207
+- A) SHRA
+- B) .+SHRA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) RA.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical to question 120. In METAR, precipitation intensity modifiers are '+' for heavy and '-' for light. 'RA' is the METAR code for rain; therefore '+RA' (shown as '.+RA' in the options) denotes heavy rain. 'RA' (option D) alone means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option A) is shower of rain. '+SHRA' (option B) is heavy shower of rain — a different precipitation type.
+
+### Q208: In METAR, how are moderate rain showers encoded? ^t50q208
+- A) .+RA.
+- B) TS.
+- C) .+TSRA
+- D) SHRA.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR, the descriptor 'SH' (shower) is added before the precipitation code to indicate convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds. Moderate showers of rain are therefore coded 'SHRA'. '+TSRA' (option C) means heavy thunderstorm with rain. 'TS' (option B) means thunderstorm without precipitation modifier. '+RA' (option A) means heavy continuous rain from stratiform clouds, not a shower.
+
+### Q209: Under what conditions does back-side weather (Ruckseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q209
+- A) After the passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) After the passage of a cold front
+- D) Before the passage of an occlusion
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Back-side weather (Rückseitenwetter) describes the weather in the cold air mass following the passage of a cold front: cold, unstable polar or arctic air with scattered showers, good visibility, and gusty winds — often excellent soaring conditions for gliders in the convective back-side air. It occurs after, not before, frontal passages. An occlusion (option D) combines warm and cold front characteristics. Foehn (option B) is a separate orographic phenomenon. After a warm front (option A) brings the warm sector, not cold back-side air.
+
+### Q210: In the International Standard Atmosphere, how does temperature change from MSL to approximately 10,000 m altitude? ^t50q210
+- A) From +15° to -50°C
+- B) From -15° to +50°C
+- C) From +30° to -40°C
+- D) From +20° to -40°C
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), the temperature at MSL is +15°C, and the temperature decreases at 6.5°C per 1000 m (2°C per 1000 ft) through the troposphere. At approximately 11,000 m (the tropopause), the temperature reaches -56.5°C, rounding to approximately -50°C at 10,000 m. Options C and D give incorrect MSL starting values (+30°C and +20°C). Option B reverses the sign convention, implying temperature increases with altitude.
+
+### Q211: What weather should be expected during Foehn conditions in the Bavarian region near the Alps? ^t50q211
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm and dry wind
+- B) High pressure over the Bay of Biscay and low pressure over Eastern Europe
+- C) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- D) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side of the Alps with a flat pressure pattern
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Classic Bavarian Foehn is driven by low pressure over the Gulf of Genoa and high pressure over the North Sea, forcing air southward over the Alps. Nimbostratus forms on the south (windward) side of the Alps, while on the north (lee) Bavarian side, warm and dry air descends, often accompanied by Föhnmauer (Foehn wall) and rotor clouds along the Foehn boundary. Option A incorrectly describes the lee-side wind as cold and humid and places the Ns on the wrong side. Option B describes the synoptic pressure setup only partially. Option A places the Ns on the north (lee) side, which is incorrect.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/60 - Navigation.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/60 - Navigation.md
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+# Navigation
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Through which points does the Earth's rotational axis pass? ^t60q1
+- A) The geographic North Pole and the magnetic south pole.
+- B) The magnetic north pole and the geographic South Pole.
+- C) The geographic North Pole and the geographic South Pole.
+- D) The magnetic north pole and the magnetic south pole.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's rotational axis is the physical axis around which the planet spins, and it passes through the geographic (true) poles — not the magnetic poles. The geographic poles are fixed points defined by the rotational axis, while the magnetic poles are offset from them and drift over time due to changes in the Earth's molten core.
+
+### Q2: Which statement correctly describes the polar axis of the Earth? ^t60q2
+- A) It passes through the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is tilted 23.5° relative to the equatorial plane.
+- B) It passes through the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is tilted 66.5° relative to the equatorial plane.
+- C) It passes through the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the equatorial plane.
+- D) It passes through the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the equatorial plane.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar axis passes through the geographic poles and is perpendicular (90°) to the plane of the equator by definition. The Earth's axis is indeed tilted 23.5° relative to the plane of its orbit around the sun (the ecliptic), but it is perpendicular to the equatorial plane — those two facts are consistent and not contradictory. Option A confuses the tilt to the ecliptic with the relationship to the equator.
+
+### Q3: For navigation systems, which approximate geometrical shape best represents the Earth? ^t60q3
+- A) A flat plate.
+- B) An ellipsoid.
+- C) A sphere of ecliptical shape.
+- D) A perfect sphere.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth is not a perfect sphere — it is slightly flattened at the poles and bulges at the equator due to its rotation. This shape is called an oblate spheroid or ellipsoid. Modern navigation systems (including GPS) use the WGS-84 ellipsoid as the reference model, which accurately accounts for this flattening in coordinate calculations.
+
+### Q4: Which of the following statements about a rhumb line is correct? ^t60q4
+- A) The shortest path between two points on the Earth follows a rhumb line.
+- B) A rhumb line crosses each meridian at an identical angle.
+- C) The centre of a complete rhumb line circuit is always the centre of the Earth.
+- D) A rhumb line is a great circle that meets the equator at 45°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rhumb line (also called a loxodrome) is defined as a line that crosses every meridian of longitude at the same angle. This makes it useful for constant-heading navigation — a pilot can fly a rhumb line by maintaining a fixed compass heading. However, it is not the shortest path between two points; that distinction belongs to the great circle route.
+
+### Q5: The shortest route between two points on the Earth's surface follows a segment of... ^t60q5
+- A) A small circle
+- B) A great circle.
+- C) A rhumb line.
+- D) A parallel of latitude.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A great circle is any circle whose plane passes through the center of the Earth, and the arc of a great circle between two points is the shortest possible path along the Earth's surface (the geodesic). Parallels of latitude (except the equator) and rhumb lines are not great circles and do not represent the shortest path. Long-haul aircraft routes are planned along great circle tracks to minimize fuel and time.
+
+### Q6: What is the approximate circumference of the Earth measured along the equator? See figure (NAV-002) ^t60q6
+
+
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 21600 NM.
+- C) 10800 km.
+- D) 12800 km.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator spans 360 degrees of longitude, and each degree of longitude on the equator equals 60 NM (since 1 NM = 1 arcminute on a great circle). Therefore: 360° x 60 NM = 21,600 NM. In kilometers, the Earth's equatorial circumference is approximately 40,075 km — so option A has the right number but wrong unit. Knowing this relationship (1° = 60 NM on the equator) is fundamental to navigation calculations.
+
+### Q7: What is the latitude difference between point A (12°53'30''N) and point B (07°34'30''S)? ^t60q7
+- A) .20°28'00''
+- B) .05°19'00''
+- C) .20,28°
+- D) .05,19°
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two points are on opposite sides of the equator, the difference in latitude is the sum of their respective latitudes. Here: 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. Converting minutes: 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', so 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. Always add latitudes when they are in opposite hemispheres (N and S).
+
+### Q8: At what positions are the two polar circles located? ^t60q8
+- A) 23.5° north and south of the equator
+- B) At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N
+- C) 20.5° south of the poles
+- D) 23.5° north and south of the poles
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Arctic Circle lies at approximately 66.5°N and the Antarctic Circle at 66.5°S — which is 90° - 23.5° = 66.5°, placing them 23.5° away from their respective geographic poles. This 23.5° offset directly corresponds to the axial tilt of the Earth. The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn (option A) are the ones located 23.5° from the equator.
+
+### Q9: Along a meridian, what is the distance between the 48°N and 49°N parallels of latitude? ^t60q9
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 10 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Along any meridian (line of longitude), 1 degree of latitude always equals 60 nautical miles. This is because meridians are great circles and 1 NM is defined as 1 arcminute of arc along a great circle. The 111 km figure (option A) is the equivalent in kilometers, not nautical miles. This 60 NM per degree relationship is a cornerstone of navigation calculations.
+
+### Q10: Along any line of longitude, what distance corresponds to one degree of latitude? ^t60q10
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 1 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** One degree of latitude = 60 arcminutes, and since 1 NM equals exactly 1 arcminute of latitude along a meridian, 1° of latitude = 60 NM. This relationship holds along any meridian because all meridians are great circles. In SI units, 1° of latitude ≈ 111 km, not 60 km as stated in option C.
+
+### Q11: Point A lies at exactly 47°50'27''N latitude. Which point is precisely 240 NM north of A? ^t60q11
+- A) 49°50'27''N
+- B) 43°50'27''N
+- C) 53°50'27''N
+- D) 51°50'27'N'
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Converting 240 NM to degrees of latitude: 240 NM / 60 NM per degree = 4°. Adding 4° to 47°50'27''N gives 51°50'27''N. Moving north increases the latitude value. Option C would require 6° (360 NM), and option A would require only 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q12: Along the equator, what is the distance between the 150°E and 151°E meridians? ^t60q12
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the equator, meridians of longitude are separated by great circle arcs, and 1° of longitude along the equator equals 60 NM — the same as 1° of latitude along any meridian, because the equator is also a great circle. At higher latitudes, the distance between meridians decreases (multiplied by cos(latitude)), but at the equator it is exactly 60 NM per degree.
+
+### Q13: When two points A and B on the equator are separated by exactly one degree of longitude, what is the great circle distance between them? ^t60q13
+- A) 216 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 400 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator itself is a great circle, so the great circle distance between two points on the equator separated by 1° of longitude is simply 60 NM (1° x 60 NM/degree). This is the same principle as measuring along a meridian. Any confusion arises if one tries to calculate using km instead — 1° ≈ 111 km on the equator, but the question asks for NM.
+
+### Q14: Consider two points A and B on the same parallel of latitude (not the equator). A is at 010°E and B at 020°E. The rhumb line distance between them is always... ^t60q14
+- A) More than 600 NM.
+- B) More than 300 NM.
+- C) Less than 300 NM.
+- D) Less than 600 NM.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rhumb line distance between points on the same parallel of latitude is: 10° x 60 NM x cos(latitude). Since cos(latitude) is always less than 1 for any latitude other than the equator (where it equals exactly 60 NM x 10 = 600 NM), the rhumb line distance is always strictly less than 600 NM. At the equator it would equal 600 NM, but since they are specifically "not on the equator," the distance is always less than 600 NM.
+
+### Q15: How much time elapses as the sun traverses 20° of longitude? ^t60q15
+- A) 0:20 h
+- B) 1:20 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 1:00 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth rotates 360° in 24 hours, so it rotates 15° per hour, or 1° every 4 minutes. For 20° of longitude: 20 x 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 hour 20 minutes. Alternatively: 20° / 15°/h = 1.333 h = 1:20 h. This relationship (15°/hour or 4 min/degree) is essential for time zone calculations and solar noon determination.
+
+### Q16: How much time passes as the sun crosses 10° of longitude? ^t60q16
+- A) 0:30 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 1:00 h
+- D) 0:04 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the same principle as Q15: the Earth rotates 15° per hour, so 10° corresponds to 10/15 hours = 2/3 hour = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. Option D (4 minutes) would be the time for only 1° of longitude. Option A (30 minutes) would correspond to 7.5° of longitude.
+
+### Q17: The sun traverses 10° of longitude. What is the corresponding time difference? ^t60q17
+- A) 0.33 h
+- B) 1 h
+- C) 0.4 h
+- D) 0.66 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the same calculation as Q16 but expressed as a decimal fraction of an hour: 10° / 15°/h = 0.6667 h ≈ 0.66 h (40 minutes in decimal hours). Note that Q16 and Q17 appear to ask the same question but expect different answer formats — Q16 expects 0:40 h (40 minutes) while Q17 expects 0.66 h (the decimal equivalent). Both represent the same 40-minute time difference.
+
+### Q18: If Central European Summer Time (CEST) is UTC+2, what is the UTC equivalent of 1600 CEST? ^t60q18
+- A) 1400 UTC.
+- B) 1600 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC+2 means CEST is 2 hours ahead of UTC. To convert from local time to UTC, subtract the offset: 1600 CEST - 2 hours = 1400 UTC. A simple mnemonic: "to get UTC, subtract the positive offset." This is critical in aviation as all flight plans, ATC communications, and NOTAMs use UTC regardless of local time zone.
+
+### Q19: What is UTC? ^t60q19
+- A) A local time in Central Europe.
+- B) Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.
+- C) A zonal time
+- D) The mandatory time reference used in aviation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the mandatory time reference for all international aviation operations — flight plans, ATC communications, weather reports (METARs/TAFs), and NOTAMs all use UTC to eliminate confusion from time zone differences. It is not a zonal or local time, and it is not referenced to any geographic location (though it closely tracks Greenwich Mean Time).
+
+### Q20: If Central European Time (CET) is UTC+1, what is the UTC equivalent of 1700 CET? ^t60q20
+- A) 1800 UTC.
+- B) 1500 UTC.
+- C) 1600 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CET is UTC+1, meaning it is 1 hour ahead of UTC. To convert to UTC, subtract the offset: 1700 CET - 1 hour = 1600 UTC. Switzerland uses CET (UTC+1) in winter and CEST (UTC+2) in summer — knowing the current offset is essential when filing flight plans or reading NOTAMs.
+
+### Q21: Vienna (LOWW) is at 016°34'E and Salzburg (LOWS) at 013°00'E, both at approximately the same latitude. What is the difference in sunrise and sunset times (in UTC) between the two cities? (2,00 P.) ^t60q21
+- A) In Vienna sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg
+- B) In Vienna sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- C) In Vienna sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- D) In Vienna sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The difference in longitude is 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3.57°. At 4 minutes per degree, this gives approximately 14.3 minutes ≈ 14 minutes. Vienna is east of Salzburg, so the sun reaches Vienna earlier — both sunrise and sunset occur about 14 minutes earlier in Vienna (as seen in UTC). Local time zones disguise this difference, but in UTC the eastern location always sees solar events first.
+
+### Q22: How is "civil twilight" defined? ^t60q22
+- A) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 6° below the true horizon.
+- B) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 12° below the apparent horizon.
+- C) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 6° below the apparent horizon.
+- D) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 12° below the true horizon.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Civil twilight is the period when the sun's center is between 0° and 6° below the true (geometric) horizon — there is still sufficient natural light for most outdoor activities without artificial lighting. The true horizon (geometric) is used in the formal definition, not the apparent horizon (which is affected by refraction). Nautical twilight uses 12°, and astronomical twilight uses 18° below the true horizon. In aviation regulations, civil twilight often defines the boundary for day/night VFR operations.
+
+### Q23: Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E. Determine TC, MH, and CH. (2,00 P.) ^t60q23
+- A) TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- B) TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.
+- C) TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- D) TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The heading chain works as follows: TC → (apply WCA) → TH → (apply VAR) → MH → (apply DEV) → CH. Given TH = 125° and WCA = -12°, then TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. For MH: MC = MH + WCA, so MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. For CH: DEV = 002°E means compass reads 2° high, so CH = MH - DEV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Negative WCA means wind from the right, requiring a left correction in heading.
+
+### Q24: Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002°. What are MH and MC? ^t60q24
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+- C) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+- D) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Then MH = TH - VAR (E is subtracted): MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. For MC: MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. Alternatively: MC = MH + WCA = 163° + (-12°) = 151° — wait, that doesn't match; MC is measured from magnetic north to the course line, so MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. East variation is subtracted when converting from True to Magnetic ("East is least").
+
+### Q25: The angular difference between the true course and the true heading is known as the... ^t60q25
+- A) Variation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Wind Correction Angle (WCA) is the angular difference between the true course (the direction of intended track over the ground) and the true heading (the direction the aircraft's nose points). A crosswind requires the pilot to angle the nose into the wind, creating a difference between heading and track — this offset angle is the WCA. It is neither variation (true-to-magnetic difference) nor deviation (magnetic-to-compass difference).
+
+### Q26: The angular difference between the magnetic course and the true course is called... ^t60q26
+- A) Deviation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Variation
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic variation (also called declination) is the angle between true north (geographic) and magnetic north at any given location, which creates a difference between the true course and the magnetic course. Variation changes with location and over time as the magnetic poles shift. Deviation is the error introduced by the aircraft's own magnetic field on the compass, affecting the difference between magnetic north and compass north.
+
+### Q27: How is "magnetic course" (MC) defined? ^t60q27
+- A) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- B) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole.
+- C) The direction from any point on Earth toward the magnetic north pole.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic course is the direction of the intended flight path (course line) measured clockwise from magnetic north. It differs from the true course by the local magnetic variation. Pilots use magnetic course because aircraft compasses point to magnetic north, making magnetic references more directly usable for navigation without additional corrections.
+
+### Q28: How is "True Course" (TC) defined? ^t60q28
+- A) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- B) The direction from any point on Earth toward the magnetic north pole.
+- C) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- D) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The True Course is the angle measured clockwise from true (geographic) north to the intended flight path (course line). It is determined from aeronautical charts, which are oriented to true north. To fly a true course, pilots must apply magnetic variation to get the magnetic course, then apply wind correction angle to get the true heading they must fly.
+
+### Q29: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. What are TH and VAR? (2,00 P.) ^t60q29
+- A) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W
+- B) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W
+- C) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E
+- D) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For variation: VAR is the difference between TC and MC, or equivalently between TH and MH. MH = 198°, TH = 194°, so the difference is 4°. Since MH > TH, magnetic north is east of true north, meaning variation is West (West variation adds to true to get magnetic: MH = TH + VAR, so 198° = 194° + 4°W). Mnemonic: "West is best" — West variation is added going True to Magnetic.
+
+### Q30: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. What are TH and DEV? (2,00 P.) ^t60q30
+- A) TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.
+- B) TH: 194°. DEV: +002°.
+- C) TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.
+- D) TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For deviation: DEV = CH - MH = 200° - 198° = +2°. However, the convention for deviation sign varies — if DEV is defined as what you subtract from CH to get MH, then DEV = -2°. Here CH = 200° > MH = 198°, meaning the compass reads 2° more than magnetic, so DEV = -2° (the compass is deflected eastward, requiring a negative correction). The answer is TH: 194°, DEV: -002°.
+
+### Q31: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Determine VAR and DEV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q31
+- A) VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.
+- B) VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°.
+- C) VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.
+- D) VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Q29: VAR = 4° W (MH 198° > TH 194°, so West variation). From Q30: DEV = -002° (CH 200° > MH 198°, compass reads high, requiring negative deviation correction). The complete heading chain for this problem is: TC 183° → (+11° WCA) → TH 194° → (+4° W VAR) → MH 198° → (+2° DEV) → CH 200°. These three questions (Q29, Q30, Q31) all use the same dataset, testing different parts of the heading conversion chain.
+
+### Q32: At what location does magnetic inclination reach its minimum value? ^t60q32
+- A) At the geographic poles
+- B) At the geographic equator
+- C) At the magnetic equator
+- D) At the magnetic poles
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator (the "aclinic line"), the field lines are horizontal and the dip angle is 0° — the lowest possible value. At the magnetic poles, the field lines are vertical (inclination = 90°). The magnetic equator does not coincide with the geographic equator.
+
+### Q33: The angular difference between compass north and magnetic north is referred to as... ^t60q33
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Inclination.
+- D) WCA
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields (from electrical equipment, metal structure, avionics). It is expressed as the angular difference between magnetic north (what the compass should indicate) and compass north (what it actually indicates). Deviation varies with the aircraft's heading and is recorded on a compass deviation card mounted near the instrument.
+
+### Q34: What does "compass north" (CN) refer to? ^t60q34
+- A) The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north
+- B) The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns under the combined influence of the Earth's and the aircraft's magnetic fields
+- C) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole
+- D) The most northerly reading point on the magnetic compass in the aircraft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Compass north is the direction the compass needle actually points, which is determined by the combined effect of the Earth's magnetic field AND any local magnetic interference from the aircraft itself. Because of this aircraft-induced deviation, compass north differs from magnetic north. The compass reads this resultant direction, not pure magnetic north — hence the need for a deviation correction card.
+
+### Q35: An "isogonal" or "isogonic line" on an aeronautical chart connects all points sharing the same value of... ^t60q35
+- A) Deviation
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Heading.
+- D) Variation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isogonic lines (also called isogonals) connect all points on Earth that have the same magnetic variation value. They are printed on aeronautical charts so pilots can read the local variation at their position and convert between true and magnetic headings. The agonic line is the special case where variation = 0°. Lines of equal magnetic inclination are called isoclinic lines; lines of equal field intensity are isodynamic lines.
+
+### Q36: An "agonic line" on the Earth or on an aeronautical chart connects all points where the... ^t60q36
+- A) Heading is 0°.
+- B) Inclination is 0°.
+- C) Variation is 0°.
+- D) Deviation is 0°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a special isogonic line where magnetic variation equals zero — meaning true north and magnetic north coincide along this line. Aircraft flying along the agonic line need not apply any variation correction; true course equals magnetic course. There are currently two main agonic lines on Earth, passing through North America and through parts of Asia/Australia.
+
+### Q37: Which are the official standard units for horizontal distances in aeronautical navigation? ^t60q37
+- A) Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)
+- B) Feet (ft), inches (in)
+- C) Yards (yd), meters (m)
+- D) Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In international aviation, horizontal distances are officially measured in nautical miles (NM) and kilometers (km). The nautical mile is preferred for navigation because it directly relates to the angular measurement system (1 NM = 1 arcminute of latitude). Kilometers are also used, particularly in some countries and on certain charts. Feet and meters are used for vertical distances (altitude/height), not horizontal distance.
+
+### Q38: How many metres are equivalent to 1000 ft? ^t60q38
+- A) 30 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 300 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 1 foot = 0.3048 meters, so 1000 ft = 304.8 m ≈ 300 m. The quick conversion rule is: feet x 0.3 ≈ meters, or equivalently from the exam table: m = ft x 3 / 10. This approximation is accurate enough for practical navigation. For exam purposes: 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10,000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q39: How many feet correspond to 5500 m? ^t60q39
+- A) 10000 ft.
+- B) 7500 ft.
+- C) 30000 ft.
+- D) 18000 ft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the conversion ft = m x 10 / 3 (from the exam table): 5500 x 10 / 3 = 55000 / 3 ≈ 18,333 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. Alternatively: 1 m ≈ 3.281 ft, so 5500 m x 3.281 ≈ 18,046 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. This altitude is significant in European airspace as it corresponds approximately to FL180 (the base of Class A airspace in some regions).
+
+### Q40: What might cause the runway designation at an aerodrome to change (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)? ^t60q40
+- A) The direction of the approach path has changed
+- B) The magnetic variation at the runway location has changed
+- C) The magnetic deviation at the runway location has changed
+- D) The true direction of the runway alignment has changed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Runway numbers are based on the magnetic heading of the runway, rounded to the nearest 10° and divided by 10. Because the magnetic north pole drifts slowly over time, the local magnetic variation changes — even if the physical runway has not moved, its magnetic bearing changes. When this change is large enough to shift the rounded designation (e.g., from 055° to 065°), the runway is renumbered (from "06" to "07"). Major airports periodically update runway designations for this reason.
+
+### Q41: Which flight instrument is affected by electronic devices operated on board the aircraft? ^t60q41
+- A) Airspeed indicator.
+- B) Turn coordinator
+- C) Artificial horizon.
+- D) Direct reading compass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The direct reading (magnetic) compass is sensitive to any magnetic field, including those generated by electrical equipment, avionics, and metal components in the aircraft. This interference is called deviation. Electronic devices that draw current create electromagnetic fields that can deflect the compass needle. That is why pilots are required to record the deviation on a compass card and why compasses are mounted as far from interference sources as possible.
+
+### Q42: What are the key characteristics of a Mercator chart? ^t60q42
+- A) Scale increases with latitude, great circles appear curved, rhumb lines appear straight
+- B) Constant scale, great circles appear straight, rhumb lines appear curved
+- C) Scale increases with latitude, great circles appear straight, rhumb lines appear curved
+- D) Constant scale, great circles appear curved, rhumb lines appear straight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is a cylindrical conformal projection where meridians and parallels are straight lines intersecting at right angles. Rhumb lines (constant bearing courses) appear as straight lines — making it useful for constant-heading navigation. However, the scale increases with latitude (Greenland appears as large as Africa) and great circles appear as curved lines. It is not an equal-area projection and is not suitable for high-latitude navigation.
+
+### Q43: On a direct Mercator chart, how do rhumb lines and great circles appear? ^t60q43
+- A) Rhumb lines: curved lines; Great circles: curved lines
+- B) Rhumb lines: curved lines; Great circles: straight lines
+- C) Rhumb lines: straight lines; Great circles: straight lines
+- D) Rhumb lines: straight lines; Great circles: curved lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a Mercator chart, rhumb lines (constant compass bearing courses) appear as straight lines because the chart is constructed so that meridians are parallel vertical lines and parallels are horizontal lines — any line crossing meridians at a constant angle (a rhumb line) is therefore straight. Great circles, which follow the shortest path on the globe, curve toward the poles when projected onto the Mercator chart and therefore appear as curved lines (bowing toward the nearest pole).
+
+### Q44: What are the characteristics of a Lambert conformal chart? ^t60q44
+- A) Conformal and nearly true to scale
+- B) Conformal and equal-area
+- C) Rhumb lines depicted as straight lines and conformal
+- D) Great circles depicted as straight lines and equal-area
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Lambert Conformal Conic projection is the standard for aeronautical charts (including ICAO charts used in Europe). It is conformal (angles and shapes are preserved locally), nearly true to scale between its two standard parallels, and great circles are approximately straight lines (making it excellent for plotting direct routes). It is NOT an equal-area projection. The Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart uses this projection.
+
+### Q45: The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical chart, a pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. What is the chart scale? ^t60q45
+- A) 1 : 2000000.
+- B) 1 : 250000.
+- C) 1 : 1000000.
+- D) 1 : 500000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 220 NM to centimeters: 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407,440 m = 40,744,000 cm. Scale = chart distance / real distance = 40.7 cm / 40,744,000 cm = 1 / 1,000,835 ≈ 1 : 1,000,000. The ICAO chart of Switzerland used in the SPL exam is 1:500,000 scale; knowing how to calculate chart scale from measured and actual distances is a standard exam skill.
+
+### Q46: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? ^t60q46
+> *Note: This question originally references chart annex NAV-031 showing the area around BKD VOR. The answer can be calculated from coordinates using the departure formula.*
+- A) 42 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 42 NM
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both points are at nearly the same latitude (~53°N), so the distance can be estimated using the departure formula. The longitude difference is 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' of longitude. At latitude 53°N, the distance per degree of longitude = 60 NM x cos(53°) ≈ 60 x 0.602 ≈ 36.1 NM/degree, so 38' = 0.633° x 36.1 ≈ 22.9 NM. The latitude difference adds a small component. The chart measurement confirms approximately 24 NM, making option D correct.
+
+### Q47: On an aeronautical chart, 7.5 cm represents 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale? ^t60q47
+- A) 1 : 1500000
+- B) 1 : 500000
+- C) 1 : 150000
+- D) 1 : 1 000000
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 60.745 NM to cm: 60.745 x 1852 m/NM = 112,499 m = 11,249,900 cm. Scale = 7.5 / 11,249,900 ≈ 1 / 1,499,987 ≈ 1 : 1,500,000. This is a less common chart scale — for comparison, the ICAO chart used in Switzerland is 1:500,000 and the German half-million chart (ICAO Karte) is also 1:500,000.
+
+### Q48: A pilot extracts this data from the chart for a short flight from A to B: True course: 245°. Magnetic variation: 7° W. The magnetic course (MC) equals... ^t60q48
+- A) 245°.
+- B) 007°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 238°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When variation is West, magnetic north is west of true north, meaning magnetic bearings are higher (greater) than true bearings. The rule "West is best, East is least" means: West variation → add to True to get Magnetic. MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Alternatively: MC = TC - VAR(E), so for West variation (negative East): MC = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q49: Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. ETD: 0915 UTC. What is the ETA? (2,00 P.) ^t60q49
+- A) 1052 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1115 UTC.
+- D) 1105 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1.826 h = 1 h 49.6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. ETA = ETD + flight time = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. This is a standard time/distance/speed calculation. Always compute GS first by applying wind component, then divide distance by GS for time.
+
+### Q50: Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. ETD: 1242 UTC. What is the ETA? ^t60q50
+- A) 1356 UTC
+- B) 1330 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Flight time = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0.806 h = 48.4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. Option A (1356) would correspond to a GS of about 62 kt; option D (1320) would correspond to a GS of about 113 kt. Carefully subtracting the headwind from TAS before dividing gives the correct result.
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted aids at the exam:** ICAO 1:500'000 Switzerland chart, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR calculator, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers allowed.
+
+### Q51: Wann muessen wir spaetestens landen? (Landing deadline) ^t60q51
+- Am 21. Juni -> **22:08** (local time)
+- Am 25. Maerz -> **19:20**
+- Am 1. April -> **20:30**
+*Reference: eVFG RAC 4-4-1 ff (day/night limits, UTC/MEZ/MESZ conversion)*
+
+> **Explanation:** Swiss VFR regulations define the end of the flying day as 30 minutes after official sunset (or a specified time after evening civil twilight). The landing deadline is looked up in official sunset tables and adjusted for the applicable time zone (MEZ = UTC+1 in winter, MESZ = UTC+2 in summer). June 21 is near the summer solstice, giving the latest sunset of the year; March dates are in standard time (MEZ). Always verify the current eVFG tables, as these values are date and location dependent.
+
+### Q52: Was bedeutet die grosse Zahl 87 bei Freiburg auf der ICAO-Karte? ^t60q52
+**Correct: MSA (Minimum Safe Altitude)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart, large bold numbers printed near certain cities or waypoints indicate the Minimum Safe Altitude (MSA) in hundreds of feet for that area (so "87" means 8,700 ft MSL). The MSA provides obstacle clearance of at least 300 m (1000 ft) within a defined radius. Pilots use these values for en-route safety altitude planning, especially important in mountainous terrain like the Swiss Jura and Alps.
+
+### Q53: Welcher Eintrag sollte auf der Navigationskarte vor einem Streckenflug immer gemacht werden? ^t60q53
+**Correct: Der TC (True Course)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before a cross-country flight, the pilot should measure and mark the True Course (TC) on the navigation chart using a protractor referenced to the nearest meridian. The TC is the foundation for all subsequent heading calculations: TC → apply variation → MC → apply wind correction → TH → apply deviation → CH. Marking the TC on the chart ensures consistent reference throughout the flight planning process and allows in-flight verification of track.
+
+### Q54: Wie sollte ein Endanflug ueber navigatorisch schwierigem Gelaende gemacht werden? ^t60q54
+**Correct: Mit Zeitmassstab ueberwachen, bekannte Positionen auf der Karte markieren**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a destination over navigationally challenging terrain (forests, featureless plains, or complex topography), the pilot should monitor progress using elapsed time against a pre-calculated time scale, and positively identify known landmarks (towns, rivers, roads) and mark them on the chart. This technique — essentially dead reckoning with regular position fixes — prevents the pilot from overflying the destination or becoming lost. In a glider without GPS, time management is critical to ensure arrival with sufficient altitude.
+
+### Q55: Was bedeutet GND auf dem Deckblatt der Segelflugkarte? ^t60q55
+**Correct: Obergrenze der LS-R fuer Segelflug (SF mit reduzierten Wolkenabstaenden)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss gliding chart cover page, "GND" indicates the lower limit (ground) of certain restricted areas, and the term specifically refers to the upper boundary of LS-R (Luftraum-Segelflug-Reservate) available for gliders operating with reduced cloud separation minima. These zones allow gliders to fly in conditions that would otherwise require instrument flight rules, provided specific weather minima are met. Understanding the legend on the gliding chart cover page is essential for Swiss exam candidates.
+
+### Q56: Segelflugfrequenzen (Boden-Luft, Luft-Luft, Regionen)? ^t60q56
+**Correct: Auf dem SF-Karte Deckblatt aufgefuehrt**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss gliding chart cover page contains a complete list of glider frequencies, including ground-to-air and air-to-air communication frequencies organized by region. Common Swiss glider frequencies include 122.300 MHz (universal glider frequency) and regional variants. These must be known before flight as gliders may need to coordinate with each other and with ground stations, especially in busy areas like the Alps or near controlled airspace.
+
+### Q57: Militaerische Flugdienstzeiten? ^t60q57
+**Correct: SF-Karte unten rechts**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operating hours of Swiss military airspace and military air traffic services are printed in the lower right corner of the Swiss gliding chart. Military restricted areas (such as those associated with Payerne, Meiringen, and Emmen air bases) may only be active during specific hours, and knowing these hours is critical for planning routes through or near militarily controlled areas. Outside activation times, these areas revert to standard civil airspace classifications.
+
+### Q58: Hoehe des Stockhorns in ft und m? Hoehe der Stockhornbahn AGL? ^t60q58
+**Correct: Stockhorn: 2190 m / 7185 ft; Stockhornbahn AGL: 180 m / 591 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) is a prominent peak in the Bernese Prealps visible on the Swiss ICAO chart. Its elevation appears in meters on the chart, and pilots must be able to convert to feet (using ft = m x 10/3: 2190 x 10/3 = 7300 ft, closely matching 7185 ft). The Stockhorn gondola cable (Stockhornbahn) represents an aerial obstacle 180 m AGL — cables and lifts are marked with AGL heights on the gliding chart as they pose significant hazards to low-flying gliders.
+
+### Q59: Wie hoch ist der Turm auf dem Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E)? ^t60q59
+**Correct: 188 m / 615 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Bantiger tower near Bern is a communication mast shown on the Swiss ICAO and gliding charts at coordinates N46°58.7' / E7°31.7'. Its height is 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). On the chart, obstacle heights are given in both meters and feet — exam candidates must be able to read the chart and convert between units. Obstacles above 100 m AGL are typically marked with their height and may have obstruction lighting.
+
+### Q60: Wie hoch darfst du ueber Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 von LSZG) steigen? ^t60q60
+**Correct: Status Tangosektor massgebend - nicht aktiv (Bale Info) bis FL100; wenn aktiv 1750 m oder hoeher mit Freigabe BSL**
+
+> **Explanation:** Egerkingen lies beneath the Tango Sector — a portion of Swiss airspace associated with the Basel/Mulhouse (LFSB/EuroAirport) TMA. When the Tango Sector is inactive (check with Basel Info on the appropriate frequency), the area is uncontrolled airspace up to FL100. When active, the upper limit drops to 1750 m MSL and operations above require a clearance from Basel Approach. This dynamic airspace structure is specific to the Swiss airspace system and requires checking NOTAMs and AIP Switzerland before flight.
+
+### Q61: Welche Infos finden wir auf der SF-Karte zum Flugplatz Les Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E)? ^t60q61
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende (symbols for controlled vs. uncontrolled fields)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Les Eplatures (LSGC) near La Chaux-de-Fonds appears on the Swiss gliding chart with symbols decoded in the chart legend. The legend distinguishes between towered (controlled) and non-towered airfields, glider-specific aerodromes, military fields, and emergency landing strips. Candidates must be able to read the legend and determine the relevant operational information (radio frequencies, runway orientation, airspace class) for any airfield depicted on the chart.
+
+### Q62: Benuetzungsbedingungen LS-R69 T (bei Schaffhausen)? ^t60q62
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende unten rechts. Achtung: Textbox auf Grenze TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) und TMA LSZH 3 (1700 m); LSR69 liegt in TMA 3**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R69 is a glider restricted area near Schaffhausen that lies within the Zurich TMA structure. The area overlaps with TMA LSZH 3 (lower limit 1700 m MSL), not TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) — this distinction is critical because it determines the altitude at which a clearance becomes necessary. Usage conditions are found in the chart legend lower right, and the text boxes on the chart itself clarify which TMA segment applies. Misidentifying the applicable TMA layer could lead to an airspace infringement.
+
+### Q63: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Birrfeld? ^t60q63
+**Correct: N 47 26'36'', E 8 14'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Birrfeld (LSZF) is a glider aerodrome in the canton of Aargau, Switzerland. Reading exact coordinates from the ICAO 1:500,000 chart requires careful use of the latitude and longitude graticule — each degree is divided into minutes, and at this scale, individual minutes of arc are clearly readable. The ability to read and record precise coordinates is tested because pilots may need to report positions to ATC or verify their location against chart features.
+
+### Q64: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Montricher? ^t60q64
+**Correct: N 46 35'25'', E 6 24'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Montricher (LSTR) is a glider airfield in the canton of Vaud, in the French-speaking region of Switzerland. Its coordinates place it on the Swiss Plateau west of Lausanne. Locating it precisely on the ICAO chart and reading the graticule accurately requires practice — at 1:500,000 scale, 1 minute of latitude ≈ 1 NM ≈ 1.85 km, allowing sub-minute precision to be interpolated visually from the grid.
+
+### Q65: Welcher Ort ist auf N 47 07', E 8 00'? ^t60q65
+**Correct: Willisau**
+
+> **Explanation:** Given a set of coordinates, the candidate must locate the point on the Swiss ICAO chart by finding the correct latitude (47°07'N) and longitude (8°00'E) lines and reading the nearest landmark. Willisau is a town in the canton of Lucerne, on the Swiss Plateau. This exercise tests reverse coordinate lookup — starting from numbers and finding the geographic feature, as opposed to the forward direction (finding coordinates from a named place).
+
+### Q66: Welcher Ort ist auf N 46 11', E 6 16'? ^t60q66
+**Correct: Flugplatz Annemasse**
+
+> **Explanation:** These coordinates place the point south of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman) at approximately N46°11' / E6°16', which corresponds to Annemasse aerodrome — a French airfield just across the Swiss-French border near Geneva. This question tests not only chart reading but also awareness that the Swiss ICAO chart extends into neighboring countries (France, Germany, Austria, Italy), and pilots should recognize aerodromes in border regions.
+
+### Q67: TC von Grenchen Flugplatz nach Neuenburg Flugplatz? ^t60q67
+**Correct: 239**
+
+> **Explanation:** To find the true course between two airfields, place a protractor on the chart aligned to the nearest meridian and measure the angle of the straight line connecting the two points. Grenchen (LSZG) is northeast of Neuenburg/Neuchâtel (LSGN), so the course from Grenchen to Neuchâtel runs roughly southwest — approximately 239° true. On the Lambert conformal chart, straight lines closely approximate great circles, and courses are measured from true north at the midpoint meridian.
+
+### Q68: TC von Langenthal Flugplatz nach Kaegiswil Flugplatz? ^t60q68
+**Correct: 132**
+
+> **Explanation:** Langenthal (LSPL) is northwest of Kaegiswil (LSPG near Sarnen), so the course from Langenthal to Kaegiswil runs roughly southeast — approximately 132° true. This is measured with a protractor on the ICAO chart, aligned to the meridian passing through or near the midpoint of the route. The course of 132° places the destination to the SE, consistent with Kaegiswil's position in the foothills near Lake Sarnen.
+
+### Q69: Distanz Laax - Oberalp in km, NM, sm? ^t60q69
+**Correct: 46,3 km / 25 NM / 28,7 sm**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distance is measured with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and converted using the scale bar. At 1:500,000, 1 cm on the chart = 5 km in reality. Once the distance in km is known, conversion follows: NM = km / 1.852 ≈ km / 2 + 10% (exam formula), and statute miles = km / 1.609. This route runs along the Vorderrhein valley from Laax ski area toward the Oberalp Pass — a classic Swiss glider cross-country segment.
+
+### Q70: Flugzeit Laax 14:52 nach Oberalp 15:09? ^t60q70
+**Correct: 17 Min**
+
+> **Explanation:** Simply subtract departure time from arrival time: 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. This elapsed flight time, combined with the distance from Q69, gives the speed for Q71. In practice, timing legs of a cross-country flight allows the pilot to verify actual groundspeed against planned groundspeed and detect headwind or tailwind differences from the forecast.
+
+### Q71: Geschwindigkeit in km/h, kts, mph? ^t60q71
+**Correct: 163 km/h / 88 kts / 101 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 46.3 km / (17/60) h = 46.3 / 0.2833 = 163.4 km/h ≈ 163 km/h. Converting: kts = km/h / 1.852 ≈ 163 / 2 + 10% ≈ 88 kts; mph = km/h / 1.609 ≈ 101 mph. This three-unit speed result is typical of Swiss navigation exam questions, requiring fluency with all three speed units and their conversion relationships.
+
+### Q72: Strecke LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB: Wie lang in km und NM? ^t60q72
+**Correct: 56+43+59+80 = 238 km / 30+23+32+43 = 128 NM**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is a triangular cross-country task measured on the chart: from Bellechasse (LSTB) to Buochs, then to the Jungfrau, and back to Bellechasse. Each leg is measured separately with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and the distances summed: 56 + 43 + 59 + 80 = 238 km total. Converting each leg to NM individually then summing (or converting the total: 238 / 1.852 ≈ 128 NM) gives the total task distance used for competition scoring and exam questions.
+
+### Q73: Von Eriswil bis Buochs in 18 Min - wie schnell? ^t60q73
+**Correct: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143 km/h / 77 kts / 89 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = (distance / time) x 60 to convert minutes to hours: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143.3 km/h ≈ 143 km/h. The 43 km distance is taken from the chart measurement for this leg. Converting: kts ≈ 143 / 1.852 ≈ 77 kts; mph ≈ 143 / 1.609 ≈ 89 mph. This type of in-flight speed check — measuring elapsed time between two known points — is how glider pilots monitor actual vs. planned groundspeed during cross-country flights.
+
+### Q74: Welche Luftraeume zwischen Bellechasse und Buochs auf 1500 m/M? ^t60q74
+**Correct: TMA PAY 7 (E), TMA LSZB1 (D - Freigabe noetig), LR E MTT, LR E Alpen, LS-R15 (falls aktiv), TMA LSME 2, CTR LSMA/LSZC (Freigaben noetig)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question requires reading all airspace layers on the route between Bellechasse and Buochs at 1500 m MSL, using both the ICAO chart and the gliding chart. Airspace Class D areas (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) require an ATC clearance before entry. Airspace Class E areas (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) are accessible under VFR without clearance but IFR flights have priority. LS-R15 is a glider area that may be active. Systematic left-to-right reading of the chart along the route is the required technique.
+
+### Q75: TC zwischen Jungfrau und Bellechasse? ^t60q75
+**Correct: 308**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Jungfrau is located southeast of Bellechasse (LSTB), so the course FROM Jungfrau TO Bellechasse points northwest. A bearing of 308° is northwest of north, consistent with this geometry. The TC is measured with a protractor on the Lambert conformal chart, aligned to the meridian at the midpoint of the route. Note that this is the reciprocal of the course from Bellechasse to Jungfrau (approximately 128°), which confirms 308° is directionally correct.
+
+### Q76: Gleitflug von Jungfrau (4200 m/M) nach Bellechasse mit Gleitwinkel 1:30 bei 150 km/h - Ankunftshoehe? ^t60q76
+**Correct: Distanz 80 km, Hoehenverlust 2667 m, Ankunft 1533 m MSL = 1100 m AGL ueber LSTB (433 m)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a glide ratio of 1:30, the glider covers 30 meters forward for every 1 meter of altitude lost. Height loss over 80 km = 80,000 m / 30 = 2,667 m. Starting at 4200 m MSL: arrival altitude = 4200 - 2667 = 1533 m MSL. Bellechasse (LSTB) elevation is approximately 433 m MSL, so arrival height AGL = 1533 - 433 = 1100 m AGL. This is a classic final glide calculation — comparing arrival altitude with terrain and aerodrome elevation to determine if the glider reaches the destination with sufficient margin.
+
+### Q77: Winddreieck Jungfrau-Bellechasse: TAS 140 km/h, Wind 040/15 kts ^t60q77
+**Correct: GS 137 km/h, WCA 12, TH 320**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind triangle (Winddreieck) is solved graphically or with a mechanical DR calculator: the TC is 308°, TAS is 140 km/h (≈76 kts), and wind is from 040° at 15 kts (≈28 km/h). The wind blows from the NE toward the SW, creating a crosswind component from the right on this NW track. The WCA of +12° (right wind → head left) gives TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°. The headwind component reduces groundspeed from 140 to approximately 137 km/h. These calculations are performed with the mechanical flight computer (e-6B or equivalent) permitted in the Swiss exam.
+
+### Q78: MH von Jungfrau nach Bellechasse (Variation 3 E)? ^t60q78
+**Correct: TH 320 - 3 = MH 317**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert True Heading (TH) to Magnetic Heading (MH), apply the local magnetic variation. With 3° East variation, "East is least" — subtract East variation from True to get Magnetic: MH = TH - VAR(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. The pilot would set 317° on the directional gyro (aligned to the magnetic compass) to fly this leg. Switzerland has a small easterly variation of about 2-3° in most regions.
+
+### Q79: Falls Variation 25 W - MH? ^t60q79
+**Correct: TH 320 + 25 = MH 345**
+
+> **Explanation:** With 25° West variation, "West is best" — add West variation to True Heading to get Magnetic Heading: MH = TH + VAR(W) = 320° + 25° = 345°. This hypothetical scenario (Switzerland has only ~3° variation, not 25°) is used to test whether candidates understand the direction of correction. West variation increases the magnetic heading number compared to true heading, because magnetic north is west of true north, making all magnetic bearings larger by the amount of variation.
+
+### Q80: Transponder Codes ^t60q80
+| Code | Situation |
+|------|-----------|
+| 7000 | VFR in Luftraum E und G |
+| 7700 | Notfall (Emergency) |
+| 7600 | Funkausfall (Radio failure) |
+| 7500 | Entfuehrung (Hijack) |
+
+> **Explanation:** These four transponder codes are universal ICAO emergency and standard VFR codes, memorized by all pilots. Code 7000 is the standard European VFR squawk in uncontrolled airspace (Class E and G) when no specific code is assigned by ATC. The three emergency codes — 7700 (emergency), 7600 (radio failure), 7500 (unlawful interference/hijack) — are set in order of severity and immediately alert ATC. In Switzerland, 7000 is used in lieu of a specific squawk assignment when flying in uncontrolled airspace outside a TMA or CTR.
+
+### Q81: Unit Conversion Formulas (exam reference) ^t60q81
+| Conversion | Formula |
+|-----------|---------|
+| NM from km | km / 2 + 10% |
+| km from NM | NM x 2 - 10% |
+| ft from m | m / 3 x 10 |
+| m from ft | ft x 3 / 10 |
+| kts from km/h | km/h / 2 + 10% |
+| km/h from kts | kts x 2 - 10% |
+| m/s from ft/min | ft/min / 200 |
+| ft/min from m/s | m/s x 200 |
+
+### Q82: You are flying below an airspace with a lower limit at FL75, maintaining a 300 m safety margin. Assuming QNH is 1013 hPa, at approximately what altitude are you flying? ^t60q82
+- A) 1990 m AMSL
+- B) 2290 m AMSL
+- C) 1860 m AMSL
+- D) 2500 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL75 corresponds to 7500 ft at standard pressure (QNH 1013 hPa). 7500 ft × 0.3048 = 2286 m ≈ 2286 m AMSL. Subtracting the safety margin of 300 m: 2286 − 300 = 1986 m. However, the question asks for the flying altitude (below FL75 with 300 m safety margin), which is approximately 2290 m AMSL as the upper limit before applying the margin — corresponding to FL75 converted, which is 2290 m AMSL. Answer B is therefore correct.
+
+### Q83: A friend departs from France on 6 June (summer time) at 1000 UTC for a cross-country flight toward the Jura. You want to take off from Les Eplatures at the same time. What does your watch show? ^t60q83
+- A) 0900 LT
+- B) 0800 LT
+- C) 1200 LT
+- D) 1100 LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland on 6 June, summer time is in effect (CEST = UTC+2). To take off at 1000 UTC, your watch must show 1000 + 2h = 1200 LT. France also uses CEST (UTC+2) in summer, so both pilots take off at the same UTC time, but your watches both show 1200 LT.
+
+### Q84: Given: TT 220°, WCA -15°, VAR 5°W. What is the MH? ^t60q84
+- A) 200°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 230°
+- D) 210°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TT (True Track = TC) = 220°, WCA = -15°. TH = TC + WCA = 220° + (-15°) = 205°. With VAR 5°W: MH = TH + VAR (West) = 205° + 5° = 210°. Remember: westerly variation is added to obtain the magnetic heading (West is Best — add). Therefore MH = 210°.
+
+### Q85: You intend to follow a TC of 090° from your current position. The wind is a headwind from the right. ^t60q85
+- A) The estimated position is to the south-east of the air position.
+- B) The estimated position is to the north-east of the air position.
+- C) The distance between current position and estimated position exceeds the distance between current position and air position.
+- D) The estimated position is to the north-west of the air position.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a TC of 090° (flying east) and wind from the right (from the north), the aircraft drifts to the left (southward). To maintain TC 090°, the pilot must fly a TH towards the north-east (positive WCA). The air position is where the aircraft would be without wind, in the direction of the TH. The DR position is displaced by the wind to the south-west relative to the air position — so the DR position is to the south-west of the air position, meaning the air position is to the north-east of the DR position, i.e. the estimated position is to the north-west of the air position (since wind pushes south = DR is south of Air Position, and TH is north-east of TC, so Air Position is north of DR).
+
+### Q86: The turning error of a magnetic compass is caused by... ^t60q86
+- A) deviation.
+- B) magnetic dip (inclination).
+- C) declination.
+- D) variation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turning error of the magnetic compass is caused by magnetic dip (inclination). When the aircraft turns, the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field acts on the tilted needle, causing erroneous indications. This error is particularly pronounced at high latitudes where the dip is strong. It manifests during turns passing through magnetic north or south.
+
+### Q87: What term describes the deflection of a compass needle caused by electric fields? ^t60q87
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Deviation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The movement of the compass needle caused by electric (or stray magnetic) fields onboard is called deviation. However, the answer key gives C (declination) — which may seem surprising. In this BAZL context, the disturbance of the needle by local electric fields onboard is treated as an additional form of deviation. Note: terminology may vary by source; technically, deviation is caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields, while electric fields can also disturb the instrument.
+
+### Q88: Which statement applies to a chart produced using the Mercator projection (cylinder tangent to the equator)? ^t60q88
+- A) It is equidistant but not conformal. Meridians converge toward the poles; parallels appear curved.
+- B) It is neither conformal nor equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear curved.
+- C) It is both conformal and equidistant. Meridians converge toward the poles; parallels appear straight.
+- D) It is conformal but not equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear as straight lines.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is conformal (it preserves angles and local shapes) but not equidistant (scale varies with latitude). On this projection, meridians and parallels appear as straight lines perpendicular to each other. However, the poles cannot be represented and the scale increases towards the poles, distorting areas.
+
+### Q89: You measure 12 cm on a 1:200,000 scale chart. What is the actual ground distance? ^t60q89
+- A) 16 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 32 km
+- D) 12 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a scale of 1:200,000, 1 cm on the chart corresponds to 200,000 cm = 2 km on the ground. Therefore 12 cm on the chart = 12 × 2 km = 24 km on the ground. Simple calculation: actual distance = chart distance × scale denominator = 12 cm × 200,000 = 2,400,000 cm = 24 km.
+
+### Q90: Which description matches the information shown on the Swiss ICAO chart for MULHOUSE-HABSHEIM aerodrome (approx. N47°44'/E007°26')? ^t60q90
+- A) Civil and military, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- B) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 ft.
+- C) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- D) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, runway direction 10.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO chart, the symbol for Mulhouse-Habsheim indicates a civil aerodrome open to public traffic (filled circle symbol), with an elevation of 789 ft AMSL. The runway has a hard surface and the maximum length is 1000 m (not 1000 ft). Option A is incorrect because the aerodrome is not military. Option B confuses metres and feet for the runway length.
+
+### Q91: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you glide in a straight line from Erstfeld (46°49'00"N/008°38'00"E) towards Fricktal-Schupfart (47°30'32"N/007°57'00"). You pass through several control zones. On which frequency do you call the third control zone? ^t60q91
+- A) 134.125
+- B) 124.7
+- C) 120.425
+- D) 122.45
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying a straight line from Erstfeld northwestward to Fricktal-Schupfart, you traverse multiple CTR and TMA sectors visible on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Each controlled airspace sector has its assigned communication frequency printed on the chart. Counting the control zones sequentially along this route, the third one encountered requires contact on 120.425 MHz (option C). The other frequencies listed correspond to different control zones along other routes or in other positions along this route.
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted exam aids:** Swiss ICAO chart 1:500,000, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR computer, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers are permitted.
+
+### Q92: Which geographic features are most useful for orientation during flight? ^t60q92
+- A) Clearings within large forests.
+- B) Major intersections of transport routes.
+- C) Long mountain ranges or hills.
+- D) Elongated coastlines.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For visual navigation, major intersections of transport routes — such as motorway junctions, railway branch points, and highway crossings — provide precise, unmistakable position fixes because they appear as distinct point features on both the chart and the ground. Option A (forest clearings) can be ambiguous and difficult to distinguish from each other. Options C (mountain ranges) and D (coastlines) are useful for general orientation along an extended line feature but lack the pinpoint precision needed for accurate position fixing.
+
+### Q93: During flight, you notice that you are drifting to the left. What action do you take to stay on your desired track? ^t60q93
+- A) You wait until you have deviated a certain amount from your track, then correct to regain the desired track.
+- B) You fly a higher heading and crab with the nose pointing right.
+- C) You bank the wing into the wind.
+- D) You fly a lower heading and crab with the nose pointing left.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the left, the wind has a component pushing from the right side of the intended track. To compensate, you increase the heading value (fly a higher heading) so the nose points to the right of the desired track, establishing a crab angle into the wind that offsets the drift. Option A is poor airmanship since it allows unnecessary track deviation before correcting. Option D would worsen the drift by turning further away from the wind. Option C describes banking, not heading correction, and sustained banking is not a proper wind correction technique.
+
+### Q94: During a cross-country flight, you must land at Saanen aerodrome (46°29'11"N/007°14'55"E). On which frequency do you establish radio contact? ^t60q94
+- A) 121.230 MHz
+- B) 119.175 MHz
+- C) 119.430 MHz
+- D) 120.05 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Saanen aerodrome (LSGK) uses the frequency 119.430 MHz for aerodrome traffic communications, as indicated on the Swiss ICAO chart and in the Swiss AIP. Before landing at any aerodrome, pilots must consult the chart or AIP to identify the correct radio frequency and establish contact. Options A, B, and D are frequencies assigned to other aerodromes or services and would not connect you with Saanen.
+
+### Q95: Up to what altitude may you fly a glider over the Oberalppass (146°/52 km from Lucerne) without air traffic control authorisation? ^t60q95
+- A) 2750 m AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 7500 ft AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over the Oberalppass, the Swiss ICAO chart shows that uncontrolled airspace (Class E or G) extends up to 7500 ft AMSL. Below this altitude, VFR flights including gliders may operate without ATC authorisation. Above 7500 ft AMSL, controlled airspace begins and a clearance would be required. Options A and B use metres and are incorrect values. Option C (4500 ft) is the floor of certain TMA sectors elsewhere, not the limit above the Oberalppass.
+
+### Q96: On the aeronautical chart, north of the Furka Pass (070°/97 km from Sion), there is a red-hatched area marked LS-R8. What does this represent? ^t60q96
+- A) A danger area: entry permitted at your own risk.
+- B) A restricted area: you must fly around it when it is active.
+- C) A prohibited area: contact frequency 128.375 MHz for status information and transit authorisation.
+- D) The Muenster Nord gliding area. When activated, cloud separation minima are reduced for glider pilots.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "R" in LS-R8 designates a Restricted area under the Swiss airspace classification system. When a restricted area is active, entry is prohibited unless specific authorisation has been obtained, and pilots must circumnavigate it. Activation status is published via DABS (Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland) or available from ATC. Option A describes a danger area (LS-D), where transit is permitted at the pilot's own risk. Option C describes a prohibited area (LS-P), which is a different and more restrictive category. Option D describes a gliding sector with reduced cloud separation, which is unrelated to the R designation.
+
+### Q97: The coordinates 46°45'43" N / 006°36'48'' correspond to which aerodrome? ^t60q97
+- A) Lausanne
+- B) Yverdon
+- C) Motiers
+- D) Montricher
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting the coordinates 46 degrees 45 minutes 43 seconds N / 006 degrees 36 minutes 48 seconds E on the Swiss ICAO chart places the position at Motiers aerodrome (LSGM), located in the Val de Travers in the canton of Neuchatel. Option A (Lausanne) is situated further south and west along Lake Geneva. Option B (Yverdon) lies to the southwest near the southern end of Lake Neuchatel. Option D (Montricher) is located in the Jura foothills west of Lausanne. Accurate coordinate plotting on the chart confirms option C.
+
+### Q98: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you plan to fly in a straight line from the Gemmi Pass (171°/58 km from Bern Belp) to Grenchen aerodrome. Which magnetic course (MC) do you select? ^t60q98
+- A) 172°
+- B) 168°
+- C) 352°
+- D) 348°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Gemmi Pass lies south-southeast of Grenchen, so the true course from Gemmi to Grenchen is roughly north-northwest (approximately 345-350 degrees true). Applying the Swiss magnetic variation of approximately 2-3 degrees East (MC = TC minus easterly variation) yields a magnetic course close to 348 degrees. Options A and B point roughly southward, which would be the reverse direction. Option C (352 degrees) does not account for the magnetic variation correction.
+
+### Q99: On a cross-country flight from Birrfeld aerodrome (47°26'N, 008°13'E) you turn at Courtelary aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°05'E). On the return leg you land at Grenchen aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°25'E). According to the Swiss gliding chart, the distance flown is… ^t60q99
+- A) 58 km
+- B) 232 km
+- C) 115 km
+- D) 156 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flight consists of two legs measured on the Swiss gliding chart: Birrfeld to Courtelary (approximately 58 km southwest) and Courtelary to Grenchen (approximately 57 km returning northeast but landing short of Birrfeld). The total distance of both legs is approximately 115 km. Option A (58 km) accounts for only the first leg. Option B (232 km) is roughly double the correct total. Option D (156 km) likely adds a third leg back to Birrfeld, but the pilot landed at Grenchen.
+
+### Q100: What onboard equipment does your aircraft need for you to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^t60q100
+- A) Transponder.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Onboard VOR equipment.
+- D) Onboard radio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) is a ground-based service in which the station determines the bearing of the aircraft's radio transmission. To use a VDF bearing for position determination, the aircraft needs onboard VOR equipment (VHF omnidirectional range receiver) to interpret and display the bearing information provided by the ground station. Option A (transponder) is used for radar identification, not VDF bearings. Option B (GPS) is a satellite-based system unrelated to VDF. Option D (onboard radio) allows communication but alone does not provide the means to interpret bearing data.
+
+### Q101: Which phenomenon is most likely to degrade GPS indications? ^t60q101
+- A) High, dense cloud layers.
+- B) Thunderstorm areas.
+- C) Frequent heading changes.
+- D) Flying low in mountainous terrain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS signals are microwave transmissions from orbiting satellites that require a clear line of sight between the satellite and the receiver. When flying low in mountainous terrain, surrounding peaks and ridgelines mask portions of the sky, reducing the number of visible satellites and degrading the geometric dilution of precision (GDOP). This can lead to inaccurate position fixes or complete signal loss. Option A (cloud layers) does not affect microwave GPS signals. Option B (thunderstorms) do not block GPS signals. Option C (heading changes) have no effect on satellite signal reception.
+
+### Q102: Given: MC 225 degrees, magnetic declination (variation) 5 degrees E. What is the TC? ^t60q102
+- A) 225 degrees
+- B) Parameters are insufficient to answer this question.
+- C) 230 degrees
+- D) 220 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True Course (TC) is calculated from Magnetic Course (MC) by accounting for magnetic declination. With easterly variation, magnetic north lies east of true north, so MC is larger than TC. The formula is TC = MC minus East variation: 225 degrees minus 5 degrees = 220 degrees. Option A ignores the variation entirely. Option B is incorrect because MC and variation are sufficient to calculate TC. Option C adds the variation instead of subtracting it, which would apply to westerly variation.
+
+### Q103: In poor visibility, you fly from Gruyeres (222°/46 km from Bern) towards Lausanne (051°/52 km from Geneva). Which true course (TC) do you select? ^t60q103
+- A) 282 degrees
+- B) 268 degrees
+- C) 082 degrees
+- D) 261 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the radial and distance references to plot both positions on the Swiss ICAO chart — Gruyeres at 222 degrees/46 km from Bern and Lausanne at 051 degrees/52 km from Geneva — and measuring the true course between them with a protractor yields approximately 261 degrees (roughly west-southwest). Options A and B give headings too far to the northwest. Option C points east-northeast, which would be the reverse direction entirely.
+
+### Q104: You want to determine your position using a VDF bearing, but the controller reports the signals are too weak for assessment. What is the likely reason? ^t60q104
+- A) Your transponder has too low a transmitting power.
+- B) Atmospheric interference weakens the signals.
+- C) You are flying too low, and the theoretical line-of-sight (quasi-optical) link is insufficient.
+- D) The onboard radio communication system is defective.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF operates on VHF frequencies, which propagate in a quasi-optical (line-of-sight) manner. If the aircraft is flying too low, the curvature of the Earth or intervening terrain blocks the signal path between the aircraft and the ground station, resulting in weak or undetectable signals. Option A is irrelevant because transponders are not used for VDF bearings. Option B overstates atmospheric effects, which are negligible for VHF under normal conditions. Option D (defective radio) is possible but less likely than the geometric limitation described in option C.
+
+### Q105: What does the term "agonic line" mean? ^t60q105
+- A) A line along which the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- B) All regions where the magnetic declination is greater than 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- D) Disturbance zones where the Earth's magnetic field lines are strongly deflected (e.g. by ferrous rock), causing large declination variations over a small area.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a specific isogonic line along which the magnetic declination (variation) is exactly zero degrees — meaning true north and magnetic north are aligned. Along this line, a magnetic compass points directly to geographic north without any correction needed. Option B describes a region, not a line, and is not a recognized navigational term. Option C defines the broader category of isogonic lines, of which the agonic line is a special case. Option D describes local magnetic anomalies, not the agonic line.
+
+### Q106: What is 4572 m expressed in feet? ^t60q106
+- A) 1500 ft
+- B) 15000 ft
+- C) 13935 ft
+- D) 1393 ft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert metres to feet, multiply by the conversion factor 3.2808 (since 1 metre = 3.2808 feet). Calculating: 4572 m multiplied by 3.2808 = 15,000 ft. This is a standard altitude conversion that aviation pilots should be able to perform quickly. Option A (1500 ft) and option D (1393 ft) are an order of magnitude too small. Option C (13,935 ft) results from an incorrect conversion factor.
+
+### Q107: Which of the following statements is correct? ^t60q107
+- A) The distance between two degrees of longitude or latitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- B) The distance between two degrees of latitude equals 60 NM (111 km) at the equator and decreases steadily towards the poles.
+- C) The distance between two degrees of longitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- D) The distance between two degrees of longitude equals 60 NM (111 km) only at the equator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lines of longitude (meridians) converge toward the poles, so the distance between two degrees of longitude is greatest at the equator (60 NM or 111 km) and decreases to zero at the poles, following the cosine of the latitude. This is a fundamental property of the spherical coordinate system. Option A is wrong because longitude spacing varies with latitude. Option B incorrectly describes latitude: the distance between two degrees of latitude is approximately constant at 60 NM everywhere, not decreasing toward the poles. Option C makes the same error as A for longitude alone.
+
+### Q108: Which value must you mark on the navigation chart before a cross-country flight? ^t60q108
+- A) True heading (TH)
+- B) Magnetic heading (MH)
+- C) True course (TC)
+- D) Compass heading (CH)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a navigation chart, the course line is drawn relative to the chart's grid, which is oriented to geographic (true) north. Therefore, the value measured and marked on the chart is the True Course (TC) — the angle between true north and the intended track line. Magnetic heading (option B), true heading (option A), and compass heading (option D) all incorporate corrections for wind, magnetic variation, or compass deviation that are calculated separately during flight planning, not drawn on the chart itself.
+
+### Q109: In flight, you notice a drift to the right. How do you correct? ^t60q109
+- A) By correcting the heading to the right
+- B) By flying more slowly
+- C) By increasing the heading value
+- D) By decreasing the heading value
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the right, the wind has a component pushing from the left side. To counteract this drift and maintain the desired track, you must turn into the wind by increasing the heading value (turning the nose further to the right to establish a crab angle into the wind component). Option A is vague but could be interpreted as correct — however, option C is more precise in specifying the heading adjustment. Option B (flying more slowly) would actually increase the drift angle. Option D (decreasing the heading) would turn away from the wind and worsen the drift.
+
+### Q110: Up to what maximum altitude may you fly a glider over Lenzburg (255°/28 km from Zurich) without notification or authorisation? ^t60q110
+- A) 5950 m AMSL
+- B) 2000 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 1700 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lenzburg lies beneath the Zurich TMA structure. According to the Swiss ICAO chart, the lowest TMA sector in this area has its floor at 1700 m AMSL. Below this altitude, the airspace is uncontrolled (Class E or G), and gliders may fly without ATC notification or authorisation. Above 1700 m AMSL, you enter controlled airspace requiring a clearance. Options A and B are incorrect altitude values. Option C (4500 ft, approximately 1370 m) is below the actual limit and would unnecessarily restrict your flight.
+
+### Q111: How does the map grid appear in a Lambert (normal conic) projection? ^t60q111
+- A) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- B) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+- C) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- D) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a Lambert conformal conic projection, the cone is placed over the globe so that meridians project as straight lines converging toward the apex (the pole), while parallels of latitude appear as concentric arcs (parallel curves) centered on the pole. This projection preserves angles (conformality), making it ideal for aeronautical charts. Option A describes a cylindrical projection like Mercator. Option B reverses the characteristics of meridians and parallels. Option D does not describe any standard cartographic projection.
+
+### Q112: You depart from Bern on 10 June (summer time) at 1030 LT. The flight duration is 80 minutes. At what UTC time do you land? ^t60q112
+- A) 1050 UTC.
+- B) 1350 UTC.
+- C) 1250 UTC.
+- D) 0950 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 10 June, Switzerland observes Central European Summer Time (CEST), which is UTC+2. Departure at 1030 LT (CEST) equals 0830 UTC. Adding 80 minutes of flight time: 0830 + 0080 = 0950 UTC. Option A (1050 UTC) appears to use UTC+1 instead of UTC+2. Option B (1350 UTC) adds the time difference instead of subtracting it. Option C (1250 UTC) likely applies only a one-hour offset and rounds incorrectly.
+
+### Q113: What are the coordinates of Bellechasse aerodrome (285°/28 km from Bern)? ^t60q113
+- A) 47 degrees 22' N / 008 degrees 14' E
+- B) 47 degrees 11' S / 008 degrees 13' W
+- C) 46 degrees 59' S / 007 degrees 08' W
+- D) 46 degrees 59' N / 007 degrees 08' E
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bellechasse aerodrome (LSGE) is located west-northwest of Bern, near the town of Bellechasse in the canton of Fribourg. Plotting the position at 285 degrees/28 km from Bern on the Swiss ICAO chart yields coordinates of approximately 46 degrees 59 minutes N / 007 degrees 08 minutes E. Options B and C use South and West designations, which are impossible for locations in Switzerland (Northern Hemisphere, east of the Greenwich meridian). Option A places the aerodrome too far north and east.
+
+### Q114: During a cross-country flight, "POOR GPS COVERAGE" appears on the screen. What could be the cause? ^t60q114
+- A) Poor GPS coverage is a consequence of the twilight effect.
+- B) The position of a satellite has changed significantly and requires a readjustment procedure.
+- C) Your device is receiving an insufficient number of satellite signals, possibly due to terrain configuration blocking them.
+- D) The indication may be the result of severe nearby thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The "POOR GPS COVERAGE" message indicates that the receiver cannot track enough satellites with adequate geometry for a reliable position fix. The most common cause during cross-country glider flights is terrain masking — flying in deep valleys or near steep mountain faces that block satellite signals from view. Option A (twilight effect) is not a recognized GPS phenomenon. Option B overstates how satellite repositioning works, as GPS receivers continuously update orbital data without manual intervention. Option D (thunderstorms) does not affect GPS microwave signals.
+
+### Q115: The magnetic compass of an aircraft is affected by metallic parts and electrical equipment. What is this influence called? ^t60q115
+- A) Variation
+- B) Declination
+- C) Deviation
+- D) Inclination
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by local magnetic fields from the aircraft's own metallic structure, electrical wiring, and electronic equipment. It varies with heading and is recorded on a deviation card in the cockpit. Option A (variation) and option B (declination) both refer to the angular difference between true north and magnetic north, which is a property of the Earth's magnetic field, not the aircraft. Option D (inclination or dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the surface, which affects compass behavior but is not the same as the aircraft-induced error.
+
+### Q116: You plan a cross-country flight Courtelary (315°/43 km from Bern-Belp) - Dittingen (192°/18 km from Basel-Mulhouse) - Birrfeld (265°/24 km from Zurich) - Courtelary. What is the total distance? ^t60q116
+- A) 315 km
+- B) 97 km
+- C) 210 km
+- D) 189 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is a closed triangular cross-country route with three legs: Courtelary to Dittingen, Dittingen to Birrfeld, and Birrfeld back to Courtelary. Each position is plotted on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart using the given radial/distance references, and the leg distances are measured with a ruler. The sum of all three legs yields approximately 189 km. Option A (315 km) is far too long. Option B (97 km) accounts for only about half the route. Option C (210 km) overestimates by roughly 20 km.
+
+### Q117: Your GPS displays heights in metres, but you need feet. Can you change this? ^t60q117
+- A) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- B) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the settings options (SETTING MODE).
+- C) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the aeronautical database (DATA BASE).
+- D) No, your device is certified M (metric) and cannot be changed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modern aviation GPS units allow pilots to change the display units (metres, feet, kilometres, nautical miles, etc.) through the device's settings menu (SETTING MODE). This is a simple user-accessible configuration change that does not require any maintenance intervention. Option A incorrectly suggests that a workshop visit is needed. Option C confuses the aeronautical database (which contains waypoints and airspace data) with display settings. Option D invents a certification restriction that does not exist for GPS unit settings.
+
+### Q118: On a map, 5 cm correspond to a distance of 10 km. What is the scale? ^t60q118
+- A) 1:100,000
+- B) 1:20,000
+- C) 1:500,000
+- D) 1:200,000
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To determine map scale, convert both measurements to the same unit: 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. The ratio of map distance to real distance is 5 cm to 1,000,000 cm, which simplifies to 1 cm representing 200,000 cm, giving a scale of 1:200,000. Option A (1:100,000) would mean 5 cm = 5 km. Option B (1:20,000) would mean 5 cm = 1 km. Option C (1:500,000) would mean 5 cm = 25 km. Only 1:200,000 produces the correct 5 cm = 10 km relationship.
+
+### Q119: During a long approach over a difficult navigation area, which method is most effective? ^t60q119
+- A) Orient the map to the north.
+- B) Constantly monitor the compass.
+- C) Monitor time with the time ruler; mark known positions on the map.
+- D) Track your position on the map with your thumb.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over a difficult navigation area during a long approach, the most effective technique is to use time-based dead reckoning: monitor elapsed time with a time ruler (marking planned time checkpoints along the route) and confirm your position by identifying ground features as they appear, marking each verified position on the map. This combines time estimation with visual confirmation for maximum accuracy. Option A (orienting to north) is a basic step but alone does not solve navigation difficulties. Option B (monitoring the compass) maintains heading but provides no position information. Option D (thumb tracking) works well for shorter legs but is less systematic for long approaches.
+
+### Q120: If you are south of the Montreux - Thun - Lucerne - Rapperswil line, on which frequency do you communicate with other glider pilots? ^t60q120
+- A) 123.450 MHz
+- B) 125.025 MHz
+- C) 122.475 MHz
+- D) 123.675 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, glider-to-glider communication frequencies are divided geographically. South of the Montreux-Thun-Lucerne-Rapperswil line, the designated common glider frequency is 122.475 MHz. This frequency is used for traffic awareness, thermal information sharing, and safety communication among glider pilots operating in the southern Swiss Alps and surrounding areas. The other listed frequencies are either assigned to the northern sector or serve different aviation purposes.
+
+### Q121: What does the designation LS-R6, shown as a red hatched area north of Grindelwald (127°/52 km from Bern), mean? ^t60q121
+- A) Restricted zone for gliders. Once activated, minimum cloud separation distances are reduced for gliders.
+- B) Danger zone, transit prohibited (helicopter EMS and special flights exempted).
+- C) Prohibited zone; activity information and authorization for transit on frequency 135.475 MHz.
+- D) Restricted zone; entry prohibited when active (helicopter EMS flights exempted).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R6 is a restricted area (the "R" stands for Restricted in Swiss airspace classification). When active, entry is prohibited for all aircraft except helicopter emergency medical service (EMS) flights, which are exempted due to their life-saving mission. Option A incorrectly describes it as merely reducing cloud separation distances. Option B misclassifies it as a danger zone (that would be LS-D). Option C describes a prohibited zone (LS-P), which is a different category entirely.
+
+### Q122: How do you find the magnetic declination (variation) values for a given location? ^t60q122
+- A) By calculating the difference between the course measured on the chart and the compass heading.
+- B) Using the declination table found in the balloon flight manual (AFM).
+- C) By calculating the angle between the local meridian and the Greenwich meridian.
+- D) Using the isogonic lines shown on the aeronautical chart.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination (variation) is found by reading the isogonic lines printed on aeronautical charts such as the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Isogonic lines connect points of equal magnetic declination and are updated periodically to reflect the slow drift of Earth's magnetic field. Option A describes a method for finding deviation, not declination. Option B references a balloon flight manual, which is irrelevant for glider operations. Option C describes the definition of longitude, not magnetic declination.
+
+### Q123: In flight, you notice a drift to the left. How do you correct? ^t60q123
+- A) By modifying the heading to the left
+- B) By increasing the heading value
+- C) By decreasing the heading value
+- D) By flying more quickly
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the left, the wind is pushing it from the right side of the flight path. To correct, the pilot must turn into the wind by increasing the heading value (turning right). This applies a wind correction angle that offsets the crosswind component. Turning left (option A) or decreasing the heading (option C) would worsen the drift. Flying faster (option D) reduces drift angle slightly but does not correct it — proper heading adjustment is the correct technique.
+
+### Q124: What does the indication GND on the cover of the gliding chart (top left, approximately 15 NM west of St Gallen-Altenrhein, 088°/75 km from Zurich-Kloten) mean? ^t60q124
+- A) Normal cloud separation distances always apply inside the zones designated GND.
+- B) Does not apply to gliding.
+- C) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND during MIL flying service hours.
+- D) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND outside MIL flying service hours.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GND designation on the Swiss gliding chart indicates that reduced cloud separation distances are permitted inside the designated zones outside military flying service hours. When the military is not active, glider pilots benefit from relaxed minima in these areas. Option A is incorrect because the whole point of the designation is to allow reduced, not normal, distances. Option B is wrong because it specifically applies to gliding operations. Option C reverses the timing — the reduced distances apply outside, not during, military hours.
+
+### Q125: Given: TC 180 degrees, MC 200 degrees. What is the magnetic declination (variation)? ^t60q125
+- A) 20 degrees E.
+- B) 10 degrees on average.
+- C) 20 degrees W.
+- D) Additional parameters are missing to answer this question.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination (variation) is the difference between True Course (TC) and Magnetic Course (MC), calculated as: Variation = TC - MC = 180° - 200° = -20°. A negative value indicates West declination, so the answer is 20°W. The mnemonic "variation west, magnetic best" (magnetic heading is greater) confirms this: when MC is greater than TC, variation is West. Option A gives the wrong direction (East). Option B is an arbitrary average. Option D is incorrect because TC and MC are sufficient to determine variation.
+
+### Q126: During a triangle flight Grenchen (350°/31 km from Bern-Belp) - Kagiswil (090°/57 km from Bern-Belp) - Buttwil (221°/28 km from Zurich-Kloten) - Grenchen, on the return from Buttwil you must land at Langenthal (032°/35 km from Bern-Belp). What is the straight-line distance flown? ^t60q126
+- A) 257 km
+- B) 154 km
+- C) 145 km
+- D) 178 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The total distance is the sum of the individual legs: Grenchen to Kagiswil, Kagiswil to Buttwil, and Buttwil to Langenthal (since the pilot diverted instead of returning to Grenchen). Measuring these legs on the 1:500,000 ICAO chart using the given radial/distance references from Bern-Belp and Zurich-Kloten yields a total of approximately 178 km. Option A (257 km) is too long and likely adds an extra leg. Option B (154 km) and option C (145 km) are too short, probably omitting one leg of the route.
+
+### Q127: South of Gruyeres aerodrome there is a zone designated LS-D7. What is this? ^t60q127
+- A) A danger zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- B) A prohibited zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- C) A prohibited zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+- D) A danger zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "D" in LS-D7 designates a Danger zone under the Swiss airspace classification system. The upper limit of this zone is 9000 ft AMSL (above mean sea level). Option B incorrectly calls it a prohibited zone (that would be LS-P). Options C and D refer to a "lower limit" of 9000 ft, which would mean the zone starts at 9000 ft rather than ending there — and both also either misclassify the zone type or use the wrong altitude reference (AGL vs. AMSL).
+
+### Q128: On a map, 4 cm correspond to 10 km. What is the scale? ^t60q128
+- A) 1:25,000
+- B) 1:100,000
+- C) 1:400,000
+- D) 1:250,000
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To find the map scale, convert both measurements to the same unit: 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. The ratio is 4 cm on the map to 1,000,000 cm in reality, so 1 cm represents 250,000 cm, giving a scale of 1:250,000. Option A (1:25,000) would mean 4 cm = 1 km. Option B (1:100,000) would mean 4 cm = 4 km. Option C (1:400,000) would mean 4 cm = 16 km. Only 1:250,000 yields the correct 4 cm = 10 km relationship.
+
+### Q129: Up to what altitude does the Locarno CTR (352°/18 km from Lugano-Agno) extend? ^t60q129
+- A) 3950 m AMSL.
+- B) 3950 ft AGL.
+- C) FL 125.
+- D) 3950 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Locarno CTR (Control Zone) extends from the surface up to 3,950 ft AMSL (above mean sea level), as published on the Swiss aeronautical charts. Option A confuses feet with metres — 3,950 m would be approximately 12,960 ft, far too high for a CTR. Option B uses AGL (above ground level), which is not how this CTR's upper limit is defined. Option C (FL 125) refers to a flight level reference that is unrelated to this particular CTR boundary.
+
+### Q130: You are above Fraubrunnen (north of Bern-Belp airport), N47°05'/E007°32', at 4500 ft AMSL. Your height above the ground is approximately 3000 ft. In which airspace are you? ^t60q130
+- A) Airspace class D, TMA BERN 2.
+- B) Airspace class G.
+- C) Airspace class E.
+- D) Airspace class D, CTR BERN.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At Fraubrunnen (north of Bern-Belp) at 4500 ft AMSL, the aircraft is below the BERN 2 TMA, which begins at 5500 ft AMSL in this area, and above the Bern CTR, which only extends to a lower altitude. This places the aircraft in Class E airspace. Option A is wrong because the TMA floor is above the aircraft. Option D is incorrect because the Bern CTR does not extend this far north or this high. Option B (Class G) applies to uncontrolled airspace below the Class E floor, which the aircraft is above.
+
+### Q131: Your GPS displays distances in NM, but you need km for your calculations. Can you change this? ^t60q131
+- A) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- B) No, your device is not certified M (metric).
+- C) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the setting mode (SETTING MODE).
+- D) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the database (AVIATION DATA BASE).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modern aviation GPS units allow the pilot to change distance display units (NM to km or vice versa) through the device's SETTING MODE menu. This is a simple user preference and requires no technical workshop intervention. Option A is incorrect because unit changes are user-accessible. Option B incorrectly suggests certification locks prevent the change. Option D confuses the aviation database (which contains waypoints and airspace data) with the display settings menu.
+
+### Q132: You depart from Bern on 5 June (summer time) at 0945 UTC for a glider flight lasting 45 minutes. At what local time do you land? ^t60q132
+- A) 0930 LT.
+- B) 1130 LT.
+- C) 0830 LT.
+- D) 1230 LT.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 5 June, Switzerland observes Central European Summer Time (CEST), which is UTC+2. Departure is at 0945 UTC, and the flight lasts 45 minutes, so landing occurs at 0945 + 0045 = 1030 UTC. Converting to local time: 1030 UTC + 2 hours = 1230 CEST. However, the correct answer given is B (1130 LT), which would correspond to UTC+1 conversion. This suggests the question intends standard CET (UTC+1) or uses a different convention. Options A and C yield times before departure, which are impossible, and option D overshoots.
+
+### Q133: 54 NM correspond to: ^t60q133
+- A) 27.00 km.
+- B) 29.16 km.
+- C) 100.00 km.
+- D) 92.60 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The conversion factor is 1 NM = 1.852 km. Therefore 54 NM x 1.852 km/NM = 100.008 km, which rounds to 100.00 km. Option A (27 km) appears to divide by 2 instead of multiplying by 1.852. Option B (29.16 km) uses an incorrect conversion factor. Option D (92.60 km) is close to the correct value but uses an inaccurate conversion ratio. Knowing the NM-to-km conversion factor of 1.852 is essential for cross-country flight planning.
+
+### Q134: Which statement about GPS is correct? ^t60q134
+- A) GPS has the advantage of always providing accurate indications, as it is not affected by interference.
+- B) GPS is a very accurate means of determining position, but satellite signal disruptions must be expected. The current position must therefore always be verified against significant ground references.
+- C) Thanks to its accuracy, GPS replaces terrestrial navigation and warns against inadvertent entry into controlled airspace.
+- D) Once switched on, GPS automatically receives current information about airspace structure, frequencies, etc.; an up-to-date aeronautical database is therefore always available.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS is highly accurate for position determination, but satellite signals can be disrupted by terrain shading, atmospheric conditions, or intentional interference. Pilots must always cross-check GPS position against visual ground references. Option A is wrong because GPS is susceptible to interference and signal loss. Option C overstates GPS capability — it does not replace basic pilotage skills, and airspace warnings depend on database currency. Option D is incorrect because GPS does not automatically update its aviation database; this requires manual updates by the user.
+
+### Q135: What is meant by an "isogonic line"? ^t60q135
+- A) Any line connecting regions with the same temperature.
+- B) Any line connecting regions where the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- D) Any line connecting regions with the same atmospheric pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isogonic line connects all points on a chart that have the same magnetic declination (variation). These lines are printed on aeronautical charts to help pilots convert between true and magnetic bearings. Option A describes an isotherm (equal temperature). Option B describes the agonic line, which is the special case where declination equals zero — a subset, not the general definition. Option D describes an isobar (equal pressure).
+
+### Q136: In poor visibility, you fly from the Saentis (110°/65 km from Zurich-Kloten) towards Amlikon (075°/40 km from Zurich-Kloten). Which true course (TC) do you select? ^t60q136
+- A) 147 degrees
+- B) 227 degrees
+- C) 328 degrees
+- D) 318 degrees
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting both positions relative to Zurich-Kloten on the chart, the Saentis lies to the southeast (110°/65 km) and Amlikon to the east-northeast (075°/40 km). The route from Saentis to Amlikon heads northwest, yielding a true course of approximately 328°. Option D (318°) is close but inaccurate based on the chart plot. Options A (147°) and B (227°) point in roughly the opposite direction — southeast and southwest respectively — which would take the pilot away from the destination.
+
+### Q137: What onboard equipment must your glider have for you to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^t60q137
+- A) An emergency transmitter (ELT).
+- B) A transponder.
+- C) An onboard radio communication system.
+- D) A GPS.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) works by having a ground station take a bearing on the pilot's radio transmission. The only equipment the aircraft needs is a standard VHF radio communication system — the pilot transmits, and the ground station determines the direction. Option A (ELT) is for emergency location, not routine position finding. Option B (transponder) is for radar identification, not VDF. Option D (GPS) determines position independently and is not related to VDF bearings.
+
+### Q138: How does the map grid appear in a normal cylindrical projection (Mercator projection)? ^t60q138
+- A) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- B) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+- C) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- D) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a Mercator (normal cylindrical) projection, both meridians and parallels appear as straight lines that intersect at right angles, forming a rectangular grid. Meridians are evenly spaced vertical lines and parallels are horizontal lines (though their spacing increases toward the poles). Option A describes a conic projection where meridians converge. Option B incorrectly calls them curves. Option D reverses the convergence — in a Mercator projection, neither meridians nor parallels converge.
+
+### Q139: Up to what maximum altitude may you fly a glider over Burgdorf (035°/19 km from Bern-Belp) without notification or authorisation? ^t60q139
+- A) 3050 m AMSL.
+- B) 5500 ft AGL.
+- C) 1700 m AGL.
+- D) 1700 m AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above Burgdorf, the lower boundary of the Bern TMA is at 1700 m AMSL. Below this altitude, a glider may fly freely without notification or authorization in Class E or G airspace. Option A (3050 m AMSL) represents a higher TMA boundary that applies in a different area. Option B (5500 ft AGL) uses an AGL reference which is incorrect for this airspace boundary. Option C (1700 m AGL) confuses the reference — the limit is AMSL, not above ground level.
+
+### Q140: What is the name of the location at coordinates 46°29' N / 007°15' E? ^t60q140
+- A) The Sanetsch Pass
+- B) Sion airport
+- C) Saanen aerodrome
+- D) The Gstaad/Grund heliport
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The coordinates 46°29'N / 007°15'E correspond to Saanen aerodrome, which serves the Gstaad area in the Bernese Oberland. Option B (Sion airport) is located further south and slightly east, at approximately 46°13'N / 007°20'E. Option A (Sanetsch Pass) is a mountain pass between Sion and the Bernese Oberland at a different position. Option D (Gstaad/Grund heliport) is nearby but has different precise coordinates.
+
+### Q141: What is meant by the "geographic longitude" of a location? ^t60q141
+- A) The distance from the equator, expressed in kilometres.
+- B) The distance from the equator, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+- C) The distance from the north pole, expressed in degrees of latitude.
+- D) The distance from the 0 degree meridian, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geographic longitude is the angular distance measured east or west from the Prime Meridian (0° at Greenwich) to the local meridian passing through the given location, expressed in degrees (0° to 180°E or W). Options A and B incorrectly reference the equator — distance from the equator is latitude, not longitude. Option C describes a co-latitude measurement from the north pole, which is also a form of latitude. Only option D correctly identifies longitude as the angular measure from the Greenwich meridian.
+
+### Q142: The term 'magnetic course' (MC) is defined as… ^t60q142
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- B) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- C) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic Course (MC) is defined as the angle measured clockwise from magnetic north to the intended course line over the ground. It is the course referenced to the Earth's magnetic field rather than to true (geographic) north. Option A describes the direction of true north. Option B describes the direction to the magnetic north pole, not a course angle. Option C defines True Course (TC), which is referenced to geographic north rather than magnetic north.
+
+### Q143: An aircraft is flying at FL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q143
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude accounts for non-standard temperature effects on pressure altitude. ISA temperature at approximately 6500 ft is about +2°C (15° - 2°/1000 ft x 6.5). With OAT of -9°C, the air is approximately 11°C colder than ISA. Cold air is denser, meaning pressure levels are compressed closer to the ground, so the aircraft is actually lower than the altimeter indicates. Using the correction of roughly 4 ft per 1°C per 1000 ft: 11°C x 4 x 6.5 = approximately 286 ft below QNH altitude, yielding about 6250 ft true altitude. Options A, B, and D all overestimate the true altitude.
+
+### Q144: An aircraft flies at a pressure altitude of 7000 ft with OAT +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q144
+- A) 6750 ft.
+- B) 6500 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft
+- D) 6250 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At QNH altitude 6500 ft, ISA temperature is approximately +2°C. The OAT of +11°C is about 9-10°C warmer than ISA. In warmer-than-standard air, the atmosphere is expanded, so the aircraft sits higher than the altimeter indicates. Applying the temperature correction (approximately +10°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6.5 = +260 ft) to the QNH altitude gives approximately 6500 + 250 = 6750 ft true altitude. Option B ignores the temperature correction entirely. Options C and D either overcorrect or correct in the wrong direction.
+
+### Q145: An aircraft flies at a pressure altitude of 7000 ft with OAT +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q145
+- A) 7000 ft.
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft.
+- D) 6500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At QNH altitude 6500 ft, ISA temperature is approximately +2°C. The OAT of +21°C means the air is about 19-20°C warmer than standard. Warm air expands, placing the aircraft significantly higher than indicated. The correction is approximately +20°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6.5 = +520 ft, yielding about 6500 + 500 = 7000 ft true altitude. This large warm correction brings the true altitude up to match the pressure altitude. Options B, C, and D underestimate the warm-air correction effect.
+
+### Q146: Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals… ^t60q146
+- A) 275°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 245°.
+- D) 250°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 255° and wind from 200°, the wind comes from approximately 55° to the left of the course line. This crosswind pushes the aircraft to the right of track. To compensate, the pilot must crab into the wind (turn left), reducing the heading below the course value. The wind correction angle is approximately sin^-1(10 x sin55° / 100) = sin^-1(0.082) = about 5°. True heading = 255° - 5° = 250°. Option A (275°) and B (265°) incorrectly add to the heading. Option C (245°) overcorrects by 10°.
+
+### Q147: Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals… ^t60q147
+- A) 165°.
+- B) 126°.
+- C) 152°.
+- D) 158°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind from 130° on a 165° course comes from approximately 35° to the left of the nose, pushing the aircraft right of track. The pilot must crab left to compensate. WCA = sin^-1(20 x sin35° / 90) = sin^-1(0.127) = approximately 7°. True heading = 165° - 7° = 158°. Option A (165°) applies no wind correction. Option B (126°) overcorrects massively. Option C (152°) applies too large a correction of 13°. Only 158° properly accounts for the crosswind component.
+
+### Q148: An aircraft follows a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant TAS of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals… ^t60q148
+- A) 172 kt.
+- B) 155 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 040° and wind from 350°, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the left-front. The headwind component is 30 x cos50° = approximately 19 kt, and the crosswind component is 30 x sin50° = approximately 23 kt. The wind correction angle is about 7°, and the groundspeed is calculated from the navigation triangle as TAS minus the effective headwind component, approximately 180 - 21 = 159 kt. Options A (172 kt) and C (168 kt) underestimate the headwind effect. Option B (155 kt) overestimates it.
+
+### Q149: Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals… ^t60q149
+- A) 6° to the left.
+- B) 3° to the left.
+- C) 3° to the right.
+- D) 6° to the right.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 120° and wind from 150°, the wind comes from 30° to the right of and behind the course line. This pushes the aircraft to the left of track, requiring the pilot to crab to the right. WCA = sin^-1(12 x sin30° / 120) = sin^-1(6/120) = sin^-1(0.05) = approximately 3° to the right. Options A and B indicate left corrections, which would worsen the drift. Option D (6° right) doubles the actual correction angle needed.
+
+### Q150: The distance from 'A' to 'B' is 120 NM. At 55 NM from 'A' the pilot finds a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change is needed to reach 'B' directly? ^t60q150
+- A) 8° left
+- B) 6° left
+- C) 15° left
+- D) 14° left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the 1:60 rule, the opening angle (track error from A) is (7/55) x 60 = approximately 7.6° or about 8°. The remaining distance to B is 120 - 55 = 65 NM, so the closing angle to reach B is (7/65) x 60 = approximately 6.5° or about 6°. The total course correction needed is the sum of both angles: 8° + 6° = 14° to the left (since the aircraft is right of track, it must turn left). Option C (15°) slightly overestimates. Option A (8°) only accounts for the opening angle. Option B (6°) only accounts for the closing angle.
+
+### Q151: How many satellites are required for a precise and verified three-dimensional position fix? ^t60q151
+- A) Five
+- B) Two
+- C) Three
+- D) Four
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A GPS receiver needs signals from at least four satellites for a three-dimensional position fix (latitude, longitude, and altitude). Three satellites would provide only a two-dimensional fix, and the fourth is needed to solve for the receiver's clock error in addition to three spatial coordinates. Option A (five) describes what is needed for RAIM (Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring), not a basic 3D fix. Option B (two) and option C (three) are insufficient for a full 3D position with clock correction.
+
+### Q152: Which ground features should be preferred for orientation during visual flight? ^t60q152
+- A) Farm tracks and creeks
+- B) Border lines
+- C) Power lines
+- D) Rivers, railroads, highways
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rivers, railroads, and highways are the preferred visual navigation references because they are large, prominent linear features that are easily identifiable from altitude and accurately depicted on aeronautical charts. Option A (farm tracks and creeks) are too small and numerous to reliably distinguish from the air. Option B (border lines) are invisible — there are no physical markings on the ground. Option C (power lines) are extremely difficult to see from altitude and pose a collision hazard when flying low.
+
+### Q153: What is the approximate circumference of the Earth at the equator? See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t60q153
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 12800 km.
+- C) 21600 NM.
+- D) 10800 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's equatorial circumference is approximately 21,600 NM. This derives from the fundamental navigation relationship: 360° of longitude x 60 NM per degree = 21,600 NM, since one nautical mile equals one minute of arc on a great circle. In metric terms, the circumference is about 40,075 km, but that does not match any of the other options correctly. Option A (40,000 NM) is nearly double the correct NM value. Options B (12,800 km) and D (10,800 km) are both far below the actual metric circumference.
+
+### Q154: Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. ETD: 0933 UTC. The ETA is… ^t60q154
+- A) 1146 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1045 UTC.
+- D) 1129 UTC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time equals distance divided by groundspeed: 100 NM / 107 kt = 0.935 hours = 56 minutes. Adding 56 minutes to the ETD of 0933 UTC gives 0933 + 0056 = 1029 UTC. Option A (1146 UTC) would imply a flight time of over 2 hours. Option C (1045 UTC) implies 72 minutes, suggesting a groundspeed of about 83 kt. Option D (1129 UTC) implies nearly 2 hours of flight time. Only 1029 UTC matches the 56-minute calculation.
+
+### Q155: An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q155
+- A) 198 kt.
+- B) 93 kt
+- C) 58 km/h
+- D) 107 km/h.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = distance / time = 100 km / (56/60 hours) = 100 x (60/56) = 107.1 km/h. Since the distance is given in kilometres, the result is naturally in km/h. Option A (198 kt) is far too high and appears to be a unit conversion error. Option B (93 kt) would be correct if the distance were in NM, not km. Option C (58 km/h) results from dividing 56 by something incorrectly. Only 107 km/h correctly applies the speed formula.
+
+### Q156: An aircraft flies with TAS 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals… ^t60q156
+- A) 435 NM.
+- B) 693 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 202 NM.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS minus headwind = 180 - 25 = 155 kt. Flight time = 2 hours 25 minutes = 2.417 hours. Distance = GS x time = 155 x 2.417 = 374.6 NM, approximately 375 NM. Option A (435 NM) incorrectly uses TAS (180 x 2.417 = 435) without subtracting the headwind. Option B (693 NM) appears to add the headwind instead of subtracting it. Option D (202 NM) likely uses only the headwind component for the calculation.
+
+### Q157: Given: GS 160 kt, TC 177°, wind vector 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals… ^t60q157
+- A) 184°.
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 180°
+- D) 169°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind from 140° on a 177° true course comes from approximately 37° to the left of the course, pushing the aircraft to the right. The pilot must crab left to compensate. WCA = sin^-1(20 x sin37° / 160) = sin^-1(12/160) = sin^-1(0.075) = approximately 4°. True heading = 177° - 4° = 173°. Option A (184°) incorrectly turns right into the drift. Option C (180°) applies only a 3° correction in the wrong direction. Option D (169°) overcorrects by 8°.
+
+### Q158: An aircraft follows TC 040° at a constant TAS of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals… ^t60q158
+- A) .+ 5°
+- B) . - 9°
+- C) .+ 11°
+- D) .- 7°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 040° and wind from 350°, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the left side. The crosswind component = 30 x sin50° = approximately 23 kt pushes the aircraft to the right of track. To maintain course, the pilot crabs left (negative WCA). WCA = -sin^-1(23/180) = -sin^-1(0.128) = approximately -7°. Option A (+5°) and C (+11°) are in the wrong direction (right instead of left). Option B (-9°) overcorrects the wind effect.
+
+### Q159: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q159
+- A) 117 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 125 kt.
+- D) 120 kt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aircraft flies on TC 270° (westbound) and the wind blows from 090° (east). Since the wind comes from directly behind the aircraft, it is a pure tailwind. Groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. There is no crosswind component, so no wind correction angle is needed. Option A (117 kt) and D (120 kt) underestimate the tailwind effect. Option B (131 kt) overestimates it. The direct tailwind simply adds to TAS.
+
+### Q160: When using GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation bar with dots is displayed. Which interpretation is correct? ^t60q160
+- A) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as angular distance in degrees; full-scale deflection is +-10°.
+- B) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as absolute distance in NM; full-scale deflection depends on the GPS operating mode.
+- C) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as angular distance in degrees; full-scale deflection depends on the GPS operating mode.
+- D) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as absolute distance in NM; full-scale deflection is +-10 NM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GPS CDI (Course Deviation Indicator) displays lateral track error as an absolute distance in nautical miles, not as angular degrees like a VOR CDI. The full-scale deflection varies by operating mode: typically +/-5 NM in en-route mode, +/-1 NM in terminal mode, and +/-0.3 NM in approach mode. Options A and C incorrectly state the deviation is angular. Option D incorrectly states a fixed +/-10 NM scale regardless of mode.
+
+### Q161: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q161
+- A) 42 NM
+- B) 42 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the coordinates: latitude difference = 9' (= 9 NM north-south). Longitude difference = 38'; at latitude 53°N, 1 minute of longitude = cos(53°) NM = approximately 0.60 NM, giving 38 x 0.60 = 22.8 NM east-west. Total distance = sqrt(9^2 + 22.8^2) = sqrt(81 + 520) = sqrt(601) = approximately 24.5 NM, rounded to 24 NM. Options A and B (42 NM/km) are nearly double the actual distance. Option C (24 km) has the right number but wrong unit — 24 NM equals approximately 44 km, not 24 km.
+
+### Q162: An aircraft flies with TAS 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM? ^t60q162
+- A) 2 h 11 min
+- B) 0 h 50 min
+- C) 1 h 12 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 120 + 35 = 155 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 185 / 155 = 1.194 hours = 1 hour 12 minutes. Option A (2 h 11 min) appears to use TAS alone without the tailwind (185/85 does not work either — likely a calculation error). Option B (50 min) would require a GS of about 222 kt. Option D (1 h 32 min) corresponds to using TAS of 120 kt without adding the tailwind (185/120 = 1.54 h = 1 h 32 min).
+
+### Q163: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals… ^t60q163
+- A) 62 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 48 Min.
+- D) 84 Min.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying on TC 270° with wind from 090° means the wind is a direct tailwind (blowing from directly behind). GS = TAS + tailwind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Flight time = 100 NM / 125 kt = 0.80 hours = 48 minutes. Option D (84 min) would result from treating the 25 kt wind as a headwind (GS = 75 kt). Option A (62 min) corresponds to a GS of about 97 kt. Option B (37 min) would require an unrealistically high GS of about 162 kt.
+
+### Q164: Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^t60q164
+- A) TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°.
+- B) TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.
+- C) TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- D) TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flight plan conversion chain proceeds from True Course through wind correction to True Heading (TH), then applying magnetic variation to get Magnetic Heading (MH), and finally accounting for compass deviation for Magnetic Course (MC). The values TH 185°, MH 184°, and MC 178° are consistent with the sequential application of a small wind correction angle, a 1° easterly variation, and compass deviation. Options A, B, and C contain inconsistencies in the TC-to-TH-to-MH-to-MC conversion chain that do not satisfy the given flight plan parameters.
+
+### Q165: What is meant by the term "terrestrial navigation"? ^t60q165
+- A) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by ground celestial objects during visual flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation (also known as pilotage or map reading) is the technique of orienting the aircraft by visually identifying ground features — towns, rivers, roads, railways, lakes — and matching them to the aeronautical chart. Option A describes instrument navigation, which relies on cockpit instruments rather than visual ground references. Option C describes GPS navigation, a satellite-based method. Option D confuses terrestrial with celestial navigation, which uses stars and other astronomical bodies for position determination.
+
+### Q166: What flight time is required for a distance of 236 NM at a ground speed of 134 kt? ^t60q166
+- A) 0:46 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 1:46 h
+- D) 1:34 h
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time = distance / groundspeed = 236 NM / 134 kt = 1.761 hours. Converting the decimal fraction: 0.761 x 60 = 45.7 minutes, approximately 46 minutes, giving a total of 1 hour 46 minutes. Option A (0:46 h) has the correct minutes but is missing the full hour. Option D (1:34 h) would correspond to a GS of about 144 kt. Option B (0:34 h) is far too short for this distance at this speed.
+
+### Q167: What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q167
+- A) 235°
+- B) 241°
+- C) 055°
+- D) 061°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Neustadt lies to the north-northeast of Uelzen (higher latitude and further east). Plotting the route from Uelzen to Neustadt on the chart yields a northeast heading of approximately 061°. Option B (241°) is the reciprocal course (from Neustadt to Uelzen). Option A (235°) is also a southwest heading, which would be the wrong direction. Option C (055°) is close but does not match the precise bearing calculated from the chart coordinates.
+
+### Q168: What does the 1:60 rule mean? ^t60q168
+- A) 10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- B) 60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM
+- C) 1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- D) 6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 1:60 rule is a mental math shortcut stating that at a distance of 60 NM, a 1° track error produces approximately 1 NM of lateral offset. Mathematically, this works because the arc length of 1° on a 60 NM radius circle is 2 x pi x 60 / 360 = approximately 1.047 NM, close enough to 1 NM for practical navigation. Option A (10 NM offset) is ten times too large. Option B reverses the distance and offset. Option D (6 NM at 10 NM) is geometrically inconsistent with the rule.
+
+### Q169: An aircraft follows TC 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q169
+- A) 135 kt.
+- B) 170 kt.
+- C) 185 kt.
+- D) 255 kt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 220° and wind from 270°, the wind angle is 50° from the right-front of the aircraft. The headwind component = 50 x cos50° = approximately 32 kt, and the crosswind component = 50 x sin50° = approximately 38 kt. Using the navigation wind triangle, the groundspeed works out to approximately 185 kt after accounting for both the headwind reduction and the crab angle. Option D (255 kt) would require a tailwind. Option A (135 kt) subtracts the full wind speed. Option B (170 kt) overcorrects for the headwind component.
+
+### Q170: An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance to fly is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What corrected heading is needed to reach the destination directly? ^t60q170
+- A) 9° to the right
+- B) 6° to the right
+- C) 12° to the right
+- D) 18° to the right
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Applying the 1:60 rule: the opening angle (track error) = (4.5 / 45) x 60 = 6° off track to the north. The remaining distance is 90 - 45 = 45 NM. The closing angle to reach the destination = (4.5 / 45) x 60 = 6°. Total correction = opening angle + closing angle = 6° + 6° = 12° to the right (south), since the aircraft has drifted north of track. Option A (9°) is too small. Option B (6°) accounts for only the closing angle. Option D (18°) is too aggressive and would overshoot the correction.
+
+### Q171: What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q171
+- A) 46 NM
+- B) 78 km
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 46 km
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From the coordinates: latitude difference = 23' (= 23 NM north-south). Longitude difference = 69'; at approximately 53°N latitude, 1' of longitude = cos(53°) = 0.602 NM, so 69 x 0.602 = 41.5 NM east-west. Total distance = sqrt(23^2 + 41.5^2) = sqrt(529 + 1722) = sqrt(2251) = approximately 47 NM, rounded to 46 NM on the chart. Options B and C (78 km) equal approximately 42 NM, which is too low. Option D (46 km) has the right number but wrong unit — 46 NM is about 85 km, not 46 km.
+
+### Q172: What does the term terrestrial navigation mean? ^t60q172
+- A) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by ground celestial objects during visual flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation is the method of navigating by visually identifying ground features such as roads, rivers, railways, towns, and lakes, and matching them to an aeronautical chart. It is the primary VFR navigation technique and sometimes called pilotage or map reading. Option A (GPS) is satellite-based navigation. Option C (instruments) describes instrument navigation or dead reckoning. Option D confuses terrestrial (ground-based) with celestial (star-based) navigation methods.
+
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+# Operational Procedures
+
+---
+
+### Q1: While flying slowly near stall with the left wing dropping, how can a full stall be avoided? ^t70q1
+- A) Use rudder to the left, push the stick forward slightly, accelerate, then neutralise all controls
+- B) Lower the nose with elevator, maintain wings level using coordinated rudder and aileron
+- C) Deflect aileron to the right, push slightly forward on the stick, build speed, then neutralise controls
+- D) Apply aileron and rudder to the right, gain speed, push the stick forward slightly, then neutralise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct stall recovery technique is to immediately reduce the angle of attack by lowering the nose with the elevator, while using coordinated rudder and aileron to keep the wings level. Option A applies rudder in the wrong direction (toward the dropping wing). Option C uses aileron alone without coordinated rudder, which near the stall can increase adverse yaw and potentially trigger a spin entry. Option D also prioritizes aileron over elevator, missing the critical first step of reducing the angle of attack.
+
+### Q2: How is "flight time" defined? ^t70q2
+- A) The total time from the first take-off until the last landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- B) The time from engine start for take-off purposes until the pilot leaves the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- C) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+- D) The interval from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown on landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations for gliders, flight time is defined as the total time from the aircraft's first movement for the purpose of flight until it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. This includes ground handling and taxiing, not just airborne time. Option A only counts from takeoff to landing, excluding ground movement. Option B applies to powered aircraft with engines, not gliders. Option D is too narrow, covering only the takeoff run to touchdown and missing ground handling phases.
+
+### Q3: What is a wind shear? ^t70q3
+- A) A meteorological downslope wind event typical in alpine regions.
+- B) A gradual increase of wind speed at altitudes above 13000 ft.
+- C) A change in wind speed exceeding 15 kt.
+- D) A vertical or horizontal variation in wind speed and/or direction.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind shear is defined as any change in wind speed and/or direction over a relatively short distance, which can occur in both the vertical and horizontal planes. It is not limited to any particular speed threshold (option C), altitude range (option B), or geographic setting (option A). Wind shear is particularly dangerous during takeoff and landing when the aircraft is close to the ground with limited recovery margins.
+
+### Q4: Which weather phenomenon is most commonly linked to wind shear? ^t70q4
+- A) Stable high-pressure systems.
+- B) Thunderstorms.
+- C) Fog.
+- D) Invernal warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms generate the most severe wind shear through their powerful updrafts, downdrafts, and microburst outflows, which can cause sudden wind reversals exceeding 50 knots within seconds. Stable high-pressure systems (option A) typically produce calm, uniform conditions. Fog (option C) is associated with light winds, not shear. Warm fronts (option D) can produce mild shear, but thunderstorms are by far the most common and dangerous source.
+
+### Q5: Under what conditions should wind shear be expected? ^t70q5
+- A) On a calm summer day with light winds
+- B) In cold weather with calm winds
+- C) During an inversion
+- D) When crossing a warm front
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A temperature inversion creates a stable boundary layer between two air masses that can move at different speeds and directions, producing wind shear at the inversion level. Inversions are common in the early morning and can significantly affect glider operations near the ground, particularly during approach and landing. Option A describes conditions with minimal shear risk. Option B and D can occasionally produce shear but are not the primary conditions associated with it.
+
+### Q6: During approach, an aircraft encounters wind shear with decreasing headwind. Without pilot corrections, what happens to the flight path and indicated airspeed (IAS)? ^t70q6
+- A) Flight path goes higher, IAS rises
+- B) Flight path goes lower, IAS rises
+- C) Flight path goes higher, IAS drops
+- D) Flight path goes lower, IAS drops
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When headwind suddenly decreases, the airflow over the wings drops, causing IAS to decrease and lift to reduce. With less lift, the aircraft sinks below the intended glide path. The aircraft's inertia maintains its groundspeed briefly, but the reduced relative airflow means less aerodynamic force. This is the most dangerous wind shear scenario on approach because both effects — lower path and lower airspeed — combine to reduce safety margins simultaneously.
+
+### Q7: During approach, an aircraft encounters wind shear with increasing headwind. Without corrections, how are the flight path and IAS affected? ^t70q7
+- A) Flight path drops, IAS drops
+- B) Flight path rises, IAS drops
+- C) Flight path drops, IAS rises
+- D) Flight path rises, IAS rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An increasing headwind temporarily increases the relative airflow over the wings, raising both IAS and lift. The additional lift pushes the aircraft above the intended glide path. Although initially this appears favorable, the pilot must be alert — if the headwind later decreases, the aircraft will experience the opposite effect and may sink rapidly below the desired path. Options involving decreased IAS or a lower flight path contradict the aerodynamic response to an increasing headwind.
+
+### Q8: During approach, the aircraft experiences wind shear with a decreasing tailwind. Without corrections, what happens to the flight path and IAS? ^t70q8
+- A) Flight path drops, IAS rises
+- B) Flight path rises, IAS rises
+- C) Flight path drops, IAS drops
+- D) Flight path rises, IAS drops
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a tailwind decreases, the aircraft's forward momentum is maintained while the air mass effectively decelerates around it, increasing the relative airflow over the wings. This raises IAS and lift, pushing the aircraft above the glide path. A decreasing tailwind has the same aerodynamic effect as an increasing headwind. Options with decreased IAS or lower flight path misinterpret the relationship between tailwind changes and relative airflow.
+
+### Q9: What is the best way to avoid encountering wind shear during flight? ^t70q9
+- A) Avoid thermally active areas, especially in summer, or remain below them
+- B) Refrain from taking off and landing when heavy showers or thunderstorms are passing
+- C) Avoid precipitation areas, particularly in winter, and choose low flight altitudes
+- D) Avoid take-offs and landings in mountainous terrain and stay over flat terrain
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe wind shear is associated with thunderstorms and heavy showers, which produce microbursts and gust fronts. Avoiding takeoffs and landings when such weather is passing through eliminates the most dangerous wind shear exposure during the most vulnerable flight phases. Option A addresses thermals, which cause turbulence but not dangerous shear. Option C targets winter precipitation, which is a lesser shear risk. Option D is overly restrictive and does not address the primary cause.
+
+### Q10: During a cross-country flight, visual conditions begin to fall below minima. To maintain minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to... ^t70q10
+- A) Press on using radio navigation aids along the route
+- B) Continue based on sufficiently favourable forecasts
+- C) Request navigational assistance from ATC to continue
+- D) Turn back, since adequate VMC was confirmed along the previous track
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When VFR conditions deteriorate below minima, the safest action is to turn back to the area where adequate visual meteorological conditions (VMC) were confirmed. Continuing into worsening visibility is the leading cause of VFR-into-IMC accidents. Option A is inappropriate because gliders typically lack radio navigation equipment and VFR pilots should not rely on instrument navigation. Option B relies on forecasts rather than actual conditions, which is unsafe. Option C is not appropriate for gliders operating under VFR rules.
+
+### Q11: Two identical aircraft at the same gross weight and configuration fly at different airspeeds. Which one produces stronger wake turbulence? ^t70q11
+- A) The one at higher altitude
+- B) The one flying faster
+- C) The one flying slower
+- D) The one at lower altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wake turbulence intensity is directly related to the strength of wingtip vortices, which are strongest when the wing operates at high lift coefficients — that is, at low speeds and high angles of attack. The slower aircraft generates more intense vortices because it must produce the same lift at a lower speed, requiring a higher angle of attack and greater circulation around the wing. Altitude (options A and D) is not the determining factor. The faster aircraft (option B) produces weaker vortices at its lower lift coefficient.
+
+### Q12: With only a light crosswind, what hazard exists when departing after a heavy aeroplane? ^t70q12
+- A) Wake vortices are amplified and become distorted.
+- B) Wake vortices spin faster and climb higher.
+- C) Wake vortices remain on or near the runway.
+- D) Wake vortices twist across the runway transversely.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In light crosswind conditions, wake vortices from a heavy aircraft tend to remain on or near the runway rather than being blown clear. With a strong crosswind, the vortices drift away from the runway centerline, but a light crosswind is insufficient to displace them, creating a lingering hazard for departing aircraft. Option A incorrectly states vortices are amplified. Option B is wrong because vortices sink, not climb. Option D is incorrect because light crosswinds do not cause significant lateral twisting of vortices across the runway.
+
+### Q13: Which surface is most suitable for an emergency off-field landing? ^t70q13
+- A) A ploughed field
+- B) A harvested cornfield
+- C) A glade with long dry grass
+- D) A village sports ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A harvested cornfield offers a firm, relatively flat surface with short stubble that provides good ground friction without excessive deceleration forces — ideal for an emergency landing. Option A (ploughed field) has soft, uneven furrows that can cause the glider to nose over or ground-loop. Option C (long dry grass) may conceal obstacles such as rocks, ditches, or fences. Option D (sports ground) is typically surrounded by buildings, fences, and spectators, creating collision hazards.
+
+### Q14: What defines a precautionary landing? ^t70q14
+- A) A landing performed without engine power.
+- B) A landing made to preserve flight safety before conditions deteriorate further.
+- C) A landing carried out with flaps retracted.
+- D) A landing forced by circumstances requiring the aircraft to land immediately.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A precautionary landing is a proactive decision to land while options remain available, made to preserve flight safety before the situation worsens. It differs from a forced landing (option D), which is an immediate necessity with no alternative. Option A describes a normal glider landing or engine-out scenario, not specifically a precautionary landing. Option C describes a configuration choice, not a type of landing. The key distinction is that a precautionary landing involves foresight and planning.
+
+### Q15: Which of these landing areas is best suited for an off-field landing? ^t70q15
+- A) A lake with a smooth, undisturbed surface
+- B) A meadow free of livestock
+- C) A light brown field with short crops
+- D) A field with ripe, waving crops
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A light brown field with short crops indicates a harvested or nearly harvested surface that is firm and free of tall obstructions, making it suitable for a safe off-field landing. Option A (a lake) should only be considered as a last resort since water landings carry drowning risk. Option B (meadow without livestock) sounds safe but may have hidden obstacles; and option D (ripe, waving crops) indicates tall vegetation that could obscure hazards and cause the glider to nose over on landing.
+
+### Q16: How does wet grass affect take-off and landing distances? ^t70q16
+- A) Both take-off and landing distances decrease
+- B) Take-off distance increases while landing distance decreases
+- C) Take-off distance decreases while landing distance increases
+- D) Both take-off and landing distances increase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass increases rolling resistance during the takeoff ground roll, requiring a longer distance to reach flying speed. On landing, wet grass reduces wheel braking friction (similar to aquaplaning), resulting in a longer stopping distance. Both phases are adversely affected. Option A reverses both effects. Option B correctly identifies the takeoff increase but incorrectly predicts a shorter landing roll. Option C reverses both effects entirely.
+
+### Q17: What adverse effects can be expected when thermalling above industrial facilities? ^t70q17
+- A) Extensive, strong downwind areas on the lee side of the plant
+- B) Very poor visibility of only a few hundred metres with heavy precipitation
+- C) Health hazards from pollutants, reduced visibility, and turbulence
+- D) Strong electrostatic charging and degraded radio communication
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermalling above industrial facilities exposes the pilot to harmful pollutants (smoke, chemical emissions), significantly reduced visibility from haze and particulates, and turbulence from the uneven heating of industrial structures. Option A describes a lee-side downdraft but not the full hazard picture. Option B exaggerates with "heavy precipitation," which is not caused by industrial plants. Option D describes electrostatic effects that are not typically associated with industrial thermal flying.
+
+### Q18: When is an off-field landing most likely to result in an accident? ^t70q18
+- A) When the approach uses distinct approach segments
+- B) When the decision to land off-field is taken too late
+- C) When the approach is made onto a harvested corn field
+- D) When the decision is made above the minimum safe altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most common cause of off-field landing accidents is delaying the decision too long, leaving insufficient altitude for proper field selection, a stabilized approach, and obstacle avoidance. Late decisions force rushed approaches, poor field choices, and inadequate speed management. Option A (distinct segments) is standard good practice. Option C (harvested cornfield) is actually a good surface choice. Option D (deciding above minimum safe altitude) is the correct time to decide, not a risk factor.
+
+### Q19: How can mid-air collisions be avoided when circling in thermals? ^t70q19
+- A) Enter the updraft quickly and pull back sharply to slow down
+- B) Circle in alternating directions at different altitudes
+- C) Mimic the movements of the glider ahead
+- D) Coordinate turns with other aircraft sharing the same thermal
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When sharing a thermal, all gliders should circle in the same direction and coordinate their turns to maintain consistent spacing and predictable flight paths. This minimizes the risk of convergence. Option A (entering quickly and pulling back sharply) can surprise other pilots and create a collision hazard. Option B (alternating directions) creates head-on crossing situations within the thermal. Option C (mimicking the glider ahead) could lead to following too closely without maintaining safe separation.
+
+### Q20: How can danger be avoided when a glider's altitude nears circuit height during a cross-country flight? ^t70q20
+- A) Seek thermals on the lee side of a chosen landing field
+- B) Regardless of the planned route, commit to an off-field landing
+- C) Maintain radio contact until fully stopped after an off-field landing
+- D) Aim for cumulus clouds visible on the distant horizon and use their thermals
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When altitude drops to circuit height, the pilot must commit to landing — continuing to search for lift at this altitude is dangerous and leaves no margin for error. Option A is hazardous because lee-side air typically contains sink, not thermals. Option C describes a good post-landing practice but does not address the immediate danger of low altitude. Option D risks flying into sink between thermals with no altitude reserve, potentially resulting in a crash rather than a controlled off-field landing.
+
+### Q21: What must a pilot consider before entering a steep turn? ^t70q21
+- A) Reduce speed in accordance with the target bank angle before starting the turn
+- B) Once the bank angle is achieved, push forward to increase speed
+- C) After reaching the bank angle, apply opposite rudder to reduce yaw
+- D) Build up sufficient speed for the intended bank angle before initiating the turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steep turn, the load factor increases (n = 1/cos(bank angle)), which raises the stall speed. The pilot must have adequate speed before entering the turn to maintain a safe margin above the increased stall speed. Option A (reducing speed before a steep turn) would dangerously bring the aircraft closer to stall. Option B (pushing forward during the turn) would cause altitude loss and nose-down pitch. Option C (opposite rudder) is not the primary concern — speed margin is the critical safety factor.
+
+### Q22: A glider is about to stall and pitch down. Which control input prevents a nose-dive and spin? ^t70q22
+- A) Hold ailerons neutral, apply strong rudder toward the lower wing
+- B) Maintain level flight using the rudder pedals
+- C) Pull the stick back slightly, deflect ailerons opposite to the lower wing
+- D) Release back pressure on the elevator, apply rudder opposite to the dropping wing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct response to an incipient stall with wing drop is to release back pressure on the elevator (reducing angle of attack) and apply opposite rudder to prevent the yaw that would develop into a spin. Option A applies rudder toward the dropping wing, which would accelerate spin entry. Option B attempts to maintain level flight with rudder alone, which is ineffective near the stall. Option C pulls back on the elevator, which deepens the stall, and uses ailerons which can worsen the situation near the critical angle of attack.
+
+### Q23: When aerotowing with a side-mounted release hook, the glider tends to... ^t70q23
+- A) Display an increased pitch-up moment.
+- B) Exhibit particularly stable flight characteristics.
+- C) Turn rapidly about its longitudinal axis.
+- D) Yaw toward the side where the hook is mounted.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A side-mounted (belly or CG) release hook creates a tow force that acts below and possibly offset from the aircraft's center of gravity. The cable pull from below the CG generates a nose-up pitching moment, which the pilot must actively counter with forward stick pressure. Option B is incorrect — side-mounted hooks do not improve stability. Option C (rapid roll) is not characteristic of this configuration. Option D describes yaw, which would occur with an asymmetric attachment but is not the primary effect.
+
+### Q24: During aerotow, the glider has climbed excessively high behind the tug. What should the glider pilot do to prevent further danger? ^t70q24
+- A) Initiate a sideslip to lose the excess height
+- B) Push firmly forward to bring the glider back to the normal position
+- C) Pull strongly, then release the cable
+- D) Gently extend the spoilers and steer the glider back to the correct tow position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The safest correction for being too high behind the tug is to gently deploy spoilers to increase drag and lose excess height while steering back to the correct tow position. Option A (sideslip) would create erratic lateral movements that could endanger both aircraft. Option B (pushing firmly forward) could put the tug into a dangerous nose-down attitude by pulling its tail up via the cable. Option C (pulling then releasing) is dangerous — pulling when high compounds the problem, potentially lifting the tug's tail catastrophically.
+
+### Q25: After a cable break during winch launch, what is the correct sequence of actions? ^t70q25
+- A) Hold the stick back, stabilise at minimum speed, and land on the remaining field length
+- B) Push the nose down firmly, release the cable, then decide based on altitude and terrain whether to land ahead or fly a short circuit
+- C) Perform a 180-degree turn and land in the opposite direction, releasing the cable before touchdown
+- D) Release the cable first, then push the nose down; below 150 m AGL land straight ahead at increased speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break during winch launch, the immediate priority is to lower the nose to maintain flying speed (preventing a stall from the steep climb attitude), then release the cable to prevent it from snagging during landing. After establishing safe flight, the pilot decides whether to land straight ahead or fly a modified circuit based on available altitude and terrain. Option A (holding the stick back) risks a stall. Option C (180° turn) is extremely dangerous at low altitude. Option D gets the sequence backward — nose down first, then release.
+
+### Q26: During the initial ground roll of a winch launch, one wing touches the ground. What must the glider pilot do? ^t70q26
+- A) Deflect ailerons in the opposite direction
+- B) Apply opposite rudder
+- C) Release the cable immediately
+- D) Pull back on the elevator
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If a wing touches the ground during the winch launch ground roll, the situation is uncontrollable and the launch must be immediately aborted by releasing the cable. Continuing the launch with a wing on the ground risks a violent ground loop or cartwheel. Option A (opposite aileron) may be insufficient at low speed and could worsen the situation under cable tension. Option B (opposite rudder) cannot correct a wing-down condition. Option D (pulling back) would try to lift off prematurely in an uncontrolled state.
+
+### Q27: During aerotow, the glider exceeds its maximum permissible speed. What should the glider pilot do? ^t70q27
+- A) Pull back on the elevator to reduce speed
+- B) Notify the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Release the towrope immediately
+- D) Deploy the spoilers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider exceeds VNE (never-exceed speed) during aerotow, the pilot must immediately release the towrope to remove the pulling force causing the excessive speed and avoid structural failure. Option A (pulling back) increases the load factor on an already over-stressed airframe. Option B (radio call) wastes critical time during a structural emergency. Option D (deploying spoilers) while still attached to the tow aircraft could cause dangerous pitch and speed oscillations.
+
+### Q28: After a cable break during aerotow, a long section of cable remains attached to the glider. What should the pilot do? ^t70q28
+- A) Fly a low approach and ask the airfield controller to assess the cable length, then release if needed
+- B) Once at a safe height, drop the cable over empty terrain or over the airfield
+- C) Fly a normal approach and release the cable immediately after touchdown
+- D) Release immediately and continue the flight with the coupling unlatched
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A trailing cable is a serious hazard — it can snag on obstacles, trees, or power lines during approach and landing. The safest action is to climb to a safe height and release the cable over empty terrain or the airfield where it can be recovered safely. Option A (low approach for assessment) risks snagging the trailing cable on obstacles. Option C (releasing after touchdown) means flying the entire approach with a dangerous trailing cable. Option D (releasing immediately regardless) may drop the cable in an unsafe location.
+
+### Q29: During aerotow, the tug aircraft disappears from the glider pilot's view. What should the pilot do? ^t70q29
+- A) Deploy the spoilers and return to a normal attitude
+- B) Alternate between pushing and pulling on the elevator
+- C) Release the cable immediately
+- D) Alternate turns left and right to search for the tug
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider pilot loses sight of the tug during aerotow, the cable must be released immediately. Continued towing without visual contact with the tug is extremely dangerous because the glider pilot cannot anticipate the tug's movements, risking a mid-air collision or being pulled into an unexpected attitude. Option A (spoilers) does not address the fundamental problem. Option B (alternating elevator) creates dangerous oscillations. Option D (searching turns) could tangle the cable or fly into the tug's path.
+
+### Q30: During aerotow in a turn, the glider drifts to an outward offset position. How should the glider pilot correct this? ^t70q30
+- A) Use a sideslip so that increased drag pushes the glider back behind the tug
+- B) Steer back using coordinated rudder and aileron inputs, then deploy spoilers to reduce speed
+- C) Return behind the tug by using a tighter radius with strong rudder pedal inputs
+- D) Match the tug's bank angle and use rudder to gently reduce the radius back to the correct position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct technique is to match the tug's bank angle to maintain the same turn radius, then use gentle rudder input to slightly tighten the radius and drift back behind the tug. This is a smooth, controlled correction. Option A (sideslip) creates lateral instability and unpredictable cable tensions. Option B (deploying spoilers) would cause the glider to drop below the tug's level. Option C (strong rudder) risks over-correction and could cause the glider to swing to the opposite side or create dangerous cable loads.
+
+### Q31: During a winch launch, cable tension suddenly disappears just after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q31
+- A) Inform the winch driver by alternating aileron inputs
+- B) Pull on the elevator to restore cable tension
+- C) Push firmly forward and release the cable immediately
+- D) Push slightly and wait for the cable tension to return
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Loss of cable tension during the steep climbing phase means a cable break or winch failure has occurred. The pilot must immediately push forward to lower the nose and prevent a stall (since the glider is at a high pitch angle with rapidly decaying speed), then release the cable. Option A wastes critical time on communication. Option B (pulling) would increase the pitch angle further, guaranteeing a stall. Option D (waiting) is dangerous because speed is decaying rapidly in the climb attitude.
+
+### Q32: Before launching with a parallel-cable winch, the pilot notices the second cable lying close to the glider. What should be done? ^t70q32
+- A) Keep watching the second cable and release after take-off if needed
+- B) Release the cable immediately and inform the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Continue with the normal take-off and inform the controller after landing
+- D) Proceed with the launch using opposite rudder to steer away from the second cable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A second cable lying close to the glider poses a serious entanglement hazard during the ground roll and climb-out. The launch must be aborted immediately by releasing the cable, and the airfield controller must be notified to correct the situation before any further launches. Option A risks snagging the loose cable during takeoff. Option C ignores a clear safety hazard. Option D cannot prevent entanglement with a cable on the ground during the critical ground roll phase.
+
+### Q33: What is the function of the weak link (breaking point) on a winch cable? ^t70q33
+- A) It limits the rate of climb during the winch launch
+- B) It prevents the glider airframe from being overstressed
+- C) It provides automatic cable release after the winch launch
+- D) It protects the winch from being overrun by the glider
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The weak link is calibrated to break before the cable tension exceeds the glider's structural limits, protecting the airframe from being overstressed by excessive winch pull. Its breaking strength is matched to the maximum permitted towing load for the specific glider type. Option A is incorrect — the rate of climb depends on winch power and speed, not the weak link. Option C is wrong because the weak link is a safety device, not a release mechanism. Option D describes a concern unrelated to the weak link's purpose.
+
+### Q34: During the final phase of a winch launch, the pilot keeps pulling back on the elevator. The automatic release trips under high wing loading. What are the consequences? ^t70q34
+- A) Only this sudden jerk ensures the cable releases properly
+- B) This technique compensates for insufficient wind correction
+- C) Extreme structural stress is placed on the glider airframe
+- D) A higher launch altitude can be achieved using this technique
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Continuing to pull back during the final phase of a winch launch places extreme structural stress on the airframe because the combination of cable tension, aerodynamic loads, and the centripetal force from the curved flight path can exceed design limits. The automatic release tripping is a safety mechanism activating because the load factor is dangerously high. Option A mischaracterizes a dangerous overload as normal procedure. Option B has nothing to do with wind correction. Option D prioritizes altitude gain over structural safety.
+
+### Q35: An off-field landing in mountainous terrain is necessary and the only available site is steeply inclined. How should the approach be flown? ^t70q35
+- A) Fly the approach at minimum speed with a careful flare upon reaching the landing site
+- B) Approach with extra speed, then make a quick flare to match the slope gradient
+- C) Approach parallel to the ridge with headwind, according to the prevailing wind
+- D) Approach down the ridge at increased speed, adjusting pitch to follow the ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing uphill on a steep slope requires extra approach speed to account for the rapid deceleration that occurs when the aircraft's momentum encounters the rising terrain. A quick, decisive flare matches the aircraft's flight path to the slope angle, minimizing impact forces. Option A (minimum speed) leaves no energy reserve for the flare on a steep slope. Option C (parallel to ridge) does not utilize the slope for deceleration. Option D (downhill) dramatically increases groundspeed and stopping distance, making it extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q36: At 6000 m MSL, the pilot realises that the oxygen supply will run out within minutes. What should be done? ^t70q36
+- A) After oxygen runs out, remain at this altitude for no more than 30 minutes
+- B) Reduce oxygen consumption by breathing slowly
+- C) Deploy spoilers and descend at the maximum permissible speed
+- D) At the first sign of hypoxia, begin descending at the maximum allowed speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6000 m without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness is very short — hypoxia can impair judgment within minutes. The pilot must descend immediately at maximum permissible speed using spoilers, before oxygen runs out, rather than waiting for symptoms to appear. Option A is extremely dangerous — remaining at 6000 m without oxygen for 30 minutes would cause incapacitation. Option B cannot meaningfully extend oxygen supply. Option D waits for hypoxia symptoms, by which point cognitive function may already be too impaired for safe decision-making.
+
+### Q37: What colour is the emergency canopy release handle? ^t70q37
+- A) Blue
+- B) Yellow
+- C) Red
+- D) Green
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Emergency canopy release handles are standardized as red to ensure immediate recognition in a crisis. Red is the universal color for emergency controls in aviation, including canopy jettison handles, fire extinguisher handles, and fuel shutoff valves. Options A (blue), B (yellow), and D (green) are incorrect — these colors are reserved for other functions such as trim (green), normal canopy latch, or non-emergency systems.
+
+### Q38: Why must trim masses or lead ballast be firmly secured in a glider? ^t70q38
+- A) To ensure the maximum allowed mass is not exceeded
+- B) To prevent them from jamming controls or causing a centre-of-gravity shift
+- C) To guarantee a comfortable seating position for the pilot
+- D) To protect the pilot from injury during turbulent thermal flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Unsecured trim masses or ballast can shift during flight, particularly in turbulence or during maneuvers, potentially jamming control linkages (elevator, rudder, or aileron cables) or causing an unplanned shift in the center of gravity that could make the aircraft uncontrollable. Option A addresses weight limits, which is a separate concern from securing ballast. Option C and D are secondary considerations — the primary danger is control jamming and CG displacement.
+
+### Q39: During a winch launch, the airspeed indicator fails after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q39
+- A) Push the stick forward, release the cable, and fly a short circuit at minimum speed
+- B) Continue the launch to normal altitude, then use the horizon and airstream noise for an immediate circuit and landing
+- C) Continue to normal altitude, then use visual and audio cues to proceed with the planned flight
+- D) Try to restore the ASI by making abrupt speed changes during the launch
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a failed ASI, the pilot should continue the launch to normal release altitude (since the launch is already established and stable), then release and fly an immediate circuit using the horizon for pitch reference and wind noise for approximate speed estimation. An immediate landing minimizes exposure to the instrument failure. Option A (aborting the launch) is unnecessarily risky at climb attitude. Option C (continuing the planned flight) is unsafe without airspeed indication. Option D (abrupt speed changes) could overstress the airframe during the launch.
+
+### Q40: Why is launching with the centre of gravity beyond the aft limit prohibited? ^t70q40
+- A) Because the maximum permissible speed would be significantly reduced
+- B) Because the increased nose-down moment could not be compensated
+- C) Because structural limits might be exceeded
+- D) Because elevator authority may be insufficient to control the flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the CG is too far aft, the moment arm between the CG and the tail becomes too short, reducing the elevator's ability to generate sufficient nose-down pitching moment. This can make the aircraft uncontrollable, particularly during the launch phase when pitch control is critical. Option A is incorrect — aft CG does not directly reduce VNE. Option B is backward — an aft CG reduces the nose-down moment, but the problem is insufficient elevator authority to correct nose-up tendencies. Option C addresses structural limits, which is a separate concern.
+
+### Q41: What effect does ice accumulation on the wings have? ^t70q41
+- A) It reduces friction drag
+- B) It improves slow-flight performance
+- C) It lowers the stall speed
+- D) It raises the stall speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ice accumulation on the wing disrupts the smooth airflow over the aerofoil surface, reducing the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) and increasing drag. Since stall speed is inversely proportional to the square root of CL_max, a lower CL_max means a higher stall speed. The aircraft must fly faster to maintain safe flight. Option A is wrong because ice roughness increases friction drag. Options B and C are incorrect because ice degrades aerodynamic performance in every respect.
+
+### Q42: The landing gear extends but will not lock despite several attempts. How should the landing be performed? ^t70q42
+- A) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at increased speed
+- B) Keep the gear extended but unlocked and land normally
+- C) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at minimum speed
+- D) Hold the gear handle firmly during a normal landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear will not lock, it must be retracted and a belly (gear-up) landing performed at minimum speed to minimize impact forces and structural damage. An unlocked gear (option B) could collapse asymmetrically on touchdown, causing a violent ground loop or cartwheel. Option A (belly landing at increased speed) unnecessarily increases impact energy. Option D (holding the handle) provides no mechanical lock and the gear could still collapse under landing loads.
+
+### Q43: When flying into heavy snowfall, what is the greatest immediate danger? ^t70q43
+- A) Rapid increase in airframe icing
+- B) Sudden blockage of the pitot-static system
+- C) Sudden loss of visibility
+- D) Sudden increase in aircraft mass
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The greatest immediate danger when encountering heavy snowfall is the sudden and complete loss of forward visibility, which can disorient the pilot and make terrain avoidance impossible within seconds. While icing (option A) and pitot blockage (option B) are real concerns, they develop more gradually. Option D (mass increase) is negligible in the short term. Loss of visibility is immediate, disorienting, and can lead to controlled flight into terrain.
+
+### Q44: A tailwind off-field landing is unavoidable. How should it be executed? ^t70q44
+- A) Approach at increased speed without using spoilers
+- B) Normal approach, then extend spoilers and push the nose down upon reaching the landing site
+- C) Approach at reduced speed, expecting shorter flare and ground roll
+- D) Approach at normal speed, expecting a longer flare and ground roll
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the groundspeed is higher than normal for the same indicated airspeed, resulting in a longer flare and longer ground roll. The pilot should maintain normal approach speed (not reduced, which would risk stalling) and prepare for the extended landing distance. Option A (increased speed without spoilers) would make the landing even longer. Option B (pushing the nose down at the field) would cause a hard landing. Option C (reduced speed) risks stalling at the higher groundspeed, and the ground roll will be longer, not shorter.
+
+### Q45: When landing with a tailwind, what must the pilot do? ^t70q45
+- A) Retract the landing gear to shorten the ground roll
+- B) Increase the approach speed
+- C) Approach at normal speed with a shallow angle
+- D) Compensate for the tailwind by sideslipping
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the pilot should maintain normal indicated approach speed (since the wing sees the same airflow regardless of wind) and fly a shallower approach angle to account for the increased groundspeed and reduced obstacle clearance gradient. Option A (retracting gear) would cause a belly landing, not shorten the roll. Option B (increasing speed) would extend the ground roll further. Option D (sideslipping) addresses crosswind, not tailwind, and would not be effective compensation.
+
+### Q46: Tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the approach and landing be conducted? ^t70q46
+- A) Approach at increased speed, but avoid using spoilers
+- B) Approach at normal speed, controlling speed with spoilers
+- C) Approach at minimum speed, making gentle control corrections
+- D) Approach at increased speed with firm control inputs to correct attitude changes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In gusty conditions (10 kt gust factor), the pilot must add speed margin to the approach speed (typically half the gust factor, so about 5 kt extra) and make firm, positive control inputs to maintain attitude through the turbulent air. Option A avoids spoilers, which may be needed for path control. Option B uses normal speed with no gust margin, leaving the aircraft vulnerable to speed drops in gusts. Option C (minimum speed) is extremely dangerous in gusts — a momentary speed loss could cause a stall.
+
+### Q47: A glider pilot encounters strong sink while ridge soaring. What is the recommended action? ^t70q47
+- A) Increase speed and head away from the ridge
+- B) Continue flying, as mountain downdrafts are typically brief
+- C) Increase speed and move closer to the ridge
+- D) Increase speed and land parallel to the ridge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong sink near a ridge, the pilot must increase speed (to improve penetration through the sink) and fly away from the ridge into the valley where conditions may be more benign and landing options exist. Option B is dangerously complacent — mountain downdrafts can be sustained and severe. Option C (moving closer to the ridge) could trap the pilot against the terrain in strong sink. Option D (landing parallel to the ridge) may not be feasible on mountainous terrain and reduces options.
+
+### Q48: A glider flying beneath an expanding cumulus that is developing into a thunderstorm rapidly approaches cloud base. What should the pilot do? ^t70q48
+- A) Slow to minimum speed and exit the thermal area in a gentle turn
+- B) Tighten harness and be prepared for severe gusts while continuing to thermal
+- C) Enter the thunderstorm cloud and continue using instruments
+- D) Deploy spoilers within speed limits and leave the thermal area at maximum permissible speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cumulus develops into a cumulonimbus, the updrafts intensify dramatically and can suck the glider into the cloud against the pilot's wishes. The pilot must deploy full spoilers and fly at maximum permissible speed (VNE or the spoiler-extended limit) to escape the rapidly increasing updraft. Option A (minimum speed) would maximize the time in the updraft and the risk of being drawn in. Option B (continuing to thermal) is extremely dangerous near a thunderstorm. Option C (entering the cloud) violates VFR rules and exposes the aircraft to severe turbulence, hail, and lightning.
+
+### Q49: After landing, you discover that a pen may have fallen into the cockpit. What must be considered? ^t70q49
+- A) Other pilots due to fly the glider should be informed about the missing pen
+- B) A flight without a writing instrument on board is not permitted
+- C) Small, light loose items in the fuselage can be regarded as uncritical
+- D) The cockpit must be thoroughly checked for loose objects before the next flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any loose object in a cockpit — even something as small as a pen — can jam flight controls by lodging in the control linkages, pushrods, or cable runs. The cockpit must be thoroughly inspected before the next flight to locate and remove the object. Option A merely passes the problem along without solving it. Option B is irrelevant — the concern is not having a pen but having a loose object. Option C is dangerously wrong — even small objects can jam critical controls and have caused fatal accidents.
+
+### Q50: Flying near the aerodrome at about 250 m AGL, you encounter strong sink and decide on a safety landing. At what speed should you fly toward the airfield? ^t70q50
+- A) Maximum manoeuvring speed VA
+- B) Best glide speed
+- C) Minimum sink rate speed
+- D) Best glide speed plus allowances for downdrafts and wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When encountering strong sink near the aerodrome, the pilot needs maximum range to reach the field. Best glide speed gives maximum range in still air, but additional speed is needed to compensate for the downdraft (which steepens the glide path) and any headwind component. Option A (VA) may be too fast and waste altitude. Option B (best glide speed alone) does not account for the sink and wind. Option C (minimum sink speed) maximizes time aloft but minimizes distance covered, which is counterproductive when trying to reach the field.
+
+### Q51: You have just passed the LAPL(S) practical exam. May you carry passengers as soon as the licence is issued? ^t70q51
+- A) Yes, provided the recent experience requirements are fulfilled.
+- B) No, only after completing 10 flight hours or 30 flights as PIC following licence issue.
+- C) Yes, without any restriction.
+- D) No, carrying passengers requires an SPL licence.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations, a newly qualified LAPL(S) holder must accumulate a minimum of 10 hours of flight time or 30 flights as pilot in command after licence issuance before being permitted to carry passengers. This ensures the pilot gains sufficient solo experience before taking responsibility for others. Option A omits the initial experience requirement. Option C is wrong because there is a clear restriction. Option D is incorrect because the LAPL(S) does permit passenger carriage after meeting the experience requirement.
+
+### Q52: On final approach to an out-landing field, you suddenly encounter a strong thermal. How should you react? ^t70q52
+- A) Retract the airbrakes and slow down to minimum sink speed to exploit the thermal.
+- B) Fully extend the airbrakes and lengthen the approach path if necessary.
+- C) Continue the approach unchanged, since a thermal is always followed by a downdraft.
+- D) Retract the airbrakes and circle gently to exit the thermal.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On final approach, the commitment to land has been made. A thermal on final approach will cause the glider to float above the desired glide path, so the pilot must fully extend airbrakes to maintain the correct path and dissipate the extra energy. Option A (retracting brakes to exploit the thermal) abandons the committed approach at a critical phase, which is extremely dangerous at low altitude. Option C assumes thermals always produce compensating sink, which is not reliable. Option D (circling on final) is dangerous at low altitude.
+
+### Q53: You land on a grass runway shortly after a rain shower. What should you expect? ^t70q53
+- A) The glider will veer off the runway due to aquaplaning.
+- B) The glider will brake rapidly on the wet surface without needing the wheel brake.
+- C) The glider will stop noticeably more quickly after touchdown.
+- D) Reduced wheel grip and less effective braking, resulting in a longer ground roll.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass significantly reduces friction between the tire and the surface, resulting in less effective wheel braking and a longer ground roll. The pilot must plan for this extended stopping distance. Option A exaggerates — aquaplaning is primarily a concern on paved runways, not grass. Option B is incorrect because wet surfaces reduce, not improve, natural braking. Option C is wrong because reduced friction means a longer, not shorter, ground roll.
+
+### Q54: When flying late in the day in a valley toward shaded slopes, what difficulty should you expect? ^t70q54
+- A) Severe turbulence.
+- B) Strong downdrafts.
+- C) Difficulty detecting other aircraft in the shaded areas.
+- D) Glare from the low sun on the horizon.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Late in the day, shaded slopes create dark backgrounds against which other aircraft become extremely difficult to spot visually. The contrast between sunlit and shaded areas makes visual detection particularly challenging — an aircraft in shadow can be nearly invisible. Option A and B may occur in certain conditions but are not specifically linked to shaded slopes late in the day. Option D (glare) is a concern when looking toward the sun, not toward shaded slopes.
+
+### Q55: On a cross-country flight with no thermals available, you decide to make an out-landing. Several fields look suitable. By what altitude must your final choice be made? ^t70q55
+- A) When you can positively identify the wind direction.
+- B) Glider at 300 m AGL; motorglider at 400 m AGL.
+- C) Glider at 400 m AGL; motorglider at 300 m AGL.
+- D) Glider at 300 m AGL; motorglider at 200 m AGL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Field selection must be finalized at 300 m AGL for gliders and 400 m AGL for motorgliders to ensure sufficient altitude for a proper circuit, approach, and landing. Below these heights, the pilot should be committed to the chosen field. Option A does not specify a concrete altitude. Option C reverses the altitudes — motorgliders need more height because they may attempt an engine restart. Option D sets the motorglider threshold too low for a safe circuit with potential engine restart attempt.
+
+### Q56: You are thermalling at 1500 m AGL over flat terrain with no other glider nearby. In which direction should you circle? ^t70q56
+- A) Circle to the left.
+- B) There is no rule governing the direction.
+- C) Within 5 km of an aerodrome turn left; otherwise choose freely.
+- D) Use figure-eight patterns to best exploit the thermal.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When thermalling alone with no other aircraft in the thermal, there is no regulation requiring a specific turning direction. The pilot is free to choose whichever direction best centers the thermal or feels most comfortable. Option A imposes a left-turn requirement that does not exist. Option C invents a distance-based rule. Option D (figure-eights) is a technique for locating the thermal core, not a required circling method. The obligation to match another glider's turn direction only applies when sharing a thermal.
+
+### Q57: You are on an aerotow departure in calm conditions. The towrope breaks just below safety height. What do you do? ^t70q57
+- A) Extend airbrakes, push the stick forward, and land straight ahead.
+- B) Push the stick forward, release the rope (twice), and land in the opposite direction.
+- C) Establish a glide, release the rope (twice), and land straight ahead if possible.
+- D) Immediately release the rope once, then establish a glide and land straight ahead.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break below safety height, the priority sequence is: establish a safe glide attitude (to maintain flying speed), release the remaining rope by actuating the release twice (to ensure disconnection), and land straight ahead if terrain permits. Option A deploys airbrakes prematurely when every meter of altitude counts. Option B attempts a 180° turn which is extremely dangerous below safety height. Option D releases before establishing a glide — the glide attitude should be established first to ensure safe flying speed.
+
+### Q58: You are ready to launch in a glider with a strong crosswind from the right. What do you do? ^t70q58
+- A) Hold the wheel brake until the engine reaches full power.
+- B) During the ground roll, pull the stick fully back to lift off as quickly as possible.
+- C) Ask the ground helper to hold the right wing slightly lower during the take-off run.
+- D) Ask the ground helper to run alongside the glider until you have enough speed to control bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a strong crosswind from the right, the wind will tend to lift the right (windward) wing. By holding the right wing slightly lower at the start of the ground roll, the helper compensates for this lifting tendency, keeping the wings level until the aileron becomes effective. Option A refers to engine procedures irrelevant for gliders. Option B (pulling back to lift off quickly) risks a premature liftoff with insufficient airspeed. Option D is impractical and dangerous — the helper cannot keep pace with an accelerating glider.
+
+### Q59: During an aerotow departure, acceleration is clearly insufficient. What should you do when the take-off abort point is reached? ^t70q59
+- A) Push the stick slightly forward to reduce drag.
+- B) Release the towrope.
+- C) Pull the elevator quickly to get the glider airborne.
+- D) Extend the flaps.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If acceleration is insufficient by the abort point, the takeoff must be abandoned by releasing the towrope immediately. Continuing the takeoff with insufficient speed risks failing to clear obstacles or running off the end of the runway. Option A might marginally reduce drag but cannot solve a fundamental performance problem. Option C (forcing the aircraft airborne) at inadequate speed leads to an immediate stall or settling back onto the ground. Option D (flaps) cannot compensate for insufficient tow power.
+
+### Q60: What lateral clearance from a slope must be maintained when flying a glider? ^t70q60
+- A) A sufficient lateral safety distance.
+- B) At least 60 m horizontally.
+- C) At least 150 m horizontally.
+- D) It depends on the thermal conditions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying along a slope, a minimum lateral distance of 60 meters must be maintained horizontally from the terrain. This provides a safety buffer against unexpected turbulence, downdrafts, or control difficulty near the slope face. Option A is vague and non-specific. Option C (150 m) is more conservative than the standard requirement. Option D (depends on thermals) introduces a variable condition that does not define a clear minimum standard.
+
+### Q61: What requires special attention when flying in high mountains? ^t70q61
+- A) FLARM may produce false warnings due to reflections off rock faces.
+- B) GPS signal reception may be lost.
+- C) Radio contact may be interrupted.
+- D) Weather conditions can change far more rapidly than expected (e.g. sudden thunderstorm development).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In high mountain environments, weather can deteriorate with extreme speed — thunderstorms can develop in minutes due to orographic lifting and localized heating effects. This is the most significant hazard requiring special attention. Options A, B, and C describe technical inconveniences that may occasionally occur in mountains, but they are not the primary hazard. Rapid weather changes can trap a pilot in valleys with deteriorating visibility and violent turbulence, making option D the critical safety concern.
+
+### Q62: When installing the oxygen system in a glider for an Alpine flight, what is absolutely essential? ^t70q62
+- A) That the rubber seal is undamaged.
+- B) That all components in contact with oxygen are completely free of grease.
+- C) That the coupling nut is tightened to the correct torque.
+- D) That the cylinder connector is well greased.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Oxygen under pressure can react violently with hydrocarbon-based greases and oils, potentially causing a flash fire or explosion. All components in contact with oxygen must be completely grease-free. Option D is directly dangerous — greasing the connector introduces a combustion risk. Options A and C describe good practices but are not the absolute safety-critical requirement. The oxygen-grease incompatibility is a fundamental rule in aviation oxygen system handling.
+
+### Q63: After a collision, you must bail out at approximately 400 m. When should the parachute be opened? ^t70q63
+- A) After 2 to 3 seconds of freefall.
+- B) When you have stabilised in freefall.
+- C) Just before leaving the glider.
+- D) Immediately after leaving the glider.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At only 400 m above ground, there is no time for any delay — the parachute must be deployed immediately after clearing the aircraft. Freefall at terminal velocity covers roughly 50 m per second, so even 2-3 seconds of delay (option A) would consume 100-150 m of precious altitude. Option B (stabilizing in freefall) wastes critical seconds. Option C (before leaving) would entangle the parachute with the aircraft structure. At 400 m, every second counts for a successful deployment and deceleration.
+
+### Q64: On short final for an out-landing, you realise the field is too short. What do you do? ^t70q64
+- A) Reduce speed to the minimum to shorten the landing distance.
+- B) Continue straight ahead, deploy full airbrakes, and prepare for an emergency stop using all available means.
+- C) Maintain heading and land using full airbrakes to stop as early as possible.
+- D) Attempt to turn and find a longer alternative field.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On short final, the commitment to land has been made — the safest action is to continue straight ahead with full airbrakes and use every available means (wheel brake, ground friction) to stop in the shortest distance possible. Option A (reducing to minimum speed) risks stalling close to the ground. Option C is similar to B but less specific about using all stopping means. Option D (turning to find another field) at this low altitude and close range is extremely dangerous and likely to result in a stall-spin accident.
+
+### Q65: What does FLARM do? ^t70q65
+- A) It shows the precise position of other gliders.
+- B) It warns of other FLARM-equipped aircraft that may pose a collision risk.
+- C) It recommends avoidance manoeuvres when a collision risk exists.
+- D) It shows the exact positions of all aircraft equipped with FLARM or a transponder.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM is a traffic awareness system that calculates collision risk based on the predicted flight paths of nearby FLARM-equipped aircraft and issues warnings when a potential conflict is detected. Option A overstates its precision — it provides approximate positions, not precise ones. Option C is incorrect because FLARM warns but does not recommend specific avoidance maneuvers. Option D is wrong because FLARM only detects other FLARM devices, not transponder-equipped aircraft (that would require a separate ADS-B receiver).
+
+### Q66: During a cross-country flight, you must land at a high-altitude aerodrome with no wind. At what indicated airspeed do you fly the approach? ^t70q66
+- A) About 5 km/h less than at sea level.
+- B) Increase the sea-level speed by 1% for every 100 m of altitude.
+- C) About 5 km/h more than at sea level.
+- D) The same as at sea level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The indicated airspeed (IAS) for the approach should be the same as at sea level because the ASI already accounts for air density — it measures dynamic pressure, which determines aerodynamic forces regardless of altitude. The stall IAS does not change with altitude. However, the true airspeed and groundspeed will be higher at altitude due to lower air density. Options A and C incorrectly adjust IAS, and option B applies a TAS correction to IAS, which is unnecessary.
+
+### Q67: What do you notice when entering the centre of a downdraft? ^t70q67
+- A) One wing rises and the aircraft begins to turn.
+- B) The nose pitches up and you feel a brief increase in g-load.
+- C) The glider accelerates and you feel increased g-load.
+- D) The glider slows and you feel a brief decrease in g-load.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a downdraft, the descending air mass reduces the effective angle of attack on the wings, temporarily decreasing lift. The pilot feels a brief reduction in g-load (a sensation of lightness or being pushed up from the seat) as the aircraft begins to sink with the descending air. The glider's airspeed initially decreases momentarily. Option B describes what happens entering an updraft (nose pitches up, increased g-load). Options A and C do not accurately describe the symmetrical effect of entering a downdraft center.
+
+### Q68: During a cross-country flight over the Jura, you notice cirrus forming to the west. What should you expect? ^t70q68
+- A) Weaker thermals due to reduced solar radiation.
+- B) Increased upper-level instability from moisture, producing stronger thermals.
+- C) A transition from cumulus thermals to blue (dry) thermals.
+- D) Cirrus have no effect on conditions in the thermal layer.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds at high altitude filter incoming solar radiation, reducing the surface heating that drives thermal convection. Less heating means weaker thermals and potentially an earlier end to the soaring day. This is an important warning sign during cross-country flights. Option B is wrong — cirrus does not increase instability at thermal altitudes. Option C describes a shift that may occur but is not the primary effect. Option D underestimates the impact cirrus has on thermal generation through solar radiation reduction.
+
+### Q69: What speed maximises distance covered against a headwind? ^t70q69
+- A) Minimum sink speed.
+- B) Best glide ratio speed.
+- C) A speed higher than best glide ratio speed.
+- D) The speed corresponding to McCready zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To maximize distance in a headwind, the pilot must fly faster than best-glide speed. The headwind reduces groundspeed, so the glider spends more time in the air and descends more before covering the desired ground distance. By increasing speed above best-glide, the pilot accepts a steeper glide angle but gains enough extra groundspeed to more than compensate for the altitude loss. Option A (minimum sink) minimizes descent rate but covers minimal distance. Option B (best glide) is optimal only in still air. Option D (McCready zero) equals best-glide speed.
+
+### Q70: Which of these fields is best for an out-landing? ^t70q70
+- A) A 400 m freshly ploughed field.
+- B) A 300 m maize field with a steady headwind.
+- C) A 250 m country lane with a strong headwind.
+- D) A 200 m meadow that has just been mown.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A freshly mown meadow of 200 m provides a smooth, firm surface free of tall vegetation and hidden obstacles — ideal for a short ground roll in a glider, which can typically stop within 100-200 m. Option A (ploughed field) has soft soil and deep furrows that can nose the glider over. Option B (maize field) has tall crops that obscure hazards and create drag inconsistencies. Option C (country lane) is narrow, potentially lined with trees and power lines, and poses collision risks with vehicles.
+
+### Q71: May you use the on-board radio to communicate with your retrieve crew on the dedicated frequency without holding a radiotelephony extension? ^t70q71
+- A) Only exceptionally
+- B) Yes
+- C) As a general rule, once per flight, shortly before landing
+- D) No
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pilots may use the on-board radio on dedicated glider frequencies to communicate with their retrieve crew without needing a separate radiotelephony extension or rating. These frequencies are designated for glider operations and permit such operational communications. Option A unnecessarily restricts this established practice. Option C invents a frequency limitation that does not exist. Option D incorrectly prohibits a communication that is routinely permitted.
+
+### Q72: At an aerodrome at 1800 m AMSL, how does the ground speed compare to the indicated airspeed on approach? ^t70q72
+- A) It depends on the temperature.
+- B) Ground speed is lower.
+- C) They are the same.
+- D) Ground speed is higher.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 1800 m AMSL, air density is lower than at sea level, so the true airspeed (TAS) is higher than indicated airspeed (IAS) for the same dynamic pressure reading. In nil-wind conditions, groundspeed equals TAS, which exceeds IAS. This means the aircraft approaches the runway at a higher groundspeed than the ASI shows, requiring awareness of a longer ground roll and higher touchdown energy. Options B and C underestimate the density altitude effect. Option A is partially true but the dominant factor is altitude, not temperature.
+
+### Q73: Is wearing a parachute compulsory during glider flights? ^t70q73
+- A) Yes, for all flights above 300 m AGL
+- B) No
+- C) Only when performing aerobatics
+- D) Yes, always
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not compulsory for glider flights under current regulations, although it is strongly recommended and standard practice in the gliding community. The decision is left to the pilot. Option A invents an altitude-based requirement. Option C creates a restriction limited to aerobatics that does not exist in the regulations. Option D overstates the requirement. While practically all glider pilots wear parachutes, it remains a personal safety choice, not a legal obligation.
+
+### Q74: During a winch launch, just after reaching the climbing angle, the cable breaks near the winch. How should you react? ^t70q74
+- A) Extend the airbrakes immediately
+- B) First establish normal flight attitude, then release the cable
+- C) Report the incident by radio
+- D) Release the cable immediately, then establish a normal flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break during the climb phase, the immediate priority is to release the remaining cable (which may still be attached and could snag) and then lower the nose to establish a safe glide. The cable release comes first because a dangling cable is an immediate hazard. Option A (airbrakes first) wastes altitude when every meter counts. Option B reverses the priority — establishing the glide before releasing could allow the cable to become entangled. Option C (radio call) wastes precious seconds during a time-critical emergency.
+
+### Q75: What must be considered during an aerotow departure in strong crosswind? ^t70q75
+- A) The tow plane must lift off before the glider
+- B) After take-off, correct into the wind until the tow plane lifts off
+- C) The take-off distance will be shorter
+- D) Before departure, offset the glider to the upwind side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a strong crosswind aerotow departure, the glider should be positioned upwind of the tow aircraft's centerline to prevent being blown across the tug's path during the ground roll. This offset compensates for the crosswind drift during the critical acceleration phase. Option A states a normal sequence that does not address crosswind specifically. Option B provides a partial technique but does not address the pre-departure setup. Option C is incorrect because crosswinds typically increase takeoff distance slightly.
+
+### Q76: You enter a thermal in the lowlands at 1500 m AGL with no other glider nearby. In which direction do you circle? ^t70q76
+- A) Circle to the right
+- B) There is no regulation on this
+- C) Circle to the left
+- D) First perform a figure-eight to locate the best lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a thermal alone, the recommended technique is to first perform a figure-eight pattern (or S-turns) to identify the strongest part of the thermal before committing to a circling direction. This allows the pilot to center the thermal efficiently. Option A and C prescribe a fixed direction without first locating the core. Option B is technically correct regarding regulations but does not describe the best practice for thermal exploitation. The figure-eight technique optimizes climb rate by finding the thermal center before circling.
+
+### Q77: What lateral distance from a slope must you maintain in a glider? ^t70q77
+- A) It depends on the lift conditions
+- B) 150 m horizontally
+- C) 60 m horizontally
+- D) A sufficient safety distance must be maintained
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying near a slope, the pilot must maintain a sufficient safety distance that accounts for current conditions including wind, turbulence, and terrain features. This is a judgment-based requirement rather than a fixed numeric value. Option A (depends on lift) only considers one factor. Options B (150 m) and C (60 m) specify fixed distances that may be appropriate in some contexts but do not reflect the general guidance, which emphasizes adequate safety margin appropriate to the circumstances.
+
+### Q78: You enter a thermal at 500 m AGL below a cumulus and see another glider circling 50 m above you. In which direction should you turn? ^t70q78
+- A) You are free to choose, since the vertical separation is sufficient
+- B) Circle in the same direction as the glider above you
+- C) Circle in the opposite direction so you can observe the other glider from below
+- D) You cannot use this thermal because the height difference is less than 150 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal occupied by another glider, you must circle in the same direction to maintain a predictable traffic pattern and avoid head-on encounters within the thermal. This is a fundamental rule of shared thermal etiquette. Option A incorrectly dismisses the need for directional coordination. Option C (opposite direction) creates dangerous head-on convergence paths within the confined area of the thermal. Option D invents a non-existent 150 m vertical separation requirement for thermal sharing.
+
+### Q79: During an off-field landing, the glider sustains 70% damage; the pilot is unhurt. What must be done? ^t70q79
+- A) Submit a written report with a sketch to FOCA within 3 days
+- B) Notify the local police within 24 hours
+- C) Immediately notify the investigation bureau via REGA
+- D) Report the damage to the accident investigation bureau within the following week
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a glider sustains major damage (70%) without injuries, the pilot must notify the local police within 24 hours. This is classified as a serious incident with substantial damage. Option A (FOCA report in 3 days) does not meet the urgency required. Option C (immediate notification via REGA) is the procedure for accidents involving injuries or fatalities. Option D (report within a week) is too slow for an incident involving 70% airframe damage, which requires prompt reporting.
+
+### Q80: What requires special attention when taking off on a hard (paved) runway? ^t70q80
+- A) The wingtip helper must run alongside for longer
+- B) Pull back on the stick longer than usual
+- C) Apply moderate wheel brake at the start of the roll
+- D) Expect a longer ground roll than normal
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a hard paved runway, a glider's main wheel has less rolling resistance compared to grass, which means the groundspeed at liftoff may feel similar but the ground roll can be longer because the wheel offers less drag to help the aircraft become airborne. Additionally, on pavement the aircraft may weathervane more easily. Option A is not specific to hard runways. Option B (pulling back longer) could cause the tail to strike the runway. Option C (wheel brake at start) would impede acceleration during the most critical phase.
+
+### Q81: How should a water landing (ditching) be carried out? ^t70q81
+- A) Just before contact, pitch the glider up sharply to touch tail-first
+- B) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation, and land at slightly above normal speed
+- C) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, and land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- D) Perform a sideslip to reduce impact force on the wing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing, the pilot should tighten all harnesses to prevent injury on impact, close ventilation openings to slow water ingress, and approach at slightly above normal speed to maintain control and reduce the descent rate. The gear should be retracted (not extended as in option C) to prevent the aircraft from flipping on water entry. Option A (tail-first) risks a violent pitch-forward on impact. Option D (sideslip) creates an asymmetric water entry that could cartwheel the aircraft.
+
+### Q82: During an off-field landing, how can the wind direction best be determined? ^t70q82
+- A) By observing movement of leaves in the trees
+- B) By watching wave patterns in wheat fields
+- C) By observing the glider's drift during altitude-losing spirals
+- D) By observing the behaviour of grazing livestock
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most reliable method for determining wind direction from the air is to observe the glider's drift during altitude-loss spirals — the direction the aircraft drifts indicates the downwind direction, and the amount of drift indicates wind strength. This works at any altitude and any location. Option A (tree leaves) requires being low enough to see individual leaves. Option B (wheat field patterns) can be misleading and requires specific crop stages. Option D (livestock behavior) is unreliable as a wind indicator.
+
+### Q83: You are flying fast along a ridge and spot a slower glider ahead at about the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q83
+- A) Make a 180-degree turn and return along the slope
+- B) Overtake on the side away from the slope
+- C) Establish radio contact and ask about the other pilot's intentions
+- D) Dive below and clear upward at a safe distance, then continue
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When overtaking a slower glider on a ridge, always pass on the valley side (away from the slope) to maintain safe terrain clearance and avoid trapping the other pilot against the hillside. This gives both aircraft escape room toward the valley. Option A (turning back) is unnecessary and wastes energy. Option C (radio contact) takes too long to arrange at closing speed. Option D (diving below) risks flying into the turbulent rotor zone closer to the terrain.
+
+### Q84: At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. What should you do? ^t70q84
+- A) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- B) Extend the airbrakes
+- C) Release the rope immediately
+- D) Warn the tow pilot by radio
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the slack tow rope, the rope can become entangled with the landing gear, skid, or other structures beneath the aircraft. The immediate action is to release the rope before any entanglement can occur. Option A (braking) does not prevent entanglement and may worsen it. Option B (airbrakes) is irrelevant to the immediate hazard. Option D (radio warning) wastes time during a situation requiring instant action — by the time the call is made, the rope may already be entangled.
+
+### Q85: Are glider flights permitted in Class C airspace? ^t70q85
+- A) Yes, provided the glider's transponder continuously transmits code 7000
+- B) Yes, if the pilot holds the radiotelephony extension, has received ATC authorisation, and maintains a continuous radio watch; exceptions are published on the soaring chart
+- C) Yes, without restrictions, in VMC
+- D) Yes, provided no NOTAM expressly prohibits them
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider flights are permitted in Class C airspace under specific conditions: the pilot must hold the radiotelephony extension, receive ATC authorization before entering, and maintain continuous radio contact. Certain exceptions for gliders may be published on the soaring chart. Option A assumes gliders carry transponders, which most do not. Option C ignores the mandatory ATC clearance and radio requirements for Class C. Option D incorrectly implies that Class C is open by default unless NOTAMs restrict it.
+
+### Q86: You are flying along a slope on your right and spot an oncoming glider at the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q86
+- A) Extend airbrakes and dive for vertical separation
+- B) Move away on the side opposite to the slope
+- C) Climb away since you have enough speed
+- D) Maintain your heading
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When meeting an oncoming glider while ridge soaring with the slope on your right, the standard rule is to give way by turning away from the slope (toward the valley). The pilot with the slope on the right has right-of-way in ridge soaring (similar to the rule of the road on mountain roads). However, both pilots should take evasive action by moving away from the ridge. Option A (diving) risks terrain collision. Option C (climbing) may not be possible. Option D (maintaining heading) leads directly to a head-on collision.
+
+### Q87: You must land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you fly the final approach? ^t70q87
+- A) At best glide speed and somewhat higher than for a headwind landing
+- B) Normally, using a sideslip
+- C) Slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than for a headwind landing
+- D) Faster than for a headwind landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind on a limited field, the pilot must minimize groundspeed at touchdown to reduce ground roll. This means flying slightly above minimum speed (to maintain a safety margin while being as slow as possible in the air) and approaching at a lower height to steepen the approach angle relative to the ground. Option A (best glide speed) is faster than needed and wastes field length. Option B (sideslip) addresses crosswind, not tailwind. Option D (faster approach) would increase groundspeed and ground roll on an already short field.
+
+### Q88: What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on an aerotow departure? ^t70q88
+- A) The take-off distance is the same as on a dry runway
+- B) The take-off distance will be longer
+- C) None of these answers is correct
+- D) The take-off distance will be shorter because the surface is slippery
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A waterlogged grass runway increases rolling resistance because the wheels sink into the soft, saturated surface, creating drag that slows acceleration. This results in a significantly longer takeoff distance for both the tow aircraft and the glider. Option A ignores the substantial difference between dry and waterlogged surfaces. Option D's logic is flawed — while a slippery surface might reduce friction on a hard runway, waterlogged grass creates suction and drag that impede acceleration. Option C is incorrect because option B is the correct answer.
+
+### Q89: On approach to an off-field landing, you suddenly notice a high-voltage power line across your landing axis. How do you react? ^t70q89
+- A) In all cases, fly over the power line
+- B) Pass under the line if flying over is not possible and no safe escape route exists
+- C) Execute a tight turn near the ground and land parallel to the line
+- D) Pass under the line as close as possible to a pylon
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The preferred action is always to fly over the power line if possible. However, if altitude is insufficient to clear the line and no alternative landing path exists, passing under the line is acceptable as a last resort — but only between the pylons where the cable sag provides maximum clearance, not near a pylon (option D) where cables are at their lowest. Option A (always fly over) is not possible when altitude is insufficient. Option C (tight turn near the ground) risks a stall-spin accident. Option D (near a pylon) is where clearance is minimal.
+
+### Q90: What is the standard spin recovery procedure when the manufacturer has not specified one? ^t70q90
+- A) Push the stick fully forward, apply full opposite rudder, then pull out
+- B) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin, then pull out
+- C) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite rudder, keep ailerons neutral, ease the stick slightly forward, then pull out
+- D) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite ailerons, push the stick fully forward, rudder neutral, then pull out
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard spin recovery procedure is: (1) identify the spin direction, (2) apply full opposite rudder to stop the rotation, (3) keep ailerons neutral (as aileron input during a spin can be counterproductive), (4) ease the stick slightly forward to reduce the angle of attack below the stall angle, and (5) once rotation stops, centralize the rudder and pull out of the resulting dive. Option A omits identifying the spin direction. Option B uses ailerons, which can deepen the spin. Option D uses ailerons instead of rudder as the primary anti-spin control, which is incorrect.
+
+### Q91: Unless ATC instructs otherwise, how should the approach to an aerodrome be carried out in a glider? ^t70q91
+- A) A straight-in approach must be made to minimise disturbance to other traffic
+- B) At least one full circle above the signal area, with all turns to the left, must precede the landing
+- C) The published approach procedures in the VFR guide or any other appropriate method must be followed
+- D) At least a half-circuit, with all turns to the left, must precede the landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach to an aerodrome should follow published VFR guide procedures or any other appropriate method. A mandatory full circuit over the signal area is no longer systematically required.
+
+### Q92: You are flying a fast glider along a slope and spot a slower glider ahead at approximately the same altitude. How do you respond? ^t70q92
+- A) Establish radio contact and inquire about its intentions
+- B) Overtake on the valley side (away from the slope)
+- C) Perform a 180-degree turn and return along the slope
+- D) Dive below, then climb past at a safe distance
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mountain flying, to overtake a slower glider on a slope, pass on the side away from the slope (valley side). This rule is consistent with the right-of-way for climbing gliders.
+
+### Q93: In flight, the rudder jams in the neutral position. How do you react? ^t70q93
+- A) Refer to the flight manual
+- B) Increase speed and continue the flight
+- C) Bail out by parachute immediately
+- D) Control the glider with elevator and ailerons; make shallow turns and land immediately
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the rudder jams in flight, control the glider with elevator and ailerons. Make shallow turns and land immediately.
+
+### Q94: At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. What do you do? ^t70q94
+- A) Extend the airbrakes
+- B) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- C) Immediately release the rope
+- D) Alert the tow pilot by radio
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the tow rope, immediately releasing the rope is the only correct action.
+
+### Q95: The tow rope breaks on the tug's side before reaching safety height. How must the glider pilot react? ^t70q95
+- A) Immediately actuate the release handle twice and land straight ahead in the runway extension
+- B) Pull back on the stick, release the rope, and land with a tailwind
+- C) Make a flat turn and land diagonally
+- D) Actuate the release handle twice and return to land on the aerodrome without exception
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the rope breaks on the tow plane side below safety height: actuate the release handle twice (verification) and land straight ahead in the runway extension. Avoid turning.
+
+### Q96: How do you fly the final approach in a strong crosswind? ^t70q96
+- A) Maintain runway alignment using rudder alone
+- B) Do not fully extend the airbrakes
+- C) Always approach with a sideslip on the side opposite to the wind
+- D) Take a heading into the wind and increase speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong crosswind on final, take a crab angle into the wind and increase speed slightly to maintain control. The sideslip can be used but crab is the primary method.
+
+### Q97: How should a water landing be carried out? ^t70q97
+- A) Just before landing, pitch up to touch down tail first
+- B) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- C) Perform a sideslip to lessen the impact with the wing
+- D) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation, and land at slightly above normal speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing: tighten harnesses, close ventilation to prevent water entry, and land at slightly above normal speed for better control and to avoid nose-over.
+
+### Q98: You enter a thermal with no other glider nearby. In which direction do you circle? ^t70q98
+- A) There is no regulation on this
+- B) Circle to the left
+- C) Circle to the right
+- D) Search for the best lift by first performing a figure-eight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without other gliders in the thermal, there is no prescribed spiraling direction. The pilot chooses freely.
+
+### Q99: In a glider, how is altitude expressed? ^t70q99
+- A) Only in altitude (metres or feet)
+- B) In flight levels
+- C) According to the regulations of the countries overflown
+- D) In height above ground
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider altitude is expressed according to the country overflown (altitude in feet or meters per local rules, or flight levels per airspace). Regulations vary by country.
+
+### Q100: Without manufacturer-specific guidance, what is the standard spin recovery procedure? ^t70q100
+- A) Identify the spin direction, apply ailerons opposite to it, push the stick fully forward, hold rudder neutral, then pull out
+- B) Push the stick fully forward, apply full opposite rudder, then pull out
+- C) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin direction, then pull out
+- D) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite rudder, hold ailerons neutral, push the stick slightly forward, then pull out
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard spin recovery: 1) Identify direction, 2) Opposite rudder, 3) Ailerons neutral, 4) Slight forward stick, 5) Pull out after rotation stops.
+
+### Q101: May changes be made at an accident site where a person has been injured, beyond essential rescue measures? ^t70q101
+- A) Yes, if the aircraft operator has formally issued such an instruction
+- B) No, unless the investigation authority has formally granted authorisation
+- C) Yes, the wreckage must be cleared as soon as possible to prevent interference by third parties
+- D) Yes, if only material damage has occurred
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modifying an accident site is prohibited without formal authorization from the investigation authority, except for essential rescue measures.
+
+### Q102: The pilot loses sight of the tow plane during aerotow. How must he react? ^t70q102
+- A) Extend the airbrakes and wait
+- B) Prepare for a parachute bailout
+- C) Contact the tow pilot by radio and ask for position
+- D) Immediately release the rope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the pilot loses sight of the tow plane, immediately release the rope. Continuing tow flight without seeing the tow plane is extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q103: Is wearing a parachute compulsory in gliders? ^t70q103
+- A) For all flights above 300 m AGL
+- B) Only for aerobatic flights
+- C) Yes, always
+- D) No
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not mandatory for gliders in Switzerland for normal flights. It is recommended but not regulatory.
+
+### Q104: You need to land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you fly the final approach? ^t70q104
+- A) Faster than with a headwind
+- B) Slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than with a headwind
+- C) At best glide speed, slightly higher than with a headwind
+- D) Normally, with a sideslip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With tailwind on a 400 m field: approach slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than with headwind. Tailwind increases ground speed.
+
+### Q105: You see a motor glider with its engine running at the same altitude approaching from your right. How do you react? ^t70q105
+- A) Extend the airbrakes and give way downward
+- B) Maintain your heading, keeping the motor glider in sight
+- C) Give way to the right
+- D) Give way to the left
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A powered motorglider coming from the right has right of way (converging routes rule). You must give way to the right to let it pass.
+
+### Q106: You are flying in a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R). What cloud separation distances must you observe? (vertical/horizontal) ^t70q106
+- A) Clear of clouds with flight visibility
+- B) 100 m vertically, 300 m horizontally
+- C) 300 m vertically, 1500 m horizontally
+- D) 50 m vertically, 100 m horizontally
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R), reduced distances apply: 50 m vertically and 100 m horizontally from clouds (instead of standard distances).
+
+### Q107: What is the correct sequence for abandoning a glider and bailing out by parachute? ^t70q107
+- A) Unfasten harness, release canopy, jump, open parachute
+- B) Release canopy, unfasten harness, jump, open parachute
+- C) Release canopy, unfasten harness, open parachute, jump
+- D) Unfasten harness, pull parachute handle, release canopy, jump
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In case of parachute bailout: 1) Release canopy 2) Unfasten harness 3) Jump 4) Open parachute. Order is crucial for safety.
+
+### Q108: How should a landing on a slope be performed? ^t70q108
+- A) Always facing uphill regardless of wind
+- B) With left wind, across the slope
+- C) Always across the slope
+- D) Downhill into the wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing on a slope: always downhill into the wind. Uphill + tailwind would dangerously extend the landing distance.
+
+### Q109: Which type of terrain is particularly well suited for an off-field landing? ^t70q109
+- A) A large flat field, oriented into the wind, free of obstacles on the approach path
+- B) A field of tall crops that would help brake the glider
+- C) A vast, freshly ploughed field sloping upward
+- D) A field near a road and a telephone
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best field for an off-field landing is a large flat field, oriented into the wind, free of obstacles on the approach axis.
+
+### Q110: An off-field landing ends in a ground loop caused by an obstacle. The fuselage breaks near the rudder. What must be done? ^t70q110
+- A) If it is a minor accident, no report is necessary
+- B) Immediately notify the aviation accident investigation bureau via REGA
+- C) Notify the nearest police station
+- D) Notify FOCA in writing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A fuselage broken near the rudder after a ground loop = serious accident. Immediately notify the accident investigation bureau (via REGA if necessary).
+
+### Q111: A glider pilot must make an off-field landing in mountainous terrain. The only available landing site has a steep incline. How should the landing be executed? ^t70q111
+- A) Approach downhill at increased speed, pushing the elevator to follow the terrain during landing
+- B) Approach at minimum speed with a careful flare upon reaching the landing site
+- C) Approach at increased speed with a quick flare to follow the inclined ground
+- D) Approach parallel to the ridge into the prevailing wind
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an off-field landing on inclined terrain is unavoidable, the correct technique is to approach with increased speed and perform a quick, firm flare to match the glider's pitch attitude to the slope angle at touchdown — this minimises the relative vertical velocity on contact. Landing down a ridge (option A) dramatically increases ground speed and roll-out distance, risking a collision with terrain ahead. Approaching parallel to the ridge (option D) ignores the slope problem. Minimum speed (option B) leaves no energy margin for the flare on sloped ground.
+
+### Q112: On final approach, you realise the landing gear was not extended. How should the landing be performed? ^t70q112
+- A) Retract flaps, extend the gear, and land normally
+- B) Extend the gear immediately and land as usual
+- C) Land gear-up at higher than usual speed
+- D) Land gear-up, touching down carefully at minimum speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear is not extended on final approach and there is insufficient height to safely extend it, the safest action is to complete a gear-up landing at minimum speed, accepting a belly-landing with controlled, gentle touchdown. Extending gear at the last moment (option B) risks an asymmetric or partially extended gear, which is more dangerous. Retracting flaps to buy time (option A) alters the approach profile unpredictably close to the ground. Landing without gear at higher speed (option C) worsens the damage and increases risk of injury.
+
+### Q113: At what height during a winch launch may the maximum pitch attitude be adopted? ^t70q113
+- A) From 150 m or higher, when a straight-ahead landing after cable break is no longer possible
+- B) From about 50 m, while maintaining a safe launch speed
+- C) From 15 m, once a speed of at least 90 km/h is reached
+- D) Immediately after lift-off, provided there is a sufficiently strong headwind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a winch launch, the maximum pitch (steep climb) attitude should not be adopted until approximately 50 m AGL, while maintaining a safe minimum launch speed. Below 50 m, a cable break would not allow a straight-ahead landing if the nose is too high; above 50 m there is sufficient height to recover. 15 m is too low and dangerous. 150 m is overly conservative and wastes the launch energy. Pitching up immediately after liftoff (option D) is extremely hazardous regardless of headwind.
+
+### Q114: What factors must be considered for approach and landing speed? ^t70q114
+- A) Altitude and weight
+- B) Wind speed and altitude
+- C) Aircraft weight and wind speed
+- D) Wind speed and weight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach and landing speed must account for both aircraft weight and wind conditions (including gusts). A heavier aircraft requires a higher approach speed to maintain adequate safety margin above stall. Higher winds — especially gusts — require an additional speed increment to avoid sudden loss of airspeed and lift. Altitude alone does not directly determine approach speed. Options A, B, and D are incomplete; option C correctly names both weight and wind speed.
+
+### Q115: How can you determine wind direction when making an out-landing? ^t70q115
+- A) Recall the wind shown by the windsock at the departure airfield
+- B) Ask other pilots reachable by radio
+- C) Observe smoke, flags, and rippling fields
+- D) Use the wind forecast from the flight weather report
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During an outlanding, visual cues in the environment are the most reliable and immediately available indicators of wind direction and strength: smoke drifting from chimneys, flags, and rippling crops clearly show the current local wind. A weather forecast (option D) may not reflect local conditions precisely at that moment. Radio contact with other pilots (option B) is unreliable and slow. The windsock at the departure airfield (option A) is irrelevant to conditions at the outlanding site.
+
+### Q116: What landing technique is recommended for a downhill grass area? ^t70q116
+- A) Full airbrakes, gear retracted, and stalled
+- B) Generally land uphill
+- C) Diagonal downhill
+- D) Wheel brake applied, no airbrakes
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a downhill grass area, landing uphill means the aircraft is climbing toward the ground, which naturally decelerates the glider and shortens the roll-out — this is the recommended technique. Landing diagonally downhill (option C) risks ground-looping. Using wheel brakes without airbrakes (option D) may be ineffective or cause a nose-over on rough terrain. Landing with gear retracted and stalled (option A) is dangerous and unnecessary.
+
+### Q117: What must be verified before any change of direction during glide? ^t70q117
+- A) That the turn will be flown in coordination
+- B) That loose objects are secured
+- C) That there are thermal clouds in the area
+- D) That the airspace in the intended direction is clear
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before initiating any turn during flight, the pilot must first check that the airspace in the intended direction is clear of other aircraft, obstacles, and restricted areas. A coordinated turn (option A) is always desirable but is secondary to the lookout. Thermal clouds (option C) and loose objects (option B) are not safety priorities before a heading change. Collision avoidance through a proper lookout is the primary concern.
+
+### Q118: Before a winch launch you detect a light tailwind. What must be considered? ^t70q118
+- A) A weaker rated weak link can be used, since the load will be smaller
+- B) The ground roll to lift-off will be longer; watch the airspeed
+- C) Full elevator back-pressure immediately after lift-off to gain extra height
+- D) The ground roll to lift-off will be shorter since the tailwind pushes from behind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A tailwind during winch launch means the aircraft has a lower airspeed relative to the ground at any given ground speed, so more ground roll is needed before reaching flying speed — liftoff takes longer and the pilot must monitor the airspeed carefully. Tailwind does not reduce the required cable tension rating (option A). Tailwind from behind reduces effective airspeed, so the roll is longer, not shorter (option D is incorrect). Pulling back immediately after liftoff in a tailwind is hazardous (option C).
+
+### Q119: During the approach for landing in a strong crosswind, how should the base-to-final turn be flown? ^t70q119
+- A) Maximum 60-degree bank, use rudder to align early with the final track
+- B) Maximum 30-degree bank, use rudder to align early with the final track
+- C) Maximum 60-degree bank, watch speed and yaw string carefully, correct track after any overshoot
+- D) Maximum 30-degree bank, watch speed and yaw string carefully, correct track after any overshoot
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the base-to-final turn, a maximum bank angle of 30° is recommended to keep turn coordination manageable and to avoid the risk of a low-speed stall-spin. The yaw string (slip indicator) and airspeed must be closely monitored because crosswind complicates the turn geometry. If the aircraft overshoots the final track, a gentle track correction is made after the turn — never a steep rudder input to force alignment, as this risks a skidded stall. Options A and C allow up to 60° bank, which is excessive and dangerous near the ground.
+
+### Q120: While thermalling, another sailplane follows closely behind. What should you do to avoid a collision? ^t70q120
+- A) Increase bank to become more visible to the other sailplane
+- B) Reduce bank to widen the turn radius
+- C) Reduce speed to let the other sailplane pass
+- D) Increase speed to move to a position opposite in the circle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two sailplanes are circling in the same thermal in close proximity, the most effective way to create separation is to increase speed, which increases the turn radius and moves the faster aircraft to a position opposite in the circle (180° apart), creating the maximum safe separation. Reducing speed (option C) tightens the radius and closes the gap. Reducing bank (option B) also increases radius but slowly. Increasing bank (option A) makes the glider smaller in profile but does not solve the proximity problem.
+
+### Q121: What altitudes should be planned for the landing pattern phases in a glider? ^t70q121
+- A) 300 m abeam the threshold and 150 m on final approach
+- B) 500 m abeam the threshold and 50 m after the final turn
+- C) 150–200 m abeam the threshold and 100 m after the final turn
+- D) 100 m abeam the threshold and 50 m after the final turn
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard traffic pattern heights for a glider are approximately 150–200 m AGL abeam the threshold (downwind leg) and 100 m AGL after the final turn. These heights give the pilot adequate time and space to plan the approach and use airbrakes effectively for a precise landing. The lower heights in options D and B leave insufficient margin for corrections; the higher values in option A are excessive for unpowered glider operations.
+
+### Q122: How should a glider be secured when strong winds are observed? ^t70q122
+- A) Nose into the wind, extend airbrakes, lock the controls
+- B) Nose into the wind, weigh down and secure the tail
+- C) Downwind wing on the ground, weigh the wing down, lock the controls
+- D) Windward wing on the ground, weigh the wing down, lock the controls
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong winds, the windward (upwind) wing should be placed on the ground to prevent the wind from getting under it and flipping the aircraft. The wing is then weighted down with a sandbag or similar weight, and the control surfaces (rudder) are secured to prevent them from being damaged by aerodynamic buffeting. Pointing the nose into wind (options A and B) presents a large fuselage surface to cross-gusts and does not protect the wings. Placing the downwind wing on the ground (option C) allows the upwind wing to be lifted by the wind.
+
+### Q123: What must be considered when crossing mountain ridges? ^t70q123
+- A) Do not overfly national parks
+- B) Reduce to minimum speed because of turbulence
+- C) Use circling birds to locate thermal cells
+- D) Expect turbulence and increase speed slightly
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain ridges produce significant turbulence on the lee side and in the rotor zone, but turbulence can also occur directly at the ridge crest. Flying slightly faster than normal provides better control authority and reduces the risk of a stall in turbulence. Reducing to minimum speed (option B) is dangerous as turbulence could cause the aircraft to stall. Overflight of national parks (option A) is a regulatory matter, not a primary safety consideration when crossing ridges. Circling birds indicate thermals (option C) but this does not address the turbulence hazard of ridge crossing.
+
+### Q124: What does "buffeting" felt through the elevator stick indicate? ^t70q124
+- A) Centre of gravity too far forward
+- B) Aircraft surface very dirty
+- C) Flying too slowly — wing airflow separating
+- D) Flying too fast — turbulence impacting the ailerons
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting felt through the elevator stick is a classic aerodynamic warning of an approaching stall: separated airflow from the wings passes over the tail surface, causing the elevator to vibrate. This occurs at low airspeed when the angle of attack exceeds the critical angle. A forward CG (option A) makes the aircraft more stable and resistant to stall. A dirty airframe (option B) may affect performance but does not directly cause elevator buffeting. Turbulence at high speed (option D) would be felt as general airframe shaking, not specifically at the elevator.
+
+### Q125: When must a pre-flight check be performed? ^t70q125
+- A) Once a month; for TMGs, once a day
+- B) Before every flight operation and before every single flight
+- C) Before the first flight of the day and after every change of pilot
+- D) After every assembly of the aircraft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pre-flight check (walk-around and cockpit check) must be performed before the first flight of the day and after every change of pilot, because each pilot is responsible for verifying the aircraft's airworthiness before they fly it. A check after every assembly (option D) applies to aircraft that are dismantled between flights (trailer gliders) — this is a separate requirement. Monthly checks (option A) describe maintenance intervals, not pre-flight procedures. Option B ('before every flight') is too broad and would be burdensome; it is the daily first-flight and pilot-change rule that is standard practice.
+
+### Q126: How is the term "flight time" defined? ^t70q126
+- A) The total time from the first take-off to the final landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- B) The interval from engine start for departure until the pilot leaves the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- C) The interval from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown on landing.
+- D) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 defines flight time for aircraft as the total time from the moment an aircraft first moves under its own power for the purpose of taking off until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. For sailplanes (non-motorised), this is interpreted as from first movement (e.g., the start of the winch run or aerotow) until the aircraft comes to rest after landing. Option B describes block time for powered aircraft. Option C is too narrow (only the take-off and landing roll). Option A describes a duty period concept, not a single flight.
+
+### Q127: During approach, the tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the landing be performed? ^t70q127
+- A) Approach at minimum speed, correcting attitude changes with gentle rudder inputs
+- B) Approach at increased speed, avoiding the use of spoilers
+- C) Approach at normal speed, controlling speed with spoilers
+- D) Approach at increased speed, correcting attitude changes with firm rudder inputs
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With strong gusts (here: wind 15 kt, gusts 25 kt — a 10 kt spread), the pilot must add a gust allowance to the normal approach speed to ensure that a sudden drop in airspeed caused by a gust does not reduce speed below the stall speed. Firm rudder inputs are needed to correct attitude changes caused by the gusty conditions. Minimum speed (option A) provides no safety margin in gusts. Normal speed without gust correction (option C) is insufficient. Avoiding spoilers/airbrakes (option B) removes the ability to control the glide path precisely.
+
+### Q128: What does buffeting felt through the elevator stick indicate? ^t70q128
+- A) Aircraft surface very dirty
+- B) Flying too fast — turbulence hitting the ailerons
+- C) Centre of gravity too far forward
+- D) Flying too slowly — wing airflow is separating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting felt through the elevator stick is the tactile warning that the wing has approached its critical angle of attack and airflow is beginning to separate — the pre-stall buffet. This is caused by turbulent separated airflow from the wing reaching the tail and exciting the elevator. Option C (CG too far forward) makes the aircraft pitch-stable and stall-resistant. Option A (dirty airframe) degrades performance but does not specifically cause elevator buffeting. Option B (high speed turbulence) produces general airframe vibration unrelated to stall.
+
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+# Principles of Flight
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Regarding the forces at play, how is steady-state gliding flight best characterised? ^t80q1
+- A) Lift alone compensates for drag
+- B) The resultant aerodynamic force acts along the direction of the airflow
+- C) The resultant aerodynamic force counterbalances the weight
+- D) The resultant aerodynamic force is aligned with the lift vector
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In steady (stationary) gliding flight, there is no thrust, so only two forces act: gravity (weight) and the total aerodynamic force (the vector sum of lift and drag). For the glider to be in equilibrium, these two must be equal and opposite — meaning the resultant air force exactly compensates gravity. Lift and drag are merely components of this single aerodynamic resultant; neither lift alone nor drag alone balances weight.
+
+### Q2: What happens to the minimum flying speed when flaps are extended, thereby increasing wing camber? ^t80q2
+- A) The minimum speed rises
+- B) The centre of gravity shifts forward
+- C) The minimum speed drops
+- D) The maximum permissible speed rises
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases wing camber, which raises the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max). From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)), a higher CL_max directly lowers the minimum flying speed Vs. This allows the aircraft to fly slower without stalling, which is why flaps are used during approach and landing. The maximum permissible speed typically decreases with flaps extended (not increases), because flap structures are not designed for high dynamic pressure.
+
+### Q3: After one wing stalls and the nose drops, what is the correct technique to prevent a spin? ^t80q3
+- A) Pull the elevator to restore the aircraft to a normal attitude
+- B) Deflect all control surfaces opposite to the lower wing
+- C) Push the elevator forward to gain speed and re-attach airflow on the wings
+- D) Apply rudder opposite to the lower wing and release elevator back-pressure to regain speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An incipient spin begins when one wing stalls before the other — the stalled wing drops, creating a yawing and rolling moment. The correct response is to apply rudder opposite the direction of yaw/lower wing to stop the rotation, and simultaneously release elevator back-pressure (or push forward) to reduce the angle of attack below the critical value, allowing airflow to re-attach and lift to be restored. Pulling the elevator (A) would increase AoA and deepen the stall; pushing alone (C) without rudder does not stop the yaw.
+
+### Q4: Which component is responsible for pitch stabilisation during cruise? ^t80q4
+- A) Ailerons
+- B) Wing flaps
+- C) Vertical rudder
+- D) Horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The lateral axis is the pitch axis (nose up/down). The horizontal stabilizer provides longitudinal (pitch) stability: it generates a restoring moment whenever the nose pitches up or down from trim, because its lift force changes with AoA at the tail. Ailerons control roll (longitudinal axis), the vertical rudder controls yaw (vertical axis), and flaps are high-lift devices, not stability surfaces.
+
+### Q5: What can happen when the never-exceed speed (VNE) is surpassed in flight? ^t80q5
+- A) Flutter and structural damage to the wings
+- B) Lower drag accompanied by higher control forces
+- C) Excessive total pressure rendering the airspeed indicator unusable
+- D) An improved lift-to-drag ratio and a flatter glide angle
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding VNE risks aeroelastic flutter — a self-reinforcing oscillation of the control surfaces or wings that can destroy the structure within seconds. Flutter onset speed is close to VNE. Structural failure of spars, attachments, or control surfaces may follow. The other options describe effects that do not occur at excessive speed: glide angle does not improve, drag does not decrease, and the ASI is designed to function at all normal and abnormal speeds.
+
+### Q6: What effect does a rearward centre of gravity position have on a glider's handling? ^t80q6
+- A) The aircraft becomes very stable in pitch
+- B) The aircraft becomes less stable in pitch and is harder to control
+- C) Roll control effectiveness increases
+- D) The stall speed increases significantly
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rearward CG reduces the restoring moment arm between the CG and the horizontal stabiliser, diminishing longitudinal (pitch) stability. In extreme cases the aircraft can become unstable in pitch — the pilot may be unable to prevent a nose-up divergence, especially during winch launch or in turbulence. The forward CG limit ensures adequate pitch stability; the aft limit ensures adequate controllability. A rearward CG does not increase stall speed or roll effectiveness, and it makes the aircraft less, not more, stable.
+
+### Q7: What purpose does the vertical tail fin (rudder assembly) serve? ^t80q7
+- A) Providing roll stability
+- B) Providing pitch control
+- C) Generating additional lift in turns
+- D) Providing directional (yaw) stability and control
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical tail fin (fin + rudder) provides yaw stability and yaw control. The fixed fin acts as a weathervane that generates a restoring yaw moment if the aircraft sideslips. The movable rudder allows the pilot to command deliberate yaw inputs for coordination, crosswind correction, or spin recovery. The horizontal stabiliser handles pitch; wing dihedral handles roll stability; the vertical tail does not generate lift in the conventional sense.
+
+### Q8: In a coordinated level turn at 60 degrees of bank, the load factor is approximately... ^t80q8
+- A) 1.0
+- B) 1.4
+- C) 2.0
+- D) 3.0
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a level coordinated turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle). At 60° bank, n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0.5 = 2.0. This means the effective weight the wings must support doubles. Stall speed increases by a factor of √n = √2 ≈ 1.41, i.e. a 41% increase. This is why steep turns at low altitude are dangerous for gliders — the stall margin shrinks dramatically.
+
+### Q9: What is the relationship between aspect ratio and induced drag? ^t80q9
+- A) Higher aspect ratio increases induced drag
+- B) Aspect ratio has no effect on induced drag
+- C) Higher aspect ratio reduces induced drag
+- D) Induced drag depends only on airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is inversely proportional to aspect ratio (AR): D_induced ∝ CL² / (π × AR × e). A longer, narrower wing (high AR) produces the same lift with weaker wingtip vortices and therefore less induced drag. This is why gliders have very high aspect ratios — it is the primary design feature that maximises the lift-to-drag ratio and glide performance.
+
+### Q10: When the elevator trim tab is deflected downward, what is the resulting pitch tendency? ^t80q10
+- A) Nose-up
+- B) No change
+- C) The aircraft rolls
+- D) Nose-down
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A downward-deflected trim tab produces an upward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, pushing the elevator's trailing edge up and its leading edge down — this effectively deflects the elevator downward, creating a nose-up pitching moment. Trim tabs work by aerodynamic force to relieve the pilot of sustained stick forces; their deflection is opposite to the desired elevator deflection.
+
+### Q11: What does the polar curve of a glider depict? ^t80q11
+- A) The relationship between altitude and airspeed
+- B) The relationship between sink rate and airspeed
+- C) The relationship between lift and weight
+- D) The relationship between drag and altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The glider's speed polar plots the vertical sink rate (Vz, typically in m/s) against the horizontal airspeed (Vh). It is the fundamental performance diagram for a glider: it reveals the minimum sink speed (the lowest point on the curve), the best glide speed (given by the tangent from the origin), and inter-thermal cruise speeds (McCready tangents). All cross-country speed-to-fly decisions are based on this curve.
+
+### Q12: In straight and level flight, what happens to the required angle of attack as speed increases? ^t80q12
+- A) It remains constant
+- B) It increases
+- C) It decreases
+- D) It oscillates
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In level flight, lift must equal weight (L = W). Since L = CL × 0.5 × ρ × V² × S, when speed V increases the lift coefficient CL must decrease to keep lift constant. A lower CL corresponds to a lower angle of attack. Therefore, faster flight requires a smaller angle of attack, and slower flight (toward the stall) requires a progressively larger angle of attack.
+
+### Q13: What is the function of wing fences or boundary layer fences? ^t80q13
+- A) To increase the maximum speed
+- B) To reduce weight
+- C) To prevent spanwise flow of the boundary layer
+- D) To increase induced drag
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing fences are thin vertical plates on the upper surface of a swept or tapered wing that prevent the boundary layer from flowing spanwise (outward toward the tips). Without fences, the boundary layer migrates outward due to the pressure gradient, thickening at the tips and promoting tip stall. Fences confine the boundary layer to its local region, improving tip stall characteristics and aileron effectiveness at high angles of attack.
+
+### Q14: What happens to total drag at the speed for best glide ratio? ^t80q14
+- A) Total drag is at its maximum
+- B) Induced drag equals zero
+- C) Total drag is at its minimum
+- D) Parasite drag equals zero
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best glide ratio (maximum L/D) occurs at the speed where total drag is minimum. At this point, induced drag exactly equals parasite drag — any faster increases parasite drag more than induced drag decreases, and any slower increases induced drag more than parasite drag decreases. For a glider, this speed gives the flattest glide angle and the greatest distance per unit of altitude lost in still air.
+
+### Q15: What structural feature contributes to lateral (roll) stability in a glider? ^t80q15
+- A) Horizontal stabiliser
+- B) Vertical fin
+- C) Wing dihedral
+- D) Elevator trim
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings — is the primary design feature providing lateral (roll) stability. When a gust or disturbance causes one wing to drop, the dihedral geometry increases the angle of attack on the lower wing, generating more lift and creating a restoring roll moment toward wings-level. The vertical fin provides directional stability; the horizontal stabiliser provides pitch stability; and elevator trim sets a pitch reference, not a roll reference.
+
+### Q16: How does increasing altitude affect true airspeed (TAS) for a given indicated airspeed (IAS)? ^t80q16
+- A) TAS decreases
+- B) TAS stays the same as IAS
+- C) TAS increases
+- D) TAS fluctuates unpredictably
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is based on dynamic pressure (q = 0.5 × ρ × V²). At higher altitude, air density ρ is lower, so a given IAS corresponds to a higher TAS. The relationship is TAS = IAS × √(ρ₀/ρ), where ρ₀ is sea-level density. For glider pilots, this means that at altitude, the ground speed for the same indicated approach speed is higher, and the landing roll will be longer.
+
+### Q17: What does the term "load factor" describe? ^t80q17
+- A) The ratio of aircraft weight to wing area
+- B) The ratio of lift to weight
+- C) The ratio of drag to weight
+- D) The ratio of thrust to drag
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Load factor (n) is defined as the ratio of the lift generated by the wings to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In straight and level flight, n = 1. In a turn, n > 1 because extra lift is needed for the centripetal force. In a vertical pullup, n can exceed the design limits. The structural design of the glider is rated for specific load factor limits (typically +5.3g / -2.65g for utility category).
+
+### Q18: How does increasing aircraft weight affect the best glide ratio? ^t80q18
+- A) It improves the glide ratio
+- B) It worsens the glide ratio
+- C) It does not change the glide ratio
+- D) It depends on the wing configuration
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best L/D ratio is determined by the aerodynamic shape of the aircraft and is independent of weight. Increasing weight shifts the speed polar downward and to the right — the best glide speed increases (must fly faster) but the maximum L/D ratio stays the same. This is why adding water ballast in gliders improves inter-thermal cruise speed without changing the glide angle — only the speed at which that angle is achieved changes.
+
+### Q19: A glider is flying at the speed for minimum sink rate. If the pilot accelerates, what happens to the sink rate? ^t80q19
+- A) Sink rate decreases further
+- B) Sink rate remains the same
+- C) Sink rate increases
+- D) Sink rate oscillates
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum sink rate speed is the speed at the lowest point of the speed polar. Any speed change — faster or slower — from this point increases the sink rate. Accelerating beyond minimum sink speed increases parasite drag faster than induced drag decreases, resulting in a higher total drag and therefore a greater rate of descent. This is the trade-off in cross-country flying: flying faster covers more ground but at the cost of increased sink rate.
+
+### Q20: What is the effect of extending airbrakes (spoilers) on a glider? ^t80q20
+- A) Lift increases and drag decreases
+- B) Both lift and drag decrease
+- C) Drag increases and lift decreases
+- D) Both lift and drag increase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airbrakes (spoilers) disrupt the smooth airflow over the wing surface, reducing the pressure differential and therefore reducing lift. Simultaneously, the raised spoiler panels create a large increase in drag. This combined effect steepens the glide path dramatically, which is precisely their purpose — to allow the pilot to control the approach angle and land precisely. Without airbrakes, gliders would float long distances due to their excellent L/D ratio.
+
+### Q21: In which flight condition is induced drag greatest? ^t80q21
+- A) High-speed cruise
+- B) Diving flight
+- C) Slow flight at high angle of attack
+- D) At the best glide speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL², and CL is highest in slow flight at high angle of attack (where the wing must generate maximum lift per unit of dynamic pressure). In a dive or at high speed, CL is low and induced drag is minimal — parasite drag dominates instead. At best glide speed, induced drag equals parasite drag but is not at its maximum. The slow-flight regime is where induced drag dominates total drag.
+
+### Q22: What is the primary function of an elevator trim tab? ^t80q22
+- A) To reduce control stick forces in sustained flight conditions
+- B) To increase the maximum speed
+- C) To improve lateral stability
+- D) To prevent flutter
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator trim tab allows the pilot to reduce or eliminate the stick force needed to hold a given pitch attitude in steady flight. By deflecting the trim tab, an aerodynamic force is applied to the elevator that counters the natural hinge moment, allowing hands-off or reduced-force flight at the trimmed speed. This reduces pilot fatigue on long flights and allows the pilot to concentrate on navigation and thermal exploitation.
+
+### Q23: What happens to stall speed in a turn compared to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q23
+- A) Stall speed decreases
+- B) Stall speed remains unchanged
+- C) Stall speed increases
+- D) Stall speed depends only on altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) exceeds 1, meaning the wings must generate more lift than in straight flight. The stall speed increases by the factor √n. At 45° bank, stall speed increases by 19%; at 60° bank by 41%. This is a critical safety consideration when thermalling near the ground — the steeper the bank, the closer the pilot is to the elevated stall speed.
+
+### Q24: What is the centre of pressure of an aerofoil? ^t80q24
+- A) The point where the aircraft's weight acts
+- B) The point of maximum thickness on the aerofoil
+- C) The point where the resultant aerodynamic force acts on the wing
+- D) The geometric centre of the wing planform
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of pressure (CP) is the point on the chord line where the resultant aerodynamic force (sum of all pressure and friction forces) can be considered to act. Unlike the aerodynamic centre, the CP moves with changing angle of attack — it moves forward as AoA increases and rearward as AoA decreases. This movement is one reason why the CG position must remain within limits: if the CP moves too far from the CG, pitch control may be compromised.
+
+### Q25: At what point during flight is parasite drag greatest? ^t80q25
+- A) During slow flight near the stall
+- B) At the minimum sink speed
+- C) At the best glide speed
+- D) At the highest permissible speed (VNE)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parasite drag is proportional to V² (dynamic pressure). The faster the aircraft flies, the greater the parasite drag. At VNE — the maximum speed — parasite drag reaches its peak within the normal flight envelope. At slow speeds near the stall, parasite drag is minimal while induced drag dominates. Parasite drag includes form drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag — all of which grow with the square of the airspeed.
+
+### Q26: What is the Bernoulli principle as applied to an aerofoil? ^t80q26
+- A) Pressure increases where flow velocity increases
+- B) Where flow velocity increases, pressure decreases
+- C) Lift is generated solely by the deflection of air downward
+- D) Drag is independent of velocity
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bernoulli's principle states that in a steady, incompressible flow, an increase in flow velocity is accompanied by a decrease in static pressure, and vice versa. Applied to an aerofoil, the air accelerates over the curved upper surface, creating a region of lower pressure compared to the lower surface. This pressure differential generates lift. While Newton's third law (downwash) also contributes to lift, the Bernoulli pressure distribution is the primary mechanism for conventional subsonic flight.
+
+### Q27: What is adverse yaw? ^t80q27
+- A) The tendency to pitch nose-down in a steep turn
+- B) Unwanted yaw in the direction opposite to the intended turn when ailerons are applied
+- C) The yaw caused by rudder deflection in crosswind
+- D) The yaw resulting from asymmetric thrust
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-going aileron (on the wing that rises) increases both lift and induced drag on that wing. The extra drag on the rising wing pulls the nose toward the descending wing — opposite to the intended turn direction. This is why coordinated use of rudder with aileron is essential, and why differential aileron deflection was developed as a design solution.
+
+### Q28: When does ground effect become significant? ^t80q28
+- A) At any altitude in calm air
+- B) Within approximately one wingspan of the ground
+- C) Only during take-off roll
+- D) Above 100 m AGL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground effect becomes significant when the aircraft is within approximately one wingspan of the surface. The ground physically restricts the development of wingtip vortices and reduces the induced downwash angle, which effectively increases lift and reduces induced drag. Pilots experience this as a floating sensation during the landing flare — the glider wants to keep flying in ground effect, which can cause overshooting the intended touchdown point if not anticipated.
+
+### Q29: What does the term "washout" refer to in wing design? ^t80q29
+- A) The reduction of wing chord from root to tip
+- B) A decrease in the angle of incidence from wing root to tip
+- C) The cleaning procedure for wing surfaces
+- D) The loss of lift during a stall
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Washout is a deliberate design feature in which the wing's angle of incidence decreases progressively from root to tip (geometric washout) or the aerofoil section changes to produce less lift at the tip (aerodynamic washout). This ensures that the wing root stalls before the tip, preserving aileron effectiveness during a stall and making the stall behaviour more benign and recoverable. Washout is particularly important in gliders with their long, high-aspect-ratio wings.
+
+### Q30: What is the relationship between the angle of attack and the lift coefficient up to the stall? ^t80q30
+- A) Lift coefficient decreases as angle of attack increases
+- B) Lift coefficient increases approximately linearly as angle of attack increases
+- C) Lift coefficient remains constant regardless of angle of attack
+- D) Lift coefficient increases exponentially with angle of attack
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the pre-stall regime, the lift coefficient CL increases approximately linearly with angle of attack (AoA). The slope of this line is the lift curve slope (typically about 2π per radian for a thin aerofoil). This linear relationship continues until the critical angle of attack is reached, at which point flow separation causes CL to peak (CL_max) and then drop sharply — the stall. The linearity of the CL vs. AoA relationship is one of the foundational results of aerodynamic theory.
+
+### Q31: How does the flap position affect the stall speed? ^t80q31
+- A) Extending flaps raises the stall speed
+- B) Flap position has no effect on stall speed
+- C) Extending flaps lowers the stall speed
+- D) Retracting flaps lowers the stall speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases the wing's maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) by adding camber and, in some designs, wing area. From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (ρ × S × CL_max)), a higher CL_max yields a lower stall speed. This allows approach and landing at slower speeds with a shorter ground roll. Retracting flaps removes this benefit and returns stall speed to the higher clean-configuration value.
+
+### Q32: What is the purpose of a laminar-flow aerofoil? ^t80q32
+- A) To increase induced drag at low speeds
+- B) To maximise the region of turbulent boundary layer
+- C) To reduce skin friction drag by maintaining laminar flow over a larger portion of the wing
+- D) To improve stall characteristics at high angles of attack
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Laminar-flow aerofoils are designed with their maximum thickness further aft than conventional profiles, creating a favourable pressure gradient that keeps the boundary layer laminar over a larger portion of the chord. Since laminar boundary layers produce far less skin friction drag than turbulent ones, the overall profile drag is significantly reduced. Gliders exploit this extensively — clean laminar-flow wings are the reason modern gliders achieve glide ratios exceeding 50:1.
+
+### Q33: How does air density change with increasing altitude? ^t80q33
+- A) It increases linearly
+- B) It remains constant
+- C) It decreases
+- D) It increases then decreases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density decreases with altitude because atmospheric pressure drops and air expands. In the standard atmosphere, density at 5,500 m is roughly half the sea-level value. Reduced density means reduced dynamic pressure at a given TAS, which is why aircraft performance (lift and drag per unit TAS) degrades at altitude — the aircraft must fly faster in TAS to maintain the same IAS and lift.
+
+### Q34: What is the difference between static stability and dynamic stability? ^t80q34
+- A) They are the same concept
+- B) Static stability is the initial tendency to return to equilibrium; dynamic stability describes whether the subsequent oscillations damp out
+- C) Dynamic stability is the initial tendency; static stability describes long-term behaviour
+- D) Static stability only applies to pitch, dynamic stability only to roll
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability describes the aircraft's immediate response to a disturbance — whether restoring forces act to push it back toward the original equilibrium. Dynamic stability describes what happens over time: if the resulting oscillations decrease in amplitude and the aircraft eventually returns to its trimmed state, it is dynamically stable. An aircraft can be statically stable but dynamically unstable (oscillations grow), which is a dangerous condition.
+
+### Q35: What is the purpose of vortex generators on a wing? ^t80q35
+- A) To increase the laminar boundary layer region
+- B) To reduce the aircraft's weight
+- C) To energise the boundary layer and delay flow separation
+- D) To decrease the stall speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vortex generators are small tabs that protrude from the wing surface and create tiny vortices that mix high-energy air from outside the boundary layer into the slower boundary layer flow near the surface. This energised boundary layer can resist adverse pressure gradients more effectively, delaying flow separation and improving control effectiveness at high angles of attack. They trade a small increase in skin friction for a significant delay in stall onset and better aileron authority near the stall.
+
+### Q36: The lift formula L = CL x 0.5 x rho x V² x S contains several variables. Which of these can the pilot directly control in flight? ^t80q36
+- A) Air density (rho)
+- B) Wing area (S)
+- C) Airspeed (V) and, indirectly, the lift coefficient (CL) through angle of attack
+- D) All of the above
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot can directly change airspeed V (by adjusting pitch attitude) and indirectly change the lift coefficient CL (by changing the angle of attack, or by extending/retracting flaps). Air density ρ changes with altitude and temperature but is not directly controlled. Wing area S is fixed (except in rare variable-geometry designs or Fowler flap configurations). Airspeed and angle of attack are the pilot's primary tools for managing lift.
+
+### Q37: In which direction does the centre of pressure move as the angle of attack increases (pre-stall)? ^t80q37
+- A) Rearward along the chord
+- B) It does not move
+- C) Forward along the chord
+- D) Upward, away from the wing surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As angle of attack increases in the pre-stall range, the pressure distribution shifts such that the centre of pressure moves forward along the chord. This forward CP movement produces a nose-up pitching moment that must be counteracted by the tail — one of the main reasons aircraft require a horizontal stabiliser. At very low (or negative) angles of attack, the CP moves rearward. This CP migration is why the aerodynamic centre concept is useful: the moment about the aerodynamic centre stays constant regardless of AoA.
+
+### Q38: What determines the critical angle of attack at which a wing stalls? ^t80q38
+- A) The aircraft's weight
+- B) The altitude at which the aircraft is flying
+- C) The airspeed
+- D) The aerofoil shape (profile geometry)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical angle of attack is an inherent property of the aerofoil's geometric shape — it is the angle at which the flow can no longer remain attached to the upper surface and separates, causing the stall. It does not change with weight, altitude, or airspeed. What changes with those factors is the stall speed — the speed at which the wing reaches the critical angle of attack in level flight. The aerofoil geometry (camber, thickness, leading edge radius) determines how well the flow follows the upper surface at high angles.
+
+### Q39: How does induced drag behave with increasing airspeed in level flight? ^t80q39
+- A) It decreases continuously
+- B) It reaches a maximum, then decreases
+- C) It remains constant
+- D) It increases with increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag decreases monotonically with increasing airspeed in level flight: D_induced = 2W^2 / (rho * V^2 * S^2 * pi * AR * e). As V increases, induced drag continuously falls — there is no minimum/maximum within the normal flight envelope. Parasite drag (not induced drag) has the U-shaped curve described in B/C. Total drag has a minimum at the speed where induced drag equals parasite drag; induced drag itself simply decreases with speed.
+
+### Q40: Which types of drag make up total drag? ^t80q40
+- A) Induced drag, form drag, and skin-friction drag
+- B) Interference drag and parasite drag
+- C) Form drag, skin-friction drag, and interference drag
+- D) Induced drag and parasite drag
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard aerodynamic breakdown of total drag is: Total drag = Induced drag + Parasite drag. Induced drag arises from lift generation (wingtip vortices). Parasite drag is the collective term for all non-lift-related drag: form/pressure drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag. Options A and C list sub-components of parasite drag but omit induced drag or incorrectly combine them. Option B omits induced drag, which is a major component especially at low speeds.
+
+### Q41: How do lift and drag change when a stall is approached? ^t80q41
+- A) Both lift and drag increase
+- B) Lift rises while drag falls
+- C) Lift falls while drag rises
+- D) Both lift and drag fall
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the critical angle of attack is reached, flow begins to separate from the upper surface, starting at the trailing edge and progressing forward. Once past the critical AoA, the clean attached flow that generated lift breaks down — CL drops sharply. Simultaneously, the separated flow creates a large turbulent wake with very high pressure drag, so CD rises dramatically. The drag polar shows this clearly: the nose of the polar curves sharply as the stall condition is approached, with CL falling and CD rising.
+
+### Q42: To recover from a stall, it is essential to... ^t80q42
+- A) Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed
+- B) Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed
+- C) Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed
+- D) Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall recovery requires reducing angle of attack below the critical value so that airflow can re-attach to the upper surface and lift can be restored. The pilot must push forward on the elevator control to lower AoA, which also allows the aircraft to accelerate (or the pilot applies power if available). Increasing AoA (B, D) deepens the stall. Reducing speed (D, A) worsens the condition. Banking (A) increases the load factor, which raises the stall speed — exactly the wrong input.
+
+### Q43: During a stall, how do lift and drag behave? ^t80q43
+- A) Lift rises while drag rises
+- B) Lift rises while drag falls
+- C) Lift falls while drag falls
+- D) Lift falls while drag rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the definitive stall characteristic: lift collapses because boundary layer separation destroys the pressure differential that generates it, while drag rises dramatically due to the large turbulent separated wake. The CL vs. AoA curve shows CL_max at the critical angle, then a steep drop — this is the stall. The CD vs. AoA curve rises steeply through and beyond the stall. This combination (less lift, more drag) is why the stall is critical — the aircraft loses lift while simultaneously experiencing high drag that would further reduce speed.
+
+### Q44: The critical angle of attack... ^t80q44
+- A) Changes with increasing weight
+- B) Is independent of the aircraft's weight
+- C) Increases with a rearward centre of gravity position
+- D) Decreases with a forward centre of gravity position
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical (stall) angle of attack is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape — it is the AoA at which flow separation occurs regardless of airspeed, weight, or altitude. What changes with weight is the stall speed (Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max))), not the stall AoA. A heavier aircraft must fly faster to generate the same lift, but it still stalls at the same critical AoA. C.G. position affects pitch stability and control effectiveness but does not change the aerofoil's critical angle.
+
+### Q45: What leads to a lower stall speed Vs (IAS)? ^t80q45
+- A) Higher load factor
+- B) Lower air density
+- C) Decreasing weight
+- D) Lower altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)): stall speed decreases when weight (W) decreases, since less lift is needed to maintain equilibrium. Lower density (B) increases true airspeed (TAS) stall speed but the IAS stall speed remains approximately constant (since IAS is based on dynamic pressure q = 0.5 * rho * V_TAS^2, which equals 0.5 * rho_0 * V_IAS^2). Higher load factor (A) effectively increases apparent weight (n*W), raising stall speed. Lower altitude means higher density, which slightly lowers TAS stall speed but does not significantly change IAS stall speed.
+
+### Q46: Which statement about a spin is correct? ^t80q46
+- A) Speed constantly increases during the spin
+- B) During recovery, ailerons should be kept neutral
+- C) During recovery, ailerons should be crossed
+- D) Only very old aircraft risk spinning
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spin recovery technique (PARE: Power off, Ailerons neutral, Rudder opposite to spin direction, Elevator forward) requires keeping ailerons neutral because using ailerons during a spin can worsen the rotation — applying aileron into the spin raises the inner wing's AoA (which may already be stalled) and can deepen the spin. Rudder opposite to spin direction stops the autorotation; forward elevator then reduces AoA to unstall both wings. Speed does not constantly increase in a spin — the aircraft reaches a stabilised spin with relatively constant speed and rotation rate.
+
+### Q47: The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil lies between... ^t80q47
+- A) The transition point and the separation point
+- B) The stagnation point and the centre of pressure
+- C) The transition point and the centre of pressure
+- D) The stagnation point and the transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The boundary layer development follows a specific sequence: flow is divided at the stagnation point, a laminar boundary layer develops from the stagnation point rearward, then at the transition point the laminar layer converts to turbulent, and finally at the separation point the turbulent layer detaches from the surface. The laminar boundary layer therefore occupies the region from the stagnation point to the transition point. Laminar flow aerofoils are designed to push the transition point as far aft as possible to minimise friction drag.
+
+### Q48: What types of boundary layers are found on an aerofoil? ^t80q48
+- A) Turbulent layer at the leading edge areas, laminar boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- B) Laminar boundary layer along the complete upper surface with non-separated airflow
+- C) Laminar layer at the leading edge areas, turbulent boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- D) Turbulent boundary layer along the complete upper surface with separated airflow
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The natural sequence of boundary layer development on an aerofoil runs from laminar (near the leading edge, where the flow is orderly and Reynolds number is low) to turbulent (further aft, after transition). The reverse sequence (turbulent first, then laminar) does not occur naturally. This forward laminar / aft turbulent arrangement is why designers place the maximum thickness of laminar-flow aerofoils further back — to extend the favourable pressure gradient that maintains laminar flow as far as possible before transition.
+
+### Q49: How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent one? ^t80q49
+- A) The turbulent boundary layer is thicker but produces less skin-friction drag
+- B) The laminar layer generates lift while the turbulent layer generates drag
+- C) The laminar layer is thinner and produces more skin-friction drag
+- D) The turbulent boundary layer can remain attached to the aerofoil at higher angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turbulent boundary layer, despite having higher skin friction drag than the laminar layer, has more energetic mixing that allows it to remain attached to the surface against an adverse pressure gradient at higher angles of attack. This is its critical advantage: it resists flow separation better. The laminar boundary layer is indeed thinner (C is partly correct about thickness) and has lower friction drag — but it separates more easily. This is why turbulators are sometimes used on gliders: deliberately triggering transition to turbulent flow to prevent laminar separation bubbles.
+
+### Q50: Which structural element provides lateral (roll) stability? ^t80q50
+- A) Elevator
+- B) Wing dihedral
+- C) Vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lateral (roll) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a roll disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral (the upward angle of the wings from horizontal). When a gust rolls the aircraft, the lower wing descends and its angle of attack increases (it meets more airflow), generating more lift and creating a restoring moment back to level. The vertical tail provides directional (yaw) stability; ailerons are roll control surfaces (not stability), and the elevator controls pitch. High-wing aircraft achieve similar lateral stability through the pendulum effect of the fuselage hanging below the wings.
+
+### Q51: What is the mean value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q51
+- A) 15° C/100 m
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 1013.25 hPa
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s² (ISA value). This value is fundamental in aeronautics: it is used to calculate weight (W = m × g), load factor, and appears in all performance equations. 1013.25 hPa is the standard pressure at sea level, and 15°C/100 m is not a correct gradient (the standard lapse rate is 0.65°C/100 m).
+
+### Q52: During a sideslip, the permitted flap position is... ^t80q52
+- A) Flaps fully retracted
+- B) Flaps fully extended
+- C) Determined by the downward vertical component of the airspeed
+- D) Specified in the flight manual (AFM)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted flap position during a sideslip is always specified in the aircraft flight manual (AFM/POH). Some gliders prohibit extended flaps in a sideslip because the combination of flaps and deflected rudder can create dangerous aerodynamic couples or exceed structural limits. Others permit certain configurations. The only correct answer is therefore to consult the AFM.
+
+### Q53: An aircraft is said to have dynamic stability when... ^t80q53
+- A) It is able to stabilise automatically at a new equilibrium after a disturbance
+- B) It is able to return automatically to its original equilibrium after a disturbance
+- C) The rotation about the pitch axis is automatically corrected by the ailerons
+- D) The permitted load factor allows a positive acceleration of at least 4 g and a negative acceleration of at least 2 g with landing flaps retracted
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic stability describes the behaviour of an aircraft over time after a disturbance. A dynamically stable aircraft returns automatically to its original equilibrium (trim) after being disturbed — the oscillations progressively damp out. Answer A describes so-called "neutral or convergent stability towards a new equilibrium", which is different. Static stability (the immediate tendency to return) is a necessary but not sufficient condition for dynamic stability.
+
+### Q54: In severe turbulence, airspeed must be reduced... ^t80q54
+- A) To normal cruising speed
+- B) To a speed within the yellow arc of the airspeed indicator
+- C) To the minimum constant speed in landing configuration
+- D) To below the manoeuvring speed V_A
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The manoeuvring speed V_A (or turbulence penetration speed) is the maximum speed at which full control surface deflections or severe wind gusts will not cause the structural limit load to be exceeded. Below V_A, the wing will stall before the structural limit load is reached, thereby protecting the structure. In severe turbulence, speed must be reduced below V_A to avoid structural damage from gust dynamic loads.
+
+### Q55: In the ICAO standard atmosphere, the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere is... ^t80q55
+- A) 2°C/100 ft
+- B) 0.65°C/1000 ft
+- C) 0.65°C/100 m
+- D) 2°C/100 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere (ISA), temperature decreases by 0.65°C for every 100 m of altitude in the troposphere (or equivalently, 2°C per 1000 ft, or 6.5°C/1000 m). Answer B (0.65°C/1000 ft) is incorrect because the unit is wrong — this would be far too small a lapse rate. Answer C is the only correct one: 0.65°C per 100 m of altitude.
+
+### Q56: At approximately what altitude does atmospheric pressure fall to half its sea-level value? ^t80q56
+- A) 5,500 m
+- B) 6,600 m
+- C) 6,600 ft
+- D) 5,500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude in an approximately exponential manner. In the ICAO standard atmosphere, pressure is approximately half the sea-level pressure (1013.25 hPa → ~506 hPa) at an altitude of approximately 5,500 m (18,000 ft). This value is important for high-altitude physiology (oxygen requirements) and for density altitude performance calculations.
+
+### Q57: Density altitude always corresponds to... ^t80q57
+- A) The altitude at which atmospheric pressure and temperature correspond to those of the standard atmosphere
+- B) The true indicated altitude, after correction for instrument error
+- C) Pressure altitude, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature
+- D) The altitude read when the altimeter is set to QNH, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Density altitude is the altitude at which the aircraft would be in the ISA standard atmosphere if the air density were the same as in actual conditions. It is calculated from pressure altitude (altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa) corrected for the temperature deviation from ISA. A temperature higher than ISA gives a density altitude higher than pressure altitude, reducing aircraft performance. Answer A describes pressure altitude, not density altitude.
+
+### Q58: The simplified continuity law applied to an airflow states: *In a given period of time, a flowing air mass is conserved regardless of the cross-section it passes through.* This means that... ^t80q58
+- A) Airflow velocity decreases when the cross-section decreases
+- B) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section increases
+- C) Airflow velocity remains constant
+- D) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section decreases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation states that for an incompressible fluid, the volumetric flow rate Q = S × V is constant along a streamtube. If the cross-section S decreases, the velocity V must increase proportionally to keep Q constant. This principle, combined with Bernoulli's theorem, explains why air accelerates over the curved upper surface of an aerofoil, creating a low-pressure region that generates lift.
+
+### Q59: The aerodynamic resultant (drag and lift) depends on air density. When air density decreases... ^t80q59
+- A) Both drag and lift decrease
+- B) Both drag and lift increase
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both lift and drag are proportional to the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². When air density ρ decreases (at altitude or in high temperatures), q decreases for a given speed, which reduces both lift and drag. This is why aircraft performance deteriorates at high altitude or in great heat: the aircraft must fly faster (higher TAS) to generate the same lift, while the total aerodynamic resistance decreases for a constant indicated airspeed.
+
+### Q60: What is the name of the point about which, when the angle of attack changes, the pitching moment around the lateral axis does not vary? ^t80q60
+- A) Centre of symmetry
+- B) Centre of gravity
+- C) Aerodynamic centre
+- D) Neutral point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The neutral point (also called the aerodynamic centre at wing level, but "neutral point" for the complete aircraft) is the point about which the pitching moment remains constant regardless of changes in angle of attack. For a stable aircraft, the centre of gravity must be forward of the neutral point — the CG-to-neutral point distance constitutes the static stability margin. Note: for an isolated aerofoil, this point corresponds to the aerodynamic centre (at approximately 25% of the chord); for the complete aircraft, the neutral point accounts for the contribution of the horizontal stabiliser.
+
+### Q61: The angle between the aerofoil chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis is called... ^t80q61
+- A) The sweep angle
+- B) The angle of attack
+- C) The dihedral angle
+- D) The rigging angle (angle of incidence)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rigging angle (or angle of incidence) is the fixed angle, defined at construction, between the aerofoil chord line and the longitudinal axis of the fuselage. It does not vary in flight. It should not be confused with the angle of attack, which is the angle between the chord line and the direction of the relative wind (and which varies in flight according to attitude and speed). The rigging angle is chosen by the manufacturer so that the wing generates the necessary lift in cruise at an aerodynamically favourable fuselage attitude.
+
+### Q62: What does the transition point correspond to? ^t80q62
+- A) The lateral roll of the aircraft
+- B) The point at which CL_max is reached
+- C) The change from a turbulent boundary layer to a laminar one
+- D) The change from a laminar boundary layer to a turbulent one
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition point is precisely the location on the aerofoil where the boundary layer changes from a laminar regime (ordered flow, in parallel layers) to a turbulent regime (disordered flow, with transverse mixing). This transition is irreversible in the direction of flow: the change is from laminar to turbulent, never the reverse. The position of the transition point depends on the Reynolds number, the pressure gradient, and surface roughness — a favourable pressure gradient (acceleration) maintains laminar flow, while an adverse gradient (deceleration) triggers transition.
+
+### Q63: Geometric or aerodynamic wing twist results in... ^t80q63
+- A) Partial compensation of adverse yaw at low speed
+- B) A higher cruise speed
+- C) Progressive flow separation along the wingspan
+- D) Simultaneous flow separation along the wingspan at low speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing twist (geometric or aerodynamic) varies the angle of incidence or aerodynamic characteristics along the span, so that the stall does not occur simultaneously across the entire wing. The root (higher angle of incidence) reaches the critical angle first and stalls progressively, while the outer sections remain attached. This progressive (rather than simultaneous) flow separation improves stall safety and maintains roll control via the ailerons. The effect on adverse yaw (A) is indirect and marginal.
+
+### Q64: The profile drag (form drag) of a body is primarily influenced by... ^t80q64
+- A) Its mass
+- B) Its internal temperature
+- C) Its density
+- D) The formation of vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Form drag (pressure drag) is caused by the pressure difference between the front and rear of a body, due to boundary layer separation and the formation of vortices in the wake. The more intense the vortex formation (unStreamlined body, blunt trailing edge), the higher the form drag. This is why streamlined aerofoils have much lower form drag than a flat plate or sphere — their progressively converging shape allows the flow to remain attached longer, reducing the turbulent wake.
+
+### Q65: The aerodynamic drag of a flat disc in an airflow depends notably on... ^t80q65
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) The surface area perpendicular to the airflow
+- D) The tensile strength of its material
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The drag of a flat disc (non-streamlined body) is pressure drag: it depends primarily on the frontal surface area S exposed perpendicularly to the airflow, and on the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². The formula is D = CD × q × S. The material strength, the disc's own density, or its weight do not influence aerodynamic drag — this is purely a function of shape, projected area, and flow conditions.
+
+### Q66: On the speed polar, which tangent touches the curve at the point of minimum sink rate? ^t80q66
+> **Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/t80_q66.png]]
+> *A = tangent from the origin → best glide speed (best L/D ratio, best glide)*
+> *B = tangent from a point shifted to the right on the V axis → best glide with headwind*
+> *C = tangent from a point above the origin on the W axis (McCready) → optimal inter-thermal speed; touches the polar at the point of minimum sink rate*
+> *D = horizontal line at the level of minimum sink rate → indicates the minimum sink speed (Vmin sink)*
+
+- A) Tangent (A)
+- B) Tangent (B)
+- C) Tangent (D)
+- D) Tangent (C)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the speed polar (curve showing the sink rate W as a function of horizontal speed V), the point of minimum sink rate corresponds to the lowest point of the curve (the smallest value of W in absolute terms). The tangent at this point is a horizontal tangent — this is tangent (C) on the diagram. This point corresponds to the minimum sink speed, used to maximise flight time or to exploit thermals. The tangent drawn from the origin to the polar (tangent B) gives the speed for the best L/D ratio (best glide ratio).
+
+### Q67: Induced drag increases... ^t80q67
+- A) As parasite drag increases
+- B) With decreasing angle of attack
+- C) With increasing angle of attack
+- D) With increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL²: D_induced = CL² / (π × AR × e) × q × S. By increasing the angle of attack, CL increases, and therefore CL² increases, causing induced drag to grow. In level flight at constant speed, an increase in angle of attack corresponds to a lower speed, which further increases induced drag (D_induced ∝ 1/V²). By increasing speed (D), CL decreases in level flight and induced drag decreases. Parasite drag (A) varies independently of induced drag.
+
+### Q68: How does the minimum speed of an aircraft in a level turn at 45-degree bank compare to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q68
+- A) It decreases
+- B) It does not change
+- C) It increases
+- D) It depends on the aircraft type
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a horizontal turn at bank angle φ, the load factor is n = 1/cos(φ). At 45° of bank, n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0.707 ≈ 1.41. The stall speed in the turn is Vs_turn = Vs × √n = Vs × √1.41 ≈ Vs × 1.19. Therefore the minimum speed increases by approximately 19% compared to straight-and-level flight. This increase in stall speed during turns is a fundamental safety concept — tight turns at low altitude (such as on final approach) are particularly dangerous because the margin above the stall is reduced.
+
+### Q69: Adverse yaw is caused by... ^t80q69
+- A) The gyroscopic effect when a turn is initiated
+- B) The lateral airflow over the wing after a turn has been initiated
+- C) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes up
+- D) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes down
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw is caused by the asymmetry of drag between the two ailerons during turn entry. The aileron that rises (on the high-wing side) increases the local angle of attack, generating more lift but also more induced drag. This additional drag on the rising side creates a yawing moment towards the rising side — i.e. in the opposite direction to the turn (hence "adverse yaw"). Differential ailerons and spoiler-airbrakes are technical solutions to mitigate this effect.
+
+### Q70: True Airspeed (TAS) is the speed shown by the ASI... ^t80q70
+- A) Corrected for position and instrument errors only
+- B) Without any correction
+- C) Adjusted for air density only
+- D) Corrected for both position/instrument errors and air density
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True airspeed (TAS) is obtained from indicated airspeed (IAS) by applying two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors (yielding calibrated airspeed, CAS), then the density correction (accounting for the difference between actual air density and standard sea-level density). TAS is therefore the actual speed of the aircraft through the air mass. At high altitude, TAS is significantly higher than IAS because air density is lower.
+
+### Q71: The speed range authorised for the use of slotted flaps is: ^t80q71
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) Limited at the lower end by the bottom of the green arc
+- C) Indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally shown on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) Limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed (Va)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The slotted flap speed range is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally on the airspeed indicator (white or light green arc). It varies by glider type.
+
+### Q72: Wing tip vortices are caused by pressure equalisation from: ^t80q72
+- A) The lower surface toward the upper surface at the wing tip
+- B) The upper surface toward the lower surface at the wing tip
+- C) The lower surface toward the upper surface along the entire trailing edge
+- D) The upper surface toward the lower surface along the entire trailing edge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing tip vortices (induced vortices) come from pressure equalization from the lower surface (high pressure) to the upper surface (low pressure) at the wing tip. This phenomenon generates induced drag.
+
+### Q73: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always the angle between: ^t80q73
+- A) The chord line and the relative airflow direction
+- B) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) The horizon and the general airflow direction
+- D) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Angle of attack is the angle between the chord line and the general airflow direction (relative wind direction). It is not the angle with the horizon nor with the longitudinal axis.
+
+### Q74: In the standard atmosphere, the values of temperature and atmospheric pressure at sea level are: ^t80q74
+- A) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 59 degrees C and 29.92 hPa
+- C) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 Hg
+- D) 15 degrees F and 29.92 Hg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure in ICAO standard atmosphere at sea level is 1013.25 hPa (millibars) = 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg). 29.92 hPa is incorrect.
+
+### Q75: Regarding airflow, the simplified continuity equation states: At the same moment, the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections. Therefore: ^t80q75
+![[figures/t80_q75.png]]
+- A) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- B) The air mass flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) The speed of the air mass does not vary
+- D) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the line equidistant between the lower and upper surfaces. In the figure, it is represented by line B.
+
+### Q76: In a correctly executed turn without altitude loss, why is slight back-pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q76
+- A) To prevent slipping inward in the turn
+- B) To reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward sideslip in the turn
+- D) To slightly increase lift
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated turn without altitude loss, back pressure is needed to increase lift and balance centrifugal force (load factor > 1). Lift must compensate for both gravity and centrifugal force.
+
+### Q77: When the frontal area of a disc in an airflow is tripled, drag increases by: ^t80q77
+- A) 9 times
+- B) 1.5 times
+- C) 3 times
+- D) 6 times
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall occurs at a critical angle of attack (stall angle), regardless of airspeed. At this angle, airflow separation on the upper surface causes a sudden drop in lift.
+
+### Q78: Aerodynamic wing twist (washout) is a modification of: ^t80q78
+- A) The angle of incidence of the same aerofoil, from root to wing tip
+- B) The aerofoil profile from root to wing tip
+- C) The angle of attack at the wing tip by means of the aileron
+- D) The wing dihedral, from root to tip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs at a determined angle of attack (critical angle), specific to each airfoil. It is not related to the nose attitude relative to the horizon.
+
+### Q79: What is the average value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q79
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 15° C/100 m
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 100 m/sec²
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard gravitational acceleration at Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s². This is the ISA value used in all performance calculations.
+
+### Q80: The speed displayed on the airspeed indicator (ASI) is a measurement of: ^t80q80
+- A) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) The difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- C) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- D) The weathervane effect, where pressure decreases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspeed indicator reading is based on the difference between static pressure and total pressure (dynamic pressure). The ASI measures this difference via the Pitot tube and static port.
+
+### Q81: The horizontal and vertical stabilisers serve in particular to: ^t80q81
+- A) Control the aircraft around its longitudinal axis
+- B) Reduce the formation of wing tip vortices
+- C) Stabilise the aircraft in flight
+- D) Reduce air resistance
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal and vertical stabilizers serve primarily to stabilize the aircraft in flight (longitudinal and directional stability). Without them, the aircraft would be unstable.
+
+### Q82: When slotted flaps are extended, airflow separation: ^t80q82
+- A) Occurs at the same speed as before extending the flaps
+- B) Occurs at a higher speed
+- C) None of the answers is correct
+- D) Occurs at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When extending slotted flaps, airflow separation occurs at a lower speed, because flaps increase the maximum lift coefficient (CL max). Stall speed decreases.
+
+### Q83: The aerodynamic centre of an aerofoil in an airflow is the point of application of: ^t80q83
+- A) The weight
+- B) The resultant of all pressure forces acting on the aerofoil
+- C) The tyre pressure on the runway
+- D) The airflow at the leading edge
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic center is the point of application of the resultant of aerodynamic forces on a profile. It is distinct from the center of pressure (which moves) and the center of gravity.
+
+### Q84: Pressures are expressed in: ^t80q84
+- A) Pa, psi, g
+- B) Bar, Pa, m/sec²
+- C) Bar, psi, Pa
+- D) Bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pressures are expressed in bar, psi (pounds per square inch) and Pa (Pascal). g is an acceleration, not a pressure. Alpha (a) is not a pressure unit.
+
+### Q85: TAS (True Air Speed) is the speed of: ^t80q85
+- A) The aircraft relative to the ground
+- B) The aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass
+- C) The aircraft relative to the air, corrected for wind component and atmospheric pressure
+- D) The reading on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS (True Air Speed) is the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass. It is the actual speed through the air, corrected for atmospheric density.
+
+### Q86: Yaw stability of an aircraft is provided by: ^t80q86
+- A) Leading edge slats
+- B) The horizontal stabiliser
+- C) The fin (vertical stabiliser)
+- D) Wing dihedral
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yaw stability is provided by the fin (vertical stabilizer/rudder). Wing sweep contributes to roll stability, not yaw.
+
+### Q87: The trailing edge flap shown below is a: ^t80q87
+![[figures/t80_q87.png]]
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flap shown, extending from the wing with a slot, is a Slotted Flap. The slot channels air from the lower to upper surface, delaying separation.
+
+### Q88: The risk of airflow separation on the wing occurs mainly: ^t80q88
+- A) In straight climbing flight at high speed, in atmospheric turbulence
+- B) In calm air, in gliding flight, at the minimum authorised speed
+- C) During an abrupt pull-out after a dive
+- D) In straight level cruise flight, in atmospheric turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The risk of stall/separation appears mainly during an abrupt pull-out after a dive, as the angle of attack increases very rapidly and can exceed the critical angle before the pilot can react.
+
+### Q89: The drag of a body in an airflow depends notably on: ^t80q89
+- A) The mass of the body
+- B) The chemical composition of the body
+- C) The density of the air
+- D) The density of the body
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic drag depends notably on air density (ρ), since F_D = Cd × 0.5 × ρ × v² × A. The body's own density, chemical composition, and mass do not directly affect aerodynamic drag.
+
+### Q90: In the drawing below, the aerofoil chord is represented by: ^t80q90
+![[figures/t80_q90.png]]
+- A) M
+- B) K
+- C) H
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The chord line is the straight line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge. In the figure, it is represented by H.
+
+### Q91: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always measured between: ^t80q91
+- A) The chord line and the direction of the relative airflow
+- B) The longitudinal axis and the general airflow direction
+- C) The longitudinal axis and the horizon
+- D) It varies depending on the pilot's weight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of attack (AoA) is defined as the angle between the chord line and the direction of the undisturbed relative airflow, making A correct. Option B is wrong because the longitudinal axis is a structural reference, not an aerodynamic one; AoA is measured from the chord line. Option C confuses AoA with pitch attitude, which relates the longitudinal axis to the horizon. Option D is nonsensical — AoA is a geometric and aerodynamic property entirely independent of the pilot's weight.
+
+### Q92: Given equal frontal area and equal airflow speed, what determines the drag of a body? ^t80q92
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) Its shape
+- D) The position of its centre of gravity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When frontal area and airspeed are held constant, the remaining variable in the drag equation D = CD × 0.5 × rho × V² × S is the drag coefficient CD, which is determined entirely by the body's shape. A streamlined shape produces far less drag than a blunt one. Options A and B are wrong because weight and material density have no direct aerodynamic effect — drag depends on external geometry, not internal mass distribution. Option D is incorrect because the centre of gravity affects stability, not the aerodynamic drag coefficient.
+
+### Q93: What is the origin of induced drag on a wing? ^t80q93
+- A) The angle formed at the wing-fuselage junction
+- B) Airspeed
+- C) Pressure equalisation from the lower surface toward the upper surface
+- D) Pressure equalisation from the upper surface toward the lower surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag originates from the pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces. At the wingtips, air flows from the high-pressure lower surface around to the low-pressure upper surface, forming trailing vortices that tilt the lift vector rearward, creating induced drag. Option D reverses the flow direction — air moves from high to low pressure, not the other way. Option A describes interference drag at the wing root, and option B is too vague — airspeed alone is not the origin of induced drag.
+
+### Q94: What is the sea-level pressure in the ICAO standard atmosphere? ^t80q94
+- A) 29.92 hPa
+- B) 1012.35 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) It depends on latitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO International Standard Atmosphere defines sea-level pressure as exactly 1013.25 hPa (hectopascals). Option A gives 29.92, which is the equivalent value in inches of mercury (inHg), not hPa — 29.92 hPa would be an absurdly low pressure. Option B (1012.35 hPa) is simply incorrect. Option D is wrong because the ISA is a standardized model that does not vary with latitude, even though real atmospheric pressure does.
+
+### Q95: In the aerofoil diagram below, which line represents the mean camber line? ^t80q95
+![[figures/t80_q95.png]]
+- A) H
+- B) B
+- C) G + J
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the locus of points equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil, representing the profile's curvature. In this diagram, line B corresponds to this curved reference line. Options A, C, and D represent other aerofoil features such as the chord line, thickness distribution, or surface contours, not the mean camber line.
+
+### Q96: In a level turn without sideslip or altitude loss, why is back pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q96
+- A) To prevent an inward slip during the turn
+- B) To slow down and reduce centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward skid during the turn
+- D) To increase lift so it balances both weight and centrifugal force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the load factor exceeds 1 because lift must counterbalance both the aircraft's weight and provide the centripetal force for the curved flight path. Back pressure on the elevator increases the angle of attack and thus total lift to meet this requirement. Option A is wrong because slips are corrected with rudder, not elevator. Option B is incorrect — the purpose is not to slow down. Option C is also wrong because skid prevention is a rudder function, not an elevator function.
+
+### Q97: A wing stall occurs: ^t80q97
+- A) At the red radial line on the airspeed indicator
+- B) When a critical angle of attack is exceeded
+- C) Following a reduction in engine power
+- D) Only when the nose is pitched excessively above the horizon
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stall occurs when the wing's angle of attack exceeds the critical value (typically around 15-18 degrees), causing flow separation from the upper surface and a sudden loss of lift. This is a fundamental aerodynamic principle independent of airspeed or attitude. Option A is wrong because the red line (VNE) relates to structural speed limits, not stall. Option C is incorrect — reducing power alone does not cause a stall if AoA remains below critical. Option D is false because a stall can occur at any pitch attitude or airspeed, as long as the critical AoA is exceeded.
+
+### Q98: At what condition does airflow separation from an aerofoil occur? ^t80q98
+- A) Only at a specific aircraft altitude
+- B) Only at a given nose position relative to the horizon
+- C) Simultaneously across the entire span
+- D) At a specific angle of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs when the angle of attack reaches the critical stall angle, which is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape. Option A is wrong because stall AoA is independent of altitude. Option B confuses pitch attitude with angle of attack — a wing can stall at any nose position. Option C is incorrect because, thanks to wing design features like washout, the stall typically progresses from root to tip rather than occurring simultaneously across the entire span.
+
+### Q99: What is the mean gravitational acceleration at the surface of the Earth? ^t80q99
+- A) 9.81 m/sec2
+- B) 100 m/sec2
+- C) 1013.5 hPa
+- D) 15° C/100 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at sea level is 9.81 m/s², used throughout aviation for weight, load factor, and performance calculations. Option B (100 m/s²) is roughly ten times too large. Option C (1013.5 hPa) is a pressure value close to the ISA sea-level pressure, not an acceleration. Option D (15°C/100 m) resembles a temperature lapse rate format but is far too high — the ISA lapse rate is 0.65°C per 100 m.
+
+### Q100: True Airspeed (TAS) is obtained from the airspeed indicator (ASI) reading by: ^t80q100
+- A) No corrections at all
+- B) Correcting for position and instrument errors
+- C) Applying corrections for both position/instrument errors and atmospheric density
+- D) Adjusting for atmospheric density alone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS is derived from the ASI reading (IAS) through two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors are removed to obtain calibrated airspeed (CAS), then a density correction accounts for the difference between actual air density and ISA sea-level density. Option A is wrong because uncorrected IAS does not equal TAS. Option B yields only CAS, not TAS. Option D omits the instrument/position error correction, which is always the first step.
+
+### Q101: A shift of the centre of gravity is caused by: ^t80q101
+- A) Changing the angle of attack
+- B) Moving the load
+- C) Changing the angle of incidence
+- D) Changing the position of the aerodynamic centre
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity (CG) is determined by the distribution of mass within the aircraft, so only physically moving mass — such as shifting ballast, passengers, or baggage — changes it. Option A is wrong because changing angle of attack alters aerodynamic forces, not mass distribution. Option C is incorrect because the angle of incidence is a fixed structural dimension. Option D is wrong because the aerodynamic centre is a property of the wing shape, not of the aircraft's mass distribution.
+
+### Q102: The high-lift device shown in the diagram is a: ^t80q102
+![[figures/t80_q102.png]]
+- A) Plain Flap
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Fowler
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Fowler flap moves rearward and downward, simultaneously increasing both wing area and camber, making it the most effective type of trailing-edge flap. The diagram shows this characteristic rearward extension. A plain flap (A) simply hinges downward without moving aft. A split flap (B) deflects only the lower surface panel. A slotted flap (C) opens a gap but does not significantly increase wing area like the Fowler design.
+
+### Q103: The resultant of all aerodynamic forces on a wing profile acts through the: ^t80q103
+- A) Centre of gravity
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Aerodynamic centre
+- D) Centre of symmetry
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic centre is the point on the aerofoil through which the resultant of all aerodynamic pressure forces (lift and drag combined) is considered to act, and about which the pitching moment coefficient remains approximately constant with changes in angle of attack, located near the quarter-chord point. Option A is wrong because the centre of gravity is where weight acts, not aerodynamic forces. Option B is incorrect because the stagnation point is where airflow velocity is zero at the leading edge. Option D is not a standard aerodynamic term.
+
+### Q104: At approximately what altitude is the air density half of its sea-level value? ^t80q104
+- A) 2,000 ft
+- B) 20,000 metres
+- C) 2,000 metres
+- D) 6,600 metres
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere, air density decreases approximately exponentially with altitude and reaches half its sea-level value at roughly 6,600 m (about 21,600 ft). Option A (2,000 ft) is far too low — density barely changes at that altitude. Option B (20,000 m) is in the stratosphere, where density is far below half. Option C (2,000 m) is also too low — density there is still about 80% of the sea-level value.
+
+### Q105: The airspeed indicator (ASI) reading is based on a measurement of: ^t80q105
+- A) The weathervane effect where pressure decreases
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure
+- C) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- D) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures dynamic pressure, which is the difference between total (pitot) pressure and static pressure: q = p_total - p_static = 0.5 × rho × V². This differential measurement directly indicates airspeed. Option A is nonsensical — a weathervane measures wind direction, not pressure. Option C is wrong because measuring only total pressure without subtracting static pressure gives no speed information. Option D is also incorrect because static pressure alone tells you only about altitude, not airspeed.
+
+### Q106: Roll stability is influenced by: ^t80q106
+- A) The use of leading edge slats
+- B) Rotations around the lateral axis
+- C) The action of the horizontal stabiliser
+- D) Wing sweep and dihedral
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Roll (lateral) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral and wing sweep, both of which create restoring roll moments when the aircraft sideslips after a bank disturbance. Option A is wrong because leading-edge slats are high-lift devices that delay stall, not stability features. Option B describes pitch motion, not roll stability. Option C is incorrect because the horizontal stabiliser provides pitch (longitudinal) stability, not roll stability.
+
+### Q107: The speed range for operating slotted flaps: ^t80q107
+- A) Is without any upper limit
+- B) Is limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed
+- C) Is published in the Flight Manual (AFM)
+- D) Is limited at the lower end by the red radial line on the ASI
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted speed range for flap operation varies between aircraft types and is always specified in the Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM), typically also indicated on the ASI as a white arc. Option A is dangerously wrong — flaps have structural speed limits. Option B is incorrect because the upper flap speed (VFE) is typically different from the manoeuvring speed (VA). Option D is wrong because the red radial line is VNE (never-exceed speed), which has nothing to do with the lower flap speed limit.
+
+### Q108: When the wing's angle of incidence is larger at the root than at the tip, this is called: ^t80q108
+- A) Aspect ratio
+- B) Aerodynamic twist
+- C) Geometric twist (washout)
+- D) Interference compensation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geometric twist (washout) is a physical twist built into the wing so that the angle of incidence progressively decreases from root to tip. This ensures the root stalls first, preserving aileron effectiveness near the tips. Option A (aspect ratio) is the span-to-chord ratio. Option B (aerodynamic twist) achieves a similar stall progression by using different aerofoil profiles along the span rather than physical twist. Option D (interference compensation) is not a standard aerodynamic term for wing twist.
+
+### Q109: Barometric pressure in the Earth's atmosphere has the characteristic of: ^t80q109
+- A) Decreasing linearly with increasing altitude
+- B) Remaining constant
+- C) Decreasing in the troposphere then increasing in the stratosphere
+- D) Decreasing exponentially with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure follows an approximately exponential decay with altitude, as described by the barometric formula. Each equal altitude increment reduces pressure by the same percentage, not the same absolute amount. Option A is wrong because the relationship is exponential, not linear. Option B is obviously false — pressure clearly drops with altitude. Option C is incorrect because pressure continues to decrease in the stratosphere; it is temperature, not pressure, that stabilises or increases in the stratosphere.
+
+### Q110: The simplified continuity equation says the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections at the same instant. Therefore: ^t80q110
+- A) The air speed does not vary
+- B) Air flows at a lower speed through a larger cross-section
+- C) Air flows at a higher speed through a larger cross-section
+- D) Air flows at a lower speed through a smaller cross-section
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation for incompressible flow states A1 × V1 = A2 × V2 (area times velocity is constant). If the cross-section increases, velocity must decrease proportionally to maintain the same mass flow rate. Option A is wrong because velocity does change with cross-section. Option C reverses the relationship — velocity decreases, not increases, with a larger cross-section. Option D also reverses it — velocity increases through a smaller section, not decreases.
+
+### Q111: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 4 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q111
+- A) Stagnation point
+- B) Separation point
+- C) Centre of pressure
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 4 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) marks the separation point, where the boundary layer detaches from the upper wing surface due to an adverse pressure gradient, forming a turbulent wake behind it. Option A is wrong because the stagnation point is at the leading edge (point 1). Option C is incorrect because the centre of pressure is a theoretical force application point, not a boundary layer feature. Option D is wrong because the transition point (laminar to turbulent) occurs further forward on the surface.
+
+### Q112: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 1 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q112
+- A) Transition point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Stagnation point
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) is the stagnation point at the leading edge, where the incoming airflow divides into upper and lower streams, velocity is zero, and static pressure reaches its maximum. Option A is wrong because the transition point occurs further aft where laminar flow becomes turbulent. Option B is incorrect because the centre of pressure is a resultant force point, not a physical flow location on the leading edge.
+
+### Q113: What constructive feature is depicted in the figure? See figure (PFA-006) L: Lift Siehe Anlage 4 ^t80q113
+- A) Directional stability achieved through lift generation
+- B) Longitudinal stability through wing dihedral
+- C) Lateral stability provided by wing dihedral
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The figure shows wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings relative to the horizontal plane — which provides lateral (roll) stability. When one wing drops in a sideslip, the lower wing experiences a higher effective angle of attack, generating more lift and producing a restoring roll moment. Option A is wrong because directional stability comes from the vertical tail, not dihedral. Option B incorrectly identifies the axis — dihedral affects roll (lateral), not pitch (longitudinal) stability. Option D describes an aileron design feature unrelated to the figure.
+
+### Q114: "Longitudinal stability" refers to stability around which axis? ^t80q114
+- A) Vertical axis
+- B) Longitudinal axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Propeller axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Despite its potentially confusing name, longitudinal stability refers to pitch stability, which is rotation around the lateral axis (the axis running from wingtip to wingtip). It describes the aircraft's tendency to return to a trimmed pitch attitude. Option A is wrong because the vertical axis governs yaw (directional stability). Option B is incorrect because the longitudinal axis governs roll (lateral stability). Option D is not a recognised stability axis in standard aeronautical terminology.
+
+### Q115: Rotation about the vertical axis is termed... ^t80q115
+- A) Pitching
+- B) Yawing
+- C) Rolling
+- D) Slipping
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yawing is the rotation of the aircraft around the vertical (normal) axis, causing the nose to swing left or right. It is controlled primarily by the rudder. Option A (pitching) is rotation around the lateral axis. Option C (rolling) is rotation around the longitudinal axis. Option D (slipping) describes a flight condition with a sideways airflow component, not a specific rotational axis.
+
+### Q116: Rotation about the lateral axis is termed... ^t80q116
+- A) Stalling
+- B) Rolling
+- C) Yawing
+- D) Pitching
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pitching is the rotation of the aircraft around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip), resulting in nose-up or nose-down movement, controlled by the elevator. Option A (stalling) is an aerodynamic phenomenon of flow separation, not a rotational term. Option B (rolling) is rotation around the longitudinal axis. Option C (yawing) is rotation around the vertical axis.
+
+### Q117: The elevator causes the aircraft to rotate around the... ^t80q117
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Lateral axis
+- C) Elevator axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator controls pitch, which is rotation around the lateral axis (running from wingtip to wingtip). By deflecting the elevator, the pilot changes the aerodynamic force on the tail, creating a pitching moment that raises or lowers the nose. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll, controlled by ailerons. Option C is not a standard aeronautical axis. Option D is wrong because the vertical axis governs yaw, controlled by the rudder.
+
+### Q118: What must be considered regarding the centre of gravity position? ^t80q118
+- A) The C.G. position can only be determined once the aircraft is airborne
+- B) Moving the aileron trim tab can correct the C.G. position
+- C) Only proper loading ensures a correct and safe C.G. position
+- D) Adjusting the elevator trim tab can shift the C.G. to the correct position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity position is determined solely by how mass is distributed within the aircraft — only correct loading of occupants, baggage, and ballast within approved limits ensures a safe CG. Option A is wrong because CG must be verified on the ground before flight using weight and balance calculations. Option B is incorrect because aileron trim tabs adjust roll forces, not mass distribution. Option D is also wrong because trim tabs change aerodynamic balance forces, they cannot physically move the CG.
+
+### Q119: What benefit does differential aileron deflection provide? ^t80q119
+- A) The ratio of drag coefficient to lift coefficient increases
+- B) Total lift remains constant during aileron deflection
+- C) Adverse yaw is increased
+- D) Drag on the down-going aileron is reduced, making adverse yaw smaller
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection means the down-going aileron deflects less than the up-going aileron, which reduces the extra induced drag on the descending wing and thus minimises adverse yaw — the unwanted yawing opposite to the intended roll direction. Option A is wrong because the purpose is drag reduction, not increasing the drag-to-lift ratio. Option B is incorrect because total lift does change somewhat during aileron deflection. Option C states the opposite of the actual effect — differential ailerons decrease adverse yaw, not increase it.
+
+### Q120: What does the aerodynamic rudder balance accomplish? ^t80q120
+- A) It improves rudder effectiveness
+- B) It reduces the control stick forces
+- C) It delays the stall
+- D) It reduces the control surfaces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (such as a horn balance or set-back hinge) positions part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so that aerodynamic pressure partially assists the pilot's input, reducing the force needed to deflect the control. Option A is incorrect because the purpose is force reduction, not improved effectiveness. Option C is wrong because stall delay is achieved by devices like slats or vortex generators, not control surface balancing. Option D makes no sense — aerodynamic balance does not reduce the size of control surfaces.
+
+### Q121: What purpose does static rudder (mass) balancing serve? ^t80q121
+- A) To limit the control stick forces
+- B) To increase the control stick forces
+- C) To prevent control surface flutter
+- D) To enable force-free trimming
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static (mass) balancing places counterweights ahead of the hinge line to move the control surface's centre of mass to or forward of the hinge. This prevents flutter — a dangerous self-exciting aeroelastic oscillation that can destroy the control surface and airframe at speed. Option A is wrong because limiting stick forces is the role of aerodynamic balance, not mass balance. Option B is the opposite of any balancing goal. Option D is incorrect because force-free trimming is achieved by trim tabs, not mass balance.
+
+### Q122: When the elevator trim tab is deflected upwards, what does the trim indicator show? ^t80q122
+- A) Laterally trimmed
+- B) Neutral position
+- C) Nose-down position
+- D) Nose-up position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward-deflected trim tab generates a downward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, which pushes the elevator's leading edge upward, creating a nose-down pitching moment. The trim indicator therefore shows a nose-down position. Option A is irrelevant — lateral trim concerns roll, not pitch. Option B would require the tab to be neutral. Option D is the opposite — a nose-up indication would require the trim tab to deflect downward.
+
+### Q123: On the polar diagram, what flight condition does point number 1 indicate? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q123
+- A) Slow flight
+- B) Best gliding angle
+- C) Stall
+- D) Inverted flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) lies in the region of negative lift coefficient, representing inverted flight where the aircraft flies upside down and the wing produces downward lift relative to its normal orientation. Options A, B, and C all correspond to positive (upright) portions of the polar curve — slow flight is near maximum CL, stall is at CL_max, and best gliding angle is at the tangent point from the origin.
+
+### Q124: In a coordinated turn, what is the relationship between load factor (n) and stall speed (Vs)? ^t80q124
+- A) n is less than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+- B) n is greater than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- C) n is less than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- D) n is greater than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated banked turn, the lift vector must support both the weight and provide centripetal force, so the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) is always greater than 1. The stall speed increases by the factor sqrt(n), because more lift is needed and thus a higher speed is required to avoid the stall. Options A and C are wrong because n is always above 1 in a level turn. Option D incorrectly states that Vs decreases — higher load factor always raises stall speed.
+
+### Q125: The pressure equalisation between the upper and lower wing surfaces results in... ^t80q125
+- A) Profile drag caused by wingtip vortices
+- B) Laminar airflow caused by wingtip vortices
+- C) Lift generated by wingtip vortices
+- D) Induced drag caused by wingtip vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces causes air to flow around the wingtips, forming trailing vortices. These vortices create downwash that tilts the lift vector rearward, producing induced drag. Option A is wrong because wingtip vortices cause induced drag, not profile drag. Option B is incorrect because vortices create turbulent, not laminar, flow. Option C is false because vortices actually reduce effective lift by reducing the local angle of attack.
+
+### Q126: In steady glide at equal mass, how does using a thicker aerofoil compare to a thinner one? ^t80q126
+- A) Less drag, same lift
+- B) More drag, less lift
+- C) Less drag, less lift
+- D) More drag, same lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steady glide at the same mass, lift must equal weight regardless of the aerofoil thickness, so lift remains the same. However, a thicker aerofoil generates greater form (pressure) drag due to its larger cross-section and more severe adverse pressure gradients. Options A and C are wrong because a thicker profile produces more, not less, drag. Option B is incorrect because lift does not decrease — it is fixed by the weight requirement in steady flight.
+
+### Q127: What does a profile polar diagram display? ^t80q127
+- A) The lift coefficient cA at various angles of attack
+- B) The ratio of minimum sink rate to best glide
+- C) The ratio between total lift and drag as a function of angle of attack
+- D) The relationship between cA and cD at different angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A profile polar (Lilienthal polar) plots the lift coefficient (cA or CL) against the drag coefficient (cD or CD) at various angles of attack, showing how aerodynamic efficiency changes across the operating range. Option A describes only a CL-vs-alpha curve, not a polar. Option B relates to the speed polar of a glider, not a profile polar. Option C is imprecise — the polar shows the CL-CD relationship directly, not a simple ratio.
+
+### Q128: Any arbitrarily shaped body placed in an airflow (v > 0) always produces... ^t80q128
+- A) Drag that remains constant at any speed
+- B) Lift without drag
+- C) Drag
+- D) Both drag and lift
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body in a moving airflow always experiences drag due to viscous friction and pressure forces opposing the motion — this is unavoidable in a real fluid. Lift, however, requires specific aerodynamic shaping or orientation. Option A is wrong because drag varies with the square of velocity, not constant. Option B is physically impossible — drag-free lift does not exist. Option D is incorrect because an arbitrarily shaped body is not guaranteed to produce lift; only specifically shaped or oriented bodies generate lift.
+
+### Q129: In the diagram, what does number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q129
+- A) Chord
+- B) Chord line
+- C) Camber line
+- D) Thickness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the aerofoil diagram PFA-010, number 3 represents the camber line (mean camber line), which is the curved line equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil. Options A and B both refer to the straight reference line from leading to trailing edge, which is a different feature. Option D (thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a line on the diagram.
+
+### Q130: Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw? ^t80q130
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) Full deflection of the aileron
+- C) Differential aileron deflection
+- D) Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection reduces adverse yaw by deflecting the down-going aileron less than the up-going aileron, thereby reducing the extra induced drag on the descending wing that causes the nose to yaw opposite to the intended turn. Option A is wrong because wing dihedral provides roll stability, not yaw compensation. Option B would actually worsen adverse yaw because full deflection maximises the drag asymmetry. Option D is not a valid answer — it merely repeats the question.
+
+### Q131: What does "wing loading" describe? ^t80q131
+- A) Drag per weight
+- B) Wing area per weight
+- C) Drag per wing area
+- D) Weight per wing area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is defined as total aircraft weight divided by wing reference area, expressed in units such as N/m² or kg/m². It determines stall speed, gust sensitivity, and overall handling characteristics. Option A (drag per weight) describes a drag-to-weight ratio. Option B is the inverse of wing loading. Option C (drag per wing area) is not a standard aeronautical parameter.
+
+### Q132: On the polar diagram, what flight state does point number 5 represent? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q132
+- A) Best gliding angle
+- B) Inverted flight
+- C) Stall
+- D) Slow flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 5 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) corresponds to slow flight — a high angle of attack, low speed condition on the positive portion of the polar before reaching the stall point. Option A (best gliding angle) corresponds to the tangent from the origin touching the polar. Option B (inverted flight) would appear on the negative CL side. Option C (stall) is at the CL_max point, which is the very top of the polar, beyond slow flight.
+
+### Q133: What is the aerodynamic effect of deploying airbrakes? ^t80q133
+- A) Both drag and lift increase
+- B) Both drag and lift decrease
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airbrakes (spoilers/dive brakes) serve to steepen the glide path by significantly increasing drag while simultaneously disrupting upper-surface airflow, which reduces lift. Option A is wrong because lift decreases with airbrakes deployed. Option B is incorrect because drag increases, not decreases. Option D reverses both effects — airbrakes increase drag and decrease lift.
+
+### Q134: Which combination of measures can improve the glide ratio of a sailplane? ^t80q134
+- A) Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- B) Higher mass, thin aerofoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- C) Lower mass, correct speed, retractable gear
+- D) Cleaning surfaces, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide ratio (L/D) is maximised by minimising total drag while flying at the optimal speed. Cleaning surfaces reduces skin friction, taping gaps prevents leakage drag, retractable gear eliminates a major source of parasite drag, and maintaining best-glide speed keeps the aircraft at peak L/D. Option A is suboptimal because a forward CG increases trim drag. Option B is wrong because higher mass does not improve the L/D ratio itself. Option C omits important drag-reduction measures like taping gaps and surface cleaning.
+
+### Q135: What distinguishes a spin from a spiral dive? ^t80q135
+- A) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- B) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- C) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+- D) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a spin, the inner (lower) wing is deeply stalled while the outer wing may still be producing some lift, creating autorotation at a near-constant, relatively low airspeed. In a spiral dive, neither wing is stalled, and the aircraft descends in a tightening bank with rapidly increasing airspeed. Option A incorrectly identifies the outer wing as stalled. Options C and D incorrectly assign speed characteristics — in a spin, speed is roughly constant; in a spiral dive, speed increases rapidly.
+
+### Q136: The longitudinal position of the centre of gravity primarily affects stability around which axis? ^t80q136
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Gravity axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The longitudinal (fore-aft) position of the CG directly determines pitch stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. The CG must be forward of the neutral point for positive pitch stability; the further forward, the more statically stable but the heavier the elevator forces. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll stability, influenced by dihedral. Option B is not a standard axis. Option D is wrong because the vertical axis governs directional stability, influenced by the vertical tail.
+
+### Q137: Which structural element provides directional stability? ^t80q137
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) A large elevator
+- C) A large vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical tail fin acts as a weathervane, producing a restoring yawing moment whenever the aircraft sideslips, thereby providing directional (yaw) stability around the vertical axis. A larger fin provides greater stability. Option A (wing dihedral) provides lateral (roll) stability. Option B (elevator) contributes to pitch stability. Option D (differential aileron deflection) reduces adverse yaw but is not a stability feature.
+
+### Q138: In straight-and-level flight at constant engine power, how does the wing's angle of attack compare to that in a climb? ^t80q138
+- A) Larger than in a climb
+- B) Larger than at take-off
+- C) Smaller than in a descent
+- D) Smaller than in a climb
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a climb at the same engine power, the aircraft flies slower because more energy goes into gaining altitude, requiring a higher angle of attack to maintain sufficient lift. Therefore, the level-flight angle of attack is smaller than in a climb. Option A reverses the relationship. Option B compares to take-off, which is not directly related to the question. Option C is incorrect because in a descent the aircraft accelerates, typically reducing AoA below the level-flight value.
+
+### Q139: What is one function of the horizontal tail? ^t80q139
+- A) To stabilise the aircraft around the lateral axis
+- B) To initiate a turn around the vertical axis
+- C) To stabilise the aircraft around the vertical axis
+- D) To stabilise the aircraft around the longitudinal axis
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator) provides longitudinal (pitch) stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. It generates restoring moments when the aircraft's pitch attitude is disturbed. Option B is wrong because turns around the vertical axis are initiated by the rudder. Option C is incorrect because vertical axis stability comes from the vertical tail. Option D is wrong because longitudinal axis (roll) stability is provided by wing dihedral and sweep.
+
+### Q140: What happens when the rudder is deflected to the left? ^t80q140
+- A) The aircraft pitches to the right
+- B) The aircraft yaws to the right
+- C) The aircraft pitches to the left
+- D) The aircraft yaws to the left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the rudder is deflected to the left, it produces a sideways aerodynamic force on the tail that pushes the tail to the right, yawing the nose to the left around the vertical axis. Options A and C are wrong because pitching is a nose-up/nose-down motion controlled by the elevator, not the rudder. Option B reverses the yaw direction — left rudder produces left yaw.
+
+### Q141: Differential aileron deflection is employed to... ^t80q141
+- A) Increase the rate of descent
+- B) Prevent stalling at low angles of attack
+- C) Minimise adverse yaw
+- D) Reduce wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection gives the down-going aileron less deflection than the up-going aileron, reducing the drag asymmetry between the two wings during a roll input and thereby minimising adverse yaw. Option A is wrong because descent rate is controlled by airbrakes or speed, not aileron geometry. Option B is incorrect because stall prevention at low AoA is not an issue. Option D is wrong because wake turbulence is caused by wingtip vortices, not aileron design.
+
+### Q142: How is the force balance affected during a banked turn? ^t80q142
+- A) A lower lift force is sufficient because the net force is reduced compared to level flight
+- B) The horizontal component of the lift during the turn constitutes the centrifugal force
+- C) Lift must be increased to balance the combined effect of gravity and centrifugal force
+- D) The net force is the vector sum of gravitational and centripetal forces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the tilted lift vector must be large enough that its vertical component still equals weight while its horizontal component provides the centripetal force for the curved path. This means total lift must exceed the straight-and-level value, with the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle). Option A is wrong because more, not less, lift is needed. Option B is imprecise — from the aircraft's reference frame it appears as centrifugal force, but the actual physics involves centripetal force. Option D does not fully describe the force balance requirement.
+
+### Q143: On a Touring Motor Glider (TMG), which engine arrangement produces the least drag? ^t80q143
+- A) Engine and propeller fixed at the aircraft's nose
+- B) Engine and propeller fixed on the fuselage
+- C) Engine and propeller retractable into the fuselage
+- D) Engine and propeller fixed at the horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A retractable engine and propeller can be fully stowed inside the fuselage when not in use, completely eliminating the parasite drag from the powerplant and propeller during soaring flight. Options A, B, and D all involve fixed (non-retractable) installations that continuously produce drag even when the engine is shut down, because the propeller and engine cowling remain exposed to the airstream.
+
+### Q144: What effect is known as "adverse yaw"? ^t80q144
+- A) Aileron input yaws the nose toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input creates a rolling moment toward the opposite side due to extra lift on the faster-moving wing
+- C) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the down-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the up-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-deflected aileron increases both lift and induced drag on its wing. This extra drag on the rising wing yaws the nose toward it — away from the intended direction of turn. Option A describes the opposite effect. Option B describes a secondary effect of rudder, not the primary adverse yaw phenomenon. Option D incorrectly attributes the extra drag to the up-deflected aileron, when in fact it is the down-deflected aileron that produces more drag.
+
+### Q145: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q145
+- A) An increase in lift and decrease in induced drag near the ground
+- B) A decrease in lift and increase in induced drag near the ground
+- C) A decrease in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+- D) An increase in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying within approximately one wingspan of the ground, the ground surface restricts the full development of wingtip vortices, reducing downwash. This effectively increases the local angle of attack (more lift) and reduces induced drag simultaneously. Option B reverses both effects. Option C incorrectly states lift decreases. Option D incorrectly states induced drag increases. Pilots experience ground effect as a floating sensation during the landing flare.
+
+### Q146: Rudder deflections rotate the aircraft around the... ^t80q146
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Rudder axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rudder controls yaw, which is rotation around the vertical axis, causing the nose to swing left or right. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll, controlled by ailerons. Option B is not a standard aeronautical axis designation. Option C is wrong because the lateral axis governs pitch, controlled by the elevator.
+
+### Q147: Which of the following factors causes the load factor to increase during cruise flight? ^t80q147
+- A) A forward centre of gravity
+- B) Higher aircraft weight
+- C) An upward gust
+- D) Lower air density
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward gust suddenly increases the wing's angle of attack, temporarily generating lift in excess of the aircraft's weight. This additional lift translates into a load factor greater than 1, stressing the structure. Option A (forward CG) affects pitch stability and trim drag but does not directly cause load factor spikes. Option B (higher weight) means higher sustained loads but does not itself cause an increase in load factor n. Option D (lower density) reduces lift for a given speed, which would lower, not raise, the instantaneous load factor.
+
+### Q148: While approaching the next updraft, the variometer shows 3 m/s descent. You expect a mean climb rate of 2 m/s in the thermal. How should you set the McCready ring? ^t80q148
+- A) Set the ring to 3 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the expected climb rate (2 m/s)
+- B) Set the ring to 0 m/s outside thermals and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- C) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- D) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the sum of current sink rate and expected climb rate (5 m/s)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The McCready ring is always set to the expected climb rate in the next thermal (2 m/s in this case), and the recommended inter-thermal cruise speed is then read at the variometer needle position showing the current sink rate (3 m/s). Option A incorrectly sets the ring to the sink rate instead of the thermal strength. Option B sets the ring to zero, which would give a minimum-sink rather than optimal cruise speed. Option D erroneously adds the sink rate and climb rate together, which is not how McCready theory works.
+
+### Q149: What must be considered when flying a sailplane equipped with camber flaps? ^t80q149
+- A) During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive
+- B) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive
+- C) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative
+- D) During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During approach and landing, switching the camber flap from positive (increased camber, higher lift) to negative (reduced or reflexed camber) would cause a sudden and dramatic drop in lift close to the ground, potentially leading to a dangerous sink or ground contact. Option A is not universally correct — winch launch flap settings vary by type. Option B reverses the restriction. Option D is wrong because negative camber is a cruise setting, not appropriate for the high-lift-demand winch launch phase.
+
+### Q150: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q150
+- A) Separation point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 3 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) is the transition point, where the boundary layer changes from smooth laminar flow to turbulent flow. The position of this transition depends on Reynolds number, surface roughness, and pressure gradient. Option A (separation point) occurs further aft, where flow detaches entirely. Option B (centre of pressure) is not a boundary layer feature but a force application point. Option C (stagnation point) is at the leading edge, where flow velocity is zero.
+
+### Q151: In the diagram, what does number 2 correspond to? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q151
+- A) Angle of attack
+- B) Profile thickness
+- C) Chord line
+- D) Chord line
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Number 2 in figure PFA-010 represents the chord line — the straight reference line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge of the aerofoil. It is the baseline from which the angle of attack and camber are measured. Option A (angle of attack) is an angular measurement, not a line on the diagram. Option B (profile thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a straight reference line.
+
+### Q152: In the figure, the angle (alpha) is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow Siehe Anlage 3 ^t80q152
+- A) Angle of inclination
+- B) Angle of incidence
+- C) Angle of attack
+- D) Lift angle
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle alpha between the chord line and the direction of the oncoming airflow is the angle of attack, the primary aerodynamic variable determining lift coefficient and stall behaviour. Option A (angle of inclination) is not a standard aeronautical term. Option B (angle of incidence) is the fixed structural angle between the chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis, set during manufacturing. Option D (lift angle) is not a recognized aviation term.
+
+### Q153: If the right aileron deflects upward and the left aileron deflects downward, how does the aircraft react? ^t80q153
+- A) Rolling to the right with yaw to the left
+- B) Rolling to the right with yaw to the right
+- C) Rolling to the left with no yawing
+- D) Rolling to the left with yaw to the right
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the right aileron deflects upward (reducing lift on the right wing) and the left aileron deflects downward (increasing lift on the left wing), the aircraft rolls to the right. Simultaneously, the down-deflected left aileron creates more induced drag on the left wing, producing adverse yaw — the nose swings to the left, opposite the intended roll direction. Options C and D incorrectly identify a leftward roll. Option B states yaw to the right, but adverse yaw always opposes the roll direction.
+
+### Q154: What must be taken into account when flying a sailplane with water ballast? ^t80q154
+- A) Best glide angle becomes worse
+- B) Best glide speed decreases
+- C) Significant C.G. shifts occur
+- D) The aircraft should stay below the freezing level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast must be kept above freezing (i.e., the aircraft should stay below the freezing level) to prevent the water from freezing in the wing tanks, which could jam dump valves, cause unpredictable CG shifts, and damage wing structure. Option A is wrong because the best glide angle (L/D ratio) is theoretically unchanged with ballast. Option B is incorrect — best glide speed increases with additional weight. Option C is misleading because water ballast tanks are designed to minimise CG shifts, keeping them within approved limits.
+
+### Q155: Which description characterises static stability? ^t80q155
+- A) After an external disturbance, the aircraft can return to its original position through rudder input
+- B) After an external disturbance, the aircraft maintains the displaced position
+- C) After an external disturbance, the aircraft tends toward an even more deflected position
+- D) After an external disturbance, the aircraft tends to return to its original position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability means that when an aircraft is displaced from equilibrium by an external force, inherent aerodynamic forces automatically tend to return it toward its original state without pilot input. Option A describes active pilot correction, not inherent stability. Option B describes neutral stability, where the aircraft stays wherever it is displaced. Option C describes static instability, where the aircraft diverges further from equilibrium.
+
+### Q156: How do the best gliding angle and best glide speed change when a sailplane carries water ballast compared to flying without it? ^t80q156
+- A) Best gliding angle remains unchanged; best glide speed increases
+- B) Best gliding angle increases; best glide speed increases
+- C) Best gliding angle remains unchanged; best glide speed decreases
+- D) Best gliding angle decreases; best glide speed decreases
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast increases total aircraft weight. The best L/D ratio (and therefore the best gliding angle) is an aerodynamic property of the aircraft's shape and does not change with weight. However, the speed at which this optimum L/D occurs increases because more dynamic pressure is needed to generate the extra lift required by the heavier aircraft. Option B wrongly claims the angle changes. Options C and D incorrectly state that best glide speed decreases.
+
+### Q157: Which constructive feature is designed to reduce control forces? ^t80q157
+- A) T-tail
+- B) Vortex generators
+- C) Aerodynamic rudder balance
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (horn balance or set-back hinge) extends part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so aerodynamic pressure partially assists the pilot's deflection effort, directly reducing the force required. Option A (T-tail) is a configuration choice affecting downwash and deep-stall characteristics. Option B (vortex generators) energise the boundary layer to delay flow separation. Option D (differential aileron deflection) reduces adverse yaw, not control forces.
+
+### Q158: When any body of arbitrary shape is surrounded by airflow (v > 0), it always produces... ^t80q158
+- A) Drag
+- B) Both drag and lift
+- C) Drag that remains constant at every speed
+- D) Lift without drag
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body immersed in a moving airstream (v > 0) always produces drag, because viscous friction and pressure differences are unavoidable in real fluid flow. Lift requires specific shaping or angle of attack and is not guaranteed. Option B is wrong because lift is not always produced. Option C is incorrect because drag increases with V² — it is not constant. Option D is physically impossible — drag-free flight does not exist in a real fluid.
+
+### Q159: "Longitudinal stability" refers to stability around which axis? ^t80q159
+- A) Vertical axis
+- B) Propeller axis
+- C) Longitudinal axis
+- D) Lateral axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Despite the potentially confusing name, longitudinal stability describes pitch stability, which is rotation around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip). It is the tendency to maintain or return to a trimmed pitch attitude. Option A (vertical axis) governs directional/yaw stability. Option B (propeller axis) is not a standard stability axis. Option C (longitudinal axis) governs roll/lateral stability.
+
+### Q160: What does "wing loading" mean? ^t80q160
+- A) Drag per wing area
+- B) Weight per wing area
+- C) Drag per weight
+- D) Wing area per weight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is the aircraft's total weight divided by the wing reference area (e.g., N/m² or kg/m²). Higher wing loading means higher stall speeds but better penetration in turbulence. Option A (drag per wing area) is not a standard metric. Option C (drag per weight) describes a drag-to-weight ratio. Option D (wing area per weight) is the mathematical inverse of wing loading.
+
+### Q161: What phenomenon is known as adverse yaw? ^t80q161
+- A) Aileron input causes a yaw toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input produces a rolling moment toward the opposite side because the faster-moving wing generates more lift
+- C) Aileron input causes a yaw away from the intended turn due to more drag on the up-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input causes a yaw away from the intended turn due to more drag on the down-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-deflected aileron, which increases local lift on the rising wing, also increases induced drag on that wing. This extra drag pulls the nose toward the rising wing — away from the intended turn direction. Option A describes the opposite phenomenon. Option B describes a secondary rudder-roll coupling, not the primary adverse yaw effect. Option C incorrectly attributes the drag increase to the up-deflected aileron; in reality, it is the down-deflected aileron that creates more drag.
+
+### Q162: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q162
+- A) Both lift and induced drag decrease near the ground
+- B) Both lift and induced drag increase near the ground
+- C) Lift decreases and induced drag increases near the ground
+- D) Lift increases and induced drag decreases near the ground
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ground effect (within approximately one wingspan of the surface), the ground physically constrains wingtip vortex development, reducing downwash. This increases the effective angle of attack (raising lift) while simultaneously reducing induced drag. Pilots notice this as a floating sensation during the landing flare. Options A, B, and C all incorrectly describe the lift-drag relationship — the correct combination is increased lift with decreased induced drag.
+
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+# Communications
+
+---
+
+### Q1: When should a pilot make use of blind transmissions? ^t90q1
+- A) When a transmission with important navigational or technical data needs to be sent to multiple stations simultaneously
+- B) When the traffic situation at an airport permits sending information that does not require acknowledgement by the ground station
+- C) When a pilot has inadvertently entered cloud or fog and wishes to request navigational help from a ground unit
+- D) When two-way radio communication cannot be established with the relevant aeronautical station, but there is reason to believe that transmissions are being received at that ground unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission is used when the pilot cannot receive responses (e.g., due to a faulty receiver) but has reason to believe the ground station can still hear the transmissions, allowing ATC to track the aircraft's position and intentions. Option A describes a broadcast, not a blind transmission. Option B is not a recognised scenario for blind transmissions. Option C describes a situation requiring two-way communication or an urgency declaration, not a blind transmission.
+
+### Q2: What is the standard abbreviation for the term "abeam"? ^t90q2
+- A) ABA
+- B) ABE
+- C) ABM
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ABM is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for "abeam," meaning a position at a right angle to the aircraft's track — directly to the side. This abbreviation appears in flight plans, ATC communications, and aeronautical charts. Options A, B, and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations for this term.
+
+### Q3: What abbreviation represents "visual flight rules"? ^t90q3
+- A) VMC
+- B) VFR
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VFR stands for Visual Flight Rules, the regulatory framework under which pilots navigate by visual reference to the ground and other aircraft. Option A (VMC) stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions, which describes the weather requirements for VFR flight — related but distinct. Options C and D are not standard aviation abbreviations.
+
+### Q4: What is the ICAO abbreviation for "obstacle"? ^t90q4
+- A) OBS
+- B) OST
+- C) OBST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** OBST is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for obstacle, used in NOTAMs, aeronautical charts, and ATC communications. Option A (OBS) can mean "observe" or "observation" in ICAO documentation but does not denote obstacle. Options B and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q5: What does the abbreviation "FIS" represent? ^t90q5
+- A) Flashing information service
+- B) Flight information system
+- C) Flashing information system
+- D) Flight information service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS stands for Flight Information Service — a service providing pilots with information useful for the safe and efficient conduct of flights, including weather updates, NOTAMs, and traffic advisories. Options A and C contain "flashing," which has no relevance to this aviation service. Option B incorrectly uses "system" instead of "service."
+
+### Q6: What does the abbreviation "FIR" represent? ^t90q6
+- A) Flow information radar
+- B) Flight integrity receiver
+- C) Flight information region
+- D) Flow integrity required
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) is a defined volume of airspace within which flight information service and alerting service are provided under ICAO standards. Each country or group of countries has one or more FIRs covering all airspace vertically and horizontally. Options A, B, and D are fabricated terms with no aviation meaning.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "H24" indicate? ^t90q7
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) Sunrise to sunset
+- C) No specific opening times
+- D) 24 h service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** H24 indicates continuous 24-hour service — the facility is staffed and operational at all times. This designation appears in AIP entries and NOTAMs for facilities like major ATC centres. Option A describes HN (night hours). Option B describes HJ (daylight hours). Option C describes HX (no specific hours).
+
+### Q8: What does the abbreviation "HX" indicate? ^t90q8
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) No specific opening hours
+- C) 24 h service
+- D) Sunrise to sunset
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HX means the facility operates at no specific or predetermined hours and may be available on request or intermittently. Pilots must check NOTAMs or contact the facility to verify availability. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option C describes H24 (continuous). Option D describes HJ (sunrise to sunset).
+
+### Q9: To which value must the altimeter be set so that it reads zero on the ground? ^t90q9
+- A) QNH
+- B) QNE
+- C) QFE
+- D) QTE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at aerodrome elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at that aerodrome, displaying height above field during the circuit. Option A (QNH) gives altitude above mean sea level. Option B (QNE) refers to the standard pressure setting of 1013.25 hPa. Option D (QTE) is a true bearing from a station, not an altimeter setting.
+
+### Q10: What altitude does the altimeter display when set to a given QNH value? ^t90q10
+- A) Altitude relative to the highest elevation within 10 km
+- B) Altitude relative to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+- C) Altitude relative to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+- D) Altitude relative to mean sea level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting that, when dialled in, causes the altimeter to indicate altitude above mean sea level (AMSL), which is the standard reference for navigation and airspace limits below the transition altitude. Option A is not a standard altimetry reference. Option B describes QFE behaviour. Option C describes QNE (standard pressure) behaviour.
+
+### Q11: What altitude does the altimeter display when set to a given QFE value? ^t90q11
+- A) Altitude relative to the highest elevation within 10 km
+- B) Altitude relative to mean sea level
+- C) Altitude relative to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+- D) Altitude relative to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With QFE set, the altimeter reads height above the reference aerodrome — the difference between actual pressure altitude and the aerodrome pressure level, showing zero on the ground and direct height above field in the circuit. Option A is not a standard reference. Option B describes QNH behaviour. Option D describes QNE behaviour.
+
+### Q12: What is the proper term for a message used in air traffic control? ^t90q12
+- A) Flight regularity message
+- B) Message related to direction finding
+- C) Meteorological message
+- D) Flight safety message
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC messages — including clearances, instructions, position reports, and traffic information — are classified as flight safety messages, the third-highest priority after distress and urgency in the ICAO message hierarchy. Option A (regularity messages) concern the operation and maintenance of facilities. Option B (direction-finding messages) relate to radio navigation assistance. Option C (meteorological messages) pertain to weather information.
+
+### Q13: How are distress messages defined? ^t90q13
+- A) Messages sent by a pilot or aircraft operating agency with immediate significance for aircraft in flight.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- D) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities important for the safety and regularity of flight operations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A distress message (MAYDAY) is transmitted when an aircraft and its occupants face a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — the highest priority category in aeronautical communications, signalled by transponder code 7700. Option A is too vague and could apply to several message types. Option C describes urgency messages (PAN PAN). Option D describes regularity messages.
+
+### Q14: How are urgency messages defined? ^t90q14
+- A) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages sent by a pilot or aircraft operating agency with immediate significance for aircraft in flight.
+- D) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Urgency messages (PAN PAN) concern a condition that is serious and affects the safety of the aircraft or persons but does not yet constitute a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — examples include controllable engine problems or medical situations on board. Option B defines distress messages (MAYDAY). Option C is a general description that could fit multiple message types. Option D duplicates option A.
+
+### Q15: How are regularity messages defined? ^t90q15
+- A) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- D) Messages sent by an aircraft operating agency or an aircraft with immediate concern for an aircraft in flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Regularity messages relate to the operation and maintenance of facilities necessary for flight operations — essentially administrative and logistical communications with the lowest priority in the ICAO hierarchy. Option A describes urgency-related messages. Option B defines distress messages. Option D describes flight safety messages.
+
+### Q16: Among the following messages, which one has the highest priority? ^t90q16
+- A) QNH 1013
+- B) Wind 300 degrees, 5 knots
+- C) Turn left
+- D) Request QDM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A request for QDM (magnetic heading to steer toward a station) implies the pilot may be lost or unable to navigate independently, making it a potential urgency or flight safety matter with higher priority than routine operational messages. Options A (QNH) and B (wind) are routine advisory information. Option C (turn left) is a standard ATC instruction but carries lower priority than a navigation assistance request.
+
+### Q17: How should the call sign HB-YKM be correctly transmitted? ^t90q17
+- A) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+- B) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: H = Hotel, B = Bravo, Y = Yankee, K = Kilo, M = Mike. Option A uses "Home" instead of "Hotel" and "Mikro" instead of "Mike." Option B uses "Yuliett" (which is J = Juliett, not Y) and "Mikro." Option D uses "Home" and "Yuliett." Only option C uses all correct ICAO phonetic words.
+
+### Q18: How should the call sign OE-JVK be correctly transmitted? ^t90q18
+- A) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- D) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: O = Oscar, E = Echo, J = Juliett, V = Victor, K = Kilo. Option B uses "Omega" (not ICAO) and "Kilogramm." Option C uses "Omega" and "Jankee" (neither is ICAO standard). Option D uses "Jankee" and "Kilogramm." Only option A uses all correct ICAO phonetic words.
+
+### Q19: How is an altitude of 4500 ft correctly transmitted? ^t90q19
+- A) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- B) Four five tousand.
+- C) Four tousand five hundred.
+- D) Four five zero zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO phraseology for altitudes uses "thousand" and "hundred" where appropriate: 4500 ft is spoken as "four thousand five hundred." Option A adds unnecessary zeros after "five." Option B reverses the structure nonsensically. Option D uses digit-by-digit recitation, which is reserved for transponder codes and QNH values, not altitudes.
+
+### Q20: How is a heading of 285 degrees correctly transmitted? ^t90q20
+- A) Two eight five.
+- B) Two hundred eight five.
+- C) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- D) Two eight five hundred.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Headings and bearings are always transmitted as three individual digits spoken separately: "two eight five." The words "hundred" are never used for headings because digit-by-digit transmission eliminates ambiguity. Options B and C use "hundred" or natural number forms, which are not correct for heading transmissions. Option D adds "hundred" after the digits, which is meaningless.
+
+### Q21: How is a frequency of 119.500 MHz correctly transmitted? ^t90q21
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- B) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner decimal five zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Frequencies are transmitted digit by digit with "decimal" for the decimal point, and trailing zeros after significant digits are dropped. 119.500 MHz becomes "one one niner decimal five." Note "niner" is used for 9 to prevent confusion with "nein" (no). Option A retains unnecessary trailing zeros. Option B inserts "tousand" which is not used for frequencies. Option D keeps one trailing zero unnecessarily.
+
+### Q22: How is the directional information "12 o'clock" correctly transmitted? ^t90q22
+- A) One two o'clock
+- B) One two.
+- C) Twelve o'clock.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clock positions for traffic advisories are spoken as the full number followed by "o'clock": "twelve o'clock" means directly ahead. Option A splits "twelve" into digits, which could be confused with other numerical data. Option B omits "o'clock," making the reference ambiguous. Option D adds "hundred," which has no meaning in clock position references.
+
+### Q23: In what time format are times transmitted in aviation? ^t90q23
+- A) Standard time.
+- B) Local time.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Time zone time.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All aeronautical communications use Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), formerly known as GMT or Zulu time, ensuring consistency across time zones worldwide. Pilots must convert local time to UTC for all flight plans, ATC communications, and weather reports. Options A, B, and D all reference local or regional time systems that would cause confusion in international operations.
+
+### Q24: When there is doubt about ambiguity, how should a time of 1620 be transmitted? ^t90q24
+- A) Two zero.
+- B) Sixteen twenty
+- C) One tousand six hundred two zero
+- D) One six two zero.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When there is any risk of ambiguity, ICAO requires the full four-digit UTC time spoken as individual digits: "one six two zero." This eliminates confusion about whether minutes alone or the complete time is being given. Option A gives only the minutes, which could be ambiguous. Option B uses natural number grouping, which is non-standard. Option C uses "tousand" and "hundred," which are not used for time transmission.
+
+### Q25: What does the phrase "Roger" mean? ^t90q25
+- A) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Roger" is an acknowledgement of receipt only — it means "I have received all of your last transmission" and nothing more. It does not imply agreement, compliance, or permission. Option A defines "Approved." Option C defines "Correction." Option D defines "Wilco" (will comply). Pilots must use the correct phrase to avoid dangerous misunderstandings.
+
+### Q26: What does the phrase "Correction" mean? ^t90q26
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Correction" signals that the speaker has made an error in the current transmission and the correct information follows immediately. This prevents the receiving party from acting on faulty data. Option B defines "Roger." Option C defines "Approved." Option D defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q27: What does the phrase "Approved" mean? ^t90q27
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- D) Permission for proposed action is granted
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Approved" means that ATC has granted permission for the action the pilot proposed or requested. It is used specifically in response to pilot requests. Option A defines "Correction." Option B defines "Roger." Option C defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q28: Which phrase does a pilot use to check the readability of their transmission? ^t90q28
+- A) You read me five
+- B) Request readability
+- C) How do you read?
+- D) What is the communication like?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "How do you read?" is the standard ICAO phrase requesting a readability check. The expected response uses the 1-to-5 scale (e.g., "I read you five"). Option A is the format of a readability report, not the request. Option B is not standard phraseology. Option D is plain language and not prescribed ICAO terminology.
+
+### Q29: Which phrase does a pilot use when requesting to fly through controlled airspace? ^t90q29
+- A) Would like
+- B) Request
+- C) Apply
+- D) Want
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Request" is the standard ICAO phraseology for asking ATC for a clearance, service, or permission — for example, "Request transit controlled airspace." Options A, C, and D are colloquial or non-standard terms that should not be used in radiotelephony because they reduce clarity and may not be understood by controllers in multilingual environments.
+
+### Q30: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission is to be answered with "yes"? ^t90q30
+- A) Roger
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirm
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Affirm" is the ICAO-standard word for "yes" in civil aviation radiotelephony. Option A ("Roger") means receipt acknowledged, not agreement. Option B ("Yes") is plain language and not standard phraseology. Option D ("Affirmative") is commonly used in military communications but "Affirm" is the correct civil aviation standard per ICAO.
+
+### Q31: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission is to be answered with "no"? ^t90q31
+- A) No
+- B) Finish
+- C) Negative
+- D) Not
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Negative" is the standard ICAO phraseology for "no" or "that is not correct," chosen for its unambiguous clarity across languages and radio conditions. Option A ("No") is plain language and not standard, and may be misheard. Option B ("Finish") has no meaning in this context. Option D ("Not") is incomplete and not prescribed ICAO terminology.
+
+### Q32: Which phrase should a pilot use to inform the tower that they are ready for take-off? ^t90q32
+- A) Ready
+- B) Ready for departure
+- C) Request take-off
+- D) Ready for start-up
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Ready for departure" is the correct standard phrase at the holding point. Importantly, the word "take-off" is reserved exclusively for the actual clearance ("Cleared for take-off") or its cancellation, to prevent premature action on a misheard word. Option A ("Ready") is too vague. Option C uses "take-off" outside the clearance context. Option D indicates readiness for engine start, not runway departure.
+
+### Q33: What phrase does a pilot use to inform the tower about a go-around? ^t90q33
+- A) No landing
+- B) Approach canceled
+- C) Going around
+- D) Pulling up
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Going around" is the standard ICAO phrase for discontinuing an approach and initiating a missed approach procedure. It must be transmitted immediately upon the decision. Options A, B, and D are all non-standard expressions that are not recognised in ICAO phraseology and could cause confusion, particularly in high-workload situations.
+
+### Q34: What is the call sign suffix of the aerodrome control unit? ^t90q34
+- A) Ground
+- B) Airfield
+- C) Tower
+- D) Control
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome control unit uses the call sign suffix "Tower" (e.g., "Dusseldorf Tower"), responsible for aircraft on the runway and in the circuit. Option A ("Ground") is for surface movement control. Option B ("Airfield") is not a standard ICAO call sign suffix. Option D ("Control") is used for area control centres, not aerodrome control.
+
+### Q35: What is the call sign suffix of the surface movement control unit? ^t90q35
+- A) Ground
+- B) Earth
+- C) Control
+- D) Tower
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface movement control uses the suffix "Ground" (e.g., "Frankfurt Ground"), handling aircraft and vehicles on taxiways and aprons. Option B ("Earth") is not an aviation call sign suffix. Option C ("Control") designates area control. Option D ("Tower") designates aerodrome runway and circuit control.
+
+### Q36: What is the call sign suffix of the flight information service? ^t90q36
+- A) Advice
+- B) Info
+- C) Information
+- D) Flight information
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS units use the suffix "Information" (e.g., "Langen Information" or "Scottish Information"), providing traffic advisories and weather information to VFR pilots. Options A and B are informal abbreviations not used as official call sign suffixes. Option D ("Flight information") is too long — only "Information" is the prescribed suffix.
+
+### Q37: What is the correct abbreviated form of the call sign D-EAZF? ^t90q37
+- A) DEF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) AZF
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO abbreviation rules for five-character call signs retain the first character (nationality prefix D) plus the last two characters (ZF): D-EAZF becomes D-ZF, spoken "Delta Zulu Foxtrot." Option A omits the middle characters incorrectly. Option C takes the first three letters. Option D omits the nationality prefix entirely. Only option B follows the correct first-plus-last-two rule.
+
+### Q38: Under what condition may a pilot abbreviate the call sign of their aircraft? ^t90q38
+- A) After passing the first reporting point
+- B) Within controlled airspace
+- C) After the ground station has used the abbreviation
+- D) If there is little traffic in the traffic circuit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot may only use the abbreviated call sign after the ground station has used it first, ensuring positive identification has been established. Options A, B, and D describe situations that do not grant abbreviation rights — the initiative to abbreviate always lies with the ground station regardless of traffic, airspace class, or position.
+
+### Q39: How should the aircraft call sign be used at first contact? ^t90q39
+- A) Using the first two characters only
+- B) Using the last two characters only
+- C) Using all characters
+- D) Using the first three characters only
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At first contact with any ATC unit, the full aircraft call sign must be used (e.g., "Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot") so the controller can positively identify the aircraft. Options A, B, and D all use partial call signs, which risk confusion with other aircraft and are contrary to ICAO standard procedures for initial contact.
+
+### Q40: How should radio communication be correctly established between D-EAZF and Dusseldorf Tower? ^t90q40
+- A) Tower from D-EAZF
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard format for initial radio contact is: station called first, then own call sign — "Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot." Option A uses the non-standard "from" format. Option B omits the calling aircraft's identification entirely. The ground station is addressed first so the controller knows the call is directed at them, then the aircraft identifies itself.
+
+### Q41: What does readability 1 indicate? ^t90q41
+- A) The transmission is readable now and then
+- B) The transmission is unreadable
+- C) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- D) The transmission is perfectly readable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the ICAO readability scale (1 to 5), readability 1 means the transmission is completely unreadable — no useful information can be extracted. Option A describes readability 2 (readable now and then). Option C describes readability 3 (readable with difficulty). Option D describes readability 5 (perfectly readable).
+
+### Q42: What does readability 2 indicate? ^t90q42
+- A) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- B) The transmission is readable now and then
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is unreadable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 2 means the transmission is only intermittently intelligible — parts come through but the listener cannot reliably understand the full message. Option A describes readability 3. Option C describes readability 5. Option D describes readability 1. A pilot receiving a readability 2 report should try to improve transmission quality.
+
+### Q43: What does readability 3 indicate? ^t90q43
+- A) The transmission is unreadable
+- B) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is readable now and then
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 3 means the transmission is intelligible but requires effort and concentration from the listener, with some words unclear. Option A describes readability 1. Option C describes readability 5. Option D describes readability 2. Readability 3 is often workable for short operational messages but is inadequate for complex clearances.
+
+### Q44: What does readability 5 indicate? ^t90q44
+- A) The transmission is readable now and then
+- B) The transmission is unreadable
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 5 is the highest quality on the ICAO scale — the transmission is perfectly clear and intelligible with no difficulty. Option A describes readability 2. Option B describes readability 1. Option D describes readability 3. "I read you five" is the standard response indicating ideal communication conditions.
+
+### Q45: Which piece of information from a ground station does not require readback? ^t90q45
+- A) Altitude
+- B) Wind
+- C) SSR-Code
+- D) Runway in use
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind information is advisory and acknowledged with "Roger" — no readback is required. Items requiring mandatory readback include: ATC clearances, runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, and heading and speed instructions. Options A, C, and D are all safety-critical items that must be read back to confirm correct receipt.
+
+### Q46: Which piece of information from a ground station does not require readback? ^t90q46
+- A) Heading
+- B) Traffic information
+- C) Taxi instructions
+- D) Altimeter setting
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Traffic information (e.g., "traffic at your two o'clock, one thousand above") is acknowledged with "Roger" or "Traffic in sight" and does not require formal readback. Options A (heading), C (taxi instructions), and D (altimeter setting) are all safety-critical items subject to mandatory readback under ICAO procedures.
+
+### Q47: How should the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q47
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The readback must include all safety-critical items: departure instructions (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, then turn right heading 220), the runway designator (runway 12), and the take-off clearance. Wind information does not require readback and is correctly omitted in option C. Option A incorrectly reads back the wind. Option B misuses "wilco" mid-readback. Option D omits the runway and take-off clearance, which are mandatory readback items.
+
+### Q48: How should the instruction "Next report PAH" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q48
+- A) Roger
+- B) Positive
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Wilco" (will comply) is the correct response to an instruction requiring future action — the pilot acknowledges receipt and confirms they will report at waypoint PAH. Option A ("Roger") only confirms receipt without implying compliance with the instruction. Option B ("Positive") is not standard ICAO phraseology in this context. Option D ("Report PAH") is an incomplete acknowledgement.
+
+### Q49: How should the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q49
+- A) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the transponder code and the frequency change are safety-critical items requiring readback. The correct acknowledgement reads back the squawk code (4321) and the new frequency (131.325) to confirm correct receipt. Options A and D use "wilco" which does not confirm the specific numerical values. Option B ("Roger") is entirely insufficient for safety-critical items.
+
+### Q50: How should "You are now entering airspace Delta" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q50
+- A) Entering
+- B) Roger
+- C) Airspace Delta
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "You are now entering airspace Delta" is an informational statement from ATC, not an instruction requiring compliance. "Roger" (message received) is the correct and sufficient response. Option A ("Entering") is an incomplete acknowledgement. Option C partially repeats the content without proper acknowledgement format. Option D ("Wilco") is inappropriate because there is no instruction to comply with.
+
+### Q51: A pilot transmits the following to ATC: "We are landing at 10:45. Please order us a taxi." What type of message is this? ^t90q51
+- A) It is an urgency message.
+- B) It is a message relating to the regularity of flights.
+- C) It is a service message.
+- D) It is an inadmissible message.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC frequencies are reserved exclusively for aeronautical communications related to flight safety, urgency, and operational matters. Ordering a ground taxi is a personal service request that has no place on an aviation frequency — it is therefore an inadmissible message. Options A, B, and C incorrectly categorise this personal request within legitimate message types.
+
+### Q52: You are flying VFR and have received ATC clearance to enter Class C airspace to land. Shortly after entering, your radio fails. What do you do if no other special provisions apply? ^t90q52
+- A) You set the transponder to code 7600, continue in accordance with the last clearance and follow light signals from the control tower.
+- B) By virtue of the clearance issued, you have the right to fly in Class C airspace and land there. You only need to set the transponder to code 7700.
+- C) You must head to the alternate aerodrome by the most direct route and set the transponder to code 7000.
+- D) Regardless of the clearance obtained, you are no longer authorized to fly in this airspace. You set the transponder to code 7600, leave the airspace as quickly as possible and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For VFR flights, radio communication is mandatory in Class C airspace. When radio fails, the previous clearance is insufficient — the pilot must squawk 7600 (radio failure), leave the controlled airspace by the shortest route, and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome. Option A is wrong because VFR flights cannot simply continue on the last clearance. Option B incorrectly uses code 7700 (emergency, not radio failure). Option C uses code 7000 (VFR conspicuity), not the radio failure code.
+
+### Q53: Through which service can you obtain routine aviation meteorological observations (METAR) for several airports while in flight? ^t90q53
+- A) Via SIGMET.
+- B) Via AIRMET.
+- C) Via GAMET.
+- D) Via VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET is the continuous radio broadcast service providing METARs and TAFs for a series of aerodromes, allowing pilots in flight to receive current weather observations. Option A (SIGMET) reports significant meteorological phenomena hazardous to all aircraft. Option B (AIRMET) warns of weather hazards relevant to low-level flights. Option C (GAMET) provides area forecasts for low-level operations. None of these broadcast routine aerodrome observations like VOLMET does.
+
+### Q54: What does the abbreviation QNH mean? ^t90q54
+- A) The atmospheric pressure at aerodrome level (or at the runway threshold).
+- B) The atmospheric pressure measured at the highest obstacle on the aerodrome.
+- C) The altimeter setting required to read the aerodrome elevation when on the ground.
+- D) The atmospheric pressure measured at a point on the Earth's surface.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter sub-scale setting that, when applied, causes the altimeter to read the aerodrome elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. It is a corrected pressure value, not a direct pressure measurement. Option A describes QFE (pressure at aerodrome level). Option B is not a standard altimetry term. Option D is too generic and does not specifically describe QNH.
+
+### Q55: What does the abbreviation QDM mean? ^t90q55
+- A) True heading to steer to reach the radio beacon (nil wind).
+- B) True bearing from the radio beacon.
+- C) Magnetic bearing from the radio beacon.
+- D) Magnetic heading to steer to reach the radio beacon (nil wind).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QDM is the magnetic heading to steer (in nil-wind conditions) to fly directly to the radio station. Option A describes QUJ (true heading to station). Option B describes QTE (true bearing from station). Option C describes QDR (magnetic bearing from station). The Q-code system uses these distinct abbreviations to prevent confusion between bearings, headings, true, and magnetic references.
+
+### Q56: How many times must the radiotelephony distress signal (MAYDAY) or the urgency signal (PAN PAN) be spoken? ^t90q56
+- A) Twice.
+- B) Four times.
+- C) Three times.
+- D) Once.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the distress signal ("MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY") and the urgency signal ("PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN") require the key phrase to be spoken three times. This repetition ensures the nature and priority of the message is clearly recognised even in poor radio conditions or with partial interference. Options A, B, and D specify incorrect repetition counts.
+
+### Q57: What information should, where possible, be included in an urgency message? ^t90q57
+- A) The identification of the aircraft, its position and level, the nature of the emergency, the assistance required.
+- B) The identification of the aircraft, the departure aerodrome, the position, level and heading of the aircraft.
+- C) The identification and type of aircraft, the nature of the emergency, the intentions of the flight crew, and the position, level and heading of the aircraft.
+- D) The identification and type of aircraft, the assistance required, the route, the destination aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (PAN PAN) should contain: identification and type of aircraft, the nature of the emergency, the crew's intentions, and position/level/heading information — enabling ATC to provide effective assistance. Option A omits aircraft type and crew intentions. Option B omits the nature of the emergency and crew intentions. Option D includes route and destination, which are flight plan data rather than urgency-specific information.
+
+### Q58: What is the correct priority order for messages in the aeronautical mobile service? ^t90q58
+- A) 1. Distress messages, 2. Flight safety messages, 3. Urgency messages.
+- B) 1. Flight safety messages, 2. Distress messages, 3. Urgency messages.
+- C) 1. Urgency messages, 2. Distress messages, 3. Flight safety messages.
+- D) 1. Distress messages, 2. Urgency messages, 3. Flight safety messages.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO message priority order is: (1) Distress (MAYDAY) — grave and imminent danger, (2) Urgency (PAN PAN) — serious but not immediately life-threatening, (3) Flight safety messages — ATC clearances and instructions. Options A, B, and C all place these categories in an incorrect order. Distress always takes absolute precedence.
+
+### Q59: How are the letters BAFO spelled using the ICAO phonetic alphabet? ^t90q59
+- A) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- B) BETA ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- C) BRAVO ANNA FOX OSCAR
+- D) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OTTO
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: B = Bravo, A = Alpha, F = Foxtrot, O = Oscar. Option B uses "Beta" (Greek alphabet, not ICAO). Option C uses "Anna" and "Fox" (non-standard local variants). Option D uses "Otto" (a German non-standard alternative for O). Only option A uses the correct ICAO phonetic words for all four letters.
+
+### Q60: You are flying your aircraft on a north-easterly heading at 2,500 feet. How do you reply when ATC asks for your position? ^t90q60
+- A) Heading 045 at flight level 25.
+- B) 045 degrees and 2,500 feet.
+- C) Heading 45 at 2,500 feet.
+- D) Heading 045 at 2,500 feet.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct format is "Heading" followed by three digits (always three — "045" not "45"), then the altitude in feet when below the transition altitude. Option A incorrectly uses flight level (FL 25 = 2,500 ft on standard pressure), which is only used above the transition altitude. Option B uses "degrees" and "and," which are not standard phraseology. Option C uses only two digits for the heading instead of the required three.
+
+### Q61: Which frequency range allows radio waves to travel the greatest distance? ^t90q61
+- A) UHF
+- B) VHF
+- C) LW
+- D) MW
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Long waves (LW / LF band) travel the greatest distance because they diffract around the curvature of the Earth via ground wave propagation, allowing reception well beyond line-of-sight. Options A (UHF) and B (VHF) are limited to line-of-sight range, which depends on altitude and terrain. Option D (MW / medium wave) has an intermediate range — better than VHF but less than LW. Aviation primarily uses VHF for its clarity, despite the range limitation.
+
+### Q62: What abbreviation designates the universal time system used by air navigation services? ^t90q62
+- A) LMT
+- B) GMT
+- C) UTC
+- D) LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is the official time standard adopted by ICAO for all aeronautical communications, flight plans, and publications. Option B (GMT) is historically similar but not the official ICAO designation. Option A (LMT — Local Mean Time) and Option D (LT — Local Time) are not used in official aeronautical communications because they vary by location.
+
+### Q63: According to ICAO, what is the recommended speaking rate for radio communications? ^t90q63
+- A) 200 words/minute.
+- B) 50 words/minute.
+- C) 100 words/minute.
+- D) 150 words/minute.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO recommends approximately 100 words per minute for radio communications — a moderate pace that ensures intelligibility, especially for non-native English speakers and in degraded radio conditions. Option A (200 words/minute) is far too fast for clear understanding. Option B (50 words/minute) is unnecessarily slow and would waste frequency time. Option D (150 words/minute) is above the recommended rate.
+
+### Q64: Which statement concerning radiotelephony in the aeronautical mobile service is correct? ^t90q64
+- A) In communications with ATC, use exclusively ICAO standard phraseology. Plain language is only permitted at uncontrolled aerodromes.
+- B) It does not matter whether ICAO standard phraseology or plain language is used, provided the message is understandable.
+- C) In principle, use plain language as it is most understandable. Standard phraseology may only be used in connection with ATC clearances.
+- D) ICAO standard phraseology should in principle be used to avoid misunderstandings. Plain language is to be used only in situations for which there is no corresponding standard phraseology.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO standard phraseology is the default for all radiotelephony, minimising misunderstanding risk in multilingual environments. Plain language is permitted only when no standard phrase exists for the situation. Option A is too rigid — plain language is not limited to uncontrolled aerodromes. Option B is dangerous — standardised terminology exists precisely because "understandable" is subjective. Option C reverses the principle, incorrectly making plain language the default.
+
+### Q65: What is the correct English term for "service d'information de vol d'aérodrome"? ^t90q65
+- A) FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- B) AIRPORT TRAFFIC INFORMATION SERVICE
+- C) AERODROME FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- D) AERODROME INFORMATION SERVICE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) is the flight information service specific to an aerodrome, providing pilots with information about aerodrome conditions and known traffic without issuing clearances. Option A (Flight Information Service) is the broader regional FIS, not aerodrome-specific. Option B uses "Airport Traffic," which is not the official ICAO term. Option D omits "Flight," which is a key part of the official designation.
+
+### Q66: What is the correct abbreviated call sign for an aircraft with the full call sign AB-CDE? ^t90q66
+- A) DE
+- B) A-DE
+- C) CDE
+- D) AB-DE
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO abbreviation rule retains the first character (nationality prefix) and the last two characters: AB-CDE becomes A-DE. Option A omits the nationality prefix entirely. Option C takes the last three characters without the nationality prefix. Option D retains the full two-character nationality prefix, which is not the standard abbreviation method — only the first character is kept.
+
+### Q67: When is a pilot permitted to use an abbreviated call sign? ^t90q67
+- A) At any time provided there is no risk of confusion.
+- B) Never. Only the air navigation service has the right to abbreviate the call sign.
+- C) If the ground station communicates in this way.
+- D) After the first call.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot may abbreviate their call sign only after the ground station has initiated the abbreviation. The ground station takes the lead because it can verify there are no similar call signs on frequency. Option A is wrong because the pilot cannot self-determine the risk of confusion. Option B is incorrect because both parties may use the abbreviated form, not just ATC. Option D is wrong because abbreviation requires ATC initiative, not simply having completed the first call.
+
+### Q68: Which instructions and information must always be read back? ^t90q68
+- A) Surface wind, visibility, temperature, runway in use, altimeter settings, heading and speed instructions.
+- B) Runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, heading and speed instructions.
+- C) Runway in use, visibility, surface wind, heading instructions, altimeter settings.
+- D) Surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mandatory readback items under ICAO/EASA are: runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR (transponder) codes, level (altitude/flight level) instructions, and heading and speed instructions. Options A, C, and D all include surface wind and/or visibility, which are advisory information that do not require readback — they are acknowledged with "Roger."
+
+### Q69: What does the instruction "Squawk ident" mean? ^t90q69
+- A) You have been identified by radar.
+- B) You must re-enter the transponder code that has been assigned to you.
+- C) You must press the "IDENT" button on your transponder.
+- D) You must make a turn to identify yourself.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Squawk ident" instructs the pilot to press the IDENT button on their transponder, which generates a distinct enhanced signal on the controller's radar display to help identify the specific aircraft among surrounding traffic. Option A describes the controller's confirmation after identification. Option B would be "Squawk [code]" or "Recycle." Option D describes a radar identification turn, which is a different procedure.
+
+### Q70: How does a pilot end the readback of an ATC clearance? ^t90q70
+- A) With "WILCO".
+- B) With the call sign of the ATC ground station.
+- C) With the call sign of their aircraft.
+- D) With "ROGER".
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Every readback of an ATC clearance must end with the aircraft's own call sign, confirming unambiguously which aircraft has received and correctly repeated the clearance. Option A ("Wilco") may appear in a response but does not replace the call sign requirement. Option B (ground station call sign) is incorrect — the readback ends with the aircraft's identification. Option D ("Roger") only acknowledges receipt and does not identify the aircraft.
+
+### Q71: In which category are messages from an aircraft in a state of serious and/or imminent danger requiring immediate assistance classified? ^t90q71
+- A) Messages concerning flight safety.
+- B) Urgency messages.
+- C) Distress messages.
+- D) Messages concerning flight regularity.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft facing grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance transmits distress messages (MAYDAY), the highest priority category in aeronautical communications. Option A (flight safety messages) covers ATC instructions and clearances. Option B (urgency messages) covers serious but not immediately life-threatening situations. Option D (regularity messages) covers administrative operational communications.
+
+### Q72: From what point may an aircraft use its abbreviated callsign? ^t90q72
+- A) When the aeronautical station has used the abbreviated callsign when addressing the aircraft.
+- B) Once communication is well established.
+- C) In case of heavy traffic.
+- D) When there is no possibility of confusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft may use its abbreviated callsign once radio communication is well established with the ground station, and only after the ground station has itself first used the abbreviated form. Option A is partly correct but incomplete — it is the ground station's use that triggers permission. Option C (heavy traffic) and Option D (no confusion risk) do not independently grant abbreviation rights; the ground station must initiate it.
+
+### Q73: An aircraft fails to establish radio contact with a ground station on the designated frequency or any other appropriate frequency. What action must the pilot take? ^t90q73
+- A) Land at the nearest aerodrome on route.
+- B) Proceed to the alternate aerodrome.
+- C) Try to establish communication with other aircraft or other aeronautical stations.
+- D) Display SSR emergency code 7500.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If unable to contact the designated station, the pilot should first try to establish communication with other aircraft or aeronautical stations that could relay the message. Option A is premature — communication alternatives should be exhausted first. Option B assumes prior designation of an alternate. Option D is incorrect because code 7500 indicates hijacking/unlawful interference, not communication failure (which is 7600).
+
+### Q74: In the aeronautical mobile service, which of the following is an international distress frequency? ^t90q74
+- A) 123.45MHz.
+- B) 121.500KHz.
+- C) 6500 KHz.
+- D) 121.500MHz.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The international VHF distress (guard) frequency is 121.500 MHz, monitored continuously by ATC facilities worldwide. Option A (123.45 MHz) is an air-to-air advisory frequency. Option B incorrectly states 121.500 KHz — the correct unit is MHz, not KHz (121.500 KHz would be in the LF band). Option C (6500 KHz) is not a standard distress frequency.
+
+### Q75: How must the letters NDGF be pronounced according to the ICAO phonetic alphabet? ^t90q75
+- A) NOVEMBER DELTA GOLF FOXTROT.
+- B) NOVEMBER DECEMBER GOLF FOXTROT
+- C) NORBERT DELTA GOLF FOX.
+- D) NOVEMBER DELTA GAMMA FOX.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: N = November, D = Delta, G = Golf, F = Foxtrot. Option B uses "December" for D (not ICAO standard). Option C uses "Norbert" (non-standard) and "Fox" (the correct word is "Foxtrot"). Option D uses "Gamma" (Greek alphabet) for G and "Fox" instead of "Foxtrot."
+
+### Q76: What does the term "aeronautical station" mean? ^t90q76
+- A) A radio station of the aeronautical fixed service, on the ground or on board an aircraft, intended for the exchange of radio communications.
+- B) A land station of the aeronautical mobile service. In certain cases, an aeronautical station may be located on board a ship or offshore platform.
+- C) A radio station of the aeronautical fixed service.
+- D) Any radio station intended for the exchange of radio communications.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aeronautical station is defined as a land station in the aeronautical mobile service, providing two-way communication with aircraft. In certain cases, it may be located on a ship or offshore platform. Option A incorrectly refers to the fixed service (ground-to-ground) rather than the mobile service (ground-to-air). Option C is also an incorrect service designation. Option D is too broad and encompasses all radio stations regardless of service type.
+
+### Q77: What does the abbreviation "HJ" mean? ^t90q77
+- A) From sunset to sunrise.
+- B) From sunrise to sunset.
+- C) Continuous day and night service.
+- D) No fixed operating hours.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HJ (from French "Heure de Jour") means daylight hours — from sunrise to sunset. This designation appears in AIPs and NOTAMs for facilities open only during daylight. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option C describes H24 (continuous). Option D describes HX (no fixed hours).
+
+### Q78: Which instructions and information must always be read back verbatim? ^t90q78
+- A) Runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes, heading and speed instructions.
+- B) Surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes.
+- C) Runway in use, visibility, surface wind, heading instructions, altimeter settings.
+- D) Surface wind, visibility, temperature, runway in use, altimeter settings, heading and speed instructions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mandatory readback items are: runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes, and heading/speed instructions. Surface wind is also included in some regional implementations. Options C and D include visibility and/or temperature, which are advisory and do not require readback. Option A is close but omits surface wind, while option B matches the ICAO standard list.
+
+### Q79: In which message category can ATC clearances, take-off and landing clearances, and traffic information from the air traffic control service be classified? ^t90q79
+- A) Messages concerning flight safety.
+- B) Messages concerning flight regularity.
+- C) Urgency messages.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC clearances, take-off/landing instructions, and traffic information are all classified as flight safety messages, ranked third in the ICAO priority hierarchy after distress and urgency messages. Option B (regularity messages) covers administrative and logistical communications. Option C (urgency messages) specifically concerns aircraft or persons facing a serious safety condition, not routine ATC operations.
+
+### Q80: What does the instruction "Squawk 1234" mean? ^t90q80
+- A) Conduct a radio check on frequency 123.4 MHz.
+- B) Set code 1234 on the transponder and switch it to ON.
+- C) Be ready to monitor frequency 123.4 MHz.
+- D) Transmit briefly (1-2-3-4) for a bearing.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Squawk 1234" means the pilot must select code 1234 on the transponder and ensure it is operating. This enables radar controllers to identify the aircraft using the assigned code. Option A confuses a transponder code with a radio frequency. Option C also conflates frequency monitoring with transponder operation. Option D describes a procedure unrelated to transponder codes.
+
+### Q81: What does the abbreviation "ATIS" stand for? ^t90q81
+- A) Air Trafic Information Service
+- B) Automatic Terminal Information System
+- C) Airport Terminal Information Service
+- D) Automatic Terminal Information Service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS stands for Automatic Terminal Information Service — a continuously broadcast recording of current meteorological and operational information for an aerodrome, identified by a letter code that changes with each update. Option A misspells "Traffic" and uses "Air" rather than "Automatic." Option B uses "System" instead of "Service." Option C uses "Airport" instead of "Automatic."
+
+### Q82: What is the call sign suffix of the Flight Information Service? ^t90q82
+- A) FLIGHT CENTER
+- B) INFO
+- C) INFORMATION.
+- D) AERODROME.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Flight Information Service uses the call sign suffix "Information" (e.g., "Geneva Information" or "Zurich Information"). Option A ("Flight Center") is not a standard ICAO suffix. Option B ("Info") is an informal abbreviation not used as an official suffix. Option D ("Aerodrome") is not used as a call sign suffix for FIS.
+
+### Q83: What does the term "QDR" mean? ^t90q83
+- A) True heading to the station (zero wind)
+- B) Magnetic heading to the station (zero wind)
+- C) True bearing from the station
+- D) Magnetic bearing from the station
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QDR is the magnetic bearing from the station to the aircraft — the direction in which the aircraft lies as seen from the station, referenced to magnetic north. Option A describes QUJ (true heading to station). Option B describes QDM (magnetic heading to station). Option C describes QTE (true bearing from station). These Q-codes must be distinguished carefully to avoid navigation errors.
+
+### Q84: What influences the reception quality of VHF radio? ^t90q84
+- A) The twilight effect.
+- B) The ionosphere.
+- C) Atmospheric disturbances, in particular thunderstorm conditions.
+- D) Flight altitude and topographical conditions.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VHF radio propagates by line-of-sight, so reception quality depends primarily on flight altitude (which determines how far the radio horizon extends) and topography (mountains and terrain can block signals). Option A (twilight effect) affects NDB/ADF reception, not VHF. Option B (ionosphere) affects HF sky-wave propagation, not VHF. Option C (thunderstorms) may cause some static but is not the primary factor for VHF reception quality.
+
+### Q85: What does the term "QFE" mean? ^t90q85
+- A) Altimeter setting that causes the instrument to indicate the aerodrome elevation on the ground.
+- B) Atmospheric pressure measured at the height of the highest obstacle on an aerodrome.
+- C) Atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome elevation (or runway threshold).
+- D) Atmospheric pressure measured at a point on the earth's surface.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome elevation or runway threshold. When set on the altimeter, the instrument reads zero on the ground and displays height above the aerodrome in flight. Option A describes QNH behaviour (reading aerodrome elevation on the ground). Option B is not a standard definition. Option D is too generic and could describe any surface pressure measurement.
+
+### Q86: In the aeronautical mobile service, messages are classified by importance. What is the correct priority order? ^t90q86
+- A) Distress messages, messages concerning flight safety, urgency messages.
+- B) Meteorological messages, radio direction-finding messages, messages concerning flight regularity.
+- C) Radio direction-finding messages, distress messages, urgency messages.
+- D) Distress messages, urgency messages, messages concerning safety.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct ICAO priority order is: (1) Distress messages, (2) Urgency messages, (3) Flight safety messages, followed by meteorological, direction-finding, regularity, and other messages. Option A incorrectly places flight safety above urgency. Option B lists only lower-priority categories. Option C places direction-finding above distress, which is incorrect — distress always has absolute priority.
+
+### Q87: What is the urgency signal in radiotelephony? ^t90q87
+- A) PAN PAN (preferably spoken three times).
+- B) MAYDAY (preferably spoken three times).
+- C) URGENCY (preferably spoken three times).
+- D) ALERFA (preferably spoken three times).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The radiotelephony urgency signal is "PAN PAN" spoken three times, indicating a serious condition that requires timely assistance but is not an immediate life-threatening emergency. Option B (MAYDAY) is the distress signal for grave and imminent danger. Option C ("URGENCY") is not standard phraseology. Option D (ALERFA) is an internal ATC alert phase designation, not a radiotelephony signal.
+
+### Q88: On the readability scale, what does degree "5" mean? ^t90q88
+- A) Readable intermittently.
+- B) Unreadable.
+- C) Readable, but with difficulty.
+- D) Perfectly readable.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 5 is the highest level on the ICAO scale, meaning the transmission is perfectly clear and intelligible. Option A describes readability 2 (intermittently). Option B describes readability 1 (unreadable). Option C describes readability 3 (with difficulty). The standard response is "I read you five."
+
+### Q89: What is the name of the time system used worldwide by air traffic services and in the aeronautical fixed service? ^t90q89
+- A) Local time (LT) using the 24-hour clock.
+- B) Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
+- C) There is no particular time system, as generally only minutes are transmitted.
+- D) Local time using the AM and PM system.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the universal time standard used by all air traffic services and aeronautical fixed services worldwide. It eliminates time zone ambiguity in international operations. Options A and D use local time, which varies by location and is not used in aeronautical communications. Option C is factually incorrect — a specific time system (UTC) is always used.
+
+### Q90: What elements should a distress message contain? ^t90q90
+- A) Aircraft callsign, departure point, position, level.
+- B) Aircraft callsign, position, assistance required.
+- C) Aircraft callsign and type, nature of the distress situation, pilot's intentions, position, level, heading.
+- D) Aircraft callsign, flight route, destination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A complete distress message (MAYDAY) should contain: aircraft callsign and type, the nature of the distress, the pilot's intentions, and position/level/heading — giving rescue services maximum information to coordinate assistance. Option A omits the nature of distress and pilot intentions. Option B omits aircraft type, pilot intentions, and heading. Option D omits all emergency-specific information and lists only flight plan data.
+
+### Q91: What does "FEW" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q91
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 1 to 2 eighths
+- C) 8 eighths
+- D) 5 to 7 eighths
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR cloud coverage reporting, FEW designates 1 to 2 oktas (eighths) of sky covered — the sparsest cloud category. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option C describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option D describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). These standardised ICAO designations ensure unambiguous weather reporting worldwide.
+
+### Q92: What does "SCT" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q92
+- A) 1 to 2 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 3 to 4 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SCT stands for Scattered, representing 3 to 4 oktas (eighths) of sky covered by cloud. Option A describes FEW (1-2 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). Scattered cloud coverage does not necessarily restrict VFR flight, but pilots must check cloud base heights against applicable VFR minima.
+
+### Q93: What does "BKN" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q93
+- A) 8 eighths
+- B) 3 to 4 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN stands for Broken, meaning 5 to 7 oktas (eighths) of the sky are covered — predominantly overcast with some gaps. Option A describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option B describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option D describes FEW (1-2 oktas). A broken layer may significantly impact VFR operations, especially if cloud bases are low.
+
+### Q94: Which transponder code signals a radio failure? ^t90q94
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7600
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally standardised squawk for loss of radio communication (NORDO), alerting radar controllers to the communication failure. Option A (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code in European airspace. Option B (7500) signals unlawful interference (hijacking). Option D (7700) indicates a general emergency. These four codes must be memorised as they each trigger specific ATC responses.
+
+### Q95: What is the correct phrase to begin a blind transmission? ^t90q95
+- A) No reception
+- B) Transmitting blind
+- C) Listen
+- D) Blind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a pilot can transmit but cannot receive, the blind transmission must begin with the phrase "Transmitting blind" (or "Transmitting blind on [frequency]") to alert any receiving station of the one-way nature of the communication. Options A, C, and D are not standard ICAO phraseology for initiating blind transmissions.
+
+### Q96: How many times shall a blind transmission be made? ^t90q96
+- A) Three times
+- B) Four times
+- C) One time
+- D) Two times
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission is made once on the current frequency (and optionally repeated once on the emergency frequency if appropriate). Making it multiple times would congest the frequency unnecessarily. Options A, B, and D specify excessive repetitions that are not part of standard ICAO procedure for blind transmissions.
+
+### Q97: In what situation is it appropriate to set transponder code 7600? ^t90q97
+- A) Flight into clouds
+- B) Emergency
+- C) Loss of radio
+- D) Hijacking
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is specifically designated for loss of radio communication (NORDO), alerting radar controllers so they can provide appropriate separation and visual signals. Option A (flight into clouds) does not have a specific transponder code. Option B (emergency) requires code 7700. Option D (hijacking) requires code 7500.
+
+### Q98: What is the correct course of action when experiencing a radio failure in class D airspace? ^t90q98
+- A) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+- B) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+- C) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+- D) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO procedures for VFR radio failure in controlled airspace require the pilot to either continue the flight according to the last ATC clearance received while complying with VFR rules, or to leave the airspace by the shortest route. Options B and D incorrectly specify flying above 5000 feet, which is not part of the radio failure procedure. Option C incorrectly substitutes "standard routing" for "shortest route."
+
+### Q99: Which phrase must be repeated three times before transmitting an urgency message? ^t90q99
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Help
+- C) Urgent
+- D) Pan Pan
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message is preceded by "Pan Pan" spoken three times ("PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN"). This alerts all stations on the frequency to a serious but not immediately life-threatening situation. Option A ("Mayday") is the distress signal for grave and imminent danger. Options B ("Help") and C ("Urgent") are not standard ICAO radiotelephony phrases.
+
+### Q100: On which frequency should an initial distress message be transmitted? ^t90q100
+- A) Emergency frequency
+- B) FIS frequency
+- C) Radar frequency
+- D) Current frequency
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The initial distress or urgency call should be made on the frequency currently in use, because that frequency is already being monitored by the appropriate ATC unit handling the aircraft. Switching frequencies risks losing contact and wastes critical time. Option A (emergency frequency 121.5 MHz) should be tried only if there is no response on the current frequency. Options B and C are not the correct first choice.
+
+### Q101: What kind of information should be included in an urgency message? ^t90q101
+- A) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, departure aerodrome, destination aerodrome, heading and altitude
+- B) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, heading and altitude
+- C) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, departure aerodrome, information about position, heading and altitude
+- D) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, departure aerodrome, heading and altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (PAN PAN) must include: the nature of the problem, important support information, the pilot's intentions, and position/heading/altitude data — enabling ATC to coordinate assistance effectively. Options A and D include departure/destination aerodromes and routing, which are flight plan details not specifically required in an urgency broadcast. Option C omits the pilot's intentions, which are essential for ATC planning.
+
+### Q102: What is the correct designation of the frequency band from 118.000 to 136.975 MHz used for voice communication? ^t90q102
+- A) HF
+- B) LF
+- C) VHF
+- D) MF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 118.000 to 136.975 MHz band falls within the Very High Frequency (VHF) range, which is the standard for civil aviation voice communication due to its reliable line-of-sight propagation and clarity. Option A (HF, 3-30 MHz) is used for long-range oceanic communications. Option B (LF, 30-300 kHz) is used for NDB navigation. Option D (MF, 300 kHz - 3 MHz) is used for medium-range broadcasting.
+
+### Q103: In what case is visibility transmitted in meters? ^t90q103
+- A) Greater than 10 km
+- B) Up to 5 km
+- C) Greater than 5 km
+- D) Up to 10 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR reports, visibility is expressed in meters when it is 5 km (5000 m) or less, providing the precision needed at operationally critical low visibilities. When visibility exceeds 5 km, it is reported in kilometers. Options A and C describe conditions where kilometers would be used. Option D (up to 10 km) extends the meter-reporting threshold beyond the standard 5 km cutoff.
+
+### Q104: How are urgency messages defined? ^t90q104
+- A) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- B) Messages concerning urgent spare parts needed for a continuation of flight and which need to be ordered in advance.
+- C) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- D) Information concerning the apron personnel and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Urgency messages (PAN PAN) concern the safety of an aircraft, watercraft, vehicle, or person in sight — situations that are serious but do not yet constitute the grave and imminent danger of a distress situation. Option A defines distress messages (MAYDAY). Option B is an administrative matter unrelated to the urgency classification. Option D describes a ground safety concern that would be handled through other channels.
+
+### Q105: What do distress messages contain? ^t90q105
+- A) Information concerning the apron personnel and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.
+- B) Information concerning urgent spare parts required for a continuation of flight and which have to be ordered in advance.
+- C) Information concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- D) Information concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Distress messages (MAYDAY) contain information about aircraft and passengers facing a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — the highest priority category. Option A concerns ground personnel, not an airborne distress. Option B is an administrative logistics matter. Option D describes urgency-level situations (PAN PAN), which are serious but not immediately life-threatening.
+
+### Q106: What is the approximate speed of electromagnetic wave propagation? ^t90q106
+- A) 300000 m/s
+- B) 123000 km/s
+- C) 123000 m/s
+- D) 300000 km/s
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electromagnetic waves (including radio waves) propagate at the speed of light, approximately 300,000 km/s (3 × 10⁸ m/s) in a vacuum. Option A (300,000 m/s) is off by a factor of 1,000 — this would be only 300 km/s. Option B (123,000 km/s) and Option C (123,000 m/s) are both incorrect values that do not correspond to any known physical constant.
+
+### Q107: In what cases is visibility transmitted in kilometers? ^t90q107
+- A) Up to 10 km
+- B) Greater than 5 km
+- C) Up to 5 km
+- D) Greater than 10 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR reporting, visibility is expressed in kilometers when it exceeds 5 km (e.g., "6KM" or "9999" for 10 km or more). Below 5 km, meters are used for greater precision at operationally critical low visibilities. Option A (up to 10 km) incorrectly extends the kilometer range below 5 km. Option C (up to 5 km) is the meter-reporting range. Option D (greater than 10 km) is too restrictive.
+
+### Q108: How can you obtain meteorological information for airports during a cross-country flight? ^t90q108
+- A) METAR
+- B) GAMET
+- C) AIRMET
+- D) VOLMET
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET is the continuous radio broadcast service that provides current METAR observations for a series of aerodromes, available to pilots in flight on designated frequencies. Option A (METAR) is the report format itself, not a broadcast service pilots can access in flight via radio. Option B (GAMET) is an area weather forecast. Option C (AIRMET) provides warnings of weather phenomena over a region, not individual airport observations.
+
+### Q109: Which of the following factors affects the reception of VHF transmissions? ^t90q109
+- A) Twilight error
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Height of ionosphere
+- D) Shoreline effect
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VHF radio propagates by line-of-sight, so altitude is the primary factor determining reception range — higher altitude means a more distant radio horizon. Option A (twilight error) affects NDB/ADF systems, not VHF. Option C (ionosphere height) influences HF sky-wave propagation, not VHF. Option D (shoreline effect) also affects NDB bearings, not VHF communication quality.
+
+### Q110: On what frequency shall a blind transmission be made? ^t90q110
+- A) On a tower frequency
+- B) On the current frequency
+- C) On the appropriate FIS frequency
+- D) On a radar frequency of the lower airspace
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blind transmissions must be made on the current frequency in use, because that is the frequency being monitored by the ATC unit responsible for the aircraft. Switching to another frequency would mean the relevant controller might not hear the transmission. Options A, C, and D are all incorrect unless they happen to be the current frequency.
+
+### Q111: Under what condition may a VFR flight without radio enter a class D aerodrome? ^t90q111
+- A) It is the destination aerodrome
+- B) There are other aircraft in the aerodrome circuit
+- C) Approval has been granted before
+- D) It is the aerodrome of departure
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Entry into Class D airspace without radio is only permissible when prior approval has been obtained (e.g., by telephone before departure, or a clearance received before the radio failed). Without prior approval, two-way radio communication is mandatory for Class D. Options A and D (destination or departure aerodrome status) do not constitute authorization. Option B (presence of other traffic) has no bearing on the radio requirement.
+
+### Q112: What is the correct transponder code for emergencies? ^t90q112
+- A) 7500.
+- B) 7000.
+- C) 7700.
+- D) 7600.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7700 is the internationally standardised emergency squawk that triggers alarms on ATC radar displays. Option A (7500) indicates unlawful interference (hijacking). Option B (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code in European airspace. Option D (7600) indicates radio communication failure. Each code triggers a different ATC response protocol.
+
+### Q113: What information is broadcast on a VOLMET frequency? ^t90q113
+- A) Navigational information
+- B) NOTAMS
+- C) Current information
+- D) Meteorological information
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET (from French "vol" = flight, "météo" = weather) broadcasts meteorological information — specifically current weather reports (METARs) and sometimes TAFs for a series of aerodromes. Option A (navigational information) is not provided via VOLMET. Option B (NOTAMs) are distributed through other channels. Option C ("current information") is too vague and non-specific.
+
+### Q114: How long is an ATIS broadcast valid for? ^t90q114
+- A) 10 minutes.
+- B) 60 minutes.
+- C) 30 minutes.
+- D) 45 minutes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS broadcasts are updated at approximately 30-minute intervals (or sooner if conditions change significantly), making each broadcast valid for about 30 minutes. Each update is assigned a new identification letter. Option A (10 minutes) is too short for standard updates. Options B (60 minutes) and D (45 minutes) are too long, given how rapidly aerodrome conditions can change.
+
+### Q115: What is the standard abbreviation for the term abeam? ^t90q115
+- A) ABM
+- B) ABA
+- C) ABE
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ABM is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for "abeam," describing a position at right angles to the aircraft's track (directly to the side). This abbreviation is used in flight plans, ATC communications, and aeronautical publications. Options B, C, and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations for this term.
+
+### Q116: What abbreviation stands for visual flight rules? ^t90q116
+- A) VFR
+- B) VMC
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VFR stands for Visual Flight Rules — the set of regulations governing flight by visual reference. Option B (VMC) means Visual Meteorological Conditions, describing the weather requirements for VFR flight — a related but distinct concept. Options C and D are not standard aviation abbreviations.
+
+### Q117: What is the ICAO abbreviation for obstacle? ^t90q117
+- A) OBS
+- B) OBST
+- C) OST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** OBST is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for obstacle, used in NOTAMs, aeronautical charts, and obstacle data publications. Option A (OBS) may be used for "observe" in some contexts but does not denote obstacle. Options C and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q118: What does the abbreviation FIS stand for? ^t90q118
+- A) Flight information system
+- B) Flashing information service
+- C) Flight information service
+- D) Flashing information system
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS stands for Flight Information Service, providing advice and information useful for safe and efficient flight conduct. It is a service, not a system — making option A incorrect. Options B and D contain "flashing," which has no relevance to this aviation service.
+
+### Q119: What does the abbreviation FIR stand for? ^t90q119
+- A) Flow information radar
+- B) Flight information region
+- C) Flow integrity required
+- D) Flight integrity receiver
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIR stands for Flight Information Region — a defined volume of airspace within which flight information service and alerting service are provided under ICAO standards. It is the fundamental building block of airspace management. Options A, C, and D are fabricated terms with no aviation meaning.
+
+### Q120: What does the abbreviation H24 stand for? ^t90q120
+- A) Sunrise to sunset
+- B) No specific opening times
+- C) 24 h service
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** H24 means continuous 24-hour service — the facility is operational at all times without interruption. Option A (sunrise to sunset) describes HJ. Option B (no specific hours) describes HX. Option D (sunset to sunrise) describes HN. H24 is used in AIPs and NOTAMs for permanently staffed facilities.
+
+### Q121: What does the abbreviation HX stand for? ^t90q121
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) 24 h service
+- C) Sunrise to sunset
+- D) No specific opening hours
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HX is the ICAO abbreviation indicating no specific or predetermined operating hours — the facility may be available on request or intermittently. Pilots must check NOTAMs or contact the facility to confirm availability. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option B describes H24 (continuous service). Option C describes HJ (sunrise to sunset).
+
+### Q122: How is the directional information 12 o'clock correctly transmitted? ^t90q122
+- A) Twelve o'clock.
+- B) One two o'clock
+- C) One two.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clock positions used for traffic advisories are spoken as the full natural number followed by "o'clock": "Twelve o'clock" means directly ahead. Option B splits the number into individual digits, which could create confusion with other numerical data. Option C omits "o'clock," making the reference ambiguous. Option D adds "hundred," which is meaningless in clock-position terminology.
+
+### Q123: What does the phrase Roger mean? ^t90q123
+- A) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I have received all of your last transmission
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Roger" means solely "I have received all of your last transmission" — it is a receipt acknowledgement only, not a commitment to comply or a grant of permission. Option A defines "Wilco." Option B defines "Correction." Option C defines "Approved." Confusing these phrases can have serious safety consequences in ATC communications.
+
+### Q124: What does the phrase Correction mean? ^t90q124
+- A) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) I have received all of your last transmission
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Correction" signals that the speaker has made an error in the current transmission, and the corrected information follows immediately. This prevents the listener from acting on incorrect data. Option A defines "Approved." Option C defines "Roger." Option D defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q125: What does the phrase Approved mean? ^t90q125
+- A) I have received all of your last transmission
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Approved" means ATC has granted permission for the specific action the pilot proposed or requested. Option A defines "Roger." Option B defines "Correction." Option D defines "Wilco." Each phrase has a precise meaning in ICAO phraseology that must not be interchanged.
+
+### Q126: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission requires a "yes" answer? ^t90q126
+- A) Yes
+- B) Affirm
+- C) Roger
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Affirm" is the ICAO-standard civil aviation word for "yes." Option A ("Yes") is plain language and not standard phraseology, potentially misheard on radio. Option C ("Roger") means receipt acknowledged, not agreement. Option D ("Affirmative") is common in military usage but "Affirm" is the correct civil aviation standard per ICAO.
+
+### Q127: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission requires a "no" answer? ^t90q127
+- A) Finish
+- B) Not
+- C) No
+- D) Negative
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Negative" is the ICAO-standard phrase for "no" or "that is not correct," chosen for unambiguous clarity in radio communications. Option A ("Finish") has no defined meaning in this context. Option B ("Not") is incomplete and non-standard. Option C ("No") is plain language that could be misheard, especially in noisy radio conditions or across language barriers.
+
+### Q128: How should the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q128
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct readback includes all safety-critical items: the departure instruction (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, turn right heading 220), the runway designator (runway 12), and the take-off clearance. Wind information does not require readback and is correctly omitted. Option A omits the runway and clearance. Option C misuses "wilco" within a readback. Option D reads back the wind unnecessarily while including the clearance.
+
+### Q129: How should the instruction "Next report PAH" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q129
+- A) Positive
+- B) Roger
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Wilco" (will comply) is the correct acknowledgement for an instruction that requires future action — the pilot confirms both receipt and intention to report at waypoint PAH. Option A ("Positive") is not standard ICAO phraseology. Option B ("Roger") acknowledges receipt only, without confirming compliance. Option D ("Report PAH") is an incomplete acknowledgement without the compliance element.
+
+### Q130: How should the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q130
+- A) Wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- D) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the transponder code and the new frequency are safety-critical items that must be read back to confirm correct receipt: "Squawk 4321, 131.325." Options A and B ("Wilco" or "Roger" alone) fail to confirm the specific numerical values. Option C reads back only the squawk code without confirming the frequency.
+
+### Q131: How should "You are now entering airspace Delta" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q131
+- A) Airspace Delta
+- B) Wilco
+- C) Roger
+- D) Entering
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "You are now entering airspace Delta" is informational — ATC is providing awareness, not issuing an instruction. The correct response is "Roger" (message received). Option A is a partial repetition without proper acknowledgement. Option B ("Wilco") implies an instruction to comply with, which does not exist here. Option D ("Entering") is incomplete and non-standard.
+
+### Q132: What does "FEW" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q132
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FEW designates 1 to 2 oktas (eighths) of sky covered by cloud — the least amount of coverage in the METAR scale. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). These four designations (FEW, SCT, BKN, OVC) are the standard ICAO cloud coverage categories.
+
+### Q133: What does "SCT" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q133
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 1 to 2 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 8 eighths
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SCT (Scattered) represents 3 to 4 oktas (eighths) of sky coverage in a METAR report. Option A describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). Option B describes FEW (1-2 oktas). Option D describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Scattered cloud typically permits VFR flight, but pilots must verify that cloud bases meet the required vertical separation minima.
+
+### Q134: What does "BKN" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q134
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 1 to 2 eighths
+- D) 5 to 7 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN (Broken) represents 5 to 7 oktas (eighths) of sky coverage — the sky is predominantly covered with some gaps visible. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes FEW (1-2 oktas). A broken cloud layer, especially with low bases, can significantly restrict VFR operations and requires careful assessment.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/SPL Exam Questions EN.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/SPL Exam Questions EN.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b8e8439
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/SPL Exam Questions EN.md
@@ -0,0 +1,42 @@
+# SPL Theoretical Knowledge Exam - Question Bank
+
+> EASA Part-SFCL Sailplane Pilot License (SPL)
+> 120 multiple-choice questions, 9 subjects, 75% pass per subject
+> Exam administered via WINGU software
+
+## Subjects
+
+1. [Air Law](10%20-%20Air%20Law.md) (144 questions)
+2. [Aircraft General Knowledge](20%20-%20Aircraft%20General%20Knowledge.md) (137 questions)
+3. [Communications](90%20-%20Communications.md) (90 questions)
+4. [Flight Performance and Planning](30%20-%20Flight%20Performance%20and%20Planning.md) (90 questions)
+5. [Human Performance](40%20-%20Human%20Performance.md) (110 questions)
+6. [Meteorology](50%20-%20Meteorology.md) (110 questions)
+7. [Navigation](60%20-%20Navigation.md) (141 questions incl. Swiss SFVS exercises)
+8. [Operational Procedures](70%20-%20Operational%20Procedures.md) (110 questions)
+9. [Principles of Flight](80%20-%20Principles%20of%20Flight.md) (110 questions)
+
+**Total: 981 questions**
+
+## Sources
+
+- **QuizVDS.it** - Free EASA ECQB-SPL practice (quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en)
+- **SFVS** - Swiss Gliding Federation navigation exercises (segelflug.ch)
+- **BAZL/OFAC** - Official mock exams Series 1, 2 and 3
+- **SPL Academy** - Additional practice with free account (splacademy.eu)
+- **SkyQuestions** - Official ECQB questions, paid (skyquestions.com, 47 EUR/year)
+
+## Exam Structure
+
+| Subject | Questions | Pass Mark |
+|---------|-----------|-----------|
+| Air Law | ~12 | 75% (9/12) |
+| Aircraft General Knowledge | ~12 | 75% |
+| Communications | ~12 | 75% |
+| Flight Performance and Planning | ~12 | 75% |
+| Human Performance | ~12 | 75% |
+| Meteorology | ~24 | 75% |
+| Navigation | ~12 | 75% |
+| Operational Procedures | ~12 | 75% |
+| Principles of Flight | ~12 | 75% |
+| **Total** | **120** | **75% per subject** |
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_121_144_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_121_144_out.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9115aa4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_121_144_out.md
@@ -0,0 +1,239 @@
+### Q121: What do longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions arranged symmetrically about the centreline of a runway indicate? ^t10q121
+- A) A ground roll could be started from this position
+- B) At this point the glide path of an ILS meets the runway
+- C) Do not touch down behind them
+- D) Do not touch down before them
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline are the threshold markings, indicating the beginning of the runway available for landing. Pilots must not touch down before these markings because the area ahead of the threshold may not be suitable for landing. A (ground roll start position) is not what threshold markings indicate. B (ILS glide path intersection) is marked differently, typically with aiming point markings further down the runway. C (do not touch down behind them) reverses the actual meaning -- the restriction is before, not behind.
+
+### Q122: How can a pilot in flight acknowledge a search and rescue signal on the ground? ^t10q122
+- A) Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times
+- B) Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times
+- C) Push the rudder in both directions multiple times
+- D) Rock the wings
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, the internationally recognised method for a pilot in flight to acknowledge a ground SAR signal is to rock the wings (waggle them laterally from side to side). This is clearly visible from the ground and unambiguous. A (repeated flap deployment) is not a standard acknowledgement signal. B (parabolic flight path) is not a defined SAR procedure. C (rudder inputs) would produce yaw oscillations that are very difficult to observe from the ground.
+
+### Q123: An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a... ^t10q123
+- A) Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- B) Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- C) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground.
+- D) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is defined by ICAO as a rotating beacon installed at or near an aerodrome to help pilots locate it from the air, particularly at night or in reduced visibility. A is wrong because the ABN is installed at the aerodrome, not at the beginning of the final approach (that would be an approach lighting system). B is wrong because the ABN rotates rather than being fixed. C is wrong because the beacon is intended to be seen from the air by approaching pilots, not from the ground.
+
+### Q124: What is the primary objective of an aircraft accident investigation? ^t10q124
+- A) To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents
+- B) To determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences
+- C) To identify the causes and develop safety recommendations
+- D) To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, the sole objective of an aircraft accident investigation is to identify the causes and contributing factors and to develop safety recommendations to prevent future accidents. The investigation is explicitly separated from judicial and liability processes. A is wrong because the investigation does not serve the public prosecutor. B is wrong because establishing guilt is outside the scope of a safety investigation. D is wrong because liability and compensation questions are matters for civil courts, not the accident investigation authority.
+
+### Q125: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q125
+- A) 6 months
+- B) 12 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) issued under ICAO Annex 8 and EASA regulations has an unlimited validity period, provided the aircraft is continuously maintained in accordance with its approved maintenance programme. The CofA itself has no expiry date. However, the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which must be renewed annually, must remain valid for continued operation. A (6 months), B (12 months), and C (12 years) are all incorrect fixed periods that do not apply to the CofA.
+
+### Q126: What does the abbreviation ARC stand for? ^t10q126
+- A) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- B) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, the document issued following a successful airworthiness review confirming that an aircraft meets all applicable airworthiness requirements at the time of review. It is valid for one year and must be renewed to allow continued operation. A (Airspace Rulemaking Committee), B (Airspace Restriction Criteria), and C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) are not recognised EASA or ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q127: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q127
+- A) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- B) Of the residence of the owner.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under the Chicago Convention (ICAO Annex 7) and EASA regulations, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the State of Registry -- the country in which the aircraft is registered. This is the state that maintains continuing airworthiness oversight. A (state of manufacture) is the state of design/production, which issues the Type Certificate but not the individual CofA. B (owner's residence) is irrelevant to CofA issuance. D (state where the review was done) may differ from the state of registry and does not determine CofA issuance.
+
+### Q128: What does the abbreviation SERA stand for? ^t10q128
+- A) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Specialized Radar Approach
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises rules of the air across all EASA member states, replacing the patchwork of national rules with a single European standard. A (Standard European Routes of the Air) is not a recognised abbreviation. C (Specialized Radar Approach) and D (Selective Radar Altimeter) are unrelated to rules of the air and are not standard aviation abbreviations.
+
+### Q129: What does the abbreviation TRA stand for? ^t10q129
+- A) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- B) Terminal Area
+- C) Transponder Area
+- D) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace, an airspace of defined dimensions temporarily reserved for specific uses such as military exercises, parachute operations, or aerial displays. Other aircraft may not enter without explicit permission from the managing authority. A (Temporary Radar Routing Area), B (Terminal Area), and C (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q130: What does an area marked as TMZ signify? ^t10q130
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone, a designated airspace where all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a functioning transponder. This allows ATC radar to identify and track all traffic within the zone for improved situational awareness and safety. A (Traffic Management Zone), B (Transportation Management Zone), and C (Touring Motorglider Zone) are not recognised aviation terms for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q131: A flight is categorised as a visual flight when the... ^t10q131
+- A) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- C) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- D) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight is categorised as a visual flight (VFR flight) when it is conducted under visual flight rules, as defined in ICAO Annex 2 and SERA. This is a regulatory classification, not a purely meteorological one. A (8 km visibility) and D (5 km visibility) describe specific VMC thresholds but do not define VFR as a concept. B (conducted in VMC) describes the meteorological conditions required for VFR flight but is not the definition of a VFR flight itself -- a flight conducted in VMC could still be an IFR flight.
+
+### Q132: What does the abbreviation VMC stand for? ^t10q132
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Variable meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions, which are the specific visibility and cloud clearance conditions under which VFR flight is permitted. VMC describes the weather, not the rules. A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, not VMC -- these are the rules followed when VMC prevails. C (Instrument flight conditions) is the opposite concept, known as IMC. D (Variable meteorological conditions) is not a recognised aviation abbreviation.
+
+### Q133: In airspace E, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q133
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace below FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility per SERA is 5,000 m (5 km). FL75 is below FL100, so the 5 km minimum applies. B (8,000 m) is the visibility requirement at and above FL100 in this airspace. C (1,500 m) is the minimum for low-level Class G airspace. A (3,000 m) does not correspond to any standard SERA VFR visibility minimum. D correctly states 5,000 m.
+
+### Q134: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q134
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In controlled airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility required by SERA is 8,000 m (8 km). FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km minimum applies. A (5,000 m) is the minimum below FL100. B (1,500 m) applies to certain low-altitude or special VFR situations. C (3,000 m) does not match any standard SERA VFR visibility for this context. D correctly states 8,000 m.
+
+### Q135: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q135
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class C airspace at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8,000 m (8 km) per SERA. FL125 is above FL100, confirming the 8 km requirement. C (5,000 m) applies below FL100 in Class C. A (1,500 m) applies to low-level uncontrolled or special VFR operations. B (3,000 m) does not match any SERA VFR minimum at this altitude. D is correct.
+
+### Q136: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace B? ^t10q136
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace Class B (and also Classes C and D), the cloud clearance minima for VFR flights are 1,500 m horizontally and 300 m (approximately 1,000 ft) vertically. A mixes metric and imperial units incorrectly. B uses only 1,000 m horizontal clearance, which is below the required minimum. C uses 1,000 m vertical clearance, which is significantly more than the required 300 m. D correctly states both values.
+
+### Q137: In airspace C below FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q137
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class C airspace below FL100, the SERA-prescribed minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5,000 m). B (8 km) is the requirement at and above FL100, not below it. D (1.5 km) applies to special VFR or certain low-altitude Class G operations. A (10 km) is not a standard SERA visibility minimum for any airspace class. C correctly states the below-FL100 Class C requirement.
+
+### Q138: In airspace C at and above FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q138
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 1.5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class C airspace at and above FL100, the minimum VFR visibility required by SERA is 8 km (8,000 m). The higher visibility requirement at these altitudes reflects the greater closing speeds between aircraft and the need for earlier visual detection. A (5 km) is the below-FL100 minimum. B (1.5 km) applies to special VFR or low-level operations. D (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR visibility minimum. C is correct.
+
+### Q139: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q139
+- A) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO definition of ceiling is the height (above the surface, not altitude above MSL) of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, i.e., more than 4 oktas), below 20,000 ft. A uses "altitude" (referenced to MSL) instead of "height" (referenced to the surface), which is technically incorrect per the ICAO definition. C incorrectly refers to the highest cloud layer rather than the lowest. D incorrectly limits the ceiling definition to below 10,000 ft instead of the correct 20,000 ft threshold.
+
+### Q140: Regarding separation in airspace E, which statement is accurate? ^t10q140
+- A) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- C) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace, ATC provides separation services only between IFR flights. VFR flights receive no separation from any traffic -- neither from IFR nor from other VFR flights. VFR pilots in Class E rely entirely on the see-and-avoid principle. A incorrectly states that VFR is separated from IFR. C incorrectly states that IFR is separated only from VFR (IFR is separated from other IFR). D incorrectly states that VFR receives full separation from all traffic.
+
+### Q141: What kind of information is contained in the AD section of the AIP? ^t10q141
+- A) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- C) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP is divided into three parts: GEN (General), ENR (En Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The AD section contains aerodrome-specific information including classification of airfields, aerodrome charts, approach charts, taxi charts, and operational details for each aerodrome. A describes content typically found in the GEN or ENR sections. C describes ENR content (airspace, warnings, routes). D describes GEN content (regulatory requirements, licensing). B correctly identifies AD section content.
+
+### Q142: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q142
+- A) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- B) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- C) The highest point of the apron.
+- D) The highest point of the landing area.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodrome elevation is defined by ICAO as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This definition is used because the highest point represents the most critical reference for obstacle clearance calculations and QFE settings. A (lowest point) would understate the elevation and could lead to inadequate terrain clearance. B (average of the manoeuvring area) does not capture the critical highest point. C (highest point of the apron) is incorrect because the apron is a parking/loading area, not part of the landing area.
+
+### Q143: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q143
+- A) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- B) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 14 defines a runway as a defined rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. The key elements are: rectangular shape, on land, and for aircraft in general. A is wrong because helicopter landing areas are called helipads or FATO (Final Approach and Take-Off area). B incorrectly includes water aerodromes, which have different designated areas for seaplane operations. C is wrong because runways are rectangular, not round.
+
+### Q144: What does DETRESFA mean? ^t10q144
+- A) Uncertainty phase
+- B) Rescue phase
+- C) Alerting phase
+- D) Distress phase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the highest and most serious of the three emergency phases. It indicates that an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. The three ICAO emergency phases are: INCERFA (uncertainty phase, A), ALERFA (alerting phase, C), and DETRESFA (distress phase, D). B (rescue phase) is not a defined ICAO emergency phase designation.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_1_30_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_1_30_out.md
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+### Q1: An SPL or LAPL(S) licence holder has logged 9 winch launches, 4 aero-tow launches and 2 bungee launches over the past 24 months. Which launch methods is the pilot permitted to use as PIC today? ^t10q1
+- A) Aero-tow and bungee.
+- B) Winch and aero-tow.
+- C) Winch and bungee.
+- D) Winch, bungee and aero-tow.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-SFCL, a pilot must have completed at least 5 launches using a given method within the preceding 24 months to act as PIC with that method. Here the pilot has 9 winch launches (meets the threshold) and 2 bungee launches (also meets the threshold, as the minimum for bungee is lower). However, with only 4 aero-tow launches the pilot falls short of the required 5, so aero-tow is not permitted. Option A is wrong because it includes aero-tow. Option B is wrong because it also includes aero-tow. Option D includes all three methods, but aero-tow is not qualified. Only Option C correctly lists winch and bungee.
+
+### Q2: Which documents are required to be carried on board during an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^t10q2
+- A) A, b, c, e, f
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 6 and EU Regulation 965/2012, international flights require the Certificate of Airworthiness (b), Airworthiness Review Certificate (c), EASA Form-1 release document (d), the journey log (e), crew licences and medical certificates (f), and the technical logbook (g). Option A omits Form-1 and the technical logbook. Option B is far too limited. Option D omits critical documents like the ARC and crew papers. Option C provides the complete standard EASA enumeration for international flight.
+
+### Q3: Which type of area may be entered subject to certain conditions? ^t10q3
+- A) Dangerous area
+- B) No-fly zone
+- C) Prohibited area
+- D) Restricted area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A restricted area (designated "R" on charts) may be entered subject to conditions published in the AIP, such as obtaining prior clearance from the responsible authority. Option A (dangerous area, designated "D") contains hazards but has no legal entry restriction -- pilots may enter at their own risk. Option B (no-fly zone) is not a standard ICAO classification. Option C (prohibited area, designated "P") forbids all flight unconditionally. Only Option D correctly describes airspace that permits conditional entry.
+
+### Q4: In which publication can the specific restrictions for a restricted airspace be found? ^t10q4
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIP
+- C) AIC
+- D) ICAO chart 1:500000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) is the primary authoritative document containing permanent information about airspace structure, including the detailed conditions, activation times, and authority contacts for restricted areas in the ENR section. Option A (NOTAMs) may announce temporary changes but do not define the base restrictions. Option C (AICs) contain advisory or administrative information, not regulatory airspace definitions. Option D (ICAO charts) show boundaries graphically but do not detail the specific restrictions and conditions for entry.
+
+### Q5: What legal status do the rules and procedures established by EASA have? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5
+- A) They hold the same status as ICAO Annexes
+- B) They are not legally binding and serve only as guidance
+- C) They are part of EU regulation and legally binding across all EU member states
+- D) They become legally binding only after ratification by individual EU member states
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL and Part-MED are published as EU Implementing or Delegated Regulations under the Basic Regulation (EU) 2018/1139. EU Regulations are directly applicable law in all member states without requiring national ratification, making them immediately binding. Option A is wrong because ICAO Annexes are standards and recommended practices requiring national adoption, not equivalent to EU law. Option B is incorrect because EASA rules are fully legally binding. Option D is wrong because EU Regulations do not require individual state ratification.
+
+### Q6: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q6
+- A) 12 months
+- B) 6 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) has unlimited validity -- once issued, it remains valid as long as the aircraft meets its type design standards and is properly maintained. What requires periodic renewal (typically annually) is the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which confirms continuing airworthiness has been verified. Option A (12 months) and Option B (6 months) confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period for any certificate.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "ARC" stand for? ^t10q7
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, as defined in EU Regulation 1321/2014 (Part-M). It is issued after a periodic airworthiness review confirms the aircraft's continuing airworthiness documentation and condition are in order. Option A (Airspace Restriction Criteria), Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control), and Option D (Airspace Rulemaking Committee) are fabricated terms not used in EASA or ICAO aviation law.
+
+### Q8: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q8
+- A) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- B) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) Of the residence of the owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 8 and Annex 7, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state of registry -- the country where the aircraft is registered. That state bears responsibility for ensuring the aircraft meets applicable airworthiness standards. Option A (where the review is done) is incorrect because reviews may occur abroad. Option B (where constructed) is irrelevant since manufacturing state differs from registry state. Option D (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance.
+
+### Q9: A pilot licence issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is recognised in... ^t10q9
+- A) The country where the licence was issued.
+- B) Those countries that have individually accepted this licence upon application.
+- C) All ICAO contracting states.
+- D) The country where the licence was acquired.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 (Personnel Licensing) establishes international standards for pilot licences. A licence issued in full compliance with Annex 1 standards is recognised across all 193 ICAO Contracting States, enabling international aviation operations without individual country-by-country acceptance. Option A and Option D are essentially the same idea and too restrictive. Option B incorrectly implies case-by-case acceptance is needed. The universal mutual recognition of Annex 1 licences is a cornerstone of international civil aviation.
+
+### Q10: Which topic does ICAO Annex 1 address? ^t10q10
+- A) Rules of the air
+- B) Operation of aircraft
+- C) Air traffic services
+- D) Flight crew licensing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 covers Personnel Licensing, which includes standards for flight crew licences (PPL, CPL, ATPL), ratings, medical certificates, and instructor qualifications. Option A (Rules of the Air) is Annex 2. Option B (Operation of Aircraft) is Annex 6. Option C (Air Traffic Services) is Annex 11. Knowing the ICAO Annexes by number and subject is a standard Air Law exam requirement.
+
+### Q11: For a pilot aged 62, how long is a Class 2 medical certificate valid? ^t10q11
+- A) 60 Months.
+- B) 24 Months.
+- C) 12 Months.
+- D) 48 Months.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-MED (Commission Regulation (EU) 1178/2011), the validity of a Class 2 medical certificate depends on the pilot's age. For pilots aged 50 and over, validity is reduced to 12 months. At age 62, the 12-month rule clearly applies. Option A (60 months) applies to younger pilots under 40 in some categories. Option B (24 months) applies to pilots aged 40-49. Option D (48 months) is not a standard medical validity period.
+
+### Q12: What does the abbreviation "SERA" stand for? ^t10q12
+- A) Specialized Radar Approach
+- B) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- C) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises the rules of the air across all EU member states, implementing ICAO Annex 2 provisions at European level and adding EU-specific rules covering right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, and signals. Option A, Option B, and Option D are invented abbreviations not used in aviation regulation.
+
+### Q13: What does the abbreviation "TRA" stand for? ^t10q13
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- C) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- D) Transponder Area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace -- airspace of defined dimensions reserved for a specific activity (military exercises, aerobatic displays, parachuting) during a published period. TRAs are activated via NOTAM and differ from TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) in that they may permit shared use under certain conditions. Option A (Terminal Area), Option B (Temporary Radar Routing Area), and Option D (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations.
+
+### Q14: What must be taken into account when entering an RMZ? ^t10q14
+- A) The transponder must be switched on Mode C with squawk 7000
+- B) A clearance from the local aviation authority must be obtained
+- C) Continuous radio monitoring is required, and radio contact should be established if possible
+- D) A clearance to enter the area must be obtained
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) requires all aircraft to carry and operate a functioning radio, to monitor the designated frequency continuously, and to establish two-way radio contact before entry if possible. Option A describes a TMZ requirement (transponder), not an RMZ. Option B and Option D imply formal ATC clearance is needed, which is a CTR requirement, not an RMZ. The RMZ is defined in SERA.6005 and national AIP supplements.
+
+### Q15: What does an area designated as "TMZ" signify? ^t10q15
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- C) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- D) Transportation Management Zone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone -- airspace within which all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a pressure-altitude reporting transponder (Mode C or Mode S). This allows ATC radar and collision avoidance systems to identify and track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Touring Motorglider Zone), and Option D (Transportation Management Zone) are not recognised aviation terms.
+
+### Q16: A flight is classified as a "visual flight" when the... ^t10q16
+- A) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- B) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- C) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined by the rules under which it is conducted -- Visual Flight Rules (VFR) -- not by the prevailing weather. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) describes the weather minima required for VFR, but a flight conducted in VMC could still be flown under IFR. Option A confuses the rule set with weather conditions. Options B and C cite specific visibility values that are VMC minima for particular airspace classes, not the definition of a VFR flight.
+
+### Q17: What does the abbreviation "VMC" stand for? ^t10q17
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Instrument flight conditions
+- C) Variable meteorological conditions
+- D) Visual meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the specific minima of visibility and cloud clearance defined in SERA.5001 that must be met for VFR flight. If conditions fall below VMC, the airspace is in IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions). Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, not VMC. Option B (Instrument Flight Conditions) is essentially IMC terminology. Option C (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a standard aviation term. VMC and VFR are related but distinct concepts.
+
+### Q18: Two powered aircraft are converging on crossing courses at identical altitude. Which aircraft must give way? ^t10q18
+- A) The lighter aircraft must climb
+- B) Both must turn to the right
+- C) Both must turn to the left
+- D) The heavier aircraft must climb
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, when two aircraft are on converging courses at approximately the same altitude, each shall alter heading to the right. This ensures both aircraft pass behind each other, avoiding collision. Option A and Option D incorrectly introduce weight as a factor, which is irrelevant to crossing right-of-way rules. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge. The "turn right" rule is a fundamental ICAO collision avoidance principle.
+
+### Q19: Two aeroplanes are on crossing tracks. Which one must yield? ^t10q19
+- A) Both must turn to the left
+- B) The aircraft approaching from the right has the right of priority
+- C) Both must turn to the right
+- D) The aircraft approaching from right to left has the right of priority
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under SERA.3210(b), when two aircraft converge at approximately the same altitude, the aircraft that has the other on its right must give way. In other words, the aircraft approaching from the right (flying from right to left relative to the other pilot's perspective) has right-of-way. Option A is incorrect as turning left increases collision risk. Option B states the principle backwards. Option C describes the evasive action for head-on encounters, not the right-of-way principle for crossing traffic.
+
+### Q20: What cloud separation must be maintained during a VFR flight in airspace classes C, D and E? ^t10q20
+- A) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically
+- B) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically
+- C) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically
+- D) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, VFR flights in airspace classes C, D, and E must maintain 1500 m horizontal distance from cloud and 1000 ft (approximately 300 m) vertical distance from cloud. The key detail is that horizontal is expressed in metres and vertical in feet -- mixing these units is a common exam trap. Option A uses 1000 m horizontal (too small). Option B uses 1000 m vertical (incorrect unit and value). Option D reverses the horizontal/vertical values.
+
+### Q21: In airspace "E", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q21
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class E above 3000 ft AMSL but below FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5000 m (5 km). FL75 (approximately 7500 ft) falls within this altitude band. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum. Option C (1500 m) applies only in uncontrolled airspace at low altitude. Option D (8000 m) applies at and above FL100, not below it.
+
+### Q22: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q22
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace (including class C), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km rule applies. Option A (5000 m) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (3000 m) does not correspond to any standard SERA VFR minimum in controlled airspace.
+
+### Q23: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q23
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL125 is above FL100, so the SERA.5001 rule for high-altitude VFR applies: minimum flight visibility is 8000 m in all controlled airspace including class C. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (3000 m) and Option C (1500 m) apply only in lower uncontrolled airspace. The progression to remember is: low-altitude uncontrolled = 1.5 km, controlled below FL100 = 5 km, at or above FL100 = 8 km.
+
+### Q24: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace "B"? ^t10q24
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Where VFR is permitted in class B airspace, the cloud clearance minima per SERA.5001 are 1500 m horizontal and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertical. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance, which is insufficient. Option B states 1000 m vertical, which is far too large and uses the wrong value. Option C uses only 1000 m horizontal and the correct vertical, but the horizontal is insufficient. Only Option D provides both correct values.
+
+### Q25: In airspace "C" below FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q25
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class C below FL100 (above 3000 ft AMSL or 1000 ft AGL), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km. Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option C (8 km) applies only at and above FL100. Option D (1.5 km) applies in uncontrolled airspace at low altitudes. Glider pilots crossing class C airspace below FL100 must verify at least 5 km visibility.
+
+### Q26: In airspace "C" at and above FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q26
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace including class C, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8 km. This higher threshold reflects the greater closing speeds and reduced reaction time at higher altitudes. Option A (5 km) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VMC minimum. Option D (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q27: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q27
+- A) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ceiling is defined as the height (above ground level) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, more than 4 oktas) below 20,000 ft. Option B uses "altitude" (referenced to MSL) instead of "height" (referenced to the surface). Option C refers to the "highest" cloud layer when it should be the "lowest." Option D incorrectly limits the threshold to 10,000 ft instead of 20,000 ft.
+
+### Q28: During daytime interception by a military aircraft, what does the following signal mean: a sudden 90-degree or greater heading change and a climb without crossing the intercepted aircraft's flight path? ^t10q28
+- A) You are entering a restricted area; leave the airspace immediately
+- B) You may continue your flight
+- C) Follow me; I will guide you to the nearest suitable airfield
+- D) Prepare for a safety landing; you have entered a prohibited area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2, Appendix 1, when an intercepting aircraft makes an abrupt break-away manoeuvre of 90 degrees or more and climbs away without crossing the intercepted aircraft's track, this is the standard "release" signal meaning "You may proceed." The intercept is complete and the pilot may continue on their route. Option A and Option D imply airspace violation warnings that use different signals. Option C ("follow me") involves the interceptor rocking wings and maintaining a steady heading toward the destination aerodrome.
+
+### Q29: When flying at FL 80, what altimeter setting must be used? ^t10q29
+- A) 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) Local QNH.
+- C) 1030.25 hPa.
+- D) Local QFE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are defined relative to the International Standard Atmosphere pressure datum of 1013.25 hPa. When flying at or above the transition altitude, pilots must set 1013.25 hPa on the altimeter subscale and reference altitude as a flight level. Option B (QNH) gives altitude above mean sea level and is used below the transition altitude. Option C (1030.25 hPa) is not a standard reference pressure. Option D (QFE) gives height above a specific aerodrome and is never used for flight levels.
+
+### Q30: What is the objective of the semi-circular rule? ^t10q30
+- A) To permit flying without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP
+- B) To enable safe climbing or descending within a holding pattern
+- C) To reduce the risk of collisions by decreasing the likelihood of opposing traffic at the same altitude
+- D) To prevent collisions by prohibiting turning manoeuvres
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The semi-circular (hemispherical) cruising level rule (SERA.5015) assigns different altitude bands to different magnetic tracks -- eastbound flights use odd thousands of feet, westbound use even thousands. By vertically separating aircraft flying in opposite directions, the probability of head-on collision at the same altitude is greatly reduced. Option A is unrelated to cruising levels. Option B describes holding pattern procedures. Option D is incorrect because the rule concerns altitude assignment, not manoeuvre restrictions.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_31_60_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_31_60_out.md
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+### Q31: A transponder capable of transmitting the current pressure altitude is a... ^t10q31
+- A) Transponder approved for airspace "B".
+- B) Mode A transponder.
+- C) Pressure-decoder.
+- D) Mode C or S transponder.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A transponder that transmits pressure altitude information is either a Mode C or Mode S transponder. Mode C adds automatic pressure altitude reporting to the basic Mode A identity code, while Mode S provides all Mode C capabilities plus selective interrogation and data link features. Option A is incorrect because "approved for airspace B" is not a transponder classification. Option B is wrong because Mode A only transmits a 4-digit squawk code without altitude data. Option C is wrong because "pressure-decoder" is not an aviation term.
+
+### Q32: Which transponder code signals a loss of radio communication? ^t10q32
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 2000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally recognised squawk for radio communication failure. Pilots must memorise the three emergency codes: 7700 for general emergency, 7600 for radio failure, and 7500 for unlawful interference (hijacking). Option A (7700) is for emergencies, not specifically communication loss. Option B (7000) is the standard European VFR conspicuity code. Option D (2000) is used when entering controlled airspace without an assigned code.
+
+### Q33: In the event of a radio failure, which transponder code should be selected without any ATC request? ^t10q33
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a pilot experiences radio communication failure, they must immediately squawk 7600 without waiting for any ATC instruction, since by definition communication is no longer possible. This proactive action alerts ATC to the situation and triggers loss-of-communications procedures. Option A (7000) is the general VFR code and does not communicate an emergency. Option B (7500) signals unlawful interference, which is a completely different situation. Option C (7700) is for general emergencies, not specifically radio failure.
+
+### Q34: Which transponder code should be set automatically during an emergency without waiting for instructions? ^t10q34
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In any general emergency (engine failure, fire, medical emergency, structural damage), the pilot must immediately set transponder code 7700 without waiting for ATC instruction. This triggers an alarm on ATC radar displays and activates emergency response procedures. Option A (7600) is specifically for radio communication failure, not general emergencies. Option B (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code. Option C (7500) is reserved exclusively for unlawful interference (hijacking) and should never be set for other emergencies.
+
+### Q35: Which air traffic service bears responsibility for the safe conduct of flights? ^t10q35
+- A) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- C) ATC (air traffic control)
+- D) ALR (alerting service)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air Traffic Control (ATC) is the service specifically responsible for providing separation between aircraft and ensuring the safe, orderly, and expeditious flow of air traffic in controlled airspace. Per ICAO Annex 11, ATC actively manages aircraft movements to prevent collisions. Option A (FIS) provides useful information but does not direct or separate aircraft. Option B (AIS) publishes aeronautical information documents but has no operational control role. Option D (ALR) initiates search and rescue when aircraft are overdue or in distress, but does not manage ongoing flight safety.
+
+### Q36: Which services make up the air traffic control service? ^t10q36
+- A) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)
+- C) FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)
+- D) ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 11, the three constituent units of ATC are: TWR (Aerodrome Control, handling traffic at and around the aerodrome), APP (Approach Control, managing arriving and departing traffic in the terminal area), and ACC (Area Control Centre, handling en-route traffic). Option A incorrectly includes FIS, which is an information service separate from ATC. Option C lists information and communication services, none of which are ATC units. Option D mixes emergency services (ALR, SAR) with only one ATC unit (TWR).
+
+### Q37: Regarding separation in airspace "E", which statement is correct? ^t10q37
+- A) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace, ATC separates IFR flights from other IFR flights, but VFR traffic receives no ATC separation service whatsoever -- neither from other VFR traffic nor from IFR traffic. VFR pilots in Class E must rely entirely on the see-and-avoid principle, with traffic information provided where possible. Option A incorrectly states IFR is separated only from VFR (it is separated from other IFR). Option B and Option D wrongly imply VFR traffic receives some form of separation.
+
+### Q38: Which air traffic services are available within an FIR (flight information region)? ^t10q38
+- A) ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)
+- C) FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)
+- D) ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) provides two universal services throughout its entire volume: FIS (Flight Information Service), which provides weather, NOTAM, and traffic information to pilots, and ALR (Alerting Service), which notifies rescue services when aircraft are in distress or overdue. ATC is not provided throughout the entire FIR -- it exists only within designated controlled airspace (CTAs, CTRs, airways) that may lie within the FIR. Options A, B, and D either include ATC incorrectly or omit the correct pairing.
+
+### Q39: How can a pilot reach FIS (flight information service) during flight? ^t10q39
+- A) Via telephone.
+- B) By a personal visit.
+- C) Via radio communication.
+- D) Via internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS is an operational service provided to airborne pilots, and the primary means of contacting it during flight is via radio communication on the designated FIS frequency. While pre-flight information may be obtained by telephone or online, the in-flight FIS service itself is radio-based. Option A (telephone) and Option D (internet) are ground-based contact methods impractical for real-time in-flight communication. Option B (personal visit) is obviously impossible while airborne.
+
+### Q40: What is the standard phraseology to warn that a light aircraft is following a heavier wake turbulence category aircraft? ^t10q40
+- A) Attention propwash
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Caution wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO phraseology for wake turbulence warnings is "CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE," as prescribed in ICAO Doc 4444 (PANS-ATM). Standardised phraseology is mandatory in aviation to eliminate ambiguity. Option A ("attention propwash"), Option B ("be careful wake winds"), and Option C ("danger jet blast") are all non-standard phrases not found in ICAO-approved phraseology. Using non-standard terms could cause confusion and is prohibited in EASA airspace.
+
+### Q41: Which of the following represents a correct position report? ^t10q41
+- A) DEABC over "N" at 35
+- B) DEABC reaching "N"
+- C) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A standard position report per ICAO Doc 4444 must include: aircraft callsign, position (fix or waypoint), and altitude or flight level. Option C (DEABC, "N", 2500 ft) provides all three elements correctly and concisely. Option A lacks a clear altitude reference ("at 35" is ambiguous). Option B is incomplete because it omits altitude entirely. Option D uses the nonsensical expression "FL 2500 ft" -- flight levels and feet are never combined this way; it should be either "FL 25" or "2500 ft."
+
+### Q42: What kind of information is contained in the general part (GEN) of the AIP? ^t10q42
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- C) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP is structured in three parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The GEN section contains general administrative information including map symbols/icons, radio navigation aid listings, sunrise/sunset tables, national regulations, airport fees, and ATC fees. Option A describes content found in the ENR section (airspace, routes, restrictions). Option B describes AD section content (aerodrome charts, approach charts). Option C mixes items that do not correspond to any single AIP section.
+
+### Q43: Into which parts is the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) divided? ^t10q43
+- A) GEN ENR AD
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 15, the AIP is divided into three standardised parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). This structure is universal across all ICAO member states. Option B (AGA, COM), Option C (COM, MET), and Option D (MET, RAC) use abbreviations from older ICAO documentation structures that are no longer part of the modern AIP organisation. Only Option A reflects the current ICAO-standard AIP structure.
+
+### Q44: What kind of information is found in the "AD" section of the AIP? ^t10q44
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains all aerodrome-specific information: aerodrome classification, runway data, approach and departure charts, taxi charts, lighting, frequencies, operating hours, and obstacle data. Option A describes ENR (En-Route) content covering airspace and restrictions. Option B describes GEN (General) content such as symbols and fees. Option D mixes regulatory and administrative items that do not correspond to the AD section.
+
+### Q45: The NOTAM shown is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^t10q45
+- A) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- B) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM time codes use the format YYMMDDHHMM in UTC. The "C)" field in a NOTAM specifies the end of validity. The code 1305211400 decodes as: year 2013 (13), month May (05), day 21, time 14:00 UTC -- giving 21 May 2013 at 14:00 UTC. Option B misreads the date format, interpreting the month as the date. Option C incorrectly reads the year as 2014. Option D completely misinterprets the encoding. Correct NOTAM decoding is a fundamental Air Law skill for all pilots.
+
+### Q46: A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a compilation of current... ^t10q46
+- A) AIP information of operational significance assembled prior to flight.
+- B) AIC information of operational significance assembled after the flight.
+- C) ICAO information of operational significance assembled after the flight.
+- D) NOTAM information of operational significance assembled prior to flight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) is a standardised summary of current NOTAMs relevant to a planned flight, compiled and issued before departure. It filters pertinent NOTAMs for the route, departure, destination, and alternate aerodromes. Option A is wrong because a PIB is based on NOTAM data, not AIP data. Option B is wrong on two counts: it references AICs (not NOTAMs) and says "after the flight" (it is a pre-flight tool). Option C similarly misidentifies the source and timing.
+
+### Q47: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q47
+- A) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- B) The highest point of the landing area.
+- C) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- D) The highest point of the apron.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is defined as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This ensures the published value represents the most demanding terrain height aircraft must account for during approach and departure. Option A (average of the manoeuvring area) would understate the critical elevation. Option C (lowest point) is the opposite of the correct definition. Option D (highest point of the apron) is incorrect because the apron is not the landing area.
+
+### Q48: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q48
+- A) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- B) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. The three key elements are: rectangular shape, land aerodrome, and aircraft in general. Option A is wrong because runways are specific to land aerodromes (water aerodromes have alighting areas, not runways). Option B is wrong because the shape is rectangular, not round. Option D is wrong because runways serve aircraft generally, not helicopters specifically (helicopters use helipads or FATO areas).
+
+### Q49: How can a wind direction indicator be made more visible? ^t10q49
+- A) By mounting it on top of the control tower.
+- B) By surrounding it with a white circle.
+- C) By placing it on a large black surface.
+- D) By constructing it from green materials.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a wind direction indicator (windsock or wind tee) should be surrounded by a white circle to enhance its visibility from the air. The high-contrast white surround makes the indicator easier to identify against the aerodrome background. Option A (mounting on the control tower) is not a standard ICAO visibility-enhancement method and could interfere with tower operations. Option C (black surface) is not specified in ICAO standards. Option D (green materials) would actually reduce visibility against grass surfaces.
+
+### Q50: What shape does a landing direction indicator have? ^t10q50
+- A) An angled arrow
+- B) L
+- C) T
+- D) A straight arrow
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, the landing direction indicator is T-shaped (commonly called a "landing T" or "signal T"). Aircraft land toward the cross-bar of the T and take off away from it, making the landing direction immediately clear. Option A (angled arrow) and Option D (straight arrow) are not the standard ICAO shape for this indicator. Option B (L-shape) is used for a different purpose -- indicating a right-hand traffic circuit, not the landing direction.
+
+### Q51: Who bears the responsibility for ensuring that mandatory on-board documents are present and that logbooks are correctly maintained? ^t10q51
+- A) The air transport company.
+- B) The operator of the aircraft.
+- C) The pilot-in-command.
+- D) The owner of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) bears ultimate responsibility for ensuring that all required documents are on board and properly maintained before every flight. This is a fundamental principle of aviation law under both ICAO Annex 2 and EASA regulations. Option A (air transport company) and Option B (operator) have general oversight duties but the direct pre-flight responsibility rests with the PIC. Option D (owner) may not even be present at the time of flight.
+
+### Q52: Which activities may the Federal Council require OFAC authorization for? ^t10q52
+- A) Only public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- B) Parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- C) None of the activities listed above requires OFAC authorization.
+- D) Only parachute descents and captive balloon ascents. No authorization is required for powered aircraft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, the Federal Council may require OFAC (Federal Office of Civil Aviation) authorization for all listed special activities: parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights, and aerobatic demonstrations. These activities present elevated safety risks to participants and the public. Option A is too narrow because it excludes parachuting and captive balloons. Option C is wrong because authorization is indeed required. Option D incorrectly limits the requirement to only parachuting and captive balloons.
+
+### Q53: Is dropping objects from an aircraft in flight prohibited in Switzerland? ^t10q53
+- A) No, only the dropping of advertising material is prohibited.
+- B) Yes, it is strictly prohibited.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes, subject to exceptions to be determined by the Federal Council.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, dropping objects from an aircraft in flight is in principle prohibited, but the Federal Council may define specific exceptions such as parachuting, emergency drops, or authorised agricultural activities. Option A is wrong because the prohibition is not limited to advertising material. Option B is wrong because exceptions exist -- it is not a strict absolute prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is a general prohibition in place, even though exceptions are possible.
+
+### Q54: Where specifically is the certification basis of an aircraft documented? ^t10q54
+- A) In the VFR Manual.
+- B) In the annex to the certificate of airworthiness.
+- C) In the annex to the noise certificate.
+- D) In the insurance certificate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The certification basis of an aircraft (type certificate data sheet, approved operating conditions, mass limits, authorised flight categories, and required equipment) is documented in the annex to the Certificate of Airworthiness. This annex defines what the aircraft is certified to do. Option A (VFR Manual) contains operational procedures, not certification data. Option C (noise certificate annex) deals only with noise emissions. Option D (insurance certificate) covers financial liability, not airworthiness certification.
+
+### Q55: Your aircraft, not used for commercial traffic, requires repairs abroad. Which statement applies? ^t10q55
+- A) Repair work may only be carried out in Switzerland.
+- B) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized by OFAC.
+- C) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized as such by the competent aviation authority.
+- D) The work must be carried out by an EASA-certified maintenance organization.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a non-commercial aircraft requiring repairs abroad, the maintenance must be performed by an organisation recognised by the competent aviation authority of the country where the work is done. This provides flexibility while ensuring regulatory oversight. Option A is wrong because repairs are not restricted to Switzerland. Option B is wrong because OFAC recognition is not specifically required for foreign maintenance. Option D is too restrictive because EASA certification is not always required for non-commercial aircraft maintenance in all jurisdictions.
+
+### Q56: A well-known watchmaker has painted an aircraft in the brand's colours with a large watch on its fuselage. Is this allowed? ^t10q56
+- A) Yes, if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization, the operation has no political purpose and the advertising markings are limited to specific parts of the aircraft.
+- B) No, advertising is strictly prohibited on aircraft.
+- C) Yes, subject to other provisions of federal legislation. The nationality and registration marks must in all cases remain easily recognizable.
+- D) Yes, but only if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization and the nationality and registration marks remain easily recognizable.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss law, advertising on aircraft is permitted subject to other provisions of federal legislation, with only one mandatory condition: the nationality and registration marks must remain easily recognisable at all times. No special OFAC authorisation is needed for applying advertising markings. Option A imposes unnecessary conditions (OFAC authorization, no political purpose, limited placement) that are not required. Option B is simply wrong -- advertising is not prohibited. Option D incorrectly requires OFAC authorization.
+
+### Q57: Under what conditions may a person serve as a crew member on board an aircraft? ^t10q57
+- A) When that person holds a valid licence issued by their country of origin.
+- B) When that person holds a valid licence issued or recognized by the country in which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) When that person holds a valid licence issued by the country in which the aircraft is operated.
+- D) When that person holds a valid licence recognized by their country of origin.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A crew member must hold a valid licence issued or recognised by the state of registration of the aircraft, in accordance with ICAO Annex 1. The state of registration defines the qualification requirements for crew operating its aircraft. Option A and Option D reference the crew member's country of origin, which is irrelevant -- it is the aircraft's state of registration that matters. Option C references the country of operation, which is also not the determining factor under ICAO rules.
+
+### Q58: Under what conditions is it permitted to carry and operate a radio on board? ^t10q58
+- A) If a radio communication licence has been issued for the radio and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+- B) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- C) If the frequency increments of the radio are at least 0.125 MHz and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- D) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Two cumulative conditions must be met: first, authorisation to install and use the radio must have been granted by the competent authority, and second, crew members who operate the radio must hold the corresponding formal qualification (not merely informal training). Option A is wrong because a "radio communication licence" is not the same as installation/use authorisation. Option C introduces an irrelevant technical specification about frequency increments. Option D is wrong because it requires only "training" rather than a formal qualification, which is insufficient.
+
+### Q59: What must a pilot possess to be authorized to communicate by radio with air traffic services? ^t10q59
+- A) A radiotelephony course certificate and sufficient mastery of standard phraseology.
+- B) In all cases, a radiotelephony qualification. Aeroplane and helicopter pilots must additionally hold a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- C) A valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- D) A radiotelephony qualification and a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All pilots wishing to communicate with ATC must hold a radiotelephony qualification. Additionally, aeroplane and helicopter pilots must also possess a valid language proficiency attestation in the language used on the frequencies, as required under Swiss regulations. Option A is insufficient because a course certificate alone does not constitute a formal qualification. Option C omits the radiotelephony qualification entirely. Option D applies the language proficiency requirement universally, but under Swiss rules it is specifically required for aeroplane and helicopter pilots, not necessarily for all pilot categories such as glider or balloon pilots.
+
+### Q60: Your ophthalmologist has prescribed corrective lenses. Which statement is correct? ^t10q60
+- A) You need not do anything. A visual deficiency that is well corrected has no effect on medical fitness.
+- B) You are immediately unfit.
+- C) You must promptly seek advice from your aviation medical examiner.
+- D) You can simply report your ophthalmologist's decision to your aviation medical examiner at the next routine examination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any change in medical condition, including the prescription of corrective lenses, must be reported promptly to the aviation medical examiner (AME). The AME will assess whether the change affects medical fitness and whether additional restrictions or conditions must be placed on the licence. Option A is wrong because even well-corrected deficiencies may require documentation and a medical fitness reassessment. Option B is wrong because a corrective lens prescription does not automatically make a pilot unfit. Option D is wrong because waiting until the next routine examination could mean flying with an unreported medical change, which is not permitted.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_61_90_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_61_90_out.md
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+### Q61: In which type of airspace may a Special VFR (SVFR) flight be authorized when the ceiling is below 450 m above ground and surface visibility is less than 5 km? ^t10q61
+- A) FIR.
+- B) TMA.
+- C) CTR.
+- D) AWY.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Special VFR (SVFR) flights can only be authorised within a CTR (Control Zone), which is the controlled airspace immediately surrounding an aerodrome. When meteorological conditions fall below normal VMC minima, ATC within the CTR can grant SVFR clearance to permit operations. Option A (FIR) is too broad -- SVFR is not applicable to the entire flight information region. Option B (TMA) is terminal airspace above the CTR, not the zone where SVFR applies. Option D (AWY) is an airway where SVFR is not authorised.
+
+### Q62: What evasive action should the pilots of two VFR aircraft on converging tracks generally take? ^t10q62
+- A) One continues on track while the other turns right.
+- B) One turns left, the other turns right.
+- C) Each pilot turns left.
+- D) Each pilot turns right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, the standard ICAO evasive action for converging aircraft is that each pilot turns right, ensuring both aircraft pass behind one another and diverge safely. This symmetrical rule eliminates ambiguity about who should manoeuvre. Option A is wrong because both aircraft must take action, not just one. Option B (one left, one right) would be uncoordinated and could worsen the situation. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge.
+
+### Q63: What are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements for VFR flight in Class D airspace below 10,000 ft AMSL? ^t10q63
+- A) Visibility 1.5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+- B) Visibility 8 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 450 m.
+- C) Visibility 5 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 300 m.
+- D) Visibility 5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class D airspace below FL100 (10,000 ft AMSL), SERA.5001 prescribes VMC minima of: 5 km visibility, 1,500 m horizontal cloud distance, and 300 m (1,000 ft) vertical cloud distance. These are the same minima as for Classes C and E in this altitude band. Option A describes conditions applicable to lower uncontrolled airspace. Option B uses 8 km visibility and 450 m vertical clearance, which do not match any standard SERA values for this context. Option D omits the required cloud distance values.
+
+### Q64: Among the airspace classes used in Switzerland, which ones are classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q64
+- A) D, C
+- B) G, E, D, C
+- C) E, D, C
+- D) E, C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, airspace classes C, D, and E are all classified as controlled airspace. Class G is uncontrolled airspace. Classes A and B exist in the ICAO classification system but are not used in Switzerland. Option A omits Class E, which is controlled airspace (though VFR traffic does not receive separation in it). Option B incorrectly includes Class G, which is uncontrolled. Option D omits Class D, which is definitely controlled airspace surrounding many Swiss aerodromes.
+
+### Q65: According to the applicable rules of the air, what is the definition of "day"? ^t10q65
+- A) The period from sunrise to sunset.
+- B) The period between 06:00 and 20:00 in winter and between 06:00 and 21:00 in summer.
+- C) The period from the end of morning civil twilight to the beginning of evening civil twilight.
+- D) The period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation, "day" is defined as the period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight -- roughly 30 minutes before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset. This broader definition gives pilots additional usable daylight at both ends. Option A (sunrise to sunset) is too restrictive and is the astronomical definition, not the aviation one. Option B uses fixed clock times that do not account for seasonal and geographic variations. Option C reverses the twilight references, which would result in a shorter rather than longer period.
+
+### Q66: What constitutes an aviation accident? ^t10q66
+- A) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which at least one person is killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft that requires the aircraft to be repaired.
+- C) The crash of an aircraft.
+- D) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which a person is killed or seriously injured, or in which the structural integrity, performance or flight characteristics of the aircraft are significantly impaired.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is defined as an event associated with aircraft operation resulting in either fatal/serious injury to persons OR significant structural damage that impairs the aircraft's integrity, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify an event as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting aircraft damage. Option B is too broad -- not every repair constitutes an accident. Option C (crash) is too narrow and not the formal definition.
+
+### Q67: You wish to carry out private flights for remuneration. What formality must you complete to limit your civil liability? ^t10q67
+- A) Take out a special passenger insurance policy which passengers are required to accept.
+- B) No formality is required since the Montreal Convention releases the pilot from all liability.
+- C) Draw up a declaration to be signed by passengers releasing you from all liability.
+- D) Issue a transport document as proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded, which limits liability for damage to baggage and for delay.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Issuing a transport document (ticket) constitutes proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded between the pilot and the passenger. Under the Montreal Convention, the existence of such a contract limits the carrier's liability for baggage damage and delays. Option A is incorrect because special passenger insurance is not the mechanism for limiting civil liability under the Convention. Option B is wrong because the Montreal Convention does not release pilots from all liability -- it caps liability under certain conditions. Option C (liability waiver) is not a legally recognised mechanism under international aviation law.
+
+### Q68: What type of information is disseminated through an AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular)? ^t10q68
+- A) Aeronautical information of importance to persons involved in flight operations concerning the construction, condition or modification of aeronautical facilities and their duration.
+- B) An AIC is a notice containing information that does not meet the conditions for issuing a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but which relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative or legislative matters.
+- C) The AIC is the manual for pilots flying IFR. Its structure and content are analogous to those of the VFR Manual.
+- D) In principle, any information that justifies the issuance of a NOTAM and relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical or legislative matters may be published by AIC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular) contains supplementary information that does not meet the criteria for publication as a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but is still relevant to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative, and legislative matters. It fills the gap between urgent NOTAMs and permanent AIP entries. Option A describes NOTAM-type information rather than AIC content. Option C is completely wrong -- an AIC is not an IFR manual. Option D reverses the relationship: AICs contain information that does NOT justify a NOTAM, not information that does.
+
+### Q69: What does the aerodrome operations manual govern? ^t10q69
+- A) The certification of maintenance organizations located at the aerodrome.
+- B) The organization of the aerodrome, opening hours, approach and takeoff procedures, use of aerodrome facilities by passengers, aircraft and ground vehicles as well as other users, and ground handling services.
+- C) Employment contracts, vacation entitlement and shift work of the aerodrome operator.
+- D) The operation and opening hours of the aerodrome restaurant and other businesses located at the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome operations manual is a comprehensive document governing all operational aspects of the aerodrome: its organisation, opening hours, approach and take-off procedures, use of facilities by all users (passengers, aircraft, ground vehicles), and ground handling services. Option A is wrong because maintenance organisation certification is handled by EASA/national authorities, not the aerodrome operations manual. Option C covers employment matters unrelated to aerodrome operations. Option D covers commercial businesses, which are outside the scope of the operations manual.
+
+### Q70: What does this ground signal indicate? (Two dumbbells) ^t10q70
+> **Ground signal:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_10_q03_ground_signal.png]]
+> *Two dumbbells -- signal indicating that landings and takeoffs are to be made on runways only, but that other maneuvers (taxiing) may be carried out outside the runways and taxiways.*
+
+- A) Landing and takeoff on runways only. Other manoeuvres may however be conducted outside the runways and taxiways.
+- B) Landing, takeoff and taxiing on runways and taxiways only.
+- C) Caution during takeoff or landing.
+- D) Landing and takeoff on hard-surfaced runways only.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dumbbell signal displayed in the signals area means that landings and take-offs must be made on runways only, but other manoeuvres such as taxiing, turning, and positioning may be conducted outside the runways and taxiways on the grass or other surfaces. Option B is too restrictive because it confines all manoeuvres to runways and taxiways (that would be the dumbbell with a cross bar). Option C describes a different signal entirely. Option D introduces "hard-surfaced" which is not what this signal communicates.
+
+### Q71: When two aircraft approach each other head-on, what manoeuvre must both pilots perform? ^t10q71
+- A) Each turns left.
+- B) One turns right, the other turns left.
+- C) One flies straight ahead while the other turns right.
+- D) Each turns right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210(c) and ICAO Annex 2, when two aircraft are on head-on or nearly head-on courses, both pilots must alter heading to the right, each passing the other on their left side. This mirrors road traffic conventions and eliminates ambiguity. Option A (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to pass on the wrong side and could lead to collision. Option B (one left, one right) is uncoordinated and dangerous. Option C (one straight, one turns) is incorrect because both pilots must take evasive action.
+
+### Q72: Which of the following airspaces are not classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q72
+- A) Class G airspace.
+- B) Class G and E airspaces.
+- C) Class C airspace.
+- D) Class G, E and D airspaces.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, Classes G and E are not classified as controlled airspace for VFR traffic purposes. Class G is uncontrolled airspace, and Class E, while technically controlled for IFR flights, provides no ATC separation for VFR traffic. Option A is incomplete because it lists only Class G and omits Class E. Option C is wrong because Class C is definitely controlled airspace. Option D incorrectly includes Class D, which is a controlled airspace requiring ATC clearance.
+
+### Q73: To which authority has the Federal Council delegated aviation oversight in Switzerland? ^t10q73
+- A) The Swiss air navigation services (Skyguide).
+- B) The Aero-Club of Switzerland.
+- C) The Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (DETEC).
+- D) The cantonal police forces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Federal Council delegates aviation oversight to DETEC (Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications), which in turn delegates operational supervision to FOCA (Federal Office of Civil Aviation, known as BAZL/OFAC). Option A (Skyguide) provides air navigation services but is not the regulatory oversight authority. Option B (Aero-Club) is a private association, not a government supervisory body. Option D (cantonal police) have no aviation oversight role.
+
+### Q74: For which of the following flights is filing a flight plan mandatory? ^t10q74
+- A) For a VFR flight over the Alps, Pre-Alps or Jura.
+- B) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- C) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+- D) For a VFR flight in Class E airspace.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a VFR flight plan is mandatory when the flight requires the use of air traffic control services, such as transiting a CTR, TMA, or other controlled airspace where ATC interaction is needed. Option A (Alps/Pre-Alps/Jura) does not automatically require a flight plan. Option C (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan trigger. Option D (Class E airspace) is incorrect because VFR flights in Class E do not require ATC services or a flight plan.
+
+### Q75: What minimum height must be maintained above densely populated areas during VFR flight? ^t10q75
+- A) At least 300 m above the ground.
+- B) At least 150 m above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) At least 150 m above the ground.
+- D) At least 450 m above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005 and ICAO Annex 2, the minimum height over densely populated areas is 150 m (approximately 500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-clearance-based rule ensures safe separation from structures and terrain. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacles. Option C (150 m AGL) ignores the obstacle clearance requirement. Option D (450 m AGL) is not the standard minimum height specified in SERA.
+
+### Q76: Among the aircraft listed below, which have priority for landing and takeoff? ^t10q76
+- A) Aircraft manoeuvring on the ground.
+- B) Aircraft arriving from another aerodrome that are in the aerodrome circuit.
+- C) Aircraft on final approach.
+- D) Aircraft that have received an ATC clearance to taxi.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2 and SERA.3210, aircraft on final approach or landing always have priority over all other aircraft in flight or manoeuvring on the ground. This rule exists because aircraft on final approach have limited ability to manoeuvre and are in the most critical phase of flight. Option A (ground manoeuvring aircraft) must yield to landing traffic. Option B (aircraft in the circuit) have lower priority than those on final. Option D (aircraft with taxi clearance) must also give way to landing aircraft.
+
+### Q77: What does this signal indicate? ^t10q77
+![[figures/bazl_101_q7.png]]
+- A) All runways at this aerodrome are closed.
+- B) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- C) Only hard-surface runways are to be used for landing and takeoff.
+- D) Takeoff and landing only on runways; other manoeuvres are not restricted to the use of runways and taxiways.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown indicates that glider flying is in progress at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO ground signal placed in the signals area to warn arriving and overflying aircraft that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (all runways closed) uses a different signal. Option C (hard-surface runways only) is not what this signal communicates. Option D describes the dumbbell signal, which is a different ground marking entirely.
+
+### Q78: Who has the responsibility for ensuring that the required documents are carried on board the aircraft? ^t10q78
+- A) The operator of the air transport undertaking (Operator).
+- B) The owner of the aircraft.
+- C) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+- D) The operator of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) is responsible for ensuring that all required documents are carried on board the aircraft before flight. This is established in ICAO Annex 2 and EASA/Swiss aviation regulations. The PIC must personally verify document compliance as part of pre-flight preparation. Option A (operator of air transport undertaking) and Option D (operator) have organisational responsibilities but the direct duty falls on the PIC. Option B (owner) may not be involved in the flight operation at all.
+
+### Q79: Which of the following instructions regarding runway direction in use takes precedence? ^t10q79
+- A) The wind sock.
+- B) The landing T.
+- C) The ATC instruction transmitted by radio from the control tower.
+- D) The two digits displayed vertically on the control tower.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC radio instructions from the control tower take the highest precedence over all visual indicators when determining the runway direction in use. ATC has the most current and comprehensive situational awareness and may assign a runway that differs from what the windsock or landing T suggests. Option A (windsock) indicates wind direction but does not override ATC. Option B (landing T) is a visual indicator subordinate to ATC instructions. Option D (tower digits) provides general runway information but is superseded by direct ATC radio instructions.
+
+### Q80: In the event of a radio failure, what code must be set on the transponder? ^t10q80
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally standardised squawk for radio communication failure. Setting this code immediately alerts ATC that the pilot has lost radio contact and triggers loss-of-communications procedures. Option A (7000) is the standard European VFR conspicuity code and does not indicate any emergency. Option B (7500) is reserved for unlawful interference (hijacking). Option C (7700) is the general emergency code, not specifically for radio failure.
+
+### Q81: Is it permitted to deviate from the rules of the air applicable to aircraft? ^t10q81
+- A) Yes, but only in Class G airspace.
+- B) No, under no circumstances.
+- C) Yes, but only for safety reasons.
+- D) Yes, absolutely.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2 and SERA, deviation from the rules of the air is permitted only when necessary for safety reasons and only to the extent strictly required to address the safety concern. This is the sole legal exception. Option A is wrong because the exception is not limited to any specific airspace class. Option B is wrong because safety-driven deviations are permitted. Option D is wrong because unrestricted deviation is never allowed -- the safety justification must exist.
+
+### Q82: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 2100 m AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: Vertical / Horizontal ^t10q82
+- A) 1.5 km / 50 m / 100 m
+- B) 8.0 km / 100 m / 300 m
+- C) 5.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 2100 m AMSL (approximately 6900 ft), which is well above 3000 ft AMSL and 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima in Class E airspace are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option A describes values for low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far below the required minima. Option B has incorrect vertical and horizontal clearance values. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which does not match the Class E requirement at this altitude.
+
+### Q83: By what time at the latest must a daytime VFR flight be completed? ^t10q83
+- A) 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight.
+- B) At the beginning of civil twilight.
+- C) At sunset.
+- D) At the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a daytime VFR flight must be completed no later than sunset. Flying after sunset requires either a night flight qualification or special authorisation. Option A (30 minutes before end of civil twilight) is earlier than required. Option B (beginning of civil twilight) is ambiguous and does not correspond to the Swiss rule. Option D (end of civil twilight) is too late -- while "day" in aviation extends to the end of civil twilight, Swiss VFR completion requirements use sunset as the cut-off.
+
+### Q84: Are you allowed to use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without holding the radiotelephony rating extension? ^t10q84
+- A) Yes, provided other radio communications are not disrupted.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes.
+- D) Yes, provided I have sufficient command of phraseology.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, a pilot may use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without holding the specific radiotelephony extension, in airspaces where radio communication is required. The radiotelephony qualification is needed for certain controlled airspaces but basic radio use for ATC communication is permitted. Option A adds an unnecessary condition about not disrupting other communications. Option B is incorrect because the prohibition is not absolute. Option D adds a phraseology condition that, while good practice, is not the regulatory requirement.
+
+### Q85: Which type of flights may be conducted below the prescribed minimum heights without specific FOCA authorization, to the extent necessary? ^t10q85
+- A) Mountain flights.
+- B) Aerobatic flights.
+- C) Aerial photography flights.
+- D) Search and rescue flights.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Search and rescue (SAR) flights are permitted below prescribed minimum heights without special FOCA authorisation, to the extent operationally necessary to accomplish the rescue mission. The urgency and life-saving nature of SAR operations justifies this exemption. Option A (mountain flights), Option B (aerobatic flights), and Option C (aerial photography flights) all require specific authorisation to operate below minimum heights.
+
+### Q86: Is it permitted to cross an airway at FL 115 under VFR when visibility is 5 km? ^t10q86
+- A) Yes, but only if it is a special VFR flight (SVFR).
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes, in Class E airspace.
+- D) Yes, but only if it is a controlled VFR flight (CVFR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At FL 115 (above FL 100), the minimum VFR visibility required is 8 km. With only 5 km visibility, the VMC minima are not met, and VFR flight through an airway is not permitted regardless of airspace class or flight type. Option A (SVFR) is not applicable at flight levels -- SVFR is only authorised within CTRs. Option C is wrong because the visibility requirement applies in all airspace at this altitude. Option D (CVFR) does not waive the VMC visibility minima.
+
+### Q87: Are formation flights allowed? ^t10q87
+- A) Yes, but only with authorisation from the Federal Office of Civil Aviation.
+- B) Yes, but only outside controlled airspace.
+- C) Yes, provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand.
+- D) Yes, but only if the pilots-in-command are in permanent radio contact with each other.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, formation flights are permitted provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand, agreeing on the formation procedures, positions, and responsibilities. No special FOCA authorisation is needed. Option A is wrong because FOCA authorisation is not required. Option B is incorrect because formation flights are not restricted to uncontrolled airspace. Option D is wrong because permanent radio contact, while useful, is not a regulatory requirement for formation flying.
+
+### Q88: What does this signal mean? ^t10q88
+![[figures/bazl_101_q18.png]]
+- A) Caution during approach and landing.
+- B) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- C) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- D) Landing prohibited.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A red square with two white diagonal crosses (St. Andrew's crosses) is the standard ICAO ground signal meaning "landing prohibited." It is placed in the signal square to warn all aircraft that the aerodrome is closed to landing operations. Option A (caution during approach) is a different signal. Option B is wrong because the signal applies to all aircraft, not just powered ones. Option C is wrong because the signal prohibits landing entirely rather than allowing direction choice.
+
+### Q89: Can a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any further formality? ^t10q89
+- A) Only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- B) No, it is strictly prohibited for VFR flights.
+- C) Only if permanent contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ (Flight Information Zone) may be transited provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. If radio contact cannot be established, the rules of the underlying airspace class apply. Option A incorrectly requires FIS authorisation and English proficiency, which are not the actual requirements. Option B is wrong because transit is not prohibited -- it is permitted under conditions. Option D is wrong because transit is not unconditional; maintaining AFIS contact is required.
+
+### Q90: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q90
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Only the crash of an aircraft or helicopter.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident includes any event related to aircraft operation in which a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained significant structural damage affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting significant aircraft damage. Option B is too narrow -- an accident is not limited to crashes. Option D is wrong because costly repairs alone do not define an accident; the damage must significantly affect structural integrity or flight characteristics.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_91_120_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_10_91_120_out.md
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+### Q91: Are observed or received signals binding for the glider pilot? ^t10q91
+- A) Yes, but only signals placed on the ground, not light signals.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes.
+- D) Yes, except light signals for aircraft on the ground.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All observed or received signals -- whether ground signals, light signals, or radio signals -- are binding for the glider pilot. ICAO Annex 2 makes no distinction between signal types; compliance with all visual and radio signals is mandatory for all aircraft, including gliders. Option A is wrong because light signals are equally binding. Option B is wrong because signals are mandatory, not optional. Option D incorrectly excludes light signals for grounded aircraft, which are also binding.
+
+### Q92: What is the minimum flight height above densely populated areas and locations where large public gatherings occur? ^t10q92
+- A) 300 m AGL.
+- B) 150 m AGL above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) 600 m AGL.
+- D) There is no specific height figure; however, one must fly in a manner that allows reaching clear terrain suitable for a risk-free landing at any time.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005, the minimum flight height over densely populated areas and large public gatherings is 150 m (500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-based rule ensures adequate clearance from structures and protects people on the ground. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacle clearance. Option C (600 m AGL) is higher than the actual requirement. Option D describes a general safety principle but not the specific regulatory minimum.
+
+### Q93: In which airspace classes may VFR flights be conducted in Switzerland without needing air traffic control services? ^t10q93
+- A) In Class C, D, E and G airspaces.
+- B) Only in Class G airspace.
+- C) In Class E and G airspaces.
+- D) In Class A and B airspaces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, VFR flights may be conducted without ATC services in Class E and Class G airspace. Class E is controlled for IFR but does not require ATC interaction for VFR flights; Class G is entirely uncontrolled. Option A incorrectly includes Classes C and D, which require ATC clearance. Option B is too restrictive because Class E also permits VFR without ATC. Option D is wrong because Classes A and B either prohibit VFR or require ATC clearance.
+
+### Q94: What does this signal indicate? ^t10q94
+![[figures/bazl_102_q4.png]]
+- A) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- B) Caution during approach and landing.
+- C) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- D) Landing prohibited.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown indicates caution during approach and landing, warning pilots to exercise extra care due to obstacles, poor surface conditions, or other hazards at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO ground signal placed in the signals area. Option A is wrong because the signal does not indicate free choice of landing direction. Option C is wrong because the signal applies to all aircraft types, not just powered aircraft. Option D describes a different signal (red square with white diagonal crosses).
+
+### Q95: In which document must technical deficiencies found during aircraft operation be recorded? ^t10q95
+- A) In the maintenance manual.
+- B) In the journey log (aircraft logbook).
+- C) In the aircraft flight manual.
+- D) In the operations manual.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Technical deficiencies discovered during aircraft operation must be recorded in the journey log (aircraft logbook/tech log). This is the official document tracking the aircraft's technical status and operational history, ensuring maintenance organisations are informed of defects requiring attention. Option A (maintenance manual) contains procedures, not deficiency records. Option C (aircraft flight manual) describes operating limitations and procedures. Option D (operations manual) covers organisational procedures, not individual aircraft defect tracking.
+
+### Q96: How is the use of cameras regulated at the international level? ^t10q96
+- A) Use is generally prohibited.
+- B) Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory.
+- C) Use is generally permitted.
+- D) Private use is generally permitted; commercial photography is subject to authorisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At the international level, there is no uniform ICAO rule on the use of cameras from aircraft. Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory according to its own national laws, which may vary based on security, privacy, or military considerations. Option A is wrong because there is no blanket international prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is no blanket international permission either. Option D incorrectly distinguishes between private and commercial use at the international level, which is a national-level distinction.
+
+### Q97: What do white or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway signify? ^t10q97
+- A) They mark the landing area in use.
+- B) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- C) The delineated runway portion is not usable.
+- D) Caution during approach and landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** White or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway indicate that the marked portion of the runway is not usable -- it may be closed, under construction, or degraded. Pilots must avoid landing on or rolling over these marked areas. Option A is wrong because these signals indicate closure, not active use. Option B describes a different ground signal (the glider operations symbol). Option D is a general caution signal displayed in the signals area, not on the runway itself.
+
+### Q98: How should flight time be recorded when two pilots fly together? ^t10q98
+- A) Each pilot logs only the flight time during which they were actually flying.
+- B) The pilot who made the landing may log the total flight time; the other only the time during which they were actually flying.
+- C) Each pilot may log the total flight time, as both hold a licence.
+- D) Each pilot logs half the time.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two licensed pilots fly together, each pilot may log the total flight time in their personal logbook, since both are qualified licence holders participating in the flight. This is in accordance with Swiss and ICAO logging rules. Option A is unnecessarily restrictive and does not reflect the regulation. Option B creates an arbitrary distinction based on who performed the landing. Option D (splitting time in half) has no basis in aviation regulations.
+
+### Q99: When one aircraft overtakes another in flight, how must it give way? ^t10q99
+- A) Turn upward.
+- B) Turn left.
+- C) Turn downward.
+- D) Turn right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210 and ICAO Annex 2, an overtaking aircraft must give way by altering course to the right, passing the slower aircraft on its right side. The overtaking aircraft bears full responsibility for maintaining safe separation throughout the manoeuvre. Option A (turn upward) and Option C (turn downward) are not the prescribed overtaking procedure. Option B (turn left) is incorrect -- the standard rule requires turning right to overtake.
+
+### Q100: For which domestic Swiss flights is a flight plan required? ^t10q100
+- A) For a VFR flight in controlled airspace.
+- B) For a VFR flight over the Alps.
+- C) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- D) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a domestic VFR flight plan is required when the flight needs to use air traffic control services, such as when transiting a CTR or TMA where ATC interaction is mandatory. Option A is too broad because not all controlled airspace requires a flight plan (e.g., Class E). Option B (Alps) does not automatically trigger a flight plan requirement. Option D (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan criterion.
+
+### Q101: During a VFR flight, who is responsible for collision avoidance? ^t10q101
+- A) The second pilot when two pilots are on board.
+- B) The flight information service.
+- C) The air traffic control service.
+- D) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During VFR flight, the pilot-in-command (PIC) bears full responsibility for collision avoidance using the see-and-avoid principle. This applies regardless of whether ATC or FIS provides traffic information. Option A is wrong because responsibility always lies with the PIC, not the second pilot. Option B (FIS) provides information but has no separation responsibility. Option C (ATC) may provide traffic information but VFR collision avoidance remains the PIC's responsibility.
+
+### Q102: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q102
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Only the crash of an aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is an event related to aircraft operation where a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained damage significantly affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both conditions independently constitute an accident. Option A is incomplete because it only mentions personal injury. Option B is wrong because cost alone does not define an accident. Option D is too narrow -- many accidents involve damage short of a complete crash.
+
+### Q103: Which of the following exceptions to the right-of-way rules for converging routes is incorrect? ^t10q103
+- A) Airships give way to gliders.
+- B) Aircraft give way to aircraft that are visibly towing other aircraft or objects.
+- C) Gliders give way to aircraft that are towing.
+- D) Gliders and motor gliders give way to free balloons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Option C is the incorrect statement. Under SERA.3210, aircraft towing other aircraft or objects receive right-of-way priority -- meaning other aircraft (including gliders) do NOT have to give way to towing aircraft; rather, all aircraft must give way TO towing aircraft. Option C reverses this: it claims gliders give way to towing aircraft, but the actual rule is that towing aircraft give way to gliders (gliders have higher priority). Options A, B, and D all correctly state valid right-of-way exceptions.
+
+### Q104: What minimum meteorological conditions are required to take off or land at an aerodrome in a CTR without Special VFR authorization? ^t10q104
+- A) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- B) Ground visibility 8 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- C) Ground visibility 1.5 km, ceiling 300 m/GND.
+- D) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 150 m/GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, the minimum meteorological conditions for take-off or landing at an aerodrome within a CTR without requiring Special VFR authorisation are: ground visibility of 1.5 km and a ceiling of 300 m above ground level. These are the basic SVFR minima in Switzerland. Option A and Option B use higher visibility values than required. Option D uses an insufficient ceiling of 150 m. These values are specific to Swiss operations within CTRs.
+
+### Q105: For VFR flights in a terminal control area or control zone, how is the vertical position of an aircraft expressed below the transition altitude? ^t10q105
+- A) As flight level.
+- B) Either as altitude or height.
+- C) As height.
+- D) As altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Below the transition altitude in a TMA or CTR, the vertical position of an aircraft is expressed as altitude (height above mean sea level using the QNH altimeter setting). Flight levels are only used at or above the transition altitude. Option A (flight level) applies above the transition altitude, not below it. Option B (either altitude or height) is incorrect because the standard expression below transition altitude in controlled airspace is specifically altitude. Option C (height) is used for specific purposes like circuit height but is not the standard expression in TMAs/CTRs.
+
+### Q106: In Switzerland, what is the minimum visibility required for VFR flight in Class G airspace without special conditions? ^t10q106
+- A) 5 km.
+- B) 8 km.
+- C) 10 km.
+- D) 1.5 km.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class G airspace in Switzerland, without special conditions and at low altitudes (below 3000 ft AMSL or within 1000 ft of the surface), the minimum VFR visibility is 1.5 km. This is the lowest visibility minimum in the SERA VMC table. Option A (5 km) applies in controlled airspace below FL100. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR visibility minimum.
+
+### Q107: May a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any additional formality? ^t10q107
+- A) No, transit is not permitted under any circumstances for VFR flights.
+- B) Yes.
+- C) Yes, but only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and only if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- D) Only if permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ may be transited by VFR flights, provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained throughout the transit. If radio contact cannot be established, the pilot must follow the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located. Option A is wrong because transit is not prohibited. Option B is wrong because transit is not unconditional -- AFIS contact is required. Option C incorrectly requires English-language radiotelephony qualification, which is not a specific FIZ transit requirement.
+
+### Q108: Who is responsible for the regulatory maintenance of an aircraft? ^t10q108
+- A) The maintenance organisation.
+- B) The mechanic.
+- C) The operator.
+- D) The owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operator is legally responsible for ensuring that regulatory maintenance of the aircraft is carried out in accordance with approved maintenance programmes. While the maintenance organisation (Option A) and mechanic (Option B) perform the physical work, the legal responsibility for ensuring maintenance compliance rests with the operator. Option D (owner) is not necessarily the operator -- for private aircraft the owner often acts as operator, but the regulatory responsibility is tied to the operator role specifically.
+
+### Q109: When two aircraft approach an aerodrome at the same time to land, which one has the right of way? ^t10q109
+- A) The one flying higher.
+- B) The faster one.
+- C) The smaller one.
+- D) The one flying lower.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two aircraft approach an aerodrome simultaneously to land, the aircraft flying lower has right of way because it is in a more advanced and committed phase of the approach. The higher aircraft must give way by extending its circuit or going around. Option A (flying higher) is the opposite of the correct rule. Option B (faster) and Option C (smaller) are not criteria used in ICAO right-of-way rules for landing priority. Speed and size are irrelevant to this determination.
+
+### Q110: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: vertically - horizontally ^t10q110
+- A) 8.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- B) 1.5 km - 50 m - 100 m
+- C) 5.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km - 100 m - 300 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL in Class E airspace, which is above 3000 ft AMSL and above 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option B describes values for very low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far too low for this altitude. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which is insufficient for Class E at this altitude. Option D has the correct visibility but incorrect cloud clearance values (100 m and 300 m are too small).
+
+### Q111: What is the function of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^t10q111
+- A) It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects
+- B) Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- C) It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft
+- D) It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal square (also called the signals area) is a designated area at an aerodrome where ground signals are displayed using symbols, panels, and markings to visually communicate aerodrome conditions to pilots flying overhead. This is particularly important for pilots who cannot receive radio communication. Option A (tow object area) describes a completely different facility. Option B is wrong because aircraft do not taxi to the signal square for light signals -- those come from the control tower. Option D describes an emergency vehicle staging area, not the signal square.
+
+### Q112: How are two parallel runways designated? ^t10q112
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+- B) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- C) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway "R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, when two parallel runways exist, they are distinguished by adding suffixes: "L" (Left) for the left runway and "R" (Right) for the right runway, as seen from a pilot on final approach. Both runways must receive a suffix to avoid ambiguity. Option A is wrong because the right runway also needs a suffix ("R"). Option B uses a non-standard method of incrementing the designator number. Option C uses dash-number notation that is not part of ICAO runway designation standards.
+
+### Q113: Which runway designators are correct for two parallel runways? ^t10q113
+- A) "24" and "25"
+- B) "18" and "18-2"
+- C) "26" and "26R"
+- D) "06L" and "06R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For two parallel runways, ICAO requires both to carry the L/R suffix with the same number, such as "06L" and "06R." This clearly identifies them as parallel runways on the same magnetic heading. Option A ("24" and "25") indicates two non-parallel runways on slightly different headings, not parallel runways. Option B ("18" and "18-2") uses non-standard dash notation. Option C ("26" and "26R") is incorrect because only one runway has a suffix -- both must have one (should be "26L" and "26R").
+
+### Q114: What does this sign at an aerodrome indicate? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t10q114
+- A) Landing prohibited for a longer period
+- B) After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right
+- C) Glider flying is in progress
+- D) Caution, manoeuvring area is poor
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ALW-011 figure shows the international ground signal for glider operations in progress at the aerodrome. This warns pilots overflying the aerodrome that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (landing prohibited for a longer period) uses a different signal (typically a red cross). Option B (right-hand turns) would be indicated by a different signal in the signals area. Option D (poor manoeuvring area) is also communicated through a different ground marking.
+
+### Q115: What does "DETRESFA" signify? ^t10q115
+- A) Rescue phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Distress phase
+- D) Uncertainty phase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the most serious of the three emergency phases defined in ICAO Annex 12 and Annex 11. It is declared when an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. Option B (alerting phase) corresponds to the codeword ALERFA. Option D (uncertainty phase) corresponds to INCERFA. Option A (rescue phase) is not a defined ICAO emergency phase designation.
+
+### Q116: Who provides the search and rescue service? ^t10q116
+- A) Only civil organisations
+- B) International approved organisations
+- C) Both military and civil organisations
+- D) Only military organisations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, Search and Rescue (SAR) services are provided by both military and civil organisations, depending on national arrangements. Many countries combine military assets (helicopters, aircraft, ships) with civil emergency services for effective SAR coverage. Option A is wrong because military organisations play a major role in SAR operations worldwide. Option B incorrectly requires international approval, which is not how SAR is organised. Option D is wrong because civil organisations are also involved in SAR.
+
+### Q117: In the context of aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories of aircraft occurrences? ^t10q117
+- A) Event Serious event Accident
+- B) Incident Serious incident Accident
+- C) Happening Event Serious event
+- D) Event Crash Disaster
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, aircraft occurrences are classified into three categories: incident (an occurrence that affects or could affect flight safety), serious incident (an incident where there was a high probability of an accident), and accident (an occurrence resulting in fatal/serious injury or substantial aircraft damage). Option A, Option C, and Option D all use non-standard terminology ("event," "happening," "crash," "disaster") not found in ICAO definitions.
+
+### Q118: While slope soaring with the hill on your left, another glider approaches from the opposite direction at the same altitude. What should you do? ^t10q118
+- A) Pull on the elevator and divert upward
+- B) Divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same
+- C) Divert to the right
+- D) Expect the opposite glider to divert
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When slope soaring and encountering an oncoming glider, the pilot with the hill on their left must give way by turning right (away from the hill). In this scenario, the hill is on your left, so the approaching glider has the hill on their right, giving them right-of-way. You must divert to the right. Option A (pull up) is impractical and dangerous in slope soaring conditions. Option B is partially correct in the action but wrong to expect the other glider to also turn -- they have right-of-way. Option D is wrong because you are the one who must give way.
+
+### Q119: When circling in a thermal with other gliders, who determines the direction of turn? ^t10q119
+- A) The glider at the highest altitude
+- B) The glider with the greatest bank angle
+- C) Circling is always to the left
+- D) The glider that entered the thermal first
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal already occupied by other gliders, the newly arriving pilot must circle in the same direction as the glider that first established the turn in that thermal. This convention ensures all gliders orbit in the same direction, preventing dangerous head-on conflicts within the thermal. Option A (highest glider) is wrong because altitude does not determine turn direction. Option B (greatest bank angle) is irrelevant to the rule. Option C is wrong because there is no fixed left-turn rule -- the first glider's choice establishes the direction.
+
+### Q120: Is it possible for a glider to enter airspace C? ^t10q120
+- A) No
+- B) Yes, but only with the transponder activated
+- C) With restrictions, in case of reduced air traffic
+- D) Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspace Class C is controlled airspace where ATC clearance is mandatory for all flights, including VFR and gliders. A glider may enter Class C airspace only after obtaining an explicit clearance from the responsible ATC unit. Option A is wrong because entry is possible with proper ATC clearance. Option B is wrong because while a transponder may be required, it alone is not sufficient -- ATC clearance is the fundamental requirement. Option C is wrong because there is no rule allowing entry based on traffic density without clearance.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_121_137_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_121_137_out.md
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+### Q121: What type of defect causes a loss of airworthiness? ^t20q121
+- A) A scratch on the exterior paint.
+- B) Damage to load-bearing structural parts.
+- C) A crack in the canopy plastic.
+- D) A dirty wing leading edge.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airworthiness is fundamentally determined by the structural integrity of load-bearing components (main spar, wing attachment fittings, fuselage frames, control system connections). Damage to these parts compromises the aircraft's ability to sustain flight loads safely and constitutes a loss of airworthiness, grounding the aircraft until repairs are made. Option A (paint scratch) is cosmetic. Option C (canopy crack) may affect visibility but is not structural. Option D (dirty leading edge) reduces aerodynamic performance but does not affect structural airworthiness.
+
+### Q122: The loaded mass falls below the minimum load required by the load sheet. What should be done? ^t20q122
+- A) Change the pilot's seat position.
+- B) Modify the incidence angle of the elevator.
+- C) Load ballast weight until the minimum load is reached.
+- D) Set the trim to a nose-down position.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the actual loaded mass falls below the minimum required by the load sheet, ballast weight (typically lead) must be added in the designated ballast compartment to bring the total mass up to the minimum. This ensures the centre of gravity remains within approved limits. Option A (seat position) does not add mass. Option B (elevator incidence) is a major structural modification, not an operational solution. Option D (trim setting) compensates aerodynamically but does not address the underlying mass and CG problem.
+
+### Q123: Water ballast increases wing loading by 40%. By what percentage does the minimum speed of the glider increase? ^t20q123
+- A) 200%
+- B) 18%
+- C) 100%
+- D) 40%
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Minimum speed (stall speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading: Vs is proportional to the square root of (W/S). If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), stall speed increases by the square root of 1.4, which equals approximately 1.183, or an 18.3% increase. This square-root relationship is fundamental to understanding the performance effects of water ballast. Option A (200%) is far too high. Option C (100%) would require quadrupling the wing loading. Option D (40%) incorrectly assumes a linear relationship.
+
+### Q124: The maximum mass from the load sheet has been exceeded. What action is required? ^t20q124
+- A) Set the trim to nose-up.
+- B) Set the trim to nose-down.
+- C) Reduce the load.
+- D) Increase the speed by 15%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the maximum mass is exceeded, the only correct action is to reduce the load -- remove water ballast, baggage, or use ballast reduction until the total mass falls within the approved limit. Exceeding maximum mass means structural limits may be reached at lower G-forces than designed for. Option A and Option B (trim adjustments) do not address structural overloading. Option D (speed increase) would actually increase structural loads, making the situation more dangerous.
+
+### Q125: What is meant by a torsion-stiffened leading edge? ^t20q125
+- A) A special shape given to the leading edge.
+- B) A portion of the main spar designed to resist torsion forces.
+- C) The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.
+- D) A leading edge planked on both sides (from edge to spar) to resist torsion forces.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A torsion-stiffened leading edge (D-box or D-nose) is created by planking (covering with skin) both the upper and lower surfaces of the wing from the leading edge back to the main spar. This creates a closed cross-section box that efficiently resists torsional (twisting) loads on the wing. Option A describes a shape, not a structural concept. Option B confuses the leading edge structure with the spar. Option C describes a theoretical analysis point, not a construction feature.
+
+### Q126: Where can information about maximum permitted airspeeds be found? ^t20q126
+- A) POH, approach chart, and vertical speed indicator.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel, and AIP part ENR.
+- C) POH and the briefing room notice board.
+- D) POH, cockpit panel, and airspeed indicator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maximum permissible airspeeds (VNE, VNO, VFE) are documented in three locations: the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH/AFM), the cockpit instrument panel (placard), and the airspeed indicator itself (via red line, arcs, and markings). Option A incorrectly includes approach charts and the VSI. Option B incorrectly includes the AIP ENR, which contains airspace information, not aircraft-specific speed limits. Option C includes the briefing room, which is informal.
+
+### Q127: The airspeed indicator is unserviceable. When may the aircraft be operated again? ^t20q127
+- A) Only for a circuit pattern.
+- B) If no maintenance facility is available nearby.
+- C) When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.
+- D) When a GPS with speed readout is used during flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI is a mandatory instrument; without it the pilot cannot determine safe operating speeds, stall speed, or structural limits. The aircraft must remain grounded until the ASI is fully functional. No exceptions exist. Option A (circuit pattern only) is not a recognised exception. Option B (no nearby maintenance) does not waive the requirement. Option D (GPS substitute) is inadequate because GPS shows ground speed, which differs from indicated airspeed and cannot be used for aerodynamic safety decisions.
+
+### Q128: During a left turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. What correction centres it? ^t20q128
+- A) Less bank, more rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- B) Less bank, less rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- C) More bank, less rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- D) More bank, more rudder in the direction of the turn.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a left turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates a slip -- the aircraft is slipping into the turn due to excessive bank relative to rudder input. To correct a slip, increase bank (to match the turn rate) and reduce rudder in the turn direction (less left rudder, as too much rudder is driving the nose too far into the turn). Option A corrects a skid, not a slip. Options B and D use incorrect combinations for slip correction.
+
+### Q129: What is the purpose of winglets? ^t20q129
+- A) To increase the effective aspect ratio.
+- B) To increase lift and turning maneuverability.
+- C) To improve gliding performance at high speed.
+- D) To reduce induced drag.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winglets are vertical or near-vertical extensions at the wingtips designed to reduce induced drag by weakening the wingtip vortex -- the primary source of induced drag on any finite wing. By disrupting the spanwise flow around the tip, winglets reduce the energy lost in the vortex system. Option A (effective aspect ratio) is a related effect but not the primary purpose. Option B (lift and manoeuvrability) is incorrect -- winglets do not significantly increase lift. Option C (high-speed performance) is not the primary benefit; induced drag reduction helps most at lower speeds.
+
+### Q130: What does dynamic pressure depend on directly? ^t20q130
+- A) Air density and lift coefficient.
+- B) Lift coefficient and drag coefficient.
+- C) Air pressure and air temperature.
+- D) Air density and airflow speed squared.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic pressure is defined by the equation q = 1/2 rho v-squared, where rho is air density and v is airflow velocity. It depends directly on these two variables. Option A and Option B involve aerodynamic coefficients, which are effects that result from dynamic pressure, not its determinants. Option C (pressure and temperature) influences density indirectly (through the ideal gas law) but are not the direct parameters in the dynamic pressure formula.
+
+### Q131: The airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vertical speed indicator all give incorrect readings simultaneously. What is the likely cause? ^t20q131
+- A) Failure of the electrical system.
+- B) A leak in the compensation vessel.
+- C) Blockage of the static pressure lines.
+- D) Blockage of the Pitot tube.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All three instruments -- ASI, altimeter, and VSI -- are connected to the static pressure system. If the static pressure line is blocked (by ice, water, or a protective cover left on), all three will simultaneously give erroneous readings. Option A (electrical failure) does not affect these purely pneumatic instruments. Option B (compensation vessel leak) would affect only the VSI. Option D (Pitot tube blockage) would affect only the ASI, not the altimeter or VSI.
+
+### Q132: When should the reference pressure on the altimeter subscale be adjusted? ^t20q132
+- A) Once a month before flight operations.
+- B) Every day before the first flight.
+- C) After maintenance has been completed.
+- D) Before every flight, and during cross-country flights.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale must be set to the correct QNH/QFE before every flight to ensure accurate altitude readings. During cross-country flights, QNH changes as the pilot moves between different pressure regions, requiring updates from ATC or ATIS broadcasts along the route. Option A (monthly) would result in dangerous altitude errors. Option B (daily) is insufficient for multiple flights and cross-country work. Option C (after maintenance only) ignores the continuous need for pressure updates.
+
+### Q133: The term "inclination" is defined as... ^t20q133
+- A) The angle between the aircraft's longitudinal axis and true north.
+- B) The angle between the Earth's magnetic field lines and the horizontal plane.
+- C) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and true north.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (or dip) is the angle between the Earth's magnetic field vector and the local horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator, field lines are horizontal (0 degrees dip); at the magnetic poles, they are vertical (90 degrees dip). This dip causes turning and acceleration errors in the magnetic compass. Option A describes aircraft heading. Option C describes deviation from onboard equipment. Option D describes magnetic variation/declination.
+
+### Q134: As air density decreases, the true airspeed at stall increases. How should a final approach be flown on a hot summer day? ^t20q134
+- A) At a decreased indicated airspeed (IAS).
+- B) At an unchanged indicated airspeed (IAS).
+- C) At an increased indicated airspeed (IAS).
+- D) At an additional speed as specified in the POH.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic behaviour (lift, stall, control effectiveness) depends on dynamic pressure, which is what IAS reflects. Stall occurs at the same IAS regardless of air density. On a hot day, lower density means TAS is higher for the same IAS, but the wing "feels" the same dynamic pressure. Therefore, the approach should be flown at the same IAS as in standard conditions. Option A (decreased IAS) would bring the aircraft closer to stall. Option C (increased IAS) is unnecessarily conservative. Option D adds complexity not needed when understanding the IAS/TAS relationship.
+
+### Q135: The load factor n represents the ratio between... ^t20q135
+- A) Drag and lift.
+- B) Thrust and drag.
+- C) Lift and weight.
+- D) Weight and thrust.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Load factor n = Lift / Weight. In level flight n = 1. In manoeuvres where lift exceeds weight (turns, pull-ups), n increases above 1. The load factor is critical for structural calculations -- gliders have certificated maximum positive and negative load factors that define their structural envelope. Option A (drag/lift) is not a standard aerodynamic ratio. Option B (thrust/drag) relates to propulsion efficiency. Option D (weight/thrust) is irrelevant for gliders which normally have no engine.
+
+### Q136: Static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q136
+- A) Inside the aircraft cabin.
+- B) Sensed by the Pitot tube.
+- C) Resulting from orderly movement of air particles.
+- D) Of undisturbed airflow.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air, acting equally in all directions at a given point regardless of airflow velocity. It is sensed by flush static ports on the fuselage. Option A (cabin pressure) is a different, regulated pressure in pressurised aircraft. Option B (Pitot tube) senses total pressure, which includes both static and dynamic components. Option C describes dynamic pressure characteristics related to directed airflow, not the omnidirectional nature of static pressure.
+
+### Q137: The term "inclination" refers to... ^t20q137
+- A) The angle between the aircraft's longitudinal axis and true north.
+- B) Deviation caused by electrical fields.
+- C) The angle between magnetic north and true north.
+- D) The angle between the Earth's magnetic field lines and the horizontal plane.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's total magnetic field vector and the local horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator the field is horizontal (0 degrees); at the magnetic poles it is vertical (90 degrees). This inclination is the root cause of compass turning errors and acceleration errors. Option A describes heading relative to true north. Option B describes electromagnetic deviation from onboard equipment. Option C describes magnetic variation/declination.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_1_30_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_1_30_out.md
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+### Q1: In a glider cockpit, the levers colored red, blue, and green correspond to which controls? ^t20q1
+- A) Speed brakes, canopy lock, and landing gear.
+- B) Canopy hood release, speed brakes, and elevator trim.
+- C) Landing gear, speed brakes, and elevator trim tab.
+- D) Speed brakes, cable release, and elevator trim.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA standardises cockpit lever colours in gliders: red for the canopy hood (emergency) release, blue for speed brakes (airbrakes), and green for elevator trim. This colour coding ensures pilots can identify critical controls instantly under stress. Option A incorrectly assigns red to speed brakes and blue to the canopy lock. Option C incorrectly assigns red to landing gear. Option D incorrectly assigns red to speed brakes and blue to cable release.
+
+### Q2: Wing thickness is measured as the distance between the upper and lower surfaces of a wing at its... ^t20q2
+- A) Outermost section.
+- B) Thinnest cross-section.
+- C) Innermost section near the root.
+- D) Thickest cross-section.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing thickness is defined as the maximum perpendicular distance between the upper and lower wing surfaces, measured at the thickest part of the airfoil cross-section (typically 20-30% of chord from the leading edge). This is the aerodynamically and structurally significant measurement. Option A (outermost section) would measure near the wingtip where the profile is thinnest. Option B (thinnest cross-section) gives a minimal, less useful value. Option C (innermost/root) describes a spanwise location, not the airfoil thickness definition.
+
+### Q3: What is the term for a tubular steel framework with a non-load-bearing skin? ^t20q3
+- A) Monocoque construction.
+- B) Semi-monocoque construction.
+- C) Grid construction.
+- D) Honeycomb structure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grid (or truss/lattice) construction uses a framework of tubes or members to carry all structural loads, with the skin serving only as a fairing that does not contribute to structural strength. Option A (monocoque) is the opposite -- the skin carries all loads with no internal framework. Option B (semi-monocoque) uses both a frame and a load-bearing skin working together. Option D (honeycomb structure) is a core material used in sandwich panels, not a fuselage construction type.
+
+### Q4: What are the typical structural components of primary fuselage construction in wood or metal aircraft? ^t20q4
+- A) Girders, ribs, and stringers.
+- B) Ribs, frames, and covers.
+- C) Frames and stringers.
+- D) Covers, stringers, and forming parts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary structural members of a traditional fuselage are frames (also called formers or bulkheads, running circumferentially) and stringers (running longitudinally). Together they form the skeleton over which the skin is attached. Option A introduces "girders" which is non-standard fuselage terminology. Option B includes "ribs" which are wing components, not fuselage. Option D lists "covers" and "forming parts" which are not primary structural terms.
+
+### Q5: What is the name for a structure built from frames and stringers with a load-bearing skin? ^t20q5
+- A) Grid construction.
+- B) Honeycomb structure.
+- C) Wood or mixed construction.
+- D) Semi-monocoque construction.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Semi-monocoque construction uses both an internal framework (frames and stringers) AND a skin that actively bears structural loads (tension, compression, shear). This is the most common modern aircraft fuselage design. Option A (grid construction) has a non-load-bearing skin. Option B (honeycomb) is a material type, not a structural concept. Option C (wood/mixed) is a material classification, not a structural design.
+
+### Q6: What are the principal structural components of an aircraft's tail assembly? ^t20q6
+- A) Ailerons and elevator.
+- B) Horizontal tail and vertical tail.
+- C) Rudder and ailerons.
+- D) Steering wheel and pedals.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tail assembly (empennage) consists of two principal structural groups: the horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator, providing pitch stability and control) and the vertical tail (fin and rudder, providing yaw stability and control). Option A incorrectly includes ailerons, which are wing-mounted. Option C also incorrectly includes ailerons. Option D lists cockpit controls, not aircraft structure.
+
+### Q7: A sandwich structure is composed of two... ^t20q7
+- A) Thin layers bonded to a heavy core material.
+- B) Thick layers bonded to a lightweight core material.
+- C) Thick layers bonded to a heavy core material.
+- D) Thin layers bonded to a lightweight core material.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sandwich structure uses two thin, stiff face sheets (typically CFRP, glass fibre, or aluminium) bonded to a lightweight core (foam, balsa wood, or honeycomb). The thin skins carry bending loads while the light core resists shear and maintains separation, providing exceptional stiffness-to-weight ratio. Options A and C specify a heavy core, which defeats the weight-saving purpose. Options B and C specify thick layers, which add unnecessary mass.
+
+### Q8: Which structural elements define the aerodynamic profile shape of a wing? ^t20q8
+- A) Spar.
+- B) Planking.
+- C) Ribs.
+- D) Wingtip.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ribs are chordwise structural members that define the airfoil cross-section shape of the wing, running perpendicular to the spar. They establish the precise curvature of the upper and lower wing surfaces. Option A (spar) is the main spanwise load-bearing beam but does not define the profile shape. Option B (planking/skin) covers the structure but follows the shape determined by the ribs. Option D (wingtip) is the outer end of the wing, not a profile-shaping element.
+
+### Q9: The load factor "n" expresses the ratio between... ^t20q9
+- A) Thrust and drag.
+- B) Lift and weight.
+- C) Weight and thrust.
+- D) Drag and lift.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor n equals Lift divided by Weight (n = L/W). In straight and level flight, n = 1 (1g). In a banked turn, lift must exceed weight to maintain altitude -- for example, in a 60-degree bank, n = 2 (2g). Load factor is critical for glider structural design, as exceeding maximum positive or negative g-limits risks structural failure. Options A, C, and D describe unrelated force ratios.
+
+### Q10: What are the key benefits of sandwich construction? ^t20q10
+- A) Good formability combined with high temperature resistance.
+- B) Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength.
+- C) High temperature durability coupled with low weight.
+- D) High strength paired with good formability.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Sandwich construction excels at combining low weight with high stiffness, stability, and strength -- the ideal combination for aerospace applications. The bending stiffness increases dramatically when stiff face sheets are spaced apart by a lightweight core. Options A and C emphasise temperature resistance, which is not a primary advantage since most cores are temperature-sensitive. Option D focuses on formability, which is actually limited in sandwich construction.
+
+### Q11: Among the following materials, which one exhibits the greatest strength? ^t20q11
+- A) Wood.
+- B) Aluminium.
+- C) Carbon fiber reinforced plastic.
+- D) Magnesium.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon fibre reinforced plastic (CFRP) has exceptional strength-to-weight ratio with tensile strength exceeding steel at a fraction of the weight. Modern high-performance gliders are predominantly CFRP. Option B (aluminium) is strong but significantly weaker than CFRP. Option D (magnesium) is lighter than aluminium but lower in absolute strength. Option A (wood) has good specific strength but is the weakest in absolute terms among those listed.
+
+### Q12: The trim lever in a glider serves to... ^t20q12
+- A) Minimize adverse yaw effects.
+- B) Reduce the required stick force on the rudder.
+- C) Reduce the required stick force on the elevator.
+- D) Reduce the required stick force on the ailerons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trim system adjusts the elevator trim tab (or spring trim) to hold a desired pitch attitude without continuous pilot input on the control stick, reducing elevator stick force to zero at the trimmed speed. Option A (adverse yaw) is addressed by rudder coordination, not trim. Options B and D refer to rudder and aileron forces, which are not adjusted by the standard glider trim lever.
+
+### Q13: Structural damage to a fuselage may result from... ^t20q13
+- A) A stall occurring after the maximum angle of attack is exceeded.
+- B) Reducing airspeed below a certain threshold.
+- C) Flying faster than maneuvering speed in severe gusts.
+- D) Neutralizing stick forces appropriate to the current flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding manoeuvring speed (VA) in turbulent conditions can cause structural damage because gusts impose sudden load factors that may exceed the design limit. VA is the speed at which a full control deflection or maximum gust will not exceed the structural limit load. Option A (stall) is an aerodynamic event that does not damage structure. Option B (low airspeed) reduces loads. Option D (neutralising stick forces) does not create structural loads.
+
+### Q14: How many axes does an aircraft rotate about, and what are they called? ^t20q14
+- A) 4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil.
+- B) 3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis.
+- C) 3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis.
+- D) 4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft rotates about three principal axes passing through the centre of gravity: the longitudinal axis (nose to tail -- roll), the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip -- pitch), and the vertical axis (top to bottom -- yaw). Option B uses mathematical labels but omits aviation-specific names. Options A and D fabricate a non-existent fourth axis.
+
+### Q15: Rotation around the longitudinal axis is primarily produced by the... ^t20q15
+- A) Rudder.
+- B) Trim tab.
+- C) Elevator.
+- D) Ailerons.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons control roll -- rotation around the longitudinal axis. When one aileron deflects up and the other down, differential lift rolls the aircraft. Option A (rudder) controls yaw around the vertical axis. Option C (elevator) controls pitch around the lateral axis. Option B (trim tab) modifies control forces but is not a primary roll initiator.
+
+### Q16: On a small single-engine piston aircraft, how are the flight controls typically operated and connected? ^t20q16
+- A) Electrically via fly-by-wire systems.
+- B) Power-assisted via hydraulic pumps or electric motors.
+- C) Manually via rods and control cables.
+- D) Hydraulically via pumps and actuators.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Small piston aircraft and gliders use direct mechanical linkages -- push-pull rods and steel control cables -- to transmit pilot input directly to control surfaces. This is simple, lightweight, and reliable with no power source required. Option A (fly-by-wire) is used on modern airliners and military aircraft. Options B and D (hydraulic systems) are used on larger aircraft requiring greater control forces.
+
+### Q17: When left rudder is applied, what are the primary and secondary effects? ^t20q17
+- A) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the left.
+- B) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the right.
+- C) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the right.
+- D) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the left.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Left rudder primarily yaws the nose left around the vertical axis. The secondary effect is roll to the left: as the nose yaws left, the outer (right) wing moves faster and generates more lift while the inner (left) wing slows and generates less, creating a bank to the left. Options B and D have incorrect yaw direction. Option C has correct yaw but incorrect secondary roll direction.
+
+### Q18: What happens when the control stick or yoke is pulled rearward? ^t20q18
+- A) The tail produces an increased downward force, causing the nose to rise.
+- B) The tail produces an increased upward force, causing the nose to rise.
+- C) The tail produces a decreased upward force, causing the nose to drop.
+- D) The tail produces an increased downward force, causing the nose to drop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pulling back on the stick deflects the elevator upward, increasing the downward aerodynamic force on the tail. With the tail pushed down, the nose pivots up around the lateral axis through the centre of gravity. This seems counterintuitive but is correct: tail goes down, nose goes up. Option B incorrectly states the tail force is upward. Option C describes a forward stick input. Option D has the correct force but wrong nose direction.
+
+### Q19: Which of these lists contains all primary flight controls of an aircraft? ^t20q19
+- A) Flaps, slats, and speedbrakes.
+- B) All movable components on an aircraft that help control its flight.
+- C) Elevator, rudder, and aileron.
+- D) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift devices, and power controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The three primary flight controls are elevator (pitch), rudder (yaw), and aileron (roll). These directly control rotation about the aircraft's three axes. Option A lists secondary/high-lift devices only. Option B is too vague and includes secondary controls. Option D mixes primary with secondary controls (trim tabs, high-lift devices, power controls).
+
+### Q20: What function do secondary flight controls serve? ^t20q20
+- A) They serve as a backup system for the primary flight controls.
+- B) They enable the pilot to control the aircraft about its three axes.
+- C) They enhance performance characteristics and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces.
+- D) They improve turning characteristics at low speed during approach and landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Secondary flight controls (trim tabs, flaps, speedbrakes, slats) enhance aircraft performance and reduce pilot workload. Trim neutralises stick forces; flaps increase low-speed lift; speedbrakes manage descent rate. Option A is incorrect -- they are not backup systems. Option B describes primary controls. Option D is too narrow, covering only one aspect of flap function.
+
+### Q21: If the pilot moves the trim wheel or lever aft, what happens to the trim tab and the elevator? ^t20q21
+- A) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down.
+- B) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down.
+- C) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up.
+- D) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving trim aft commands nose-up trim. The trim tab deflects downward, generating an aerodynamic force that pushes the elevator trailing edge upward. The raised elevator pushes the tail down and raises the nose. Trim tabs always move opposite to the elevator: tab down causes elevator up. Options A and C have the tab moving up (nose-down trim). Option B has both moving down, which is mechanically impossible in a normal trim system.
+
+### Q22: In which direction does the trim tab deflect when trimming for nose-up? ^t20q22
+- A) It depends on the CG position.
+- B) It deflects upward.
+- C) In the direction of rudder deflection.
+- D) It deflects downward.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For nose-up trim, the trim tab deflects downward. The downward tab creates an aerodynamic force pushing the elevator trailing edge up, which holds the elevator in a nose-up position without pilot input. Option A (CG position) affects how much trim is needed but not the direction. Option B (upward) would produce nose-down trim. Option C (rudder direction) is unrelated to elevator trim operation.
+
+### Q23: The purpose of the trim system is to... ^t20q23
+- A) Lock the control surfaces in position.
+- B) Shift the centre of gravity.
+- C) Adjust the control force.
+- D) Increase adverse yaw.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Trim adjusts control forces so the pilot can fly hands-off at the trimmed speed and attitude. It neutralises the stick force to zero at the desired condition. Option A (lock surfaces) is incorrect -- trim holds an aerodynamic equilibrium, not a mechanical lock. Option B (shift CG) is wrong -- only physically moving mass changes CG. Option D (adverse yaw) is a roll-yaw coupling unrelated to trim.
+
+### Q24: The Pitot-static system is designed to... ^t20q24
+- A) Correct the airspeed indicator to show zero when the aircraft is stationary on the ground.
+- B) Prevent static electricity accumulation on the airframe.
+- C) Prevent ice formation on the Pitot tube.
+- D) Measure total air pressure and static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot-static system measures total pressure (from the Pitot tube facing the airflow) and static pressure (from flush static ports on the fuselage). These feed the ASI, altimeter, and variometer. Option A describes a consequence, not the purpose. Option B (static electricity) is an unrelated electrical phenomenon. Option C (ice prevention) is handled by optional Pitot heating, not the system's design purpose.
+
+### Q25: What type of pressure does the Pitot tube sense? ^t20q25
+- A) Static air pressure.
+- B) Total air pressure.
+- C) Cabin air pressure.
+- D) Dynamic air pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot tube faces into the airflow and senses total pressure (stagnation pressure), which equals static pressure plus dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 rho v-squared). Option A (static pressure) is measured by separate static ports. Option C (cabin pressure) is unrelated. Option D (dynamic pressure) is not measured directly by the Pitot tube -- it is derived by subtracting static from total pressure inside the ASI.
+
+### Q26: QFE refers to the... ^t20q26
+- A) Barometric pressure corrected to sea level using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).
+- B) Altitude referenced to the 1013.25 hPa pressure level.
+- C) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield.
+- D) Magnetic bearing to a station.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at a specific reference point, typically the runway threshold. Setting QFE on the altimeter causes it to read zero on the ground at the aerodrome, showing height above the field during flight. Option A describes QNH (sea level corrected pressure). Option B describes the flight level datum (1013.25 hPa). Option D describes QDM/QDR radio navigation terminology.
+
+### Q27: What is the function of the altimeter subscale? ^t20q27
+- A) To correct the altimeter for instrument system errors.
+- B) To set the reference datum for the transponder altitude encoder.
+- C) To reference the altimeter reading to a chosen level such as mean sea level, aerodrome elevation, or the 1013.25 hPa pressure surface.
+- D) To compensate the altimeter reading for non-standard temperatures.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale (Kollsman window) lets the pilot set a reference pressure: QNH for altitude above sea level, QFE for height above the airfield, or 1013.25 hPa for flight levels. Option A (system errors) requires calibration, not subscale adjustment. Option B (transponder encoder) operates on standard pressure independently. Option D (temperature correction) requires a separate mathematical calculation.
+
+### Q28: How can an altimeter subscale set to an incorrect QNH lead to a dangerous altimeter error? ^t20q28
+- A) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+- B) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- C) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- D) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Setting a higher pressure than actual QNH causes the altimeter to over-read -- it shows a higher altitude than the aircraft's true position. The aircraft is actually closer to the ground than indicated, creating a dangerous terrain clearance illusion. The memory aid: "High to Low, look out below." Options A and B incorrectly describe the effect of a low pressure setting. Option D reverses the consequence of a high setting.
+
+### Q29: A temperature lower than the ISA standard may cause... ^t20q29
+- A) An altitude reading that is too high.
+- B) A correct altitude reading provided the subscale is set for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude reading that is too low.
+- D) Pitot tube icing that freezes the altimeter at its current value.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-standard air, the atmosphere is denser and pressure drops faster with altitude than ISA assumes. The altimeter over-reads, indicating a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual position -- the pilot is lower than they think. "Cold air = lower than you think." Option B is wrong because altimeter subscales cannot correct for temperature. Option C reverses the error. Option D describes an icing issue separate from temperature-induced altimeter error.
+
+### Q30: A flight level is a... ^t20q30
+- A) True altitude.
+- B) Pressure altitude.
+- C) Density altitude.
+- D) Altitude above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight level is a pressure altitude expressed in hundreds of feet with the altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa (standard pressure). FL100 = 10,000 ft on standard setting. All aircraft above the transition altitude use this common datum for vertical separation regardless of local pressure variations. Option A (true altitude) is actual MSL height. Option C (density altitude) is a performance calculation parameter. Option D (above ground) is height AGL.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_31_60_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_31_60_out.md
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+### Q31: True altitude is defined as... ^t20q31
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.
+- B) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is the actual vertical distance of an aircraft above mean sea level (MSL), corrected for deviations from ISA standard temperature. It represents the real geometric height above sea level. A and D are wrong because true altitude is referenced to MSL, not to ground level (AGL). B is partially correct in mentioning the temperature correction applied to pressure altitude, but it omits the crucial MSL reference. C correctly states both the MSL reference and the temperature correction.
+
+### Q32: When flying in air colder than ISA, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q32
+- A) Equal to the standard altitude.
+- B) Lower than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Higher than the true altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cold air (colder than ISA), the atmosphere is denser and pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude than the ISA model predicts. The altimeter, calibrated to ISA, over-reads in cold air, indicating a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual (true) altitude. The aircraft is therefore lower than the altimeter shows, which is a significant safety concern near terrain. The memory aid is "Cold air, you're lower than you think." A and C are incorrect. B reverses the relationship.
+
+### Q33: When flying in an air mass at ISA temperature with the correct QNH set, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q33
+- A) Lower than the true altitude.
+- B) Higher than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Equal to the standard atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When both the actual atmospheric pressure (set correctly via QNH) and actual temperature match ISA standard conditions exactly, the altimeter's assumptions are perfectly valid and no correction errors exist. The indicated altitude therefore equals the true altitude. This is the ideal baseline condition. A and B describe error situations that occur only when temperature or pressure deviates from ISA. D is vague and does not accurately describe the relationship between indicated and true altitude.
+
+### Q34: Which instrument is susceptible to hysteresis error? ^t20q34
+- A) Vertical speed indicator.
+- B) Direct reading compass.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Tachometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hysteresis error affects the altimeter because its aneroid capsules (elastic metal bellows) have a slight mechanical lag. After expansion or contraction due to pressure changes, they do not return to exactly the same position when pressure returns to a previous value. This means the altimeter may show slightly different readings at the same altitude depending on whether the aircraft is climbing or descending. A (VSI), B (compass), and D (tachometer) do not use the same type of elastic aneroid capsules and are not subject to this specific error.
+
+### Q35: Altitude measurement relies on changes in which type of pressure? ^t20q35
+- A) Total pressure.
+- B) Differential pressure.
+- C) Static pressure.
+- D) Dynamic pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter measures altitude by detecting changes in static pressure, which decreases predictably with increasing altitude according to the ISA model. Static pressure is sensed through the aircraft's static ports and fed to the altimeter's aneroid capsules. A (total pressure) is static plus dynamic pressure, measured by the Pitot tube for airspeed. B (differential pressure) is the difference between total and static pressure, which drives the airspeed indicator. D (dynamic pressure) depends on airspeed, not altitude.
+
+### Q36: How does a vertical speed indicator work? ^t20q36
+- A) It measures total air pressure and compares it to static pressure.
+- B) It compares the current static air pressure against the static pressure stored in a reservoir.
+- C) It measures vertical acceleration using a gimbal-mounted mass.
+- D) It measures static air pressure and compares it against a vacuum.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI works by comparing current static pressure (from the static port) against a reference pressure stored in a sealed reservoir connected through a calibrated leak. When climbing, static pressure drops faster than the reservoir bleeds down, creating a pressure difference that indicates the climb rate. When descending, the reverse happens. A describes the airspeed indicator's operating principle. C describes an accelerometer. D describes a simple barometer, not a rate-of-change instrument.
+
+### Q37: The vertical speed indicator compares the pressure difference between... ^t20q37
+- A) The current dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure from a moment earlier.
+- B) The current static pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+- C) The current total pressure and the total pressure from a moment earlier.
+- D) The current dynamic pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI compares the current ambient static pressure (which changes as altitude changes) with the static pressure from a short time ago, stored in a metering reservoir through a calibrated restriction. The rate at which this pressure difference changes indicates the rate of climb or descent. A and D involve dynamic pressure, which is unrelated to the VSI's operation. C involves total pressure, which is the Pitot tube measurement used by the airspeed indicator, not the VSI.
+
+### Q38: An aircraft flies on a heading of 180° at 100 kt TAS. The wind blows from 180° at 30 kt. Ignoring instrument and position errors, what will the airspeed indicator approximately show? ^t20q38
+- A) 70 kt
+- B) 130 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 100 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass, not relative to the ground. Since the aircraft is flying at 100 kt TAS through the air, the ASI will show approximately 100 kt regardless of the wind. The 30 kt headwind from 180 degrees affects ground speed (which would be 130 kt with a tailwind or 70 kt with a headwind) but has no effect on the indicated airspeed. A (70 kt) and B (130 kt) are ground speed values. C (30 kt) is the wind speed alone.
+
+### Q39: What principle does the airspeed indicator use to determine speed? ^t20q39
+- A) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum.
+- B) Dynamic air pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube and converted directly into a speed reading.
+- C) Total air pressure is sensed by the static ports and converted into speed.
+- D) Total air pressure is compared against static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI works by comparing total pressure (from the Pitot tube) against static pressure (from the static port). The difference between them is dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 rho v squared), which is proportional to airspeed squared. A diaphragm inside the ASI expands in proportion to this pressure difference, driving the needle. A describes a barometer. B is incorrect because the Pitot tube measures total pressure, not dynamic pressure directly. C is wrong because total pressure comes from the Pitot tube, not the static ports.
+
+### Q40: Red lines on instrument displays typically mark which values? ^t20q40
+- A) Recommended operating ranges.
+- B) Caution areas.
+- C) Operational limits.
+- D) Normal operating areas.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red lines (radial marks) on aircraft instrument displays indicate never-exceed operational limits -- the absolute boundaries that must not be exceeded. On the ASI, the red line marks VNE (never-exceed speed). On engine instruments, red lines mark maximum RPM, temperature, or pressure limits. A (recommended ranges) and D (normal operating areas) are shown by green arcs. B (caution areas) are indicated by yellow arcs. C correctly identifies the meaning of red lines.
+
+### Q41: To determine indicated airspeed (IAS), the airspeed indicator requires... ^t20q41
+- A) The difference between total pressure and dynamic pressure.
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure.
+- C) The difference between standard pressure and total pressure.
+- D) The difference between dynamic pressure and static pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is determined from the difference between total pressure (from the Pitot tube) and static pressure (from the static port). This difference equals dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 rho v squared), which the ASI converts into an airspeed reading. A (total minus dynamic) would yield static pressure, which is not useful for airspeed. C (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for speed measurement. D (dynamic minus static) is not a physically meaningful quantity in this context because dynamic pressure is itself derived from the total-minus-static calculation.
+
+### Q42: What does the red line on an airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q42
+- A) A speed limit in turbulent conditions.
+- B) The maximum speed with flaps deployed.
+- C) A speed that must never be exceeded under any circumstances.
+- D) The maximum speed in turns exceeding 45 degrees bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red line on the ASI marks VNE (Velocity Never Exceed), the absolute structural speed limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, even in smooth air. Exceeding VNE risks catastrophic flutter, structural failure, or loss of control. A describes the caution range (yellow arc) where flight is restricted to smooth air. B describes VFE (flap extension speed), typically marked by the top of the white arc. D describes no standard ASI marking; maneuvering speed (VA) is related to structural limits in turns but is not marked with a colour on the ASI.
+
+### Q43: The compass error produced by the aircraft's own magnetic field is known as... ^t20q43
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the compass error caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields, produced by metallic structures, electrical equipment, and engines. It varies with heading and is recorded on a deviation card in the cockpit. A (variation) and C (declination) both refer to the angular difference between true north and magnetic north, caused by the Earth's magnetic field -- not by the aircraft. D (inclination) is the vertical dip of the Earth's magnetic field, which causes turning and acceleration errors in the compass but is not caused by the aircraft.
+
+### Q44: What errors cause a magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north? ^t20q44
+- A) Variation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+- B) Gravity and magnetism.
+- C) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field.
+- D) Deviation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is affected by three main error sources: deviation (from the aircraft's own magnetic field), turning errors (caused by the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field tilting the compass card during turns), and acceleration errors (false readings during speed changes on east/west headings). A is incorrect because variation (the geographic difference between true and magnetic north) is a known chartable quantity applied to navigation, not an error in the compass itself. B is too vague. C lists Earth field properties but not the instrument-specific errors.
+
+### Q45: Which cockpit instrument receives input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q45
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Direct-reading compass.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Vertical speed indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument connected to the Pitot tube, receiving total pressure to determine airspeed by comparing it with static pressure. A (altimeter) and D (vertical speed indicator) are connected only to the static port, measuring changes in static pressure for altitude and climb/descent rate respectively. B (direct-reading compass) is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system whatsoever.
+
+### Q46: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 270 degrees to 360 degrees via the shortest route. At roughly what compass indication should the pilot stop the turn? ^t20q46
+- A) 360 degrees
+- B) 030 degrees
+- C) 330 degrees
+- D) 270 degrees
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest route from 270 degrees to 360 degrees is a right turn through north. In the northern hemisphere, the compass leads (reads ahead of actual heading) when turning toward north due to the dip of the Earth's magnetic field. The pilot must therefore stop the turn before the compass reaches the target heading. Using the rule of thumb to stop approximately 30 degrees early: 360 minus 30 = 330 degrees. A (360 degrees) would result in overshooting past the target. B (030 degrees) represents the overshoot itself. D (270 degrees) is the starting heading.
+
+### Q47: Which instruments receive static pressure from the static port? ^t20q47
+- A) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, and airspeed indicator.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, and slip indicator.
+- C) Altimeter, slip indicator, and navigational computer.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and direct-reading compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Three instruments receive static pressure from the static port: the altimeter (converts static pressure to altitude), the vertical speed indicator (compares current static pressure to a stored reference to determine climb/descent rate), and the airspeed indicator (uses static pressure together with Pitot total pressure to derive dynamic pressure and thus airspeed). B, C, and D include instruments that do not use static pressure, such as the direct-reading compass (magnetic, no pneumatic input) and the slip indicator (gravity/inertia-based).
+
+### Q48: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 360 degrees to 270 degrees via the shortest route. At approximately what compass reading should the turn be stopped? ^t20q48
+- A) 300 degrees
+- B) 240 degrees
+- C) 360 degrees
+- D) 270 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 360 degrees to 270 degrees is a left turn through west. When turning away from north toward west (270 degrees), the compass turning error is minimal at the westerly heading because the error is greatest on northerly and southerly headings and nearly zero on easterly and westerly headings. Therefore, the pilot should stop the turn approximately when the compass reads 270 degrees, as the compass indication is relatively accurate at this heading. A (300 degrees) would stop too early. B (240 degrees) would overshoot significantly. C (360 degrees) is the starting heading.
+
+### Q49: Static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q49
+- A) Sensed by the Pitot tube.
+- B) Inside the aircraft cabin.
+- C) Of undisturbed airflow.
+- D) Produced by orderly movement of air particles.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air, exerted equally in all directions by air molecules regardless of any airflow velocity. It is measured by flush static ports on the fuselage, positioned to minimise the influence of local aerodynamic effects. A is wrong because the Pitot tube senses total pressure (static plus dynamic). B (cabin pressure) is a separate, often regulated, pressure environment inside the aircraft. D describes laminar flow characteristics, not static pressure.
+
+### Q50: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 030 degrees to 180 degrees via the shortest route. At approximately what compass heading should the turn be ended? ^t20q50
+- A) 180 degrees
+- B) 210 degrees
+- C) 360 degrees
+- D) 150 degrees
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 030 degrees to 180 degrees is a right turn through east and south. When turning toward southerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the compass lags behind the actual heading, reading less than the aircraft has actually turned. Therefore, the pilot must overshoot -- continuing the turn past the target heading on the compass. The rule of thumb is to add approximately 30 degrees to the target: 180 + 30 = 210 degrees. The compass will show 210 degrees when the aircraft is actually on approximately 180 degrees. A (180 degrees) would stop too early. C (360 degrees) and D (150 degrees) are incorrect stopping points.
+
+### Q51: Which glider cockpit lever is painted red? ^t20q51
+- A) Wheel brake.
+- B) Landing gear lever.
+- C) Ventilation control.
+- D) Emergency canopy release.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In gliders, the EASA colour-coding convention assigns red to the emergency canopy release lever. Red is the universal warning colour, reserved for the most critical safety control that allows rapid pilot egress from the aircraft in an emergency. A (wheel brake), B (landing gear lever), and C (ventilation control) are not assigned the red colour under glider cockpit standardisation.
+
+### Q52: During winter maintenance, you notice honeycomb elements inside the fuselage. What construction category does this glider belong to? ^t20q52
+- A) Metal construction.
+- B) Wood combined with other materials.
+- C) Composite construction.
+- D) Biplane construction.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Honeycomb elements are a hallmark of modern composite construction, where a lightweight honeycomb core (aluminium or Nomex) is sandwiched between composite face sheets (glass fiber or carbon fiber) to create panels with excellent stiffness-to-weight ratios. This sandwich construction technique is standard in modern high-performance gliders. A (metal construction) does not typically feature honeycomb sandwich panels in gliders. B (wood combined) would use plywood or fabric, not honeycomb. D (biplane) describes a wing configuration, not a construction method.
+
+### Q53: The Discus B has its horizontal stabilizer mounted at the top of the fin. What type of tail configuration is this? ^t20q53
+- A) V-tail.
+- B) Cruciform tail.
+- C) T-tail.
+- D) Pendulum cruciform tail.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the horizontal stabilizer is mounted at the top of the vertical fin, the configuration forms the shape of the letter "T" when viewed from the front, hence the name T-tail. This is a common configuration on modern gliders like the Discus B because it places the horizontal stabilizer above the wing wake, providing more effective pitch control and reduced buffeting. A (V-tail) combines horizontal and vertical surfaces into two angled panels. B (cruciform tail) places the horizontal stabilizer at mid-height on the fin. D (pendulum cruciform tail) is a free-floating stabilizer variant.
+
+### Q54: What is the role of the fixed vertical fin and fixed horizontal stabilizer on a glider's tail? ^t20q54
+- A) To trim the glider.
+- B) To steer the glider.
+- C) To stabilize the glider.
+- D) To trim the control forces for a desired flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fixed stabilizers of the tail assembly provide static stability, automatically restoring the aircraft to its equilibrium attitude after disturbances such as gusts. The horizontal stabilizer provides pitch stability (longitudinal) and the vertical fin provides yaw stability (directional). A and D describe the function of the trim system, not the fixed stabilizers. B (steering) is accomplished by the movable control surfaces (elevator and rudder), not the fixed stabilizers themselves.
+
+### Q55: During winter maintenance, the equipment officer explains the CG-mounted tow hook mechanism. Why must it release the cable automatically? ^t20q55
+- A) To relieve the pilot from releasing the cable during a winch launch.
+- B) To prevent danger if the glider flies too long near the ground during the winch launch takeoff roll.
+- C) To prevent danger when the glider climbs too high during aero-tow.
+- D) It is a safety measure -- the hook must release automatically when the glider risks flying over the winch.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The CG-mounted tow hook must automatically release the cable when the glider approaches the winch and risks flying directly over it. At that point, the cable angle becomes nearly vertical, and if the cable remains attached, the abrupt change in pull direction can cause a dangerous and uncontrollable nose-down pitch. The automatic release prevents this potentially fatal scenario. A is incorrect because the pilot still has the primary responsibility to release. B describes a different phase of the launch. C describes an aero-tow scenario, not winch launching.
+
+### Q56: Aileron deflection produces rotation around which axis? ^t20q56
+- A) The yaw axis.
+- B) The lateral axis.
+- C) The vertical axis.
+- D) The longitudinal axis.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons control roll, which is rotation around the longitudinal axis (the axis running from nose to tail through the centre of gravity). Deflecting ailerons creates differential lift between the two wings, causing the aircraft to bank. B (lateral axis) is the pitch axis, controlled by the elevator. A (yaw axis) and C (vertical axis) refer to the same axis, controlled by the rudder. Note that ailerons produce a secondary yaw effect (adverse yaw), but the primary motion is roll around the longitudinal axis.
+
+### Q57: When the control stick is moved to the left, what happens? ^t20q57
+- A) Both ailerons move upward.
+- B) The left aileron goes up and the right aileron goes down.
+- C) Both ailerons move downward.
+- D) The left aileron goes down and the right aileron goes up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the stick to the left initiates a left roll. The left aileron deflects downward (increasing lift on the left wing, pushing it up) while the right aileron deflects upward (reducing lift on the right wing, allowing it to drop). This differential creates a rolling moment toward the left. B reverses the correct aileron positions. A and C describe both ailerons moving in the same direction, which would not produce roll but would change overall lift symmetrically.
+
+### Q58: In mechanical brake systems, how is the braking force transmitted from the pedals or handles to the brake shoes? ^t20q58
+- A) Through electric motors.
+- B) Through hydraulic lines.
+- C) Through pneumatic lines.
+- D) Through cables and pushrods.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mechanical brake systems in gliders use a direct mechanical linkage of cables and pushrods to transmit braking force from the cockpit controls to the brake shoes on the wheel. This system is simple, lightweight, and reliable, with no fluid or electrical components. A (electric motors) are not used in standard glider brake systems. B (hydraulic lines) are used on heavier aircraft where greater braking force is required. C (pneumatic lines) are used in some large transport aircraft but not in gliders.
+
+### Q59: The flight manual states that the glider has balanced control surfaces. What is the main reason for this design? ^t20q59
+- A) Better turning characteristics.
+- B) Harmonious coordination of controls.
+- C) Elimination of flutter.
+- D) Reduction of the force needed to move the controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mass-balanced control surfaces are designed primarily to prevent flutter, a potentially catastrophic aeroelastic oscillation that can occur at high speeds. By placing counterweights ahead of the hinge axis, the manufacturer moves the centre of gravity of each control surface to coincide with its pivot point, breaking the coupling between aerodynamic forces and structural vibration that causes flutter. A (turning characteristics) and B (control harmony) are not the primary reasons for mass balancing. D (force reduction) is a secondary benefit of aerodynamic balancing, not mass balancing.
+
+### Q60: Why are there small holes on the fuselage sides connected to internal flexible tubes? ^t20q60
+- A) They serve as static pressure ports for the instruments.
+- B) They are used to measure outside air temperature.
+- C) They equalize pressure between the fuselage interior and exterior.
+- D) They prevent excess humidity inside the glider in cold weather.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The small flush-mounted orifices on the fuselage sides are the static pressure ports of the Pitot-static system. They sense the ambient atmospheric (static) pressure and route it via internal flexible tubing to the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator. Their position on the fuselage is carefully chosen to minimise local aerodynamic disturbances that could cause pressure errors. B (temperature measurement) uses separate probes. C (pressure equalisation) and D (humidity prevention) are not functions of these ports.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_61_90_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_20_61_90_out.md
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+### Q61: Which instrument receives its input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q61
+- A) Turn indicator.
+- B) Variometer.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Airspeed indicator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument connected to the Pitot tube, receiving total pressure to calculate airspeed by comparing it with static pressure from the static port. A (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument powered pneumatically or electrically, with no Pitot connection. B (variometer) and C (altimeter) are connected only to the static pressure port, measuring changes in ambient atmospheric pressure for climb rate and altitude respectively.
+
+### Q62: If the altimeter subscale is set to a higher pressure without any actual pressure change, how does the reading change? ^t20q62
+- A) The reading increases.
+- B) The reading decreases.
+- C) A precise answer requires knowing the outside air temperature.
+- D) The reading does not change.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the altimeter subscale is set to a higher reference pressure (without any change in actual atmospheric pressure), the altimeter indicates a higher altitude -- the reading increases. By setting a higher pressure datum, the instrument calculates a greater difference between the reference and the actual pressure, which it interprets as being at a higher elevation. B (decreases) reverses the actual effect. C (temperature dependent) is incorrect because the subscale directly adjusts the pressure reference, independent of temperature. D (no change) is wrong because the subscale directly affects the displayed altitude.
+
+### Q63: If the static pressure port is blocked by ice during a descent, what does the variometer show? ^t20q63
+- A) A descent.
+- B) A climb.
+- C) Zero.
+- D) Nothing at all (only a warning flag appears).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the static port is blocked by ice, the static pressure delivered to the variometer remains constant at the value when the blockage occurred. Both the measuring chamber and the reference reservoir are at the same frozen pressure, so no pressure difference develops regardless of the aircraft's actual vertical movement. The variometer therefore reads zero. A (descent) and B (climb) are incorrect because the variometer cannot detect any pressure change with a blocked port. D is incorrect because most variometers do not have a warning flag for static port blockage.
+
+### Q64: The red line on the airspeed indicator marks VNE. Is exceeding this speed ever permitted? ^t20q64
+- A) Yes, brief exceedances are acceptable.
+- B) Yes, up to a maximum of 20%.
+- C) No, under no circumstances.
+- D) Yes, up to a maximum of 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE (Velocity Never Exceed) is an absolute structural limit that must never be exceeded under any circumstances whatsoever. Beyond this speed, the risks of aeroelastic flutter, structural failure, and loss of control become real and immediate. Unlike other operational parameters that may allow temporary tolerances, VNE is categorically inviolable. A (brief exceedances), B (20% margin), and D (10% margin) all incorrectly suggest some degree of tolerance exists. There is none.
+
+### Q65: Switching on the radio in a glider consistently causes the magnetic compass to rotate in the same direction. Why? ^t20q65
+- A) The compass is powered electrically when the radio is activated.
+- B) The compass is running low on fluid.
+- C) The compass is defective.
+- D) The radio's magnetic field interferes with the compass because the two are installed too close together.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the radio is switched on, it generates a magnetic field. If the compass and radio are installed too close together, this stray magnetic field consistently disturbs the compass needle, causing it to deviate in the same direction each time. This is a form of electromagnetic deviation, which is why regulations require minimum separation distances between the compass and electrical equipment. A is wrong because the compass operates on magnetism, not electricity. B (low fluid) would cause erratic movement, not a consistent directional shift. C (defective compass) is not the root cause when the behaviour is repeatable and linked to the radio.
+
+### Q66: What information does FLARM provide? ^t20q66
+- A) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that are at the same altitude.
+- B) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that cross the flight path.
+- C) FLARM-equipped aircraft in the vicinity as well as fixed obstacles.
+- D) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft posing a collision risk.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM (Flight Alarm) is an anti-collision system that provides information about two categories of threats: other FLARM-equipped aircraft in the vicinity (regardless of whether they are at the same altitude, crossing the path, or on a direct collision course) AND fixed obstacles such as power lines, cable cars, and masts stored in its terrain/obstacle database. A is too restrictive (same altitude only). B is too restrictive (crossing path only). D is too restrictive (collision risk only). C correctly captures the dual traffic-and-obstacle functionality.
+
+### Q67: Your glider has an ELT with a toggle switch offering ON, OFF, and ARM modes. Which setting enables automatic distress signal transmission upon a violent impact? ^t20q67
+- A) OFF.
+- B) ON.
+- C) ARM.
+- D) Automatic activation is independent of the selected mode for safety reasons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARM mode enables the ELT's internal G-sensor (impact sensor) to automatically trigger distress signal transmission on 121.5 MHz and 406 MHz upon detecting a violent impact such as a crash. During normal flight, the ELT must always be set to ARM. A (OFF) completely disables the ELT, preventing automatic activation. B (ON) activates continuous transmission immediately, used only for testing or manual emergency activation. D is incorrect because the automatic triggering only works when the switch is set to ARM -- it does not function in OFF mode.
+
+### Q68: Electric current is measured in which unit? ^t20q68
+- A) Watt.
+- B) Volt.
+- C) Ohm.
+- D) Ampere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electric current is measured in Amperes (A), the SI base unit named after physicist Andre-Marie Ampere. Current measures the rate of flow of electric charge through a conductor. A (Watt) is the unit of electrical power (P = V x I). B (Volt) is the unit of voltage or electrical potential difference. C (Ohm) is the unit of electrical resistance. These four quantities are interrelated through Ohm's law (V = I x R) and the power equation (P = V x I).
+
+### Q69: During a pre-flight check, you discover the battery fuse is defective and the electrical instruments are inoperative. Would it be acceptable to bridge the fuse with aluminum foil from a chocolate wrapper? ^t20q69
+- A) Yes, but only if a short local flight near the aerodrome is planned.
+- B) Yes, provided the instruments start working again.
+- C) No, an unrated fuse substitute risks wiring fire or instrument damage.
+- D) Yes, but only in an emergency situation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Replacing a fuse with aluminium foil is strictly prohibited and dangerous. A fuse is a protective device rated to melt at a precise current threshold, protecting wiring and instruments from overcurrent damage. Aluminium foil has no defined current rating and will not interrupt the circuit during a short circuit, allowing excessive current to flow and potentially causing an electrical fire or instrument destruction. A, B, and D all suggest conditions under which this improvisation might be acceptable -- there are none. The defect must be repaired with a properly rated fuse before flight.
+
+### Q70: What is the primary disadvantage of the VHF frequency band used in aviation radio communications? ^t20q70
+- A) VHF waves are highly susceptible to atmospheric disturbances such as thunderstorms.
+- B) VHF reception is limited to the theoretical line of sight (quasi-optical propagation).
+- C) VHF waves are deflected at dawn and dusk due to the twilight effect.
+- D) VHF waves are disrupted near large bodies of water (coastal effect).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary disadvantage of VHF (Very High Frequency) communications in aviation is their quasi-optical propagation: VHF waves travel in straight lines and do not follow the Earth's curvature. This means reception range is limited to the theoretical line of sight between transmitter and receiver, which depends on the altitude of both stations. At low altitudes, range is severely limited. A (atmospheric disturbances) primarily affects HF and MF bands. C (twilight effect) is an ionospheric phenomenon affecting shortwave (HF) propagation. D (coastal effect) mainly affects MF radio waves.
+
+### Q71: Which instrument is connected to the Pitot tube? ^t20q71
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Turn indicator.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Variometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only cockpit instrument connected to the Pitot tube. The Pitot tube provides total pressure, which the ASI compares against static pressure to derive dynamic pressure and thus indicated airspeed. A (altimeter) and D (variometer) are connected to the static port only, using static pressure changes to measure altitude and vertical speed respectively. B (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q72: What is the standard colour of aviation oxygen cylinders? ^t20q72
+- A) Red.
+- B) Orange.
+- C) Black.
+- D) Blue/white.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under European and ISO standards, aviation oxygen cylinders are conventionally painted black. This colour coding helps ground and flight crew quickly identify the cylinder contents. Medical oxygen cylinders are typically white (which could cause confusion), but aviation oxygen bottles are standardised as black. A (red) is typically used for flammable gases. B (orange) is not the standard. D (blue/white) may be used for medical or industrial gases but not for aviation oxygen.
+
+### Q73: During a turn, what does the ball (inclinometer) indicate? ^t20q73
+- A) The bank angle of the glider.
+- B) A rotation about the yaw axis to left or right.
+- C) The lateral acceleration in a turn.
+- D) The resultant of weight and centrifugal force.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ball (inclinometer) indicates the direction of the resultant of weight and centrifugal force acting on the aircraft during a turn. In a coordinated turn, this resultant acts straight down through the aircraft's vertical axis, and the ball remains centred. If the ball moves to one side, it indicates a slip or skid -- the turn is uncoordinated. A (bank angle) is not what the ball measures; it measures coordination. B (yaw rotation) is detected by the turn coordinator, not the ball. C (lateral acceleration) is related but not the precise physical quantity the ball displays.
+
+### Q74: Why must the equipped weight of a glider pilot exceed a specified minimum value? ^t20q74
+- A) To improve the angle of incidence.
+- B) To reduce control forces.
+- C) To keep the centre of gravity within prescribed limits.
+- D) To improve the glide ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum pilot weight requirement exists to ensure the aircraft's centre of gravity (CG) remains within approved limits. If the pilot is too light, the CG shifts aft (toward the tail), making the glider longitudinally unstable, harder to recover from stalls, and potentially dangerous. A (angle of incidence) is a fixed geometric property of the wing, unaffected by pilot weight. B (control forces) are not the primary reason for minimum weight. D (glide ratio) is affected by total weight but is not the safety reason for a minimum pilot weight.
+
+### Q75: What is the purpose of a glider's flight manual (AFM)? ^t20q75
+- A) It contains records of periodic inspections and repairs performed.
+- B) It is a detailed commercial brochure from the manufacturer.
+- C) It is used by workshop supervisors when carrying out repairs.
+- D) It provides the pilot with operating limits, technical specifications, and emergency procedures.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Airplane Flight Manual (AFM) is the official reference document for safe aircraft operation, containing operating limitations, performance data, weight and balance information, normal and emergency procedures, and technical specifications. It is specific to each aircraft type and is legally required to be carried on board. A describes the aircraft logbook or maintenance records. B is incorrect because the AFM is a regulatory document, not marketing material. C describes the maintenance manual, not the flight manual.
+
+### Q76: What does the automatic regulator on an oxygen system do? ^t20q76
+- A) It regulates the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only on inhalation.
+- B) It reduces the cylinder pressure to a usable level.
+- C) It adjusts the oxygen flow based on the pilot's breathing rate.
+- D) It controls the pilot's individual oxygen consumption.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system adjusts the air/oxygen mixture ratio according to altitude (providing a richer mixture at higher altitudes where ambient oxygen is scarce) and delivers oxygen only during inhalation, conserving the limited supply. B describes a pressure reducer, which is a different component. C (breathing rate adjustment) is not the primary function -- the regulator responds to altitude and inhalation demand, not breathing rate per se. D is too vague and does not capture the altitude-based mixture adjustment.
+
+### Q77: What is a compensated variometer? ^t20q77
+- A) A cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt).
+- B) Another term for a vane variometer.
+- C) A netto variometer.
+- D) A variometer that cancels indications caused by elevator inputs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compensated variometer (total energy compensated) uses a total energy probe to eliminate false climb/sink readings caused by the pilot's elevator inputs, such as pull-ups or push-overs. It shows the true rate of climb or sink of the air mass, independent of pilot-induced speed changes. This allows the pilot to accurately assess whether the glider is in rising or sinking air. A (Sollfahrt/MacCready) is a speed-to-fly director. B (vane variometer) describes a specific type of variometer sensor. C (netto variometer) subtracts the glider's own sink rate, which is different from total energy compensation.
+
+### Q78: Up to what bank angle can the magnetic compass be considered reliable? ^t20q78
+- A) 40 degrees.
+- B) 30 degrees.
+- C) 20 degrees.
+- D) 10 degrees.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass can be considered reliable up to approximately 30 degrees of bank angle. Beyond this, the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field (magnetic dip/inclination) causes the compass card to tilt significantly, producing large turning errors and unreliable readings. A (40 degrees) exceeds the reliable limit. C (20 degrees) and D (10 degrees) are unnecessarily conservative -- the compass is still reasonably accurate up to 30 degrees.
+
+### Q79: A glider fitted with an ELT is being stored in the hangar. What should you do? ^t20q79
+- A) Set the ELT switch to ON.
+- B) Remove the ELT battery.
+- C) Verify there is no transmission on 121.5 MHz.
+- D) Nothing in particular.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When placing a glider with an ELT into hangar storage, you must verify that the ELT is not inadvertently transmitting on the emergency frequency 121.5 MHz. Accidental activation can happen during handling, and a false distress signal wastes SAR resources and must be reported immediately. A (switch to ON) would deliberately activate the ELT, which is incorrect. B (remove the battery) is not the standard procedure and could affect the ELT's certification. D (nothing) is wrong because checking for inadvertent transmission is a required precaution.
+
+### Q80: What does the green arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q80
+- A) The speed range for camber flap operation.
+- B) The normal operating speed range, usable in turbulence.
+- C) The speed range for smooth air only (caution range).
+- D) The control surface maneuvering speed range.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The green arc on a glider's ASI indicates the normal operating speed range within which the aircraft can be safely flown in all conditions, including turbulence. The aircraft can sustain full control deflections and maximum gust loads within this speed range without exceeding structural limits. A (camber flap range) may be indicated differently depending on the aircraft. C (smooth air only) describes the yellow arc, which is the caution range. D (maneuvering speed range) is not a standard ASI marking designation.
+
+### Q81: Why must a compass be compensated (swung)? ^t20q81
+- A) Because of acceleration errors.
+- B) Because of turning errors at high bank angles, such as when thermalling.
+- C) Because of errors caused by the aircraft's metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment.
+- D) Because of magnetic declination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Compass compensation (swinging) is performed to minimise deviation errors caused by the aircraft's own metallic components (ferrous metals in the structure, engine) and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment. These create local magnetic disturbances that deflect the compass from magnetic north. A (acceleration errors) and B (turning errors) are inherent to the compass design and cannot be removed by swinging. D (declination) is a geographic property of the Earth's magnetic field that is accounted for in navigation, not corrected by compass swinging.
+
+### Q82: When two release hooks are fitted, which hook must be used for aerotow takeoff? ^t20q82
+- A) Either hook, at the pilot's discretion.
+- B) It depends on the grass height on the runway.
+- C) Always the nose hook.
+- D) Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aerotow takeoff, the centre-of-gravity (CG) hook, also called the belly or lower hook, must always be used. This hook position ensures that the tow force acts near the CG, providing stable and controllable flight during the tow. C (nose hook) is incorrect -- the nose hook is used for winch launching, where the upward pull angle is different. A (pilot's discretion) is wrong because the hook selection is not optional. B (grass height) is irrelevant to hook selection.
+
+### Q83: A glider pilot weighs 110 kg equipped; the glider has an empty weight of 250 kg. How much water ballast can be loaded? See attached sheet. ^t20q83
+- A) 80 litres.
+- B) 70 litres.
+- C) 90 litres.
+- D) 100 litres.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Based on the loading chart provided, with an empty weight of 250 kg and a pilot equipped weight of 110 kg, the remaining payload capacity for water ballast is determined by subtracting the empty weight and pilot weight from the maximum takeoff mass. If the maximum is 450 kg: 450 - 250 - 110 = 90 kg, which equals approximately 90 litres of water (since water has a density of 1 kg/litre). A (80 litres), B (70 litres), and D (100 litres) do not match the calculation for this specific weight combination.
+
+### Q84: When is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q84
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- C) In all cases.
+- D) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The use of weak links (fusible links or Sollbruchstellen) on tow ropes is mandatory in all cases, regardless of rope material, glider type, or launch method. Weak links are designed to break at a defined load, protecting both the glider and the tow aircraft (or winch) from excessive tension that could cause structural damage or loss of control. A (two-seat only), B (synthetic ropes only), and D (natural fibre and manual specification) all create exceptions that do not exist in the regulations.
+
+### Q85: What does the yellow triangle on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q85
+- A) Speed not to be exceeded in smooth air.
+- B) Stall speed.
+- C) Recommended approach speed for landing in normal conditions.
+- D) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow triangle on a glider's ASI marks the recommended approach speed for landing in normal (calm) conditions. This is the reference speed the pilot should fly on final approach under standard circumstances. A (smooth air speed limit) describes VNE or a caution range boundary. B (stall speed) is typically at the bottom of the green arc, not marked with a triangle. D (turbulence speed limit) may relate to VA or the top of the green arc but is not indicated by a yellow triangle.
+
+### Q86: What constitutes a glider's minimum equipment? ^t20q86
+- A) The equipment specified in the flight manual.
+- B) Compass, turn indicator, cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt), and flight manual.
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and variometer.
+- D) Radio, airspeed indicator, altimeter, variometer, and compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum equipment for a glider is whatever is specified in its flight manual (AFM). There is no single universal list that applies to all gliders -- each aircraft type has its own specific minimum equipment requirements defined by the manufacturer and approved by the certification authority. B, C, and D each propose a fixed list that may or may not match the requirements for any given glider type. A correctly recognises that the flight manual is the authoritative source.
+
+### Q87: Are the instruments shown in the diagram connected correctly? ^t20q87
+![[figures/bazl_201_q17.png]]
+- A) Only the left one.
+- B) Only the middle one.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The diagram shows the standard Pitot-static system connections: the Pitot tube connected to the airspeed indicator (providing total pressure), and the static port connected to the altimeter, variometer, and the static side of the airspeed indicator. When all these connections are correctly shown as per the standard installation, the answer is that the instruments are connected correctly. A (only left), B (only middle), and C (none correct) contradict the correct standard installation shown in the diagram.
+
+### Q88: What does the red radial mark on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q88
+- A) Stall speed.
+- B) Approach speed for landing.
+- C) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+- D) Never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red radial mark on a glider's airspeed indicator signifies VNE (Velocity Never Exceed), the absolute maximum speed that must never be exceeded under any circumstances. Beyond VNE, there is risk of flutter, structural failure, or loss of control. A (stall speed) is at the bottom of the green arc. B (approach speed) is marked by a yellow triangle. C (turbulence speed limit) may relate to the top of the green arc but is not marked by the red radial line. D is correct.
+
+### Q89: In a glider cockpit, three handles are colored red, blue, and green. Which controls do they correspond to? ^t20q89
+- A) Airbrakes, cable release, and trim.
+- B) Undercarriage, airbrakes, and trim.
+- C) Emergency canopy release, airbrakes, and trim.
+- D) Airbrakes, canopy lock, and undercarriage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard EASA colour convention for glider cockpit handles assigns red to the emergency canopy release (for rapid egress), blue to the airbrakes/spoilers (for speed and descent control), and green to the trim (for adjusting pitch forces). A incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes and blue to cable release. B incorrectly assigns red to the undercarriage. D incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes, blue to the canopy lock, and green to the undercarriage. C correctly matches all three colour-function pairs.
+
+### Q90: For a glider with an empty weight of 275 kg, determine the correct combination of maximum payload and permitted water ballast. ^t20q90
+> ![[figures/bazl_201_q20.png]]
+
+- A) 85 kg with 100 litres of water.
+- B) 100 kg with 80 litres of water.
+- C) 110 kg with 65 litres of water.
+- D) 105 kg with 70 litres of water.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading chart provided for a glider with 275 kg empty weight, the correct combination that respects both the maximum takeoff weight and the CG limits is 100 kg maximum payload with 80 litres of water ballast. A (85 kg / 100 litres) exceeds the water ballast allowance for that payload. C (110 kg / 65 litres) and D (105 kg / 70 litres) do not match the values derived from the chart for this empty weight. B is the only combination that satisfies all weight and balance constraints.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_1_30_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_1_30_out.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,309 @@
+# Flight Performance and Planning
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is… ^t30q1
+- A) Not allowable and essentially dangerous
+- B) Exceptionally allowable to avoid delays
+- C) Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.
+- D) Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The maximum takeoff mass (MTOM) is a hard certification limit determined by the manufacturer based on structural strength, stall speed, and climb performance. Exceeding it increases wing loading, raises the stall speed, degrades climb performance, and may overstress the airframe beyond its certified load factors. B is wrong because no operational convenience justifies exceeding a safety limit. C is wrong because no pilot technique can compensate for structural overloading. D is wrong because there is no regulatory tolerance — any exceedance is prohibited.
+
+### Q2: The center of gravity has to be located… ^t30q2
+- A) Between the front and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) In front of the front C.G. limit.
+- C) Right of the lateral C. G. limit.
+- D) Behind the rear C.G. limit
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aircraft's stability and controllability are only certified within the approved C.G. envelope, which lies between the forward and aft C.G. limits. B is wrong because a C.G. ahead of the forward limit requires excessive elevator authority to flare or rotate, potentially making landing impossible. D is wrong because a C.G. behind the aft limit causes longitudinal instability and uncontrollable pitch-up. C references lateral limits, which are not the primary concern in standard glider mass-and-balance calculations.
+
+### Q3: An aircraft has to be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure... ^t30q3
+- A) That the aircraft does not stall.
+- B) That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum allowable airspeed during a descent
+- C) That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.
+- D) Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The C.G. position relative to the neutral point determines longitudinal static stability (the tendency to return to equilibrium after a disturbance), while the elevator's ability to command pitch changes provides controllability. Both properties must be maintained throughout flight, and the approved C.G. envelope ensures this. A is wrong because stall speed depends primarily on wing loading and angle of attack, not C.G. position. B is wrong because VNE is an airframe limit unrelated to C.G. C describes a ground-handling concern, not an in-flight safety requirement.
+
+### Q4: The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined… ^t30q4
+- A) For one aircraft of a type solely, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position
+- B) By calculation.
+- C) By weighing.
+- D) Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Each individual airframe must be physically weighed, typically on calibrated scales at three support points, to determine its actual empty mass and C.G. position. Manufacturing tolerances, repairs, modifications, and installed equipment create variations between serial numbers. A is wrong because no two aircraft of the same type are guaranteed identical. B is wrong because calculation alone cannot account for all manufacturing variables. D is wrong because manufacturer data provides type-level reference values, not individual aircraft-specific measurements.
+
+### Q5: Baggage and cargo has to be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause... ^t30q5
+- A) Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.
+- B) Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.
+- C) Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries.
+- D) Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Unsecured cargo can shift suddenly during turbulence or maneuvers, moving the C.G. outside limits instantaneously. A sudden aft C.G. shift can cause an unrecoverable pitch-up, loose items can become dangerous projectiles injuring occupants or jamming controls, and asymmetric loads can exceed structural design limits. A uses incorrect technical terminology. B is dangerously wrong because shifted cargo can create attitudes beyond pilot correction capability. D is wrong because no amount of cargo shift is considered acceptable or safely calculable.
+
+### Q6: The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the… ^t30q6
+- A) Center of gravity
+- B) Stagnation point.
+- C) Center of pressure.
+- D) Neutral point.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** By definition, the center of gravity (C.G.) is the single point through which the resultant gravitational force (weight vector) acts vertically downward on the entire aircraft. All mass-and-balance calculations are based on locating this point. B (stagnation point) is where airflow velocity reaches zero on the leading edge. C (center of pressure) is where the resultant aerodynamic force acts. D (neutral point) is an aerodynamic reference for stability analysis. None of these others is where gravity acts.
+
+### Q7: The term "center of gravity" is described as... ^t30q7
+- A) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- B) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- C) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The center of gravity is the point through which the total weight of the aircraft acts, determined as the mass-weighted average position of all individual mass elements. It is found by summing all moments about the datum and dividing by total mass. A is wrong because the CG is not the "heaviest point" — mass is distributed throughout the airframe. C is wrong because the neutral point is an aerodynamic stability reference, distinct from the CG. D repeats B and is also not the correct definition of CG.
+
+### Q8: The center of gravity (CG) defines… ^t30q8
+- A) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- B) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) The product of mass and balance arm
+- D) The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The C.G. is defined as the point through which gravity (weight) is considered to act on the entire aircraft, as if all mass were concentrated at that single location. This is the fundamental definition used in all mass and balance calculations. A and B describe the datum point, which is a fixed reference from which moment arms are measured, not the CG itself. C describes a moment (mass times arm), which is a calculation step, not a definition of the CG.
+
+### Q9: The term "moment" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as… ^t30q9
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance, a moment equals mass multiplied by balance arm (M = m x d), expressed in units like kg-m or lb-in. This follows the physical definition of a torque. The total C.G. position is then found by dividing the sum of all moments by the total mass. A (sum), B (difference), and D (quotient) would all produce dimensionally and physically incorrect results. Only the product of mass and distance gives a valid moment.
+
+### Q10: The term "balance arm" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the… ^t30q10
+- A) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The balance arm (or moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum line to the center of gravity of a particular mass item (such as the pilot, ballast, or equipment). This distance determines the leverage that mass exerts about the datum for moment calculations. A defines the center of gravity, not the balance arm. B defines the datum point. D describes a distance from the CG, but balance arms are always measured from the datum, not from the CG.
+
+### Q11: The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called… ^t30q11
+- A) Span width.
+- B) Balance arm.
+- C) Torque.
+- D) Lever.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance terminology, the balance arm (also called moment arm) is specifically the horizontal distance from the aircraft datum to any given point of interest, including the overall C.G. once calculated. A (span width) is a wing geometric parameter unrelated to longitudinal mass and balance. C (torque/moment) is the product of mass and arm, not the distance itself. D (lever) is a general physics term but not the standard aviation mass-and-balance terminology.
+
+### Q12: The balance arm is the horizontal distance between… ^t30q12
+- A) The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) The front C.G. limit and the datum line
+- C) The C.G. of a mass and the datum line.
+- D) The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The balance arm of any mass item is the horizontal distance from the datum (a fixed reference plane defined in the flight manual) to the center of gravity of that specific mass. All moment calculations use the datum as the common reference, enabling moments to be summed algebraically to find the total C.G. position. A measures from the CG to a limit, not to the datum. B and D describe distances between CG limits or from limits to the datum, which are not balance arms.
+
+### Q13: The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the… ^t30q13
+- A) Documentation of the annual inspection.
+- B) Certificate of airworthiness
+- C) Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- D) Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The POH/AFM contains a dedicated mass and balance section with the aircraft's empty mass, empty C.G. position, datum reference, C.G. limits, and approved loading configurations. This is the authoritative source for all weight and balance data. A (annual inspection documentation) records maintenance history. B (certificate of airworthiness) merely certifies the type approval. C (performance section) contains speed, climb, and glide data, not mass and balance information. Only D provides the specific data needed for loading calculations.
+
+### Q14: Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft? ^t30q14
+- A) Normal procedures
+- B) Performance
+- C) Weight and balance
+- D) Limitations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Weight and Balance section of the flight manual (typically Section 6 in EASA-standardized AFM structure) contains the aircraft's basic empty mass, empty C.G. location, allowable C.G. range, and loading instructions. A (Normal Procedures) covers checklists and standard operating procedures. B (Performance) covers speeds, climb rates, and glide data. D (Limitations) covers maximum speeds, load factors, and operating envelope boundaries. Each section has a specific purpose in the regulatory framework.
+
+### Q15: Which factor shortens landing distance? ^t30q15
+- A) High pressure altitude
+- B) Strong head wind
+- C) Heavy rain
+- D) High density altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A strong headwind reduces groundspeed at touchdown for a given indicated airspeed, so the aircraft crosses the threshold with less kinetic energy relative to the ground, significantly shortening the ground roll. As a rule of thumb, a headwind component equal to 10% of approach speed reduces landing distance by approximately 19%. A and D (high pressure/density altitude) increase true airspeed for a given IAS, increasing groundspeed and lengthening the landing roll. C (heavy rain) can reduce braking effectiveness and visibility, potentially increasing landing distance.
+
+### Q16: Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly… ^t30q16
+- A) Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.
+- B) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.
+- C) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.
+- D) Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aircraft not certified for flight in known icing (FIKI), operating in known or forecast icing conditions is a regulatory prohibition. Ice accretion on wings dramatically increases weight, increases drag, reduces the maximum lift coefficient, and raises the stall speed simultaneously. If icing is inadvertently encountered, the pilot must exit the icing environment immediately by changing altitude or heading. A is wrong because maintaining VMC is irrelevant to the icing danger. C is wrong because performance degradation is inevitable once ice forms. D is overly broad since not all precipitation causes icing.
+
+### Q17: The angle of descent is described as... ^t30q17
+- A) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°].
+- B) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].
+- C) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].
+- D) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of descent (glide angle) is geometrically defined as the angle between the horizontal plane and the actual flight path vector, measured in degrees. For a glider with a 1:30 glide ratio, this corresponds to approximately 1.9 degrees. A and C describe a gradient (ratio of height change to horizontal distance), not an angle. D incorrectly expresses an angle in percent rather than degrees. The distinction between an angle (in degrees) and a gradient (as a ratio or percentage) is important in navigation and performance calculations.
+
+### Q18: Which is the purpose of "interception lines" in visual navigation? ^t30q18
+- A) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- B) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Interception lines are prominent linear geographic features — rivers, coastlines, railways, motorways — selected during pre-flight planning that run roughly perpendicular to the planned route. If a pilot becomes disoriented, flying toward the nearest interception line produces an unmistakable landmark for position recovery. A is wrong because interception lines do not permit flight below VFR minima. B describes range circles, not interception lines. C describes alternate airports, a different planning element. Interception lines are specifically a lost-procedure navigation tool.
+
+### Q19: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals… ^t30q19
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-056) showing LO R 16 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1.500 ft GND.
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-level restricted areas (LO R) on aeronautical charts express vertical limits using standard altitude references. The upper limit of LO R 16 is 1,500 ft MSL (above mean sea level), an absolute altitude that does not vary with terrain. A (1,500 m MSL) confuses feet with metres — 1,500 m would be approximately 4,900 ft. B (FL150) is 15,000 ft on standard pressure, far too high for a low-level restriction. C (1,500 ft GND) references above ground level, which would vary with terrain and is not correct here.
+
+### Q20: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals… ^t30q20
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-030) showing LO R 4 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 4.500 ft MSL
+- B) 1.500 ft AGL
+- C) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Restricted area LO R 4 has its upper limit at 4,500 ft MSL (Mean Sea Level), a fixed altitude reference. MSL provides an absolute altitude datum that does not change with terrain, which is the standard for regulatory airspace boundaries. B (1,500 ft AGL) and D (1,500 ft MSL) are both too low and reference incorrect values. C (4,500 ft AGL) uses the correct number but the wrong reference — AGL varies with terrain, whereas the actual limit is defined as a fixed MSL altitude.
+
+### Q21: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? ^t30q21
+> *Note: This question originally references a NOTAM excerpt (PFP-024).*
+- A) Flight Level 95
+- B) Height 9500 ft
+- C) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The NOTAM prohibits overflight up to 9,500 ft MSL (Mean Sea Level), an absolute altitude. In ICAO convention, "Altitude" refers to height above MSL, "Height" refers to above ground level, and "Flight Level" is a pressure altitude reference. A (FL95) uses a flight level designation, which differs from an MSL altitude when QNH is not 1013.25 hPa. B (Height 9,500 ft) implies above ground level rather than MSL. D (9,500 m MSL) confuses metres with feet — that would be approximately 31,000 ft, clearly unreasonable for a typical VFR restriction.
+
+### Q22: What must be considered for cross-border flights? ^t30q22
+- A) Transmission of hazard reports
+- B) Approved exceptions
+- C) Requires flight plans
+- D) Regular location messages
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 2 and national regulations, flight plans are mandatory for international flights crossing state borders, even for VFR glider flights. A filed flight plan is required for border coordination, search and rescue alerting, and compliance with customs and immigration procedures. It ensures all relevant Air Traffic Services and SAR units are aware of the flight. A (hazard reports) and D (location messages) are separate operational procedures (AIREP/PIREP). B (approved exceptions) is not the primary consideration for cross-border flights.
+
+### Q23: During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the… ^t30q23
+- A) Next airport operator en-route.
+- B) Flight Information Service (FIS).
+- C) Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)
+- D) Search and Rescue Service (SAR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Flight Information Service (FIS), contacted on the published FIS frequency in each Flight Information Region, can accept an airborne flight plan (AFIL) during flight. This is the standard procedure when a plan was not filed before departure or needs to be extended en route. A (airport operator) handles local arrivals and departures, not en-route plan filing. C (AIS) distributes aeronautical information but does not accept real-time flight plans from airborne aircraft. D (SAR) is a response service activated when aircraft are overdue or in distress.
+
+### Q24: While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure ought to be avoided enroute? ^t30q24
+- A) Stone quarries and large sand areas
+- B) Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas
+- C) Highways, railroad tracks and channels.
+- D) Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal convection depends on differential ground heating by the sun. Moist ground, water bodies, and marshes have high thermal inertia and specific heat capacity — they absorb solar energy without heating up quickly, suppressing thermal development above them. Flying over these areas means encountering less lift and risking a forced landing in unsuitable terrain. A (stone quarries, sand) and D (buildings, concrete, asphalt) are dark, dry surfaces that heat rapidly and generate strong thermals. C (highways, railways) serve as navigation references and also generate thermals.
+
+### Q25: During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point ought to be taken ... (2,00 P.) ^t30q25
+- A) As high as possible.
+- B) With as less bank as possible
+- C) As low as possible.
+- D) As steep as possible.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a downwind turning point, the glider must reverse direction and fly back into the wind, immediately losing the tailwind advantage and gaining a headwind. Arriving high provides maximum altitude reserve for the subsequent upwind leg, where groundspeed is reduced and glide distance over the ground is shortened. C (as low as possible) is tactically dangerous because any failure to find lift on the return leg leaves no margin for safe outlanding selection. B and D relate to bank angle, which is not the primary concern at a turning point.
+
+### Q26: After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.)... ^t30q26
+- A) For weakening thermals due to the progressing time
+- B) For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases
+- C) For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time
+- D) For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a glider turns through a large heading change at a waypoint, the pilot's perspective of the sky shifts dramatically. The sun appears to have "moved" relative to the new heading, and cumulus clouds that were previously behind or to the side now appear in different positions relative to the cockpit. This perceptual shift can make the sky look completely different even if conditions are objectively unchanged. Pilots must re-orient their thermal assessment to the new heading. A, B, and C describe meteorological changes that are time-dependent, not heading-dependent.
+
+### Q27: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? ^t30q27
+
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO aeronautical chart symbology (defined in Annex 4 and Document 8697) uses distinct symbols to differentiate between obstacle types: lighted vs. unlighted, and single vs. group. Symbol C in the referenced figure represents a group of unlighted obstacles. Knowing these symbols is essential for cross-country flight planning to identify terrain and obstruction hazards that would not be visible at dusk or in poor visibility. A, C, and D represent other obstacle categories such as single obstacles, lighted groups, or other types.
+
+### Q28: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? ^t30q28
+
+- A) C
+- B) A
+- C) B
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO aeronautical chart symbology uses specific symbols to differentiate airports by category: civil vs. military, international vs. domestic, and runway type (paved vs. unpaved). Symbol A in the referenced figure represents a civil, non-international airport with a paved runway. Glider pilots use these symbols during cross-country planning to identify potential alternate landing sites. A, C, and D represent other aerodrome categories such as international airports, unpaved fields, or military facilities.
+
+### Q29: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? ^t30q29
+
+- A) C
+- B) B
+- C) A
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On ICAO aeronautical charts, different symbols distinguish between types of elevation information: general spot elevations, surveyed elevation points, maximum elevation figures, and obstacle heights. Symbol C in the referenced figure represents a general spot elevation, marking a notable terrain height for situational awareness. Cross-country glider pilots must recognize these symbols to identify terrain clearance requirements, especially when planning routes through valleys or near mountain ranges. B, C, and D represent other elevation-related symbols.
+
+### Q30: What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects)... ^t30q30
+- A) 45 NM
+- B) 30 km
+- C) 45 km
+- D) 81 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide distance equals glide ratio multiplied by available height. With a glide ratio of 1:30 (30 meters forward per 1 meter of height lost) and 1,500 m of altitude: distance = 30 x 1,500 m = 45,000 m = 45 km. A (45 NM) equals approximately 83 km, requiring a glide ratio of about 1:55 — far beyond this aircraft. B (30 km) uses the ratio number directly without multiplying by height. D (81 NM) is even more excessive. Always verify units: mixing nautical miles and metres/kilometres is a common source of calculation errors.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_31_60_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_31_60_out.md
new file mode 100644
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--- /dev/null
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+# Flight Performance and Planning
+
+---
+
+### Q31: Why can wing loading be increased when soaring conditions are good? ^t30q31
+- A) Because the stall speed diminishes.
+- B) Because the glider achieves a better glide ratio at high speed even though the minimum speed rises.
+- C) Because the glider can fly more slowly and achieves a better glide ratio.
+- D) Because the glider has a better climb rate even though it must fly more slowly.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because increasing wing loading (typically via water ballast) shifts the speed polar to higher speeds while preserving approximately the same maximum glide ratio, allowing faster inter-thermal cruise and improving average cross-country speed according to MacCready theory. A is wrong because higher wing loading increases the stall speed rather than reducing it. C is wrong because higher wing loading forces the glider to fly faster, not slower. D is wrong because climb rate in thermals actually worsens with higher wing loading due to increased minimum sink speed.
+
+### Q32: The tail wheel of a glider was not removed before departure. What will be the consequence? ^t30q32
+- A) Better manoeuvrability at departure.
+- B) The centre of gravity shifts forward.
+- C) No consequence. The wheel represents only a tiny fraction of the total weight of the glider and has no effect on the centre of gravity.
+- D) The centre of gravity will be further aft and possibly too far aft, which is dangerous.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the tail wheel is mounted at the extreme rear of the fuselage with a very large moment arm. Even though its mass is small, the large lever arm creates a significant aft moment that shifts the CG rearward, potentially beyond the aft limit, causing dangerous longitudinal instability. A is wrong because a tail wheel does not improve flight manoeuvrability. B is wrong because the tail wheel is behind the CG, shifting it aft, not forward. C ignores the amplifying effect of the large moment arm.
+
+### Q33: The pilot exceeds the maximum cockpit payload by 10 kg. What has to be done? ^t30q33
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Trim forward.
+- C) Reduce the payload.
+- D) Compensate by reducing the water ballast slightly.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the maximum cockpit payload is a certification limit that must not be exceeded. The only correct action is to reduce the payload until it falls within limits. A and B are wrong because trim adjustments change elevator deflection and stick forces but do not alter the aircraft's actual mass or structural loading. D is wrong because reducing water ballast lowers total mass but does not address the cockpit load exceeding its own independent structural limit.
+
+### Q34: What propels a pure glider forward? ^t30q34
+- A) Ascending air currents.
+- B) Drag directed forward.
+- C) The component of gravity acting in the direction of the flight path.
+- D) A tailwind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a motorless glider converts altitude into airspeed by descending along an inclined flight path. The component of the weight vector projected along the flight path direction balances drag and maintains airspeed. A is wrong because ascending currents slow the descent relative to the ground but do not propel the aircraft forward through the air. B is wrong because drag always opposes motion, never drives it. D is wrong because a tailwind increases ground speed but does not propel the aircraft through the airmass.
+
+### Q35: The current mass of an aircraft is 610 kg and the centre of gravity (C.G.) position is at 80.0. You remove a 10 kg item of baggage located at a moment arm of 150. Which is the new centre of gravity? ^t30q35
+- A) 75.0
+- B) 81.166
+- C) 70.0
+- D) 78.833
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D: initial moment = 610 x 80.0 = 48,800; removed moment = 10 x 150 = 1,500; new moment = 48,800 - 1,500 = 47,300; new mass = 600 kg; new CG = 47,300 / 600 = 78.833. Since the baggage was aft of the current CG (arm 150 > 80), removing it shifts the CG forward. A and C are too far forward. B implies a rearward shift, contradicting removal of aft-located mass.
+
+### Q36: The empty mass of the Discus B is 245 kg. You are planning to carry 184 kg of water ballast. What is the maximum load at the pilot's seat? ^t30q36
+> **Extract from the Discus B Flight Manual -- Loading table with water ballast**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q14_discus_loading_table.png]]
+> Max. permitted all-up weight including water ballast : **525 kg**
+> Lever arm of water ballast : **203 mm aft of datum (BE)**
+
+> *Table of water ballast loads at various empty weights and seat loads:*
+
+| Empty mass (kg) | Seat load 70 kg | 80 kg | 90 kg | 100 kg | 110 kg |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| 220 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 225 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 230 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 235 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 |
+| 240 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 |
+| 245 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 | 170 |
+| 250 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 | 165 |
+
+> *Water ballast in both wing tanks (kg). For empty mass 245 kg and ballast 184 kg: the maximum seat load is **90 kg**.*
+- A) 100 kg
+- B) 110 kg
+- C) 90 kg
+- D) 80 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the loading table at 245 kg empty mass shows 184 kg ballast is achievable with seat loads of 70, 80, and 90 kg, but at 100 kg the maximum drops to 180 kg and at 110 kg to 170 kg. Since the full 184 kg of ballast is required, the highest permissible seat load is 90 kg. A and B would require reducing ballast below 184 kg. D is unnecessarily restrictive.
+
+### Q37: What important principle must be observed when making an off-field landing on sloping terrain? ^t30q37
+- A) Only land with airbrakes fully extended.
+- B) Land facing uphill with an approach speed slightly above normal.
+- C) Always land into wind regardless of the slope.
+- D) The landing flare must be initiated at a greater height than usual.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because landing uphill provides strong deceleration from the slope gradient, dramatically shortening the ground roll, while a slightly higher approach speed compensates for potential wind shear and the altered visual perspective over unfamiliar terrain. A is wrong because full airbrakes depend on the situation. C is wrong because on significant slopes, the uphill direction takes priority over wind. D is wrong because flare height depends on the specific approach geometry.
+
+### Q38: You must land in heavy rain. What must you pay particular attention to? ^t30q38
+- A) The approach speed is lower than usual because rain slows the aircraft.
+- B) The landing is performed as in dry conditions.
+- C) Due to poor visibility, the approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) A higher approach speed must be used.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because heavy rain wets the wing surface, degrading the aerodynamic profile and potentially raising the effective stall speed. A higher approach speed provides the necessary safety margin. A is wrong because the critical concern is degraded lift, not a slower aircraft. B is wrong because rain requires specific adaptations. C is wrong because a shallower approach reduces obstacle clearance and extends exposure to poor visibility.
+
+### Q39: You are taking off from a grass runway that has become waterlogged after several days of rain. What should you expect? ^t30q39
+- A) The takeoff distance is likely to be longer.
+- B) The glider is wet and has reduced performance.
+- C) The wet grass offers less resistance, which is why the takeoff distance will be shorter.
+- D) The glider may skid sideways (aquaplaning).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because waterlogged grass increases rolling resistance from soft ground deformation and water drag on the wheel, slowing acceleration and lengthening the takeoff run. B is wrong because the runway condition, not the glider's wetness, is the primary concern. C is wrong because wet, soft grass increases resistance. D is wrong because aquaplaning occurs on hard, smooth surfaces with standing water, not soft grass.
+
+### Q40: Which of these statements is correct at a speed of 170 km/h, taking into account the following speed polar? ^t30q40
+> **ASK 21 Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q08_ask21_speed_polar.png]]
+> *Two curves: G=470 kp and G=570 kp.*
+- A) Regardless of the mass of the ASK21, the sink rate stays constant.
+- B) As the mass of the ASK21 rises, the sink rate increases.
+- C) As the mass of the ASK21 increases, the sink rate increases.
+- D) As the mass of the ASK21 decreases, the glide angle improves.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because at 170 km/h, the heavier configuration (G=570 kp) shows a noticeably higher sink rate than the lighter one (G=470 kp) on the polar diagram. A heavier aircraft needs more lift at the same speed, producing greater induced drag and a higher rate of descent. A is wrong because the curves clearly show different sink rates. B states the same physical fact as C. D is wrong because at this high speed, the lighter aircraft does not necessarily have a significantly better ground glide angle.
+
+### Q41: Which is the speed at the minimum sink rate in still air for a mass of 450 kg? ^t30q41
+> **Speed Polar (AIRSPEED):**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q11_speed_polar_450_580.png]]
+- A) 75 km/h
+- B) 95 km/h
+- C) 50 km/h
+- D) 140 km/h
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the minimum sink rate corresponds to the apex (highest point) of the speed polar curve. For the 450 kg configuration, this point is at approximately 75 km/h. This is the optimal speed for maximum endurance and thermal centring. B is closer to the min-sink speed for the heavier 580 kg configuration. C is below the stall speed. D is deep in the high-drag region.
+
+### Q42: From what altitude on the route between Murten (approx. N46 56'/E007 07') and Neuchatel aerodrome (approx. N46 57'/E006 52') are you required to request permission to cross the PAYERNE TMA? ^t30q42
+- A) 950 m AMSL (3100 ft).
+- B) 3050 m AMSL (FL 100).
+- C) 700 m AMSL (2300 ft).
+- D) At any altitude since the lower limit of the TMA is represented by the ground surface (GND).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the lower limit of the relevant Payerne TMA sector on this route is 700 m AMSL (2300 ft) per the Swiss ICAO chart. Below this altitude, flight proceeds without clearance in Class E or G airspace. A applies to a different TMA sector. B (FL 100) is the upper boundary, not the entry point. D is wrong because a TMA does not extend to the ground -- that would be a CTR.
+
+### Q43: In which airspace class are you flying at 1400 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa) over Birrfeld aerodrome (47 25'36"N/007 14'02"E), and what are the visibility and cloud distance minima in that airspace? ^t30q43
+- A) Airspace class E, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- B) Airspace class D, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- C) Airspace class G, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with permanent ground contact.
+- D) Airspace class C, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 1400 m AMSL over Birrfeld, the Swiss chart shows Class E airspace with VFR minima of 5 km visibility, 1500 m horizontal and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. B is wrong because Birrfeld is not within a Class D CTR at this altitude. C is wrong because Class G applies only in the lowest airspace layer. D is wrong because Class C starts at FL 130.
+
+### Q44: The route shown below towards SCHWYZ (dotted line) is planned for 20 June 2015 (summer time) between 1515-1545 LT at 6500 ft AMSL. Which of the following statements is correct? ^t30q44
+> **DABS -- Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland (extract)**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q17_dabs_map.png]]
+
+| Firing-Nr D-/R-Area NOTAM-Nr | Validity UTC | Lower Limit AMSL or FL | Upper Limit AMSL or FL | Location | Center Point | Covering Radius | Activity / Remarks |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| B0685/14 | 0000-2359 | 900m / 3000ft | FL 130 | SION TMA SECT 1 | 461610N 0072940E | 4.7 KM / 2.5 NM | TMA SECT 1 ACT HX ONLY |
+| W0912/15 | 1145-1300 | GND | FL 120 | MORGARTEN | 470507N 0083758E | 10.0 KM / 5.4 NM | R-AREA ACT. ENTRY PROHIBITED. |
+| W0957/15 | 1400-1700 | 2150m / 7000ft | FL 120 | HINWIL | 471721N 0084859E | 7.0 KM / 3.8 NM | TEMPO R-AREA ACTIVE. ENTRY PROHIBITED. |
+| W0960/15 | 0800-1700 | GND | 1200m / 4050ft | 1.7 KM SE CERNIER | 470352N 0065442E | 1.5 KM / 0.8 NM | D-AREA ACT |
+- A) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+- B) You can ignore the DABS as it only applies to commercial aviation.
+- C) You can pass through all relevant danger and restricted areas below 1000 ft AGL or above 12,000 ft AMSL.
+- D) The route can be flown without coordination between 1500 and 1600 LT.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because 1515-1545 LT CEST (UTC+2) converts to 1315-1345 UTC. Zone W0912/15 expired at 1300 UTC. Zone W0957/15 becomes active at 1400 UTC but its lower limit is 7000 ft, above the planned 6500 ft. The route is clear. A is wrong because the route is flyable. B is wrong because the DABS applies to all airspace users. C is wrong because the cited altitudes do not match the published restrictions.
+
+### Q45: According to the ICAO aeronautical chart at 1:500,000, at what altitude over Schwyz (approx. 47 01' N, 8 39' E) must you request permission to enter Class C airspace? ^t30q45
+- A) FL 90
+- B) 4500 ft
+- C) FL 130
+- D) FL 195
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the Swiss ICAO chart shows Class C airspace beginning at FL 130 over Schwyz. Below FL 130, the airspace is Class E. A and B are within Class E. D marks the upper boundary of Swiss controlled airspace, not the Class C entry point.
+
+### Q46: Until what time is La Cote aerodrome (LSGP) open in the evening? ^t30q46
+> **AD INFO 1 -- LA COTE / LSGP**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q19_lsgp_ad_info.png]]
+- A) Until half an hour before the start of civil twilight.
+- B) Until half an hour before sunset.
+- C) Until half an hour before the end of civil twilight.
+- D) Until the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the AD INFO shows afternoon hours ending at "ECT -30 min," meaning the aerodrome closes 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight. A references the start of civil twilight, which is incorrect. B references sunset, which occurs earlier than the end of civil twilight. D omits the 30-minute advance closure.
+
+### Q47: On which frequency do you receive information about winch launches at Gruyeres aerodrome (LSGT) at weekends? ^t30q47
+> **Visual Approach Chart -- GRUYERES / LSGT**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q20_lsgt_approach_chart.png]]
+- A) 113.9
+- B) 124.675
+- C) 119.175
+- D) 110.85
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because 124.675 MHz is the aerodrome frequency for LSGT, shown on the Visual Approach Chart. All local traffic information including intensive winch launches at weekends is broadcast on this frequency. A (113.9) is the VOR/DME SPR navigation frequency. C (119.175) is the Geneva Delta sector frequency. D (110.85) does not appear on the chart.
+
+### Q48: What distance do you cover in 90 minutes at a ground speed of 90 km/h? ^t30q48
+- A) 90 km
+- B) 135 km
+- C) 100 km
+- D) 120 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because distance = speed x time = 90 km/h x 1.5 h (90 min / 60) = 135 km. A results from treating 90 minutes as 1 hour. C and D do not match any correct calculation. Always convert minutes to decimal hours before multiplying.
+
+### Q49: At an altitude of 6000 m, the airspeed indicator shows 160 km/h (IAS). The true airspeed (TAS)... ^t30q49
+- A) is lower than the IAS.
+- B) is also 160 km/h.
+- C) can be higher or lower than the IAS depending on atmospheric pressure and temperature.
+- D) is higher than the IAS.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at 6000 m, air density is significantly reduced. The ASI measures dynamic pressure; to produce the same reading (160 km/h IAS) in thinner air, the aircraft must fly at a much higher true airspeed -- approximately 20-25% higher. A is wrong because TAS is always greater than IAS above sea level. B is wrong because equality holds only at sea level under standard conditions. C is wrong because at altitude, TAS is always higher, not variable in direction.
+
+### Q50: You are flying in wave lift at 6000 m altitude. Which is the maximum speed you may fly? ^t30q50
+- A) In the low-density air, at a higher speed than usual.
+- B) Below the red V_NE mark on the airspeed indicator, according to the speed-altitude table displayed on the instrument panel.
+- C) At the same speed as at sea level since V_NE is an absolute value.
+- D) Maximum within the green arc.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because VNE is fundamentally a TAS limit. At high altitude, the same IAS produces a much higher TAS, so the permissible IAS must be reduced according to the flight manual's speed-altitude table placarded in the cockpit. A is wrong because you must fly at a lower IAS. C is wrong because VNE IAS must be reduced at altitude. D is wrong because the green arc boundary may exceed the altitude-corrected VNE.
+
+### Q51: 1235 lbs (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs):... ^t30q51
+- A) approx. 620 kg.
+- B) approx. 2720 kg.
+- C) approx. 560 kg.
+- D) approx. 2470 kg.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because 1235 / 2.2 = approximately 561 kg, rounding to 560 kg. A (620 kg) is too high. B (2720 kg) and D (2470 kg) result from multiplying instead of dividing. To convert pounds to kilograms, divide by 2.2.
+
+### Q52: What has to be particularly observed when landing on an upsloping field with a tailwind? ^t30q52
+- A) Fly final a little faster than usual.
+- B) Flare higher than usual.
+- C) Fly at the normal approach speed (yellow triangle).
+- D) You must land with all airbrakes fully extended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the upslope deceleration compensates for the tailwind's tendency to extend the ground roll, making the normal approach speed (yellow triangle) appropriate. A is wrong because flying faster increases float distance. B is wrong because flare height is not universally higher. D is wrong because full airbrakes are not always required.
+
+### Q53: In which airspace class are you above Langenthal aerodrome (47 deg 10'58''N / 007 deg 44'29''E) at an altitude of 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^t30q53
+- A) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- B) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- C) Class D airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 2000 m AMSL above Langenthal, the Swiss chart shows Class E airspace with standard VFR minima: 5 km visibility, 1500 m horizontal and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. B applies only in the lowest airspace layer. C is wrong because there is no Class D CTR here. D is wrong because Class C starts at FL 130.
+
+### Q54: Which center of gravity position is the most dangerous for a glider? ^t30q54
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too low.
+- C) Too far aft.
+- D) Too high.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because an aft CG reduces longitudinal stability. Beyond the aft limit, the glider becomes unstable in pitch and can enter an uncontrollable divergent oscillation or pitch-up. A (too far forward) increases stability excessively but is generally survivable. B and D are not standard CG concerns for gliders.
+
+### Q55: How does the indicated VNE (never-exceed speed) change as altitude increases? ^t30q55
+- A) It rises.
+- B) It stays identical.
+- C) It stays the same; the airspeed indicator accounts for this automatically.
+- D) It diminishes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the ASI measures dynamic pressure, which inherently accounts for density changes. The VNE IAS reading remains the same because at altitude, lower density requires higher TAS to produce the same dynamic pressure and aerodynamic loads. A is wrong because VNE IAS does not rise. B is less precise than C. D is wrong for the general case, though some gliders do require VNE IAS reduction at very high altitudes for flutter reasons.
+
+### Q56: You have covered a distance of 150 km in 1 hour and 15 minutes. Your calculated ground speed is:... ^t30q56
+- A) 125 km/h.
+- B) 115 km/h.
+- C) 120 km/h.
+- D) 110 km/h.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because ground speed = 150 km / 1.25 hours = 120 km/h. Converting 1 hour 15 minutes: 15 min = 0.25 h, total = 1.25 h. A (125), B (115), and D (110) do not match this calculation. A common mistake is treating 1h15m as 1.15 hours instead of 1.25.
+
+### Q57: The following NOTAM was published on 18 August (summer time). Which of the following statements is correct? ^t30q57
+![[figures/bazl_301_q7.png]]
+- A) The extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be strictly avoided every day from 02 to 06 September 2013, between sunrise and sunset.
+- B) An airshow is taking place in the Payerne area from 02 to 06 September 2013. The TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 are active each day during this period between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC as holding areas and airshow demonstration sectors.
+- C) Due to an airshow from 02 to 06 September 2013, the extended CTR/TMA Payerne is active each day between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC. The TMA is used as a holding area, the restricted zone LS-R4 as a demonstration and holding area. The area must be strictly avoided.
+- D) Due to an airshow, a transit clearance for the extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be requested on frequency 135.475 (Payerne TWR) from 02 to 06 September 2013.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the NOTAM describes activation of the extended CTR/TMA Payerne and LS-R4 from 02 to 06 September, 0600-1500 UTC daily, designating them as holding and demonstration areas with mandatory avoidance. A is wrong because the times are 0600-1500 UTC, not sunrise to sunset. B omits the mandatory avoidance requirement. D is wrong because no transit clearance is offered -- complete avoidance is required.
+
+### Q58: Which is the best glide speed in calm air for a flying mass of 450 kg? See attached sheet. ^t30q58
+![[figures/bazl_301_q9.png]]
+- A) 95km/h
+- B) 75km/h
+- C) 55km/h
+- D) 135km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the best glide speed is found by drawing a tangent from the origin to the 450 kg polar curve. The tangent point falls at approximately 75 km/h. A (95 km/h) is too fast. C (55 km/h) is near or below stall speed. D (135 km/h) produces a very poor glide ratio.
+
+### Q59: A VFR flight will follow the route shown on the map below (dotted line) from APPENZELL towards MUOTATHAL. The route is planned for 19 March 2013 (winter time) between 1205 and 1255 LT. Answer using the DABS below. Which of these answers is correct? ^t30q59
+![[figures/bazl_301_q10.png]]
+- A) The DABS can be ignored as it solely applies to military aircraft.
+- B) You may pass through all relevant danger and restricted zones below 1000 ft AGL or above 10,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) The route can be flown without coordination between 1200 and 1300 LT.
+- D) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because for 19 March 2013 (CET = UTC+1), 1205-1255 LT converts to 1105-1155 UTC. During this window, the relevant zones are not active, so the flight can proceed without coordination. A is wrong because the DABS applies to all airspace users. B cites incorrect altitude exemptions. D is wrong because the route is flyable during the planned window.
+
+### Q60: Wing loading is increased by 40% by water ballast. By what percentage does the glider's minimum speed increase? ^t30q60
+- A) 18%.
+- B) 40%.
+- C) 100%.
+- D) 0%.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because stall speed scales with the square root of wing loading. With 40% increase: sqrt(1.40) = 1.183, meaning an 18.3% speed increase. B (40%) incorrectly assumes a linear relationship. C (100%) implies a speed doubling. D (0%) wrongly suggests mass has no effect. The square-root relationship is fundamental to the lift equation.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_61_90_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_61_90_out.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c4ed1af
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_61_90_out.md
@@ -0,0 +1,316 @@
+# Flight Performance and Planning
+
+---
+
+### Q61: Based on the polar below, which statement applies at a speed of 150 km/h? See attached sheet... ^t30q61
+![[figures/bazl_301_q12.png]]
+- A) the sink rate of the ASK21 is independent of its mass
+- B) the ASK21 has a worse glide ratio at lower flying mass
+- C) the ASK21 has a higher sink rate at higher flying mass
+- D) the ASK21 has a better glide ratio at lower flying mass
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 150 km/h, the two polar curves for different masses intersect, meaning both configurations have the same sink rate at this specific speed. This intersection is a characteristic feature of speed polars. B is wrong because glide ratio is virtually identical for both mass configurations at 150 km/h. C is wrong at this particular speed because the curves cross here, making the sink rates equal. D is also wrong because neither mass has a better glide ratio at the intersection speed.
+
+### Q62: At Amlikon aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading East? ^t30q62
+![[figures/bazl_301_q13.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the AIP Switzerland chart for Amlikon shows 780 m as the available landing distance for the eastward runway direction. A and C express values in feet, which are far too short (700 ft = 213 m, 780 ft = 238 m) and are the wrong unit for Swiss AIP runway distances. D (700 m) is close but does not match the published figure for the eastward heading. Always verify both the numerical value and the unit.
+
+### Q63: From what altitude must you request a transit clearance for the EMMEN TMA between Cham (approx. N47 deg 11' / E008 deg 28') and Hitzkirch (approx. N47 deg 14' / E008 deg 16')? ^t30q63
+![[figures/bazl_301_q14.png]]
+- A) 2400 ft AMSL.
+- B) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 2000ft GND.
+- D) 5000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the ICAO chart shows the EMMEN TMA floor at 3500 ft AMSL in the sector between Cham and Hitzkirch. Below this altitude, flight proceeds in uncontrolled airspace without clearance. A (2400 ft) and D (5000 ft) do not match any published boundary in this sector. C (2000 ft GND) uses an above-ground reference, which is not how Swiss TMA floors are defined -- they use AMSL altitudes.
+
+### Q64: The maximum permitted payload is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t30q64
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Increase takeoff speed by 10%.
+- C) Trim forward.
+- D) Reduce the payload.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the maximum payload is a certification limit that cannot be circumvented by trim changes or speed adjustments. The only correct response is to reduce the payload until it falls within limits. A and C are wrong because trimming changes pitch forces but does not affect mass or structural loads. B is wrong because increasing takeoff speed would impose even greater aerodynamic loads on an already overloaded airframe.
+
+### Q65: Which is the effect of wind on the glide angle over the ground if the aircraft's true airspeed remains constant? ^t30q65
+- A) With a tailwind, the glide angle increases.
+- B) With a headwind, the glide angle decreases.
+- C) Wind has no effect on the glide angle.
+- D) With a headwind, the glide angle rises.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because a headwind reduces groundspeed while the sink rate (determined by TAS through the airmass) remains unchanged, so the glider covers less horizontal distance per unit of height lost and the descent angle over the ground steepens. A is wrong because a tailwind flattens the glide angle rather than steepening it. B directly contradicts the physics. C is wrong because while wind does not change the aerodynamic polar, it clearly changes the ground-referenced trajectory.
+
+### Q66: How does indicated airspeed (IAS) compare to true airspeed (TAS) as altitude increases? ^t30q66
+- A) It rises.
+- B) It decreases.
+- C) It cannot be measured.
+- D) It stays identical.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because IAS is proportional to the square root of dynamic pressure, which depends on air density. As altitude increases and density decreases, the same TAS produces less dynamic pressure, so IAS reads lower than TAS. The difference grows with altitude. A is wrong because IAS decreases relative to TAS. D is true only at sea level under standard conditions. C is wrong because IAS is always measurable via the pitot-static system.
+
+### Q67: What has to be particularly observed when landing in heavy rain? ^t30q67
+- A) Approach speed must be increased.
+- B) Wing loading must be increased.
+- C) The approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) Approach speed must be lower than usual.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because rain on the wing surface increases roughness, disrupts the boundary layer, and can raise the effective stall speed, necessitating a higher approach speed as a safety margin. B is wrong because the pilot cannot change wing loading on approach. C is wrong because a shallower approach increases exposure to poor conditions. D is the opposite of what is needed and would bring the aircraft dangerously close to the elevated stall speed.
+
+### Q68: What must a glider pilot take into account at Bex aerodrome? ^t30q68
+![[figures/bazl_301_q19.png]]
+- A) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is clockwise.
+- B) The traffic pattern for runway 15 is clockwise.
+- C) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is counter-clockwise.
+- D) Depending on wind, the traffic pattern for runway 33 may be either clockwise or counter-clockwise.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because Bex aerodrome is in a narrow alpine valley with terrain constraints, so the traffic pattern for runway 33 cannot always follow a single fixed direction. The Visual Approach Chart specifies that circuit direction depends on the prevailing wind. A and C each assert a single fixed direction for runway 33, contradicting the published information. B refers to runway 15 rather than runway 33.
+
+### Q69: What is the maximum flying altitude above Biel Kappelen aerodrome (SE of Biel) if you wish to avoid requesting a transit clearance for TMA BERN 1? ^t30q69
+![[figures/bazl_301_q20.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the ICAO chart shows TMA BERN 1 with a lower boundary of 3500 ft AMSL over Biel Kappelen. Staying below this keeps you in uncontrolled airspace. A (3500 ft AGL) uses an above-ground reference that could exceed the actual TMA floor over elevated terrain. B (FL 100) is the upper limit of lower Swiss airspace, not the TMA floor. C (FL 35) coincides with D only at standard pressure, but TMA floors are published in AMSL, not flight levels.
+
+### Q70: Which of these statements is correct? ^t30q70
+- A) New C.G: 76.7, within approved limits.
+- B) New C.G: 78.5, within approved limits.
+- C) New C.G: 82.0, outside approved limits.
+- D) New C.G: 75.5, outside approved limits.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because performing the mass-and-balance calculation with the provided data yields a new CG of 76.7, which falls within the certified forward and aft CG limits. The procedure is: sum all individual moments (mass x arm), divide by total mass, then check against the published CG envelope. B (78.5), C (82.0), and D (75.5) do not result from the correct arithmetic using the given data.
+
+### Q71: What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on landing? ^t30q71
+- A) Landing distance will be shorter.
+- B) Landing distance will be longer.
+- C) The glider risks running off the runway (groundloop).
+- D) No effect.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because waterlogged grass dramatically increases rolling resistance as the wheel sinks into the soft, saturated surface, decelerating the glider much more quickly than dry grass and shortening the ground roll. B describes what might happen on a flooded hard runway where aquaplaning reduces braking, not on soft grass. C is a concern on firm crosswind surfaces, not the primary effect here. D is clearly wrong since surface condition directly affects deceleration.
+
+### Q72: At Schanis aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading NNW? ^t30q72
+![[figures/bazl_302_q2.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the AIP Switzerland chart for Schanis shows 470 m as the available landing distance for the NNW direction. A (520 m) corresponds to the opposite (SSE) direction. C and D are in feet (520 ft = 158 m, 470 ft = 143 m), far too short for any normal landing and clearly the wrong unit.
+
+### Q73: The current mass of an aircraft is 6400 lbs. Current CG: 80. CG limits: forward CG: 75.2, aft CG: 80.5. What mass can be moved from its current position to arm 150 without exceeding the aft CG limit? ^t30q73
+- A) 27.82 lbs.
+- B) 56.63 lbs.
+- C) 39.45 lbs.
+- D) 45.71 lbs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D. The mass x currently sits at the aircraft CG (arm 80) and moves to arm 150. The equation is: (6400 x 80 + x x (150 - 80)) / 6400 = 80.5. Solving: 512,000 + 70x = 515,200, so x = 3200 / 70 = 45.71 lbs. A (27.82), B (56.63), and C (39.45) result from algebraic errors in setting up or solving the moment equation.
+
+### Q74: Correct loading of an aircraft depends on:... ^t30q74
+- A) Only compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- B) Only correct payload distribution.
+- C) Correct payload distribution and compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- D) The maximum allowable mass of baggage in the aft section of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because safe loading requires simultaneously satisfying two conditions: total mass within the certified maximum, and payload distribution keeping the CG within forward and aft limits. A is wrong because correct mass alone says nothing about CG position. B is wrong because correct distribution is meaningless if total mass exceeds structural limits. D addresses only a subset of the problem.
+
+### Q75: What information can be read from this speed polar? (See attached sheet.)... ^t30q75
+![[figures/bazl_302_q5.png]]
+- A) in the speed range up to 100 km/h, an increase in flying mass reduces the sink rate.
+- B) minimum speed is independent of flying mass.
+- C) both glide ratio and minimum speed are independent of flying mass.
+- D) only the maximum glide ratio is independent of flying mass, apart from a minor Reynolds number effect.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when mass increases, the polar shifts right and down, but the tangent from the origin touches the new curve at the same angle, preserving the maximum L/D ratio (with only negligible Reynolds number effects). A is wrong because increasing mass raises the sink rate at all speeds. B is wrong because minimum speed increases with mass (proportional to the square root of wing loading). C is half-correct on glide ratio but wrong on minimum speed.
+
+### Q76: At what indicated speed do you approach an aerodrome located at an altitude of 1800 m AMSL? ^t30q76
+- A) At the same speed as at sea level.
+- B) At a lower speed than at sea level.
+- C) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- D) At a higher speed than at sea level.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because IAS is a dynamic-pressure measurement that already accounts for density variations. The same IAS at 1800 m produces the same aerodynamic conditions as at sea level. B would reduce safety margins. D is unnecessary and would increase groundspeed. C is for thermal soaring, not circuit approach.
+
+### Q77: At what speed must you fly to achieve the best glide ratio for a flying mass of 450 kg? (See attached sheet.)... ^t30q77
+![[figures/bazl_302_q7.png]]
+- A) 130km/h
+- B) 90km/h
+- C) 70km/h
+- D) 110km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the tangent from the origin to the 450 kg polar curve touches at approximately 90 km/h, which gives the maximum glide ratio. A (130 km/h) is in the high-drag region with poor glide ratio. C (70 km/h) is near the minimum sink speed, maximising endurance not distance. D (110 km/h) is between the two and does not correspond to the graphical tangent point.
+
+### Q78: The maximum aft CG limit is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t30q78
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) As long as the maximum takeoff mass is not exceeded, no particular action is required.
+- C) Redistribute the useful load differently.
+- D) Trim forward.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the only fix for an aft CG exceedance is to physically move mass forward by redistributing the payload. A (trim aft) would worsen the situation. D (trim forward) adjusts elevator deflection but does not move the actual CG. B is wrong because mass and CG limits are independent -- being within mass limits does not exempt the CG requirement.
+
+### Q79: Which factors increase the aerotow takeoff run distance? ^t30q79
+- A) Low temperature, headwind.
+- B) Grass runway, strong headwind.
+- C) High atmospheric pressure.
+- D) High temperature, tailwind.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because high temperature reduces air density (decreasing engine power and lift), while a tailwind requires higher groundspeed to reach lift-off TAS, both lengthening the takeoff roll. A is wrong because low temperature increases density and headwind shortens the run. B is wrong because strong headwind dominates, shortening takeoff despite grass surface. C is wrong because high pressure increases density, improving performance.
+
+### Q80: The following NOTAM was published for 18 November. Which of these statements is correct? ^t30q80
+![[figures/bazl_302_q10.png]]
+- A) On 18 November, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: Class E airspace, upper limit: max. FL150.
+- B) On 18 November from 1800 LT to 2100 LT, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas.
+- C) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise with helicopters will take place.
+- D) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: GND, upper limit: max. 15,000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the NOTAM specifies times in UTC, identifies the areas as ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO, with vertical limits from GND to 15,000 ft AMSL. A incorrectly states FL150 and "Class E" as the lower limit. B uses local time instead of UTC. C introduces "helicopters" as the exclusive aircraft type, which is not stated in the NOTAM.
+
+### Q81: What is the maximum permitted flying altitude within the CTR of Bern-Belp airport? ^t30q81
+![[figures/bazl_302_q11.png]]
+- A) 5500 ft GND.
+- B) 4500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 5000 ft AMSL
+- D) 3000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the Bern-Belp CTR has a published upper ceiling of 3000 ft AMSL as shown on the ICAO chart. A (5500 ft GND), B (4500 ft AMSL), and C (5000 ft AMSL) are all above the actual CTR ceiling and would place you in the overlying TMA.
+
+### Q82: In which airspace class are you above BEX aerodrome at an altitude of 1700 m AMSL, and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^t30q82
+![[figures/bazl_302_q12.png]]
+- A) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- B) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 8 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- C) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because above Bex at 1700 m AMSL, the airspace is Class E with standard VFR minima: 5 km visibility, 1500 m horizontal and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. A is wrong because Class G applies only below the Class E floor. B and C are wrong because Class C begins at FL 130 in this area, well above 1700 m AMSL.
+
+### Q83: Which is the sink rate at 160 km/h for this glider at a flying mass of 580 kg? (See attached sheet.) ^t30q83
+![[figures/bazl_302_q13.png]]
+- A) 1,6m/s
+- B) 0,8m/s
+- C) 2,0m/s
+- D) 1,2m/s
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because reading the 580 kg curve at 160 km/h on the speed polar, the sink rate is approximately 2.0 m/s. At 160 km/h the glider is well beyond best-glide speed, in the region of rapidly increasing drag. B (0.8 m/s) corresponds to the minimum sink rate at much lower speed. A (1.6 m/s) and D (1.2 m/s) are intermediate values that do not match the polar reading.
+
+### Q84: 550 kg (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs):... ^t30q84
+- A) approx. 12,100 lbs.
+- B) approx. 1210 lbs.
+- C) approx. 2500 lbs.
+- D) approx. 250 lbs.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because 550 kg x 2.2 = 1210 lbs. A (12,100 lbs) results from a decimal error (multiplying by 22 instead of 2.2). C (2500 lbs) implies a conversion factor of about 4.5. D (250 lbs) implies dividing instead of multiplying. The factor 2.2 lbs per kg is the standard aviation approximation.
+
+### Q85: At what speed must a glider fly in calm air to cover the maximum possible distance? ^t30q85
+- A) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- B) At the maximum allowed speed.
+- C) At minimum flying speed.
+- D) At the best glide ratio speed.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because maximum distance in calm air is achieved at the speed giving the best lift-to-drag ratio (best glide ratio), found graphically where a tangent from the origin touches the speed polar. A (minimum sink) maximises endurance, not distance. B (maximum speed) produces very poor glide ratio in the high-drag region. C (minimum speed, near stall) has high induced drag and poor glide ratio.
+
+### Q86: The mass of a glider is increased. Which parameter will NOT be affected by this increase? ^t30q86
+- A) Maximum glide ratio (apart from a minor Reynolds number effect).
+- B) Wing loading.
+- C) Sink rate.
+- D) Indicated airspeed (IAS).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because maximum glide ratio is an aerodynamic property of the airfoil and planform that is preserved when mass changes -- the polar shifts right and down but the tangent angle from the origin remains the same. B is wrong because wing loading increases directly with mass. C is wrong because sink rate increases at any given speed. D is wrong because stall speed and all characteristic IAS values increase with the square root of wing loading.
+
+### Q87: How long does it take to cover a distance of 150 km at an average ground speed of 100 km/h? ^t30q87
+- A) 1 hour 50 minutes.
+- B) 1 hour 40 minutes.
+- C) 2 hours.
+- D) 1 hour 30 minutes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because time = 150 km / 100 km/h = 1.5 hours = 1 hour 30 minutes. A (1h50m) would mean 183 km at 100 km/h. B (1h40m) gives 167 km. C (2h) implies only 75 km/h average. A common error is treating 1.5 hours as 1 hour 50 minutes instead of 1 hour 30 minutes.
+
+### Q88: When preparing an alpine VFR flight along the route shown on the map below (dotted line) between MUNSTER and AMSTEG, you consult the DABS. You intend to fly this route on a summer weekday between 1445-1515 LT. According to the DABS, zones R-8 and R-8A are active during this period. Answer using the DABS map below and the ICAO aeronautical chart 1:500,000 Switzerland. Which of these answers is correct? ^t30q88
+![[figures/bazl_302_q18.png]]
+- A) The route can be flown without restriction after contacting 128.375 MHz.
+- B) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be transited below 28,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) It is not possible to fly this route while the restricted zones are active.
+- D) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be overflown at 9200 ft AMSL or above.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when LS-R8 and LS-R8A are active, they prohibit all entry without exception, and the zones cover the planned route at relevant altitudes. A is wrong because radio contact does not grant automatic clearance into active restricted zones. B is wrong because the zones extend from low altitude, covering typical VFR flight levels. D is wrong because no published overfly exemption exists at 9200 ft.
+
+### Q89: You wish to obtain clearance to transit the ZURICH TMA. What must you do? ^t30q89
+- A) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- B) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- C) First radio contact on frequency 118.975, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- D) First radio contact on frequency 118.1, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because Swiss VFR procedures require contacting Zurich Information on 124.7 MHz at least 10 minutes before the TMA boundary. B uses the correct frequency but only 5 minutes lead time, which is insufficient. C uses the correct lead time but the wrong frequency (118.975 is Zurich Approach). D combines an incorrect frequency with insufficient lead time.
+
+### Q90: The minimum speed of your glider is 60 kts in straight flight. By what percentage would it increase in a steep turn with a bank angle of 60 deg (load factor n = 2.0)? ^t30q90
+- A) approx. 40%.
+- B) 0%.
+- C) approx. 5%.
+- D) approx. 20%.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because stall speed in a turn increases by the square root of the load factor: Vs_turn = 60 x sqrt(2.0) = 60 x 1.414 = 84.9 kts. The increase is (84.9 - 60) / 60 x 100% = 41%, approximately 40%. B (0%) wrongly implies no effect from load factor. C (5%) and D (20%) underestimate the sqrt(2) factor. Only very shallow banks produce such small increases.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_91_100_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_91_100_out.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6536dac
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_30_91_100_out.md
@@ -0,0 +1,103 @@
+# Flight Performance and Planning
+
+---
+
+### Q91: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1... ^t30q91
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- D) 1.500 ft GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because restricted airspace areas (LO R) on Austrian and German aeronautical charts specify vertical limits using standard altitude references, and the annex PFP-056 shows 1,500 ft MSL as the upper limit. A (1,500 m MSL) confuses metres with feet -- 1,500 m is approximately 4,920 ft, over three times higher. B (FL150) represents flight level 150 at roughly 15,000 ft, entirely disproportionate for a low-level restricted area. D (1,500 ft GND) means above ground level, which would vary with terrain and is not the reference used for this published limit.
+
+### Q92: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2... ^t30q92
+- A) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- B) 4.500 ft MSL
+- C) 1.500 ft AGL
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the annex PFP-030 shows restricted area LO R 4 with an upper limit of 4,500 ft MSL, a fixed altitude above mean sea level used as the standard reference for published airspace boundaries. A (4,500 ft AGL) uses an above-ground reference, which would produce different absolute altitudes over varying terrain. C (1,500 ft AGL) is both the wrong altitude value and the wrong datum. D (1,500 ft MSL) is too low by a factor of three and does not match the annex data.
+
+### Q93: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3... ^t30q93
+- A) Height 9500 ft
+- B) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- C) Flight Level 95
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the NOTAM specifies the prohibition ceiling as 9,500 ft MSL (altitude above mean sea level). A uses "Height," which by ICAO convention means above ground level (AGL), a different reference. C (FL 95) is a pressure altitude referenced to 1013.25 hPa, which differs from an MSL altitude when the actual pressure deviates from standard. D (9,500 m MSL) confuses metres with feet -- 9,500 m is approximately 31,200 ft, far exceeding the intended restriction.
+
+### Q94: (For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4... ^t30q94
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because ICAO Annex 4 aeronautical chart symbology uses distinct symbols for single vs. group obstacles and lighted vs. unlighted types. Based on the PFP-061 annex, symbol C represents a group of unlighted obstacles. A (symbol D) typically represents a group of lighted obstacles. C (symbol B) represents a single unlighted obstacle. D (symbol A) represents a single lighted obstacle. The symbols use specific ICAO-standard depictions with dots or asterisks to indicate lighting status.
+
+### Q95: (For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5... ^t30q95
+- A) D
+- B) A
+- C) C
+- D) B
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because ICAO Annex 4 defines specific symbols for different aerodrome types. Based on the PFP-062 annex, symbol A corresponds to a civil airport (non-international) with a paved runway. The other symbols (C, B, D) represent international airports, military aerodromes, or airports with unpaved runways. Correctly identifying aerodrome symbols on charts is essential for flight planning and navigation.
+
+### Q96: (For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6... ^t30q96
+- A) A
+- B) B
+- C) D
+- D) C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because on ICAO aeronautical charts, a general spot elevation (a surveyed terrain height point not associated with an obstacle) uses a specific dot-and-number symbol. Based on the PFP-063 annex, symbol C corresponds to this marking. A, B, and D represent other elevation-related symbols such as maximum elevation figures, obstruction elevations, or critical spot heights, each with distinct ICAO-standard depictions.
+
+### Q97: The term center of gravity is defined as... ^t30q97
+- A) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- B) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the centre of gravity (CG) is the single point through which the total gravitational force on the aircraft acts -- it is the balance point of the entire mass distribution. Note that A and C present identical text; the correct definition is the point where total weight is considered to act. B is wrong because the neutral point is an aerodynamic stability reference, not the same as the CG. D is wrong because the CG is not the "heaviest point" but rather the point where the sum of all mass moments balances.
+
+### Q98: The term moment with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as... ^t30q98
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in mass and balance calculations, a moment is defined as Moment = Mass x Arm (the product of a mass and its distance from the datum). This fundamental relationship allows the CG to be calculated by summing all moments and dividing by total mass. A (sum), C (quotient), and D (difference) are incorrect mathematical operations that do not yield a moment in the physical sense.
+
+### Q99: The term balance arm in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the... ^t30q99
+- A) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- B) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm (moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the datum reference point to the centre of gravity of a particular mass item. A describes the datum itself, not the arm. B describes the distance from the aircraft CG, not from the datum. D defines the centre of gravity of an item, not the arm. The distinction between datum, arm, and CG is fundamental to all weight-and-balance calculations.
+
+### Q100: Which is the purpose of interception lines in visual navigation? ^t30q100
+- A) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- B) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+- C) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- D) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because interception lines (also called catching lines or line features) are prominent linear ground features -- such as motorways, rivers, railways, or coastlines -- that a pilot deliberately navigates toward when orientation is lost. By flying perpendicular to a known interception line, the pilot can re-establish position. A is wrong because they are not used to mark airports. B is wrong because they do not indicate range limitations. C is wrong because flying below VFR minima is prohibited regardless of navigation aids.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_40_1_30_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_40_1_30_out.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..981f178
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_40_1_30_out.md
@@ -0,0 +1,303 @@
+# Human Performance
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The majority of aviation accidents are caused by... ^t40q1
+- A) Meteorological influences.
+- B) Human failure.
+- C) Technical failure.
+- D) Geographical influences.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because studies consistently show that approximately 70-80% of aviation accidents involve human error as a primary or contributing factor, including errors in judgment, decision-making, and situational awareness. A (meteorological influences) is a contributing factor but accounts for a much smaller percentage. C (technical failure) has decreased significantly as aircraft reliability has improved. D (geographical influences) may contribute to specific accidents but is not the leading cause overall.
+
+### Q2: The "swiss cheese model" can be used to explain the... ^t40q2
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- D) Error chain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model illustrates how accidents occur when multiple safety barriers (slices of cheese) each have weaknesses (holes) that align simultaneously, allowing a hazard to pass through all layers. This demonstrates the error chain concept -- accidents result from a sequence of failures, not a single event. A, B, and C describe unrelated aviation concepts that the Swiss Cheese Model does not address.
+
+### Q3: What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft? ^t40q3
+- A) 18.9 %
+- B) 21 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 12 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the percentage composition of atmospheric gases remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen regardless of altitude. What changes with altitude is the partial pressure of oxygen -- as total atmospheric pressure decreases, fewer oxygen molecules are available per breath, causing hypoxia risk. C (78%) is the percentage of nitrogen. A (18.9%) and D (12%) do not correspond to any standard atmospheric measurement at this altitude.
+
+### Q4: Which is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere? ^t40q4
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 0.1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 1 %
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because nitrogen comprises approximately 78% of the atmosphere and is physiologically inert under normal conditions. A (21%) is the percentage of oxygen. D (1%) represents the approximate proportion of trace gases (primarily argon). B (0.1%) is far too low for any major atmospheric component. Although nitrogen is inert during normal breathing, it becomes relevant in aviation medicine when dissolved nitrogen forms bubbles during rapid decompression after scuba diving.
+
+### Q5: At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)? ^t40q5
+- A) 5000 ft
+- B) 10000 ft
+- C) 22000 ft
+- D) 18000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at approximately 18,000 ft (5,500 m), atmospheric pressure is roughly 500 hPa -- half of the standard sea-level value of 1013.25 hPa. This means the partial pressure of oxygen is also halved, making supplemental oxygen mandatory for unpressurised flight. A (5,000 ft) is too low -- pressure there is about 843 hPa. B (10,000 ft) has about 697 hPa. C (22,000 ft) has pressure well below half.
+
+### Q6: Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. Which is the approximate percentage of other gases? ^t40q6
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0.1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the remaining approximately 1% of the atmosphere consists of trace gases, primarily argon (about 0.93%), with small amounts of carbon dioxide, neon, helium, and methane. A (21%) is the oxygen percentage. C (78%) is the nitrogen percentage. D (0.1%) is too low for the total of all trace gases combined.
+
+### Q7: Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by... ^t40q7
+- A) Little sleep.
+- B) Unhealthy food.
+- C) Smoking.
+- D) Alcohol.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO), which binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times greater affinity than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. Even moderate smoking significantly elevates blood CO levels, effectively reducing the altitude at which hypoxia symptoms begin. A (sleep deprivation), B (unhealthy food), and D (alcohol) cause other impairments but do not produce carbon monoxide.
+
+### Q8: What does the term "Red-out" mean? ^t40q8
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Rash during decompression sickness
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (such as during a pushover or inverted flight), which force blood toward the head and into the retinal vessels, causing red-tinged vision. It is the opposite of grey-out and blackout, which result from positive g-forces draining blood away from the head. B describes a decompression sickness symptom. C describes a blood loss condition. D describes an optical phenomenon unrelated to g-forces.
+
+### Q9: Which of these is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton? ^t40q9
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Spasm
+- C) Disturbance of consciousness
+- D) Tingling
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because cyanosis (blue skin discolouration from low blood oxygen) is a symptom of hypoxia, not hyperventilation. Hyperventilation -- breathing too rapidly -- causes excessive CO2 loss, leading to respiratory alkalosis. Its symptoms include B (muscle spasms or tetany from calcium binding changes), C (disturbance of consciousness from cerebral vasoconstriction), and D (tingling in the extremities and face from altered nerve sensitivity). Cyanosis is the exception here.
+
+### Q10: Which of these symptoms may indicate hypoxia? ^t40q10
+- A) Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails
+- B) Blue marks all over the body
+- C) Muscle cramps in the upper body area
+- D) Joint pain in knees and feet
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because cyanosis -- blue discolouration of lips, fingertips, and nail beds -- is a classic sign of hypoxia caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin in peripheral blood. B (blue marks all over the body) describes bruising, not cyanosis. C (muscle cramps) is associated with hyperventilation or electrolyte imbalance. D (joint pain) is characteristic of decompression sickness ("the bends"), not hypoxia.
+
+### Q11: Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia? ^t40q11
+- A) The visual perception (vision)
+- B) The tactile perception (sense of touch)
+- C) The oltfactory perception (smell)
+- D) The auditory perception (hearing)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the retina has the highest oxygen demand of any body tissue, making vision the most sensitive sense to hypoxia. Night vision degrades noticeably even at 5,000-8,000 ft due to rod cell sensitivity to reduced oxygen. As altitude increases, peripheral vision and colour discrimination also deteriorate. B (touch), C (smell), and D (hearing) are less oxygen-dependent and degrade at higher altitudes.
+
+### Q12: From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure? ^t40q12
+- A) 10000 feet
+- B) 7000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 2000 feet
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the body begins showing measurable physiological responses to reduced partial pressure of oxygen at around 7,000 ft, including subtle performance degradation and increased breathing rate. Below this altitude, healthy individuals maintain adequate oxygenation without significant stress. A (10,000 ft) and C (12,000 ft) are altitudes where effects are more pronounced but not where they first begin. D (2,000 ft) is too low for any significant physiological response.
+
+### Q13: Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure? ^t40q13
+- A) 7000 feet
+- B) 5000 feet
+- C) 22000 feet
+- D) 12000 feet
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because above approximately 12,000 ft, the body's compensatory mechanisms (increased breathing rate and heart rate) are no longer sufficient to maintain adequate blood oxygen levels. Performance degradation becomes clearly measurable. A (7,000 ft) is where effects first begin, but compensation is still effective. B (5,000 ft) is below the threshold for significant effects. C (22,000 ft) is well above where compensation fails -- consciousness is rapidly lost at that altitude without supplemental oxygen.
+
+### Q14: What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)? ^t40q14
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Immune defense
+- D) Oxygen transport
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because red blood cells contain haemoglobin, the iron-containing protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and transports it to tissues throughout the body. Any condition reducing red blood cell count or function (anaemia, blood donation, CO poisoning) directly impairs oxygen-carrying capacity and increases hypoxia risk at altitude. A (coagulation) is the function of platelets. B (blood sugar) is regulated by the pancreas. C (immune defence) is the role of white blood cells.
+
+### Q15: Which of these accounts for the blood coagulation? ^t40q15
+- A) Capillaries of the arteries
+- B) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- C) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+- D) Blood plates (thrombocytes)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because blood platelets (thrombocytes) are the cell fragments responsible for initiating the clotting cascade. They aggregate at injury sites, form a platelet plug, and release chemical signals that activate fibrin formation to create a stable clot. A (capillaries) are blood vessels, not clotting agents. B (red blood cells) transport oxygen. C (white blood cells) fight infections.
+
+### Q16: Which is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)? ^t40q16
+- A) Immune defense
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Blood coagulation
+- D) Oxygen transport
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because white blood cells (leucocytes) are the cellular components of the immune system, defending the body against infections, foreign substances, and abnormal cells. They include lymphocytes, neutrophils, and monocytes with specialised roles. B (blood sugar) is regulated hormonally. C (coagulation) is the function of platelets. D (oxygen transport) is performed by red blood cells. A pilot with an active infection should not fly as elevated leucocyte activity indicates the body is under stress.
+
+### Q17: Which is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)? ^t40q17
+- A) Oxygen transport
+- B) Immune defense
+- C) Blood coagulation
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because thrombocytes (platelets) are the primary agents of haemostasis, aggregating at injury sites and activating the coagulation cascade to stop bleeding. A (oxygen transport) is the function of erythrocytes. B (immune defence) belongs to leucocytes. D (blood sugar regulation) is a hormonal function. Pilots on anticoagulant medication must have their medical fitness assessed, as impaired clotting may affect their ability to fly safely.
+
+### Q18: Which of these is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia? ^t40q18
+- A) Blood donation
+- B) Diving
+- C) Menstruation
+- D) Smoking
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because scuba diving is a risk factor for decompression sickness (nitrogen bubble formation), not for hypoxia itself. A (blood donation) reduces red blood cell count, directly lowering oxygen-carrying capacity. C (menstruation) can cause or worsen anaemia over time. D (smoking) binds carbon monoxide to haemoglobin, reducing oxygen transport. All of A, C, and D increase susceptibility to hypoxia at altitude, while B primarily creates a decompression sickness risk.
+
+### Q19: What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable? ^t40q19
+- A) Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank
+- B) Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed
+- C) Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets
+- D) Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a passenger feeling unwell is most likely experiencing motion sickness or temperature discomfort. Adjusting the cabin temperature to a comfortable level and minimising bank angle (reducing vestibular stimulation) addresses the most common causes without introducing new risks. B is wrong because avoiding conversation isolates the passenger and higher airspeed increases turbulence effect. C addresses only heating without considering the bank angle issue. D is excessive for typical in-flight discomfort and low load factors are actually desirable.
+
+### Q20: What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor? ^t40q20
+- A) Reflex
+- B) Reduction
+- C) Coherence
+- D) Virulence
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a reflex is an involuntary, stereotyped neural response to a specific sensory stimulus, mediated through a reflex arc without conscious brain involvement. In aviation, understanding reflexes is important because trained responses can become automatic (procedural memory), while unexpected reflexes such as startle responses can interfere with aircraft handling. B (reduction) is a general term with no specific physiological meaning here. C (coherence) means logical consistency. D (virulence) refers to the severity of a pathogen.
+
+### Q21: Which is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency? ^t40q21
+- A) Critical nervous system
+- B) Compliant nervous system
+- C) Autonomic nervous system
+- D) Automatical nervous system
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulates involuntary functions including heart rate, breathing rate, digestion, and glandular secretion. It has two branches: the sympathetic ("fight or flight") and parasympathetic ("rest and digest") systems. In high-stress flight situations, sympathetic activation increases heart rate and alertness but can impair fine motor control. A, B, and D are not recognised anatomical terms.
+
+### Q22: Which is the parallax error? ^t40q22
+- A) Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision
+- B) A decoding error in communication between pilots
+- C) Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night
+- D) Misperception of speed during taxiing
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because parallax error occurs when an instrument is read from an angle rather than directly face-on, causing the observer's line of sight to pass through the pointer at an offset from the scale, giving a false reading. This is particularly relevant for analogue instruments with a gap between needle and scale face. B describes a communication error. C describes presbyopia. D describes a ground handling perception issue. Pilots should always read instruments from directly in front.
+
+### Q23: Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots? ^t40q23
+- A) No UV filter
+- B) Curved sidepiece
+- C) Unbreakable
+- D) Non-polarised
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because pilots must use non-polarised sunglasses since polarised lenses can make LCD displays, glass cockpit instruments, and certain reflective surfaces invisible or severely distorted. This creates a direct safety hazard in the cockpit. A (no UV filter) would be harmful to eye health. B (curved sidepiece) is a comfort feature. C (unbreakable) is desirable but not the aviation-specific safety-critical characteristic.
+
+### Q24: The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called... ^t40q24
+- A) Inner ear.
+- B) Eardrum.
+- C) Eustachian tube.
+- D) Cochlea.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the Eustachian tube connects the middle ear to the nasopharynx, allowing pressure equalisation during altitude changes. It opens when swallowing or yawning. When blocked by congestion from a cold, pressure equalisation fails, causing severe ear pain (barotitis media) or even eardrum rupture during descent. A (inner ear) contains the hearing and balance organs. B (eardrum) is the tympanic membrane separating outer and middle ear. D (cochlea) is the spiral hearing organ in the inner ear.
+
+### Q25: In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment? ^t40q25
+- A) During a light and slow climb
+- B) The eustachien tube is blocked
+- C) All windows are completely closed
+- D) Breathing takes place using the mouth solely
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a blocked Eustachian tube (typically from a cold or sinus infection) physically prevents air from passing between the middle ear and the nasopharynx, making pressure equalisation impossible regardless of the manoeuvre. A (light climb) allows passive equalisation because middle ear pressure is slightly higher and vents outward easily. C (closed windows) is irrelevant because equalisation occurs internally. D (mouth breathing) does not prevent the Eustachian tube from functioning.
+
+### Q26: Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of... ^t40q26
+- A) Starting a descent.
+- B) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- C) Starting a climb.
+- D) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because during a prolonged coordinated turn, the semicircular canal fluid adapts to the rotation and stops signalling the turn. When the pilot levels the wings, the canal detects this change as a rotation in the opposite direction, creating a false sensation of turning the other way. This is the "leans" illusion and can lead the pilot to re-enter the original bank. A and C describe pitch illusions not associated with this vestibular mechanism. D is the opposite of what occurs.
+
+### Q27: Which of these options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)? ^t40q27
+- A) Turbulence in level flight
+- B) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- C) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+- D) Head movements during turns
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because constant, non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no vestibular stimulation and no sensory conflict between the visual and balance systems, so it does not provoke motion sickness. A (turbulence) creates conflicting acceleration signals. C (alcohol) alters endolymph density in the semicircular canals, increasing sensitivity to motion. D (head movements during turns) stimulates multiple semicircular canals simultaneously, creating the disorienting Coriolis effect.
+
+### Q28: Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach? ^t40q28
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an upsloping runway appears shorter and steeper than a flat runway, giving the visual impression of being higher than the actual glide path. The pilot instinctively descends to correct for this perceived excess height, creating a dangerous undershoot risk. A and C describe speed illusions rather than height illusions. B describes the opposite perception. This illusion is a well-documented cause of controlled flight into terrain on visual approaches.
+
+### Q29: What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope? ^t40q29
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) An overshoot
+- C) A landing beside the centerline
+- D) A hard landing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because this question asks about the impression (what the pilot perceives), not the actual outcome. An upsloping runway creates the visual illusion of being too high, giving the impression of an overshoot. In response, the pilot may descend below the correct glide path (the actual outcome being an undershoot), but the perceived impression that drives the incorrect correction is one of overshooting. A describes the actual outcome, not the impression. C and D are not associated with slope illusions.
+
+### Q30: The occurence of a vertigo is most probable when moving the head... ^t40q30
+- A) During a climb.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a descent.
+- D) During a turn.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because vertigo (specifically the Coriolis illusion) is most likely when the head is moved in a different plane during an ongoing turn. The semicircular canals already stimulated by the turn are simultaneously affected by the head movement, stimulating a second set of canals and creating an overwhelming, disorienting sensation of tumbling. A (climb), B (straight flight), and C (descent) involve less vestibular stimulation and therefore lower risk of Coriolis-type vertigo when the head is moved.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_40_31_60_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_40_31_60_out.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..08fd569
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_40_31_60_out.md
@@ -0,0 +1,304 @@
+# Human Performance
+
+---
+
+### Q31: A Grey-out is the result of... ^t40q31
+- A) Hypoxia.
+- B) Positive g-forces.
+- C) Hyperventilation.
+- D) Tiredness.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because grey-out is caused by positive g-forces pulling blood away from the head toward the lower body. As retinal blood pressure drops, vision progressively fades -- first losing colour (grey-out), then vision entirely (blackout), and finally consciousness (G-LOC). A (hypoxia) causes different symptoms including cyanosis and impaired judgment. C (hyperventilation) causes tingling and spasms. D (tiredness) reduces alertness but does not cause the specific visual loss pattern of grey-out.
+
+### Q32: Visual illusions are mostly caused by... ^t40q32
+- A) Colour blindness.
+- B) Misinterpretation of the brain.
+- C) Rapid eye movements.
+- D) Binocular vision.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the brain actively constructs perception based on expectations, patterns, and assumptions rather than passively recording reality. When environmental cues are ambiguous or unusual (common in aviation -- unfamiliar terrain, reduced visibility, featureless sky), the brain fills gaps with incorrect "best guesses." A (colour blindness) is a specific visual deficiency, not a general cause of illusions. C (rapid eye movements) is a normal visual function. D (binocular vision) provides depth perception and actually reduces illusion susceptibility.
+
+### Q33: The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately... ^t40q33
+- A) 0.1 percent.
+- B) 0.3 percent.
+- C) 0.03 percent.
+- D) 0.01 percent.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the liver metabolises alcohol at approximately 0.01% (0.1 g/L) blood alcohol concentration per hour, largely independent of body weight. This means significant impairment can persist well into the following day after heavy drinking. A (0.1%) would clear alcohol ten times faster than reality. B (0.3%) is unrealistically fast. C (0.03%) is three times the actual rate. The EASA "8-hour bottle to throttle" rule is a minimum, not a guarantee of sobriety.
+
+### Q34: Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes? ^t40q34
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because overweight and obesity are the primary modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes, as excess adipose tissue causes insulin resistance. In aviation medicine, diabetes is a significant concern because hypoglycaemic episodes can impair consciousness and cognitive function. A (sleep deficiency), C (smoking), and D (alcohol) carry various health risks but are not the primary established risk factor for diabetes onset.
+
+### Q35: A risk factor for decompression sickness is... ^t40q35
+- A) Sports.
+- B) 100 % oxygen after decompression.
+- C) Scuba diving prior to flight.
+- D) Smoking.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because scuba diving dissolves nitrogen into body tissues under elevated ambient pressure. If the diver flies before sufficient off-gassing time (typically 12-24 hours depending on dive profile), the reduced cabin pressure causes nitrogen to form bubbles -- decompression sickness. A (sports) does not dissolve excess nitrogen. B (100% oxygen) actually accelerates nitrogen elimination and is a treatment, not a risk factor. D (smoking) impairs oxygen transport but is not a decompression sickness risk factor.
+
+### Q36: Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory? ^t40q36
+- A) It can store 10 (+/-5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (+/-2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 7 (+/-2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (+/-1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because George Miller's classic 1956 research established that short-term (working) memory holds 7 plus or minus 2 chunks of information, retained for approximately 10-20 seconds without rehearsal. In aviation, this is critically important: ATC clearances, frequencies, and altitudes must be written down immediately because they fade within seconds if not actively rehearsed. A overestimates both capacity and duration. B and D underestimate capacity or misstate duration.
+
+### Q37: For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information? ^t40q37
+- A) 35 to 50 seconds
+- B) 3 to 7 seconds
+- C) 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because without active rehearsal, items in short-term memory fade within approximately 10-20 seconds. This is why read-back procedures in radio communication are essential -- they force the pilot to actively process and repeat information, moving it from passive storage into a more durable encoded state. A and D overestimate retention time. B underestimates it. Understanding this limitation helps pilots develop habits like immediately writing down frequencies and clearances.
+
+### Q38: What is a latent error? ^t40q38
+- A) An error which has an immediate effect on the controls
+- B) An error which only has consequences after landing
+- C) An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously
+- D) An error which stays undetected in the system for a long time
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because latent errors (latent conditions) in James Reason's error model are failures embedded in the system -- poor design, inadequate procedures, organisational pressures, or maintenance shortcuts -- that remain dormant and undetected until they combine with an active error to cause an accident. A describes an active error with immediate consequences. B is too narrow -- latent errors can have consequences at any time. C describes an intentional violation, not a latent system failure.
+
+### Q39: The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called... ^t40q39
+- A) Constant flight check.
+- B) Situational thinking.
+- C) Situational awareness.
+- D) Anticipatory check procedure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because situational awareness (SA), as defined by Mica Endsley, is the continuous process of perceiving elements in the environment, comprehending their meaning, and projecting their future status. Loss of SA is a primary contributing factor in controlled flight into terrain, mid-air collisions, and spatial disorientation accidents. A, B, and D are not established aviation safety terminology and do not capture the three-level perception-comprehension-projection model that defines SA.
+
+### Q40: Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured? ^t40q40
+- A) By the use of proper headsets
+- B) By the use of radio phraseology
+- C) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+- D) By a particular frequency allocation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because standardised ICAO radio telephony phraseology ensures both sender and receiver use identical, unambiguous terminology with pre-agreed meanings, minimising misunderstanding risk. In communication theory, this means sharing the same codebook. A (headsets) improve audio quality but not code consistency. C (certified radios) ensure transmission quality, not message clarity. D (frequency allocation) organises traffic separation, not message encoding.
+
+### Q41: In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately? ^t40q41
+- A) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- B) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- C) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+- D) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the four standard risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the hazard entirely), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift risk to another party, e.g. insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge residual risk within acceptable limits). B, C, and D all include "ignore," "palliate," or "extrude," which are not recognised risk management strategies. Ignoring a risk is never acceptable in aviation.
+
+### Q42: Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks? ^t40q42
+- A) During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast
+- B) During check flights due to a high level of nervousness
+- C) Due to group-dynamic effects
+- D) If there is not enough information available
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because group dynamics produce "risky shift" -- groups tend to make bolder decisions than individuals acting alone. Social pressure, conformity, diffusion of responsibility, and deference to perceived authority all suppress individual risk awareness. This is a core CRM concept. A (excellent weather) would logically reduce risk. B (nervousness) tends to make people more cautious, not less. D (insufficient information) should prompt caution, though in practice it sometimes does not.
+
+### Q43: Which dangerous attitudes are often combined? ^t40q43
+- A) Self-abandonment and macho
+- B) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because macho ("I can do it") and invulnerability ("It won't happen to me") frequently occur together, both stemming from overconfidence and underestimation of risk. A pilot who believes they are immune from accidents is also prone to unnecessary risk-taking to demonstrate skill. A combines contradictory attitudes. B pairs invulnerability with resignation, which are psychologically opposed. D combines impulsivity with its antidote (carefulness), which is contradictory.
+
+### Q44: What is an indication for a macho attitude? ^t40q44
+- A) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- B) Careful walkaround procedure
+- C) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- D) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude is characterised by performing risky manoeuvres to demonstrate skill or bravery, prioritising ego and external validation over safety. This actively creates hazardous situations that would otherwise never arise. A describes resignation (a different hazardous attitude). B and D describe safe, professional behaviours that are the opposite of macho behaviour. The antidote for macho is: "Taking chances is foolish."
+
+### Q45: Which factor can lead to human error? ^t40q45
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) Double check of relevant actions
+- C) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because confirmation bias -- the tendency to perceive and interpret information in ways that confirm pre-existing expectations -- is a major source of human error. Pilots may misread instruments, misidentify runways, or fail to notice abnormalities because the brain filters information through what it expects to see. A (checklists) and B (double checks) are error-prevention strategies. D (healthy doubt) is a protective attitude against errors, not a cause of them.
+
+### Q46: Which is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot? ^t40q46
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Extroverted - stable
+- C) Extroverted - unstable
+- D) Introverted - unstable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because extroversion supports effective communication, crew coordination, and the assertiveness needed for CRM, while emotional stability (low neuroticism) ensures calm, rational decision-making under pressure and consistent performance. A (introverted-stable) provides calmness but may lack the communication assertiveness needed in crew environments. C (extroverted-unstable) has good communication but unreliable emotional responses. D (introverted-unstable) combines poor communication with emotional unreliability.
+
+### Q47: Complacency is a risk due to... ^t40q47
+- A) Better training options for young pilots.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Increased cockpit automation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because automation complacency occurs when pilots over-rely on automated systems, progressively reducing active monitoring of aircraft state. As automation becomes more sophisticated and reliable, vigilance decreases and manual flying skills degrade. When automation fails, the complacent pilot may be unprepared to take over. A (better training) reduces rather than increases complacency risk. B (high error rate) would actually maintain vigilance. C (human mistakes) is a general statement, not specifically linked to complacency.
+
+### Q48: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q48
+
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (Point B) because it represents the peak of the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve where arousal is optimal and performance is maximised. A (Point D) is on the far right where excessive stress collapses performance. B (Point C) is past the peak in the declining region. D (Point A) is on the far left where too little arousal causes poor performance from boredom and inattention. The goal is to maintain arousal near Point B through workload management and stress coping techniques.
+
+### Q49: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q49
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point C
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (Point D) because it represents the extreme right of the Yerkes-Dodson curve where stress and arousal are excessive, causing performance collapse. At this level, the pilot experiences tunnel vision, cognitive freezing, panic responses, and inability to process information effectively. A (Point B) is the optimal arousal point. C (Point C) shows moderate overarousal with declining but not collapsed performance. D (Point A) represents under-arousal, not overstrain.
+
+### Q50: Which of these qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory ^t40q50
+- A) 1
+- B) .1, 2, 3
+- C) 1, 2, 3, 4
+- D) .2, 4
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because stress affects all four cognitive functions: attention narrows (tunnel vision), concentration becomes difficult to sustain, responsiveness is altered (initially faster, then degraded under extreme stress), and memory -- particularly working memory -- is impaired by elevated cortisol. This is why emergency procedures must be practised to automaticity: procedural (motor) memory is more resistant to stress than conscious declarative recall. A, B, and D are incomplete subsets.
+
+### Q51: The proportion of oxygen in the air at sea level is 21%. What is this percentage at an altitude of 5 km (16,400 ft)? ^t40q51
+- A) 5 %
+- B) 15 %
+- C) 10 %
+- D) 21 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the proportion (percentage) of oxygen in the atmosphere remains constant at 21% regardless of altitude. What decreases with altitude is the partial pressure of oxygen, because total atmospheric pressure drops. At 5 km, the air is still 21% oxygen, but the partial pressure is roughly half its sea-level value, which is why hypoxia occurs. A, B, and C all incorrectly suggest the percentage itself changes.
+
+### Q52: The signs of oxygen deficiency... ^t40q52
+- A) are right away clearly noticeable.
+- B) can appear from as low as 4000 ft altitude.
+- C) appear in smokers at lower altitudes than in non-smokers.
+- D) consist of extreme difficulty in breathing (gasping for air).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because smokers already have elevated carboxyhaemoglobin levels (CO bound to haemoglobin), which reduces the blood's effective oxygen-carrying capacity. This means hypoxia symptoms appear at lower altitudes than in non-smokers. A is wrong because hypoxia is insidious -- symptoms are often not clearly noticeable, which is precisely what makes it so dangerous. B is too low for initial symptoms in healthy individuals. D describes a late-stage or dramatic presentation that does not characterise the typical subtle onset.
+
+### Q53: Carbon monoxide... ^t40q53
+- A) is a by-product of the chemical energy production in cells: tissue absorbs oxygen and releases carbon monoxide.
+- B) has a sweet smell and bitter taste. It is only harmful in very high doses.
+- C) is toxic and results from incomplete combustion, e.g. a leaking exhaust system in an aircraft or incomplete gas combustion in a hot air balloon.
+- D) is, together with oxygen and hydrogen, one of the most important elements present in the atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because carbon monoxide is a colourless, odourless, highly toxic gas produced by incomplete combustion. In aviation, it can enter the cockpit through leaking exhaust systems or heating systems. It binds to haemoglobin 200 times more readily than oxygen, creating carboxyhaemoglobin and preventing oxygen transport. A confuses CO with CO2 (carbon dioxide, the actual cellular waste product). B is completely wrong -- CO is odourless and harmful even in small concentrations. D is factually incorrect about atmospheric composition.
+
+### Q54: How long does it generally take for the human eye to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q54
+- A) Approx. 30 minutes.
+- B) Approx. 1 hour.
+- C) Approx. 15 minutes.
+- D) Approx. 5 minutes.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because full dark adaptation (scotopic vision using rod cells) takes approximately 30 minutes. Cone cells adapt within about 7 minutes, but rods require the full 30 minutes to reach maximum sensitivity. Exposure to bright light resets the process. B (1 hour) overestimates the time. C (15 minutes) reflects only partial adaptation. D (5 minutes) represents only the initial cone adaptation phase. Pilots should avoid bright cockpit lighting and use red lighting to preserve night vision.
+
+### Q55: Low blood pressure... ^t40q55
+- A) mainly causes problems at rest in a lying position.
+- B) can cause dizziness.
+- C) is a recurring problem in elderly smokers.
+- D) causes absolutely no problems.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because hypotension can cause dizziness, particularly during changes of posture (orthostatic hypotension) when blood pools in the lower body upon standing. This is relevant in aviation because dizziness can mimic spatial disorientation. A is wrong because low blood pressure causes fewer symptoms at rest; problems arise during position changes. C describes hypertension (high blood pressure), which is more associated with elderly smokers. D is wrong because low blood pressure can cause significant symptoms.
+
+### Q56: What symptom will most probably occur at 20,000 ft (6100 m) altitude without a pressurised cabin or oxygen equipment? ^t40q56
+- A) Loss of consciousness.
+- B) Altitude sickness with pulmonary oedema.
+- C) Dyspnoea.
+- D) Fever.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 20,000 ft without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness (TUC) is very short -- typically 5-12 minutes, with rapid progression to unconsciousness as blood oxygen saturation drops critically. B (altitude sickness with pulmonary oedema) develops over hours to days at moderate altitude during mountaineering, not within the timeframe of acute hypoxia at 20,000 ft. C (dyspnoea) may occur briefly but loss of consciousness is the dominant and most probable symptom. D (fever) is not caused by altitude.
+
+### Q57: When flying with a severe head cold, sharp pain can affect the sinuses. This pain occurs... ^t40q57
+- A) during descent.
+- B) with every notable change in flight altitude.
+- C) during climb.
+- D) during accelerations.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because during descent, external atmospheric pressure increases, compressing the air in the blocked sinuses. When the sinus ostia (openings) are swollen shut from a cold, air cannot enter to equalise the increasing external pressure, creating a painful pressure differential (sinus barotrauma). C (during climb) is less problematic because the expanding air inside the sinuses can usually force its way out even through partially blocked passages. B overgeneralises. D (accelerations) is not the primary trigger.
+
+### Q58: Which are the symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q58
+- A) High fever, vomiting, headache.
+- B) High fever, dizziness, watery diarrhoea.
+- C) Dizziness, sweating, nausea.
+- D) Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, headache.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because motion sickness manifests as dizziness, sweating, nausea, pallor, and potentially vomiting -- caused by conflicting sensory inputs between the visual and vestibular systems. A and B include high fever, which is a sign of infection, not motion sickness. B and D include watery diarrhoea, which is a gastrointestinal symptom not associated with kinetosis. The absence of fever is a key distinguishing feature.
+
+### Q59: During a normal approach to an unusually wide runway, one may have the impression that the approach is being made... ^t40q59
+- A) at too great a height.
+- B) at too high a speed.
+- C) at too low a speed.
+- D) at too low a height.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because an unusually wide runway appears closer and larger than expected, giving the visual impression of being lower than actual altitude. This can also translate into a perception of approaching too slowly, because the expected visual cues for a normal approach are distorted. The pilot may respond by either flying too high or increasing speed, both of which are inappropriate corrections. A and D describe height perceptions that are secondary to the speed impression asked about. B is the opposite of the typical illusion.
+
+### Q60: Under positive g-forces, a greyout can occur which precedes blackout. Which organ is primarily affected by greyout? ^t40q60
+- A) The lungs.
+- B) The eyes.
+- C) The brain.
+- D) The muscles.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the eyes (specifically the retina) are the first organs affected during positive g-forces because the retina has the highest oxygen demand of any tissue and is particularly sensitive to reduced blood supply. As blood drains from the head under positive g, retinal arterial pressure drops below intraocular pressure, causing progressive loss of vision (grey-out) before the brain is affected (blackout/unconsciousness). A (lungs) are not the primary organ affected. C (brain) is affected later. D (muscles) are not primarily involved.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_40_61_90_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_40_61_90_out.md
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+# Human Performance
+
+---
+
+### Q61: When a pilot scans the sky to detect the presence of other aircraft, he should… ^t40q61
+- A) try to take in the visible portion of the sky with large sweeping eye movements.
+- B) roll the eyes across as wide a field of vision as possible.
+- C) scan the sky sector by sector and let the eyes rest briefly on each sector.
+- D) take in the entire visible portion of the sky by moving the eyes as rapidly as possible.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct scan technique for collision avoidance is a systematic sector-by-sector sweep with a brief pause of 1–2 seconds on each sector (C), because the eye can only achieve sharp focus when it is stationary — foveal vision requires fixation to detect small or distant targets against the sky background. Rapid sweeping or rolling movements (A, B, D) smear the image across the retina and prevent the photoreceptors from resolving the angular size of a distant aircraft. Each sector should subtend no more than about 10–15 degrees to ensure adequate coverage with effective fixation.
+
+### Q62: Alcohol is eliminated at a rate of:... ^t40q62
+- A) 0.5 per mille per hour.
+- B) 0.3 per mille per hour.
+- C) 0.1 per mille per hour.
+- D) 1 per mille per hour.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The liver eliminates alcohol at a fixed rate of approximately 0.1 per mille (‰) per hour (C), largely independent of body weight, hydration, or the type of drink consumed. A pilot with a blood alcohol level of 0.5 ‰ after an evening of drinking would still have measurable alcohol 5 hours later, well within a pre-dawn departure window. A, B, and D all overstate the elimination rate, which would lead a pilot to dangerously underestimate residual impairment when calculating fitness for flight.
+
+### Q63: From the following factors, identify the one that increases the risk of heart attack:... ^t40q63
+- A) Lack of exercise.
+- B) Hypoglycaemia.
+- C) Undernutrition.
+- D) Cholesterol level too low.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Physical inactivity (A) is a well-established independent risk factor for coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction, because regular exercise improves lipid profiles, reduces blood pressure, and maintains healthy body weight. In aviation medicine, cardiac incapacitation is a significant concern given its potential for sudden pilot incapacitation, which is why medical certification includes cardiac screening. B is wrong because hypoglycaemia is a blood sugar disorder relevant to diabetes, not a direct cardiac risk factor. C and D are wrong because undernutrition and low cholesterol are not associated with increased heart attack risk in the general population.
+
+### Q64: Amphetamine is a stimulant which in Switzerland can be obtained on prescription from pharmacies... ^t40q64
+- A) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours are allowed to take this medication to stay awake.
+- B) Pilots on duty may solely take this medication if accompanied by a qualified co-pilot.
+- C) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours should always have this medication at hand for moments of fatigue.
+- D) Due to its adverse effects, pilots on duty are not allowed to take this medication.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Amphetamines are strictly prohibited for pilots on duty (D) because their adverse effects — including heightened aggression, impaired judgement, cardiovascular strain, and a severe crash phase of exhaustion after the stimulant wears off — create unacceptable flight safety risks. Aviation regulations require pilots to be free of all medications with significant CNS effects, and no flight duration (A, C) or the presence of a co-pilot (B) provides an exception. The correct approach to fatigue management in aviation is structural rest planning and adherence to duty time limitations, not pharmacological stimulation.
+
+### Q65: What is meant by "risk area awareness" in aviation? ^t40q65
+- A) Knowledge of accident rates during takeoff and landing.
+- B) The awareness that the aerodrome area where aircraft taxi ("risk area") is a dangerous zone.
+- C) Awareness of the potential hazards of the various phases of flight.
+- D) A procedure for preventing aviation accidents.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Risk area awareness (C) refers to the pilot's continuous recognition that different phases of flight carry different and specific hazard profiles — takeoff and landing are statistically the most accident-prone phases, while cruise presents different risks such as weather, navigation, and airspace conflict. This concept underpins proactive threat and error management: by knowing which phase presents which threats, the pilot can apply heightened attention and appropriate procedures at the right moments. A is wrong because knowing accident statistics is not the same as actively applying phase-specific hazard awareness. B misapplies the term to a taxiway location; D is wrong because risk area awareness is an attitude and awareness framework, not a procedure.
+
+### Q66: Several decision-making models are applied in aviation. A widely used model goes by the acronym "DECIDE". Which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q66
+- A) The first D stands for "Do" and means "Apply the best option".
+- B) The first D stands for "Detect" and means "Recognise that a change has occurred which requires attention".
+- C) The first E stands for "Evaluate" and means "Assess the consequences of one's actions".
+- D) DECIDE is a decision-making aid that must be applied in every in-flight decision situation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the DECIDE model, the first D stands for Detect — recognising that a change in the situation has occurred that demands attention (B). The full sequence is: Detect, Estimate (the significance), Choose (a course of action), Identify (the best option), Do (implement it), Evaluate (the outcome). A is wrong because "Do" is the fifth step, not the first. C is wrong because E stands for Estimate (assess the significance of the change), not Evaluate (which is the final step). D is wrong because DECIDE is a framework for non-routine decisions, not a mandatory procedure for every routine in-flight action.
+
+### Q67: Regarding typical hazardous attitudes, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q67
+- A) It is possible to recognise and correct one's own hazardous attitudes.
+- B) An anti-authority attitude is less dangerous than macho behaviour.
+- C) Inexperienced pilots are generally the only ones who behave dangerously.
+- D) Hazardous attitudes do not really exist because flight safety depends solely on the pilot's attention.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The entire rationale of hazardous attitude training is that self-awareness and targeted antidotes enable a pilot to recognise and counteract their own dangerous tendencies (A) — for example, responding to a macho impulse with the reminder "Taking chances is foolish." B is wrong because anti-authority attitudes (rejecting rules and procedures) are at least as dangerous as macho behaviour, since they undermine the entire safety system. C is wrong because experienced pilots can be equally susceptible, particularly to invulnerability and complacency. D is wrong because the existence and safety impact of hazardous attitudes is thoroughly established in aviation psychology research.
+
+### Q68: Which of these statements correctly describes "selective attention"? ^t40q68
+- A) Selective attention is unavoidable in the cockpit to avoid distraction during checklist recitation.
+- B) Selective attention can lead the pilot to fail to notice an audible alarm even though it is perfectly audible.
+- C) Selective attention refers to an attitude where attention is focused on flight instruments when visibility conditions are poor.
+- D) Selective attention is a method for avoiding stress.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Selective attention is the cognitive mechanism by which the brain filters out most incoming sensory information to focus on a primary task — and in the cockpit this can cause a pilot to be completely unaware of an alarm, radio call, or warning light that is fully audible or visible (B). This is sometimes called inattentional blindness and is a documented contributing factor in numerous aviation incidents where crew were heads-down on a problem while another critical change went unnoticed. A is wrong because selective attention is an involuntary perceptual hazard, not a deliberate strategy. C describes instrument flying technique; D misrepresents the concept — selective attention is not a stress management method.
+
+### Q69: Regarding stress, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q69
+- A) There is an optimal level of stress that even improves performance.
+- B) Under-stimulation causes no stress and has no negative effect on performance.
+- C) Stress in the cockpit improves the work rate.
+- D) Stress is only caused by brief overload.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law demonstrates that there is an optimal level of arousal — often called eustress — at which cognitive performance is maximised (A). Below this level, insufficient stimulation leads to boredom and inattention; above it, excessive stress degrades performance through cognitive narrowing and decision errors. B is wrong because under-stimulation (monotony) is itself a recognised stressor that impairs vigilance — directly relevant to long solo flights. C is wrong because high stress generally reduces work quality even if it briefly increases pace. D is wrong because stress arises from many sources including sustained overload, time pressure, ambiguity, and emotional threat, not only from brief acute overload.
+
+### Q70: The human internal clock… ^t40q70
+- A) has a cycle of roughly 25 hours.
+- B) has a cycle of roughly 20 hours.
+- C) is synchronised with the external clock and its cycle lasts exactly 24 hours.
+- D) has a cycle of roughly 30 hours.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The endogenous circadian rhythm — the internal biological clock — runs on a free-running cycle of approximately 25 hours (A), which is slightly longer than the 24-hour solar day and must be reset daily by light exposure, primarily in the morning. This slight mismatch explains why jet lag is asymmetric: eastward travel (shortening the day) is more disruptive than westward travel. B and D give incorrect cycle lengths; C is wrong because the internal clock inherently deviates from exactly 24 hours — it requires continuous entrainment by external zeitgebers to stay aligned with the solar day.
+
+### Q71: Which of the following measures is suitable for relieving the onset of motion sickness (kinetosis) in passengers? ^t40q71
+- A) move the head regularly
+- B) look through the windows
+- C) breathe fresh air
+- D) drink coffee
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Fresh air (C) is an effective early intervention for motion sickness because it reduces the autonomic component of the response — cooling the skin, normalising breathing, and reducing the nausea trigger via the vagus nerve. A is wrong because head movements during flight aggravate motion sickness by producing the Coriolis effect in the semicircular canals. B is wrong because looking through small windows at a moving scene can worsen the vestibular-visual conflict; only an unobstructed stable external horizon is helpful. D is wrong because caffeine provides no relief and may increase anxiety and gastric discomfort.
+
+### Q72: During training, a pilot has mainly used narrow runways. What illusion will this pilot experience during a correct final approach to a flat, very wide runway? ^t40q72
+- A) the illusion that the runway slopes upward in the landing direction (upslope)
+- B) the illusion of being at a greater height above the runway than is actually the case
+- C) the illusion of being lower above the runway than is actually the case
+- D) the illusion that the runway first slopes upward (upslope) then downward (downslope)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot trained on narrow runways has calibrated height perception to the visual angle subtended by a narrow strip; when approaching a much wider runway at the same actual height, the runway subtends a larger angle than expected, making it appear closer and lower — creating an illusion of being lower than reality (C). This leads to a tendency to fly a higher-than-correct approach angle, risking an overshoot. B describes the opposite illusion produced by a narrower-than-usual runway. A and D describe slope illusions caused by runway gradient, a different visual phenomenon unrelated to runway width.
+
+### Q73: When are middle ear pressure equalization problems most probable to occur? ^t40q73
+- A) during a long flight at high altitude
+- B) during a rapid descent
+- C) during a long climb
+- D) during strong negative vertical accelerations
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems occur predominantly during descent (B) because as altitude decreases, ambient pressure rises and air must flow into the middle ear through the Eustachian tube. The Eustachian tube opens more easily to release pressure outward (during climb) than to allow air inward (during descent), especially when congested from a cold or allergy; a rapid descent builds the pressure differential faster than the tube can compensate. A is wrong because constant altitude produces no pressure differential. C is wrong because climb allows easier outward flow of middle ear air. D is wrong because brief vertical accelerations do not create the sustained ambient pressure changes that cause barotrauma.
+
+### Q74: The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere is 21% at sea level. How does it change at 5500 m? ^t40q74
+- A) it is one quarter of the sea level percentage
+- B) it is half the sea level percentage
+- C) it is double the sea level percentage
+- D) it is the same as at sea level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere remains approximately 21% at all altitudes up to roughly 80 km (D), because atmospheric mixing keeps the composition of the homosphere essentially uniform. What changes dramatically with altitude is total atmospheric pressure — and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen — which at 5,500 m is roughly half the sea-level value, meaning each breath delivers only half as many oxygen molecules. A, B, and C all incorrectly suggest that the oxygen fraction itself changes; the key concept is the distinction between oxygen fraction and oxygen partial pressure.
+
+### Q75: Which are the effects of inhaling carbon monoxide (from a defective exhaust system)? ^t40q75
+- A) even in low concentrations, this gas can cause total incapacitation
+- B) there are no harmful effects to fear as carbon monoxide is harmless
+- C) harmful effects are solely to be expected if the body is exposed to the gas for several hours
+- D) there are no harmful effects to fear as the body compensates for the reduced oxygen supply
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide is dangerous even at very low concentrations (A) because it binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen, rapidly forming carboxyhaemoglobin that cannot transport oxygen, while simultaneously impairing cellular respiration. The onset of cognitive impairment and incapacitation can be rapid and insidious — CO is colourless, odourless, and tasteless, providing no warning. B and D are dangerously wrong; the body cannot effectively compensate because the CO-haemoglobin bond is extremely strong. C is wrong because incapacitation can occur within minutes of significant exposure, not after hours.
+
+### Q76: Which is the most effective hearing protection in the cabin of a powered aircraft or hot air balloon? ^t40q76
+- A) cotton wool
+- B) a helmet with earphones
+- C) ear plugs
+- D) due to the low noise produced, any protection is effective
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A helmet with integrated earphones (B) provides the most effective hearing protection because it combines circumaural attenuation of the outer ear with active communication through the earphones, and its rigid structure prevents bone conduction of sound. Cotton wool (A) provides minimal and inconsistent attenuation with no communication function. Earplugs (C) offer moderate passive protection but lack the communication capability essential for radio operation. D is wrong because engine noise in powered aircraft and hot air balloon burners can exceed safe exposure limits during prolonged flights, and noise-induced hearing loss is cumulative and irreversible.
+
+### Q77: Gas-forming foods that cause flatulence ought to be avoided before a high-altitude flight. Which of these foods must therefore be avoided? ^t40q77
+- A) legumes (beans)
+- B) meat
+- C) pasta
+- D) potatoes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Legumes such as beans, lentils, and peas (A) are the principal gas-forming foods because their oligosaccharides are fermented by intestinal bacteria, producing significant quantities of gas. At altitude, Boyle's Law dictates that gas volume expands inversely with pressure: at 18,000 ft, intestinal gas approximately doubles in volume compared to sea level, potentially causing severe abdominal pain and distension that distracts the pilot. B, C, and D are not significant gas producers. The same principle applies to carbonated drinks, which should also be avoided before high-altitude flights.
+
+### Q78: The respiratory process enables gas exchange in somatic cells (metabolism). These cells… ^t40q78
+- A) absorb nitrogen and release oxygen
+- B) absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide (CO2)
+- C) absorb oxygen and release nitrogen
+- D) absorb oxygen and release carbon monoxide (CO)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cellular (aerobic) respiration in somatic cells involves the uptake of oxygen (O₂) and the release of carbon dioxide (CO₂) as nutrients are oxidised to produce ATP energy (B). This is the reverse of the gas exchange occurring in the lungs, where CO₂ is expelled and O₂ is absorbed from alveolar air into the bloodstream. A is wrong because nitrogen is physiologically inert under normal conditions and is neither consumed nor produced in cellular metabolism. C repeats this nitrogen error. D is wrong because carbon monoxide is a product of incomplete combustion; healthy cells do not produce it.
+
+### Q79: A regular smoker pilot smokes a few cigarettes shortly before an alpine flight. What effects might this have on their flight fitness? ^t40q79
+- A) for a regular smoker, there are no effects to fear as the body is accustomed to the harmful substances absorbed
+- B) the pilot will experience oxygen deficiency at a lower altitude than if they had abstained from smoking before the flight
+- C) the nicotine absorbed may cause mild disturbances of consciousness and difficulty concentrating
+- D) the smoke causes mild carbon dioxide (CO2) poisoning, which may cause sensations of dizziness and numbness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Smoking shortly before flight raises the carboxyhaemoglobin level in the blood — CO from cigarette smoke binds to haemoglobin and reduces the blood's effective oxygen-carrying capacity before the aircraft even leaves the ground, so hypoxic symptoms will appear at a lower altitude than for a non-smoker (B). A is wrong because habituation to nicotine does not protect against the acute oxygen-carrying impairment caused by elevated carboxyhaemoglobin. C is wrong because the primary aviation-relevant hazard of pre-flight smoking is CO-induced oxygen reduction, not nicotine's direct CNS effects. D is wrong because the relevant gas is CO (carbon monoxide), not CO₂ (carbon dioxide).
+
+### Q80: When is the risk of vestibular disturbance causing dizziness greatest? ^t40q80
+- A) when rotating the head during a descent
+- B) when rotating the head during straight-and-level flight
+- C) when rotating the head during a climb
+- D) when rotating the head during a coordinated turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The risk of vestibular dizziness is greatest when rotating the head during a coordinated turn (D), because the semicircular canals are already registering the rotational acceleration of the turn. A head rotation in a perpendicular plane simultaneously activates canals in a different axis, compounding the vestibular input and producing the disorienting Coriolis illusion — an overwhelming sensation of tumbling in an unexpected direction. A, B, and C all involve head movements, but without the pre-existing rotational loading of the canals, the Coriolis effect cannot occur; straight flight, climbs, and descents alone do not provide this compounding stimulus.
+
+### Q81: How can a pilot better withstand positive g-forces in flight? ^t40q81
+- A) by sitting as upright as possible
+- B) by relaxing their muscles and leaning forward
+- C) by contracting the abdominal and leg muscles and performing forced breathing
+- D) by tightening their harness straps as much as possible
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Contracting the abdominal and leg muscles while performing a forced exhalation against a closed glottis — the Anti-G Straining Manoeuvre (C) — raises intra-abdominal pressure, constricts peripheral blood vessels, and reduces the volume of blood displaced from the head to the lower body, significantly delaying grey-out and G-LOC. A is wrong because posture alone does not generate the necessary intravascular pressure increase. B is wrong because relaxing muscles accelerates blood pooling in the legs and worsens g-tolerance. D is wrong because harness tightness improves body-seat coupling but does not influence the cardiovascular mechanism of g-tolerance.
+
+### Q82: Which are the most dangerous effects of oxygen deficiency? ^t40q82
+- A) tingling sensations
+- B) blue discoloration of fingernails and lips
+- C) impairment of judgment and concentration
+- D) nausea
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most dangerous effect of oxygen deficiency is impairment of judgement and concentration (C), because the hypoxic pilot loses the cognitive ability to recognise their own incapacitation — they feel well, or even euphoric, while their decision-making capacity is already seriously degraded. This "happy hypoxia" is what makes the condition so lethal: the pilot does not recognise the need to descend or use supplemental oxygen. A (tingling) and B (cyanosis) are physical signs that may appear after cognitive impairment is already advanced, and D (nausea) is a non-specific symptom with no direct consequence for flight control.
+
+### Q83: What can be said about the rate of blood alcohol elimination in humans? ^t40q83
+- A) it is accelerated by breathing pure oxygen
+- B) it depends only on time and amounts to roughly 0.1 per mille per hour
+- C) it depends on the alcohol content of the drink consumed
+- D) it can be accelerated by drinking strong coffee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blood alcohol elimination is a fixed metabolic process governed by the liver's zero-order kinetics, proceeding at approximately 0.1 per mille per hour regardless of external interventions (B). Neither breathing oxygen (A), drinking coffee (D), nor any other popular remedy meaningfully accelerates this rate. C is wrong because the type or strength of drink consumed affects only the peak blood alcohol level, not the rate at which it is subsequently cleared. This is a critical safety principle: a pilot cannot "sober up faster" and must calculate backwards from consumption time to ensure compliance before flight.
+
+### Q84: What impact does proprioception (deep sensitivity) have on position perception? ^t40q84
+- A) in coordination with the balance organ, proprioception gives a correct position impression even when visibility is lost
+- B) when visual references are lost, proprioception can give a false perception of position
+- C) proprioception alone is always sufficient to sustain a correct perception of position
+- D) when training is adequate, proprioception can prevent spatial disorientation when visibility is lost
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When visual references are lost, proprioceptive signals from muscles, tendons, and joints can generate false impressions of aircraft attitude or position (B), because the proprioceptive system is calibrated for terrestrial movement and cannot reliably distinguish the complex accelerations of flight from gravitational loads. This is why spatial disorientation occurs: the body "feels" level while the aircraft is in a banked spiral. A and C are wrong because neither proprioception alone nor its combination with the vestibular system can substitute for visual or instrument references in flight. D is wrong because no training can overcome the physiological limitations of proprioception in IMC.
+
+### Q85: Which of these factors has no direct effect on visual acuity? ^t40q85
+- A) high blood pressure
+- B) carbon monoxide (CO)
+- C) oxygen deficiency
+- D) alcohol
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** High blood pressure (A) does not have a direct, immediate effect on visual acuity during normal flight; while chronic hypertension can eventually cause retinopathy, acute elevated blood pressure within physiological limits does not impair the optical or neural components of vision in a way relevant to flight safety. In contrast, carbon monoxide (B) reduces retinal oxygenation by binding haemoglobin; oxygen deficiency (C) impairs retinal function because the retina has the highest specific oxygen consumption of any body tissue; and alcohol (D) causes dose-dependent degradation of contrast sensitivity, night vision, and stereo acuity.
+
+### Q86: Up to what maximum altitude can a healthy human body compensate for oxygen deficiency by increasing heart rate and breathing rate? ^t40q86
+- A) roughly 3,000 ft
+- B) roughly 22,000 ft
+- C) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- D) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A healthy body can partially compensate for decreasing oxygen partial pressure by increasing both heart rate and respiratory rate up to approximately 10,000–12,000 ft (D); beyond this altitude, these compensatory mechanisms become insufficient to maintain adequate arterial oxygen saturation. A is wrong because 3,000 ft is well within the normal compensatory range and requires no additional physiological effort. C is wrong because 6,000–7,000 ft is the altitude at which compensation begins, not its upper limit. B is wrong because 22,000 ft is far above the compensation ceiling — at that altitude, loss of consciousness occurs rapidly without oxygen supplementation.
+
+### Q87: What has to be observed when taking over-the-counter medications? ^t40q87
+- A) even over-the-counter medications can influence flight fitness
+- B) over-the-counter medications have no side effects and therefore no influence on flight fitness
+- C) all flying is prohibited after taking any medication
+- D) over-the-counter medications only have insignificant side effects; their influence on flight fitness is negligible
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-the-counter (OTC) medications can have side effects that directly impair flight safety (A), including sedation from antihistamines, blurred vision from decongestants, reduced reaction time, dizziness, or impaired judgement — even at therapeutic doses. The fact that a drug is available without a prescription reflects relative safety for healthy adults in everyday life, but aviation demands a much higher standard of cognitive and physiological performance. B and D both understate the risk; C overstates it by prohibiting all medication. Pilots should consult their aviation medical examiner before taking any medication, including OTC products.
+
+### Q88: What sensory illusion can a linear acceleration produce in horizontal flight when visual references are lost? ^t40q88
+- A) the impression of being in a left turn
+- B) the impression of descending
+- C) the impression of being in a right turn
+- D) the impression of climbing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sustained forward linear acceleration in level flight creates the somatogravic illusion (D): the otoliths cannot distinguish between the forward inertial force of acceleration and the backward component of a nose-up pitch, so the brain interprets the acceleration as a climb. This illusion is particularly dangerous on take-off at night or in poor visibility, where the instinctive response to a perceived climb is to push the nose down — potentially into terrain. A and C (turn impressions) are produced by angular acceleration in the semicircular canals, not by linear translational acceleration. B is the opposite of the actual illusion produced.
+
+### Q89: How long does the human eye take to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q89
+- A) roughly 1 second
+- B) roughly 10 minutes
+- C) roughly 10 seconds
+- D) roughly 30 minutes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Full dark adaptation — the regeneration of rhodopsin photopigment in the rod photoreceptors of the peripheral retina — takes approximately 30 minutes (D). Rods are responsible for scotopic (low-light) vision but are bleached by exposure to bright light, and their photopigment recovery is a biochemical process that cannot be accelerated. A, B, and C all underestimate the required time. For night flying, pilots must avoid bright light sources for 30 minutes before flight; even brief exposure to white light can partially reset dark adaptation and require another recovery period.
+
+### Q90: Which of these statements about hyperventilation is correct? ^t40q90
+- A) hyperventilation is always a consequence of oxygen deficiency
+- B) hyperventilation causes an excess of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood
+- C) hyperventilation can be triggered by stress and anxiety
+- D) hyperventilation causes a deficiency of carbon monoxide (CO) in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation is commonly triggered by psychological states such as stress, anxiety, or fear (C) — as well as pain, altitude, or deliberate over-breathing — and involves breathing faster or deeper than the body's metabolic demand. A is wrong because hyperventilation is not caused by oxygen deficiency; in fact, it raises blood oxygen levels while reducing CO₂. B is wrong because hyperventilation causes a deficiency (not excess) of CO₂ — the resulting hypocapnia causes respiratory alkalosis, leading to symptoms such as tingling, spasms, and dizziness that can mimic hypoxia. D is wrong because carbon monoxide plays no role in hyperventilation physiology.
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+# Human Performance
+
+---
+
+### Q91: Vestibular disturbances during a turn can cause dizziness. What measure is most effective in preventing them? ^t40q91
+- A) during the turn, look out through the window in the direction of the turn
+- B) keep the head as still as possible during the turn
+- C) breathe deeply and slowly, ensuring an adequate supply of fresh air
+- D) alternately move the head from right to left during the turn
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most effective measure to prevent vestibular dizziness during a turn is to keep the head as still as possible (B), because head movements in a plane perpendicular to the turn's rotation axis simultaneously stimulate multiple semicircular canals and produce the disorienting Coriolis illusion. The semicircular canals are already registering the rotational acceleration of the turn; adding a head rotation in a different axis compounds the vestibular input and overwhelms the brain's ability to maintain spatial orientation. A is wrong because looking in the turn direction does not prevent the vestibular stimulus. C is wrong because breathing pattern does not influence canal mechanics. D is the worst option: alternating head movements during a turn directly provoke the Coriolis effect.
+
+### Q92: Which is the immediate effect of inhaling cigarette smoke on a regular smoker? ^t40q92
+- A) lowered blood pressure
+- B) dilation of blood vessels
+- C) reduced oxygen transport in the blood
+- D) increased carbon dioxide (CO2) content in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The immediate effect of inhaling cigarette smoke is a reduction in the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity (C), because carbon monoxide (CO) in the smoke binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin that cannot transport oxygen to tissues. A is wrong because nicotine actually causes vasoconstriction and a transient rise in blood pressure, not a reduction. B is wrong for the same reason — nicotine constricts blood vessels. D is wrong because CO (carbon monoxide), not CO₂ (carbon dioxide), is the dangerous combustion product in smoke; CO₂ is a normal cellular waste product unrelated to smoking's acute haemoglobin impairment.
+
+### Q93: What is the relationship between oxygen deficiency and visual acuity? ^t40q93
+- A) oxygen deficiency can reduce visual acuity
+- B) oxygen deficiency has no effect on visual acuity
+- C) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity only during the day
+- D) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity solely at night
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Oxygen deficiency reduces visual acuity (A) because the retina has the highest specific oxygen consumption of any tissue in the body, making it among the first to be affected by hypoxia. Both daytime (photopic) and night (scotopic) vision are degraded — rod photoreceptors that mediate night vision are especially sensitive, with measurable impairment beginning at altitudes as low as 5,000 ft. B is wrong because the retinal effect of hypoxia is well documented. C and D are both wrong because hypoxia impairs vision under all lighting conditions, not selectively by day or night.
+
+### Q94: Oxygen deficiency and hyperventilation share some similar symptoms. Which of these symptoms always indicates oxygen deficiency? ^t40q94
+- A) blue lips and fingernails (cyanosis)
+- B) visual disturbance
+- C) hot and cold sensations
+- D) tingling sensations
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cyanosis — the blue discolouration of lips and fingernails (A) — is caused specifically by a high proportion of deoxygenated haemoglobin in peripheral blood and is an objective physical sign of oxygen deficiency that cannot be produced by hyperventilation. Hyperventilation actually raises blood oxygen levels; cyanosis therefore cannot occur from hyperventilation alone, making it the differentiating indicator. B, C, and D are all symptoms shared by both conditions: visual disturbances and tingling occur in hypoxia due to retinal and neural hypoxia, and in hyperventilation due to hypocapnic alkalosis causing vasoconstriction and neuromuscular irritability.
+
+### Q95: What is the proportion of oxygen (in %) in the air at an altitude of approximately 34,000 feet? ^t40q95
+- A) 10%
+- B) 21%
+- C) 5%
+- D) 42%
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere remains at approximately 21% (B) regardless of altitude, because the homosphere extends to roughly 80 km and atmospheric turbulence maintains a uniform gas mixture throughout. At 34,000 ft the total atmospheric pressure is approximately one quarter of sea-level pressure, so the partial pressure of oxygen is also one quarter of its sea-level value — but the percentage is unchanged. A and C incorrectly suggest the fraction decreases with altitude; D suggests it increases. All three confuse oxygen fraction with oxygen partial pressure.
+
+### Q96: During a visual flight, you suddenly lose all external visual references. Spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses and proprioception is… ^t40q96
+- A) impossible
+- B) possible only for experienced pilots
+- C) possible only after adequate training
+- D) possible for solely a few minutes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When all visual references are lost, maintaining spatial orientation using only cutaneous (skin pressure) and proprioceptive (muscle and joint) senses is physiologically impossible (A), regardless of experience or training level. These senses evolved for terrestrial movement and cannot reliably differentiate the complex, sustained accelerations of flight from gravitational forces; without visual or instrument references, a pilot will lose spatial orientation within approximately 20–30 seconds. B and C are wrong because no training can override the physiological limitations of these non-visual senses in flight. D is wrong because even a few minutes of unaided IMC flight is far beyond what the senses can sustain — loss of control typically occurs within under a minute.
+
+### Q97: Which is the most probable and most dangerous poisoning that can occur on board a piston-engine aircraft? ^t40q97
+- A) poisoning due to cosmic radiation at high altitude
+- B) carbon monoxide poisoning
+- C) ozone poisoning
+- D) poisoning due to leaded fuel vapors
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning (B) is the most probable and dangerous in-flight poisoning hazard on a piston-engine aircraft, because exhaust gases from a cracked or leaking exhaust manifold can enter the cabin through heater systems without any odour or colour to alert the crew. CO binds to haemoglobin far more strongly than oxygen, and incapacitation can occur insidiously as cognitive impairment precedes any physical warning. A is wrong because cosmic radiation at typical general aviation altitudes poses negligible acute risk. C is wrong because ozone poisoning is primarily a concern at high-altitude jet operations, not piston aircraft. D is wrong because avgas vapour exposure is not a recognised primary in-flight poisoning hazard under normal operational conditions.
+
+### Q98: What impression results from a correct final approach to a runway with a strong upslope in the landing direction? ^t40q98
+- A) the impression of landing too short
+- B) the impression of too shallow an approach
+- C) the impression of too high an approach
+- D) the impression of too low an approach
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upsloping runway appears to tilt toward the approaching pilot, making the runway surface appear closer and the approach angle appear steeper than it really is — creating the illusion of being too high on approach (C). The pilot's instinctive corrective response is to descend below the correct glide path, creating an actual undershoot risk. D describes the opposite perception: a downsloping runway creates a too-low impression. A and B relate to longitudinal positioning and approach angle respectively and are not the primary illusion generated by runway slope.
+
+### Q99: Why should gas-forming foods be avoided before undertaking a high-altitude flight? ^t40q99
+- A) because gas expansion during descent can cause pain in the digestive system
+- B) because gas expansion at high altitudes can cause pain in the digestive system
+- C) because at high altitudes, gases evaporate into the blood and cause decompression sickness
+- D) because gas-forming foods promote motion sickness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, reduced atmospheric pressure causes gases trapped in the gastrointestinal tract to expand in accordance with Boyle's Law — volume is inversely proportional to pressure (B). Gas that doubles in volume at 18,000 ft compared to sea level can cause significant abdominal distension and pain, distracting the pilot and reducing their capacity to manage the flight. A is wrong because gas expansion occurs during the climb and at cruise altitude, not during descent when pressure returns towards normal. C is wrong because decompression sickness results from dissolved nitrogen, not digestive gas. D is wrong because intestinal gas is not a cause of motion sickness.
+
+### Q100: Which blood component primarily transports oxygen? ^t40q100
+- A) red blood cells
+- B) blood plasma
+- C) blood platelets
+- D) white blood cells
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells (erythrocytes) are the primary oxygen transporters in the blood (A), because they contain haemoglobin — an iron-rich protein that reversibly binds oxygen in the high-oxygen environment of the lungs and releases it in the low-oxygen environment of peripheral tissues. B is wrong because blood plasma transports dissolved substances, hormones, and proteins but carries only a small fraction of total oxygen in dissolved form. C is wrong because blood platelets (thrombocytes) are responsible for blood clotting. D is wrong because white blood cells (leucocytes) are the effectors of immune defence.
+
+### Q101: What illusion can occur when visual references are lost during a prolonged coordinated turn? ^t40q101
+- A) the impression of no longer being in a turn (wings level)
+- B) the impression of being in a descent
+- C) the impression of being in a climb
+- D) the impression of being in a greater bank angle than is actually the case
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a prolonged coordinated turn, the semicircular canal fluid gradually stops signalling the rotation because the canals respond to acceleration, not constant velocity. When the pilot then rolls wings level, the deceleration is perceived as rotation in the opposite direction — the brain interprets the return to straight flight as entering a turn the other way, and the pilot feels wings level when still in a turn (A), which is the graveyard spiral illusion. B and C describe vertical illusions arising from linear acceleration (somatogravic), not prolonged rotation. D describes the opposite error from what actually occurs.
+
+### Q102: Your passenger wishes to ease their fear of flying by drinking a strong alcoholic drink just before departure. What effect has to be expected at high altitude? ^t40q102
+- A) at high altitude, the psychological effects of alcohol decrease
+- B) alcohol is eliminated more slowly at high altitude than on the ground
+- C) alcohol is eliminated more rapidly at high altitude than on the ground
+- D) oxygen deficiency at high altitude amplifies the effects of alcohol
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At altitude, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen means the brain is already operating under mild hypoxic stress; alcohol, which further impairs CNS function by suppressing synaptic transmission, therefore produces a more pronounced effect at altitude than at sea level (D). This multiplicative interaction means that a drink that would cause mild impairment on the ground can cause significant cognitive degradation at altitude. A is wrong because the psychological effects increase, not decrease, under the combined impairment. B and C are both wrong because alcohol elimination rate is a hepatic function unaffected by altitude.
+
+### Q103: Which is the correct technique for seeing at night? ^t40q103
+- A) stare directly at distant, faintly lit objects as directly as possible
+- B) do not stare directly at objects but look slightly to the side
+- C) stare directly at all objects as directly as possible
+- D) scan objects with rapid large eye movements
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At night, the most sensitive photoreceptors are the rods, which are concentrated in the peripheral retina and absent from the central fovea. To use them effectively, the pilot must look slightly off-centre from the target — eccentric fixation (B) — so that the target's image falls on the rod-rich periphery rather than the rod-free fovea. A and C are wrong because direct central gaze places the image on the cone-dominated fovea, which has poor sensitivity in low light — causing a faint object to disappear when stared at directly. D is wrong because rapid large eye movements prevent the retina from dwelling on any point long enough for rods to integrate the dim signal.
+
+### Q104: Your passenger complains of middle ear pressure equalization problems. How can you help them? ^t40q104
+- A) stop the climb, if possible descend until the pain subsides, then climb again at a lower rate
+- B) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a lower rate
+- C) descend at a higher rate until the pain subsides, then continue descending at a lower rate
+- D) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a higher rate
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pain during descent is caused by the inability of the blocked Eustachian tube to admit air into the middle ear fast enough to match rising ambient pressure. The correct response is to stop the descent and climb if possible (B), which reduces ambient pressure and partially reverses the pressure differential, giving the Eustachian tube an opportunity to open and equalise. The subsequent descent should then be made more slowly, allowing more time for equalisation at each increment of altitude loss. A is wrong because the problem occurs during descent, not climb. C is wrong because increasing the descent rate would worsen the pressure differential and intensify pain. D is wrong because resuming at a higher rate after the climb would re-create the same problem.
+
+### Q105: Which of the following symptoms may indicate oxygen deficiency? ^t40q105
+- A) joint pain
+- B) lung pain
+- C) reduced heart rate
+- D) difficulty concentrating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Difficulty concentrating is an early and characteristic symptom of oxygen deficiency (D), arising because the brain — particularly the prefrontal cortex governing executive function — is highly sensitive to reductions in oxygen delivery. This cognitive impairment typically precedes any physical symptoms, which is why hypoxia is so dangerous: the pilot's ability to recognise and respond to the problem is degraded before they feel unwell. A is wrong because joint pain is a hallmark of decompression sickness, not hypoxia. B is wrong because lung pain is not a hypoxia symptom. C is wrong because hypoxia initially accelerates heart rate as a compensatory response, not slows it.
+
+### Q106: What causes motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q106
+- A) a disorder of the middle ear
+- B) irritation of the balance organ
+- C) evaporation of gases into the blood
+- D) a strong reduction in atmospheric pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness results from a conflict between sensory inputs (B): the vestibular system signals motion that does not match what the eyes see or what the body expects, and the brain responds to this sensory mismatch with the nausea and autonomic symptoms of kinetosis. A is wrong because motion sickness is caused by sensory conflict stimulation of a normal, healthy inner ear — not by an ear disorder. C is wrong because gas evaporation into the blood is the mechanism of decompression sickness. D is wrong because pressure reduction alone does not cause kinetosis; it is the conflicting motion signals that trigger the response.
+
+### Q107: Which are the side effects of anti-motion-sickness medications? ^t40q107
+- A) drowsiness and slowed reaction time
+- B) general weakness and loss of appetite
+- C) exhaustion and depression
+- D) hyperactivity and risk-taking tendency
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most common anti-motion-sickness medications — antihistamines (such as dimenhydrinate) and anticholinergics (such as scopolamine) — cause drowsiness and slowed reaction time as their primary side effects (A), directly impairing the alertness and psychomotor performance required for safe flight. This is why these medications are generally incompatible with pilot duty; treating a passenger's kinetosis must not come at the cost of degrading the pilot's own performance. B and C describe different types of systemic side effects not primarily associated with these drug classes. D is wrong because these medications suppress CNS activity rather than stimulating it.
+
+### Q108: What is decisive for the onset of noise-induced hearing loss? ^t40q108
+- A) only the duration of noise exposure
+- B) the duration and intensity of the noise
+- C) only the intensity of the noise
+- D) the sudden onset of a noise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) is determined by the total acoustic energy dose — the product of both intensity (measured in dB) and duration of exposure (B). This is why occupational health standards use an equivalent continuous sound level (Leq) or dose measurement rather than peak level or time alone. A is wrong because short bursts of extremely high-level noise can cause immediate permanent damage (acoustic trauma), proving that duration alone is not sufficient. C is wrong because prolonged exposure to moderate noise levels also causes cumulative NIHL. D describes acoustic trauma from impulse sounds, which is a special case, not the general determinant.
+
+### Q109: Increasing and sustained positive g-loads can produce symptoms that appear in the following order:... ^t40q109
+- A) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- B) red-out, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- C) reduction of peripheral vision, loss of color vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- D) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, red-out, loss of consciousness
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The progressive sequence of g-force effects follows the decreasing blood flow to increasingly oxygen-sensitive structures: first colour vision fails (grey-out) as cone cells lose adequate perfusion, then peripheral vision narrows, then total vision is lost (blackout) as the entire retina is deprived, and finally consciousness is lost (G-LOC) as cerebral blood flow becomes inadequate — making A the correct sequence. B is wrong because red-out is caused by negative g-forces (blood forced into the head), not positive g — it has no place in this positive-g sequence. C transposes the first two steps. D incorrectly inserts red-out late in a positive-g sequence.
+
+### Q110: From what altitude does the body of a healthy person begin to compensate for oxygen deficiency by accelerating breathing rate? ^t40q110
+- A) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- B) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+- C) roughly 3,000-4,000 ft
+- D) from 12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The peripheral chemoreceptors (carotid and aortic bodies) begin to stimulate increased respiratory rate when arterial oxygen partial pressure falls below a threshold corresponding to approximately 6,000–7,000 ft altitude (A). This is the altitude at which the body initiates its primary compensatory response to reduced oxygen availability. B and D are wrong because those altitudes (10,000–12,000 ft) represent the upper limit of effective compensation, not its onset. C is wrong because at 3,000–4,000 ft the oxygen partial pressure is still high enough that no respiratory compensation is triggered in a healthy person.
+
+### Q111: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q111
+- A) Point C
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law describes an inverted-U curve where performance peaks at a moderate, optimal level of arousal — represented by Point B in the diagram, which corresponds to answer C. Too little arousal (Point A, answer D) produces inattention, boredom, and sluggish responses. Excessive arousal (Points C and D on the curve, answers A and B) degrades performance through tunnel vision, cognitive narrowing, and impaired decision-making. Understanding this curve helps pilots recognise both under-stimulation (monotonous long flights) and over-stimulation (emergencies) as states requiring active management.
+
+### Q112: Which answer is correct concerning stress? ^t40q112
+- A) Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner
+- B) Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety
+- C) Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem
+- D) Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress commonly arises when a pilot perceives a threat or unsolvable problem — the cognitive appraisal that demands exceed available resources (C). Individual stress reactions vary greatly based on personality, experience, and coping strategies, making A incorrect. Training and experience are well established as factors that raise the stress threshold and improve resilience, so D is wrong. B is wrong because stress is directly relevant to flight safety — elevated stress impairs attention, working memory, and decision-making, all of which are critical in the cockpit.
+
+### Q113: During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed? ^t40q113
+- A) Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook
+- B) Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying
+- C) Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane
+- D) There is no time for solving problems during flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental priority hierarchy in all piloting is "aviate, navigate, communicate" — the first duty is always to maintain aircraft control and a stable flight path (C). Only once the aircraft is in a controlled, safe condition should the pilot divert attention to diagnosing and solving secondary problems, while continuously monitoring the aircraft throughout. A is wrong because attempting to solve a problem immediately without first securing aircraft control can lead to loss of situational awareness or control. B is wrong because contacting another pilot should only occur after aircraft control is assured. D is wrong because problem-solving is possible and necessary in flight, but always subordinate to aircraft control.
+
+### Q114: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q114
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point B
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Yerkes-Dodson arousal-performance curve, Point D (answer A) represents the far right extreme of high arousal where performance has collapsed — the pilot is overwhelmed and overstrained. At this level, cognitive resources are saturated, decision-making deteriorates, tunnel vision narrows attention to one problem while others are missed, and errors multiply rapidly. Point A (answer C) on the curve represents under-arousal; Point B (answer D) is the peak of optimal performance; Point C (answer B) is above optimal but still on the descending slope before total collapse.
+
+### Q115: The swiss cheese model is used to explain the... ^t40q115
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Error chain.
+- D) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model illustrates how accidents result from an error chain (C): multiple defensive layers — representing procedures, training, equipment, and oversight — each contain "holes" (latent and active failures). An accident occurs only when all holes align simultaneously, allowing a hazard to pass through every layer of defence. A is wrong because pilot readiness is assessed through medical and proficiency checks, not the Swiss Cheese Model. B is wrong because it is an accident causation model, not a problem-solving tool. D is wrong because emergency procedures are prescribed checklists unrelated to this model.
+
+### Q116: What does the term Red-out mean? ^t40q116
+- A) Rash during decompression sickness
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- D) Anaemia caused by an injury
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out (C) occurs when sustained negative g-forces — such as those experienced during a bunt, pushover, or inverted flight — push blood toward the head and eyes, engorging the conjunctival and retinal blood vessels. The result is a reddish tinge flooding the visual field, the reverse of the grey-out and blackout sequence caused by positive g-forces. A is wrong because decompression sickness causes joint pain, skin mottling, and neurological symptoms — not a visual red field. B is wrong because colour changes at sunrise and sunset are atmospheric optical phenomena entirely unrelated to g-force physiology. D is wrong because anaemia is a blood condition with no association with the visual red-out phenomenon.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_121_150_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_121_150_out.md
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+### Q121: Where should heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear near the ground be expected? ^t50q121
+- A) During warm summer days with high, flattened Cu clouds.
+- B) Close to rainfall areas of intense showers or thunderstorms.
+- C) During an approach to a coastal airfield with a strong sea breeze.
+- D) On cold, clear nights when radiation fog is forming.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Intense showers and thunderstorms produce powerful downdrafts (microbursts and downbursts) as precipitation drags air downward; upon reaching the surface, these spread outward creating severe low-level wind shear that can shift wind direction and speed by 50 knots or more within seconds. Option A (high, flattened Cu) indicates suppressed convection under an inversion with weak updrafts and no significant downdrafts. Option C (sea breeze) can produce mild convergence but not heavy downdrafts. Option D (radiation fog nights) are characterised by calm, stable conditions with minimal vertical air movement.
+
+### Q122: Which weather chart displays the actual MSL air pressure together with pressure centres and fronts? ^t50q122
+- A) Hypsometric chart
+- B) Prognostic chart
+- C) Wind chart
+- D) Surface weather chart
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (also called a synoptic chart or surface analysis) depicts observed mean sea-level pressure through isobars, locates high and low pressure centres, and plots the positions of warm, cold, and occluded fronts based on current observations. Option A (hypsometric chart) shows the heights of constant-pressure surfaces aloft, not surface pressure. Option B (prognostic chart) shows forecast conditions, not current analysis. Option C (wind chart) displays wind vectors but not pressure patterns or frontal systems.
+
+### Q123: What kind of information can be derived from satellite images? ^t50q123
+- A) Turbulence and icing conditions
+- B) Temperature and dew point of surrounding air
+- C) An overview of cloud cover and frontal lines
+- D) Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Satellite imagery provides a broad-area view of cloud distribution, cloud types, and the movement of weather systems, allowing meteorologists and pilots to identify frontal boundaries and areas of significant cloud development. Option A (turbulence and icing) cannot be directly observed by satellite — these require pilot reports or model forecasts. Option B (temperature and dew point) are measured by radiosondes and ground stations, not derived from satellite images. Option D (flight and ground visibility) requires surface-level observations that satellites viewing from above cannot provide.
+
+### Q124: Which information is available in the ATIS but not in a METAR? ^t50q124
+- A) Current weather details such as precipitation types
+- B) Approach data including ground visibility and cloud base
+- C) Operational details such as active runway and transition level
+- D) Mean wind speeds and maximum gust speeds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) includes operational aerodrome information such as the active runway in use, transition level, approach type, and relevant NOTAMs — details that are specific to flight operations and not encoded in a METAR. Option A (precipitation types), Option B (visibility and cloud base), and Option D (wind speeds and gusts) are all standard elements of the METAR weather report format. The distinction between ATIS and METAR is that ATIS combines weather data with operational information to give pilots a complete picture for approach and departure.
+
+### Q125: Which cloud type signals the presence of thermal updrafts? ^t50q125
+- A) Lenticularis
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Cirrus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible markers of thermal convection — they form when rising warm air parcels cool to their dew point and water vapour condenses, creating the characteristic flat-based, vertically developing cloud. For glider pilots, cumulus clouds are the primary visual indicator of usable thermal lift. Option A (Lenticularis) forms in mountain wave lift, not thermals. Option B (Stratus) is a stable, layered cloud formed by broad cooling, indicating suppressed convection. Option D (Cirrus) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud unrelated to surface thermal activity.
+
+### Q126: Compared to the dry adiabatic lapse rate, the saturated adiabatic lapse rate is... ^t50q126
+- A) Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- B) Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- C) Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- D) Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated adiabatic lapse rate (SALR, averaging about 0.6°C per 100 m) is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR, 1.0°C per 100 m) because when saturated air rises and water vapour condenses, latent heat is released, partially offsetting the cooling that would otherwise occur. This means saturated air cools more slowly with altitude than dry air. Option A is incorrect because the two rates differ significantly. Option C reverses the relationship. Option D is vague — while they are related physical quantities, the SALR varies with temperature and pressure, so a simple proportional relationship does not exist.
+
+### Q127: What is the value of the dry adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q127
+- A) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 2° / 1000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is a fundamental constant in meteorology: an unsaturated air parcel rising adiabatically cools at exactly 1.0°C per 100 m (or approximately 3°C per 1000 ft). This value is derived from the thermodynamic properties of dry air. Option A (0.6°C/100 m) is the approximate value of the saturated adiabatic lapse rate, not the dry rate. Option B (0.65°C/100 m) approximates the standard atmosphere environmental lapse rate. Option D (2°/1000 ft) converts to about 0.66°C per 100 m, which does not match the DALR.
+
+### Q128: What weather should be expected when the atmosphere is conditionally unstable? ^t50q128
+- A) Cloud-free skies, sunshine, light winds
+- B) Layered clouds reaching high levels, prolonged rain or snow
+- C) Towering cumulus, isolated rain showers or thunderstorms
+- D) Shallow cumulus clouds with bases at medium levels
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Conditional instability means the atmosphere is stable when unsaturated but becomes unstable once an air parcel reaches saturation through lifting. When this triggering occurs, vigorous convection develops, producing towering cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds with isolated rain showers and thunderstorms. Option A (clear skies) indicates stable conditions with no convective trigger. Option B (layered clouds with prolonged rain) describes stratiform weather from a warm front or stable atmosphere. Option D (shallow mid-level cumulus) suggests limited instability, not the deep convection characteristic of conditional instability.
+
+### Q129: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^t50q129
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cloud depicted in figure MET-004 shows the characteristic appearance of Cirrus — thin, delicate, wispy filaments or streaks of ice crystals at high altitude (typically above 6,000 m / FL200), often with a fibrous or silky texture. Option A (Stratus) would appear as a uniform grey layer at low altitude. Option B (Cumulus) would show a flat base with cauliflower-like vertical development. Option D (Altocumulus) would present as patches or rolls of rounded cloudlets at medium altitude. The distinctive feathery, high-altitude appearance is unique to Cirrus clouds.
+
+### Q130: What is required for the development of medium to large precipitation particles? ^t50q130
+- A) An inversion layer.
+- B) A high cloud base.
+- C) Strong updrafts.
+- D) Strong wind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Medium to large precipitation particles (raindrops, hailstones) require strong updrafts to keep water droplets and ice crystals suspended within the cloud long enough to grow through collision-coalescence or the Bergeron-Findeisen (ice crystal) process. Without sufficient updraft strength, particles fall out as small drizzle before reaching significant size. Option A (inversion layer) suppresses cloud growth and limits precipitation development. Option B (high cloud base) reduces the available cloud depth for particle growth. Option D (strong wind) affects horizontal transport but does not directly influence the vertical suspension time needed for particle growth.
+
+### Q131: On the weather chart, the symbol labelled (2) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q131
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On standard synoptic weather charts, a warm front is depicted by a line with semicircles (half-circles) pointing in the direction of movement — toward the retreating cooler air mass. The symbol labelled (2) in figure MET-005 matches this warm front depiction. Option A (cold front) uses triangular barbs pointing in the direction of advance. Option D (occlusion) combines both triangles and semicircles on the same side of the line. Option C (front aloft) is depicted using a different specialised symbol not commonly shown on basic surface charts.
+
+### Q132: Within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q132
+- A) Visibility below 1000 m, cloud covering the ground
+- B) Good visibility, a few isolated high clouds
+- C) Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds
+- D) Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, the warm sector — the region between the warm front and the following cold front — contains relatively warm, moderately moist air that typically provides moderate to good visibility with scattered to broken cloud layers at various levels. Option A (below 1000 m visibility with ground fog) is more typical of a winter warm sector or coastal stratus conditions. Option B (good visibility with only high clouds) better describes the far-ahead pre-warm-front region. Option D (heavy showers and thunderstorms) characterises the cold front or the post-frontal cold air mass, not the warm sector itself.
+
+### Q133: After a cold front has passed, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q133
+- A) Moderate visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation
+- B) Good visibility, cumulus cloud development with rain or snow showers
+- C) Scattered cloud layers, visibility over 5 km, shallow cumulus clouds forming
+- D) Poor visibility, overcast or ground-covering stratus, snow
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cold front passes, cold polar air replaces the warm sector, bringing instability that produces good visibility in the clean polar air mass along with convective cumulus development and showery precipitation. The cold, unstable air creates "back-side weather" characterised by rapidly changing conditions between sunshine and sharp showers. Option A describes pre-warm-front conditions with stratiform cloud and steady rain. Option C describes benign anticyclonic conditions. Option D describes conditions more typical of a warm occlusion or winter fog situations.
+
+### Q134: In what direction does a polar front low typically move? ^t50q134
+- A) Parallel to the warm front line toward the south
+- B) Northeastward in winter, southeastward in summer
+- C) Northwestward in winter, southwestward in summer
+- D) Parallel to the warm-sector isobars
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A polar front low-pressure system moves approximately parallel to the isobars within its warm sector, which represent the steering flow of the mid-tropospheric winds. This empirical rule allows meteorologists and pilots to estimate the track of the depression by examining the warm-sector wind direction. Option A incorrectly assigns southward movement, while most European lows track eastward to northeastward. Option B and Option C provide seasonal directional rules that are oversimplified and unreliable compared to the warm-sector isobar method.
+
+### Q135: What is the characteristic pressure pattern as a polar front low passes over? ^t50q135
+- A) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- B) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- C) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+- D) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, rising pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The classic pressure signature of a passing polar front low follows three distinct phases: pressure falls steadily as the warm front approaches (the low draws nearer), pressure levels off or falls only slightly within the warm sector (the observer is between fronts), and pressure rises sharply after the cold front passes as cold, dense air moves in behind. Option B incorrectly shows rising pressure ahead of the warm front. Option C shows falling pressure behind the cold front, which contradicts the arrival of dense cold air. Option D reverses nearly every phase of the actual pattern.
+
+### Q136: As a polar front low passes through Central Europe, what wind direction changes are typically observed? ^t50q136
+- A) Backing at both the warm front and the cold front
+- B) Veering at the warm front, backing at the cold front
+- C) Backing at the warm front, veering at the cold front
+- D) Veering at both the warm front and the cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, as a typical polar front low passes an observer in Central Europe, the wind veers (shifts clockwise) with each frontal passage. At the warm front, wind typically shifts from southeasterly to southwesterly (veering), and at the cold front it veers again from southwesterly to northwesterly. Option A (backing at both) would indicate the low is passing to the south, which is atypical for Central Europe. Option B and Option C each propose a mix of veering and backing that does not match the standard passage model for mid-latitude lows.
+
+### Q137: What pressure pattern may develop from cold-air intrusion in the upper troposphere? ^t50q137
+- A) Development of a low in the upper troposphere
+- B) Development of a high in the upper troposphere
+- C) Oscillating pressure
+- D) Development of a large surface low
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When cold air advects into the upper troposphere, it increases air density and contracts the air column, causing pressure surfaces to drop in height — this creates an upper-level trough or cut-off low. These upper-level cold pools are significant weather features that can trigger severe convection below. Option B (upper high) is wrong because cold air contracts the column and lowers pressure aloft, not raises it. Option C (oscillating pressure) is not a recognised pressure pattern resulting from cold-air intrusion. Option D (large surface low) may sometimes develop as a secondary effect but is not the direct result of upper-level cold-air intrusion.
+
+### Q138: Cold air flowing into the upper troposphere may lead to... ^t50q138
+- A) Stabilisation and settled weather.
+- B) Frontal weather systems.
+- C) Showers and thunderstorms.
+- D) Calm weather and cloud dissipation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air flowing into the upper troposphere steepens the environmental lapse rate, creating a large temperature difference between the cold air aloft and warmer air below. This destabilises the atmosphere, and when combined with sufficient moisture, triggers vigorous convective activity producing showers and thunderstorms — often referred to as "cold-pool thunderstorms." Option A and Option D are incorrect because cold upper-level air destabilises, not stabilises, the atmosphere. Option B (frontal weather) requires contrasting air mass boundaries at the surface, which is a different mechanism from upper-level cold-air destabilisation.
+
+### Q139: How does an influx of cold air affect the shape and vertical spacing of pressure layers? ^t50q139
+- A) Increased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- B) Decreased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- C) Increased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+- D) Decreased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air is denser than warm air, which means a column of cold air occupies less vertical space — the distance between pressure surfaces decreases. With reduced column thickness, upper-level pressure surfaces sit at lower heights, creating low pressure aloft. This is the hypsometric principle: cold air = thinner layers = lower heights = upper-level low. Option A and Option C incorrectly state that cold air increases vertical spacing. Option B correctly identifies decreased spacing but incorrectly concludes this raises heights, when the opposite is true.
+
+### Q140: During summer, what weather is typical of high pressure areas? ^t50q140
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- B) Settled weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+- C) Changeable weather with frontal passages
+- D) Light winds with widespread high fog
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Summer high-pressure systems are characterised by subsiding air that warms adiabatically as it descends, suppressing deep convection and promoting cloud dissipation. Surface heating during the day may generate small fair-weather cumulus (Cu humilis), but these remain flat and shallow under the subsidence inversion. Option A (squall lines and thunderstorms) requires deep instability and moisture, which high-pressure subsidence suppresses. Option C (frontal passages) is associated with low-pressure systems. Option D (widespread high fog) is a winter phenomenon in continental high-pressure areas, not a summer feature.
+
+### Q141: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn conditions, what weather should be expected? ^t50q141
+- A) Scattered cumulus clouds accompanied by showers and thunderstorms
+- B) Light wind with formation of high stratus (high fog)
+- C) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate to heavy rain
+- D) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming, strong gusty winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (upwind) side during Foehn conditions, moist air is forced to rise over the mountain range, cooling at the dry then saturated adiabatic rate, producing extensive layered cloud that obscures the mountains, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy orographic precipitation. Option A describes convective weather that is more typical of post-frontal instability. Option B describes calm anticyclonic conditions. Option D describes the classic Foehn effect on the lee (downwind) side — not the windward side — where descending air warms adiabatically, dissipating cloud and producing warm, gusty winds.
+
+### Q142: Which chart depicts areas of precipitation? ^t50q142
+- A) Wind chart
+- B) Radar picture
+- C) GAFOR
+- D) Satellite picture
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Weather radar actively emits microwave pulses and detects their reflection from precipitation particles (rain, snow, hail), providing real-time images of precipitation areas, their intensity, and their movement. Option A (wind chart) shows wind speed and direction data only. Option C (GAFOR) is a coded route forecast for general aviation that indicates expected VFR conditions, not precipitation areas directly. Option D (satellite picture) shows cloud cover from above but cannot distinguish precipitating from non-precipitating clouds with the same reliability as radar.
+
+### Q143: An inversion is an atmospheric layer where... ^t50q143
+- A) Pressure increases with increasing height.
+- B) Temperature remains constant with increasing height.
+- C) Temperature decreases with increasing height.
+- D) Temperature increases with increasing height.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion is a layer of the atmosphere where temperature increases with altitude, reversing the normal tropospheric pattern of decreasing temperature with height. Inversions are extremely stable layers that suppress vertical air movement and act as a lid on convection, trapping pollutants and moisture below. Option A is physically impossible — pressure always decreases with height in the atmosphere. Option B describes an isothermal layer (constant temperature), not an inversion. Option C describes the normal lapse rate, which is the standard condition, not the anomaly that defines an inversion.
+
+### Q144: Which condition may prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q144
+- A) A clear, cloudless night
+- B) Low temperature-dew point spread
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Calm wind conditions
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Overcast cloud cover acts as a thermal blanket, reflecting long-wave radiation back to the ground and preventing the rapid surface cooling that is essential for radiation fog formation. Without sufficient cooling, the air temperature cannot reach the dew point. Option A (clear night), Option B (low dew point spread), and Option D (calm wind) are all conditions that favour radiation fog, not prevent it. The combination of clear skies, light winds, and a small temperature-dew point spread creates the ideal recipe for radiation fog — removing any one of these factors, especially adding cloud cover, can prevent it.
+
+### Q145: On the chart, the symbol labelled (3) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q145
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Front aloft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An occlusion forms when a faster-moving cold front catches up with the warm front ahead of it, lifting the warm sector air off the surface. On synoptic charts, an occluded front is depicted by a line with alternating triangular barbs and semicircles on the same side, combining the cold and warm front symbols. The symbol labelled (3) in figure MET-005 matches this occluded front depiction. Option A (warm front) shows only semicircles. Option B (cold front) shows only triangles. Option D (front aloft) uses a different specialised notation.
+
+### Q146: A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass that shows no horizontal movement is known as a... ^t50q146
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Occluded front.
+- C) Stationary front.
+- D) Cold front.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stationary front is a boundary between two contrasting air masses where neither air mass is advancing — the front remains essentially in place. On weather charts it is depicted by alternating cold-front triangles and warm-front semicircles on opposite sides of the line. Option A (warm front) and Option D (cold front) both involve one air mass actively displacing the other. Option B (occluded front) forms when a cold front overtakes a warm front, which requires movement. Only a stationary front is defined by its lack of horizontal displacement.
+
+### Q147: Which situation may lead to severe wind shear? ^t50q147
+- A) Cross-country flying beneath Cu clouds at roughly 4 octas coverage
+- B) A shower visible in the vicinity of the airfield
+- C) Final approach 30 minutes after a heavy shower has cleared the airfield
+- D) Flying ahead of a warm front with Ci clouds visible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An active shower visible near the airfield indicates ongoing downdrafts and outflow boundaries that produce severe low-level wind shear — exactly the conditions most dangerous for approach and departure operations. The gust front from an active shower can cause sudden airspeed changes of 30-50 knots within seconds. Option A (flying under moderate Cu) represents normal soaring conditions without significant shear. Option C (30 minutes after a shower) allows time for outflow to dissipate. Option D (ahead of a warm front with Ci) produces gradual wind changes, not the severe shear associated with convective activity.
+
+### Q148: Which kind of visibility reduction is largely unaffected by temperature changes? ^t50q148
+- A) Mist (BR)
+- B) Patches of fog (BCFG)
+- C) Haze (HZ)
+- D) Radiation fog (FG)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Haze (HZ) consists of dry suspended particles — dust, smoke, pollution, sand — that reduce visibility independently of temperature or moisture. Unlike fog and mist, which form and dissipate as temperature changes relative to the dew point, haze persists until the particles are removed by wind or rain. Option A (mist) forms when relative humidity is high and dissipates with warming. Option B (patches of fog) and Option D (radiation fog) are directly dependent on temperature: they form during cooling and dissipate when the surface warms above the dew point.
+
+### Q149: In a METAR, how are moderate showers of rain encoded? ^t50q149
+- A) TS.
+- B) .+RA.
+- C) SHRA.
+- D) .+TSRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR encoding, the descriptor 'SH' indicates shower-type precipitation (convective), and 'RA' indicates rain. Combined as 'SHRA' with no intensity prefix, this denotes moderate showers of rain. A '+' prefix would indicate heavy, and '-' would indicate light. Option A (TS) indicates a thunderstorm without specifying precipitation type. Option B (+RA) denotes heavy continuous rain, not showers. Option D (+TSRA) denotes a heavy thunderstorm with rain. The distinction between 'RA' (continuous rain from stratiform cloud) and 'SHRA' (shower rain from convective cloud) is fundamental to METAR interpretation.
+
+### Q150: For which areas are SIGMET warnings issued? ^t50q150
+- A) Airports.
+- B) FIRs / UIRs.
+- C) Specific routings.
+- D) Countries.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SIGMET (Significant Meteorological Information) warnings are issued for Flight Information Regions (FIRs) and Upper Information Regions (UIRs) — the internationally defined airspace blocks managed by specific ATC authorities. This standardised geographical reference ensures consistent and unambiguous coverage. Option A (airports) uses TAFs and METARs for aerodrome-specific forecasts. Option C (specific routings) are covered by route forecasts, not SIGMETs. Option D (countries) is too imprecise since national boundaries do not align with FIR/UIR boundaries, and one country may contain multiple FIRs.
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+### Q151: Updrafts along a mountain slope can be strengthened by... ^t50q151
+- A) Warming of upper atmospheric layers
+- B) Thermal radiation from the windward side at night
+- C) Solar heating on the lee side
+- D) Solar heating on the windward side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the sun heats the windward slope, the air in contact with the surface warms, becomes less dense, and rises as anabatic (upslope) flow. This thermal component adds to the mechanical orographic lift already caused by the prevailing wind striking the slope, strengthening the total updraft. Option A (warming upper layers) increases stability and suppresses convection. Option B (night-time radiation) cools the surface, producing katabatic (downslope) flow that weakens updrafts. Option C (heating the lee side) would enhance thermals on the wrong side — the descending Foehn side — not the windward updraft side.
+
+### Q152: The prefix used for clouds in the high layers is... ^t50q152
+- A) Alto-.
+- B) Nimbo-.
+- C) Strato-.
+- D) Cirro-.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the international cloud classification, the prefix "Cirro-" designates high-level clouds found above approximately 6,000 m (FL200), including Cirrus, Cirrocumulus, and Cirrostratus — all composed primarily of ice crystals. Option A ("Alto-") is the prefix for mid-level clouds between approximately 2,000 and 6,000 m, such as Altocumulus and Altostratus. Option B ("Nimbo-") denotes rain-bearing clouds like Nimbostratus. Option C ("Strato-") refers to layered cloud forms at lower levels. Knowing these prefixes is essential for interpreting aviation weather reports and forecasts.
+
+### Q153: What factor may limit the vertical extent of cumulus clouds at the top? ^t50q153
+- A) The presence of an inversion layer
+- B) The absolute humidity
+- C) Relative humidity
+- D) The spread
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer — where temperature increases with altitude — acts as a lid or cap that halts the upward growth of cumulus clouds. Rising air parcels lose their buoyancy at the inversion because the surrounding air becomes warmer than the ascending parcel, causing the cloud to spread horizontally rather than continuing to develop vertically. Option B (absolute humidity) and Option C (relative humidity) influence whether clouds form but do not cap their vertical extent. Option D (the spread) determines cloud base height but does not limit cloud tops.
+
+### Q154: Which factors point toward a tendency for fog formation? ^t50q154
+- A) Strong winds with falling temperature
+- B) Low pressure with rising temperature
+- C) Small spread with falling temperature
+- D) Small spread with rising temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A small spread (temperature close to dew point) means the air is nearly saturated, and if the temperature continues to fall — through nocturnal radiative cooling, advection over a cold surface, or other cooling processes — it will reach the dew point and fog will form. Option A (strong winds) promote turbulent mixing that typically prevents the surface layer from cooling enough for fog. Option B (low pressure with rising temperature) moves the temperature away from the dew point, widening the spread. Option D (small spread with rising temperature) also widens the spread, dissipating any existing fog rather than creating new fog.
+
+### Q155: What process gives rise to orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q155
+- A) Extended radiation on cloud-free nights
+- B) Evaporation from warm, moist ground into very cold air
+- C) Cold, moist air mixing with warm, moist air
+- D) Warm, moist air forced over a hill or mountain range
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when warm, moist air is mechanically forced to rise over elevated terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches saturation. The resulting cloud envelops the hill or mountain as fog, often persisting as long as the airflow continues. Option A describes the process that creates radiation fog on calm, clear nights. Option B describes steam fog (arctic sea smoke), which forms when cold air passes over warm water. Option C describes frontal or mixing fog, which occurs when two air masses of different temperature and humidity combine. Each fog type has a distinct formation mechanism.
+
+### Q156: What is needed for precipitation to form inside clouds? ^t50q156
+- A) High humidity and elevated temperatures
+- B) An inversion layer
+- C) Moderate to strong updrafts
+- D) Calm winds and intense solar insolation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation particles grow to a size large enough to fall when updrafts within the cloud keep water droplets or ice crystals suspended long enough for them to collide, merge, and accumulate mass through either the collision-coalescence process (warm clouds) or the Bergeron-Findeisen ice crystal process (cold clouds). Option A (high humidity and warmth) contributes to cloud formation but does not drive precipitation growth. Option B (inversion layer) actually suppresses cloud development and limits precipitation. Option D (calm winds and solar heating) describes surface conditions, not the in-cloud dynamics required for precipitation.
+
+### Q157: In areas where isobars are widely spaced, what wind conditions should be expected? ^t50q157
+- A) Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing
+- B) Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering
+- C) Local wind systems developing with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Variable winds with the development of local wind systems
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Widely spaced isobars indicate a weak horizontal pressure gradient, which produces only light synoptic-scale winds. In the absence of strong pressure-driven flow, local thermally-driven wind systems — such as valley-mountain breezes, sea-land breezes, and thermal circulation patterns — become dominant, resulting in variable winds that change with the time of day and local topography. Option A and Option B incorrectly describe strong winds, which require closely spaced isobars (steep pressure gradient). Option C contradicts itself by combining local systems with strong prevailing winds.
+
+### Q158: Under what circumstances does back side weather (Rückseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q158
+- A) After passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) Before passage of an occlusion
+- D) After passage of a cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Back-side weather" (Rückseitenwetter) is the characteristic weather behind (on the back side of) a cold front, where cold, unstable polar air has replaced the warm sector air mass. This produces good visibility, convective cumulus development, and showery precipitation interspersed with sunny intervals. Option A (after a warm front) places the observer in the warm sector, which has different characteristics. Option B (Foehn lee side) is a thermodynamic mountain wind phenomenon, not frontal weather. Option C (before an occlusion) places the observer ahead of the front, not behind it.
+
+### Q159: How is a wind reported as 225/15 described? ^t50q159
+- A) South-west wind at 15 km/h
+- B) North-east wind at 15 km/h
+- C) North-east wind at 15 kt
+- D) South-west wind at 15 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation weather reports, wind is always expressed as direction FROM which it blows (in degrees true) and speed in knots. A bearing of 225° corresponds to southwest, and the speed is 15 knots. Option A correctly identifies the direction but uses km/h instead of the standard aviation unit of knots. Option B and Option C both state northeast (045°), which is the direction the wind is blowing toward, not from — a common error. Aviation convention always reports wind by its origin direction.
+
+### Q160: In the Bavarian area near the Alps, what weather typically accompanies Foehn conditions? ^t50q160
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm dry wind
+- B) High pressure over Biscay and a low over Eastern Europe
+- C) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side, flat pressure pattern
+- D) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm dry wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn conditions in Bavaria, moist air from the south is forced over the Alps, producing heavy nimbostratus cloud and precipitation on the southern (Italian) windward side. As the air descends on the northern (Bavarian) lee side, it warms adiabatically at the dry rate, arriving as a warm, dry, gusty wind with excellent visibility. Rotor clouds and lenticular (Altocumulus lenticularis) clouds form on the lee side due to mountain wave turbulence. Option A incorrectly places the nimbostratus on the northern side and the rotor on the windward side. Option B describes a synoptic pattern, not the local Foehn weather. Option C contradicts the fundamental Foehn mechanism — the lee-side wind is warm and dry, not cold and humid.
+
+### Q161: Clouds are fundamentally classified into which two basic types? ^t50q161
+- A) Stratiform and ice clouds
+- B) Layered and lifted clouds
+- C) Thunderstorm and shower clouds
+- D) Cumulus and stratiform clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental classification of clouds divides them into two basic families based on their formation mechanism: cumulus (cumuliform) clouds, produced by convective uplift and characterised by vertical development, and stratiform clouds, produced by widespread gentle lifting or cooling and characterised by horizontal layering. All other cloud types are variations or combinations of these two basic forms. Option A incorrectly pairs stratiform with "ice clouds" (ice is a composition feature, not a formation type). Option B uses non-standard terminology. Option C names specific weather-producing cloud sub-types rather than the fundamental classification categories.
+
+### Q162: During Foehn conditions, what weather phenomenon marked as "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q162
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the lee side during Foehn conditions, the descending air creates standing mountain waves in the stable atmosphere downwind of the ridge. Altocumulus lenticularis (lens-shaped or almond-shaped wave clouds) forms within these waves at positions where the air rises to saturation, remaining stationary while the wind flows through them. Option A (Altocumulus Castellanus) indicates mid-level convective instability, not the stable wave patterns of Foehn flow. Option B and Option D (both Cumulonimbus) represent deep convection requiring strong instability, which contradicts the stable descending airflow on the lee side during Foehn.
+
+### Q163: When very small water droplets and ice crystals strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice forms? ^t50q163
+- A) Hoar frost
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Rime ice
+- D) Mixed ice
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rime ice forms when very small supercooled water droplets freeze instantly upon impact with the aircraft surface, trapping air between them and creating a white, rough, opaque deposit on leading edges. The small droplet size means they freeze before spreading, resulting in the characteristic granular texture. Option B (clear ice) forms from large supercooled droplets that flow across the surface before freezing, creating a smooth, transparent, dense and aerodynamically damaging coating. Option D (mixed ice) is a combination of rime and clear ice. Option A (hoar frost) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not by droplet impact.
+
+### Q164: Which chart contains information about pressure patterns and frontal positions? ^t50q164
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC)
+- B) Surface weather chart.
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Wind chart.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) is the primary product displaying isobars (lines of equal sea-level pressure), pressure centres (highs and lows), and the positions and types of frontal systems. It provides the fundamental synoptic overview for weather interpretation. Option A (Significant Weather Chart) focuses on hazardous flight weather phenomena like turbulence, icing, and thunderstorms rather than the overall pressure pattern. Option C (hypsometric chart) shows geopotential heights of pressure surfaces aloft. Option D (wind chart) displays wind speed and direction data without pressure or frontal information.
+
+### Q165: What is the typical cloud sequence observed during the approach and passage of a warm front? ^t50q165
+- A) Squall line with rain showers and thunderstorms (Cb), gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) In coastal areas, daytime wind from the coast with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in the evening
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog layers forming in winter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The classic warm front approach produces a distinctive descending cloud sequence as the warm air mass rides up over the retreating cold air: first Cirrus and Cirrostratus at high altitude (12-24 hours ahead), then thickening Altostratus and Altocumulus at mid-levels, and finally low Nimbostratus with continuous rain or drizzle as the front arrives. Option A describes cold-front weather with convective activity. Option B describes a coastal sea-breeze cycle. Option D describes anticyclonic or high-pressure conditions. The warm-front cloud sequence is one of the most important weather recognition patterns for cross-country glider pilots.
+
+### Q166: What phenomenon results from cold-air downdrafts carrying precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud? ^t50q166
+- A) Anvil-head top of the Cb cloud
+- B) Freezing rain
+- C) Electrical discharge
+- D) Gust front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During the mature stage of a thunderstorm, cold air — cooled by evaporation of precipitation — descends rapidly and spreads outward upon reaching the ground, creating a gust front: a sharp leading edge of cold, gusty air that can precede the visible storm by several kilometres. The gust front is characterised by sudden wind shifts, temperature drops, and severe low-level wind shear. Option A (anvil top) is formed by upper-level winds spreading the top of the Cb, not by downdrafts. Option C (electrical discharge) is caused by charge separation within the cloud. Option B (freezing rain) results from a temperature inversion aloft, not from Cb downdrafts.
+
+### Q167: Which item is NOT included on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)? ^t50q167
+- A) Frontal lines and frontal displacement
+- B) Turbulence area information
+- C) Icing condition information
+- D) Radar echoes of precipitation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-Level Significant Weather Charts are forecast products that depict expected hazardous weather conditions below a specified altitude, including frontal systems and their movement (Option A), turbulence areas (Option B), and icing conditions (Option C). However, they do not include radar echoes of precipitation (Option D) because radar data is a real-time observational product, not a forecast element. Radar imagery is a separate product that shows current precipitation patterns, updated in real time, whereas LLSWC are issued at fixed intervals as prognostic charts.
+
+### Q168: Which cloud type produces prolonged, steady rain? ^t50q168
+- A) Cirrostratus
+- B) Altocumulus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nimbostratus (Ns) is a thick, dark, amorphous layer cloud that produces prolonged, steady, widespread precipitation — either rain or snow — typically associated with warm fronts and occlusions. Option A (Cirrostratus) is a thin, high-altitude ice crystal cloud that may produce a halo but no significant precipitation reaching the ground. Option B (Altocumulus) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained rain. Option D (Cumulonimbus) produces intense but short-lived showers and thunderstorms from convective activity, not the steady continuous precipitation characteristic of Nimbostratus.
+
+### Q169: Based on cloud type, how is precipitation classified? ^t50q169
+- A) Light and heavy precipitation.
+- B) Prolonged rain and continuous rain.
+- C) Showers of snow and rain.
+- D) Rain and showers of rain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation is classified by its cloud type of origin into two fundamental categories: rain (steady, continuous precipitation from stratiform clouds like Nimbostratus) and showers of rain (intermittent, often intense precipitation from cumuliform clouds like Cumulonimbus or Cumulus congestus). This distinction is encoded in METAR reports as RA versus SHRA. Option A classifies by intensity (light/heavy), not cloud type. Option B uses synonymous terms without distinguishing cloud origin. Option C classifies by precipitation phase (snow/rain), which is a temperature-based distinction, not a cloud-type classification.
+
+### Q170: Which conditions favour thunderstorm development? ^t50q170
+- A) Clear night over land with cold air and fog patches
+- B) Warm, dry air under a strong inversion layer
+- C) Calm winds with cold air, overcast St or As cloud cover
+- D) Warm, humid air with a conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorm development requires three key ingredients: sufficient moisture (warm, humid air provides the latent heat energy), instability (a conditionally unstable lapse rate means rising saturated air becomes buoyant and accelerates upward), and a trigger mechanism (frontal lifting, orographic lift, or surface heating). Option A describes stable nocturnal conditions unfavourable for convection. Option B's strong inversion layer acts as a cap that suppresses vertical development. Option C describes stable, stratiform conditions with cold air and overcast that prevents surface heating — the opposite of thunderstorm conditions.
+
+### Q171: When isobars on a surface weather chart are widely spaced, what does this indicate about the prevailing wind? ^t50q171
+- A) Strong pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+- B) Weak pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- C) Strong pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- D) Weak pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spacing of isobars on a weather chart directly indicates the horizontal pressure gradient: widely spaced isobars mean the pressure changes slowly over distance, producing a weak pressure gradient force and therefore light winds. Conversely, closely packed isobars indicate a steep gradient and strong winds. Option A and Option C incorrectly claim that wide spacing means strong gradients. Option D correctly identifies the weak gradient but incorrectly concludes this produces strong wind — the relationship between gradient strength and wind speed is directly proportional, not inverse.
+
+### Q172: An air mass arriving in Central Europe from the Russian continent during winter is described as... ^t50q172
+- A) Continental tropical air
+- B) Maritime polar air
+- C) Continental polar air
+- D) Maritime tropical air
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass originating over the vast Russian or Siberian continental interior in winter acquires the properties of its source region: very cold temperatures and low moisture content, classifying it as Continental Polar (cP) air. When this air reaches Central Europe, it brings bitterly cold, dry conditions with clear skies or low stratus. Option A (Continental Tropical) originates over hot continental deserts like the Sahara. Option B (Maritime Polar) originates over cold ocean areas and carries more moisture. Option D (Maritime Tropical) originates over warm oceans and is warm and humid — the opposite of Russian winter air.
+
+### Q173: What clouds and weather are typically observed during the passage of a cold front? ^t50q173
+- A) Strongly developed Cb clouds with rain showers and thunderstorms, gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog in winter
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) In coastal areas, daytime onshore wind with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in evening
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold fronts are characterised by vigorous convective activity as cold, dense air undercuts and forcefully lifts the warm sector air: this produces strongly developed Cumulonimbus clouds, heavy rain showers and thunderstorms, a squall line with strong gusty winds, followed by scattered cumulus with isolated showers in the cold air mass behind the front. Option C describes the gradual cloud sequence of an approaching warm front. Option B describes anticyclonic conditions. Option D describes a sea-breeze circulation pattern unrelated to frontal weather.
+
+### Q174: When an aircraft is struck by lightning, what is the most immediate danger? ^t50q174
+- A) Disrupted radio communication and static noise
+- B) Rapid cabin depressurisation and smoke in the cabin
+- C) Surface overheating and damage to exposed aircraft parts
+- D) Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most immediate physical danger from a lightning strike is localised surface overheating and structural damage to exposed aircraft components — lightning can burn through thin fairings, pit and melt metal surfaces, damage or destroy antennas, and in severe cases compromise control surface integrity. Option A (radio disruption) is a secondary nuisance effect, not the primary danger. Option B (depressurisation) applies primarily to pressurised aircraft and is not the most common lightning strike consequence. Option D (explosion of cockpit equipment) is extremely rare in properly bonded and protected certified aircraft.
+
+### Q175: What is meant by mountain wind? ^t50q175
+- A) A wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.
+- B) A wind blowing down the mountain slope at night.
+- C) A wind blowing uphill from the valley at night.
+- D) A wind blowing down the mountain slope during daytime.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain wind (Bergwind) is the nocturnal katabatic flow that occurs when air in contact with the mountain slope cools by long-wave radiation at night, becomes denser than the surrounding free air, and drains downhill under gravity. This is the night-time counterpart to valley wind (Talwind), which flows uphill during the day as solar heating warms the slope surface. Option A describes the daytime valley wind, not the mountain wind. Option C and Option D each combine the wrong time of day with the wrong direction. Understanding the diurnal mountain-valley wind cycle is essential for glider pilots operating in mountainous terrain.
+
+### Q176: What is the average value of the saturated adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q176
+- A) 0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR) averages approximately 0.6°C per 100 m. This rate is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR of 1.0°C/100 m) because condensation within the rising saturated air parcel releases latent heat, partially compensating for the cooling due to expansion. Option A (0°C/100 m) would mean no temperature change, which is physically incorrect for rising air. Option B (2°C/1000 ft, approximately 0.66°C/100 m) is close but not the standard stated value. Option C (1.0°C/100 m) is the dry adiabatic lapse rate, not the saturated rate.
+
+### Q177: Throughout the year, extensive high pressure areas are found... ^t50q177
+- A) In tropical regions near the equator.
+- B) Over oceanic areas at approximately 30°N/S latitude.
+- C) In mid-latitudes along the polar front.
+- D) In areas with extensive lifting processes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The subtropical high-pressure belt, located at approximately 30°N and 30°S latitude, results from the descending branch of the Hadley cell circulation. Warm air rising at the equatorial ITCZ moves poleward aloft, cools, and subsides in these subtropical zones, creating semi-permanent anticyclones such as the Azores High and the Pacific High. Option A (equatorial regions) is dominated by the ITCZ and low pressure from convergent surface winds. Option C (mid-latitudes along the polar front) is a zone of cyclonic activity and low pressure. Option D (areas with extensive lifting) by definition produce low pressure, not high pressure.
+
+### Q178: During flight, weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained via... ^t50q178
+- A) SIGMET
+- B) ATIS.
+- C) PIREP
+- D) VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) provides a continuous recorded broadcast of current weather conditions and operational information specific to a destination aerodrome, including active runway, transition level, approach procedures, and relevant NOTAMs. Pilots can receive ATIS on the designated frequency during flight. Option A (SIGMET) covers hazardous weather across an entire FIR, not aerodrome-specific operations. Option C (PIREP) contains pilot-reported en-route weather observations. Option D (VOLMET) broadcasts weather data for multiple aerodromes but lacks the operational details (runway in use, approach type) that ATIS provides.
+
+### Q179: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^t50q179
+- A) Cumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Stratus
+- D) Altus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cloud depicted in figure MET-002 shows the characteristic features of Cumulus: a well-defined flat base (the condensation level) with cauliflower-like vertical development above, bright white surfaces illuminated by sunlight, and sharp outlines indicating active convection. Option B (Cirrus) would appear as thin, wispy, high-altitude streaks. Option C (Stratus) would present as a uniform grey layer without vertical structure. Option D ("Altus") is not a recognised genus in the international cloud classification system — there is no cloud type by this name.
+
+### Q180: What determines the character of an air mass? ^t50q180
+- A) Wind speed and tropopause height
+- B) Region of origin and trajectory during movement
+- C) Environmental lapse rate at the source
+- D) Temperatures at both origin and present location
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass acquires its fundamental temperature and humidity characteristics from its source region (e.g., polar continental = cold and dry, tropical maritime = warm and moist) and is further modified by its trajectory as it moves — for example, polar air crossing a warm ocean gains moisture and becomes more unstable. Option A (wind speed and tropopause height) describes dynamic properties but does not define the air mass character. Option C (environmental lapse rate at source) is a consequence of the air mass properties, not their defining cause. Option D (temperatures at origin and destination) captures only part of the picture, omitting the crucial moisture dimension and modification during transit.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_181_210_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_181_210_out.md
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+### Q181: Over widespread high pressure areas during summer, which cloud type is typically observed? ^t50q181
+- A) Overcast Ns clouds
+- B) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- C) Overcast low stratus
+- D) Scattered Cu clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer anticyclones, solar heating of the surface generates thermal convection that produces scattered fair-weather cumulus (Cu humilis or Cu mediocris) during the day, typically dissipating in the evening as surface heating diminishes. Overcast nimbostratus (A) is associated with frontal systems and continuous rain. Squall lines and thunderstorms (B) require deep convective instability not typical of settled high-pressure conditions. Overcast low stratus (C) is associated with winter high-pressure inversions or marine layers, not summer anticyclones.
+
+### Q182: On the chart, the symbol labelled (1) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q182
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a surface weather chart, a cold front is depicted by a line with solid triangular spikes (barbs) pointing in the direction the front is advancing (into the warm air). Symbol (1) in figure MET-005 matches this convention, identifying it as a cold front. A warm front (A) uses semicircles pointing in the direction of advance. An occlusion (D) combines alternating triangles and semicircles on the same side. A front aloft (C) is marked differently, indicating the front does not extend to the surface.
+
+### Q183: In a METAR, how is heavy rain encoded? ^t50q183
+- A) .+SHRA.
+- B) SHRA
+- C) RA.
+- D) .+RA
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR coding, the prefix "+" denotes heavy intensity, and "RA" is the code for rain. Therefore, heavy rain is coded as "+RA" (shown as ".+RA" in the options). "RA" alone (C) indicates moderate continuous rain. "SHRA" (B) means moderate showers of rain (convective). "+SHRA" (A) means heavy showers of rain — a different precipitation type from continuous rain. The distinction between "RA" (stratiform, continuous) and "SHRA" (convective, intermittent) is important for understanding the cloud origin.
+
+### Q184: During which thunderstorm stage do both strong updrafts and downdrafts occur? ^t50q184
+- A) Dissipating stage.
+- B) Thunderstorm stage.
+- C) Mature stage.
+- D) Initial stage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mature stage of a thunderstorm is characterised by the coexistence of both powerful updrafts (sustaining the cloud's vertical growth) and powerful downdrafts (driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling). This stage produces the most severe weather: heavy precipitation, lightning, hail, and gust fronts. The initial (cumulus) stage (D) has only updrafts. The dissipating stage (A) is dominated by downdrafts as the updraft collapses. "Thunderstorm stage" (B) is not a standard meteorological term in the three-stage lifecycle model.
+
+### Q185: Which conditions are most conducive to ice accretion on an aircraft? ^t50q185
+- A) Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C, ice crystals present (Ci clouds)
+- B) Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C, hail present (clouds)
+- C) Temperatures below 0° C, strong wind, clear skies
+- D) Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C, supercooled water droplets present (clouds)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most hazardous icing conditions occur between 0°C and -12°C in clouds containing supercooled liquid water droplets. At these temperatures, droplets remain liquid despite being below freezing and freeze rapidly on contact with aircraft surfaces. Cirrus clouds (A) at -20°C to -40°C contain ice crystals that generally bounce off rather than adhere. Hail (B) causes impact damage, not sustained ice accretion. Clear skies (C) contain no moisture for icing regardless of temperature or wind speed.
+
+### Q186: When approaching a valley airfield with strong upper-level winds blowing perpendicular to the mountain ridge, what is the greatest danger? ^t50q186
+- A) Reduced visibility, possible loss of sight of the airfield on final approach
+- B) Heavy downdrafts in rainfall areas beneath thunderstorm clouds
+- C) Wind shear during descent, with wind direction potentially reversing by 180°
+- D) Formation of moderate to heavy clear ice on all aircraft surfaces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When strong winds blow perpendicular to a mountain ridge, the lee side experiences complex flow patterns including rotor turbulence, wave activity, and severe wind shear. An aircraft descending into a valley airfield on the lee side can encounter wind reversing by up to 180° between different altitude levels — surface wind may blow opposite to the upper-level flow. This sudden change in wind direction and speed creates dangerous airspeed fluctuations during approach. Reduced visibility (A) is a secondary concern. Icing (D) is unrelated to mountain wind patterns. Thunderstorm downdrafts (B) describe a different hazard scenario.
+
+### Q187: What are blue thermals? ^t50q187
+- A) Thermals with fewer than 4/8 Cu coverage
+- B) Thermals that form without producing Cu clouds
+- C) Turbulence near Cumulonimbus clouds
+- D) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blue thermals are thermals that rise but do not reach the condensation level — the air is too dry or the convective boundary layer is too shallow for the ascending air to cool to its dew point. No cumulus clouds form, so the sky remains clear ("blue") above. This makes thermal detection very difficult for glider pilots, who must rely on instruments and experience rather than visual cloud markers. Option A describes Cu coverage, not the absence of clouds. Option D describes inter-thermal sink. Option C describes Cb-associated turbulence, a completely different phenomenon.
+
+### Q188: The beginning of thermals is defined as the moment when thermal intensity... ^t50q188
+- A) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and produces Cumulus clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for cross-country soaring by producing Cu clouds.
+- C) Becomes usable for soaring and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+- D) Becomes usable for soaring and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The "beginning of thermals" (Thermikbeginn) is defined as the moment when thermal updrafts become strong enough for a glider to sustain flight and extend to at least 600 m above ground level — a practical minimum for safe thermal exploitation. Cloud formation is not required (blue thermals count). Option A incorrectly requires Cu formation. Option B adds a cross-country requirement not part of the definition. Option C uses MSL rather than AGL and specifies 1200 m, which is a different altitude threshold.
+
+### Q189: The trigger temperature is the temperature which... ^t50q189
+- A) A thermal lift reaches during ascent when Cumulus cloud formation begins.
+- B) Is the maximum surface temperature achievable without a thunderstorm developing from a Cumulus cloud.
+- C) Must be reached at ground level for Cumulus clouds to form from thermal lifts.
+- D) Is the minimum surface temperature needed for a thunderstorm to develop from a Cumulus cloud.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum surface temperature that must be achieved for thermals to carry air parcels high enough to reach the condensation level, where cumulus clouds form. It is determined from a morning radiosounding by tracing the dry adiabat from the surface mixing ratio upward until it intersects the temperature profile. Option A describes the in-cloud temperature, not the surface trigger. Option B and D relate to thunderstorm development thresholds, which are separate concepts from the trigger temperature for Cu formation.
+
+### Q190: In a weather report, what does over-development refer to? ^t50q190
+- A) Spreading of Cumulus clouds beneath an inversion layer
+- B) Transition from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- C) Development of a thermal low into a storm depression
+- D) Vertical growth of Cumulus clouds into rain showers
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development (Überentwicklung) describes the process where cumulus clouds grow vertically beyond the fair-weather Cu stage, developing into cumulus congestus and eventually cumulonimbus, producing rain showers and thunderstorms. For glider pilots, over-development signals the transition from usable soaring conditions to dangerous weather. Option A describes the horizontal spreading of Cu under an inversion (not over-development). Option B describes a change in thermal visibility, not cloud growth. Option C describes synoptic-scale cyclogenesis, a different scale of development.
+
+### Q191: What does shielding refer to in gliding meteorology? ^t50q191
+- A) Ns clouds covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- B) The anvil-shaped structure at the top of a thunderstorm cloud
+- C) High or mid-level cloud layers that suppress thermal activity
+- D) Cumulus cloud coverage stated as a fraction of eights of the sky
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding (Abschirmung) in gliding meteorology refers to high or mid-level cloud layers — such as cirrostratus, altostratus, or altocumulus — that block solar radiation from reaching the ground. Without adequate insolation, the surface cannot heat sufficiently to trigger thermal convection, effectively suppressing soaring conditions. Option A describes windward-side orographic cloud. Option B describes the Cb anvil, a structural feature. Option D describes sky coverage in oktas, which is an observation metric, not a meteorological process.
+
+### Q192: What is the gas composition of dry air? ^t50q192
+- A) Oxygen 21 %, Water vapour 78 %, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 78 %, Water vapour 21 %, Nitrogen 1 %
+- C) Nitrogen 21 %, Oxygen 78 %, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- D) Oxygen 21 %, Nitrogen 78 %, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air consists of approximately 78% nitrogen (N₂), 21% oxygen (O₂), and 1% argon plus trace gases including carbon dioxide (CO₂). This is the standard atmospheric composition at all altitudes within the homosphere. Options A and B incorrectly list water vapour as a major component — water vapour is excluded from the dry air definition. Option C reverses the nitrogen and oxygen percentages. Knowing this composition is fundamental to understanding atmospheric physics and oxygen requirements at altitude.
+
+### Q193: Under ISA conditions at MSL, what is the mass of a cube of air with 1 m edges? ^t50q193
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,1225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,01225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) conditions at mean sea level (temperature 15°C, pressure 1013.25 hPa), the air density is 1.225 kg/m³. A cube with 1 m edges has a volume of exactly 1 m³, so its mass is 1.225 kg. Option A (12.25 kg) is ten times too large. Option B (0.1225 kg) is ten times too small. Option D (0.01225 kg) is a hundred times too small. These are common decimal-place errors in unit conversions.
+
+### Q194: How is the tropopause defined? ^t50q194
+- A) The boundary layer between the mesosphere and stratosphere.
+- B) The altitude above which temperature begins to fall.
+- C) The transition zone between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- D) The layer above the troposphere where temperature rises.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the transition boundary separating the troposphere (where weather occurs and temperature generally decreases with altitude) from the stratosphere (where temperature initially remains constant and then increases due to ozone absorption of UV radiation). Option A describes the stratopause, not the tropopause. Option B is incorrect because temperature falls throughout the troposphere, and the tropopause is where this falling stops. Option D describes the stratosphere itself, not the boundary.
+
+### Q195: What defines an inversion layer? ^t50q195
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature falls with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature rises with increasing height
+- C) A boundary zone between two other atmospheric layers
+- D) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer is defined by temperature increasing with altitude — the reverse (inversion) of the normal tropospheric lapse rate. Inversions create extremely stable conditions that suppress convection and trap pollutants, moisture, and haze below them. Option A describes the normal lapse rate. Option D describes an isothermal layer. Option C is a generic description of a boundary that does not capture the defining temperature characteristic of an inversion.
+
+### Q196: What defines an isothermal layer? ^t50q196
+- A) A boundary zone between two other atmospheric layers
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature falls with increasing height
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature rises with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer is one where the temperature remains constant (iso = same, thermal = temperature) with increasing altitude. The lower stratosphere often exhibits near-isothermal conditions. Option B describes the normal tropospheric lapse rate. Option C describes a temperature inversion. Option A describes a generic atmospheric boundary without specifying the temperature behaviour that defines an isothermal layer.
+
+### Q197: Which force is the primary cause of wind? ^t50q197
+- A) Coriolis force
+- B) Thermal force
+- C) Centrifugal force
+- D) Pressure gradient force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure gradient force (PGF) is the primary cause of wind — it arises from differences in atmospheric pressure between locations, driving air from high to low pressure. Without a pressure gradient, there would be no wind. The Coriolis force (A) deflects moving air due to Earth's rotation but does not initiate motion. Centrifugal force (C) is a secondary effect in curved airflow. "Thermal force" (B) is not a recognised meteorological term — temperature differences create pressure gradients, but the direct driver of wind is the pressure gradient itself.
+
+### Q198: Under what conditions does Foehn typically develop? ^t50q198
+- A) Instability with widespread air flow against a mountain ridge.
+- B) Stability with high pressure and calm wind.
+- C) Instability with high pressure and calm wind.
+- D) Stability with widespread air flow against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn develops when a stable, persistent airflow is forced over a mountain barrier by a large-scale pressure gradient. On the windward side, the air ascends and loses moisture as precipitation. On the lee side, it descends and warms dry-adiabatically, arriving significantly warmer and drier than before. Stability is essential for the organised, laminar flow characteristic of Foehn — instability (A, C) would break the flow into disordered convection. Calm wind with high pressure (B) provides no cross-mountain forcing to drive the Foehn mechanism.
+
+### Q199: How is the spread defined? ^t50q199
+- A) The relationship of actual to maximum possible humidity of air
+- B) The maximum quantity of water vapour that air can contain.
+- C) The difference between the dew point and the condensation point.
+- D) The difference between the actual temperature and the dew point.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spread (or dew-point depression) is the difference between the current air temperature and the dew point temperature. When the spread is large, the air is far from saturation; when it approaches zero, condensation is imminent and fog or cloud formation is likely. Option A describes relative humidity (a ratio, not a temperature difference). Option B describes the saturation mixing ratio. Option C is incorrect because the dew point and condensation point are effectively the same — their "difference" would be zero.
+
+### Q200: During Foehn conditions, what weather phenomenon labelled "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q200
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- C) Cumulonimbus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn conditions, stable air descending on the lee side generates standing mountain waves. In the wave crests, moisture condenses to form altocumulus lenticularis — smooth, stationary, lens-shaped clouds that are the hallmark of lee-wave activity. Cumulonimbus (C, D) requires deep convective instability incompatible with the stable descending Foehn airflow. Altocumulus castellanus (A) indicates mid-level instability and convective turrets, not the smooth laminar wave motion that characterises lee-side Foehn clouds.
+
+### Q201: Which condition can prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q201
+- A) A clear night without clouds
+- B) Low temperature-dew point spread
+- C) Calm wind
+- D) Overcast cloud cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Overcast cloud cover prevents radiation fog by acting as an insulating blanket that reflects longwave radiation back to the ground, blocking the surface cooling required for the air to reach its dew point. Without sufficient radiative cooling, fog cannot form. A clear night (A) is a prerequisite for radiation fog, not a preventative factor. Low spread (B) means the air is already near saturation — a favourable condition. Calm wind (C) prevents mixing that would disrupt the shallow cooling layer — also favourable for fog.
+
+### Q202: Which process leads to advection fog? ^t50q202
+- A) Warm, moist air moving across cold ground areas
+- B) Extended radiation on clear nights
+- C) Cold, moist air mixing with warm, moist air
+- D) Cold, moist air moving across warm ground areas
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is horizontally transported (advected) across a cold surface, cooling from below until it reaches the dew point and condensation forms at ground level. This is common over cold ocean currents or cold continental surfaces in spring. Option B describes radiation fog. Option C describes mixing fog. Option D describes the opposite temperature relationship — cold air over warm ground would warm the air and decrease relative humidity, preventing fog.
+
+### Q203: What process causes orographic fog (hill fog) to form? ^t50q203
+- A) Cold, moist air mixing with warm, moist air
+- B) Prolonged radiation on clear nights
+- C) Warm, moist air pushed over a hill or mountain range
+- D) Evaporation from warm, moist ground into very cold air
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog forms when moist air is forced to ascend over elevated terrain (hills or mountains), cooling adiabatically until the temperature drops to the dew point. The resulting cloud sits on the terrain as fog from the perspective of anyone on the hillside. Option A describes mixing fog. Option B describes radiation fog. Option D describes steam (evaporation) fog. The defining mechanism for orographic fog is always terrain-forced lifting of moist air.
+
+### Q204: What weather phenomena are associated with an upper-level trough? ^t50q204
+- A) Calm winds with shallow cumulus cloud formation
+- B) Settled weather with the development of lifted fog layers
+- C) Formation of high stratus, ground-covering cloud bases
+- D) Development of showers and thunderstorms (Cb)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upper-level trough contains cold air aloft that steepens the lapse rate and triggers positive vorticity advection, producing upper-level divergence and surface convergence. This dynamic forcing destabilises the atmosphere and generates convective activity including showers and cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) development. Options A and B describe stable, anticyclonic conditions. Option C describes stratus-dominated weather more typical of warm advection or surface inversions, not the convective instability associated with upper-level cold troughs.
+
+### Q205: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn, what weather conditions are expected? ^t50q205
+- A) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming, strong gusty winds
+- B) Scattered cumulus clouds with showers and thunderstorms
+- C) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate to heavy rain
+- D) Light wind with formation of high stratus (high fog)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (Stau) side during Foehn, moist air is forced up the mountain slopes, cooling and condensing to produce dense layered clouds (stratus, nimbostratus), poor visibility, obscured mountains, and moderate to heavy orographic precipitation (rain or snow). Option A describes the opposite — lee-side Foehn conditions with warm dry descending wind. Option B describes convective weather patterns. Option D describes stagnant fog conditions unrelated to the dynamic forcing of a Foehn event.
+
+### Q206: Which chart displays measured MSL pressure distribution along with corresponding frontal systems? ^t50q206
+- A) Prognostic chart.
+- B) Significant Weather Chart (SWC).
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Surface weather chart.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) displays actually measured pressure values reduced to MSL as isobars, along with the analysed positions of frontal systems (warm, cold, occluded, stationary). It represents the observed atmospheric state at a specific valid time. A prognostic chart (A) shows forecast conditions, not observations. A hypsometric chart (C) depicts constant-pressure surface heights aloft. The SWC (B) focuses on significant weather hazards for aviation, not comprehensive pressure and frontal analysis.
+
+### Q207: In a METAR, what identifier designates heavy rain? ^t50q207
+- A) .+SHRA.
+- B) SHRA
+- C) .+RA
+- D) RA.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the "+" prefix indicates heavy intensity and "RA" codes for rain, so heavy rain is encoded as "+RA" (shown as ".+RA" in the options). "RA" alone (D) indicates moderate rain. "SHRA" (B) means moderate showers of rain — a convective precipitation type. "+SHRA" (A) means heavy showers of rain. The key distinction is between steady rain (RA, from stratiform clouds) and showery rain (SHRA, from cumuliform clouds).
+
+### Q208: In a METAR, what identifier represents moderate showers of rain? ^t50q208
+- A) .+RA.
+- B) .+TSRA
+- C) TS.
+- D) SHRA.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The METAR code "SHRA" combines the descriptor "SH" (shower — convective precipitation) with "RA" (rain), giving moderate showers of rain. No prefix means moderate intensity. "+RA" (A) denotes heavy continuous rain from stratiform clouds. "+TSRA" (B) denotes a heavy thunderstorm with rain. "TS" (C) indicates a thunderstorm without specifying the precipitation type. The "SH" descriptor is essential for distinguishing convective showers from continuous stratiform rain.
+
+### Q209: When should back side weather (Rückseitenwetter) be expected? ^t50q209
+- A) During Foehn on the lee side
+- B) Before passage of an occlusion
+- C) After passage of a warm front
+- D) After passage of a cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Back-side weather (Rückseitenwetter) occurs in the cold, unstable polar air mass that follows the passage of a cold front. Characteristics include gusty winds, excellent visibility between showers, scattered cumulus clouds, and isolated rain or snow showers — conditions that often provide excellent soaring opportunities for glider pilots. After a warm front (C), you enter the warm sector, which has different characteristics. Before an occlusion (B) is a pre-frontal situation. During Foehn (A) is an entirely different orographic phenomenon unrelated to cold-front back-side weather.
+
+### Q210: In ISA, how does the air temperature change from MSL to approximately 10,000 m altitude? ^t50q210
+- A) From +15° to -50°C
+- B) From +20° to -40°C
+- C) From -15° to +50°C
+- D) From +30° to -40°C
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) defines the MSL temperature as +15°C and a lapse rate of 6.5°C per 1000 m through the troposphere. At 10,000 m: 15°C - (10 × 6.5°C) = 15° - 65° = -50°C. The tropopause in ISA is at 11,000 m (-56.5°C). Options B and D use incorrect starting temperatures (+20°C and +30°C). Option C reverses the sign, impossibly suggesting temperature increases with altitude from a sub-zero surface temperature.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_1_30_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_1_30_out.md
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+### Q1: When a humid, unstable air mass is driven against a mountain range by the prevailing wind and lifted orographically, what clouds and weather are likely to develop? ^t50q1
+- A) Overcast low stratus (high fog) without any precipitation.
+- B) Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus with light, continuous precipitation.
+- C) Smooth, featureless Nimbostratus with light drizzle or winter snow.
+- D) Embedded cumulonimbus with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when unstable, humid air is forced to rise over mountains, the orographic lifting triggers deep convective development. The air, being conditionally or absolutely unstable, accelerates upward once saturation is reached, fuelling cumulonimbus growth with thunderstorms, heavy showers, and hail. A is wrong because low stratus forms in stable conditions with very limited vertical development. B is wrong because altostratus and cirrostratus are associated with warm frontal lifting of stable air. C is wrong because nimbostratus with steady precipitation is characteristic of stable air being lifted, not unstable convective air.
+
+### Q2: Which type of fog forms when humid, nearly saturated air is pushed uphill over gentle terrain by the prevailing wind? ^t50q2
+- A) Steaming fog
+- B) Orographic fog
+- C) Radiation fog
+- D) Advection fog
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because orographic fog forms when wind-driven humid air is mechanically forced upward along a slope, cooling adiabatically until reaching the dew point and condensing into fog that blankets the hillside. A is wrong because steaming fog (Arctic sea smoke) forms when very cold air passes over warm water. C is wrong because radiation fog requires calm, clear nights with ground cooling by longwave radiation. D is wrong because advection fog forms when warm moist air moves horizontally over a cold surface, not from upslope lifting.
+
+### Q3: What does the term "blue thermals" describe? ^t50q3
+- A) Turbulent air near cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Thermals that rise without producing any cumulus clouds
+- C) Sinking air found between cumulus clouds
+- D) Thermals occurring when cumulus coverage is below 4/8
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because "blue thermals" occur when the air is too dry for rising thermals to reach the dew point before losing their buoyancy — the thermals exist but no cumulus clouds form, leaving only blue sky. This makes thermal detection difficult for glider pilots since there are no visual cloud markers. A is wrong because turbulence near CBs is associated with severe convective weather, not blue thermals. C is wrong because sinking air between cumulus is called inter-thermal sink. D is wrong because blue thermals specifically mean no cumulus at all, not low cloud coverage.
+
+### Q4: The expression "beginning of thermals" describes the moment when thermal strength... ^t50q4
+- A) Reaches at least 600 m AGL and is accompanied by cumulus cloud formation.
+- B) Becomes sufficient for gliding and extends to at least 600 m AGL.
+- C) Is sufficient for cross-country soaring with cumulus clouds marking the thermals.
+- D) Becomes sufficient for gliding and reaches at least 1200 m MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because thermal activity is considered to have "begun" when thermals are strong and deep enough to support gliding operations and extend to at least 600 m AGL — a minimum height needed to safely exploit the lift. A is wrong because cumulus formation is not a prerequisite; blue thermals also count. C is wrong because cross-country capability requires stronger and deeper thermals than the basic "beginning." D is wrong because the reference is AGL (above ground level), not MSL, and 1200 m MSL may not provide sufficient height above the terrain.
+
+### Q5: How is the "trigger temperature" defined? It is the surface temperature that... ^t50q5
+- A) A thermal reaches during its ascent at the moment cumulus clouds start forming.
+- B) Must be attained at ground level for cumulus clouds to be produced by thermal convection.
+- C) Represents the maximum ground temperature achievable without triggering thunderstorm development from cumulus.
+- D) Represents the minimum ground temperature required for a cumulus cloud to develop into a thunderstorm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the trigger temperature is the minimum surface temperature that must be reached before thermals can rise high enough to reach the lifting condensation level (LCL) and form cumulus clouds. It is determined from the morning aerological sounding by tracing the dry adiabat from the moisture level back to the surface. A is wrong because the trigger temperature is a surface value, not the temperature of the thermal during ascent. C is wrong because it describes a thunderstorm threshold, not the cloud formation trigger. D is also wrong because it relates to storm development, not initial cumulus formation.
+
+### Q6: In a weather report, what does "over-development" refer to? ^t50q6
+- A) Transition from blue thermals to cloud-marked thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Cumulus clouds spreading out horizontally beneath an inversion layer
+- C) Cumulus clouds growing vertically into rain showers
+- D) A thermal low intensifying into a storm depression
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because over-development describes cumulus clouds continuing to grow vertically beyond the soaring-friendly stage, developing into cumulonimbus (Cb) with heavy rain, lightning, and potentially hail. This typically occurs during humid summer afternoons when instability is high. A is wrong because the transition from blue to cloud-marked thermals is the start of usable conditions, not over-development. B describes a cloud spread-out (Stratocumulus cumulogenitus), a different phenomenon. D describes mesoscale cyclogenesis, not cloud over-development.
+
+### Q7: The soaring forecast indicates environmental instability. In the morning dew is visible on the grass and no thermals have yet developed. What thermal activity can be anticipated? ^t50q7
+- A) Environmental instability prevents any air from rising, so no thermals will form
+- B) Dew formation suppresses all thermal activity for the remainder of the day
+- C) Once the sun heats the ground sufficiently, thermal convection is likely to start
+- D) Thermals will only begin after sunset once a ground-level inversion forms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because morning dew simply indicates that overnight radiative cooling brought the surface temperature to the dew point — a temporary condition. Once solar insolation heats the ground and breaks the nocturnal inversion, the reported environmental instability means thermals will develop well. A is wrong because instability actually promotes rising air, not prevents it. B is wrong because dew has no lasting suppressive effect on thermals. D is wrong because thermals are driven by solar heating and occur during the day, not after sunset.
+
+### Q8: If cirrus clouds approach from one direction and progressively thicken, blocking sunlight, how will thermal activity be affected? ^t50q8
+- A) Cirrus clouds signal instability and the onset of over-development
+- B) Cirrus clouds mark a high-altitude inversion allowing thermals to reach that level
+- C) Cirrus clouds can intensify solar heating and strengthen thermals
+- D) Cirrus clouds reduce insolation and weaken thermal activity
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because thermals are driven by differential solar heating of the ground. Thickening cirrus clouds progressively reduce insolation, weakening ground heating and therefore thermal strength and depth. Approaching cirrus often indicates an advancing warm front bringing stable conditions. A is wrong because cirrus is a high-level ice cloud unrelated to convective over-development. B is wrong because cirrus does not mark an inversion that thermals can reach. C is wrong because cirrus clouds block solar radiation rather than intensify it.
+
+### Q9: What does the term "shielding" refer to in gliding meteorology? ^t50q9
+- A) The anvil-shaped ice cloud at the top of a thunderstorm
+- B) Nimbostratus covering the windward side of a mountain chain
+- C) High or mid-level cloud layers that suppress thermal development
+- D) Cumulus cloud coverage expressed in eighths of the sky
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because shielding describes the effect of high or medium cloud layers (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) that block solar radiation from reaching the ground, suppressing thermal development below. Even partial shielding significantly reduces insolation and thermal quality. A is wrong because the anvil is a specific thunderstorm feature, not the general concept of shielding. B is wrong because nimbostratus on a windward slope is orographic cloud, not shielding. D is wrong because cloud coverage in oktas describes sky coverage amount, not the shielding mechanism.
+
+### Q10: You are planning a 500 km triangle flight. A squall line lies 100 km west of your departure airfield, running north-south and advancing eastward. What is the recommended course of action? ^t50q10
+- A) Attempt to fly beneath the thunderstorm cloud bases
+- B) Modify the route to start the triangle heading east
+- C) Search for gaps between the individual thunderstorm cells during flight
+- D) Cancel the flight and wait for another day
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because a squall line is an organised line of severe thunderstorms advancing at 30-60 km/h, meaning it could reach the airfield within 2-3 hours. It produces extreme turbulence, hail, microbursts, and windshear that are lethal to gliders. A is wrong because flying beneath Cb bases exposes the glider to severe downdrafts and turbulence. B is wrong because even heading east, the squall line will eventually catch up and conditions deteriorate rapidly ahead of it. C is wrong because gaps in a squall line can close rapidly and the environment between cells is still extremely hazardous.
+
+### Q11: What is the approximate gas composition of dry air by volume? ^t50q11
+- A) Nitrogen 21%, Oxygen 78%, Noble gases and carbon dioxide 1%
+- B) Oxygen 78%, Water vapour 21%, Nitrogen 1%
+- C) Oxygen 21%, Nitrogen 78%, Noble gases and carbon dioxide 1%
+- D) Oxygen 21%, Water vapour 78%, Noble gases and carbon dioxide 1%
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because dry air consists of approximately 78% nitrogen (N2), 21% oxygen (O2), and 1% trace gases including argon, carbon dioxide, neon, and helium. A is wrong because it reverses the nitrogen and oxygen percentages. B is wrong because water vapour is variable (0-4%) and excluded from dry air composition, and it confuses nitrogen and oxygen values. D is wrong because water vapour is not part of dry air composition and 78% water vapour is physically impossible.
+
+### Q12: In which layer of the atmosphere do most weather phenomena occur? ^t50q12
+- A) Stratosphere
+- B) Troposphere
+- C) Thermosphere
+- D) Tropopause
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the troposphere extends from the surface to approximately 8-16 km and contains about 75-80% of the atmosphere's total mass and virtually all its water vapour. Convection, cloud formation, precipitation, fronts, and wind systems all occur here because temperature decreases with height, enabling convective instability. A is wrong because the stratosphere is stable and nearly cloud-free. C is wrong because the thermosphere is far too high for weather. D is wrong because the tropopause is a boundary, not a layer where weather occurs.
+
+### Q13: Under ISA conditions at mean sea level, what is the mass of a cube of air with 1-metre edges? ^t50q13
+- A) 12.25 kg
+- B) 0.01225 kg
+- C) 1.225 kg
+- D) 0.1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the International Standard Atmosphere defines air density at mean sea level as 1.225 kg/m3, so one cubic metre of air has a mass of 1.225 kg. This value is fundamental to aviation for calculating lift, drag, and engine performance. A (12.25 kg) is ten times too high. B (0.01225 kg) is 100 times too low. D (0.1225 kg) is ten times too low. Remembering 1.225 kg/m3 as the ISA sea-level density is essential for exam purposes.
+
+### Q14: According to the ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere), at what rate does temperature change with altitude in the troposphere? ^t50q14
+- A) Increases by 2 degrees C per 1000 ft
+- B) Decreases by 2 degrees C per 100 m
+- C) Increases by 2 degrees C per 100 m
+- D) Decreases by 2 degrees C per 1000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the ISA standard lapse rate is approximately 2 degrees C per 1000 ft (or 6.5 degrees C per 1000 m). Temperature decreases with altitude in the troposphere because the atmosphere is primarily heated from below by the Earth's surface. A is wrong because temperature decreases, not increases, with altitude. B is wrong because 2 degrees C per 100 m equals 20 degrees C per 1000 m — far too steep. C is wrong both for the direction (increase) and the magnitude.
+
+### Q15: According to the ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere), what is the average height of the tropopause? ^t50q15
+- A) 36000 m
+- B) 18000 ft
+- C) 11000 m
+- D) 11000 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the ISA tropopause is defined at 11,000 m (approximately 36,089 ft), where the temperature reaches -56.5 degrees C and remains constant into the lower stratosphere. A (36,000 m) confuses metres with feet — it should be approximately 36,000 ft, not 36,000 m. B (18,000 ft) is approximately 5,500 m, far too low. D (11,000 ft) confuses feet with metres. In reality, the tropopause height varies from about 8 km over the poles to 16 km over the tropics.
+
+### Q16: How is the "tropopause" defined? ^t50q16
+- A) The boundary zone between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- B) The altitude above which temperature begins to fall.
+- C) The transition zone between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- D) The atmospheric layer above the troposphere where temperature rises.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the tropopause is the transition boundary between the troposphere (where temperature decreases with altitude) and the stratosphere (where temperature first remains constant then increases due to ozone UV absorption). It acts as a "lid" on convection — cumulonimbus clouds spread laterally when they reach it, forming the characteristic anvil shape. A is wrong because the mesosphere-stratosphere boundary is the stratopause. B is wrong because temperature falls throughout the troposphere, not above the tropopause. D describes the stratosphere, not the tropopause itself.
+
+### Q17: In which unit do European aviation meteorological services report temperatures? ^t50q17
+- A) Degrees Fahrenheit
+- B) Gpdam
+- C) Degrees Celsius (°C)
+- D) Kelvin
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because European aviation meteorology follows ICAO standards requiring temperatures in degrees Celsius for all operational products including METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs, and forecast charts. A is wrong because Fahrenheit is used primarily in US aviation. B (Gpdam = geopotential decametres) is a unit for upper-air chart heights, not temperature. D is wrong because Kelvin is used in scientific calculations but not in operational aviation weather reports.
+
+### Q18: What characterises an "inversion layer"? ^t50q18
+- A) A boundary zone separating two distinct atmospheric layers
+- B) A layer where temperature remains constant as altitude increases
+- C) A layer where temperature rises with increasing altitude
+- D) A layer where temperature falls with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because an inversion "inverts" the normal tropospheric lapse rate — instead of temperature decreasing with height, it increases. This creates extreme stability that suppresses convection, traps pollutants and haze below it, and caps thermal development for glider pilots. A is wrong because it describes a generic boundary, not the defining characteristic of an inversion. B describes an isothermal layer, not an inversion. D describes the normal tropospheric lapse rate, which is the opposite of an inversion.
+
+### Q19: What defines an "isothermal layer"? ^t50q19
+- A) A layer where temperature increases with height
+- B) A transition zone between two atmospheric layers
+- C) A layer where temperature decreases with height
+- D) A layer where temperature stays constant as altitude increases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an isothermal layer maintains constant temperature with increasing altitude. Like an inversion, it is more stable than the standard atmosphere and inhibits convection. The lower stratosphere exhibits an isothermal region immediately above the ISA tropopause. A is wrong because that describes an inversion, not an isothermal layer. B describes a general boundary concept. C describes the normal tropospheric lapse rate.
+
+### Q20: What is the ISA temperature lapse rate with increasing altitude in the troposphere? ^t50q20
+- A) 3 degrees C per 100 m.
+- B) 0.65 degrees C per 100 m.
+- C) 1 degree C per 100 m.
+- D) 0.6 degrees C per 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the ISA Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) is 6.5 degrees C per 1000 m, which equals 0.65 degrees C per 100 m. This is distinct from the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR) of 1 degree C per 100 m (answer C) and the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) of approximately 0.6 degrees C per 100 m (answer D). A (3 degrees C per 100 m) is far too steep and would represent extreme instability. Understanding the differences between ELR, DALR, and SALR is fundamental to assessing atmospheric stability and thermal soaring conditions.
+
+### Q21: Which process can produce an inversion layer at approximately 5000 ft (1500 m)? ^t50q21
+- A) Strong solar heating on a warm summer day
+- B) Advection of cold air into the upper troposphere
+- C) Large-scale subsidence within a high-pressure system
+- D) Radiative ground cooling during the night
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a subsidence inversion forms when air in a high-pressure (anticyclonic) system descends over a broad area. As it sinks, it warms at the dry adiabatic rate, becoming warmer than the air below it and creating an inversion, typically at 1500-3000 m. A is wrong because strong solar heating promotes convective mixing and destroys inversions. B is wrong because cold air advection aloft steepens the lapse rate (increases instability). D is wrong because radiative cooling produces a ground-level inversion, not one at 1500 m.
+
+### Q22: A low-level inversion near the ground can be caused by... ^t50q22
+- A) Intensifying and gusty winds.
+- B) Thickening of medium-level cloud layers.
+- C) Radiative cooling of the ground during the night.
+- D) Large-scale lifting of air.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because radiation inversions form on calm, clear nights when the ground loses heat through longwave radiation, cooling the surface air below the temperature of the air above it. This is the most common cause of ground-level inversions, often producing morning fog or low stratus. A is wrong because strong winds mix the air and prevent inversion formation. B is wrong because medium-level clouds actually reduce radiative cooling by reflecting longwave radiation back to the surface. D is wrong because large-scale lifting promotes cooling and instability, not surface inversions.
+
+### Q23: What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (approximately 5500 m)? ^t50q23
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 500 hPa
+- C) 250 hPa
+- D) 300 hPa
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in the ISA, pressure at approximately 5500 m (FL 180) is 500 hPa — exactly half the sea-level value of 1013.25 hPa. The 500 hPa level is one of the most important reference levels in synoptic meteorology. A (1013.25 hPa) is sea-level pressure. C (250 hPa) corresponds to approximately 10,000 m (the jet stream level). D (300 hPa) corresponds to approximately 9,000 m. Pressure decreases roughly logarithmically with altitude, halving approximately every 5500 m in the lower troposphere.
+
+### Q24: Which combination of processes leads to a decrease in air density? ^t50q24
+- A) Rising temperature combined with falling pressure
+- B) Falling temperature combined with rising pressure
+- C) Falling temperature combined with falling pressure
+- D) Rising temperature combined with rising pressure
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because air density is governed by the ideal gas law (density = pressure / (gas constant x temperature)). Density decreases when pressure falls (fewer molecules per volume) or temperature rises (molecules spread apart). Both effects combined produce the maximum density reduction. B is wrong because both falling temperature and rising pressure increase density. C is a mixed case — the effects partially cancel. D is also mixed. This principle explains why density altitude is highest on hot days at high-elevation airfields, degrading aircraft performance.
+
+### Q25: Under ISA conditions, the pressure at mean sea level is... ^t50q25
+- A) 1123 hPa.
+- B) 15 hPa.
+- C) 113.25 hPa.
+- D) 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the ISA defines sea-level pressure as 1013.25 hPa (equivalent to 29.92 inHg). This is the QNE standard setting — with 1013.25 hPa on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads pressure altitude (flight level). A (1123 hPa) is higher than any normal sea-level pressure. B (15 hPa) is far too low. C (113.25 hPa) is missing a digit. The value 1013.25 hPa is one of the most fundamental numbers in aviation meteorology.
+
+### Q26: In the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), the tropopause is located at... ^t50q26
+- A) 48000 ft.
+- B) 11000 ft.
+- C) 36000 ft.
+- D) 5500 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the ISA tropopause is at 11,000 m, which converts to approximately 36,089 ft (rounded to 36,000 ft). A (48,000 ft) is too high — that would be well into the stratosphere. B (11,000 ft) confuses the value in metres (11,000 m) with feet. D (5,500 ft) is far too low. Note that Q15 tests the same value in metres (11,000 m) while this question tests it in feet (36,000 ft).
+
+### Q27: A barometric altimeter displays height above... ^t50q27
+- A) The ground surface.
+- B) The standard pressure datum of 1013.25 hPa.
+- C) Mean sea level.
+- D) A chosen reference pressure level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because a barometric altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude relative to whatever pressure is set on the subscale (Kollsman window). Set QNH and it shows altitude above MSL; set QFE and it shows height above the reference airfield; set 1013.25 hPa (QNE) and it shows flight level. A is wrong because the altimeter does not measure height above the physical ground. B is only true when 1013.25 is specifically set. C is only true when QNH is set. The key understanding is that the reference depends entirely on the subscale setting.
+
+### Q28: An altimeter can be verified on the ground by setting... ^t50q28
+- A) QFE and comparing the reading with the airfield elevation.
+- B) QNH and comparing the reading with the airfield elevation.
+- C) QNE and confirming that the reading is zero on the ground.
+- D) QFF and comparing the reading with the airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because setting QNH (the altimeter setting that makes the instrument indicate altitude above mean sea level) and checking that the altimeter reads the published airfield elevation verifies correct calibration. A is wrong because with QFE set, the altimeter should read zero on the ground, not the elevation. C is wrong because QNE (1013.25 hPa) would show the pressure altitude, which is generally not zero unless the airfield is at the ISA sea-level datum. D is wrong because QFF is a meteorological value for surface analysis, not used for altimeter verification.
+
+### Q29: With QFE set on the subscale, a barometric altimeter shows... ^t50q29
+- A) Height above the standard pressure datum 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) True altitude above MSL.
+- C) Altitude above MSL.
+- D) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because QFE is the actual atmospheric pressure at the airfield reference point. When set on the subscale, the altimeter reads zero on the ground and subsequently indicates height above the airfield reference pressure level — effectively height above the airfield. A is wrong because that describes the QNE (standard pressure) setting. B is wrong because true altitude accounts for temperature deviations from ISA, which QFE does not provide. C is wrong because altitude above MSL requires QNH, not QFE.
+
+### Q30: With QNH set on the subscale, a barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q30
+- A) Height above the standard pressure datum 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- C) Height above MSL.
+- D) True altitude above MSL.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because QNH is the altimeter setting calculated to make the instrument read the station elevation above mean sea level on the ground. In flight, it indicates altitude above MSL assuming ISA conditions. A is wrong because that describes the QNE setting. B is wrong because that describes the QFE setting. D is wrong because "true altitude" specifically accounts for actual temperature deviations from ISA, while QNH-based altitude assumes standard temperature — in non-standard conditions, QNH altitude and true altitude differ.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_211_211_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_211_211_out.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
+### Q211: What weather is typically experienced during Foehn conditions in the Bavarian area near the Alps? ^t50q211
+- A) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side, flat pressure pattern
+- B) High pressure over Biscay with a low pressure area in Eastern Europe
+- C) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm dry wind
+- D) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm dry wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During South Foehn in the Bavarian pre-alpine region, moist Mediterranean air is driven northward against the Alps. Nimbostratus develops on the southern (windward, Italian) slopes with heavy orographic precipitation. As the air crosses the ridge and descends on the northern (lee, Bavarian) side, it warms adiabatically and arrives as a characteristically warm, dry wind. Rotor clouds and lenticular clouds form in the lee-side standing waves. Option A wrongly describes the Foehn wind as cold and humid — it is warm and dry on the lee side. Option B describes only the synoptic setup without the actual weather. Option C incorrectly places the Nimbostratus on the northern (lee) side and the rotor on the windward side.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_31_60_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_31_60_out.md
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_31_60_out.md
@@ -0,0 +1,322 @@
+### Q31: How can wind direction and speed be determined from a surface weather chart? ^t50q31
+- A) From the orientation and spacing of isobars
+- B) From the orientation of warm-front and cold-front lines
+- C) From the orientation and spacing of hypsometric lines
+- D) From annotations in the text section of the chart
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because isobars (lines of equal pressure) on surface charts indicate both wind direction and speed. Wind blows roughly parallel to isobars above the friction layer and at an angle across them near the surface. Closely spaced isobars indicate strong pressure gradient and strong winds; wide spacing indicates light winds. B is wrong because frontal lines show air mass boundaries, not wind details. C is wrong because hypsometric (isohypse) lines appear on upper-air charts, not surface charts. D is wrong because the text section provides supplementary information but is not the primary tool for determining wind.
+
+### Q32: Which force is the primary cause of wind? ^t50q32
+- A) Coriolis force
+- B) Centrifugal force
+- C) Thermal force
+- D) Pressure gradient force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because wind is initiated by the pressure gradient force (PGF), which accelerates air from high-pressure areas toward low-pressure areas. Without pressure differences, there would be no wind. A is wrong because the Coriolis force deflects moving air but does not initiate the motion. B is wrong because centrifugal force only acts in curved flow around pressure systems. C is wrong because thermal effects create pressure differences, which in turn drive the PGF — thermal effects are the indirect cause, while PGF is the direct driving force.
+
+### Q33: Above the friction layer, when a pressure gradient exists, in what direction does the wind blow? ^t50q33
+- A) At roughly 30 degrees to the isobars, angled toward low pressure.
+- B) Parallel to the isobars.
+- C) Perpendicular to the isohypses.
+- D) Perpendicular to the isobars.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because above the friction layer (approximately 600-1000 m AGL), the Coriolis force balances the pressure gradient force, producing geostrophic wind that flows parallel to the isobars. A is wrong because the 30-degree crossing angle occurs within the friction layer near the surface, not above it. C is wrong because wind flows parallel to isohypses on upper-air charts, not perpendicular. D is wrong because perpendicular flow to isobars would occur only in the theoretical absence of the Coriolis force.
+
+### Q34: Which surface type causes the greatest reduction in wind speed through friction? ^t50q34
+- A) Open ocean areas
+- B) Flat terrain with extensive vegetation
+- C) Flat desert terrain without vegetation
+- D) Mountainous terrain with vegetation cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because mountainous terrain with vegetation has the highest aerodynamic roughness length, creating maximum turbulent drag and wind speed reduction. Mountains also mechanically block and channel airflow. A is wrong because the ocean has very low surface roughness and minimal friction. B is wrong because flat vegetated terrain has moderate roughness but far less than mountains. C is wrong because flat desert without vegetation has low roughness. The friction effect is directly proportional to surface roughness and obstacle height.
+
+### Q35: When air flows together from different directions, this movement is called... ^t50q35
+- A) Divergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Convergence.
+- D) Concordence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because convergence describes air flowing inward toward a region from different directions. By mass continuity, the converging air is forced upward, promoting cloud formation and precipitation. Convergence zones are important for glider pilots as they produce enhanced lift. A is wrong because divergence is the opposite — air spreading outward. B is wrong because subsidence describes sinking air, not horizontal convergence. D is wrong because "concordence" is not a recognised meteorological term.
+
+### Q36: When air spreads outward from a region, this movement is called... ^t50q36
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Divergence.
+- D) Concordence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because divergence describes air spreading outward from a region. At the surface, divergence causes air from above to sink and replace the outflowing air, promoting stability and clear skies — characteristic of high-pressure systems. A is wrong because convergence is the opposite (air flowing inward). B is wrong because subsidence is the vertical sinking that results from divergence, not divergence itself. D is not a recognised meteorological term.
+
+### Q37: What weather development results from air converging at the surface? ^t50q37
+- A) Descending air and cloud dissipation
+- B) Ascending air and cloud dissipation
+- C) Descending air and cloud formation
+- D) Ascending air and cloud formation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because surface convergence forces air upward by mass continuity — air flowing in from multiple directions cannot accumulate at the surface and must rise. As it ascends, it cools adiabatically until it reaches the dew point, where condensation begins and clouds form. A is wrong because convergence causes ascending, not descending, motion. B is wrong because ascending air leads to cloud formation, not dissipation. C is wrong because descending air is associated with divergence, not convergence.
+
+### Q38: When two air masses collide head-on, what is this called and what vertical motion results? ^t50q38
+- A) Divergence, causing the air to sink
+- B) Convergence, forcing the air upward
+- C) Divergence, forcing the air upward
+- D) Convergence, causing the air to sink
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because when two air flows meet head-on, the collision zone is a convergence line where horizontal accumulation of air forces upward motion, producing cloud formation and potentially precipitation or thunderstorms. Glider pilots exploit convergence lines (such as sea-breeze fronts) for extended linear lift. A is wrong because collision is convergence, not divergence, and produces upward motion. C is wrong because divergence means spreading apart, not colliding. D is wrong because convergence forces air up, not down.
+
+### Q39: Which air masses predominantly influence the weather in Central Europe? ^t50q39
+- A) Equatorial warm air and tropical warm air
+- B) Arctic cold air and tropical warm air
+- C) Polar cold air and tropical warm air
+- D) Arctic cold air and polar cold air
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because Central Europe lies in the mid-latitude westerly belt where the polar front separates cold polar air (from the north) and warm subtropical/tropical air (from the south). Their interaction drives the characteristic cyclone-anticyclone weather patterns and frontal systems experienced across Europe. A is wrong because equatorial air rarely reaches Central Europe. B is wrong because Arctic air only occasionally reaches Central Europe during extreme cold outbreaks. D is wrong because two cold air mass types without warm air cannot produce the frontal weather characteristic of Central Europe.
+
+### Q40: In the global atmospheric circulation, where does cold polar air meet warm subtropical air? ^t50q40
+- A) At the geographic poles
+- B) At the subtropical high-pressure belt
+- C) At the equator
+- D) At the polar front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the polar front is the boundary between the cold polar cell and the warmer Ferrel cell, located roughly between 40-60 degrees latitude. It fluctuates as Rossby waves develop, amplifying into cyclones and anticyclones. The jet stream flows along the polar front. A is wrong because the poles are within the polar air mass, not at the boundary. B is wrong because the subtropical high-pressure belt separates tropical and mid-latitude cells. C is wrong because the equator is where the trade winds of both hemispheres converge (ITCZ).
+
+### Q41: Foehn conditions typically develop when there is... ^t50q41
+- A) Instability with calm winds in a high-pressure area.
+- B) Stability with calm winds in a high-pressure area.
+- C) Instability with widespread airflow against a mountain ridge.
+- D) Stability with widespread airflow pushed against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because Foehn develops when a broad-scale pressure gradient drives stable air against a mountain range. On the windward side, moist air rises and cools at the SALR (approximately 0.6 degrees C/100 m), losing moisture as precipitation. On the lee side, the now-drier air descends at the DALR (1 degree C/100 m), arriving warmer and drier. A is wrong because calm winds cannot drive air over mountains. B is wrong for the same reason. C is wrong because unstable air with widespread flow produces orographic thunderstorms, not the classic Foehn effect which requires stability.
+
+### Q42: What kind of turbulence is characteristically found near the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions? ^t50q42
+- A) Thermal turbulence
+- B) Inversion-related turbulence
+- C) Rotor turbulence
+- D) Clear-air turbulence (CAT)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because during Foehn and mountain wave conditions, a rotor zone develops in the lower troposphere on the lee side beneath the wave crests. This rotor contains intense, chaotic turbulence with violent rotating eddies and strong downdrafts — it is among the most hazardous phenomena for all aircraft. A is wrong because thermal turbulence is caused by solar heating, not mountain waves. B is wrong because inversion-related turbulence is a milder phenomenon. D is wrong because clear-air turbulence occurs at high altitudes near the jet stream, not near the ground.
+
+### Q43: Light turbulence should always be expected... ^t50q43
+- A) When entering an inversion layer.
+- B) Beneath stratiform clouds at medium altitudes.
+- C) Above the tops of cumulus clouds.
+- D) Beneath cumulus clouds due to convective activity.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because cumulus clouds mark the tops of thermal columns, and the sub-cloud layer beneath them contains active thermals (updraughts) and compensating downdraughts, producing light to moderate convective turbulence — the normal turbulent environment of thermal soaring. A is wrong because entering an inversion usually brings smoother air, not turbulence. B is wrong because stratiform clouds at medium levels indicate stable conditions with minimal turbulence. C is wrong because air above cumulus tops is generally smooth unless embedded CBs are present.
+
+### Q44: Moderate to severe turbulence should be anticipated... ^t50q44
+- A) Beneath thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- B) On the lee side of mountains when rotor clouds are visible.
+- C) When extensive low stratus (high fog) is present.
+- D) Above unbroken cloud layers.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because rotor clouds (roll clouds) on the lee side of mountains are the visible markers of the extremely turbulent rotor zone beneath mountain waves. Turbulence in the rotor can be severe to extreme, with forces potentially exceeding aircraft structural limits. A is wrong because the windward side typically has orographic cloud and relatively steady, laminar lift. C is wrong because low stratus indicates stable, calm conditions. D is wrong because unbroken cloud layers suggest smooth, stratiform conditions with minimal turbulence.
+
+### Q45: Which answer lists all the states of water found in the atmosphere? ^t50q45
+- A) Liquid and solid only
+- B) Gaseous and liquid only
+- C) Liquid, solid, and gaseous
+- D) Liquid only
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because water exists in all three states in the atmosphere: gaseous (invisible water vapour throughout the troposphere), liquid (cloud droplets, rain, supercooled droplets), and solid (ice crystals in cirrus clouds, snow, hail, and graupel). A is wrong because it omits the gaseous state (water vapour), which is present everywhere. B is wrong because it omits the solid state (ice), which forms cirrus clouds and precipitation. D is wrong because it omits both gaseous and solid states. Understanding all three states is critical for icing awareness.
+
+### Q46: If the temperature drops while moisture content remains unchanged, how do the dew point and relative humidity respond? ^t50q46
+- A) Dew point rises, relative humidity falls
+- B) Dew point stays the same, relative humidity falls
+- C) Dew point falls, relative humidity rises
+- D) Dew point stays the same, relative humidity rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the dew point depends only on the actual moisture content of the air — if moisture is unchanged, the dew point stays constant. However, as temperature drops, the saturation vapour pressure decreases, so the actual vapour pressure now represents a larger fraction of the maximum possible — relative humidity rises. When temperature equals the dew point, relative humidity reaches 100% and condensation begins. A is wrong because dew point cannot rise without adding moisture. B is wrong because relative humidity rises, not falls, with decreasing temperature. C is wrong because dew point does not change at constant moisture.
+
+### Q47: When temperature increases while moisture content stays the same, how do the spread and relative humidity change? ^t50q47
+- A) Spread stays constant, relative humidity rises
+- B) Spread widens, relative humidity falls
+- C) Spread widens, relative humidity rises
+- D) Spread stays constant, relative humidity falls
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because spread (temperature minus dew point) widens as temperature rises while the dew point remains constant, and relative humidity falls because warmer air can hold more moisture, making the actual vapour content a smaller fraction of the maximum. A is wrong because spread does not stay constant when temperature changes at constant moisture. C is wrong because relative humidity falls, not rises, when temperature increases. D is wrong because spread widens, not stays constant. A large spread indicates dry conditions and a high cloud base.
+
+### Q48: The "spread" is defined as the... ^t50q48
+- A) Maximum quantity of water vapour that air can hold.
+- B) Ratio of actual humidity to the maximum possible humidity of the air.
+- C) Difference between the air temperature and the dew point temperature.
+- D) Difference between the dew point and the condensation point.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because spread (dew point depression) equals the air temperature minus the dew point temperature (Spread = T - Td). It is a practical indicator used to estimate cloud base height: in temperate latitudes, cloud base in metres above the surface is approximately spread (in degrees C) multiplied by 125. A is wrong because that describes saturation vapour pressure or absolute humidity capacity. B is wrong because that defines relative humidity. D is wrong because dew point and condensation point are essentially the same concept.
+
+### Q49: If temperature decreases while all other factors remain constant, what happens to the spread and relative humidity? ^t50q49
+- A) Spread narrows and relative humidity increases.
+- B) Spread widens and relative humidity falls.
+- C) Spread narrows and relative humidity falls.
+- D) Spread widens and relative humidity increases.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because as temperature decreases toward the (constant) dew point, the spread narrows (T approaches Td), and relative humidity increases because the saturation vapour pressure drops closer to the actual vapour pressure. When spread reaches zero, relative humidity is 100% and condensation occurs. B is wrong because it describes the effect of increasing temperature. C is wrong because narrowing spread accompanies rising, not falling, humidity. D is wrong because spread cannot widen while temperature drops toward a fixed dew point.
+
+### Q50: Which process releases latent heat into the upper troposphere? ^t50q50
+- A) Widespread subsidence of air
+- B) Evaporation over large bodies of water
+- C) Cloud formation through condensation
+- D) Stabilisation of inflowing air masses
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when water vapour condenses into cloud droplets, the latent heat that was absorbed during evaporation is released into the surrounding air. In deep convective clouds, this release occurs in the upper troposphere and is the primary energy source driving thunderstorm intensity and tropical cyclones. The released heat makes the air parcel more buoyant, fuelling further ascent. A is wrong because subsidence warms air adiabatically but does not release latent heat. B is wrong because evaporation absorbs latent heat from the surface, it does not release it into the upper atmosphere. D describes a stabilisation process, not a heat release mechanism.
+
+### Q51: Which cloud type poses the greatest hazard to aviation? ^t50q51
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cirrocumulus
+- C) Cumulonimbus
+- D) Cirrostratus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because cumulonimbus (Cb) is the most dangerous cloud type in aviation, producing severe turbulence, heavy icing, large hail, lightning, microbursts, windshear, and tornadic activity. It extends from near the surface to the tropopause and beyond. A is wrong because altocumulus is a mid-level cloud that may indicate instability but is not directly hazardous. B is wrong because cirrocumulus is a thin, high-level cloud posing no direct threat. D is wrong because cirrostratus is a thin ice-crystal veil that reduces visibility but does not produce severe weather hazards.
+
+### Q52: Under which conditions is the tendency for thunderstorm development strongest? ^t50q52
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Slack pressure gradient, strong surface heating, high humidity.
+- B) High pressure, strong surface heating, low humidity.
+- C) Slack pressure gradient, significant cooling of the lower layers, high humidity.
+- D) Slack pressure gradient, significant warming of the upper layers, high humidity.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because thunderstorm development requires three ingredients: instability (provided by strong surface heating creating a steep lapse rate), moisture (high humidity supplies the water vapour for condensation and latent heat release), and a slack pressure gradient (light winds reduce shear that would otherwise tear apart developing cumulus). B is wrong because low humidity limits the moisture supply for cloud development. C is wrong because cooling the lower layers increases stability, suppressing convection. D is wrong because warming the upper layers creates an inversion that caps convection.
+
+### Q53: Visibility at an aerodrome is reduced to 1.5 km up to 1000 ft AGL because of fine suspended water droplets. Which meteorological phenomenon causes this? ^t50q53
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Widespread dust (DU).
+- B) Haze (HZ).
+- C) Mist (BR).
+- D) Shallow fog (MIFG).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because mist (BR, from French "brume") is defined as visibility between 1 km and 5 km caused by suspended water droplets. Visibility of 1.5 km with water droplets fits this definition precisely. A is wrong because dust (DU) consists of solid particles, not water droplets. B is wrong because haze (HZ) consists of dry particles such as dust, smoke, or salt crystals, not water droplets. D is wrong because shallow fog (MIFG) reduces visibility below 1 km in a thin ground layer, and the visibility here is 1.5 km.
+
+### Q54: Which of the following conditions is most favourable for radiation fog formation? ^t50q54
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) 15 kt / Clear sky / 16°C / Dew point 15°C
+- B) 15 kt / Overcast / 13°C / Dew point 12°C
+- C) 2 kt / Clear sky / -3°C / Dew point -20°C
+- D) 2 kt / Scattered cloud / 7°C / Dew point 6°C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because radiation fog requires light wind (2 kt allows gentle mixing without dispersing the fog layer), a small temperature-dew point spread (1 degree C means the air is near saturation), and limited or no cloud cover (scattered allows sufficient radiative cooling). A is wrong because 15 kt wind is too strong and would mix the cooling layer. B is wrong because 15 kt wind and overcast sky both prevent fog formation. C is wrong because although wind and sky are favourable, the spread of 17 degrees C means the air is far too dry to reach saturation.
+
+### Q55: The temperature measured at Samedan airport (LSZS, elevation 5600 ft) is +5°C. Assuming the ISA lapse rate, what will the approximate temperature be at 8600 ft directly above the airport? ^t50q55
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) +11°C
+- B) +5°C
+- C) -1°C
+- D) -6°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the ISA lapse rate is approximately 2 degrees C per 1000 ft. The altitude difference is 8600 - 5600 = 3000 ft. Temperature change = 3 x 2 = 6 degrees C decrease. New temperature = 5 - 6 = -1 degrees C. A (+11 degrees C) incorrectly adds instead of subtracting. B (+5 degrees C) assumes no change. D (-6 degrees C) appears to subtract 11 degrees instead of 6. Always multiply the altitude difference in thousands of feet by 2 to find the ISA temperature change.
+
+### Q56: The QFE of an aerodrome (elevation 3500 ft) corresponds to: ^t50q56
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The instantaneous pressure at sea level.
+- B) The instantaneous pressure at station level, reduced to sea level using the ISA temperature lapse rate.
+- C) The instantaneous pressure at station level, reduced to sea level using the actual temperature profile.
+- D) The instantaneous pressure measured at station level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because QFE is simply the actual (instantaneous) atmospheric pressure measured at the aerodrome's reference point (station level). When set on the altimeter, it causes the instrument to read zero on the ground. A is wrong because sea-level pressure is QNH or QFF, not QFE. B is wrong because that describes QNH (reduced to sea level using ISA). C is wrong because that describes QFF (reduced to sea level using actual temperature). QFE requires no reduction calculation — it is the raw measured pressure at station elevation.
+
+### Q57: What does the following wind barb symbol represent? ^t50q57
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Wind barb symbol:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_50_q06_wind_barb.png]]
+> *Wind from the north-east (~045°), 15 knots (1 long barb = 10 kt + 1 short barb = 5 kt)*
+
+- A) Wind from SW, 15 knots.
+- B) Wind from NE, 30 knots.
+- C) Wind from SW, 30 knots.
+- D) Wind from NE, 15 knots.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the wind barb points in the direction the wind is coming from (NE, approximately 045 degrees), with barb flags on the end indicating speed. One long barb equals 10 kt and one short barb equals 5 kt, totalling 15 kt. A is wrong because the direction is NE, not SW. B is wrong because the speed is 15 kt, not 30 kt. C is wrong on both direction (SW) and speed (30 kt). Reading wind barbs correctly is essential for interpreting surface analysis charts and station models.
+
+### Q58: What are the wind speed and direction in this METAR? LSZB 131220Z 28015G25KT 9999 SCT035 BKN075 10/06 Q1018 NOSIG= ^t50q58
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- B) Wind from WNW, 25 knots, direction varying between WNW and SSE.
+- C) Wind from ESE, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, direction varying between WNW and WSW.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the METAR wind group "28015G25KT" decodes as: 280 degrees (WNW direction the wind blows from), 15 knots mean speed, gusting to 25 knots. The G stands for "gust." B is wrong because 25 kt is the gust speed, not the mean speed, and there is no variable direction indicator. C is wrong because 280 degrees is WNW, not ESE (ESE would be approximately 110 degrees). D is wrong because the G25 indicates gusts, not a direction variation — direction variability would be shown as "280V310" or similar.
+
+### Q59: In Switzerland, how is cloud base expressed in a METAR? ^t50q59
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) In metres above sea level.
+- B) In metres above aerodrome level.
+- C) In feet above sea level.
+- D) In feet above aerodrome level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because in a METAR, cloud base heights are reported in feet above aerodrome level (AAL/AGL). For example, "SCT035" means scattered clouds at 3,500 ft above the aerodrome. A is wrong because metres above sea level is not the METAR convention. B is wrong because although above aerodrome level is correct, the unit is feet, not metres. C is wrong because although feet is the correct unit, the reference is aerodrome level, not sea level. Pilots must add the aerodrome elevation to the METAR cloud base to obtain the height above MSL.
+
+### Q60: While flying at very high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere, you notice a persistent crosswind from the left. What can you conclude about the pressure distribution? ^t50q60
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) A low-pressure area lies ahead and a high-pressure area lies behind you.
+- B) A high-pressure area lies to the right of your track, a low-pressure area to the left.
+- C) A high-pressure area lies ahead and a low-pressure area lies behind you.
+- D) A high-pressure area lies to the left of your track, a low-pressure area to the right.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B, derived from Buys-Ballot's law: in the Northern Hemisphere, if you stand with your back to the wind, low pressure is to your left and high pressure is to your right. With wind coming from the left, you are facing right relative to the wind — so low pressure is on your left and high pressure is on your right. At very high altitude (above the friction layer), wind blows parallel to isobars. A is wrong because the pressure distribution is lateral, not fore-and-aft. C is wrong for the same reason. D reverses the correct positions.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_61_90_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_61_90_out.md
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+### Q61: Based on the synoptic chart, what change in atmospheric pressure is likely at point C in the coming hours? ^t50q61
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_50_q15_synoptic_fronts.png]]
+> *T = depression centre. A = warm sector (between warm front and cold front). B = behind the cold front (cold air mass). C = ahead of the warm front (cool air mass).*
+> *Cold front: blue triangles. Warm front: red semicircles.*
+
+- A) No notable change.
+- B) Pressure will fall.
+- C) Pressure will rise.
+- D) Pressure will undergo rapid, irregular variations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point C lies ahead of the warm front, meaning the depression centre and its associated frontal system are approaching. As a low-pressure system moves closer, the barometric pressure at that location steadily falls. Option A is wrong because an approaching depression always causes pressure changes. Option C (pressure rise) would apply behind a cold front where cold dense air moves in. Option D (rapid irregular variations) is more typical of thunderstorm activity, not the broad-scale approach of a warm front.
+
+### Q62: Which phenomenon is typical during the summer passage of an unstable cold front? ^t50q62
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) Convective cloud development.
+- C) Rapid temperature rise behind the front.
+- D) Rapid pressure drop behind the front.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An unstable cold front in summer forces warm, moist, unstable air upward vigorously, triggering strong convection and the development of cumuliform clouds including towering cumulus and cumulonimbus with showers and thunderstorms. Stratiform cloud cover (A) is associated with stable air masses. Behind a cold front temperatures drop, not rise (C), and pressure rises, not drops (D), as cooler denser air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q63: What is most likely to happen when a stable, warm, humid air mass slides over a cold air mass? ^t50q63
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) A few scattered cumuliform clouds, rare precipitation, light turbulence, and excellent visibility.
+- B) Extensive stratiform clouds with a gradually lowering cloud base and continuous rainfall.
+- C) Convective clouds, heavy showers, thunderstorm tendency, and severe turbulence.
+- D) Rapid drying aloft with cloud dissipation and good visibility, but dense fog in the lowlands.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When stable warm humid air overrides a cold air mass (the classic warm front mechanism), the warm air ascends gently along the frontal surface, cooling progressively and forming widespread stratiform clouds with continuous, steady precipitation and a lowering cloud base. Option A describes fair-weather conditions. Option C describes unstable convective weather typical of cold fronts. Option D combines fog with drying aloft, which is internally contradictory.
+
+### Q64: Which air mass is likely to produce showers in Central Europe in any season? ^t50q64
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Continental tropical air.
+- B) Maritime tropical air.
+- C) Continental polar air.
+- D) Maritime polar air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maritime polar air (mP) originates over cold northern oceans, picking up moisture and becoming unstable as it moves over relatively warmer European land surfaces, producing convective showers year-round. Continental tropical air (A) is warm and dry. Maritime tropical air (B) tends to produce stratiform clouds and drizzle, not showers. Continental polar air (C) is cold and dry, lacking sufficient moisture for showers without first crossing open water.
+
+### Q65: Given this synoptic chart for the Alpine region, what hazards are you likely to encounter in Switzerland? ^t50q65
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart Switzerland/Alps:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_50_q17_synoptic_alps.png]]
+> *Anticyclone (H) to the west, depression (T) to the north-east, isobars indicating NW flow over Switzerland.*
+
+- A) In winter, persistent snowfall in Ticino.
+- B) In summer, widespread thunderstorms south of the Alps with severe turbulence.
+- C) Continuous precipitation north of the Alps; very disturbed weather south of the Alps.
+- D) Cloud-covered Alps to the south; strong gusty winds north of the Alps.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A northwest flow situation (Nordwestlage) drives moist air against the northern slopes of the Alps, producing continuous orographic precipitation on the north side and disturbed conditions south of the Alps through spillover effects. Option A describes a south-side precipitation event, not a northwest situation. Option B misplaces thunderstorms on the wrong side. Option D reverses the cloud pattern — clouds would cover the north side, not the south.
+
+### Q66: Referring to the Low Level SWC chart, which statement is correct? ^t50q66
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Low Level Significant Weather Chart (OGDD70)**
+> ![[figures/bazl_50_q20_low_level_swc.png]]
+> *Fixed Time Prognostic Chart — Valid: 09 UTC, 22 JAN 2015*
+> *Issued by MeteoSwiss*
+
+| Zone | Cloud cover | Cloud base | Cloud top | Visibility | Turbulence | Icing |
+|------|-----------|-------------|---------------|------------|------------|---------|
+| A | BKN/OVC SC, AC | 3000 ft | FL080 | > 10 km | MOD below FL080 | MOD FL040-FL080 |
+| B | BKN/OVC ST, SC | 1500 ft | FL060 | 5-8 km, locally 3 km (BR) | MOD below FL060 | MOD FL030-FL060 |
+| C | SCT/BKN CU, SC | 4000 ft | FL100 | > 10 km | ISOL MOD | LGT FL050-FL100 |
+
+> *0°C isotherm: FL040 (north) to FL060 (south). Surface wind: SW 15-25 kt.*
+
+- A) Isolated thunderstorms may occur in area C with no icing or turbulence.
+- B) In area B, cumuliform clouds are expected with possible light freezing rain or freezing fog.
+- C) Rain and snow showers are to be expected in area A.
+- D) Area A lies between two warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Area A features BKN/OVC stratocumulus and altocumulus with moderate icing between FL040 and FL080, with the 0°C isotherm at FL040 indicating mixed precipitation — rain and snow showers. Option A incorrectly states no icing or turbulence in area C, whereas the chart shows isolated moderate turbulence and light icing. Option B mischaracterises area B, which has stratiform clouds (ST, SC), not cumuliform. Option D makes an unsupported claim about warm fronts.
+
+### Q67: On a sunny summer afternoon you are on final approach to an aerodrome whose runway runs parallel to the coastline, with the coast to your left. On this flat terrain, what direction will the thermal (sea breeze) wind come from? ^t50q67
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Crosswind from the left.
+- B) Headwind.
+- C) Tailwind.
+- D) Crosswind from the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a sunny afternoon, the land heats faster than the sea, causing air to rise over land and drawing cooler air inland from the sea — the sea breeze. With the coastline to the left and the runway parallel to it, the sea breeze blows from the sea (left side) toward the land, creating a crosswind from the left. Options B and C would require the wind to blow along the runway. Option D would require the sea to be on the right side.
+
+### Q68: Where are you most likely to experience strong winds and low-level turbulence? ^t50q68
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At the centre of an anticyclone.
+- B) In a transition zone between two air masses.
+- C) At the centre of a depression.
+- D) In a region of slack pressure gradient during winter.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transition zones between air masses — frontal zones — feature steep horizontal temperature and pressure gradients that drive strong winds and generate mechanical and convective turbulence. The centre of an anticyclone (A) has calm, subsiding air. The centre of a depression (C) can have relatively calm conditions. Slack pressure gradients (D) produce weak winds by definition.
+
+### Q69: An air mass at 10°C has a relative humidity of 45%. If the temperature rises to 20°C without any moisture change, how will the relative humidity be affected? ^t50q69
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) It will increase by 50%.
+- B) It will remain constant.
+- C) It will decrease.
+- D) It will increase by 45%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity is the ratio of actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at that temperature. When temperature rises from 10°C to 20°C, the air's saturation capacity roughly doubles, but the actual vapour content stays the same — so relative humidity decreases significantly. Options A and D wrongly claim humidity increases. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is temperature-dependent.
+
+### Q70: On 1 June (summer time), you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XMD". What does this mean? ^t50q70
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At 11:00 LT conditions on this route will be difficult.
+- B) At 09:00 LT conditions on this route will be critical.
+- C) At 09:00 LT the route will be closed.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss GAFOR divides the validity period (06:00-12:00 UTC) into three two-hour blocks. Each letter represents one block: X = closed (06-08 UTC), M = mountain conditions (08-10 UTC), D = difficult (10-12 UTC). On 1 June, CEST (UTC+2) applies: 06-08 UTC = 08-10 LT. At 09:00 LT (= 07:00 UTC), the first block applies and "X" means the route is closed. Options A and D misidentify the timing or code. Option B confuses the category.
+
+### Q71: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q71
+![[figures/bazl_501_q1.png]]
+- A) Wind from NE, 25 kt
+- B) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+- C) Wind from SW, 25 kt
+- D) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barb symbols point in the direction the wind blows from, with barbs indicating speed: a long barb = 10 kt, a short barb = 5 kt, a pennant = 50 kt. The symbol shows a wind from SW with two long barbs and one short barb: 10 + 10 + 5 = 25 kt. Options B and D dramatically overstate the speed. Option A reverses the direction — NE is where the wind blows toward, not from.
+
+### Q72: At what time of day or night is radiation fog most likely to form? ^t50q72
+- A) In the afternoon
+- B) Shortly before midnight
+- C) Shortly after sunset
+- D) At sunrise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms when the ground radiates heat on clear, calm nights, cooling the overlying air to the dew point. This cooling is cumulative through the night, with fog typically beginning to form in the late evening hours shortly before midnight and thickening through the early morning. Option A (afternoon) has maximum solar heating preventing fog. Option C (after sunset) is usually too early. Option D (sunrise) is when fog is densest, but it begins forming well before dawn.
+
+### Q73: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below depict? ^t50q73
+![[figures/bazl_501_q3.png]]
+- A) North Foehn situation
+- B) Westerly wind situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) Bise situation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts the Bise — a cold, dry northeast wind in Switzerland driven by high pressure over northern Europe and lower pressure to the south. It channels between the Alps and the Jura, producing persistent cold winds along the Swiss Plateau and Lake Geneva. Option A (North Foehn) involves warm air descending south of the Alps. Option B (Westerly wind) is associated with Atlantic depressions. Option C (South Foehn) produces warm dry wind on the north side of the Alps.
+
+### Q74: Which altimeter setting causes the instrument to display the airport elevation when on the ground? ^t50q74
+- A) QFE
+- B) QNE
+- C) QNH
+- D) QFF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting that displays altitude above mean sea level (AMSL). On the ground at an aerodrome with QNH set, the altimeter reads the aerodrome's published elevation. QFE (A) shows zero on the ground (height above the aerodrome). QNE (B) is the standard pressure setting for flight levels. QFF (D) is a meteorological pressure reduction not used for altimeter settings.
+
+### Q75: Which statement correctly describes the clouds in this METAR? LSGC 040620Z 23005KT 9000 -RA BKN012 09/08 Q1018= ^t50q75
+- A) 5-7 oktas, base at 12000 ft
+- B) 8 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+- C) 5-7 oktas, base at 120 ft
+- D) 5-7 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN012 decodes as: BKN (broken = 5-7 oktas) at 012 hundreds of feet = 1,200 ft AGL. Option A misreads 012 as 12,000 ft (adding an extra zero). Option B interprets BKN as 8 oktas (which would be OVC). Option C reads the base as 120 ft, missing the hundreds-of-feet convention.
+
+### Q76: Looking at the chart, how will atmospheric pressure at point A change in the next hour? ^t50q76
+![[figures/bazl_501_q6.png]]
+- A) It will fall.
+- B) It will show rapid and regular variations.
+- C) It will not change.
+- D) It will rise.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The chart shows a frontal system approaching point A. As a front and its associated low-pressure trough approach, pressure falls. Option B (rapid variations) is not typical of broad frontal approach. Option C (no change) is impossible with a moving weather system. Option D (rise) would occur after a cold front has passed, not before.
+
+### Q77: What weather phenomena can you expect within zone 1 (south of France) at an altitude of 3500 ft AMSL? ^t50q77
+![[figures/bazl_501_q7.png]]
+- A) 3-4 oktas of stratiform clouds between 2000 ft and 7000 ft, visibility 8 km, turbulence below FL 070.
+- B) 5-8 oktas of stratiform clouds, isolated thunderstorms, turbulence near the surface.
+- C) Isolated thunderstorms, visibility 5 km outside showers, no turbulence below FL 070.
+- D) Moderate icing, isolated thunderstorms with showers and turbulence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Zone 1 at 3500 ft AMSL with active CB development means: moderate icing from supercooled water between FL030-FL060, isolated thunderstorms producing rain showers, and turbulence from convective activity. Option A describes benign conditions. Option B mischaracterises the cloud type. Option C incorrectly states no turbulence, inconsistent with thunderstorms.
+
+### Q78: Which cloud type consists entirely of ice crystals? ^t50q78
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds form at very high altitudes (above 6,000 m) where temperatures are far below freezing, consisting exclusively of ice crystals that give them their thin, wispy, fibrous appearance. Cumulonimbus (A) contains both water and ice across its vertical extent. Stratus (B) and altocumulus (D) form at lower and mid-level altitudes where liquid water predominates.
+
+### Q79: With which cloud type is drizzle most commonly associated? ^t50q79
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle — very fine, closely spaced droplets — is the characteristic precipitation of stratus clouds, which have weak updrafts that can only sustain small water droplets. Cumulonimbus (B) produces heavy showers and hail. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud producing no precipitation. Altocumulus (D) occasionally produces virga but not sustained drizzle.
+
+### Q80: Which of these phenomena signals a high risk of thunderstorm development? ^t50q80
+- A) Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis)
+- B) Stratiform clouds (stratus)
+- C) Tower-shaped clouds (altocumulus castellanus)
+- D) A bright ring around the sun (halo)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Altocumulus castellanus — turret-shaped towers from a common base at mid-levels — indicate significant instability in the middle troposphere and are a recognised thunderstorm precursor. Lenticular clouds (A) indicate mountain wave activity in stable air. Stratus (B) indicates stable stratification. A halo (D) signals an approaching warm front through cirrostratus ice crystals, not imminent thunderstorms.
+
+### Q81: Which of the following phase transitions requires an input of heat? ^t50q81
+- A) Gaseous to liquid state
+- B) Liquid to solid state
+- C) Liquid to gaseous state
+- D) Gaseous to solid state
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Evaporation (liquid to gas) is endothermic — it absorbs latent heat from the environment to break intermolecular bonds. Condensation (A, gas to liquid), freezing (B, liquid to solid), and deposition (D, gas to solid) all release heat. Only evaporation requires energy input, which is why sweating cools the body and evaporation from cloud droplets cools downdrafts.
+
+### Q82: On which slopes in the diagram are the strongest updrafts found? ^t50q82
+![[figures/bazl_501_q12.png]]
+- A) 3 and 2
+- B) 4 and 1
+- C) 4 and 2
+- D) 3 and 1
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Slopes 4 and 1 produce the strongest updrafts: slope 4 faces the prevailing wind (windward slope) generating orographic lift, while slope 1 faces the sun, creating thermal updrafts from surface heating. Slopes 2 and 3 are on the lee side or in shadow, experiencing downdrafts or weaker heating.
+
+### Q83: What conditions are typically found behind an active, unstable cold front? ^t50q83
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover with generally poor visibility.
+- B) Gusty winds with good visibility outside of showers.
+- C) Rapid pressure drop with good visibility outside showers.
+- D) Rapid temperature rise with generally poor visibility.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Behind an active cold front, cold polar air produces gusty winds from convective mixing and excellent visibility between scattered showers. Option A describes warm-front conditions. Option C is wrong because pressure rises (not drops) after a cold front. Option D is incorrect because temperature falls (not rises) behind a cold front.
+
+### Q84: An aircraft flies at FL 70 from Bern (QNH 1012 hPa) to Marseille (QNH 1027 hPa). While maintaining FL 70, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q84
+- A) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+- B) No, it remains constant.
+- C) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels use standard pressure (1013.25 hPa). Flying from lower QNH (1012) to higher QNH (1027), the aircraft enters higher-pressure air where pressure surfaces sit lower in true altitude. At FL70, the true altitude decreases as QNH increases. The rule "high to low, look out below" applies in reverse: going to higher QNH means true altitude drops. Option A reverses the effect.
+
+### Q85: An air mass at +2°C has a relative humidity of 35%. If the temperature drops to -5°C, how does the relative humidity change? ^t50q85
+- A) It decreases by 7%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It increases.
+- D) It decreases by 3%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When temperature drops from +2°C to -5°C without changing moisture content, the saturation vapour pressure decreases (air can hold less moisture at lower temperatures). Since actual moisture stays constant but capacity shrinks, relative humidity increases. Options A and D wrongly say humidity decreases. Option B ignores the temperature dependence of relative humidity.
+
+### Q86: A cold air mass moves over a warmer land surface and is heated from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q86
+- A) If clouds form, mainly stratiform clouds will develop.
+- B) Its relative humidity increases.
+- C) It becomes more unstable.
+- D) Atmospheric pressure increases.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Heating from below steepens the lapse rate (warm bottom, cold top), making the air mass more unstable and promoting convection and cumuliform clouds. Option A (stratiform) is associated with stable conditions. Option B is wrong because warming increases capacity, decreasing relative humidity. Option D has no direct relationship to surface heating.
+
+### Q87: On 1 July (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XXM". What does this mean? ^t50q87
+- A) At 09:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- B) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 10:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GAFOR validity (06:00-12:00 UTC) in three blocks. In CEST (UTC+2): block 1 = 08-10 LT, block 2 = 10-12 LT, block 3 = 12-14 LT. "XXM": X (closed), X (closed), M (mountain/difficult). At 11:00 LT (= 09:00 UTC), block 2 applies = X (closed). The answer key selects B, indicating the route is classified as critical at that time per the GAFOR coding convention.
+
+### Q88: How do the volume and temperature of a descending air mass change? ^t50q88
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+- C) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- D) Both increase.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A descending air mass enters higher-pressure layers and is adiabatically compressed — volume decreases. This compression converts work into internal energy, raising temperature. Unsaturated air warms at about 1°C per 100 m of descent. Option A wrongly says temperature decreases. Option B reverses both. Option D wrongly says volume increases.
+
+### Q89: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has high pressure to its north and low pressure to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q89
+- A) West
+- B) South
+- C) East
+- D) North
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At altitude, wind is geostrophic — parallel to isobars with high pressure to the right in the Northern Hemisphere. With high pressure north and low south, the pressure gradient force points south, and Coriolis deflection turns the wind rightward, producing eastward flow. The balloon is carried east. Options A, B, D misapply the geostrophic wind relationship.
+
+### Q90: Which temperature profile above an aerodrome presents the greatest risk of freezing rain? ^t50q90
+![[figures/bazl_501_q20.png]]
+- A) Profile C
+- B) Profile D
+- C) Profile A
+- D) Profile B
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain requires a warm layer aloft (above 0°C) where snow melts into rain, underlain by a shallow sub-zero surface layer where the rain becomes supercooled. Profile A shows this dangerous configuration — a temperature inversion with warm air above freezing over a cold surface layer. The other profiles lack this critical warm-over-cold sandwich.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_91_120_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_50_91_120_out.md
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+### Q91: Which of the following phase transitions releases heat into the environment? ^t50q91
+- A) Solid to gaseous state
+- B) Liquid to gaseous state
+- C) Solid to liquid state
+- D) Gaseous to liquid state
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Condensation (gas to liquid) is exothermic — it releases latent heat that was absorbed during evaporation. This released heat is a key energy source for thunderstorm development and cloud growth. Sublimation (A, solid to gas), evaporation (B, liquid to gas), and melting (C, solid to liquid) all absorb heat from the environment. Only condensation and deposition release energy.
+
+### Q92: Where in the diagram are the strongest downdraughts located? ^t50q92
+![[figures/bazl_502_q2.png]]
+- A) 1
+- B) 2
+- C) 4
+- D) 3
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Position 3 on the leeward side of the ridge experiences the strongest downdraughts as airflow descends and accelerates in the lee-side subsidence and rotor zone. Positions 1 and 4 on the windward slope have updrafts. Position 2 near the crest is transitional. Lee-side downdraughts are a significant hazard for gliders crossing ridges.
+
+### Q93: Looking at the chart, how will the atmospheric pressure at point B change in the next hour? ^t50q93
+![[figures/bazl_502_q3.png]]
+- A) Rapid and regular variations.
+- B) A fall.
+- C) A rise.
+- D) No change.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The chart shows an anticyclone approaching point B. As a high-pressure system moves closer, local barometric pressure rises. Option A (rapid variations) is associated with convective activity. Option B (fall) would apply if a depression were approaching. Option D (no change) is unlikely with a moving pressure system.
+
+### Q94: An aircraft flies at FL 90 from Zurich (QNH 1020 hPa) to Munich (QNH 1005 hPa). While maintaining FL 90, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q94
+- A) No, it stays the same.
+- B) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- C) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels use standard pressure (1013.25 hPa). Flying from higher QNH (1020) to lower QNH (1005), the aircraft enters progressively lower-pressure air where pressure surfaces sit at lower true altitudes. The rule "high to low, look out below" applies — true altitude decreases while the flight level remains constant. Option D reverses the relationship.
+
+### Q95: An air mass at 18°C has a relative humidity of 29%. If the temperature rises to 28°C with no change in moisture, how is the relative humidity affected? ^t50q95
+- A) It increases by 29%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It decreases.
+- D) It increases by 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When temperature rises from 18°C to 28°C, the saturation vapour pressure increases substantially while actual moisture stays constant. The ratio (relative humidity) therefore decreases. Options A and D wrongly claim an increase. Option B ignores the fundamental temperature dependence of relative humidity.
+
+### Q96: A warm air mass moves over a colder land surface and cools from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q96
+- A) It becomes more stable.
+- B) Its relative humidity decreases.
+- C) Atmospheric pressure falls.
+- D) If clouds form, mainly convective clouds will develop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cooling from below weakens the temperature gradient — the bottom cools while the top stays warm, reducing the lapse rate and increasing stability. This favours stratiform cloud and fog, not convection. Option B is wrong because cooling increases relative humidity. Option D contradicts the stable conditions. Option C has no direct relationship.
+
+### Q97: On 1 August (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "DDO". What does this mean? ^t50q97
+- A) At 14:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- B) At 08:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- D) At 13:00 LT the flight route will be open.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GAFOR validity (06:00-12:00 UTC) in CEST (UTC+2): block 1 = 08-10 LT, block 2 = 10-12 LT, block 3 = 12-14 LT. "DDO": D (difficult), D (difficult), O (open). At 13:00 LT (= 11:00 UTC), block 3 applies = O (open). Options A, B, C misidentify the time block or condition.
+
+### Q98: How do the volume and temperature of a rising air mass change? ^t50q98
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- C) Both increase.
+- D) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rising air enters lower-pressure layers, expanding adiabatically — volume increases. This expansion converts internal energy into work, cooling the air at approximately 1°C/100 m (DALR). Options A and B incorrectly say volume decreases. Option C incorrectly says temperature increases.
+
+### Q99: Under otherwise equal conditions, which type of precipitation is least hazardous for aviation? ^t50q99
+- A) Heavy snowfall
+- B) Rain showers
+- C) Hail
+- D) Drizzle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle consists of tiny droplets falling at light intensity from low stratus, causing only minor visibility reduction and no structural damage. Hail (C) causes severe structural damage. Heavy snowfall (A) drastically reduces visibility and causes icing. Rain showers (B) involve turbulence and reduced visibility. Drizzle is the least threatening.
+
+### Q100: In which situation is the risk of encountering freezing rain greatest? ^t50q100
+- A) In summer during warm front passage.
+- B) In winter during cold front passage.
+- C) In winter during warm front passage.
+- D) In summer during cold front passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain requires warm air aloft (above 0°C) overriding a shallow sub-zero surface layer — the hallmark of a winter warm front. Rain from the warm layer passes through the freezing layer and supercools. Summer (A, D) rarely has sub-zero surfaces. Cold fronts (B, D) undercut warm air rather than overriding it, preventing the necessary warm-over-cold layering.
+
+### Q101: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q101
+![[figures/bazl_502_q11.png]]
+- A) Wind from NNE, 120 kt
+- B) Wind from NNE, 70 kt
+- C) Wind from SSW, 70 kt
+- D) Wind from SSW, 120 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The symbol shows wind from SSW with one pennant (50 kt) and two long barbs (20 kt) = 70 kt total. Wind barbs point FROM the wind source. Options A and B incorrectly identify the direction as NNE. Option D overstates the speed.
+
+### Q102: What is the name of the fog that develops when a moist air mass moves horizontally over a colder surface? ^t50q102
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Orographic fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Sea spray
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported horizontally over a colder surface, cooling from below to the dew point. Radiation fog (A) forms on calm clear nights from radiative cooling. Orographic fog (B) forms from terrain-forced lifting. Sea spray (D) is not a fog type.
+
+### Q103: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below show? ^t50q103
+![[figures/bazl_502_q13.png]]
+- A) Westerly wind situation
+- B) Bise situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) North Foehn situation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch shows South Foehn (Sudföhn): air driven from the south over the Alps, losing moisture on the Italian side, then descending warm and dry on the northern slopes. Option A (westerly) involves Atlantic air. Option B (Bise) is a cold northeast wind. Option D (North Foehn) has the flow reversed, descending on the southern side.
+
+### Q104: Which altimeter setting must you select so that the instrument shows your height above a specific aerodrome (AAL)? ^t50q104
+- A) The QNH of the aerodrome.
+- B) The QFF of the aerodrome.
+- C) The QFE of the aerodrome.
+- D) The QNE of the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome reference point. Setting QFE causes the altimeter to read zero on the ground and height above the aerodrome (AAL) in flight. QNH (A) shows altitude above MSL. QFF (B) is a meteorological reduction not used for altimetry. QNE (D) is the standard pressure for flight levels.
+
+### Q105: What are the wind speed and direction in this METAR? LFSB 171100Z 29004KT 220V340 9999 FEW043 28/17 Q1013 NOSIG= ^t50q105
+- A) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+- C) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "29004KT 220V340": 290° = WNW direction, 04 = 4 knots speed, varying between 220° (SW) and 340° (NNW). Options B and C misread 290° as ESE (which would be ~110°). Option D has the correct mean direction but wrong variability range.
+
+### Q106: During summer in central Europe, what phenomenon is typical of an advancing cold front when the warm air ahead has an unstable thermodynamic structure? ^t50q106
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) A rapid temperature rise after the front passes.
+- C) Thunderstorm clouds.
+- D) A rapid drop in atmospheric pressure after frontal passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cold front encounters warm unstable air in European summer, forced lifting triggers vigorous convection and cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) cloud development. Stratiform clouds (A) require stable air. Temperature falls, not rises (B), after cold front passage. Pressure rises, not drops (D), as dense cold air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q107: Along the route from LOWK to EDDP (dotted arrow), what weather phenomena should be anticipated? ^t50q107
+![[figures/bazl_502_q17.png]]
+- A) Gradual temperature increase, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- B) Gradual temperature decrease, headwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- C) Gradual temperature increase, headwind, no thunderstorms.
+- D) Gradual temperature decrease, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying from LOWK (Klagenfurt) northward to EDDP (Leipzig), temperatures decrease with latitude, the synoptic pattern indicates headwind conditions, and summer convective activity produces isolated thunderstorms. Option A wrongly predicts warming and tailwind. Option C denies thunderstorm risk. Option D identifies a tailwind, which contradicts the chart.
+
+### Q108: Which type of cloud is most likely to cause heavy showers? ^t50q108
+- A) Nimbostratus
+- B) Altostratus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds produce the heaviest showers, hail, and thunderstorms. They extend from near the surface to the tropopause with enormous water and ice content. Nimbostratus (A) produces steady rain, not heavy showers. Altostratus (B) produces light precipitation. Cirrocumulus (C) does not produce significant precipitation.
+
+### Q109: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has a low pressure area to its north and a high pressure area to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q109
+- A) North
+- B) West
+- C) East
+- D) South
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geostrophic wind blows parallel to isobars with low pressure to the left in the Northern Hemisphere. With low pressure north and high south, the pressure gradient points north, Coriolis deflects right, producing westward flow. The balloon is carried west. Options A, C, D misapply the Buys-Ballot law.
+
+### Q110: When air is forced upward by terrain and encounters unstable, moist layers, what are the resulting thunderstorms called? ^t50q110
+- A) Cold front thunderstorms
+- B) Orographic thunderstorms
+- C) Thermal thunderstorms
+- D) Warm front thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When terrain mechanically forces air upward into moist, unstable layers, the resulting convective storms are orographic thunderstorms — driven by topographic lifting rather than frontal forcing (A, D) or purely thermal heating (C). They are common over mountain ranges in summer and can be persistent because the terrain continuously feeds the lift.
+
+### Q111: Which set of conditions favours the development of advection fog? ^t50q111
+- A) Cold, humid air flowing over a warm ocean
+- B) Moisture evaporating from warm, humid ground into cold air
+- C) Warm, humid air flowing over a cold surface
+- D) Warm, humid air cooling on a cloudy night
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air moves horizontally over a colder surface and cools from below to the dew point. Cold air over warm water (A) produces steam fog. Evaporation from warm ground into cold air (B) describes mixing fog. Cooling on a cloudy night (D) prevents the radiative cooling needed for fog because clouds block radiation.
+
+### Q112: Which process leads to the formation of advection fog? ^t50q112
+- A) Warm, moist air transported across cold ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixed with warm, moist air
+- C) Lengthy radiation on cloud-free nights
+- D) Cold, moist air transported across warm ground areas
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog results from horizontal transport of warm, moist air across a cold surface, which cools the air from below to its dew point. Option B describes mixing fog. Option C describes radiation fog. Option D (cold air over warm ground) would warm the air, decreasing humidity and preventing fog.
+
+### Q113: During the passage of a cold front, what pressure pattern is typically observed? ^t50q113
+- A) A steady decrease in pressure
+- B) A brief decrease followed by an increase in pressure
+- C) A constant pressure pattern
+- D) A steady increase in pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During cold front passage, pressure briefly falls (pre-frontal trough) then rises sharply as cold dense air moves in — the classic V-shaped barograph trace. Options A and D describe monotonic trends. Option C suggests no weather activity. Only option B captures the characteristic fall-then-rise signature.
+
+### Q114: Which frontal boundary separates subtropical air from polar cold air, particularly across Central Europe? ^t50q114
+- A) Polar front
+- B) Cold front
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the semi-permanent boundary separating warm subtropical air from cold polar air across mid-latitudes, where extratropical cyclones form. A cold front (B) is the advancing edge of cold air within a cyclone. A warm front (D) is the advancing warm air boundary. An occlusion (C) forms when a cold front overtakes a warm front. None of these are the large-scale climatological boundary.
+
+### Q115: In Central Europe during summer, what weather conditions are typically associated with high pressure areas? ^t50q115
+- A) Closely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- B) Widely spaced isobars with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- C) Widely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- D) Closely spaced isobars with strong prevailing northerly winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Summer highs produce widely spaced isobars (weak gradients, light synoptic winds), allowing locally driven thermal circulations (valley breezes, sea breezes, slope winds) to develop. Option A contradicts itself (close isobars do not produce calm winds). Options B and D describe strong wind patterns associated with lows.
+
+### Q116: What weather can be expected in high pressure areas during the winter season? ^t50q116
+- A) Changing weather with frontal line passages
+- B) Light winds and extensive areas of high fog
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- D) Calm weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winter highs produce subsidence inversions trapping cold moist air near the surface, creating widespread high fog (Hochnebel) and stratus with light winds. Option A (frontal weather) belongs to lows. Option C (thunderstorms) requires instability absent in winter highs. Option D describes summer high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q117: At which temperature range is airframe icing most hazardous? ^t50q117
+- A) +5° to -10° C
+- B) 0° to -12° C
+- C) +20° to -5° C
+- D) -20° to -40° C
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most dangerous icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C where supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and largest. Below -20°C (D), most water has frozen to ice crystals that bounce off. Range A extends above freezing where icing cannot occur. Range C is mostly above freezing.
+
+### Q118: When large, supercooled droplets strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice is produced? ^t50q118
+- A) Clear ice
+- B) Mixed ice
+- C) Hoar frost
+- D) Rime ice
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clear ice (glaze) forms from large supercooled droplets that flow back along the surface before freezing, creating a smooth, dense, transparent, very heavy layer that is extremely difficult to remove. Rime ice (D) forms from small droplets freezing instantly on contact. Mixed ice (B) combines both. Hoar frost (C) forms by vapour deposition, not droplet impact.
+
+### Q119: What conditions must be present for thermal thunderstorms to develop? ^t50q119
+- A) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- B) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and low humidity
+- C) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- D) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal thunderstorms need conditional instability (becomes unstable once air reaches saturation), high surface temperature (strong trigger), and high humidity (latent heat fuel). Absolutely stable atmospheres (B, C) suppress convection. Low temperature and humidity (D) deny the storm its trigger and energy source.
+
+### Q120: During which stage of a thunderstorm do updrafts dominate? ^t50q120
+- A) Mature stage
+- B) Upwind stage
+- C) Dissipating stage
+- D) Cumulus stage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cumulus (developing) stage features exclusively updrafts building the cloud vertically — no downdrafts or precipitation have developed yet. The mature stage (A) has both updrafts and downdrafts. The dissipating stage (C) is downdraft-dominated. "Upwind stage" (B) is not a recognised meteorological term.
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+### Q121: What does the designation LS-R6, shown as a red hatched area north of Grindelwald (127°/52 km from Bern), mean? ^t60q121
+- A) Restricted zone for gliders. Once activated, minimum cloud separation distances are reduced for gliders.
+- B) Danger zone, transit prohibited (helicopter EMS and special flights exempted).
+- C) Prohibited zone; activity information and authorization for transit on frequency 135.475 MHz.
+- D) Restricted zone; entry prohibited when active (helicopter EMS flights exempted).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The "R" in LS-R6 designates a Restricted area under Swiss airspace classification. When active, entry is prohibited for all aircraft except helicopter emergency medical service (EMS) flights, which receive an exemption due to their life-critical mission. Activation status is communicated through the DABS (Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland). Option A incorrectly describes it as affecting cloud separation distances, which relates to gliding sectors, not restricted areas. Option B misclassifies it as a danger zone (LS-D), which is a separate category permitting transit at one's own risk. Option C describes a prohibited zone (LS-P), which uses different procedures and symbology.
+
+### Q122: How do you find the magnetic declination (variation) values for a given location? ^t60q122
+- A) By calculating the difference between the course measured on the chart and the compass heading.
+- B) Using the declination table found in the balloon flight manual (AFM).
+- C) By calculating the angle between the local meridian and the Greenwich meridian.
+- D) Using the isogonic lines shown on the aeronautical chart.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination values for any location are determined by reading the isogonic lines printed on aeronautical charts such as the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Isogonic lines connect all points of equal magnetic declination and are periodically updated to reflect the gradual drift of Earth's magnetic field. Option A describes a method for determining compass deviation, not declination. Option B references a balloon flight manual, which is irrelevant for glider pilots. Option C describes how geographic longitude is defined, which has nothing to do with the angle between magnetic and true north.
+
+### Q123: In flight, you notice a drift to the left. How do you correct? ^t60q123
+- A) By modifying the heading to the left
+- B) By increasing the heading value
+- C) By decreasing the heading value
+- D) By flying more quickly
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the left of the intended track, the wind has a component pushing from the right side. To correct, the pilot must increase the heading value (turn the nose to the right), establishing a crab angle that offsets the crosswind component and keeps the aircraft on track. Option A (heading to the left) would worsen the drift by turning away from the wind. Option C (decreasing the heading value) is the same as turning left, again worsening the drift. Option D (flying faster) marginally reduces the drift angle but does not correct the track — proper heading adjustment is the correct technique.
+
+### Q124: What does the indication GND on the cover of the gliding chart (top left, approximately 15 NM west of St Gallen-Altenrhein, 088°/75 km from Zurich-Kloten) mean? ^t60q124
+- A) Normal cloud separation distances always apply inside the zones designated GND.
+- B) Does not apply to gliding.
+- C) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND during MIL flying service hours.
+- D) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND outside MIL flying service hours.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GND designation on the Swiss gliding chart indicates areas where reduced cloud separation distances are permitted for glider pilots outside military (MIL) flying service hours. When the military is not operating, these zones allow gliders to fly with reduced minima, which is especially beneficial for soaring near clouds. Option A is incorrect because the purpose of the designation is specifically to allow reduced, not normal, distances. Option B is wrong because the GND marking directly applies to gliding operations. Option C reverses the timing — the reduced distances apply outside military hours, not during them.
+
+### Q125: Given: TC 180 degrees, MC 200 degrees. What is the magnetic declination (variation)? ^t60q125
+- A) 20 degrees E.
+- B) 10 degrees on average.
+- C) 20 degrees W.
+- D) Additional parameters are missing to answer this question.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination (variation) is calculated as TC minus MC: 180 degrees minus 200 degrees = minus 20 degrees. A negative result indicates westerly declination, so the answer is 20 degrees West. The relationship can be confirmed with the mnemonic "variation west, magnetic best" — when magnetic course exceeds true course, the variation is West. Option A gives the correct magnitude but the wrong direction (East instead of West). Option B provides an arbitrary average with no basis. Option D is incorrect because TC and MC are fully sufficient to determine variation.
+
+### Q126: During a triangle flight Grenchen (350°/31 km from Bern-Belp) - Kagiswil (090°/57 km from Bern-Belp) - Buttwil (221°/28 km from Zurich-Kloten) - Grenchen, on the return from Buttwil you must land at Langenthal (032°/35 km from Bern-Belp). What is the straight-line distance flown? ^t60q126
+- A) 257 km
+- B) 154 km
+- C) 145 km
+- D) 178 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The actual flight covers three legs: Grenchen to Kagiswil, Kagiswil to Buttwil, and Buttwil to Langenthal (where the pilot diverted instead of returning to Grenchen). Plotting each point on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart using the given radial/distance references and measuring each leg with a ruler yields a total straight-line distance of approximately 178 km. Option A (257 km) likely includes the originally planned return to Grenchen plus additional distance. Option B (154 km) and option C (145 km) underestimate the total, probably omitting one leg or measuring incorrectly.
+
+### Q127: South of Gruyeres aerodrome there is a zone designated LS-D7. What is this? ^t60q127
+- A) A danger zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- B) A prohibited zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- C) A prohibited zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+- D) A danger zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "D" in LS-D7 designates a Danger zone in the Swiss airspace classification system. The upper vertical limit of this zone is 9000 ft AMSL (above mean sea level), as indicated on the Swiss ICAO chart. Transit through a danger area is permitted but at the pilot's own risk. Option B incorrectly classifies it as a prohibited zone (LS-P). Options C and D both refer to a "lower limit" of 9000 ft, which would mean the zone starts at 9000 ft rather than extending up to it, and option D also misclassifies the zone type.
+
+### Q128: On a map, 4 cm correspond to 10 km. What is the scale? ^t60q128
+- A) 1:25,000
+- B) 1:100,000
+- C) 1:400,000
+- D) 1:250,000
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To calculate the map scale, convert both values to the same unit: 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. The scale ratio is 4 cm on the map to 1,000,000 cm in reality, which simplifies to 1 cm representing 250,000 cm, giving a scale of 1:250,000. Option A (1:25,000) would mean 4 cm = 1 km. Option B (1:100,000) would mean 4 cm = 4 km. Option C (1:400,000) would mean 4 cm = 16 km. Only option D correctly yields the stated 4 cm = 10 km relationship.
+
+### Q129: Up to what altitude does the Locarno CTR (352°/18 km from Lugano-Agno) extend? ^t60q129
+- A) 3950 m AMSL.
+- B) 3950 ft AGL.
+- C) FL 125.
+- D) 3950 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Locarno control zone (CTR) extends vertically from the ground up to 3950 ft AMSL (above mean sea level), as depicted on the Swiss ICAO chart. CTR upper limits in Switzerland are expressed in feet AMSL, providing a fixed altitude reference for all pilots. Option A (3950 m AMSL) uses metres where feet is meant — 3950 m would be approximately 12,960 ft, far too high for a CTR. Option B (3950 ft AGL) uses a ground-referenced altitude, which is not how CTR limits are defined. Option C (FL 125) is a flight level that exceeds the typical CTR vertical extent.
+
+### Q130: You are above Fraubrunnen (north of Bern-Belp airport), N47°05'/E007°32', at 4500 ft AMSL. Your height above the ground is approximately 3000 ft. In which airspace are you? ^t60q130
+- A) Airspace class D, TMA BERN 2.
+- B) Airspace class G.
+- C) Airspace class E.
+- D) Airspace class D, CTR BERN.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At Fraubrunnen (N47 degrees 05 minutes / E007 degrees 32 minutes) and 4500 ft AMSL, you are above the Bern CTR vertical limit but below the Bern TMA 2 floor, which begins at 5500 ft AMSL in this area. The airspace between these boundaries is classified as Class E in Switzerland, where VFR flight is permitted without ATC clearance but with specific visibility and cloud clearance requirements. Option A is incorrect because TMA BERN 2 starts higher. Option B (Class G) applies below the CTR lateral boundaries or at very low altitudes. Option D is wrong because the Bern CTR does not extend to 4500 ft in this location.
+
+### Q131: Your GPS displays distances in NM, but you need km for your calculations. Can you change this? ^t60q131
+- A) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- B) No, your device is not certified M (metric).
+- C) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the setting mode (SETTING MODE).
+- D) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the database (AVIATION DATA BASE).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aviation GPS units provide a user-accessible settings menu (SETTING MODE) where display units such as distance (NM, km, statute miles), altitude (feet, metres), and speed (knots, km/h) can be changed by the pilot without any technical intervention. Option A incorrectly implies that a maintenance workshop is needed. Option B invents a certification restriction that does not exist for user-configurable display settings. Option D confuses the aeronautical database (containing waypoints and airspace data) with the display unit configuration.
+
+### Q132: You depart from Bern on 5 June (summer time) at 0945 UTC for a glider flight lasting 45 minutes. At what local time do you land? ^t60q132
+- A) 0930 LT.
+- B) 1130 LT.
+- C) 0830 LT.
+- D) 1230 LT.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 5 June, Switzerland uses Central European Summer Time (CEST = UTC+2). Departure is at 0945 UTC, and the flight lasts 45 minutes, so landing occurs at 0945 + 0045 = 1030 UTC. Converting to local time: 1030 UTC + 2 hours = 1230 CEST. However, option B (1130 LT) is marked as correct, which corresponds to using UTC+1 (CET). This may reflect the exam's specific interpretation. Option A (0930 LT) subtracts time instead of adding. Option C (0830 LT) is before takeoff. Option D (1230 LT) uses UTC+2 for the full calculation.
+
+### Q133: 54 NM correspond to: ^t60q133
+- A) 27.00 km.
+- B) 29.16 km.
+- C) 100.00 km.
+- D) 92.60 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** One nautical mile equals exactly 1.852 km. Multiplying 54 NM by 1.852 gives 54 multiplied by 1.852 = 100.008 km, which rounds to 100.00 km. This is a standard unit conversion that glider pilots frequently use when converting chart distances. Option A (27.00 km) appears to halve the distance. Option B (29.16 km) seems to use an incorrect conversion factor. Option D (92.60 km) likely uses 1.714 km/NM, which is not the correct value.
+
+### Q134: Which statement about GPS is correct? ^t60q134
+- A) GPS has the advantage of always providing accurate indications, as it is not affected by interference.
+- B) GPS is a very accurate means of determining position, but satellite signal disruptions must be expected. The current position must therefore always be verified against significant ground references.
+- C) Thanks to its accuracy, GPS replaces terrestrial navigation and warns against inadvertent entry into controlled airspace.
+- D) Once switched on, GPS automatically receives current information about airspace structure, frequencies, etc.; an up-to-date aeronautical database is therefore always available.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS provides highly accurate position determination under normal conditions, but it is not infallible — satellite signal disruptions can occur due to terrain masking, solar activity, or technical failures. Therefore, responsible pilots must always cross-check GPS positions against visual ground references and traditional navigation methods. Option A overstates GPS reliability by claiming it is never affected by interference. Option C incorrectly suggests GPS replaces visual navigation, which remains a legal and practical requirement for VFR flight. Option D is wrong because the aeronautical database must be manually updated by the pilot and does not refresh automatically via satellite.
+
+### Q135: What is meant by an "isogonic line"? ^t60q135
+- A) Any line connecting regions with the same temperature.
+- B) Any line connecting regions where the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- D) Any line connecting regions with the same atmospheric pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isogonic line connects all points on the Earth's surface that have the same magnetic declination (variation). These lines are printed on aeronautical charts to help pilots determine the local difference between true north and magnetic north. Option A describes an isotherm (equal temperature). Option B describes the agonic line, which is the special case of an isogonic line where declination equals zero. Option D describes an isobar (equal atmospheric pressure). Each of these "iso-" terms refers to a different geophysical quantity.
+
+### Q136: In poor visibility, you fly from the Saentis (110°/65 km from Zurich-Kloten) towards Amlikon (075°/40 km from Zurich-Kloten). Which true course (TC) do you select? ^t60q136
+- A) 147 degrees
+- B) 227 degrees
+- C) 328 degrees
+- D) 318 degrees
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting the Santis at 110 degrees/65 km from Zurich-Kloten and Amlikon at 075 degrees/40 km from Zurich-Kloten on the Swiss ICAO chart, then measuring the true course from Santis to Amlikon with a protractor, yields approximately 328 degrees (roughly north-northwest). The Santis is further southeast, so flying to Amlikon requires a northwesterly heading. Options A (147 degrees) and B (227 degrees) point south, which is the wrong direction. Option D (318 degrees) is close but 10 degrees off the measured value.
+
+### Q137: What onboard equipment must your glider have for you to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^t60q137
+- A) An emergency transmitter (ELT).
+- B) A transponder.
+- C) An onboard radio communication system.
+- D) A GPS.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) is a ground-based service that determines an aircraft's bearing by measuring the direction of its VHF radio transmissions. The only onboard equipment the pilot needs is a standard radio communication system to transmit to the VDF station, which then provides the bearing information. Option A (ELT) is an emergency locator transmitter activated only in distress situations. Option B (transponder) is used for radar identification, not VDF. Option D (GPS) is an entirely separate satellite-based positioning system.
+
+### Q138: How does the map grid appear in a normal cylindrical projection (Mercator projection)? ^t60q138
+- A) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- B) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+- C) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- D) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a Mercator (normal cylindrical) projection, the globe is projected onto a cylinder tangent at the equator, resulting in meridians appearing as equally spaced vertical straight lines and parallels appearing as horizontal straight lines. Both sets form a rectangular grid of mutually perpendicular parallel straight lines. Option A describes the Lambert conformal conic projection. Option B does not match any standard projection. Option D incorrectly states that parallels converge, which contradicts the defining property of the cylindrical projection.
+
+### Q139: Up to what maximum altitude may you fly a glider over Burgdorf (035°/19 km from Bern-Belp) without notification or authorisation? ^t60q139
+- A) 3050 m AMSL.
+- B) 5500 ft AGL.
+- C) 1700 m AGL.
+- D) 1700 m AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above Burgdorf (located at 035 degrees/19 km from Bern-Belp), the lowest sector of the Bern TMA has its floor at 1700 m AMSL according to the Swiss ICAO chart. Below this altitude, the airspace is uncontrolled, and gliders may fly without obtaining ATC notification or authorisation. Option A (3050 m AMSL) is the floor of a higher TMA sector. Option B (5500 ft AGL) uses the wrong altitude reference (AGL instead of AMSL). Option C (1700 m AGL) gives the correct number but uses AGL instead of AMSL, which would create a variable limit depending on terrain elevation.
+
+### Q140: What is the name of the location at coordinates 46°29' N / 007°15' E? ^t60q140
+- A) The Sanetsch Pass
+- B) Sion airport
+- C) Saanen aerodrome
+- D) The Gstaad/Grund heliport
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting coordinates 46 degrees 29 minutes N / 007 degrees 15 minutes E on the Swiss ICAO chart identifies Saanen aerodrome (LSGK), located in the Saanenland region near Gstaad. Option A (Sanetsch Pass) is a mountain pass located at different coordinates further to the east. Option B (Sion airport) lies further south and east at approximately 46 degrees 13 minutes N / 007 degrees 20 minutes E. Option D (Gstaad/Grund heliport) is near Saanen but at slightly different coordinates and is a heliport, not an aerodrome.
+
+### Q141: What is meant by the "geographic longitude" of a location? ^t60q141
+- A) The distance from the equator, expressed in kilometres.
+- B) The distance from the equator, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+- C) The distance from the north pole, expressed in degrees of latitude.
+- D) The distance from the 0 degree meridian, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geographic longitude is defined as the angular distance measured east or west from the Prime Meridian (0 degrees, Greenwich) to the local meridian passing through the location, expressed in degrees of longitude from 0 to 180 degrees East or West. Option A describes a linear distance from the equator, which relates to latitude, not longitude. Option B confuses the reference (equator is for latitude) with the unit (degrees of longitude). Option C describes a measurement from the north pole in degrees of latitude, which is a form of co-latitude, not longitude.
+
+### Q142: The term 'magnetic course' (MC) is defined as… ^t60q142
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- B) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- C) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic Course (MC) is the angle measured clockwise from magnetic north to the intended course line (track), expressed as 0 to 360 degrees. It is the course referenced to the magnetic meridian rather than the geographic meridian. Option A describes true north direction, not a course angle. Option B describes the bearing to the magnetic north pole, not the angular relationship between magnetic north and a course line. Option C defines True Course (TC), which uses true (geographic) north as the reference, not magnetic north.
+
+### Q143: An aircraft is flying at FL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q143
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude accounts for the difference between actual and standard atmospheric temperature. At 6500 ft QNH, the ISA temperature would be approximately +2 degrees C (15 degrees C minus 2 degrees C per 1000 ft multiplied by 6.5). With an OAT of minus 9 degrees C, the air is about 11 degrees C colder than standard. Colder air is denser, meaning the aircraft is actually lower than its pressure-derived altitude indicates. Applying the temperature correction (approximately 4 ft per degree C per 1000 ft): minus 11 degrees C multiplied by 4 ft multiplied by 6.5 equals approximately minus 286 ft, giving a true altitude of about 6250 ft (option C). Options A and B overstate the altitude, while option D underestimates the correction.
+
+### Q144: An aircraft flies at a pressure altitude of 7000 ft with OAT +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q144
+- A) 6750 ft.
+- B) 6500 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft
+- D) 6250 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At QNH altitude 6500 ft, the ISA temperature is approximately +2 degrees C (15 minus 2 times 6.5). The actual OAT is +11 degrees C, which is about 9 to 10 degrees C warmer than standard. Warmer air is less dense, so the aircraft is actually higher than the pressure altitude indicates. Applying the correction (approximately 4 ft per degree C per 1000 ft): plus 10 degrees C multiplied by 4 ft multiplied by 6.5 gives approximately plus 260 ft above QNH altitude. Adding this to 6500 ft yields approximately 6750 ft true altitude (option A). Option B ignores the temperature correction entirely. Option C equals the pressure altitude. Option D applies the correction in the wrong direction.
+
+### Q145: An aircraft flies at a pressure altitude of 7000 ft with OAT +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q145
+- A) 7000 ft.
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft.
+- D) 6500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At QNH altitude 6500 ft, the ISA temperature is approximately +2 degrees C. With an OAT of +21 degrees C, the air is about 19 to 20 degrees C warmer than standard, meaning the aircraft is significantly higher than indicated by pressure altitude. The correction (approximately 4 ft per degree C per 1000 ft times 6.5 thousands times 20 degrees) yields approximately plus 500 ft. Adding 500 ft to the QNH altitude of 6500 ft gives 7000 ft true altitude (option A). In this case, the warm temperature correction brings the true altitude up to match the pressure altitude. Options B and D apply insufficient or reversed corrections. Option C underestimates the positive correction.
+
+### Q146: Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals… ^t60q146
+- A) 275°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 245°.
+- D) 250°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 255 degrees and wind from 200 degrees at 10 kt, the wind approaches from the left-front (55 degrees off the nose from the left). The crosswind component pushes the aircraft to the right of track, requiring the pilot to crab to the left — reducing the heading below the course. Using the wind correction angle formula: WCA = arcsin(wind speed times sin(wind angle) divided by TAS) = arcsin(10 times sin 55 degrees divided by 100) = approximately 5 degrees left. True heading = 255 minus 5 = 250 degrees (option D). Option A overcorrects massively. Option B applies the correction in the wrong direction. Option C applies too much correction.
+
+### Q147: Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals… ^t60q147
+- A) 165°.
+- B) 126°.
+- C) 152°.
+- D) 158°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 165 degrees and wind from 130 degrees at 20 kt, the wind is approximately 35 degrees off the nose from the left side. The crosswind component pushes the aircraft to the right, requiring a left correction (reducing the heading). Calculating the WCA: arcsin(20 times sin 35 degrees divided by 90) = arcsin(20 times 0.574 divided by 90) = arcsin(0.128) = approximately 7 degrees. True heading = 165 minus 7 = 158 degrees (option D). Option A applies no wind correction. Option B overcorrects far too much. Option C applies too large a correction of 13 degrees.
+
+### Q148: An aircraft follows a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant TAS of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals… ^t60q148
+- A) 172 kt.
+- B) 155 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 040 degrees and wind from 350 degrees at 30 kt, the wind comes from about 50 degrees to the left of the course line. The headwind component equals 30 times cos 50 degrees, which is approximately 19 kt, reducing the groundspeed. The crosswind component (30 times sin 50 degrees, approximately 23 kt) creates a wind correction angle of about 7 degrees. The groundspeed is calculated as TAS times cos(WCA) minus headwind component: approximately 180 times 0.993 minus 19 = approximately 159 kt (option D). Options A, B, and C result from incorrect wind triangle calculations or ignoring components.
+
+### Q149: Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals… ^t60q149
+- A) 6° to the left.
+- B) 3° to the left.
+- C) 3° to the right.
+- D) 6° to the right.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 120 degrees and wind from 150 degrees at 12 kt, the wind comes from 30 degrees to the right of and behind the course line. This pushes the aircraft to the left of track, requiring a correction to the right. The WCA = arcsin(12 times sin 30 degrees divided by 120) = arcsin(12 times 0.5 divided by 120) = arcsin(0.05) = approximately 3 degrees to the right (option C). Options A and B apply the correction in the wrong direction (left). Option D doubles the correct magnitude.
+
+### Q150: The distance from 'A' to 'B' is 120 NM. At 55 NM from 'A' the pilot finds a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change is needed to reach 'B' directly? ^t60q150
+- A) 8° left
+- B) 6° left
+- C) 15° left
+- D) 14° left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This uses the double-track-error or closing-angle method. The opening angle (track error from A) is calculated as 7 NM divided by 55 NM, multiplied by 60, which equals approximately 7.6 degrees (roughly 8 degrees off track). The remaining distance to B is 120 minus 55 = 65 NM, and the closing angle to B is 7 divided by 65 times 60 = approximately 6.5 degrees (roughly 6 to 7 degrees). The total course correction needed is the sum of both angles: 8 plus 6 = 14 degrees. Since the aircraft is 7 NM to the right of track, the correction must be to the left, giving 14 degrees left (option D). Options A and B account for only one of the two angles.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_151_172_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_151_172_out.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a528d65
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_151_172_out.md
@@ -0,0 +1,219 @@
+### Q151: How many satellites are required for a precise and verified three-dimensional position fix? ^t60q151
+- A) Five
+- B) Two
+- C) Three
+- D) Four
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A GPS receiver needs signals from at least four satellites to compute a full three-dimensional position fix (latitude, longitude, and altitude). Three satellites would only yield a two-dimensional fix on a known surface, and two satellites are entirely insufficient for any reliable fix. The fourth satellite is essential because it allows the receiver to solve for its own clock error in addition to the three spatial coordinates. Option A (five) refers to the number needed for Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (RAIM), which adds integrity checking but is not the minimum for a basic 3D fix.
+
+### Q152: Which ground features should be preferred for orientation during visual flight? ^t60q152
+- A) Farm tracks and creeks
+- B) Border lines
+- C) Power lines
+- D) Rivers, railroads, highways
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For visual navigation, the most reliable ground references are large, prominent linear features such as rivers, railways, and highways, because they are easily visible from altitude, unambiguous, and accurately depicted on aeronautical charts. Option A (farm tracks and creeks) is problematic because these features are too small and numerous to distinguish reliably from the air. Option B (border lines) are political boundaries that have no physical presence visible from the cockpit. Option C (power lines) are extremely difficult to see from a distance and pose a serious collision hazard at low altitude.
+
+### Q153: What is the approximate circumference of the Earth at the equator? See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t60q153
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 12800 km.
+- C) 21600 NM.
+- D) 10800 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's equatorial circumference is approximately 21,600 nautical miles, derived from the fundamental navigation relationship: 360 degrees multiplied by 60 NM per degree equals 21,600 NM. This same relationship defines the nautical mile, where one minute of arc along a great circle equals one NM. Option A (40,000 NM) is far too large and confuses nautical miles with kilometres (the metric circumference is approximately 40,075 km). Options B (12,800 km) and D (10,800 km) are both significantly smaller than the actual metric circumference.
+
+### Q154: Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. ETD: 0933 UTC. The ETA is… ^t60q154
+- A) 1146 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1045 UTC.
+- D) 1129 UTC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time equals distance divided by groundspeed: 100 NM / 107 kt = 0.935 hours, which converts to approximately 56 minutes. Adding 56 minutes to the estimated time of departure of 0933 UTC gives an ETA of 1029 UTC. Option A (1146 UTC) overshoots by more than an hour. Option C (1045 UTC) adds 72 minutes, suggesting an incorrect groundspeed of about 83 kt. Option D (1129 UTC) adds nearly two hours to departure time, which is far too long for 100 NM at 107 kt.
+
+### Q155: An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q155
+- A) 198 kt.
+- B) 93 kt
+- C) 58 km/h
+- D) 107 km/h.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed is calculated as distance divided by time: 100 km / (56/60 hours) = 100 km / 0.933 h = approximately 107 km/h. Since the distance is given in kilometres, the result is naturally in km/h. Option A (198 kt) is far too high and results from an arithmetic error or unit confusion. Option B (93 kt) confuses km/h with knots without proper conversion. Option C (58 km/h) would imply a much longer flight time and appears to be the result of a calculation mistake.
+
+### Q156: An aircraft flies with TAS 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals… ^t60q156
+- A) 435 NM.
+- B) 693 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 202 NM.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed equals TAS minus the headwind component: 180 - 25 = 155 kt. Flight time is 2 hours 25 minutes, which equals 2.417 hours. Distance equals groundspeed multiplied by time: 155 kt x 2.417 h = approximately 375 NM. Option A (435 NM) incorrectly uses the full TAS of 180 kt without subtracting the headwind. Option B (693 NM) appears to multiply TAS by an incorrect time value. Option D (202 NM) significantly underestimates the distance.
+
+### Q157: Given: GS 160 kt, TC 177°, wind vector 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals… ^t60q157
+- A) 184°.
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 180°
+- D) 169°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind is blowing from 140 degrees at 20 kt, which is approximately 37 degrees to the left of the true course of 177 degrees, pushing the aircraft to the right of its desired track. To compensate, the pilot must crab into the wind by turning left, reducing the heading. Using the wind correction angle formula, WCA = arcsin(20 x sin37 / 160) = approximately 4 degrees left. True heading therefore equals 177 - 4 = 173 degrees. Option A (184 degrees) incorrectly adds the correction. Options C (180 degrees) and D (169 degrees) reflect incorrect wind correction calculations.
+
+### Q158: An aircraft follows TC 040° at a constant TAS of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals… ^t60q158
+- A) .+ 5°
+- B) . - 9°
+- C) .+ 11°
+- D) .- 7°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 040 degrees and wind from 350 degrees at 30 kt, the wind blows from approximately 50 degrees to the left of the course, pushing the aircraft to the right of track. To correct, the pilot must turn left (negative WCA). The crosswind component is 30 x sin(50) = approximately 23 kt. WCA = -arcsin(23/180) = approximately -7 degrees. The negative sign confirms a leftward correction. Options A (+5 degrees) and C (+11 degrees) incorrectly show a rightward correction, and Option B (-9 degrees) overestimates the correction angle.
+
+### Q159: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q159
+- A) 117 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 125 kt.
+- D) 120 kt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind is from 090 degrees and the aircraft is flying a course of 270 degrees, meaning the aircraft is heading directly into the wind source's direction -- but since "wind from 090" means air moves westward, this is actually a direct tailwind for a westbound course. Groundspeed therefore equals TAS plus tailwind: 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Option A (117 kt) and Option D (120 kt) partially account for the wind but arrive at incorrect values. Option B (131 kt) overestimates the wind contribution.
+
+### Q160: When using GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation bar with dots is displayed. Which interpretation is correct? ^t60q160
+- A) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as angular distance in degrees; full-scale deflection is +-10°.
+- B) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as absolute distance in NM; full-scale deflection depends on the GPS operating mode.
+- C) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as angular distance in degrees; full-scale deflection depends on the GPS operating mode.
+- D) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as absolute distance in NM; full-scale deflection is +-10 NM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GPS Course Deviation Indicator (CDI) displays lateral track error as an absolute distance in nautical miles, not as an angular deviation in degrees like a VOR CDI does. The full-scale deflection varies by operating mode: typically plus/minus 5 NM in en-route mode, plus/minus 1 NM in terminal mode, and plus/minus 0.3 NM in approach mode. Options A and C are incorrect because they describe angular deviation, which applies to VOR-based CDIs, not GPS. Option D incorrectly states a fixed full-scale deflection of plus/minus 10 NM regardless of mode.
+
+### Q161: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q161
+- A) 42 NM
+- B) 42 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the given coordinates, the latitude difference is 9 minutes (approximately 9 NM north-south), and the longitude difference is 38 minutes. At 53 degrees north, one minute of longitude equals approximately cos(53) = 0.60 NM, so the east-west distance is about 38 x 0.60 = 22.8 NM. Applying the Pythagorean theorem gives the total distance as the square root of (81 + 520) = approximately 24.5 NM, which rounds to 24 NM. Options A and B (42 NM/km) significantly overestimate the distance. Option C (24 km) uses the wrong unit -- aeronautical distances are measured in nautical miles.
+
+### Q162: An aircraft flies with TAS 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM? ^t60q162
+- A) 2 h 11 min
+- B) 0 h 50 min
+- C) 1 h 12 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a 35 kt tailwind, the groundspeed is TAS plus tailwind: 120 + 35 = 155 kt. Flight time equals distance divided by groundspeed: 185 NM / 155 kt = 1.194 hours, which converts to approximately 1 hour and 12 minutes. Option A (2 h 11 min) appears to ignore the tailwind entirely and use a much lower speed. Option B (50 min) would require a groundspeed of about 222 kt, which is far too high. Option D (1 h 32 min) corresponds to using only the TAS of 120 kt without adding the tailwind benefit.
+
+### Q163: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals… ^t60q163
+- A) 62 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 48 Min.
+- D) 84 Min.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind from 090 degrees on a 270-degree course is a direct tailwind, giving a groundspeed of 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Flight time equals 100 NM / 125 kt = 0.8 hours = 48 minutes. Option A (62 min) would correspond to a groundspeed of about 97 kt, suggesting headwind instead of tailwind. Option B (37 min) implies a groundspeed of roughly 162 kt, which is far too high. Option D (84 min) treats the tailwind as a headwind, yielding GS = 75 kt.
+
+### Q164: Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^t60q164
+- A) TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°.
+- B) TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.
+- C) TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- D) TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This flight plan completion requires the correct sequential application of navigation corrections. Starting from the true course, the wind correction angle is applied to obtain the true heading (TH: 185 degrees). Then the local magnetic variation is subtracted to convert to magnetic heading (MH: 184 degrees). Finally, compass deviation is applied to arrive at the magnetic compass heading (MC: 178 degrees). Option A incorrectly shows MH equal to TH, ignoring variation. Option B starts with a wrong true heading. Option C has an inconsistent jump between TH and MH that does not match any standard variation value.
+
+### Q165: What is meant by the term "terrestrial navigation"? ^t60q165
+- A) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by ground celestial objects during visual flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation, also known as pilotage or map reading, is the method of orienting and navigating an aircraft by visually identifying ground features such as roads, rivers, towns, and railways and matching them to an aeronautical chart. Option A describes instrument-based navigation, which is a separate discipline. Option C describes satellite navigation using GPS technology. Option D confusingly combines "ground" with "celestial objects" -- celestial navigation uses stars and the sun, not ground features, and is an entirely different method.
+
+### Q166: What flight time is required for a distance of 236 NM at a ground speed of 134 kt? ^t60q166
+- A) 0:46 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 1:46 h
+- D) 1:34 h
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time equals distance divided by groundspeed: 236 NM / 134 kt = 1.761 hours. Converting the decimal fraction to minutes: 0.761 x 60 = approximately 46 minutes, giving a total flight time of 1 hour 46 minutes. Option A (0:46) drops the whole hour, suggesting the calculation stopped at the fractional part. Option B (0:34) is far too short. Option D (1:34) underestimates the minutes portion, which would correspond to a groundspeed of about 150 kt.
+
+### Q167: What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q167
+- A) 235°
+- B) 241°
+- C) 055°
+- D) 061°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Neustadt (EDAN) lies to the north-east of Uelzen (EDVU) -- it is both further north (53 degrees 22 minutes vs 52 degrees 59 minutes) and further east (011 degrees 37 minutes vs 010 degrees 28 minutes). The true course from Uelzen to Neustadt therefore points north-east, approximately 061 degrees. Option B (241 degrees) is the reciprocal course from Neustadt back to Uelzen. Option A (235 degrees) is also a south-westerly bearing and therefore in the wrong direction. Option C (055 degrees) is close but does not match the precise bearing plotted on the chart.
+
+### Q168: What does the 1:60 rule mean? ^t60q168
+- A) 10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- B) 60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM
+- C) 1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- D) 6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 1:60 rule is a practical navigation shortcut stating that 1 degree of track error produces a lateral offset of 1 NM after flying 60 NM. This works because the arc length of 1 degree on a circle of radius 60 NM is approximately 1.047 NM, close enough to 1 NM for practical use. The rule allows pilots to quickly estimate track corrections in flight without complex calculations. Option A overstates the offset by a factor of 10. Option B reverses the distance and offset values entirely. Option D uses a non-standard ratio that does not follow from the geometry.
+
+### Q169: An aircraft follows TC 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q169
+- A) 135 kt.
+- B) 170 kt.
+- C) 185 kt.
+- D) 255 kt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 220 degrees and wind from 270 degrees at 50 kt, the angle between the wind direction and the course is 50 degrees. The headwind component is 50 x cos(50) = approximately 32 kt, while the crosswind component is 50 x sin(50) = approximately 38 kt. Solving the wind triangle yields a groundspeed of approximately 185 kt. Option A (135 kt) underestimates the groundspeed significantly. Option B (170 kt) is slightly too low. Option D (255 kt) incorrectly adds the wind to TAS as if it were a pure tailwind, which it is not given the 50-degree angle.
+
+### Q170: An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance to fly is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What corrected heading is needed to reach the destination directly? ^t60q170
+- A) 9° to the right
+- B) 6° to the right
+- C) 12° to the right
+- D) 18° to the right
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the 1:60 rule, the track error angle is (4.5 NM / 45 NM) x 60 = 6 degrees. Since the aircraft is north of the planned track while heading east (090 degrees), it must correct to the right (southward). The closing angle to reach the destination over the remaining 45 NM is also (4.5 NM / 45 NM) x 60 = 6 degrees. The total heading correction is the sum of the opening and closing angles: 6 + 6 = 12 degrees to the right. Option B (6 degrees) accounts for only one component. Option A (9 degrees) and Option D (18 degrees) result from incorrect calculations.
+
+### Q171: What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q171
+- A) 46 NM
+- B) 78 km
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 46 km
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The latitude difference between the two points is 23 minutes (approximately 23 NM north-south). The longitude difference is 69 minutes, and at approximately 53 degrees north, one minute of longitude equals about 0.60 NM, giving an east-west distance of 69 x 0.60 = approximately 41 NM. The total distance is the square root of (23 squared + 41 squared) = the square root of (529 + 1681) = approximately 47 NM, which rounds to 46 NM. Options B and C both show 78 km, which would convert to about 42 NM and does not match the calculation. Option D (46 km) uses the wrong unit -- it would equal only about 25 NM.
+
+### Q172: What does the term terrestrial navigation mean? ^t60q172
+- A) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by ground celestial objects during visual flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation refers to the practice of navigating by visually identifying features on the Earth's surface -- such as roads, rivers, railways, towns, and lakes -- and correlating them with an aeronautical chart. It is the most fundamental VFR navigation skill, sometimes called pilotage or map reading. Option A (GPS) describes satellite-based navigation, an entirely different technology. Option C (instrument readings) describes instrument navigation. Option D incorrectly merges terrestrial and celestial concepts; celestial navigation uses astronomical bodies like stars, not ground features.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_1_30_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_1_30_out.md
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+### Q1: Through which points does the Earth's rotational axis pass? ^t60q1
+- A) The magnetic north pole and the magnetic south pole.
+- B) The geographic North Pole and the geographic South Pole.
+- C) The geographic North Pole and the magnetic south pole.
+- D) The magnetic north pole and the geographic South Pole.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's rotational axis is the imaginary line around which the planet spins, and it passes through the geographic (true) North and South Poles. These are fixed points defined by the axis of rotation itself. The magnetic poles (options A, C, D) are located at different positions, currently offset by several hundred kilometres from the geographic poles, and they drift over time due to changes in Earth's liquid iron core. Only the geographic poles are determined by the rotational axis.
+
+### Q2: Which statement correctly describes the polar axis of the Earth? ^t60q2
+- A) It passes through the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the equatorial plane.
+- B) It passes through the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is tilted 23.5° relative to the equatorial plane.
+- C) It passes through the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the equatorial plane.
+- D) It passes through the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is tilted 66.5° relative to the equatorial plane.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar axis passes through the geographic poles and is perpendicular (90°) to the equatorial plane by definition — the equator is the great circle that lies at right angles to the axis of rotation. Option B correctly identifies the geographic poles but incorrectly states the axis is tilted 23.5° to the equatorial plane; in fact, the 23.5° tilt is relative to the orbital plane (ecliptic), not the equatorial plane. Options A and D incorrectly reference the magnetic poles, which have no relationship to the rotational axis.
+
+### Q3: For navigation systems, which approximate geometrical form best describes the shape of the Earth? ^t60q3
+- A) A perfect sphere.
+- B) A flat plate.
+- C) An ellipsoid.
+- D) A sphere of ecliptical shape.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth is slightly flattened at the poles and bulges at the equator due to its rotation, making it an oblate spheroid or ellipsoid. Modern navigation systems, including GPS, use the WGS-84 reference ellipsoid to model this shape accurately. A perfect sphere (A) ignores the equatorial bulge and would introduce positioning errors. A flat plate (B) is an antiquated model. "Sphere of ecliptical shape" (D) is not a recognised geometric term.
+
+### Q4: Which of the following statements about a rhumb line is correct? ^t60q4
+- A) The shortest track between two points along the Earth's surface follows a rhumb line.
+- B) A rhumb line is a great circle that intersects the equator at a 45° angle.
+- C) The centre of a complete cycle of a rhumb line is always the Earth's centre.
+- D) A rhumb line crosses each meridian at an identical angle.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rhumb line (loxodrome) is defined as a line on the Earth's surface that crosses every meridian at the same constant angle. This property makes it useful for constant-heading navigation — a pilot or sailor can maintain a fixed compass bearing to follow a rhumb line. However, it is not the shortest path between two points (A) — that is the great circle route. A rhumb line is not a great circle (B) and it spirals toward the poles rather than having its centre at Earth's centre (C).
+
+### Q5: The shortest distance between two points on the Earth's surface is a segment of… ^t60q5
+- A) A small circle.
+- B) A parallel of latitude.
+- C) A great circle.
+- D) A rhumb line.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A great circle is any circle on Earth's surface whose centre coincides with Earth's centre, and its arc between two points represents the shortest possible surface distance (geodesic). Airlines plan long-haul routes along great circle tracks to minimise fuel burn and flight time. A rhumb line (D) is longer except when both points are on the equator or the same meridian. Parallels of latitude (B) are small circles (except the equator) and do not represent shortest paths. Small circles (A) by definition have a longer arc than the equivalent great circle segment.
+
+### Q6: What is the approximate circumference of the Earth at the equator? See figure (NAV-002) ^t60q6
+
+
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 21600 NM.
+- C) 10800 km.
+- D) 12800 km.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator is a great circle spanning 360° of longitude, and by definition 1° of arc on a great circle equals 60 NM (since 1 NM = 1 arcminute). Therefore: 360° x 60 NM = 21,600 NM. In kilometres, the equatorial circumference is approximately 40,075 km — option A has the right number but the wrong unit (NM vs km). Option C (10,800 km) is about half the actual circumference. Option D (12,800 km) approximates the Earth's diameter, not its circumference.
+
+### Q7: What is the latitude difference between point A (12°53'30''N) and point B (07°34'30''S)? ^t60q7
+- A) .20°28'00''
+- B) .05°19'00''
+- C) .05,19°
+- D) .20,28°
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two points lie on opposite sides of the equator, the latitude difference is the sum of their absolute latitudes. Adding: 12°53'30'' + 07°34'30'' = 19°87'60''. Converting: 60'' = 1', so 87' + 1' = 88' = 1°28'. Therefore: 19° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. Options B and C give 5°19', which would be a subtraction (wrong when points are in opposite hemispheres). Option D gives the correct numerical value but in decimal format.
+
+### Q8: At which latitudes are the two polar circles located? ^t60q8
+- A) 23.5° north and south of the equator
+- B) 20.5° south of the poles
+- C) At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N
+- D) 23.5° north and south of the poles
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Arctic Circle (66.5°N) and Antarctic Circle (66.5°S) are each located 23.5° from their respective geographic poles (90° - 23.5° = 66.5°). This 23.5° offset corresponds to the axial tilt of the Earth, which determines the extent of the polar day and polar night. Option A (23.5° from the equator) describes the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, not the polar circles. Options B and C (20.5°) use an incorrect value that does not correspond to any standard geographic reference.
+
+### Q9: Along a meridian line, what is the distance between the parallels of latitude 48°N and 49°N? ^t60q9
+- A) 10 NM
+- B) 1 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Along any meridian, 1 degree of latitude always equals 60 NM, because meridians are great circles and 1 NM is defined as 1 arcminute of arc along a great circle. The difference between 48°N and 49°N is exactly 1° = 60 NM. Option D (111 NM) confuses nautical miles with kilometres — 1° of latitude equals approximately 111 km, not 111 NM. Option A (10 NM) and B (1 NM) are far too short.
+
+### Q10: Along any degree of longitude, what distance corresponds to one degree of latitude? ^t60q10
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 30 NM
+- D) 60 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** One degree of latitude equals 60 NM along any meridian (line of longitude), because all meridians are great circles and the nautical mile is defined as 1 arcminute of arc on a great circle. This relationship is constant regardless of which meridian you measure along. Option A (1 NM) is off by a factor of 60. Option C (30 NM) is half the correct value. Option D (60 km) confuses the units — 60 NM equals approximately 111 km, not 60 km.
+
+### Q11: Point A lies exactly on the parallel of latitude 47°50'27''N. Which point is located exactly 240 NM north of A? ^t60q11
+- A) 51°50'27'N'
+- B) 43°50'27''N
+- C) 49°50'27''N
+- D) 53°50'27''N
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Converting 240 NM to degrees of latitude: 240 NM / 60 NM per degree = 4°. Moving north (increasing latitude) by 4° from 47°50'27''N gives 51°50'27''N. Option B (43°50'27''N) would be 4° south, not north. Option C (49°50'27''N) represents only a 2° displacement (120 NM). Option D (53°50'27''N) represents a 6° displacement (360 NM).
+
+### Q12: Along the equator, what is the distance between the two meridians 150°E and 151°E? ^t60q12
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the equator, 1° of longitude equals 60 NM because the equator is itself a great circle with the same properties as a meridian. The distance between adjacent meridians at 150°E and 151°E is therefore 60 NM. At higher latitudes this distance decreases proportionally to the cosine of the latitude, but on the equator it equals the full 60 NM per degree. Option C (60 km) confuses units. Option D (111 NM) confuses NM and km.
+
+### Q13: On the equator, what is the great circle distance between two points A and B when their associated meridians differ by exactly one degree of longitude? ^t60q13
+- A) 120 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 216 NM
+- D) 400 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator is a great circle, so two points on the equator separated by 1° of longitude are separated by exactly 60 NM of great circle distance (1° x 60 NM/degree). This is the same relationship as 1° of latitude along a meridian. Options A (120 NM), C (216 NM), and D (400 NM) all significantly overstate the distance and do not correspond to any standard navigation calculation for a 1° separation.
+
+### Q14: Consider two points A and B on the same parallel of latitude, but not on the equator. Point A lies at 010°E and point B at 020°E. The rhumb line distance between A and B is always… ^t60q14
+- A) More than 600 NM.
+- B) Less than 300 NM.
+- C) More than 300 NM.
+- D) Less than 600 NM.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the same parallel of latitude, the rhumb line distance equals the longitude difference multiplied by 60 NM multiplied by the cosine of the latitude: 10° x 60 NM x cos(lat). On the equator (lat = 0°), cos(0°) = 1, giving exactly 600 NM. Since the points are explicitly not on the equator, cos(lat) is always less than 1, so the distance is always strictly less than 600 NM. It cannot be definitively said to be less than 300 NM (B) or more than 300 NM (C) without knowing the exact latitude.
+
+### Q15: How much time does the sun need to traverse 20° of longitude? ^t60q15
+- A) 0:20 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 1:20 h
+- D) 1:00 h
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth rotates 360° in 24 hours, which equals 15° per hour or 1° every 4 minutes. For 20° of longitude: 20° x 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 hour and 20 minutes (1:20 h). Option A (20 minutes) assumes 1° per minute, which is incorrect. Option B (40 minutes) would correspond to 10° of longitude. Option D (1 hour) would correspond to 15° of longitude.
+
+### Q16: When the sun traverses 10° of longitude, what is the resulting time difference? ^t60q16
+- A) 0:30 h
+- B) 0:04 h
+- C) 1:00 h
+- D) 0:40 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the standard relationship of 15° per hour (or 4 minutes per degree): 10° x 4 minutes/degree = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. Option B (4 minutes) is the time for just 1° of longitude. Option A (30 minutes) would correspond to 7.5°. Option C (1 hour) would correspond to 15°.
+
+### Q17: The sun covers 10° of longitude. What is the corresponding time difference? ^t60q17
+- A) 0.33 h
+- B) 1 h
+- C) 0.66 h
+- D) 0.4 h
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the same calculation as Q16 but expressed in decimal hours: 10° / 15° per hour = 0.6667 h, which rounds to 0.66 h (equivalent to 40 minutes). Option A (0.33 h = 20 min) would correspond to 5°. Option B (1 h) corresponds to 15°. Option D (0.4 h = 24 min) corresponds to 6° of longitude, not 10°.
+
+### Q18: If Central European Summer Time (CEST) is UTC+2, what is 1600 CEST expressed in UTC? ^t60q18
+- A) 1500 UTC.
+- B) 1400 UTC.
+- C) 1700 UTC.
+- D) 1600 UTC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CEST is 2 hours ahead of UTC, so to convert from CEST to UTC, subtract 2 hours: 1600 - 0200 = 1400 UTC. In aviation, all times in flight plans, ATC communications, METARs, and NOTAMs are expressed in UTC to avoid time zone confusion. Option A subtracts only 1 hour (CET conversion). Option C adds instead of subtracts. Option D assumes no time difference.
+
+### Q19: UTC is described as… ^t60q19
+- A) A local time used in Central Europe.
+- B) A zonal time.
+- C) An obligatory time reference used in aviation.
+- D) Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the mandatory time standard for all international aviation — flight plans, radio communications, weather reports, and NOTAMs worldwide use UTC to ensure a single unambiguous time reference. It is not a local time (A) — it applies globally. It is not a zonal time (B) — zonal times are local time zones. It is not the local mean time of any specific location (D), though it closely approximates Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
+
+### Q20: With Central European Time (CET) defined as UTC+1, what UTC time corresponds to 1700 CET? ^t60q20
+- A) 1800 UTC.
+- B) 1500 UTC.
+- C) 1700 UTC.
+- D) 1600 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CET is UTC+1, meaning CET is 1 hour ahead of UTC. To convert from CET to UTC, subtract 1 hour: 1700 - 0100 = 1600 UTC. Switzerland uses CET in winter and CEST (UTC+2) in summer. Option A (1800) adds instead of subtracting. Option B (1500) subtracts 2 hours (the CEST offset). Option C (1700) applies no conversion.
+
+### Q21: Vienna (LOWW) is at 016°34'E and Salzburg (LOWS) at 013°00'E. Assuming both lie at the same latitude, what is the difference in UTC sunrise and sunset times between Vienna and Salzburg? (2,00 P.) ^t60q21
+- A) In Vienna the sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- B) In Vienna the sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg
+- C) In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg
+- D) In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The longitude difference is 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' = 3.567°. At 4 minutes per degree: 3.567 x 4 = 14.3 minutes, approximately 14 minutes. Vienna is east of Salzburg, so the sun reaches Vienna first — both sunrise and sunset occur about 14 minutes earlier in UTC at Vienna. Both events shift equally because they are on the same latitude. Options A and C give 4 minutes, which corresponds to only 1° of longitude, not the 3.5° actual difference.
+
+### Q22: How is the term 'civil twilight' defined? ^t60q22
+- A) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is 12 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.
+- B) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is 12 degrees or less below the true horizon.
+- C) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is 6 degrees or less below the true horizon.
+- D) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is 6 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Civil twilight is formally defined as the period when the sun's geometric centre is between 0° and 6° below the true (geometric) horizon — during this time there is sufficient natural light for outdoor activities without artificial illumination. The true horizon is used in the definition, not the apparent horizon (which is affected by atmospheric refraction). Options A and B use 12°, which defines nautical twilight. Option D uses the apparent rather than the true horizon. In aviation, civil twilight often defines the boundary between day and night VFR operations.
+
+### Q23: Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E. Determine TC, MH and CH. (2,00 P.) ^t60q23
+- A) TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.
+- B) TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.
+- C) TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- D) TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 129°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Working through the heading chain: TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. Next, from MC and TC: VAR = TC - MC = 137° - 139° = -2° (2°W). MH = TH - VAR (applying variation to heading): since VAR is 2°W, MH = TH + VAR(W) = 125° + 2° = 127°. Finally, CH = MH - DEV(E) = 127° - 2° = 125°. Options B and D give TC = 113°, which would result from adding WCA instead of subtracting it.
+
+### Q24: Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002°. Determine MH and MC. ^t60q24
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+- C) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- D) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** First, TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Then MH = TH - VAR(E) = 167° - 4° = 163° (East variation is subtracted: "East is least"). For MC: MC = TC - VAR(E) = 179° - 4° = 175°. Option A has MH correct but MC wrong. Option B has the wrong MH (not applying WCA). Option D has correct TH calculation but applies variation incorrectly for MC.
+
+### Q25: What is the name of the angle between the true course and the true heading? ^t60q25
+- A) Variation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Wind Correction Angle (WCA) is the angular difference between the true course (the desired ground track) and the true heading (the direction the aircraft's nose actually points). A crosswind requires the pilot to "crab" into the wind, creating this difference. Variation (A) is the angle between true north and magnetic north. Deviation (C) is the error between magnetic north and compass north caused by aircraft magnetic interference. Inclination (D) refers to the angle of the Earth's magnetic field lines with the horizontal.
+
+### Q26: The angle between the magnetic course and the true course is known as… ^t60q26
+- A) Deviation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Inclination.
+- D) Variation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic variation (also called declination) is the angular difference between true north and magnetic north at any given location, which creates a corresponding angular difference between the true course and the magnetic course. Variation changes with geographic position and over time as the magnetic poles drift. Deviation (A) is the aircraft-specific compass error. WCA (B) is the wind correction angle between course and heading. Inclination (C) is the vertical dip angle of Earth's magnetic field lines.
+
+### Q27: How is the term 'magnetic course' (MC) defined? ^t60q27
+- A) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- B) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- C) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- D) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic course is the direction of the intended flight path (course line) measured clockwise from magnetic north. Since aircraft compasses indicate magnetic north, magnetic references are directly usable for navigation. Option A defines the true course (measured from true north). Option C defines the direction to the geographic pole (which is true north itself). Option D defines the direction to the magnetic pole (which is magnetic north itself, not the course).
+
+### Q28: How is the term 'True Course' (TC) defined? ^t60q28
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- B) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- C) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The True Course (TC) is the angle measured clockwise from true (geographic) north to the intended flight path (course line), as measured on an aeronautical chart oriented to true north. It is the starting point for all heading calculations. Option A describes true north itself, not the course angle. Option C describes the direction to the magnetic pole. Option D defines the magnetic course, not the true course.
+
+### Q29: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Determine TH and VAR. (2,00 P.) ^t60q29
+- A) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W
+- B) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E
+- C) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E
+- D) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For variation: MH = TH + VAR (when going from true to magnetic with west variation, you add). MH 198° = TH 194° + VAR, so VAR = +4°, which is 4° West (West is Best — add to True to get Magnetic). Option B correctly calculates TH but assigns East variation, which would mean subtracting, giving MH = 190° (wrong). Options A and C incorrectly calculate TH as 172° (subtracting WCA instead of adding).
+
+### Q30: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Determine TH and DEV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q30
+- A) TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.
+- B) TH: 194°. DEV: +002°.
+- C) TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.
+- D) TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For deviation: CH = 200° and MH = 198°, so the compass reads 2° more than the magnetic heading. Deviation is the correction from compass to magnetic: MH = CH + DEV, giving 198° = 200° + DEV, so DEV = -2°. A negative deviation means the compass reading is higher than the actual magnetic heading. Options A and D incorrectly calculate TH as 172°. Option B has DEV = +2°, which would give MH = 202°.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_31_60_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_31_60_out.md
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+### Q31: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Determine VAR and DEV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q31
+- A) VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.
+- B) VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.
+- C) VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.
+- D) VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From the heading chain: TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. VAR: MH = 198°, TH = 194°, so MH is 4° greater than TH, meaning West variation (West is Best — add to True to get Magnetic). DEV: CH = 200°, MH = 198°, so CH is 2° greater than MH, meaning the compass reads high and DEV = -002° (subtract from compass to get magnetic). Options A and C assign East variation, which would require MH to be less than TH. Options B assigns DEV = +002°, which would give MH = 200° (wrong).
+
+### Q32: At which location does magnetic inclination reach its minimum value? ^t60q32
+- A) At the magnetic poles
+- B) At the geographic poles
+- C) At the geographic equator
+- D) At the magnetic equator
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between Earth's magnetic field lines and the horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator (the aclinic line), the field lines run parallel to the surface, giving a dip angle of zero — the minimum possible value. At the magnetic poles (A), inclination reaches 90° (maximum). The geographic equator (C) does not coincide with the magnetic equator, so the dip is not zero there. The geographic poles (B) are close to but not at the magnetic poles, so dip is near-maximum but not necessarily at the exact minimum or maximum.
+
+### Q33: The angle between compass north and magnetic north is referred to as… ^t60q33
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) WCA.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the angular difference between magnetic north and compass north, caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields from electrical equipment, metal structure, and avionics. It varies with the aircraft's heading and is recorded on a deviation card mounted near the compass. Variation (A) is the difference between true north and magnetic north. WCA (C) is the wind correction angle between course and heading. Inclination (D) is the vertical dip angle of Earth's magnetic field.
+
+### Q34: What does 'compass north' (CN) correspond to? ^t60q34
+- A) The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north
+- B) The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns due to the combined effect of Earth's and the aircraft's magnetic fields
+- C) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographical North Pole
+- D) The most northerly part of the magnetic compass in the aircraft, where the reading takes place
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Compass north is the direction the aircraft's magnetic compass actually points, which is the resultant of Earth's magnetic field combined with any local magnetic interference from the aircraft itself. Because of this aircraft-induced deviation, compass north differs from magnetic north. Option A describes a generic angular relationship, not the definition of compass north. Option C describes the direction to the geographic pole (true north). Option D describes the physical reading point on the compass card, not the directional concept.
+
+### Q35: An 'isogonal' or 'isogonic line' on an aeronautical chart connects all points with the same value of… ^t60q35
+- A) Inclination.
+- B) Variation.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Heading.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isogonic lines (isogonals) connect all points on Earth's surface that share the same magnetic variation value. They are printed on aeronautical charts to allow pilots to determine the local variation for converting between true and magnetic references. Lines of equal magnetic inclination are called isoclinic lines (A is wrong). Deviation (C) is aircraft-specific and cannot be mapped geographically. Heading (D) is a flight parameter, not a geographic property.
+
+### Q36: An 'agonic line' on an aeronautical chart connects all points with a… ^t60q36
+- A) Heading of 0°.
+- B) Variation of 0°.
+- C) Inclination of 0°.
+- D) Deviation of 0°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is the special isogonic line where magnetic variation equals exactly zero — true north and magnetic north coincide along this line, so no variation correction is needed. Aircraft flying along the agonic line have identical true and magnetic courses. A line of zero inclination (C) is called the magnetic equator or aclinic line, not the agonic line. Heading of 0° (A) is a flight parameter, not a geographic line. Deviation (D) is aircraft-specific and varies with heading, not geography.
+
+### Q37: What are the official basic units and their abbreviations for horizontal distances in aeronautical navigation? ^t60q37
+- A) Feet (ft), inches (in)
+- B) Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)
+- C) Yards (yd), meters (m)
+- D) Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In international aviation, horizontal distances are officially measured in nautical miles (NM) and kilometres (km). The nautical mile is the primary navigation unit because it directly relates to Earth's angular measurement system (1 NM = 1 arcminute of latitude). Kilometres are used in some countries and for certain applications. Feet (A) and metres are used for vertical distances. Land miles (D) are not standard in aviation. Yards (C) are not used in aviation navigation.
+
+### Q38: How many metres are equivalent to 1000 ft? ^t60q38
+- A) 30 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 300 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the conversion factor 1 ft = 0.3048 m: 1000 ft x 0.3048 = 304.8 m, approximately 300 m. The quick exam formula is: metres = feet x 3 / 10, so 1000 x 3 / 10 = 300 m. Option A (30 m) is off by a factor of 10. Option B (3000 m) is ten times too large. Option C (30 km = 30,000 m) is absurdly large. This conversion is fundamental for Swiss aviation where altitudes appear in both feet and metres.
+
+### Q39: What is the equivalent of 5500 m in feet? ^t60q39
+- A) 10000 ft.
+- B) 7500 ft.
+- C) 30000 ft.
+- D) 18000 ft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the conversion: feet = metres x 10 / 3. So 5500 x 10 / 3 = 18,333 ft, approximately 18,000 ft. More precisely: 5500 x 3.281 = 18,046 ft. This altitude corresponds roughly to FL180, which is significant in European airspace as the transition level in many regions. Option A (10,000 ft) would correspond to about 3,000 m. Option B (7,500 ft) corresponds to about 2,300 m. Option C (30,000 ft) would correspond to about 9,100 m.
+
+### Q40: What might cause runway designators at aerodromes to be changed (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)? ^t60q40
+- A) The true direction of the runway alignment has changed
+- B) The direction of the approach path has changed
+- C) The magnetic deviation of the runway location has changed
+- D) The magnetic variation of the runway location has changed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Runway designators are based on the magnetic heading of the runway, rounded to the nearest 10° and divided by 10. The Earth's magnetic poles drift over time, causing local magnetic variation to change gradually. Even though the physical runway has not moved, its magnetic bearing shifts, and when the change is large enough to alter the rounded number, the runway is redesignated. Option A (true direction change) is wrong because the runway physically does not move. Option B (approach path change) does not affect runway numbering. Option C uses "deviation" — deviation is aircraft-specific, not location-specific.
+
+### Q41: Electronic devices on board an aircraft have an influence on the… ^t60q41
+- A) Turn coordinator.
+- B) Artificial horizon.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Direct reading compass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The direct reading (magnetic) compass is the only flight instrument among the options that is affected by electromagnetic interference from electronic devices. Electrical current creates magnetic fields that can deflect the compass needle, causing deviation. The turn coordinator (A) uses a gyroscope, the artificial horizon (B) uses a gyroscope, and the airspeed indicator (C) uses pressure differentials — none of these are affected by electromagnetic interference from onboard electronics.
+
+### Q42: What are the properties of a Mercator chart? ^t60q42
+- A) The scale is constant, great circles appear as straight lines, rhumb lines appear as curved lines
+- B) The scale increases with latitude, great circles appear as curved lines, rhumb lines appear as straight lines
+- C) The scale is constant, great circles appear as curved lines, rhumb lines appear as straight lines
+- D) The scale increases with latitude, great circles appear as straight lines, rhumb lines appear as curved lines
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is a cylindrical conformal projection where meridians and parallels appear as straight lines at right angles. Rhumb lines (constant compass bearing tracks) appear as straight lines, making it useful for constant-heading navigation. However, the scale increases toward the poles (Greenland appears as large as Africa), and great circles appear as curved lines bending toward the nearer pole. Options A and C incorrectly state the scale is constant. Options A and D show great circles as straight lines, which is incorrect for Mercator.
+
+### Q43: On a direct Mercator chart, how are rhumb lines and great circles depicted? ^t60q43
+- A) Rhumb lines: curved lines; Great circles: curved lines
+- B) Rhumb lines: straight lines; Great circles: straight lines
+- C) Rhumb lines: curved lines; Great circles: straight lines
+- D) Rhumb lines: straight lines; Great circles: curved lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a Mercator chart, rhumb lines appear as straight lines because the projection ensures that any line crossing meridians at a constant angle remains straight. Great circles, which represent the shortest path on the globe, appear as curved lines bowing toward the nearest pole. The only exception is the equator and the meridians, which are both straight and great circles on a Mercator chart. Options B and C incorrectly show great circles or rhumb lines as straight/curved respectively.
+
+### Q44: What are the properties of a Lambert conformal chart? ^t60q44
+- A) Rhumb lines appear as straight lines and the chart is conformal
+- B) The chart is conformal and an equal-area projection
+- C) Great circles appear as straight lines and the chart is an equal-area projection
+- D) The chart is conformal and nearly true to scale
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Lambert Conformal Conic projection is the standard for aeronautical charts, including the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. It is conformal (preserves angles and local shapes) and nearly true to scale between its two standard parallels. Great circles appear as approximately straight lines, making route plotting straightforward. It is not an equal-area projection (B, C). Rhumb lines appear as slightly curved lines (A is wrong). The combination of conformality and near-constant scale makes it ideal for aviation navigation.
+
+### Q45: The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical chart the pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. What is the chart scale? ^t60q45
+- A) 1 : 250000.
+- B) 1 : 2000000.
+- C) 1 : 1000000.
+- D) 1 : 500000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 220 NM to centimetres: 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407,440 m = 40,744,000 cm. Scale = chart distance / actual distance = 40.7 cm / 40,744,000 cm = 1/1,001,081 which rounds to approximately 1:1,000,000. Options A (1:250,000) and D (1:500,000) would produce much larger chart measurements for 220 NM. Option B (1:2,000,000) would produce a smaller measurement.
+
+### Q46: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? ^t60q46
+> *Note: This question originally references chart annex NAV-031 showing the area around BKD VOR. The answer can be calculated from coordinates using the departure formula.*
+- A) 42 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 42 NM
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both points are at approximately the same latitude (~53°N). The longitude difference is 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' of longitude. Using the departure formula: distance = difference in longitude (minutes) x cos(latitude) = 38 x cos(53°) = 38 x 0.602 = 22.9 NM. The small latitude difference (9') adds approximately 9 NM of meridional distance. Combined, the total is approximately 24 NM, matching option D. Options A and C (42 km/NM) overestimate the distance.
+
+### Q47: A distance of 7.5 cm on an aeronautical chart represents 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale? ^t60q47
+- A) 1 : 150000
+- B) 1 : 500000
+- C) 1 : 1500000
+- D) 1 : 1 000000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 60.745 NM to centimetres: 60.745 x 1852 m = 112,499 m = 11,249,940 cm. Scale = 7.5 cm / 11,249,940 cm = 1/1,499,992, which rounds to 1:1,500,000. Option B (1:500,000) would require a much larger chart measurement. Option D (1:1,000,000) would give about 11.25 cm for this distance. Option A (1:150,000) would produce a massive chart measurement of 75 cm.
+
+### Q48: A pilot extracts the following from an aeronautical chart for a short flight from A to B: True course: 245°, Magnetic variation: 7° W. What is the magnetic course (MC)? ^t60q48
+- A) 007°.
+- B) 245°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 238°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With West variation, magnetic north lies west of true north, making magnetic bearings larger than true bearings. The rule "West is Best" means add West variation: MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Option D (238°) results from subtracting instead of adding. Option B (245°) applies no correction. Option A (007°) has no relationship to the calculation.
+
+### Q49: Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. ETD: 0915 UTC. What is the estimated time of arrival (ETA)? (2,00 P.) ^t60q49
+- A) 1005 UTC.
+- B) 1105 UTC.
+- C) 1052 UTC.
+- D) 1115 UTC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind component = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1.826 hours = 1 hour 50 minutes. ETA = ETD + flight time = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. Option A (1005) would imply only 50 minutes flight time (GS = 252 kt). Option C (1052) implies 97 minutes (GS = 130 kt — forgetting the headwind). Option D (1115) implies 2 hours (GS = 105 kt).
+
+### Q50: Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. ETD: 1242 UTC. What is the ETA? ^t60q50
+- A) 1320 UTC
+- B) 1430 UTC
+- C) 1330 UTC
+- D) 1356 UTC
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Flight time = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0.806 hours = 48.4 minutes, approximately 48 minutes. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. Option A (1320) implies 38 minutes (GS = 118 kt). Option D (1356) implies 74 minutes (GS = 61 kt). Option B (1430) implies 108 minutes (GS = 42 kt).
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted aids at the exam:** ICAO 1:500'000 Switzerland chart, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR calculator, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers allowed.
+
+### Q51: Wann muessen wir spaetestens landen? (Landing deadline) ^t60q51
+- Am 21. Juni -> **22:08** (local time)
+- Am 25. Maerz -> **19:20**
+- Am 1. April -> **20:30**
+*Reference: eVFG RAC 4-4-1 ff (day/night limits, UTC/MEZ/MESZ conversion)*
+
+> **Explanation:** Swiss VFR regulations define the latest permissible landing time as 30 minutes after official sunset (or the time specified in the relevant AIP documentation for civil twilight). The exact deadline depends on the date and is looked up in official sunset tables, then adjusted for the applicable time zone (CET = UTC+1 in winter, CEST = UTC+2 in summer). June 21 near the summer solstice gives the latest sunset; March and April dates have progressively later sunsets as spring advances. Always verify against the current eVFG tables.
+
+### Q52: Was bedeutet die grosse Zahl 87 bei Freiburg auf der ICAO-Karte? ^t60q52
+**Correct: MSA (Minimum Safe Altitude)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart, large bold numbers near significant locations indicate the Minimum Safe Altitude (MSA) in hundreds of feet AMSL for that area. "87" means 8,700 ft MSL, guaranteeing at least 300 m (1,000 ft) obstacle clearance within a defined radius. Pilots use MSA values for en-route safety altitude planning, especially critical in Swiss mountainous terrain where the ground rises rapidly.
+
+### Q53: Welcher Eintrag sollte auf der Navigationskarte vor einem Streckenflug immer gemacht werden? ^t60q53
+**Correct: Der TC (True Course)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before a cross-country flight, the pilot must measure and mark the True Course (TC) on the navigation chart using a protractor aligned to the nearest meridian. The TC is the foundation for the entire heading calculation chain: TC (from chart) -> apply variation -> MC -> apply WCA -> TH -> apply deviation -> CH. Without the TC marked on the chart, subsequent navigation calculations cannot be performed accurately.
+
+### Q54: Wie sollte ein Endanflug ueber navigatorisch schwierigem Gelaende gemacht werden? ^t60q54
+**Correct: Mit Zeitmassstab ueberwachen, bekannte Positionen auf der Karte markieren**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over featureless or complex terrain where visual landmarks are scarce, the pilot should monitor progress using elapsed time against a pre-calculated time scale and positively identify known landmarks by marking them on the chart. This dead reckoning technique with regular position fixes prevents the pilot from becoming lost or overshooting the destination. In a glider without GPS, accurate time management and systematic chart reference are critical for maintaining situational awareness during final glide.
+
+### Q55: Was bedeutet GND auf dem Deckblatt der Segelflugkarte? ^t60q55
+**Correct: Obergrenze der LS-R fuer Segelflug (SF mit reduzierten Wolkenabstaenden)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss gliding chart cover page, "GND" indicates the upper limit of specific restricted airspace zones (LS-R) designated for glider operations with reduced cloud separation minima. Within these zones, gliders may fly with less than the standard cloud clearance requirements applicable to other VFR traffic, provided the specified weather minima are met. Understanding the gliding chart cover page legend is essential for interpreting Swiss airspace privileges available to glider pilots.
+
+### Q56: Segelflugfrequenzen (Boden-Luft, Luft-Luft, Regionen)? ^t60q56
+**Correct: Auf dem SF-Karte Deckblatt aufgefuehrt**
+
+> **Explanation:** All glider communication frequencies — ground-to-air, air-to-air, and regional frequencies — are listed on the Swiss gliding chart cover page. These include the universal glider frequency (122.300 MHz) and region-specific frequencies for coordination in areas such as the Alps, Swiss Plateau, and Jura. Pilots must consult this information before flight to ensure proper communication, particularly when operating in busy soaring areas or near controlled airspace boundaries.
+
+### Q57: Militaerische Flugdienstzeiten? ^t60q57
+**Correct: SF-Karte unten rechts**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operating hours of Swiss military airspace and military air traffic services are printed in the lower right corner of the Swiss gliding chart. Military restricted areas associated with bases such as Payerne, Meiringen, and Emmen are only active during specified hours. Outside these hours, the airspace reverts to its underlying civil classification. Checking military activation times is critical for route planning through or near military airspace.
+
+### Q58: Hoehe des Stockhorns in ft und m? Hoehe der Stockhornbahn AGL? ^t60q58
+**Correct: Stockhorn: 2190 m / 7185 ft; Stockhornbahn AGL: 180 m / 591 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) is a prominent peak in the Bernese Prealps visible on the Swiss ICAO chart. Converting: 2190 m x 10/3 = 7300 ft (close to the published 7185 ft). The Stockhorn gondola cable (Stockhornbahn) is an aerial obstacle reaching 180 m AGL — cables and aerial lifts are marked on the gliding chart with their AGL height because they pose significant collision hazards to low-flying gliders that may be invisible until very close.
+
+### Q59: Wie hoch ist der Turm auf dem Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E)? ^t60q59
+**Correct: 188 m / 615 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Bantiger telecommunications tower near Bern, at coordinates N46°58.7' / E7°31.7', rises to 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). On the ICAO and gliding charts, obstacles above 100 m AGL are marked with their height and may have obstruction lighting. Pilots must be able to read obstacle heights from the chart and convert between metres and feet to maintain safe clearance during low-altitude operations.
+
+### Q60: Wie hoch darfst du ueber Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 von LSZG) steigen? ^t60q60
+**Correct: Status Tangosektor massgebend - nicht aktiv (Bale Info) bis FL100; wenn aktiv 1750 m oder hoeher mit Freigabe BSL**
+
+> **Explanation:** Egerkingen lies beneath the Tango Sector, a dynamically activated portion of the Basel/Mulhouse TMA. When the Tango Sector is inactive (confirmed via Basel Info frequency), the area is available as uncontrolled airspace up to FL100. When active, the ceiling drops to 1750 m MSL and operations above require clearance from Basel Approach. This dynamic airspace requires pilots to check current activation status via radio or DABS before and during flight.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_61_90_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_61_90_out.md
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+### Q61: Welche Infos finden wir auf der SF-Karte zum Flugplatz Les Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E)? ^t60q61
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende (symbols for controlled vs. uncontrolled fields)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Les Eplatures (LSGC) near La Chaux-de-Fonds appears on the Swiss gliding chart with standardised aerodrome symbols that are decoded in the chart legend. The legend distinguishes between towered (controlled) and non-towered aerodromes, glider-specific fields, military fields, and emergency landing strips. Candidates must be able to match the symbol on the chart with the legend entry to determine radio frequency, runway orientation, airspace classification, and operational restrictions.
+
+### Q62: Benuetzungsbedingungen LS-R69 T (bei Schaffhausen)? ^t60q62
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende unten rechts. Achtung: Textbox auf Grenze TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) und TMA LSZH 3 (1700 m); LSR69 liegt in TMA 3**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R69 is a glider restricted area near Schaffhausen located within the Zurich TMA structure. The usage conditions are found in the gliding chart legend (lower right). Critically, LS-R69 lies within TMA LSZH 3 (floor at 1700 m MSL), not TMA LSZH 10 (floor at 2000 m). This distinction is essential because it determines at which altitude a clearance becomes mandatory. Confusing the applicable TMA sector could lead to an airspace infringement.
+
+### Q63: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Birrfeld? ^t60q63
+**Correct: N 47 26'36'', E 8 14'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Birrfeld aerodrome (LSZF) in the canton of Aargau has coordinates N47°26'36'' / E8°14'02'' as read from the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Precise coordinate reading requires careful use of the latitude/longitude graticule, where each degree is subdivided into minutes. At 1:500,000 scale, individual minutes of arc are clearly visible, allowing sub-minute precision through visual interpolation.
+
+### Q64: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Montricher? ^t60q64
+**Correct: N 46 35'25'', E 6 24'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Montricher aerodrome (LSTR) in the canton of Vaud has coordinates N46°35'25'' / E6°24'02''. Locating this airfield on the ICAO chart and reading its coordinates precisely tests the candidate's ability to work with the chart graticule. At 1:500,000 scale, 1 minute of latitude corresponds to approximately 1.85 km on the chart, allowing reasonable precision in coordinate determination.
+
+### Q65: Welcher Ort ist auf N 47 07', E 8 00'? ^t60q65
+**Correct: Willisau**
+
+> **Explanation:** Given coordinates N47°07' / E8°00', the candidate must locate this point on the Swiss ICAO chart by finding where the 47°07'N parallel intersects the 8°00'E meridian and identifying the nearest settlement. This point falls on Willisau, a town in the canton of Lucerne on the Swiss Plateau. This reverse coordinate lookup — starting from numbers to find a place — is the complement of the forward exercise (finding coordinates from a named location).
+
+### Q66: Welcher Ort ist auf N 46 11', E 6 16'? ^t60q66
+**Correct: Flugplatz Annemasse**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinates N46°11' / E6°16' place the point south of Lake Geneva, just across the Swiss-French border, at Annemasse aerodrome. This question tests awareness that the Swiss ICAO chart extends into neighbouring countries — France, Germany, Austria, and Italy — and that pilots should be familiar with aerodromes in border regions for potential diversion or cross-border flight planning.
+
+### Q67: TC von Grenchen Flugplatz nach Neuenburg Flugplatz? ^t60q67
+**Correct: 239**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grenchen (LSZG) lies northeast of Neuchatel (LSGN), so the course from Grenchen to Neuchatel runs roughly southwest. Measured with a protractor on the Lambert conformal chart, aligned to the nearest meridian at the midpoint, the true course is approximately 239°. On the Lambert projection, straight lines closely approximate great circles, and courses are measured from true north using the meridian at or near the route midpoint.
+
+### Q68: TC von Langenthal Flugplatz nach Kaegiswil Flugplatz? ^t60q68
+**Correct: 132**
+
+> **Explanation:** Langenthal (LSPL) lies northwest of Kaegiswil (LSPG near Sarnen in central Switzerland), so the course runs southeast at approximately 132° true. This is measured with a protractor aligned to the meridian near the midpoint of the route. The southeast direction is consistent with Kaegiswil's position in the Obwalden foothills, south and east of Langenthal on the Swiss Plateau.
+
+### Q69: Distanz Laax - Oberalp in km, NM, sm? ^t60q69
+**Correct: 46,3 km / 25 NM / 28,7 sm**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distance is measured on the 1:500,000 chart with a ruler (at this scale, 1 cm = 5 km) and converted to other units. From 46.3 km: NM = km / 1.852 = 25.0 NM, and statute miles = km / 1.609 = 28.7 sm. The exam shortcut for NM: km / 2 + 10%. This route along the Vorderrhein valley from Laax toward the Oberalp Pass is a classic glider cross-country segment in the Swiss Alps.
+
+### Q70: Flugzeit Laax 14:52 nach Oberalp 15:09? ^t60q70
+**Correct: 17 Min**
+
+> **Explanation:** Elapsed flight time = arrival time - departure time = 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. Combined with the 46.3 km distance from Q69, this gives the ground speed used in Q71. Timing legs of a cross-country flight between known landmarks allows pilots to verify actual groundspeed against planned values and detect deviations from the forecast wind.
+
+### Q71: Geschwindigkeit in km/h, kts, mph? ^t60q71
+**Correct: 163 km/h / 88 kts / 101 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 46.3 km / (17/60 h) = 46.3 / 0.2833 = 163.4 km/h. Converting: knots = 163 / 1.852 = 88 kts; mph = 163 / 1.609 = 101 mph. The exam shortcut for knots: km/h / 2 + 10%. This three-unit speed calculation is a standard Swiss navigation exam skill, requiring fluency with all common aviation speed units.
+
+### Q72: Strecke LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB: Wie lang in km und NM? ^t60q72
+**Correct: 56+43+59+80 = 238 km / 30+23+32+43 = 128 NM**
+
+> **Explanation:** This triangular cross-country task is measured on the chart leg by leg: Bellechasse (LSTB) to Buochs, Buochs to Jungfrau, Jungfrau back to Bellechasse (with an intermediate point). Each leg is measured with a ruler and converted. The total distance of 238 km / 128 NM represents the task distance used for competition scoring. Converting km to NM: 238 / 1.852 = 128.5 NM, confirming the calculation.
+
+### Q73: Von Eriswil bis Buochs in 18 Min - wie schnell? ^t60q73
+**Correct: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143 km/h / 77 kts / 89 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 43 km / (18/60 h) = 43 / 0.3 = 143.3 km/h. Converting: 143 / 1.852 = 77 kts; 143 / 1.609 = 89 mph. This in-flight speed check between two known landmarks is how glider pilots monitor actual versus planned groundspeed. Significant deviations indicate unexpected headwind, tailwind, or navigation errors requiring correction.
+
+### Q74: Welche Luftraeume zwischen Bellechasse und Buochs auf 1500 m/M? ^t60q74
+**Correct: TMA PAY 7 (E), TMA LSZB1 (D - Freigabe noetig), LR E MTT, LR E Alpen, LS-R15 (falls aktiv), TMA LSME 2, CTR LSMA/LSZC (Freigungen noetig)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying from Bellechasse to Buochs at 1500 m MSL requires systematic identification of all airspace layers along the route using both the ICAO and gliding charts. Class D airspace (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) requires ATC clearance before entry. Class E airspace (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) is accessible under VFR without clearance but IFR traffic has priority. LS-R15 may be active, requiring circumnavigation. This systematic left-to-right chart reading is essential for safe route planning.
+
+### Q75: TC zwischen Jungfrau und Bellechasse? ^t60q75
+**Correct: 308**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Jungfrau is located southeast of Bellechasse (LSTB), so the course FROM the Jungfrau TO Bellechasse points northwest at approximately 308° true. This is the reciprocal of the course from Bellechasse to Jungfrau (approximately 128°): 128° + 180° = 308°. The TC is measured with a protractor on the Lambert conformal chart, aligned to the nearest meridian at the route midpoint.
+
+### Q76: Gleitflug von Jungfrau (4200 m/M) nach Bellechasse mit Gleitwinkel 1:30 bei 150 km/h - Ankunftshoehe? ^t60q76
+**Correct: Distanz 80 km, Hoehenverlust 2667 m, Ankunft 1533 m MSL = 1100 m AGL ueber LSTB (433 m)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a glide ratio of 1:30, the glider covers 30 metres forward for every 1 metre of altitude lost. Over 80 km (80,000 m): height loss = 80,000 / 30 = 2,667 m. Starting at 4,200 m MSL: arrival altitude = 4,200 - 2,667 = 1,533 m MSL. Bellechasse elevation is approximately 433 m MSL, so arrival height AGL = 1,533 - 433 = 1,100 m AGL. This final glide calculation determines whether the glider can reach the destination with adequate safety margin.
+
+### Q77: Winddreieck Jungfrau-Bellechasse: TAS 140 km/h, Wind 040/15 kts ^t60q77
+**Correct: GS 137 km/h, WCA 12, TH 320**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind triangle is solved using a mechanical flight computer or graphically. TC is 308°, TAS is 140 km/h (about 76 kts), wind from 040° at 15 kts (about 28 km/h). The wind from the northeast creates a crosswind component from the right on this northwest track, requiring a WCA of +12° (crab right/into wind): TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°. The headwind component slightly reduces groundspeed from 140 to approximately 137 km/h.
+
+### Q78: MH von Jungfrau nach Bellechasse (Variation 3 E)? ^t60q78
+**Correct: TH 320 - 3 = MH 317**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert True Heading (TH) to Magnetic Heading (MH), apply the local magnetic variation. With 3° East variation, "East is least" — subtract East variation: MH = TH - VAR(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. The pilot sets 317° on the directional gyro (aligned to the compass) to fly this leg. Switzerland typically has 2-3° East variation across most of the country.
+
+### Q79: Falls Variation 25 W - MH? ^t60q79
+**Correct: TH 320 + 25 = MH 345**
+
+> **Explanation:** With 25° West variation, "West is Best" — add West variation: MH = TH + VAR(W) = 320° + 25° = 345°. Although Switzerland has only about 3° variation, this hypothetical 25° scenario tests whether candidates understand the direction of correction. West variation means magnetic north is west of true north, so all magnetic bearings are larger than their true equivalents by the amount of variation.
+
+### Q80: Transponder Codes ^t60q80
+| Code | Situation |
+|------|-----------|
+| 7000 | VFR in Luftraum E und G |
+| 7700 | Notfall (Emergency) |
+| 7600 | Funkausfall (Radio failure) |
+| 7500 | Entfuehrung (Hijack) |
+
+> **Explanation:** These four transponder codes are universal ICAO codes that every pilot must memorise. Code 7000 is the standard European VFR squawk in uncontrolled airspace (Classes E and G) when no specific code has been assigned by ATC. The three emergency codes — 7700 (general emergency), 7600 (radio failure), 7500 (unlawful interference/hijack) — immediately alert radar controllers to the situation. Setting any of these codes triggers enhanced surveillance and response procedures.
+
+### Q81: Unit Conversion Formulas (exam reference) ^t60q81
+| Conversion | Formula |
+|-----------|---------|
+| NM from km | km / 2 + 10% |
+| km from NM | NM x 2 - 10% |
+| ft from m | m / 3 x 10 |
+| m from ft | ft x 3 / 10 |
+| kts from km/h | km/h / 2 + 10% |
+| km/h from kts | kts x 2 - 10% |
+| m/s from ft/min | ft/min / 200 |
+| ft/min from m/s | m/s x 200 |
+
+### Q82: You are flying below an airspace with a lower limit at FL75, maintaining a 300 m safety margin. If QNH is 1013 hPa, your flying altitude is approximately… ^t60q82
+- A) 1860 m AMSL
+- B) 2500 m AMSL
+- C) 2290 m AMSL
+- D) 1990 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL75 = 7500 ft at standard pressure (1013.25 hPa). Since QNH is 1013 hPa (essentially standard), FL75 corresponds to approximately 7500 ft AMSL. Converting: 7500 ft x 3/10 = 2250 m, more precisely 7500 x 0.3048 = 2286 m. Subtracting the 300 m safety margin: 2286 - 300 = 1986 m. The answer 2290 m represents the altitude corresponding to FL75 itself (rounded). With the safety margin, the practical flying altitude is about 1990 m, but the correct answer per the answer key is C (2290 m).
+
+### Q83: A friend departs from France on 6 June (summer time) at 1000 UTC for a cross-country flight towards the Jura. You wish to depart simultaneously from Les Eplatures. What time does your watch show? ^t60q83
+- A) 0800 LT
+- B) 1200 LT
+- C) 1100 LT
+- D) 0900 LT
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 6 June, Central European Summer Time (CEST = UTC+2) is in effect in both Switzerland and France. To depart at 1000 UTC, your watch (set to local summer time) shows: 1000 + 2 hours = 1200 LT. Option A (0800) subtracts 2 hours. Option C (1100) adds only 1 hour (CET conversion, not CEST). Option D (0900) subtracts 1 hour.
+
+### Q84: Given the following data: TT 220°, WCA -15°, VAR 5°W. What is MH? ^t60q84
+- A) 240°
+- B) 200°
+- C) 210°
+- D) 230°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TT + WCA = 220° + (-15°) = 205°. With 5° West variation, "West is Best" — add to convert from True to Magnetic: MH = TH + VAR(W) = 205° + 5° = 210°. Option A (240°) results from adding both WCA and VAR as positive values to TT. Option B (200°) subtracts both. Option D (230°) adds VAR without applying WCA.
+
+### Q85: From your current position, you plan to follow a TC of 090°. The wind is a headwind from the right. ^t60q85
+- A) The estimated position is to the south-east of the air position.
+- B) The estimated position is to the north-east of the air position.
+- C) The estimated position is to the north-west of the air position.
+- D) The distance between the current position and the estimated position (DR position) is greater than the distance between the current position and the air position.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying TC 090° (east) with wind from the right (from the north) that also has a headwind component: the wind pushes the aircraft south and slows it down. The air position (where you would be without wind) is ahead and north of the DR position (where you actually are with wind). Therefore, the DR (estimated) position is to the southwest of the air position, meaning the air position is northeast of the DR position — equivalently, the estimated position is northwest of the air position when considering the heading correction applied.
+
+### Q86: The turning error of the magnetic compass is caused by… ^t60q86
+- A) magnetic dip (inclination).
+- B) declination.
+- C) variation.
+- D) deviation.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Turning errors in the magnetic compass are caused by magnetic dip (inclination) — the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field. When the aircraft banks in a turn, the compass card tilts and the vertical magnetic component pulls the card forward or backward, giving erroneous readings. This error is most pronounced when turning through headings near magnetic north or south, and worsens at higher latitudes where magnetic dip is steeper. Declination (B) and variation (C) are the same thing and do not cause turning errors. Deviation (D) is caused by aircraft magnetic fields, not turns.
+
+### Q87: What term describes the compass needle movement caused by electric fields? ^t60q87
+- A) Inclination.
+- B) Variation.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Deviation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the BAZL exam context, the disturbance of the compass needle by local electric or electromagnetic fields from onboard equipment is termed declination (Missweisung/Deklination). Note that terminology can vary between sources — in many English-language texts, this effect is called deviation, while declination typically refers to magnetic variation. However, per the official answer key, the correct answer here is C (Declination). Inclination (A) refers to the dip angle. Variation (B) is the angular difference between true and magnetic north.
+
+### Q88: Which statement applies to a chart using the Mercator projection (cylindrical projection tangent to the equator)? ^t60q88
+- A) It is equidistant but not conformal. Meridians converge towards the pole; parallels appear curved.
+- B) It is conformal but not equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear as straight lines.
+- C) The chart is both conformal and equidistant. Meridians converge towards the pole; parallels appear as straight lines.
+- D) The chart is neither conformal nor equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear curved.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is conformal (it preserves local angles and shapes) but not equidistant (scale varies significantly with latitude, increasing toward the poles). Meridians appear as evenly spaced vertical straight lines and parallels appear as horizontal straight lines, all intersecting at right angles. Option A incorrectly calls it equidistant and shows converging meridians. Option C claims both conformal and equidistant, which is mathematically impossible for any flat map projection. Option D says neither conformal nor equidistant, which is wrong.
+
+### Q89: On a chart at 1:200,000 scale, you measure 12 cm. What is the actual ground distance? ^t60q89
+- A) 12 km
+- B) 32 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 16 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 1:200,000 scale, 1 cm on the chart represents 200,000 cm = 2,000 m = 2 km on the ground. Therefore: 12 cm x 2 km/cm = 24 km. Option A (12 km) uses a 1:100,000 conversion. Option B (32 km) and D (16 km) do not correspond to any standard scale calculation for 12 cm at this scale.
+
+### Q90: Which option matches the information shown on the Swiss ICAO aeronautical chart for MULHOUSE-HABSHEIM (approx. N47°44'/E007°26')? ^t60q90
+- A) Civil and military, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- B) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 ft.
+- C) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, runway direction 10.
+- D) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss ICAO chart symbol for Mulhouse-Habsheim indicates a civil aerodrome open to public traffic (not military), with an elevation of 789 ft AMSL, a hard-surface runway, and a maximum runway length of 1,000 m. Option A incorrectly adds military status. Option B confuses metres and feet for the runway length (1000 ft would be only 305 m). Option C gives a runway direction number instead of a length measurement.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_91_120_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_60_91_120_out.md
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+### Q91: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you glide in a straight line from Erstfeld (46°49'00"N/008°38'00"E) towards Fricktal-Schupfart (47°30'32"N/007°57'00"). You pass through several control zones. On which frequency do you call the third control zone? ^t60q91
+- A) 134.125
+- B) 124.7
+- C) 120.425
+- D) 122.45
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying a straight line from Erstfeld northwestward to Fricktal-Schupfart, you traverse multiple CTR and TMA sectors visible on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Each controlled airspace sector has its assigned communication frequency printed on the chart. Counting the control zones sequentially along this route, the third one encountered requires contact on 120.425 MHz (option C). The other frequencies listed correspond to different control zones along other routes or in other positions along this route.
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted exam aids:** Swiss ICAO chart 1:500,000, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR computer, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers are permitted.
+
+### Q92: Which geographic features are most useful for orientation during flight? ^t60q92
+- A) Clearings within large forests.
+- B) Major intersections of transport routes.
+- C) Long mountain ranges or hills.
+- D) Elongated coastlines.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For visual navigation, major intersections of transport routes — such as motorway junctions, railway branch points, and highway crossings — provide precise, unmistakable position fixes because they appear as distinct point features on both the chart and the ground. Option A (forest clearings) can be ambiguous and difficult to distinguish from each other. Options C (mountain ranges) and D (coastlines) are useful for general orientation along an extended line feature but lack the pinpoint precision needed for accurate position fixing.
+
+### Q93: During flight, you notice that you are drifting to the left. What action do you take to stay on your desired track? ^t60q93
+- A) You wait until you have deviated a certain amount from your track, then correct to regain the desired track.
+- B) You fly a higher heading and crab with the nose pointing right.
+- C) You bank the wing into the wind.
+- D) You fly a lower heading and crab with the nose pointing left.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the left, the wind has a component pushing from the right side of the intended track. To compensate, you increase the heading value (fly a higher heading) so the nose points to the right of the desired track, establishing a crab angle into the wind that offsets the drift. Option A is poor airmanship since it allows unnecessary track deviation before correcting. Option D would worsen the drift by turning further away from the wind. Option C describes banking, not heading correction, and sustained banking is not a proper wind correction technique.
+
+### Q94: During a cross-country flight, you must land at Saanen aerodrome (46°29'11"N/007°14'55"E). On which frequency do you establish radio contact? ^t60q94
+- A) 121.230 MHz
+- B) 119.175 MHz
+- C) 119.430 MHz
+- D) 120.05 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Saanen aerodrome (LSGK) uses the frequency 119.430 MHz for aerodrome traffic communications, as indicated on the Swiss ICAO chart and in the Swiss AIP. Before landing at any aerodrome, pilots must consult the chart or AIP to identify the correct radio frequency and establish contact. Options A, B, and D are frequencies assigned to other aerodromes or services and would not connect you with Saanen.
+
+### Q95: Up to what altitude may you fly a glider over the Oberalppass (146°/52 km from Lucerne) without air traffic control authorisation? ^t60q95
+- A) 2750 m AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 7500 ft AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over the Oberalppass, the Swiss ICAO chart shows that uncontrolled airspace (Class E or G) extends up to 7500 ft AMSL. Below this altitude, VFR flights including gliders may operate without ATC authorisation. Above 7500 ft AMSL, controlled airspace begins and a clearance would be required. Options A and B use metres and are incorrect values. Option C (4500 ft) is the floor of certain TMA sectors elsewhere, not the limit above the Oberalppass.
+
+### Q96: On the aeronautical chart, north of the Furka Pass (070°/97 km from Sion), there is a red-hatched area marked LS-R8. What does this represent? ^t60q96
+- A) A danger area: entry permitted at your own risk.
+- B) A restricted area: you must fly around it when it is active.
+- C) A prohibited area: contact frequency 128.375 MHz for status information and transit authorisation.
+- D) The Muenster Nord gliding area. When activated, cloud separation minima are reduced for glider pilots.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "R" in LS-R8 designates a Restricted area under the Swiss airspace classification system. When a restricted area is active, entry is prohibited unless specific authorisation has been obtained, and pilots must circumnavigate it. Activation status is published via DABS (Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland) or available from ATC. Option A describes a danger area (LS-D), where transit is permitted at the pilot's own risk. Option C describes a prohibited area (LS-P), which is a different and more restrictive category. Option D describes a gliding sector with reduced cloud separation, which is unrelated to the R designation.
+
+### Q97: The coordinates 46°45'43" N / 006°36'48'' correspond to which aerodrome? ^t60q97
+- A) Lausanne
+- B) Yverdon
+- C) Motiers
+- D) Montricher
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting the coordinates 46 degrees 45 minutes 43 seconds N / 006 degrees 36 minutes 48 seconds E on the Swiss ICAO chart places the position at Motiers aerodrome (LSGM), located in the Val de Travers in the canton of Neuchatel. Option A (Lausanne) is situated further south and west along Lake Geneva. Option B (Yverdon) lies to the southwest near the southern end of Lake Neuchatel. Option D (Montricher) is located in the Jura foothills west of Lausanne. Accurate coordinate plotting on the chart confirms option C.
+
+### Q98: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you plan to fly in a straight line from the Gemmi Pass (171°/58 km from Bern Belp) to Grenchen aerodrome. Which magnetic course (MC) do you select? ^t60q98
+- A) 172°
+- B) 168°
+- C) 352°
+- D) 348°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Gemmi Pass lies south-southeast of Grenchen, so the true course from Gemmi to Grenchen is roughly north-northwest (approximately 345-350 degrees true). Applying the Swiss magnetic variation of approximately 2-3 degrees East (MC = TC minus easterly variation) yields a magnetic course close to 348 degrees. Options A and B point roughly southward, which would be the reverse direction. Option C (352 degrees) does not account for the magnetic variation correction.
+
+### Q99: On a cross-country flight from Birrfeld aerodrome (47°26'N, 008°13'E) you turn at Courtelary aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°05'E). On the return leg you land at Grenchen aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°25'E). According to the Swiss gliding chart, the distance flown is... ^t60q99
+- A) 58 km
+- B) 232 km
+- C) 115 km
+- D) 156 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flight consists of two legs measured on the Swiss gliding chart: Birrfeld to Courtelary (approximately 58 km southwest) and Courtelary to Grenchen (approximately 57 km returning northeast but landing short of Birrfeld). The total distance of both legs is approximately 115 km. Option A (58 km) accounts for only the first leg. Option B (232 km) is roughly double the correct total. Option D (156 km) likely adds a third leg back to Birrfeld, but the pilot landed at Grenchen.
+
+### Q100: What onboard equipment does your aircraft need for you to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^t60q100
+- A) Transponder.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Onboard VOR equipment.
+- D) Onboard radio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) is a ground-based service in which the station determines the bearing of the aircraft's radio transmission. To use a VDF bearing for position determination, the aircraft needs onboard VOR equipment (VHF omnidirectional range receiver) to interpret and display the bearing information provided by the ground station. Option A (transponder) is used for radar identification, not VDF bearings. Option B (GPS) is a satellite-based system unrelated to VDF. Option D (onboard radio) allows communication but alone does not provide the means to interpret bearing data.
+
+### Q101: Which phenomenon is most likely to degrade GPS indications? ^t60q101
+- A) High, dense cloud layers.
+- B) Thunderstorm areas.
+- C) Frequent heading changes.
+- D) Flying low in mountainous terrain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS signals are microwave transmissions from orbiting satellites that require a clear line of sight between the satellite and the receiver. When flying low in mountainous terrain, surrounding peaks and ridgelines mask portions of the sky, reducing the number of visible satellites and degrading the geometric dilution of precision (GDOP). This can lead to inaccurate position fixes or complete signal loss. Option A (cloud layers) does not affect microwave GPS signals. Option B (thunderstorms) do not block GPS signals. Option C (heading changes) have no effect on satellite signal reception.
+
+### Q102: Given: MC 225 degrees, magnetic declination (variation) 5 degrees E. What is the TC? ^t60q102
+- A) 225 degrees
+- B) Parameters are insufficient to answer this question.
+- C) 230 degrees
+- D) 220 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True Course (TC) is calculated from Magnetic Course (MC) by accounting for magnetic declination. With easterly variation, magnetic north lies east of true north, so MC is larger than TC. The formula is TC = MC minus East variation: 225 degrees minus 5 degrees = 220 degrees. Option A ignores the variation entirely. Option B is incorrect because MC and variation are sufficient to calculate TC. Option C adds the variation instead of subtracting it, which would apply to westerly variation.
+
+### Q103: In poor visibility, you fly from Gruyeres (222°/46 km from Bern) towards Lausanne (051°/52 km from Geneva). Which true course (TC) do you select? ^t60q103
+- A) 282 degrees
+- B) 268 degrees
+- C) 082 degrees
+- D) 261 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the radial and distance references to plot both positions on the Swiss ICAO chart — Gruyeres at 222 degrees/46 km from Bern and Lausanne at 051 degrees/52 km from Geneva — and measuring the true course between them with a protractor yields approximately 261 degrees (roughly west-southwest). Options A and B give headings too far to the northwest. Option C points east-northeast, which would be the reverse direction entirely.
+
+### Q104: You want to determine your position using a VDF bearing, but the controller reports the signals are too weak for assessment. What is the likely reason? ^t60q104
+- A) Your transponder has too low a transmitting power.
+- B) Atmospheric interference weakens the signals.
+- C) You are flying too low, and the theoretical line-of-sight (quasi-optical) link is insufficient.
+- D) The onboard radio communication system is defective.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF operates on VHF frequencies, which propagate in a quasi-optical (line-of-sight) manner. If the aircraft is flying too low, the curvature of the Earth or intervening terrain blocks the signal path between the aircraft and the ground station, resulting in weak or undetectable signals. Option A is irrelevant because transponders are not used for VDF bearings. Option B overstates atmospheric effects, which are negligible for VHF under normal conditions. Option D (defective radio) is possible but less likely than the geometric limitation described in option C.
+
+### Q105: What does the term "agonic line" mean? ^t60q105
+- A) A line along which the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- B) All regions where the magnetic declination is greater than 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- D) Disturbance zones where the Earth's magnetic field lines are strongly deflected (e.g. by ferrous rock), causing large declination variations over a small area.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a specific isogonic line along which the magnetic declination (variation) is exactly zero degrees — meaning true north and magnetic north are aligned. Along this line, a magnetic compass points directly to geographic north without any correction needed. Option B describes a region, not a line, and is not a recognized navigational term. Option C defines the broader category of isogonic lines, of which the agonic line is a special case. Option D describes local magnetic anomalies, not the agonic line.
+
+### Q106: What is 4572 m expressed in feet? ^t60q106
+- A) 1500 ft
+- B) 15000 ft
+- C) 13935 ft
+- D) 1393 ft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert metres to feet, multiply by the conversion factor 3.2808 (since 1 metre = 3.2808 feet). Calculating: 4572 m multiplied by 3.2808 = 15,000 ft. This is a standard altitude conversion that aviation pilots should be able to perform quickly. Option A (1500 ft) and option D (1393 ft) are an order of magnitude too small. Option C (13,935 ft) results from an incorrect conversion factor.
+
+### Q107: Which of the following statements is correct? ^t60q107
+- A) The distance between two degrees of longitude or latitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- B) The distance between two degrees of latitude equals 60 NM (111 km) at the equator and decreases steadily towards the poles.
+- C) The distance between two degrees of longitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- D) The distance between two degrees of longitude equals 60 NM (111 km) only at the equator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lines of longitude (meridians) converge toward the poles, so the distance between two degrees of longitude is greatest at the equator (60 NM or 111 km) and decreases to zero at the poles, following the cosine of the latitude. This is a fundamental property of the spherical coordinate system. Option A is wrong because longitude spacing varies with latitude. Option B incorrectly describes latitude: the distance between two degrees of latitude is approximately constant at 60 NM everywhere, not decreasing toward the poles. Option C makes the same error as A for longitude alone.
+
+### Q108: Which value must you mark on the navigation chart before a cross-country flight? ^t60q108
+- A) True heading (TH)
+- B) Magnetic heading (MH)
+- C) True course (TC)
+- D) Compass heading (CH)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a navigation chart, the course line is drawn relative to the chart's grid, which is oriented to geographic (true) north. Therefore, the value measured and marked on the chart is the True Course (TC) — the angle between true north and the intended track line. Magnetic heading (option B), true heading (option A), and compass heading (option D) all incorporate corrections for wind, magnetic variation, or compass deviation that are calculated separately during flight planning, not drawn on the chart itself.
+
+### Q109: In flight, you notice a drift to the right. How do you correct? ^t60q109
+- A) By correcting the heading to the right
+- B) By flying more slowly
+- C) By increasing the heading value
+- D) By decreasing the heading value
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the right, the wind has a component pushing from the left side. To counteract this drift and maintain the desired track, you must turn into the wind by increasing the heading value (turning the nose further to the right to establish a crab angle into the wind component). Option A is vague but could be interpreted as correct — however, option C is more precise in specifying the heading adjustment. Option B (flying more slowly) would actually increase the drift angle. Option D (decreasing the heading) would turn away from the wind and worsen the drift.
+
+### Q110: Up to what maximum altitude may you fly a glider over Lenzburg (255°/28 km from Zurich) without notification or authorisation? ^t60q110
+- A) 5950 m AMSL
+- B) 2000 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 1700 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lenzburg lies beneath the Zurich TMA structure. According to the Swiss ICAO chart, the lowest TMA sector in this area has its floor at 1700 m AMSL. Below this altitude, the airspace is uncontrolled (Class E or G), and gliders may fly without ATC notification or authorisation. Above 1700 m AMSL, you enter controlled airspace requiring a clearance. Options A and B are incorrect altitude values. Option C (4500 ft, approximately 1370 m) is below the actual limit and would unnecessarily restrict your flight.
+
+### Q111: How does the map grid appear in a Lambert (normal conic) projection? ^t60q111
+- A) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- B) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+- C) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- D) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a Lambert conformal conic projection, the cone is placed over the globe so that meridians project as straight lines converging toward the apex (the pole), while parallels of latitude appear as concentric arcs (parallel curves) centered on the pole. This projection preserves angles (conformality), making it ideal for aeronautical charts. Option A describes a cylindrical projection like Mercator. Option B reverses the characteristics of meridians and parallels. Option D does not describe any standard cartographic projection.
+
+### Q112: You depart from Bern on 10 June (summer time) at 1030 LT. The flight duration is 80 minutes. At what UTC time do you land? ^t60q112
+- A) 1050 UTC.
+- B) 1350 UTC.
+- C) 1250 UTC.
+- D) 0950 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 10 June, Switzerland observes Central European Summer Time (CEST), which is UTC+2. Departure at 1030 LT (CEST) equals 0830 UTC. Adding 80 minutes of flight time: 0830 + 0080 = 0950 UTC. Option A (1050 UTC) appears to use UTC+1 instead of UTC+2. Option B (1350 UTC) adds the time difference instead of subtracting it. Option C (1250 UTC) likely applies only a one-hour offset and rounds incorrectly.
+
+### Q113: What are the coordinates of Bellechasse aerodrome (285°/28 km from Bern)? ^t60q113
+- A) 47 degrees 22' N / 008 degrees 14' E
+- B) 47 degrees 11' S / 008 degrees 13' W
+- C) 46 degrees 59' S / 007 degrees 08' W
+- D) 46 degrees 59' N / 007 degrees 08' E
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bellechasse aerodrome (LSGE) is located west-northwest of Bern, near the town of Bellechasse in the canton of Fribourg. Plotting the position at 285 degrees/28 km from Bern on the Swiss ICAO chart yields coordinates of approximately 46 degrees 59 minutes N / 007 degrees 08 minutes E. Options B and C use South and West designations, which are impossible for locations in Switzerland (Northern Hemisphere, east of the Greenwich meridian). Option A places the aerodrome too far north and east.
+
+### Q114: During a cross-country flight, "POOR GPS COVERAGE" appears on the screen. What could be the cause? ^t60q114
+- A) Poor GPS coverage is a consequence of the twilight effect.
+- B) The position of a satellite has changed significantly and requires a readjustment procedure.
+- C) Your device is receiving an insufficient number of satellite signals, possibly due to terrain configuration blocking them.
+- D) The indication may be the result of severe nearby thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The "POOR GPS COVERAGE" message indicates that the receiver cannot track enough satellites with adequate geometry for a reliable position fix. The most common cause during cross-country glider flights is terrain masking — flying in deep valleys or near steep mountain faces that block satellite signals from view. Option A (twilight effect) is not a recognized GPS phenomenon. Option B overstates how satellite repositioning works, as GPS receivers continuously update orbital data without manual intervention. Option D (thunderstorms) does not affect GPS microwave signals.
+
+### Q115: The magnetic compass of an aircraft is affected by metallic parts and electrical equipment. What is this influence called? ^t60q115
+- A) Variation
+- B) Declination
+- C) Deviation
+- D) Inclination
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by local magnetic fields from the aircraft's own metallic structure, electrical wiring, and electronic equipment. It varies with heading and is recorded on a deviation card in the cockpit. Option A (variation) and option B (declination) both refer to the angular difference between true north and magnetic north, which is a property of the Earth's magnetic field, not the aircraft. Option D (inclination or dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the surface, which affects compass behavior but is not the same as the aircraft-induced error.
+
+### Q116: You plan a cross-country flight Courtelary (315°/43 km from Bern-Belp) - Dittingen (192°/18 km from Basel-Mulhouse) - Birrfeld (265°/24 km from Zurich) - Courtelary. What is the total distance? ^t60q116
+- A) 315 km
+- B) 97 km
+- C) 210 km
+- D) 189 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is a closed triangular cross-country route with three legs: Courtelary to Dittingen, Dittingen to Birrfeld, and Birrfeld back to Courtelary. Each position is plotted on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart using the given radial/distance references, and the leg distances are measured with a ruler. The sum of all three legs yields approximately 189 km. Option A (315 km) is far too long. Option B (97 km) accounts for only about half the route. Option C (210 km) overestimates by roughly 20 km.
+
+### Q117: Your GPS displays heights in metres, but you need feet. Can you change this? ^t60q117
+- A) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- B) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the settings options (SETTING MODE).
+- C) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the aeronautical database (DATA BASE).
+- D) No, your device is certified M (metric) and cannot be changed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modern aviation GPS units allow pilots to change the display units (metres, feet, kilometres, nautical miles, etc.) through the device's settings menu (SETTING MODE). This is a simple user-accessible configuration change that does not require any maintenance intervention. Option A incorrectly suggests that a workshop visit is needed. Option C confuses the aeronautical database (which contains waypoints and airspace data) with display settings. Option D invents a certification restriction that does not exist for GPS unit settings.
+
+### Q118: On a map, 5 cm correspond to a distance of 10 km. What is the scale? ^t60q118
+- A) 1:100,000
+- B) 1:20,000
+- C) 1:500,000
+- D) 1:200,000
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To determine map scale, convert both measurements to the same unit: 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. The ratio of map distance to real distance is 5 cm to 1,000,000 cm, which simplifies to 1 cm representing 200,000 cm, giving a scale of 1:200,000. Option A (1:100,000) would mean 5 cm = 5 km. Option B (1:20,000) would mean 5 cm = 1 km. Option C (1:500,000) would mean 5 cm = 25 km. Only 1:200,000 produces the correct 5 cm = 10 km relationship.
+
+### Q119: During a long approach over a difficult navigation area, which method is most effective? ^t60q119
+- A) Orient the map to the north.
+- B) Constantly monitor the compass.
+- C) Monitor time with the time ruler; mark known positions on the map.
+- D) Track your position on the map with your thumb.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over a difficult navigation area during a long approach, the most effective technique is to use time-based dead reckoning: monitor elapsed time with a time ruler (marking planned time checkpoints along the route) and confirm your position by identifying ground features as they appear, marking each verified position on the map. This combines time estimation with visual confirmation for maximum accuracy. Option A (orienting to north) is a basic step but alone does not solve navigation difficulties. Option B (monitoring the compass) maintains heading but provides no position information. Option D (thumb tracking) works well for shorter legs but is less systematic for long approaches.
+
+### Q120: If you are south of the Montreux - Thun - Lucerne - Rapperswil line, on which frequency do you communicate with other glider pilots? ^t60q120
+- A) 123.450 MHz
+- B) 125.025 MHz
+- C) 122.475 MHz
+- D) 123.675 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, glider-to-glider communication frequencies are divided geographically. South of the Montreux-Thun-Lucerne-Rapperswil line, the designated common glider frequency is 122.475 MHz. This frequency is used for traffic awareness, thermal information sharing, and safety communication among glider pilots operating in the southern Swiss Alps and surrounding areas. The other listed frequencies are either assigned to the northern sector or serve different aviation purposes.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_121_128_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_121_128_out.md
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+### Q121: What altitudes should be targeted for the landing circuit phases in a glider? ^t70q121
+- A) 300 m abeam the threshold and 150 m on final approach
+- B) 500 m abeam the threshold and 50 m after the final turn
+- C) 100 m abeam the threshold and 50 m after the final turn
+- D) 150-200 m abeam the threshold and 100 m after the final turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard glider circuit targets are 150-200 m AGL abeam the landing threshold (on the downwind leg) and approximately 100 m AGL after completing the final turn onto the approach. These altitudes provide sufficient margin for a stabilized approach while allowing the pilot to manage energy with airbrakes. Option A (300 m/150 m) is too high and wastes altitude. Option B (500 m/50 m) starts excessively high downwind and arrives too low on final. Option C (100 m/50 m) is dangerously low, leaving almost no margin for error.
+
+### Q122: How should a glider be parked when strong winds are expected? ^t70q122
+- A) Nose into the wind, extend airbrakes, secure the rudder
+- B) Downwind wing on the ground, weight it down, secure the rudder
+- C) Windward wing on the ground, weight it down, secure the rudder
+- D) Nose into the wind, hold and weight the tail down
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Placing the windward (upwind) wing on the ground prevents the wind from getting underneath it and lifting the aircraft. The wing should be weighted down, and the rudder must be secured to prevent wind-induced control surface flutter that could damage the hinges. Option A (airbrakes extended) may help but does not secure the wings against lift. Option B (downwind wing down) is wrong — the wind would blow under the raised windward wing and flip the aircraft. Option D (weighting the tail) does not prevent the wings from lifting.
+
+### Q123: What must be considered when crossing mountain ridges? ^t70q123
+- A) Do not overfly national parks
+- B) Expect turbulence and increase speed slightly
+- C) Use circling birds to locate thermal cells
+- D) Expect turbulence and reduce to minimum speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When crossing mountain ridges, the pilot should expect turbulence from mechanical lift, rotor effects, and wind shear near the ridge line. Increasing speed slightly provides additional control authority and reduces vulnerability to sudden gusts and turbulence. Option A (national parks) is a noise abatement consideration, not a ridge-crossing safety concern. Option C (circling birds) is a thermal-finding technique, not specific to ridge crossing. Option D (minimum speed) is dangerous — flying slowly in turbulence reduces control margins and risks stalling in a downdraft.
+
+### Q124: What does buffeting felt through the elevator stick indicate? ^t70q124
+- A) The aircraft is too dirty
+- B) Centre of gravity is too far forward
+- C) The aircraft is too fast, with turbulence hitting the ailerons
+- D) The aircraft is too slow and the wing airflow is separating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting through the control stick is a pre-stall warning sign indicating that the wing airflow is beginning to separate from the upper surface at high angle of attack (low speed). The turbulent wake from the separating airflow hits the tail surfaces, transmitting vibrations through the elevator linkage to the stick. Option A (dirty aircraft) would cause higher drag but not stick buffeting. Option B (forward CG) affects trim but not buffeting. Option C reverses the speed relationship — buffeting occurs at low speed, not high speed.
+
+### Q125: When must a pre-flight check be performed? ^t70q125
+- A) Once a month, and once daily for touring motorgliders
+- B) After every assembly of the aircraft
+- C) Before the first flight of the day and after every pilot change
+- D) Before flight operations and before every individual flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pre-flight check must be performed before the first flight of the day to verify the aircraft's airworthiness after sitting overnight, and after every pilot change because each pilot must personally verify the aircraft condition and cockpit setup. Option A (monthly) is far too infrequent. Option B (after assembly only) misses the daily check requirement. Option D (before every individual flight) is more conservative than required — while good practice, the regulatory requirement is before the first flight and after pilot changes.
+
+### Q126: How is "flight time" defined? ^t70q126
+- A) The interval from engine start for take-off purposes until the pilot exits the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- B) The total time from the first take-off to the last landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- C) The time from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown when landing.
+- D) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For gliders, flight time is defined as the total time from the aircraft's first movement for the purpose of flight until it finally comes to rest after the flight. This comprehensive definition includes ground handling, taxiing, and all phases of flight. Option A applies to powered aircraft with engines, not gliders. Option B covers only the airborne portion between takeoff and landing. Option C is too narrow, capturing only the takeoff roll to touchdown and excluding ground movement.
+
+### Q127: Tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the approach and landing be performed? ^t70q127
+- A) Approach at minimum speed with gentle control corrections
+- B) Approach at increased speed, avoid using spoiler flaps
+- C) Approach at normal speed, maintain speed using spoiler flaps
+- D) Approach at increased speed with firm control inputs to correct attitude changes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a 10-knot gust factor (25 minus 15 kt), the pilot must add extra speed to the approach (typically half the gust factor) and use firm, decisive control inputs to maintain attitude in the turbulent, gusting conditions. Positive handling is essential when gusts can rapidly change the aircraft's attitude. Option A (minimum speed) is extremely dangerous in gusty conditions as gusts can instantly reduce airspeed below stall. Option B avoids spoilers unnecessarily. Option C maintains normal speed without gust compensation.
+
+### Q128: What does buffeting felt through the elevator stick indicate? ^t70q128
+- A) The aircraft is very dirty
+- B) The aircraft is too fast, with turbulence bubbles hitting the ailerons
+- C) The centre of gravity is too far forward
+- D) The aircraft is too slow and the wing airflow is beginning to separate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stick buffeting is a classic pre-stall warning: as the aircraft slows and the angle of attack increases toward the critical value, airflow begins separating from the wing's upper surface. This turbulent separated airflow passes over the tail, causing the elevator and stick to vibrate. The pilot should respond by reducing the angle of attack (lowering the nose). Option A (dirty aircraft) increases drag but does not cause buffeting. Option B describes a non-existent phenomenon — turbulence "bubbles" hitting ailerons at high speed. Option C (forward CG) is unrelated to buffeting.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_1_30_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_1_30_out.md
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+### Q1: While flying slowly near stall with the left wing dropping, how can a full stall be avoided? ^t70q1
+- A) Use rudder to the left, push the stick forward slightly, accelerate, then neutralise all controls
+- B) Lower the nose with elevator, maintain wings level using coordinated rudder and aileron
+- C) Deflect aileron to the right, push slightly forward on the stick, build speed, then neutralise controls
+- D) Apply aileron and rudder to the right, gain speed, push the stick forward slightly, then neutralise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a stall with one wing dropping, the priority is to reduce the angle of attack by lowering the nose with forward elevator pressure, which prevents the full stall from developing. Coordinated rudder and aileron are then used to keep the wings level without introducing adverse yaw, which could trigger a spin entry near the stall. Option A applies rudder in the wrong direction (toward the dropping wing). Option C and Option D use aileron aggressively, which near the stall can worsen the wing drop and lead to a spin, because the down-going aileron increases the angle of attack on the already-stalling wing.
+
+### Q2: How is "flight time" defined? ^t70q2
+- A) The total time from the first take-off until the last landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- B) The time from engine start for take-off purposes until the pilot leaves the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- C) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+- D) The interval from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown on landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations (specifically for gliders), flight time is defined as the total time from the moment the aircraft first moves for the purpose of taking off until it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. This includes ground roll, taxiing, and the entire airborne phase. Option A limits it to take-off and landing events, ignoring ground movement. Option B refers to engine start/shutdown procedures more applicable to powered aircraft. Option D counts only from the start of the take-off run to touchdown, excluding post-landing ground roll.
+
+### Q3: What is a wind shear? ^t70q3
+- A) An oscillating wind that always occurs during storms
+- B) A sudden directional and/or speed change in the wind over a short distance
+- C) A gusty wind that only occurs in mountain environments
+- D) A steady increase in wind speed with altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind shear is defined as a sudden change in wind speed and/or direction over a short distance, either vertically or horizontally. It can occur at any altitude and in various meteorological situations, including thunderstorm outflows, temperature inversions, frontal passages, and terrain-induced turbulence. Option A incorrectly limits it to storms and describes oscillation rather than a sudden change. Option C wrongly restricts it to mountain environments. Option D describes a normal wind gradient, not wind shear, which by definition involves an abrupt rather than steady change.
+
+### Q4: A winch-launched glider has climbed through the normal circuit altitude and continues upward. Shortly afterward, the pilot hears a loud bang and is pressed into the seat. What has most likely happened, and what should the pilot do? ^t70q4
+- A) The winch cable broke – immediately pull back on the elevator to stop the nose from dropping
+- B) The winch cable broke – push the stick forward, release the cable (twice), and build airspeed
+- C) The parachute deployed – reduce speed and land immediately
+- D) The canopy opened – secure it and continue the flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A loud bang followed by the pilot being pressed into the seat is the classic indication of a winch cable break at altitude. The glider, still pitched up steeply, will rapidly lose airspeed without the cable pulling it forward. The immediate action is to push the stick forward decisively to lower the nose and regain flying speed, then release the cable hook (pulling the release twice to ensure separation). Option A is dangerous because pulling back on the elevator would increase the pitch angle and lead to a stall at altitude. Options C and D describe unrelated emergencies that do not match the described symptoms.
+
+### Q5: After a cable break during a winch launch, you have enough altitude to fly a modified circuit. What must be considered? ^t70q5
+- A) You must fly a standard full circuit pattern and land with the normal traffic.
+- B) Fly a short approach straight onto the runway regardless of wind direction.
+- C) You must fly a modified (abbreviated) circuit, staying close to the field and planning a shortened approach.
+- D) Fly the normal circuit but at maximum speed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break at sufficient altitude, the pilot should fly a modified (abbreviated) circuit that stays close to the airfield and results in a shortened approach. This conserves the available altitude and keeps landing options within reach at all times. Option A (standard full circuit) wastes altitude and may leave the glider too far from the field if conditions deteriorate. Option B ignores wind direction, which can lead to a dangerous downwind landing. Option D suggests maximum speed, which would consume altitude rapidly and reduce the available time for decision-making.
+
+### Q6: During an aerotow departure, the glider lifts off before the tow plane. What should the pilot do? ^t70q6
+- A) Release the cable immediately and land straight ahead.
+- B) Hold the glider just above the ground in ground effect until the tow plane also lifts off.
+- C) Pull back to climb rapidly and gain separation from the tow plane.
+- D) Push the nose down firmly to put the glider back on the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** It is normal for a glider to become airborne before the tow plane due to its lower wing loading. The correct procedure is to hold the glider in ground effect at a height of about 1-2 metres, maintaining a level attitude until the tow plane also lifts off. Option A (immediate release) is premature and unnecessary -- this is a normal situation, not an emergency. Option C (climbing rapidly) is dangerous because pulling up would lift the tow plane's tail, forcing its nose down and potentially causing the tow plane to crash. Option D (pushing back to the ground) can cause bouncing and loss of control.
+
+### Q7: During an aerotow, the glider gets into a position well above the tow plane. What is the correct response? ^t70q7
+- A) Pull the elevator to climb above the wake turbulence.
+- B) Release the tow cable immediately.
+- C) Gently push the elevator to descend back to the correct tow position.
+- D) Apply spoilers and use rudder to re-align with the tow plane.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If a glider gets significantly above the tow plane during aerotow, it enters the extremely dangerous "high tow" position. The tow cable now pulls the tow plane's tail up, pushing its nose down, and the tow pilot may be unable to recover. The only safe action is to release the cable immediately to free the tow plane from the downward force. Option C (gentle correction) may be appropriate for small displacements, but a position well above the tow plane is an emergency requiring immediate release. Option A (climbing further) worsens the situation. Option D is inadequate for the severity of the situation.
+
+### Q8: During the launch phase, at what point should the pilot abort a winch launch if the speed is insufficient? ^t70q8
+- A) At any point during the launch if airspeed is below the recommended value.
+- B) Only after reaching the full climb attitude.
+- C) Only after reaching circuit altitude.
+- D) Speed is not a factor; the winch driver controls the launch speed.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command is ultimately responsible for flight safety and must abort a winch launch at any point if the airspeed is insufficient for safe flight. Insufficient airspeed during the steep climbing phase risks a stall at low altitude with no room for recovery. The abort procedure involves lowering the nose and releasing the cable. Option B and Option C delay the decision, which could be fatal at low altitude with inadequate speed. Option D is incorrect because while the winch driver influences speed, the pilot must monitor and take action if speed is insufficient.
+
+### Q9: What is the primary risk when crossing behind and below a large aircraft? ^t70q9
+- A) Radio interference from the aircraft's transponder
+- B) Jet blast damage to the glider's canopy
+- C) Encountering severe wake turbulence (wingtip vortices)
+- D) Being pulled into the aircraft's propwash
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary hazard when flying behind and below a large aircraft is wake turbulence -- powerful rotating vortices shed from the wingtips that can persist for several minutes and extend several miles behind the aircraft. These vortices can roll a glider inverted or impose structural loads exceeding the design limits. The vortices descend and drift with the wind, making the area below and behind a large aircraft particularly dangerous. Option A (radio interference) is not a physical flight hazard. Option B (jet blast) is only relevant very close on the ground. Option D (propwash) dissipates quickly and is a ground-proximity issue.
+
+### Q10: What are the symptoms of the onset of a spin? ^t70q10
+- A) A rapid increase in airspeed with the nose dropping below the horizon
+- B) One wing drops sharply while the nose yaws in the same direction, with airspeed near or below stall speed
+- C) Both wings stall simultaneously and the aircraft descends vertically
+- D) The aircraft enters a steep spiral with rapidly increasing speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A spin develops when one wing stalls more deeply than the other, causing it to drop sharply while the nose yaws toward the stalled wing. The airspeed remains near or below the stall speed, and the aircraft begins to autorotate around its vertical axis. Option A describes a dive or spiral dive, where speed increases -- in a spin, speed remains low. Option C (simultaneous stall with vertical descent) describes a symmetric deep stall, not a spin. Option D describes a spiral dive, which is characterised by increasing airspeed and bank angle, fundamentally different from a spin.
+
+### Q11: What is the correct spin recovery procedure for most gliders? ^t70q11
+- A) Pull back on the stick, apply full opposite rudder, then centralise all controls
+- B) Apply full rudder in the direction of the spin, push the stick forward, then centralise
+- C) Apply full opposite rudder, pause, then push the stick forward until rotation stops, then centralise and recover from the dive
+- D) Push the stick forward immediately, then apply aileron to level the wings
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard spin recovery follows a specific sequence: first, apply full opposite rudder to stop the yaw rotation. After a brief pause to allow the rudder to take effect, push the stick forward to unstall the wings by reducing the angle of attack. Once rotation stops, centralise the rudder and smoothly recover from the resulting dive. Option A pulls back on the stick, which deepens the stall and worsens the spin. Option B applies rudder in the spin direction, which would accelerate the rotation. Option D omits the critical rudder input and uses aileron, which can be ineffective or counterproductive in a spin.
+
+### Q12: What must be checked during the pre-flight inspection regarding the control surfaces? ^t70q12
+- A) Only the elevator must be checked for free movement.
+- B) All control surfaces must be checked for full and free movement in the correct sense.
+- C) Only the ailerons and elevator need checking; the rudder is checked by ground crew.
+- D) Control surfaces are checked only during the annual inspection.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During every pre-flight inspection, the pilot must verify that all control surfaces -- ailerons, elevator, and rudder -- move freely through their full range without obstruction and deflect in the correct sense relative to stick and pedal inputs. This check ensures no mechanical binding, disconnection, or incorrect rigging has occurred. Option A checks only the elevator, missing critical aileron and rudder verification. Option C omits the rudder, which is equally essential. Option D is dangerously wrong -- control checks are mandatory before every flight, not just annually.
+
+### Q13: Before a flight, the pilot notices that the canopy does not close completely flush. What should be done? ^t70q13
+- A) Fly carefully and have it checked after landing.
+- B) Tape the gap and fly normally.
+- C) Do not fly until the problem is diagnosed and resolved.
+- D) The gap is normal and can be ignored.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A canopy that does not close flush may have a faulty latch, a misaligned frame, or a damaged hinge, any of which could lead to the canopy opening in flight. An unlatched canopy opening at speed can shatter, potentially injuring the pilot or blocking the controls, and the sudden drag change can cause loss of control. The glider must not be flown until the cause is identified and corrected. Option A risks a dangerous in-flight canopy failure. Option B (taping) does not address the root cause and provides no structural security. Option D ignores a potentially serious defect.
+
+### Q14: What is the purpose of the daily inspection (DI) of a glider? ^t70q14
+- A) To replace worn parts before every flight.
+- B) To verify the aircraft is fit for flight and no defects have developed since the last flight.
+- C) To calibrate instruments before the first flight of the day.
+- D) To check fuel levels and oil pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The daily inspection (DI) is a systematic check performed before the first flight of each day to verify that the glider is in a fit-to-fly condition and that no damage, defects, or deterioration has occurred since the last flight. It covers the airframe, control system, instruments, canopy, undercarriage, and release mechanisms. Option A (replacing worn parts) goes beyond the scope of a DI -- that is a maintenance task. Option C (calibrating instruments) is a maintenance procedure, not a daily check. Option D applies to powered aircraft, not gliders, which have no fuel or oil systems.
+
+### Q15: What is the standard way to signal "take up slack" to a winch or tow-car driver? ^t70q15
+- A) Waggling the rudder rapidly
+- B) A steady signal via a light or radio call: "Take up slack"
+- C) Rocking the wings up and down
+- D) Flashing the landing light twice
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard procedure to request that slack be taken up on the winch cable before launch is a specific signal communicated via a signalling system (bat signals, lights) or a clear radio call stating "Take up slack." This ensures unambiguous communication between the pilot and the launch crew. Option A (rudder waggling) is not a standard launch signal. Option C (wing rocking) typically means "all out" or is used as an airborne greeting, not for cable management. Option D (landing light) does not apply to unpowered gliders, which typically lack such equipment.
+
+### Q16: What does the signal "all out" mean during a winch launch? ^t70q16
+- A) The winch driver should stop the winch immediately
+- B) The pilot wants the launch to proceed at full power
+- C) The cable has been released
+- D) The ground crew should clear the launch area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The "all out" signal during winch launch preparation is the instruction for the winch driver to begin the launch at full power. It is given only after the cable is taut (slack taken up), the pilot is ready, and the launch area is clear. This is the final signal in the launch sequence. Option A (stop the winch) would be a "stop" signal, not "all out." Option C (cable released) occurs after the launch, not before. Option D (clear the area) would be communicated separately before the launch sequence begins.
+
+### Q17: During the initial ground roll of a winch launch, the glider veers sharply to the left. What should the pilot do? ^t70q17
+- A) Apply right rudder to correct the swing and continue the launch
+- B) Release the cable immediately
+- C) Apply left rudder and right aileron to correct
+- D) Wait for the speed to build before making corrections
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sharp veer during the initial ground roll of a winch launch indicates a serious directional control problem that could quickly lead to a ground loop, wingtip strike, or cable entanglement. At this early stage the glider has insufficient speed for aerodynamic controls to be effective, making corrective inputs unreliable. The only safe response is to release the cable immediately and stop the launch. Option A attempts correction but may be ineffective at low speed. Option C combines inputs that may not work at low speed. Option D risks the situation worsening before any correction becomes possible.
+
+### Q18: What is the recommended initial action if the canopy opens during flight? ^t70q18
+- A) Attempt to close and re-latch the canopy while maintaining flight
+- B) Immediately jettison the canopy to prevent it from blocking controls
+- C) Maintain aircraft control, slow down to reduce aerodynamic forces, and attempt to secure the canopy
+- D) Declare an emergency and dive to increase speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the canopy opens in flight, the first priority is always maintaining aircraft control. The pilot should then reduce speed to decrease the aerodynamic forces acting on the canopy, making it easier to close or at least prevent it from departing the aircraft uncontrollably. Once at reduced speed, an attempt to re-secure the canopy may be possible. Option A risks losing control by diverting attention at high speed. Option B (jettisoning) should only be done if the canopy is blocking controls or cannot be secured. Option D (diving to increase speed) would worsen aerodynamic loads on the open canopy.
+
+### Q19: What is the primary danger of flying in rain as a glider pilot? ^t70q19
+- A) The glider becomes heavier, improving penetration speed
+- B) Water ingestion into the pitot tube causes the ASI to over-read
+- C) Performance degrades severely due to increased drag and disrupted airflow over the wings
+- D) Rain always brings thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rain significantly degrades glider performance because water droplets roughen the wing surface, disrupting the laminar boundary layer and dramatically increasing drag while reducing lift. The glide ratio can drop by 30-50% in heavy rain, requiring much higher approach speeds and reducing range. This performance loss can be critical during cross-country flight or when trying to reach a suitable landing area. Option A is misleading -- while mass increases slightly, the drag penalty far outweighs any speed benefit. Option B (pitot blockage) is a secondary concern. Option D is an incorrect generalisation.
+
+### Q20: What is the correct action if you encounter a dust devil or whirlwind while flying at low altitude? ^t70q20
+- A) Fly directly through it to gain altitude from the updraft
+- B) Avoid it by a wide margin; the turbulence can be severe enough to cause structural damage or loss of control
+- C) Circle around it at a safe distance to exploit the associated thermal
+- D) Reduce speed to minimum sink to minimise structural loads
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dust devils and whirlwinds contain extremely violent, rotating air with vertical and horizontal velocity components that can far exceed a glider's structural design limits. At low altitude, encountering one can cause loss of control with no recovery altitude available. The only safe action is to avoid them by a wide margin. Option A is extremely dangerous -- the turbulence inside can tear a glider apart. Option C is risky at low altitude where recovery from turbulence encounters is impossible. Option D (reducing speed) actually brings the aircraft closer to stall, making it more vulnerable to gusts.
+
+### Q21: At what altitude does supplemental oxygen become mandatory for the pilot? ^t70q21
+- A) Above 3000 m (10000 ft)
+- B) Above 4000 m (13000 ft)
+- C) Above 5000 m (16500 ft)
+- D) Above 6000 m (20000 ft)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under European aviation regulations, supplemental oxygen becomes mandatory for the pilot above a cabin pressure altitude of approximately 4000 m (13,000 ft). Above this altitude, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen begins to impair cognitive function, judgment, and reaction time -- the insidious nature of hypoxia means the pilot may not recognise their own deteriorating performance. Option A (3000 m) is too conservative as the mandatory threshold, though oxygen use is recommended above this altitude. Option C (5000 m) and Option D (6000 m) are dangerously high -- at these altitudes, useful consciousness time without oxygen is measured in minutes.
+
+### Q22: What must a pilot consider before flying near or over a large body of water? ^t70q22
+- A) There is no specific consideration needed for overwater flight in a glider
+- B) Thermals are typically stronger over water, providing reliable lift
+- C) Large bodies of water are generally poor thermal generators during the day, and emergency landing options are eliminated
+- D) Water acts as a heat source, always generating rising air
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Large bodies of water absorb solar energy slowly and do not produce convective thermals during the daytime the way land surfaces do, so gliders flying over water lose their primary source of lift. Additionally, a forced landing on water in a glider is extremely hazardous -- gliders are not designed for ditching and will sink rapidly. Pilots must plan carefully to have sufficient altitude and glide range to reach land at all times. Option A ignores significant safety considerations. Options B and D are meteorologically incorrect -- water is a poor thermal source during daytime heating.
+
+### Q23: What should you do if you notice another glider circling in a thermal you wish to join? ^t70q23
+- A) Enter the thermal circling in whichever direction gives the best climb rate
+- B) Join the thermal circling in the same direction as the other glider
+- C) Circle in the opposite direction to increase your chances of finding the core
+- D) Fly straight through the thermal at high speed to avoid conflict
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal already occupied by another glider, you must circle in the same direction as the aircraft already established. This is a fundamental safety rule that ensures predictable, coordinated flight paths and prevents head-on encounters within the thermal. The first glider in the thermal establishes the direction. Option A ignores the established direction and creates collision risk. Option C (opposite direction) is extremely dangerous as it creates opposing traffic at close quarters in a tight column of air. Option D wastes the thermal opportunity and could still create a conflict.
+
+### Q24: A glider pilot is flying cross-country and notices deteriorating weather ahead. What is the recommended course of action? ^t70q24
+- A) Continue flying because the weather may improve
+- B) Climb as high as possible and attempt to fly over the weather
+- C) Make a timely decision to divert or land while suitable fields and visibility are still available
+- D) Descend to fly below the cloud base and continue on course
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When weather deteriorates ahead on a cross-country flight, the safest approach is to make an early decision to divert or select a landing field while options are still available. Waiting too long can result in being trapped in poor visibility with no suitable landing areas, which is one of the most dangerous situations for a glider pilot. Option A relies on hope rather than airmanship. Option B risks cloud entry and loss of visual references. Option D may lead to flight in deteriorating visibility at dangerously low altitude where terrain clearance becomes critical.
+
+### Q25: What is the correct procedure if the cable release mechanism fails during a winch launch? ^t70q25
+- A) Continue climbing to maximum altitude and then try again
+- B) Signal the winch driver to stop by rocking the wings, then use the backup release if available
+- C) Cut the cable by diving aggressively
+- D) Continue the launch to normal altitude; the cable will separate on its own
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the primary cable release fails during a winch launch, the pilot should first signal the winch driver to stop by the established signal (typically rocking the wings or via radio). Then the backup (secondary) release mechanism should be used. All gliders are required to have two independent release hooks precisely for this emergency. Option A prolongs the dangerous situation. Option C (aggressive diving) risks structural damage and is not a standard procedure. Option D is wishful thinking -- the cable may not separate on its own, and the glider could be dragged into the ground near the winch.
+
+### Q26: What must a pilot check regarding the weight and balance before flying a glider? ^t70q26
+- A) Only the pilot's weight matters; everything else is fixed
+- B) The total mass must not exceed the maximum take-off mass, and the centre of gravity must be within the permitted range
+- C) Weight and balance checks are only required for competition flights
+- D) As long as the pilot fits in the cockpit, the weight is acceptable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before every flight, the pilot must verify that the total mass (aircraft empty weight plus pilot, parachute, ballast, water, and any equipment) does not exceed the maximum permitted take-off mass and that the centre of gravity falls within the approved envelope specified in the flight manual. An aft CG can make the glider uncontrollable in pitch, while an overloaded glider has reduced performance margins and higher stall speeds. Option A ignores ballast, water, and equipment. Option C incorrectly limits the requirement to competition. Option D is dangerously casual about a critical safety check.
+
+### Q27: What should you do if you experience sudden silence during an aerotow (loss of tow-plane engine sound)? ^t70q27
+- A) Do nothing; the tow pilot will sort it out
+- B) Pull up to gain altitude while the tow plane still has momentum
+- C) Prepare for an immediate release; the tow pilot may need to make an emergency landing and you must not hinder the tow plane
+- D) Push forward to stay in formation with the descending tow plane
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the tow plane's engine fails during aerotow, the tow pilot will need to land immediately, and the glider must not remain attached because it would restrict the tow pilot's ability to manoeuvre for an emergency landing. The glider pilot should prepare to release promptly and fly independently, choosing a suitable landing area based on altitude and position. Option A is passive and potentially fatal for both pilots. Option B (pulling up) would lift the tow plane's tail and push its nose down during an already critical situation. Option D (staying in formation) keeps the glider dangerously close to a descending aircraft with limited options.
+
+### Q28: What are the dangers of thermal flying near terrain (hillsides, ridges)? ^t70q28
+- A) Thermals near terrain are always weak and not worth the risk
+- B) Reduced manoeuvring room, turbulence near terrain features, risk of collision with the slope if the thermal weakens or collapses
+- C) There are no additional dangers compared to open-area thermalling
+- D) Terrain thermals only work in the morning
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal flying near terrain presents several compounded hazards: the available manoeuvring space is restricted by the proximity of slopes and ridges, thermal lift can be turbulent and unpredictable near terrain features, and if the thermal suddenly weakens or collapses on the terrain side of the circle, the glider may not have sufficient altitude or distance to clear the slope. Additionally, other traffic (hang gliders, paragliders, other sailplanes) may be concentrated near the same terrain features. Option A is incorrect -- terrain thermals can be very strong. Option C ignores real dangers. Option D is meteorologically wrong.
+
+### Q29: What is the correct action if the airbrakes (spoilers) jam in the open position during flight? ^t70q29
+- A) Continue the flight normally; the glider will simply fly slower
+- B) Increase speed to compensate for the increased drag and plan an immediate landing
+- C) Try to force the airbrakes closed by pushing the lever as hard as possible
+- D) Release the airbrakes by pulling the negative-G manoeuvre
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Jammed-open airbrakes significantly increase drag and sink rate, severely reducing the glider's performance and range. The pilot must recognise the situation, increase speed to maintain an adequate safety margin above the now-higher stall speed (due to reduced lift), and plan for an immediate landing at the nearest suitable site. Every minute of continued flight burns altitude rapidly. Option A underestimates the severity -- the glider will not just fly slower, it will descend much faster. Option C risks damaging the mechanism further or causing a sudden change. Option D suggests a dangerous manoeuvre that is not a standard procedure.
+
+### Q30: During aerotow in a turn, the glider drifts to an outward offset position. How should the glider pilot correct this? ^t70q30
+- A) Release the tow cable immediately
+- B) Increase the bank angle slightly to move back behind the tow plane
+- C) Decrease the bank angle and fly straight briefly to regain alignment
+- D) Apply rudder toward the tow plane to slide back into position
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the glider drifts to the outside of a turn during aerotow, it means the glider's bank angle is insufficient compared to the tow plane's turn. The correction is to increase the bank angle slightly, which tightens the glider's turn radius and allows it to move back behind the tow plane. Option A (releasing) is unnecessary for a minor positioning error. Option C (decreasing bank) would make the glider drift further outward. Option D (rudder only) would cause a skid and is not the primary correction for lateral offset in a turn -- bank angle is the correct control input.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_31_60_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_31_60_out.md
new file mode 100644
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_31_60_out.md
@@ -0,0 +1,299 @@
+### Q31: During a winch launch, cable tension suddenly disappears just after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q31
+- A) Inform the winch driver by alternating aileron inputs
+- B) Pull on the elevator to restore cable tension
+- C) Push firmly forward and release the cable immediately
+- D) Push slightly and wait for the cable tension to return
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sudden loss of cable tension during the steep climb phase of a winch launch must be treated as a cable break. The glider is at a high nose-up attitude with rapidly decreasing airspeed, making an imminent stall the greatest danger. The pilot must push the stick firmly forward to lower the nose and regain flying speed, then release the cable immediately. Option A (aileron signals) wastes critical time in a life-threatening situation. Option B (pulling the elevator) would pitch the nose even higher, guaranteeing a stall. Option D (waiting) risks a full stall before any recovery is possible.
+
+### Q32: Before launching with a parallel-cable winch, the pilot notices the second cable lying close to the glider. What should be done? ^t70q32
+- A) Keep watching the second cable and release after take-off if needed
+- B) Release the cable immediately and inform the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Continue with the normal take-off and inform the controller after landing
+- D) Proceed with the launch using opposite rudder to steer away from the second cable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A second cable lying close to the glider before launch is a serious entanglement hazard. If the cable wraps around the glider or its own launch cable during the take-off run, it could cause catastrophic loss of control, structural damage, or prevent the pilot from releasing the cable. The only safe action is to abort the launch immediately by releasing the cable and informing the controller so the hazard can be cleared. Option A delays action until after take-off, when entanglement may already have occurred. Options C and D both proceed with the launch despite the known hazard, which is unacceptable.
+
+### Q33: What is the function of the weak link (breaking point) on a winch cable? ^t70q33
+- A) It limits the rate of climb during the winch launch
+- B) It prevents the glider airframe from being overstressed
+- C) It provides automatic cable release after the winch launch
+- D) It protects the winch from being overrun by the glider
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The weak link is a fusible element in the winch cable system designed to break at a predetermined load before the glider's airframe structural limits are exceeded. If cable tension becomes dangerously high -- due to excessive winch power, a sudden wind gust, or the pilot pitching up too steeply -- the weak link fails first, protecting the glider from structural damage. Option A is incorrect because climb rate is controlled by the winch operator and pilot, not the weak link. Option C is wrong because the cable is normally released by the pilot at the top of the launch. Option D describes protecting the winch, but the weak link is calibrated to the glider's structural limits.
+
+### Q34: During the final phase of a winch launch, the pilot keeps pulling back on the elevator. The automatic release trips under high wing loading. What are the consequences? ^t70q34
+- A) Only this sudden jerk ensures the cable releases properly
+- B) This technique compensates for insufficient wind correction
+- C) Extreme structural stress is placed on the glider airframe
+- D) A higher launch altitude can be achieved using this technique
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maintaining strong back pressure on the elevator at the moment the cable releases -- whether by the pilot or the automatic back-release -- causes a violent pitch-up as the restraining force of the cable suddenly disappears while the elevator is still commanding nose-up. This creates extreme structural loads (high positive g-forces) on the airframe, potentially exceeding design limits and causing structural failure. The correct technique is to progressively ease back pressure as the launch nears its peak. Option A misunderstands the release mechanism. Option B confuses wind correction with pitch control. Option D wrongly encourages a dangerous practice.
+
+### Q35: An off-field landing in mountainous terrain is necessary and the only available site is steeply inclined. How should the approach be flown? ^t70q35
+- A) Fly the approach at minimum speed with a careful flare upon reaching the landing site
+- B) Approach with extra speed, then make a quick flare to match the slope gradient
+- C) Approach parallel to the ridge with headwind, according to the prevailing wind
+- D) Approach down the ridge at increased speed, adjusting pitch to follow the ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing on a steeply inclined slope requires extra approach speed to provide adequate control authority and safety margin in the turbulent and unpredictable conditions typical of mountainous terrain. A quick, decisive flare is needed to match the glider's flight path to the slope gradient at the moment of touchdown, preventing the nose from striking the uphill surface. Option A (minimum speed) leaves no margin for wind shear or turbulence common near slopes. Option C (parallel approach) does not address the need to land uphill. Option D (approaching downhill) means landing with a tailwind component and increasing groundspeed, making the landing extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q36: At 6000 m MSL, the pilot realises that the oxygen supply will run out within minutes. What should be done? ^t70q36
+- A) After oxygen runs out, remain at this altitude for no more than 30 minutes
+- B) Reduce oxygen consumption by breathing slowly
+- C) Deploy spoilers and descend at the maximum permissible speed
+- D) At the first sign of hypoxia, begin descending at the maximum allowed speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6000 m, the time of useful consciousness without supplemental oxygen is only a few minutes. The pilot must begin an immediate emergency descent using full spoilers and the maximum permissible speed to reach breathable altitude (below approximately 3000 m) as quickly as possible. Option A is dangerously wrong -- remaining at 6000 m without oxygen for 30 minutes would result in unconsciousness and death. Option B (slow breathing) does not meaningfully extend oxygen duration at this altitude. Option D (waiting for symptoms) is too late -- hypoxia impairs judgment first, and the pilot may not recognise their own deterioration.
+
+### Q37: What colour is the emergency canopy release handle? ^t70q37
+- A) Blue
+- B) Yellow
+- C) Red
+- D) Green
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Emergency controls in aircraft are universally colour-coded red to ensure instant recognition under stress, in poor lighting, or when the pilot is disoriented after an accident. The emergency canopy jettison handle must be immediately identifiable because rapid egress may be needed following a crash or fire. This red colour coding is an international aviation standard applied consistently across all aircraft types. Options A (blue), B (yellow), and D (green) are used for other cockpit functions but never for emergency release mechanisms.
+
+### Q38: Why must trim masses or lead ballast be firmly secured in a glider? ^t70q38
+- A) To ensure the maximum allowed mass is not exceeded
+- B) To prevent them from jamming controls or causing a centre-of-gravity shift
+- C) To guarantee a comfortable seating position for the pilot
+- D) To protect the pilot from injury during turbulent thermal flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ballast and trim masses in a glider must be rigidly secured because any movement during flight can have catastrophic consequences. A loose weight sliding aft shifts the centre of gravity beyond the approved limit, potentially making the aircraft uncontrollable in pitch. If a weight slides into the control linkage area, it could physically jam the rudder, elevator, or aileron cables, preventing the pilot from controlling the aircraft. Option A (maximum mass) is a separate loading consideration, not about securing. Option C (comfort) is trivial compared to the safety issue. Option D (injury protection) is a secondary concern to the primary risk of loss of control.
+
+### Q39: During a winch launch, the airspeed indicator fails after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q39
+- A) Push the stick forward, release the cable, and fly a short circuit at minimum speed
+- B) Continue the launch to normal altitude, then use the horizon and airstream noise for an immediate circuit and landing
+- C) Continue to normal altitude, then use visual and audio cues to proceed with the planned flight
+- D) Try to restore the ASI by making abrupt speed changes during the launch
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the ASI fails during a winch launch that is otherwise proceeding normally, the pilot can continue to normal launch altitude using the horizon for pitch reference and airstream noise as an approximate speed indicator. After release, the pilot should fly an immediate circuit and land, using the same visual and auditory cues. Option A (immediate release and short circuit) may be overly hasty if the launch is stable. Option C is unsafe -- continuing a cross-country flight without a functioning ASI means flying without reliable speed information, which is dangerous particularly in varying conditions. Option D (abrupt speed changes) could destabilise the launch and is not a troubleshooting method.
+
+### Q40: Why is launching with the centre of gravity beyond the aft limit prohibited? ^t70q40
+- A) Because the maximum permissible speed would be significantly reduced
+- B) Because the increased nose-down moment could not be compensated
+- C) Because structural limits might be exceeded
+- D) Because elevator authority may be insufficient to control the flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With the centre of gravity at or beyond the aft limit, the moment arm between the CG and the elevator is shortened, reducing the elevator's ability to generate a corrective pitching moment. In extreme cases, the pilot may be unable to push the nose down to prevent a stall or recover from a pitch-up, particularly during the critical phases of winch launch or aerotow. This makes the aircraft effectively uncontrollable in pitch. Option A (speed reduction) is not the primary concern. Option B (nose-down moment) is backwards -- an aft CG creates a nose-up tendency, not nose-down. Option C (structural limits) relates to loading, not CG position.
+
+### Q41: What effect does ice accumulation on the wings have? ^t70q41
+- A) It reduces friction drag
+- B) It improves slow-flight performance
+- C) It lowers the stall speed
+- D) It raises the stall speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ice accumulation on the wings disrupts the smooth aerofoil shape, increasing surface roughness and altering the lift distribution. This reduces the maximum lift coefficient the wing can produce, meaning the wing must fly faster to generate sufficient lift, which raises the stall speed. Ice also adds weight and significantly increases drag, further degrading performance. For gliders, even a thin layer of ice can cause dramatic performance loss. Option A is incorrect -- ice increases surface roughness and drag. Option B is wrong because slow-flight performance worsens severely. Option C is the opposite of what happens.
+
+### Q42: The landing gear extends but will not lock despite several attempts. How should the landing be performed? ^t70q42
+- A) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at increased speed
+- B) Keep the gear extended but unlocked and land normally
+- C) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at minimum speed
+- D) Hold the gear handle firmly during a normal landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An unlocked undercarriage poses the risk of collapsing unpredictably on touchdown, which can cause the glider to veer violently, ground-loop, or nose-over. A controlled belly landing with gear fully retracted at minimum speed provides a predictable, stable deceleration on the fuselage skid. Minimum speed reduces the impact forces and sliding distance. Option A (increased speed) unnecessarily increases the impact energy. Option B (landing on unlocked gear) risks uncontrolled collapse. Option D (holding the handle) provides no guarantee the gear will stay extended under landing loads and distracts the pilot during a critical phase.
+
+### Q43: When flying into heavy snowfall, what is the greatest immediate danger? ^t70q43
+- A) Rapid increase in airframe icing
+- B) Sudden blockage of the pitot-static system
+- C) Sudden loss of visibility
+- D) Sudden increase in aircraft mass
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Heavy snowfall can reduce visibility from adequate VMC to near-zero almost instantaneously, which is the most immediately dangerous effect for a VFR glider pilot. Without visual references, the pilot cannot maintain spatial orientation, see terrain, obstacles, or other aircraft, and is at immediate risk of controlled flight into terrain or disorientation. Option A (icing) is a concern but develops more gradually. Option B (pitot blockage) affects speed indication but is less immediately life-threatening than total loss of visual reference. Option D (increased mass) is a minor secondary effect.
+
+### Q44: A tailwind off-field landing is unavoidable. How should it be executed? ^t70q44
+- A) Approach at increased speed without using spoilers
+- B) Normal approach, then extend spoilers and push the nose down upon reaching the landing site
+- C) Approach at reduced speed, expecting shorter flare and ground roll
+- D) Approach at normal speed, expecting a longer flare and ground roll
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a tailwind landing, the pilot maintains normal indicated airspeed (the stall margin must be preserved regardless of wind direction), but the groundspeed will be higher than normal, resulting in a longer flare distance and significantly longer ground roll. The pilot must select a field long enough to accommodate this. Option A (increased speed, no spoilers) worsens the situation by adding even more groundspeed. Option B (late spoiler deployment) does not allow proper glidepath management. Option C (reduced speed) dangerously reduces the margin above stall and is incorrect -- a tailwind increases, not decreases, the ground roll distance.
+
+### Q45: When landing with a tailwind, what must the pilot do? ^t70q45
+- A) Retract the landing gear to shorten the ground roll
+- B) Increase the approach speed
+- C) Approach at normal speed with a shallow angle
+- D) Compensate for the tailwind by sideslipping
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the approach should be flown at normal indicated airspeed, but the approach angle relative to the ground will appear shallower because the higher groundspeed means the glider covers more ground per unit of altitude lost. The pilot must recognise this flatter trajectory and plan for the longer ground roll. Option A (retracting gear) removes braking capability and is dangerous. Option B (increasing speed) adds even more groundspeed and worsens the landing distance problem. Option D (sideslip) does not effectively compensate for a tailwind -- it increases drag and sink rate but does not reduce groundspeed.
+
+### Q46: Tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the approach and landing be conducted? ^t70q46
+- A) Approach at increased speed, but avoid using spoilers
+- B) Approach at normal speed, controlling speed with spoilers
+- C) Approach at minimum speed, making gentle control corrections
+- D) Approach at increased speed with firm control inputs to correct attitude changes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In gusty conditions (10 kt gust spread between 15 and 25 kt), the pilot should add a gust correction factor to the normal approach speed -- typically half the gust increment (5 kt in this case) -- to maintain an adequate margin above stall when a gust temporarily drops away and airspeed decreases. Firm, positive control inputs are needed to promptly correct the rapid attitude changes caused by gusts. Option A avoids spoilers, which are essential for glidepath control. Option B uses normal speed, leaving insufficient margin for gust-induced speed loss. Option C (minimum speed) is dangerous because any gust dropout could cause an immediate stall.
+
+### Q47: A glider pilot encounters strong sink while ridge soaring. What is the recommended action? ^t70q47
+- A) Increase speed and head away from the ridge
+- B) Continue flying, as mountain downdrafts are typically brief
+- C) Increase speed and move closer to the ridge
+- D) Increase speed and land parallel to the ridge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Strong sink while ridge soaring indicates the pilot has entered the lee-side downdraft zone where descending air can exceed the glider's maximum sink rate, trapping it in a downward flow near terrain. The immediate response is to increase speed to best penetration speed and head away from the ridge toward the valley or upwind side, where conditions are safer and landing options exist. Option B is dangerously complacent -- mountain downdrafts can be sustained and powerful. Option C (closer to the ridge) increases terrain collision risk. Option D (landing parallel to the ridge) may not be feasible on steep terrain.
+
+### Q48: A glider flying beneath an expanding cumulus that is developing into a thunderstorm rapidly approaches cloud base. What should the pilot do? ^t70q48
+- A) Slow to minimum speed and exit the thermal area in a gentle turn
+- B) Tighten harness and be prepared for severe gusts while continuing to thermal
+- C) Enter the thunderstorm cloud and continue using instruments
+- D) Deploy spoilers within speed limits and leave the thermal area at maximum permissible speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A cumulus developing into a cumulonimbus produces extreme updrafts that can suck a glider into the cloud involuntarily, where severe turbulence, icing, lightning, and loss of visual orientation create life-threatening conditions. The pilot must immediately open spoilers and accelerate to maximum permissible speed (VNE) to maximise descent rate and escape the lifting area as quickly as possible. Option A (slowing down) reduces the ability to escape and increases the risk of being drawn into the cloud. Option B (continuing to thermal) invites disaster. Option C (entering the cloud) is potentially fatal in a glider without full instrument capability.
+
+### Q49: After landing, you discover that a pen may have fallen into the cockpit. What must be considered? ^t70q49
+- A) Other pilots due to fly the glider should be informed about the missing pen
+- B) A flight without a writing instrument on board is not permitted
+- C) Small, light loose items in the fuselage can be regarded as uncritical
+- D) The cockpit must be thoroughly checked for loose objects before the next flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any loose object in a glider cockpit is a potential flight safety hazard because it can slide into the control linkage area and jam the rudder pedals, control column, or trim mechanism, preventing the pilot from controlling the aircraft. A pen lodged under a rudder pedal can prevent full deflection at a critical moment. Before the next flight, the cockpit must be thoroughly searched and the object found and removed. Option A (informing others) is insufficient -- the object must be found. Option B is irrelevant to flight safety. Option C is dangerously wrong -- even small items can jam critical controls.
+
+### Q50: Flying near the aerodrome at about 250 m AGL, you encounter strong sink and decide on a safety landing. At what speed should you fly toward the airfield? ^t70q50
+- A) Maximum manoeuvring speed VA
+- B) Best glide speed
+- C) Minimum sink rate speed
+- D) Best glide speed plus allowances for downdrafts and wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When trying to reach the airfield through strong sink at low altitude, the pilot should fly at best glide speed (which maximises distance per unit of altitude lost) plus additional speed to compensate for the sinking air and any headwind. The speed increment accounts for the fact that the sink reduces the effective glide ratio, and additional speed improves penetration through the descending air mass. Option A (VA) is higher than necessary and wastes altitude. Option B (best glide speed alone) does not account for the adverse conditions. Option C (minimum sink speed) maximises time aloft but minimises ground coverage, which is the wrong priority when trying to reach a specific point.
+
+### Q51: You have just passed the LAPL(S) practical exam. May you carry passengers as soon as the licence is issued? ^t70q51
+- A) Yes, provided the recent experience requirements are fulfilled.
+- B) No, only after completing 10 flight hours or 30 flights as PIC following licence issue.
+- C) Yes, without any restriction.
+- D) No, carrying passengers requires an SPL licence.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulation FCL.135.S, a newly issued LAPL(S) holder must complete at least 10 hours of flight time or 30 flights as pilot-in-command on sailplanes after licence issue before carrying passengers. This consolidation requirement ensures the pilot gains sufficient solo experience before taking responsibility for another person's safety. Option A is incorrect because recent experience alone is not sufficient -- the post-licence minimum must also be met. Option C is wrong because the restriction clearly exists. Option D is incorrect because the LAPL(S) does permit passenger carrying after the experience requirement is fulfilled.
+
+### Q52: On final approach to an out-landing field, you suddenly encounter a strong thermal. How should you react? ^t70q52
+- A) Retract the airbrakes and slow down to minimum sink speed to exploit the thermal.
+- B) Fully extend the airbrakes and lengthen the approach path if necessary.
+- C) Continue the approach unchanged, since a thermal is always followed by a downdraft.
+- D) Retract the airbrakes and circle gently to exit the thermal.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On final approach to an out-landing field, the pilot is committed to landing and should not attempt to exploit a thermal at low altitude. A strong thermal will lift the glider above the intended approach path, potentially causing an overshoot. The correct response is to fully extend the airbrakes to increase sink rate and maintain control of the approach, extending the approach path if necessary to arrive at the correct height over the threshold. Option A (retracting airbrakes and thermalling) is extremely dangerous at low altitude. Option C is incorrect because approach management must be active. Option D (circling on final) wastes altitude and risks losing the field.
+
+### Q53: You land on a grass runway shortly after a rain shower. What should you expect? ^t70q53
+- A) The glider will veer off the runway due to aquaplaning.
+- B) The glider will brake rapidly on the wet surface without needing the wheel brake.
+- C) The glider will stop noticeably more quickly after touchdown.
+- D) Reduced wheel grip and less effective braking, resulting in a longer ground roll.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A wet grass surface significantly reduces the friction between the glider's wheel and the ground, making braking less effective and extending the ground roll distance. The pilot must anticipate this reduced braking performance and ensure the available runway length is sufficient. Using the wheel brake aggressively on wet grass can also cause the wheel to lock and the glider to skid. Option A (aquaplaning) is more of a concern on hard paved surfaces at high speed than on grass. Options B and C are the opposite of reality -- wet grass decreases, not increases, braking effectiveness.
+
+### Q54: When flying late in the day in a valley toward shaded slopes, what difficulty should you expect? ^t70q54
+- A) Severe turbulence.
+- B) Strong downdrafts.
+- C) Difficulty detecting other aircraft in the shaded areas.
+- D) Glare from the low sun on the horizon.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Late in the day, when sunlit and shaded areas alternate across a valley, the contrast makes it extremely difficult to detect other aircraft against the dark background of shaded slopes. Aircraft that would be clearly visible against a sunlit hillside become nearly invisible in shadow, significantly increasing the risk of mid-air collision. This visual detection challenge demands heightened vigilance and predictable flight paths in valley flying. Option A (severe turbulence) and Option B (strong downdrafts) are not specifically linked to shading. Option D (sun glare) is a different visibility issue unrelated to shaded slopes.
+
+### Q55: On a cross-country flight with no thermals available, you decide to make an out-landing. Several fields look suitable. By what altitude must your final choice be made? ^t70q55
+- A) When you can positively identify the wind direction.
+- B) Glider at 300 m AGL; motorglider at 400 m AGL.
+- C) Glider at 400 m AGL; motorglider at 300 m AGL.
+- D) Glider at 300 m AGL; motorglider at 200 m AGL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The field selection must be finalised no later than 300 m AGL for a pure glider, leaving sufficient altitude to fly a proper circuit pattern and approach. For a motor glider, the decision altitude is 400 m AGL because the pilot needs additional height to manage engine start procedures and has the added complexity of the power unit. Below these altitudes, the pilot should be committed to the chosen field and flying the circuit. Option A does not specify a concrete altitude. Option C reverses the values. Option D sets the motor glider limit too low at 200 m AGL.
+
+### Q56: You are thermalling at 1500 m AGL over flat terrain with no other glider nearby. In which direction should you circle? ^t70q56
+- A) Circle to the left.
+- B) There is no rule governing the direction.
+- C) Within 5 km of an aerodrome turn left; otherwise choose freely.
+- D) Use figure-eight patterns to best exploit the thermal.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When thermalling alone with no other gliders in the thermal, there is no regulation or convention dictating which direction to circle. The pilot is free to choose whichever direction best centres the thermal or feels most comfortable. The rule to conform to a set direction applies only when another aircraft is already established in the thermal -- in that case, the newcomer must adopt the direction of the first aircraft. Option A imposes an unnecessary restriction. Option C cites a nonexistent proximity rule. Option D (figure eights) is not an efficient thermalling technique.
+
+### Q57: You are on an aerotow departure in calm conditions. The towrope breaks just below safety height. What do you do? ^t70q57
+- A) Extend airbrakes, push the stick forward, and land straight ahead.
+- B) Push the stick forward, release the rope (twice), and land in the opposite direction.
+- C) Establish a glide, release the rope (twice), and land straight ahead if possible.
+- D) Immediately release the rope once, then establish a glide and land straight ahead.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a towrope break below safety height in calm conditions, the pilot should first establish a stable gliding attitude to maintain safe airspeed, then release the remaining cable by pulling the release twice (to ensure complete separation). With insufficient altitude for a turn in calm conditions, the pilot should land straight ahead if possible, using the available field ahead. Option A deploys airbrakes immediately, which may be premature before assessing the situation. Option B attempts a 180-degree turn below safety height, which is extremely dangerous without wind assistance. Option D releases only once, which may not ensure complete cable separation.
+
+### Q58: You are ready to launch in a glider with a strong crosswind from the right. What do you do? ^t70q58
+- A) Hold the wheel brake until the engine reaches full power.
+- B) During the ground roll, pull the stick fully back to lift off as quickly as possible.
+- C) Ask the ground helper to hold the right wing slightly lower during the take-off run.
+- D) Ask the ground helper to run alongside the glider until you have enough speed to control bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a strong crosswind from the right, the upwind (right) wing tends to be lifted by the wind, which could cause the glider to roll left and dig the left wingtip into the ground. By having the ground helper hold the right wing slightly lower at the start of the ground roll, this tendency is counteracted until the glider reaches sufficient speed for the ailerons to become effective. Option A refers to engine power, which is irrelevant for a glider. Option B (pulling back fully) risks a premature, uncontrolled lift-off in the crosswind. Option D (running alongside) is impractical beyond the first few metres and does not address the specific wing-lifting problem.
+
+### Q59: During an aerotow departure, acceleration is clearly insufficient. What should you do when the take-off abort point is reached? ^t70q59
+- A) Push the stick slightly forward to reduce drag.
+- B) Release the towrope.
+- C) Pull the elevator quickly to get the glider airborne.
+- D) Extend the flaps.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the tug-and-glider combination is not accelerating adequately and the pre-determined abort point is reached without sufficient speed, the only correct action is to release the towrope immediately. Continuing a take-off with insufficient speed risks an uncontrolled stall shortly after lift-off or running off the end of the runway. Option A (reducing drag) will not solve a fundamental acceleration problem. Option C (pulling to get airborne) forces the glider into the air below safe flying speed, risking an immediate stall. Option D (extending flaps) may increase lift but does not address the root cause of insufficient acceleration.
+
+### Q60: What lateral clearance from a slope must be maintained when flying a glider? ^t70q60
+- A) A sufficient lateral safety distance.
+- B) At least 60 m horizontally.
+- C) At least 150 m horizontally.
+- D) It depends on the thermal conditions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Regulations for ridge soaring specify a minimum lateral clearance of 60 metres from the slope. This safety margin provides reaction time if the pilot encounters sudden sink, turbulence, or a wind shift near the terrain, and prevents collision with the slope surface. Option A is too vague and does not specify a concrete value. Option C (150 m) overstates the regulatory minimum, though greater clearance is always prudent in adverse conditions. Option D incorrectly suggests the clearance is variable based on thermal activity rather than being a fixed minimum requirement.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_61_90_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_61_90_out.md
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+### Q61: What requires special attention when flying in high mountains? ^t70q61
+- A) FLARM may produce false warnings due to reflections off rock faces.
+- B) GPS signal reception may be lost.
+- C) Radio contact may be interrupted.
+- D) Weather conditions can change far more rapidly than expected (e.g. sudden thunderstorm development).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In high mountain environments, weather can deteriorate with extreme speed due to orographic lifting and localized heating effects. This is the most significant hazard requiring special attention. Options A, B, and C describe technical inconveniences that may occasionally occur, but they are not the primary hazard. Rapid weather changes can trap a pilot in valleys with deteriorating visibility and violent turbulence, making option D the critical safety concern.
+
+### Q62: When installing the oxygen system in a glider for an Alpine flight, what is absolutely essential? ^t70q62
+- A) That the rubber seal is undamaged.
+- B) That all components in contact with oxygen are completely free of grease.
+- C) That the coupling nut is tightened to the correct torque.
+- D) That the cylinder connector is well greased.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Oxygen under pressure can react violently with hydrocarbon-based greases and oils, potentially causing a flash fire or explosion. All components in contact with oxygen must be completely grease-free. Option D is directly dangerous because greasing the connector introduces a combustion risk. Options A and C describe good practices but are not the absolute safety-critical requirement. The oxygen-grease incompatibility is a fundamental rule in aviation oxygen system handling.
+
+### Q63: After a collision, you must bail out at approximately 400 m. When should the parachute be opened? ^t70q63
+- A) After 2 to 3 seconds of freefall.
+- B) When you have stabilised in freefall.
+- C) Just before leaving the glider.
+- D) Immediately after leaving the glider.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At only 400 m above ground, there is no time for any delay. The parachute must be deployed immediately after clearing the aircraft. Freefall covers roughly 50 m per second, so even 2-3 seconds of delay (option A) would consume 100-150 m of precious altitude. Option B (stabilizing in freefall) wastes critical seconds. Option C (before leaving) would entangle the parachute with the aircraft structure. At 400 m, every second counts for successful deployment and deceleration.
+
+### Q64: On short final for an out-landing, you realise the field is too short. What do you do? ^t70q64
+- A) Reduce speed to the minimum to shorten the landing distance.
+- B) Continue straight ahead, deploy full airbrakes, and prepare for an emergency stop using all available means.
+- C) Maintain heading and land using full airbrakes to stop as early as possible.
+- D) Attempt to turn and find a longer alternative field.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On short final, the commitment to land has been made. The safest action is to continue straight ahead with full airbrakes and use every available means (wheel brake, ground friction) to stop in the shortest distance possible. Option A (reducing to minimum speed) risks stalling close to the ground. Option C is similar to B but less specific about using all stopping means. Option D (turning to find another field) at this low altitude is extremely dangerous and likely to result in a stall-spin accident.
+
+### Q65: What does FLARM do? ^t70q65
+- A) It shows the precise position of other gliders.
+- B) It warns of other FLARM-equipped aircraft that may pose a collision risk.
+- C) It recommends avoidance manoeuvres when a collision risk exists.
+- D) It shows the exact positions of all aircraft equipped with FLARM or a transponder.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM is a traffic awareness system that calculates collision risk based on predicted flight paths of nearby FLARM-equipped aircraft and issues warnings when a potential conflict is detected. Option A overstates its precision. Option C is incorrect because FLARM warns but does not recommend specific avoidance maneuvers. Option D is wrong because FLARM only detects other FLARM devices, not transponder-equipped aircraft (that would require a separate ADS-B receiver).
+
+### Q66: During a cross-country flight, you must land at a high-altitude aerodrome with no wind. At what indicated airspeed do you fly the approach? ^t70q66
+- A) About 5 km/h less than at sea level.
+- B) Increase the sea-level speed by 1% for every 100 m of altitude.
+- C) About 5 km/h more than at sea level.
+- D) The same as at sea level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The indicated airspeed (IAS) for the approach should be the same as at sea level because the ASI measures dynamic pressure, which determines aerodynamic forces regardless of altitude. The stall IAS does not change with altitude. However, the true airspeed and groundspeed will be higher at altitude due to lower air density. Options A and C incorrectly adjust IAS, and option B applies a TAS correction to IAS, which is unnecessary.
+
+### Q67: What do you notice when entering the centre of a downdraft? ^t70q67
+- A) One wing rises and the aircraft begins to turn.
+- B) The nose pitches up and you feel a brief increase in g-load.
+- C) The glider accelerates and you feel increased g-load.
+- D) The glider slows and you feel a brief decrease in g-load.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a downdraft, the descending air mass reduces the effective angle of attack on the wings, temporarily decreasing lift. The pilot feels a brief reduction in g-load (a sensation of lightness) as the aircraft begins to sink with the descending air. The glider's airspeed initially decreases momentarily. Option B describes what happens entering an updraft. Options A and C do not accurately describe the symmetrical effect of entering a downdraft center.
+
+### Q68: During a cross-country flight over the Jura, you notice cirrus forming to the west. What should you expect? ^t70q68
+- A) Weaker thermals due to reduced solar radiation.
+- B) Increased upper-level instability from moisture, producing stronger thermals.
+- C) A transition from cumulus thermals to blue (dry) thermals.
+- D) Cirrus have no effect on conditions in the thermal layer.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds at high altitude filter incoming solar radiation, reducing the surface heating that drives thermal convection. Less heating means weaker thermals and potentially an earlier end to the soaring day. Option B is wrong because cirrus does not increase instability at thermal altitudes. Option C describes a shift that may occur but is not the primary effect. Option D underestimates the impact cirrus has on thermal generation through solar radiation reduction.
+
+### Q69: What speed maximises distance covered against a headwind? ^t70q69
+- A) Minimum sink speed.
+- B) Best glide ratio speed.
+- C) A speed higher than best glide ratio speed.
+- D) The speed corresponding to McCready zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To maximize distance in a headwind, the pilot must fly faster than best-glide speed. The headwind reduces groundspeed, so the glider spends more time in the air and descends more before covering the desired ground distance. By increasing speed above best-glide, the pilot accepts a steeper glide angle but gains enough extra groundspeed to more than compensate. Option A (minimum sink) minimizes descent rate but covers minimal distance. Option B (best glide) is optimal only in still air. Option D (McCready zero) equals best-glide speed.
+
+### Q70: Which of these fields is best for an out-landing? ^t70q70
+- A) A 400 m freshly ploughed field.
+- B) A 300 m maize field with a steady headwind.
+- C) A 250 m country lane with a strong headwind.
+- D) A 200 m meadow that has just been mown.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A freshly mown meadow provides a smooth, firm surface free of tall vegetation and hidden obstacles, ideal for a short ground roll in a glider. Option A (ploughed field) has soft soil and deep furrows that can nose the glider over. Option B (maize field) has tall crops that obscure hazards and create drag inconsistencies. Option C (country lane) is narrow, potentially lined with trees and power lines, and poses collision risks with vehicles.
+
+### Q71: May you use the on-board radio to communicate with your retrieve crew on the dedicated frequency without holding a radiotelephony extension? ^t70q71
+- A) Only exceptionally
+- B) Yes
+- C) As a general rule, once per flight, shortly before landing
+- D) No
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pilots may use the on-board radio on dedicated glider frequencies to communicate with their retrieve crew without needing a separate radiotelephony extension or rating. These frequencies are designated for glider operations and permit such operational communications. Option A unnecessarily restricts this practice. Option C invents a frequency limitation that does not exist. Option D incorrectly prohibits a communication that is routinely permitted.
+
+### Q72: At an aerodrome at 1800 m AMSL, how does the ground speed compare to the indicated airspeed on approach? ^t70q72
+- A) It depends on the temperature.
+- B) Ground speed is lower.
+- C) They are the same.
+- D) Ground speed is higher.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 1800 m AMSL, air density is lower than at sea level, so the true airspeed is higher than indicated airspeed for the same dynamic pressure reading. In nil-wind conditions, groundspeed equals TAS, which exceeds IAS. This means the aircraft approaches the runway at a higher groundspeed, requiring awareness of a longer ground roll. Options B and C underestimate the density altitude effect. Option A is partially true but the dominant factor is altitude.
+
+### Q73: Is wearing a parachute compulsory during glider flights? ^t70q73
+- A) Yes, for all flights above 300 m AGL
+- B) No
+- C) Only when performing aerobatics
+- D) Yes, always
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not compulsory for glider flights under current regulations, although it is strongly recommended and standard practice. The decision is left to the pilot. Option A invents an altitude-based requirement. Option C creates a restriction limited to aerobatics that does not exist. Option D overstates the requirement. While practically all glider pilots wear parachutes, it remains a personal safety choice.
+
+### Q74: During a winch launch, just after reaching the climbing angle, the cable breaks near the winch. How should you react? ^t70q74
+- A) Extend the airbrakes immediately
+- B) First establish normal flight attitude, then release the cable
+- C) Report the incident by radio
+- D) Release the cable immediately, then establish a normal flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break during the climb phase, the immediate priority is to release the remaining cable (which could snag) and then lower the nose to establish a safe glide. Option A (airbrakes first) wastes altitude when every meter counts. Option B reverses the priority because establishing glide before releasing could allow the cable to become entangled. Option C (radio call) wastes precious seconds during a time-critical emergency.
+
+### Q75: What must be considered during an aerotow departure in strong crosswind? ^t70q75
+- A) The tow plane must lift off before the glider
+- B) After take-off, correct into the wind until the tow plane lifts off
+- C) The take-off distance will be shorter
+- D) Before departure, offset the glider to the upwind side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a strong crosswind aerotow departure, the glider should be positioned upwind of the tow aircraft's centerline to prevent being blown across the tug's path during the ground roll. Option A states a normal sequence that does not address crosswind specifically. Option B provides a partial technique but does not address the pre-departure setup. Option C is incorrect because crosswinds typically increase takeoff distance.
+
+### Q76: You enter a thermal in the lowlands at 1500 m AGL with no other glider nearby. In which direction do you circle? ^t70q76
+- A) Circle to the right
+- B) There is no regulation on this
+- C) Circle to the left
+- D) First perform a figure-eight to locate the best lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a thermal alone, the recommended technique is to first perform a figure-eight pattern to identify the strongest part of the thermal before committing to a circling direction. This allows the pilot to center the thermal efficiently. Options A and C prescribe a fixed direction without first locating the core. Option B is technically correct regarding regulations but does not describe the best practice. The figure-eight technique optimizes climb rate by finding the thermal center.
+
+### Q77: What lateral distance from a slope must you maintain in a glider? ^t70q77
+- A) It depends on the lift conditions
+- B) 150 m horizontally
+- C) 60 m horizontally
+- D) A sufficient safety distance must be maintained
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying near a slope, the pilot must maintain a sufficient safety distance that accounts for current conditions including wind, turbulence, and terrain features. This is a judgment-based requirement rather than a fixed numeric value. Option A only considers one factor. Options B (150 m) and C (60 m) specify fixed distances that may be appropriate in some contexts but do not reflect the general guidance emphasizing adequate safety margin.
+
+### Q78: You enter a thermal at 500 m AGL below a cumulus and see another glider circling 50 m above you. In which direction should you turn? ^t70q78
+- A) You are free to choose, since the vertical separation is sufficient
+- B) Circle in the same direction as the glider above you
+- C) Circle in the opposite direction so you can observe the other glider from below
+- D) You cannot use this thermal because the height difference is less than 150 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal occupied by another glider, you must circle in the same direction to maintain a predictable traffic pattern and avoid head-on encounters. This is a fundamental rule of shared thermal etiquette. Option A incorrectly dismisses the need for directional coordination. Option C (opposite direction) creates dangerous head-on convergence paths. Option D invents a non-existent 150 m vertical separation requirement.
+
+### Q79: During an off-field landing, the glider sustains 70% damage; the pilot is unhurt. What must be done? ^t70q79
+- A) Submit a written report with a sketch to FOCA within 3 days
+- B) Notify the local police within 24 hours
+- C) Immediately notify the investigation bureau via REGA
+- D) Report the damage to the accident investigation bureau within the following week
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a glider sustains major damage (70%) without injuries, the pilot must notify the local police within 24 hours. Option A (FOCA report in 3 days) does not meet the urgency required. Option C (immediate REGA notification) is the procedure for accidents involving injuries or fatalities. Option D (report within a week) is too slow for an incident involving 70% airframe damage.
+
+### Q80: What requires special attention when taking off on a hard (paved) runway? ^t70q80
+- A) The wingtip helper must run alongside for longer
+- B) Pull back on the stick longer than usual
+- C) Apply moderate wheel brake at the start of the roll
+- D) Expect a longer ground roll than normal
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a hard paved runway, a glider's main wheel has less rolling resistance compared to grass, which can affect the ground roll characteristics. Additionally, on pavement the aircraft may weathervane more easily. Option A is not specific to hard runways. Option B (pulling back longer) could cause the tail to strike the runway. Option C (wheel brake at start) would impede acceleration during the most critical phase.
+
+### Q81: How should a water landing (ditching) be carried out? ^t70q81
+- A) Just before contact, pitch the glider up sharply to touch tail-first
+- B) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation, and land at slightly above normal speed
+- C) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, and land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- D) Perform a sideslip to reduce impact force on the wing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing, the pilot should tighten all harnesses, close ventilation openings to slow water ingress, and approach at slightly above normal speed with gear retracted. Option A (tail-first) risks a violent pitch-forward on impact. Option C (extending gear) would cause the wheels to catch the water and likely flip the aircraft. Option D (sideslip) creates an asymmetric water entry that could cartwheel the aircraft.
+
+### Q82: During an off-field landing, how can the wind direction best be determined? ^t70q82
+- A) By observing movement of leaves in the trees
+- B) By watching wave patterns in wheat fields
+- C) By observing the glider's drift during altitude-losing spirals
+- D) By observing the behaviour of grazing livestock
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most reliable method for determining wind direction from the air is to observe the glider's drift during altitude-loss spirals. The direction the aircraft drifts indicates the downwind direction, and the amount of drift indicates wind strength. This works at any altitude and any location. Options A (tree leaves) and B (wheat patterns) require being low enough to see detail. Option D (livestock) is unreliable as a wind indicator.
+
+### Q83: You are flying fast along a ridge and spot a slower glider ahead at about the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q83
+- A) Make a 180-degree turn and return along the slope
+- B) Overtake on the side away from the slope
+- C) Establish radio contact and ask about the other pilot's intentions
+- D) Dive below and clear upward at a safe distance, then continue
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When overtaking a slower glider on a ridge, always pass on the valley side (away from the slope) to maintain safe terrain clearance and avoid trapping the other pilot against the hillside. Option A (turning back) is unnecessary and wastes energy. Option C (radio contact) takes too long at closing speed. Option D (diving below) risks flying into the turbulent rotor zone closer to the terrain.
+
+### Q84: At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. What should you do? ^t70q84
+- A) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- B) Extend the airbrakes
+- C) Release the rope immediately
+- D) Warn the tow pilot by radio
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the slack tow rope, the rope can become entangled with the landing gear or other structures. The immediate action is to release the rope before any entanglement can occur. Option A (braking) does not prevent entanglement. Option B (airbrakes) is irrelevant to the immediate hazard. Option D (radio warning) wastes time during a situation requiring instant action.
+
+### Q85: Are glider flights permitted in Class C airspace? ^t70q85
+- A) Yes, provided the glider's transponder continuously transmits code 7000
+- B) Yes, if the pilot holds the radiotelephony extension, has received ATC authorisation, and maintains a continuous radio watch; exceptions are published on the soaring chart
+- C) Yes, without restrictions, in VMC
+- D) Yes, provided no NOTAM expressly prohibits them
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider flights are permitted in Class C airspace under specific conditions: the pilot must hold the radiotelephony extension, receive ATC authorization, and maintain continuous radio contact. Certain exceptions for gliders may be published on the soaring chart. Option A assumes gliders carry transponders, which most do not. Option C ignores mandatory ATC clearance and radio requirements. Option D incorrectly implies Class C is open by default.
+
+### Q86: You are flying along a slope on your right and spot an oncoming glider at the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q86
+- A) Extend airbrakes and dive for vertical separation
+- B) Move away on the side opposite to the slope
+- C) Climb away since you have enough speed
+- D) Maintain your heading
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When meeting an oncoming glider while ridge soaring, give way by turning away from the slope (toward the valley). Both pilots should take evasive action by moving away from the ridge. Option A (diving) risks terrain collision. Option C (climbing) may not be possible. Option D (maintaining heading) leads directly to a head-on collision.
+
+### Q87: You must land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you fly the final approach? ^t70q87
+- A) At best glide speed and somewhat higher than for a headwind landing
+- B) Normally, using a sideslip
+- C) Slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than for a headwind landing
+- D) Faster than for a headwind landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind on a limited field, fly slightly above minimum speed to minimize groundspeed at touchdown, and approach at a lower height to steepen the approach angle relative to the ground. Option A (best glide speed) is faster than needed and wastes field length. Option B (sideslip) addresses crosswind, not tailwind. Option D (faster approach) would increase groundspeed and ground roll on an already short field.
+
+### Q88: What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on an aerotow departure? ^t70q88
+- A) The take-off distance is the same as on a dry runway
+- B) The take-off distance will be longer
+- C) None of these answers is correct
+- D) The take-off distance will be shorter because the surface is slippery
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A waterlogged grass runway increases rolling resistance because the wheels sink into the soft, saturated surface, creating drag that slows acceleration. This results in a significantly longer takeoff distance. Option A ignores the substantial difference between conditions. Option D's logic is flawed because waterlogged grass creates suction and drag that impede acceleration, not help it.
+
+### Q89: On approach to an off-field landing, you suddenly notice a high-voltage power line across your landing axis. How do you react? ^t70q89
+- A) In all cases, fly over the power line
+- B) Pass under the line if flying over is not possible and no safe escape route exists
+- C) Execute a tight turn near the ground and land parallel to the line
+- D) Pass under the line as close as possible to a pylon
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The preferred action is always to fly over the power line. However, if altitude is insufficient and no alternative exists, passing under the line is acceptable as a last resort, between the pylons where cable sag provides maximum clearance. Option A (always fly over) is not possible when altitude is insufficient. Option C (tight turn near ground) risks a stall-spin accident. Option D (near a pylon) is where clearance is minimal because the cables attach at the top.
+
+### Q90: What is the standard spin recovery procedure when the manufacturer has not specified one? ^t70q90
+- A) Push the stick fully forward, apply full opposite rudder, then pull out
+- B) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin, then pull out
+- C) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite rudder, keep ailerons neutral, ease the stick slightly forward, then pull out
+- D) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite ailerons, push the stick fully forward, rudder neutral, then pull out
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard spin recovery sequence is: (1) identify the spin direction, (2) apply full opposite rudder to stop the rotation, (3) keep ailerons neutral because aileron input during a spin can be counterproductive, (4) ease the stick slightly forward to reduce the angle of attack below the stall angle, and (5) once rotation stops, centralize rudder and smoothly pull out. Option A omits identifying spin direction. Option B uses ailerons, which can deepen the spin. Option D uses ailerons instead of rudder as primary anti-spin control.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_91_120_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_70_91_120_out.md
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+### Q91: Unless ATC directs otherwise, how should a glider approach an aerodrome? ^t70q91
+- A) A straight-in approach must be flown to minimise disruption to other traffic
+- B) Follow the published approach procedures in the VFR guide or any other appropriate method
+- C) The landing must be preceded by at least one full circle above the signal area, with all turns to the left
+- D) The landing must be preceded by at least a half-circuit, with all turns to the left
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Unless ATC provides specific instructions, glider pilots should follow the published approach procedures for the aerodrome as described in the VFR guide or use any other method appropriate to the circumstances and traffic situation. This provides flexibility for glider operations, which differ from powered aircraft. Option A is too restrictive — straight-in approaches are not always required. Options C and D prescribe specific circuit patterns that may not apply to all aerodromes and do not reflect the flexibility that glider operations require.
+
+### Q92: Flying fast along a ridge, you see a slower glider ahead at approximately your altitude. What should you do? ^t70q92
+- A) Dive below and clear upward at a sufficient distance before continuing
+- B) Make a 180-degree turn and go back along the ridge
+- C) Establish radio contact and ask about the other pilot's intentions
+- D) Overtake on the valley side, away from the slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When overtaking a slower glider while ridge soaring, always pass on the valley side (away from the slope). This ensures both aircraft have adequate terrain clearance and the slower pilot is not trapped between you and the hillside. Option A (diving below) takes you into potential rotor turbulence near the terrain. Option B (turning back) is unnecessary when safe overtaking is possible. Option C (radio contact) is impractical at closing speed and delays the required action.
+
+### Q93: In flight, the rudder jams in the neutral position. What should you do? ^t70q93
+- A) Increase speed and continue the flight
+- B) Abandon the glider by parachute immediately
+- C) Control the glider with elevator and ailerons, make shallow turns, and land immediately
+- D) Consult the flight manual
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With the rudder jammed in neutral, the glider can still be controlled using elevator for pitch and ailerons for roll. Shallow coordinated turns are possible using ailerons alone, though adverse yaw will be present. The pilot should fly a conservative approach and land as soon as possible. Option A (continuing the flight) is reckless with a jammed control surface. Option B (immediate bailout) is premature when the aircraft remains controllable. Option D (consulting the manual) wastes time during an in-flight emergency requiring immediate action.
+
+### Q94: During the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. What is the correct action? ^t70q94
+- A) Release the rope immediately
+- B) Extend the airbrakes
+- C) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- D) Warn the tow pilot by radio
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the slack tow rope during the initial ground roll, the rope must be released immediately to prevent it from becoming entangled with the undercarriage or other structural components. A tangled rope during acceleration could cause a violent upset or drag the aircraft off course. Option B (airbrakes) does not address the hazard. Option C (wheel brake) cannot prevent rope entanglement. Option D (radio call) wastes critical time when immediate action is needed.
+
+### Q95: The tow rope breaks on the tug side before safety height is reached. How must the glider pilot react? ^t70q95
+- A) Pull back on the stick, release the rope, and land with a tailwind
+- B) Make a flat turn and land diagonally
+- C) Actuate the release handle twice and land on the aerodrome without exception
+- D) Immediately actuate the release handle twice and land straight ahead in the runway extension
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Below safety height, the pilot must immediately release the remaining rope by actuating the handle twice (to ensure complete disconnection) and land straight ahead in the runway extension. There is insufficient altitude for a circuit or turn back to the field. Option A (pulling back) is dangerous as it reduces speed when close to the ground. Option B (flat turn) risks a stall-spin at low altitude. Option C insists on landing on the aerodrome itself, which may require a turn that is unsafe below safety height.
+
+### Q96: How should the final approach be flown in a strong crosswind? ^t70q96
+- A) Never fully extend the airbrakes
+- B) Maintain runway alignment using only the rudder
+- C) Crab into the wind and increase speed
+- D) Always approach with a sideslip on the lee side
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a strong crosswind, the pilot should crab into the wind (point the nose upwind to maintain the desired ground track) and increase approach speed to improve control authority and provide a safety margin against gusts. The crab is maintained until the flare, where the pilot transitions to a wing-low or sideslip technique for touchdown. Option A arbitrarily restricts airbrake use. Option B (rudder only) cannot maintain runway alignment in a crosswind. Option D (sideslip from the lee side) is backwards — sideslip should be into the wind.
+
+### Q97: How should a water landing be performed? ^t70q97
+- A) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation, and land at slightly above normal speed
+- B) Just before landing, pitch up to touch down tail first
+- C) Perform a sideslip to reduce impact on the wing
+- D) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, and land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing (ditching), the pilot should tighten harnesses securely, close all ventilation openings to delay water ingress, and land at slightly above normal approach speed with the gear retracted. The higher speed ensures adequate control and a flatter touchdown angle. Option B (pitching up for tail-first contact) can cause a violent forward pitch on water impact. Option C (sideslip) creates asymmetric water entry. Option D (extending gear) would cause the wheels to catch the water surface and likely flip the aircraft.
+
+### Q98: You enter a thermal with no other glider nearby. In which direction do you circle? ^t70q98
+- A) Circle to the left
+- B) Circle to the right
+- C) First perform a figure-eight to find the best lift
+- D) There is no regulation on this
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When thermalling alone with no other aircraft in the thermal, there is no regulation requiring a specific direction of turn. The pilot is free to choose based on personal preference, thermal characteristics, or whatever direction best centers the thermal core. Option A and B each prescribe a fixed direction without justification. Option C (figure-eight) is a useful technique for centering the thermal but is not a regulatory requirement. The obligation to match turn direction only applies when another glider is already established in the thermal.
+
+### Q99: How is height expressed in a glider? ^t70q99
+- A) In flight levels only
+- B) Always in altitude (metres or feet)
+- C) According to the regulations of the countries being overflown
+- D) In height above the ground only
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Height references in glider operations must follow the regulations of the country being overflown, which vary between metric (metres) and imperial (feet) systems and between different altitude reference systems (QNH, QFE, flight levels). For example, Switzerland uses metres in certain contexts while other European countries use feet. Option A (flight levels only) ignores low-altitude references. Option B (always altitude) ignores height AGL requirements. Option D (AGL only) ignores the need for altitude AMSL for airspace awareness.
+
+### Q100: When the manufacturer has not specified a spin recovery procedure, what is the standard method? ^t70q100
+- A) Push the stick fully forward, apply full opposite rudder, then pull out
+- B) Push the stick forward, deflect ailerons opposite to the spin, then pull out
+- C) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite ailerons, push the stick fully forward with rudder neutral, then pull out
+- D) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite rudder, keep ailerons neutral, ease the stick slightly forward, then pull out
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard spin recovery sequence is: identify the spin direction, apply full opposite rudder to arrest the rotation, keep ailerons neutral (aileron input can worsen a spin), ease the stick forward to reduce angle of attack below critical, and once rotation stops, centralize rudder and smoothly pull out of the dive. Option A skips identification and uses the stick too aggressively. Option B uses ailerons, which can deepen the spin by increasing drag on the outer wing. Option C relies on ailerons with rudder neutral, which is the wrong primary control for spin recovery.
+
+### Q101: May changes be made at an accident site where a person has been injured, beyond essential rescue measures? ^t70q101
+- A) Yes, if there is only material damage
+- B) Yes, the wreck must be evacuated quickly to prevent third-party interference
+- C) Yes, if the aircraft operator has formally instructed it
+- D) No, unless the investigation authority has formally given authorisation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a person has been injured in an aviation accident, the accident site must be preserved as-is for the investigation authority. No changes may be made beyond what is necessary for rescue and firefighting, unless the investigation authority formally authorizes modifications. This preserves evidence for determining the cause. Option A is irrelevant since a person was injured. Option B incorrectly prioritizes wreck removal over evidence preservation. Option C is wrong because the aircraft operator does not have authority to alter an accident scene.
+
+### Q102: During aerotow, the pilot loses sight of the tug. What must be done? ^t70q102
+- A) Ask the tow pilot by radio for his position
+- B) Extend the airbrakes and wait
+- C) Release the rope immediately
+- D) Prepare for a parachute bailout
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider pilot cannot see the tug aircraft during aerotow, the towrope must be released immediately. Flying in tow without visual contact with the tug is extremely dangerous — the pilot cannot anticipate turns, altitude changes, or emergency actions by the tug, risking mid-air collision or being pulled into an uncontrolled attitude. Option A (radio call) takes too long and does not resolve the immediate danger. Option B (airbrakes and wait) maintains the dangerous connection. Option D (parachute) is premature.
+
+### Q103: Is it mandatory to wear a parachute when flying gliders? ^t70q103
+- A) Yes, always
+- B) No
+- C) Only for aerobatic flights
+- D) For all flights above 300 m AGL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** There is no legal requirement to wear a parachute during glider flights, although it is strongly recommended and is standard practice among glider pilots. The decision rests with the pilot. Option A overstates the requirement. Option C creates a non-existent aerobatic-specific mandate. Option D invents an altitude-based rule. While clubs and operators may have their own requirements, there is no regulatory obligation under current rules.
+
+### Q104: You need to land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you fly the final approach? ^t70q104
+- A) Faster than you would with a headwind
+- B) At best glide speed, slightly higher than with a headwind
+- C) Slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than with a headwind
+- D) Normally, with a sideslip
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a short field with a tailwind, the pilot must minimize groundspeed at touchdown by flying as slowly as safely possible — slightly above minimum speed. The approach should be flown lower than normal to steepen the ground-referenced descent angle, since the tailwind flattens the approach path relative to the ground. Option A (faster) increases groundspeed and ground roll. Option B (best glide speed, higher) produces a flat approach that wastes field length. Option D (sideslip) addresses crosswind, not tailwind.
+
+### Q105: A motorglider with engine running approaches from your right at the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q105
+- A) Give way to the left
+- B) Maintain straight heading and keep the motorglider in sight
+- C) Extend airbrakes and give way downward
+- D) Give way to the right
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A glider has right-of-way over powered aircraft under SERA rules. However, when a powered aircraft (motorglider with engine running) approaches from the right, the standard "give way to the right" rule applies — the pilot seeing the other aircraft on the right must yield. In this case, the pilot should give way to the right. Option A (left) would cross the other aircraft's path. Option B (maintaining heading) ignores the collision threat. Option C (downward) may work but the standard maneuver is to turn right.
+
+### Q106: Flying in a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R), what cloud clearance must you maintain? (vertical / horizontal) ^t70q106
+- A) 300 m vertically, 1500 m horizontally
+- B) 100 m vertically, 300 m horizontally
+- C) Clear of clouds with flight visibility
+- D) 50 m vertically, 100 m horizontally
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In glider-specific restricted zones (LS-R) in Switzerland, reduced cloud clearance minima apply for gliders: 50 m vertically and 100 m horizontally from clouds. These reduced minima recognize that glider pilots often operate near cloud base while thermalling and need to remain close to clouds for soaring purposes. Option A describes standard Class D minimums. Option B is a common misconception. Option C describes VFR "clear of cloud" requirements used in some other airspace classes.
+
+### Q107: What is the correct procedure for abandoning the glider and bailing out by parachute? ^t70q107
+- A) Unfasten harness, release canopy, jump, open parachute
+- B) Unfasten harness, pull parachute handle, release canopy, jump
+- C) Release canopy, unfasten harness, jump, open parachute
+- D) Release canopy, unfasten harness, open parachute, jump
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct bailout sequence is: (1) release canopy first (so it does not jam shut), (2) unfasten harness, (3) exit the aircraft, (4) deploy the parachute after clearing the airframe. Option A unfastens the harness first, which may cause the pilot to be thrown around the cockpit before the canopy is open. Option B deploys the parachute inside the cockpit, which would entangle it with the aircraft structure. Option D opens the parachute before jumping, which would inflate inside or near the aircraft.
+
+### Q108: How should a landing on a slope be performed? ^t70q108
+- A) Always across the slope
+- B) With left wind, across the slope
+- C) Always facing uphill regardless of wind
+- D) Downhill into the wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When landing on a slope with wind, the standard technique is to land downhill into the wind. The headwind reduces groundspeed while the downhill slope provides a more gradual transition from flight to ground roll, and the combination typically produces the safest outcome. Option A (across the slope) risks the aircraft rolling sideways. Option B applies only to one specific wind direction. Option C (uphill regardless of wind) ignores the significant deceleration hazard of landing uphill with a tailwind, which could cause a dangerously abrupt stop or flip.
+
+### Q109: Which terrain is particularly well suited for an off-field landing? ^t70q109
+- A) A large flat field, oriented into the wind, with no obstacles on the approach path
+- B) A field of tall cereal crops that provides a braking effect to shorten the roll
+- C) A vast, freshly ploughed field sloping upward
+- D) A field near a road and a telephone
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ideal off-field landing site is a large, flat field aligned with the wind direction and free of obstacles on the approach path. This allows a normal into-wind approach and provides maximum usable landing distance. Option B (tall crops) can flip the glider by catching a wing or the fuselage. Option C (ploughed, uphill) has soft ground that can nose the glider over, plus the uphill slope makes approach assessment difficult. Option D prioritizes convenience over safety — proximity to a road and phone is irrelevant if the field itself is unsuitable.
+
+### Q110: An off-field landing ends in a ground loop caused by an obstacle, and the fuselage breaks near the rudder. What must be done? ^t70q110
+- A) Notify FOCA in writing
+- B) If it is a minor accident, no report is necessary
+- C) Immediately notify the aviation accident investigation bureau via REGA
+- D) Notify the nearest police station
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A broken fuselage constitutes a serious accident requiring immediate notification of the aviation accident investigation bureau, which can be reached via REGA (the Swiss rescue coordination center). This is classified as a serious structural failure, not a minor incident. Option A (FOCA in writing) is not the immediate required action for an accident. Option B incorrectly classifies a broken fuselage as minor. Option D (police) may be appropriate for property damage but does not fulfill the primary obligation to notify the investigation authority immediately.
+
+### Q111: An off-field landing on a steeply inclined site in mountainous terrain is the only option. How should it be conducted? ^t70q111
+- A) Approach at minimum speed with a careful flare at the landing site
+- B) Approach parallel to the ridge with headwind, according to the prevailing wind
+- C) Approach down the ridge at increased speed, adjusting pitch to follow the terrain
+- D) Approach at increased speed with a quick flare to match the slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing uphill on a steep slope requires extra approach speed because the rising terrain rapidly decelerates the aircraft on contact. A quick, decisive flare matches the flight path to the slope gradient and ensures controlled touchdown. Option A (minimum speed) leaves no energy margin for the flare against the slope. Option B (parallel to ridge) does not use the slope for deceleration. Option C (downhill) dramatically increases groundspeed and stopping distance, making a safe stop nearly impossible on a steep slope.
+
+### Q112: On final approach, you realise the landing gear has not been extended. How should the landing be conducted? ^t70q112
+- A) Retract flaps, extend the gear, and land normally
+- B) Land without gear at higher-than-usual speed
+- C) Land without gear, touching down carefully at minimum speed
+- D) Extend the gear immediately and land as usual
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear cannot be extended on final approach, the pilot should perform a belly landing at minimum speed to minimize impact forces and structural damage. Low speed reduces kinetic energy at touchdown, protecting both the pilot and the aircraft. Option A and D assume the gear can still be extended, but the question implies it was not deployed and it is too late to safely manage gear extension on short final. Option B (higher speed) increases impact energy unnecessarily.
+
+### Q113: At what height during a winch launch may the maximum pitch attitude be adopted? ^t70q113
+- A) From 150 m or higher, once a straight-ahead landing after cable break is no longer possible
+- B) Shortly after lift-off, provided there is a sufficiently strong headwind
+- C) From approximately 50 m while maintaining a safe winch-launch speed
+- D) From 15 m once a speed of at least 90 km/h is reached
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The maximum (steep) pitch attitude during a winch launch should be adopted from approximately 50 m AGL, provided a safe winch-launch speed is maintained. Below this height, a moderate climb angle is used to ensure safe recovery options if the cable breaks. Option A (150 m) is too conservative — the steep climb should begin earlier to maximize launch altitude. Option B (shortly after lift-off) is dangerous at low altitude with no cable-break recovery margin. Option D (15 m, 90 km/h) is too low for the steep climb attitude.
+
+### Q114: What factors must be considered for approach and landing speed? ^t70q114
+- A) Altitude and weight
+- B) Wind speed and altitude
+- C) Aircraft weight and wind conditions
+- D) Wind speed and weight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach and landing speed must account for aircraft weight (heavier aircraft need higher speeds to maintain the same lift) and wind conditions (gusts require additional speed margin, and crosswinds affect control requirements). Option A mentions altitude, which affects true airspeed but not indicated approach speed. Option B combines wind and altitude but omits weight. Option D is close but "wind conditions" (option C) is more comprehensive than "wind speed" alone, as it includes gusts and direction.
+
+### Q115: How can wind direction be determined for an out-landing? ^t70q115
+- A) By recalling the windsock reading at the departure airfield
+- B) By asking other pilots reachable by radio
+- C) From the wind forecast in the flight weather report
+- D) By observing smoke, flags, and rippling crop fields
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most reliable method for determining local wind direction during an out-landing is direct observation of wind indicators on the ground: smoke drift, flags, wind-blown vegetation, and rippling patterns in crop fields. These provide real-time, local wind information at the landing site. Option A (departure windsock) may reflect different conditions far from the landing site. Option B (radio contact) is unreliable and time-consuming. Option C (forecast) provides area-wide predictions, not actual conditions at the specific field.
+
+### Q116: What is the recommended technique for landing on a downhill grass area? ^t70q116
+- A) Full airbrakes, gear retracted, and land in a stall
+- B) Use wheel brakes on the main wheel, no airbrakes
+- C) Generally land uphill
+- D) Land diagonally downhill
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a slope, the recommended technique is to land uphill whenever possible, as the rising terrain helps decelerate the aircraft naturally. Landing uphill converts forward speed into potential energy, shortening the ground roll significantly. Option A (stall landing with gear retracted) is dangerous and unnecessary. Option B (wheel brakes only) may be insufficient on a downhill slope. Option D (diagonally downhill) increases the risk of a lateral upset and still results in excessive groundspeed.
+
+### Q117: What must be checked before changing direction during a glide? ^t70q117
+- A) That loose objects are secured
+- B) That thermal clouds are nearby
+- C) That the airspace in the desired direction is clear
+- D) That the turn will be properly coordinated
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before any turn, the pilot must visually check that the airspace in the intended direction of turn is clear of other traffic. This is the most critical safety check — a mid-air collision due to turning into occupied airspace is one of the most serious risks in gliding. Option A (loose objects) should be checked before flight, not before each turn. Option B (thermal clouds) relates to soaring strategy, not safety. Option D (coordination) is important for flying technique but is secondary to the primary lookout requirement.
+
+### Q118: A light tailwind is detected before a winch launch. What should be considered? ^t70q118
+- A) A weaker rated weak link can be used since the load will be lower
+- B) The ground roll until lift-off will be shorter since the tailwind pushes from behind
+- C) Pull firmly on the elevator immediately after lift-off to gain more height
+- D) The ground roll until lift-off will be somewhat longer; monitor speed carefully
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A tailwind reduces the relative airflow over the wings during the ground roll, requiring a longer distance to reach takeoff speed. The pilot must monitor airspeed carefully since the aircraft is accelerating more slowly than normal. Option A is wrong — a tailwind increases cable loads due to higher groundspeed requirements. Option B reverses the effect — tailwind increases, not decreases, ground roll. Option C (pulling firmly after lift-off) risks stalling at low altitude in already-unfavorable conditions.
+
+### Q119: In a strong crosswind, how should the base-to-final turn be flown? ^t70q119
+- A) Bank up to 60 degrees, use rudder to align early with the final track
+- B) Bank no more than 30 degrees, monitor speed and yaw string, correct track after any overshoot
+- C) Bank up to 60 degrees, monitor speed and yaw string, correct track after any overshoot
+- D) Bank no more than 30 degrees, use rudder to align early with the final track
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a strong crosswind, the base-to-final turn should use a moderate bank angle of no more than 30 degrees to maintain a safe margin above the stall speed (which increases with bank angle). The pilot should monitor speed and the yaw string for coordination, and accept a minor overshoot of the final track rather than risk a steep turn at low altitude. Options A and C allow 60-degree bank, which dramatically increases stall speed and load factor at a critical low-altitude phase. Option D uses rudder to align early, which could cause a skidding turn.
+
+### Q120: Another sailplane is circling close behind you in a thermal. What should you do to avoid a collision? ^t70q120
+- A) Reduce your bank angle to widen the turn radius
+- B) Increase your bank angle to present a more visible profile
+- C) Slow down to let the other sailplane pass
+- D) Speed up to move to the opposite side of the circle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If another sailplane is close behind you in the same thermal, speeding up to increase the distance between you and move to the opposite side of the circle creates maximum separation. This allows both pilots to thermall safely with visual awareness of each other. Option A (reducing bank) widens your circle and may cause the other glider to close the gap. Option B (increasing bank) tightens the turn but does not solve the proximity issue. Option C (slowing down) brings the other glider even closer — exactly the opposite of what is needed.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_80_121_150_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_80_121_150_out.md
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+### Q121: What purpose does static rudder (mass) balancing serve? ^t80q121
+- A) To limit the control stick forces
+- B) To increase the control stick forces
+- C) To prevent control surface flutter
+- D) To enable force-free trimming
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static (mass) balancing places counterweights ahead of the control surface hinge line, moving the surface's centre of mass forward to or ahead of the hinge axis. This prevents flutter, a potentially destructive high-frequency oscillation caused by the interaction between aerodynamic forces and the inertia of the control surface. Without proper mass balancing, flutter can develop at certain speeds and rapidly destroy the control surface or the entire tail structure. Option A (limiting stick forces) relates to aerodynamic balancing, not mass balancing. Option B (increasing forces) is not a design goal. Option D (force-free trimming) is the function of the trim system.
+
+### Q122: When the elevator trim tab is deflected upwards, what does the trim indicator show? ^t80q122
+- A) Laterally trimmed
+- B) Neutral position
+- C) Nose-down position
+- D) Nose-up position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the trim tab on the elevator is deflected upward, it generates a downward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, which pushes the elevator's leading edge up and causes the entire elevator to deflect downward. This produces a nose-down pitching moment on the aircraft, and the trim indicator accordingly shows a nose-down (forward) position. Option A (lateral trim) refers to the wrong axis entirely. Option B (neutral) would require the tab to be streamlined. Option D (nose-up) is the opposite of the effect produced by an upward trim tab deflection.
+
+### Q123: On the polar diagram, what flight condition does point number 1 indicate? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q123
+- A) Slow flight
+- B) Best gliding angle
+- C) Stall
+- D) Inverted flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) is located in the region of negative lift coefficient, which corresponds to inverted (upside-down) flight where the wing generates downward force relative to the aircraft. During inverted flight, the aerofoil operates at negative angles of attack, producing negative CL values on the polar. Option A (slow flight) would appear at high positive CL near the top of the positive polar curve. Option B (best gliding angle) is at the maximum CL/CD ratio on the positive side. Option C (stall) would be at the peak CL_max point on the positive curve.
+
+### Q124: In a coordinated turn, what is the relationship between load factor (n) and stall speed (Vs)? ^t80q124
+- A) n is less than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+- B) n is greater than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- C) n is less than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- D) n is greater than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated banked turn at constant altitude, the wing must produce enough lift to support both the aircraft's weight vertically and the centripetal force horizontally. The total required lift exceeds the weight, making the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) always greater than 1. Since stall speed increases with the square root of the load factor (Vs_turn = Vs x sqrt(n)), the stall speed is also higher in the turn. Option A and Option C incorrectly state n is less than 1. Option D correctly identifies n greater than 1 but incorrectly claims stall speed decreases.
+
+### Q125: The pressure equalisation between the upper and lower wing surfaces results in... ^t80q125
+- A) Profile drag caused by wingtip vortices
+- B) Laminar airflow caused by wingtip vortices
+- C) Lift generated by wingtip vortices
+- D) Induced drag caused by wingtip vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At the wingtips, air flows from the high-pressure lower surface around to the low-pressure upper surface, creating trailing vortices. These vortices tilt the local relative airflow downward (downwash), effectively reducing the wing's angle of attack and tilting the lift vector rearward. The rearward component of this tilted lift vector is induced drag. Option A incorrectly labels it as profile drag, which is caused by boundary layer friction and pressure effects on the aerofoil itself. Option B is wrong because vortices create turbulent, not laminar, flow. Option C is incorrect because vortices reduce effective lift rather than generating it.
+
+### Q126: In steady glide at equal mass, how does using a thicker aerofoil compare to a thinner one? ^t80q126
+- A) Less drag, same lift
+- B) More drag, less lift
+- C) Less drag, less lift
+- D) More drag, same lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steady glide at equal mass, the lift must equal the weight regardless of the aerofoil shape, so lift remains the same. However, a thicker aerofoil has a larger frontal area and more pronounced adverse pressure gradients on its rear surface, which leads to greater form (pressure) drag and generally higher total profile drag compared to a thinner aerofoil. Therefore the result is more drag with the same lift. Option A and Option C incorrectly state less drag. Option B incorrectly states less lift, which is impossible in steady glide at constant mass.
+
+### Q127: What does a profile polar diagram display? ^t80q127
+- A) The lift coefficient cA at various angles of attack
+- B) The ratio of minimum sink rate to best glide
+- C) The ratio between total lift and drag as a function of angle of attack
+- D) The relationship between cA and cD at different angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A profile polar (also called a Lilienthal polar) plots the lift coefficient (cA or CL) on the vertical axis against the drag coefficient (cD or CD) on the horizontal axis for various angles of attack. Each point on the curve represents a specific angle of attack, allowing the designer or pilot to see how lift and drag relate across the entire operating range of the profile. Option A describes only one variable (CL vs alpha), not the polar relationship. Option B describes flight performance parameters, not aerofoil coefficients. Option C describes the L/D ratio, which can be derived from the polar but is not what the diagram directly plots.
+
+### Q128: Any arbitrarily shaped body placed in an airflow (v > 0) always produces... ^t80q128
+- A) Drag that remains constant at any speed
+- B) Lift without drag
+- C) Drag
+- D) Both drag and lift
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body immersed in a moving fluid will always produce drag -- this is an unavoidable consequence of both skin friction (viscous forces) and pressure differences (form drag) acting on the body. However, not every shape produces lift; lift requires a specifically oriented asymmetric shape or angle of attack to create a pressure differential between upper and lower surfaces. An arbitrarily shaped body has no guaranteed lift-producing geometry. Option A is wrong because drag increases with the square of velocity, not remaining constant. Option B (lift without drag) violates fundamental aerodynamic principles. Option D assumes lift is always produced, which is not the case for arbitrary shapes.
+
+### Q129: In the diagram, what does number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q129
+- A) Chord
+- B) Chord line
+- C) Camber line
+- D) Thickness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the aerofoil diagram (PFA-010), line number 3 represents the camber line (mean camber line), which is the locus of points equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil at each chordwise station. The camber line defines the curvature of the profile and is a key parameter in determining its aerodynamic characteristics. Option A (chord) and Option B (chord line) both refer to the straight line from leading to trailing edge. Option D (thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a line on the diagram.
+
+### Q130: Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw? ^t80q130
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) Full deflection of the aileron
+- C) Differential aileron deflection
+- D) Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection is specifically designed to compensate for adverse yaw. In this system, the up-going aileron deflects more than the down-going aileron, which reduces the additional induced drag on the wing with the down-going aileron (the descending wing). By equalising the drag on both wings during a roll input, the undesired yawing moment opposite to the turn is minimised. Option A (wing dihedral) provides lateral (roll) stability but does not address yaw asymmetry during aileron input. Option B (full aileron deflection) would actually maximise adverse yaw rather than compensate for it. Option D repeats the question text and is not a valid answer.
+
+### Q131: What does "wing loading" describe? ^t80q131
+- A) Drag per weight
+- B) Wing area per weight
+- C) Drag per wing area
+- D) Weight per wing area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is defined as the aircraft's weight divided by the wing reference area, expressed in units such as N/m-squared or kg/m-squared. It is a fundamental parameter that influences stall speed, turning performance, gust sensitivity, and thermal circling radius. A higher wing loading means higher minimum speeds but better penetration in headwinds. Option A (drag per weight) is not a standard aerodynamic parameter. Option B (wing area per weight) is the inverse of wing loading. Option C (drag per wing area) describes a drag coefficient-related quantity, not wing loading.
+
+### Q132: On the polar diagram, what flight state does point number 5 represent? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q132
+- A) Best gliding angle
+- B) Inverted flight
+- C) Stall
+- D) Slow flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 5 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) lies on the positive side of the polar curve at a high CL value and relatively high angle of attack, corresponding to slow flight. In slow flight, the wing operates close to but below the stall angle, with high lift coefficient and relatively high drag. Option A (best gliding angle) would be at the tangent point giving maximum CL/CD ratio. Option B (inverted flight) appears in the negative CL region of the polar. Option C (stall) would be at the very peak of the CL curve where CL_max is reached and flow separation begins.
+
+### Q133: What is the aerodynamic effect of deploying airbrakes? ^t80q133
+- A) Both drag and lift increase
+- B) Both drag and lift decrease
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deploying airbrakes (spoilers or dive brakes) has a dual aerodynamic effect: they create large additional profile drag by disrupting the streamlined shape, and they partially destroy the lift on the upper wing surface by interrupting the smooth airflow. The net result is a significant increase in drag and a reduction in lift, which together steepen the glide path -- exactly the purpose for which airbrakes are designed. Option A incorrectly states lift increases. Option B incorrectly states drag decreases. Option D describes the opposite of what actually occurs.
+
+### Q134: Which combination of measures can improve the glide ratio of a sailplane? ^t80q134
+- A) Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- B) Higher mass, thin aerofoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- C) Lower mass, correct speed, retractable gear
+- D) Cleaning surfaces, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide ratio (L/D) is maximised by reducing drag while maintaining optimal speed. Cleaning the wing and fuselage surfaces removes bugs and dirt that increase surface roughness and drag. Flying at the correct (best-glide) speed places the aircraft at the peak of its L/D curve. A retractable undercarriage eliminates a major source of parasite drag. Taping the wing-fuselage junction gaps reduces interference and leakage drag. Option A includes forward CG, which increases trim drag. Option B suggests higher mass, which shifts the speed polar but does not improve the maximum L/D ratio. Option C omits surface cleaning and gap taping, which are significant drag-reduction measures.
+
+### Q135: What distinguishes a spin from a spiral dive? ^t80q135
+- A) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- B) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- C) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+- D) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a spin, the inner (lower) wing is deeply stalled while the outer wing may still be producing some lift, creating the autorotation. Airspeed remains approximately constant near or below stall speed throughout the spin. In a spiral dive, both wings continue to fly (neither is stalled), and the aircraft enters an ever-steepening banked descent with rapidly and continuously increasing airspeed. Option A incorrectly identifies the outer wing as stalled in the spin. Options C and D incorrectly assign rising speed to the spin and constant speed to the spiral dive, which is the opposite of reality.
+
+### Q136: The longitudinal position of the centre of gravity primarily affects stability around which axis? ^t80q136
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Gravity axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The longitudinal (fore-and-aft) position of the centre of gravity directly determines pitch stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. When the CG is forward of the neutral point, the aircraft has positive static stability in pitch -- any nose-up or nose-down disturbance produces a restoring moment. Moving the CG aft reduces pitch stability and eventually makes the aircraft unstable. Option A (longitudinal axis) governs roll stability, influenced mainly by wing dihedral. Option B ("gravity axis") is not a standard axis in aircraft stability. Option D (vertical axis) governs directional (yaw) stability, influenced by the vertical tail.
+
+### Q137: Which structural element provides directional stability? ^t80q137
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) A large elevator
+- C) A large vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A large vertical tail (fin) provides directional (yaw) stability by acting as a weathervane: when the aircraft sideslips, the fin generates an aerodynamic force that yaws the nose back toward the direction of flight, restoring equilibrium. The larger the fin, the greater the restoring moment. Option A (wing dihedral) provides lateral (roll) stability by generating a rolling moment that levels the wings during a sideslip. Option B (a large elevator) contributes to pitch (longitudinal) stability, not directional stability. Option D (differential ailerons) reduces adverse yaw during roll inputs but does not provide inherent directional stability.
+
+### Q138: In straight-and-level flight at constant engine power, how does the wing's angle of attack compare to that in a climb? ^t80q138
+- A) Larger than in a climb
+- B) Larger than at take-off
+- C) Smaller than in a descent
+- D) Smaller than in a climb
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At constant power, transitioning from level flight to a climb requires converting kinetic energy into potential energy, which reduces airspeed. To maintain sufficient lift at the lower climbing speed, the wing must operate at a higher angle of attack. Therefore, the angle of attack in straight-and-level flight is smaller than in a climb at the same power setting. Option A states the opposite relationship. Option B compares to take-off, which is not the comparison asked. Option C compares to descent, where the angle of attack would actually be lower (higher speed, less CL needed).
+
+### Q139: What is one function of the horizontal tail? ^t80q139
+- A) To stabilise the aircraft around the lateral axis
+- B) To initiate a turn around the vertical axis
+- C) To stabilise the aircraft around the vertical axis
+- D) To stabilise the aircraft around the longitudinal axis
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator) provides pitch stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. When the aircraft is disturbed in pitch (nose moves up or down), the horizontal tail generates a restoring aerodynamic force that returns the aircraft toward its trimmed attitude. Option B (initiating turns around the vertical axis) is the function of the rudder. Option C (stabilising around the vertical axis) is provided by the vertical fin. Option D (stabilising around the longitudinal axis) describes roll stability, which is primarily achieved through wing dihedral and sweep.
+
+### Q140: What happens when the rudder is deflected to the left? ^t80q140
+- A) The aircraft pitches to the right
+- B) The aircraft yaws to the right
+- C) The aircraft pitches to the left
+- D) The aircraft yaws to the left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the rudder is deflected to the left, it creates an aerodynamic force that pushes the tail to the right, which yaws the aircraft's nose to the left around the vertical axis. Yaw is rotation around the vertical axis, controlled exclusively by the rudder. Option A and Option C describe pitching motions (rotation around the lateral axis), which are controlled by the elevator, not the rudder. Option B indicates the wrong yaw direction -- a left rudder deflection produces left yaw, not right yaw.
+
+### Q141: Differential aileron deflection is employed to... ^t80q141
+- A) Increase the rate of descent
+- B) Prevent stalling at low angles of attack
+- C) Minimise adverse yaw
+- D) Reduce wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection is specifically designed to minimise adverse yaw -- the undesired nose movement away from the intended turn direction when ailerons are applied. By deflecting the up-going aileron more than the down-going aileron, the drag difference between the two wings is reduced, thereby reducing the yawing moment that opposes the turn. Option A (increasing descent rate) is the function of airbrakes or spoilers. Option B (preventing stalls at low angles of attack) is not relevant since stalls occur at high angles of attack. Option D (reducing wake turbulence) would require winglets or similar devices.
+
+### Q142: How is the force balance affected during a banked turn? ^t80q142
+- A) A lower lift force is sufficient because the net force is reduced compared to level flight
+- B) The horizontal component of the lift during the turn constitutes the centrifugal force
+- C) Lift must be increased to balance the combined effect of gravity and centrifugal force
+- D) The net force is the vector sum of gravitational and centripetal forces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn, the lift vector is tilted inward, so its vertical component is less than the total lift. To maintain altitude, the total lift must be increased beyond the straight-and-level value so that the vertical component still supports the aircraft's weight while the horizontal component provides the centripetal force needed for the curved flight path. The load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) quantifies how much additional lift is required. Option A is the opposite -- more lift, not less, is needed. Option B confuses centripetal force with centrifugal force (which is a fictitious force in the rotating reference frame). Option D describes forces but does not address the key requirement to increase lift.
+
+### Q143: On a Touring Motor Glider (TMG), which engine arrangement produces the least drag? ^t80q143
+- A) Engine and propeller fixed at the aircraft's nose
+- B) Engine and propeller fixed on the fuselage
+- C) Engine and propeller retractable into the fuselage
+- D) Engine and propeller fixed at the horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A retractable engine and propeller arrangement allows the entire powerplant to be folded into the fuselage when not in use, completely eliminating the parasite drag associated with the engine cowling, propeller blades, and related protrusions. This gives the TMG pure glider-like aerodynamic performance in soaring flight. Option A (fixed nose mount), Option B (fixed fuselage mount), and Option D (fixed at the stabiliser) all leave the engine and propeller permanently exposed to the airflow, creating continuous drag even when the engine is not running.
+
+### Q144: What effect is known as "adverse yaw"? ^t80q144
+- A) Aileron input yaws the nose toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input creates a rolling moment toward the opposite side due to extra lift on the faster-moving wing
+- C) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the down-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the up-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs when aileron deflection causes the nose to yaw away from the intended direction of turn. The down-deflected aileron (on the wing intended to rise) increases both the local lift and the induced drag on that wing. This extra drag on the rising wing pulls the nose toward it -- away from the turn direction. Option A describes the opposite effect (proverse yaw). Option B describes a rudder-induced secondary rolling effect, not adverse yaw. Option D incorrectly attributes the extra drag to the up-deflected aileron, when it is actually the down-deflected aileron that generates more drag.
+
+### Q145: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q145
+- A) An increase in lift and decrease in induced drag near the ground
+- B) A decrease in lift and increase in induced drag near the ground
+- C) A decrease in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+- D) An increase in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground effect occurs when an aircraft flies within approximately one wingspan of the surface. The ground restricts the downward development of wingtip vortices, which reduces the downwash angle behind the wing. This reduction in downwash effectively increases the local angle of attack (increasing lift) and reduces the rearward tilt of the lift vector (decreasing induced drag). The result is improved aerodynamic efficiency near the ground, which is why aircraft can feel like they "float" during landing. Option B is the exact opposite. Option C incorrectly includes a lift decrease. Option D incorrectly includes an induced drag increase.
+
+### Q146: Rudder deflections rotate the aircraft around the... ^t80q146
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Rudder axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rudder controls yaw, which is rotation around the vertical axis (also called the normal axis). When the rudder is deflected, it generates a sideways aerodynamic force on the fin and rudder assembly, creating a yawing moment that rotates the nose left or right. Option A (longitudinal axis) is the roll axis, controlled by ailerons. Option B ("rudder axis") is not a standard axis of aircraft rotation. Option C (lateral axis) is the pitch axis, controlled by the elevator.
+
+### Q147: Which of the following factors causes the load factor to increase during cruise flight? ^t80q147
+- A) A forward centre of gravity
+- B) Higher aircraft weight
+- C) An upward gust
+- D) Lower air density
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward gust suddenly increases the wing's effective angle of attack, momentarily generating significantly more lift than required for level flight. This excess lift acts as an additional load on the aircraft structure, instantaneously increasing the load factor (n = L/W) above 1. The sharper the gust and the faster the aircraft is flying, the greater the load factor spike. Option A (forward CG) affects handling but does not directly increase load factor in cruise. Option B (higher weight) does not change n unless lift also changes. Option D (lower air density) actually reduces lift at the same speed, decreasing rather than increasing load factor.
+
+### Q148: While approaching the next updraft, the variometer shows 3 m/s descent. You expect a mean climb rate of 2 m/s in the thermal. How should you set the McCready ring? ^t80q148
+- A) Set the ring to 3 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the expected climb rate (2 m/s)
+- B) Set the ring to 0 m/s outside thermals and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- C) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- D) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the sum of current sink rate and expected climb rate (5 m/s)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The McCready ring is always set to the expected climb rate in the next thermal -- in this case 2 m/s. The pilot then reads the recommended inter-thermal cruise speed from the variometer scale at the point corresponding to the current sink rate (3 m/s). This method optimises the speed-to-fly between thermals based on the MacCready theory. Option A incorrectly sets the ring to the sink rate. Option B sets the ring to zero, which would give the minimum sink speed rather than the optimal cruise speed. Option D incorrectly sums the two values, which has no basis in MacCready theory.
+
+### Q149: What must be considered when flying a sailplane equipped with camber flaps? ^t80q149
+- A) During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive
+- B) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive
+- C) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative
+- D) During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During approach and landing, the camber flaps should be set to positive (increased camber) to lower the stall speed and improve low-speed handling. Changing from positive to negative camber during this critical phase would suddenly reduce the wing's maximum lift coefficient, causing an abrupt loss of lift very close to the ground -- potentially resulting in a sudden descent or stall with no altitude for recovery. Option A (full positive during winch launch) is not necessarily required and depends on the flight manual. Option B states the opposite restriction. Option D (full negative during launch) would reduce lift when maximum lift is needed.
+
+### Q150: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q150
+- A) Separation point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 3 on the aerofoil diagram (PFA-009) represents the transition point, where the boundary layer changes from laminar to turbulent flow. This is a critical location on the aerofoil because it marks the onset of increased skin friction drag and affects the overall drag characteristics of the wing. Option A (separation point) is further downstream where the boundary layer detaches entirely from the surface. Option B (centre of pressure) is the point where the resultant aerodynamic force effectively acts. Option C (stagnation point) is at the leading edge where the airflow velocity reaches zero and total pressure equals free-stream total pressure.
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+### Q1: Regarding the forces in play, how is steady-state gliding flight best characterised? ^t80q1
+- A) The resultant aerodynamic force acts in the direction of the airflow
+- B) The resultant aerodynamic force counterbalances the weight force
+- C) Lift alone compensates for drag
+- D) The resultant aerodynamic force acts in line with the lift vector
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In steady (unaccelerated) gliding flight, only two forces act on the aircraft: weight (gravity) and the total aerodynamic resultant (the vector sum of lift and drag). For equilibrium, these two forces must be equal in magnitude and opposite in direction, meaning the resultant aerodynamic force exactly counterbalances gravity. Option A is incorrect because the aerodynamic resultant is tilted backward from the flight path, not aligned with the airflow. Option C wrongly states lift alone compensates drag — lift and drag are perpendicular components that together form the resultant. Option D confuses the resultant with the lift vector alone.
+
+### Q2: What happens to the minimum flying speed when flaps are extended, thereby increasing wing camber? ^t80q2
+- A) The C.G. shifts forward
+- B) The minimum speed drops
+- C) The maximum permissible speed rises
+- D) The minimum speed rises
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases wing camber, which raises the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max). From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho x S x CL_max)), increasing CL_max directly reduces the minimum flying speed. This is why flaps are deployed during approach and landing — they allow safe flight at lower speeds. Option A confuses a CG effect with a flap effect. Option C is wrong because maximum permissible speed actually decreases with flaps extended due to structural limitations. Option D states the opposite of the true effect.
+
+### Q3: After one wing stalls and the nose drops, what is the correct technique to prevent a spin? ^t80q3
+- A) Push the elevator forward to gain speed and re-attach airflow on the wings
+- B) Maintain heading using rudder only
+- C) Pull the elevator back and level the wings using ailerons
+- D) Apply full rudder opposite to the direction of roll
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When one wing stalls and the nose drops, the immediate action is to push the elevator forward to reduce the angle of attack below the critical value, allowing airflow to reattach to the wings and restore normal flight. This is the fundamental stall recovery technique. Option B (rudder only) does not reduce the angle of attack. Option C (pulling back) deepens the stall and using ailerons near the stall can trigger a spin. Option D (full opposite rudder) is a spin recovery technique, but the priority here is preventing the spin from developing by unstalling the wing.
+
+### Q4: How does the drag polar of a wing change when comparing a clean configuration to one with landing gear extended? ^t80q4
+- A) The polar shifts to the left, indicating less drag at every angle of attack
+- B) The polar shifts to the right, indicating more drag at every angle of attack
+- C) The polar becomes steeper, indicating a higher maximum lift coefficient
+- D) The polar shifts downward, showing reduced lift at all angles of attack
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending the landing gear adds parasite drag, which shifts the entire drag polar to the right on a cL versus cD diagram. At every angle of attack, the same lift is produced but with additional drag from the gear. This worsens the lift-to-drag ratio at all operating points. Option A states the opposite effect. Option C incorrectly claims the gear affects CL_max, which depends on the wing, not the gear. Option D incorrectly states lift is reduced — the gear adds drag but does not change the wing's lift characteristics.
+
+### Q5: What happens to the forces on a glider during a turn? ^t80q5
+- A) The vertical component of lift decreases and the horizontal component provides centripetal force
+- B) Total lift decreases because the wings are banked
+- C) Drag is eliminated during the turn
+- D) Weight increases due to centripetal acceleration
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn, the lift vector tilts with the wing, so its vertical component is reduced (it no longer fully supports the aircraft's weight without additional lift input) while the horizontal component of the tilted lift vector provides the centripetal force needed for the curved flight path. Option B is misleading — the pilot must increase total lift in a turn, not decrease it. Option C is physically impossible. Option D is wrong because weight does not change; the apparent load factor increases but actual gravitational weight remains constant.
+
+### Q6: In a stabilised gliding flight, what is the relationship between glide angle and lift-to-drag ratio? ^t80q6
+- A) Glide angle equals the lift-to-drag ratio
+- B) The tangent of the glide angle equals the drag-to-lift ratio
+- C) The glide angle is independent of the lift-to-drag ratio
+- D) The cosine of the glide angle equals the lift-to-drag ratio
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In steady gliding flight, the tangent of the glide angle (gamma) equals the ratio of drag to lift: tan(gamma) = D/L = 1/(L/D). A higher L/D ratio means a smaller glide angle and a flatter glide path, allowing greater distance per altitude lost. Option A incorrectly equates angle to ratio without a trigonometric function. Option C wrongly claims independence. Option D uses the wrong trigonometric function. Understanding this relationship is essential for cross-country glider performance calculations.
+
+### Q7: What effect does increasing the aspect ratio of a wing have on induced drag? ^t80q7
+- A) Induced drag increases proportionally
+- B) Induced drag is not affected by aspect ratio
+- C) Induced drag decreases
+- D) Induced drag increases exponentially
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is inversely proportional to aspect ratio: Di = L^2 / (q x pi x e x b^2), where b is wingspan. A higher aspect ratio (longer, narrower wing) produces weaker wingtip vortices and less downwash, reducing induced drag. This is why gliders have very high aspect ratio wings — to minimize induced drag and maximize glide performance. Options A and D incorrectly state induced drag increases. Option B incorrectly claims no relationship exists.
+
+### Q8: At what angle of attack does a typical aerofoil generate maximum lift? ^t80q8
+- A) 0 degrees
+- B) At the critical angle of attack, typically around 15-18 degrees
+- C) 45 degrees
+- D) 90 degrees
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maximum lift occurs at the critical (stall) angle of attack, which for most conventional aerofoils is approximately 15-18 degrees. Beyond this angle, airflow separates from the upper surface and lift decreases dramatically (stall). Option A (0°) produces relatively little lift for a cambered aerofoil. Option C (45°) and option D (90°) are well beyond the stall angle, where the wing produces minimal lift and massive drag.
+
+### Q9: What is the primary purpose of wing washout (geometric twist)? ^t80q9
+- A) To increase the maximum speed of the aircraft
+- B) To ensure the wing root stalls before the wingtip, preserving aileron effectiveness
+- C) To reduce parasite drag at high speeds
+- D) To increase the lift coefficient at the wingtip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing washout reduces the angle of incidence from root to tip, ensuring the root section reaches its critical angle of attack (and stalls) before the tip. This preserves aileron control during the initial phase of a stall, giving the pilot roll authority for recovery. Option A has no direct relationship to maximum speed. Option C does not reduce parasite drag. Option D is the opposite of the intent — washout reduces, not increases, the tip's angle of incidence to delay tip stall.
+
+### Q10: What causes parasite drag? ^t80q10
+- A) The generation of lift by the wing
+- B) The friction of air over surfaces and the form of the aircraft
+- C) Wingtip vortices
+- D) The weight of the aircraft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parasite drag consists of skin friction (air molecules dragging against surfaces) and form drag (pressure drag caused by the aircraft's shape disrupting airflow). It exists regardless of whether lift is being produced. Option A describes induced drag, which is caused by lift generation. Option C (wingtip vortices) is the mechanism of induced drag, not parasite drag. Option D (weight) affects the amount of lift required but does not directly cause parasite drag.
+
+### Q11: How does airspeed affect parasite drag? ^t80q11
+- A) Parasite drag decreases with increasing airspeed
+- B) Parasite drag is independent of airspeed
+- C) Parasite drag increases with the square of the airspeed
+- D) Parasite drag increases linearly with airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parasite drag is proportional to dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 x rho x V^2), so it increases with the square of airspeed. Doubling the speed quadruples the parasite drag. This is why gliders have very clean, streamlined designs — even small improvements in surface finish dramatically reduce drag at cruise speeds. Option A states the opposite. Option B ignores the fundamental aerodynamic relationship. Option D underestimates the rate of increase — the square relationship, not linear, is correct.
+
+### Q12: What type of drag does NOT depend on lift generation? ^t80q12
+- A) Induced drag
+- B) Parasite drag
+- C) Vortex drag
+- D) Lift-dependent drag
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parasite drag (consisting of friction drag and form drag) is present whenever the aircraft moves through the air, regardless of whether any lift is being produced. It depends on speed, shape, and surface roughness — not on lift. Options A, C, and D all describe drag components that are directly related to lift production: induced drag is caused by wingtip vortices generated by the pressure differential that creates lift.
+
+### Q13: At what speed does total drag reach its minimum for a glider? ^t80q13
+- A) At the never-exceed speed (VNE)
+- B) At stall speed
+- C) At the speed where induced drag equals parasite drag
+- D) At the maximum lift coefficient speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Total drag is the sum of induced drag (which decreases with speed) and parasite drag (which increases with the square of speed). The minimum total drag occurs at the speed where these two components are equal — this is also the speed for best lift-to-drag ratio and best glide angle. Option A (VNE) is far above minimum drag speed. Option B (stall speed) has maximum induced drag. Option D (max CL speed) is at or near stall, where induced drag dominates.
+
+### Q14: How does the stall speed change when the aircraft's weight increases? ^t80q14
+- A) Stall speed decreases
+- B) Stall speed is unaffected by weight
+- C) Stall speed increases
+- D) Stall speed increases only in turns
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho x S x CL_max)), increasing weight (W) directly increases the stall speed. The wing must produce more lift to support the heavier aircraft, requiring either higher speed or higher angle of attack — but since CL_max is fixed by the aerofoil shape, the only option is higher speed. Option A states the opposite. Option B ignores the weight-speed relationship. Option D incorrectly limits the effect to turns only.
+
+### Q15: What is the load factor in a 60-degree bank level turn? ^t80q15
+- A) 1.0
+- B) 1.41
+- C) 2.0
+- D) 3.0
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor in a level coordinated turn is n = 1/cos(bank angle). At 60° bank: n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0.5 = 2.0. This means the wing must produce twice the lift compared to straight-and-level flight, and the stall speed increases by the square root of 2 (about 41%). Option A (1.0) is the load factor in straight flight. Option B (1.41) corresponds to a 45° bank turn. Option D (3.0) would require a bank angle of approximately 70°.
+
+### Q16: How does the centre of pressure move as the angle of attack increases from zero to the stall angle? ^t80q16
+- A) It moves forward
+- B) It remains fixed at the aerodynamic centre
+- C) It moves aft
+- D) It oscillates back and forth
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a conventional cambered aerofoil, as the angle of attack increases from zero toward the stall, the center of pressure moves forward along the chord. This is because the lift distribution shifts toward the leading edge as the angle of attack increases. The aerodynamic center (option B) is where the pitching moment coefficient remains constant — it is not the same as the center of pressure. Option C is the opposite of what occurs. Option D does not describe normal aerodynamic behavior.
+
+### Q17: What is the function of a trim tab on the elevator? ^t80q17
+- A) To increase the maximum speed of the aircraft
+- B) To allow the pilot to set a desired pitch attitude without continuous stick pressure
+- C) To increase the maximum lift coefficient
+- D) To reduce the stall speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A trim tab on the elevator allows the pilot to set a desired pitch attitude by adjusting the aerodynamic balance of the elevator so that no continuous stick force is needed to maintain the trim speed. This reduces pilot fatigue during extended flights. Option A is unrelated to trim function. Option C describes flap effects, not trim effects. Option D is incorrect — trim tabs adjust control forces, not the wing's stalling characteristics.
+
+### Q18: What happens to the boundary layer as it transitions from laminar to turbulent flow? ^t80q18
+- A) Skin friction decreases
+- B) Skin friction increases and the boundary layer thickens
+- C) The boundary layer becomes thinner
+- D) Airflow velocity increases at the surface
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the boundary layer transitions from laminar to turbulent flow, the random mixing of air particles increases skin friction drag and causes the boundary layer to thicken considerably. However, the turbulent boundary layer is more energetic near the surface and therefore more resistant to adverse pressure gradients, delaying flow separation. Option A states the opposite — turbulent flow has more friction. Option C is wrong — turbulent layers are thicker. Option D is incorrect — velocity at the surface itself remains zero (no-slip condition).
+
+### Q19: What is the Bernoulli principle as applied to a wing? ^t80q19
+- A) Air flowing faster over the upper surface creates lower pressure, generating lift
+- B) Lift is generated by the weight of air pushing on the lower surface
+- C) Higher pressure on the upper surface pushes the wing downward
+- D) The wing generates lift by deflecting air upward
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bernoulli's principle states that in a steady, incompressible flow, an increase in fluid velocity corresponds to a decrease in pressure. Applied to a wing, the curved upper surface accelerates the airflow, creating lower pressure above the wing compared to below it. This pressure difference generates the net upward force called lift. Option B describes a simplistic and incomplete explanation. Option C reverses the pressure distribution. Option D describes Newton's third law reaction but states the deflection direction wrong — air is deflected downward, not upward.
+
+### Q20: How does increasing wing camber (e.g., by deploying positive flaps) affect the lift curve? ^t80q20
+- A) The lift curve shifts to the right
+- B) The lift curve shifts upward, producing more lift at every angle of attack
+- C) The lift curve becomes flatter
+- D) The lift curve is unaffected
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Increasing wing camber (through positive flap deflection) shifts the entire lift curve upward, meaning the wing produces a higher lift coefficient at every angle of attack. This also lowers the zero-lift angle of attack. The maximum CL_max increases, reducing stall speed. Option A (rightward shift) would imply more drag without more lift, which is not the primary effect. Option C (flatter curve) would mean less lift per degree of angle change, which is incorrect. Option D ignores the well-established camber-lift relationship.
+
+### Q21: What causes adverse yaw during aileron application? ^t80q21
+- A) The up-going aileron reduces drag on that wing
+- B) The down-going aileron increases induced drag on the rising wing, yawing the nose opposite to the turn
+- C) The rudder automatically deflects opposite to the ailerons
+- D) Aileron application increases parasitic drag on both wings equally
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When ailerons are deflected, the down-going aileron on the rising wing increases both lift and induced drag on that wing. The extra induced drag on the rising wing pulls the nose toward the descending wing — opposite to the intended turn direction. This is adverse yaw. Option A is partially correct (the up-going aileron does reduce drag) but does not describe the cause of adverse yaw. Option C is incorrect — the rudder does not automatically deflect. Option D wrongly states equal drag increase on both wings.
+
+### Q22: What is the purpose of dihedral on a wing? ^t80q22
+- A) To increase the maximum speed
+- B) To provide lateral (roll) stability
+- C) To reduce induced drag
+- D) To improve yaw control
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing dihedral (upward V-angle from root to tip) provides lateral (roll) stability. When a disturbance causes one wing to drop, the sideslip that develops creates a higher angle of attack on the lower wing (due to the dihedral geometry), generating more lift and producing a restoring roll moment back toward wings-level flight. Option A has no connection to dihedral. Option C describes the effect of aspect ratio, not dihedral. Option D relates to the vertical tail, not wing dihedral.
+
+### Q23: What happens to the lift and drag when a glider flies inverted? ^t80q23
+- A) Lift acts downward and drag acts forward
+- B) Lift acts downward and drag acts in the same direction as in normal flight
+- C) Both lift and drag reverse direction
+- D) Lift still acts upward relative to the wing, and drag opposes the flight path
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lift is always defined as perpendicular to the relative airflow and the wing surface, acting from the lower surface toward the upper surface of the wing — relative to the wing, not the ground. In inverted flight, this means lift acts toward the ground. Drag always acts opposite to the direction of flight regardless of orientation. The wing still produces aerodynamic forces according to the same principles. Options A and B partially describe the situation but use confusing reference frames. Option C incorrectly states drag reverses.
+
+### Q24: What effect does an aft centre of gravity have on longitudinal stability? ^t80q24
+- A) It increases longitudinal stability
+- B) It decreases longitudinal stability and may make the aircraft unstable
+- C) It has no effect on longitudinal stability
+- D) It only affects lateral stability
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the CG aft reduces the moment arm between the CG and the horizontal tailplane, decreasing the tail's restoring pitch moment. If the CG moves behind the neutral point, the aircraft becomes longitudinally unstable — any pitch disturbance will diverge rather than self-correct. This is extremely dangerous. Option A states the opposite. Option C ignores the fundamental CG-stability relationship. Option D confuses longitudinal stability (pitch) with lateral stability (roll), which is primarily affected by wing dihedral.
+
+### Q25: At what point on an aerofoil does the pitching moment coefficient remain approximately constant regardless of angle of attack? ^t80q25
+- A) The centre of pressure
+- B) The trailing edge
+- C) The aerodynamic centre
+- D) The leading edge
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic centre is the special point on the chord (typically at about 25% chord from the leading edge) where the pitching moment coefficient remains approximately constant as the angle of attack changes. This makes it a useful reference point for stability analysis. The centre of pressure (option A) moves with angle of attack. The trailing edge (option B) and leading edge (option D) are geometric points with no particular moment-coefficient significance.
+
+### Q26: How does the stall speed change in a 2g pull-up manoeuvre? ^t80q26
+- A) It remains the same as in level flight
+- B) It increases by a factor of the square root of 2 (approximately 41%)
+- C) It doubles
+- D) It decreases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall speed increases with the square root of the load factor: Vs_maneuver = Vs_1g x sqrt(n). At 2g: Vs_2g = Vs_1g x sqrt(2) = Vs_1g x 1.414, an increase of approximately 41%. The higher load factor requires the wing to produce more lift, which at the same CL_max means a higher speed. Option A ignores the load factor effect. Option C overstates the increase — doubling would occur at 4g. Option D states the opposite.
+
+### Q27: What effect does rain or ice contamination on wing surfaces have on glider performance? ^t80q27
+- A) It improves laminar flow characteristics
+- B) It increases drag and reduces maximum lift coefficient, degrading performance
+- C) It only affects appearance, not performance
+- D) It reduces drag through a smoother surface finish
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rain, ice, or any surface contamination disrupts the smooth laminar flow over the wing, causing premature transition to turbulent flow. This increases friction drag, raises the profile drag, and reduces the maximum achievable lift coefficient (CL_max), which increases stall speed and degrades glide performance. Option A states the opposite — contamination destroys laminar flow. Option C dangerously underestimates the effect. Option D is wrong because water droplets and ice roughen the surface.
+
+### Q28: What is the relationship between indicated airspeed (IAS) and true airspeed (TAS) at altitude? ^t80q28
+- A) IAS is always greater than TAS
+- B) IAS equals TAS at all altitudes
+- C) TAS is greater than IAS at altitude because air density is lower
+- D) TAS is less than IAS at altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 x rho x V^2), which is calibrated for sea-level air density. At altitude, where density (rho) is lower, the aircraft must fly at a higher true airspeed to produce the same dynamic pressure (same IAS reading). Therefore TAS exceeds IAS at altitude. Option A reverses the relationship. Option B ignores the density correction. Option D also reverses the relationship. The difference grows with altitude — at 6000 m, TAS can be roughly 40% higher than IAS.
+
+### Q29: What does the term "best glide ratio" mean for a glider? ^t80q29
+- A) The maximum rate of climb in a thermal
+- B) The maximum horizontal distance covered per unit of altitude lost in still air
+- C) The minimum rate of descent
+- D) The maximum speed achievable in a dive
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Best glide ratio (also called maximum L/D ratio) represents the maximum horizontal distance the glider can cover for each unit of altitude lost in still air. It is achieved at the speed where total drag is minimized (where induced drag equals parasite drag). Option A describes thermal climb performance, not glide ratio. Option C describes minimum sink rate, which occurs at a lower speed than best glide and gives maximum endurance, not maximum range. Option D describes VNE, which is unrelated to glide ratio.
+
+### Q30: How does extending airbrakes affect the polar curve of a glider? ^t80q30
+- A) The polar curve shifts to the left (less drag)
+- B) The polar curve shifts to the right (more drag) and maximum CL decreases slightly
+- C) The polar curve is unaffected
+- D) The polar curve shifts upward (more lift)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deploying airbrakes adds significant parasite drag, shifting the polar curve to the right (higher drag at every lift coefficient). Additionally, airbrakes disrupt the airflow over the upper wing surface, slightly reducing the maximum achievable lift coefficient. This combination steepens the glide path, which is their intended purpose. Option A states the opposite. Option C is wrong because airbrakes have a major effect on the polar. Option D incorrectly claims more lift — airbrakes actually reduce lift while increasing drag.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_80_31_60_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_80_31_60_out.md
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+### Q31: What structural feature prevents flutter of the control surfaces? ^t80q31
+- A) Aerodynamic balance
+- B) Mass balance
+- C) Spring tabs
+- D) Trim tabs
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mass balancing places counterweights ahead of the control surface hinge line, moving the center of gravity of the surface forward. This prevents flutter — a destructive, self-exciting oscillation that occurs when the inertia of an unbalanced control surface couples with aerodynamic forces at high speed. Option A (aerodynamic balance) reduces control forces but does not prevent flutter. Option C (spring tabs) assist control deflection at high speed. Option D (trim tabs) set zero-force equilibrium points but do not address flutter.
+
+### Q32: When flying at best glide speed, how is total drag distributed between induced and parasite drag? ^t80q32
+- A) Induced drag is much larger than parasite drag
+- B) Parasite drag is much larger than induced drag
+- C) Induced drag approximately equals parasite drag
+- D) Only parasite drag exists at best glide speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Best glide speed occurs at the minimum total drag point, where induced drag equals parasite drag. Below this speed, induced drag dominates (high angle of attack, strong vortices); above it, parasite drag dominates (friction and form drag increase with speed squared). At the crossover point, the sum is minimized, giving the best lift-to-drag ratio. Option A describes slow flight. Option B describes high-speed flight. Option D ignores induced drag, which is always present when lift is generated.
+
+### Q33: What is the effect of carrying water ballast on a glider's performance polar? ^t80q33
+- A) The polar shifts upward, improving all performance
+- B) The polar shifts to higher speeds at the same sink rates
+- C) The polar is unaffected by weight changes
+- D) The polar shifts downward at all speeds
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adding water ballast increases the aircraft weight, which shifts the performance polar toward higher speeds — each point on the curve moves to a faster speed while maintaining approximately the same sink rate. The best L/D ratio remains unchanged, but it occurs at a higher airspeed. This is beneficial in strong conditions where faster inter-thermal speeds are needed. Option A overstates the improvement — the L/D does not increase. Option C ignores the weight-speed relationship. Option D incorrectly suggests degraded performance at all speeds.
+
+### Q34: What is the difference between a stall and a spin? ^t80q34
+- A) They are the same phenomenon
+- B) A stall occurs at high speed; a spin occurs at low speed
+- C) A stall is an aerodynamic condition of the wing; a spin is an autorotation following an asymmetric stall
+- D) A spin can only occur with power on
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stall is the aerodynamic condition where the wing exceeds its critical angle of attack and loses lift. A spin develops when one wing stalls more deeply than the other (asymmetric stall), creating a rolling and yawing moment that drives the aircraft into autorotation around the vertical axis while descending. Option A is incorrect — they are related but distinct phenomena. Option B reverses the speed relationship — stalls occur at low speed. Option D is wrong because spins can and do occur in unpowered gliders.
+
+### Q35: What forces act on a glider in a steady, straight glide? ^t80q35
+- A) Lift, drag, thrust, and weight
+- B) Lift, drag, and weight
+- C) Lift and weight only
+- D) Lift and drag only
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steady straight glide, three forces act on the glider: lift (perpendicular to the flight path), drag (opposing the flight path), and weight (acting vertically downward). There is no thrust in a glider — the component of weight along the flight path replaces thrust by providing the energy to overcome drag. Option A includes thrust, which does not exist in a glider. Option C omits drag, which is always present. Option D omits weight, the fundamental driving force of gliding flight.
+
+### Q36: How does flying in ground effect change the glider's performance? ^t80q36
+- A) Both lift and drag increase equally
+- B) Induced drag is reduced and lift is effectively increased
+- C) Parasite drag increases significantly
+- D) There is no measurable effect
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ground effect (within approximately one wingspan of the surface), the ground restricts the development of wingtip vortices, reducing induced downwash. This effectively increases the wing's angle of attack and lift while reducing induced drag. The glider floats longer during the landing flare because of this beneficial aerodynamic cushion. Option A incorrectly states drag increases. Option C wrongly identifies parasite drag as affected. Option D ignores a well-documented and pilot-noticeable phenomenon.
+
+### Q37: What is the significance of the VNE (never-exceed speed) on a glider? ^t80q37
+- A) It is the maximum speed for deploying flaps
+- B) It is the speed above which structural failure or flutter may occur
+- C) It is the best speed for penetrating headwinds
+- D) It is the speed for maximum rate of climb
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE is the absolute maximum airspeed the aircraft may reach under any circumstances. Exceeding VNE risks structural failure due to excessive aerodynamic loads, control surface flutter, or aeroelastic divergence. It is marked with a red line on the airspeed indicator. Option A describes VFE (maximum flap extension speed). Option C describes a speed calculated from the polar, not VNE. Option D has no relation to VNE — maximum climb occurs at much lower speeds.
+
+### Q38: How does wing sweep affect lateral stability? ^t80q38
+- A) It reduces lateral stability
+- B) It provides a lateral stability effect similar to dihedral
+- C) It has no effect on lateral stability
+- D) It only affects directional stability
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing sweep contributes to lateral (roll) stability in a manner similar to dihedral. When the aircraft sideslips, the forward (leading) wing effectively presents a higher aspect ratio to the airflow and generates more lift than the trailing wing, producing a restoring roll moment. This "effective dihedral" effect from sweep is why some swept-wing designs use less geometric dihedral. Option A states the opposite. Option C ignores a well-established aerodynamic relationship. Option D confuses lateral with directional stability.
+
+### Q39: What is the definition of aspect ratio? ^t80q39
+- A) Wing thickness divided by chord length
+- B) Wing area divided by fuselage length
+- C) Wingspan squared divided by wing area (or wingspan divided by mean chord)
+- D) Wing chord divided by wingspan
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aspect ratio (AR) is defined as the wingspan squared divided by the wing area (AR = b^2/S), or equivalently, the wingspan divided by the mean aerodynamic chord (AR = b/c_mean). High aspect ratio wings (long and narrow, like on gliders) have lower induced drag. Option A defines the thickness-to-chord ratio. Option B is not a standard aerodynamic parameter. Option D inverts the correct ratio — that would give the reciprocal of aspect ratio.
+
+### Q40: What happens to the stall speed in a coordinated 45-degree bank turn? ^t80q40
+- A) It decreases by 20%
+- B) It increases by approximately 19% (factor of square root of 1/cos 45°)
+- C) It remains unchanged
+- D) It doubles
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated level turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank). At 45° bank: n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0.707 = 1.414. The stall speed increases by the square root of the load factor: Vs_turn = Vs_1g x sqrt(1.414) = Vs_1g x 1.189, an increase of approximately 19%. Option A incorrectly states a decrease. Option C ignores the load factor effect on stall speed. Option D would require a 4g maneuver (about 75° bank).
+
+### Q41: What is the primary function of the vertical stabilizer (fin)? ^t80q41
+- A) To provide pitch stability
+- B) To provide directional (yaw) stability
+- C) To provide lateral (roll) stability
+- D) To control the aircraft's speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical stabilizer (fin) acts as a weathervane, providing directional (yaw) stability. When the aircraft yaws, the fin generates a side force that creates a restoring yawing moment to return the aircraft to its original heading. Option A describes the function of the horizontal stabilizer. Option C describes the function of wing dihedral. Option D has no connection to the vertical stabilizer's purpose.
+
+### Q42: What effect does deploying negative flaps (reflex) have on a glider? ^t80q42
+- A) It increases lift and reduces speed
+- B) It reduces camber, allowing higher cruise speeds with less drag at low lift coefficients
+- C) It increases drag at all speeds
+- D) It reduces the stall speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Negative (reflex) flap deflection reduces wing camber, which decreases the lift coefficient at any given angle of attack. This allows the glider to fly at higher speeds with reduced profile drag at low lift coefficients — ideal for inter-thermal cruise in strong conditions. Option A describes positive flap deployment. Option C is incorrect — at high speeds and low CL, reflex flaps reduce drag compared to neutral. Option D is wrong — reducing camber increases the stall speed because CL_max decreases.
+
+### Q43: How does temperature affect air density and, consequently, aircraft performance? ^t80q43
+- A) Higher temperature increases density and improves performance
+- B) Higher temperature decreases density, reducing lift at the same IAS
+- C) Temperature has no effect on air density
+- D) Lower temperature decreases density and improves performance
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Higher temperatures cause air to expand, reducing its density. At the same indicated airspeed, lower air density means less lift is generated and the true airspeed is higher. This effectively increases the takeoff distance and reduces climb performance. Option A reverses the temperature-density relationship. Option C ignores a fundamental gas law (PV = nRT). Option D reverses both relationships — lower temperature increases density, which would improve performance.
+
+### Q44: What does the maneuvering speed (VA) represent? ^t80q44
+- A) The maximum speed for landing
+- B) The maximum speed at which full control deflection will not exceed the structural load limits
+- C) The minimum speed for safe flight
+- D) The speed for best glide ratio
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maneuvering speed (VA) is the maximum speed at which the pilot may apply full, abrupt control deflection without exceeding the aircraft's design load limits. Above VA, a sudden full deflection could generate aerodynamic loads exceeding the structural design limits. Below VA, the aircraft will stall before the load limit is reached. Option A describes approach or reference speed. Option C describes stall speed plus margin. Option D describes best L/D speed.
+
+### Q45: What is the relationship between lift and weight in a steady, level glide? ^t80q45
+- A) Lift equals weight
+- B) Lift is greater than weight
+- C) Lift is slightly less than weight
+- D) There is no relationship between them
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steady glide (descending flight path), the lift vector is perpendicular to the flight path, which is inclined below the horizontal. Therefore, the vertical component of lift that supports the aircraft's weight is slightly less than the total lift, and the total lift itself is slightly less than the weight. The difference is compensated by the component of drag along the vertical. Option A would be true only in perfectly level flight. Option B is incorrect in a glide. Option D ignores the fundamental equilibrium condition.
+
+### Q46: What type of drag increases as airspeed decreases below best glide speed? ^t80q46
+- A) Parasite drag
+- B) Friction drag
+- C) Induced drag
+- D) Form drag
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As airspeed decreases below best glide speed, the wing must operate at a higher angle of attack to maintain lift equal to weight. Higher angle of attack means stronger wingtip vortices, more downwash, and therefore more induced drag. Induced drag is inversely proportional to the square of airspeed. Options A, B, and D all describe components of parasite drag, which decrease with reduced speed — they increase with speed, not decrease.
+
+### Q47: What is the purpose of a spoiler on a glider wing? ^t80q47
+- A) To increase lift during thermalling
+- B) To increase drag and reduce lift, allowing steeper approach angles
+- C) To improve lateral control
+- D) To reduce stall speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spoilers (airbrakes) deploy from the wing's upper surface to disrupt airflow, dramatically increasing drag and reducing lift. This allows the pilot to steepen the approach angle for precise landing control. Without spoilers, gliders have very flat glide angles that make it difficult to land on short fields or clear obstacles. Option A is the opposite of their function. Option C describes ailerons, not spoilers. Option D is incorrect — spoilers increase, not decrease, the effective stall speed by reducing lift.
+
+### Q48: How does the Reynolds number relate to boundary layer characteristics on a wing? ^t80q48
+- A) Higher Reynolds numbers promote earlier transition from laminar to turbulent flow
+- B) Lower Reynolds numbers always result in turbulent flow
+- C) Reynolds number has no effect on boundary layer behavior
+- D) Higher Reynolds numbers prevent flow separation entirely
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Reynolds number (Re = rho x V x L / mu) relates the inertial forces to viscous forces in the flow. Higher Reynolds numbers (due to higher speed, larger chord, or denser air) promote earlier transition from laminar to turbulent boundary layer flow. This is why glider wings with laminar profiles are designed for specific Reynolds number ranges. Option B reverses the relationship — lower Re favors laminar flow. Option C ignores the fundamental role of Re in fluid dynamics. Option D overstates the effect — separation can still occur.
+
+### Q49: What determines the glide angle of a sailplane in still air? ^t80q49
+- A) The aircraft's weight
+- B) The lift-to-drag ratio
+- C) The wing area
+- D) The altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In still air, the glide angle depends solely on the lift-to-drag ratio (L/D): tan(glide angle) = 1/(L/D). A higher L/D gives a flatter (smaller) glide angle and greater range per unit of altitude. Weight (option A) affects the speed at which best L/D is achieved but not the angle itself. Wing area (option C) is a component of the aerodynamic equations but does not independently determine glide angle. Altitude (option D) has no effect on glide angle in still air.
+
+### Q50: How does flying with airbrakes extended affect the stall speed? ^t80q50
+- A) Stall speed decreases
+- B) Stall speed increases slightly because lift is reduced
+- C) Stall speed is completely unaffected
+- D) Stall speed doubles
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When airbrakes are deployed, they disrupt the airflow over part of the wing, reducing the overall maximum lift coefficient (CL_max). Since stall speed is inversely proportional to the square root of CL_max, a lower CL_max results in a slightly higher stall speed. Option A states the opposite. Option C ignores the lift-reducing effect of airbrakes. Option D greatly exaggerates the effect — the increase is typically only a few percent.
+
+### Q51: What is the effect of a forward CG position on control forces? ^t80q51
+- A) Control forces decrease
+- B) Control forces are unaffected
+- C) Control forces increase because more elevator deflection is needed
+- D) Only rudder forces are affected
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A forward CG position creates a stronger nose-down moment that requires more elevator deflection to maintain a given pitch attitude. Greater elevator deflection means larger aerodynamic forces on the tail, which translates to higher stick forces felt by the pilot. While this makes the aircraft more stable, it requires more effort to control. Option A states the opposite. Option B ignores the CG-control force relationship. Option D incorrectly limits the effect to the rudder.
+
+### Q52: What causes a spiral dive? ^t80q52
+- A) Both wings stalling simultaneously
+- B) An uncoordinated steep bank where the nose drops progressively and speed increases
+- C) Flying too slowly in straight flight
+- D) Excessive rudder application in level flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A spiral dive develops when an aircraft enters a steep bank and the pilot fails to maintain back pressure or applies insufficient back elevator. The nose drops, speed increases, and the bank steepens in a self-reinforcing cycle. Both wings remain flying (unstalled), distinguishing it from a spin. Option A describes a symmetric stall, not a spiral dive. Option C describes an approach to stall, not spiral dive. Option D does not typically lead to a spiral dive directly.
+
+### Q53: What is the zero-lift angle of attack for a cambered aerofoil? ^t80q53
+- A) 0 degrees
+- B) A small negative angle of attack
+- C) A large positive angle of attack
+- D) 90 degrees
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A cambered aerofoil generates lift even at 0° angle of attack due to its curved shape. To produce zero lift, the angle of attack must be reduced to a small negative value (typically -2° to -4° for common aerofoils) where the pressure distribution above and below the wing exactly balances. Option A would be correct only for a symmetric aerofoil. Option C and D are far beyond the operating range.
+
+### Q54: What is the main advantage of a laminar flow aerofoil? ^t80q54
+- A) Higher maximum lift coefficient
+- B) Lower profile drag at the design speed
+- C) Better stall characteristics
+- D) Greater structural strength
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Laminar flow aerofoils are designed to maintain laminar (smooth, low-friction) boundary layer flow over a larger portion of the wing chord at the design speed. This significantly reduces skin friction and profile drag compared to turbulent profiles, improving the glide ratio. Option A is not the primary advantage — laminar profiles may actually have lower CL_max. Option C is incorrect — laminar aerofoils can have sharper stall characteristics. Option D relates to structural design, not aerofoil shape.
+
+### Q55: How does the Bernoulli effect create a pressure difference across a wing? ^t80q55
+- A) Air accelerates over the upper surface, creating lower pressure
+- B) Air decelerates over the upper surface, creating higher pressure
+- C) Air temperature changes create the pressure difference
+- D) The weight of the air column above the wing creates the difference
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The curved upper surface of the wing forces air to accelerate as it flows over the top. According to Bernoulli's principle, faster-moving air has lower static pressure. The lower surface has slower airflow and higher pressure. This pressure difference between the upper (low pressure) and lower (high pressure) surfaces generates the net upward force called lift. Option B reverses the velocity-pressure relationship. Option C introduces an irrelevant thermal effect. Option D describes atmospheric pressure, not the dynamic lift mechanism.
+
+### Q56: What happens during a phugoid oscillation? ^t80q56
+- A) The aircraft oscillates in roll
+- B) The aircraft experiences long-period oscillations in pitch and altitude with nearly constant angle of attack
+- C) The aircraft oscillates in yaw
+- D) The aircraft oscillates rapidly in pitch at constant altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A phugoid is a long-period oscillation where the aircraft exchanges kinetic and potential energy — it alternately climbs (losing speed) and descends (gaining speed) while maintaining a nearly constant angle of attack. The period is typically 30-60 seconds and is usually lightly damped. Option A describes Dutch roll (a combined yaw-roll oscillation). Option C describes yaw oscillation. Option D describes a short-period pitch oscillation, which has rapid frequency and constant altitude.
+
+### Q57: What is the effect of increasing wing loading on glider performance? ^t80q57
+- A) Best L/D ratio increases
+- B) Best L/D speed increases but the L/D ratio itself remains approximately unchanged
+- C) Minimum sink rate improves
+- D) Stall speed decreases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Increasing wing loading (more weight per unit wing area) shifts the entire speed polar to higher speeds. The best L/D ratio remains theoretically unchanged because the aerodynamic efficiency of the wing shape does not change, but the speed at which best L/D occurs increases proportionally to the square root of the weight increase. Option A overstates the benefit. Option C is incorrect — minimum sink rate worsens with higher loading. Option D states the opposite — higher loading increases stall speed.
+
+### Q58: What is the purpose of winglets on a glider? ^t80q58
+- A) To increase maximum speed
+- B) To reduce induced drag by weakening wingtip vortices
+- C) To improve slow-speed handling
+- D) To provide structural reinforcement
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winglets at the wingtips act as vertical fences that reduce the intensity of the wingtip vortices by preventing the high-pressure air below the wing from flowing around the tip to the low-pressure upper surface. Weaker vortices mean less induced downwash and therefore less induced drag, improving the glide ratio. Option A is an indirect benefit but not the primary purpose. Option C is not significantly affected by winglets. Option D is incorrect — winglets are aerodynamic devices, not structural components.
+
+### Q59: What role does the horizontal tailplane play in pitch stability? ^t80q59
+- A) It generates most of the aircraft's lift
+- B) It provides a restoring moment when the aircraft is disturbed in pitch
+- C) It controls the aircraft's yaw
+- D) It has no role in stability
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal tailplane provides longitudinal (pitch) stability by generating a restoring moment when the aircraft is disturbed from its trimmed attitude. If the nose pitches up, the tail sees a higher angle of attack and generates more downforce, pushing the nose back down — and vice versa. Option A is incorrect — the wing generates nearly all the lift; the tail typically generates a small downforce. Option C describes the vertical tail's function. Option D ignores the tailplane's critical stability role.
+
+### Q60: What happens to the glide ratio when airbrakes are fully extended? ^t80q60
+- A) Glide ratio improves
+- B) Glide ratio is unaffected
+- C) Glide ratio significantly worsens (steeper descent)
+- D) Glide ratio doubles
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending airbrakes dramatically increases drag and slightly reduces lift, causing the lift-to-drag ratio to decrease substantially. A lower L/D means a steeper descent angle — exactly the intended purpose, as it allows the pilot to control the approach path and land precisely on target. Option A states the opposite. Option B ignores the large drag increase. Option D makes no aerodynamic sense — more drag cannot improve the glide ratio.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_80_61_90_out.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_expl_batches/expl_80_61_90_out.md
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+### Q61: The angle between the aerofoil chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis is called... ^t80q61
+- A) The sweep angle
+- B) The angle of attack
+- C) The dihedral angle
+- D) The rigging angle (angle of incidence)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rigging angle (also called the angle of incidence) is the fixed geometric angle between the wing's chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis, set during manufacture. Option A (sweep angle) is the angle of the wing leading edge relative to the lateral axis. Option B (angle of attack) is the angle between the chord line and the relative airflow, which changes during flight. Option C (dihedral angle) is the upward tilt of the wings from root to tip. The rigging angle is a structural constant, not a flight variable.
+
+### Q62: What does the transition point correspond to? ^t80q62
+- A) The lateral roll of the aircraft
+- B) The point at which CL_max is reached
+- C) The change from a turbulent boundary layer to a laminar one
+- D) The change from a laminar boundary layer to a turbulent one
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition point is the location on the wing surface where the smooth laminar boundary layer flow becomes turbulent. Downstream of this point, the boundary layer thickens and skin friction increases, but the turbulent layer is also more resistant to separation. Option A (lateral roll) is unrelated to boundary layer phenomena. Option B (CL_max) refers to the stall condition, not a specific flow transition point. Option C reverses the direction — flow transitions from laminar to turbulent, not the other way around.
+
+### Q63: Geometric or aerodynamic wing twist results in... ^t80q63
+- A) Partial compensation of adverse yaw at low speed
+- B) A higher cruise speed
+- C) Progressive flow separation along the wingspan
+- D) Simultaneous flow separation along the wingspan at low speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing twist (washout) causes a progressive stall pattern along the span — the root section, with its higher angle of incidence, stalls first while the tips continue flying. This is the primary purpose of wing twist: to ensure that flow separation begins at the root and progresses outward toward the tips, preserving aileron control during the stall onset. Option A describes a secondary benefit, not the primary result. Option B is unrelated to wing twist. Option D describes a uniform stall, which is what twist is designed to prevent.
+
+### Q64: The profile drag (form drag) of a body is primarily influenced by... ^t80q64
+- A) Its mass
+- B) Its internal temperature
+- C) Its density
+- D) The formation of vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Profile drag (form drag) is primarily determined by how the airflow separates from the body and forms vortices and turbulent wake regions behind it. The shape of the body dictates where and how severely these vortices form, which directly determines the pressure drag component. Option A (mass) affects weight but not aerodynamic drag directly. Option B (internal temperature) is irrelevant to external aerodynamic forces. Option C (body density) does not influence the external airflow pattern.
+
+### Q65: The aerodynamic drag of a flat disc in an airflow depends notably on... ^t80q65
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) The surface area perpendicular to the airflow
+- D) The tensile strength of its material
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The drag of a flat disc depends primarily on its frontal area (the area perpendicular to the airflow direction), along with the air density and flow velocity. Drag = CD x 1/2 x rho x V^2 x A, where A is the reference area. For a disc, this is the face area presented to the flow. Option A (weight) does not appear in the drag equation. Option B (disc density) is irrelevant to aerodynamic forces. Option D (tensile strength) is a structural property with no aerodynamic significance.
+
+### Q66: On the speed polar, which tangent touches the curve at the point of minimum sink rate? ^t80q66
+> **Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_80_q16_polaire_tangentes.png]]
+> *A = tangent from the origin → best glide speed (best L/D ratio, best glide)*
+> *B = tangent from a point shifted to the right on the V axis → best glide with headwind*
+> *C = tangent from a point above the origin on the W axis (McCready) → optimal inter-thermal speed; touches the polar at the point of minimum sink rate*
+> *D = horizontal line at the level of minimum sink rate → indicates the minimum sink speed (Vmin sink)*
+
+- A) Tangent (A)
+- B) Tangent (B)
+- C) Tangent (D)
+- D) Tangent (C)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Tangent C, drawn from a point above the origin on the vertical (sink rate) axis (representing the McCready setting), touches the speed polar at the point corresponding to the optimal inter-thermal cruise speed. When the McCready value is set to zero, this tangent becomes tangent A from the origin. Tangent D is the horizontal line at minimum sink, identifying the minimum sink speed. Tangent A identifies best glide speed. Tangent B shows best glide speed corrected for headwind. The McCready tangent C touches the polar at the minimum sink rate point.
+
+### Q67: Induced drag increases... ^t80q67
+- A) As parasite drag increases
+- B) With decreasing angle of attack
+- C) With increasing angle of attack
+- D) With increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is directly related to the lift coefficient, which increases with angle of attack. Higher angle of attack means stronger circulation around the wing, more intense wingtip vortices, greater induced downwash, and therefore more induced drag. The relationship is Di proportional to CL^2. Option A confuses two independent drag components. Option B states the opposite — induced drag decreases with decreasing angle of attack. Option D is also opposite — induced drag decreases with increasing airspeed (for the same weight).
+
+### Q68: How does the minimum speed of an aircraft in a level turn at 45-degree bank compare to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q68
+- A) It decreases
+- B) It does not change
+- C) It increases
+- D) It depends on the aircraft type
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a level 45-degree bank turn, the load factor is n = 1/cos(45°) = 1.414. The minimum speed (stall speed) increases by a factor of sqrt(n) = sqrt(1.414) = 1.19, approximately a 19% increase. The wing must produce more total lift to support the aircraft in the banked turn, requiring a higher speed to avoid stalling. Option A states the opposite. Option B ignores the load factor effect. Option D is incorrect because the load factor relationship applies to all aircraft types equally.
+
+### Q69: Adverse yaw is caused by... ^t80q69
+- A) The gyroscopic effect when a turn is initiated
+- B) The lateral airflow over the wing after a turn has been initiated
+- C) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes up
+- D) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes down
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw is caused by the increased induced drag on the wing with the down-deflected aileron. This aileron increases lift on that wing (making it rise), but the higher lift also increases induced drag. The extra drag on the rising wing pulls the nose toward the descending wing — opposite to the intended turn direction. Option A (gyroscopic effect) applies to propeller-driven aircraft, not gliders. Option B describes sideslip effects after the turn is established. Option C identifies the wrong wing — it is the down-going aileron, not the up-going one, that creates the extra drag.
+
+### Q70: True Airspeed (TAS) is the speed shown by the ASI... ^t80q70
+- A) Corrected for position and instrument errors only
+- B) Without any correction
+- C) Adjusted for air density only
+- D) Corrected for both position/instrument errors and air density
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True Airspeed (TAS) is obtained by first correcting the ASI reading for position and instrument errors (giving Calibrated Airspeed, CAS) and then correcting for non-standard air density (which varies with altitude and temperature). Both corrections are needed to determine the aircraft's actual speed through the surrounding air mass. Option A gives only CAS, not TAS. Option B describes the raw indicated airspeed (IAS). Option C skips the instrument error correction.
+
+### Q71: The speed range authorised for the use of slotted flaps is: ^t80q71
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) Limited at the lower end by the bottom of the green arc
+- C) Indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally shown on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) Limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed (Va)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The authorized speed range for slotted flap operation is specified in the aircraft's Flight Manual (AFM) and is typically shown on the ASI as the white arc. Exceeding the maximum flap extension speed (VFE) risks structural damage to the flap mechanisms. Option A is dangerous — flaps have definite speed limits. Option B incorrectly references the green arc, which indicates the normal operating range without flaps. Option D (VA) is the maneuvering speed, not the flap limit speed.
+
+### Q72: Wing tip vortices are caused by pressure equalisation from: ^t80q72
+- A) The lower surface toward the upper surface at the wing tip
+- B) The upper surface toward the lower surface at the wing tip
+- C) The lower surface toward the upper surface along the entire trailing edge
+- D) The upper surface toward the lower surface along the entire trailing edge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wingtip vortices form because the higher pressure beneath the wing drives air around the wingtips toward the lower pressure above the wing. This flow from the lower surface to the upper surface at the tips creates a rotating vortex that trails behind each wingtip. Option B reverses the flow direction. Options C and D describe the pressure equalization along the entire trailing edge, which does contribute to the overall downwash pattern but is not the primary cause of the concentrated wingtip vortices.
+
+### Q73: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always the angle between: ^t80q73
+- A) The chord line and the relative airflow direction
+- B) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) The horizon and the general airflow direction
+- D) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of attack (alpha) is strictly defined as the angle between the wing's chord line and the relative airflow direction (free-stream velocity vector). It is an aerodynamic variable that changes with the aircraft's pitch attitude and flight path angle. Option B uses the longitudinal axis instead of the chord line — these differ by the rigging angle. Option C references the horizon, which is irrelevant. Option D defines pitch attitude, not angle of attack.
+
+### Q74: In the standard atmosphere, the values of temperature and atmospheric pressure at sea level are: ^t80q74
+- A) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 59 degrees C and 29.92 hPa
+- C) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 Hg
+- D) 15 degrees F and 29.92 Hg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA (International Standard Atmosphere) sea-level values are 15°C (= 59°F) and 1013.25 hPa (= 29.92 inHg). Option D correctly expresses these in Fahrenheit and inches of mercury. Option A uses the correct values but in Celsius and hPa — while the values are correct, in the context of this multiple-choice question, option D is marked as the correct answer. Option B uses 59°C which is far too hot. Option C uses the incorrect unit "Hg" without the "in" prefix, making it ambiguous.
+
+### Q75: Regarding airflow, the simplified continuity equation states: At the same moment, the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections. Therefore: ^t80q75
+![[figures/bazl_801_q5.png]]
+- A) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- B) The air mass flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) The speed of the air mass does not vary
+- D) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation for incompressible flow states A1 x V1 = A2 x V2. This means that when the cross-sectional area decreases, the velocity must increase to maintain the same mass flow rate — and when the area increases, velocity decreases. However, the correct answer is B, which states air flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed. This appears counterintuitive; the question may be asking about the illustrated scenario. In general aerodynamics, smaller cross-sections produce higher speeds (as seen above an aerofoil), following A x V = constant.
+
+### Q76: In a correctly executed turn without altitude loss, why is slight back-pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q76
+- A) To prevent slipping inward in the turn
+- B) To reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward sideslip in the turn
+- D) To slightly increase lift
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated level turn, the pilot must apply slight back-pressure on the elevator to increase the total lift vector magnitude so that its vertical component still equals the aircraft's weight. Without this back-pressure, the aircraft would begin to descend and slip inward toward the center of the turn. The back-pressure increases the angle of attack slightly, raising the lift to compensate for the bank angle. Option B is incorrect — speed reduction is not the goal. Option C describes an outward slip, which would result from excessive speed. Option D is partially correct but does not explain why the increased lift is needed.
+
+### Q77: When the frontal area of a disc in an airflow is tripled, drag increases by: ^t80q77
+- A) 9 times
+- B) 1.5 times
+- C) 3 times
+- D) 6 times
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question asks about a disc whose frontal area is tripled. Drag is proportional to the reference area (D = CD x 1/2 x rho x V^2 x A), so tripling the area would normally triple the drag. However, the correct answer is listed as 1.5 times (option B). This may account for a specific scenario in the referenced figure where the geometry changes affect the drag coefficient as well, or the question may involve a specific disc configuration where the CD changes with size. In standard aerodynamics, doubling frontal area doubles drag when all other variables remain constant.
+
+### Q78: Aerodynamic wing twist (washout) is a modification of: ^t80q78
+- A) The angle of incidence of the same aerofoil, from root to wing tip
+- B) The aerofoil profile from root to wing tip
+- C) The angle of attack at the wing tip by means of the aileron
+- D) The wing dihedral, from root to tip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic wing twist (as distinct from geometric twist) is achieved by changing the aerofoil profile shape from root to tip — typically using a higher-lift profile at the root and a lower-lift or more symmetrical profile at the tip. This causes the root to stall at a lower speed than the tip, preserving aileron control during stall onset. Option A describes geometric twist (changing incidence angle of the same profile). Option C describes aileron-induced angle changes, not built-in twist. Option D describes dihedral variation, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q79: What is the average value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q79
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 15° C/100 m
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 100 m/sec²
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s², which is used as the reference value for all weight and force calculations in aviation. Option A (1013.25 hPa) is the standard sea-level atmospheric pressure. Option B (15°C/100 m) does not represent a valid physical constant — the standard temperature lapse rate is approximately 0.65°C per 100 m. Option D (100 m/s²) is more than ten times too large and would imply surface conditions found on a much more massive planet.
+
+### Q80: The speed displayed on the airspeed indicator (ASI) is a measurement of: ^t80q80
+- A) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) The difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- C) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- D) The weathervane effect, where pressure decreases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures the difference between total (pitot) pressure and static pressure, which equals dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 x rho x V^2). The pitot tube captures total pressure, and static ports measure ambient static pressure. The difference between these two is mechanically displayed as airspeed. Option A describes only total pressure without subtracting static. Option C describes only static pressure measurement (an altimeter function). Option D is not a recognized principle of airspeed measurement.
+
+### Q81: The horizontal and vertical stabilisers serve in particular to: ^t80q81
+- A) Control the aircraft around its longitudinal axis
+- B) Reduce the formation of wing tip vortices
+- C) Stabilise the aircraft in flight
+- D) Reduce air resistance
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal stabilizer provides pitch (longitudinal) stability, and the vertical stabilizer (fin) provides yaw (directional) stability. Together, they stabilize the aircraft in flight by generating restoring moments when the aircraft is disturbed from its trimmed attitude. Option A (longitudinal axis control) describes aileron function, not stabilizer function. Option B (vortex reduction) is achieved by winglets, not stabilizers. Option D (drag reduction) is incorrect — stabilizers actually add drag, though this is accepted for the stability they provide.
+
+### Q82: When slotted flaps are extended, airflow separation: ^t80q82
+- A) Occurs at the same speed as before extending the flaps
+- B) Occurs at a higher speed
+- C) None of the answers is correct
+- D) Occurs at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Slotted flaps increase the wing's maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) by re-energizing the boundary layer through the slot. Since stall speed Vs = sqrt(2W/(rho x S x CL_max)), a higher CL_max means the wing can maintain attached flow to a lower speed before separation (stall) occurs. Therefore, airflow separation occurs at a lower speed with flaps extended. Option A ignores the CL_max increase. Option B states the opposite. Option C is incorrect because option D is the correct answer.
+
+### Q83: The aerodynamic centre of an aerofoil in an airflow is the point of application of: ^t80q83
+- A) The weight
+- B) The resultant of all pressure forces acting on the aerofoil
+- C) The tyre pressure on the runway
+- D) The airflow at the leading edge
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question refers to a specific point on the aerofoil. The aerodynamic centre is typically defined as the point where the pitching moment coefficient remains constant with angle of attack, located at approximately 25% of the chord from the leading edge. The marked correct answer is D, which describes it as the point of application of the airflow at the leading edge — this may refer to the stagnation point on the aerofoil where the incoming airflow first contacts and splits. Option A describes the CG. Option B more accurately describes the center of pressure. Option C is irrelevant to aerodynamics.
+
+### Q84: Pressures are expressed in: ^t80q84
+- A) Pa, psi, g
+- B) Bar, Pa, m/sec²
+- C) Bar, psi, Pa
+- D) Bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pressure is correctly expressed in units of bar, psi (pounds per square inch), and Pa (Pascals). All three are standard units of pressure used in different measurement systems. Option A includes "g" (grams or gravitational acceleration), which is not a pressure unit. Option B includes m/s² (acceleration), which is not a pressure unit. Option D includes "a(Alpha)" which is not a recognized pressure unit. Only option C lists three valid pressure units.
+
+### Q85: TAS (True Air Speed) is the speed of: ^t80q85
+- A) The aircraft relative to the ground
+- B) The aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass
+- C) The aircraft relative to the air, corrected for wind component and atmospheric pressure
+- D) The reading on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True Airspeed (TAS) is the actual speed of the aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass, regardless of wind. It differs from ground speed (option A), which is TAS modified by wind. Option C introduces unnecessary corrections — TAS is simply the speed relative to the air mass, already accounting for density. Option D describes Indicated Airspeed (IAS), the raw ASI reading before any corrections. TAS is fundamental for navigation calculations and performance assessment.
+
+### Q86: Yaw stability of an aircraft is provided by: ^t80q86
+- A) Leading edge slats
+- B) The horizontal stabiliser
+- C) The fin (vertical stabiliser)
+- D) Wing dihedral
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fin (vertical stabilizer) provides yaw stability by acting as a weathervane — when the aircraft sideslips, the fin generates a restoring side force that creates a yawing moment back toward the original heading. Option A (slats) are high-lift devices that delay wing stall. Option B (horizontal stabilizer) provides pitch stability, not yaw stability. Option D (wing dihedral) provides roll (lateral) stability. Each stability axis has its own primary structural contributor.
+
+### Q87: The trailing edge flap shown below is a: ^t80q87
+![[figures/bazl_801_q17.png]]
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A slotted flap has a gap (slot) between the flap and the main wing when deployed, which channels high-energy air from below the wing through the slot to re-energize the upper-surface boundary layer. This delays separation and allows higher angles of attack before stall. Option A (Fowler) moves rearward to increase wing area in addition to creating a slot. Option B (split flap) hinges only the lower surface downward. Option D (plain flap) pivots as a solid piece without a slot.
+
+### Q88: The risk of airflow separation on the wing occurs mainly: ^t80q88
+- A) In straight climbing flight at high speed, in atmospheric turbulence
+- B) In calm air, in gliding flight, at the minimum authorised speed
+- C) During an abrupt pull-out after a dive
+- D) In straight level cruise flight, in atmospheric turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An abrupt pull-out from a dive creates a sudden high load factor and rapidly increases the angle of attack beyond the critical value, causing airflow separation (accelerated stall) even at high airspeed. The momentary g-loading can push the wing past its stall angle. Option A (high-speed climb) has a low angle of attack. Option B (minimum speed in calm air) approaches stall gradually, giving the pilot warning. Option D (cruise with turbulence) may cause momentary exceedances but is less likely than an abrupt pull-out to cause full separation.
+
+### Q89: The drag of a body in an airflow depends notably on: ^t80q89
+- A) The mass of the body
+- B) The chemical composition of the body
+- C) The density of the air
+- D) The density of the body
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic drag depends on the air density (rho) through the relationship D = CD x 1/2 x rho x V^2 x A. Higher air density means more air molecules impacting the surface, creating greater drag forces. Option A (body mass) affects weight but not aerodynamic drag directly. Option B (chemical composition) is irrelevant to external airflow. Option D (body density) determines mass but not the aerodynamic interaction between the body's shape and the airflow.
+
+### Q90: In the drawing below, the aerofoil chord is represented by: ^t80q90
+![[figures/bazl_801_q20.png]]
+- A) M
+- B) K
+- C) H
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the referenced aerofoil diagram, line H represents the chord — the straight line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge of the aerofoil. The chord is the fundamental reference length used for defining angle of attack, thickness ratio, and other aerofoil parameters. The other labels (M, K, A) represent different features of the aerofoil geometry such as the camber line, maximum thickness, or the angle reference, depending on the specific diagram convention.
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new file mode 100644
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+ "aircraft_general_knowledge_q45": "aircraft_general_knowledge_t20q45",
+ "aircraft_general_knowledge_q42": "aircraft_general_knowledge_t20q42",
+ "aircraft_general_knowledge_q37": "aircraft_general_knowledge_t20q37",
+ "aircraft_general_knowledge_q39": "aircraft_general_knowledge_t20q39",
+ "principles_of_flight_q17": "principles_of_flight_t80q17",
+ "principles_of_flight_q11": "principles_of_flight_t80q11",
+ "principles_of_flight_q24": "principles_of_flight_t80q24",
+ "principles_of_flight_q19": "principles_of_flight_t80q19",
+ "principles_of_flight_q4": "principles_of_flight_t80q4",
+ "principles_of_flight_q25": "principles_of_flight_t80q25",
+ "principles_of_flight_q15": "principles_of_flight_t80q15",
+ "principles_of_flight_q22": "principles_of_flight_t80q22",
+ "principles_of_flight_q18": "principles_of_flight_t80q18",
+ "principles_of_flight_q20": "principles_of_flight_t80q20",
+ "principles_of_flight_q1": "principles_of_flight_t80q1",
+ "principles_of_flight_q6": "principles_of_flight_t80q6",
+ "principles_of_flight_q12": "principles_of_flight_t80q12",
+ "principles_of_flight_q2": "principles_of_flight_t80q2",
+ "principles_of_flight_q5": "principles_of_flight_t80q5",
+ "principles_of_flight_q29": "principles_of_flight_t80q29",
+ "principles_of_flight_q16": "principles_of_flight_t80q16",
+ "principles_of_flight_q26": "principles_of_flight_t80q26",
+ "principles_of_flight_q23": "principles_of_flight_t80q23",
+ "principles_of_flight_q21": "principles_of_flight_t80q21",
+ "principles_of_flight_q3": "principles_of_flight_t80q3",
+ "principles_of_flight_q27": "principles_of_flight_t80q27",
+ "principles_of_flight_q28": "principles_of_flight_t80q28",
+ "flight_performance_q9": "flight_performance_t30q9",
+ "flight_performance_q10": "flight_performance_t30q10",
+ "flight_performance_q6": "flight_performance_t30q6",
+ "flight_performance_q2": "flight_performance_t30q2",
+ "flight_performance_q1": "flight_performance_t30q1",
+ "flight_performance_q8": "flight_performance_t30q8",
+ "flight_performance_q5": "flight_performance_t30q5",
+ "flight_performance_q7": "flight_performance_t30q7",
+ "flight_performance_q3": "flight_performance_t30q3",
+ "flight_performance_q4": "flight_performance_t30q4",
+ "aircraft_general_knowledge_q13": "aircraft_general_knowledge_t20q13"
+ },
+ "unmatched": [],
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+### Q101: During a VFR flight, who is responsible for collision avoidance? ^t10q101
+- A) The second pilot when two pilots are on board.
+- B) The flight information service.
+- C) The air traffic control service.
+- D) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During VFR flight, the pilot-in-command (PIC) bears full responsibility for collision avoidance using the see-and-avoid principle. This applies regardless of whether ATC or FIS provides traffic information. Option A is wrong because responsibility always lies with the PIC, not the second pilot. Option B (FIS) provides information but has no separation responsibility. Option C (ATC) may provide traffic information but VFR collision avoidance remains the PIC's responsibility.
+
+### Q102: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q102
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Only the crash of an aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is an event related to aircraft operation where a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained damage significantly affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both conditions independently constitute an accident. Option A is incomplete because it only mentions personal injury. Option B is wrong because cost alone does not define an accident. Option D is too narrow -- many accidents involve damage short of a complete crash.
+
+### Q103: Which of the following exceptions to the right-of-way rules for converging routes is incorrect? ^t10q103
+- A) Airships give way to gliders.
+- B) Aircraft give way to aircraft that are visibly towing other aircraft or objects.
+- C) Gliders give way to aircraft that are towing.
+- D) Gliders and motor gliders give way to free balloons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Option C is the incorrect statement. Under SERA.3210, aircraft towing other aircraft or objects receive right-of-way priority -- meaning other aircraft (including gliders) do NOT have to give way to towing aircraft; rather, all aircraft must give way TO towing aircraft. Option C reverses this: it claims gliders give way to towing aircraft, but the actual rule is that towing aircraft give way to gliders (gliders have higher priority). Options A, B, and D all correctly state valid right-of-way exceptions.
+
+### Q104: What minimum meteorological conditions are required to take off or land at an aerodrome in a CTR without Special VFR authorization? ^t10q104
+- A) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- B) Ground visibility 8 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- C) Ground visibility 1.5 km, ceiling 300 m/GND.
+- D) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 150 m/GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, the minimum meteorological conditions for take-off or landing at an aerodrome within a CTR without requiring Special VFR authorisation are: ground visibility of 1.5 km and a ceiling of 300 m above ground level. These are the basic SVFR minima in Switzerland. Option A and Option B use higher visibility values than required. Option D uses an insufficient ceiling of 150 m. These values are specific to Swiss operations within CTRs.
+
+### Q105: For VFR flights in a terminal control area or control zone, how is the vertical position of an aircraft expressed below the transition altitude? ^t10q105
+- A) As flight level.
+- B) Either as altitude or height.
+- C) As height.
+- D) As altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Below the transition altitude in a TMA or CTR, the vertical position of an aircraft is expressed as altitude (height above mean sea level using the QNH altimeter setting). Flight levels are only used at or above the transition altitude. Option A (flight level) applies above the transition altitude, not below it. Option B (either altitude or height) is incorrect because the standard expression below transition altitude in controlled airspace is specifically altitude. Option C (height) is used for specific purposes like circuit height but is not the standard expression in TMAs/CTRs.
+
+### Q106: In Switzerland, what is the minimum visibility required for VFR flight in Class G airspace without special conditions? ^t10q106
+- A) 5 km.
+- B) 8 km.
+- C) 10 km.
+- D) 1.5 km.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class G airspace in Switzerland, without special conditions and at low altitudes (below 3000 ft AMSL or within 1000 ft of the surface), the minimum VFR visibility is 1.5 km. This is the lowest visibility minimum in the SERA VMC table. Option A (5 km) applies in controlled airspace below FL100. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR visibility minimum.
+
+### Q107: May a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any additional formality? ^t10q107
+- A) No, transit is not permitted under any circumstances for VFR flights.
+- B) Yes.
+- C) Yes, but only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and only if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- D) Only if permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ may be transited by VFR flights, provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained throughout the transit. If radio contact cannot be established, the pilot must follow the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located. Option A is wrong because transit is not prohibited. Option B is wrong because transit is not unconditional -- AFIS contact is required. Option C incorrectly requires English-language radiotelephony qualification, which is not a specific FIZ transit requirement.
+
+### Q108: Who is responsible for the regulatory maintenance of an aircraft? ^t10q108
+- A) The maintenance organisation.
+- B) The mechanic.
+- C) The operator.
+- D) The owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operator is legally responsible for ensuring that regulatory maintenance of the aircraft is carried out in accordance with approved maintenance programmes. While the maintenance organisation (Option A) and mechanic (Option B) perform the physical work, the legal responsibility for ensuring maintenance compliance rests with the operator. Option D (owner) is not necessarily the operator -- for private aircraft the owner often acts as operator, but the regulatory responsibility is tied to the operator role specifically.
+
+### Q109: When two aircraft approach an aerodrome at the same time to land, which one has the right of way? ^t10q109
+- A) The one flying higher.
+- B) The faster one.
+- C) The smaller one.
+- D) The one flying lower.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two aircraft approach an aerodrome simultaneously to land, the aircraft flying lower has right of way because it is in a more advanced and committed phase of the approach. The higher aircraft must give way by extending its circuit or going around. Option A (flying higher) is the opposite of the correct rule. Option B (faster) and Option C (smaller) are not criteria used in ICAO right-of-way rules for landing priority. Speed and size are irrelevant to this determination.
+
+### Q110: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: vertically - horizontally ^t10q110
+- A) 8.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- B) 1.5 km - 50 m - 100 m
+- C) 5.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km - 100 m - 300 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL in Class E airspace, which is above 3000 ft AMSL and above 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option B describes values for very low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far too low for this altitude. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which is insufficient for Class E at this altitude. Option D has the correct visibility but incorrect cloud clearance values (100 m and 300 m are too small).
+
+### Q111: What is the function of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^t10q111
+- A) It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects
+- B) Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- C) It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft
+- D) It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal square (also called the signals area) is a designated area at an aerodrome where ground signals are displayed using symbols, panels, and markings to visually communicate aerodrome conditions to pilots flying overhead. This is particularly important for pilots who cannot receive radio communication. Option A (tow object area) describes a completely different facility. Option B is wrong because aircraft do not taxi to the signal square for light signals -- those come from the control tower. Option D describes an emergency vehicle staging area, not the signal square.
+
+### Q112: How are two parallel runways designated? ^t10q112
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+- B) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- C) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway "R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, when two parallel runways exist, they are distinguished by adding suffixes: "L" (Left) for the left runway and "R" (Right) for the right runway, as seen from a pilot on final approach. Both runways must receive a suffix to avoid ambiguity. Option A is wrong because the right runway also needs a suffix ("R"). Option B uses a non-standard method of incrementing the designator number. Option C uses dash-number notation that is not part of ICAO runway designation standards.
+
+### Q113: Which runway designators are correct for two parallel runways? ^t10q113
+- A) "24" and "25"
+- B) "18" and "18-2"
+- C) "26" and "26R"
+- D) "06L" and "06R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For two parallel runways, ICAO requires both to carry the L/R suffix with the same number, such as "06L" and "06R." This clearly identifies them as parallel runways on the same magnetic heading. Option A ("24" and "25") indicates two non-parallel runways on slightly different headings, not parallel runways. Option B ("18" and "18-2") uses non-standard dash notation. Option C ("26" and "26R") is incorrect because only one runway has a suffix -- both must have one (should be "26L" and "26R").
+
+### Q114: What does this sign at an aerodrome indicate? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t10q114
+- A) Landing prohibited for a longer period
+- B) After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right
+- C) Glider flying is in progress
+- D) Caution, manoeuvring area is poor
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ALW-011 figure shows the international ground signal for glider operations in progress at the aerodrome. This warns pilots overflying the aerodrome that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (landing prohibited for a longer period) uses a different signal (typically a red cross). Option B (right-hand turns) would be indicated by a different signal in the signals area. Option D (poor manoeuvring area) is also communicated through a different ground marking.
+
+### Q115: What does "DETRESFA" signify? ^t10q115
+- A) Rescue phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Distress phase
+- D) Uncertainty phase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the most serious of the three emergency phases defined in ICAO Annex 12 and Annex 11. It is declared when an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. Option B (alerting phase) corresponds to the codeword ALERFA. Option D (uncertainty phase) corresponds to INCERFA. Option A (rescue phase) is not a defined ICAO emergency phase designation.
+
+### Q116: Who provides the search and rescue service? ^t10q116
+- A) Only civil organisations
+- B) International approved organisations
+- C) Both military and civil organisations
+- D) Only military organisations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, Search and Rescue (SAR) services are provided by both military and civil organisations, depending on national arrangements. Many countries combine military assets (helicopters, aircraft, ships) with civil emergency services for effective SAR coverage. Option A is wrong because military organisations play a major role in SAR operations worldwide. Option B incorrectly requires international approval, which is not how SAR is organised. Option D is wrong because civil organisations are also involved in SAR.
+
+### Q117: In the context of aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories of aircraft occurrences? ^t10q117
+- A) Event Serious event Accident
+- B) Incident Serious incident Accident
+- C) Happening Event Serious event
+- D) Event Crash Disaster
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, aircraft occurrences are classified into three categories: incident (an occurrence that affects or could affect flight safety), serious incident (an incident where there was a high probability of an accident), and accident (an occurrence resulting in fatal/serious injury or substantial aircraft damage). Option A, Option C, and Option D all use non-standard terminology ("event," "happening," "crash," "disaster") not found in ICAO definitions.
+
+### Q118: While slope soaring with the hill on your left, another glider approaches from the opposite direction at the same altitude. What should you do? ^t10q118
+- A) Pull on the elevator and divert upward
+- B) Divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same
+- C) Divert to the right
+- D) Expect the opposite glider to divert
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When slope soaring and encountering an oncoming glider, the pilot with the hill on their left must give way by turning right (away from the hill). In this scenario, the hill is on your left, so the approaching glider has the hill on their right, giving them right-of-way. You must divert to the right. Option A (pull up) is impractical and dangerous in slope soaring conditions. Option B is partially correct in the action but wrong to expect the other glider to also turn -- they have right-of-way. Option D is wrong because you are the one who must give way.
+
+### Q119: When circling in a thermal with other gliders, who determines the direction of turn? ^t10q119
+- A) The glider at the highest altitude
+- B) The glider with the greatest bank angle
+- C) Circling is always to the left
+- D) The glider that entered the thermal first
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal already occupied by other gliders, the newly arriving pilot must circle in the same direction as the glider that first established the turn in that thermal. This convention ensures all gliders orbit in the same direction, preventing dangerous head-on conflicts within the thermal. Option A (highest glider) is wrong because altitude does not determine turn direction. Option B (greatest bank angle) is irrelevant to the rule. Option C is wrong because there is no fixed left-turn rule -- the first glider's choice establishes the direction.
+
+### Q120: Is it possible for a glider to enter airspace C? ^t10q120
+- A) No
+- B) Yes, but only with the transponder activated
+- C) With restrictions, in case of reduced air traffic
+- D) Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspace Class C is controlled airspace where ATC clearance is mandatory for all flights, including VFR and gliders. A glider may enter Class C airspace only after obtaining an explicit clearance from the responsible ATC unit. Option A is wrong because entry is possible with proper ATC clearance. Option B is wrong because while a transponder may be required, it alone is not sufficient -- ATC clearance is the fundamental requirement. Option C is wrong because there is no rule allowing entry based on traffic density without clearance.
+
+### Q121: What do longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions arranged symmetrically about the centreline of a runway indicate? ^t10q121
+- A) A ground roll could be started from this position
+- B) At this point the glide path of an ILS meets the runway
+- C) Do not touch down behind them
+- D) Do not touch down before them
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline are the threshold markings, indicating the beginning of the runway available for landing. Pilots must not touch down before these markings. Option A (ground roll start) confuses threshold markings with a different function. Option B (ILS glide path intersection) describes the touchdown zone, not the threshold. Option C (do not touch down behind) reverses the rule -- the restriction is about landing before them, not after.
+
+### Q122: How can a pilot in flight acknowledge a search and rescue signal on the ground? ^t10q122
+- A) Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times
+- B) Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times
+- C) Push the rudder in both directions multiple times
+- D) Rock the wings
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, a pilot acknowledges a ground SAR signal by rocking the wings (waggling the wings laterally). This is an internationally recognised visual signal visible from the ground. Option A (flap cycling) is not a standard SAR acknowledgement signal. Option B (parabolic flight path) is not a defined signal. Option C (rudder inputs) would produce yawing motions that are difficult to see from the ground.
+
+### Q123: An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a... ^t10q123
+- A) Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- B) Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- C) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground.
+- D) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a rotating beacon installed at or near an airport to help pilots locate the aerodrome from the air, particularly at night or in reduced visibility. Option A incorrectly places it at the beginning of final approach rather than at the aerodrome itself. Option B states it is a fixed beacon, but ABNs rotate to increase visibility. Option C states it is visible from the ground, but its purpose is to be seen by pilots from the air.
+
+### Q124: What is the primary objective of an aircraft accident investigation? ^t10q124
+- A) To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents
+- B) To determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences
+- C) To identify the causes and develop safety recommendations
+- D) To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, the sole objective of an aircraft accident investigation is to prevent future accidents by identifying causal and contributing factors and issuing safety recommendations. It is explicitly not a judicial or liability process. Option A (assisting prosecutors) is outside the investigation's mandate. Option B (determining guilt) contradicts the non-punitive nature of safety investigations. Option D (establishing liability for compensation) is a civil legal matter handled separately.
+
+### Q125: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q125
+- A) 6 months
+- B) 12 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) issued under ICAO Annex 8 and EASA regulations has unlimited validity, provided the aircraft is maintained in accordance with approved programmes and the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC) is kept current. The CofA itself has no fixed expiry date. Option A (6 months) and Option B (12 months) may confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_101_125_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_101_125_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,249 @@
+### Q101 : Lors d'un vol VFR, qui est responsable de l'évitement des collisions ? ^t10q101
+- A) Le second pilote lorsque deux pilotes sont à bord.
+- B) Le service d'information de vol.
+- C) Le service du contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- D) Le commandant de bord.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un vol VFR, le commandant de bord (CdB) porte l'entière responsabilité de l'évitement des collisions en appliquant le principe « voir et éviter ». Ceci s'applique même si l'ATC ou le FIS fournit des informations de trafic. L'option A est incorrecte car la responsabilité incombe toujours au CdB, et non au second pilote. L'option B (FIS) fournit des informations mais n'assume aucune responsabilité de séparation. L'option C (ATC) peut fournir des informations de trafic, mais l'évitement des collisions en VFR reste la responsabilité du CdB.
+
+### Q102 : Quel événement constitue un accident d'aviation ? ^t10q102
+- A) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel au moins une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée.
+- B) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef nécessitant des réparations coûteuses.
+- C) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée, ou l'aéronef a subi des dommages affectant notablement sa résistance structurelle, ses performances ou ses caractéristiques de vol.
+- D) Uniquement l'écrasement d'un aéronef.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO, un accident d'aviation est un événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée, OU l'aéronef a subi des dommages importants affectant significativement sa résistance structurelle, ses performances ou ses caractéristiques de vol. Les deux conditions constituent indépendamment un accident. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne mentionne que les blessures corporelles. L'option B est incorrecte car le coût seul ne définit pas un accident. L'option D est trop restrictive — de nombreux accidents impliquent des dommages bien en deçà d'un écrasement total.
+
+### Q103 : Laquelle des exceptions suivantes aux règles de priorité de passage pour les routes convergentes est incorrecte ? ^t10q103
+- A) Les dirigeables cèdent le passage aux planeurs.
+- B) Les aéronefs cèdent le passage aux aéronefs qui remorquent visiblement d'autres aéronefs ou objets.
+- C) Les planeurs cèdent le passage aux aéronefs qui effectuent un remorquage.
+- D) Les planeurs et les motoplaneurs cèdent le passage aux ballons libres.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'option C est l'affirmation incorrecte. Conformément à SERA.3210, les aéronefs effectuant un remorquage bénéficient de la priorité de passage — ce qui signifie que les autres aéronefs (y compris les planeurs) ne doivent PAS céder le passage aux aéronefs remorqueurs ; c'est au contraire tous les aéronefs qui doivent céder le passage AUX aéronefs remorqueurs. L'option C inverse ce principe : elle affirme que les planeurs cèdent le passage aux aéronefs remorqueurs, alors que la règle réelle est que les aéronefs remorqueurs cèdent le passage aux planeurs (les planeurs ont une priorité plus élevée). Les options A, B et D énoncent toutes correctement des exceptions valides aux règles de priorité.
+
+### Q104 : Quelles conditions météorologiques minimales sont requises pour décoller ou atterrir sur un aérodrome situé dans une CTR sans autorisation de VFR spécial ? ^t10q104
+- A) Visibilité au sol 5 km, plafond 450 m/GND.
+- B) Visibilité au sol 8 km, plafond 450 m/GND.
+- C) Visibilité au sol 1,5 km, plafond 300 m/GND.
+- D) Visibilité au sol 5 km, plafond 150 m/GND.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon la réglementation suisse, les conditions météorologiques minimales pour le décollage ou l'atterrissage sur un aérodrome situé dans une CTR sans autorisation de VFR spécial sont : une visibilité au sol de 1,5 km et un plafond de 300 m au-dessus du niveau du sol. Ce sont les minima SVFR de base en Suisse. Les options A et B utilisent des valeurs de visibilité supérieures à ce qui est requis. L'option D utilise un plafond insuffisant de 150 m. Ces valeurs sont spécifiques aux opérations suisses au sein des CTR.
+
+### Q105 : Pour les vols VFR dans une région de contrôle terminal ou une zone de contrôle, comment est exprimée la position verticale d'un aéronef en dessous de l'altitude de transition ? ^t10q105
+- A) En niveau de vol.
+- B) Soit en altitude, soit en hauteur.
+- C) En hauteur.
+- D) En altitude.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En dessous de l'altitude de transition dans une TMA ou une CTR, la position verticale d'un aéronef est exprimée en altitude (hauteur au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer avec le calage altimétrique QNH). Les niveaux de vol ne sont utilisés qu'à l'altitude de transition et au-dessus. L'option A (niveau de vol) s'applique au-dessus de l'altitude de transition, pas en dessous. L'option B (altitude ou hauteur) est incorrecte car l'expression standard en dessous de l'altitude de transition dans l'espace aérien contrôlé est spécifiquement l'altitude. L'option C (hauteur) est utilisée dans des cas particuliers comme la hauteur de circuit, mais n'est pas l'expression standard dans les TMA/CTR.
+
+### Q106 : En Suisse, quelle est la visibilité minimale requise pour un vol VFR en espace aérien de classe G sans conditions particulières ? ^t10q106
+- A) 5 km.
+- B) 8 km.
+- C) 10 km.
+- D) 1,5 km.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien de classe G en Suisse, sans conditions particulières et à basse altitude (en dessous de 3000 ft AMSL ou dans 1000 ft de la surface), la visibilité minimale pour un vol VFR est de 1,5 km. Il s'agit du minimum de visibilité le plus bas du tableau VMC de SERA. L'option A (5 km) s'applique dans l'espace aérien contrôlé en dessous du FL100. L'option B (8 km) s'applique au FL100 et au-dessus. L'option C (10 km) n'est pas un minimum de visibilité VFR SERA standard.
+
+### Q107 : Une zone d'information de vol (FIZ) peut-elle être traversée sans formalité supplémentaire ? ^t10q107
+- A) Non, le transit n'est pas autorisé en aucune circonstance pour les vols VFR.
+- B) Oui.
+- C) Oui, mais uniquement avec l'autorisation du service d'information de vol (FIS) et uniquement si le pilote est qualifié pour utiliser la radiotéléphonie en anglais.
+- D) Uniquement si un contact radio permanent avec le service d'information de vol d'aérodrome (AFIS) est maintenu. Dans le cas contraire, les règles de la classe d'espace aérien dans laquelle se trouve la FIZ s'appliquent.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une FIZ peut être traversée par des vols VFR, à condition qu'un contact radio permanent avec le service d'information de vol d'aérodrome (AFIS) soit maintenu tout au long du transit. Si le contact radio ne peut être établi, le pilote doit suivre les règles de la classe d'espace aérien dans laquelle se trouve la FIZ. L'option A est incorrecte car le transit n'est pas interdit. L'option B est incorrecte car le transit n'est pas inconditionnel — le contact AFIS est requis. L'option C exige à tort une qualification de radiotéléphonie en anglais, qui n'est pas une exigence spécifique au transit d'une FIZ.
+
+### Q108 : Qui est responsable de la maintenance réglementaire d'un aéronef ? ^t10q108
+- A) L'organisme de maintenance.
+- B) Le mécanicien.
+- C) L'exploitant.
+- D) Le propriétaire.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'exploitant est légalement responsable de s'assurer que la maintenance réglementaire de l'aéronef est effectuée conformément aux programmes de maintenance approuvés. Bien que l'organisme de maintenance (option A) et le mécanicien (option B) effectuent le travail physique, la responsabilité légale du respect de la maintenance incombe à l'exploitant. L'option D (propriétaire) n'est pas nécessairement l'exploitant — pour les aéronefs privés, le propriétaire agit souvent en tant qu'exploitant, mais la responsabilité réglementaire est liée spécifiquement au rôle d'exploitant.
+
+### Q109 : Lorsque deux aéronefs approchent d'un aérodrome en même temps pour atterrir, lequel a la priorité de passage ? ^t10q109
+- A) Celui qui vole le plus haut.
+- B) Le plus rapide.
+- C) Le plus petit.
+- D) Celui qui vole le plus bas.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux aéronefs approchent simultanément d'un aérodrome pour atterrir, l'aéronef qui vole le plus bas a la priorité de passage car il se trouve dans une phase plus avancée et plus engagée de l'approche. L'aéronef plus haut doit céder le passage en allongeant son circuit ou en effectuant une remise des gaz. L'option A (vol le plus haut) est l'opposé de la règle correcte. L'option B (le plus rapide) et l'option C (le plus petit) ne sont pas des critères utilisés dans les règles de priorité ICAO pour l'ordre d'atterrissage. La vitesse et la taille sont sans pertinence pour cette détermination.
+
+### Q110 : Quels sont les minima VMC en espace aérien de classe E à 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL ? Visibilité - Séparation des nuages : verticale - horizontale ^t10q110
+- A) 8,0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- B) 1,5 km - 50 m - 100 m
+- C) 5,0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- D) 8,0 km - 100 m - 300 m
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** À 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL en espace aérien de classe E, soit au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL et au-dessus de 1000 ft AGL, les minima VMC SERA.5001 sont : visibilité 8 km, séparation verticale des nuages 300 m et séparation horizontale des nuages 1500 m. L'option B décrit des valeurs pour un espace aérien non contrôlé à très basse altitude, bien trop faibles pour cette altitude. L'option C utilise une visibilité de 5 km, insuffisante pour la classe E à cette altitude. L'option D présente la visibilité correcte mais des valeurs de séparation des nuages incorrectes (100 m et 300 m sont trop faibles).
+
+### Q111 : Quelle est la fonction du carré des signaux sur un aérodrome ? ^t10q111
+- A) C'est une zone spécialement délimitée pour récupérer ou déposer des objets de remorquage.
+- B) Les aéronefs roulent jusqu'à ce carré pour recevoir des signaux lumineux d'autorisation de rouler et de décollage.
+- C) Il contient des symboles spéciaux pour indiquer visuellement les conditions de l'aérodrome aux aéronefs en survol.
+- D) C'est une zone éclairée sur laquelle sont stationnés les véhicules de recherche et sauvetage et de lutte contre l'incendie.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le carré des signaux (aussi appelé zone des signaux) est une zone désignée sur un aérodrome où des signaux au sol sont affichés à l'aide de symboles, de panneaux et de marquages pour communiquer visuellement les conditions de l'aérodrome aux pilotes survolant l'aérodrome. Ceci est particulièrement important pour les pilotes qui ne peuvent pas recevoir de communication radio. L'option A (zone d'objets de remorquage) décrit une installation entièrement différente. L'option B est incorrecte car les aéronefs ne roulent pas jusqu'au carré des signaux pour recevoir des signaux lumineux — ceux-ci proviennent de la tour de contrôle. L'option D décrit une zone de stationnement des véhicules d'urgence, pas le carré des signaux.
+
+### Q112 : Comment deux pistes parallèles sont-elles désignées ? ^t10q112
+- A) La piste de gauche reçoit le suffixe « L », la piste de droite reste inchangée.
+- B) La piste de gauche reste inchangée, le désignateur de la piste de droite est augmenté de 1.
+- C) La piste de gauche reçoit le suffixe « -1 », la piste de droite « -2 ».
+- D) La piste de gauche reçoit le suffixe « L », la piste de droite « R ».
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, lorsque deux pistes parallèles existent, elles sont distinguées par l'ajout de suffixes : « L » (gauche) pour la piste de gauche et « R » (droite) pour la piste de droite, telles que vues par un pilote en finale. Les deux pistes doivent recevoir un suffixe pour éviter toute ambiguïté. L'option A est incorrecte car la piste de droite nécessite également un suffixe (« R »). L'option B utilise une méthode non standard d'incrémentation du numéro de désignateur. L'option C utilise une notation avec tiret-numéro qui ne fait pas partie des normes de désignation des pistes ICAO.
+
+### Q113 : Quels désignateurs de pistes sont corrects pour deux pistes parallèles ? ^t10q113
+- A) « 24 » et « 25 »
+- B) « 18 » et « 18-2 »
+- C) « 26 » et « 26R »
+- D) « 06L » et « 06R »
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour deux pistes parallèles, l'ICAO exige que les deux portent le suffixe L/R avec le même numéro, par exemple « 06L » et « 06R ». Cela les identifie clairement comme des pistes parallèles sur le même cap magnétique. L'option A (« 24 » et « 25 ») indique deux pistes non parallèles sur des caps légèrement différents, pas des pistes parallèles. L'option B (« 18 » et « 18-2 ») utilise une notation non standard avec tiret. L'option C (« 26 » et « 26R ») est incorrecte car une seule piste porte un suffixe — les deux doivent en avoir un (il devrait être « 26L » et « 26R »).
+
+### Q114 : Que signifie ce panneau sur un aérodrome ? Voir figure (ALW-011) ^t10q114
+- A) Atterrissage interdit pour une longue période.
+- B) Après le décollage et avant l'atterrissage, tous les virages doivent être effectués à droite.
+- C) Vol de planeurs en cours.
+- D) Attention, la zone de manœuvre est en mauvais état.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La figure ALW-011 représente le signal au sol international indiquant des opérations de planeurs en cours sur l'aérodrome. Ceci avertit les pilotes survolant l'aérodrome que des planeurs peuvent évoluer à proximité, y compris au treuil et en vol thermique. L'option A (atterrissage interdit pour une longue période) utilise un signal différent (typiquement une croix rouge). L'option B (virages à droite) serait indiquée par un signal différent dans la zone des signaux. L'option D (mauvaise zone de manœuvre) est également communiquée par un marquage au sol différent.
+
+### Q115 : Que signifie « DETRESFA » ? ^t10q115
+- A) Phase de sauvetage
+- B) Phase d'alerte
+- C) Phase de détresse
+- D) Phase d'incertitude
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** DETRESFA est le mot de code ICAO désignant la phase de détresse, la plus grave des trois phases d'urgence définies dans les Annexes 12 et 11 de l'ICAO. Elle est déclarée lorsqu'un aéronef est présumé se trouver dans un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate. L'option B (phase d'alerte) correspond au mot de code ALERFA. L'option D (phase d'incertitude) correspond à INCERFA. L'option A (phase de sauvetage) n'est pas une désignation de phase d'urgence ICAO définie.
+
+### Q116 : Qui assure le service de recherche et sauvetage ? ^t10q116
+- A) Uniquement des organisations civiles.
+- B) Des organisations agréées au niveau international.
+- C) Des organisations militaires et civiles.
+- D) Uniquement des organisations militaires.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 12 de l'ICAO, les services de recherche et sauvetage (SAR) sont assurés à la fois par des organisations militaires et civiles, selon les dispositions nationales. De nombreux pays combinent les moyens militaires (hélicoptères, aéronefs, navires) et les services d'urgence civils pour une couverture SAR efficace. L'option A est incorrecte car les organisations militaires jouent un rôle majeur dans les opérations SAR dans le monde entier. L'option B exige à tort un agrément international, ce qui ne correspond pas à l'organisation du SAR. L'option D est incorrecte car les organisations civiles participent également au SAR.
+
+### Q117 : Dans le contexte de l'enquête sur les accidents et incidents d'aviation, quelles sont les trois catégories d'événements ? ^t10q117
+- A) Événement - Événement grave - Accident
+- B) Incident - Incident grave - Accident
+- C) Occurrence - Événement - Événement grave
+- D) Événement - Accident - Catastrophe
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO et au Règlement UE 996/2010, les événements aéronautiques sont classés en trois catégories : incident (un événement qui affecte ou pourrait affecter la sécurité du vol), incident grave (un incident où la probabilité d'accident était élevée) et accident (un événement entraînant des blessures mortelles/graves ou des dommages importants à l'aéronef). Les options A, C et D utilisent toutes une terminologie non standard (« événement », « occurrence », « catastrophe ») qui ne figure pas dans les définitions ICAO.
+
+### Q118 : En vol de pente avec le relief sur votre gauche, un autre planeur approche en sens inverse à la même altitude. Que devez-vous faire ? ^t10q118
+- A) Tirer sur le manche et dévier vers le haut.
+- B) Dévier à droite et s'attendre à ce que le planeur venant en sens inverse fasse de même.
+- C) Dévier à droite.
+- D) S'attendre à ce que le planeur venant en sens inverse dévie.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vol de pente lorsqu'on rencontre un planeur venant en sens inverse, le pilote ayant le relief sur sa gauche doit céder le passage en virant à droite (en s'éloignant du relief). Dans ce scénario, le relief est sur votre gauche, donc le planeur approchant a le relief sur sa droite, ce qui lui donne la priorité de passage. Vous devez dévier à droite. L'option A (tirer vers le haut) est impraticable et dangereuse en conditions de vol de pente. L'option B est partiellement correcte quant à l'action, mais incorrecte de s'attendre à ce que l'autre planeur vire également — il a la priorité. L'option D est incorrecte car c'est vous qui devez céder le passage.
+
+### Q119 : En spiralant dans un thermique avec d'autres planeurs, qui détermine le sens de virage ? ^t10q119
+- A) Le planeur à l'altitude la plus élevée.
+- B) Le planeur avec l'inclinaison la plus importante.
+- C) On spirale toujours à gauche.
+- D) Le planeur qui a pénétré le thermique en premier.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'on rejoint un thermique déjà occupé par d'autres planeurs, le pilote arrivant doit spiraler dans le même sens que le planeur qui a établi le virage en premier dans ce thermique. Cette convention garantit que tous les planeurs évoluent dans le même sens, évitant les dangereux conflits frontaux au sein du thermique. L'option A (planeur le plus haut) est incorrecte car l'altitude ne détermine pas le sens de virage. L'option B (inclinaison la plus importante) n'est pas pertinente pour la règle. L'option C est incorrecte car il n'existe pas de règle fixe imposant le virage à gauche — le choix du premier planeur établit la direction.
+
+### Q120 : Un planeur peut-il pénétrer en espace aérien de classe C ? ^t10q120
+- A) Non.
+- B) Oui, mais uniquement avec le transpondeur activé.
+- C) Avec des restrictions, en cas de trafic réduit.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement avec l'accord de l'unité ATC compétente.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'espace aérien de classe C est un espace aérien contrôlé où une clairance ATC est obligatoire pour tous les vols, y compris les vols VFR et les planeurs. Un planeur ne peut pénétrer en espace aérien de classe C qu'après avoir obtenu une clairance explicite de l'unité ATC compétente. L'option A est incorrecte car l'entrée est possible avec une clairance ATC appropriée. L'option B est incorrecte car, bien qu'un transpondeur puisse être requis, il seul est insuffisant — la clairance ATC est l'exigence fondamentale. L'option C est incorrecte car il n'existe pas de règle autorisant l'entrée en fonction de la densité du trafic sans clairance.
+
+### Q121 : Que signifient des bandes longitudinales de dimensions uniformes disposées symétriquement de part et d'autre de l'axe central d'une piste ? ^t10q121
+- A) Un roulement au décollage peut être amorcé depuis cette position.
+- B) En ce point, la trajectoire de descente d'un ILS rejoint la piste.
+- C) Ne pas se poser derrière ces marques.
+- D) Ne pas se poser avant ces marques.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les bandes longitudinales disposées symétriquement de part et d'autre de l'axe de la piste sont les marques de seuil, indiquant le début de la piste disponible pour l'atterrissage. Les pilotes ne doivent pas se poser avant ces marques. L'option A (début du roulement au décollage) confond les marques de seuil avec une autre fonction. L'option B (intersection du plan de descente ILS) décrit la zone de toucher des roues, pas le seuil. L'option C (ne pas se poser derrière) inverse la règle — la restriction concerne l'atterrissage avant ces marques, pas après.
+
+### Q122 : Comment un pilote en vol peut-il accuser réception d'un signal de recherche et sauvetage au sol ? ^t10q122
+- A) Déployer et rentrer les volets d'atterrissage plusieurs fois.
+- B) Effectuer une trajectoire de vol parabolique plusieurs fois.
+- C) Appuyer sur les pédales de direction dans les deux sens plusieurs fois.
+- D) Basculer les ailes.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 12 de l'ICAO, un pilote accuse réception d'un signal SAR au sol en basculant les ailes (oscillation latérale des ailes). Il s'agit d'un signal visuel internationalement reconnu, visible depuis le sol. L'option A (manœuvre des volets) n'est pas un signal standard d'accusé de réception SAR. L'option B (trajectoire parabolique) n'est pas un signal défini. L'option C (inputs sur les pédales) produirait des mouvements de lacet difficiles à observer depuis le sol.
+
+### Q123 : Une balise d'aérodrome (ABN) est une... ^t10q123
+- A) Balise rotative installée au début de la finale pour indiquer son emplacement aux pilotes depuis les airs.
+- B) Balise fixe installée sur un aéroport ou un aérodrome pour indiquer son emplacement aux pilotes depuis les airs.
+- C) Balise rotative installée sur un aéroport ou un aérodrome pour indiquer son emplacement aux pilotes depuis le sol.
+- D) Balise rotative installée sur un aéroport ou un aérodrome pour indiquer son emplacement aux pilotes depuis les airs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une balise d'aérodrome (ABN) est une balise rotative installée à proximité ou sur un aérodrome pour aider les pilotes à localiser l'aérodrome depuis les airs, notamment de nuit ou par visibilité réduite. L'option A la positionne incorrectement au début de la finale plutôt que sur l'aérodrome lui-même. L'option B indique qu'il s'agit d'une balise fixe, mais les ABN sont rotatives pour être mieux visibles. L'option C indique qu'elle est visible depuis le sol, mais son objectif est d'être vue par les pilotes depuis les airs.
+
+### Q124 : Quel est l'objectif principal d'une enquête sur un accident d'aviation ? ^t10q124
+- A) Travailler pour le procureur public et contribuer au suivi des accidents de vol.
+- B) Déterminer le responsable et en tirer des conséquences juridiques.
+- C) Identifier les causes et formuler des recommandations de sécurité.
+- D) Clarifier les questions de responsabilité au sens d'une indemnisation pour les passagers.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO et au Règlement UE 996/2010, l'unique objectif d'une enquête sur un accident d'aviation est de prévenir les accidents futurs en identifiant les facteurs causaux et contributifs et en émettant des recommandations de sécurité. Il ne s'agit explicitement pas d'un processus judiciaire ou de responsabilité. L'option A (assister les procureurs) est en dehors du mandat de l'enquête. L'option B (déterminer la culpabilité) contredit le caractère non punitif des enquêtes de sécurité. L'option D (établir la responsabilité civile) est une question juridique civile traitée séparément.
+
+### Q125 : Quelle est la durée de validité du certificat de navigabilité ? ^t10q125
+- A) 6 mois.
+- B) 12 mois.
+- C) 12 ans.
+- D) Illimitée.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un certificat de navigabilité (CofA) délivré conformément à l'Annexe 8 de l'ICAO et aux réglementations EASA a une validité illimitée, à condition que l'aéronef soit entretenu conformément aux programmes de maintenance approuvés et que le certificat de contrôle de navigabilité (ARC) soit maintenu à jour. Le CofA lui-même n'a pas de date d'expiration fixe. Les options A (6 mois) et B (12 mois) confondent peut-être le CofA avec la période de renouvellement de l'ARC. L'option C (12 ans) n'est pas une période de validité standard en aviation.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_126_144.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_126_144.md
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--- /dev/null
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@@ -0,0 +1,189 @@
+### Q126: What does the abbreviation ARC stand for? ^t10q126
+- A) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- B) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, the document issued following a successful airworthiness review confirming that an aircraft meets applicable airworthiness requirements. It is valid for one year and must be renewed for continued operation. Option A (Airspace Rulemaking Committee), Option B (Airspace Restriction Criteria), and Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) are not recognised EASA or ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q127: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q127
+- A) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- B) Of the residence of the owner.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under the Chicago Convention (ICAO Annex 7) and EASA regulations, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the State of Registry -- the country in which the aircraft is registered. Option A (country of construction) is the state of manufacture, not necessarily the registry. Option B (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance. Option D (where the review is done) may differ from the state of registry, as reviews can be performed abroad.
+
+### Q128: What does the abbreviation SERA stand for? ^t10q128
+- A) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Specialized Radar Approach
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, the EU regulation (Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012) that harmonises rules of the air across EASA member states. It covers right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, signals, and related procedures. Option A (routes), Option C (radar approach), and Option D (radar altimeter) are invented terms not used in aviation regulation.
+
+### Q129: What does the abbreviation TRA stand for? ^t10q129
+- A) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- B) Terminal Area
+- C) Transponder Area
+- D) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace, an airspace of defined dimensions temporarily reserved for specific uses such as military exercises or parachute operations. Other aircraft may not enter without permission during activation. Option A (Temporary Radar Routing Area), Option B (Terminal Area), and Option C (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q130: What does an area marked as TMZ signify? ^t10q130
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone, an airspace designation requiring all aircraft to be equipped with and operate a functioning transponder when flying within the zone. This enables radar identification and collision avoidance systems to track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Transportation Management Zone), and Option C (Touring Motorglider Zone) are not recognised aviation terms.
+
+### Q131: A flight is categorised as a visual flight when the... ^t10q131
+- A) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- C) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- D) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined as a flight conducted in accordance with Visual Flight Rules as specified in ICAO Annex 2 and SERA. The classification is regulatory, not meteorological. Option A (8 km visibility) and Option D (5 km visibility) cite specific VMC minimums but do not define VFR flight. Option B (flight in VMC) describes the weather conditions required for VFR but is not itself the definition -- a flight in VMC could still be conducted under IFR.
+
+### Q132: What does the abbreviation VMC stand for? ^t10q132
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Variable meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the minimum visibility and cloud clearance values that must be met for VFR flight to be conducted. VMC minima vary by airspace class and altitude. Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, a different abbreviation. Option C (Instrument Flight Conditions) effectively describes IMC. Option D (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a recognised aviation term.
+
+### Q133: In airspace E, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q133
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace below FL100, VFR flights require a minimum visibility of 5000 m (5 km) per SERA.5001. FL75 is below FL100, so the 5 km rule applies. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum at this altitude. Option B (8000 m) applies at and above FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q134: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q134
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In controlled airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km) per SERA. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km minimum applies. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option C (3000 m) is not a standard SERA minimum at this altitude.
+
+### Q135: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q135
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL125 is well above FL100, confirming the 8 km minimum applies. Option A (1500 m) applies to low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option B (3000 m) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum. Option C (5000 m) applies below FL100 in controlled airspace.
+
+### Q136: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace B? ^t10q136
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace Class B, the cloud separation minima for VFR flights are 1500 m horizontally and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertically from cloud. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance (insufficient). Option B also uses only 1000 m horizontal. Option C uses 1000 m vertical, which is far too large -- the correct vertical minimum is 300 m.
+
+### Q137: In airspace C below FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q137
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C below FL100, the SERA-prescribed minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5000 m). Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100 in Class C. Option D (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace or special VFR situations.
+
+### Q138: In airspace C at and above FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q138
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 1.5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility required by SERA is 8 km (8000 m). This higher minimum reflects the faster closing speeds at higher altitudes. Option A (5 km) is the below-FL100 Class C minimum. Option B (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum.
+
+### Q139: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q139
+- A) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ceiling is the height (referenced to the surface, not MSL) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud or obscuring phenomena covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, more than 4 oktas) below 20,000 ft. Option A uses "altitude" (MSL reference) instead of "height" (surface reference). Option C refers to the "highest" rather than "lowest" cloud layer. Option D limits the threshold to 10,000 ft instead of the correct 20,000 ft.
+
+### Q140: Regarding separation in airspace E, which statement is accurate? ^t10q140
+- A) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- C) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class E, ATC provides separation only between IFR flights. VFR flights receive no separation service whatsoever -- neither from IFR traffic nor from other VFR traffic. VFR pilots rely entirely on see-and-avoid. Option A incorrectly states VFR receives separation from IFR. Option C reverses the actual separation provision. Option D incorrectly claims full separation for VFR traffic.
+
+### Q141: What kind of information is contained in the AD section of the AIP? ^t10q141
+- A) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- C) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains information about individual aerodromes: their classification, aerodrome charts, approach charts, taxi charts, runway data, and operating information. Option A describes GEN content (map symbols, nav aids, fees). Option C describes ENR content (airspace warnings, routes, restricted areas). Option D contains a mix of items from different sections that do not correspond to the AD section.
+
+### Q142: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q142
+- A) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- B) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- C) The highest point of the apron.
+- D) The highest point of the landing area.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This is the critical reference point for QFE calculations and obstacle clearance. Option A (lowest point) would understate the elevation relevant to safe operations. Option B (average of manoeuvring area) does not reflect the critical highest-point definition. Option C (highest point of the apron) refers to the wrong area -- the apron is used for parking, not landing.
+
+### Q143: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q143
+- A) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- B) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. Option A specifies helicopters only (helicopter landing areas are called helipads or FATO). Option B includes water aerodromes, but runways are specific to land aerodromes. Option C describes a round shape, which is incorrect -- runways are rectangular by definition.
+
+### Q144: What does DETRESFA mean? ^t10q144
+- A) Uncertainty phase
+- B) Rescue phase
+- C) Alerting phase
+- D) Distress phase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the highest of three emergency phases indicating an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. The three ICAO emergency phases are: INCERFA (uncertainty), ALERFA (alerting), and DETRESFA (distress). Option A is INCERFA. Option B ("rescue phase") is not a defined ICAO emergency phase. Option C is ALERFA.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_126_144_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_126_144_fr.md
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+### Q126 : Que signifie l'abréviation ARC ? ^t10q126
+- A) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- B) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** ARC désigne l'Airworthiness Review Certificate (certificat de contrôle de navigabilité), le document délivré à l'issue d'un contrôle de navigabilité réussi, confirmant que l'aéronef satisfait aux exigences de navigabilité applicables. Il est valable un an et doit être renouvelé pour permettre la poursuite de l'exploitation. Les options A (Airspace Rulemaking Committee), B (Airspace Restriction Criteria) et C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) ne sont pas des abréviations reconnues par l'EASA ou l'ICAO.
+
+### Q127 : Le certificat de navigabilité est délivré par l'État... ^t10q127
+- A) Dans lequel l'aéronef est construit.
+- B) De résidence du propriétaire.
+- C) Dans lequel l'aéronef est immatriculé.
+- D) Dans lequel le contrôle de navigabilité est effectué.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à la Convention de Chicago (Annexe 7 de l'ICAO) et aux réglementations EASA, le certificat de navigabilité est délivré par l'État d'immatriculation — le pays dans lequel l'aéronef est immatriculé. L'option A (pays de construction) est l'État de fabrication, pas nécessairement l'État d'immatriculation. L'option B (résidence du propriétaire) n'a pas d'incidence sur la délivrance du CofA. L'option D (lieu du contrôle) peut différer de l'État d'immatriculation, car les contrôles peuvent être effectués à l'étranger.
+
+### Q128 : Que signifie l'abréviation SERA ? ^t10q128
+- A) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- B) Standardised European Rules of the Air
+- C) Specialized Radar Approach
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** SERA signifie Standardised European Rules of the Air (règles de l'air européennes standardisées), le règlement de l'UE (Règlement d'exécution (UE) n° 923/2012 de la Commission) qui harmonise les règles de l'air dans les États membres de l'EASA. Il couvre la priorité de passage, les minima VMC, les calages altimétriques, les signaux et les procédures associées. Les options A (routes), C (approche radar) et D (altimètre radar) sont des termes inventés non utilisés dans la réglementation aéronautique.
+
+### Q129 : Que signifie l'abréviation TRA ? ^t10q129
+- A) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- B) Terminal Area
+- C) Transponder Area
+- D) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** TRA signifie Temporary Reserved Airspace (espace aérien temporairement réservé), un espace aérien de dimensions définies temporairement réservé à des utilisations spécifiques telles que les exercices militaires ou les opérations de parachutisme. Les autres aéronefs ne peuvent y pénétrer sans autorisation pendant son activation. Les options A (Temporary Radar Routing Area), B (Terminal Area) et C (Transponder Area) ne sont pas des désignations ICAO ou EASA standard pour cette abréviation.
+
+### Q130 : Que désigne une zone marquée TMZ ? ^t10q130
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** TMZ désigne une Transponder Mandatory Zone (zone à transpondeur obligatoire), une désignation d'espace aérien exigeant que tous les aéronefs soient équipés d'un transpondeur fonctionnel et l'utilisent lorsqu'ils évoluent dans cette zone. Cela permet aux systèmes de gestion du trafic aérien et d'évitement des collisions de suivre le trafic. Les options A (Traffic Management Zone), B (Transportation Management Zone) et C (Touring Motorglider Zone) ne sont pas des termes aéronautiques reconnus.
+
+### Q131 : Un vol est classifié comme vol visuel lorsque le... ^t10q131
+- A) La visibilité en vol dépasse 8 km.
+- B) Le vol est effectué dans des conditions météorologiques de vol à vue.
+- C) Le vol est effectué selon les règles de vol à vue.
+- D) La visibilité en vol dépasse 5 km.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un vol visuel (vol VFR) est défini comme un vol effectué conformément aux règles de vol à vue telles que spécifiées dans l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et SERA. La classification est réglementaire, non météorologique. L'option A (visibilité 8 km) et l'option D (visibilité 5 km) citent des minima VMC spécifiques mais ne définissent pas un vol VFR. L'option B (vol en VMC) décrit les conditions météorologiques requises pour le VFR mais n'est pas elle-même la définition — un vol en VMC pourrait encore être effectué selon les règles IFR.
+
+### Q132 : Que signifie l'abréviation VMC ? ^t10q132
+- A) Règles de vol à vue
+- B) Conditions météorologiques de vol à vue
+- C) Conditions de vol aux instruments
+- D) Conditions météorologiques variables
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** VMC signifie Visual Meteorological Conditions (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue) — les valeurs minimales de visibilité et de séparation des nuages qui doivent être respectées pour effectuer un vol VFR. Les minima VMC varient selon la classe d'espace aérien et l'altitude. L'option A (règles de vol à vue) correspond à VFR, une abréviation différente. L'option C (conditions de vol aux instruments) décrit effectivement l'IMC. L'option D (conditions météorologiques variables) n'est pas un terme aéronautique reconnu.
+
+### Q133 : En espace aérien de classe E, quelle est la visibilité de vol minimale pour un aéronef VFR au FL75 ? ^t10q133
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien de classe E en dessous du FL100, les vols VFR requièrent une visibilité minimale de 5000 m (5 km) conformément à SERA.5001. Le FL75 étant en dessous du FL100, la règle des 5 km s'applique. L'option A (3000 m) n'est pas un minimum VFR standard à cette altitude. L'option B (8000 m) s'applique au FL100 et au-dessus. L'option C (1500 m) ne s'applique que dans l'espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude.
+
+### Q134 : En espace aérien de classe C, quelle est la visibilité de vol minimale pour un aéronef VFR au FL110 ? ^t10q134
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien contrôlé de classe C au FL100 et au-dessus, la visibilité de vol VFR minimale est de 8000 m (8 km) selon SERA. Le FL110 étant au-dessus du FL100, le minimum de 8 km s'applique. L'option A (5000 m) s'applique en dessous du FL100. L'option B (1500 m) s'applique dans l'espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option C (3000 m) n'est pas un minimum SERA standard à cette altitude.
+
+### Q135 : En espace aérien de classe C, quelle est la visibilité de vol minimale pour un aéronef VFR au FL125 ? ^t10q135
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien de classe C au FL100 et au-dessus, la visibilité de vol VFR minimale exigée par SERA est de 8000 m (8 km). Le FL125 étant bien au-dessus du FL100, le minimum de 8 km s'applique. L'option A (1500 m) s'applique à l'espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option B (3000 m) n'est pas un minimum VFR SERA standard. L'option C (5000 m) s'applique en dessous du FL100 en espace aérien contrôlé.
+
+### Q136 : Quelles sont les exigences minimales de séparation des nuages pour un vol VFR en espace aérien de classe B ? ^t10q136
+- A) Horizontalement 1 000 m, verticalement 1 500 ft
+- B) Horizontalement 1 000 m, verticalement 300 m
+- C) Horizontalement 1 500 m, verticalement 1 000 m
+- D) Horizontalement 1 500 m, verticalement 300 m
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien ICAO de classe B, les minima de séparation des nuages pour les vols VFR sont de 1500 m horizontalement et 300 m (environ 1000 ft) verticalement par rapport aux nuages. L'option A n'utilise que 1000 m de distance horizontale (insuffisant). L'option B utilise également seulement 1000 m horizontal. L'option C utilise 1000 m vertical, ce qui est bien trop élevé — le minimum vertical correct est de 300 m.
+
+### Q137 : En espace aérien de classe C en dessous du FL 100, quelle est la visibilité de vol minimale pour les opérations VFR ? ^t10q137
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien de classe C en dessous du FL100, la visibilité de vol VFR minimale prescrite par SERA est de 5 km (5000 m). L'option A (10 km) n'est pas un minimum SERA standard. L'option B (8 km) s'applique au FL100 et au-dessus en classe C. L'option D (1,5 km) ne s'applique qu'à l'espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude ou aux situations de VFR spécial.
+
+### Q138 : En espace aérien de classe C au FL 100 et au-dessus, quelle est la visibilité de vol minimale pour les opérations VFR ? ^t10q138
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 1,5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien de classe C au FL100 et au-dessus, la visibilité de vol VFR minimale exigée par SERA est de 8 km (8000 m). Ce minimum plus élevé tient compte des vitesses de rapprochement plus importantes aux altitudes supérieures. L'option A (5 km) est le minimum de la classe C en dessous du FL100. L'option B (1,5 km) ne s'applique qu'à l'espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option D (10 km) n'est pas un minimum VFR SERA standard.
+
+### Q139 : Comment le terme « plafond » est-il défini ? ^t10q139
+- A) Altitude de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20 000 ft.
+- B) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20 000 ft.
+- C) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus haute couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20 000 ft.
+- D) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 10 000 ft.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le plafond est la hauteur (référencée par rapport à la surface, non au MSL) de la base de la couche la plus basse de nuages ou de phénomènes obscurcissants couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel (BKN ou OVC, plus de 4 octas) en dessous de 20 000 ft. L'option A utilise « altitude » (référence MSL) au lieu de « hauteur » (référence surface). L'option C se réfère à la couche nuageuse la « plus haute » plutôt que la « plus basse ». L'option D limite le seuil à 10 000 ft au lieu des 20 000 ft corrects.
+
+### Q140 : Concernant la séparation en espace aérien de classe E, quelle affirmation est exacte ? ^t10q140
+- A) Le trafic VFR n'est séparé que du trafic IFR.
+- B) Le trafic VFR ne reçoit aucune séparation avec aucun trafic.
+- C) Le trafic IFR n'est séparé que du trafic VFR.
+- D) Le trafic VFR est séparé à la fois du trafic VFR et du trafic IFR.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien de classe E, l'ATC n'assure la séparation qu'entre les vols IFR. Les vols VFR ne reçoivent aucun service de séparation — ni du trafic IFR ni du trafic VFR. Les pilotes VFR s'appuient entièrement sur le principe « voir et éviter ». L'option A indique incorrectement que le VFR reçoit une séparation de l'IFR. L'option C inverse la disposition de séparation réelle. L'option D prétend incorrectement que le trafic VFR bénéficie d'une séparation complète.
+
+### Q141 : Quel type d'informations contient la section AD de l'AIP ? ^t10q141
+- A) Icônes de cartes, liste des aides à la navigation radio, heures de lever et coucher du soleil, redevances d'aérodrome, redevances de contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- B) Table des matières, classification des aérodromes avec les cartes correspondantes, cartes d'approche, cartes de circulation au sol.
+- C) Avertissements pour l'aviation, espaces aériens et routes ATS, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux.
+- D) Restrictions d'accès aux aérodromes, contrôles des passagers, exigences relatives aux pilotes, modèles de licences et périodes de validité.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La section AD (Aérodromes) de l'AIP contient des informations sur les aérodromes individuels : leur classification, les cartes d'aérodrome, les cartes d'approche, les cartes de circulation au sol, les données de piste et les informations d'exploitation. L'option A décrit le contenu GEN (symboles cartographiques, aides à la navigation, redevances). L'option C décrit le contenu ENR (avertissements d'espace aérien, routes, zones réglementées). L'option D contient un mélange d'éléments provenant de différentes sections qui ne correspondent pas à la section AD.
+
+### Q142 : Comment l'« altitude de l'aérodrome » est-elle définie ? ^t10q142
+- A) Le point le plus bas de la zone d'atterrissage.
+- B) La valeur moyenne de la hauteur de l'aire de manœuvre.
+- C) Le point le plus élevé de l'aire de trafic.
+- D) Le point le plus élevé de la zone d'atterrissage.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, l'altitude de l'aérodrome est l'altitude du point le plus élevé de la zone d'atterrissage. C'est le point de référence critique pour les calculs QFE et le franchissement des obstacles. L'option A (point le plus bas) sous-estimerait l'altitude pertinente pour des opérations sûres. L'option B (valeur moyenne de l'aire de manœuvre) ne reflète pas la définition du point le plus élevé. L'option C (point le plus élevé de l'aire de trafic) fait référence à la mauvaise zone — l'aire de trafic est utilisée pour le stationnement, pas pour l'atterrissage.
+
+### Q143 : Comment le terme « piste » est-il défini ? ^t10q143
+- A) Zone rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des hélicoptères.
+- B) Zone rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre ou maritime préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- C) Zone ronde sur un aérodrome préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- D) Zone rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, une piste est une zone rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs. L'option A ne concerne que les hélicoptères (les zones d'atterrissage pour hélicoptères sont appelées hélistations ou FATO). L'option B inclut les aérodromes maritimes, mais les pistes sont spécifiques aux aérodromes terrestres. L'option C décrit une forme ronde, ce qui est incorrect — les pistes sont rectangulaires par définition.
+
+### Q144 : Que signifie DETRESFA ? ^t10q144
+- A) Phase d'incertitude
+- B) Phase de sauvetage
+- C) Phase d'alerte
+- D) Phase de détresse
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** DETRESFA est le mot de code ICAO désignant la phase de détresse, la plus élevée des trois phases d'urgence, indiquant qu'un aéronef est présumé se trouver dans un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate. Les trois phases d'urgence ICAO sont : INCERFA (incertitude), ALERFA (alerte) et DETRESFA (détresse). L'option A correspond à INCERFA. L'option B (« phase de sauvetage ») n'est pas une phase d'urgence ICAO définie. L'option C correspond à ALERFA.
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+### Q1: An SPL or LAPL(S) licence holder has logged 9 winch launches, 4 aero-tow launches and 2 bungee launches over the past 24 months. Which launch methods is the pilot permitted to use as PIC today? ^t10q1
+- A) Aero-tow and bungee.
+- B) Winch and aero-tow.
+- C) Winch and bungee.
+- D) Winch, bungee and aero-tow.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-SFCL, a pilot must have completed at least 5 launches using a given method within the preceding 24 months to act as PIC with that method. Here the pilot has 9 winch launches (meets the threshold) and 2 bungee launches (also meets the threshold, as the minimum for bungee is lower). However, with only 4 aero-tow launches the pilot falls short of the required 5, so aero-tow is not permitted. Option A is wrong because it includes aero-tow. Option B is wrong because it also includes aero-tow. Option D includes all three methods, but aero-tow is not qualified. Only Option C correctly lists winch and bungee.
+
+### Q2: Which documents are required to be carried on board during an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^t10q2
+- A) A, b, c, e, f
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 6 and EU Regulation 965/2012, international flights require the Certificate of Airworthiness (b), Airworthiness Review Certificate (c), EASA Form-1 release document (d), the journey log (e), crew licences and medical certificates (f), and the technical logbook (g). Option A omits Form-1 and the technical logbook. Option B is far too limited. Option D omits critical documents like the ARC and crew papers. Option C provides the complete standard EASA enumeration for international flight.
+
+### Q3: Which type of area may be entered subject to certain conditions? ^t10q3
+- A) Dangerous area
+- B) No-fly zone
+- C) Prohibited area
+- D) Restricted area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A restricted area (designated "R" on charts) may be entered subject to conditions published in the AIP, such as obtaining prior clearance from the responsible authority. Option A (dangerous area, designated "D") contains hazards but has no legal entry restriction -- pilots may enter at their own risk. Option B (no-fly zone) is not a standard ICAO classification. Option C (prohibited area, designated "P") forbids all flight unconditionally. Only Option D correctly describes airspace that permits conditional entry.
+
+### Q4: In which publication can the specific restrictions for a restricted airspace be found? ^t10q4
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIP
+- C) AIC
+- D) ICAO chart 1:500000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) is the primary authoritative document containing permanent information about airspace structure, including the detailed conditions, activation times, and authority contacts for restricted areas in the ENR section. Option A (NOTAMs) may announce temporary changes but do not define the base restrictions. Option C (AICs) contain advisory or administrative information, not regulatory airspace definitions. Option D (ICAO charts) show boundaries graphically but do not detail the specific restrictions and conditions for entry.
+
+### Q5: What legal status do the rules and procedures established by EASA have? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5
+- A) They hold the same status as ICAO Annexes
+- B) They are not legally binding and serve only as guidance
+- C) They are part of EU regulation and legally binding across all EU member states
+- D) They become legally binding only after ratification by individual EU member states
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL and Part-MED are published as EU Implementing or Delegated Regulations under the Basic Regulation (EU) 2018/1139. EU Regulations are directly applicable law in all member states without requiring national ratification, making them immediately binding. Option A is wrong because ICAO Annexes are standards and recommended practices requiring national adoption, not equivalent to EU law. Option B is incorrect because EASA rules are fully legally binding. Option D is wrong because EU Regulations do not require individual state ratification.
+
+### Q6: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q6
+- A) 12 months
+- B) 6 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) has unlimited validity -- once issued, it remains valid as long as the aircraft meets its type design standards and is properly maintained. What requires periodic renewal (typically annually) is the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which confirms continuing airworthiness has been verified. Option A (12 months) and Option B (6 months) confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period for any certificate.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "ARC" stand for? ^t10q7
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, as defined in EU Regulation 1321/2014 (Part-M). It is issued after a periodic airworthiness review confirms the aircraft's continuing airworthiness documentation and condition are in order. Option A (Airspace Restriction Criteria), Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control), and Option D (Airspace Rulemaking Committee) are fabricated terms not used in EASA or ICAO aviation law.
+
+### Q8: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q8
+- A) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- B) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) Of the residence of the owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 8 and Annex 7, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state of registry -- the country where the aircraft is registered. That state bears responsibility for ensuring the aircraft meets applicable airworthiness standards. Option A (where the review is done) is incorrect because reviews may occur abroad. Option B (where constructed) is irrelevant since manufacturing state differs from registry state. Option D (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance.
+
+### Q9: A pilot licence issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is recognised in... ^t10q9
+- A) The country where the licence was issued.
+- B) Those countries that have individually accepted this licence upon application.
+- C) All ICAO contracting states.
+- D) The country where the licence was acquired.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 (Personnel Licensing) establishes international standards for pilot licences. A licence issued in full compliance with Annex 1 standards is recognised across all 193 ICAO Contracting States, enabling international aviation operations without individual country-by-country acceptance. Option A and Option D are essentially the same idea and too restrictive. Option B incorrectly implies case-by-case acceptance is needed. The universal mutual recognition of Annex 1 licences is a cornerstone of international civil aviation.
+
+### Q10: Which topic does ICAO Annex 1 address? ^t10q10
+- A) Rules of the air
+- B) Operation of aircraft
+- C) Air traffic services
+- D) Flight crew licensing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 covers Personnel Licensing, which includes standards for flight crew licences (PPL, CPL, ATPL), ratings, medical certificates, and instructor qualifications. Option A (Rules of the Air) is Annex 2. Option B (Operation of Aircraft) is Annex 6. Option C (Air Traffic Services) is Annex 11. Knowing the ICAO Annexes by number and subject is a standard Air Law exam requirement.
+
+### Q11: For a pilot aged 62, how long is a Class 2 medical certificate valid? ^t10q11
+- A) 60 Months.
+- B) 24 Months.
+- C) 12 Months.
+- D) 48 Months.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-MED (Commission Regulation (EU) 1178/2011), the validity of a Class 2 medical certificate depends on the pilot's age. For pilots aged 50 and over, validity is reduced to 12 months. At age 62, the 12-month rule clearly applies. Option A (60 months) applies to younger pilots under 40 in some categories. Option B (24 months) applies to pilots aged 40-49. Option D (48 months) is not a standard medical validity period.
+
+### Q12: What does the abbreviation "SERA" stand for? ^t10q12
+- A) Specialized Radar Approach
+- B) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- C) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises the rules of the air across all EU member states, implementing ICAO Annex 2 provisions at European level and adding EU-specific rules covering right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, and signals. Option A, Option B, and Option D are invented abbreviations not used in aviation regulation.
+
+### Q13: What does the abbreviation "TRA" stand for? ^t10q13
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- C) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- D) Transponder Area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace -- airspace of defined dimensions reserved for a specific activity (military exercises, aerobatic displays, parachuting) during a published period. TRAs are activated via NOTAM and differ from TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) in that they may permit shared use under certain conditions. Option A (Terminal Area), Option B (Temporary Radar Routing Area), and Option D (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations.
+
+### Q14: What must be taken into account when entering an RMZ? ^t10q14
+- A) The transponder must be switched on Mode C with squawk 7000
+- B) A clearance from the local aviation authority must be obtained
+- C) Continuous radio monitoring is required, and radio contact should be established if possible
+- D) A clearance to enter the area must be obtained
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) requires all aircraft to carry and operate a functioning radio, to monitor the designated frequency continuously, and to establish two-way radio contact before entry if possible. Option A describes a TMZ requirement (transponder), not an RMZ. Option B and Option D imply formal ATC clearance is needed, which is a CTR requirement, not an RMZ. The RMZ is defined in SERA.6005 and national AIP supplements.
+
+### Q15: What does an area designated as "TMZ" signify? ^t10q15
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- C) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- D) Transportation Management Zone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone -- airspace within which all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a pressure-altitude reporting transponder (Mode C or Mode S). This allows ATC radar and collision avoidance systems to identify and track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Touring Motorglider Zone), and Option D (Transportation Management Zone) are not recognised aviation terms.
+
+### Q16: A flight is classified as a "visual flight" when the... ^t10q16
+- A) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- B) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- C) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined by the rules under which it is conducted -- Visual Flight Rules (VFR) -- not by the prevailing weather. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) describes the weather minima required for VFR, but a flight conducted in VMC could still be flown under IFR. Option A confuses the rule set with weather conditions. Options B and C cite specific visibility values that are VMC minima for particular airspace classes, not the definition of a VFR flight.
+
+### Q17: What does the abbreviation "VMC" stand for? ^t10q17
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Instrument flight conditions
+- C) Variable meteorological conditions
+- D) Visual meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the specific minima of visibility and cloud clearance defined in SERA.5001 that must be met for VFR flight. If conditions fall below VMC, the airspace is in IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions). Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, not VMC. Option B (Instrument Flight Conditions) is essentially IMC terminology. Option C (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a standard aviation term. VMC and VFR are related but distinct concepts.
+
+### Q18: Two powered aircraft are converging on crossing courses at identical altitude. Which aircraft must give way? ^t10q18
+- A) The lighter aircraft must climb
+- B) Both must turn to the right
+- C) Both must turn to the left
+- D) The heavier aircraft must climb
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, when two aircraft are on converging courses at approximately the same altitude, each shall alter heading to the right. This ensures both aircraft pass behind each other, avoiding collision. Option A and Option D incorrectly introduce weight as a factor, which is irrelevant to crossing right-of-way rules. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge. The "turn right" rule is a fundamental ICAO collision avoidance principle.
+
+### Q19: Two aeroplanes are on crossing tracks. Which one must yield? ^t10q19
+- A) Both must turn to the left
+- B) The aircraft approaching from the right has the right of priority
+- C) Both must turn to the right
+- D) The aircraft approaching from right to left has the right of priority
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under SERA.3210(b), when two aircraft converge at approximately the same altitude, the aircraft that has the other on its right must give way. In other words, the aircraft approaching from the right (flying from right to left relative to the other pilot's perspective) has right-of-way. Option A is incorrect as turning left increases collision risk. Option B states the principle backwards. Option C describes the evasive action for head-on encounters, not the right-of-way principle for crossing traffic.
+
+### Q20: What cloud separation must be maintained during a VFR flight in airspace classes C, D and E? ^t10q20
+- A) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically
+- B) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically
+- C) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically
+- D) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, VFR flights in airspace classes C, D, and E must maintain 1500 m horizontal distance from cloud and 1000 ft (approximately 300 m) vertical distance from cloud. The key detail is that horizontal is expressed in metres and vertical in feet -- mixing these units is a common exam trap. Option A uses 1000 m horizontal (too small). Option B uses 1000 m vertical (incorrect unit and value). Option D reverses the horizontal/vertical values.
+
+### Q21: In airspace "E", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q21
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class E above 3000 ft AMSL but below FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5000 m (5 km). FL75 (approximately 7500 ft) falls within this altitude band. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum. Option C (1500 m) applies only in uncontrolled airspace at low altitude. Option D (8000 m) applies at and above FL100, not below it.
+
+### Q22: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q22
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace (including class C), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km rule applies. Option A (5000 m) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (3000 m) does not correspond to any standard SERA VFR minimum in controlled airspace.
+
+### Q23: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q23
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL125 is above FL100, so the SERA.5001 rule for high-altitude VFR applies: minimum flight visibility is 8000 m in all controlled airspace including class C. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (3000 m) and Option C (1500 m) apply only in lower uncontrolled airspace. The progression to remember is: low-altitude uncontrolled = 1.5 km, controlled below FL100 = 5 km, at or above FL100 = 8 km.
+
+### Q24: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace "B"? ^t10q24
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Where VFR is permitted in class B airspace, the cloud clearance minima per SERA.5001 are 1500 m horizontal and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertical. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance, which is insufficient. Option B states 1000 m vertical, which is far too large and uses the wrong value. Option C uses only 1000 m horizontal and the correct vertical, but the horizontal is insufficient. Only Option D provides both correct values.
+
+### Q25: In airspace "C" below FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q25
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class C below FL100 (above 3000 ft AMSL or 1000 ft AGL), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km. Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option C (8 km) applies only at and above FL100. Option D (1.5 km) applies in uncontrolled airspace at low altitudes. Glider pilots crossing class C airspace below FL100 must verify at least 5 km visibility.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_1_25_fr.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..60aca1b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_1_25_fr.md
@@ -0,0 +1,249 @@
+### Q1 : Le titulaire d'une licence SPL ou LAPL(S) a effectué 9 lancers au treuil, 4 lancers en remorquage et 2 lancers à l'élastique au cours des 24 derniers mois. Quelles méthodes de lancement le pilote est-il autorisé à utiliser en tant que CdB aujourd'hui ? ^t10q1
+- A) Remorquage et élastique.
+- B) Treuil et remorquage.
+- C) Treuil et élastique.
+- D) Treuil, élastique et remorquage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à la Part-SFCL, un pilote doit avoir effectué au moins 5 lancers selon une méthode donnée au cours des 24 derniers mois pour exercer les privilèges de commandant de bord (CdB) avec cette méthode. Le pilote totalise ici 9 lancers au treuil (seuil atteint) et 2 lancers à l'élastique (seuil atteint, le minimum étant inférieur pour cette méthode). En revanche, avec seulement 4 lancers en remorquage, le pilote n'atteint pas les 5 requis — le remorquage n'est donc pas autorisé. L'option A est incorrecte car elle inclut le remorquage. L'option B l'est également. L'option D inclut les trois méthodes, mais le remorquage n'est pas qualifié. Seule l'option C liste correctement le treuil et l'élastique.
+
+### Q2 : Quels documents doivent obligatoirement se trouver à bord lors d'un vol international ? a) Certificat d'immatriculation de l'aéronef b) Certificat de navigabilité c) Certificat de contrôle de navigabilité d) Formulaire EASA Form-1 e) Carnet de vol de l'avion f) Documents appropriés pour chaque membre d'équipage g) Carnet technique ^t10q2
+- A) A, b, c, e, f
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 6 de l'ICAO et au Règlement UE 965/2012, les vols internationaux exigent à bord : le Certificat de navigabilité (b), le Certificat de contrôle de navigabilité — ARC (c), le formulaire EASA Form-1 ou document de remise en service équivalent (d), le carnet de vol de l'aéronef (e), les licences et certificats médicaux de chaque membre d'équipage (f), ainsi que le carnet technique (g). L'option A omet le formulaire Form-1 et le carnet technique. L'option B est bien trop limitée. L'option D omet des documents essentiels tels que l'ARC et les papiers d'équipage. Seule l'option C correspond à l'énumération complète standard EASA pour un vol international.
+
+### Q3 : Quel type de zone peut être pénétré sous certaines conditions ? ^t10q3
+- A) Zone dangereuse
+- B) Zone d'interdiction de vol
+- C) Zone interdite
+- D) Zone réglementée
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une zone réglementée (désignée « R » sur les cartes) peut être pénétrée sous réserve de conditions publiées dans l'AIP, telles qu'une autorisation préalable de l'autorité responsable. L'option A (zone dangereuse, désignée « D ») contient des risques mais n'impose aucune restriction légale d'entrée — les pilotes peuvent y pénétrer à leurs risques et périls. L'option B (zone d'interdiction de vol) n'est pas une classification officielle de l'ICAO. L'option C (zone interdite, désignée « P ») interdit tout vol de façon inconditionnelle. Seule l'option D décrit correctement un espace aérien permettant une entrée conditionnelle.
+
+### Q4 : Dans quelle publication peut-on trouver les restrictions spécifiques d'un espace aérien réglementé ? ^t10q4
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIP
+- C) AIC
+- D) Carte ICAO 1:500 000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Publication d'information aéronautique (AIP) est le document officiel de référence contenant les informations permanentes sur la structure des espaces aériens, notamment les conditions détaillées, les horaires d'activation et les contacts des autorités responsables des zones réglementées dans la section ENR. L'option A (NOTAMs) peut annoncer des modifications temporaires, mais ne définit pas les restrictions de base. L'option C (AIC) contient des informations consultatives ou administratives, pas des définitions réglementaires d'espaces aériens. L'option D (cartes ICAO) représente les limites graphiquement, mais ne détaille pas les restrictions et conditions d'entrée spécifiques.
+
+### Q5 : Quel est le statut juridique des règles et procédures établies par l'EASA ? (ex. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5
+- A) Elles ont le même statut que les Annexes ICAO
+- B) Elles ne sont pas juridiquement contraignantes et servent uniquement de guide
+- C) Elles font partie de la réglementation européenne et sont juridiquement contraignantes pour tous les États membres de l'UE
+- D) Elles ne deviennent juridiquement contraignantes qu'après ratification par chaque État membre de l'UE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les règlements EASA tels que la Part-SFCL et la Part-MED sont publiés en tant que Règlements d'exécution ou Règlements délégués de l'UE en vertu du Règlement de base (UE) 2018/1139. Les Règlements de l'UE sont directement applicables dans tous les États membres sans nécessiter de ratification nationale — ils sont immédiatement contraignants. L'option A est incorrecte car les Annexes de l'ICAO sont des normes et pratiques recommandées nécessitant une adoption nationale, et ne sont pas équivalentes au droit de l'UE. L'option B est incorrecte car les règles EASA sont pleinement contraignantes. L'option D est incorrecte car les Règlements de l'UE ne requièrent pas de ratification individuelle par les États.
+
+### Q6 : Quelle est la durée de validité du certificat de navigabilité ? ^t10q6
+- A) 12 mois
+- B) 6 mois
+- C) 12 ans
+- D) Illimitée
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le certificat de navigabilité (CofA) a une validité illimitée — une fois délivré, il reste valable aussi longtemps que l'aéronef satisfait aux normes de son type de conception et est correctement entretenu. Ce qui nécessite un renouvellement périodique (généralement annuel), c'est le Certificat de contrôle de navigabilité (ARC), qui atteste que la navigabilité continue a été vérifiée. Les options A (12 mois) et B (6 mois) confondent le CofA avec la période de renouvellement de l'ARC. L'option C (12 ans) ne correspond à aucune durée de validité standard en aviation.
+
+### Q7 : Que signifie l'abréviation « ARC » ? ^t10q7
+- A) Critères de restriction d'espace aérien (Airspace Restriction Criteria)
+- B) Certificat de contrôle de navigabilité (Airworthiness Review Certificate)
+- C) Contrôle récurrent de navigabilité (Airworthiness Recurring Control)
+- D) Comité de réglementation des espaces aériens (Airspace Rulemaking Committee)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** ARC désigne le Certificat de contrôle de navigabilité (Airworthiness Review Certificate), tel que défini dans le Règlement UE 1321/2014 (Part-M). Il est délivré après qu'une révision périodique de navigabilité confirme que la documentation et l'état de l'aéronef sont en ordre. Les options A, C et D sont des termes inventés, non utilisés dans la réglementation EASA ou ICAO.
+
+### Q8 : Le certificat de navigabilité est délivré par l'État... ^t10q8
+- A) Dans lequel la vérification de navigabilité est effectuée.
+- B) Dans lequel l'aéronef est construit.
+- C) Dans lequel l'aéronef est immatriculé.
+- D) De résidence du propriétaire.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément aux Annexes 8 et 7 de l'ICAO, le certificat de navigabilité est délivré par l'État d'immatriculation — le pays dans lequel l'aéronef est enregistré. Cet État est responsable de s'assurer que l'aéronef satisfait aux normes de navigabilité applicables. L'option A (lieu de la vérification) est incorrecte car les révisions peuvent avoir lieu à l'étranger. L'option B (lieu de construction) est sans pertinence car l'État de fabrication peut différer de l'État d'immatriculation. L'option D (résidence du propriétaire) n'a aucune incidence sur la délivrance du CofA.
+
+### Q9 : Une licence de pilote délivrée conformément à l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO est reconnue... ^t10q9
+- A) Dans le pays où la licence a été délivrée.
+- B) Dans les pays ayant individuellement accepté cette licence sur demande.
+- C) Dans tous les États contractants de l'ICAO.
+- D) Dans le pays où la licence a été obtenue.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO (Licences du personnel) établit des normes internationales pour les licences de pilote. Une licence délivrée en pleine conformité avec les normes de l'Annexe 1 est reconnue dans l'ensemble des 193 États contractants de l'ICAO, permettant des opérations aériennes internationales sans acceptation pays par pays. Les options A et D sont essentiellement identiques et trop restrictives. L'option B implique incorrectement qu'une acceptation au cas par cas est nécessaire. La reconnaissance mutuelle universelle des licences conformes à l'Annexe 1 est une pierre angulaire de l'aviation civile internationale.
+
+### Q10 : Quel sujet traite l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO ? ^t10q10
+- A) Règles de l'air
+- B) Exploitation des aéronefs
+- C) Services de la circulation aérienne
+- D) Licences du personnel navigant
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO couvre la délivrance des licences du personnel, notamment les normes relatives aux licences de pilote (PPL, CPL, ATPL), aux qualifications, aux certificats médicaux et aux qualifications d'instructeur. L'option A (Règles de l'air) correspond à l'Annexe 2. L'option B (Exploitation des aéronefs) correspond à l'Annexe 6. L'option C (Services de la circulation aérienne) correspond à l'Annexe 11. La connaissance des Annexes ICAO par numéro et par sujet est une exigence standard des examens de droit aérien.
+
+### Q11 : Pour un pilote âgé de 62 ans, quelle est la durée de validité d'un certificat médical de classe 2 ? ^t10q11
+- A) 60 mois.
+- B) 24 mois.
+- C) 12 mois.
+- D) 48 mois.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vertu de la Part-MED (Règlement de la Commission (UE) 1178/2011), la durée de validité d'un certificat médical de classe 2 dépend de l'âge du pilote. Pour les pilotes âgés de 50 ans et plus, la validité est réduite à 12 mois. À 62 ans, la règle des 12 mois s'applique clairement. L'option A (60 mois) s'applique aux pilotes de moins de 40 ans dans certaines catégories. L'option B (24 mois) s'applique aux pilotes âgés de 40 à 49 ans. L'option D (48 mois) ne correspond à aucune durée de validité médicale standard.
+
+### Q12 : Que signifie l'abréviation « SERA » ? ^t10q12
+- A) Approche radar spécialisée (Specialized Radar Approach)
+- B) Routes aériennes standard européennes (Standard European Routes of the Air)
+- C) Règles de l'air européennes standardisées (Standardised European Rules of the Air)
+- D) Altimètre radar sélectif (Selective Radar Altimeter)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** SERA désigne les Règles de l'air européennes standardisées (Standardised European Rules of the Air), établies par le Règlement d'exécution de la Commission (UE) n° 923/2012. Le SERA harmonise les règles de l'air dans tous les États membres de l'UE, met en œuvre les dispositions de l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO au niveau européen et ajoute des règles spécifiques à l'UE couvrant les priorités de passage, les minima VMC, les calages altimétriques et les signaux. Les options A, B et D sont des abréviations inventées, absentes de la réglementation aéronautique.
+
+### Q13 : Que signifie l'abréviation « TRA » ? ^t10q13
+- A) Zone terminale (Terminal Area)
+- B) Zone de routage radar temporaire (Temporary Radar Routing Area)
+- C) Espace aérien temporairement réservé (Temporary Reserved Airspace)
+- D) Zone à transpondeur (Transponder Area)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** TRA désigne un Espace aérien temporairement réservé (Temporary Reserved Airspace) — un espace aérien de dimensions définies, réservé à une activité spécifique (exercices militaires, présentations acrobatiques, parachutisme) pendant une période publiée. Les TRA sont activés par NOTAM et se distinguent des TSA (Temporary Segregated Areas) en ce qu'ils peuvent permettre une utilisation partagée sous certaines conditions. Les options A, B et D ne sont pas des désignations standard ICAO ou EASA.
+
+### Q14 : Que faut-il prendre en compte lors de l'entrée dans une RMZ ? ^t10q14
+- A) Le transpondeur doit être activé en mode C avec le code 7000
+- B) Une autorisation de l'autorité locale de l'aviation civile doit être obtenue
+- C) Une veille radio permanente est requise, et le contact radio doit être établi si possible
+- D) Une autorisation d'entrée dans la zone doit être obtenue
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone — Zone à radio obligatoire) impose à tous les aéronefs d'être équipés d'une radio fonctionnelle, d'assurer une veille permanente sur la fréquence désignée et d'établir un contact radio bilatéral avant l'entrée si possible. L'option A décrit une exigence TMZ (transpondeur), et non RMZ. Les options B et D impliquent une clairance ATC formelle, ce qui est une exigence de CTR, pas de RMZ. La RMZ est définie dans le SERA.6005 et les suppléments nationaux à l'AIP.
+
+### Q15 : Que signifie la désignation « TMZ » pour une zone aérienne ? ^t10q15
+- A) Zone de gestion du trafic (Traffic Management Zone)
+- B) Zone pour motoplaneurs de tourisme (Touring Motorglider Zone)
+- C) Zone à transpondeur obligatoire (Transponder Mandatory Zone)
+- D) Zone de gestion des transports (Transportation Management Zone)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** TMZ désigne une Zone à transpondeur obligatoire (Transponder Mandatory Zone) — un espace aérien dans lequel tous les aéronefs doivent être équipés d'un transpondeur rapportant l'altitude-pression (mode C ou mode S) et l'activer. Cela permet aux radars ATC et aux systèmes d'évitement de collision d'identifier et de suivre le trafic. Les options A, B et D ne sont pas des termes aéronautiques reconnus.
+
+### Q16 : Un vol est classifié comme « vol à vue » lorsque... ^t10q16
+- A) Le vol est effectué dans des conditions météorologiques de vol à vue.
+- B) La visibilité en vol dépasse 8 km.
+- C) La visibilité en vol dépasse 5 km.
+- D) Le vol est effectué selon les règles du vol à vue.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un vol à vue (vol VFR) est défini par les règles selon lesquelles il est conduit — les Règles du vol à vue (VFR) — et non par la météo ambiante. Les VMC (Conditions météorologiques de vol à vue) décrivent les minima météorologiques requis pour le VFR, mais un vol en VMC pourrait malgré tout être effectué selon les règles IFR. L'option A confond le cadre réglementaire avec les conditions météo. Les options B et C citent des valeurs de visibilité spécifiques qui sont des minima VMC pour certaines classes d'espace aérien, et non la définition d'un vol VFR.
+
+### Q17 : Que signifie l'abréviation « VMC » ? ^t10q17
+- A) Règles du vol à vue (Visual Flight Rules)
+- B) Conditions de vol aux instruments (Instrument Flight Conditions)
+- C) Conditions météorologiques variables (Variable Meteorological Conditions)
+- D) Conditions météorologiques de vol à vue (Visual Meteorological Conditions)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** VMC désigne les Conditions météorologiques de vol à vue (Visual Meteorological Conditions) — les minima spécifiques de visibilité et de distance par rapport aux nuages définis dans le SERA.5001 qui doivent être respectés pour un vol VFR. Lorsque les conditions sont inférieures aux VMC, l'espace aérien est en IMC (Conditions météorologiques de vol aux instruments). L'option A (Visual Flight Rules) correspond à VFR, pas à VMC. L'option B correspond essentiellement à la terminologie IMC. L'option C n'est pas un terme aéronautique standard. VMC et VFR sont des notions liées mais distinctes.
+
+### Q18 : Deux aéronefs motorisés convergent sur des routes qui se croisent à la même altitude. Lequel doit céder le passage ? ^t10q18
+- A) L'aéronef le plus léger doit monter
+- B) Les deux doivent virer à droite
+- C) Les deux doivent virer à gauche
+- D) L'aéronef le plus lourd doit monter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.3210, lorsque deux aéronefs convergent sur des routes se croisant à peu près à la même altitude, chacun doit modifier son cap vers la droite. Cela garantit que les deux aéronefs se croisent par l'arrière l'un de l'autre, évitant toute collision. Les options A et D introduisent incorrectement la masse comme facteur, ce qui est sans pertinence pour les règles de priorité en cas de croisement. L'option C (virer à gauche tous les deux) amènerait les aéronefs à converger davantage plutôt qu'à diverger. La règle du « virage à droite » est un principe fondamental d'évitement de collision de l'ICAO.
+
+### Q19 : Deux avions sont sur des routes se croisant. Lequel doit céder le passage ? ^t10q19
+- A) Les deux doivent virer à gauche
+- B) L'aéronef qui arrive par la droite a la priorité
+- C) Les deux doivent virer à droite
+- D) L'aéronef qui arrive de droite à gauche a la priorité de passage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vertu du SERA.3210(b), lorsque deux aéronefs convergent à peu près à la même altitude, l'aéronef qui a l'autre sur sa droite doit céder le passage. Autrement dit, l'aéronef qui arrive par la droite (se déplaçant de droite à gauche par rapport à l'autre pilote) a la priorité. L'option A est incorrecte car virer à gauche augmente le risque de collision. L'option B énonce le principe à l'envers. L'option C décrit la manœuvre d'évitement pour les rencontres face à face, non la règle de priorité pour le trafic se croisant.
+
+### Q20 : Quelle distance par rapport aux nuages doit être maintenue lors d'un vol VFR dans les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E ? ^t10q20
+- A) 1000 m horizontalement, 300 m verticalement
+- B) 1500 m horizontalement, 1000 m verticalement
+- C) 1500 m horizontalement, 1000 ft verticalement
+- D) 1000 m horizontalement, 1500 ft verticalement
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.5001, les vols VFR dans les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E doivent maintenir une distance horizontale de 1500 m par rapport aux nuages et une distance verticale de 1000 ft (environ 300 m) par rapport aux nuages. Le détail essentiel est que la distance horizontale s'exprime en mètres et la distance verticale en pieds — mélanger ces unités est un piège classique à l'examen. L'option A utilise 1000 m horizontalement (insuffisant). L'option B utilise 1000 m verticalement (unité et valeur incorrectes). L'option D inverse les valeurs horizontale et verticale.
+
+### Q21 : Dans l'espace aérien « E », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL75 ? ^t10q21
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.5001, dans l'espace aérien de classe E au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL mais en dessous du FL100, la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 5000 m (5 km). Le FL75 (environ 7500 ft) se situe dans cette tranche d'altitude. L'option A (3000 m) ne correspond à aucun minimum VFR standard. L'option C (1500 m) s'applique uniquement en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option D (8000 m) s'applique au FL100 et au-dessus, pas en dessous.
+
+### Q22 : Dans l'espace aérien « C », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL110 ? ^t10q22
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.5001, au FL100 et au-dessus dans l'espace aérien contrôlé (y compris la classe C), la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 8000 m (8 km). Le FL110 est au-dessus du FL100, donc la règle des 8 km s'applique. L'option A (5000 m) est le minimum en dessous du FL100. L'option C (1500 m) s'applique en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option D (3000 m) ne correspond à aucun minimum VFR standard du SERA en espace aérien contrôlé.
+
+### Q23 : Dans l'espace aérien « C », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL125 ? ^t10q23
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FL125 est au-dessus du FL100, donc la règle SERA.5001 pour le VFR en haute altitude s'applique : visibilité minimale en vol de 8000 m dans tout l'espace aérien contrôlé, y compris la classe C. L'option A (5000 m) s'applique en dessous du FL100. Les options B (3000 m) et C (1500 m) s'appliquent uniquement en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. La progression à retenir est : basse altitude non contrôlée = 1,5 km, contrôlé en dessous du FL100 = 5 km, au FL100 et au-dessus = 8 km.
+
+### Q24 : Quelles sont les exigences minimales de distance par rapport aux nuages pour un vol VFR dans l'espace aérien « B » ? ^t10q24
+- A) Horizontalement 1 000 m, verticalement 1 500 ft
+- B) Horizontalement 1 500 m, verticalement 1 000 m
+- C) Horizontalement 1 000 m, verticalement 300 m
+- D) Horizontalement 1 500 m, verticalement 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque le VFR est autorisé dans l'espace aérien de classe B, les minima de distance par rapport aux nuages conformément au SERA.5001 sont de 1500 m horizontalement et 300 m (environ 1000 ft) verticalement. L'option A n'utilise que 1000 m horizontalement, ce qui est insuffisant. L'option B indique 1000 m verticalement, ce qui est bien trop grand et utilise une valeur incorrecte. L'option C utilise seulement 1000 m horizontalement et la valeur verticale correcte, mais la distance horizontale est insuffisante. Seule l'option D fournit les deux valeurs correctes.
+
+### Q25 : Dans l'espace aérien « C » en dessous du FL 100, quelle visibilité minimale en vol s'applique aux opérations VFR ? ^t10q25
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.5001, dans l'espace aérien de classe C en dessous du FL100 (au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL ou 1000 ft AGL), la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 5 km. L'option A (10 km) ne correspond à aucun minimum SERA standard. L'option C (8 km) s'applique uniquement au FL100 et au-dessus. L'option D (1,5 km) s'applique en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. Les pilotes de planeur traversant l'espace aérien de classe C en dessous du FL100 doivent vérifier une visibilité d'au moins 5 km.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_26_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_26_50.md
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+### Q26: In airspace "C" at and above FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q26
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace including class C, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8 km. This higher threshold reflects the greater closing speeds and reduced reaction time at higher altitudes. Option A (5 km) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VMC minimum. Option D (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q27: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q27
+- A) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ceiling is defined as the height (above ground level) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, more than 4 oktas) below 20,000 ft. Option B uses "altitude" (referenced to MSL) instead of "height" (referenced to the surface). Option C refers to the "highest" cloud layer when it should be the "lowest." Option D incorrectly limits the threshold to 10,000 ft instead of 20,000 ft.
+
+### Q28: During daytime interception by a military aircraft, what does the following signal mean: a sudden 90-degree or greater heading change and a climb without crossing the intercepted aircraft's flight path? ^t10q28
+- A) You are entering a restricted area; leave the airspace immediately
+- B) You may continue your flight
+- C) Follow me; I will guide you to the nearest suitable airfield
+- D) Prepare for a safety landing; you have entered a prohibited area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2, Appendix 1, when an intercepting aircraft makes an abrupt break-away manoeuvre of 90 degrees or more and climbs away without crossing the intercepted aircraft's track, this is the standard "release" signal meaning "You may proceed." The intercept is complete and the pilot may continue on their route. Option A and Option D imply airspace violation warnings that use different signals. Option C ("follow me") involves the interceptor rocking wings and maintaining a steady heading toward the destination aerodrome.
+
+### Q29: When flying at FL 80, what altimeter setting must be used? ^t10q29
+- A) 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) Local QNH.
+- C) 1030.25 hPa.
+- D) Local QFE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are defined relative to the International Standard Atmosphere pressure datum of 1013.25 hPa. When flying at or above the transition altitude, pilots must set 1013.25 hPa on the altimeter subscale and reference altitude as a flight level. Option B (QNH) gives altitude above mean sea level and is used below the transition altitude. Option C (1030.25 hPa) is not a standard reference pressure. Option D (QFE) gives height above a specific aerodrome and is never used for flight levels.
+
+### Q30: What is the objective of the semi-circular rule? ^t10q30
+- A) To permit flying without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP
+- B) To enable safe climbing or descending within a holding pattern
+- C) To reduce the risk of collisions by decreasing the likelihood of opposing traffic at the same altitude
+- D) To prevent collisions by prohibiting turning manoeuvres
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The semi-circular (hemispherical) cruising level rule (SERA.5015) assigns different altitude bands to different magnetic tracks -- eastbound flights use odd thousands of feet, westbound use even thousands. By vertically separating aircraft flying in opposite directions, the probability of head-on collision at the same altitude is greatly reduced. Option A is unrelated to cruising levels. Option B describes holding pattern procedures. Option D is incorrect because the rule concerns altitude assignment, not manoeuvre restrictions.
+
+### Q31: A transponder capable of transmitting the current pressure altitude is a... ^t10q31
+- A) Transponder approved for airspace "B".
+- B) Mode A transponder.
+- C) Pressure-decoder.
+- D) Mode C or S transponder.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A transponder that transmits pressure altitude information is either a Mode C or Mode S transponder. Mode C adds automatic pressure altitude reporting to the basic Mode A identity code, while Mode S provides all Mode C capabilities plus selective interrogation and data link features. Option A is incorrect because "approved for airspace B" is not a transponder classification. Option B is wrong because Mode A only transmits a 4-digit squawk code without altitude data. Option C is wrong because "pressure-decoder" is not an aviation term.
+
+### Q32: Which transponder code signals a loss of radio communication? ^t10q32
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 2000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally recognised squawk for radio communication failure. Pilots must memorise the three emergency codes: 7700 for general emergency, 7600 for radio failure, and 7500 for unlawful interference (hijacking). Option A (7700) is for emergencies, not specifically communication loss. Option B (7000) is the standard European VFR conspicuity code. Option D (2000) is used when entering controlled airspace without an assigned code.
+
+### Q33: In the event of a radio failure, which transponder code should be selected without any ATC request? ^t10q33
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a pilot experiences radio communication failure, they must immediately squawk 7600 without waiting for any ATC instruction, since by definition communication is no longer possible. This proactive action alerts ATC to the situation and triggers loss-of-communications procedures. Option A (7000) is the general VFR code and does not communicate an emergency. Option B (7500) signals unlawful interference, which is a completely different situation. Option C (7700) is for general emergencies, not specifically radio failure.
+
+### Q34: Which transponder code should be set automatically during an emergency without waiting for instructions? ^t10q34
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In any general emergency (engine failure, fire, medical emergency, structural damage), the pilot must immediately set transponder code 7700 without waiting for ATC instruction. This triggers an alarm on ATC radar displays and activates emergency response procedures. Option A (7600) is specifically for radio communication failure, not general emergencies. Option B (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code. Option C (7500) is reserved exclusively for unlawful interference (hijacking) and should never be set for other emergencies.
+
+### Q35: Which air traffic service bears responsibility for the safe conduct of flights? ^t10q35
+- A) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- C) ATC (air traffic control)
+- D) ALR (alerting service)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air Traffic Control (ATC) is the service specifically responsible for providing separation between aircraft and ensuring the safe, orderly, and expeditious flow of air traffic in controlled airspace. Per ICAO Annex 11, ATC actively manages aircraft movements to prevent collisions. Option A (FIS) provides useful information but does not direct or separate aircraft. Option B (AIS) publishes aeronautical information documents but has no operational control role. Option D (ALR) initiates search and rescue when aircraft are overdue or in distress, but does not manage ongoing flight safety.
+
+### Q36: Which services make up the air traffic control service? ^t10q36
+- A) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)
+- C) FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)
+- D) ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 11, the three constituent units of ATC are: TWR (Aerodrome Control, handling traffic at and around the aerodrome), APP (Approach Control, managing arriving and departing traffic in the terminal area), and ACC (Area Control Centre, handling en-route traffic). Option A incorrectly includes FIS, which is an information service separate from ATC. Option C lists information and communication services, none of which are ATC units. Option D mixes emergency services (ALR, SAR) with only one ATC unit (TWR).
+
+### Q37: Regarding separation in airspace "E", which statement is correct? ^t10q37
+- A) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace, ATC separates IFR flights from other IFR flights, but VFR traffic receives no ATC separation service whatsoever -- neither from other VFR traffic nor from IFR traffic. VFR pilots in Class E must rely entirely on the see-and-avoid principle, with traffic information provided where possible. Option A incorrectly states IFR is separated only from VFR (it is separated from other IFR). Option B and Option D wrongly imply VFR traffic receives some form of separation.
+
+### Q38: Which air traffic services are available within an FIR (flight information region)? ^t10q38
+- A) ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)
+- C) FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)
+- D) ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) provides two universal services throughout its entire volume: FIS (Flight Information Service), which provides weather, NOTAM, and traffic information to pilots, and ALR (Alerting Service), which notifies rescue services when aircraft are in distress or overdue. ATC is not provided throughout the entire FIR -- it exists only within designated controlled airspace (CTAs, CTRs, airways) that may lie within the FIR. Options A, B, and D either include ATC incorrectly or omit the correct pairing.
+
+### Q39: How can a pilot reach FIS (flight information service) during flight? ^t10q39
+- A) Via telephone.
+- B) By a personal visit.
+- C) Via radio communication.
+- D) Via internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS is an operational service provided to airborne pilots, and the primary means of contacting it during flight is via radio communication on the designated FIS frequency. While pre-flight information may be obtained by telephone or online, the in-flight FIS service itself is radio-based. Option A (telephone) and Option D (internet) are ground-based contact methods impractical for real-time in-flight communication. Option B (personal visit) is obviously impossible while airborne.
+
+### Q40: What is the standard phraseology to warn that a light aircraft is following a heavier wake turbulence category aircraft? ^t10q40
+- A) Attention propwash
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Caution wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO phraseology for wake turbulence warnings is "CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE," as prescribed in ICAO Doc 4444 (PANS-ATM). Standardised phraseology is mandatory in aviation to eliminate ambiguity. Option A ("attention propwash"), Option B ("be careful wake winds"), and Option C ("danger jet blast") are all non-standard phrases not found in ICAO-approved phraseology. Using non-standard terms could cause confusion and is prohibited in EASA airspace.
+
+### Q41: Which of the following represents a correct position report? ^t10q41
+- A) DEABC over "N" at 35
+- B) DEABC reaching "N"
+- C) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A standard position report per ICAO Doc 4444 must include: aircraft callsign, position (fix or waypoint), and altitude or flight level. Option C (DEABC, "N", 2500 ft) provides all three elements correctly and concisely. Option A lacks a clear altitude reference ("at 35" is ambiguous). Option B is incomplete because it omits altitude entirely. Option D uses the nonsensical expression "FL 2500 ft" -- flight levels and feet are never combined this way; it should be either "FL 25" or "2500 ft."
+
+### Q42: What kind of information is contained in the general part (GEN) of the AIP? ^t10q42
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- C) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP is structured in three parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The GEN section contains general administrative information including map symbols/icons, radio navigation aid listings, sunrise/sunset tables, national regulations, airport fees, and ATC fees. Option A describes content found in the ENR section (airspace, routes, restrictions). Option B describes AD section content (aerodrome charts, approach charts). Option C mixes items that do not correspond to any single AIP section.
+
+### Q43: Into which parts is the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) divided? ^t10q43
+- A) GEN ENR AD
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 15, the AIP is divided into three standardised parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). This structure is universal across all ICAO member states. Option B (AGA, COM), Option C (COM, MET), and Option D (MET, RAC) use abbreviations from older ICAO documentation structures that are no longer part of the modern AIP organisation. Only Option A reflects the current ICAO-standard AIP structure.
+
+### Q44: What kind of information is found in the "AD" section of the AIP? ^t10q44
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains all aerodrome-specific information: aerodrome classification, runway data, approach and departure charts, taxi charts, lighting, frequencies, operating hours, and obstacle data. Option A describes ENR (En-Route) content covering airspace and restrictions. Option B describes GEN (General) content such as symbols and fees. Option D mixes regulatory and administrative items that do not correspond to the AD section.
+
+### Q45: The NOTAM shown is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^t10q45
+- A) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- B) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM time codes use the format YYMMDDHHMM in UTC. The "C)" field in a NOTAM specifies the end of validity. The code 1305211400 decodes as: year 2013 (13), month May (05), day 21, time 14:00 UTC -- giving 21 May 2013 at 14:00 UTC. Option B misreads the date format, interpreting the month as the date. Option C incorrectly reads the year as 2014. Option D completely misinterprets the encoding. Correct NOTAM decoding is a fundamental Air Law skill for all pilots.
+
+### Q46: A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a compilation of current... ^t10q46
+- A) AIP information of operational significance assembled prior to flight.
+- B) AIC information of operational significance assembled after the flight.
+- C) ICAO information of operational significance assembled after the flight.
+- D) NOTAM information of operational significance assembled prior to flight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) is a standardised summary of current NOTAMs relevant to a planned flight, compiled and issued before departure. It filters pertinent NOTAMs for the route, departure, destination, and alternate aerodromes. Option A is wrong because a PIB is based on NOTAM data, not AIP data. Option B is wrong on two counts: it references AICs (not NOTAMs) and says "after the flight" (it is a pre-flight tool). Option C similarly misidentifies the source and timing.
+
+### Q47: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q47
+- A) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- B) The highest point of the landing area.
+- C) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- D) The highest point of the apron.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is defined as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This ensures the published value represents the most demanding terrain height aircraft must account for during approach and departure. Option A (average of the manoeuvring area) would understate the critical elevation. Option C (lowest point) is the opposite of the correct definition. Option D (highest point of the apron) is incorrect because the apron is not the landing area.
+
+### Q48: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q48
+- A) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- B) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. The three key elements are: rectangular shape, land aerodrome, and aircraft in general. Option A is wrong because runways are specific to land aerodromes (water aerodromes have alighting areas, not runways). Option B is wrong because the shape is rectangular, not round. Option D is wrong because runways serve aircraft generally, not helicopters specifically (helicopters use helipads or FATO areas).
+
+### Q49: How can a wind direction indicator be made more visible? ^t10q49
+- A) By mounting it on top of the control tower.
+- B) By surrounding it with a white circle.
+- C) By placing it on a large black surface.
+- D) By constructing it from green materials.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a wind direction indicator (windsock or wind tee) should be surrounded by a white circle to enhance its visibility from the air. The high-contrast white surround makes the indicator easier to identify against the aerodrome background. Option A (mounting on the control tower) is not a standard ICAO visibility-enhancement method and could interfere with tower operations. Option C (black surface) is not specified in ICAO standards. Option D (green materials) would actually reduce visibility against grass surfaces.
+
+### Q50: What shape does a landing direction indicator have? ^t10q50
+- A) An angled arrow
+- B) L
+- C) T
+- D) A straight arrow
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, the landing direction indicator is T-shaped (commonly called a "landing T" or "signal T"). Aircraft land toward the cross-bar of the T and take off away from it, making the landing direction immediately clear. Option A (angled arrow) and Option D (straight arrow) are not the standard ICAO shape for this indicator. Option B (L-shape) is used for a different purpose -- indicating a right-hand traffic circuit, not the landing direction.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_26_50_fr.md
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+### Q26 : Dans l'espace aérien « C » au FL 100 et au-dessus, quelle visibilité minimale en vol s'applique aux opérations VFR ? ^t10q26
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.5001, au FL100 et au-dessus dans l'espace aérien contrôlé, y compris la classe C, la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 8 km. Ce seuil plus élevé reflète les vitesses de rapprochement plus importantes et le temps de réaction réduit aux altitudes élevées. L'option A (5 km) est le minimum en dessous du FL100. L'option C (10 km) ne correspond à aucun minimum VMC standard du SERA. L'option D (1,5 km) s'applique uniquement en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude.
+
+### Q27 : Comment est défini le terme « plafond » ? ^t10q27
+- A) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20 000 ft.
+- B) Altitude de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20 000 ft.
+- C) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus haute couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20 000 ft.
+- D) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 10 000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le plafond est défini comme la hauteur (au-dessus du sol) de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel (BKN ou OVC, plus de 4 octas) en dessous de 20 000 ft. L'option B utilise « altitude » (référencée par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer) au lieu de « hauteur » (référencée par rapport à la surface). L'option C fait référence à la couche nuageuse « la plus haute » alors qu'il s'agit de la « plus basse ». L'option D limite incorrectement le seuil à 10 000 ft au lieu de 20 000 ft.
+
+### Q28 : Lors d'une interception de jour par un aéronef militaire, que signifie le signal suivant : un changement de cap soudain de 90 degrés ou plus, suivi d'une montée sans croiser la trajectoire de l'aéronef intercepté ? ^t10q28
+- A) Vous pénétrez dans une zone réglementée ; quittez immédiatement l'espace aérien
+- B) Vous pouvez poursuivre votre vol
+- C) Suivez-moi ; je vais vous guider vers le terrain le plus proche
+- D) Préparez-vous à un atterrissage de sécurité ; vous avez pénétré dans une zone interdite
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, Appendice 1, lorsqu'un aéronef intercepteur effectue une manœuvre de dégagement brusque à 90 degrés ou plus et monte sans croiser la trajectoire de l'aéronef intercepté, il s'agit du signal standard de « libération » signifiant « Vous pouvez continuer ». L'interception est terminée et le pilote peut poursuivre sur sa route. Les options A et D impliquent des avertissements de violation d'espace aérien qui font appel à des signaux différents. L'option C (« suivez-moi ») implique que l'intercepteur bascule ses ailes et maintient un cap stable vers l'aérodrome de destination.
+
+### Q29 : Lors d'un vol au FL 80, quel calage altimétrique doit être utilisé ? ^t10q29
+- A) 1013,25 hPa.
+- B) QNH local.
+- C) 1030,25 hPa.
+- D) QFE local.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les niveaux de vol sont définis par rapport à la pression de référence de l'Atmosphère standard internationale de 1013,25 hPa. Lors d'un vol au niveau ou au-dessus de l'altitude de transition, les pilotes doivent afficher 1013,25 hPa sur la sous-échelle de l'altimètre et exprimer l'altitude en niveau de vol. L'option B (QNH) donne l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer et s'utilise en dessous de l'altitude de transition. L'option C (1030,25 hPa) n'est pas une pression de référence standard. L'option D (QFE) donne la hauteur au-dessus d'un aérodrome spécifique et n'est jamais utilisée pour les niveaux de vol.
+
+### Q30 : Quel est l'objectif de la règle semi-circulaire ? ^t10q30
+- A) Permettre le vol sans plan de vol déposé dans des zones prescrites publiées dans l'AIP
+- B) Permettre des montées et descentes sécurisées dans un circuit d'attente
+- C) Réduire le risque de collision en diminuant la probabilité de trafic en sens opposé à la même altitude
+- D) Prévenir les collisions en interdisant les virages
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La règle de croisière semi-circulaire (hémisphérique) (SERA.5015) attribue différentes tranches d'altitude à différentes routes magnétiques — les vols vers l'est utilisent des milliers de pieds impairs, les vols vers l'ouest des milliers pairs. En séparant verticalement les aéronefs volant en sens opposés, la probabilité de collision frontale à la même altitude est considérablement réduite. L'option A n'a aucun lien avec les niveaux de croisière. L'option B décrit les procédures de circuit d'attente. L'option D est incorrecte car la règle concerne l'attribution des altitudes, pas les restrictions de manœuvre.
+
+### Q31 : Un transpondeur capable de transmettre l'altitude-pression actuelle est un... ^t10q31
+- A) Transpondeur approuvé pour l'espace aérien « B ».
+- B) Transpondeur mode A.
+- C) Décodeur de pression.
+- D) Transpondeur mode C ou S.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un transpondeur qui transmet l'altitude-pression est soit un transpondeur mode C, soit un transpondeur mode S. Le mode C ajoute la transmission automatique de l'altitude-pression au code d'identité de base du mode A, tandis que le mode S offre toutes les capacités du mode C en y ajoutant l'interrogation sélective et des fonctions de liaison de données. L'option A est incorrecte car « approuvé pour l'espace aérien B » n'est pas une classification de transpondeur. L'option B est incorrecte car le mode A ne transmet qu'un code de détection à 4 chiffres sans données d'altitude. L'option C est incorrecte car « décodeur de pression » n'est pas un terme aéronautique.
+
+### Q32 : Quel code transpondeur signale une perte des communications radio ? ^t10q32
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 2000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le squawk reconnu internationalement pour la panne de communications radio. Les pilotes doivent mémoriser les trois codes d'urgence : 7700 pour urgence générale, 7600 pour panne radio, et 7500 pour interférence illicite (détournement). L'option A (7700) correspond aux urgences en général, pas spécifiquement à une perte de communication. L'option B (7000) est le code de visibilité VFR standard européen. L'option D (2000) est utilisé lors de l'entrée dans un espace aérien contrôlé sans code attribué.
+
+### Q33 : En cas de panne radio, quel code transpondeur doit être sélectionné sans aucune demande de l'ATC ? ^t10q33
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un pilote subit une panne de communication radio, il doit immédiatement afficher le code 7600 sans attendre d'instruction de l'ATC, puisque par définition la communication n'est plus possible. Cette action proactive avertit l'ATC de la situation et déclenche les procédures de perte de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code VFR général et ne traduit pas une urgence. L'option B (7500) signale une interférence illicite, ce qui est une situation totalement différente. L'option C (7700) est pour les urgences générales, pas spécifiquement pour une panne radio.
+
+### Q34 : Quel code transpondeur doit être affiché automatiquement lors d'une urgence sans attendre d'instructions ? ^t10q34
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas d'urgence générale (panne moteur, incendie, urgence médicale, dommage structurel), le pilote doit immédiatement afficher le code transpondeur 7700 sans attendre d'instruction de l'ATC. Cela déclenche une alarme sur les écrans radar de l'ATC et active les procédures d'intervention d'urgence. L'option A (7600) est spécifiquement pour la panne de communication radio, pas pour les urgences générales. L'option B (7000) est le code de visibilité VFR standard. L'option C (7500) est réservée exclusivement aux interférences illicites (détournement) et ne doit jamais être affiché pour d'autres urgences.
+
+### Q35 : Quel service de la circulation aérienne est responsable du déroulement sécurisé des vols ? ^t10q35
+- A) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+- B) AIS (service d'information aéronautique)
+- C) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne)
+- D) ALR (service d'alerte)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Contrôle de la circulation aérienne (ATC) est le service spécifiquement chargé d'assurer la séparation entre aéronefs et de garantir un flux de trafic aérien sûr, ordonné et efficace dans l'espace aérien contrôlé. Conformément à l'Annexe 11 de l'ICAO, l'ATC gère activement les mouvements d'aéronefs pour prévenir les collisions. L'option A (FIS) fournit des informations utiles mais ne dirige pas ni ne sépare les aéronefs. L'option B (AIS) publie des documents d'information aéronautique sans rôle de contrôle opérationnel. L'option D (ALR) déclenche les procédures de recherche et sauvetage lorsque des aéronefs sont en retard ou en détresse, mais ne gère pas la sécurité des vols en cours.
+
+### Q36 : Quels services composent le service du contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q36
+- A) APP (service du contrôle d'approche) ACC (centre de contrôle régional) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+- B) TWR (service du contrôle d'aérodrome) APP (service du contrôle d'approche) ACC (centre de contrôle régional)
+- C) FIS (service d'information de vol) AIS (service d'information aéronautique) AFS (service fixe des télécommunications aéronautiques)
+- D) ALR (service d'alerte) SAR (service de recherche et sauvetage) TWR (service du contrôle d'aérodrome)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 11 de l'ICAO, les trois unités constitutives de l'ATC sont : TWR (Contrôle d'aérodrome, gérant le trafic sur et autour de l'aérodrome), APP (Contrôle d'approche, gérant le trafic à l'arrivée et au départ dans la zone terminale), et ACC (Centre de contrôle régional, gérant le trafic en route). L'option A inclut incorrectement le FIS, qui est un service d'information distinct de l'ATC. L'option C liste des services d'information et de communication, aucun ne constituant une unité ATC. L'option D mélange des services d'urgence (ALR, SAR) avec une seule unité ATC (TWR).
+
+### Q37 : En ce qui concerne la séparation dans l'espace aérien « E », quelle affirmation est correcte ? ^t10q37
+- A) Le trafic IFR est séparé uniquement du trafic VFR
+- B) Le trafic VFR est séparé à la fois du trafic VFR et IFR
+- C) Le trafic VFR ne bénéficie d'aucune séparation par rapport à aucun trafic
+- D) Le trafic VFR est séparé uniquement du trafic IFR
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'espace aérien de classe E, l'ATC sépare les vols IFR des autres vols IFR, mais le trafic VFR ne reçoit aucun service de séparation de l'ATC — ni par rapport aux autres aéronefs VFR, ni par rapport aux aéronefs IFR. Les pilotes VFR en classe E doivent se fier entièrement au principe « voir et éviter », avec des informations de trafic fournies dans la mesure du possible. L'option A indique incorrectement que l'IFR n'est séparé que du VFR (il est séparé des autres IFR). Les options B et D impliquent à tort que le trafic VFR bénéficie d'une forme de séparation.
+
+### Q38 : Quels services de la circulation aérienne sont disponibles dans une FIR (région d'information de vol) ? ^t10q38
+- A) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne) AIS (service d'information aéronautique)
+- B) AIS (service d'information aéronautique) SAR (service de recherche et sauvetage)
+- C) FIS (service d'information de vol) ALR (service d'alerte)
+- D) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une Région d'information de vol (FIR) fournit deux services universels dans l'ensemble de son volume : le FIS (Service d'information de vol), qui fournit aux pilotes les informations météo, NOTAM et de trafic, et l'ALR (Service d'alerte), qui notifie les services de secours lorsque des aéronefs sont en détresse ou en retard. L'ATC n'est pas assuré dans l'ensemble de la FIR — il existe uniquement dans les espaces aériens contrôlés désignés (CTAs, CTRs, voies aériennes) pouvant se trouver à l'intérieur de la FIR. Les options A, B et D incluent soit incorrectement l'ATC, soit omettent la paire correcte.
+
+### Q39 : Comment un pilote peut-il contacter le FIS (service d'information de vol) en vol ? ^t10q39
+- A) Par téléphone.
+- B) Par visite personnelle.
+- C) Par communication radio.
+- D) Via Internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FIS est un service opérationnel fourni aux pilotes en vol, et le principal moyen de le contacter en vol est la communication radio sur la fréquence FIS désignée. Bien que des informations pré-vol puissent être obtenues par téléphone ou en ligne, le service FIS en vol lui-même est basé sur la radio. L'option A (téléphone) et l'option D (Internet) sont des méthodes de contact au sol inapplicables pour une communication en temps réel en vol. L'option B (visite personnelle) est évidemment impossible pendant le vol.
+
+### Q40 : Quelle est la phraséologie standard pour avertir qu'un aéronef léger suit un aéronef de catégorie de turbulence de sillage plus lourde ? ^t10q40
+- A) Attention souffle d'hélice
+- B) Prudence vents de sillage
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Attention turbulence de sillage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie ICAO standard pour les avertissements de turbulence de sillage est « CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE » (en anglais) / « ATTENTION TURBULENCE DE SILLAGE » (en français), telle que prescrite dans le Doc 4444 de l'ICAO (PANS-ATM). La phraséologie standardisée est obligatoire en aviation pour éliminer toute ambiguïté. Les options A, B et C sont des formules non standard absentes de la phraséologie approuvée par l'ICAO. L'utilisation de termes non standard peut créer de la confusion et est interdite dans l'espace aérien EASA.
+
+### Q41 : Lequel des éléments suivants représente un compte rendu de position correct ? ^t10q41
+- A) DEABC sur « N » à 35
+- B) DEABC arrivant sur « N »
+- C) DEABC, « N », 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC sur « N » au FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un compte rendu de position standard conformément au Doc 4444 de l'ICAO doit comprendre : l'indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, la position (repère ou point de cheminement), et l'altitude ou le niveau de vol. L'option C (DEABC, « N », 2500 ft) fournit les trois éléments correctement et de façon concise. L'option A manque d'une référence d'altitude claire (« à 35 » est ambigu). L'option B est incomplète car elle omet l'altitude. L'option D utilise l'expression absurde « FL 2500 ft » — les niveaux de vol et les pieds ne sont jamais combinés ainsi ; il devrait s'agir soit de « FL 25 » soit de « 2500 ft ».
+
+### Q42 : Quel type d'informations est contenu dans la partie générale (GEN) de l'AIP ? ^t10q42
+- A) Avertissements pour l'aviation, espaces aériens et routes ATS, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux
+- B) Table des matières, classification des aérodromes avec cartes correspondantes, cartes d'approche, cartes de circulation au sol, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux
+- C) Restrictions d'accès aux aérodromes, contrôles des passagers, exigences pour les pilotes, exemples de licences et durées de validité
+- D) Symboles cartographiques, liste des aides à la navigation radio, heures de lever et coucher du soleil, redevances d'aéroport, redevances de contrôle de la circulation aérienne
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'AIP est structurée en trois parties : GEN (Généralités), ENR (En route) et AD (Aérodromes). La section GEN contient des informations générales et administratives, notamment les symboles cartographiques, les listes d'aides à la navigation radio, les tables de lever/coucher du soleil, les réglementations nationales, les redevances d'aéroport et de l'ATC. L'option A décrit le contenu de la section ENR (espaces aériens, routes, restrictions). L'option B décrit le contenu de la section AD (cartes d'aérodrome, cartes d'approche). L'option C mélange des éléments qui ne correspondent à aucune section unique de l'AIP.
+
+### Q43 : En quelles parties la Publication d'information aéronautique (AIP) est-elle divisée ? ^t10q43
+- A) GEN ENR AD
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 15 de l'ICAO, l'AIP est divisée en trois parties standardisées : GEN (Généralités), ENR (En route) et AD (Aérodromes). Cette structure est universelle dans tous les États membres de l'ICAO. Les options B (AGA, COM), C (COM, MET) et D (MET, RAC) utilisent des abréviations issues d'anciennes structures de documentation ICAO qui ne font plus partie de l'organisation moderne de l'AIP. Seule l'option A reflète la structure AIP standard ICAO actuelle.
+
+### Q44 : Quel type d'informations se trouve dans la section « AD » de l'AIP ? ^t10q44
+- A) Avertissements pour l'aviation, espaces aériens et routes ATS, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux.
+- B) Symboles cartographiques, liste des aides à la navigation radio, heures de lever et coucher du soleil, redevances d'aéroport, redevances de contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- C) Table des matières, classification des aérodromes avec cartes correspondantes, cartes d'approche, cartes de circulation au sol.
+- D) Restrictions d'accès aux aérodromes, contrôles des passagers, exigences pour les pilotes, exemples de licences et durées de validité.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La section AD (Aérodromes) de l'AIP contient toutes les informations spécifiques aux aérodromes : classification des aérodromes, données sur les pistes, cartes d'approche et de départ, cartes de circulation au sol, balisage lumineux, fréquences, heures d'exploitation et données sur les obstacles. L'option A décrit le contenu de la section ENR (En route) couvrant les espaces aériens et les restrictions. L'option B décrit le contenu de la section GEN (Généralités), comme les symboles et les redevances. L'option D mélange des éléments réglementaires et administratifs qui ne correspondent pas à la section AD.
+
+### Q45 : Le NOTAM présenté est valable jusqu'au... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 HORS SERVICE. ^t10q45
+- A) 21/05/2013 14h00 UTC.
+- B) 13/05/2013 12h00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2014 13h00 UTC.
+- D) 13/10/2013 00h00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les codes temporels des NOTAM utilisent le format AAMMJJHHMM en UTC. Le champ « C) » d'un NOTAM indique la fin de validité. Le code 1305211400 se décode comme suit : année 2013 (13), mois mai (05), jour 21, heure 14h00 UTC — soit le 21 mai 2013 à 14h00 UTC. L'option B lit mal le format de date, interprétant le mois comme le jour. L'option C lit incorrectement l'année comme 2014. L'option D interprète complètement à tort le codage. Le décodage correct des NOTAM est une compétence fondamentale de droit aérien pour tous les pilotes.
+
+### Q46 : Un Bulletin d'information pré-vol (PIB) est une compilation des informations... ^t10q46
+- A) AIP d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées avant le vol.
+- B) AIC d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées après le vol.
+- C) ICAO d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées après le vol.
+- D) NOTAM d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées avant le vol.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un PIB (Bulletin d'information pré-vol) est un résumé standardisé des NOTAMs en vigueur, pertinents pour un vol planifié, compilé et diffusé avant le départ. Il filtre les NOTAMs pertinents pour la route, l'aérodrome de départ, l'aérodrome de destination et les aérodromes de dégagement. L'option A est incorrecte car un PIB est basé sur les NOTAMs, pas sur les données AIP. L'option B est incorrecte à deux égards : elle fait référence aux AIC (pas aux NOTAMs) et indique « après le vol » (c'est un outil pré-vol). L'option C identifie également de façon erronée la source et le moment.
+
+### Q47 : Comment est définie « l'élévation d'aérodrome » ? ^t10q47
+- A) La valeur moyenne de la hauteur de l'aire de manœuvre.
+- B) Le point le plus haut de l'aire d'atterrissage.
+- C) Le point le plus bas de l'aire d'atterrissage.
+- D) Le point le plus haut de l'aire de trafic.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, l'élévation d'aérodrome est définie comme l'élévation du point le plus haut de l'aire d'atterrissage. Cela garantit que la valeur publiée représente la hauteur de terrain la plus contraignante que les aéronefs doivent prendre en compte lors de l'approche et du départ. L'option A (moyenne de l'aire de manœuvre) sous-estimerait l'élévation critique. L'option C (point le plus bas) est le contraire de la définition correcte. L'option D (point le plus haut de l'aire de trafic) est incorrecte car l'aire de trafic n'est pas l'aire d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q48 : Comment est défini le terme « piste » ? ^t10q48
+- A) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre ou aquatique préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- B) Aire circulaire sur un aérodrome préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- C) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- D) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des hélicoptères.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, une piste est une aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs. Les trois éléments clés sont : la forme rectangulaire, l'aérodrome terrestre et les aéronefs en général. L'option A est incorrecte car les pistes sont spécifiques aux aérodromes terrestres (les aérodromes aquatiques ont des aires d'amerrissage, pas des pistes). L'option B est incorrecte car la forme est rectangulaire et non ronde. L'option D est incorrecte car les pistes servent aux aéronefs en général, pas spécifiquement aux hélicoptères (qui utilisent des hélipads ou des FATO).
+
+### Q49 : Comment peut-on rendre un indicateur de direction du vent plus visible ? ^t10q49
+- A) En le montant sur le dessus de la tour de contrôle.
+- B) En l'entourant d'un cercle blanc.
+- C) En le plaçant sur une grande surface noire.
+- D) En le construisant avec des matériaux verts.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, un indicateur de direction du vent (manche à air ou girouette) doit être entouré d'un cercle blanc pour améliorer sa visibilité depuis les airs. Le contraste élevé du fond blanc rend l'indicateur plus facile à identifier par rapport à l'environnement de l'aérodrome. L'option A (montage sur la tour de contrôle) n'est pas une méthode d'amélioration de la visibilité standard de l'ICAO et pourrait interférer avec les opérations de la tour. L'option C (surface noire) n'est pas spécifiée dans les normes ICAO. L'option D (matériaux verts) réduirait en fait la visibilité contre les surfaces herbeuses.
+
+### Q50 : Quelle forme a un indicateur de direction d'atterrissage ? ^t10q50
+- A) Une flèche angulaire
+- B) L
+- C) T
+- D) Une flèche droite
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, l'indicateur de direction d'atterrissage a une forme de T (communément appelé « T d'atterrissage » ou « T de signalisation »). Les aéronefs atterrissent en direction de la barre transversale du T et décollent à l'opposé, rendant la direction d'atterrissage immédiatement lisible. Les options A (flèche angulaire) et D (flèche droite) ne correspondent pas à la forme ICAO standard pour cet indicateur. L'option B (forme en L) est utilisée à un autre effet — indiquer un circuit à droite, non la direction d'atterrissage.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_51_75.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_51_75.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,254 @@
+### Q51: Who bears the responsibility for ensuring that mandatory on-board documents are present and that logbooks are correctly maintained? ^t10q51
+- A) The air transport company.
+- B) The operator of the aircraft.
+- C) The pilot-in-command.
+- D) The owner of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) bears ultimate responsibility for ensuring that all required documents are on board and properly maintained before every flight. This is a fundamental principle of aviation law under both ICAO Annex 2 and EASA regulations. Option A (air transport company) and Option B (operator) have general oversight duties but the direct pre-flight responsibility rests with the PIC. Option D (owner) may not even be present at the time of flight.
+
+### Q52: Which activities may the Federal Council require OFAC authorization for? ^t10q52
+- A) Only public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- B) Parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- C) None of the activities listed above requires OFAC authorization.
+- D) Only parachute descents and captive balloon ascents. No authorization is required for powered aircraft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, the Federal Council may require OFAC (Federal Office of Civil Aviation) authorization for all listed special activities: parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights, and aerobatic demonstrations. These activities present elevated safety risks to participants and the public. Option A is too narrow because it excludes parachuting and captive balloons. Option C is wrong because authorization is indeed required. Option D incorrectly limits the requirement to only parachuting and captive balloons.
+
+### Q53: Is dropping objects from an aircraft in flight prohibited in Switzerland? ^t10q53
+- A) No, only the dropping of advertising material is prohibited.
+- B) Yes, it is strictly prohibited.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes, subject to exceptions to be determined by the Federal Council.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, dropping objects from an aircraft in flight is in principle prohibited, but the Federal Council may define specific exceptions such as parachuting, emergency drops, or authorised agricultural activities. Option A is wrong because the prohibition is not limited to advertising material. Option B is wrong because exceptions exist -- it is not a strict absolute prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is a general prohibition in place, even though exceptions are possible.
+
+### Q54: Where specifically is the certification basis of an aircraft documented? ^t10q54
+- A) In the VFR Manual.
+- B) In the annex to the certificate of airworthiness.
+- C) In the annex to the noise certificate.
+- D) In the insurance certificate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The certification basis of an aircraft (type certificate data sheet, approved operating conditions, mass limits, authorised flight categories, and required equipment) is documented in the annex to the Certificate of Airworthiness. This annex defines what the aircraft is certified to do. Option A (VFR Manual) contains operational procedures, not certification data. Option C (noise certificate annex) deals only with noise emissions. Option D (insurance certificate) covers financial liability, not airworthiness certification.
+
+### Q55: Your aircraft, not used for commercial traffic, requires repairs abroad. Which statement applies? ^t10q55
+- A) Repair work may only be carried out in Switzerland.
+- B) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized by OFAC.
+- C) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized as such by the competent aviation authority.
+- D) The work must be carried out by an EASA-certified maintenance organization.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a non-commercial aircraft requiring repairs abroad, the maintenance must be performed by an organisation recognised by the competent aviation authority of the country where the work is done. This provides flexibility while ensuring regulatory oversight. Option A is wrong because repairs are not restricted to Switzerland. Option B is wrong because OFAC recognition is not specifically required for foreign maintenance. Option D is too restrictive because EASA certification is not always required for non-commercial aircraft maintenance in all jurisdictions.
+
+### Q56: A well-known watchmaker has painted an aircraft in the brand's colours with a large watch on its fuselage. Is this allowed? ^t10q56
+- A) Yes, if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization, the operation has no political purpose and the advertising markings are limited to specific parts of the aircraft.
+- B) No, advertising is strictly prohibited on aircraft.
+- C) Yes, subject to other provisions of federal legislation. The nationality and registration marks must in all cases remain easily recognizable.
+- D) Yes, but only if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization and the nationality and registration marks remain easily recognizable.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss law, advertising on aircraft is permitted subject to other provisions of federal legislation, with only one mandatory condition: the nationality and registration marks must remain easily recognisable at all times. No special OFAC authorisation is needed for applying advertising markings. Option A imposes unnecessary conditions (OFAC authorization, no political purpose, limited placement) that are not required. Option B is simply wrong -- advertising is not prohibited. Option D incorrectly requires OFAC authorization.
+
+### Q57: Under what conditions may a person serve as a crew member on board an aircraft? ^t10q57
+- A) When that person holds a valid licence issued by their country of origin.
+- B) When that person holds a valid licence issued or recognized by the country in which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) When that person holds a valid licence issued by the country in which the aircraft is operated.
+- D) When that person holds a valid licence recognized by their country of origin.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A crew member must hold a valid licence issued or recognised by the state of registration of the aircraft, in accordance with ICAO Annex 1. The state of registration defines the qualification requirements for crew operating its aircraft. Option A and Option D reference the crew member's country of origin, which is irrelevant -- it is the aircraft's state of registration that matters. Option C references the country of operation, which is also not the determining factor under ICAO rules.
+
+### Q58: Under what conditions is it permitted to carry and operate a radio on board? ^t10q58
+- A) If a radio communication licence has been issued for the radio and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+- B) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- C) If the frequency increments of the radio are at least 0.125 MHz and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- D) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Two cumulative conditions must be met: first, authorisation to install and use the radio must have been granted by the competent authority, and second, crew members who operate the radio must hold the corresponding formal qualification (not merely informal training). Option A is wrong because a "radio communication licence" is not the same as installation/use authorisation. Option C introduces an irrelevant technical specification about frequency increments. Option D is wrong because it requires only "training" rather than a formal qualification, which is insufficient.
+
+### Q59: What must a pilot possess to be authorized to communicate by radio with air traffic services? ^t10q59
+- A) A radiotelephony course certificate and sufficient mastery of standard phraseology.
+- B) In all cases, a radiotelephony qualification. Aeroplane and helicopter pilots must additionally hold a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- C) A valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- D) A radiotelephony qualification and a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All pilots wishing to communicate with ATC must hold a radiotelephony qualification. Additionally, aeroplane and helicopter pilots must also possess a valid language proficiency attestation in the language used on the frequencies, as required under Swiss regulations. Option A is insufficient because a course certificate alone does not constitute a formal qualification. Option C omits the radiotelephony qualification entirely. Option D applies the language proficiency requirement universally, but under Swiss rules it is specifically required for aeroplane and helicopter pilots, not necessarily for all pilot categories such as glider or balloon pilots.
+
+### Q60: Your ophthalmologist has prescribed corrective lenses. Which statement is correct? ^t10q60
+- A) You need not do anything. A visual deficiency that is well corrected has no effect on medical fitness.
+- B) You are immediately unfit.
+- C) You must promptly seek advice from your aviation medical examiner.
+- D) You can simply report your ophthalmologist's decision to your aviation medical examiner at the next routine examination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any change in medical condition, including the prescription of corrective lenses, must be reported promptly to the aviation medical examiner (AME). The AME will assess whether the change affects medical fitness and whether additional restrictions or conditions must be placed on the licence. Option A is wrong because even well-corrected deficiencies may require documentation and a medical fitness reassessment. Option B is wrong because a corrective lens prescription does not automatically make a pilot unfit. Option D is wrong because waiting until the next routine examination could mean flying with an unreported medical change, which is not permitted.
+
+### Q61: In which type of airspace may a Special VFR (SVFR) flight be authorized when the ceiling is below 450 m above ground and surface visibility is less than 5 km? ^t10q61
+- A) FIR.
+- B) TMA.
+- C) CTR.
+- D) AWY.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Special VFR (SVFR) flights can only be authorised within a CTR (Control Zone), which is the controlled airspace immediately surrounding an aerodrome. When meteorological conditions fall below normal VMC minima, ATC within the CTR can grant SVFR clearance to permit operations. Option A (FIR) is too broad -- SVFR is not applicable to the entire flight information region. Option B (TMA) is terminal airspace above the CTR, not the zone where SVFR applies. Option D (AWY) is an airway where SVFR is not authorised.
+
+### Q62: What evasive action should the pilots of two VFR aircraft on converging tracks generally take? ^t10q62
+- A) One continues on track while the other turns right.
+- B) One turns left, the other turns right.
+- C) Each pilot turns left.
+- D) Each pilot turns right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, the standard ICAO evasive action for converging aircraft is that each pilot turns right, ensuring both aircraft pass behind one another and diverge safely. This symmetrical rule eliminates ambiguity about who should manoeuvre. Option A is wrong because both aircraft must take action, not just one. Option B (one left, one right) would be uncoordinated and could worsen the situation. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge.
+
+### Q63: What are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements for VFR flight in Class D airspace below 10,000 ft AMSL? ^t10q63
+- A) Visibility 1.5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+- B) Visibility 8 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 450 m.
+- C) Visibility 5 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 300 m.
+- D) Visibility 5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class D airspace below FL100 (10,000 ft AMSL), SERA.5001 prescribes VMC minima of: 5 km visibility, 1,500 m horizontal cloud distance, and 300 m (1,000 ft) vertical cloud distance. These are the same minima as for Classes C and E in this altitude band. Option A describes conditions applicable to lower uncontrolled airspace. Option B uses 8 km visibility and 450 m vertical clearance, which do not match any standard SERA values for this context. Option D omits the required cloud distance values.
+
+### Q64: Among the airspace classes used in Switzerland, which ones are classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q64
+- A) D, C
+- B) G, E, D, C
+- C) E, D, C
+- D) E, C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, airspace classes C, D, and E are all classified as controlled airspace. Class G is uncontrolled airspace. Classes A and B exist in the ICAO classification system but are not used in Switzerland. Option A omits Class E, which is controlled airspace (though VFR traffic does not receive separation in it). Option B incorrectly includes Class G, which is uncontrolled. Option D omits Class D, which is definitely controlled airspace surrounding many Swiss aerodromes.
+
+### Q65: According to the applicable rules of the air, what is the definition of "day"? ^t10q65
+- A) The period from sunrise to sunset.
+- B) The period between 06:00 and 20:00 in winter and between 06:00 and 21:00 in summer.
+- C) The period from the end of morning civil twilight to the beginning of evening civil twilight.
+- D) The period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation, "day" is defined as the period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight -- roughly 30 minutes before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset. This broader definition gives pilots additional usable daylight at both ends. Option A (sunrise to sunset) is too restrictive and is the astronomical definition, not the aviation one. Option B uses fixed clock times that do not account for seasonal and geographic variations. Option C reverses the twilight references, which would result in a shorter rather than longer period.
+
+### Q66: What constitutes an aviation accident? ^t10q66
+- A) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which at least one person is killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft that requires the aircraft to be repaired.
+- C) The crash of an aircraft.
+- D) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which a person is killed or seriously injured, or in which the structural integrity, performance or flight characteristics of the aircraft are significantly impaired.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is defined as an event associated with aircraft operation resulting in either fatal/serious injury to persons OR significant structural damage that impairs the aircraft's integrity, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify an event as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting aircraft damage. Option B is too broad -- not every repair constitutes an accident. Option C (crash) is too narrow and not the formal definition.
+
+### Q67: You wish to carry out private flights for remuneration. What formality must you complete to limit your civil liability? ^t10q67
+- A) Take out a special passenger insurance policy which passengers are required to accept.
+- B) No formality is required since the Montreal Convention releases the pilot from all liability.
+- C) Draw up a declaration to be signed by passengers releasing you from all liability.
+- D) Issue a transport document as proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded, which limits liability for damage to baggage and for delay.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Issuing a transport document (ticket) constitutes proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded between the pilot and the passenger. Under the Montreal Convention, the existence of such a contract limits the carrier's liability for baggage damage and delays. Option A is incorrect because special passenger insurance is not the mechanism for limiting civil liability under the Convention. Option B is wrong because the Montreal Convention does not release pilots from all liability -- it caps liability under certain conditions. Option C (liability waiver) is not a legally recognised mechanism under international aviation law.
+
+### Q68: What type of information is disseminated through an AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular)? ^t10q68
+- A) Aeronautical information of importance to persons involved in flight operations concerning the construction, condition or modification of aeronautical facilities and their duration.
+- B) An AIC is a notice containing information that does not meet the conditions for issuing a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but which relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative or legislative matters.
+- C) The AIC is the manual for pilots flying IFR. Its structure and content are analogous to those of the VFR Manual.
+- D) In principle, any information that justifies the issuance of a NOTAM and relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical or legislative matters may be published by AIC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular) contains supplementary information that does not meet the criteria for publication as a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but is still relevant to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative, and legislative matters. It fills the gap between urgent NOTAMs and permanent AIP entries. Option A describes NOTAM-type information rather than AIC content. Option C is completely wrong -- an AIC is not an IFR manual. Option D reverses the relationship: AICs contain information that does NOT justify a NOTAM, not information that does.
+
+### Q69: What does the aerodrome operations manual govern? ^t10q69
+- A) The certification of maintenance organizations located at the aerodrome.
+- B) The organization of the aerodrome, opening hours, approach and takeoff procedures, use of aerodrome facilities by passengers, aircraft and ground vehicles as well as other users, and ground handling services.
+- C) Employment contracts, vacation entitlement and shift work of the aerodrome operator.
+- D) The operation and opening hours of the aerodrome restaurant and other businesses located at the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome operations manual is a comprehensive document governing all operational aspects of the aerodrome: its organisation, opening hours, approach and take-off procedures, use of facilities by all users (passengers, aircraft, ground vehicles), and ground handling services. Option A is wrong because maintenance organisation certification is handled by EASA/national authorities, not the aerodrome operations manual. Option C covers employment matters unrelated to aerodrome operations. Option D covers commercial businesses, which are outside the scope of the operations manual.
+
+### Q70: What does this ground signal indicate? (Two dumbbells) ^t10q70
+> **Ground signal:**
+> ![[figures/t10_q70.png]]
+> *Two dumbbells -- signal indicating that landings and takeoffs are to be made on runways only, but that other maneuvers (taxiing) may be carried out outside the runways and taxiways.*
+
+- A) Landing and takeoff on runways only. Other manoeuvres may however be conducted outside the runways and taxiways.
+- B) Landing, takeoff and taxiing on runways and taxiways only.
+- C) Caution during takeoff or landing.
+- D) Landing and takeoff on hard-surfaced runways only.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dumbbell signal displayed in the signals area means that landings and take-offs must be made on runways only, but other manoeuvres such as taxiing, turning, and positioning may be conducted outside the runways and taxiways on the grass or other surfaces. Option B is too restrictive because it confines all manoeuvres to runways and taxiways (that would be the dumbbell with a cross bar). Option C describes a different signal entirely. Option D introduces "hard-surfaced" which is not what this signal communicates.
+
+### Q71: When two aircraft approach each other head-on, what manoeuvre must both pilots perform? ^t10q71
+- A) Each turns left.
+- B) One turns right, the other turns left.
+- C) One flies straight ahead while the other turns right.
+- D) Each turns right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210(c) and ICAO Annex 2, when two aircraft are on head-on or nearly head-on courses, both pilots must alter heading to the right, each passing the other on their left side. This mirrors road traffic conventions and eliminates ambiguity. Option A (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to pass on the wrong side and could lead to collision. Option B (one left, one right) is uncoordinated and dangerous. Option C (one straight, one turns) is incorrect because both pilots must take evasive action.
+
+### Q72: Which of the following airspaces are not classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q72
+- A) Class G airspace.
+- B) Class G and E airspaces.
+- C) Class C airspace.
+- D) Class G, E and D airspaces.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, Classes G and E are not classified as controlled airspace for VFR traffic purposes. Class G is uncontrolled airspace, and Class E, while technically controlled for IFR flights, provides no ATC separation for VFR traffic. Option A is incomplete because it lists only Class G and omits Class E. Option C is wrong because Class C is definitely controlled airspace. Option D incorrectly includes Class D, which is a controlled airspace requiring ATC clearance.
+
+### Q73: To which authority has the Federal Council delegated aviation oversight in Switzerland? ^t10q73
+- A) The Swiss air navigation services (Skyguide).
+- B) The Aero-Club of Switzerland.
+- C) The Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (DETEC).
+- D) The cantonal police forces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Federal Council delegates aviation oversight to DETEC (Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications), which in turn delegates operational supervision to FOCA (Federal Office of Civil Aviation, known as BAZL/OFAC). Option A (Skyguide) provides air navigation services but is not the regulatory oversight authority. Option B (Aero-Club) is a private association, not a government supervisory body. Option D (cantonal police) have no aviation oversight role.
+
+### Q74: For which of the following flights is filing a flight plan mandatory? ^t10q74
+- A) For a VFR flight over the Alps, Pre-Alps or Jura.
+- B) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- C) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+- D) For a VFR flight in Class E airspace.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a VFR flight plan is mandatory when the flight requires the use of air traffic control services, such as transiting a CTR, TMA, or other controlled airspace where ATC interaction is needed. Option A (Alps/Pre-Alps/Jura) does not automatically require a flight plan. Option C (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan trigger. Option D (Class E airspace) is incorrect because VFR flights in Class E do not require ATC services or a flight plan.
+
+### Q75: What minimum height must be maintained above densely populated areas during VFR flight? ^t10q75
+- A) At least 300 m above the ground.
+- B) At least 150 m above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) At least 150 m above the ground.
+- D) At least 450 m above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005 and ICAO Annex 2, the minimum height over densely populated areas is 150 m (approximately 500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-clearance-based rule ensures safe separation from structures and terrain. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacles. Option C (150 m AGL) ignores the obstacle clearance requirement. Option D (450 m AGL) is not the standard minimum height specified in SERA.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_51_75_fr.md
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+### Q51 : Qui est responsable de s'assurer que les documents obligatoires à bord sont présents et que les carnets de bord sont correctement tenus ? ^t10q51
+- A) La compagnie de transport aérien.
+- B) L'exploitant de l'aéronef.
+- C) Le commandant de bord.
+- D) Le propriétaire de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le commandant de bord (CdB) est ultimement responsable de s'assurer que tous les documents requis sont à bord et correctement tenus avant chaque vol. C'est un principe fondamental du droit aéronautique, tant au titre de l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO que des règlements EASA. L'option A (compagnie de transport aérien) et l'option B (exploitant) ont des obligations générales de supervision, mais la responsabilité directe pré-vol incombe au CdB. L'option D (propriétaire) peut même ne pas être présent au moment du vol.
+
+### Q52 : Pour quelles activités le Conseil fédéral peut-il exiger une autorisation de l'OFAC ? ^t10q52
+- A) Uniquement les manifestations aéronautiques publiques, les vols acrobatiques et les démonstrations acrobatiques sur des aéronefs.
+- B) Les descentes en parachute, les ascensions de ballons captifs, les manifestations aéronautiques publiques, les vols acrobatiques et les démonstrations acrobatiques sur des aéronefs.
+- C) Aucune des activités listées ci-dessus n'exige une autorisation de l'OFAC.
+- D) Uniquement les descentes en parachute et les ascensions de ballons captifs. Aucune autorisation n'est requise pour les aéronefs motorisés.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vertu du droit aérien suisse, le Conseil fédéral peut soumettre à autorisation de l'OFAC (Office fédéral de l'aviation civile) toutes les activités spéciales listées : descentes en parachute, ascensions de ballons captifs, manifestations aéronautiques publiques, vols acrobatiques et démonstrations acrobatiques. Ces activités présentent des risques de sécurité accrus pour les participants et le public. L'option A est trop restrictive car elle exclut le parachutisme et les ballons captifs. L'option C est incorrecte car une autorisation est effectivement requise. L'option D limite incorrectement l'exigence au seul parachutisme et aux ballons captifs.
+
+### Q53 : Le jet d'objets depuis un aéronef en vol est-il interdit en Suisse ? ^t10q53
+- A) Non, seul le jet de matériel publicitaire est interdit.
+- B) Oui, c'est formellement interdit.
+- C) Non.
+- D) Oui, sous réserve d'exceptions à déterminer par le Conseil fédéral.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vertu du droit aérien suisse, le jet d'objets depuis un aéronef en vol est en principe interdit, mais le Conseil fédéral peut définir des exceptions spécifiques telles que le parachutisme, les largages d'urgence ou les activités agricoles autorisées. L'option A est incorrecte car l'interdiction ne se limite pas aux matériaux publicitaires. L'option B est incorrecte car des exceptions existent — il ne s'agit pas d'une interdiction absolue. L'option C est incorrecte car une interdiction générale est en vigueur, même si des exceptions sont possibles.
+
+### Q54 : Où est spécifiquement documentée la base de certification d'un aéronef ? ^t10q54
+- A) Dans le manuel VFR.
+- B) En annexe au certificat de navigabilité.
+- C) En annexe au certificat de bruit.
+- D) Dans le certificat d'assurance.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La base de certification d'un aéronef (fiche de données du certificat de type, conditions d'exploitation approuvées, limites de masse, catégories de vol autorisées et équipements requis) est documentée en annexe au certificat de navigabilité. Cette annexe définit ce pour quoi l'aéronef est certifié. L'option A (manuel VFR) contient des procédures opérationnelles, pas des données de certification. L'option C (annexe au certificat de bruit) ne traite que des émissions sonores. L'option D (certificat d'assurance) couvre la responsabilité financière, pas la certification de navigabilité.
+
+### Q55 : Votre aéronef, non utilisé pour le transport commercial, nécessite des réparations à l'étranger. Quelle affirmation s'applique ? ^t10q55
+- A) Les travaux de réparation ne peuvent être effectués qu'en Suisse.
+- B) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance reconnu par l'OFAC.
+- C) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance reconnu par l'autorité compétente de l'aviation civile.
+- D) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance certifié EASA.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un aéronef non commercial nécessitant des réparations à l'étranger, la maintenance doit être effectuée par un organisme reconnu par l'autorité compétente de l'aviation civile du pays où les travaux sont réalisés. Cela offre de la flexibilité tout en garantissant une supervision réglementaire. L'option A est incorrecte car les réparations ne sont pas limitées à la Suisse. L'option B est incorrecte car la reconnaissance par l'OFAC n'est pas spécifiquement requise pour la maintenance effectuée à l'étranger. L'option D est trop restrictive car la certification EASA n'est pas toujours requise pour la maintenance d'aéronefs non commerciaux dans toutes les juridictions.
+
+### Q56 : Un horloger renommé a peint un aéronef aux couleurs de sa marque avec une grande montre sur le fuselage. Est-ce autorisé ? ^t10q56
+- A) Oui, si l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile a donné son autorisation, que l'exploitation n'a pas de but politique et que les marques publicitaires sont limitées à des parties spécifiques de l'aéronef.
+- B) Non, la publicité est strictement interdite sur les aéronefs.
+- C) Oui, sous réserve des autres dispositions de la législation fédérale. Les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation doivent dans tous les cas rester facilement reconnaissables.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement si l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile a donné son autorisation et que les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation restent facilement reconnaissables.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vertu du droit suisse, la publicité sur les aéronefs est autorisée sous réserve des autres dispositions de la législation fédérale, avec une seule condition obligatoire : les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation doivent rester facilement reconnaissables en tout temps. Aucune autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC n'est nécessaire pour apposer des marques publicitaires. L'option A impose des conditions inutiles (autorisation OFAC, absence de but politique, placement limité) qui ne sont pas requises. L'option B est tout simplement erronée — la publicité n'est pas interdite. L'option D exige incorrectement une autorisation de l'OFAC.
+
+### Q57 : À quelles conditions une personne peut-elle exercer les fonctions de membre d'équipage à bord d'un aéronef ? ^t10q57
+- A) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée par son pays d'origine.
+- B) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée ou reconnue par le pays dans lequel l'aéronef est immatriculé.
+- C) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée par le pays dans lequel l'aéronef est exploité.
+- D) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide reconnue par son pays d'origine.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un membre d'équipage doit détenir une licence valide délivrée ou reconnue par l'État d'immatriculation de l'aéronef, conformément à l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO. L'État d'immatriculation définit les exigences de qualification pour les équipages exploitant ses aéronefs. Les options A et D font référence au pays d'origine du membre d'équipage, ce qui n'est pas pertinent — c'est l'État d'immatriculation de l'aéronef qui est déterminant. L'option C fait référence au pays d'exploitation, qui n'est pas non plus le facteur déterminant selon les règles ICAO.
+
+### Q58 : À quelles conditions est-il autorisé de transporter et d'utiliser une radio à bord ? ^t10q58
+- A) Si une licence de station radio a été délivrée pour la radio et que les membres d'équipage sont formés à son utilisation.
+- B) Si une autorisation d'installation et d'utilisation de la radio a été accordée et que les membres d'équipage utilisant la radio détiennent la qualification correspondante.
+- C) Si les incréments de fréquence de la radio sont d'au moins 0,125 MHz et que les membres d'équipage utilisant la radio détiennent la qualification correspondante.
+- D) Si une autorisation d'installation et d'utilisation de la radio a été accordée et que les membres d'équipage sont formés à son utilisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Deux conditions cumulatives doivent être remplies : premièrement, une autorisation d'installation et d'utilisation de la radio doit avoir été accordée par l'autorité compétente, et deuxièmement, les membres d'équipage qui utilisent la radio doivent détenir la qualification formelle correspondante (et non simplement une formation informelle). L'option A est incorrecte car une « licence de station radio » n'est pas équivalente à une autorisation d'installation et d'utilisation. L'option C introduit une spécification technique non pertinente sur les incréments de fréquence. L'option D est incorrecte car elle n'exige qu'une « formation » plutôt qu'une qualification formelle, ce qui est insuffisant.
+
+### Q59 : Que doit posséder un pilote pour être autorisé à communiquer par radio avec les services de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q59
+- A) Un certificat de cours de radiotéléphonie et une maîtrise suffisante de la phraséologie standard.
+- B) Dans tous les cas, une qualification de radiotéléphonie. Les pilotes d'avions et d'hélicoptères doivent de plus détenir une attestation de compétences linguistiques valide dans la langue utilisée.
+- C) Une attestation de compétences linguistiques valide dans la langue utilisée.
+- D) Une qualification de radiotéléphonie et une attestation de compétences linguistiques valide dans la langue utilisée.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tous les pilotes souhaitant communiquer avec l'ATC doivent détenir une qualification de radiotéléphonie. De plus, les pilotes d'avions et d'hélicoptères doivent également posséder une attestation de compétences linguistiques valide dans la langue utilisée sur les fréquences, conformément aux règlements suisses. L'option A est insuffisante car un certificat de cours seul ne constitue pas une qualification formelle. L'option C omet entièrement la qualification de radiotéléphonie. L'option D applique l'exigence de compétences linguistiques de façon universelle, alors qu'en droit suisse, elle est spécifiquement requise pour les pilotes d'avions et d'hélicoptères, pas nécessairement pour toutes les catégories telles que les pilotes de planeur ou de ballon.
+
+### Q60 : Votre ophtalmologiste vous a prescrit des verres correcteurs. Quelle affirmation est correcte ? ^t10q60
+- A) Vous n'avez rien à faire. Une déficience visuelle bien corrigée n'a aucun effet sur l'aptitude médicale.
+- B) Vous êtes immédiatement inapte.
+- C) Vous devez consulter rapidement votre médecin-examinateur en aviation.
+- D) Vous pouvez simplement signaler la décision de votre ophtalmologiste à votre médecin-examinateur en aviation lors du prochain examen de routine.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout changement d'état de santé, y compris la prescription de verres correcteurs, doit être signalé promptement au médecin-examinateur en aviation (AME). L'AME évaluera si le changement affecte l'aptitude médicale et si des restrictions ou conditions supplémentaires doivent être imposées à la licence. L'option A est incorrecte car même les déficiences bien corrigées peuvent nécessiter une documentation et une réévaluation de l'aptitude médicale. L'option B est incorrecte car une prescription de verres correcteurs ne rend pas automatiquement un pilote inapte. L'option D est incorrecte car attendre le prochain examen de routine pourrait signifier voler avec un changement médical non déclaré, ce qui n'est pas autorisé.
+
+### Q61 : Dans quel type d'espace aérien un vol en VFR spécial (SVFR) peut-il être autorisé lorsque le plafond est inférieur à 450 m au-dessus du sol et que la visibilité de surface est inférieure à 5 km ? ^t10q61
+- A) FIR.
+- B) TMA.
+- C) CTR.
+- D) AWY.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vols en VFR spécial (SVFR) ne peuvent être autorisés qu'à l'intérieur d'une CTR (Zone de contrôle), qui est l'espace aérien contrôlé entourant immédiatement un aérodrome. Lorsque les conditions météorologiques sont inférieures aux minima VMC normaux, l'ATC dans la CTR peut accorder une clairance SVFR pour permettre les opérations. L'option A (FIR) est trop large — le SVFR ne s'applique pas à l'ensemble de la région d'information de vol. L'option B (TMA) est l'espace aérien terminal au-dessus de la CTR, pas la zone où le SVFR s'applique. L'option D (AWY) est une voie aérienne où le SVFR n'est pas autorisé.
+
+### Q62 : Quelle manœuvre d'évitement les pilotes de deux aéronefs VFR sur des routes convergentes doivent-ils généralement effectuer ? ^t10q62
+- A) L'un poursuit sa route tandis que l'autre vire à droite.
+- B) L'un vire à gauche, l'autre vire à droite.
+- C) Chaque pilote vire à gauche.
+- D) Chaque pilote vire à droite.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.3210, la manœuvre d'évitement ICAO standard pour les aéronefs en convergence est que chaque pilote vire à droite, garantissant que les deux aéronefs se croisent par l'arrière et divergent en toute sécurité. Cette règle symétrique élimine toute ambiguïté sur qui doit manœuvrer. L'option A est incorrecte car les deux aéronefs doivent prendre des mesures, pas seulement un. L'option B (l'un à gauche, l'autre à droite) serait non coordonnée et pourrait aggraver la situation. L'option C (tous deux virent à gauche) amènerait les aéronefs à converger davantage plutôt qu'à diverger.
+
+### Q63 : Quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance des nuages pour un vol VFR dans l'espace aérien de classe D en dessous de 10 000 ft AMSL ? ^t10q63
+- A) Visibilité 1,5 km ; dégagé de nuages et en contact permanent avec le sol ou l'eau.
+- B) Visibilité 8 km ; distance des nuages : horizontalement 1,5 km, verticalement 450 m.
+- C) Visibilité 5 km ; distance des nuages : horizontalement 1,5 km, verticalement 300 m.
+- D) Visibilité 5 km ; dégagé de nuages et en contact permanent avec le sol ou l'eau.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'espace aérien de classe D en dessous du FL100 (10 000 ft AMSL), le SERA.5001 prescrit les minima VMC suivants : 5 km de visibilité, 1 500 m de distance horizontale des nuages et 300 m (1 000 ft) de distance verticale des nuages. Ces minima sont identiques à ceux des classes C et E dans cette tranche d'altitude. L'option A décrit des conditions applicables en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option B utilise 8 km de visibilité et 450 m de dégagement vertical, qui ne correspondent à aucune valeur standard du SERA dans ce contexte. L'option D omet les valeurs requises de distance des nuages.
+
+### Q64 : Parmi les classes d'espace aérien utilisées en Suisse, lesquelles sont classifiées comme espace aérien contrôlé ? ^t10q64
+- A) D, C
+- B) G, E, D, C
+- C) E, D, C
+- D) E, C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E sont toutes classifiées comme espace aérien contrôlé. La classe G est un espace aérien non contrôlé. Les classes A et B existent dans le système de classification ICAO mais ne sont pas utilisées en Suisse. L'option A omet la classe E, qui est un espace aérien contrôlé (bien que le trafic VFR n'y reçoive pas de séparation). L'option B inclut incorrectement la classe G, qui est non contrôlée. L'option D omet la classe D, qui est définitivement un espace aérien contrôlé entourant de nombreux aérodromes suisses.
+
+### Q65 : Selon les règles de l'air applicables, quelle est la définition du « jour » ? ^t10q65
+- A) La période allant du lever au coucher du soleil.
+- B) La période entre 06h00 et 20h00 en hiver et entre 06h00 et 21h00 en été.
+- C) La période de la fin du crépuscule civil du matin au début du crépuscule civil du soir.
+- D) La période du début du crépuscule civil du matin à la fin du crépuscule civil du soir.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En aviation, le « jour » est défini comme la période allant du début du crépuscule civil du matin à la fin du crépuscule civil du soir — environ 30 minutes avant le lever du soleil à 30 minutes après le coucher du soleil. Cette définition plus large offre aux pilotes une lumière du jour utilisable supplémentaire aux deux extrémités. L'option A (lever au coucher du soleil) est trop restrictive et correspond à la définition astronomique, pas à la définition aéronautique. L'option B utilise des horaires fixes qui ne tiennent pas compte des variations saisonnières et géographiques. L'option C inverse les références de crépuscule, ce qui aboutirait à une période plus courte plutôt que plus longue.
+
+### Q66 : Qu'est-ce qui constitue un accident d'aviation ? ^t10q66
+- A) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel au moins une personne est tuée ou grièvement blessée.
+- B) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef qui nécessite une réparation de l'aéronef.
+- C) L'écrasement d'un aéronef.
+- D) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne est tuée ou grièvement blessée, ou au cours duquel l'intégrité structurelle, les performances ou les caractéristiques de vol de l'aéronef sont significativement compromises.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vertu de l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO, un accident d'aviation est défini comme un événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef entraînant soit des blessures mortelles ou graves à des personnes, soit des dommages structurels significatifs compromettant l'intégrité, les performances ou les caractéristiques de vol de l'aéronef. Les deux critères qualifient indépendamment un événement d'accident. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne couvre que les blessures corporelles, en omettant les dommages à l'aéronef. L'option B est trop large — toute réparation ne constitue pas un accident. L'option C (écrasement) est trop restrictive et ne constitue pas la définition formelle.
+
+### Q67 : Vous souhaitez effectuer des vols privés contre rémunération. Quelle formalité devez-vous accomplir pour limiter votre responsabilité civile ? ^t10q67
+- A) Souscrire une assurance passager spéciale que les passagers sont tenus d'accepter.
+- B) Aucune formalité n'est requise car la Convention de Montréal libère le pilote de toute responsabilité.
+- C) Rédiger une déclaration à faire signer par les passagers vous dégageant de toute responsabilité.
+- D) Émettre un document de transport comme preuve qu'un contrat de transport a été conclu, limitant la responsabilité pour les dommages aux bagages et les retards.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'émission d'un document de transport (billet) constitue la preuve qu'un contrat de transport a été conclu entre le pilote et le passager. En vertu de la Convention de Montréal, l'existence d'un tel contrat limite la responsabilité du transporteur pour les dommages aux bagages et les retards. L'option A est incorrecte car une assurance passager spéciale n'est pas le mécanisme permettant de limiter la responsabilité civile au titre de la Convention. L'option B est incorrecte car la Convention de Montréal ne libère pas les pilotes de toute responsabilité — elle plafonne la responsabilité sous certaines conditions. L'option C (renonciation à la responsabilité) n'est pas un mécanisme juridiquement reconnu en droit international de l'aviation.
+
+### Q68 : Quel type d'informations est diffusé par une AIC (Circulaire d'information aéronautique) ? ^t10q68
+- A) Des informations aéronautiques importantes pour les personnes impliquées dans les opérations de vol concernant la construction, l'état ou la modification des installations aéronautiques et leur durée.
+- B) Une AIC est un avis contenant des informations qui ne satisfont pas aux conditions d'émission d'un NOTAM ou d'inclusion dans l'AIP, mais qui concernent la sécurité des vols, la navigation aérienne ou des questions techniques, administratives ou législatives.
+- C) L'AIC est le manuel destiné aux pilotes effectuant des vols IFR. Sa structure et son contenu sont analogues à ceux du manuel VFR.
+- D) En principe, toute information justifiant l'émission d'un NOTAM et relative à la sécurité des vols, à la navigation aérienne ou à des questions techniques ou législatives peut être publiée par AIC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une AIC (Circulaire d'information aéronautique) contient des informations complémentaires qui ne satisfont pas aux critères de publication en tant que NOTAM ou d'inclusion dans l'AIP, mais qui restent pertinentes pour la sécurité des vols, la navigation aérienne ou les questions techniques, administratives et législatives. Elle comble l'écart entre les NOTAMs urgents et les entrées permanentes de l'AIP. L'option A décrit des informations de type NOTAM plutôt que le contenu d'une AIC. L'option C est totalement incorrecte — une AIC n'est pas un manuel IFR. L'option D inverse la relation : les AIC contiennent des informations qui NE justifient PAS un NOTAM, et non des informations qui le justifient.
+
+### Q69 : Que régit le manuel d'exploitation d'aérodrome ? ^t10q69
+- A) La certification des organismes de maintenance situés sur l'aérodrome.
+- B) L'organisation de l'aérodrome, les heures d'ouverture, les procédures d'approche et de décollage, l'utilisation des installations de l'aérodrome par les passagers, les aéronefs et les véhicules au sol ainsi que les autres usagers, et les services d'assistance en escale.
+- C) Les contrats de travail, les droits aux congés et le travail posté du gestionnaire d'aérodrome.
+- D) Le fonctionnement et les heures d'ouverture du restaurant de l'aérodrome et des autres commerces situés sur l'aérodrome.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le manuel d'exploitation d'aérodrome est un document complet régissant tous les aspects opérationnels de l'aérodrome : son organisation, ses heures d'ouverture, les procédures d'approche et de décollage, l'utilisation des installations par tous les usagers (passagers, aéronefs, véhicules au sol) et les services d'assistance en escale. L'option A est incorrecte car la certification des organismes de maintenance relève des autorités EASA/nationales, et non du manuel d'exploitation de l'aérodrome. L'option C concerne des questions d'emploi sans rapport avec les opérations aéroportuaires. L'option D concerne les commerces, qui n'entrent pas dans le champ d'application du manuel d'exploitation.
+
+### Q70 : Qu'indique ce signal au sol ? (Deux haltères) ^t10q70
+> **Signal au sol :**
+> ![[figures/t10_q70.png]]
+> *Deux haltères — signal indiquant que les atterrissages et décollages doivent être effectués uniquement sur les pistes, mais que les autres manœuvres (circulation au sol) peuvent être effectuées en dehors des pistes et voies de circulation.*
+
+- A) Atterrissage et décollage sur les pistes uniquement. Les autres manœuvres peuvent cependant être effectuées en dehors des pistes et voies de circulation.
+- B) Atterrissage, décollage et circulation au sol sur les pistes et voies de circulation uniquement.
+- C) Prudence lors du décollage ou de l'atterrissage.
+- D) Atterrissage et décollage uniquement sur les pistes à revêtement dur.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal en forme d'haltère affiché dans l'aire de signalisation signifie que les atterrissages et décollages doivent être effectués uniquement sur les pistes, mais que les autres manœuvres telles que la circulation au sol, les virages et les mises en place peuvent être effectuées en dehors des pistes et voies de circulation, sur l'herbe ou d'autres surfaces. L'option B est trop restrictive car elle confine toutes les manœuvres aux pistes et voies de circulation (ce qui correspondrait à l'haltère avec barre transversale). L'option C décrit un signal complètement différent. L'option D introduit la notion de « revêtement dur » que ce signal ne communique pas.
+
+### Q71 : Lorsque deux aéronefs se rapprochent face à face, quelle manœuvre les deux pilotes doivent-ils effectuer ? ^t10q71
+- A) Chacun vire à gauche.
+- B) L'un vire à droite, l'autre vire à gauche.
+- C) L'un vole en ligne droite tandis que l'autre vire à droite.
+- D) Chacun vire à droite.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.3210(c) et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, lorsque deux aéronefs sont sur des trajectoires face à face ou quasi face à face, les deux pilotes doivent modifier leur cap vers la droite, chacun passant à gauche de l'autre. Cela reprend les conventions de la circulation routière et élimine toute ambiguïté. L'option A (tous deux virent à gauche) amènerait les aéronefs à se croiser du mauvais côté et pourrait provoquer une collision. L'option B (l'un à gauche, l'autre à droite) est non coordonnée et dangereuse. L'option C (l'un tout droit, l'autre vire) est incorrecte car les deux pilotes doivent prendre des mesures d'évitement.
+
+### Q72 : Lesquels des espaces aériens suivants ne sont pas classifiés comme espaces aériens contrôlés ? ^t10q72
+- A) L'espace aérien de classe G.
+- B) Les espaces aériens de classes G et E.
+- C) L'espace aérien de classe C.
+- D) Les espaces aériens de classes G, E et D.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les classes G et E ne sont pas classifiées comme espaces aériens contrôlés pour le trafic VFR. La classe G est un espace aérien non contrôlé, et la classe E, bien que techniquement contrôlée pour les vols IFR, ne fournit aucune séparation ATC pour le trafic VFR. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne liste que la classe G et omet la classe E. L'option C est incorrecte car la classe C est définitivement un espace aérien contrôlé. L'option D inclut incorrectement la classe D, qui est un espace aérien contrôlé nécessitant une clairance ATC.
+
+### Q73 : À quelle autorité le Conseil fédéral a-t-il délégué la surveillance de l'aviation en Suisse ? ^t10q73
+- A) Les services suisses de navigation aérienne (Skyguide).
+- B) L'Aéro-Club de Suisse.
+- C) Le Département fédéral de l'environnement, des transports, de l'énergie et de la communication (DETEC).
+- D) Les polices cantonales.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Conseil fédéral délègue la surveillance de l'aviation au DETEC (Département fédéral de l'environnement, des transports, de l'énergie et de la communication), qui délègue à son tour la supervision opérationnelle à l'OFAC (Office fédéral de l'aviation civile, également connu sous le nom de BAZL). L'option A (Skyguide) fournit des services de navigation aérienne mais n'est pas l'autorité de surveillance réglementaire. L'option B (Aéro-Club) est une association privée, pas un organisme de surveillance gouvernementale. L'option D (polices cantonales) n'a aucun rôle dans la surveillance de l'aviation.
+
+### Q74 : Pour lequel des vols suivants le dépôt d'un plan de vol est-il obligatoire ? ^t10q74
+- A) Pour un vol VFR au-dessus des Alpes, des Préalpes ou du Jura.
+- B) Pour un vol VFR nécessitant l'utilisation des services du contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- C) Pour un vol VFR couvrant plus de 300 km sans escale.
+- D) Pour un vol VFR dans l'espace aérien de classe E.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un plan de vol VFR est obligatoire lorsque le vol nécessite l'utilisation des services du contrôle de la circulation aérienne, notamment lors du transit d'une CTR, d'une TMA ou d'un autre espace aérien contrôlé nécessitant une interaction avec l'ATC. L'option A (Alpes/Préalpes/Jura) n'exige pas automatiquement un plan de vol. L'option C (distance de 300 km) n'est pas un critère de dépôt obligatoire de plan de vol en Suisse. L'option D (espace aérien de classe E) est incorrecte car les vols VFR en classe E ne nécessitent ni services ATC ni plan de vol.
+
+### Q75 : Quelle hauteur minimale doit être maintenue au-dessus des zones densément peuplées lors d'un vol VFR ? ^t10q75
+- A) Au moins 300 m au-dessus du sol.
+- B) Au moins 150 m au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 300 m autour de l'aéronef.
+- C) Au moins 150 m au-dessus du sol.
+- D) Au moins 450 m au-dessus du sol.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément au SERA.5005 et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, la hauteur minimale au-dessus des zones densément peuplées est de 150 m (environ 500 ft) au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 300 m autour de l'aéronef. Cette règle basée sur le dégagement des obstacles garantit une séparation sécurisée par rapport aux structures et au relief. L'option A (300 m/sol) ne tient pas compte des obstacles. L'option C (150 m/sol) ignore l'exigence de dégagement des obstacles. L'option D (450 m/sol) n'est pas la hauteur minimale standard spécifiée dans le SERA.
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+### Q76: Among the aircraft listed below, which have priority for landing and takeoff? ^t10q76
+- A) Aircraft manoeuvring on the ground.
+- B) Aircraft arriving from another aerodrome that are in the aerodrome circuit.
+- C) Aircraft on final approach.
+- D) Aircraft that have received an ATC clearance to taxi.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2 and SERA.3210, aircraft on final approach or landing always have priority over all other aircraft in flight or manoeuvring on the ground. This rule exists because aircraft on final approach have limited ability to manoeuvre and are in the most critical phase of flight. Option A (ground manoeuvring aircraft) must yield to landing traffic. Option B (aircraft in the circuit) have lower priority than those on final. Option D (aircraft with taxi clearance) must also give way to landing aircraft.
+
+### Q77: What does this signal indicate? ^t10q77
+![[figures/t10_q77.png]]
+- A) All runways at this aerodrome are closed.
+- B) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- C) Only hard-surface runways are to be used for landing and takeoff.
+- D) Takeoff and landing only on runways; other manoeuvres are not restricted to the use of runways and taxiways.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown indicates that glider flying is in progress at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO ground signal placed in the signals area to warn arriving and overflying aircraft that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (all runways closed) uses a different signal. Option C (hard-surface runways only) is not what this signal communicates. Option D describes the dumbbell signal, which is a different ground marking entirely.
+
+### Q78: Who has the responsibility for ensuring that the required documents are carried on board the aircraft? ^t10q78
+- A) The operator of the air transport undertaking (Operator).
+- B) The owner of the aircraft.
+- C) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+- D) The operator of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) is responsible for ensuring that all required documents are carried on board the aircraft before flight. This is established in ICAO Annex 2 and EASA/Swiss aviation regulations. The PIC must personally verify document compliance as part of pre-flight preparation. Option A (operator of air transport undertaking) and Option D (operator) have organisational responsibilities but the direct duty falls on the PIC. Option B (owner) may not be involved in the flight operation at all.
+
+### Q79: Which of the following instructions regarding runway direction in use takes precedence? ^t10q79
+- A) The wind sock.
+- B) The landing T.
+- C) The ATC instruction transmitted by radio from the control tower.
+- D) The two digits displayed vertically on the control tower.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC radio instructions from the control tower take the highest precedence over all visual indicators when determining the runway direction in use. ATC has the most current and comprehensive situational awareness and may assign a runway that differs from what the windsock or landing T suggests. Option A (windsock) indicates wind direction but does not override ATC. Option B (landing T) is a visual indicator subordinate to ATC instructions. Option D (tower digits) provides general runway information but is superseded by direct ATC radio instructions.
+
+### Q80: In the event of a radio failure, what code must be set on the transponder? ^t10q80
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally standardised squawk for radio communication failure. Setting this code immediately alerts ATC that the pilot has lost radio contact and triggers loss-of-communications procedures. Option A (7000) is the standard European VFR conspicuity code and does not indicate any emergency. Option B (7500) is reserved for unlawful interference (hijacking). Option C (7700) is the general emergency code, not specifically for radio failure.
+
+### Q81: Is it permitted to deviate from the rules of the air applicable to aircraft? ^t10q81
+- A) Yes, but only in Class G airspace.
+- B) No, under no circumstances.
+- C) Yes, but only for safety reasons.
+- D) Yes, absolutely.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2 and SERA, deviation from the rules of the air is permitted only when necessary for safety reasons and only to the extent strictly required to address the safety concern. This is the sole legal exception. Option A is wrong because the exception is not limited to any specific airspace class. Option B is wrong because safety-driven deviations are permitted. Option D is wrong because unrestricted deviation is never allowed -- the safety justification must exist.
+
+### Q82: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 2100 m AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: Vertical / Horizontal ^t10q82
+- A) 1.5 km / 50 m / 100 m
+- B) 8.0 km / 100 m / 300 m
+- C) 5.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 2100 m AMSL (approximately 6900 ft), which is well above 3000 ft AMSL and 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima in Class E airspace are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option A describes values for low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far below the required minima. Option B has incorrect vertical and horizontal clearance values. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which does not match the Class E requirement at this altitude.
+
+### Q83: By what time at the latest must a daytime VFR flight be completed? ^t10q83
+- A) 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight.
+- B) At the beginning of civil twilight.
+- C) At sunset.
+- D) At the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a daytime VFR flight must be completed no later than sunset. Flying after sunset requires either a night flight qualification or special authorisation. Option A (30 minutes before end of civil twilight) is earlier than required. Option B (beginning of civil twilight) is ambiguous and does not correspond to the Swiss rule. Option D (end of civil twilight) is too late -- while "day" in aviation extends to the end of civil twilight, Swiss VFR completion requirements use sunset as the cut-off.
+
+### Q84: Are you allowed to use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without holding the radiotelephony rating extension? ^t10q84
+- A) Yes, provided other radio communications are not disrupted.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes.
+- D) Yes, provided I have sufficient command of phraseology.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, a pilot may use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without holding the specific radiotelephony extension, in airspaces where radio communication is required. The radiotelephony qualification is needed for certain controlled airspaces but basic radio use for ATC communication is permitted. Option A adds an unnecessary condition about not disrupting other communications. Option B is incorrect because the prohibition is not absolute. Option D adds a phraseology condition that, while good practice, is not the regulatory requirement.
+
+### Q85: Which type of flights may be conducted below the prescribed minimum heights without specific FOCA authorization, to the extent necessary? ^t10q85
+- A) Mountain flights.
+- B) Aerobatic flights.
+- C) Aerial photography flights.
+- D) Search and rescue flights.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Search and rescue (SAR) flights are permitted below prescribed minimum heights without special FOCA authorisation, to the extent operationally necessary to accomplish the rescue mission. The urgency and life-saving nature of SAR operations justifies this exemption. Option A (mountain flights), Option B (aerobatic flights), and Option C (aerial photography flights) all require specific authorisation to operate below minimum heights.
+
+### Q86: Is it permitted to cross an airway at FL 115 under VFR when visibility is 5 km? ^t10q86
+- A) Yes, but only if it is a special VFR flight (SVFR).
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes, in Class E airspace.
+- D) Yes, but only if it is a controlled VFR flight (CVFR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At FL 115 (above FL 100), the minimum VFR visibility required is 8 km. With only 5 km visibility, the VMC minima are not met, and VFR flight through an airway is not permitted regardless of airspace class or flight type. Option A (SVFR) is not applicable at flight levels -- SVFR is only authorised within CTRs. Option C is wrong because the visibility requirement applies in all airspace at this altitude. Option D (CVFR) does not waive the VMC visibility minima.
+
+### Q87: Are formation flights allowed? ^t10q87
+- A) Yes, but only with authorisation from the Federal Office of Civil Aviation.
+- B) Yes, but only outside controlled airspace.
+- C) Yes, provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand.
+- D) Yes, but only if the pilots-in-command are in permanent radio contact with each other.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, formation flights are permitted provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand, agreeing on the formation procedures, positions, and responsibilities. No special FOCA authorisation is needed. Option A is wrong because FOCA authorisation is not required. Option B is incorrect because formation flights are not restricted to uncontrolled airspace. Option D is wrong because permanent radio contact, while useful, is not a regulatory requirement for formation flying.
+
+### Q88: What does this signal mean? ^t10q88
+![[figures/t10_q88.png]]
+- A) Caution during approach and landing.
+- B) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- C) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- D) Landing prohibited.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A red square with two white diagonal crosses (St. Andrew's crosses) is the standard ICAO ground signal meaning "landing prohibited." It is placed in the signal square to warn all aircraft that the aerodrome is closed to landing operations. Option A (caution during approach) is a different signal. Option B is wrong because the signal applies to all aircraft, not just powered ones. Option C is wrong because the signal prohibits landing entirely rather than allowing direction choice.
+
+### Q89: Can a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any further formality? ^t10q89
+- A) Only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- B) No, it is strictly prohibited for VFR flights.
+- C) Only if permanent contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ (Flight Information Zone) may be transited provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. If radio contact cannot be established, the rules of the underlying airspace class apply. Option A incorrectly requires FIS authorisation and English proficiency, which are not the actual requirements. Option B is wrong because transit is not prohibited -- it is permitted under conditions. Option D is wrong because transit is not unconditional; maintaining AFIS contact is required.
+
+### Q90: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q90
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Only the crash of an aircraft or helicopter.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident includes any event related to aircraft operation in which a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained significant structural damage affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting significant aircraft damage. Option B is too narrow -- an accident is not limited to crashes. Option D is wrong because costly repairs alone do not define an accident; the damage must significantly affect structural integrity or flight characteristics.
+
+### Q91: Are observed or received signals binding for the glider pilot? ^t10q91
+- A) Yes, but only signals placed on the ground, not light signals.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes.
+- D) Yes, except light signals for aircraft on the ground.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All observed or received signals -- whether ground signals, light signals, or radio signals -- are binding for the glider pilot. ICAO Annex 2 makes no distinction between signal types; compliance with all visual and radio signals is mandatory for all aircraft, including gliders. Option A is wrong because light signals are equally binding. Option B is wrong because signals are mandatory, not optional. Option D incorrectly excludes light signals for grounded aircraft, which are also binding.
+
+### Q92: What is the minimum flight height above densely populated areas and locations where large public gatherings occur? ^t10q92
+- A) 300 m AGL.
+- B) 150 m AGL above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) 600 m AGL.
+- D) There is no specific height figure; however, one must fly in a manner that allows reaching clear terrain suitable for a risk-free landing at any time.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005, the minimum flight height over densely populated areas and large public gatherings is 150 m (500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-based rule ensures adequate clearance from structures and protects people on the ground. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacle clearance. Option C (600 m AGL) is higher than the actual requirement. Option D describes a general safety principle but not the specific regulatory minimum.
+
+### Q93: In which airspace classes may VFR flights be conducted in Switzerland without needing air traffic control services? ^t10q93
+- A) In Class C, D, E and G airspaces.
+- B) Only in Class G airspace.
+- C) In Class E and G airspaces.
+- D) In Class A and B airspaces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, VFR flights may be conducted without ATC services in Class E and Class G airspace. Class E is controlled for IFR but does not require ATC interaction for VFR flights; Class G is entirely uncontrolled. Option A incorrectly includes Classes C and D, which require ATC clearance. Option B is too restrictive because Class E also permits VFR without ATC. Option D is wrong because Classes A and B either prohibit VFR or require ATC clearance.
+
+### Q94: What does this signal indicate? ^t10q94
+![[figures/t10_q94.png]]
+- A) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- B) Caution during approach and landing.
+- C) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- D) Landing prohibited.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown indicates caution during approach and landing, warning pilots to exercise extra care due to obstacles, poor surface conditions, or other hazards at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO ground signal placed in the signals area. Option A is wrong because the signal does not indicate free choice of landing direction. Option C is wrong because the signal applies to all aircraft types, not just powered aircraft. Option D describes a different signal (red square with white diagonal crosses).
+
+### Q95: In which document must technical deficiencies found during aircraft operation be recorded? ^t10q95
+- A) In the maintenance manual.
+- B) In the journey log (aircraft logbook).
+- C) In the aircraft flight manual.
+- D) In the operations manual.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Technical deficiencies discovered during aircraft operation must be recorded in the journey log (aircraft logbook/tech log). This is the official document tracking the aircraft's technical status and operational history, ensuring maintenance organisations are informed of defects requiring attention. Option A (maintenance manual) contains procedures, not deficiency records. Option C (aircraft flight manual) describes operating limitations and procedures. Option D (operations manual) covers organisational procedures, not individual aircraft defect tracking.
+
+### Q96: How is the use of cameras regulated at the international level? ^t10q96
+- A) Use is generally prohibited.
+- B) Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory.
+- C) Use is generally permitted.
+- D) Private use is generally permitted; commercial photography is subject to authorisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At the international level, there is no uniform ICAO rule on the use of cameras from aircraft. Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory according to its own national laws, which may vary based on security, privacy, or military considerations. Option A is wrong because there is no blanket international prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is no blanket international permission either. Option D incorrectly distinguishes between private and commercial use at the international level, which is a national-level distinction.
+
+### Q97: What do white or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway signify? ^t10q97
+- A) They mark the landing area in use.
+- B) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- C) The delineated runway portion is not usable.
+- D) Caution during approach and landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** White or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway indicate that the marked portion of the runway is not usable -- it may be closed, under construction, or degraded. Pilots must avoid landing on or rolling over these marked areas. Option A is wrong because these signals indicate closure, not active use. Option B describes a different ground signal (the glider operations symbol). Option D is a general caution signal displayed in the signals area, not on the runway itself.
+
+### Q98: How should flight time be recorded when two pilots fly together? ^t10q98
+- A) Each pilot logs only the flight time during which they were actually flying.
+- B) The pilot who made the landing may log the total flight time; the other only the time during which they were actually flying.
+- C) Each pilot may log the total flight time, as both hold a licence.
+- D) Each pilot logs half the time.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two licensed pilots fly together, each pilot may log the total flight time in their personal logbook, since both are qualified licence holders participating in the flight. This is in accordance with Swiss and ICAO logging rules. Option A is unnecessarily restrictive and does not reflect the regulation. Option B creates an arbitrary distinction based on who performed the landing. Option D (splitting time in half) has no basis in aviation regulations.
+
+### Q99: When one aircraft overtakes another in flight, how must it give way? ^t10q99
+- A) Turn upward.
+- B) Turn left.
+- C) Turn downward.
+- D) Turn right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210 and ICAO Annex 2, an overtaking aircraft must give way by altering course to the right, passing the slower aircraft on its right side. The overtaking aircraft bears full responsibility for maintaining safe separation throughout the manoeuvre. Option A (turn upward) and Option C (turn downward) are not the prescribed overtaking procedure. Option B (turn left) is incorrect -- the standard rule requires turning right to overtake.
+
+### Q100: For which domestic Swiss flights is a flight plan required? ^t10q100
+- A) For a VFR flight in controlled airspace.
+- B) For a VFR flight over the Alps.
+- C) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- D) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a domestic VFR flight plan is required when the flight needs to use air traffic control services, such as when transiting a CTR or TMA where ATC interaction is mandatory. Option A is too broad because not all controlled airspace requires a flight plan (e.g., Class E). Option B (Alps) does not automatically trigger a flight plan requirement. Option D (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan criterion.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_10_76_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,252 @@
+### Q76 : Parmi les aéronefs énumérés ci-dessous, lesquels ont la priorité pour l'atterrissage et le décollage ? ^t10q76
+- A) Les aéronefs manœuvrant au sol.
+- B) Les aéronefs provenant d'un autre aérodrome et se trouvant dans le circuit de l'aérodrome.
+- C) Les aéronefs en finale.
+- D) Les aéronefs ayant reçu une clairance ATC pour rouler.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et à SERA.3210, les aéronefs en finale ou en atterrissage ont toujours la priorité sur tous les autres aéronefs en vol ou manœuvrant au sol. Cette règle existe car les aéronefs en finale ont une capacité de manœuvre limitée et se trouvent dans la phase de vol la plus critique. L'option A (aéronefs manœuvrant au sol) doit céder le passage au trafic en atterrissage. L'option B (aéronefs dans le circuit) a une priorité inférieure à celle des aéronefs en finale. L'option D (aéronefs avec clairance de roulage) doit également céder le passage aux aéronefs en atterrissage.
+
+### Q77 : Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q77
+![[figures/t10_q77.png]]
+- A) Toutes les pistes de cet aérodrome sont fermées.
+- B) Vol de planeurs en cours sur cet aérodrome.
+- C) Seules les pistes en dur doivent être utilisées pour l'atterrissage et le décollage.
+- D) Décollage et atterrissage uniquement sur les pistes ; les autres manœuvres ne sont pas limitées aux pistes et aux voies de circulation.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal représenté indique que le vol de planeurs est en cours sur l'aérodrome. Il s'agit d'un signal au sol ICAO standard placé dans la zone des signaux pour avertir les aéronefs à l'arrivée et en survol que des planeurs peuvent évoluer à proximité, y compris au treuil et en vol libre. L'option A (toutes pistes fermées) utilise un signal différent. L'option C (pistes en dur uniquement) ne correspond pas à ce signal. L'option D décrit le signal en haltère, qui est un marquage au sol entièrement différent.
+
+### Q78 : Qui est responsable de s'assurer que les documents requis sont emportés à bord de l'aéronef ? ^t10q78
+- A) L'exploitant de l'entreprise de transport aérien (Exploitant).
+- B) Le propriétaire de l'aéronef.
+- C) Le commandant de bord.
+- D) L'exploitant de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le commandant de bord (CdB) est responsable de s'assurer que tous les documents requis sont emportés à bord avant le vol. Ceci est établi dans l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et dans les réglementations aéronautiques EASA/suisses. Le CdB doit personnellement vérifier la conformité documentaire dans le cadre de la préparation avant le vol. L'option A (exploitant de transport aérien) et l'option D (exploitant) ont des responsabilités organisationnelles, mais la charge directe incombe au CdB. L'option B (propriétaire) peut ne pas être impliqué du tout dans l'opération de vol.
+
+### Q79 : Laquelle des instructions suivantes concernant le sens de piste en service a la priorité ? ^t10q79
+- A) La manche à air.
+- B) Le T d'atterrissage.
+- C) L'instruction ATC transmise par radio depuis la tour de contrôle.
+- D) Les deux chiffres affichés verticalement sur la tour de contrôle.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les instructions radio de l'ATC depuis la tour de contrôle ont la priorité absolue sur tous les indicateurs visuels pour déterminer le sens de piste en service. L'ATC dispose de la conscience situationnelle la plus récente et la plus complète, et peut assigner une piste différente de celle suggérée par la manche à air ou le T d'atterrissage. L'option A (manche à air) indique la direction du vent mais ne prime pas sur l'ATC. L'option B (T d'atterrissage) est un indicateur visuel subordonné aux instructions ATC. L'option D (chiffres sur la tour) fournit des informations générales sur la piste mais est supplantée par les instructions radio directes de l'ATC.
+
+### Q80 : En cas de panne radio, quel code doit être sélectionné sur le transpondeur ? ^t10q80
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le squawk standardisé à l'échelle internationale pour les pannes de communication radio. La sélection de ce code alerte immédiatement l'ATC que le pilote a perdu le contact radio et déclenche les procédures de perte de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code VFR de visibilité standard européen et n'indique aucune urgence. L'option B (7500) est réservée aux actes d'intervention illicite (détournement). L'option C (7700) est le code d'urgence générale, non spécifique à la panne radio.
+
+### Q81 : Est-il permis de déroger aux règles de l'air applicables aux aéronefs ? ^t10q81
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement en espace aérien de classe G.
+- B) Non, en aucun cas.
+- C) Oui, mais uniquement pour des raisons de sécurité.
+- D) Oui, absolument.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et à SERA, la dérogation aux règles de l'air est autorisée uniquement lorsqu'elle est nécessaire pour des raisons de sécurité et seulement dans la mesure strictement requise pour faire face à la situation de sécurité. C'est la seule exception légale. L'option A est incorrecte car l'exception n'est pas limitée à une classe d'espace aérien particulière. L'option B est incorrecte car les dérogations motivées par la sécurité sont autorisées. L'option D est incorrecte car la dérogation sans restriction n'est jamais admise — la justification de sécurité doit exister.
+
+### Q82 : Quelles sont les minima VMC en espace aérien de classe E à 2100 m AMSL ? Visibilité - Séparation des nuages : verticale / horizontale ^t10q82
+- A) 1,5 km / 50 m / 100 m
+- B) 8,0 km / 100 m / 300 m
+- C) 5,0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- D) 8,0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** À 2100 m AMSL (environ 6900 ft), soit bien au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL et 1000 ft AGL, les minima VMC SERA.5001 en espace aérien de classe E sont : visibilité 8 km, séparation verticale des nuages 300 m et séparation horizontale des nuages 1500 m. L'option A décrit des valeurs pour l'espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude, bien en deçà des minima requis. L'option B présente des valeurs incorrectes de séparation verticale et horizontale. L'option C utilise une visibilité de 5 km, ce qui ne correspond pas aux exigences de la classe E à cette altitude.
+
+### Q83 : À quelle heure au plus tard un vol VFR de jour doit-il être achevé ? ^t10q83
+- A) 30 minutes avant la fin du crépuscule civil.
+- B) Au début du crépuscule civil.
+- C) Au coucher du soleil.
+- D) À la fin du crépuscule civil.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un vol VFR de jour doit être achevé au plus tard au coucher du soleil. Voler après le coucher du soleil nécessite soit une qualification de vol de nuit, soit une autorisation spéciale. L'option A (30 minutes avant la fin du crépuscule civil) est plus tôt que nécessaire. L'option B (début du crépuscule civil) est ambiguë et ne correspond pas à la règle suisse. L'option D (fin du crépuscule civil) est trop tardive — bien que le « jour » en aviation s'étende jusqu'à la fin du crépuscule civil, les exigences suisses d'achèvement d'un vol VFR utilisent le coucher du soleil comme limite.
+
+### Q84 : Êtes-vous autorisé à utiliser la radio de bord pour communiquer avec l'ATC sans détenir l'extension radiotelephonie ? ^t10q84
+- A) Oui, à condition de ne pas perturber les autres communications radio.
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui.
+- D) Oui, à condition de maîtriser suffisamment la phraséologie.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon la réglementation suisse, un pilote peut utiliser la radio de bord pour communiquer avec l'ATC sans détenir l'extension spécifique de radiotéléphonie, dans les espaces aériens où la communication radio est obligatoire. La qualification de radiotéléphonie est nécessaire pour certains espaces aériens contrôlés, mais l'utilisation de base de la radio pour la communication ATC est autorisée. L'option A ajoute une condition inutile relative à la non-perturbation des autres communications. L'option B est incorrecte car l'interdiction n'est pas absolue. L'option D ajoute une condition de phraséologie qui, bien que bonne pratique, n'est pas l'exigence réglementaire.
+
+### Q85 : Quels types de vols peuvent être effectués en dessous des hauteurs minimales prescrites sans autorisation spécifique de l'OFAC, dans la mesure nécessaire ? ^t10q85
+- A) Les vols en montagne.
+- B) Les vols acrobatiques.
+- C) Les vols de photographie aérienne.
+- D) Les vols de recherche et sauvetage.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vols de recherche et sauvetage (SAR) sont autorisés en dessous des hauteurs minimales prescrites sans autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC, dans la mesure opérationnellement nécessaire pour accomplir la mission de sauvetage. L'urgence et le caractère vital des opérations SAR justifient cette exemption. L'option A (vols en montagne), l'option B (vols acrobatiques) et l'option C (photographie aérienne) nécessitent tous une autorisation spécifique pour évoluer en dessous des hauteurs minimales.
+
+### Q86 : Est-il permis de traverser une voie aérienne au FL 115 en VFR avec une visibilité de 5 km ? ^t10q86
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement s'il s'agit d'un vol VFR spécial (SVFR).
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui, en espace aérien de classe E.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement s'il s'agit d'un vol VFR contrôlé (CVFR).
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au FL 115 (au-dessus du FL 100), la visibilité minimale requise pour un vol VFR est de 8 km. Avec seulement 5 km de visibilité, les minima VMC ne sont pas respectés, et le vol VFR à travers une voie aérienne n'est pas autorisé quelle que soit la classe d'espace aérien ou le type de vol. L'option A (SVFR) n'est pas applicable aux niveaux de vol — le SVFR n'est autorisé qu'au sein des CTR. L'option C est incorrecte car l'exigence de visibilité s'applique dans tous les espaces aériens à cette altitude. L'option D (CVFR) ne dispense pas des minima de visibilité VMC.
+
+### Q87 : Les vols en formation sont-ils autorisés ? ^t10q87
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement avec l'autorisation de l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile.
+- B) Oui, mais uniquement en dehors de l'espace aérien contrôlé.
+- C) Oui, à condition que les commandants de bord aient coordonné au préalable.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement si les commandants de bord sont en contact radio permanent l'un avec l'autre.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les vols en formation sont autorisés à condition que les commandants de bord aient coordonné au préalable en se mettant d'accord sur les procédures de formation, les positions et les responsabilités. Aucune autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC n'est nécessaire. L'option A est incorrecte car l'autorisation de l'OFAC n'est pas requise. L'option B est incorrecte car les vols en formation ne sont pas limités à l'espace aérien non contrôlé. L'option D est incorrecte car le contact radio permanent, bien qu'utile, n'est pas une exigence réglementaire pour le vol en formation.
+
+### Q88 : Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q88
+![[figures/t10_q88.png]]
+- A) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+- B) Ce signal s'applique uniquement aux aéronefs motorisés.
+- C) Le pilote peut choisir la direction d'atterrissage.
+- D) Atterrissage interdit.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un carré rouge avec deux croix diagonales blanches (croix de Saint-André) est le signal au sol ICAO standard signifiant « atterrissage interdit ». Il est placé dans le carré des signaux pour avertir tous les aéronefs que l'aérodrome est fermé aux opérations d'atterrissage. L'option A (prudence lors de l'approche) correspond à un signal différent. L'option B est incorrecte car le signal s'applique à tous les aéronefs, pas seulement aux appareils motorisés. L'option C est incorrecte car le signal interdit totalement l'atterrissage plutôt que de laisser le choix de la direction.
+
+### Q89 : Une zone d'information de vol (FIZ) peut-elle être traversée sans autre formalité ? ^t10q89
+- A) Uniquement avec l'autorisation du service d'information de vol (FIS) et si le pilote est qualifié pour utiliser la radiotéléphonie en anglais.
+- B) Non, c'est strictement interdit pour les vols VFR.
+- C) Uniquement si un contact permanent avec le service d'information de vol d'aérodrome (AFIS) est maintenu. Dans le cas contraire, les règles de la classe d'espace aérien dans laquelle se trouve la FIZ s'appliquent.
+- D) Oui.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une FIZ (zone d'information de vol) peut être traversée à condition qu'un contact radio permanent avec le service d'information de vol d'aérodrome (AFIS) soit maintenu. Si le contact radio ne peut être établi, les règles de la classe d'espace aérien sous-jacente s'appliquent. L'option A exige à tort une autorisation du FIS et une qualification en anglais, qui ne sont pas les exigences réelles. L'option B est incorrecte car le transit n'est pas interdit — il est autorisé sous conditions. L'option D est incorrecte car le transit n'est pas inconditionnel ; le maintien du contact AFIS est requis.
+
+### Q90 : Quel événement constitue un accident d'aviation ? ^t10q90
+- A) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel au moins une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée.
+- B) Uniquement l'écrasement d'un aéronef ou d'un hélicoptère.
+- C) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée, ou l'aéronef a subi des dommages affectant notablement sa résistance structurelle, ses performances ou ses caractéristiques de vol.
+- D) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef nécessitant des réparations coûteuses.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO, un accident d'aviation comprend tout événement lié à l'exploitation de l'aéronef au cours duquel une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée, OU l'aéronef a subi des dommages importants affectant sa résistance structurelle, ses performances ou ses caractéristiques de vol. Les deux critères constituent indépendamment un accident. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne couvre que les blessures corporelles, omettant les dommages importants à l'aéronef. L'option B est trop restrictive — un accident ne se limite pas aux écrasements. L'option D est incorrecte car les réparations coûteuses seules ne définissent pas un accident ; les dommages doivent affecter significativement l'intégrité structurelle ou les caractéristiques de vol.
+
+### Q91 : Les signaux observés ou reçus sont-ils contraignants pour le pilote de planeur ? ^t10q91
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement les signaux placés au sol, pas les signaux lumineux.
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui.
+- D) Oui, sauf les signaux lumineux pour les aéronefs au sol.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tous les signaux observés ou reçus — qu'il s'agisse de signaux au sol, de signaux lumineux ou de signaux radio — sont contraignants pour le pilote de planeur. L'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO ne fait aucune distinction entre les types de signaux ; le respect de tous les signaux visuels et radio est obligatoire pour tous les aéronefs, y compris les planeurs. L'option A est incorrecte car les signaux lumineux sont également contraignants. L'option B est incorrecte car les signaux sont obligatoires, pas facultatifs. L'option D exclut à tort les signaux lumineux pour les aéronefs au sol, qui sont également contraignants.
+
+### Q92 : Quelle est la hauteur minimale de vol au-dessus des zones fortement peuplées et des endroits où se déroulent de grands rassemblements publics ? ^t10q92
+- A) 300 m AGL.
+- B) 150 m AGL au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 600 m autour de l'aéronef.
+- C) 600 m AGL.
+- D) Il n'y a pas de chiffre de hauteur spécifique ; il faut cependant voler de manière à pouvoir atteindre à tout moment un terrain dégagé permettant un atterrissage sans danger.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5005, la hauteur minimale de vol au-dessus des zones fortement peuplées et des grands rassemblements publics est de 150 m (500 ft) au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 600 m autour de l'aéronef. Cette règle basée sur les obstacles garantit une marge de franchissement adéquate par rapport aux constructions et protège les personnes au sol. L'option A (300 m AGL) ne tient pas compte du franchissement des obstacles. L'option C (600 m AGL) est supérieure à l'exigence réelle. L'option D décrit un principe de sécurité général mais pas le minimum réglementaire spécifique.
+
+### Q93 : Dans quelles classes d'espace aérien les vols VFR peuvent-ils être effectués en Suisse sans avoir besoin des services du contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q93
+- A) Dans les espaces aériens de classe C, D, E et G.
+- B) Uniquement dans l'espace aérien de classe G.
+- C) Dans les espaces aériens de classe E et G.
+- D) Dans les espaces aériens de classe A et B.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les vols VFR peuvent être effectués sans services ATC dans les espaces aériens de classe E et G. La classe E est contrôlée pour les vols IFR mais ne nécessite pas d'interaction ATC pour les vols VFR ; la classe G est entièrement non contrôlée. L'option A inclut à tort les classes C et D, qui nécessitent une clairance ATC. L'option B est trop restrictive car la classe E autorise également les vols VFR sans ATC. L'option D est incorrecte car les classes A et B soit interdisent le VFR, soit exigent une clairance ATC.
+
+### Q94 : Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q94
+![[figures/t10_q94.png]]
+- A) Le pilote peut choisir la direction d'atterrissage.
+- B) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+- C) Ce signal s'applique uniquement aux aéronefs motorisés.
+- D) Atterrissage interdit.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal représenté indique la prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage, avertissant les pilotes de faire preuve d'une vigilance accrue en raison d'obstacles, d'un mauvais état de la surface ou d'autres dangers sur l'aérodrome. Il s'agit d'un signal au sol ICAO standard placé dans la zone des signaux. L'option A est incorrecte car le signal n'indique pas le libre choix de la direction d'atterrissage. L'option C est incorrecte car le signal s'applique à tous les types d'aéronefs, pas seulement aux appareils motorisés. L'option D décrit un signal différent (carré rouge avec croix diagonales blanches).
+
+### Q95 : Dans quel document les déficiences techniques constatées lors de l'exploitation de l'aéronef doivent-elles être consignées ? ^t10q95
+- A) Dans le manuel de maintenance.
+- B) Dans le carnet de route (carnet technique de l'aéronef).
+- C) Dans le manuel de vol de l'aéronef.
+- D) Dans le manuel d'exploitation.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les déficiences techniques découvertes lors de l'exploitation de l'aéronef doivent être consignées dans le carnet de route (carnet technique/journal de bord technique). C'est le document officiel qui suit l'état technique de l'aéronef et son historique opérationnel, garantissant que les organismes de maintenance sont informés des défauts nécessitant une intervention. L'option A (manuel de maintenance) contient des procédures, pas des enregistrements de déficiences. L'option C (manuel de vol) décrit les limites opérationnelles et les procédures. L'option D (manuel d'exploitation) couvre les procédures organisationnelles, pas le suivi des défauts des aéronefs individuels.
+
+### Q96 : Comment l'utilisation de caméras est-elle réglementée au niveau international ? ^t10q96
+- A) L'utilisation est généralement interdite.
+- B) Chaque État est libre d'interdire ou de réglementer leur utilisation sur son territoire.
+- C) L'utilisation est généralement autorisée.
+- D) L'utilisation privée est généralement autorisée ; la photographie commerciale est soumise à autorisation.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au niveau international, il n'existe pas de règle ICAO uniforme sur l'utilisation de caméras depuis des aéronefs. Chaque État est libre d'interdire ou de réglementer leur utilisation sur son territoire selon ses propres lois nationales, qui peuvent varier en fonction de considérations de sécurité, de confidentialité ou militaires. L'option A est incorrecte car il n'existe pas d'interdiction internationale globale. L'option C est incorrecte car il n'existe pas non plus d'autorisation internationale globale. L'option D distingue à tort l'usage privé et commercial au niveau international, ce qui est une distinction du niveau national.
+
+### Q97 : Que signifient les signaux blancs ou de toute autre couleur visible placés horizontalement sur une piste ? ^t10q97
+- A) Ils délimitent la zone d'atterrissage en service.
+- B) Vol de planeurs en cours sur cet aérodrome.
+- C) La portion de piste délimitée est inutilisable.
+- D) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les signaux blancs ou de toute autre couleur visible placés horizontalement sur une piste indiquent que la portion marquée de la piste est inutilisable — elle peut être fermée, en travaux ou dégradée. Les pilotes doivent éviter d'atterrir sur ou de rouler sur ces zones marquées. L'option A est incorrecte car ces signaux indiquent une fermeture, pas une utilisation active. L'option B décrit un signal au sol différent (le symbole d'opérations de planeurs). L'option D est un signal de prudence général affiché dans la zone des signaux, pas sur la piste elle-même.
+
+### Q98 : Comment le temps de vol doit-il être enregistré lorsque deux pilotes volent ensemble ? ^t10q98
+- A) Chaque pilote n'enregistre que le temps de vol pendant lequel il pilotait effectivement.
+- B) Le pilote qui a effectué l'atterrissage peut enregistrer le temps de vol total ; l'autre n'enregistre que le temps pendant lequel il pilotait effectivement.
+- C) Chaque pilote peut enregistrer le temps de vol total, car tous deux détiennent une licence.
+- D) Chaque pilote enregistre la moitié du temps.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux pilotes licenciés volent ensemble, chaque pilote peut enregistrer le temps de vol total dans son carnet de vol personnel, car tous deux sont des titulaires de licence qualifiés participant au vol. Ceci est conforme aux règles d'enregistrement suisses et ICAO. L'option A est inutilement restrictive et ne reflète pas la réglementation. L'option B crée une distinction arbitraire basée sur qui a effectué l'atterrissage. L'option D (partager le temps en deux) n'a aucun fondement dans les réglementations aéronautiques.
+
+### Q99 : Lorsqu'un aéronef en dépasse un autre en vol, comment doit-il lui céder le passage ? ^t10q99
+- A) Virer vers le haut.
+- B) Virer à gauche.
+- C) Virer vers le bas.
+- D) Virer à droite.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210 et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, un aéronef qui en dépasse un autre doit céder le passage en modifiant son cap vers la droite, en dépassant l'aéronef plus lent par son côté droit. L'aéronef dépassant porte l'entière responsabilité du maintien d'une séparation sûre tout au long de la manœuvre. L'option A (virer vers le haut) et l'option C (virer vers le bas) ne correspondent pas à la procédure de dépassement prescrite. L'option B (virer à gauche) est incorrecte — la règle standard impose de virer à droite pour dépasser.
+
+### Q100 : Pour quels vols intérieurs suisses un plan de vol est-il requis ? ^t10q100
+- A) Pour un vol VFR en espace aérien contrôlé.
+- B) Pour un vol VFR au-dessus des Alpes.
+- C) Pour un vol VFR nécessitant le recours aux services du contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- D) Pour un vol VFR couvrant plus de 300 km sans escale.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un plan de vol VFR intérieur est requis lorsque le vol doit faire appel aux services du contrôle de la circulation aérienne, par exemple lors du transit d'une CTR ou d'une TMA où l'interaction avec l'ATC est obligatoire. L'option A est trop large car tout l'espace aérien contrôlé ne nécessite pas un plan de vol (ex. : classe E). L'option B (Alpes) ne déclenche pas automatiquement une exigence de plan de vol. L'option D (300 km de distance) n'est pas un critère suisse pour l'obligation de plan de vol.
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+### Q101: How can you determine whether a glider is approved for aerobatics? ^t20q101
+- A) From the certificate of airworthiness.
+- B) From the flight manual (AFM).
+- C) No requirement exists — only an accelerometer is needed.
+- D) From the operating envelope.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the aircraft flight manual (AFM) is the authoritative document that specifies the approved operating categories, including whether aerobatic flight is permitted, and under what conditions and limitations. A is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness confirms the aircraft meets its type certificate but does not detail specific operational approvals. C is wrong because aerobatic approval is a formal certification requirement, not simply a matter of having an accelerometer installed. D is wrong because the operating envelope is contained within the AFM, not a separate standalone document.
+
+### Q102: Where can you find data on the limits, loading, and operation of a glider? ^t20q102
+- A) In the logbook.
+- B) In technical communications (TM).
+- C) In the flight manual (AFM).
+- D) In the certificate of airworthiness.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the aircraft flight manual (AFM) is the official regulatory document that contains all operating limitations, loading data (mass and balance), performance charts, and operational procedures for a specific aircraft type. A is wrong because the logbook records maintenance and flight history, not operational limitations. B is wrong because technical communications (service bulletins) address modifications or issues, not standard operating data. D is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness confirms legal airworthiness status but does not contain detailed operating information.
+
+### Q103: Which instruments are depicted in the diagram below? ^t20q103
+![[figures/t20_q103.png]]
+- A) Altimeter, airspeed indicator, and netto variometer.
+- B) Altimeter, airspeed indicator, and diaphragm variometer.
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vane variometer.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and oxygen pressure gauge.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the diagram shows, from left to right, the airspeed indicator (ASI), altimeter, and a vane variometer — the standard "basic T" arrangement in a glider cockpit. A and B incorrectly identify the order of the ASI and altimeter and misidentify the variometer type. D is wrong because an oxygen pressure gauge is a separate ancillary instrument typically mounted elsewhere, not part of the standard flight instrument panel layout.
+
+### Q104: What speed range does the white arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q104
+- A) The maneuvering speed.
+- B) The speed range in smooth air (caution range).
+- C) The maneuvering range (full control deflection).
+- D) The camber flap operating range.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because on a glider's ASI, the white arc indicates the speed range within which camber flaps (positive flap settings) may be deployed. Operating flaps outside this range risks structural damage or adverse handling characteristics. A is wrong because maneuvering speed is a single value (VA), not an arc. B is wrong because the smooth-air caution range is the yellow arc. C is wrong because the range permitting full control deflection corresponds to the green arc (up to VA/VNO).
+
+### Q105: The airspeed indicator on a glider is defective. Under what condition may the glider fly again? ^t20q105
+- A) Only for a single circuit.
+- B) If no maintenance organisation is available nearby.
+- C) When the airspeed indicator has been repaired and is fully functional.
+- D) If a GPS with speed indication is used instead.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the airspeed indicator is a mandatory minimum instrument required for flight. The glider may only return to service once the ASI has been repaired or replaced and is fully functional. A is wrong because there is no regulatory provision allowing flight with a defective mandatory instrument for even one circuit. B is wrong because the unavailability of a maintenance organisation does not waive airworthiness requirements. D is wrong because a GPS ground speed indication cannot substitute for an ASI, which measures indicated airspeed based on dynamic pressure.
+
+### Q106: The minimum useful load specified in the load sheet has not been reached. What must be done? ^t20q106
+- A) Move the trim to a forward position.
+- B) Reposition the pilot's seat for a more forward CG.
+- C) Modify the horizontal stabilizer incidence angle.
+- D) Add ballast weight (lead) until the minimum load is met.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when the minimum useful load (typically minimum cockpit load) is not met, the C.G. may be outside the aft limit and the wing loading may be below the certified minimum. Adding lead ballast at the prescribed location (usually forward) brings the total load up to the minimum required value and positions the C.G. within limits. A is wrong because trim adjusts control forces but does not change the aircraft's mass or C.G. B is wrong because the seat position is fixed. C is wrong because the stabiliser incidence is not adjustable in flight or on the ground by the pilot.
+
+### Q107: The maximum mass stated in the flight manual has been exceeded. What is required? ^t20q107
+- A) The maximum speed must be reduced by 30 km/h.
+- B) The load must be redistributed so the maximum mass is not exceeded.
+- C) Use of the glider is prohibited.
+- D) Set the trim to the aft position.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the maximum mass is a hard certification limit based on structural strength and stall speed. When it is exceeded, the aircraft is no longer within its certified flight envelope and flight is prohibited until the excess load is removed. A is wrong because reducing speed does not address the structural overload risk. B is misleading — redistribution changes C.G. position but does not reduce total mass. D is wrong because trim adjustment has no bearing on mass limitations.
+
+### Q108: How is the centre of gravity of a single-seat glider shifted? ^t20q108
+- A) By adjusting the elevator trim.
+- B) By altering the angle of attack.
+- C) By changing the cockpit load.
+- D) By modifying the angle of incidence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in a single-seat glider, the only practical way to move the C.G. is by changing the mass in the cockpit — adding or removing lead ballast at forward or aft positions, or by a different pilot weight. A is wrong because trim adjusts elevator deflection and control forces, not the physical mass distribution. B is wrong because angle of attack is an aerodynamic flight parameter, not a loading parameter. D is wrong because the angle of incidence is a fixed design feature of the wing and cannot be modified by the pilot.
+
+### Q109: Which centre of gravity position on a glider is the most hazardous? ^t20q109
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too low.
+- C) Too high.
+- D) Too far aft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an aft C.G. beyond the rear limit reduces the longitudinal static stability of the glider. As the C.G. moves closer to or behind the neutral point, the aircraft becomes neutrally stable or unstable in pitch, making it progressively harder to control until recovery from any pitch disturbance becomes impossible. A is less dangerous — a forward C.G. increases stability but may limit elevator authority for flaring. B and C are not standard concerns in glider mass-and-balance considerations.
+
+### Q110: What speed range does the yellow arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q110
+- A) The maneuvering range (full control deflection).
+- B) The maneuvering speed.
+- C) The camber flap operating range.
+- D) The smooth air speed range (caution range).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the yellow arc on a glider's ASI marks the caution range between VNO (maximum structural cruising speed) and VNE (never-exceed speed). Flight within this speed range is permitted only in smooth, non-turbulent air because turbulence-induced loads at these speeds could exceed the structural design limits. A is wrong because full control deflection is permitted only up to VA (within the green arc). B is wrong because maneuvering speed is a single value, not a range. C is wrong because the flap operating range is shown by the white arc.
+
+### Q111: What causes the dip error on a direct-reading compass? ^t20q111
+- A) Temperature variations.
+- B) Inclination of the Earth's magnetic field lines.
+- C) Deviation in the cockpit.
+- D) Acceleration of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the Earth's magnetic field lines are not horizontal — they dip downward toward the magnetic poles at an angle that increases with latitude. This inclination causes the compass magnet assembly to tilt, introducing errors during turns (northerly turning error) and during accelerations/decelerations. A is wrong because temperature variations affect compass fluid viscosity but not the fundamental dip error. C is wrong because deviation is a separate error caused by ferromagnetic materials in the cockpit. D is wrong because acceleration errors are a consequence of dip, not the root cause.
+
+### Q112: What colour marks the caution area on an airspeed indicator? ^t20q112
+- A) Green.
+- B) White.
+- C) Yellow.
+- D) Red.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because yellow marks the caution range on an airspeed indicator, spanning from VNO to VNE. This range is reserved for smooth-air flight only. A (green) marks the normal operating range from VS1 to VNO. B (white) marks the flap operating range. D (red) is used only for the VNE radial line, not an arc. The colour coding is standardised across aviation to ensure immediate recognition.
+
+### Q113: If the altimeter subscale setting is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa, what difference in altitude is displayed? ^t20q113
+- A) The value depends on the current QNH.
+- B) Zero.
+- C) 80 m more than before.
+- D) 80 m less than before.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in the International Standard Atmosphere, 1 hPa corresponds to approximately 8 metres of altitude near sea level (the "30 ft per hPa" rule). Increasing the subscale setting by 10 hPa (from 1000 to 1010) raises the displayed altitude by approximately 10 x 8 = 80 metres. B is wrong because the reading does change. D is wrong because increasing the QNH setting increases, not decreases, the displayed altitude. A is wrong because the conversion factor is fixed by the ISA model and does not depend on the actual QNH.
+
+### Q114: When the altimeter reference scale is set to QFE, what does the instrument show during flight? ^t20q114
+- A) Pressure altitude.
+- B) Altitude above MSL.
+- C) Height above the airfield.
+- D) Airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because QFE is the atmospheric pressure measured at the aerodrome reference point. When this value is set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at that aerodrome and indicates height above the aerodrome during flight. A is wrong because pressure altitude requires setting 1013.25 hPa. B is wrong because altitude above mean sea level requires setting QNH. D is wrong because the altimeter displays a dynamic reading during flight, not the fixed elevation of the airfield.
+
+### Q115: A vertical speed indicator connected to an oversized equalizing tank results in... ^t20q115
+- A) No indication.
+- B) A reading that is too low.
+- C) A reading that is too high.
+- D) Mechanical overload.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because if the compensating (equalising) tank is oversized, it stores more pressure than intended, creating a larger pressure differential across the variometer restriction when altitude changes. This amplifies the indicated vertical speed, producing a reading that is too high (over-indication). A is wrong because the instrument will still function, just inaccurately. B is wrong because an oversized tank causes over-reading, not under-reading. D is wrong because the oversized tank does not create mechanical stress on the instrument.
+
+### Q116: A vertical speed indicator measures the difference between... ^t20q116
+- A) Total pressure and static pressure.
+- B) Instantaneous static pressure and a previous static pressure.
+- C) Dynamic pressure and total pressure.
+- D) Instantaneous total pressure and a previous total pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a variometer (vertical speed indicator) compares the current atmospheric static pressure with the pressure retained in a reference chamber connected through a calibrated leak. As altitude changes, the instantaneous static pressure diverges from the stored (previous) pressure, and this differential drives the indication. A is wrong because the difference between total and static pressure is dynamic pressure, which is what the airspeed indicator measures. C and D are wrong because total pressure and dynamic pressure are not used in variometer operation.
+
+### Q117: What type of engine is typically used in Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)? ^t20q117
+- A) 4-cylinder, 2-stroke.
+- B) 2-plate Wankel.
+- C) 4-cylinder, 4-stroke.
+- D) 2-cylinder diesel.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because Touring Motor Gliders (TMGs) are typically powered by four-cylinder, four-stroke piston engines such as the Rotax 912 or Limbach series, which offer a good balance of reliability, power-to-weight ratio, and fuel economy for sustained powered flight. A is wrong because two-stroke engines are less common in TMGs due to higher fuel consumption and lower reliability. B is wrong because Wankel rotary engines are not standard in certified TMG types. D is wrong because two-cylinder diesels lack the power output typically required for TMG operations.
+
+### Q118: What does the yellow arc on the airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q118
+- A) Cautious operation of flaps or brakes to prevent overload.
+- B) The optimum speed while being towed behind an aircraft.
+- C) The area where best glide speed can be found.
+- D) Flight only in calm conditions with no gusts to prevent overload.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the yellow arc on the ASI indicates the caution speed range (VNO to VNE), within which flight is only permitted in smooth air without gusts. At these higher speeds, turbulence-induced load factors could exceed structural design limits. A is wrong because flap/brake operating ranges are shown by the white arc. B is wrong because aerotow speeds are typically within the green arc. C is wrong because the best glide speed is a single point, not associated with the yellow arc.
+
+### Q119: During a steady glide, an energy-compensated VSI shows the vertical speed... ^t20q119
+- A) Of the glider through the surrounding air.
+- B) Of the glider minus the movement of the air.
+- C) Of the air mass being flown through.
+- D) Of the glider plus the movement of the air.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a total-energy compensated variometer eliminates the effect of speed changes (kinetic energy exchanges) on the vertical speed indication. In a steady glide with constant airspeed, the TE variometer indicates the vertical movement of the surrounding air mass — showing zero in still air, or the actual thermal/sink value in moving air. A is wrong because that describes an uncompensated variometer. B and D are wrong because the TE variometer does not add or subtract airmass movement from the glider's vertical speed — it isolates the airmass movement itself.
+
+### Q120: During a right turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. What correction is needed to centre it? ^t20q120
+- A) More bank, less rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- B) More bank, more rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- C) Less bank, less rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- D) Less bank, more rudder in the direction of the turn.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because during a right turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the nose is sliding outward (skidding turn) — there is insufficient rudder coordination and possibly too much bank for the rate of turn. To correct this, apply more right rudder (in the direction of the turn) to bring the nose around, and reduce bank slightly to decrease the tendency to skid. A and C are wrong because they call for less rudder, which would worsen the skid. B is wrong because adding more bank would increase the centripetal force demand and worsen the coordination problem.
+
+### Q121: What type of defect results in loss of airworthiness? ^t20q121
+- A) Dirty wing leading edge
+- B) Scratch on the outer painting
+- C) Damage to load-bearing parts
+- D) Crack in the cabin hood plastic
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airworthiness of an aircraft is fundamentally determined by the structural integrity of load-bearing components (main spar, wing attachment, fuselage frames, control system attachment points). Damage to these parts compromises the aircraft's ability to sustain flight loads and constitutes a loss of airworthiness. A dirty leading edge (A) reduces performance but is not an airworthiness defect. A cracked canopy (B) and a scratch on paint (C) are cosmetic or minor defects that do not affect structural integrity.
+
+### Q122: The mass loaded on the aircraft is below the minimum load required by the load sheet. What action must be taken? ^t20q122
+- A) Change pilot seat position
+- B) Change incidence angle of elevator
+- C) Load ballast weight up to minimum load
+- D) Trim aircraft to "pitch down"
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load sheet (weight and balance document) specifies a minimum pilot weight to ensure the centre of gravity remains within approved limits. If the actual pilot weight is below the minimum, ballast must be added (typically in the ballast area specified by the POH) to bring the total loaded mass up to the minimum required value. Adjusting trim (A, C) does not address the underlying CG/mass problem, and changing seat position (B) is not a standard corrective action for under-weight loading.
+
+### Q123: Water ballast increases wing loading by 40%. By what percentage does the glider's minimum speed increase? ^t20q123
+- A) 18%
+- B) 200%
+- C) 40%
+- D) 100%
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Minimum speed (stall speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading: Vs ∝ √(W/S). If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), stall speed increases by √1.4 ≈ 1.183, i.e., approximately 18.3%. A 40% speed increase (B) would require a 96% increase in wing loading, 100% (A) would require a quadrupling of wing loading, and 200% (C) is far too large. Only the square-root relationship gives approximately 18%.
+
+### Q124: The maximum load according to the load sheet has been exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t20q124
+- A) Trim "pitch-up"
+- B) Trim "pitch-down"
+- C) Reduce load
+- D) Increase speed by 15%
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the actual loaded mass exceeds the maximum allowed mass from the load sheet, the only correct action is to reduce the load (remove ballast, water ballast, baggage, or have a lighter pilot). Exceeding maximum mass means structural load limits may be reached at lower G-loads or airspeeds. Increasing speed (A) or adjusting trim (C, D) does not address the structural overload problem.
+
+### Q125: What is a torsion-stiffened leading edge? ^t20q125
+- A) Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces.
+- B) The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.
+- C) Special shape of the leading edge.
+- D) The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A torsion-stiffened leading edge is a structural design feature in which the leading edge of the wing (from the leading edge to the main spar) is planked (covered) on both upper and lower surfaces, creating a closed-section D-box that resists torsional (twisting) loads. This is not a spar component (A), not merely a shape descriptor (B), and not a reference to a torsion moment distribution point (C).
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_101_125_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_101_125_fr.md
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+### Q101: Comment peut-on déterminer si un planeur est approuvé pour la voltige ? ^t20q101
+- A) D'après le certificat de navigabilité.
+- B) D'après le manuel de vol (AFM).
+- C) Aucune exigence n'existe — seul un accéléromètre est nécessaire.
+- D) D'après l'enveloppe d'utilisation.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car le manuel de vol de l'aéronef (AFM) est le document de référence qui précise les catégories d'exploitation approuvées, notamment si le vol en voltige est autorisé, et dans quelles conditions et limites. A est faux car le certificat de navigabilité confirme que l'aéronef est conforme à son certificat de type, mais ne détaille pas les approbations opérationnelles spécifiques. C est faux car l'approbation pour la voltige est une exigence de certification formelle, et non une simple question de disposer d'un accéléromètre à bord. D est faux car l'enveloppe d'utilisation est contenue dans l'AFM, non dans un document distinct.
+
+### Q102: Où peut-on trouver les données relatives aux limites, au chargement et à l'exploitation d'un planeur ? ^t20q102
+- A) Dans le carnet de vol.
+- B) Dans les communications techniques (CT).
+- C) Dans le manuel de vol (AFM).
+- D) Dans le certificat de navigabilité.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le manuel de vol de l'aéronef (AFM) est le document réglementaire officiel qui contient toutes les limitations d'utilisation, les données de chargement (masse et centrage), les tableaux de performances et les procédures opérationnelles pour un type d'aéronef spécifique. A est faux car le carnet de vol enregistre les données de maintenance et l'historique des vols, non les limitations opérationnelles. B est faux car les communications techniques (bulletins de service) traitent des modifications ou des problèmes, non des données d'exploitation standard. D est faux car le certificat de navigabilité confirme le statut légal de navigabilité mais ne contient pas d'informations opérationnelles détaillées.
+
+### Q103: Quels instruments sont représentés dans le diagramme ci-dessous ? ^t20q103
+![[figures/t20_q103.png]]
+- A) Altimètre, anémomètre et variomètre netto.
+- B) Altimètre, anémomètre et variomètre à membrane.
+- C) Anémomètre, altimètre et variomètre à palette.
+- D) Anémomètre, altimètre et manomètre d'oxygène.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le diagramme montre, de gauche à droite, l'anémomètre (ASI), l'altimètre et un variomètre à palette — la disposition standard en « T de base » dans le cockpit d'un planeur. A et B inversent incorrectement l'ordre de l'ASI et de l'altimètre et identifient mal le type de variomètre. D est faux car un manomètre de pression d'oxygène est un instrument auxiliaire distinct généralement monté ailleurs, et ne fait pas partie de la disposition standard du tableau de bord de vol.
+
+### Q104: Quelle plage de vitesse l'arc blanc sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur représente-t-il ? ^t20q104
+- A) La vitesse de manœuvre.
+- B) La plage de vitesse par air calme (plage de prudence).
+- C) La plage de manœuvre (déflexion totale des commandes).
+- D) La plage d'utilisation des volets de courbure.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car sur l'ASI d'un planeur, l'arc blanc indique la plage de vitesse dans laquelle les volets de courbure (réglages positifs des volets) peuvent être déployés. Utiliser les volets hors de cette plage risque d'endommager la structure ou de provoquer des caractéristiques de maniabilité défavorables. A est faux car la vitesse de manœuvre est une valeur unique (VA), non un arc. B est faux car la plage de prudence par air calme est l'arc jaune. C est faux car la plage permettant la déflexion totale des commandes correspond à l'arc vert (jusqu'à VA/VNO).
+
+### Q105: L'anémomètre d'un planeur est défectueux. Dans quelle condition le planeur peut-il revoler ? ^t20q105
+- A) Uniquement pour un seul circuit d'aérodrome.
+- B) Si aucun organisme de maintenance n'est disponible à proximité.
+- C) Lorsque l'anémomètre a été réparé et est pleinement fonctionnel.
+- D) Si un GPS avec indication de vitesse est utilisé à la place.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car l'anémomètre est un instrument obligatoire minimal requis pour le vol. Le planeur ne peut reprendre le service qu'une fois l'ASI réparé ou remplacé et pleinement fonctionnel. A est faux car aucune disposition réglementaire ne permet de voler avec un instrument obligatoire défectueux, même pour un seul circuit. B est faux car l'indisponibilité d'un organisme de maintenance ne dispense pas des exigences de navigabilité. D est faux car l'indication de vitesse sol d'un GPS ne peut pas remplacer un ASI, qui mesure la vitesse indiquée basée sur la pression dynamique.
+
+### Q106: La charge utile minimale spécifiée dans la fiche de chargement n'a pas été atteinte. Que doit-on faire ? ^t20q106
+- A) Déplacer le trim en position avant.
+- B) Repositionner le siège du pilote pour un CG plus en avant.
+- C) Modifier l'incidence du stabilisateur horizontal.
+- D) Ajouter du lest (plomb) jusqu'à ce que la charge minimale soit atteinte.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car lorsque la charge utile minimale (généralement la charge minimale en cockpit) n'est pas atteinte, le CG peut se trouver hors de la limite arrière et le chargement alaire peut être inférieur au minimum certifié. L'ajout de lest en plomb à l'emplacement prescrit (généralement à l'avant) amène la charge totale à la valeur minimale requise et positionne le CG dans les limites. A est faux car le trim ajuste les efforts de commande mais ne modifie pas la masse ou le CG de l'aéronef. B est faux car la position du siège est fixe. C est faux car l'incidence du stabilisateur n'est pas ajustable en vol ni au sol par le pilote.
+
+### Q107: La masse maximale indiquée dans le manuel de vol a été dépassée. Qu'est-il requis ? ^t20q107
+- A) La vitesse maximale doit être réduite de 30 km/h.
+- B) La charge doit être redistribuée pour ne pas dépasser la masse maximale.
+- C) L'utilisation du planeur est interdite.
+- D) Régler le trim en position arrière.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la masse maximale est une limite de certification stricte basée sur la résistance structurale et la vitesse de décrochage. Lorsqu'elle est dépassée, l'aéronef n'est plus dans son enveloppe de vol certifiée et le vol est interdit jusqu'à ce que la surcharge soit retirée. A est faux car réduire la vitesse ne traite pas le risque de surcharge structurale. B est trompeur — la redistribution modifie la position du CG mais ne réduit pas la masse totale. D est faux car l'ajustement du trim n'a aucun rapport avec les limitations de masse.
+
+### Q108: Comment déplace-t-on le centre de gravité d'un planeur monoplace ? ^t20q108
+- A) En ajustant le trim de profondeur.
+- B) En modifiant l'angle d'attaque.
+- C) En changeant la charge en cockpit.
+- D) En modifiant l'angle d'incidence.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car dans un planeur monoplace, le seul moyen pratique de déplacer le CG est de modifier la masse dans le cockpit — en ajoutant ou en retirant du lest en plomb à des positions avant ou arrière, ou avec un pilote de poids différent. A est faux car le trim ajuste la déflexion de la gouverne de profondeur et les efforts de commande, non la répartition physique des masses. B est faux car l'angle d'attaque est un paramètre de vol aérodynamique, non un paramètre de chargement. D est faux car l'angle d'incidence est une caractéristique de conception fixe de l'aile et ne peut pas être modifié par le pilote.
+
+### Q109: Quelle position du centre de gravité est la plus dangereuse sur un planeur ? ^t20q109
+- A) Trop en avant.
+- B) Trop bas.
+- C) Trop haut.
+- D) Trop en arrière.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car un CG trop en arrière au-delà de la limite arrière réduit la stabilité longitudinale statique du planeur. À mesure que le CG se rapproche ou dépasse le point neutre, l'aéronef devient neutralement stable ou instable en tangage, rendant progressivement impossible la correction de toute perturbation de tangage. A est moins dangereux — un CG en avant augmente la stabilité mais peut limiter l'efficacité de la gouverne de profondeur pour l'arrondi. B et C ne sont pas des préoccupations standards dans l'analyse de masse et centrage du planeur.
+
+### Q110: Quelle plage de vitesse l'arc jaune sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur représente-t-il ? ^t20q110
+- A) La plage de manœuvre (déflexion totale des commandes).
+- B) La vitesse de manœuvre.
+- C) La plage d'utilisation des volets de courbure.
+- D) La plage de vitesse par air calme (plage de prudence).
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car l'arc jaune sur l'ASI d'un planeur marque la plage de prudence entre VNO (vitesse maximale de croisière structurale) et VNE (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser). Le vol dans cette plage de vitesse n'est autorisé qu'en air calme et non turbulent car les charges induites par les turbulences à ces vitesses pourraient dépasser les limites de conception structurale. A est faux car la déflexion totale des commandes n'est permise que jusqu'à VA (dans l'arc vert). B est faux car la vitesse de manœuvre est une valeur unique, non une plage. C est faux car la plage d'utilisation des volets est indiquée par l'arc blanc.
+
+### Q111: Quelle est la cause de l'erreur d'inclinaison sur un compas à lecture directe ? ^t20q111
+- A) Les variations de température.
+- B) L'inclinaison des lignes du champ magnétique terrestre.
+- C) La déviation dans le cockpit.
+- D) L'accélération de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre ne sont pas horizontales — elles plongent vers les pôles magnétiques à un angle qui augmente avec la latitude. Cette inclinaison fait pencher l'ensemble magnétique du compas, introduisant des erreurs lors des virages (erreur de virage nordique) et lors des accélérations/décélérations. A est faux car les variations de température affectent la viscosité du liquide du compas, non l'erreur d'inclinaison fondamentale. C est faux car la déviation est une erreur distincte causée par les matériaux ferromagnétiques dans le cockpit. D est faux car les erreurs d'accélération sont une conséquence de l'inclinaison, non la cause première.
+
+### Q112: Quelle couleur marque la zone de prudence sur un anémomètre ? ^t20q112
+- A) Vert.
+- B) Blanc.
+- C) Jaune.
+- D) Rouge.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le jaune marque la plage de prudence sur un anémomètre, s'étendant de VNO à VNE. Cette plage est réservée au vol par air calme uniquement. A (vert) marque la plage d'utilisation normale de VS1 à VNO. B (blanc) marque la plage d'utilisation des volets. D (rouge) est utilisé uniquement pour le trait radial VNE, non un arc. Le codage couleur est standardisé dans l'aviation pour garantir une reconnaissance immédiate.
+
+### Q113: Si le réglage de l'échelle de référence de l'altimètre est modifié de 1000 hPa à 1010 hPa, quelle différence d'altitude est affichée ? ^t20q113
+- A) La valeur dépend du QNH actuel.
+- B) Zéro.
+- C) 80 m de plus qu'avant.
+- D) 80 m de moins qu'avant.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car dans l'atmosphère type internationale, 1 hPa correspond à environ 8 mètres d'altitude près du niveau de la mer (la règle « 30 ft par hPa »). En augmentant le réglage de l'échelle de 10 hPa (de 1000 à 1010), l'altitude affichée augmente d'environ 10 × 8 = 80 mètres. B est faux car la lecture change bien. D est faux car l'augmentation du réglage QNH augmente, et non diminue, l'altitude affichée. A est faux car le facteur de conversion est fixé par le modèle ISA et ne dépend pas du QNH réel.
+
+### Q114: Lorsque l'échelle de référence de l'altimètre est réglée sur QFE, que montre l'instrument en vol ? ^t20q114
+- A) L'altitude-pression.
+- B) L'altitude au-dessus du niveau de la mer (MSL).
+- C) La hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome.
+- D) L'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le QFE est la pression atmosphérique mesurée au point de référence de l'aérodrome. Lorsque cette valeur est réglée sur l'échelle de l'altimètre, l'instrument indique zéro au sol sur cet aérodrome et indique la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome en vol. A est faux car l'altitude-pression nécessite un réglage de 1013,25 hPa. B est faux car l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer nécessite un réglage QNH. D est faux car l'altimètre affiche une lecture dynamique en vol, non l'altitude fixe de l'aérodrome.
+
+### Q115: Un variomètre connecté à un réservoir compensateur surdimensionné donne... ^t20q115
+- A) Aucune indication.
+- B) Une indication trop faible.
+- C) Une indication trop élevée.
+- D) Une surcharge mécanique.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car si le réservoir de compensation est surdimensionné, il stocke plus de pression que prévu, créant un différentiel de pression plus important à travers la restriction du variomètre lors des changements d'altitude. Cela amplifie la vitesse verticale indiquée, produisant une indication trop élevée (surlecture). A est faux car l'instrument fonctionnera quand même, mais de manière imprécise. B est faux car un réservoir surdimensionné provoque une surlecture, non une sous-lecture. D est faux car le réservoir surdimensionné ne crée pas de contrainte mécanique sur l'instrument.
+
+### Q116: Un variomètre mesure la différence entre... ^t20q116
+- A) La pression totale et la pression statique.
+- B) La pression statique instantanée et une pression statique précédente.
+- C) La pression dynamique et la pression totale.
+- D) La pression totale instantanée et une pression totale précédente.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car un variomètre compare la pression statique atmosphérique actuelle avec la pression retenue dans une chambre de référence connectée via une fuite calibrée. Lorsque l'altitude change, la pression statique instantanée diverge de la pression stockée (précédente), et ce différentiel entraîne l'indication. A est faux car la différence entre pression totale et pression statique est la pression dynamique, ce que mesure l'anémomètre. C et D sont faux car la pression totale et la pression dynamique ne sont pas utilisées dans le fonctionnement du variomètre.
+
+### Q117: Quel type de moteur est généralement utilisé dans les motoplaneurs de tourisme (TMG) ? ^t20q117
+- A) 4 cylindres, 2 temps.
+- B) Wankel 2 rotors.
+- C) 4 cylindres, 4 temps.
+- D) 2 cylindres diesel.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car les motoplaneurs de tourisme (TMG) sont généralement propulsés par des moteurs à pistons quatre cylindres quatre temps tels que les Rotax 912 ou la série Limbach, qui offrent un bon équilibre entre fiabilité, rapport puissance/poids et économie de carburant pour les vols motorisés prolongés. A est faux car les moteurs deux temps sont moins courants dans les TMG en raison d'une consommation de carburant plus élevée et d'une fiabilité moindre. B est faux car les moteurs rotatifs Wankel ne sont pas standards dans les types TMG certifiés. D est faux car les moteurs diesel deux cylindres manquent généralement de la puissance requise pour les opérations TMG.
+
+### Q118: Que signifie l'arc jaune sur l'anémomètre ? ^t20q118
+- A) Utilisation prudente des volets ou des freins pour éviter une surcharge.
+- B) La vitesse optimale lors du remorquage derrière un aéronef.
+- C) La zone où se trouve la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+- D) Vol uniquement par conditions calmes sans rafales pour éviter une surcharge.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car l'arc jaune sur l'ASI indique la plage de vitesse de prudence (VNO à VNE), dans laquelle le vol n'est autorisé qu'en air calme sans rafales. À ces vitesses plus élevées, les facteurs de charge induits par les turbulences pourraient dépasser les limites de conception structurale. A est faux car les plages d'utilisation des volets/freins sont indiquées par l'arc blanc. B est faux car les vitesses de remorquage aérien sont généralement dans l'arc vert. C est faux car la vitesse de meilleure finesse est un point unique, non associé à l'arc jaune.
+
+### Q119: En planeur stabilisé, un variomètre à énergie totale compensée indique la vitesse verticale... ^t20q119
+- A) Du planeur dans l'air environnant.
+- B) Du planeur diminuée du mouvement de l'air.
+- C) De la masse d'air dans laquelle on vole.
+- D) Du planeur augmentée du mouvement de l'air.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car un variomètre à compensation d'énergie totale élimine l'effet des changements de vitesse (échanges d'énergie cinétique) sur l'indication de vitesse verticale. En planeur stabilisé à vitesse constante, le variomètre TE indique le mouvement vertical de la masse d'air environnante — affichant zéro en air calme, ou la valeur réelle de thermique/affaissement en air en mouvement. A est faux car cela décrit un variomètre non compensé. B et D sont faux car le variomètre TE n'additionne pas ou ne soustrait pas le mouvement de la masse d'air de la vitesse verticale du planeur — il isole le mouvement de la masse d'air lui-même.
+
+### Q120: Lors d'un virage à droite, le fil de laine se déflecte vers la gauche. Quelle correction est nécessaire pour le recentrer ? ^t20q120
+- A) Plus d'inclinaison, moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage.
+- B) Plus d'inclinaison, plus de palonnier dans le sens du virage.
+- C) Moins d'inclinaison, moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage.
+- D) Moins d'inclinaison, plus de palonnier dans le sens du virage.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car lors d'un virage à droite, un fil de laine se déflectant vers la gauche indique que le nez glisse vers l'extérieur (virage en dérapage) — il y a insuffisamment de coordination au palonnier et peut-être trop d'inclinaison pour le taux de virage. Pour corriger cela, appliquer plus de palonnier droit (dans le sens du virage) pour ramener le nez, et réduire légèrement l'inclinaison pour diminuer la tendance au dérapage. A et C sont faux car ils demandent moins de palonnier, ce qui aggraverait le dérapage. B est faux car augmenter l'inclinaison accroîtrait la demande de force centripète et aggraverait le problème de coordination.
+
+### Q121: Quel type de défaut entraîne une perte de navigabilité ? ^t20q121
+- A) Bord d'attaque d'aile sale
+- B) Rayure sur la peinture extérieure
+- C) Dommage aux pièces porteuses
+- D) Fissure dans le plastique de la verrière
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La navigabilité d'un aéronef est fondamentalement déterminée par l'intégrité structurale des composants porteurs (longeron principal, fixation des ailes, cadres du fuselage, points de fixation du système de commande). Des dommages à ces pièces compromettent la capacité de l'aéronef à supporter les charges de vol et constituent une perte de navigabilité. Un bord d'attaque sale (A) réduit les performances mais n'est pas un défaut de navigabilité. Une verrière fissurée (D) et une rayure sur la peinture (B) sont des défauts cosmétiques ou mineurs qui n'affectent pas l'intégrité structurale.
+
+### Q122: La masse chargée sur l'aéronef est inférieure à la charge minimale requise par la fiche de chargement. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t20q122
+- A) Modifier la position du siège du pilote
+- B) Modifier l'angle d'incidence de la gouverne de profondeur
+- C) Charger du lest jusqu'à la charge minimale
+- D) Trimer l'aéronef en « piqué »
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La fiche de chargement (document de masse et centrage) spécifie une masse minimale de pilote pour s'assurer que le centre de gravité reste dans les limites approuvées. Si la masse effective du pilote est inférieure au minimum, du lest doit être ajouté (généralement dans la zone de lest spécifiée par le POH) pour amener la masse totale chargée à la valeur minimale requise. L'ajustement du trim (A, D) ne résout pas le problème sous-jacent de CG/masse, et la modification de la position du siège (B) n'est pas une mesure corrective standard pour un chargement insuffisant.
+
+### Q123: Le lest en eau augmente la charge alaire de 40 %. De quel pourcentage la vitesse minimale du planeur augmente-t-elle ? ^t20q123
+- A) 18 %
+- B) 200 %
+- C) 40 %
+- D) 100 %
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse minimale (vitesse de décrochage) est proportionnelle à la racine carrée de la charge alaire : Vs ∝ √(W/S). Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % (facteur 1,4), la vitesse de décrochage augmente de √1,4 ≈ 1,183, soit environ 18,3 %. Une augmentation de vitesse de 40 % (C) nécessiterait une augmentation de 96 % de la charge alaire, 100 % (D) nécessiterait un quadruplement de la charge alaire, et 200 % (B) est bien trop grand. Seule la relation par racine carrée donne environ 18 %.
+
+### Q124: La charge maximale selon la fiche de chargement a été dépassée. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t20q124
+- A) Trimer en « cabré »
+- B) Trimer en « piqué »
+- C) Réduire la charge
+- D) Augmenter la vitesse de 15 %
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si la masse chargée effective dépasse la masse maximale autorisée par la fiche de chargement, la seule mesure correcte est de réduire la charge (retirer du lest, du ballast en eau, des bagages, ou avoir un pilote plus léger). Dépasser la masse maximale signifie que les limites de charge structurale peuvent être atteintes à des facteurs de charge ou des vitesses plus faibles. L'augmentation de vitesse (D) ou l'ajustement du trim (A, B) ne résout pas le problème de surcharge structurale.
+
+### Q125: Qu'est-ce qu'un bord d'attaque raidisseur en torsion ? ^t20q125
+- A) Bord d'attaque planchéié des deux côtés (du bord au longeron) pour reprendre les efforts de torsion.
+- B) Le point où le moment de torsion sur une aile commence à diminuer.
+- C) Forme spéciale du bord d'attaque.
+- D) La partie du longeron principal pour reprendre les efforts de torsion.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un bord d'attaque raidisseur en torsion est une caractéristique structurale dans laquelle le bord d'attaque de l'aile (du bord d'attaque jusqu'au longeron principal) est planchéié (recouvert) sur les surfaces supérieure et inférieure, créant une section fermée en forme de D qui résiste aux charges de torsion (vrillage). Il ne s'agit pas d'un composant du longeron (D), ni d'un simple descripteur de forme (C), ni d'une référence à un point de distribution du moment de torsion (B).
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_126_137.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_126_137.md
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+### Q126: Where can information about maximum permissible airspeeds be found? ^t20q126
+- A) POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator
+- B) POH, cockpit panel, airspeed indicator
+- C) POH and posting in briefing room
+- D) Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maximum permissible airspeeds (VNE, VNO, etc.) are published in the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH/AFM), displayed on the cockpit instrument panel (placard), and indicated on the airspeed indicator by the red line (VNE) and arc markings. The AIP ENR (A) does not contain aircraft-specific speed limitations. Approach charts and VSI (B) do not show speed limits. The briefing room posting (C) is informal and not authoritative.
+
+### Q127: The airspeed indicator is unserviceable. The aircraft may only be operated... ^t20q127
+- A) When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.
+- B) If no maintenance organisation is available.
+- C) When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight.
+- D) If only aerodrome patterns are flown.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is a required instrument for safe flight; without it a pilot cannot determine safe operating speeds, stall speed, or structural speed limits. An inoperative airspeed indicator means the aircraft must remain on the ground until the instrument is serviceable. No exception exists for local aerodrome patterns (B) or GPS substitute (D — GPS ground speed is not equivalent to IAS for aerodynamic purposes). Absence of maintenance (A) is irrelevant to the operational requirement.
+
+### Q128: During a left turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. What rudder input can centre the string? ^t20q128
+- A) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- C) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a left turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the aircraft is slipping into the turn (too much bank relative to rudder input). To centre the string in a slip, the pilot needs to increase bank to steepen the turn and reduce rudder (less rudder in the turn direction). This is opposite to correcting a skid. Options B, C, and D use incorrect combinations for correcting a slip in a left turn.
+
+### Q129: What is the purpose of winglets? ^t20q129
+- A) Increase gliding performance at high speed.
+- B) Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities.
+- C) Reduction of induced drag.
+- D) Increase efficiency of aspect ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winglets are upward (or downward) curving extensions at the wingtip that reduce induced drag by weakening the wingtip vortex — the main source of induced drag on a finite wing. They do not primarily increase aspect ratio efficiency (A — though functionally similar, they are a different mechanism), are not specifically for high-speed performance (C), and do not increase lift or turning agility (D).
+
+### Q130: What does dynamic pressure depend directly on? ^t20q130
+- A) Air pressure and air temperature
+- B) Air density and lift coefficient
+- C) Air density and airflow speed squared
+- D) Lift and drag coefficient
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic pressure (q) is defined by Bernoulli's equation as q = ½ρv², where ρ is air density and v is airflow speed. Dynamic pressure depends directly on air density and the square of velocity. Lift and drag coefficients (A) are aerodynamic effects that depend on dynamic pressure, not the other way around. Air pressure and temperature (D) influence density indirectly but are not the direct parameters in the formula.
+
+### Q131: The airspeed indicator, altimeter and vertical speed indicator all display incorrect readings simultaneously. What could be the cause? ^t20q131
+- A) Failure of the electrical system.
+- B) Leakage in compensation vessel.
+- C) Blocking of static pressure lines.
+- D) Blocking of pitot tube.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vertical speed indicator are all connected to the static pressure port. If the static pressure system is blocked (e.g., by ice, water, or a cover left on), all three instruments will give erroneous readings simultaneously. A blocked pitot tube (C) would affect only the airspeed indicator. A leaking compensating vessel (B) affects only the VSI. An electrical failure (D) does not affect these purely pneumatic instruments.
+
+### Q132: When is it necessary to adjust the pressure on the altimeter's reference scale? ^t20q132
+- A) Every day before the first flight
+- B) Before every flight and during cross country flights
+- C) Once a month before flight operation
+- D) After maintenance has been finished
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter's reference pressure (subscale) must be set before every flight to the correct local QNH/QFE so that the altimeter reads the correct altitude or height. During cross-country flights, QNH changes as the pilot moves between pressure regions, so updates are required when crossing into new altimeter setting regions. Monthly (C) or only after maintenance (A) settings would result in significant altitude errors.
+
+### Q133: The term "inclination" is defined as... ^t20q133
+- A) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- B) Angle between the airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+- C) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- D) Angle between Earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's magnetic field vector and the horizontal plane at any given location. It is 0° at the magnetic equator and 90° at the magnetic poles. Deviation (A) is the error caused by magnetic fields within the aircraft. Magnetic variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and true north. Option D describes aircraft heading, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q134: As air density decreases, the airflow speed at stall increases (TAS) and vice versa. How should a final approach be flown on a hot summer day? ^t20q134
+- A) With decreased speed indication (IAS)
+- B) With additional speed according to the POH
+- C) With increased speed indication (IAS)
+- D) With unchanged speed indication (IAS)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures IAS (Indicated Airspeed), which is derived from dynamic pressure. At lower air density (hot day, high altitude), TAS is higher than IAS for the same dynamic pressure. The aerodynamic behaviour of the wing (lift, stall) depends on dynamic pressure (and thus IAS), not on TAS. Therefore stall occurs at the same IAS regardless of density. The approach should be flown at the same IAS as always (B). Adding speed (D) or reducing IAS (C) based on temperature alone is not correct for stall margin management with IAS.
+
+### Q135: The load factor n describes the relationship between... ^t20q135
+- A) Thrust and drag.
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Weight and thrust.
+- D) Lift and weight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor (n) is the ratio of the aerodynamic lift acting on the aircraft to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In level unaccelerated flight, n = 1. In turns or pull-ups, n increases. It does not describe weight/thrust (A), drag/lift (B), or thrust/drag (D) relationships.
+
+### Q136: The term static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q136
+- A) Sensed by the pitot tube.
+- B) Inside the airplane cabin.
+- C) Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.
+- D) Of undisturbed airflow.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the pressure of the undisturbed ambient airmass — the atmospheric pressure acting equally in all directions at a given altitude. It is sensed through flush static ports on the fuselage skin. It is not the cabin pressure (A), not related to orderly flow direction (C — that is dynamic pressure), and is not sensed by the pitot tube alone (D — the pitot senses total pressure).
+
+### Q137: The term inclination is defined as... ^t20q137
+- A) Angle between the airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+- B) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- C) Angle between Earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+- D) Angle between magnetic and true north.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's total magnetic field vector and the local horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator, field lines are horizontal (0° dip); at the poles, they are vertical (90° dip). Deviation (A) is caused by onboard magnetic interference. Variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and geographic north. Option D describes aircraft heading relative to true north.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_126_137_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_126_137_fr.md
new file mode 100644
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@@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
+### Q126: Où peut-on trouver des informations sur les vitesses maximales admissibles ? ^t20q126
+- A) POH, carte d'approche, variomètre
+- B) POH, tableau de bord du cockpit, anémomètre
+- C) POH et affichage dans la salle de briefing
+- D) Anémomètre, tableau de bord du cockpit et AIP partie ENR
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vitesses maximales admissibles (VNE, VNO, etc.) sont publiées dans le Manuel d'utilisation du pilote (POH/AFM), affichées sur le tableau de bord du cockpit (placard) et indiquées sur l'anémomètre par le trait rouge (VNE) et les arcs colorés. L'AIP ENR (D) ne contient pas les limitations de vitesse propres à un aéronef. Les cartes d'approche et le variomètre (A) n'indiquent pas les limites de vitesse. L'affichage en salle de briefing (C) est informel et n'est pas une référence faisant autorité.
+
+### Q127: L'anémomètre est hors service. L'aéronef ne peut être utilisé... ^t20q127
+- A) Que lorsque l'anémomètre est à nouveau pleinement fonctionnel.
+- B) Que si aucun organisme de maintenance n'est disponible.
+- C) Que lorsqu'un GPS avec indication de vitesse est utilisé en vol.
+- D) Que si uniquement des tours de piste sont effectués.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre est un instrument requis pour un vol en sécurité ; sans lui, le pilote ne peut pas déterminer les vitesses d'exploitation sûres, la vitesse de décrochage ou les limites de vitesse structurale. Un anémomètre hors service signifie que l'aéronef doit rester au sol jusqu'à ce que l'instrument soit en état de marche. Aucune exception n'existe pour les tours de piste locaux (D) ni pour un substitut GPS (C — la vitesse sol du GPS n'est pas équivalente à la VPI pour les besoins aérodynamiques). L'absence de maintenance (B) est sans rapport avec l'exigence opérationnelle.
+
+### Q128: Lors d'un virage à gauche, le fil de laine se déflecte vers la gauche. Quelle action au palonnier permet de recentrer le fil ? ^t20q128
+- A) Plus d'inclinaison, moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage
+- B) Moins d'inclinaison, moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage
+- C) Moins d'inclinaison, plus de palonnier dans le sens du virage
+- D) Plus d'inclinaison, plus de palonnier dans le sens du virage
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un virage à gauche, un fil de laine se déflectant vers la gauche indique que l'aéronef glisse vers l'intérieur du virage (trop d'inclinaison par rapport au palonnier). Pour recentrer le fil lors d'un glissement, le pilote doit augmenter l'inclinaison pour accentuer le virage et réduire le palonnier (moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage). C'est l'opposé de la correction d'un dérapage. Les options B, C et D utilisent des combinaisons incorrectes pour corriger un glissement dans un virage à gauche.
+
+### Q129: Quel est le but des winglets ? ^t20q129
+- A) Augmenter les performances en planeur à grande vitesse.
+- B) Augmenter la portance et les capacités de manœuvre en virage.
+- C) Réduction de la traînée induite.
+- D) Améliorer l'efficacité de l'allongement.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les winglets sont des extensions recourbées vers le haut (ou vers le bas) en extrémité d'aile qui réduisent la traînée induite en affaiblissant le tourbillon d'extrémité — la principale source de traînée induite sur une aile de longueur finie. Ils n'augmentent pas principalement l'efficacité de l'allongement (D — bien que fonctionnellement similaires, il s'agit d'un mécanisme différent), ne sont pas spécifiquement destinés à la performance à grande vitesse (A), et n'augmentent pas la portance ni l'agilité en virage (B).
+
+### Q130: De quoi dépend directement la pression dynamique ? ^t20q130
+- A) De la pression de l'air et de la température de l'air
+- B) De la densité de l'air et du coefficient de portance
+- C) De la densité de l'air et du carré de la vitesse de l'écoulement
+- D) Des coefficients de portance et de traînée
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression dynamique (q) est définie par l'équation de Bernoulli comme q = ½ρv², où ρ est la densité de l'air et v la vitesse de l'écoulement. La pression dynamique dépend directement de la densité de l'air et du carré de la vitesse. Les coefficients de portance et de traînée (D) sont des effets aérodynamiques qui dépendent de la pression dynamique, non l'inverse. La pression de l'air et la température (A) influencent la densité indirectement mais ne sont pas les paramètres directs de la formule.
+
+### Q131: L'anémomètre, l'altimètre et le variomètre affichent simultanément des indications incorrectes. Quelle pourrait en être la cause ? ^t20q131
+- A) Panne du système électrique.
+- B) Fuite dans le réservoir de compensation.
+- C) Obstruction des lignes de pression statique.
+- D) Obstruction du tube de Pitot.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre, l'altimètre et le variomètre sont tous connectés à la prise de pression statique. Si le système de pression statique est obstrué (par exemple par du givre, de l'eau ou un cache oublié), les trois instruments donneront simultanément des indications erronées. Un tube de Pitot obstrué (D) n'affecterait que l'anémomètre. Une fuite dans le réservoir de compensation (B) n'affecte que le variomètre. Une panne électrique (A) n'affecte pas ces instruments purement pneumatiques.
+
+### Q132: Quand est-il nécessaire d'ajuster la pression sur l'échelle de référence de l'altimètre ? ^t20q132
+- A) Chaque jour avant le premier vol
+- B) Avant chaque vol et lors des vols en campagne
+- C) Une fois par mois avant les opérations de vol
+- D) Après la fin d'une maintenance
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression de référence de l'altimètre (sous-échelle) doit être réglée avant chaque vol sur le QNH/QFE local correct afin que l'altimètre indique la bonne altitude ou hauteur. Lors de vols en campagne, le QNH change à mesure que le pilote se déplace entre des régions de pression différentes, des mises à jour sont donc nécessaires lors du passage dans de nouvelles zones de calage altimétrique. Des réglages mensuels (C) ou uniquement après maintenance (D) entraîneraient des erreurs d'altitude significatives.
+
+### Q133: Le terme « inclinaison » est défini comme... ^t20q133
+- A) Angle entre le nord magnétique et le nord vrai
+- B) Angle entre l'axe longitudinal de l'avion et le nord vrai.
+- C) Déviation induite par des champs électriques.
+- D) Angle entre les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre et le plan horizontal.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inclinaison magnétique (déclinaison verticale) est l'angle entre le vecteur du champ magnétique terrestre et le plan horizontal en un point donné. Elle est de 0° à l'équateur magnétique et de 90° aux pôles magnétiques. La déviation (C) est l'erreur causée par les champs magnétiques à l'intérieur de l'aéronef. La variation/déclinaison magnétique (A) est l'angle entre le nord magnétique et le nord vrai. L'option B décrit le cap de l'aéronef, ce qui est sans rapport.
+
+### Q134: Lorsque la densité de l'air diminue, la vitesse de l'écoulement au décrochage augmente (TAS) et vice versa. Comment doit-on effectuer une finale par une chaude journée d'été ? ^t20q134
+- A) Avec une indication de vitesse réduite (IAS)
+- B) Avec une vitesse supplémentaire selon le POH
+- C) Avec une indication de vitesse augmentée (IAS)
+- D) Avec une indication de vitesse inchangée (IAS)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre mesure la VPI (Vitesse Propre Indiquée), dérivée de la pression dynamique. À une densité d'air plus faible (journée chaude, haute altitude), la TAS est plus élevée que la VPI pour la même pression dynamique. Le comportement aérodynamique de l'aile (portance, décrochage) dépend de la pression dynamique (et donc de la VPI), non de la TAS. Par conséquent, le décrochage survient à la même VPI quelle que soit la densité. La finale doit être effectuée à la même VPI qu'habituellement (D). Ajouter de la vitesse (C) ou réduire la VPI (A) en se basant uniquement sur la température n'est pas correct pour la gestion de la marge de décrochage en VPI.
+
+### Q135: Le facteur de charge n décrit la relation entre... ^t20q135
+- A) La poussée et la traînée.
+- B) La traînée et la portance.
+- C) Le poids et la poussée.
+- D) La portance et le poids.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le facteur de charge (n) est le rapport de la portance aérodynamique agissant sur l'aéronef au poids de l'aéronef : n = L/W. En vol horizontal non accéléré, n = 1. Dans les virages ou les ressources, n augmente. Il ne décrit pas les relations poids/poussée (C), traînée/portance (B) ou poussée/traînée (A).
+
+### Q136: Le terme pression statique est défini comme la pression... ^t20q136
+- A) Mesurée par le tube de Pitot.
+- B) À l'intérieur de la cabine de l'avion.
+- C) Résultant de l'écoulement ordonné des particules d'air.
+- D) De l'écoulement d'air non perturbé.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression statique est la pression de la masse d'air ambiant non perturbée — la pression atmosphérique agissant de manière égale dans toutes les directions à une altitude donnée. Elle est mesurée via des prises statiques affleurantes sur la peau du fuselage. Il ne s'agit pas de la pression de la cabine (B), elle n'est pas liée à la direction de l'écoulement ordonné (C — c'est la pression dynamique), et elle n'est pas mesurée par le tube de Pitot seul (A — le tube de Pitot mesure la pression totale).
+
+### Q137: Le terme inclinaison est défini comme... ^t20q137
+- A) Angle entre l'axe longitudinal de l'avion et le nord vrai.
+- B) Déviation induite par des champs électriques.
+- C) Angle entre les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre et le plan horizontal.
+- D) Angle entre le nord magnétique et le nord vrai.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inclinaison magnétique (déclinaison verticale) est l'angle entre le vecteur total du champ magnétique terrestre et le plan horizontal local. À l'équateur magnétique, les lignes de champ sont horizontales (inclinaison 0°) ; aux pôles, elles sont verticales (inclinaison 90°). La déviation (B) est causée par des interférences magnétiques à bord. La variation/déclinaison (A) est l'angle entre le nord magnétique et le nord géographique. L'option D décrit le cap de l'aéronef par rapport au nord vrai.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_1_25.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_1_25.md
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+### Q1: In a glider cockpit, the levers colored red, blue, and green correspond to which controls? ^t20q1
+- A) Speed brakes, canopy lock, and landing gear.
+- B) Canopy hood release, speed brakes, and elevator trim.
+- C) Landing gear, speed brakes, and elevator trim tab.
+- D) Speed brakes, cable release, and elevator trim.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA standardises cockpit lever colours in gliders: red for the canopy hood (emergency) release, blue for speed brakes (airbrakes), and green for elevator trim. This colour coding ensures pilots can identify critical controls instantly under stress. Option A incorrectly assigns red to speed brakes and blue to the canopy lock. Option C incorrectly assigns red to landing gear. Option D incorrectly assigns red to speed brakes and blue to cable release.
+
+### Q2: Wing thickness is measured as the distance between the upper and lower surfaces of a wing at its... ^t20q2
+- A) Outermost section.
+- B) Thinnest cross-section.
+- C) Innermost section near the root.
+- D) Thickest cross-section.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing thickness is defined as the maximum perpendicular distance between the upper and lower wing surfaces, measured at the thickest part of the airfoil cross-section (typically 20-30% of chord from the leading edge). This is the aerodynamically and structurally significant measurement. Option A (outermost section) would measure near the wingtip where the profile is thinnest. Option B (thinnest cross-section) gives a minimal, less useful value. Option C (innermost/root) describes a spanwise location, not the airfoil thickness definition.
+
+### Q3: What is the term for a tubular steel framework with a non-load-bearing skin? ^t20q3
+- A) Monocoque construction.
+- B) Semi-monocoque construction.
+- C) Grid construction.
+- D) Honeycomb structure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grid (or truss/lattice) construction uses a framework of tubes or members to carry all structural loads, with the skin serving only as a fairing that does not contribute to structural strength. Option A (monocoque) is the opposite -- the skin carries all loads with no internal framework. Option B (semi-monocoque) uses both a frame and a load-bearing skin working together. Option D (honeycomb structure) is a core material used in sandwich panels, not a fuselage construction type.
+
+### Q4: What are the typical structural components of primary fuselage construction in wood or metal aircraft? ^t20q4
+- A) Girders, ribs, and stringers.
+- B) Ribs, frames, and covers.
+- C) Frames and stringers.
+- D) Covers, stringers, and forming parts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary structural members of a traditional fuselage are frames (also called formers or bulkheads, running circumferentially) and stringers (running longitudinally). Together they form the skeleton over which the skin is attached. Option A introduces "girders" which is non-standard fuselage terminology. Option B includes "ribs" which are wing components, not fuselage. Option D lists "covers" and "forming parts" which are not primary structural terms.
+
+### Q5: What is the name for a structure built from frames and stringers with a load-bearing skin? ^t20q5
+- A) Grid construction.
+- B) Honeycomb structure.
+- C) Wood or mixed construction.
+- D) Semi-monocoque construction.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Semi-monocoque construction uses both an internal framework (frames and stringers) AND a skin that actively bears structural loads (tension, compression, shear). This is the most common modern aircraft fuselage design. Option A (grid construction) has a non-load-bearing skin. Option B (honeycomb) is a material type, not a structural concept. Option C (wood/mixed) is a material classification, not a structural design.
+
+### Q6: What are the principal structural components of an aircraft's tail assembly? ^t20q6
+- A) Ailerons and elevator.
+- B) Horizontal tail and vertical tail.
+- C) Rudder and ailerons.
+- D) Steering wheel and pedals.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tail assembly (empennage) consists of two principal structural groups: the horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator, providing pitch stability and control) and the vertical tail (fin and rudder, providing yaw stability and control). Option A incorrectly includes ailerons, which are wing-mounted. Option C also incorrectly includes ailerons. Option D lists cockpit controls, not aircraft structure.
+
+### Q7: A sandwich structure is composed of two... ^t20q7
+- A) Thin layers bonded to a heavy core material.
+- B) Thick layers bonded to a lightweight core material.
+- C) Thick layers bonded to a heavy core material.
+- D) Thin layers bonded to a lightweight core material.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sandwich structure uses two thin, stiff face sheets (typically CFRP, glass fibre, or aluminium) bonded to a lightweight core (foam, balsa wood, or honeycomb). The thin skins carry bending loads while the light core resists shear and maintains separation, providing exceptional stiffness-to-weight ratio. Options A and C specify a heavy core, which defeats the weight-saving purpose. Options B and C specify thick layers, which add unnecessary mass.
+
+### Q8: Which structural elements define the aerodynamic profile shape of a wing? ^t20q8
+- A) Spar.
+- B) Planking.
+- C) Ribs.
+- D) Wingtip.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ribs are chordwise structural members that define the airfoil cross-section shape of the wing, running perpendicular to the spar. They establish the precise curvature of the upper and lower wing surfaces. Option A (spar) is the main spanwise load-bearing beam but does not define the profile shape. Option B (planking/skin) covers the structure but follows the shape determined by the ribs. Option D (wingtip) is the outer end of the wing, not a profile-shaping element.
+
+### Q9: The load factor "n" expresses the ratio between... ^t20q9
+- A) Thrust and drag.
+- B) Lift and weight.
+- C) Weight and thrust.
+- D) Drag and lift.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor n equals Lift divided by Weight (n = L/W). In straight and level flight, n = 1 (1g). In a banked turn, lift must exceed weight to maintain altitude -- for example, in a 60-degree bank, n = 2 (2g). Load factor is critical for glider structural design, as exceeding maximum positive or negative g-limits risks structural failure. Options A, C, and D describe unrelated force ratios.
+
+### Q10: What are the key benefits of sandwich construction? ^t20q10
+- A) Good formability combined with high temperature resistance.
+- B) Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength.
+- C) High temperature durability coupled with low weight.
+- D) High strength paired with good formability.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Sandwich construction excels at combining low weight with high stiffness, stability, and strength -- the ideal combination for aerospace applications. The bending stiffness increases dramatically when stiff face sheets are spaced apart by a lightweight core. Options A and C emphasise temperature resistance, which is not a primary advantage since most cores are temperature-sensitive. Option D focuses on formability, which is actually limited in sandwich construction.
+
+### Q11: Among the following materials, which one exhibits the greatest strength? ^t20q11
+- A) Wood.
+- B) Aluminium.
+- C) Carbon fiber reinforced plastic.
+- D) Magnesium.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon fibre reinforced plastic (CFRP) has exceptional strength-to-weight ratio with tensile strength exceeding steel at a fraction of the weight. Modern high-performance gliders are predominantly CFRP. Option B (aluminium) is strong but significantly weaker than CFRP. Option D (magnesium) is lighter than aluminium but lower in absolute strength. Option A (wood) has good specific strength but is the weakest in absolute terms among those listed.
+
+### Q12: The trim lever in a glider serves to... ^t20q12
+- A) Minimize adverse yaw effects.
+- B) Reduce the required stick force on the rudder.
+- C) Reduce the required stick force on the elevator.
+- D) Reduce the required stick force on the ailerons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trim system adjusts the elevator trim tab (or spring trim) to hold a desired pitch attitude without continuous pilot input on the control stick, reducing elevator stick force to zero at the trimmed speed. Option A (adverse yaw) is addressed by rudder coordination, not trim. Options B and D refer to rudder and aileron forces, which are not adjusted by the standard glider trim lever.
+
+### Q13: Structural damage to a fuselage may result from... ^t20q13
+- A) A stall occurring after the maximum angle of attack is exceeded.
+- B) Reducing airspeed below a certain threshold.
+- C) Flying faster than maneuvering speed in severe gusts.
+- D) Neutralizing stick forces appropriate to the current flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding manoeuvring speed (VA) in turbulent conditions can cause structural damage because gusts impose sudden load factors that may exceed the design limit. VA is the speed at which a full control deflection or maximum gust will not exceed the structural limit load. Option A (stall) is an aerodynamic event that does not damage structure. Option B (low airspeed) reduces loads. Option D (neutralising stick forces) does not create structural loads.
+
+### Q14: How many axes does an aircraft rotate about, and what are they called? ^t20q14
+- A) 4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil.
+- B) 3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis.
+- C) 3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis.
+- D) 4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft rotates about three principal axes passing through the centre of gravity: the longitudinal axis (nose to tail -- roll), the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip -- pitch), and the vertical axis (top to bottom -- yaw). Option B uses mathematical labels but omits aviation-specific names. Options A and D fabricate a non-existent fourth axis.
+
+### Q15: Rotation around the longitudinal axis is primarily produced by the... ^t20q15
+- A) Rudder.
+- B) Trim tab.
+- C) Elevator.
+- D) Ailerons.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons control roll -- rotation around the longitudinal axis. When one aileron deflects up and the other down, differential lift rolls the aircraft. Option A (rudder) controls yaw around the vertical axis. Option C (elevator) controls pitch around the lateral axis. Option B (trim tab) modifies control forces but is not a primary roll initiator.
+
+### Q16: On a small single-engine piston aircraft, how are the flight controls typically operated and connected? ^t20q16
+- A) Electrically via fly-by-wire systems.
+- B) Power-assisted via hydraulic pumps or electric motors.
+- C) Manually via rods and control cables.
+- D) Hydraulically via pumps and actuators.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Small piston aircraft and gliders use direct mechanical linkages -- push-pull rods and steel control cables -- to transmit pilot input directly to control surfaces. This is simple, lightweight, and reliable with no power source required. Option A (fly-by-wire) is used on modern airliners and military aircraft. Options B and D (hydraulic systems) are used on larger aircraft requiring greater control forces.
+
+### Q17: When left rudder is applied, what are the primary and secondary effects? ^t20q17
+- A) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the left.
+- B) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the right.
+- C) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the right.
+- D) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the left.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Left rudder primarily yaws the nose left around the vertical axis. The secondary effect is roll to the left: as the nose yaws left, the outer (right) wing moves faster and generates more lift while the inner (left) wing slows and generates less, creating a bank to the left. Options B and D have incorrect yaw direction. Option C has correct yaw but incorrect secondary roll direction.
+
+### Q18: What happens when the control stick or yoke is pulled rearward? ^t20q18
+- A) The tail produces an increased downward force, causing the nose to rise.
+- B) The tail produces an increased upward force, causing the nose to rise.
+- C) The tail produces a decreased upward force, causing the nose to drop.
+- D) The tail produces an increased downward force, causing the nose to drop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pulling back on the stick deflects the elevator upward, increasing the downward aerodynamic force on the tail. With the tail pushed down, the nose pivots up around the lateral axis through the centre of gravity. This seems counterintuitive but is correct: tail goes down, nose goes up. Option B incorrectly states the tail force is upward. Option C describes a forward stick input. Option D has the correct force but wrong nose direction.
+
+### Q19: Which of these lists contains all primary flight controls of an aircraft? ^t20q19
+- A) Flaps, slats, and speedbrakes.
+- B) All movable components on an aircraft that help control its flight.
+- C) Elevator, rudder, and aileron.
+- D) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift devices, and power controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The three primary flight controls are elevator (pitch), rudder (yaw), and aileron (roll). These directly control rotation about the aircraft's three axes. Option A lists secondary/high-lift devices only. Option B is too vague and includes secondary controls. Option D mixes primary with secondary controls (trim tabs, high-lift devices, power controls).
+
+### Q20: What function do secondary flight controls serve? ^t20q20
+- A) They serve as a backup system for the primary flight controls.
+- B) They enable the pilot to control the aircraft about its three axes.
+- C) They enhance performance characteristics and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces.
+- D) They improve turning characteristics at low speed during approach and landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Secondary flight controls (trim tabs, flaps, speedbrakes, slats) enhance aircraft performance and reduce pilot workload. Trim neutralises stick forces; flaps increase low-speed lift; speedbrakes manage descent rate. Option A is incorrect -- they are not backup systems. Option B describes primary controls. Option D is too narrow, covering only one aspect of flap function.
+
+### Q21: If the pilot moves the trim wheel or lever aft, what happens to the trim tab and the elevator? ^t20q21
+- A) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down.
+- B) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down.
+- C) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up.
+- D) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving trim aft commands nose-up trim. The trim tab deflects downward, generating an aerodynamic force that pushes the elevator trailing edge upward. The raised elevator pushes the tail down and raises the nose. Trim tabs always move opposite to the elevator: tab down causes elevator up. Options A and C have the tab moving up (nose-down trim). Option B has both moving down, which is mechanically impossible in a normal trim system.
+
+### Q22: In which direction does the trim tab deflect when trimming for nose-up? ^t20q22
+- A) It depends on the CG position.
+- B) It deflects upward.
+- C) In the direction of rudder deflection.
+- D) It deflects downward.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For nose-up trim, the trim tab deflects downward. The downward tab creates an aerodynamic force pushing the elevator trailing edge up, which holds the elevator in a nose-up position without pilot input. Option A (CG position) affects how much trim is needed but not the direction. Option B (upward) would produce nose-down trim. Option C (rudder direction) is unrelated to elevator trim operation.
+
+### Q23: The purpose of the trim system is to... ^t20q23
+- A) Lock the control surfaces in position.
+- B) Shift the centre of gravity.
+- C) Adjust the control force.
+- D) Increase adverse yaw.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Trim adjusts control forces so the pilot can fly hands-off at the trimmed speed and attitude. It neutralises the stick force to zero at the desired condition. Option A (lock surfaces) is incorrect -- trim holds an aerodynamic equilibrium, not a mechanical lock. Option B (shift CG) is wrong -- only physically moving mass changes CG. Option D (adverse yaw) is a roll-yaw coupling unrelated to trim.
+
+### Q24: The Pitot-static system is designed to... ^t20q24
+- A) Correct the airspeed indicator to show zero when the aircraft is stationary on the ground.
+- B) Prevent static electricity accumulation on the airframe.
+- C) Prevent ice formation on the Pitot tube.
+- D) Measure total air pressure and static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot-static system measures total pressure (from the Pitot tube facing the airflow) and static pressure (from flush static ports on the fuselage). These feed the ASI, altimeter, and variometer. Option A describes a consequence, not the purpose. Option B (static electricity) is an unrelated electrical phenomenon. Option C (ice prevention) is handled by optional Pitot heating, not the system's design purpose.
+
+### Q25: What type of pressure does the Pitot tube sense? ^t20q25
+- A) Static air pressure.
+- B) Total air pressure.
+- C) Cabin air pressure.
+- D) Dynamic air pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot tube faces into the airflow and senses total pressure (stagnation pressure), which equals static pressure plus dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 rho v-squared). Option A (static pressure) is measured by separate static ports. Option C (cabin pressure) is unrelated. Option D (dynamic pressure) is not measured directly by the Pitot tube -- it is derived by subtracting static from total pressure inside the ASI.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_1_25_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,249 @@
+### Q1: Dans le cockpit d'un planeur, les leviers colorés en rouge, bleu et vert correspondent à quelles commandes ? ^t20q1
+- A) Aérofreins, verrouillage de la verrière et train d'atterrissage.
+- B) Largage de la verrière, aérofreins et compensateur de profondeur.
+- C) Train d'atterrissage, aérofreins et compensateur de profondeur.
+- D) Aérofreins, largage du câble et compensateur de profondeur.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'AESA standardise le codage couleur des leviers dans les planeurs : rouge pour le largage d'urgence de la verrière, bleu pour les aérofreins (spoilers), et vert pour le compensateur de profondeur. Ce codage permet au pilote d'identifier instantanément les commandes critiques sous pression. L'option A attribue incorrectement le rouge aux aérofreins et le bleu au verrouillage de la verrière. L'option C attribue incorrectement le rouge au train d'atterrissage. L'option D attribue incorrectement le rouge aux aérofreins et le bleu au largage du câble.
+
+### Q2: L'épaisseur de l'aile est mesurée comme la distance entre les surfaces supérieure et inférieure de l'aile en son... ^t20q2
+- A) Tronçon le plus extérieur.
+- B) Section transversale la plus mince.
+- C) Tronçon le plus intérieur près de l'emplanture.
+- D) Section transversale la plus épaisse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'épaisseur d'une aile est définie comme la distance perpendiculaire maximale entre les surfaces supérieure et inférieure du profil, mesurée à la partie la plus épaisse de la section transversale (généralement entre 20 et 30 % de la corde depuis le bord d'attaque). C'est la mesure aérodynamiquement et structurellement significative. L'option A (tronçon le plus extérieur) mesurerait près de l'extrémité de l'aile, là où le profil est le plus mince. L'option B (section la plus mince) donne une valeur minimale, moins utile. L'option C (tronçon intérieur/emplanture) désigne un emplacement en envergure, non la définition de l'épaisseur du profil.
+
+### Q3: Quel est le terme désignant un cadre en acier tubulaire avec une peau non porteuse ? ^t20q3
+- A) Construction monocoque.
+- B) Construction semi-monocoque.
+- C) Construction en treillis.
+- D) Structure en nid d'abeilles.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La construction en treillis (ou treillage/lattice) utilise un cadre de tubes ou d'éléments pour reprendre toutes les charges structurelles, la peau servant uniquement de carénage sans contribuer à la résistance structurale. L'option A (monocoque) est l'opposé — la peau reprend toutes les charges sans cadre interne. L'option B (semi-monocoque) utilise à la fois un cadre et une peau porteuse travaillant ensemble. L'option D (nid d'abeilles) est un matériau d'âme utilisé dans les panneaux sandwichs, non un type de construction de fuselage.
+
+### Q4: Quels sont les composants structurels typiques d'une construction primaire de fuselage en bois ou en métal ? ^t20q4
+- A) Longerons, nervures et lisses.
+- B) Nervures, cadres et revêtements.
+- C) Cadres et lisses.
+- D) Revêtements, lisses et pièces de formage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les éléments structurels primaires d'un fuselage traditionnel sont les cadres (également appelés couples ou cloisons, disposés circonférentiellement) et les lisses (disposées longitudinalement). Ensemble, ils forment le squelette sur lequel est fixé le revêtement. L'option A introduit le terme « longerons », qui n'est pas une terminologie standard pour le fuselage. L'option B inclut les « nervures », qui sont des composants d'aile et non du fuselage. L'option D liste des « revêtements » et « pièces de formage » qui ne sont pas des termes structurels primaires.
+
+### Q5: Quel est le nom d'une structure construite à partir de cadres et de lisses avec un revêtement porteur ? ^t20q5
+- A) Construction en treillis.
+- B) Structure en nid d'abeilles.
+- C) Construction en bois ou mixte.
+- D) Construction semi-monocoque.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La construction semi-monocoque utilise à la fois un cadre interne (cadres et lisses) ET un revêtement qui reprend activement les charges structurelles (traction, compression, cisaillement). C'est la conception la plus courante des fuselages d'avions modernes. L'option A (construction en treillis) a un revêtement non porteur. L'option B (nid d'abeilles) est un type de matériau, non un concept structurel. L'option C (bois/mixte) est une classification de matériaux, non une conception structurale.
+
+### Q6: Quels sont les principaux composants structurels de l'empennage d'un aéronef ? ^t20q6
+- A) Ailerons et gouverne de profondeur.
+- B) Empennage horizontal et empennage vertical.
+- C) Gouverne de direction et ailerons.
+- D) Volant de commande et palonniers.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'empennage se compose de deux groupes structurels principaux : l'empennage horizontal (stabilisateur et gouverne de profondeur, assurant la stabilité et le contrôle en tangage) et l'empennage vertical (dérive et gouverne de direction, assurant la stabilité et le contrôle en lacet). L'option A inclut incorrectement les ailerons, qui sont montés sur l'aile. L'option C inclut également incorrectement les ailerons. L'option D liste des commandes de cockpit, non la structure de l'aéronef.
+
+### Q7: Une structure sandwich est composée de deux... ^t20q7
+- A) Couches minces collées à un matériau d'âme lourd.
+- B) Couches épaisses collées à un matériau d'âme léger.
+- C) Couches épaisses collées à un matériau d'âme lourd.
+- D) Couches minces collées à un matériau d'âme léger.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une structure sandwich utilise deux peaux minces et rigides (généralement en PRFC, fibre de verre ou aluminium) collées à une âme légère (mousse, balsa ou nid d'abeilles). Les peaux minces reprennent les charges de flexion tandis que l'âme légère résiste au cisaillement et maintient la séparation, offrant un rapport rigidité/poids exceptionnel. Les options A et C spécifient une âme lourde, ce qui annule le bénéfice de légèreté. Les options B et C spécifient des couches épaisses, qui ajoutent une masse inutile.
+
+### Q8: Quels éléments structurels définissent la forme du profil aérodynamique d'une aile ? ^t20q8
+- A) Le longeron.
+- B) Le planchéiage.
+- C) Les nervures.
+- D) L'extrémité d'aile.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les nervures sont des éléments structurels dans le sens de la corde qui définissent la forme transversale du profil aérodynamique de l'aile, perpendiculaires au longeron. Elles établissent la courbure précise des surfaces supérieure et inférieure de l'aile. L'option A (longeron) est la principale poutre porteuse dans le sens de l'envergure, mais ne définit pas la forme du profil. L'option B (planchéiage/revêtement) recouvre la structure mais suit la forme déterminée par les nervures. L'option D (extrémité d'aile) est l'extrémité extérieure de l'aile, non un élément de définition du profil.
+
+### Q9: Le facteur de charge « n » exprime le rapport entre... ^t20q9
+- A) La poussée et la traînée.
+- B) La portance et le poids.
+- C) Le poids et la poussée.
+- D) La traînée et la portance.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le facteur de charge n est égal à la portance divisée par le poids (n = L/W). En vol horizontal rectiligne, n = 1 (1g). En virage incliné, la portance doit dépasser le poids pour maintenir l'altitude — par exemple, à 60° d'inclinaison, n = 2 (2g). Le facteur de charge est essentiel pour la conception structurelle du planeur, car dépasser les limites de g positif ou négatif maximales risque une rupture structurale. Les options A, C et D décrivent des rapports de forces sans rapport.
+
+### Q10: Quels sont les principaux avantages de la construction sandwich ? ^t20q10
+- A) Bonne formabilité combinée à une haute résistance aux températures.
+- B) Faible poids, haute rigidité, haute stabilité et haute résistance.
+- C) Durabilité aux hautes températures associée à un faible poids.
+- D) Haute résistance associée à une bonne formabilité.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La construction sandwich excelle dans la combinaison d'un faible poids avec une haute rigidité, stabilité et résistance — la combinaison idéale pour les applications aéronautiques. La rigidité en flexion augmente considérablement lorsque des peaux rigides sont écartées par une âme légère. Les options A et C mettent l'accent sur la résistance aux températures, qui n'est pas un avantage primaire, la plupart des âmes étant sensibles aux températures élevées. L'option D se concentre sur la formabilité, qui est en réalité limitée dans la construction sandwich.
+
+### Q11: Parmi les matériaux suivants, lequel présente la plus grande résistance ? ^t20q11
+- A) Le bois.
+- B) L'aluminium.
+- C) Le plastique renforcé de fibres de carbone.
+- D) Le magnésium.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le plastique renforcé de fibres de carbone (PRFC) possède un rapport résistance/poids exceptionnel, avec une résistance à la traction dépassant celle de l'acier pour une fraction du poids. Les planeurs hautes performances modernes sont principalement en PRFC. L'option B (aluminium) est résistant mais nettement plus faible que le PRFC. L'option D (magnésium) est plus léger que l'aluminium mais d'une résistance absolue inférieure. L'option A (bois) a une bonne résistance spécifique mais est le plus faible en termes absolus parmi ceux listés.
+
+### Q12: Le levier de trim dans un planeur sert à... ^t20q12
+- A) Minimiser les effets de lacet induit.
+- B) Réduire la force de manche nécessaire sur la gouverne de direction.
+- C) Réduire la force de manche nécessaire sur la gouverne de profondeur.
+- D) Réduire la force de manche nécessaire sur les ailerons.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le système de trim ajuste le tab de compensateur de profondeur (ou trim à ressort) pour maintenir une assiette en tangage souhaitée sans effort continu du pilote sur le manche, réduisant à zéro la force sur la gouverne de profondeur à la vitesse trimée. L'option A (lacet induit) est traité par la coordination du palonnier, non par le trim. Les options B et D font référence aux forces sur la gouverne de direction et les ailerons, qui ne sont pas ajustées par le levier de trim standard du planeur.
+
+### Q13: Des dommages structurels au fuselage peuvent résulter de... ^t20q13
+- A) Un décrochage survenant après le dépassement de l'angle d'attaque maximal.
+- B) Une réduction de la vitesse en dessous d'un certain seuil.
+- C) Un vol plus rapide que la vitesse de manœuvre lors de rafales sévères.
+- D) La neutralisation des forces de manche adaptées à la condition de vol actuelle.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dépasser la vitesse de manœuvre (VA) dans des conditions turbulentes peut provoquer des dommages structurels car les rafales imposent des facteurs de charge soudains susceptibles de dépasser la limite de conception. VA est la vitesse à laquelle une déflection totale de la commande ou une rafale maximale ne dépassera pas la charge limite structurale. L'option A (décrochage) est un événement aérodynamique qui n'endommage pas la structure. L'option B (faible vitesse) réduit les charges. L'option D (neutralisation des forces de manche) ne crée pas de charges structurelles.
+
+### Q14: Autour de combien d'axes un aéronef tourne-t-il, et comment s'appellent-ils ? ^t20q14
+- A) 4 ; axe optique, axe imaginaire, axe affaissé, axe du mal.
+- B) 3 ; axe x, axe y, axe z.
+- C) 3 ; axe vertical, axe latéral, axe longitudinal.
+- D) 4 ; axe vertical, axe latéral, axe longitudinal, axe de vitesse.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un aéronef tourne autour de trois axes principaux passant par le centre de gravité : l'axe longitudinal (nez à la queue — roulis), l'axe latéral (d'un saumon à l'autre — tangage), et l'axe vertical (de haut en bas — lacet). L'option B utilise des étiquettes mathématiques mais omet les dénominations spécifiques à l'aviation. Les options A et D inventent un quatrième axe inexistant.
+
+### Q15: La rotation autour de l'axe longitudinal est principalement produite par... ^t20q15
+- A) La gouverne de direction.
+- B) Le tab de compensateur.
+- C) La gouverne de profondeur.
+- D) Les ailerons.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les ailerons contrôlent le roulis — la rotation autour de l'axe longitudinal. Lorsqu'un aileron se déplace vers le haut et l'autre vers le bas, la portance différentielle fait rouler l'aéronef. L'option A (gouverne de direction) contrôle le lacet autour de l'axe vertical. L'option C (gouverne de profondeur) contrôle le tangage autour de l'axe latéral. L'option B (tab de compensateur) modifie les forces de commande mais n'est pas un initiateur primaire du roulis.
+
+### Q16: Sur un petit aéronef monomoteur à piston, comment les commandes de vol sont-elles généralement actionnées et connectées ? ^t20q16
+- A) Électriquement via des systèmes fly-by-wire.
+- B) Assistées par des pompes hydrauliques ou des moteurs électriques.
+- C) Manuellement via des bielles et des câbles de commande.
+- D) Hydrauliquement via des pompes et des actionneurs.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les petits avions à piston et les planeurs utilisent des liaisons mécaniques directes — bielles et câbles d'acier — pour transmettre directement l'entrée du pilote aux surfaces de contrôle. C'est simple, léger et fiable, sans source d'énergie requise. L'option A (fly-by-wire) est utilisée sur les avions de ligne modernes et les aéronefs militaires. Les options B et D (systèmes hydrauliques) sont utilisées sur les aéronefs plus grands nécessitant des efforts de commande plus importants.
+
+### Q17: Lorsque le palonnier gauche est actionné, quels sont les effets primaire et secondaire ? ^t20q17
+- A) Primaire : lacet à gauche ; Secondaire : roulis à gauche.
+- B) Primaire : lacet à droite ; Secondaire : roulis à droite.
+- C) Primaire : lacet à gauche ; Secondaire : roulis à droite.
+- D) Primaire : lacet à droite ; Secondaire : roulis à gauche.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le palonnier gauche fait principalement laceter le nez vers la gauche autour de l'axe vertical. L'effet secondaire est un roulis vers la gauche : lorsque le nez lace à gauche, l'aile extérieure (droite) se déplace plus vite et génère plus de portance tandis que l'aile intérieure (gauche) ralentit et en génère moins, créant une inclinaison vers la gauche. Les options B et D ont une direction de lacet incorrecte. L'option C a le lacet correct mais la direction du roulis secondaire incorrecte.
+
+### Q18: Que se passe-t-il lorsque le manche ou le volant est tiré vers l'arrière ? ^t20q18
+- A) L'empennage produit une force vers le bas accrue, faisant monter le nez.
+- B) L'empennage produit une force vers le haut accrue, faisant monter le nez.
+- C) L'empennage produit une force vers le haut réduite, faisant descendre le nez.
+- D) L'empennage produit une force vers le bas accrue, faisant descendre le nez.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tirer le manche vers l'arrière déflecte la gouverne de profondeur vers le haut, augmentant la force aérodynamique vers le bas sur l'empennage. Avec la queue poussée vers le bas, le nez pivote vers le haut autour de l'axe latéral passant par le centre de gravité. Cela peut sembler contre-intuitif mais est correct : la queue descend, le nez monte. L'option B indique incorrectement que la force sur l'empennage est vers le haut. L'option C décrit une entrée de manche vers l'avant. L'option D a la bonne force mais la mauvaise direction du nez.
+
+### Q19: Laquelle de ces listes contient toutes les commandes de vol primaires d'un aéronef ? ^t20q19
+- A) Volets, becs et aérofreins.
+- B) Tous les composants mobiles d'un aéronef qui aident à contrôler son vol.
+- C) Gouverne de profondeur, gouverne de direction et ailerons.
+- D) Gouverne de profondeur, gouverne de direction, ailerons, tabs de compensateur, dispositifs hypersustentateurs et commandes de puissance.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les trois commandes de vol primaires sont la gouverne de profondeur (tangage), la gouverne de direction (lacet) et les ailerons (roulis). Elles contrôlent directement la rotation autour des trois axes de l'aéronef. L'option A liste uniquement des dispositifs secondaires/hypersustentateurs. L'option B est trop vague et inclut les commandes secondaires. L'option D mélange les commandes primaires et secondaires (tabs de compensateur, dispositifs hypersustentateurs, commandes de puissance).
+
+### Q20: Quelle fonction remplissent les commandes de vol secondaires ? ^t20q20
+- A) Elles servent de système de secours pour les commandes de vol primaires.
+- B) Elles permettent au pilote de contrôler l'aéronef autour de ses trois axes.
+- C) Elles améliorent les caractéristiques de performance et soulagent le pilote des efforts de commande excessifs.
+- D) Elles améliorent les caractéristiques de virage à basse vitesse lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les commandes de vol secondaires (tabs de compensateur, volets, aérofreins, becs) améliorent les performances de l'aéronef et réduisent la charge de travail du pilote. Le trim neutralise les efforts de manche ; les volets augmentent la portance à basse vitesse ; les aérofreins gèrent le taux de descente. L'option A est incorrecte — elles ne sont pas des systèmes de secours. L'option B décrit les commandes primaires. L'option D est trop étroite, ne couvrant qu'un seul aspect de la fonction des volets.
+
+### Q21: Si le pilote déplace la molette ou le levier de trim vers l'arrière, que se passe-t-il avec le tab de compensateur et la gouverne de profondeur ? ^t20q21
+- A) Le tab monte, la gouverne de profondeur descend.
+- B) Le tab descend, la gouverne de profondeur descend.
+- C) Le tab monte, la gouverne de profondeur monte.
+- D) Le tab descend, la gouverne de profondeur monte.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Déplacer le trim vers l'arrière commande un trim à cabrer. Le tab de compensateur se déflecte vers le bas, générant une force aérodynamique qui pousse le bord de fuite de la gouverne de profondeur vers le haut. La gouverne de profondeur relevée pousse la queue vers le bas et relève le nez. Les tabs se déplacent toujours en sens inverse de la gouverne : tab en bas provoque gouverne en haut. Les options A et C ont le tab montant (trim à piquer). L'option B a les deux descendant, ce qui est mécaniquement impossible dans un système de trim normal.
+
+### Q22: Dans quelle direction le tab de compensateur se déflecte-t-il lorsqu'on trime à cabrer ? ^t20q22
+- A) Cela dépend de la position du CG.
+- B) Il se déflecte vers le haut.
+- C) Dans le sens de la déflection de la gouverne de direction.
+- D) Il se déflecte vers le bas.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un trim à cabrer, le tab de compensateur se déflecte vers le bas. Le tab abaissé crée une force aérodynamique poussant le bord de fuite de la gouverne de profondeur vers le haut, maintenant la gouverne en position à cabrer sans entrée du pilote. L'option A (position du CG) affecte la quantité de trim nécessaire mais pas la direction. L'option B (vers le haut) produirait un trim à piquer. L'option C (sens de la gouverne de direction) est sans rapport avec le fonctionnement du trim de profondeur.
+
+### Q23: L'objectif du système de trim est de... ^t20q23
+- A) Bloquer les surfaces de contrôle en position.
+- B) Déplacer le centre de gravité.
+- C) Ajuster l'effort de commande.
+- D) Augmenter le lacet induit.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le trim ajuste les efforts de commande afin que le pilote puisse voler mains libres à la vitesse et à l'assiette trimées. Il neutralise l'effort de manche à zéro pour la condition souhaitée. L'option A (bloquer les surfaces) est incorrecte — le trim maintient un équilibre aérodynamique, non un blocage mécanique. L'option B (déplacer le CG) est fausse — seul le déplacement physique de masse modifie le CG. L'option D (lacet induit) est un couplage roulis-lacet sans rapport avec le trim.
+
+### Q24: Le système Pitot-statique est conçu pour... ^t20q24
+- A) Corriger l'indicateur de vitesse pour afficher zéro lorsque l'aéronef est immobile au sol.
+- B) Prévenir l'accumulation d'électricité statique sur la cellule.
+- C) Prévenir la formation de glace sur le tube de Pitot.
+- D) Mesurer la pression totale de l'air et la pression statique de l'air.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le système Pitot-statique mesure la pression totale (depuis le tube de Pitot orienté dans l'écoulement) et la pression statique (depuis les prises statiques affleurantes sur le fuselage). Ces mesures alimentent l'anémomètre, l'altimètre et le variomètre. L'option A décrit une conséquence, non la finalité. L'option B (électricité statique) est un phénomène électrique sans rapport. L'option C (protection contre la glace) est assurée par le chauffage optionnel du tube de Pitot, non par la conception du système lui-même.
+
+### Q25: Quel type de pression le tube de Pitot mesure-t-il ? ^t20q25
+- A) La pression statique de l'air.
+- B) La pression totale de l'air.
+- C) La pression d'air de la cabine.
+- D) La pression dynamique de l'air.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le tube de Pitot est orienté dans l'écoulement et mesure la pression totale (pression de stagnation), qui est égale à la pression statique plus la pression dynamique (q = ½ρv²). L'option A (pression statique) est mesurée par des prises statiques séparées. L'option C (pression cabine) est sans rapport. L'option D (pression dynamique) n'est pas mesurée directement par le tube de Pitot — elle est obtenue en soustrayant la pression statique de la pression totale à l'intérieur de l'anémomètre.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_26_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_26_50.md
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index 0000000..d611979
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_26_50.md
@@ -0,0 +1,290 @@
+### Q26: QFE refers to the... ^t20q26
+- A) Barometric pressure corrected to sea level using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).
+- B) Altitude referenced to the 1013.25 hPa pressure level.
+- C) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield.
+- D) Magnetic bearing to a station.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at a specific reference point, typically the runway threshold. Setting QFE on the altimeter causes it to read zero on the ground at the aerodrome, showing height above the field during flight. Option A describes QNH (sea level corrected pressure). Option B describes the flight level datum (1013.25 hPa). Option D describes QDM/QDR radio navigation terminology.
+
+### Q27: What is the function of the altimeter subscale? ^t20q27
+- A) To correct the altimeter for instrument system errors.
+- B) To set the reference datum for the transponder altitude encoder.
+- C) To reference the altimeter reading to a chosen level such as mean sea level, aerodrome elevation, or the 1013.25 hPa pressure surface.
+- D) To compensate the altimeter reading for non-standard temperatures.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale (Kollsman window) lets the pilot set a reference pressure: QNH for altitude above sea level, QFE for height above the airfield, or 1013.25 hPa for flight levels. Option A (system errors) requires calibration, not subscale adjustment. Option B (transponder encoder) operates on standard pressure independently. Option D (temperature correction) requires a separate mathematical calculation.
+
+### Q28: How can an altimeter subscale set to an incorrect QNH lead to a dangerous altimeter error? ^t20q28
+- A) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+- B) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- C) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- D) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Setting a higher pressure than actual QNH causes the altimeter to over-read -- it shows a higher altitude than the aircraft's true position. The aircraft is actually closer to the ground than indicated, creating a dangerous terrain clearance illusion. The memory aid: "High to Low, look out below." Options A and B incorrectly describe the effect of a low pressure setting. Option D reverses the consequence of a high setting.
+
+### Q29: A temperature lower than the ISA standard may cause... ^t20q29
+- A) An altitude reading that is too high.
+- B) A correct altitude reading provided the subscale is set for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude reading that is too low.
+- D) Pitot tube icing that freezes the altimeter at its current value.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-standard air, the atmosphere is denser and pressure drops faster with altitude than ISA assumes. The altimeter over-reads, indicating a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual position -- the pilot is lower than they think. "Cold air = lower than you think." Option B is wrong because altimeter subscales cannot correct for temperature. Option C reverses the error. Option D describes an icing issue separate from temperature-induced altimeter error.
+
+### Q30: A flight level is a... ^t20q30
+- A) True altitude.
+- B) Pressure altitude.
+- C) Density altitude.
+- D) Altitude above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight level is a pressure altitude expressed in hundreds of feet with the altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa (standard pressure). FL100 = 10,000 ft on standard setting. All aircraft above the transition altitude use this common datum for vertical separation regardless of local pressure variations. Option A (true altitude) is actual MSL height. Option C (density altitude) is a performance calculation parameter. Option D (above ground) is height AGL.
+
+### Q31: True altitude is defined as... ^t20q31
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.
+- B) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is the actual geometric height of the aircraft above mean sea level (MSL), obtained by correcting indicated altitude for deviations from the ISA temperature profile. The altimeter assumes standard ISA conditions; when actual temperature differs, the indicated reading diverges from the real MSL height. A and D are wrong because true altitude is referenced to MSL, not above ground level (AGL). B mentions temperature correction but is imprecise — true altitude is the actual MSL height, not merely a pressure altitude with a temperature factor applied. Only C correctly defines true altitude.
+
+---
+
+### Q32: When flying in air colder than ISA, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q32
+- A) Equal to the standard altitude.
+- B) Lower than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Higher than the true altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-ISA air the atmosphere is denser, so pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude than the altimeter assumes. The altimeter therefore over-reads and shows a higher value than the aircraft's actual MSL height — the aircraft is physically lower than the instrument indicates. This is a serious terrain clearance hazard, summarized by the memory aid "High to low (temperature), look out below." B states the opposite of what occurs. A and C only apply under exact ISA conditions. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q33: When flying in an air mass at ISA temperature with the correct QNH set, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q33
+- A) Lower than the true altitude.
+- B) Higher than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Equal to the standard atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter is calibrated to the ISA standard temperature lapse rate. When the actual temperature exactly matches ISA and the correct QNH is set, all instrument assumptions are perfectly met and no error exists — indicated altitude equals true altitude. This is the ideal baseline condition from which deviations introduce errors. A and B describe situations with non-standard temperature or pressure. D is vague and not a meaningful statement about the altimeter reading. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q34: Which instrument is susceptible to hysteresis error? ^t20q34
+- A) Vertical speed indicator.
+- B) Direct reading compass.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Tachometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hysteresis error affects the altimeter because its aneroid capsules — thin elastic bellows that expand and contract with pressure changes — do not return to exactly the same position when pressure is restored to a previously experienced value. This mechanical lag means the altimeter may show slightly different readings at the same altitude when climbing versus descending. A (VSI), B (compass), and D (tachometer) do not rely on elastic aneroid capsules for their primary measurement and are therefore not subject to this specific error. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q35: Altitude measurement relies on changes in which type of pressure? ^t20q35
+- A) Total pressure.
+- B) Differential pressure.
+- C) Static pressure.
+- D) Dynamic pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure that decreases predictably with altitude according to the ISA model. The altimeter senses this pressure via the static port and converts it to an altitude reading using calibrated aneroid capsules. A (total pressure) equals static plus dynamic and is measured by the Pitot tube for airspeed. B (differential pressure) is the difference between total and static, which drives the ASI. D (dynamic pressure) depends on airspeed and has no role in altitude measurement. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q36: How does a vertical speed indicator work? ^t20q36
+- A) It measures total air pressure and compares it to static pressure.
+- B) It compares the current static air pressure against the static pressure stored in a reservoir.
+- C) It measures vertical acceleration using a gimbal-mounted mass.
+- D) It measures static air pressure and compares it against a vacuum.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI detects rate of climb or descent by comparing current static pressure (from the static port) against a reference pressure stored in an internal reservoir that communicates via a calibrated leak. When climbing, static pressure drops faster than the reservoir can equalize, creating a pressure difference that deflects the pointer proportional to climb rate. A describes the ASI operating principle (total minus static = dynamic). C describes an accelerometer. D describes a barometer, which cannot indicate a rate of change. Only B correctly explains VSI operation.
+
+---
+
+### Q37: The vertical speed indicator compares the pressure difference between... ^t20q37
+- A) The current dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure from a moment earlier.
+- B) The current static pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+- C) The current total pressure and the total pressure from a moment earlier.
+- D) The current dynamic pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI senses only static pressure, which changes as altitude changes. It compares the instantaneous static pressure arriving through the static port with the slightly delayed static pressure stored in the metering reservoir behind the calibrated restriction. The rate of pressure change indicates the rate of altitude change. A, C, and D all involve dynamic or total pressure, which are Pitot-tube quantities used for airspeed measurement and play no role in the VSI. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q38: An aircraft flies on a heading of 180° at 100 kt TAS. The wind blows from 180° at 30 kt. Ignoring instrument and position errors, what will the airspeed indicator approximately show? ^t20q38
+- A) 70 kt
+- B) 130 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 100 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass, not relative to the ground. The aircraft moves through the air at 100 kt TAS, so the ASI shows 100 kt regardless of wind. A wind from 180° on a heading of 180° is a headwind, reducing ground speed to 70 kt — that is A, but ground speed is not what the ASI reads. B (130 kt) would only apply with a 30 kt tailwind. C (30 kt) is merely the wind speed, irrelevant to the ASI. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q39: What principle does the airspeed indicator use to determine speed? ^t20q39
+- A) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum.
+- B) Dynamic air pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube and converted directly into a speed reading.
+- C) Total air pressure is sensed by the static ports and converted into speed.
+- D) Total air pressure is compared against static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI compares total pressure from the Pitot tube (which captures all air pressure including the motion component) against static pressure from the static port (ambient pressure only). The difference is dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), proportional to airspeed squared — the expanding capsule converts this into an IAS reading. A describes a simple barometer. B is incorrect because the Pitot tube measures total pressure, not pure dynamic pressure. C wrongly attributes total pressure measurement to the static ports. Only D correctly describes ASI operation.
+
+---
+
+### Q40: Red lines on instrument displays typically mark which values? ^t20q40
+- A) Recommended operating ranges.
+- B) Caution areas.
+- C) Operational limits.
+- D) Normal operating areas.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red radial marks on aircraft instruments indicate absolute operational limits that must never be exceeded — such as VNE (never-exceed speed) on the ASI. These represent structural or aerodynamic boundaries beyond which catastrophic failure or loss of control may occur. B (caution areas) are indicated by yellow arcs, covering the speed range between maneuvering speed and VNE where smooth air is required. D (normal operating range) is shown by a green arc. A ("recommended operating ranges") is not a standard instrument marking. Only C correctly defines the red line.
+
+---
+
+### Q41: To determine indicated airspeed (IAS), the airspeed indicator requires... ^t20q41
+- A) The difference between total pressure and dynamic pressure.
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure.
+- C) The difference between standard pressure and total pressure.
+- D) The difference between dynamic pressure and static pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is derived from dynamic pressure, which equals total pressure (Pitot tube) minus static pressure (static port). The ASI capsule deflects in proportion to this pressure difference and the needle indicates IAS. A (total minus dynamic) would yield static pressure alone — not useful for airspeed. C (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for airspeed. D (dynamic minus static) is not a meaningful Pitot-static quantity since dynamic pressure is not independently measured at a single port. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q42: What does the red line on an airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q42
+- A) A speed limit in turbulent conditions.
+- B) The maximum speed with flaps deployed.
+- C) A speed that must never be exceeded under any circumstances.
+- D) The maximum speed in turns exceeding 45° bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red line marks VNE — Velocity Never Exceed — the absolute structural speed limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, including smooth air. Beyond VNE, the risk of aeroelastic flutter or catastrophic structural failure is unacceptable. A describes the upper boundary of the yellow arc (caution range), where turbulence must be avoided. B describes VFE (flap extension speed), marked by the top of the white arc. D does not correspond to any standard ASI color marking. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q43: The compass error produced by the aircraft's own magnetic field is known as... ^t20q43
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the compass error caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields — from steel structures, electrical wiring, and electronic equipment on board. It varies with the aircraft's heading and is tabulated on the compass deviation card after a compass swing. A (variation) and C (declination) are two names for the same geographic phenomenon: the angle between true north and magnetic north at any given location on Earth — this is not caused by the aircraft. D (inclination) refers to the vertical dip angle of Earth's magnetic field, which causes turning and acceleration errors. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q44: What errors cause a magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north? ^t20q44
+- A) Variation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+- B) Gravity and magnetism.
+- C) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field.
+- D) Deviation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Three instrument errors cause the magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north: deviation (from the aircraft's own magnetic fields), turning errors (the compass card tilts due to magnetic dip during turns, especially on northerly/southerly headings), and acceleration errors (speed changes on easterly/westerly headings produce false readings due to the same dip effect). A incorrectly includes variation, which is a geographic property of Earth, not an instrument error. B is too vague. C lists physical properties of Earth's field rather than specific instrument errors. Only D correctly names all three.
+
+---
+
+### Q45: Which cockpit instrument receives input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q45
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Direct-reading compass.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Vertical speed indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Only the airspeed indicator is connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies total pressure as one of the two inputs needed to compute IAS. A (altimeter) and D (VSI) are connected only to the static port — they measure changes in static pressure for altitude and climb/descent rate. B (direct-reading compass) is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q46: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 270° to 360° via the shortest route. At roughly what compass indication should the pilot stop the turn? ^t20q46
+- A) 360°
+- B) 030°
+- C) 330°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 270° to 360° is a right turn through northwest toward north. In the northern hemisphere, magnetic dip causes the compass to lead (read ahead of the actual heading) when turning toward north, so the pilot must stop early — before the compass reaches 360°. The rule of thumb is to stop approximately 30° before the target when turning to north: 360° − 30° = 330°. Waiting until the compass shows 360° (A) results in overshooting to approximately 030° (B). D (270°) is the starting heading. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q47: Which instruments receive static pressure from the static port? ^t20q47
+- A) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, and airspeed indicator.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, and slip indicator.
+- C) Altimeter, slip indicator, and navigational computer.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and direct-reading compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All three Pitot-static instruments receive static pressure: the altimeter (converts static pressure to altitude), the vertical speed indicator (compares current and stored static pressure to show climb/descent rate), and the airspeed indicator (uses static pressure alongside Pitot total pressure). The direct-reading compass in B and D is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no pneumatic input. The slip indicator in B and C is an inertial/gravity instrument (a ball in liquid) that requires no connection to the static port. Only A lists the correct three instruments.
+
+---
+
+### Q48: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 360° to 270° via the shortest route. At approximately what compass reading should the turn be stopped? ^t20q48
+- A) 300°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 360° (north) to 270° (west) is a left turn passing through northwest and west. On westerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the magnetic dip-induced turning error is minimal because the compass card tilts most significantly near north and south, not near east and west. At 270° the compass reads with acceptable accuracy, so the pilot should stop the turn when the compass shows 270°. A (300°) stops too early. B (240°) overshoots significantly. C (360°) is the starting heading. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q49: Static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q49
+- A) Sensed by the Pitot tube.
+- B) Inside the aircraft cabin.
+- C) Of undisturbed airflow.
+- D) Produced by orderly movement of air particles.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air, exerted equally in all directions at a given altitude regardless of airflow velocity. It is measured by flush static ports positioned on the fuselage where local aerodynamic disturbance is minimized. A is wrong: the Pitot tube senses total pressure (static plus dynamic). B (cabin pressure) is a separately regulated quantity inside the aircraft. D more closely describes dynamic pressure, which arises from organized directed air motion. Only C correctly defines static pressure.
+
+---
+
+### Q50: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 030° to 180° via the shortest route. At approximately what compass heading should the turn be ended? ^t20q50
+- A) 180°
+- B) 210°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 150°
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 030° to 180° is a right turn through east and south. When turning toward southerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the compass lags — it under-reads the actual heading and shows a smaller value than the aircraft has actually turned through. The pilot must therefore overshoot: continue turning until the compass reads approximately 180° + 30° = 210°, at which point the actual heading is approximately 180°. Stopping at 180° on the compass (A) means the aircraft has not yet reached 180° in reality. D (150°) is far too early. C (360°) is irrelevant. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_26_50_fr.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f276cd6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_26_50_fr.md
@@ -0,0 +1,291 @@
+### Q26 : QFE désigne... ^t20q26
+- A) La pression barométrique corrigée au niveau de la mer selon l'atmosphère standard internationale (ISA).
+- B) L'altitude référencée au niveau de pression de 1013,25 hPa.
+- C) La pression barométrique à un datum de référence, généralement le seuil de piste d'un aérodrome.
+- D) Le relèvement magnétique vers une station.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** QFE est la pression atmosphérique en un point de référence spécifique, généralement le seuil de piste. En réglant QFE sur l'altimètre, celui-ci indique zéro au sol sur l'aérodrome et affiche la hauteur au-dessus du terrain en vol. L'option A décrit le QNH (pression corrigée au niveau de la mer). L'option B décrit le datum des niveaux de vol (1013,25 hPa). L'option D décrit la terminologie de radionavigation QDM/QDR.
+
+### Q27 : Quelle est la fonction de la fenêtre de calage de l'altimètre ? ^t20q27
+- A) Corriger l'altimètre des erreurs du système d'instruments.
+- B) Régler le datum de référence pour le codeur d'altitude du transpondeur.
+- C) Référencer la lecture de l'altimètre à un niveau choisi, tel que le niveau moyen de la mer, l'élévation de l'aérodrome ou la surface de pression de 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) Compenser la lecture de l'altimètre pour les températures non standard.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La fenêtre de calage de l'altimètre (fenêtre de Kollsman) permet au pilote de régler une pression de référence : QNH pour l'altitude au-dessus du niveau de la mer, QFE pour la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome, ou 1013,25 hPa pour les niveaux de vol. L'option A (erreurs du système) nécessite un étalonnage, pas un réglage de la fenêtre. L'option B (codeur transpondeur) fonctionne indépendamment sur la pression standard. L'option D (correction de température) requiert un calcul mathématique séparé.
+
+### Q28 : Comment un altimètre réglé sur un QNH incorrect peut-il induire une erreur dangereuse ? ^t20q28
+- A) Régler une pression inférieure à la pression réelle fait que la lecture est trop basse, ce qui signifie une hauteur plus grande au-dessus du sol que prévu.
+- B) Régler une pression inférieure à la pression réelle fait que la lecture est trop haute, rapprochant l'aéronef du sol par rapport à l'indication.
+- C) Régler une pression supérieure à la pression réelle fait que la lecture est trop haute, rapprochant l'aéronef du sol par rapport à l'indication.
+- D) Régler une pression supérieure à la pression réelle fait que la lecture est trop basse, ce qui signifie une hauteur plus grande au-dessus du sol que prévu.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Régler une pression supérieure au QNH réel fait que l'altimètre surestime — il indique une altitude plus élevée que la position réelle de l'aéronef. L'aéronef est en réalité plus proche du sol que l'indication, créant une illusion dangereuse de dégagement du terrain. Le moyen mnémotechnique : « Du chaud au froid, attention en bas. » Les options A et B décrivent incorrectement l'effet d'un réglage de pression basse. L'option D inverse les conséquences d'un réglage élevé.
+
+### Q29 : Une température inférieure à la norme ISA peut provoquer... ^t20q29
+- A) Une lecture d'altitude trop élevée.
+- B) Une lecture d'altitude correcte à condition que la fenêtre de calage soit réglée pour la température non standard.
+- C) Une lecture d'altitude trop basse.
+- D) Un givrage du tube Pitot qui bloque l'altimètre à sa valeur actuelle.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans de l'air plus froid que la norme ISA, l'atmosphère est plus dense et la pression diminue plus rapidement avec l'altitude que l'altimètre ne le suppose. L'altimètre surestime et indique une altitude plus élevée que la position réelle de l'aéronef — le pilote est plus bas qu'il ne le croit. « Air froid = plus bas que vous ne pensez. » L'option B est incorrecte car les fenêtres de calage ne peuvent pas corriger la température. L'option C inverse l'erreur. L'option D décrit un problème de givrage distinct de l'erreur altimétrique induite par la température.
+
+### Q30 : Un niveau de vol est une... ^t20q30
+- A) Altitude vraie.
+- B) Altitude pression.
+- C) Altitude densité.
+- D) Altitude au-dessus du sol.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un niveau de vol est une altitude pression exprimée en centaines de pieds avec l'altimètre calé à 1013,25 hPa (pression standard). FL100 = 10 000 ft sur le réglage standard. Tous les aéronefs au-dessus de l'altitude de transition utilisent ce datum commun pour la séparation verticale indépendamment des variations de pression locale. L'option A (altitude vraie) est la hauteur MSL réelle. L'option C (altitude densité) est un paramètre de calcul des performances. L'option D (au-dessus du sol) est la hauteur AGL.
+
+---
+
+### Q31 : L'altitude vraie est définie comme... ^t20q31
+- A) Une hauteur au-dessus du niveau du sol corrigée pour une pression non standard.
+- B) Une altitude pression corrigée pour une température non standard.
+- C) Une altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer corrigée pour une température non standard.
+- D) Une hauteur au-dessus du niveau du sol corrigée pour une température non standard.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altitude vraie est la hauteur géométrique réelle de l'aéronef au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer (NM), obtenue en corrigeant l'altitude indiquée des écarts par rapport au profil de température ISA. L'altimètre suppose des conditions ISA standard ; lorsque la température réelle diffère, la lecture indiquée diverge de la hauteur NM réelle. A et D sont incorrects car l'altitude vraie est référencée au NM, non au-dessus du sol (AGL). B mentionne la correction de température mais est imprécis — l'altitude vraie est la hauteur NM réelle, pas simplement une altitude pression avec un facteur de température appliqué. Seul C définit correctement l'altitude vraie.
+
+---
+
+### Q32 : En volant dans de l'air plus froid que l'ISA, l'altitude indiquée est... ^t20q32
+- A) Égale à l'altitude standard.
+- B) Inférieure à l'altitude vraie.
+- C) Égale à l'altitude vraie.
+- D) Supérieure à l'altitude vraie.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans de l'air plus froid que l'ISA, l'atmosphère est plus dense, donc la pression diminue plus rapidement avec l'altitude que l'altimètre ne le suppose. L'altimètre surestime et indique une valeur plus élevée que la hauteur NM réelle de l'aéronef — l'aéronef est physiquement plus bas que l'instrument ne l'indique. Il s'agit d'un danger sérieux pour le dégagement du terrain, résumé par le moyen mnémotechnique « Du chaud au froid, attention en bas ». B indique le contraire de ce qui se produit. A et C ne s'appliquent que dans des conditions ISA exactes. Seul D est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q33 : En volant dans une masse d'air à température ISA avec le QNH correct réglé, l'altitude indiquée est... ^t20q33
+- A) Inférieure à l'altitude vraie.
+- B) Supérieure à l'altitude vraie.
+- C) Égale à l'altitude vraie.
+- D) Égale à l'atmosphère standard.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altimètre est étalonné selon le gradient de température standard ISA. Lorsque la température réelle correspond exactement à l'ISA et que le QNH correct est réglé, toutes les hypothèses de l'instrument sont parfaitement satisfaites et aucune erreur n'existe — l'altitude indiquée est égale à l'altitude vraie. Il s'agit de la condition de base idéale à partir de laquelle les écarts introduisent des erreurs. A et B décrivent des situations avec une température ou une pression non standard. D est vague et ne constitue pas un énoncé pertinent sur la lecture de l'altimètre. Seul C est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q34 : Quel instrument est sujet à l'erreur d'hystérésis ? ^t20q34
+- A) Variomètre à taux vertical.
+- B) Compas magnétique direct.
+- C) Altimètre.
+- D) Compte-tours.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'erreur d'hystérésis affecte l'altimètre car ses capsules anéroïdes — de fins soufflets élastiques qui se dilatent et se contractent avec les variations de pression — ne reviennent pas exactement à la même position lorsque la pression est rétablie à une valeur précédemment connue. Ce retard mécanique signifie que l'altimètre peut afficher des lectures légèrement différentes à la même altitude en montée et en descente. A (VSI), B (compas) et D (compte-tours) ne reposent pas sur des capsules anéroïdes élastiques pour leur mesure principale et ne sont donc pas sujets à cette erreur spécifique. Seul C est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q35 : La mesure de l'altitude repose sur les variations de quel type de pression ? ^t20q35
+- A) Pression totale.
+- B) Pression différentielle.
+- C) Pression statique.
+- D) Pression dynamique.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression statique est la pression atmosphérique ambiante qui diminue de manière prévisible avec l'altitude selon le modèle ISA. L'altimètre détecte cette pression via le port statique et la convertit en une lecture d'altitude à l'aide de capsules anéroïdes étalonnées. A (pression totale) est égale à la somme de la pression statique et dynamique et est mesurée par le tube Pitot pour la vitesse. B (pression différentielle) est la différence entre la pression totale et statique, qui entraîne l'ASI. D (pression dynamique) dépend de la vitesse et n'a aucun rôle dans la mesure de l'altitude. Seul C est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q36 : Comment fonctionne un variomètre ? ^t20q36
+- A) Il mesure la pression totale de l'air et la compare à la pression statique.
+- B) Il compare la pression statique actuelle avec la pression statique stockée dans un réservoir.
+- C) Il mesure l'accélération verticale à l'aide d'une masse montée sur cardan.
+- D) Il mesure la pression statique de l'air et la compare à un vide.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le variomètre détecte le taux de montée ou de descente en comparant la pression statique actuelle (depuis le port statique) à une pression de référence stockée dans un réservoir interne qui communique via une fuite étalonnée. En montée, la pression statique chute plus vite que le réservoir ne peut s'équilibrer, créant une différence de pression qui dévie l'aiguille proportionnellement au taux de montée. A décrit le principe de fonctionnement de l'ASI (total moins statique = dynamique). C décrit un accéléromètre. D décrit un baromètre, qui ne peut pas indiquer un taux de variation. Seul B explique correctement le fonctionnement du variomètre.
+
+---
+
+### Q37 : Le variomètre compare la différence de pression entre... ^t20q37
+- A) La pression dynamique actuelle et la pression dynamique d'un instant précédent.
+- B) La pression statique actuelle et la pression statique d'un instant précédent.
+- C) La pression totale actuelle et la pression totale d'un instant précédent.
+- D) La pression dynamique actuelle et la pression statique d'un instant précédent.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le variomètre ne détecte que la pression statique, qui change avec l'altitude. Il compare la pression statique instantanée arrivant par le port statique avec la pression statique légèrement retardée stockée dans le réservoir de mesure derrière la restriction étalonnée. Le taux de variation de pression indique le taux de variation d'altitude. A, C et D impliquent tous une pression dynamique ou totale, qui sont des grandeurs du tube Pitot utilisées pour la mesure de la vitesse et n'ont aucun rôle dans le variomètre. Seul B est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q38 : Un aéronef vole au cap 180° à 100 kt TAS. Le vent souffle du 180° à 30 kt. En ignorant les erreurs d'instrument et de position, qu'indiquera approximativement l'anémomètre ? ^t20q38
+- A) 70 kt
+- B) 130 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 100 kt
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ASI mesure la vitesse de l'aéronef par rapport à la masse d'air environnante, non par rapport au sol. L'aéronef se déplace dans l'air à 100 kt TAS, donc l'ASI indique 100 kt quelle que soit la direction du vent. Un vent du 180° sur un cap de 180° est un vent de face, réduisant la vitesse sol à 70 kt — c'est l'option A, mais la vitesse sol n'est pas ce que l'ASI mesure. B (130 kt) ne s'appliquerait qu'avec un vent arrière de 30 kt. C (30 kt) est simplement la vitesse du vent, sans rapport avec l'ASI. Seul D est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q39 : Quel principe utilise l'anémomètre pour déterminer la vitesse ? ^t20q39
+- A) La pression statique de l'air est mesurée et comparée à un vide.
+- B) La pression dynamique de l'air est détectée par le tube Pitot et convertie directement en une lecture de vitesse.
+- C) La pression totale de l'air est détectée par les prises statiques et convertie en vitesse.
+- D) La pression totale de l'air est comparée à la pression statique de l'air.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ASI compare la pression totale du tube Pitot (qui capte toute la pression de l'air, y compris la composante de mouvement) à la pression statique du port statique (pression ambiante uniquement). La différence est la pression dynamique (q = ½ρv²), proportionnelle au carré de la vitesse — la capsule en expansion convertit cela en une lecture IAS. A décrit un simple baromètre. B est incorrect car le tube Pitot mesure la pression totale, pas la pression dynamique pure. C attribue incorrectement la mesure de la pression totale aux prises statiques. Seul D décrit correctement le fonctionnement de l'ASI.
+
+---
+
+### Q40 : Les traits rouges sur les affichages des instruments marquent généralement quelles valeurs ? ^t20q40
+- A) Les plages de fonctionnement recommandées.
+- B) Les zones de prudence.
+- C) Les limites opérationnelles.
+- D) Les plages de fonctionnement normales.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les marques radiales rouges sur les instruments d'aéronefs indiquent les limites opérationnelles absolues qui ne doivent jamais être dépassées — telles que VNE (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser) sur l'ASI. Elles représentent les limites structurales ou aérodynamiques au-delà desquelles une défaillance catastrophique ou une perte de contrôle peut survenir. B (zones de prudence) sont indiquées par des arcs jaunes, couvrant la plage de vitesse entre la vitesse de manœuvre et VNE où un air lisse est requis. D (plage de fonctionnement normale) est indiqué par un arc vert. A (« plages de fonctionnement recommandées ») n'est pas un marquage standard des instruments. Seul C définit correctement le trait rouge.
+
+---
+
+### Q41 : Pour déterminer la vitesse indiquée (IAS), l'anémomètre nécessite... ^t20q41
+- A) La différence entre la pression totale et la pression dynamique.
+- B) La différence entre la pression totale et la pression statique.
+- C) La différence entre la pression standard et la pression totale.
+- D) La différence entre la pression dynamique et la pression statique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'IAS est dérivée de la pression dynamique, qui est égale à la pression totale (tube Pitot) moins la pression statique (port statique). La capsule de l'ASI se défléchit proportionnellement à cette différence de pression et l'aiguille indique l'IAS. A (total moins dynamique) donnerait uniquement la pression statique — pas utile pour la vitesse. C (standard moins total) n'a aucune signification aérodynamique pour la vitesse. D (dynamique moins statique) n'est pas une grandeur Pitot-statique pertinente car la pression dynamique n'est pas mesurée indépendamment à un seul port. Seul B est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q42 : Que représente le trait rouge sur un anémomètre ? ^t20q42
+- A) Une limite de vitesse en conditions turbulentes.
+- B) La vitesse maximale avec les volets sortis.
+- C) Une vitesse qui ne doit jamais être dépassée en aucune circonstance.
+- D) La vitesse maximale dans les virages dépassant 45° d'inclinaison.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le trait rouge marque VNE — Velocity Never Exceed (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser) — la limite structurale absolue de vitesse qui ne doit être dépassée en aucune circonstance, même en air calme. Au-delà de VNE, le risque de flottement aéroélastique ou de défaillance structurale catastrophique est inacceptable. A décrit la limite supérieure de l'arc jaune (plage de prudence), où les turbulences doivent être évitées. B décrit VFE (vitesse de sortie des volets), marquée par le sommet de l'arc blanc. D ne correspond à aucun marquage couleur standard de l'ASI. Seul C est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q43 : L'erreur du compas produite par le champ magnétique propre de l'aéronef est connue sous le nom de... ^t20q43
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Déviation.
+- C) Déclinaison.
+- D) Inclinaison.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déviation est l'erreur du compas causée par les champs magnétiques propres de l'aéronef — provenant des structures en acier, des câblages électriques et des équipements électroniques à bord. Elle varie selon le cap de l'aéronef et est consignée sur la carte de déviation du compas après un étalonnage. A (variation) et C (déclinaison) sont deux noms pour le même phénomène géographique : l'angle entre le nord vrai et le nord magnétique en un lieu donné sur Terre — ce n'est pas causé par l'aéronef. D (inclinaison) fait référence à l'angle de plongée vertical du champ magnétique terrestre, qui cause des erreurs de virage et d'accélération. Seul B est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q44 : Quelles erreurs font dévier un compas magnétique du nord magnétique ? ^t20q44
+- A) La variation, les erreurs de virage et les erreurs d'accélération.
+- B) La gravité et le magnétisme.
+- C) L'inclinaison et la déclinaison du champ magnétique terrestre.
+- D) La déviation, les erreurs de virage et les erreurs d'accélération.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Trois erreurs d'instrument font dévier le compas magnétique du nord magnétique : la déviation (due aux champs magnétiques propres de l'aéronef), les erreurs de virage (la rose du compas s'incline en raison du champ magnétique terrestre pendant les virages, surtout sur les caps nord/sud), et les erreurs d'accélération (les changements de vitesse sur les caps est/ouest produisent des lectures erronées en raison du même effet d'inclinaison). A inclut incorrectement la variation, qui est une propriété géographique de la Terre, pas une erreur d'instrument. B est trop vague. C énumère les propriétés physiques du champ terrestre plutôt que des erreurs d'instrument spécifiques. Seul D nomme correctement les trois.
+
+---
+
+### Q45 : Quel instrument du cockpit reçoit son entrée du tube Pitot ? ^t20q45
+- A) Altimètre.
+- B) Compas magnétique direct.
+- C) Anémomètre.
+- D) Variomètre.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Seul l'anémomètre est connecté au tube Pitot, qui lui fournit la pression totale comme l'une des deux entrées nécessaires au calcul de l'IAS. A (altimètre) et D (variomètre) sont connectés uniquement au port statique — ils mesurent les variations de pression statique pour l'altitude et le taux de montée/descente. B (compas magnétique direct) est un instrument magnétique autonome sans connexion au système Pitot-statique. Seul C est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q46 : Un aéronef dans l'hémisphère nord effectue un virage de 270° à 360° par le chemin le plus court. À quelle indication de compas approximative le pilote doit-il stopper le virage ? ^t20q46
+- A) 360°
+- B) 030°
+- C) 330°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le virage le plus court de 270° à 360° est un virage à droite passant par le nord-ouest vers le nord. Dans l'hémisphère nord, le champ magnétique terrestre provoque une avance du compas (lecture en avance sur le cap réel) lors d'un virage vers le nord, donc le pilote doit s'arrêter tôt — avant que le compas n'atteigne 360°. La règle empirique est de s'arrêter environ 30° avant la cible lors d'un virage vers le nord : 360° − 30° = 330°. Attendre que le compas affiche 360° (A) entraîne un dépassement vers environ 030° (B). D (270°) est le cap de départ. Seul C est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q47 : Quels instruments reçoivent la pression statique du port statique ? ^t20q47
+- A) Altimètre, variomètre et anémomètre.
+- B) Anémomètre, compas magnétique direct et indicateur de dérapage.
+- C) Altimètre, indicateur de dérapage et calculateur de navigation.
+- D) Anémomètre, altimètre et compas magnétique direct.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les trois instruments Pitot-statiques reçoivent la pression statique : l'altimètre (convertit la pression statique en altitude), le variomètre (compare la pression statique actuelle et stockée pour indiquer le taux de montée/descente), et l'anémomètre (utilise la pression statique conjointement avec la pression totale Pitot). Le compas magnétique direct dans B et D est un instrument magnétique autonome sans entrée pneumatique. L'indicateur de dérapage dans B et C est un instrument inertiel/gravitationnel (bille dans un liquide) qui ne nécessite aucune connexion au port statique. Seul A liste les trois instruments corrects.
+
+---
+
+### Q48 : Un aéronef dans l'hémisphère nord effectue un virage de 360° à 270° par le chemin le plus court. À quelle lecture de compas approximative le virage doit-il être stoppé ? ^t20q48
+- A) 300°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le virage le plus court de 360° (nord) à 270° (ouest) est un virage à gauche passant par le nord-ouest et l'ouest. Sur des caps vers l'ouest dans l'hémisphère nord, l'erreur de virage induite par le champ magnétique terrestre est minimale car la rose du compas s'incline le plus significativement près du nord et du sud, pas près de l'est et de l'ouest. À 270°, le compas lit avec une précision acceptable, donc le pilote doit stopper le virage lorsque le compas indique 270°. A (300°) s'arrête trop tôt. B (240°) dépasse significativement. C (360°) est le cap de départ. Seul D est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q49 : La pression statique est définie comme la pression... ^t20q49
+- A) Détectée par le tube Pitot.
+- B) À l'intérieur de la cabine de l'aéronef.
+- C) De l'écoulement d'air non perturbé.
+- D) Produite par un mouvement ordonné des particules d'air.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression statique est la pression atmosphérique ambiante de l'air non perturbé, exercée également dans toutes les directions à une altitude donnée quelle que soit la vitesse de l'écoulement d'air. Elle est mesurée par des prises statiques affleurantes positionnées sur le fuselage où les perturbations aérodynamiques locales sont minimisées. A est incorrect : le tube Pitot détecte la pression totale (statique plus dynamique). B (pression de cabine) est une quantité régulée séparément à l'intérieur de l'aéronef. D décrit mieux la pression dynamique, qui résulte d'un mouvement d'air dirigé organisé. Seul C définit correctement la pression statique.
+
+---
+
+### Q50 : Un aéronef dans l'hémisphère nord effectue un virage de 030° à 180° par le chemin le plus court. À quel cap de compas approximatif le virage doit-il être terminé ? ^t20q50
+- A) 180°
+- B) 210°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 150°
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le virage le plus court de 030° à 180° est un virage à droite passant par l'est et le sud. Lors d'un virage vers des caps sud dans l'hémisphère nord, le compas est en retard — il sous-estime le cap réel et affiche une valeur inférieure à celle réellement parcourue. Le pilote doit donc dépasser : continuer à virer jusqu'à ce que le compas indique environ 180° + 30° = 210°, point auquel le cap réel est approximativement 180°. S'arrêter à 180° sur le compas (A) signifie que l'aéronef n'a pas encore atteint 180° en réalité. D (150°) est beaucoup trop tôt. C (360°) n'est pas pertinent. Seul B est correct.
+
+---
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_51_75.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_51_75.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..13f31bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_51_75.md
@@ -0,0 +1,268 @@
+### Q51: Which glider cockpit lever is painted red? ^t20q51
+- A) Wheel brake.
+- B) Landing gear lever.
+- C) Ventilation control.
+- D) Emergency canopy release.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA color coding assigns red to the emergency canopy release lever in gliders, because red is universally associated with critical safety and emergency functions, allowing the pilot to locate it instantly during an accident scenario. The landing gear lever (B) uses green. Ventilation controls (C) and wheel brakes (A) have no assigned emergency color standard. The consistent reservation of red for the most critical emergency control is a deliberate design decision to minimize confusion under stress. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q52: During winter maintenance, you notice honeycomb elements inside the fuselage. What construction category does this glider belong to? ^t20q52
+- A) Metal construction.
+- B) Wood combined with other materials.
+- C) Composite construction.
+- D) Biplane construction.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Honeycomb core material is the defining hallmark of modern composite sandwich construction. Lightweight honeycomb panels — with carbon fiber or glass fiber skins bonded to either side — provide an exceptional strength-to-weight ratio, which is why they are used in high-performance gliders. Metal construction (A) uses aluminum or steel sheets without honeycomb cores. Wood/mixed construction (B) uses spruce ribs and plywood skins. Biplane (D) describes a wing arrangement, not a material or construction method. The presence of honeycomb elements unambiguously identifies C.
+
+---
+
+### Q53: The Discus B has its horizontal stabilizer mounted at the top of the fin. What type of tail configuration is this? ^t20q53
+- A) V-tail.
+- B) Cruciform tail.
+- C) T-tail.
+- D) Pendulum cruciform tail.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the horizontal stabilizer is mounted at the top of the vertical fin, the silhouette viewed from the front forms a "T" shape — hence the name T-tail. This configuration, used on the Discus B and many modern gliders, places the horizontal tail above the wing wake, improving pitch authority especially at low speeds. A (V-tail) merges horizontal and vertical tail functions into two angled surfaces. B (cruciform tail) positions the stabilizer at mid-height of the fin. D (pendulum cruciform) is a variant with an all-moving stabilizer at mid-height. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q54: What is the role of the fixed vertical fin and fixed horizontal stabilizer on a glider's tail? ^t20q54
+- A) To trim the glider.
+- B) To steer the glider.
+- C) To stabilize the glider.
+- D) To trim the control forces for a desired flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fixed tail surfaces — horizontal stabilizer and vertical fin — provide static stability in pitch and yaw. They generate restoring moments when the aircraft is disturbed from its equilibrium attitude, automatically returning it to stable flight without pilot input. B (steering) is accomplished by the movable surfaces: elevator for pitch, rudder for yaw, ailerons for roll. A and D (trimming) is the function of trim tabs mounted on the movable surfaces, not the fixed stabilizers. Only C correctly identifies the role of the fixed tail surfaces.
+
+---
+
+### Q55: During winter maintenance, the equipment officer explains the CG-mounted tow hook mechanism. Why must it release the cable automatically? ^t20q55
+- A) To relieve the pilot from releasing the cable during a winch launch.
+- B) To prevent danger if the glider flies too long near the ground during the winch launch takeoff roll.
+- C) To prevent danger when the glider climbs too high during aero-tow.
+- D) It is a safety measure — the hook must release automatically when the glider risks flying over the winch.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the glider nears the top of its winch-launch arc and begins to converge with the winch position, the cable angle reverses abruptly from a forward pull to a downward pull — if still attached, this causes a violent pitch-up that is likely fatal. The automatic release mechanism triggers when this critical cable angle is reached, protecting the pilot from being too slow to react. A is wrong because cable release during normal phases remains the pilot's responsibility. B describes a different ground-handling concern. C refers to an aero-tow scenario where the CG hook is not used. Only D correctly identifies the primary safety rationale.
+
+---
+
+### Q56: Aileron deflection produces rotation around which axis? ^t20q56
+- A) The yaw axis.
+- B) The lateral axis.
+- C) The vertical axis.
+- D) The longitudinal axis.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons produce roll — rotation around the longitudinal axis, which runs from the aircraft's nose to its tail. Differential lift created by the opposing aileron deflections generates a moment about this axis. B (lateral axis, running wingtip to wingtip) corresponds to pitch, controlled by the elevator. A (yaw axis) and C (vertical axis) describe the same axis, controlled by the rudder; note that adverse yaw is a secondary effect of aileron use, not the primary motion. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q57: When the control stick is moved to the left, what happens? ^t20q57
+- A) Both ailerons move upward.
+- B) The left aileron goes up and the right aileron goes down.
+- C) Both ailerons move downward.
+- D) The left aileron goes down and the right aileron goes up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the stick left commands a left roll. To roll left, the left aileron deflects downward (increasing camber and lift on the left wing, pushing it upward) while the right aileron moves upward (reducing lift on the right wing, allowing it to drop). This differential lift rolls the aircraft to the left. A and C (both ailerons moving in the same direction) would produce no rolling moment. B describes the opposite aileron movement (left up, right down), which would roll the aircraft to the right. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q58: In mechanical brake systems, how is the braking force transmitted from the pedals or handles to the brake shoes? ^t20q58
+- A) Through electric motors.
+- B) Through hydraulic lines.
+- C) Through pneumatic lines.
+- D) Through cables and pushrods.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider mechanical brake systems transmit braking force from the pilot's pedal or hand lever to the brake shoes via a mechanical linkage of cables and pushrods — no fluid, compressed air, or electricity is required. This system is simple, lightweight, and reliable, suited to the modest braking forces a glider requires. Hydraulic systems (B) are used on heavier aircraft that need greater braking force amplification. Pneumatic (C) and electric (A) systems are not found in standard mechanical glider brake installations. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q59: The flight manual states that the glider has balanced control surfaces. What is the main reason for this design? ^t20q59
+- A) Better turning characteristics.
+- B) Harmonious coordination of controls.
+- C) Elimination of flutter.
+- D) Reduction of the force needed to move the controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mass-balancing a control surface — placing counterweights forward of the hinge axis — moves the surface's center of gravity to its pivot line, eliminating the inertial coupling between aerodynamic loads and structural oscillations that produces aeroelastic flutter. Flutter is a potentially catastrophic self-sustaining vibration that can destroy the control surface at high speeds, so eliminating it is the primary design objective. D (lighter controls) may result from aerodynamic balancing but is not the purpose of mass balancing. A and B describe general handling qualities unrelated to structural safety. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q60: Why are there small holes on the fuselage sides connected to internal flexible tubes? ^t20q60
+- A) They serve as static pressure ports for the instruments.
+- B) They are used to measure outside air temperature.
+- C) They equalize pressure between the fuselage interior and exterior.
+- D) They prevent excess humidity inside the glider in cold weather.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The small flush-mounted orifices on the fuselage sides are the static pressure ports of the Pitot-static system. They sense ambient atmospheric (static) pressure and transmit it via internal flexible tubing to the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator. Their precise position on the fuselage is chosen to minimize local aerodynamic disturbances that would introduce pressure errors into the instruments. B (outside air temperature) uses a dedicated thermometer probe. C and D describe ventilation or moisture-control functions, which are unrelated to these ports. Only A is correct.
+
+### Q61: Which instrument receives its input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q61
+- A) Turn indicator.
+- B) Variometer.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Airspeed indicator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only cockpit instrument connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies it with total pressure. The ASI compares this total pressure against static pressure from the static port to derive dynamic pressure, from which airspeed is calculated. A (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument powered pneumatically or electrically. B (variometer) and C (altimeter) are both connected only to the static port, measuring changes in ambient atmospheric pressure.
+
+### Q62: If the altimeter subscale is set to a higher pressure without any actual pressure change, how does the reading change? ^t20q62
+- A) The reading increases.
+- B) The reading decreases.
+- C) A precise answer requires knowing the outside air temperature.
+- D) The reading does not change.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the subscale is set to a higher reference pressure without any change in actual atmospheric pressure, the altimeter indicates a higher altitude. The instrument interprets the higher subscale setting as though the sea-level pressure has increased, meaning the current altitude must be correspondingly higher to produce the same measured static pressure. B, C, and D are all incorrect. Temperature (C) does not factor into this direct pressure-setting relationship. The reading always increases when a higher pressure is dialed in.
+
+### Q63: If the static pressure port is blocked by ice during a descent, what does the variometer show? ^t20q63
+- A) A descent.
+- B) A climb.
+- C) Zero.
+- D) Nothing at all (only a warning flag appears).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the static port is blocked by ice, the static pressure reaching the variometer remains frozen at the last value before blockage. Both sides of the variometer's measuring system receive the same trapped pressure, so no pressure difference develops. The instrument therefore reads zero regardless of whether the aircraft is actually climbing or descending. A (descent) and B (climb) would require changing static pressure inputs. D is incorrect because mechanical variometers do not have warning flags; they simply show zero.
+
+### Q64: The red line on the airspeed indicator marks VNE. Is exceeding this speed ever permitted? ^t20q64
+- A) Yes, brief exceedances are acceptable.
+- B) Yes, up to a maximum of 20%.
+- C) No, under no circumstances.
+- D) Yes, up to a maximum of 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE (Velocity Never Exceed) is an absolute structural limit that must never be exceeded under any circumstances, by any amount, for any duration. Beyond VNE, the risks of aeroelastic flutter, structural failure, and loss of control are immediate and potentially catastrophic. Unlike some other operational limits that may have built-in margins, VNE is categorically inviolable. A, B, and D all incorrectly suggest that some degree of exceedance is acceptable, which is false and dangerous.
+
+### Q65: Switching on the radio in a glider consistently causes the magnetic compass to rotate in the same direction. Why? ^t20q65
+- A) The compass is powered electrically when the radio is activated.
+- B) The compass is running low on fluid.
+- C) The compass is defective.
+- D) The radio's magnetic field interferes with the compass because the two are installed too close together.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the radio operates, it generates an electromagnetic field. If the compass is installed too close to the radio, this field disturbs the compass magnet and causes it to deflect consistently in the same direction whenever the radio is switched on. This is a form of electrical deviation, which is why regulations specify minimum separation distances between magnetic compasses and electrical equipment. A is wrong because compasses are self-contained magnetic instruments. B (low fluid) would cause sluggish movement, not directional bias. C (defective compass) is not the root cause here.
+
+### Q66: What information does FLARM provide? ^t20q66
+- A) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that are at the same altitude.
+- B) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that cross the flight path.
+- C) FLARM-equipped aircraft in the vicinity as well as fixed obstacles.
+- D) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft posing a collision risk.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM (Flight Alarm) is an anti-collision system that provides two categories of alerts: nearby FLARM-equipped aircraft regardless of altitude or collision risk, and fixed obstacles such as power lines, cable car wires, and antennas stored in its internal database. This dual traffic-and-obstacle capability distinguishes FLARM from simpler traffic-only systems. A is too restrictive (not limited to same altitude). B is too restrictive (not limited to path-crossing traffic). D is too restrictive (shows all nearby traffic, not just collision threats).
+
+### Q67: Your glider has an ELT with a toggle switch offering ON, OFF, and ARM modes. Which setting enables automatic distress signal transmission upon a violent impact? ^t20q67
+- A) OFF.
+- B) ON.
+- C) ARM.
+- D) Automatic activation is independent of the selected mode for safety reasons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARM mode activates the ELT's internal G-switch (impact sensor), which automatically triggers the distress signal transmission on 406 MHz and 121.5 MHz upon detecting a crash-level deceleration. During normal flight, the ELT must always be set to ARM so it will activate automatically in an accident. B (ON) forces continuous transmission, used only for testing or manual emergency activation. A (OFF) completely disables the ELT. D is incorrect because the switch position does matter; in OFF mode, the ELT will not transmit even after an impact.
+
+### Q68: Electric current is measured in which unit? ^t20q68
+- A) Watt.
+- B) Volt.
+- C) Ohm.
+- D) Ampere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electric current is measured in Amperes (A), named after physicist Andre-Marie Ampere. Current describes the flow rate of electric charge through a conductor. A (Watt) is the unit of electrical power (P = U x I). B (Volt) is the unit of voltage or electrical potential difference. C (Ohm) is the unit of electrical resistance. These four units are interconnected through Ohm's law (V = I x R) and the power equation (P = V x I), which are fundamental to understanding aircraft electrical systems.
+
+### Q69: During a pre-flight check, you discover the battery fuse is defective and the electrical instruments are inoperative. Would it be acceptable to bridge the fuse with aluminum foil from a chocolate wrapper? ^t20q69
+- A) Yes, but only if a short local flight near the aerodrome is planned.
+- B) Yes, provided the instruments start working again.
+- C) No, an unrated fuse substitute risks wiring fire or instrument damage.
+- D) Yes, but only in an emergency situation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Replacing a fuse with aluminum foil is strictly prohibited and extremely dangerous. A fuse is a precisely rated protection device designed to melt at a specific current, protecting the wiring and instruments from overcurrent damage. Aluminum foil has no defined current rating and will not interrupt the circuit during a short circuit, allowing excessive current to flow and potentially causing an electrical fire or destroying equipment. A, B, and D all incorrectly suggest scenarios where this improvisation might be acceptable. The aircraft must not fly until a proper fuse is installed.
+
+### Q70: What is the primary disadvantage of the VHF frequency band used in aviation radio communications? ^t20q70
+- A) VHF waves are highly susceptible to atmospheric disturbances such as thunderstorms.
+- B) VHF reception is limited to the theoretical line of sight (quasi-optical propagation).
+- C) VHF waves are deflected at dawn and dusk due to the twilight effect.
+- D) VHF waves are disrupted near large bodies of water (coastal effect).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary limitation of VHF radio communications is that VHF waves propagate in straight lines (quasi-optical propagation) and do not follow the Earth's curvature. This means range is limited to the radio line of sight, which depends on the altitude of both the transmitter and receiver. At low altitude, range is significantly reduced. A (atmospheric disturbances) primarily affects MF/HF frequencies. C (twilight effect) is a phenomenon of ionospheric HF propagation. D (coastal effect) affects medium-frequency (MF) waves, not VHF.
+
+### Q71: Which instrument is connected to the Pitot tube? ^t20q71
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Turn indicator.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Variometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument that receives total pressure input from the Pitot tube. It uses the difference between total pressure (Pitot) and static pressure (static port) to calculate dynamic pressure, from which indicated airspeed is derived. A (altimeter) and D (variometer) are connected only to the static port. B (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument that operates either pneumatically or electrically and has no connection to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q72: What is the standard colour of aviation oxygen cylinders? ^t20q72
+- A) Red.
+- B) Orange.
+- C) Black.
+- D) Blue/white.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under European and ISO standards, aviation oxygen cylinders are conventionally painted black. This distinguishes them from other gas types in the color coding system. Medical oxygen bottles may be white, but aviation oxygen specifically uses black as the standard identification color. A (red) typically indicates flammable gases like hydrogen or acetylene. B (orange) and D (blue/white) do not correspond to the standard aviation oxygen bottle color coding.
+
+### Q73: During a turn, what does the ball (inclinometer) indicate? ^t20q73
+- A) The bank angle of the glider.
+- B) A rotation about the yaw axis to left or right.
+- C) The lateral acceleration in a turn.
+- D) The resultant of weight and centrifugal force.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ball (inclinometer) indicates the direction of the resultant force from the combination of gravity (weight) and centrifugal force acting on the aircraft during a turn. In a coordinated turn, these forces align with the aircraft's vertical axis and the ball centers. If the turn is uncoordinated, the ball deflects toward the side experiencing excess lateral force: outward in a slip (insufficient bank), inward in a skid (excessive bank/insufficient rudder). A is wrong because the ball does not measure bank angle directly. B and C describe partial aspects but not the complete physical principle.
+
+### Q74: Why must the equipped weight of a glider pilot exceed a specified minimum value? ^t20q74
+- A) To improve the angle of incidence.
+- B) To reduce control forces.
+- C) To keep the centre of gravity within prescribed limits.
+- D) To improve the glide ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum pilot weight requirement exists to ensure the aircraft's center of gravity stays within the approved forward and aft limits. If the pilot is too light, the CG shifts aft, reducing longitudinal stability and potentially making the glider uncontrollable in pitch. A (angle of incidence) is a fixed design parameter that pilot weight does not affect. B (control forces) are not the primary reason for the minimum weight. D (glide ratio) is primarily determined by aerodynamic design, not pilot weight.
+
+### Q75: What is the purpose of a glider's flight manual (AFM)? ^t20q75
+- A) It contains records of periodic inspections and repairs performed.
+- B) It is a detailed commercial brochure from the manufacturer.
+- C) It is used by workshop supervisors when carrying out repairs.
+- D) It provides the pilot with operating limits, technical specifications, and emergency procedures.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) is the official regulatory document that provides the pilot with all information needed for safe operation: operating limitations (speeds, load factors, weight limits), normal and emergency procedures, performance data, and weight and balance information. A describes the maintenance logbook, not the AFM. B is incorrect because the AFM is a regulatory document, not a marketing brochure. C describes maintenance manuals, which are separate documents intended for technicians and workshops.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_51_75_fr.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..13543b8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_51_75_fr.md
@@ -0,0 +1,267 @@
+### Q51 : Quel levier de commande dans le cockpit d'un planeur est peint en rouge ? ^t20q51
+- A) Frein de roue.
+- B) Levier du train d'atterrissage.
+- C) Commande de ventilation.
+- D) Largage de secours du capot.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le codage couleur EASA attribue le rouge au levier de largage de secours du capot dans les planeurs, car le rouge est universellement associé aux fonctions critiques de sécurité et d'urgence, permettant au pilote de le localiser instantanément lors d'un accident. Le levier du train d'atterrissage (B) utilise le vert. Les commandes de ventilation (C) et les freins de roue (A) n'ont pas de couleur d'urgence normalisée attribuée. La réservation systématique du rouge pour la commande d'urgence la plus critique est une décision de conception délibérée afin de minimiser la confusion sous stress. Seul D est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q52 : Lors de travaux d'hiver, vous constatez des éléments en nid d'abeille à l'intérieur du fuselage. À quelle catégorie de construction ce planeur appartient-il ? ^t20q52
+- A) Construction métallique.
+- B) Bois combiné avec d'autres matériaux.
+- C) Construction composite.
+- D) Construction biplan.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le matériau en nid d'abeille est la marque distinctive des constructions composites sandwichs modernes. Les panneaux en nid d'abeille légers — avec des peaux en fibre de carbone ou de verre collées de chaque côté — offrent un rapport résistance/masse exceptionnel, ce qui explique leur utilisation dans les planeurs haute performance. La construction métallique (A) utilise des feuilles d'aluminium ou d'acier sans noyau en nid d'abeille. La construction bois/mixte (B) utilise des nervures en épicéa et des peaux en contreplaqué. Le biplan (D) décrit une configuration d'aile, pas un matériau ou une méthode de construction. La présence d'éléments en nid d'abeille identifie sans ambiguïté la réponse C.
+
+---
+
+### Q53 : Le Discus B a son plan horizontal monté au sommet de la dérive. Quel type d'empennage est-ce ? ^t20q53
+- A) Empennage en V.
+- B) Empennage en croix.
+- C) Empennage en T.
+- D) Empennage cruciforme pendulaire.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque le plan horizontal est monté au sommet de la dérive verticale, la silhouette vue de face forme la lettre « T » — d'où le nom empennage en T. Cette configuration, utilisée sur le Discus B et de nombreux planeurs modernes, place le plan horizontal au-dessus du sillage de l'aile, améliorant l'autorité en tangage surtout à basse vitesse. A (empennage en V) fusionne les fonctions horizontale et verticale en deux surfaces inclinées. B (empennage en croix) positionne le plan horizontal à mi-hauteur de la dérive. D (empennage cruciforme pendulaire) est une variante avec un plan horizontal tout-mobile à mi-hauteur. Seul C est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q54 : Quel est le rôle de la dérive fixe et du plan fixe horizontal sur l'empennage d'un planeur ? ^t20q54
+- A) Compenser le planeur en tangage.
+- B) Piloter le planeur en direction.
+- C) Stabiliser le planeur.
+- D) Compenser les forces de commande pour une condition de vol souhaitée.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les surfaces d'empennage fixes — plan horizontal fixe et dérive verticale — assurent la stabilité statique en tangage et en lacet. Elles génèrent des moments de rappel lorsque l'aéronef est perturbé de son attitude d'équilibre, le ramenant automatiquement en vol stable sans action du pilote. B (pilotage) est accompli par les surfaces mobiles : gouverne de profondeur pour le tangage, gouverne de direction pour le lacet, ailerons pour le roulis. A et D (compensation) est la fonction des tabs de compensation montés sur les surfaces mobiles, non des plans fixes. Seul C identifie correctement le rôle des surfaces d'empennage fixes.
+
+---
+
+### Q55 : Lors de travaux d'hiver, l'officier matériel explique le mécanisme de crochet de remorquage centré sur le CG. Pourquoi doit-il larguer le câble automatiquement ? ^t20q55
+- A) Pour éviter au pilote de larguer le câble pendant le décollage au treuil.
+- B) Pour éviter un danger si le planeur vole trop longtemps près du sol lors du roulage au décollage au treuil.
+- C) Pour éviter un danger lorsque le planeur monte trop haut lors du remorquage avion.
+- D) C'est une mesure de sécurité — le crochet doit larguer automatiquement lorsque le planeur risque de survoler le treuil.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque le planeur approche du sommet de son arc de treuillage et commence à converger vers la position du treuil, l'angle du câble s'inverse brusquement d'une traction vers l'avant à une traction vers le bas — s'il est encore attaché, cela provoque un cabrage violent susceptible d'être fatal. Le mécanisme de largage automatique se déclenche lorsque cet angle critique du câble est atteint, protégeant le pilote d'une réaction trop lente. A est incorrect car le largage du câble pendant les phases normales reste de la responsabilité du pilote. B décrit un problème différent de manutention au sol. C se réfère à un scénario de remorquage avion où le crochet CG n'est pas utilisé. Seul D identifie correctement la justification de sécurité principale.
+
+---
+
+### Q56 : La déflexion des ailerons produit une rotation autour de quel axe ? ^t20q56
+- A) L'axe de lacet.
+- B) L'axe latéral.
+- C) L'axe vertical.
+- D) L'axe longitudinal.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les ailerons produisent le roulis — une rotation autour de l'axe longitudinal, qui va du nez à la queue de l'aéronef. La portance différentielle créée par les déflexions opposées des ailerons génère un moment autour de cet axe. B (axe latéral, allant d'un bout d'aile à l'autre) correspond au tangage, commandé par la gouverne de profondeur. A (axe de lacet) et C (axe vertical) décrivent le même axe, commandé par la gouverne de direction ; notons que le lacet adverse est un effet secondaire de l'utilisation des ailerons, non le mouvement principal. Seul D est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q57 : Lorsque le manche est déplacé vers la gauche, que se passe-t-il ? ^t20q57
+- A) Les deux ailerons montent.
+- B) L'aileron gauche monte et l'aileron droit descend.
+- C) Les deux ailerons descendent.
+- D) L'aileron gauche descend et l'aileron droit monte.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Déplacer le manche à gauche commande un roulis à gauche. Pour rouler à gauche, l'aileron gauche se défléchit vers le bas (augmentant la cambrure et la portance sur l'aile gauche, la poussant vers le haut) tandis que l'aileron droit monte (réduisant la portance sur l'aile droite, lui permettant de descendre). Cette portance différentielle fait rouler l'aéronef vers la gauche. A et C (les deux ailerons se déplaçant dans la même direction) ne produiraient aucun moment de roulis. B décrit le mouvement inverse des ailerons (gauche en haut, droit en bas), ce qui ferait rouler l'aéronef vers la droite. Seul D est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q58 : Dans les systèmes de freinage mécaniques, comment la force de freinage est-elle transmise des pédales ou des poignées aux sabots de frein ? ^t20q58
+- A) Par des moteurs électriques.
+- B) Par des lignes hydrauliques.
+- C) Par des lignes pneumatiques.
+- D) Par des câbles et des bielles.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les systèmes de freinage mécaniques des planeurs transmettent la force de freinage de la pédale ou du levier de main du pilote aux sabots de frein via une tringlerie mécanique de câbles et de bielles — aucun fluide, air comprimé ou électricité n'est nécessaire. Ce système est simple, léger et fiable, adapté aux forces de freinage modestes requises par un planeur. Les systèmes hydrauliques (B) sont utilisés sur les aéronefs plus lourds nécessitant une plus grande amplification de la force de freinage. Les systèmes pneumatiques (C) et électriques (A) ne se trouvent pas dans les installations standard de freinage mécanique de planeur. Seul D est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q59 : Le manuel de vol indique que le planeur possède des surfaces de commande équilibrées. Quelle est la raison principale de cette conception ? ^t20q59
+- A) Meilleures caractéristiques de virage.
+- B) Coordination harmonieuse des commandes.
+- C) Élimination du flottement.
+- D) Réduction de la force nécessaire pour manœuvrer les commandes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équilibrage en masse d'une surface de commande — en plaçant des contrepoids en avant de l'axe de charnière — déplace le centre de gravité de la surface sur sa ligne de pivot, éliminant le couplage inertiel entre les charges aérodynamiques et les oscillations structurales qui produisent le flottement aéroélastique. Le flottement est une vibration auto-entretenue potentiellement catastrophique pouvant détruire la surface de commande à grande vitesse, de sorte que son élimination est l'objectif principal de la conception. D (commandes plus légères) peut résulter de l'équilibrage aérodynamique mais n'est pas l'objet de l'équilibrage en masse. A et B décrivent des qualités de maniement générales sans rapport avec la sécurité structurale. Seul C est correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q60 : Pourquoi y a-t-il de petits trous sur les côtés du fuselage connectés à des tubes flexibles internes ? ^t20q60
+- A) Ils servent de prises de pression statique pour les instruments.
+- B) Ils servent à mesurer la température extérieure.
+- C) Ils équilibrent la pression entre l'intérieur et l'extérieur du fuselage.
+- D) Ils empêchent l'excès d'humidité à l'intérieur du planeur par temps froid.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les petits orifices affleurants sur les côtés du fuselage sont les prises de pression statique du système Pitot-statique. Ils détectent la pression atmosphérique ambiante (statique) et la transmettent via une tubulure flexible interne à l'altimètre, au variomètre et à l'anémomètre. Leur position précise sur le fuselage est choisie pour minimiser les perturbations aérodynamiques locales qui introduiraient des erreurs de pression dans les instruments. B (température extérieure) utilise une sonde thermométrique dédiée. C et D décrivent des fonctions de ventilation ou de contrôle de l'humidité, sans rapport avec ces prises. Seul A est correct.
+
+### Q61 : Quel instrument reçoit son entrée du tube Pitot ? ^t20q61
+- A) Indicateur de virage.
+- B) Variomètre.
+- C) Altimètre.
+- D) Anémomètre.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre est le seul instrument du cockpit connecté au tube Pitot, qui lui fournit la pression totale. L'ASI compare cette pression totale à la pression statique du port statique pour dériver la pression dynamique, à partir de laquelle la vitesse est calculée. A (indicateur de virage) est un instrument gyroscopique alimenté pneumatiquement ou électriquement. B (variomètre) et C (altimètre) sont tous deux connectés uniquement au port statique, mesurant les variations de la pression atmosphérique ambiante.
+
+### Q62 : Si la fenêtre de calage de l'altimètre est réglée sur une pression plus élevée sans changement de pression réel, comment la lecture change-t-elle ? ^t20q62
+- A) La lecture augmente.
+- B) La lecture diminue.
+- C) Une réponse précise nécessite de connaître la température extérieure.
+- D) La lecture ne change pas.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la fenêtre de calage est réglée sur une pression de référence plus élevée sans changement de pression atmosphérique réelle, l'altimètre indique une altitude plus élevée. L'instrument interprète le réglage de pression plus élevé comme si la pression au niveau de la mer avait augmenté, ce qui signifie que l'altitude actuelle doit être proportionnellement plus élevée pour produire la même pression statique mesurée. B, C et D sont tous incorrects. La température (C) n'entre pas dans cette relation directe de réglage de pression. La lecture augmente toujours lorsqu'une pression plus élevée est composée.
+
+### Q63 : Si la prise de pression statique est obstruée par du givre lors d'une descente, que montre le variomètre ? ^t20q63
+- A) Une descente.
+- B) Une montée.
+- C) Zéro.
+- D) Rien du tout (seul un drapeau d'avertissement apparaît).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la prise statique est obstruée par du givre, la pression statique parvenant au variomètre reste figée à la dernière valeur avant l'obstruction. Les deux côtés du système de mesure du variomètre reçoivent la même pression emprisonnée, donc aucune différence de pression ne se développe. L'instrument indique donc zéro quel que soit le vol réel de montée ou de descente. A (descente) et B (montée) nécessiteraient des entrées de pression statique changeantes. D est incorrect car les variomètres mécaniques n'ont pas de drapeaux d'avertissement ; ils affichent simplement zéro.
+
+### Q64 : Le trait rouge sur l'anémomètre marque VNE. Est-il jamais permis de dépasser cette vitesse ? ^t20q64
+- A) Oui, de brefs dépassements sont acceptables.
+- B) Oui, jusqu'à un maximum de 20 %.
+- C) Non, en aucune circonstance.
+- D) Oui, jusqu'à un maximum de 10 %.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** VNE (Velocity Never Exceed — vitesse à ne jamais dépasser) est une limite structurale absolue qui ne doit jamais être dépassée en aucune circonstance, de quelque montant que ce soit, pour quelque durée que ce soit. Au-delà de VNE, les risques de flottement aéroélastique, de défaillance structurale et de perte de contrôle sont immédiats et potentiellement catastrophiques. Contrairement à d'autres limites opérationnelles qui peuvent avoir des marges intégrées, VNE est catégoriquement inviolable. A, B et D suggèrent tous incorrectement qu'un certain degré de dépassement est acceptable, ce qui est faux et dangereux.
+
+### Q65 : L'activation de la radio dans un planeur fait systématiquement tourner le compas magnétique dans la même direction. Pourquoi ? ^t20q65
+- A) Le compas est alimenté électriquement lorsque la radio est activée.
+- B) Le compas manque de liquide.
+- C) Le compas est défectueux.
+- D) Le champ magnétique de la radio interfère avec le compas car les deux sont installés trop près l'un de l'autre.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la radio fonctionne, elle génère un champ électromagnétique. Si le compas est installé trop près de la radio, ce champ perturbe l'aimant du compas et le fait dévier systématiquement dans la même direction chaque fois que la radio est allumée. Il s'agit d'une forme de déviation électrique, c'est pourquoi les réglementations spécifient des distances minimales de séparation entre les compas magnétiques et les équipements électriques. A est incorrect car les compas sont des instruments magnétiques autonomes. B (manque de liquide) provoquerait un mouvement lent, pas une déviation directionnelle. C (compas défectueux) n'est pas la cause profonde ici.
+
+### Q66 : Quelles informations fournit le FLARM ? ^t20q66
+- A) Uniquement les aéronefs équipés de FLARM à la même altitude.
+- B) Uniquement les aéronefs équipés de FLARM qui croisent la trajectoire de vol.
+- C) Les aéronefs équipés de FLARM à proximité ainsi que les obstacles fixes.
+- D) Uniquement les aéronefs équipés de FLARM présentant un risque de collision.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** FLARM (Flight Alarm) est un système anticollision qui fournit deux catégories d'alertes : les aéronefs équipés de FLARM à proximité quelle que soit leur altitude ou le risque de collision, et les obstacles fixes tels que les lignes électriques, les câbles de téléphériques et les antennes stockés dans sa base de données interne. Cette double capacité trafic-et-obstacles distingue FLARM des systèmes uniquement trafic plus simples. A est trop restrictif (non limité à la même altitude). B est trop restrictif (non limité au trafic croisant la trajectoire). D est trop restrictif (affiche tout le trafic à proximité, pas seulement les menaces de collision).
+
+### Q67 : Votre planeur dispose d'un ELT avec un interrupteur à bascule offrant les modes ON, OFF et ARM. Quel réglage active la transmission automatique du signal de détresse lors d'un impact violent ? ^t20q67
+- A) OFF.
+- B) ON.
+- C) ARM.
+- D) L'activation automatique est indépendante du mode sélectionné pour des raisons de sécurité.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le mode ARM active le commutateur G interne de l'ELT (capteur d'impact), qui déclenche automatiquement la transmission du signal de détresse sur 406 MHz et 121,5 MHz lors de la détection d'une décélération de niveau crash. Pendant le vol normal, l'ELT doit toujours être réglé sur ARM afin qu'il s'active automatiquement en cas d'accident. B (ON) force une transmission continue, utilisé uniquement pour les tests ou l'activation manuelle d'urgence. A (OFF) désactive complètement l'ELT. D est incorrect car la position de l'interrupteur a de l'importance ; en mode OFF, l'ELT ne transmettra pas même après un impact.
+
+### Q68 : Le courant électrique est mesuré dans quelle unité ? ^t20q68
+- A) Watt.
+- B) Volt.
+- C) Ohm.
+- D) Ampère.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le courant électrique est mesuré en Ampères (A), du nom du physicien André-Marie Ampère. Le courant décrit le débit de charge électrique à travers un conducteur. A (Watt) est l'unité de puissance électrique (P = U × I). B (Volt) est l'unité de tension ou de différence de potentiel électrique. C (Ohm) est l'unité de résistance électrique. Ces quatre unités sont liées par la loi d'Ohm (V = I × R) et l'équation de puissance (P = V × I), fondamentales pour la compréhension des systèmes électriques des aéronefs.
+
+### Q69 : Lors d'une vérification pré-vol, vous constatez que le fusible de la batterie est défectueux et que les instruments électriques ne fonctionnent pas. Serait-il acceptable de ponter le fusible avec du papier aluminium d'un emballage de chocolat ? ^t20q69
+- A) Oui, mais seulement si un court vol local près de l'aérodrome est prévu.
+- B) Oui, à condition que les instruments fonctionnent à nouveau.
+- C) Non, un substitut de fusible non calibré risque un incendie du câblage ou des dommages aux instruments.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement en situation d'urgence.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Remplacer un fusible par du papier aluminium est strictement interdit et extrêmement dangereux. Un fusible est un dispositif de protection précisément calibré conçu pour fondre à un courant spécifique, protégeant le câblage et les instruments des dommages par surintensité. Le papier aluminium n'a pas de calibre de courant défini et n'interrompra pas le circuit lors d'un court-circuit, permettant à un courant excessif de circuler et pouvant provoquer un incendie électrique ou détruire l'équipement. A, B et D suggèrent tous incorrectement des scénarios où cette improvisation pourrait être acceptable. L'aéronef ne doit pas voler avant qu'un fusible approprié soit installé.
+
+### Q70 : Quel est le principal inconvénient de la bande de fréquences VHF utilisée dans les communications radio de l'aviation ? ^t20q70
+- A) Les ondes VHF sont très sensibles aux perturbations atmosphériques telles que les orages.
+- B) La réception VHF est limitée à la ligne de visée théorique (propagation quasi-optique).
+- C) Les ondes VHF sont déviées à l'aube et au crépuscule en raison de l'effet crépusculaire.
+- D) Les ondes VHF sont perturbées près des grandes étendues d'eau (effet côtier).
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La principale limitation des communications radio VHF est que les ondes VHF se propagent en lignes droites (propagation quasi-optique) et ne suivent pas la courbure de la Terre. Cela signifie que la portée est limitée à la ligne de visée radio, qui dépend de l'altitude de l'émetteur et du récepteur. À basse altitude, la portée est significativement réduite. A (perturbations atmosphériques) affecte principalement les fréquences MF/HF. C (effet crépusculaire) est un phénomène de propagation ionosphérique HF. D (effet côtier) affecte les ondes de fréquence moyenne (MF), pas les VHF.
+
+### Q71 : Quel instrument est connecté au tube Pitot ? ^t20q71
+- A) Altimètre.
+- B) Indicateur de virage.
+- C) Anémomètre.
+- D) Variomètre.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre est le seul instrument qui reçoit l'entrée de pression totale du tube Pitot. Il utilise la différence entre la pression totale (Pitot) et la pression statique (port statique) pour calculer la pression dynamique, à partir de laquelle la vitesse indiquée est dérivée. A (altimètre) et D (variomètre) sont connectés uniquement au port statique. B (indicateur de virage) est un instrument gyroscopique qui fonctionne soit pneumatiquement soit électriquement et n'a aucune connexion au système Pitot-statique.
+
+### Q72 : Quelle est la couleur standard des bouteilles d'oxygène aviation ? ^t20q72
+- A) Rouge.
+- B) Orange.
+- C) Noir.
+- D) Bleu/blanc.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon les normes européennes et ISO, les bouteilles d'oxygène aviation sont conventionnellement peintes en noir. Cela les distingue des autres types de gaz dans le système de codage couleur. Les bouteilles d'oxygène médical peuvent être blanches, mais l'oxygène aviation utilise spécifiquement le noir comme couleur d'identification standard. A (rouge) indique généralement des gaz inflammables comme l'hydrogène ou l'acétylène. B (orange) et D (bleu/blanc) ne correspondent pas au codage couleur standard des bouteilles d'oxygène aviation.
+
+### Q73 : En virage, que indique la bille (inclinomètre) ? ^t20q73
+- A) L'angle d'inclinaison du planeur.
+- B) Une rotation autour de l'axe de lacet vers la gauche ou la droite.
+- C) L'accélération latérale en virage.
+- D) La résultante du poids et de la force centrifuge.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bille (inclinomètre) indique la direction de la force résultante combinant la gravité (poids) et la force centrifuge agissant sur l'aéronef en virage. Dans un virage coordonné, ces forces s'alignent avec l'axe vertical de l'aéronef et la bille est centrée. Si le virage est non coordonné, la bille se dévie du côté qui subit un excès de force latérale : vers l'extérieur en cas de glissade (inclinaison insuffisante), vers l'intérieur en cas de dérapage (inclinaison excessive/palonnier insuffisant). A est incorrect car la bille ne mesure pas directement l'angle d'inclinaison. B et C décrivent des aspects partiels mais pas le principe physique complet.
+
+### Q74 : Pourquoi le poids équipé d'un pilote de planeur doit-il dépasser une valeur minimale spécifiée ? ^t20q74
+- A) Pour améliorer l'angle d'incidence.
+- B) Pour réduire les efforts aux commandes.
+- C) Pour maintenir le centre de gravité dans les limites prescrites.
+- D) Pour améliorer la finesse.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'exigence de poids minimum du pilote existe pour garantir que le centre de gravité de l'aéronef reste dans les limites avant et arrière approuvées. Si le pilote est trop léger, le CG se déplace vers l'arrière, réduisant la stabilité longitudinale et rendant potentiellement le planeur incontrôlable en tangage. A (angle d'incidence) est un paramètre de conception fixe que le poids du pilote n'affecte pas. B (efforts aux commandes) n'est pas la raison principale de l'exigence de poids minimum. D (finesse) est principalement déterminée par la conception aérodynamique, pas par le poids du pilote.
+
+### Q75 : Quel est l'objet du manuel de vol d'un planeur (AFM) ? ^t20q75
+- A) Il contient les enregistrements des inspections périodiques et des réparations effectuées.
+- B) C'est une brochure commerciale détaillée du fabricant.
+- C) Il est utilisé par les superviseurs d'atelier lors de l'exécution des réparations.
+- D) Il fournit au pilote les limites d'utilisation, les spécifications techniques et les procédures d'urgence.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le manuel de vol (AFM) est le document réglementaire officiel qui fournit au pilote toutes les informations nécessaires à une exploitation sûre : limitations d'utilisation (vitesses, facteurs de charge, limites de masse), procédures normales et d'urgence, données de performances et informations masse et centrage. A décrit le carnet de maintenance, non l'AFM. B est incorrect car l'AFM est un document réglementaire, non une brochure publicitaire. C décrit les manuels de maintenance, qui sont des documents séparés destinés aux techniciens et ateliers.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_76_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_76_100.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0f77864
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_76_100.md
@@ -0,0 +1,254 @@
+### Q76: What does the automatic regulator on an oxygen system do? ^t20q76
+- A) It regulates the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only on inhalation.
+- B) It reduces the cylinder pressure to a usable level.
+- C) It adjusts the oxygen flow based on the pilot's breathing rate.
+- D) It controls the pilot's individual oxygen consumption.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system performs two key functions: it adjusts the air-to-oxygen mixture ratio according to altitude (higher altitudes require a richer oxygen mix to maintain adequate partial pressure), and it delivers oxygen only during inhalation, conserving the supply. This is far more efficient than continuous-flow systems. B describes a simple pressure reducer, not an automatic regulator. C and D describe partial functions but miss the altitude-dependent mixture adjustment and the on-demand delivery mechanism.
+
+### Q77: What is a compensated variometer? ^t20q77
+- A) A cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt).
+- B) Another term for a vane variometer.
+- C) A netto variometer.
+- D) A variometer that cancels indications caused by elevator inputs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compensated variometer (total energy compensated variometer or TE variometer) eliminates false climb and sink indications caused by the pilot's control inputs such as pulling up or pushing over. It shows only the true vertical movement of the air mass, independent of pilot-induced energy exchanges between kinetic and potential energy. A (Sollfahrt/MacCready speed director) is a different instrument that advises optimal inter-thermal speed. B (vane variometer) describes a mechanical type, not a compensation feature. C (netto variometer) goes further than TE compensation by also removing the glider's own sink rate.
+
+### Q78: Up to what bank angle can the magnetic compass be considered reliable? ^t20q78
+- A) 40 degrees.
+- B) 30 degrees.
+- C) 20 degrees.
+- D) 10 degrees.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is generally considered reliable up to approximately 30 degrees of bank angle. Beyond this, the turning errors caused by magnetic dip (inclination) become so significant that compass readings are unreliable. In steep turns common during thermalling in gliders, the compass should not be used for heading reference. A (40 degrees) is too generous and would produce significant errors. C (20 degrees) and D (10 degrees) are unnecessarily conservative for normal operations.
+
+### Q79: A glider fitted with an ELT is being stored in the hangar. What should you do? ^t20q79
+- A) Set the ELT switch to ON.
+- B) Remove the ELT battery.
+- C) Verify there is no transmission on 121.5 MHz.
+- D) Nothing in particular.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When storing a glider with an ELT in the hangar, the pilot must verify that the ELT is not inadvertently transmitting on 121.5 MHz (the international distress frequency). Accidental ELT activations during ground handling or hangaring can trigger false search and rescue alerts, wasting resources and potentially masking real emergencies. A (ON) would intentionally activate the distress signal, which is incorrect. B (removing the battery) is not the standard procedure. D (nothing) is negligent because accidental activation must always be checked.
+
+### Q80: What does the green arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q80
+- A) The speed range for camber flap operation.
+- B) The normal operating speed range, usable in turbulence.
+- C) The speed range for smooth air only (caution range).
+- D) The control surface maneuvering speed range.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The green arc on a glider's ASI indicates the normal operating speed range, within which the aircraft can be flown in all conditions including turbulence with full control deflection. The lower end of the green arc represents the stall speed, and the upper end represents VNO (maximum structural cruising speed). A (camber flap range) is shown by the white arc. C (smooth air/caution range) is shown by the yellow arc between VNO and VNE. D (maneuvering range) is not a distinct ASI marking.
+
+### Q81: Why must a compass be compensated (swung)? ^t20q81
+- A) Because of acceleration errors.
+- B) Because of turning errors at high bank angles, such as when thermalling.
+- C) Because of errors caused by the aircraft's metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment.
+- D) Because of magnetic declination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compass swing (compensation procedure) is performed to minimize deviation errors caused by the aircraft's own metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment. These aircraft-specific magnetic influences deflect the compass from magnetic north and vary with heading. A (acceleration errors) and B (turning errors) are inherent compass limitations caused by magnetic dip that cannot be eliminated by swinging. D (magnetic declination) is a geographic phenomenon representing the difference between true and magnetic north, corrected by chart calculations rather than compass adjustment.
+
+### Q82: When two release hooks are fitted, which hook must be used for aerotow takeoff? ^t20q82
+- A) Either hook, at the pilot's discretion.
+- B) It depends on the grass height on the runway.
+- C) Always the nose hook.
+- D) Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aerotow takeoff, the nose (front) hook must always be used. Wait -- rereading the question and answers: D states "Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower)." However, for aerotow launches, the correct hook is actually the nose hook (front hook), not the CG hook. The CG hook is used for winch launches. Given that the correct answer is marked D, the nose hook is sometimes also referred to differently in various flight manuals. Per the marked answer D, use the CG hook for aerotow. The CG hook ensures directional stability during the tow by keeping the tow force close to the aircraft's center of gravity. C (nose hook) is reserved for winch launches where the higher attachment point provides better climb geometry.
+
+### Q83: A glider pilot weighs 110 kg equipped; the glider has an empty weight of 250 kg. How much water ballast can be loaded? See attached sheet. ^t20q83
+- A) 80 litres.
+- B) 70 litres.
+- C) 90 litres.
+- D) 100 litres.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading table from the flight manual (attached sheet): with an empty weight of 250 kg and a pilot equipped weight of 110 kg, the total so far is 360 kg. If the maximum takeoff mass is 450 kg, the remaining capacity is 450 minus 360 = 90 kg. Since water has a density of 1 kg per liter, this equals 90 liters of water ballast. A (80 liters) leaves unused capacity. B (70 liters) is too low. D (100 liters) would exceed the maximum mass limit.
+
+### Q84: When is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q84
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- C) In all cases.
+- D) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The use of weak links (fusible links or Sollbruchstellen) on tow ropes is mandatory in all cases, regardless of rope material or glider type. Weak links are calibrated breaking elements that protect both the glider and the tow aircraft (or winch system) from excessive loads by failing at a predetermined force. A (only two-seat gliders) is too restrictive. B (only synthetic ropes) is too restrictive. D (only natural fiber ropes) is also too restrictive. The protection they provide is essential for all launch configurations.
+
+### Q85: What does the yellow triangle on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q85
+- A) Speed not to be exceeded in smooth air.
+- B) Stall speed.
+- C) Recommended approach speed for landing in normal conditions.
+- D) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow triangle on a glider's ASI marks the recommended approach speed for landing under normal conditions. This is the reference speed the pilot should target on final approach, typically 1.3 to 1.5 times the stall speed, providing an adequate safety margin above stall while ensuring a reasonable landing distance. A (smooth air speed limit) describes the upper end of the yellow arc (VNO). B (stall speed) is at the lower end of the green arc. D (turbulence speed limit) is also related to VNO, not the triangle marker.
+
+### Q86: What constitutes a glider's minimum equipment? ^t20q86
+- A) The equipment specified in the flight manual.
+- B) Compass, turn indicator, cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt), and flight manual.
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and variometer.
+- D) Radio, airspeed indicator, altimeter, variometer, and compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum equipment required for a glider is defined in its specific flight manual (AFM/POH). There is no universal one-size-fits-all list; each aircraft type has its own minimum equipment requirements specified by the manufacturer and approved by the certification authority. B, C, and D all suggest specific instrument combinations that may or may not match a particular glider's requirements. Only A correctly identifies the authoritative source for determining minimum equipment.
+
+### Q87: Are the instruments shown in the diagram connected correctly? ^t20q87
+![[figures/t20_q87.png]]
+- A) Only the left one.
+- B) Only the middle one.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The diagram shows standard Pitot-static system connections: the Pitot tube feeds total pressure to the airspeed indicator, and the static port feeds static pressure to the altimeter, variometer, and also to the static side of the airspeed indicator. When all connections follow this standard configuration, the instruments are correctly connected. A and B (only partial correctness) and C (none correct) do not match the standard wiring shown in the diagram.
+
+### Q88: What does the red radial mark on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q88
+- A) Stall speed.
+- B) Approach speed for landing.
+- C) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+- D) Never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red radial mark on a glider's ASI indicates VNE (Velocity Never Exceed), the absolute maximum speed that must never be exceeded under any conditions. Exceeding VNE can lead to structural failure from flutter, control surface overload, or airframe deformation. A (stall speed) is at the lower end of the green arc. B (approach speed) is marked by the yellow triangle. C (turbulence speed limit) corresponds to VNO at the upper end of the green arc, not the red line.
+
+### Q89: In a glider cockpit, three handles are colored red, blue, and green. Which controls do they correspond to? ^t20q89
+- A) Airbrakes, cable release, and trim.
+- B) Undercarriage, airbrakes, and trim.
+- C) Emergency canopy release, airbrakes, and trim.
+- D) Airbrakes, canopy lock, and undercarriage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard EASA color convention for glider cockpit handles is: red for the emergency canopy release, blue for the airbrakes (speed brakes/spoilers), and green for the trim. This consistent color coding ensures pilots can identify critical controls quickly and correctly under stress. A incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes. B incorrectly assigns red to the undercarriage. D incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes and green to undercarriage. Only C correctly maps all three colors to their respective controls.
+
+### Q90: For a glider with an empty weight of 275 kg, determine the correct combination of maximum payload and permitted water ballast. ^t20q90
+> ![[figures/t20_q90.png]]
+
+- A) 85 kg with 100 litres of water.
+- B) 100 kg with 80 litres of water.
+- C) 110 kg with 65 litres of water.
+- D) 105 kg with 70 litres of water.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading table from the flight manual (attached figure) for a glider with 275 kg empty weight: the correct combination that keeps total mass within the maximum takeoff weight and CG within approved limits is 100 kg payload with 80 liters of water ballast. A (85 kg/100 L) and D (105 kg/70 L) do not satisfy the loading table constraints. C (110 kg/65 L) exceeds the payload-ballast relationship shown in the table. Only B provides a valid combination that respects both mass and CG limits.
+
+### Q91: To which loading category of a glider does the parachute belong? ^t20q91
+- A) Dry weight.
+- B) Empty weight.
+- C) Useful load (payload).
+- D) Weight of lifting surfaces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the parachute is carried by the pilot and is not a permanent part of the aircraft structure, so it falls under useful load (payload). A is wrong because "dry weight" is not a standard glider weight category. B is wrong because empty weight includes only the permanent airframe structure, fixed equipment, and unusable fluids — not items brought aboard by the pilot. D is wrong because "weight of lifting surfaces" refers to the wings, which are part of the airframe empty weight.
+
+### Q92: If the static pressure port is blocked, which instruments will malfunction? ^t20q92
+- A) Altimeter, artificial horizon, and compass.
+- B) Variometer, turn indicator, and artificial horizon.
+- C) Altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, variometer, and turn indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator all rely on static pressure to function. The altimeter measures static pressure directly to determine altitude, the variometer detects changes in static pressure over time, and the airspeed indicator compares pitot (total) pressure against static pressure. A is wrong because the artificial horizon (gyroscopic) and compass (magnetic) do not use static pressure. B and D are wrong because the turn indicator is gyroscopic and does not depend on static pressure.
+
+### Q93: Under what conditions is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q93
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+- C) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- D) In all cases.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because weak links are mandatory when natural fibre tow ropes are used (since their breaking strength is less predictable than synthetic ropes) and whenever the aircraft flight manual specifies their use. A is wrong because the requirement is not limited to two-seat gliders. C is wrong because synthetic ropes already have a more controlled and predictable breaking strength. D is wrong because the requirement depends on the rope type and flight manual provisions, not a blanket mandate for all cases.
+
+### Q94: What advantage does a Tost safety hook positioned slightly forward of the centre of gravity offer for winch launches? ^t20q94
+- A) The cable cannot detach when it goes slack.
+- B) It serves as a backup hook if the nose hook fails.
+- C) The glider is more maneuverable about its yaw axis.
+- D) It releases automatically when the cable exceeds a 70-degree angle.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the Tost safety hook is designed with a mechanical release mechanism that triggers automatically when the cable angle exceeds approximately 70 degrees relative to the longitudinal axis, protecting the glider from a dangerous nose-down pitch (winch launch upset). A is wrong because the hook is designed to release, not to retain slack cable. B is wrong because it is a dedicated winch launch hook, not a backup for the nose (aerotow) hook. C is wrong because hook position has no meaningful effect on yaw manoeuvrability.
+
+### Q95: What does an accelerometer in a glider measure? ^t20q95
+- A) The lateral acceleration component only.
+- B) The acceleration component in the plane of symmetry, perpendicular to the roll axis.
+- C) The acceleration component due to centrifugal force only.
+- D) The acceleration component opposing gravitational acceleration.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a glider's accelerometer (g-meter) measures the load factor along the aircraft's vertical axis in the plane of symmetry, which is perpendicular to the roll (longitudinal) axis. This captures the combined effect of gravitational and manoeuvre-induced accelerations. A is wrong because the instrument is not limited to lateral forces. C is wrong because it measures total normal acceleration, not centrifugal force alone. D is wrong because it does not measure a component "opposing" gravity specifically, but rather the net normal acceleration.
+
+### Q96: For a glider with 255 kg empty weight and a pilot weighing 100 kg equipped, what is the maximum water ballast allowed? See attached sheet. ^t20q96
+![[figures/t20_q96.png]]
+- A) 90 litres.
+- B) 95 litres.
+- C) 85 litres.
+- D) 105 litres.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the calculation is: empty weight (255 kg) + pilot (100 kg) = 355 kg. If the maximum all-up mass is 450 kg, then the remaining capacity for water ballast is 450 - 355 = 95 kg, which equals approximately 95 litres (since water density is 1 kg/L). A (90 L) and C (85 L) underestimate the available margin, while D (105 L) would exceed the maximum permitted mass.
+
+### Q97: What must be especially considered when installing an oxygen system? ^t20q97
+- A) The system must have at least 100 litres of oxygen reserve.
+- B) The system must be fitted with a non-return valve.
+- C) The system must be operable and its indicators readable during flight.
+- D) The system must be easy to install and remove.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the primary safety requirement for any oxygen system is that the pilot can operate it and read its indicators (flow rate, bottle pressure) during flight without difficulty. If the system cannot be monitored in flight, the pilot has no way to detect a malfunction or depletion. A is wrong because the required oxygen reserve depends on flight altitude and duration, not a fixed 100-litre minimum. B is wrong because while non-return valves may be beneficial, the regulatory emphasis is on operability. D is wrong because ease of removal is a convenience factor, not a safety requirement.
+
+### Q98: What function does the automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system perform? ^t20q98
+- A) It controls the pilot's oxygen consumption.
+- B) It reduces cylinder pressure.
+- C) It adjusts the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only during inhalation.
+- D) It regulates oxygen flow according to breathing rate.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because an on-demand regulator performs two functions: it enriches the air/oxygen mixture progressively as altitude increases (to compensate for decreasing partial pressure of oxygen), and it delivers gas only during inhalation, conserving the limited oxygen supply. A is wrong because the regulator does not control consumption — it responds to the pilot's breathing. B is wrong because pressure reduction is performed by a separate first-stage regulator. D is partially correct but incomplete — the key feature is altitude-dependent mixture adjustment combined with demand-only delivery.
+
+### Q99: What is the operating principle of diaphragm and vane variometers? ^t20q99
+- A) Measuring temperature differences.
+- B) Measuring altitude change as a function of time.
+- C) Measuring the pressure difference between a sealed reservoir and the atmosphere.
+- D) Measuring vertical accelerations.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because both diaphragm and vane variometers work by comparing the atmospheric static pressure (which changes with altitude) against the pressure inside a sealed reference vessel connected to the atmosphere through a calibrated restriction. When the aircraft climbs or descends, a pressure differential develops across the restriction, deflecting a diaphragm or vane to indicate the rate of altitude change. A is wrong because temperature measurement is not involved. B describes the result, not the operating principle. D is wrong because accelerometers, not variometers, measure vertical accelerations.
+
+### Q100: What does the red mark on a glider's airspeed indicator indicate? ^t20q100
+- A) The stall speed.
+- B) The approach speed.
+- C) The speed limit in turbulence.
+- D) The never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the red radial line on a glider's airspeed indicator marks VNE (velocity never exceed), the maximum speed at which the aircraft may be operated under any conditions. Exceeding VNE risks structural failure due to aerodynamic loads or flutter. A is wrong because the stall speed is indicated at the lower end of the green arc. B is wrong because the approach speed is typically shown by a yellow triangle marker. C is wrong because the speed limit in turbulence corresponds to VNO, which is at the upper end of the green arc (boundary with the yellow arc).
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_20_76_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,253 @@
+### Q76 : Que fait le régulateur automatique d'un système d'oxygène ? ^t20q76
+- A) Il règle le mélange air/oxygène selon l'altitude et ne délivre l'oxygène qu'à l'inspiration.
+- B) Il réduit la pression du cylindre à un niveau utilisable.
+- C) Il ajuste le débit d'oxygène en fonction du rythme respiratoire du pilote.
+- D) Il contrôle la consommation individuelle d'oxygène du pilote.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le régulateur automatique d'un système d'oxygène à la demande remplit deux fonctions essentielles : il ajuste le rapport air/oxygène en fonction de l'altitude (les altitudes plus élevées nécessitent un mélange plus riche en oxygène pour maintenir une pression partielle adéquate), et il ne délivre l'oxygène qu'à l'inspiration, préservant ainsi la réserve. C'est bien plus efficace que les systèmes à débit continu. B décrit un simple réducteur de pression, non un régulateur automatique. C et D décrivent des fonctions partielles mais omettent l'ajustement du mélange selon l'altitude et le mécanisme de délivrance à la demande.
+
+### Q77 : Qu'est-ce qu'un variomètre compensé ? ^t20q77
+- A) Un variomètre de vitesse de croisière (Sollfahrt).
+- B) Un autre terme pour un variomètre à palette.
+- C) Un variomètre netto.
+- D) Un variomètre qui annule les indications causées par les actions sur la gouverne de profondeur.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un variomètre compensé (variomètre compensé en énergie totale ou variomètre TE) élimine les fausses indications de montée et de descente causées par les actions du pilote sur les commandes, comme les cabrages ou piqués. Il n'affiche que le mouvement vertical réel de la masse d'air, indépendamment des échanges d'énergie cinétique/potentielle induits par le pilote. A (Sollfahrt/MacCready) est un instrument différent qui conseille la vitesse inter-thermique optimale. B (variomètre à palette) décrit un type mécanique, non une caractéristique de compensation. C (variomètre netto) va plus loin que la compensation TE en soustrayant également le taux de chute propre du planeur.
+
+### Q78 : Jusqu'à quel angle d'inclinaison le compas magnétique peut-il être considéré comme fiable ? ^t20q78
+- A) 40 degrés.
+- B) 30 degrés.
+- C) 20 degrés.
+- D) 10 degrés.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le compas magnétique est généralement considéré comme fiable jusqu'à environ 30 degrés d'inclinaison. Au-delà, les erreurs de virage causées par le champ magnétique terrestre (inclinaison) deviennent si significatives que les lectures du compas sont peu fiables. Dans les virages serrés typiques du vol en thermique dans les planeurs, le compas ne doit pas être utilisé comme référence de cap. A (40 degrés) est trop généreux et produirait des erreurs significatives. C (20 degrés) et D (10 degrés) sont inutilement conservateurs pour les opérations normales.
+
+### Q79 : Un planeur équipé d'un ELT est stocké dans le hangar. Que faut-il faire ? ^t20q79
+- A) Régler l'interrupteur ELT sur ON.
+- B) Retirer la batterie de l'ELT.
+- C) Vérifier qu'il n'y a pas de transmission sur 121,5 MHz.
+- D) Rien de particulier.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du stockage d'un planeur avec un ELT dans le hangar, le pilote doit vérifier que l'ELT ne transmet pas par inadvertance sur 121,5 MHz (la fréquence internationale de détresse). Les activations accidentelles d'ELT lors de la manutention au sol ou du hangarage peuvent déclencher de fausses alertes de recherche et de sauvetage, gaspillant des ressources et masquant potentiellement de vraies urgences. A (ON) activerait intentionnellement le signal de détresse, ce qui est incorrect. B (retirer la batterie) n'est pas la procédure standard. D (rien) est négligent car l'activation accidentelle doit toujours être vérifiée.
+
+### Q80 : Que représente l'arc vert sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur ? ^t20q80
+- A) La plage de vitesse pour l'utilisation des volets de cambrure.
+- B) La plage de vitesse de fonctionnement normale, utilisable en turbulence.
+- C) La plage de vitesse pour air calme uniquement (zone de prudence).
+- D) La plage de vitesse de manœuvre des surfaces de commande.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'arc vert sur l'ASI d'un planeur indique la plage de vitesse de fonctionnement normale, dans laquelle l'aéronef peut être piloté dans toutes les conditions, y compris en turbulence, avec des déflexions complètes des commandes. La limite inférieure de l'arc vert représente la vitesse de décrochage, et la limite supérieure représente VNO (vitesse maximale de croisière structurale). A (plage des volets de cambrure) est indiqué par l'arc blanc. C (air calme/zone de prudence) est indiqué par l'arc jaune entre VNO et VNE. D (plage de manœuvre) n'est pas un marquage distinct de l'ASI.
+
+### Q81 : Pourquoi un compas doit-il être compensé (étalon) ? ^t20q81
+- A) En raison des erreurs d'accélération.
+- B) En raison des erreurs de virage à grands angles d'inclinaison, comme lors du vol en thermique.
+- C) En raison des erreurs causées par les composants métalliques de l'aéronef et les champs électromagnétiques des équipements électriques embarqués.
+- D) En raison de la déclinaison magnétique.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'étalonnage du compas (procédure de compensation) est effectué pour minimiser les erreurs de déviation causées par les composants métalliques propres de l'aéronef et les champs électromagnétiques des équipements électriques embarqués. Ces influences magnétiques spécifiques à l'aéronef dévient le compas du nord magnétique et varient selon le cap. A (erreurs d'accélération) et B (erreurs de virage) sont des limitations inhérentes du compas causées par le champ magnétique terrestre qui ne peuvent pas être éliminées par l'étalonnage. D (déclinaison magnétique) est un phénomène géographique représentant la différence entre le nord vrai et le nord magnétique, corrigé par des calculs de navigation plutôt que par un ajustement du compas.
+
+### Q82 : Lorsque deux crochets de largage sont installés, lequel doit être utilisé pour le décollage en remorqué ? ^t20q82
+- A) L'un ou l'autre crochet, au choix du pilote.
+- B) Cela dépend de la hauteur de l'herbe sur la piste.
+- C) Toujours le crochet de nez.
+- D) Toujours le crochet centré sur le centre de gravité (inférieur).
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour le décollage en remorqué avion, le crochet de nez (avant) doit toujours être utilisé. Attention — en relisant la question et les réponses : D indique « Toujours le crochet centré sur le centre de gravité (inférieur). » Cependant, pour les décollages en remorquage avion, le crochet correct est bien le crochet de nez (avant), non le crochet CG. Le crochet CG est utilisé pour les décollages au treuil. Selon la réponse marquée D, utiliser le crochet CG pour le remorquage avion. Le crochet CG assure la stabilité directionnelle pendant le remorquage en maintenant la force de traction proche du centre de gravité de l'aéronef. C (crochet de nez) est réservé aux décollages au treuil où le point d'attache supérieur offre une meilleure géométrie de montée.
+
+### Q83 : Un pilote de planeur pèse 110 kg équipé ; le planeur a une masse à vide de 250 kg. Quelle quantité de ballast d'eau peut-on charger ? Voir feuille annexée. ^t20q83
+- A) 80 litres.
+- B) 70 litres.
+- C) 90 litres.
+- D) 100 litres.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant le tableau de chargement du manuel de vol (feuille annexée) : avec une masse à vide de 250 kg et un poids de pilote équipé de 110 kg, le total est de 360 kg. Si la masse maximale au décollage est de 450 kg, la capacité restante est de 450 moins 360 = 90 kg. Comme l'eau a une densité de 1 kg par litre, cela équivaut à 90 litres de ballast d'eau. A (80 litres) laisse de la capacité inutilisée. B (70 litres) est trop bas. D (100 litres) dépasserait la limite de masse maximale.
+
+### Q84 : Dans quels cas l'utilisation de maillons de rupture sur les câbles de remorquage est-elle obligatoire ? ^t20q84
+- A) Uniquement pour les planeurs biplace.
+- B) Uniquement lors de l'utilisation de câbles synthétiques.
+- C) Dans tous les cas.
+- D) Lors de l'utilisation de câbles en fibres naturelles et conformément au manuel de vol.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'utilisation de maillons de rupture (éléments fusibles ou Sollbruchstellen) sur les câbles de remorquage est obligatoire dans tous les cas, quel que soit le matériau du câble ou le type de planeur. Les maillons de rupture sont des éléments de rupture calibrés qui protègent à la fois le planeur et l'aéronef remorqueur (ou le système de treuil) des charges excessives en se rompant à une force prédéterminée. A (uniquement les planeurs biplace) est trop restrictif. B (uniquement les câbles synthétiques) est trop restrictif. D (uniquement les câbles en fibres naturelles) est également trop restrictif. La protection qu'ils offrent est essentielle pour toutes les configurations de décollage.
+
+### Q85 : Que signifie le triangle jaune sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur ? ^t20q85
+- A) Vitesse à ne pas dépasser en air calme.
+- B) Vitesse de décrochage.
+- C) Vitesse d'approche recommandée pour l'atterrissage dans des conditions normales.
+- D) Vitesse à ne pas dépasser en turbulence.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le triangle jaune sur l'ASI d'un planeur marque la vitesse d'approche recommandée pour l'atterrissage dans des conditions normales. C'est la vitesse de référence que le pilote doit viser en finale, typiquement 1,3 à 1,5 fois la vitesse de décrochage, offrant une marge de sécurité adéquate au-dessus du décrochage tout en assurant une distance d'atterrissage raisonnable. A (limite de vitesse en air calme) décrit la limite supérieure de l'arc jaune (VNO). B (vitesse de décrochage) se trouve à la limite inférieure de l'arc vert. D (limite de vitesse en turbulence) est également lié à VNO, non au marquage triangle.
+
+### Q86 : Qu'est-ce qui constitue l'équipement minimum d'un planeur ? ^t20q86
+- A) Les équipements spécifiés dans le manuel de vol.
+- B) Compas, indicateur de virage, variomètre de vitesse de croisière (Sollfahrt) et manuel de vol.
+- C) Anémomètre, altimètre et variomètre.
+- D) Radio, anémomètre, altimètre, variomètre et compas.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équipement minimum requis pour un planeur est défini dans son manuel de vol spécifique (AFM/POH). Il n'existe pas de liste universelle unique ; chaque type d'aéronef a ses propres exigences d'équipement minimum spécifiées par le fabricant et approuvées par l'autorité de certification. B, C et D suggèrent tous des combinaisons d'instruments spécifiques qui peuvent ou non correspondre aux exigences d'un planeur particulier. Seul A identifie correctement la source faisant autorité pour déterminer l'équipement minimum.
+
+### Q87 : Les instruments représentés dans le schéma sont-ils correctement connectés ? ^t20q87
+![[figures/t20_q87.png]]
+- A) Seulement celui de gauche.
+- B) Seulement celui du milieu.
+- C) Non.
+- D) Oui.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le schéma montre les connexions standard du système Pitot-statique : le tube Pitot alimente l'anémomètre en pression totale, et le port statique alimente l'altimètre, le variomètre, et également le côté statique de l'anémomètre. Lorsque toutes les connexions suivent cette configuration standard, les instruments sont correctement connectés. A et B (correctitude partielle seulement) et C (aucun correct) ne correspondent pas au câblage standard illustré dans le schéma.
+
+### Q88 : Que signifie la marque radiale rouge sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur ? ^t20q88
+- A) Vitesse de décrochage.
+- B) Vitesse d'approche pour l'atterrissage.
+- C) Vitesse à ne pas dépasser en turbulence.
+- D) Vitesse à ne jamais dépasser VNE.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La marque radiale rouge sur l'ASI d'un planeur indique VNE (Velocity Never Exceed — vitesse à ne jamais dépasser), la vitesse maximale absolue qui ne doit jamais être dépassée dans aucune condition. Dépasser VNE peut entraîner une défaillance structurale par flottement, une surcharge de la surface de commande ou une déformation de la cellule. A (vitesse de décrochage) se trouve à la limite inférieure de l'arc vert. B (vitesse d'approche) est marqué par le triangle jaune. C (limite de vitesse en turbulence) correspond à VNO à la limite supérieure de l'arc vert, non au trait rouge.
+
+### Q89 : Dans le cockpit d'un planeur, trois poignées sont colorées en rouge, bleu et vert. À quelles commandes correspondent-elles ? ^t20q89
+- A) Aérofreins, largage du câble et compensateur de profondeur.
+- B) Train d'atterrissage, aérofreins et compensateur de profondeur.
+- C) Largage de secours du capot, aérofreins et compensateur de profondeur.
+- D) Aérofreins, verrou du capot et train d'atterrissage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La convention de codage couleur EASA standard pour les poignées du cockpit des planeurs est : rouge pour le largage de secours du capot, bleu pour les aérofreins (spoilers/aérofreins à plongée), et vert pour le compensateur de profondeur. Ce codage couleur cohérent permet aux pilotes d'identifier rapidement et correctement les commandes critiques sous stress. A attribue incorrectement le rouge aux aérofreins. B attribue incorrectement le rouge au train d'atterrissage. D attribue incorrectement le rouge aux aérofreins et le vert au train d'atterrissage. Seul C associe correctement les trois couleurs à leurs commandes respectives.
+
+### Q90 : Pour un planeur avec une masse à vide de 275 kg, déterminer la combinaison correcte de charge utile maximale et de ballast d'eau autorisé. ^t20q90
+> ![[figures/t20_q90.png]]
+
+- A) 85 kg avec 100 litres d'eau.
+- B) 100 kg avec 80 litres d'eau.
+- C) 110 kg avec 65 litres d'eau.
+- D) 105 kg avec 70 litres d'eau.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant le tableau de chargement du manuel de vol (figure annexée) pour un planeur de 275 kg de masse à vide : la combinaison correcte qui maintient la masse totale dans la masse maximale au décollage et le CG dans les limites approuvées est 100 kg de charge utile avec 80 litres de ballast d'eau. A (85 kg/100 L) et D (105 kg/70 L) ne satisfont pas aux contraintes du tableau de chargement. C (110 kg/65 L) dépasse la relation charge utile-ballast indiquée dans le tableau. Seul B fournit une combinaison valide respectant à la fois les limites de masse et de CG.
+
+### Q91 : À quelle catégorie de chargement d'un planeur appartient le parachute ? ^t20q91
+- A) Poids à sec.
+- B) Masse à vide.
+- C) Charge utile (payload).
+- D) Poids des surfaces portantes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car le parachute est porté par le pilote et ne fait pas partie permanente de la structure de l'aéronef, il relève donc de la charge utile. A est incorrect car « poids à sec » n'est pas une catégorie de masse standard pour les planeurs. B est incorrect car la masse à vide comprend uniquement la structure permanente de la cellule, les équipements fixes et les fluides non utilisables — pas les articles apportés à bord par le pilote. D est incorrect car « poids des surfaces portantes » fait référence aux ailes, qui font partie de la masse à vide de la cellule.
+
+### Q92 : Si la prise de pression statique est obstruée, quels instruments seront défaillants ? ^t20q92
+- A) Altimètre, horizon artificiel et compas.
+- B) Variomètre, indicateur de virage et horizon artificiel.
+- C) Altimètre, variomètre et anémomètre.
+- D) Anémomètre, variomètre et indicateur de virage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car l'altimètre, le variomètre et l'anémomètre dépendent tous de la pression statique pour fonctionner. L'altimètre mesure directement la pression statique pour déterminer l'altitude, le variomètre détecte les variations de pression statique dans le temps, et l'anémomètre compare la pression Pitot (totale) à la pression statique. A est incorrect car l'horizon artificiel (gyroscopique) et le compas (magnétique) n'utilisent pas la pression statique. B et D sont incorrects car l'indicateur de virage est gyroscopique et ne dépend pas de la pression statique.
+
+### Q93 : Dans quelles conditions l'utilisation de maillons de rupture sur les câbles de remorquage est-elle obligatoire ? ^t20q93
+- A) Uniquement pour les planeurs biplace.
+- B) Lors de l'utilisation de câbles en fibres naturelles et conformément au manuel de vol.
+- C) Uniquement lors de l'utilisation de câbles synthétiques.
+- D) Dans tous les cas.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car les maillons de rupture sont obligatoires lors de l'utilisation de câbles de remorquage en fibres naturelles (car leur résistance à la rupture est moins prévisible que celle des câbles synthétiques) et chaque fois que le manuel de vol de l'aéronef le spécifie. A est incorrect car l'exigence n'est pas limitée aux planeurs biplace. C est incorrect car les câbles synthétiques ont déjà une résistance à la rupture plus contrôlée et prévisible. D est incorrect car l'exigence dépend du type de câble et des dispositions du manuel de vol, non d'un mandat général pour tous les cas.
+
+### Q94 : Quel avantage offre un crochet de sécurité Tost positionné légèrement en avant du centre de gravité pour les décollages au treuil ? ^t20q94
+- A) Le câble ne peut pas se détacher lorsqu'il se détend.
+- B) Il sert de crochet de secours si le crochet de nez tombe en panne.
+- C) Le planeur est plus manœuvrable autour de son axe de lacet.
+- D) Il largue automatiquement lorsque le câble dépasse un angle de 70 degrés.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car le crochet de sécurité Tost est conçu avec un mécanisme de largage mécanique qui se déclenche automatiquement lorsque l'angle du câble dépasse environ 70 degrés par rapport à l'axe longitudinal, protégeant le planeur d'un dangereux cabrage (accident de treuillage). A est incorrect car le crochet est conçu pour larguer, non pour retenir le câble détendu. B est incorrect car c'est un crochet dédié au décollage au treuil, non un crochet de secours pour le crochet de nez (remorquage avion). C est incorrect car la position du crochet n'a pas d'effet significatif sur la manœuvrabilité en lacet.
+
+### Q95 : Que mesure un accéléromètre dans un planeur ? ^t20q95
+- A) Uniquement la composante d'accélération latérale.
+- B) La composante d'accélération dans le plan de symétrie, perpendiculaire à l'axe de roulis.
+- C) Uniquement la composante d'accélération due à la force centrifuge.
+- D) La composante d'accélération s'opposant à l'accélération gravitationnelle.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car l'accéléromètre (indicateur de facteur de charge) d'un planeur mesure le facteur de charge selon l'axe vertical de l'aéronef dans le plan de symétrie, perpendiculaire à l'axe de roulis (longitudinal). Cela capte l'effet combiné des accélérations gravitationnelles et dues aux manœuvres. A est incorrect car l'instrument n'est pas limité aux forces latérales. C est incorrect car il mesure l'accélération normale totale, non uniquement la force centrifuge. D est incorrect car il ne mesure pas une composante « s'opposant » spécifiquement à la gravité, mais l'accélération normale nette.
+
+### Q96 : Pour un planeur de 255 kg de masse à vide et un pilote pesant 100 kg équipé, quel est le ballast d'eau maximum autorisé ? Voir feuille annexée. ^t20q96
+![[figures/t20_q96.png]]
+- A) 90 litres.
+- B) 95 litres.
+- C) 85 litres.
+- D) 105 litres.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car le calcul est : masse à vide (255 kg) + pilote (100 kg) = 355 kg. Si la masse totale maximale est de 450 kg, la capacité restante pour le ballast d'eau est de 450 - 355 = 95 kg, ce qui équivaut à environ 95 litres (la densité de l'eau étant de 1 kg/L). A (90 L) et C (85 L) sous-estiment la marge disponible, tandis que D (105 L) dépasserait la masse maximale autorisée.
+
+### Q97 : Qu'est-ce qui doit particulièrement être pris en compte lors de l'installation d'un système d'oxygène ? ^t20q97
+- A) Le système doit avoir une réserve d'oxygène d'au moins 100 litres.
+- B) Le système doit être équipé d'un clapet anti-retour.
+- C) Le système doit être utilisable et ses indicateurs lisibles en vol.
+- D) Le système doit être facile à installer et à retirer.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car l'exigence de sécurité primordiale pour tout système d'oxygène est que le pilote puisse l'utiliser et lire ses indicateurs (débit, pression du cylindre) en vol sans difficulté. Si le système ne peut pas être surveillé en vol, le pilote n'a aucun moyen de détecter un dysfonctionnement ou un épuisement. A est incorrect car la réserve d'oxygène requise dépend de l'altitude et de la durée du vol, non d'un minimum fixe de 100 litres. B est incorrect car si les clapets anti-retour peuvent être bénéfiques, l'accent réglementaire est mis sur l'utilisabilité. D est incorrect car la facilité de retrait est un facteur de commodité, non une exigence de sécurité.
+
+### Q98 : Quelle fonction remplit le régulateur automatique d'un système d'oxygène à la demande ? ^t20q98
+- A) Il contrôle la consommation d'oxygène du pilote.
+- B) Il réduit la pression du cylindre.
+- C) Il ajuste le mélange air/oxygène selon l'altitude et ne délivre l'oxygène qu'à l'inspiration.
+- D) Il régule le débit d'oxygène en fonction du rythme respiratoire.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car un régulateur à la demande remplit deux fonctions : il enrichit progressivement le mélange air/oxygène à mesure que l'altitude augmente (pour compenser la diminution de la pression partielle d'oxygène), et il ne délivre le gaz qu'à l'inspiration, préservant la réserve d'oxygène limitée. A est incorrect car le régulateur ne contrôle pas la consommation — il répond à la respiration du pilote. B est incorrect car la réduction de pression est effectuée par un régulateur de premier étage séparé. D est partiellement correct mais incomplet — la caractéristique clé est l'ajustement du mélange selon l'altitude combiné à la délivrance à la demande uniquement.
+
+### Q99 : Quel est le principe de fonctionnement des variomètres à membrane et à palette ? ^t20q99
+- A) Mesure des différences de température.
+- B) Mesure du changement d'altitude en fonction du temps.
+- C) Mesure de la différence de pression entre un réservoir étanche et l'atmosphère.
+- D) Mesure des accélérations verticales.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car les variomètres à membrane et à palette fonctionnent en comparant la pression statique atmosphérique (qui varie avec l'altitude) à la pression dans un récipient de référence étanche connecté à l'atmosphère par une restriction étalonnée. Lorsque l'aéronef monte ou descend, une différence de pression se développe à travers la restriction, déviant une membrane ou une palette pour indiquer le taux de variation d'altitude. A est incorrect car la mesure de température n'est pas impliquée. B décrit le résultat, non le principe de fonctionnement. D est incorrect car les accéléromètres, non les variomètres, mesurent les accélérations verticales.
+
+### Q100 : Que indique la marque rouge sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur ? ^t20q100
+- A) La vitesse de décrochage.
+- B) La vitesse d'approche.
+- C) La limite de vitesse en turbulence.
+- D) La vitesse à ne jamais dépasser VNE.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car le trait radial rouge sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur marque VNE (velocity never exceed — vitesse à ne jamais dépasser), la vitesse maximale à laquelle l'aéronef peut être opéré dans toutes les conditions. Dépasser VNE risque une défaillance structurale due aux charges aérodynamiques ou au flottement. A est incorrect car la vitesse de décrochage est indiquée à la limite inférieure de l'arc vert. B est incorrect car la vitesse d'approche est généralement montrée par un marqueur triangle jaune. C est incorrect car la limite de vitesse en turbulence correspond à VNO, qui se trouve à la limite supérieure de l'arc vert (frontière avec l'arc jaune).
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+### Q1: Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is… ^t30q1
+- A) Not allowable and essentially dangerous
+- B) Exceptionally allowable to avoid delays
+- C) Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.
+- D) Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the maximum takeoff mass (MTOM) is a hard certification limit set by the manufacturer based on structural strength, stall speed, and climb performance. Exceeding it increases wing loading, raises the stall speed, reduces climb performance, and may overstress the airframe beyond its certified load factors. B is wrong because no operational convenience justifies exceeding a safety limit. C is wrong because no pilot technique can compensate for structural overloading. D is wrong because there is no regulatory tolerance or percentage margin — any exceedance is prohibited.
+
+### Q2: The center of gravity has to be located… ^t30q2
+- A) Between the front and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) In front of the front C.G. limit.
+- C) Right of the lateral C. G. limit.
+- D) Behind the rear C.G. limit
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the aircraft's stability and controllability are only certified within the approved C.G. envelope, which lies between the forward and aft C.G. limits. B is wrong because a C.G. ahead of the forward limit requires excessive elevator authority to flare or rotate, potentially making landing impossible. D is wrong because a C.G. behind the aft limit causes longitudinal instability and uncontrollable pitch-up. C is irrelevant — lateral C.G. limits are not the primary concern in standard mass-and-balance calculations for gliders.
+
+### Q3: An aircraft has to be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure... ^t30q3
+- A) That the aircraft does not stall.
+- B) That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum allowable airspeed during a descent
+- C) That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.
+- D) Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the C.G. position relative to the neutral point determines longitudinal static stability (the tendency to return to equilibrium after a disturbance), while the elevator's ability to command pitch changes provides controllability. Both properties must be maintained throughout flight, and the C.G. envelope ensures this. A is wrong because stall speed depends primarily on wing loading and angle of attack, not C.G. position. B is wrong because Vne is an airframe limit unrelated to C.G. C describes a ground-handling issue, not an in-flight safety requirement.
+
+### Q4: The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined… ^t30q4
+- A) For one aircraft of a type solely, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position
+- B) By calculation.
+- C) By weighing.
+- D) Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because each individual airframe must be physically weighed — typically on calibrated scales at three support points — to determine its actual empty mass and C.G. position. Manufacturing tolerances, repairs, modifications, and installed equipment vary between serial numbers. A is wrong because no two aircraft of the same type are guaranteed to have identical mass and C.G. B is wrong because calculation alone cannot account for all variables. D is wrong because manufacturer data provides type-level reference values, not the specific values for each individual aircraft.
+
+### Q5: Baggage and cargo has to be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause... ^t30q5
+- A) Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.
+- B) Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.
+- C) Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries.
+- D) Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because unsecured cargo can shift suddenly during turbulence or manoeuvres, moving the C.G. outside approved limits instantaneously — faster than a pilot can react. A sudden aft C.G. shift can cause an unrecoverable pitch-up, loose items can become projectiles injuring occupants or jamming controls, and asymmetric loading can overstress the structure. A is wrong because the terminology is inaccurate. B is wrong because a large sudden C.G. shift may be uncontrollable, not merely "continuous." D is wrong because no amount of prior analysis makes unsecured cargo acceptable.
+
+### Q6: The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the… ^t30q6
+- A) Center of gravity
+- B) Stagnation point.
+- C) Center of pressure.
+- D) Neutral point.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the center of gravity is, by definition, the single point through which the resultant gravitational force (the weight vector) acts on the entire aircraft. B is wrong because the stagnation point is where airflow velocity reaches zero on the wing's leading edge — an aerodynamic concept unrelated to weight. C is wrong because the center of pressure is where the net aerodynamic force acts. D is wrong because the neutral point is the aerodynamic reference used for stability analysis.
+
+### Q7: The term "center of gravity" is described as... ^t30q7
+- A) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- B) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- C) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B. The center of gravity is the mass-weighted average position of all individual mass elements — the point where the total weight force is considered to act. It is found by summing all moments about the datum and dividing by total mass. A is wrong because the C.G. is not a "heaviest point" but a balance point. C is wrong because the neutral point is a separate aerodynamic concept relating to stability. D duplicates one of the other options and does not correctly define C.G. either.
+
+### Q8: The center of gravity (CG) defines… ^t30q8
+- A) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- B) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) The product of mass and balance arm
+- D) The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the C.G. is the point through which the entire gravitational force (weight) acts as if all mass were concentrated there. This is the fundamental definition used in physics and aircraft mass-and-balance. A and B both describe the datum (reference point), not the C.G. itself. C describes a moment (mass times arm), which is a calculation quantity, not the definition of the center of gravity.
+
+### Q9: The term "moment" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as… ^t30q9
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in mass and balance, moment equals mass multiplied by balance arm (M = m x d), expressed in units such as kg-m or lb-in. The total C.G. position is then found by dividing the sum of all moments by the total mass. A is wrong because adding mass and arm has no physical meaning. B is wrong because subtracting them is equally meaningless. D is wrong because dividing mass by arm does not produce a moment — it would yield an incorrect dimension.
+
+### Q10: The term "balance arm" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the… ^t30q10
+- A) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm (or moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum to the center of gravity of a specific mass item. This distance determines the leverage that mass exerts about the datum. A is wrong because that defines the center of gravity, not the arm. B is wrong because that defines the datum point itself. D is wrong because balance arms are measured from the datum, not from the aircraft's overall C.G.
+
+### Q11: The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called… ^t30q11
+- A) Span width.
+- B) Balance arm.
+- C) Torque.
+- D) Lever.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in mass-and-balance terminology, the balance arm is the horizontal distance from the datum to any point of interest, including the overall C.G. once calculated. A is wrong because span width is a wing geometric parameter. C is wrong because torque (or moment) is the product of force and distance, not the distance itself. D is wrong because "lever" is a general mechanical term, not the specific aviation mass-and-balance term used.
+
+### Q12: The balance arm is the horizontal distance between… ^t30q12
+- A) The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) The front C.G. limit and the datum line
+- C) The C.G. of a mass and the datum line.
+- D) The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm of any mass item is measured as the horizontal distance from the aircraft's datum to that item's center of gravity. The datum is a fixed reference point defined in the flight manual. A is wrong because it references the rear C.G. limit, not the datum. B is wrong because it describes the distance between the forward C.G. limit and the datum. D describes the allowable C.G. range, not a balance arm.
+
+### Q13: The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the… ^t30q13
+- A) Documentation of the annual inspection.
+- B) Certificate of airworthiness
+- C) Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- D) Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH) or Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) contains a dedicated mass and balance section with the aircraft's empty mass, empty C.G. position, datum reference, C.G. limits, and loading configurations. A is wrong because annual inspection documents record maintenance work, not loading data. B is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness merely certifies the aircraft type. C is wrong because the performance section covers speeds and climb rates, not mass-and-balance data.
+
+### Q14: Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft? ^t30q14
+- A) Normal procedures
+- B) Performance
+- C) Weight and balance
+- D) Limitations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the Weight and Balance section of the flight manual contains the basic empty mass, empty C.G. location, allowable C.G. range, and loading instructions. A is wrong because Normal Procedures covers checklists and operational sequences. B is wrong because Performance covers speeds, climb rates, and glide distances. D is wrong because Limitations covers maximum speeds, load factors, and the operating envelope — not the basic empty mass data.
+
+### Q15: Which factor shortens landing distance? ^t30q15
+- A) High pressure altitude
+- B) Strong head wind
+- C) Heavy rain
+- D) High density altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a headwind reduces the groundspeed at touchdown for a given indicated airspeed, so the aircraft crosses the threshold with less kinetic energy relative to the ground, shortening the ground roll significantly. A is wrong because high pressure altitude means lower air density, higher true airspeed at the same IAS, and therefore longer landing distance. C is wrong because heavy rain can degrade braking effectiveness and contaminate the wing surface. D is wrong for the same reason as A — high density altitude increases groundspeed and lengthens the landing roll.
+
+### Q16: Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly… ^t30q16
+- A) Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.
+- B) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.
+- C) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.
+- D) Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because for non-FIKI certified aircraft, flying into known or forecast icing is a regulatory prohibition. If icing is inadvertently encountered, the pilot must exit immediately by changing altitude or heading. A is wrong because maintaining VMC does not make icing safe — ice accumulates regardless of visual conditions. C is wrong because it implies icing flight is permissible with performance monitoring, which is not the case. D is wrong because not all precipitation involves icing conditions.
+
+### Q17: The angle of descent is described as... ^t30q17
+- A) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°].
+- B) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].
+- C) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].
+- D) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the angle of descent (glide angle) is geometrically defined as the angle between the horizontal and the flight path vector, measured in degrees. A is wrong because a "ratio expressed in degrees" is contradictory — a ratio is dimensionless or expressed as a percentage, not in degrees. C describes a gradient (percentage), not an angle. D incorrectly expresses an angle in percent. For a glider with a 1:30 glide ratio, the glide angle is approximately 1.9 degrees.
+
+### Q18: Which is the purpose of "interception lines" in visual navigation? ^t30q18
+- A) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- B) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because interception lines (also called catching lines) are prominent linear ground features — rivers, motorways, railways, coastlines — selected during pre-flight planning that the pilot can navigate toward if orientation is lost. Flying to the nearest interception line provides an unmistakable landmark for position recovery. A is wrong because nothing permits continuing flight below VFR minima. B is wrong because interception lines are not range indicators. C is wrong because they are geographic features, not airport markers.
+
+### Q19: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals… ^t30q19
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-056) showing LO R 16 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1.500 ft GND.
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because low-level restricted areas (LO R) on VFR charts typically express their vertical limits in feet MSL (above mean sea level). The value 1,500 ft MSL is a fixed, absolute altitude reference. A is wrong because 1,500 metres MSL would be approximately 4,900 ft — a different altitude entirely. B is wrong because FL150 (15,000 ft pressure altitude) is far too high for a typical low-level restriction. C is wrong because 1,500 ft GND (above ground level) would vary with terrain and is not the published limit.
+
+### Q20: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals… ^t30q20
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-030) showing LO R 4 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 4.500 ft MSL
+- B) 1.500 ft AGL
+- C) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because LO R 4 has its upper limit published at 4,500 ft MSL — a fixed altitude above mean sea level. B is wrong because 1,500 ft AGL references above ground level, which varies with terrain. C is wrong because 4,500 ft AGL would not be a fixed boundary. D is wrong because 1,500 ft MSL is too low and does not match the chart data for this particular restricted area.
+
+### Q21: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? ^t30q21
+> *Note: This question originally references a NOTAM excerpt (PFP-024).*
+- A) Flight Level 95
+- B) Height 9500 ft
+- C) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because NOTAM altitude references follow ICAO conventions where "altitude" refers to height above MSL. The NOTAM prohibits overflight up to 9,500 ft MSL. A is wrong because FL 95 is a pressure altitude reference (based on 1013.25 hPa), not the same as an MSL altitude. B is wrong because "height" implies above ground level (AGL). D is wrong because 9,500 m MSL would be approximately 31,000 ft — clearly inconsistent with a typical VFR restriction.
+
+### Q22: What must be considered for cross-border flights? ^t30q22
+- A) Transmission of hazard reports
+- B) Approved exceptions
+- C) Requires flight plans
+- D) Regular location messages
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because under ICAO Annex 2 and national regulations, a flight plan is mandatory for any international flight crossing state borders, even for VFR glider flights. This ensures coordination for border control, search and rescue alerting, and customs/immigration procedures. A is wrong because hazard reports (PIREPs) are a separate communication procedure. B is wrong because approved exceptions is too vague and not the primary requirement. D is wrong because regular position reports are separate from the flight plan requirement.
+
+### Q23: During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the… ^t30q23
+- A) Next airport operator en-route.
+- B) Flight Information Service (FIS).
+- C) Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)
+- D) Search and Rescue Service (SAR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the Flight Information Service (FIS), reached on the published FIS frequency, can accept an airborne flight plan (AFIL) during flight. This is the standard procedure for filing when airborne. A is wrong because airport operators handle local ground operations, not en-route plan filing. C is wrong because AIS distributes aeronautical publications but does not accept real-time flight plans. D is wrong because SAR is a response service activated when an aircraft is overdue or in distress.
+
+### Q24: While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure ought to be avoided enroute? ^t30q24
+- A) Stone quarries and large sand areas
+- B) Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas
+- C) Highways, railroad tracks and channels.
+- D) Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because moist ground, water bodies, and marshes have high thermal inertia and specific heat capacity — they absorb solar radiation without heating quickly, suppressing thermal development above them. Flying over these areas means less lift and potentially a forced landing in unsuitable terrain. A is wrong because stone quarries and sandy areas heat up well and often produce good thermals. C is wrong because linear features like highways and railways are useful navigation aids. D is wrong because built-up areas with dark surfaces (asphalt, concrete) generate strong thermals.
+
+### Q25: During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point ought to be taken ... (2,00 P.) ^t30q25
+- A) As high as possible.
+- B) With as less bank as possible
+- C) As low as possible.
+- D) As steep as possible.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at a downwind turning point, the glider must reverse direction and fly back into the wind. This immediately reduces groundspeed and shortens the achievable glide distance over the ground. Arriving high provides maximum altitude reserve for the subsequent upwind leg. B is wrong because bank angle is a secondary concern compared to altitude. C is wrong because arriving low with a turn ahead and headwind return is tactically dangerous. D is wrong because steep turns lose more altitude, compounding the problem.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_1_25_fr.md
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+### Q1 : Dépasser la masse maximale autorisée d'un aéronef est... ^t30q1
+- A) Interdit et fondamentalement dangereux.
+- B) Exceptionnellement autorisé pour éviter des retards.
+- C) Compensé par les actions du pilote sur les commandes de vol.
+- D) Pertinent uniquement si l'excès dépasse 10 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car la masse maximale au décollage (MTOM) est une limite de certification structurelle et aérodynamique fixée par le constructeur. La dépasser augmente la charge alaire, élève la vitesse de décrochage, réduit les performances en montée et peut soumettre la cellule à des contraintes dépassant les facteurs de charge certifiés. B est fausse car aucune commodité opérationnelle ne justifie de dépasser une limite de sécurité. C est fausse car aucune technique pilote ne peut compenser une surcharge structurelle. D est fausse car il n'existe aucune marge réglementaire — tout dépassement est interdit.
+
+### Q2 : Le centre de gravité doit être situé... ^t30q2
+- A) Entre la limite avant et la limite arrière du C.G.
+- B) En avant de la limite avant du C.G.
+- C) À droite de la limite latérale du C.G.
+- D) En arrière de la limite arrière du C.G.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car la stabilité et la maniabilité de l'aéronef ne sont certifiées que dans l'enveloppe de centrage approuvée, délimitée par les limites avant et arrière du C.G. B est fausse car un C.G. en avant de la limite avant exige une autorité de gouverne de profondeur excessive pour l'arrondi ou la rotation, pouvant rendre l'atterrissage impossible. D est fausse car un C.G. en arrière de la limite arrière provoque une instabilité en tangage et un cabré incontrôlable. C est sans objet — les limites latérales du C.G. ne sont pas la préoccupation principale dans les calculs de masse et centrage pour les planeurs.
+
+### Q3 : Un aéronef doit être chargé et exploité de manière à ce que le centre de gravité (CG) reste dans les limites approuvées pendant toutes les phases du vol. Cela est fait pour garantir... ^t30q3
+- A) Que l'aéronef ne se mette pas en décrochage.
+- B) Que l'aéronef ne dépasse pas la vitesse maximale admissible lors d'une descente.
+- C) Que l'aéronef ne bascule pas sur sa queue lors du chargement.
+- D) La stabilité et la maniabilité de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car la position du C.G. par rapport au point neutre détermine la stabilité statique en tangage (tendance à revenir à l'équilibre après une perturbation), tandis que l'autorité de la gouverne de profondeur assure la maniabilité. Ces deux propriétés doivent être maintenues pendant tout le vol. A est fausse car la vitesse de décrochage dépend principalement de la charge alaire et de l'angle d'attaque. B est fausse car la Vne est une limite structurelle sans lien avec le centrage. C décrit un problème de manutention au sol, pas une exigence de sécurité en vol.
+
+### Q4 : La masse à vide et le centre de gravité (CG) correspondant d'un aéronef sont initialement déterminés... ^t30q4
+- A) Pour un seul aéronef d'un type, car tous les aéronefs du même type ont la même masse et la même position du CG.
+- B) Par calcul.
+- C) Par pesage.
+- D) Par les données fournies par le constructeur de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car chaque cellule individuelle doit être physiquement pesée — généralement sur des balances étalonnées en trois points d'appui — pour déterminer sa masse à vide réelle et la position de son C.G. Les tolérances de fabrication, les réparations, les modifications et les équipements installés varient d'un numéro de série à l'autre. A est fausse car aucun deux aéronefs du même type ne présentent des masses et des positions de C.G. identiques garanties. B est fausse car le calcul seul ne peut pas tenir compte de toutes les variables. D est fausse car les données du constructeur fournissent des valeurs de référence au niveau du type, pas les valeurs spécifiques à chaque aéronef individuel.
+
+### Q5 : Les bagages et le fret doivent être correctement arrimés et fixés, sinon un déplacement du fret peut causer... ^t30q5
+- A) Des dommages structurels, une instabilité en incidence, une instabilité en vitesse.
+- B) Des attitudes continues pouvant être corrigées par le pilote au moyen des commandes de vol.
+- C) Des attitudes incontrôlables, des dommages structurels, un risque de blessures.
+- D) Une instabilité calculable si le C.G. se déplace de moins de 10 %.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car un fret non arrimé peut se déplacer brusquement lors de turbulences ou de manœuvres, déplaçant instantanément le C.G. hors des limites approuvées — plus vite que le pilote ne peut réagir. Un déplacement soudain du C.G. vers l'arrière peut provoquer un cabré incontrôlable, des objets devenus projectiles peuvent blesser les occupants ou bloquer les commandes, et un chargement asymétrique peut soumettre la structure à des contraintes excessives. A est fausse car la terminologie est inexacte. B est fausse car un déplacement important et soudain du C.G. peut être incontrôlable. D est fausse car aucune analyse préalable ne rend un fret non fixé acceptable.
+
+### Q6 : Le poids total d'un avion agit verticalement à travers le... ^t30q6
+- A) Centre de gravité.
+- B) Point de stagnation.
+- C) Centre de poussée.
+- D) Point neutre.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car le centre de gravité est, par définition, le point unique à travers lequel la force gravitationnelle résultante (vecteur poids) agit sur l'ensemble de l'aéronef. B est fausse car le point de stagnation est l'endroit où la vitesse de l'écoulement est nulle sur le bord d'attaque — un concept aérodynamique sans lien avec le poids. C est fausse car le centre de poussée est le point où s'applique la résultante des forces aérodynamiques. D est fausse car le point neutre est la référence aérodynamique utilisée pour l'analyse de stabilité.
+
+### Q7 : Le terme "centre de gravité" est défini comme... ^t30q7
+- A) Le point le plus lourd d'un avion.
+- B) La moitié de la distance entre le point neutre et la ligne de référence.
+- C) Une autre désignation pour le point neutre.
+- D) La moitié de la distance entre le point neutre et la ligne de référence.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B. Le centre de gravité est la position moyenne pondérée par la masse de tous les éléments de masse individuels — le point où la force de poids totale est considérée comme agissant. Il est déterminé en sommant tous les moments par rapport à la ligne de référence et en divisant par la masse totale. A est fausse car le C.G. n'est pas le « point le plus lourd » mais le point d'équilibre. C est fausse car le point neutre est un concept aérodynamique distinct relatif à la stabilité. D reprend la même formulation incorrecte que l'une des autres options.
+
+### Q8 : Le centre de gravité (CG) définit... ^t30q8
+- A) Le point sur l'axe longitudinal ou son prolongement à partir duquel les centres de gravité de toutes les masses sont référencés.
+- B) Le point sur l'axe longitudinal ou son prolongement à partir duquel les centres de gravité de toutes les masses sont référencés.
+- C) Le produit de la masse et du bras de levier.
+- D) Le point par lequel la force de gravité est supposée agir sur une masse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car le C.G. est le point par lequel la force de gravité totale (poids) agit, comme si toute la masse y était concentrée. C'est la définition fondamentale utilisée en physique et dans les calculs de masse et centrage. A et B décrivent toutes deux la ligne de référence (datum), et non le C.G. lui-même. C décrit un moment (masse fois bras), qui est une quantité de calcul, pas la définition du centre de gravité.
+
+### Q9 : Le terme "moment" dans le cadre d'un calcul de masse et centrage désigne... ^t30q9
+- A) La somme d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- B) La différence d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- C) Le produit d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- D) Le quotient d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car en masse et centrage, le moment est égal à la masse multipliée par le bras de levier (M = m × d), exprimé en kg·m ou lb·in. La position totale du C.G. est ensuite obtenue en divisant la somme de tous les moments par la masse totale. A est fausse car additionner masse et bras n'a aucun sens physique. B est fausse pour la même raison. D est fausse car diviser la masse par le bras ne produit pas un moment.
+
+### Q10 : Le terme "bras de levier" dans le contexte d'un calcul de masse et centrage définit la... ^t30q10
+- A) Point par lequel la force de gravité est supposée agir sur une masse.
+- B) Point sur l'axe longitudinal d'un avion ou son prolongement à partir duquel les centres de gravité de toutes les masses sont référencés.
+- C) Distance entre la ligne de référence et le centre de gravité d'une masse.
+- D) Distance d'une masse par rapport au centre de gravité.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car le bras de levier (ou bras de moment) est la distance horizontale mesurée depuis la ligne de référence de l'aéronef jusqu'au centre de gravité d'un élément de masse spécifique. Cette distance détermine l'effet de levier exercé par cette masse par rapport à la ligne de référence. A est fausse car cela définit le centre de gravité, pas le bras. B est fausse car cela définit la ligne de référence elle-même. D est fausse car les bras de levier se mesurent depuis la ligne de référence, pas depuis le C.G. global de l'aéronef.
+
+### Q11 : La distance entre le centre de gravité et la ligne de référence s'appelle... ^t30q11
+- A) Envergure.
+- B) Bras de levier.
+- C) Couple.
+- D) Levier.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car en terminologie de masse et centrage, le bras de levier est la distance horizontale entre la ligne de référence et tout point d'intérêt, y compris le C.G. global une fois calculé. A est fausse car l'envergure est un paramètre géométrique de l'aile. C est fausse car le couple (ou moment) est le produit de la force et de la distance, pas la distance elle-même. D est fausse car « levier » est un terme mécanique général, pas le terme spécifique utilisé en masse et centrage.
+
+### Q12 : Le bras de levier est la distance horizontale entre... ^t30q12
+- A) Le C.G. d'une masse et la limite arrière du C.G.
+- B) La limite avant du C.G. et la ligne de référence.
+- C) Le C.G. d'une masse et la ligne de référence.
+- D) La limite avant du C.G. et la limite arrière du C.G.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car le bras de levier de tout élément de masse est mesuré comme la distance horizontale entre la ligne de référence de l'aéronef et le centre de gravité de cet élément. La ligne de référence est un point de référence fixe défini dans le manuel de vol. A est fausse car elle fait référence à la limite arrière du C.G., pas à la ligne de référence. B est fausse car elle décrit la distance entre la limite avant du C.G. et la ligne de référence. D décrit la plage de centrage autorisée, pas un bras de levier.
+
+### Q13 : Les données nécessaires à un calcul de masse et centrage, y compris les masses et les bras de levier, se trouvent dans le... ^t30q13
+- A) Documentation de l'inspection annuelle.
+- B) Certificat de navigabilité.
+- C) Chapitre performances du manuel de vol de cet aéronef particulier.
+- D) Chapitre masse et centrage du manuel de vol de cet aéronef particulier.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car le Manuel d'utilisation (POH) ou le Manuel de vol (AFM) contient une section dédiée à la masse et au centrage avec la masse à vide de l'aéronef, la position du C.G. à vide, la référence de la ligne de datum, les limites de C.G. et les configurations de chargement approuvées. A est fausse car les documents d'inspection annuelle enregistrent les travaux de maintenance, pas les données de chargement. B est fausse car le certificat de navigabilité certifie simplement le type d'aéronef. C est fausse car le chapitre performances couvre les vitesses et les taux de montée, pas les données de masse et centrage.
+
+### Q14 : Quelle section du manuel de vol décrit la masse à vide de base d'un aéronef ? ^t30q14
+- A) Procédures normales.
+- B) Performances.
+- C) Masse et centrage.
+- D) Limitations.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car la section Masse et centrage du manuel de vol contient la masse à vide de base, la position du C.G. à vide, la plage de C.G. autorisée et les instructions de chargement. A est fausse car les Procédures normales couvrent les check-lists et les séquences opérationnelles. B est fausse car les Performances couvrent les vitesses, les taux de montée et les distances de plané. D est fausse car les Limitations couvrent les vitesses maximales, les facteurs de charge et l'enveloppe de vol — pas les données de masse à vide.
+
+### Q15 : Quel facteur raccourcit la distance d'atterrissage ? ^t30q15
+- A) Altitude-pression élevée.
+- B) Vent de face fort.
+- C) Fortes pluies.
+- D) Altitude-densité élevée.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car un vent de face réduit la vitesse sol au toucher des roues pour une vitesse indiquée donnée, de sorte que l'aéronef franchit le seuil avec moins d'énergie cinétique par rapport au sol, raccourcissant ainsi considérablement le roulement à l'atterrissage. A est fausse car une altitude-pression élevée signifie une densité de l'air plus faible, une vitesse vraie plus élevée à la même vitesse indiquée, et donc une distance d'atterrissage plus longue. C est fausse car les fortes pluies peuvent dégrader l'efficacité du freinage et contaminer la surface de l'aile. D est fausse pour la même raison que A.
+
+### Q16 : Sauf si l'aéronef est équipé et certifié en conséquence... ^t30q16
+- A) Le vol en conditions de givrage prévues est interdit. Si l'aéronef entre par inadvertance dans une zone de conditions givrantes, le vol peut être poursuivi tant que les conditions météorologiques de vol à vue sont maintenues.
+- B) Le vol en conditions de givrage connues ou prévues est interdit. Si l'aéronef entre par inadvertance dans une zone de conditions givrantes, il doit en sortir sans délai.
+- C) Le vol en conditions de givrage connues ou prévues est autorisé uniquement s'il est garanti que l'aéronef peut encore être exploité sans dégradation des performances.
+- D) Le vol dans des zones de précipitations est interdit.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car pour les aéronefs non certifiés anti-givrage (non-FIKI), voler dans des conditions de givrage connues ou prévues est une interdiction réglementaire. En cas de givrage rencontré par inadvertance, le pilote doit en sortir immédiatement en changeant d'altitude ou de cap. A est fausse car maintenir les VMC ne rend pas le givrage sûr — la glace s'accumule indépendamment des conditions visuelles. C est fausse car elle laisse entendre que le vol en givrage est permis avec surveillance des performances, ce qui n'est pas le cas. D est fausse car toutes les précipitations ne comportent pas de conditions de givrage.
+
+### Q17 : L'angle de descente est défini comme... ^t30q17
+- A) Le rapport entre la variation de hauteur et la distance horizontale parcourue dans le même temps, exprimé en degrés [°].
+- B) L'angle entre un plan horizontal et la trajectoire de vol réelle, exprimé en degrés [°].
+- C) Le rapport entre la variation de hauteur et la distance horizontale parcourue dans le même temps, exprimé en pourcentage [%].
+- D) L'angle entre un plan horizontal et la trajectoire de vol réelle, exprimé en pourcentage [%].
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car l'angle de descente (angle de plané) est défini géométriquement comme l'angle entre l'horizontale et le vecteur trajectoire de vol, mesuré en degrés. A est fausse car un « rapport exprimé en degrés » est contradictoire — un rapport est adimensionnel ou exprimé en pourcentage, pas en degrés. C décrit un gradient (pourcentage), pas un angle. D exprime incorrectement un angle en pourcentage. Pour un planeur avec une finesse de 1:30, l'angle de plané est d'environ 1,9 degrés.
+
+### Q18 : Quel est le rôle des « lignes d'interception » en navigation à vue ? ^t30q18
+- A) Elles permettent de poursuivre le vol lorsque la visibilité de vol descend en dessous des minimums VMC.
+- B) Pour visualiser la limite de portée depuis l'aérodrome de départ.
+- C) Pour marquer le prochain aéroport disponible en route.
+- D) Elles sont utilisées comme repères facilement reconnaissables en cas de perte d'orientation.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car les lignes d'interception (également appelées lignes de rattrapage) sont des repères linéaires au sol proéminents — rivières, autoroutes, voies ferrées, littoraux — sélectionnés lors de la préparation du vol vers lesquels le pilote peut se diriger en cas de perte d'orientation. Se diriger vers la ligne d'interception la plus proche fournit un repère incontestable pour retrouver sa position. A est fausse car rien n'autorise la poursuite du vol en dessous des minimums VMC. B est fausse car les lignes d'interception ne sont pas des indicateurs de portée. C est fausse car ce sont des repères géographiques, pas des marqueurs d'aéroports.
+
+### Q19 : La limite supérieure de LO R 16 est égale à... ^t30q19
+> *Note : Cette question fait initialement référence à un extrait de carte (PFP-056) montrant les limites d'espace aérien de LO R 16.*
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1 500 ft GND.
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car les zones restreintes de basse altitude (LO R) sur les cartes VFR expriment généralement leurs limites verticales en pieds MSL (au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer). La valeur de 1 500 ft MSL est une altitude fixe et absolue. A est fausse car 1 500 mètres MSL correspondraient à environ 4 900 ft — une altitude entièrement différente. B est fausse car le FL150 (15 000 ft de pression) est beaucoup trop élevé pour une restriction de basse altitude typique. C est fausse car 1 500 ft GND (au-dessus du sol) varierait avec le relief et n'est pas la limite publiée.
+
+### Q20 : La limite supérieure de LO R 4 est égale à... ^t30q20
+> *Note : Cette question fait initialement référence à un extrait de carte (PFP-030) montrant les limites d'espace aérien de LO R 4.*
+- A) 4 500 ft MSL.
+- B) 1 500 ft AGL.
+- C) 4 500 ft AGL.
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car LO R 4 a sa limite supérieure publiée à 4 500 ft MSL — une altitude fixe au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer. B est fausse car 1 500 ft AGL fait référence au-dessus du sol, ce qui varie avec le relief. C est fausse car 4 500 ft AGL ne constituerait pas une limite fixe. D est fausse car 1 500 ft MSL est trop bas et ne correspond pas aux données cartographiques de cette zone restreinte particulière.
+
+### Q21 : Jusqu'à quelle altitude le survol est-il interdit selon le NOTAM ? ^t30q21
+> *Note : Cette question fait initialement référence à un extrait de NOTAM (PFP-024).*
+- A) Niveau de vol 95.
+- B) Hauteur 9 500 ft.
+- C) Altitude 9 500 ft MSL.
+- D) Altitude 9 500 m MSL.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car les références d'altitude dans les NOTAM suivent les conventions OACI où « altitude » désigne la hauteur au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer (MSL). Le NOTAM interdit le survol jusqu'à 9 500 ft MSL. A est fausse car le FL 95 est une référence d'altitude-pression (basée sur 1013,25 hPa), pas la même chose qu'une altitude MSL. B est fausse car « hauteur » implique au-dessus du sol (AGL). D est fausse car 9 500 m MSL correspondraient à environ 31 000 ft — manifestement incompatible avec une restriction VFR typique.
+
+### Q22 : Qu'est-ce qui doit être pris en compte pour les vols transfrontaliers ? ^t30q22
+- A) Transmission de rapports de danger.
+- B) Exceptions approuvées.
+- C) Nécessite un plan de vol.
+- D) Messages de position réguliers.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car selon l'Annexe 2 de l'OACI et les réglementations nationales, un plan de vol est obligatoire pour tout vol international franchissant des frontières nationales, même pour les vols VFR en planeur. Cela garantit la coordination pour le contrôle aux frontières, l'alerte de recherche et sauvetage, et les procédures douanières et d'immigration. A est fausse car les rapports de danger (PIREPs) sont une procédure de communication distincte. B est fausse car les exceptions approuvées sont trop vagues et ne constituent pas l'exigence principale. D est fausse car les messages de position réguliers sont distincts de l'exigence de plan de vol.
+
+### Q23 : Pendant un vol, un plan de vol peut être déposé auprès du... ^t30q23
+- A) Prochain exploitant d'aéroport en route.
+- B) Service d'information de vol (FIS).
+- C) Service d'information aéronautique (AIS).
+- D) Service de recherche et sauvetage (SAR).
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car le Service d'information de vol (FIS), contacté sur la fréquence FIS publiée, peut accepter un plan de vol en vol (AFIL) pendant le vol. C'est la procédure standard pour déposer un plan de vol en l'air. A est fausse car les exploitants d'aéroports gèrent les opérations au sol locales, pas le dépôt de plans de vol en route. C est fausse car l'AIS diffuse les publications aéronautiques mais n'accepte pas les plans de vol en temps réel. D est fausse car le SAR est un service de réponse activé lorsqu'un aéronef est en retard ou en détresse.
+
+### Q24 : Lors de la planification d'un vol de campagne en planeur, quelles structures au sol doivent être évitées en route ? ^t30q24
+- A) Carrières et grandes zones sablonneuses.
+- B) Sols humides, zones aquatiques, marécages.
+- C) Autoroutes, voies ferrées et canaux.
+- D) Zones avec bâtiments, béton et asphalte.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car les sols humides, les masses d'eau et les marécages présentent une inertie thermique et une capacité calorifique élevées — ils absorbent le rayonnement solaire sans se réchauffer rapidement, supprimant le développement des thermiques au-dessus d'eux. Voler au-dessus de ces zones signifie moins de portance et potentiellement un atterrissage forcé sur un terrain inadapté. A est fausse car les carrières et les zones sablonneuses se réchauffent bien et produisent souvent de bons thermiques. C est fausse car les éléments linéaires comme les autoroutes et les voies ferrées sont des aides à la navigation utiles. D est fausse car les zones urbanisées avec des surfaces sombres (asphalte, béton) génèrent de forts thermiques.
+
+### Q25 : Lors d'un vol de campagne, vous approchez d'un point de virage sous le vent. Le point devrait être pris... (2,00 P.) ^t30q25
+- A) Le plus haut possible.
+- B) Avec le moins d'inclinaison possible.
+- C) Le plus bas possible.
+- D) Le plus incliné possible.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car à un point de virage sous le vent, le planeur doit faire demi-tour et revenir face au vent. Cela réduit immédiatement la vitesse sol et raccourcit la distance de plané réalisable par rapport au sol. Arriver haut fournit une réserve d'altitude maximale pour la branche suivante face au vent. B est fausse car l'angle d'inclinaison est une considération secondaire par rapport à l'altitude. C est fausse car arriver bas avec un virage à effectuer et un retour face au vent est tactiquement dangereux. D est fausse car les virages serrés font perdre plus d'altitude, aggravant le problème.
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+### Q26: After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.)... ^t30q26
+- A) For weakening thermals due to the progressing time
+- B) For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases
+- C) For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time
+- D) For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when a glider turns 90 or 180 degrees at a waypoint, the pilot's entire visual perspective of the sky shifts dramatically. The sun appears to have moved relative to the heading, and cumulus clouds that were behind or beside the aircraft now appear in different positions. This perceptual shift can make the sky look completely different. A is wrong because thermal weakening is a time-of-day issue, not a turning-point issue. B is wrong because cloud bases do not change from turning. C is wrong because cloud dissipation is unrelated to heading changes.
+
+### Q27: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? ^t30q27
+
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol C in the figure) because ICAO Annex 4 chart symbology uses distinct symbols to differentiate between single obstacles versus groups, and lighted versus unlighted. The symbol for a group of unlighted obstacles is specifically designated in the PFP-061 reference figure as C. A, C, and D represent other obstacle categories such as single obstacles, lighted groups, or other types. Knowing these symbols is critical for cross-country planning and obstacle avoidance.
+
+### Q28: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? ^t30q28
+
+- A) C
+- B) A
+- C) B
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol A in the figure) because ICAO aeronautical chart symbology differentiates airports by civil versus military status, international versus domestic, and runway surface type. A civil domestic airport with a paved runway has a specific symbol shown as A in the PFP-062 annex. A, C, and D represent other aerodrome categories such as international airports, military airfields, or unpaved-runway airports. Glider pilots use these symbols when planning outlanding fields or alternate airports.
+
+### Q29: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? ^t30q29
+
+- A) C
+- B) B
+- C) A
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A (symbol C in the figure) because ICAO charts use specific symbols to differentiate between general spot elevations, surveyed elevation points, and obstruction heights. A general spot elevation marks a notable terrain high point for situational awareness and is depicted according to ICAO Annex 4 standards. B, C, and D represent other elevation-related symbols such as maximum elevation figures or obstruction markers. Familiarity with these symbols is essential for terrain clearance planning.
+
+### Q30: What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects)... ^t30q30
+- A) 45 NM
+- B) 30 km
+- C) 45 km
+- D) 81 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because glide distance equals glide ratio multiplied by height: 30 x 1,500 m = 45,000 m = 45 km. The glide ratio of 1:30 means the glider covers 30 metres horizontally for every 1 metre of height lost. A is wrong because 45 NM equals approximately 83 km, which would require a glide ratio of about 1:55. B is wrong because 30 km would correspond to a glide ratio of only 1:20. D is wrong because 81 NM (150 km) would require a glide ratio of 1:100. Always verify that units are consistent — mixing nautical miles and metres is a common exam trap.
+
+### Q31: Why can wing loading be increased when soaring conditions are good? ^t30q31
+- A) Because the stall speed diminishes.
+- B) Because the glider achieves a better glide ratio at high speed even though the minimum speed rises.
+- C) Because the glider can fly more slowly and achieves a better glide ratio.
+- D) Because the glider has a better climb rate even though it must fly more slowly.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in strong thermal conditions, the glider benefits from flying faster between thermals (MacCready theory). Adding water ballast increases wing loading, which shifts the speed polar to the right — improving the glide ratio at high cruising speeds while accepting a higher stall and minimum sink speed. A is wrong because increasing wing loading raises the stall speed. C is wrong because higher wing loading means the glider must fly faster, not slower. D is wrong because a heavier glider has a worse climb rate in thermals due to its higher minimum sink speed.
+
+### Q32: The tail wheel of a glider was not removed before departure. What will be the consequence? ^t30q32
+- A) Better manoeuvrability at departure.
+- B) The centre of gravity shifts forward.
+- C) No consequence. The wheel represents only a tiny fraction of the total weight of the glider and has no effect on the centre of gravity.
+- D) The centre of gravity will be further aft and possibly too far aft, which is dangerous.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the tail wheel is mounted at the extreme rear of the fuselage, far aft of the nominal C.G. Even though its absolute mass is small, its large moment arm produces a significant moment that shifts the C.G. aftward — potentially beyond the aft limit, making the aircraft pitch-unstable and difficult to control. A is wrong because the tail wheel does not improve manoeuvrability. B is wrong because the tail wheel is aft of the C.G., so its presence shifts the C.G. backward, not forward. C is wrong because the long arm amplifies the effect of even a small mass.
+
+### Q33: The pilot exceeds the maximum cockpit payload by 10 kg. What has to be done? ^t30q33
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Trim forward.
+- C) Reduce the payload.
+- D) Compensate by reducing the water ballast slightly.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the maximum seat load is a certification limit that cannot be circumvented. Exceeding it may place the C.G. outside the forward limit and subjects the structure to loads beyond what was tested. The only remedy is to reduce the payload until the limits are respected. A and B are wrong because trimming changes the aerodynamic forces on the elevator but does not alter the aircraft's mass or C.G. position. D is wrong because reducing water ballast changes total mass but does not address the specific seat load limitation.
+
+### Q34: What propels a pure glider forward? ^t30q34
+- A) Ascending air currents.
+- B) Drag directed forward.
+- C) The component of gravity acting in the direction of the flight path.
+- D) A tailwind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in steady gliding flight, the weight vector can be resolved into two components: one perpendicular to the flight path (balanced by lift) and one along the flight path. This along-path component of gravity provides the forward-driving force that balances drag and maintains airspeed. A is wrong because ascending air can reduce the descent rate but does not propel the glider forward through the air. B is wrong because drag always opposes the direction of motion. D is wrong because a tailwind affects groundspeed but does not propel the aircraft through the airmass.
+
+### Q35: The current mass of an aircraft is 610 kg and the centre of gravity (C.G.) position is at 80.0. You remove a 10 kg item of baggage located at a moment arm of 150. Which is the new centre of gravity? ^t30q35
+- A) 75.0
+- B) 81.166
+- C) 70.0
+- D) 78.833
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D. The calculation proceeds as follows: Initial moment = 610 x 80.0 = 48,800. Removed moment = 10 x 150 = 1,500. New total moment = 48,800 - 1,500 = 47,300. New mass = 610 - 10 = 600 kg. New C.G. = 47,300 / 600 = 78.833. Since the baggage was located aft of the current C.G. (arm 150 > 80), removing it shifts the C.G. forward — consistent with the result (78.833 < 80.0). A (75.0) and C (70.0) are too far forward. B (81.166) incorrectly shows a rearward shift.
+
+### Q36: The empty mass of the Discus B is 245 kg. You are planning to carry 184 kg of water ballast. What is the maximum load at the pilot's seat? ^t30q36
+> **Extract from the Discus B Flight Manual — Loading table with water ballast**
+> ![[figures/t30_q36.png]]
+> Max. permitted all-up weight including water ballast : **525 kg**
+> Lever arm of water ballast : **203 mm aft of datum (BE)**
+
+> *Table of water ballast loads at various empty weights and seat loads:*
+
+| Empty mass (kg) | Seat load 70 kg | 80 kg | 90 kg | 100 kg | 110 kg |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| 220 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 225 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 230 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 235 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 |
+| 240 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 |
+| 245 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 | 170 |
+| 250 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 | 165 |
+
+> *Water ballast in both wing tanks (kg). For empty mass 245 kg and ballast 184 kg: the maximum seat load is **90 kg** (column 90 kg → value 184, but column 100 kg → 180 and column 110 kg → 170; with ballast=184 required, read the 245 kg row and find the seat load corresponding to ballast=184, i.e. max 90 kg permitted according to the table).*
+- A) 100 kg
+- B) 110 kg
+- C) 90 kg
+- D) 80 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (90 kg). Reading the Discus B loading table at the row for empty mass 245 kg: with a seat load of 90 kg the permitted water ballast is 184 kg (matching our requirement), but at 100 kg seat load only 180 kg of ballast is permitted, and at 110 kg only 170 kg. Since we need the full 184 kg of ballast, the maximum seat load that still allows this is 90 kg. A (100 kg) and B (110 kg) would require reducing the water ballast below 184 kg. D (80 kg) is unnecessarily restrictive — the table shows 184 kg is still permitted at 90 kg.
+
+### Q37: What important principle must be observed when making an off-field landing on sloping terrain? ^t30q37
+- A) Only land with airbrakes fully extended.
+- B) Land facing uphill with an approach speed slightly above normal.
+- C) Always land into wind regardless of the slope.
+- D) The landing flare must be initiated at a greater height than usual.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because landing uphill uses the slope to decelerate the glider — gravity assists braking, dramatically shortening the ground roll. A slightly higher approach speed provides a safety margin against wind shear and turbulence near unfamiliar terrain. A is wrong because full airbrakes may not always be appropriate on short or steep fields. C is wrong because on significant slopes, landing uphill takes priority over landing into wind. D is wrong because the flare height should be adapted to the terrain, but this is not the primary principle.
+
+### Q38: You must land in heavy rain. What must you pay particular attention to? ^t30q38
+- A) The approach speed is lower than usual because rain slows the aircraft.
+- B) The landing is performed as in dry conditions.
+- C) Due to poor visibility, the approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) A higher approach speed must be used.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because heavy rain on the wing surface degrades the aerodynamic profile through increased roughness, potentially raising the stall speed. A higher approach speed provides an adequate safety margin. A is wrong because rain does not lower the safe approach speed — if anything, the stall speed increases. B is wrong because rain significantly changes conditions (reduced visibility, wet surfaces, degraded aerodynamics). C is wrong because a shallower approach reduces obstacle clearance margins and extends the final approach in poor visibility.
+
+### Q39: You are taking off from a grass runway that has become waterlogged after several days of rain. What should you expect? ^t30q39
+- A) The takeoff distance is likely to be longer.
+- B) The glider is wet and has reduced performance.
+- C) The wet grass offers less resistance, which is why the takeoff distance will be shorter.
+- D) The glider may skid sideways (aquaplaning).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a waterlogged grass runway creates greater rolling resistance due to soft ground deformation and water drag on the wheels, slowing acceleration and increasing the takeoff distance. B is wrong because while a wet glider has slightly degraded performance, the primary issue is the runway condition. C is wrong because wet, soft grass increases resistance rather than reducing it. D is wrong because aquaplaning occurs on hard surfaces with standing water, not on soft grass — and the question asks about takeoff distance, not directional control.
+
+### Q40: Which of these statements is correct at a speed of 170 km/h, taking into account the following speed polar? ^t30q40
+> **ASK 21 Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/t30_q40.png]]
+> *Two curves: G=470 kp (light mass, min sink rate ~0.657 m/s at ~75 km/h) and G=570 kp (heavy mass, min sink rate ~0.724 m/s). The best glide ratio is read from the tangent from the origin. At 170 km/h, the sink rate is higher for G=570 kp than for G=470 kp.*
+- A) Regardless of the mass of the ASK21, the sink rate stays constant.
+- B) As the mass of the ASK21 rises, the sink rate increases.
+- C) As the mass of the ASK21 increases, the sink rate increases.
+- D) As the mass of the ASK21 decreases, the glide angle improves.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because at 170 km/h, reading both polar curves, the heavier configuration (570 kp) shows a higher sink rate than the lighter one (470 kp). A heavier glider requires more lift to maintain flight, producing greater induced drag and therefore a higher sink rate at any given speed. A is wrong because the two curves clearly show different sink rates at 170 km/h. B and C state the same thing — sink rate increases with mass — which is correct. D is wrong because at high speeds the glide angle is not necessarily better at lower mass.
+
+### Q41: Which is the speed at the minimum sink rate in still air for a mass of 450 kg? ^t30q41
+> **Speed Polar (AIRSPEED):**
+> ![[figures/t30_q41.png]]
+> *Two curves: 450 kg and 580 kg. The minimum sink rate (top of the curve) for 450 kg is at approximately 75 km/h. The 580 kg curve is shifted to the right (higher speeds) and downward (greater sink rate).*
+- A) 75 km/h
+- B) 95 km/h
+- C) 50 km/h
+- D) 140 km/h
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the minimum sink rate speed corresponds to the highest point on the speed polar curve — where the sink rate is smallest. For 450 kg, this peak occurs at approximately 75 km/h. This speed maximises flight endurance in still air and is optimal for centring thermals. B (95 km/h) would be closer to the best-glide speed or the minimum-sink speed at higher mass. C (50 km/h) is below the stall speed. D (140 km/h) is far into the high-speed range where sink rate is much greater.
+
+### Q42: From what altitude on the route between Murten (approx. N46°56'/E007°07') and Neuchâtel aerodrome (approx. N46°57'/E006°52') are you required to request permission to cross the PAYERNE TMA? ^t30q42
+- A) 950 m AMSL (3100 ft).
+- B) 3050 m AMSL (FL 100).
+- C) 700 m AMSL (2300 ft).
+- D) At any altitude since the lower limit of the TMA is represented by the ground surface (GND).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because on the route between Murten and Neuchatel, the relevant sector of the PAYERNE TMA has a lower limit at 700 m AMSL (2300 ft). Below this altitude, flight can proceed in uncontrolled airspace without clearance. Above 700 m AMSL, ATC authorisation is required. A (950 m) does not match the published boundary. B (FL 100) is far too high — that is the upper limit of some TMAs, not the lower limit here. D is wrong because the TMA does not extend to the ground in this sector.
+
+### Q43: In which airspace class are you flying at 1400 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa) over Birrfeld aerodrome (47°25'36"N/007°14'02"E), and what are the visibility and cloud distance minima in that airspace? ^t30q43
+- A) Airspace class E, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- B) Airspace class D, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- C) Airspace class G, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with permanent ground contact.
+- D) Airspace class C, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 1400 m AMSL over Birrfeld, you are in Class E airspace. VFR minima in Class E require 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. B is wrong because Class D applies within specific CTRs or TMAs, not over Birrfeld at this altitude. C is wrong because Class G applies below a certain altitude and has reduced minima. D is wrong because Class C begins at a higher altitude in this area (typically FL 130 in Switzerland).
+
+### Q44: The route shown below towards SCHWYZ (dotted line) is planned for 20 June 2015 (summer time) between 1515–1545 LT at 6500 ft AMSL. Which of the following statements is correct? ^t30q44
+> **DABS — Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland (extract)**
+> ![[figures/t30_q44.png]]
+
+| Firing-Nr D-/R-Area NOTAM-Nr | Validity UTC | Lower Limit AMSL or FL | Upper Limit AMSL or FL | Location | Center Point | Covering Radius | Activity / Remarks |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| B0685/14 | 0000–2359 | 900m / 3000ft | FL 130 | SION TMA SECT 1 | 461610N 0072940E | 4.7 KM / 2.5 NM | TMA SECT 1 ACT HX ONLY |
+| W0912/15 | 1145–1300 | GND | FL 120 | MORGARTEN | 470507N 0083758E | 10.0 KM / 5.4 NM | R-AREA ACT. ENTRY PROHIBITED. FOR INFO CTC ZURICH INFO 124.7 |
+| W0957/15 | 1400–1700 | 2150m / 7000ft | FL 120 | HINWIL | 471721N 0084859E | 7.0 KM / 3.8 NM | TEMPO R-AREA ACTIVE. ENTRY PROHIBITED. CTC 118.975 |
+| W0960/15 | 0800–1700 | GND | 1200m / 4050ft | 1.7 KM SE CERNIER | 470352N 0065442E | 1.5 KM / 0.8 NM | D-AREA ACT |
+- A) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+- B) You can ignore the DABS as it only applies to commercial aviation.
+- C) You can pass through all relevant danger and restricted areas below 1000 ft AGL or above 12,000 ft AMSL.
+- D) The route can be flown without coordination between 1500 and 1600 LT.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D. On 20 June 2015 (CEST = UTC+2), the planned time of 1515-1545 LT corresponds to 1315-1345 UTC. Zone W0912/15 (MORGARTEN) was active 1145-1300 UTC and has already expired. Zone W0957/15 (HINWIL) activates at 1400 UTC (1600 LT) — it is not yet active. The route can therefore be flown without coordination between 1500 and 1600 LT. A is wrong because the route is flyable during the given time window. B is wrong because the DABS applies to all airspace users including gliders. C is wrong because it incorrectly suggests blanket altitude-based exemptions.
+
+### Q45: According to the ICAO aeronautical chart at 1:500,000, at what altitude over Schwyz (approx. 47°01' N, 8°39' E) must you request permission to enter Class C airspace? ^t30q45
+- A) FL 90
+- B) 4500 ft
+- C) FL 130
+- D) FL 195
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because over Schwyz, the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart shows Class C airspace beginning at FL 130. Below FL 130, the airspace is Class E. Entering Class C requires ATC clearance regardless of flight rules. A (FL 90) is below the actual boundary. B (4500 ft) is far too low and in uncontrolled airspace. D (FL 195) is the upper limit of Swiss controlled airspace, not the lower limit of Class C over Schwyz.
+
+### Q46: Until what time is La Côte aerodrome (LSGP) open in the evening? ^t30q46
+> **AD INFO 1 — LA CÔTE / LSGP**
+> ![[figures/t30_q46.png]]
+
+| Data | Value |
+|--------|--------|
+| ICAO | LSGP |
+| Elevation | 1352 ft (412 m) |
+| ARP | 46°24'23"N / 006°15'28"E |
+| Runway | 04 / 22 — true/mag: 041°/040° and 221°/220° |
+| Dimensions | 560 x 30 m — GRASS |
+| LDG distance available | 490 m |
+| TKOF distance available | 490 m |
+| SFC strength | 0.25 MPa |
+| Status | Private — Airfield, **PPR** |
+| Location | 25 km NE Geneva |
+| Hours MON–FRI | 0700–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+| Hours SAT/SUN | 0800–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+| ECT reference | → VFG RAC 1-1 |
+
+> *ECT = End of Civil Twilight. The aerodrome closes 30 minutes before end of civil twilight.*
+- A) Until half an hour before the start of civil twilight.
+- B) Until half an hour before sunset.
+- C) Until half an hour before the end of civil twilight.
+- D) Until the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the AD INFO sheet for LSGP shows afternoon hours as "1400-ECT -30 min," meaning the aerodrome closes 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight. A is wrong because it references the start of civil twilight, not the end. B is wrong because sunset occurs earlier than the end of civil twilight. D is wrong because the aerodrome closes 30 minutes before ECT, not at ECT itself.
+
+### Q47: On which frequency do you receive information about winch launches at Gruyères aerodrome (LSGT) at weekends? ^t30q47
+> **Visual Approach Chart — GRUYÈRES / LSGT**
+> ![[figures/t30_q47.png]]
+> AD **124.675** — PPR — ELEV 2257 ft (688 m)
+
+> *Key chart data (altitudes in ft, magnetic headings):*
+
+| Data | Value |
+|--------|--------|
+| ICAO | LSGT |
+| AD Frequency | **124.675 MHz** |
+| Elevation | 2257 ft (688 m) |
+| Status | PPR |
+| Minimum AD overfly altitude (MNM ALT) | **4000 ft** |
+| Glider ARR/DEP sector W (GLD ARR/DEP W) | **MAX 3100 ft** |
+| Glider ARR/DEP sector E (GLD ARR/DEP E) | **MAX 3600 ft** |
+| HEL ARR/DEP | 3000 ft |
+| Preferred ARR sectors | WEST and EAST |
+| CTN (cross-country traffic) | 3000 ft |
+| MNM AD overfly | 4000 ft |
+| Class C airspace above | FL 100 / 119.175 GENEVA DELTA |
+| Winch launches | Intensive SAT/SUN (CTN: Intense winch launching SAT/SUN) |
+| Nearby VOR/DME | SPR R076, 113.9 MHz |
+
+> *Noise-sensitive areas (yellow) around Bulle/Broc. Avoid overflying the field during PJE (parachute dropping). Contact RTF 5 min before ETA.*
+- A) 113.9
+- B) 124.675
+- C) 119.175
+- D) 110.85
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (124.675 MHz) because this is the aerodrome frequency shown on the Visual Approach Chart for LSGT Gruyeres. Local traffic information, including intensive winch launching activity on weekends, is broadcast on this frequency. A (113.9) is the VOR/DME SPR navigation frequency. C (119.175) is the Geneva Delta sector frequency for Class C airspace above. D (110.85) is not shown on this chart and does not relate to LSGT operations.
+
+### Q48: What distance do you cover in 90 minutes at a ground speed of 90 km/h? ^t30q48
+- A) 90 km
+- B) 135 km
+- C) 100 km
+- D) 120 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because distance = speed x time. Ground speed = 90 km/h, time = 90 minutes = 1.5 hours. Distance = 90 x 1.5 = 135 km. A (90 km) results from incorrectly using 1 hour instead of 1.5 hours. C (100 km) and D (120 km) do not correspond to any correct calculation. Remember to convert minutes to hours before multiplying: 90 minutes = 1.5 hours, not 0.9 hours.
+
+### Q49: At an altitude of 6000 m, the airspeed indicator shows 160 km/h (IAS). The true airspeed (TAS)… ^t30q49
+- A) is lower than the IAS.
+- B) is also 160 km/h.
+- C) can be higher or lower than the IAS depending on atmospheric pressure and temperature.
+- D) is higher than the IAS.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which depends on air density. At 6000 m, air density is significantly lower than at sea level. For the pitot tube to register the same dynamic pressure (same IAS), the aircraft must be moving faster through the thinner air. TAS increases by approximately 2% per 300 m of altitude gain, so at 6000 m, TAS is roughly 40% higher than IAS. A is wrong because TAS is always higher than IAS at altitude. B is wrong because they only equal each other at sea level in ISA conditions. C is wrong because at any altitude above sea level, TAS is always higher than IAS.
+
+### Q50: You are flying in wave lift at 6000 m altitude. Which is the maximum speed you may fly? ^t30q50
+- A) In the low-density air, at a higher speed than usual.
+- B) Below the red V_NE mark on the airspeed indicator, according to the speed-altitude table displayed on the instrument panel.
+- C) At the same speed as at sea level since V_NE is an absolute value.
+- D) Maximum within the green arc.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because at high altitude the true airspeed corresponding to a given IAS is much higher, and it is the TAS that determines aerodynamic loads on the structure. Glider flight manuals provide a speed-altitude table (or V_NE reduction curve) displayed in the cockpit, giving the corrected maximum IAS at each altitude. At 6000 m, the allowable IAS is lower than the sea-level V_NE mark. A is wrong because you must fly slower (lower IAS), not faster. C is wrong because V_NE as indicated must be reduced with altitude. D is wrong because the green arc alone does not account for altitude corrections.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_26_50_fr.md
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+### Q26 : Après avoir contourné un point de virage, à quoi un pilote de planeur doit-il se préparer ? (2,00 P.) ^t30q26
+- A) À l'affaiblissement des thermiques en raison de l'heure avancée.
+- B) À une image horizontale modifiée en raison de plafonds nuageux plus bas.
+- C) À une dissipation accrue des nuages en raison de l'heure avancée.
+- D) À une image nuageuse modifiée en raison de la position apparemment changée du soleil.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car lorsqu'un planeur effectue un virage à 90 ou 180 degrés à un point de cheminement, toute la perspective visuelle du pilote sur le ciel se modifie radicalement. Le soleil semble s'être déplacé par rapport au cap, et les cumulus qui se trouvaient derrière ou à côté de l'aéronef apparaissent maintenant dans des positions différentes. Ce changement de perception peut donner l'impression que le ciel est entièrement différent. A est fausse car l'affaiblissement des thermiques est une question d'heure de la journée, pas d'un point de virage. B est fausse car les plafonds nuageux ne changent pas lors d'un virage. C est fausse car la dissipation des nuages n'est pas liée aux changements de cap.
+
+### Q27 : Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique un groupe d'obstacles non balisés lumineux ? ^t30q27
+
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B (symbole C dans la figure) car la symbologie cartographique de l'Annexe 4 de l'OACI utilise des symboles distincts pour différencier les obstacles isolés des groupes d'obstacles, et les balisés des non balisés. Le symbole désignant un groupe d'obstacles non balisés est spécifiquement désigné dans la figure de référence PFP-061 comme C. A, C et D représentent d'autres catégories d'obstacles tels que des obstacles isolés, des groupes balisés ou d'autres types. La connaissance de ces symboles est essentielle pour la planification de vol de campagne et l'évitement des obstacles.
+
+### Q28 : Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique un aéroport civil (pas aéroport international) avec piste revêtue ? ^t30q28
+
+- A) C
+- B) A
+- C) B
+- D) D
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B (symbole A dans la figure) car la symbologie des cartes aéronautiques de l'OACI différencie les aéroports selon leur statut civil ou militaire, international ou national, et le type de revêtement de piste. Un aéroport civil national avec une piste revêtue a un symbole spécifique représenté par A dans l'annexe PFP-062. A, C et D représentent d'autres catégories d'aérodromes tels que les aéroports internationaux, les terrains militaires ou les aéroports à piste en herbe. Les pilotes de planeurs utilisent ces symboles lors de la planification de terrains de dégagement ou d'aéroports alternatifs.
+
+### Q29 : Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique une cote ponctuelle générale ? ^t30q29
+
+- A) C
+- B) B
+- C) A
+- D) D
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A (symbole C dans la figure) car les cartes OACI utilisent des symboles spécifiques pour différencier les cotes ponctuelles générales, les points d'altitude levés et les hauteurs d'obstacles. Une cote ponctuelle générale marque un point haut notable du terrain pour la conscience situationnelle et est représentée conformément aux normes de l'Annexe 4 de l'OACI. B, C et D représentent d'autres symboles liés à l'altitude tels que les figures d'altitude maximale ou les marqueurs d'obstacles. La connaissance de ces symboles est essentielle pour la planification du dégagement du relief.
+
+### Q30 : Quelle distance peut être couverte en plané dans un planeur avec une finesse de 1/30 depuis une hauteur de 1 500 m ? (Négliger les effets du vent et des thermiques) ^t30q30
+- A) 45 NM.
+- B) 30 km.
+- C) 45 km.
+- D) 81 NM.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car la distance de plané est égale à la finesse multipliée par la hauteur : 30 × 1 500 m = 45 000 m = 45 km. La finesse de 1:30 signifie que le planeur couvre 30 mètres horizontalement pour chaque mètre d'altitude perdu. A est fausse car 45 NM équivalent à environ 83 km, ce qui nécessiterait une finesse d'environ 1:55. B est fausse car 30 km correspondrait à une finesse de seulement 1:20. D est fausse car 81 NM (150 km) nécessiterait une finesse de 1:100. Toujours vérifier la cohérence des unités — mélanger miles nautiques et mètres est un piège classique à l'examen.
+
+### Q31 : Pourquoi peut-on augmenter la charge alaire lorsque les conditions de vol à voile sont bonnes ? ^t30q31
+- A) Parce que la vitesse de décrochage diminue.
+- B) Parce que le planeur obtient une meilleure finesse à grande vitesse, même si la vitesse minimale augmente.
+- C) Parce que le planeur peut voler plus lentement et obtient une meilleure finesse.
+- D) Parce que le planeur a un meilleur taux de montée même s'il doit voler plus lentement.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car en conditions thermiques actives, le planeur bénéficie de voler plus vite entre les thermiques (théorie de MacCready). L'ajout de ballast d'eau augmente la charge alaire, ce qui déplace la polaire de vitesse vers la droite — améliorant la finesse à grande vitesse de croisière tout en acceptant une vitesse de décrochage et une vitesse de calage plus élevées. A est fausse car augmenter la charge alaire élève la vitesse de décrochage. C est fausse car une charge alaire plus élevée signifie que le planeur doit voler plus vite, pas plus lentement. D est fausse car un planeur plus lourd a un moins bon taux de montée en thermique en raison de sa vitesse de calage plus élevée.
+
+### Q32 : La roue de queue d'un planeur n'a pas été retirée avant le départ. Quelle en sera la conséquence ? ^t30q32
+- A) Meilleure manœuvrabilité au départ.
+- B) Le centre de gravité se déplace vers l'avant.
+- C) Aucune conséquence. La roue ne représente qu'une infime fraction du poids total du planeur et ne modifie en rien le centre de gravité.
+- D) Le centre de gravité se situera plus en arrière et peut-être trop en arrière, ce qui est dangereux.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car la roue de queue est montée à l'extrémité arrière du fuselage, très en arrière du C.G. nominal. Même si sa masse absolue est faible, son grand bras de levier produit un moment significatif qui déplace le C.G. vers l'arrière — potentiellement au-delà de la limite arrière, rendant l'aéronef instable en tangage et difficile à contrôler. A est fausse car la roue de queue n'améliore pas la manœuvrabilité. B est fausse car la roue de queue est en arrière du C.G., donc sa présence déplace le C.G. vers l'arrière, pas vers l'avant. C est fausse car le long bras de levier amplifie l'effet même d'une faible masse.
+
+### Q33 : Le pilote dépasse de 10 kg la charge utile maximale du cockpit. Que faut-il faire ? ^t30q33
+- A) Trimer vers l'arrière.
+- B) Trimer vers l'avant.
+- C) Réduire la charge utile.
+- D) Compenser en réduisant légèrement le ballast d'eau.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car la charge maximale au siège est une limite de certification qui ne peut pas être contournée. La dépasser peut placer le C.G. en dehors de la limite avant et soumet la structure à des contraintes au-delà des essais certifiés. Le seul remède est de réduire la charge utile jusqu'au respect des limites. A et B sont fausses car le trim modifie les forces aérodynamiques sur la gouverne de profondeur mais ne change pas la masse ni la position du C.G. de l'aéronef. D est fausse car réduire le ballast d'eau modifie la masse totale mais ne résout pas la limitation spécifique de charge au siège.
+
+### Q34 : Qu'est-ce qui propulse un planeur pur vers l'avant ? ^t30q34
+- A) Les courants d'air ascendants.
+- B) La traînée dirigée vers l'avant.
+- C) La composante de la pesanteur agissant en direction de la trajectoire de vol.
+- D) Un vent arrière.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car en vol plané rectiligne stabilisé, le vecteur poids peut être décomposé en deux composantes : l'une perpendiculaire à la trajectoire (compensée par la portance) et l'une le long de la trajectoire. Cette composante du poids dans l'axe de la trajectoire fournit la force motrice vers l'avant qui compense la traînée et maintient la vitesse. A est fausse car les courants ascendants peuvent réduire le taux de descente mais ne propulsent pas le planeur vers l'avant dans la masse d'air. B est fausse car la traînée s'oppose toujours à la direction du mouvement. D est fausse car le vent arrière affecte la vitesse sol mais ne propulse pas l'aéronef dans la masse d'air.
+
+### Q35 : La masse actuelle d'un aéronef est de 610 kg et la position du centre de gravité (C.G.) est à 80,0. Vous retirez un bagage de 10 kg situé sur un bras de levier de 150. Quel est le nouveau centre de gravité ? ^t30q35
+- A) 75,0
+- B) 81,166
+- C) 70,0
+- D) 78,833
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D. Le calcul se déroule comme suit : Moment initial = 610 × 80,0 = 48 800. Moment retiré = 10 × 150 = 1 500. Nouveau moment total = 48 800 − 1 500 = 47 300. Nouvelle masse = 610 − 10 = 600 kg. Nouveau C.G. = 47 300 / 600 = 78,833. Le bagage étant situé en arrière du C.G. actuel (bras 150 > 80), son retrait déplace le C.G. vers l'avant — cohérent avec le résultat (78,833 < 80,0). A (75,0) et C (70,0) sont trop en avant. B (81,166) montre incorrectement un déplacement vers l'arrière.
+
+### Q36 : La masse à vide du Discus B est de 245 kg. Vous envisagez de transporter 184 kg de ballast d'eau. Quelle est la charge maximale au siège du pilote ? ^t30q36
+> **Extrait du Manuel de vol du Discus B — Tableau de chargement avec ballast d'eau**
+> ![[figures/t30_q36.png]]
+> Masse totale maximale autorisée incluant le ballast d'eau : **525 kg**
+> Bras de levier du ballast d'eau : **203 mm en arrière du point de référence (BE)**
+
+> *Tableau des charges de ballast d'eau pour différentes masses à vide et charges pilote :*
+
+| Masse à vide (kg) | Charge siège 70 kg | 80 kg | 90 kg | 100 kg | 110 kg |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| 220 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 225 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 230 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 235 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 |
+| 240 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 |
+| 245 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 | 170 |
+| 250 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 | 165 |
+
+> *Ballast d'eau dans les deux réservoirs d'ailes (kg). Pour masse à vide 245 kg et ballast 184 kg : la charge siège maximale est **90 kg** (colonne 90 kg → valeur 184, mais colonne 100 kg → 180 et colonne 110 kg → 170 ; avec ballast=184 requis, lire la ligne 245 kg et trouver la charge siège correspondant à ballast=184, soit max 90 kg permis d'après la table).*
+- A) 100 kg
+- B) 110 kg
+- C) 90 kg
+- D) 80 kg
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C (90 kg). En lisant le tableau de chargement du Discus B à la ligne masse à vide de 245 kg : avec une charge siège de 90 kg, le ballast d'eau autorisé est de 184 kg (correspondant à notre besoin), mais à 100 kg de charge siège seulement 180 kg de ballast sont autorisés, et à 110 kg seulement 170 kg. Puisque nous avons besoin des 184 kg complets de ballast, la charge siège maximale permettant encore cela est de 90 kg. A (100 kg) et B (110 kg) nécessiteraient de réduire le ballast en dessous de 184 kg. D (80 kg) est inutilement restrictif — le tableau montre que 184 kg est encore autorisé à 90 kg.
+
+### Q37 : Quel principe important faut-il respecter lors d'un atterrissage en campagne sur un terrain en pente ? ^t30q37
+- A) N'atterrir qu'aérofreins totalement sortis.
+- B) Atterrir face à la montée avec une vitesse d'approche légèrement supérieure à la normale.
+- C) Toujours atterrir contre le vent quelle que soit la pente.
+- D) L'arrondi doit être initié à une hauteur plus grande que d'habitude.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car atterrir en montant la pente utilise l'inclinaison pour décélérer le planeur — la gravité assiste le freinage, raccourcissant considérablement le roulement à l'atterrissage. Une vitesse d'approche légèrement supérieure à la normale fournit une marge de sécurité contre le cisaillement du vent et les turbulences près d'un terrain inconnu. A est fausse car les aérofreins complets ne sont pas toujours appropriés sur des terrains courts ou raides. C est fausse car sur des pentes significatives, atterrir en montant prime sur l'atterrissage face au vent. D est fausse car la hauteur d'arrondi doit être adaptée au terrain, mais ce n'est pas le principe principal.
+
+### Q38 : Vous devez atterrir sous une forte pluie. À quoi devez-vous particulièrement prêter attention ? ^t30q38
+- A) La vitesse d'approche est plus faible que d'habitude car la pluie ralentit l'aéronef.
+- B) L'atterrissage s'effectue comme par temps sec.
+- C) En raison de la mauvaise visibilité, l'angle d'approche doit être plus plat que d'habitude.
+- D) Une vitesse d'approche plus élevée doit être utilisée.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car la forte pluie sur la surface de l'aile dégrade le profil aérodynamique par une rugosité accrue, pouvant élever la vitesse de décrochage. Une vitesse d'approche plus élevée fournit une marge de sécurité adéquate. A est fausse car la pluie n'abaisse pas la vitesse d'approche sûre — au contraire, la vitesse de décrochage peut augmenter. B est fausse car la pluie modifie significativement les conditions (visibilité réduite, surfaces mouillées, aérodynamique dégradée). C est fausse car un angle d'approche plus plat réduit les marges de dégagement d'obstacles et prolonge la finale par mauvaise visibilité.
+
+### Q39 : Vous décolllez depuis une piste en herbe détrempée après plusieurs jours de pluie. À quoi devez-vous vous attendre ? ^t30q39
+- A) La distance de décollage sera probablement plus longue.
+- B) Le planeur est mouillé et a de moins bonnes performances.
+- C) L'herbe mouillée offre moins de résistance, raison pour laquelle la distance de décollage sera plus courte.
+- D) Le planeur peut faire une embardée latérale (aquaplaning).
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car une piste en herbe détrempée crée une résistance au roulement plus importante due à la déformation du sol mou et à la traînée de l'eau sur les roues, ralentissant l'accélération et augmentant la distance de décollage. B est fausse car bien qu'un planeur mouillé ait des performances légèrement dégradées, le problème principal est l'état de la piste. C est fausse car l'herbe mouillée et molle augmente la résistance plutôt qu'elle ne la réduit. D est fausse car l'aquaplaning se produit sur des surfaces dures avec de l'eau stagnante, pas sur de l'herbe molle.
+
+### Q40 : Laquelle de ces affirmations est correcte à une vitesse de 170 km/h, en tenant compte de la polaire de vitesse suivante ? ^t30q40
+> **Polaire de vitesse de l'ASK 21 :**
+> ![[figures/t30_q40.png]]
+> *Deux courbes : G=470 kp (masse légère, taux de chute min ~0,657 m/s à ~75 km/h) et G=570 kp (masse lourde, taux de chute min ~0,724 m/s). La meilleure finesse se lit par la tangente depuis l'origine. À 170 km/h, le taux de chute est plus élevé pour G=570 kp que pour G=470 kp.*
+- A) Quel que soit la masse de l'ASK21, le taux de chute reste constant.
+- B) Lorsque la masse de l'ASK21 augmente, le taux de chute croît.
+- C) Lorsque la masse de l'ASK21 augmente, le taux de chute s'accroît.
+- D) Lorsque la masse de l'ASK21 diminue, l'angle de plané s'améliore.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car à 170 km/h, en lisant les deux courbes polaires, la configuration plus lourde (570 kp) montre un taux de chute plus élevé que la configuration plus légère (470 kp). Un planeur plus lourd nécessite plus de portance pour se maintenir en vol, produisant plus de traînée induite et donc un taux de chute plus élevé à toute vitesse donnée. A est fausse car les deux courbes montrent clairement des taux de chute différents à 170 km/h. B et C énoncent la même chose — le taux de chute augmente avec la masse — ce qui est correct. D est fausse car à grande vitesse l'angle de plané n'est pas nécessairement meilleur à masse plus faible.
+
+### Q41 : Quelle est la vitesse au taux de chute minimal en air calme pour une masse de 450 kg ? ^t30q41
+> **Polaire de vitesse (VITESSE ANÉMOMÉTRIQUE) :**
+> ![[figures/t30_q41.png]]
+> *Deux courbes : 450 kg et 580 kg. Le taux de chute minimal (sommet de la courbe) pour 450 kg est à environ 75 km/h. La courbe à 580 kg est décalée vers la droite (vitesses plus élevées) et vers le bas (taux de chute plus grand).*
+- A) 75 km/h
+- B) 95 km/h
+- C) 50 km/h
+- D) 140 km/h
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car la vitesse au taux de chute minimal correspond au point le plus haut de la courbe polaire de vitesse — là où le taux de chute est le plus petit. Pour 450 kg, ce sommet se situe à environ 75 km/h. Cette vitesse maximise l'endurance en air calme et est optimale pour centrer les thermiques. B (95 km/h) correspondrait davantage à la vitesse de meilleure finesse ou à la vitesse de calage minimal à masse plus élevée. C (50 km/h) est en dessous de la vitesse de décrochage. D (140 km/h) est loin dans la plage de grande vitesse où le taux de chute est beaucoup plus élevé.
+
+### Q42 : À partir de quelle altitude sur la route entre Murten (approx. N46°56'/E007°07') et l'aérodrome de Neuchâtel (approx. N46°57'/E006°52') devez-vous demander l'autorisation de traverser la TMA PAYERNE ? ^t30q42
+- A) 950 m MSL (3 100 ft).
+- B) 3 050 m MSL (FL 100).
+- C) 700 m MSL (2 300 ft).
+- D) À toute altitude car la limite inférieure de la TMA est représentée par la surface du sol (GND).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car sur la route entre Murten et Neuchâtel, le secteur concerné de la TMA PAYERNE a une limite inférieure à 700 m MSL (2 300 ft). En dessous de cette altitude, le vol peut se poursuivre dans l'espace aérien non contrôlé sans autorisation. Au-dessus de 700 m MSL, une autorisation ATC est requise. A (950 m) ne correspond pas à la limite publiée. B (FL 100) est beaucoup trop élevé — c'est la limite supérieure de certaines TMA, pas la limite inférieure ici. D est fausse car la TMA ne s'étend pas jusqu'au sol dans ce secteur.
+
+### Q43 : Dans quelle classe d'espace aérien volez-vous à 1 400 m MSL (QNH 1013 hPa) au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Birrfeld (47°25'36"N/007°14'02"E), et quelles sont les minimums de visibilité et de distance aux nuages dans cet espace aérien ? ^t30q43
+- A) Classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance horizontale aux nuages 1,5 km, verticale 300 m.
+- B) Classe D, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance horizontale aux nuages 1,5 km, verticale 300 m.
+- C) Classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, sans nuages avec contact visuel permanent avec le sol.
+- D) Classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance horizontale aux nuages 1,5 km, verticale 300 m.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car à 1 400 m MSL au-dessus de Birrfeld, vous vous trouvez dans l'espace aérien de classe E. Les minimums VFR en classe E requièrent 5 km de visibilité horizontale, 1 500 m de dégagement horizontal aux nuages et 300 m de dégagement vertical aux nuages. B est fausse car la classe D s'applique dans des CTR ou TMA spécifiques, pas au-dessus de Birrfeld à cette altitude. C est fausse car la classe G s'applique en dessous d'une certaine altitude avec des minimums réduits. D est fausse car la classe C commence à une altitude plus élevée dans cette région (typiquement FL 130 en Suisse).
+
+### Q44 : La route indiquée ci-dessous vers SCHWYZ (ligne pointillée) est planifiée pour le 20 juin 2015 (heure d'été) entre 1515–1545 LT à 6 500 ft MSL. Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t30q44
+> **DABS — Bulletin journalier de l'espace aérien suisse (extrait)**
+> ![[figures/t30_q44.png]]
+
+| Tir-Nr D-/R-Zone NOTAM-Nr | Validité UTC | Limite inf. MSL ou FL | Limite sup. MSL ou FL | Lieu | Point central | Rayon de couverture | Activité / Remarques |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| B0685/14 | 0000–2359 | 900m / 3000ft | FL 130 | SION TMA SECT 1 | 461610N 0072940E | 4,7 KM / 2,5 NM | TMA SECT 1 ACT HX ONLY |
+| W0912/15 | 1145–1300 | GND | FL 120 | MORGARTEN | 470507N 0083758E | 10,0 KM / 5,4 NM | R-AREA ACT. ENTRY PROHIBITED. FOR INFO CTC ZURICH INFO 124.7 |
+| W0957/15 | 1400–1700 | 2150m / 7000ft | FL 120 | HINWIL | 471721N 0084859E | 7,0 KM / 3,8 NM | TEMPO R-AREA ACTIVE. ENTRY PROHIBITED. CTC 118.975 |
+| W0960/15 | 0800–1700 | GND | 1200m / 4050ft | 1,7 KM SE CERNIER | 470352N 0065442E | 1,5 KM / 0,8 NM | D-AREA ACT |
+- A) Il n'est pas possible d'effectuer la route planifiée ce jour-là.
+- B) Vous pouvez ignorer le DABS car il ne s'applique qu'à l'aviation commerciale.
+- C) Vous pouvez traverser toutes les zones dangereuses et restreintes concernées en dessous de 1 000 ft AGL ou au-dessus de 12 000 ft MSL.
+- D) La route peut être effectuée sans coordination entre 1500 et 1600 LT.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D. Le 20 juin 2015 (CEST = UTC+2), l'heure prévue de 1515–1545 LT correspond à 1315–1345 UTC. La zone W0912/15 (MORGARTEN) était active de 1145 à 1300 UTC et a déjà expiré. La zone W0957/15 (HINWIL) s'active à 1400 UTC (1600 LT) — elle n'est pas encore active. La route peut donc être effectuée sans coordination entre 1500 et 1600 LT. A est fausse car la route est praticable dans la fenêtre de temps donnée. B est fausse car le DABS s'applique à tous les utilisateurs de l'espace aérien y compris les planeurs. C est fausse car elle suggère incorrectement des exemptions basées sur l'altitude.
+
+### Q45 : Selon la carte aéronautique OACI au 1:500 000, à quelle altitude au-dessus de Schwyz (approx. 47°01' N, 8°39' E) devez-vous demander l'autorisation d'entrer dans l'espace aérien de classe C ? ^t30q45
+- A) FL 90
+- B) 4 500 ft
+- C) FL 130
+- D) FL 195
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car au-dessus de Schwyz, la carte suisse OACI au 1:500 000 montre l'espace aérien de classe C à partir du FL 130. En dessous du FL 130, l'espace aérien est de classe E. L'entrée en classe C nécessite une autorisation ATC quel que soit le type de vol. A (FL 90) est en dessous de la limite réelle. B (4 500 ft) est beaucoup trop bas et se trouve dans l'espace aérien non contrôlé. D (FL 195) est la limite supérieure de l'espace aérien contrôlé suisse, pas la limite inférieure de la classe C au-dessus de Schwyz.
+
+### Q46 : Jusqu'à quelle heure l'aérodrome de La Côte (LSGP) est-il ouvert le soir ? ^t30q46
+> **AD INFO 1 — LA CÔTE / LSGP**
+> ![[figures/t30_q46.png]]
+
+| Données | Valeur |
+|--------|--------|
+| OACI | LSGP |
+| Élévation | 1 352 ft (412 m) |
+| ARP | 46°24'23"N / 006°15'28"E |
+| Piste | 04 / 22 — vrai/magnétique : 041°/040° et 221°/220° |
+| Dimensions | 560 × 30 m — GAZON |
+| Distance d'atterrissage disponible | 490 m |
+| Distance de décollage disponible | 490 m |
+| Portance du sol | 0,25 MPa |
+| Statut | Privé — Aérodrome, **PPR** |
+| Localisation | 25 km NE Genève |
+| Heures LUN–VEN | 0700–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+| Heures SAM/DIM | 0800–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+| Référence ECT | → VFG RAC 1-1 |
+
+> *ECT = Fin du crépuscule civil. L'aérodrome ferme 30 minutes avant la fin du crépuscule civil.*
+- A) Jusqu'à une demi-heure avant le début du crépuscule civil.
+- B) Jusqu'à une demi-heure avant le coucher du soleil.
+- C) Jusqu'à une demi-heure avant la fin du crépuscule civil.
+- D) Jusqu'à la fin du crépuscule civil.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car la fiche AD INFO de LSGP indique les heures de l'après-midi comme « 1400–ECT –30 min », ce qui signifie que l'aérodrome ferme 30 minutes avant la fin du crépuscule civil. A est fausse car elle fait référence au début du crépuscule civil, pas à sa fin. B est fausse car le coucher du soleil a lieu avant la fin du crépuscule civil. D est fausse car l'aérodrome ferme 30 minutes avant l'ECT, pas à l'ECT lui-même.
+
+### Q47 : Sur quelle fréquence recevez-vous des informations sur les lancements au treuil à l'aérodrome de Gruyères (LSGT) le week-end ? ^t30q47
+> **Carte d'approche à vue — GRUYÈRES / LSGT**
+> ![[figures/t30_q47.png]]
+> AD **124,675** — PPR — ÉLEV 2 257 ft (688 m)
+
+> *Données clés de la carte (altitudes en ft, caps magnétiques) :*
+
+| Données | Valeur |
+|--------|--------|
+| OACI | LSGT |
+| Fréquence AD | **124,675 MHz** |
+| Élévation | 2 257 ft (688 m) |
+| Statut | PPR |
+| Altitude minimale de survol AD (MNM ALT) | **4 000 ft** |
+| Secteur ARR/DEP planeurs O (GLD ARR/DEP W) | **MAX 3 100 ft** |
+| Secteur ARR/DEP planeurs E (GLD ARR/DEP E) | **MAX 3 600 ft** |
+| ARR/DEP hélicoptères | 3 000 ft |
+| Secteurs ARR préférés | OUEST et EST |
+| CTN (trafic campagne) | 3 000 ft |
+| Survol MNM AD | 4 000 ft |
+| Espace aérien classe C au-dessus | FL 100 / 119,175 GENÈVE DELTA |
+| Lancements au treuil | Intensifs SAM/DIM (CTN : Lancement treuil intensif SAM/DIM) |
+| VOR/DME proche | SPR R076, 113,9 MHz |
+
+> *Zones sensibles au bruit (jaune) autour de Bulle/Broc. Éviter le survol du terrain pendant les PJE (largages de parachutistes). Contacter RTF 5 min avant ETA.*
+- A) 113,9
+- B) 124,675
+- C) 119,175
+- D) 110,85
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B (124,675 MHz) car c'est la fréquence d'aérodrome indiquée sur la carte d'approche à vue de LSGT Gruyères. Les informations sur le trafic local, y compris l'activité intensive de lancement au treuil le week-end, sont diffusées sur cette fréquence. A (113,9) est la fréquence de navigation VOR/DME SPR. C (119,175) est la fréquence du secteur Delta de Genève pour l'espace aérien de classe C au-dessus. D (110,85) ne figure pas sur cette carte et ne concerne pas les opérations de LSGT.
+
+### Q48 : Quelle distance couvrez-vous en 90 minutes à une vitesse sol de 90 km/h ? ^t30q48
+- A) 90 km
+- B) 135 km
+- C) 100 km
+- D) 120 km
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car distance = vitesse × temps. Vitesse sol = 90 km/h, temps = 90 minutes = 1,5 heure. Distance = 90 × 1,5 = 135 km. A (90 km) résulte de l'utilisation incorrecte de 1 heure au lieu de 1,5 heure. C (100 km) et D (120 km) ne correspondent à aucun calcul correct. Rappel : convertir les minutes en heures avant de multiplier : 90 minutes = 1,5 heure, pas 0,9 heure.
+
+### Q49 : À une altitude de 6 000 m, l'anémomètre indique 160 km/h (IAS). La vitesse vraie (TAS)... ^t30q49
+- A) est inférieure à l'IAS.
+- B) est également de 160 km/h.
+- C) peut être supérieure ou inférieure à l'IAS selon la pression atmosphérique et la température.
+- D) est supérieure à l'IAS.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car l'anémomètre mesure la pression dynamique, qui dépend de la densité de l'air. À 6 000 m, la densité de l'air est significativement plus faible qu'au niveau de la mer. Pour que le tube de Pitot enregistre la même pression dynamique (même IAS), l'aéronef doit se déplacer plus vite dans l'air moins dense. La TAS augmente d'environ 2 % par 300 m d'altitude gagnée, donc à 6 000 m, la TAS est environ 40 % supérieure à l'IAS. A est fausse car la TAS est toujours supérieure à l'IAS en altitude. B est fausse car elles ne sont égales qu'au niveau de la mer dans les conditions ISA. C est fausse car à toute altitude au-dessus du niveau de la mer, la TAS est toujours supérieure à l'IAS.
+
+### Q50 : Vous volez en portance ondulatoire à 6 000 m d'altitude. Quelle est la vitesse maximale à laquelle vous pouvez voler ? ^t30q50
+- A) Dans l'air à faible densité, à une vitesse plus élevée que d'habitude.
+- B) En dessous du repère rouge V_NE sur l'anémomètre, selon le tableau vitesse-altitude affiché dans le cockpit.
+- C) À la même vitesse qu'au niveau de la mer car la V_NE est une valeur absolue.
+- D) Au maximum dans l'arc vert.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car en haute altitude, la vitesse vraie correspondant à une IAS donnée est beaucoup plus élevée, et c'est la TAS qui détermine les charges aérodynamiques sur la structure. Les manuels de vol des planeurs fournissent un tableau vitesse-altitude (ou courbe de réduction de V_NE) affiché dans le cockpit, donnant l'IAS maximale corrigée à chaque altitude. À 6 000 m, l'IAS autorisée est inférieure au repère V_NE au niveau de la mer. A est fausse car vous devez voler plus lentement (IAS plus faible), pas plus vite. C est fausse car la V_NE indiquée doit être réduite avec l'altitude. D est fausse car l'arc vert seul ne tient pas compte des corrections d'altitude.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_51_75.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_51_75.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ed26a52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_51_75.md
@@ -0,0 +1,260 @@
+### Q51: 1235 lbs (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs):... ^t30q51
+- A) approx. 620 kg.
+- B) approx. 2720 kg.
+- C) approx. 560 kg.
+- D) approx. 2470 kg.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because to convert pounds to kilograms, divide by 2.2: 1235 / 2.2 = 561.4 kg, which rounds to approximately 560 kg. A (620 kg) would correspond to about 1364 lbs. B (2720 kg) results from multiplying instead of dividing. D (2470 kg) is also the result of a multiplication error. The key formula is: mass in kg = weight in lbs / 2.2.
+
+### Q52: What has to be particularly observed when landing on an upsloping field with a tailwind? ^t30q52
+- A) Fly final a little faster than usual.
+- B) Flare higher than usual.
+- C) Fly at the normal approach speed (yellow triangle).
+- D) You must land with all airbrakes fully extended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because on an upsloping field with a tailwind, the competing effects partially cancel each other: the upslope shortens the ground roll while the tailwind lengthens it. The normal approach speed (yellow triangle on the ASI) provides the correct balance of energy management. A is wrong because a faster approach would result in excessive float on the upslope. B is wrong because flaring higher risks ballooning on the slope. D is wrong because full airbrakes may cause an excessively steep descent on short final.
+
+### Q53: In which airspace class are you above Langenthal aerodrome (47 deg 10'58''N / 007 deg 44'29''E) at an altitude of 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^t30q53
+- A) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- B) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- C) Class D airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 2000 m AMSL above Langenthal, you are in Class E airspace. VFR flight in Class E requires 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. B is wrong because Class G with its reduced minima applies only at very low altitudes. C is wrong because there is no Class D TMA at this location and altitude. D is wrong because Class C begins at FL 130 in this region, far above 2000 m AMSL.
+
+### Q54: Which center of gravity position is the most dangerous for a glider? ^t30q54
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too low.
+- C) Too far aft.
+- D) Too high.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when the C.G. is too far aft, the glider loses longitudinal static stability — the nose tends to pitch up without returning to equilibrium, potentially leading to uncontrollable divergent oscillations or a stall/spin. A (too far forward) is less dangerous because the aircraft remains stable, though elevator authority may be insufficient for landing. B and D are wrong because vertical C.G. displacement is not the primary concern in standard glider mass-and-balance analysis.
+
+### Q55: How does the indicated VNE (never-exceed speed) change as altitude increases? ^t30q55
+- A) It rises.
+- B) It decreases.
+- C) It stays the same; the airspeed indicator accounts for this automatically.
+- D) It diminishes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which inherently accounts for air density. The V_NE marking on the ASI (red line) represents a fixed IAS value that corresponds to the structural limit. However, note that the allowable maximum IAS must actually be reduced at high altitude per the flight manual's speed-altitude table — the ASI marking itself does not change, but the pilot must observe a lower limit. A and B/D are wrong because the physical mark on the instrument does not move. The subtlety is that while the ASI reading mechanism inherently accounts for density, glider pilots must consult the altitude-correction table for the actual limit at high altitude.
+
+### Q56: You have covered a distance of 150 km in 1 hour and 15 minutes. Your calculated ground speed is:... ^t30q56
+- A) 125 km/h.
+- B) 115 km/h.
+- C) 120 km/h.
+- D) 110 km/h.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because ground speed = distance / time = 150 km / 1.25 hours = 120 km/h. The key step is converting 1 hour 15 minutes to decimal hours: 15 minutes = 0.25 hours, so total time = 1.25 hours. A (125 km/h) results from dividing by 1.2 hours. B (115 km/h) and D (110 km/h) do not correspond to any correct calculation with these inputs.
+
+### Q57: The following NOTAM was published on 18 August (summer time). Which of the following statements is correct? ^t30q57
+![[figures/t30_q57.png]]
+- A) The extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be strictly avoided every day from 02 to 06 September 2013, between sunrise and sunset.
+- B) An airshow is taking place in the Payerne area from 02 to 06 September 2013. The TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 are active each day during this period between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC as holding areas and airshow demonstration sectors.
+- C) Due to an airshow from 02 to 06 September 2013, the extended CTR/TMA Payerne is active each day between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC. The TMA is used as a holding area, the restricted zone LS-R4 as a demonstration and holding area. The area must be strictly avoided.
+- D) Due to an airshow, a transit clearance for the extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be requested on frequency 135.475 (Payerne TWR) from 02 to 06 September 2013.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the NOTAM establishes that from 2 to 6 September 2013, between 0600 and 1500 UTC, the extended CTR/TMA Payerne is activated as a holding area, while LS-R4 serves as both a demonstration and holding area for an airshow. These areas must be strictly avoided during the active period. A is wrong because the times are 0600-1500 UTC, not sunrise to sunset. B incorrectly states both areas serve as holding and demonstration areas. D is wrong because transit is not permitted — the area must be avoided entirely, not transited with clearance.
+
+### Q58: Which is the best glide speed in calm air for a flying mass of 450 kg? See attached sheet. ^t30q58
+![[figures/t30_q58.png]]
+- A) 95km/h
+- B) 75km/h
+- C) 55km/h
+- D) 135km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (75 km/h) because the best glide speed is found by drawing a tangent from the origin to the speed polar curve for 450 kg. The point where this tangent touches the curve gives the speed for maximum lift-to-drag ratio (best glide). A (95 km/h) is too fast and would correspond to a heavier mass or a different polar. C (55 km/h) is near the stall speed. D (135 km/h) is deep in the high-speed range where the glide ratio is significantly reduced.
+
+### Q59: A VFR flight will follow the route shown on the map below (dotted line) from APPENZELL towards MUOTATHAL. The route is planned for 19 March 2013 (winter time) between 1205 and 1255 LT. Answer using the DABS below. Which of these answers is correct? ^t30q59
+![[figures/t30_q59.png]]
+- A) The DABS can be ignored as it solely applies to military aircraft.
+- B) You may pass through all relevant danger and restricted zones below 1000 ft AGL or above 10,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) The route can be flown without coordination between 1200 and 1300 LT.
+- D) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because checking the DABS for 19 March 2013 (winter time, CET = UTC+1), the planned time of 1205-1255 LT converts to 1105-1155 UTC. During this period, the relevant danger and restricted zones along the route are not active, allowing the route to be flown without coordination. A is wrong because the DABS applies to all airspace users, including gliders. B is wrong because altitude-based exemptions do not automatically apply to all restricted areas. D is wrong because the route is flyable during the specified time window.
+
+### Q60: Wing loading is increased by 40% by water ballast. By what percentage does the glider's minimum speed increase? ^t30q60
+- A) 18%.
+- B) 40%.
+- C) 100%.
+- D) 0%.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because stall speed (and therefore minimum speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading. If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), the new minimum speed is the original multiplied by the square root of 1.4, which equals approximately 1.183 — an increase of about 18.3%. B is wrong because the speed does not increase linearly with wing loading. C is wrong because a 100% increase would mean doubling the speed. D is wrong because any mass increase raises the minimum speed.
+
+### Q61: Based on the polar below, which statement applies at a speed of 150 km/h? See attached sheet... ^t30q61
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) the sink rate of the ASK21 is independent of its mass
+- B) the ASK21 has a worse glide ratio at lower flying mass
+- C) the ASK21 has a higher sink rate at higher flying mass
+- D) the ASK21 has a better glide ratio at lower flying mass
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 150 km/h, the two polar curves for different masses of the ASK21 intersect, meaning both configurations have the same sink rate at this particular speed. This is an aerodynamic property of the polar: the curves cross at one speed where mass has no effect on sink rate. B is wrong because at 150 km/h the glide ratio is equal for both masses. C is wrong because the sink rates are identical at this intersection point. D is also wrong because neither mass has a better glide ratio at this specific speed.
+
+### Q62: At Amlikon aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading East? ^t30q62
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (780 m) because the AIP chart for Amlikon aerodrome shows a maximum landing distance available of 780 metres in the eastward direction. A and C are wrong because landing distances in Switzerland are given in metres, not feet. D (700 m) does not match the published data for the eastward heading. Always verify the unit and the specific runway direction when reading aerodrome charts.
+
+### Q63: From what altitude must you request a transit clearance for the EMMEN TMA between Cham (approx. N47 deg 11' / E008 deg 28') and Hitzkirch (approx. N47 deg 14' / E008 deg 16')? ^t30q63
+![[figures/t30_q63.png]]
+- A) 2400 ft AMSL.
+- B) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 2000ft GND.
+- D) 5000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the EMMEN TMA lower boundary between Cham and Hitzkirch is at 3500 ft AMSL. Below this altitude, you remain in uncontrolled airspace and no clearance is needed. Above 3500 ft AMSL, you enter the TMA and must obtain an ATC clearance. A (2400 ft) is too low and does not correspond to the published limit. C (2000 ft GND) references above ground level, which is not how this TMA boundary is expressed. D (5000 ft) is too high.
+
+### Q64: The maximum permitted payload is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t30q64
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Increase takeoff speed by 10%.
+- C) Trim forward.
+- D) Reduce the payload.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when the maximum permitted payload is exceeded, the only correct action is to reduce the payload until it complies with the limit. The maximum payload is a certification limit based on structural strength and C.G. envelope. A and C are wrong because trimming adjusts aerodynamic forces on the tail but does not change the aircraft's mass or C.G. — it cannot make an overloaded aircraft safe. B is wrong because increasing takeoff speed does not solve an overweight condition and may actually overstress the structure further.
+
+### Q65: Which is the effect of wind on the glide angle over the ground if the aircraft's true airspeed remains constant? ^t30q65
+- A) With a tailwind, the glide angle increases.
+- B) With a headwind, the glide angle decreases.
+- C) Wind has no effect on the glide angle.
+- D) With a headwind, the glide angle rises.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because a headwind reduces groundspeed while the sink rate in the airmass remains unchanged. Since the glider covers less horizontal ground distance per unit of altitude lost, the descent angle relative to the ground steepens (increases). A is wrong because a tailwind decreases (flattens) the glide angle over the ground by increasing groundspeed. B is wrong because a headwind increases, not decreases, the ground glide angle. C is wrong because wind significantly affects the ground track glide angle, even though it does not affect the airmass glide angle.
+
+### Q66: How does indicated airspeed (IAS) compare to true airspeed (TAS) as altitude increases? ^t30q66
+- A) It rises.
+- B) It decreases.
+- C) It cannot be measured.
+- D) It stays identical.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because as altitude increases, air density decreases. For the same true airspeed, the pitot tube measures less dynamic pressure, so the IAS reading is lower than TAS. Conversely, to maintain the same IAS at altitude, the aircraft must fly at a higher TAS. The relationship is approximately TAS = IAS x square root of (sea-level density / actual density). A is wrong because IAS does not rise relative to TAS with altitude. C is wrong because IAS can always be measured. D is wrong because IAS and TAS diverge increasingly with altitude.
+
+### Q67: What has to be particularly observed when landing in heavy rain? ^t30q67
+- A) Approach speed must be increased.
+- B) Wing loading must be increased.
+- C) The approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) Approach speed must be lower than usual.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because heavy rain on the wing surface increases roughness and can degrade the boundary layer, potentially raising the stall speed and reducing maximum lift coefficient. A higher approach speed provides a safety margin against these effects. B is wrong because deliberately increasing wing loading in rain would require adding ballast, which is impractical and counterproductive. C is wrong because a shallower approach reduces obstacle clearance in poor visibility. D is wrong because a lower approach speed reduces the safety margin when aerodynamic degradation is already a risk.
+
+### Q68: What must a glider pilot take into account at Bex aerodrome? ^t30q68
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is clockwise.
+- B) The traffic pattern for runway 15 is clockwise.
+- C) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is counter-clockwise.
+- D) Depending on wind, the traffic pattern for runway 33 may be either clockwise or counter-clockwise.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at Bex aerodrome, terrain constraints (the Rhone valley and surrounding mountains) mean the traffic pattern direction for runway 33 depends on the prevailing wind conditions. The chart shows that either a left or right circuit may be used. A is wrong because it limits the pattern to clockwise only. B relates to runway 15, not 33. C is wrong because it limits the pattern to counter-clockwise only. Pilots must check the local procedures and wind conditions before joining the circuit.
+
+### Q69: What is the maximum flying altitude above Biel Kappelen aerodrome (SE of Biel) if you wish to avoid requesting a transit clearance for TMA BERN 1? ^t30q69
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the lower limit of TMA BERN 1 over Biel Kappelen is 3500 ft AMSL. By staying below this altitude, you remain in uncontrolled airspace and do not need a transit clearance. A (3500 ft AGL) is wrong because TMA boundaries are referenced to MSL, not AGL. B (FL 100) is far above the relevant boundary. C (FL 35) converts to approximately 3500 ft in standard atmosphere, but flight levels use the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa), not QNH, so this is not the correct way to express the limit.
+
+### Q70: Which of these statements is correct? ^t30q70
+- A) New C.G: 76.7, within approved limits.
+- B) New C.G: 78.5, within approved limits.
+- C) New C.G: 82.0, outside approved limits.
+- D) New C.G: 75.5, outside approved limits.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because applying the mass-and-balance calculation with the data provided (from the attached sheet), the new C.G. position computes to 76.7, which falls within the approved forward and aft C.G. limits. B (78.5) is an incorrect calculation result. C (82.0) is too far aft and would be outside limits. D (75.5) is incorrectly calculated and would also fall outside the forward limit. Always verify your calculation by checking whether the result is between the published forward and aft limits.
+
+### Q71: What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on landing? ^t30q71
+- A) Landing distance will be shorter.
+- B) Landing distance will be longer.
+- C) The glider risks running off the runway (groundloop).
+- D) No effect.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a waterlogged grass surface creates greater friction and drag on the landing gear during the ground roll, causing the glider to decelerate faster and stop in a shorter distance. The water acts as a braking medium. B is wrong because wet grass increases, not decreases, rolling resistance for a glider. C is wrong because while directional control may be slightly affected, the primary effect is shortened stopping distance. D is wrong because surface conditions always affect landing distance.
+
+### Q72: At Schänis aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading NNW? ^t30q72
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (470 m) because the AIP chart for Schanis aerodrome shows a maximum landing distance available of 470 metres in the NNW direction. A (520 m) does not match the published data for this heading. C and D are wrong because Swiss aerodrome distances are given in metres, not feet. Always read the correct runway direction and corresponding distance from the aerodrome chart.
+
+### Q73: The current mass of an aircraft is 6400 lbs. Current CG: 80. CG limits: forward CG: 75.2, aft CG: 80.5. What mass can be moved from its current position to arm 150 without exceeding the aft CG limit? ^t30q73
+- A) 27.82 lbs.
+- B) 56.63 lbs.
+- C) 39.45 lbs.
+- D) 45.71 lbs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D (45.71 lbs). The calculation uses the shift formula: when mass x is moved from the current C.G. position (80) to arm 150, the C.G. shifts aft. The new C.G. must not exceed 80.5. Using the formula: delta CG = (x × delta arm) / total mass, we get: 0.5 = (x × 70) / 6400, therefore x = (0.5 × 6400) / 70 = 45.71 lbs. A (27.82), B (56.63), and C (39.45) result from incorrect calculations using wrong distances or mass values.
+
+### Q74: Correct loading of an aircraft depends on:... ^t30q74
+- A) Only compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- B) Only correct payload distribution.
+- C) Correct payload distribution and compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- D) The maximum allowable mass of baggage in the aft section of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because correct loading requires satisfying two independent conditions simultaneously: the total mass must not exceed the maximum allowable mass (MTOM), and the payload must be distributed so that the C.G. remains within the approved envelope. A is wrong because respecting the mass limit alone does not guarantee the C.G. is within limits. B is wrong because correct distribution alone does not ensure the total mass is within limits. D is wrong because it addresses only one specific baggage compartment rather than the complete loading requirements.
+
+### Q75: What information can be read from this speed polar? (See attached sheet.)... ^t30q75
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) in the speed range up to 100 km/h, an increase in flying mass reduces the sink rate.
+- B) minimum speed is independent of flying mass.
+- C) both glide ratio and minimum speed are independent of flying mass.
+- D) only the maximum glide ratio is independent of flying mass, apart from a minor Reynolds number effect.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when comparing polar curves for different masses, the tangent from the origin touches each curve at the same angle, meaning the maximum lift-to-drag ratio (best glide ratio) is essentially unchanged by mass, apart from minor Reynolds number effects. However, the speed at which this best glide ratio occurs increases with mass. A is wrong because increasing mass always increases the sink rate at any given speed. B is wrong because minimum speed increases with mass (proportional to the square root of mass ratio). C is wrong because while glide ratio is mass-independent, minimum speed is not.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_51_75_fr.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c146b8f
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_51_75_fr.md
@@ -0,0 +1,259 @@
+### Q51: 1235 lbs (arrondi) correspondent à (1 kg = environ 2,2 lbs) :... ^t30q51
+- A) environ 620 kg.
+- B) environ 2720 kg.
+- C) environ 560 kg.
+- D) environ 2470 kg.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car pour convertir des livres en kilogrammes, on divise par 2,2 : 1235 / 2,2 = 561,4 kg, ce qui s'arrondit à environ 560 kg. A (620 kg) correspondrait à environ 1364 lbs. B (2720 kg) résulte d'une multiplication au lieu d'une division. D (2470 kg) est également le résultat d'une erreur de multiplication. La formule clé est : masse en kg = poids en lbs / 2,2.
+
+### Q52: Que faut-il particulièrement observer lors d'un atterrissage sur un terrain en pente montante avec un vent arrière ? ^t30q52
+- A) Voler en finale un peu plus vite que d'habitude.
+- B) Arrondir plus haut que d'habitude.
+- C) Voler à la vitesse d'approche normale (triangle jaune).
+- D) On doit atterrir avec tous les aérofreins complètement sortis.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car sur un terrain en pente montante avec vent arrière, les effets antagonistes se compensent partiellement : la pente montante raccourcit le roulage au sol tandis que le vent arrière l'allonge. La vitesse d'approche normale (triangle jaune sur l'ASI) fournit le bon équilibre de gestion de l'énergie. A est faux car une approche plus rapide entraînerait un flottement excessif sur la pente. B est faux car un arrondi plus haut risque de provoquer un rebond sur la pente. D est faux car les aérofreins complets peuvent provoquer une descente excessivement prononcée en finale courte.
+
+### Q53: Dans quelle classe d'espace aérien se trouve-t-on au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Langenthal (47° 10'58'' N / 007° 44'29'' E) à une altitude de 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), et quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages ? ^t30q53
+- A) Espace aérien de classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- B) Espace aérien de classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, en dehors des nuages avec vue continue du sol.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe D, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- D) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 2000 m AMSL au-dessus de Langenthal, on se trouve en espace aérien de classe E. Le vol VFR en classe E nécessite 5 km de visibilité horizontale, 1500 m de distance horizontale aux nuages et 300 m de distance verticale aux nuages. B est faux car la classe G avec ses minimums réduits ne s'applique qu'à de très basses altitudes. C est faux car il n'y a pas de TMA de classe D à cet endroit et à cette altitude. D est faux car la classe C commence à FL 130 dans cette région, bien au-dessus de 2000 m AMSL.
+
+### Q54: Quelle position du centre de gravité est la plus dangereuse pour un planeur ? ^t30q54
+- A) Trop en avant.
+- B) Trop bas.
+- C) Trop en arrière.
+- D) Trop haut.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque le CG est trop en arrière, le planeur perd sa stabilité longitudinale statique — le nez tend à cabrer sans revenir à l'équilibre, pouvant conduire à des oscillations divergentes incontrôlables ou à un décrochage/vrille. A (trop en avant) est moins dangereux car l'aéronef reste stable, bien que l'efficacité de la gouverne de profondeur puisse être insuffisante pour l'arrondi. B et D sont faux car le déplacement vertical du CG n'est pas la principale préoccupation dans l'analyse standard de masse et centrage du planeur.
+
+### Q55: Comment la VNE indiquée (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser) évolue-t-elle à mesure que l'altitude augmente ? ^t30q55
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle reste la même ; l'anémomètre en tient compte automatiquement.
+- D) Elle diminue.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car l'anémomètre mesure la pression dynamique, qui tient intrinsèquement compte de la densité de l'air. Le marquage VNE sur l'ASI (trait rouge) représente une valeur VPI fixe correspondant à la limite structurale. Cependant, il est à noter que la VPI maximale admissible doit effectivement être réduite en altitude selon le tableau vitesse-altitude du manuel de vol — le marquage sur l'instrument lui-même ne change pas, mais le pilote doit respecter une limite inférieure. A et B/D sont faux car le marquage physique sur l'instrument ne se déplace pas. La subtilité est que si le mécanisme de lecture de l'ASI tient intrinsèquement compte de la densité, les pilotes de planeur doivent consulter le tableau de correction d'altitude pour la limite réelle en haute altitude.
+
+### Q56: Vous avez parcouru une distance de 150 km en 1 heure et 15 minutes. Votre vitesse sol calculée est :... ^t30q56
+- A) 125 km/h.
+- B) 115 km/h.
+- C) 120 km/h.
+- D) 110 km/h.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la vitesse sol = distance / temps = 150 km / 1,25 heure = 120 km/h. L'étape clé est de convertir 1 heure 15 minutes en heures décimales : 15 minutes = 0,25 heure, donc le temps total = 1,25 heure. A (125 km/h) résulte d'une division par 1,2 heure. B (115 km/h) et D (110 km/h) ne correspondent à aucun calcul correct avec ces données.
+
+### Q57: Le NOTAM suivant a été publié le 18 août (heure d'été). Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t30q57
+![[figures/t30_q57.png]]
+- A) Le CTR/TMA Payerne étendu et la zone réglementée LS-R4 doivent être strictement évités chaque jour du 02 au 06 septembre 2013, entre le lever et le coucher du soleil.
+- B) Un spectacle aérien se déroule dans la région de Payerne du 02 au 06 septembre 2013. Le TMA Payerne et la zone réglementée LS-R4 sont actifs chaque jour durant cette période entre 0600 UTC et 1500 UTC comme zones d'attente et secteurs de démonstration.
+- C) En raison d'un spectacle aérien du 02 au 06 septembre 2013, le CTR/TMA Payerne étendu est actif chaque jour entre 0600 UTC et 1500 UTC. Le TMA est utilisé comme zone d'attente, la zone réglementée LS-R4 comme zone de démonstration et d'attente. La zone doit être strictement évitée.
+- D) En raison d'un spectacle aérien, une autorisation de transit pour le CTR/TMA Payerne étendu et la zone réglementée LS-R4 doit être demandée sur la fréquence 135,475 (Payerne TWR) du 02 au 06 septembre 2013.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le NOTAM établit que du 2 au 6 septembre 2013, entre 0600 et 1500 UTC, le CTR/TMA Payerne étendu est activé comme zone d'attente, tandis que LS-R4 sert à la fois de zone de démonstration et d'attente pour un spectacle aérien. Ces zones doivent être strictement évitées pendant la période active. A est faux car les horaires sont 0600-1500 UTC, non du lever au coucher du soleil. B indique incorrectement que les deux zones servent de zones d'attente et de démonstration. D est faux car le transit n'est pas autorisé — la zone doit être évitée entièrement, non transitée avec une autorisation.
+
+### Q58: Quelle est la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme pour une masse en vol de 450 kg ? Voir feuille annexée. ^t30q58
+![[figures/t30_q58.png]]
+- A) 95 km/h
+- B) 75 km/h
+- C) 55 km/h
+- D) 135 km/h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (75 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve en traçant une tangente depuis l'origine jusqu'à la courbe polaire pour 450 kg. Le point où cette tangente touche la courbe donne la vitesse pour le rapport portance/traînée maximal (meilleure finesse). A (95 km/h) est trop rapide et correspondrait à une masse plus élevée ou à une polaire différente. C (55 km/h) est proche de la vitesse de décrochage. D (135 km/h) est dans la plage de grande vitesse où la finesse est significativement réduite.
+
+### Q59: Un vol VFR suivra l'itinéraire indiqué sur la carte ci-dessous (pointillés) d'APPENZELL vers MUOTATHAL. L'itinéraire est prévu pour le 19 mars 2013 (heure d'hiver) entre 12h05 et 12h55 LT. Répondez en utilisant le DABS ci-dessous. Laquelle de ces réponses est correcte ? ^t30q59
+![[figures/t30_q59.png]]
+- A) Le DABS peut être ignoré car il ne s'applique qu'aux aéronefs militaires.
+- B) Vous pouvez traverser toutes les zones dangereuses et réglementées concernées en dessous de 1000 ft sol ou au-dessus de 10 000 ft AMSL.
+- C) L'itinéraire peut être volé sans coordination entre 12h00 et 13h00 LT.
+- D) Il n'est pas possible de voler l'itinéraire prévu ce jour-là.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car en vérifiant le DABS pour le 19 mars 2013 (heure d'hiver, CET = UTC+1), l'heure prévue de 12h05-12h55 LT correspond à 11h05-11h55 UTC. Durant cette période, les zones dangereuses et réglementées concernées le long de l'itinéraire ne sont pas actives, permettant de voler l'itinéraire sans coordination. A est faux car le DABS s'applique à tous les usagers de l'espace aérien, y compris les planeurs. B est faux car les exemptions basées sur l'altitude ne s'appliquent pas automatiquement à toutes les zones réglementées. D est faux car l'itinéraire est praticable pendant la fenêtre de temps spécifiée.
+
+### Q60: La charge alaire est augmentée de 40 % par du ballast en eau. De quel pourcentage la vitesse minimale du planeur augmente-t-elle ? ^t30q60
+- A) 18 %.
+- B) 40 %.
+- C) 100 %.
+- D) 0 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la vitesse de décrochage (et donc la vitesse minimale) est proportionnelle à la racine carrée de la charge alaire. Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % (facteur 1,4), la nouvelle vitesse minimale est l'originale multipliée par la racine carrée de 1,4, ce qui est égal à environ 1,183 — une augmentation d'environ 18,3 %. B est faux car la vitesse n'augmente pas linéairement avec la charge alaire. C est faux car une augmentation de 100 % signifierait doubler la vitesse. D est faux car toute augmentation de masse élève la vitesse minimale.
+
+### Q61: D'après la polaire ci-dessous, quelle affirmation s'applique à une vitesse de 150 km/h ? Voir feuille annexée... ^t30q61
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) le taux de chute de l'ASK21 est indépendant de sa masse
+- B) l'ASK21 a une moins bonne finesse à masse de vol inférieure
+- C) l'ASK21 a un taux de chute plus élevé à masse de vol supérieure
+- D) l'ASK21 a une meilleure finesse à masse de vol inférieure
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 150 km/h, les deux courbes polaires pour différentes masses de l'ASK21 se croisent, ce qui signifie que les deux configurations ont le même taux de chute à cette vitesse particulière. C'est une propriété aérodynamique de la polaire : les courbes se croisent à une vitesse où la masse n'a aucun effet sur le taux de chute. B est faux car à 150 km/h la finesse est égale pour les deux masses. C est faux car les taux de chute sont identiques à ce point d'intersection. D est également faux car ni l'une ni l'autre masse n'a de meilleure finesse à cette vitesse spécifique.
+
+### Q62: À l'aérodrome d'Amlikon, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction est ? ^t30q62
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780 m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700 m.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (780 m) car le tableau AIP pour l'aérodrome d'Amlikon indique une distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible de 780 mètres dans la direction est. A et C sont faux car les distances d'atterrissage en Suisse sont données en mètres, non en pieds. D (700 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées pour la direction est. Vérifiez toujours l'unité et la direction spécifique de piste lors de la lecture des tableaux d'aérodrome.
+
+### Q63: À partir de quelle altitude devez-vous demander une autorisation de transit pour le TMA EMMEN entre Cham (environ N47° 11' / E008° 28') et Hitzkirch (environ N47° 14' / E008° 16') ? ^t30q63
+![[figures/t30_q63.png]]
+- A) 2400 ft AMSL.
+- B) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 2000 ft sol.
+- D) 5000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la limite inférieure du TMA EMMEN entre Cham et Hitzkirch est à 3500 ft AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, vous restez dans l'espace aérien non contrôlé et aucune autorisation n'est nécessaire. Au-dessus de 3500 ft AMSL, vous entrez dans le TMA et devez obtenir une autorisation ATC. A (2400 ft) est trop bas et ne correspond pas à la limite publiée. C (2000 ft sol) fait référence à la hauteur au-dessus du sol, ce qui n'est pas la façon dont cette limite de TMA est exprimée. D (5000 ft) est trop élevé.
+
+### Q64: La charge utile maximale autorisée est dépassée. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t30q64
+- A) Trimer à cabrer.
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse de décollage de 10 %.
+- C) Trimer à piquer.
+- D) Réduire la charge utile.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car lorsque la charge utile maximale autorisée est dépassée, la seule mesure correcte est de réduire la charge utile jusqu'à ce qu'elle respecte la limite. La charge utile maximale est une limite de certification basée sur la résistance structurale et l'enveloppe CG. A et C sont faux car le trim ajuste les forces aérodynamiques sur l'empennage mais ne modifie pas la masse ou le CG de l'aéronef — il ne peut pas rendre sûr un aéronef en surcharge. B est faux car l'augmentation de la vitesse de décollage ne résout pas une condition de surpoids et peut même surestresser davantage la structure.
+
+### Q65: Quel est l'effet du vent sur l'angle de plané sur le sol si la vitesse propre de l'aéronef reste constante ? ^t30q65
+- A) Avec un vent arrière, l'angle de plané augmente.
+- B) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de plané diminue.
+- C) Le vent n'a aucun effet sur l'angle de plané.
+- D) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de plané augmente.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car un vent de face réduit la vitesse sol tandis que le taux de chute dans la masse d'air reste inchangé. Puisque le planeur couvre moins de distance horizontale sur le sol par unité d'altitude perdue, l'angle de descente par rapport au sol se raidit (augmente). A est faux car un vent arrière diminue (aplatit) l'angle de plané sur le sol en augmentant la vitesse sol. B est faux car un vent de face augmente, et non diminue, l'angle de plané sur le sol. C est faux car le vent affecte significativement l'angle de plané sur la trajectoire au sol, même s'il n'affecte pas l'angle de plané dans la masse d'air.
+
+### Q66: Comment la vitesse indiquée (IAS) se compare-t-elle à la vitesse propre (TAS) à mesure que l'altitude augmente ? ^t30q66
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle ne peut pas être mesurée.
+- D) Elle reste identique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car à mesure que l'altitude augmente, la densité de l'air diminue. Pour la même vitesse propre, le tube de Pitot mesure une pression dynamique plus faible, donc l'indication IAS est inférieure à la TAS. Inversement, pour maintenir la même IAS en altitude, l'aéronef doit voler à une TAS plus élevée. La relation est approximativement TAS = IAS × racine carrée de (densité au niveau de la mer / densité réelle). A est faux car l'IAS n'augmente pas par rapport à la TAS avec l'altitude. C est faux car l'IAS peut toujours être mesurée. D est faux car l'IAS et la TAS divergent de plus en plus avec l'altitude.
+
+### Q67: Que faut-il particulièrement observer lors d'un atterrissage sous forte pluie ? ^t30q67
+- A) La vitesse d'approche doit être augmentée.
+- B) La charge alaire doit être augmentée.
+- C) L'angle d'approche doit être plus faible que d'habitude.
+- D) La vitesse d'approche doit être inférieure à la normale.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car une forte pluie sur la surface de l'aile augmente la rugosité et peut dégrader la couche limite, augmentant potentiellement la vitesse de décrochage et réduisant le coefficient de portance maximal. Une vitesse d'approche plus élevée fournit une marge de sécurité contre ces effets. B est faux car augmenter délibérément la charge alaire sous la pluie nécessiterait d'ajouter du lest, ce qui est impraticable et contre-productif. C est faux car une approche plus aplatie réduit la marge de franchissement des obstacles par faible visibilité. D est faux car une vitesse d'approche plus faible réduit la marge de sécurité lorsque la dégradation aérodynamique est déjà un risque.
+
+### Q68: Que doit prendre en compte un pilote de planeur à l'aérodrome de Bex ? ^t30q68
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens des aiguilles d'une montre.
+- B) Le circuit pour la piste 15 est dans le sens des aiguilles d'une montre.
+- C) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens inverse des aiguilles d'une montre.
+- D) Selon le vent, le circuit pour la piste 33 peut être dans le sens des aiguilles d'une montre ou dans le sens inverse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à l'aérodrome de Bex, les contraintes de terrain (la vallée du Rhône et les montagnes environnantes) signifient que la direction du circuit pour la piste 33 dépend des conditions de vent dominantes. Le tableau montre que l'on peut utiliser un circuit à gauche ou à droite. A est faux car il limite le circuit au sens des aiguilles d'une montre uniquement. B concerne la piste 15, non la piste 33. C est faux car il limite le circuit au sens inverse des aiguilles d'une montre uniquement. Les pilotes doivent vérifier les procédures locales et les conditions de vent avant de rejoindre le circuit.
+
+### Q69: Quelle est l'altitude de vol maximale au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Biel Kappelen (SE de Biel) si vous souhaitez éviter de demander une autorisation de transit pour le TMA BERNE 1 ? ^t30q69
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft sol.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la limite inférieure du TMA BERNE 1 au-dessus de Biel Kappelen est à 3500 ft AMSL. En restant en dessous de cette altitude, vous demeurez dans l'espace aérien non contrôlé et n'avez pas besoin d'une autorisation de transit. A (3500 ft sol) est faux car les limites de TMA sont référencées au niveau de la mer, non au sol. B (FL 100) est bien au-dessus de la limite concernée. C (FL 35) correspond à environ 3500 ft dans l'atmosphère standard, mais les niveaux de vol utilisent le réglage de pression standard (1013,25 hPa), non le QNH, ce qui n'est donc pas la bonne façon d'exprimer la limite.
+
+### Q70: Laquelle de ces affirmations est correcte ? ^t30q70
+- A) Nouveau CG : 76,7, dans les limites approuvées.
+- B) Nouveau CG : 78,5, dans les limites approuvées.
+- C) Nouveau CG : 82,0, hors des limites approuvées.
+- D) Nouveau CG : 75,5, hors des limites approuvées.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en appliquant le calcul de masse et centrage avec les données fournies (d'après la feuille annexée), la nouvelle position du CG se calcule à 76,7, ce qui se situe dans les limites avant et arrière approuvées du CG. B (78,5) est un résultat de calcul incorrect. C (82,0) est trop en arrière et serait hors limites. D (75,5) est également mal calculé et tomberait hors de la limite avant. Vérifiez toujours votre calcul en vous assurant que le résultat se situe entre les limites avant et arrière publiées.
+
+### Q71: Quel est l'effet d'une piste en herbe détrempée sur l'atterrissage ? ^t30q71
+- A) La distance d'atterrissage sera plus courte.
+- B) La distance d'atterrissage sera plus longue.
+- C) Le planeur risque de sortir de la piste (tête-à-queue).
+- D) Aucun effet.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car une surface en herbe détrempée crée plus de friction et de résistance sur le train d'atterrissage lors du roulage au sol, faisant décélérer le planeur plus rapidement et s'arrêtant en une distance plus courte. L'eau agit comme un milieu de freinage. B est faux car l'herbe mouillée augmente, et non diminue, la résistance au roulement pour un planeur. C est faux car bien que le contrôle directionnel puisse être légèrement affecté, l'effet principal est une distance d'arrêt raccourcie. D est faux car les conditions de surface affectent toujours la distance d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q72: À l'aérodrome de Schänis, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction NNO ? ^t30q72
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470 m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (470 m) car le tableau AIP pour l'aérodrome de Schänis indique une distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible de 470 mètres dans la direction NNO. A (520 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées pour ce cap. C et D sont faux car les distances d'aérodrome suisses sont données en mètres, non en pieds. Lisez toujours la direction correcte de la piste et la distance correspondante sur le tableau d'aérodrome.
+
+### Q73: La masse actuelle d'un aéronef est 6400 lbs. CG actuel : 80. Limites CG : CG avant : 75,2, CG arrière : 80,5. Quelle masse peut être déplacée de sa position actuelle vers le bras 150 sans dépasser la limite CG arrière ? ^t30q73
+- A) 27,82 lbs.
+- B) 56,63 lbs.
+- C) 39,45 lbs.
+- D) 45,71 lbs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D (45,71 lbs). Le calcul utilise la formule de déplacement : lorsqu'une masse x est déplacée de la position actuelle du CG (80) vers le bras 150, le CG se déplace vers l'arrière. Le nouveau CG ne doit pas dépasser 80,5. En utilisant la formule : delta CG = (x × delta bras) / masse totale, on obtient : 0,5 = (x × 70) / 6400, donc x = (0,5 × 6400) / 70 = 45,71 lbs. A (27,82), B (56,63) et C (39,45) résultent de calculs incorrects utilisant des distances ou des valeurs de masse erronées.
+
+### Q74: Le chargement correct d'un aéronef dépend de :... ^t30q74
+- A) Uniquement du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- B) Uniquement de la bonne répartition de la charge utile.
+- C) De la bonne répartition de la charge utile et du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- D) De la masse maximale autorisée des bagages dans la section arrière de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car un chargement correct nécessite de satisfaire simultanément deux conditions indépendantes : la masse totale ne doit pas dépasser la masse maximale autorisée (MTOM), et la charge utile doit être répartie de manière à ce que le CG reste dans l'enveloppe approuvée. A est faux car le respect de la limite de masse seule ne garantit pas que le CG est dans les limites. B est faux car une répartition correcte seule ne garantit pas que la masse totale est dans les limites. D est faux car il ne s'adresse qu'à un seul compartiment spécifique de bagages plutôt qu'aux exigences complètes de chargement.
+
+### Q75: Quelles informations peut-on lire sur cette polaire de vitesse ? (Voir feuille annexée.)... ^t30q75
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) dans la plage de vitesse jusqu'à 100 km/h, une augmentation de la masse de vol réduit le taux de chute.
+- B) la vitesse minimale est indépendante de la masse de vol.
+- C) la finesse maximale et la vitesse minimale sont toutes deux indépendantes de la masse de vol.
+- D) seule la finesse maximale est indépendante de la masse de vol, à part un effet mineur de nombre de Reynolds.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car en comparant les courbes polaires pour différentes masses, la tangente depuis l'origine touche chaque courbe sous le même angle, ce qui signifie que le rapport portance/traînée maximal (meilleure finesse) est essentiellement inchangé par la masse, à l'exception d'effets mineurs de nombre de Reynolds. Cependant, la vitesse à laquelle cette meilleure finesse est atteinte augmente avec la masse. A est faux car l'augmentation de la masse augmente toujours le taux de chute à toute vitesse donnée. B est faux car la vitesse minimale augmente avec la masse (proportionnelle à la racine carrée du rapport de masse). C est faux car si la finesse est indépendante de la masse, la vitesse minimale ne l'est pas.
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+### Q76: At what indicated speed do you approach an aerodrome located at an altitude of 1800 m AMSL? ^t30q76
+- A) At the same speed as at sea level.
+- B) At a lower speed than at sea level.
+- C) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- D) At a higher speed than at sea level.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which directly relates to aerodynamic forces regardless of altitude. At 1800 m AMSL, air density is lower, so the TAS will be higher for the same IAS — but the aerodynamic forces (lift, stall characteristics) depend on IAS, not TAS. Therefore, the same indicated approach speed provides the same safety margins as at sea level. B is wrong because flying at a lower IAS would reduce the stall margin. D is wrong because a higher IAS is unnecessary and would result in excessive float. C is wrong because the minimum sink speed is not the correct approach speed.
+
+### Q77: At what speed must you fly to achieve the best glide ratio for a flying mass of 450 kg? (See attached sheet.)... ^t30q77
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130km/h
+- B) 90km/h
+- C) 70km/h
+- D) 110km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (90 km/h) because the best glide ratio speed is found where the tangent from the origin touches the speed polar curve for 450 kg. For this glider type at 450 kg, this occurs at approximately 90 km/h. A (130 km/h) is too fast — at this speed the glide ratio is significantly reduced. C (70 km/h) is closer to the minimum sink speed, which maximises endurance but not distance. D (110 km/h) would give a reduced glide ratio compared to the optimum.
+
+### Q78: The maximum aft CG limit is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t30q78
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) As long as the maximum takeoff mass is not exceeded, no particular action is required.
+- C) Redistribute the useful load differently.
+- D) Trim forward.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when the aft C.G. limit is exceeded, the useful load must be redistributed to move mass forward — for example, adding nose ballast, repositioning equipment, or adjusting the pilot's seating position. This physically moves the C.G. within approved limits. A is wrong because trimming aft would worsen the situation aerodynamically. B is wrong because being within mass limits does not compensate for a C.G. out of limits — both must be satisfied independently. D is wrong because trim adjusts aerodynamic forces but does not change the actual C.G. position.
+
+### Q79: Which factors increase the aerotow takeoff run distance? ^t30q79
+- A) Low temperature, headwind.
+- B) Grass runway, strong headwind.
+- C) High atmospheric pressure.
+- D) High temperature, tailwind.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because high temperature reduces air density, decreasing the lift generated at any given groundspeed, requiring a longer acceleration to reach flying speed. A tailwind reduces the headwind component, meaning the aircraft needs a higher groundspeed to achieve the same airspeed, further lengthening the takeoff run. A is wrong because low temperature increases air density (more lift) and headwind shortens the run. B is wrong because a strong headwind shortens the takeoff distance. C is wrong because high atmospheric pressure increases density, which helps rather than hinders takeoff performance.
+
+### Q80: The following NOTAM was published for 18 November. Which of these statements is correct? ^t30q80
+![[figures/t30_q80.png]]
+- A) On 18 November, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: Class E airspace, upper limit: max. FL150.
+- B) On 18 November from 1800 LT to 2100 LT, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas.
+- C) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise with helicopters will take place.
+- D) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: GND, upper limit: max. 15,000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the NOTAM specifies a military night flying exercise on 18 November from 1800 to 2100 UTC in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN, and TICINO areas, with vertical limits from GND to 15,000 ft AMSL. A is wrong because the lower limit is GND, not Class E airspace, and the upper limit is 15,000 ft AMSL, not FL150. B is wrong because the times are in UTC, not local time. C is wrong because it incorrectly specifies helicopter-only operations and omits the geographic areas.
+
+### Q81: What is the maximum permitted flying altitude within the CTR of Bern-Belp airport? ^t30q81
+![[figures/t30_q81.png]]
+- A) 5500 ft GND.
+- B) 4500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 5000 ft AMSL
+- D) 3000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the CTR (Control Zone) of Bern-Belp airport has an upper limit of 3000 ft AMSL. Above this altitude, you exit the CTR and enter different airspace. A (5500 ft GND) does not match the published limit. B (4500 ft AMSL) is too high. C (5000 ft AMSL) is also too high. VFR flight within the CTR requires a clearance from Bern Tower and must remain below the published upper limit.
+
+### Q82: In which airspace class are you above BEX aerodrome at an altitude of 1700 m AMSL, and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^t30q82
+![[figures/t30_q82.png]]
+- A) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- B) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 8 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- C) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at 1700 m AMSL above Bex aerodrome, you are in Class E airspace. VFR minima in Class E require 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. A is wrong because Class G applies at lower altitudes with reduced requirements. B is wrong because Class C has the right visibility minimum (5 km in Switzerland, not 8 km) but starts at a much higher altitude. C is wrong for the same airspace classification reason — Class C begins at FL 130, well above 1700 m.
+
+### Q83: Which is the sink rate at 160 km/h for this glider at a flying mass of 580 kg? (See attached sheet.) ^t30q83
+![[figures/t30_q83.png]]
+- A) 1,6m/s
+- B) 0,8m/s
+- C) 2,0m/s
+- D) 1,2m/s
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (2.0 m/s) because reading the speed polar curve for a flying mass of 580 kg at 160 km/h, the sink rate is approximately 2.0 m/s. A (1.6 m/s) would correspond to a lighter mass or lower speed. B (0.8 m/s) is near the minimum sink rate at much lower speed. D (1.2 m/s) is also too low for this speed and mass combination. When reading a speed polar, always identify the correct curve for the given mass before reading the value at the specified speed.
+
+### Q84: 550 kg (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs):... ^t30q84
+- A) approx. 12,100 lbs.
+- B) approx. 1210 lbs.
+- C) approx. 2500 lbs.
+- D) approx. 250 lbs.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because to convert kilograms to pounds, multiply by 2.2: 550 x 2.2 = 1,210 lbs. A (12,100 lbs) results from multiplying by 22 instead of 2.2. C (2,500 lbs) does not correspond to any correct calculation. D (250 lbs) results from dividing instead of multiplying. The key formula is: weight in lbs = mass in kg x 2.2.
+
+### Q85: At what speed must a glider fly in calm air to cover the maximum possible distance? ^t30q85
+- A) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- B) At the maximum allowed speed.
+- C) At minimum flying speed.
+- D) At the best glide ratio speed.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the best glide ratio speed (also called best L/D speed) maximises the horizontal distance covered per unit of altitude lost in still air. This speed is found on the polar curve where the tangent from the origin touches the curve. A is wrong because minimum sink speed maximises endurance (time aloft), not distance. B is wrong because maximum speed produces the worst glide ratio due to high parasite drag. C is wrong because minimum flying speed is near the stall and gives a poor glide ratio due to high induced drag.
+
+### Q86: The mass of a glider is increased. Which parameter will NOT be affected by this increase? ^t30q86
+- A) Maximum glide ratio (apart from a minor Reynolds number effect).
+- B) Wing loading.
+- C) Sink rate.
+- D) Indicated airspeed (IAS).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the maximum glide ratio (best L/D) is essentially independent of mass — both the lift coefficient and drag coefficient at the optimal angle of attack remain the same, so their ratio is unchanged. Only a minor Reynolds number effect exists. B is wrong because wing loading = mass / wing area, which directly increases with mass. C is wrong because sink rate increases with mass at any given speed. D is wrong because the speeds corresponding to best glide and minimum sink both increase with mass.
+
+### Q87: How long does it take to cover a distance of 150 km at an average ground speed of 100 km/h? ^t30q87
+- A) 1 hour 50 minutes.
+- B) 1 hour 40 minutes.
+- C) 2 hours.
+- D) 1 hour 30 minutes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because time = distance / speed = 150 km / 100 km/h = 1.5 hours = 1 hour 30 minutes. A (1 hour 50 minutes) would correspond to a distance of about 183 km. B (1 hour 40 minutes = 1.667 hours) would correspond to about 167 km. C (2 hours) would correspond to 200 km. The calculation is straightforward: 150 / 100 = 1.5 hours. Convert the decimal 0.5 hours to 30 minutes.
+
+### Q88: When preparing an alpine VFR flight along the route shown on the map below (dotted line) between MUNSTER and AMSTEG, you consult the DABS. You intend to fly this route on a summer weekday between 1445-1515 LT. According to the DABS, zones R-8 and R-8A are active during this period. Answer using the DABS map below and the ICAO aeronautical chart 1:500,000 Switzerland. Which of these answers is correct? ^t30q88
+![[figures/t30_q88.png]]
+- A) The route can be flown without restriction after contacting 128.375 MHz.
+- B) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be transited below 28,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) It is not possible to fly this route while the restricted zones are active.
+- D) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be overflown at 9200 ft AMSL or above.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A are active, they cover the planned alpine route between Munster and Amsteg, making it impossible to fly through them. Restricted zones with "entry prohibited" status cannot be transited, regardless of altitude or radio contact. A is wrong because radio contact does not grant transit rights through active restricted zones. B is wrong because a 28,000 ft ceiling does not help a glider. D is wrong because overflying at 9,200 ft may still be within the zone's vertical limits.
+
+### Q89: You wish to obtain clearance to transit the ZURICH TMA. What must you do? ^t30q89
+- A) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- B) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- C) First radio contact on frequency 118.975, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- D) First radio contact on frequency 118.1, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because to transit the Zurich TMA, the pilot must make first radio contact on frequency 124.7 MHz (Zurich Information) at least 10 minutes before entering the controlled airspace. This provides ATC sufficient time to assess traffic, issue a clearance or alternative instructions, and ensure separation. B is wrong because 5 minutes is insufficient lead time. C is wrong because 118.975 is not the correct frequency for Zurich TMA transit requests. D is wrong on both the frequency and the lead time.
+
+### Q90: The minimum speed of your glider is 60 kts in straight flight. By what percentage would it increase in a steep turn with a bank angle of 60 deg (load factor n = 2.0)? ^t30q90
+- A) approx. 40%.
+- B) 0%.
+- C) approx. 5%.
+- D) approx. 20%.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because in a turn, the stall speed increases by the square root of the load factor: Vs_turn = Vs_straight x sqrt(n). With n = 2.0: Vs_turn = 60 x sqrt(2) = 60 x 1.414 = 84.85 kts. The increase is (84.85 - 60) / 60 x 100 = 41.4%, which rounds to approximately 40%. B is wrong because the stall speed always increases in a turn. C (5%) and D (20%) significantly underestimate the effect. This relationship between bank angle, load factor, and stall speed is fundamental to safe manoeuvring flight.
+
+### Q91: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1... ^t30q91
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- D) 1.500 ft GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because restricted airspace areas (LO R) on aeronautical charts express their limits using standard altitude references. LO R 16 has an upper limit of 1,500 ft MSL (mean sea level), which is a fixed, absolute altitude. A is wrong because 1,500 m MSL would be approximately 4,900 ft — a completely different altitude that confuses feet with metres. B is wrong because FL150 (15,000 ft pressure altitude) is far too high for a typical low-level restriction. D is wrong because 1,500 ft GND (above ground level) would vary with terrain elevation and is not the published reference.
+
+### Q92: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2... ^t30q92
+- A) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- B) 4.500 ft MSL
+- C) 1.500 ft AGL
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because LO R 4 has its upper limit at 4,500 ft MSL, a fixed altitude above mean sea level. A is wrong because 4,500 ft AGL (above ground level) would vary with terrain, which is inappropriate for a fixed regulatory boundary. C is wrong because 1,500 ft AGL is both the wrong altitude value and the wrong reference. D is wrong because 1,500 ft MSL is too low and corresponds to a different restricted area (LO R 16).
+
+### Q93: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3... ^t30q93
+- A) Height 9500 ft
+- B) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- C) Flight Level 95
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the NOTAM prohibits overflight up to an altitude of 9,500 ft MSL, following ICAO convention where "altitude" refers to height above mean sea level. A is wrong because "height" in aviation terminology means above a local ground reference (AGL), which is not what the NOTAM specifies. C is wrong because FL 95 is a pressure altitude reference based on 1013.25 hPa, which differs from an MSL altitude depending on actual atmospheric conditions. D is wrong because 9,500 m MSL would be approximately 31,000 ft — clearly inconsistent with a typical VFR NOTAM.
+
+### Q94: (For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4... ^t30q94
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol C in the annex) because ICAO aeronautical chart symbology (defined in ICAO Annex 4) uses specific symbols to distinguish between single and grouped obstacles, and between lighted and unlighted ones. Symbol C represents a group of unlighted obstacles. A (symbol D), C (symbol B), and D (symbol A) represent other obstacle categories such as single obstacles, lighted groups, or lighted single obstacles. Correct identification of these symbols is essential for cross-country flight planning and obstacle avoidance.
+
+### Q95: (For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5... ^t30q95
+- A) D
+- B) A
+- C) C
+- D) B
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol A in the annex) because ICAO chart symbology uses distinct depictions for different aerodrome types — civil versus military, international versus domestic, and paved versus unpaved. Symbol A represents a civil (non-international) airport with a paved runway. A (symbol D), C (symbol C), and D (symbol B) represent other aerodrome categories such as international airports, military aerodromes, or grass-strip airfields. Glider pilots must recognise these symbols when identifying potential emergency landing options.
+
+### Q96: (For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6... ^t30q96
+- A) A
+- B) B
+- C) D
+- D) C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D (symbol C in the annex) because on ICAO aeronautical charts, a general spot elevation is indicated by a specific symbol showing a terrain point of known height, used for situational awareness and terrain clearance planning. A (symbol A), B (symbol B), and C (symbol D) represent other elevation-related markings such as maximum elevation figures, surveyed points, or obstruction elevations defined in ICAO Annex 4.
+
+### Q97: The term center of gravity is defined as… ^t30q97
+- A) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- B) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A. The center of gravity is the single point through which the resultant of all gravitational forces acts on the aircraft — it is the mass-weighted average position of all components. B is wrong because the neutral point is a distinct aerodynamic concept used for stability analysis, not another name for C.G. C duplicates the same incorrect description as A's wording, but the C.G. is defined by mass distribution, not as a geometric midpoint. D is wrong because the C.G. is not the heaviest point — it is where the total weight effectively acts.
+
+### Q98: The term moment with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as… ^t30q98
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in mass-and-balance calculations, moment is defined as the product of mass and balance arm: Moment = Mass x Arm (e.g., in kg-m or lb-in). This follows the physical definition of a torque. The total C.G. is found by summing all moments and dividing by total mass. A is wrong because adding mass and arm is dimensionally meaningless. C is wrong because dividing mass by arm does not produce a moment. D is wrong because subtracting them is equally incorrect.
+
+### Q99: The term balance arm in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the… ^t30q99
+- A) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- B) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm (moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum reference point to the center of gravity of a specific mass item. A is wrong because that describes the datum itself, not the balance arm. B is wrong because balance arms are measured from the datum, not from the overall aircraft C.G. D is wrong because that is the definition of the center of gravity of a mass item, not the balance arm.
+
+### Q100: Which is the purpose of interception lines in visual navigation? ^t30q100
+- A) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- B) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+- C) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- D) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because interception lines (also called catching lines or line features) are prominent linear ground features — motorways, rivers, coastlines, railways — that a pilot selects during pre-flight planning to navigate toward if orientation is lost. By flying toward a known interception line, the pilot can re-establish position and resume navigation. A is wrong because interception lines are geographic features, not airport markers. B is wrong because they are not range indicators. C is wrong because nothing authorises continuing flight below VFR minima — interception lines are a lost-procedure tool, not a visibility workaround.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_30_76_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,255 @@
+### Q76: À quelle vitesse indiquée approche-t-on un aérodrome situé à une altitude de 1800 m AMSL ? ^t30q76
+- A) À la même vitesse qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- B) À une vitesse inférieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+- C) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimal.
+- D) À une vitesse supérieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car l'anémomètre mesure la pression dynamique, qui est directement liée aux forces aérodynamiques quelle que soit l'altitude. À 1800 m AMSL, la densité de l'air est plus faible, donc la TAS sera plus élevée pour la même IAS — mais les forces aérodynamiques (portance, caractéristiques de décrochage) dépendent de l'IAS, non de la TAS. Par conséquent, la même vitesse d'approche indiquée fournit les mêmes marges de sécurité qu'au niveau de la mer. B est faux car voler à une IAS plus faible réduirait la marge de décrochage. D est faux car une IAS plus élevée est inutile et entraînerait un flottement excessif. C est faux car la vitesse de taux de chute minimal n'est pas la vitesse d'approche correcte.
+
+### Q77: À quelle vitesse doit-on voler pour obtenir la meilleure finesse pour une masse de vol de 450 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.)... ^t30q77
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130 km/h
+- B) 90 km/h
+- C) 70 km/h
+- D) 110 km/h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (90 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve là où la tangente depuis l'origine touche la courbe polaire pour 450 kg. Pour ce type de planeur à 450 kg, cela se produit à environ 90 km/h. A (130 km/h) est trop rapide — à cette vitesse, la finesse est significativement réduite. C (70 km/h) est plus proche de la vitesse de taux de chute minimal, qui maximise l'endurance mais pas la distance. D (110 km/h) donnerait une finesse réduite par rapport à l'optimum.
+
+### Q78: La limite CG arrière maximale est dépassée. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t30q78
+- A) Trimer à cabrer.
+- B) Tant que la masse maximale au décollage n'est pas dépassée, aucune mesure particulière n'est requise.
+- C) Redistribuer différemment la charge utile.
+- D) Trimer à piquer.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque la limite CG arrière est dépassée, la charge utile doit être redistribuée pour déplacer la masse vers l'avant — par exemple, en ajoutant du lest à l'avant, en repositionnant l'équipement, ou en ajustant la position assise du pilote. Cela déplace physiquement le CG dans les limites approuvées. A est faux car trimer à cabrer aggraverait la situation sur le plan aérodynamique. B est faux car être dans les limites de masse ne compense pas un CG hors limites — les deux doivent être satisfaits indépendamment. D est faux car le trim ajuste les forces aérodynamiques mais ne modifie pas la position réelle du CG.
+
+### Q79: Quels facteurs augmentent la distance de décollage en remorqué ? ^t30q79
+- A) Basse température, vent de face.
+- B) Piste en herbe, fort vent de face.
+- C) Pression atmosphérique élevée.
+- D) Haute température, vent arrière.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car une haute température réduit la densité de l'air, diminuant la portance générée à toute vitesse sol donnée, nécessitant une accélération plus longue pour atteindre la vitesse de vol. Un vent arrière réduit la composante de vent de face, ce qui signifie que l'aéronef a besoin d'une vitesse sol plus élevée pour atteindre la même vitesse anémométrique, allongeant encore la distance de décollage. A est faux car la basse température augmente la densité de l'air (plus de portance) et le vent de face raccourcit la distance. B est faux car un fort vent de face raccourcit la distance de décollage. C est faux car une pression atmosphérique élevée augmente la densité, ce qui aide plutôt que nuit aux performances au décollage.
+
+### Q80: Le NOTAM suivant a été publié pour le 18 novembre. Laquelle de ces affirmations est correcte ? ^t30q80
+![[figures/t30_q80.png]]
+- A) Le 18 novembre, un exercice de vol de nuit militaire aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TESSIN. Limite inférieure : espace aérien de classe E, limite supérieure : max. FL150.
+- B) Le 18 novembre de 18h00 LT à 21h00 LT, un exercice de vol de nuit militaire aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TESSIN.
+- C) Le 18 novembre de 18h00 UTC à 21h00 UTC, un exercice de vol de nuit militaire avec des hélicoptères aura lieu.
+- D) Le 18 novembre de 18h00 UTC à 21h00 UTC, un exercice de vol de nuit militaire aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TESSIN. Limite inférieure : sol, limite supérieure : max. 15 000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car le NOTAM spécifie un exercice de vol de nuit militaire le 18 novembre de 18h00 à 21h00 UTC dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TESSIN, avec des limites verticales du sol à 15 000 ft AMSL. A est faux car la limite inférieure est le sol, non l'espace aérien de classe E, et la limite supérieure est 15 000 ft AMSL, non FL150. B est faux car les horaires sont en UTC, non en heure locale. C est faux car il spécifie incorrectement des opérations d'hélicoptères uniquement et omet les zones géographiques.
+
+### Q81: Quelle est l'altitude de vol maximale autorisée dans le CTR de l'aéroport de Berne-Belp ? ^t30q81
+![[figures/t30_q81.png]]
+- A) 5500 ft sol.
+- B) 4500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 5000 ft AMSL
+- D) 3000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car le CTR (zone de contrôle) de l'aéroport de Berne-Belp a une limite supérieure de 3000 ft AMSL. Au-dessus de cette altitude, vous quittez le CTR et entrez dans un espace aérien différent. A (5500 ft sol) ne correspond pas à la limite publiée. B (4500 ft AMSL) est trop élevé. C (5000 ft AMSL) est également trop élevé. Le vol VFR dans le CTR nécessite une autorisation de la tour de Berne et doit rester en dessous de la limite supérieure publiée.
+
+### Q82: Dans quelle classe d'espace aérien se trouve-t-on au-dessus de l'aérodrome de BEX à une altitude de 1700 m AMSL, et quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages ? ^t30q82
+![[figures/t30_q82.png]]
+- A) Espace aérien de classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, en dehors des nuages avec vue continue du sol.
+- B) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 8 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- D) Espace aérien de classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à 1700 m AMSL au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Bex, on se trouve en espace aérien de classe E. Les minimums VFR en classe E nécessitent 5 km de visibilité horizontale, 1500 m de distance horizontale aux nuages et 300 m de distance verticale aux nuages. A est faux car la classe G s'applique à des altitudes plus basses avec des exigences réduites. B est faux car la classe C a le bon minimum de visibilité (5 km en Suisse, non 8 km) mais commence à une altitude beaucoup plus élevée. C est faux pour la même raison de classification — la classe C commence à FL 130, bien au-dessus de 1700 m.
+
+### Q83: Quel est le taux de chute à 160 km/h pour ce planeur à une masse de vol de 580 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q83
+![[figures/t30_q83.png]]
+- A) 1,6 m/s
+- B) 0,8 m/s
+- C) 2,0 m/s
+- D) 1,2 m/s
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C (2,0 m/s) car en lisant la courbe polaire pour une masse de vol de 580 kg à 160 km/h, le taux de chute est d'environ 2,0 m/s. A (1,6 m/s) correspondrait à une masse plus légère ou à une vitesse plus faible. B (0,8 m/s) est proche du taux de chute minimal à une vitesse beaucoup plus faible. D (1,2 m/s) est également trop faible pour cette vitesse et cette combinaison de masse. Lors de la lecture d'une polaire, identifiez toujours la courbe correcte pour la masse donnée avant de lire la valeur à la vitesse spécifiée.
+
+### Q84: 550 kg (arrondi) correspondent à (1 kg = environ 2,2 lbs) :... ^t30q84
+- A) environ 12 100 lbs.
+- B) environ 1210 lbs.
+- C) environ 2500 lbs.
+- D) environ 250 lbs.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car pour convertir des kilogrammes en livres, on multiplie par 2,2 : 550 × 2,2 = 1210 lbs. A (12 100 lbs) résulte d'une multiplication par 22 au lieu de 2,2. C (2500 lbs) ne correspond à aucun calcul correct. D (250 lbs) résulte d'une division au lieu d'une multiplication. La formule clé est : poids en lbs = masse en kg × 2,2.
+
+### Q85: À quelle vitesse un planeur doit-il voler en air calme pour couvrir la distance maximale possible ? ^t30q85
+- A) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimal.
+- B) À la vitesse maximale autorisée.
+- C) À la vitesse de vol minimale.
+- D) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la vitesse de meilleure finesse (également appelée vitesse de meilleur L/D) maximise la distance horizontale couverte par unité d'altitude perdue en air calme. Cette vitesse se trouve sur la courbe polaire là où la tangente depuis l'origine touche la courbe. A est faux car la vitesse de taux de chute minimal maximise l'endurance (temps en l'air), non la distance. B est faux car la vitesse maximale produit la pire finesse en raison de la traînée parasite élevée. C est faux car la vitesse de vol minimale est proche du décrochage et donne une mauvaise finesse en raison de la traînée induite élevée.
+
+### Q86: La masse d'un planeur est augmentée. Quel paramètre ne sera PAS affecté par cette augmentation ? ^t30q86
+- A) La finesse maximale (à part un effet mineur de nombre de Reynolds).
+- B) La charge alaire.
+- C) Le taux de chute.
+- D) La vitesse anémométrique indiquée (IAS).
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la finesse maximale (meilleur L/D) est essentiellement indépendante de la masse — le coefficient de portance et le coefficient de traînée à l'angle d'attaque optimal restent les mêmes, donc leur rapport est inchangé. Seul un effet mineur de nombre de Reynolds existe. B est faux car la charge alaire = masse / surface alaire, ce qui augmente directement avec la masse. C est faux car le taux de chute augmente avec la masse à toute vitesse donnée. D est faux car les vitesses correspondant à la meilleure finesse et au taux de chute minimal augmentent toutes deux avec la masse.
+
+### Q87: Combien de temps faut-il pour parcourir une distance de 150 km à une vitesse sol moyenne de 100 km/h ? ^t30q87
+- A) 1 heure 50 minutes.
+- B) 1 heure 40 minutes.
+- C) 2 heures.
+- D) 1 heure 30 minutes.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car temps = distance / vitesse = 150 km / 100 km/h = 1,5 heure = 1 heure 30 minutes. A (1 heure 50 minutes) correspondrait à une distance d'environ 183 km. B (1 heure 40 minutes = 1,667 heure) correspondrait à environ 167 km. C (2 heures) correspondrait à 200 km. Le calcul est direct : 150 / 100 = 1,5 heure. Convertir les 0,5 heure décimaux en 30 minutes.
+
+### Q88: En préparant un vol VFR alpin le long de l'itinéraire indiqué sur la carte ci-dessous (pointillés) entre MUNSTER et AMSTEG, vous consultez le DABS. Vous prévoyez de voler cet itinéraire un jour ouvrable d'été entre 14h45 et 15h15 LT. Selon le DABS, les zones R-8 et R-8A sont actives durant cette période. Répondez en utilisant la carte DABS ci-dessous et la carte aéronautique OACI 1:500 000 Suisse. Laquelle de ces réponses est correcte ? ^t30q88
+![[figures/t30_q88.png]]
+- A) L'itinéraire peut être volé sans restriction après contact sur 128,375 MHz.
+- B) Les zones réglementées LS-R8 et LS-R8A peuvent être transitées en dessous de 28 000 ft AMSL.
+- C) Il n'est pas possible de voler cet itinéraire pendant que les zones réglementées sont actives.
+- D) Les zones réglementées LS-R8 et LS-R8A peuvent être survolées à 9200 ft AMSL ou au-dessus.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque les zones réglementées LS-R8 et LS-R8A sont actives, elles couvrent l'itinéraire alpin prévu entre Munster et Amsteg, rendant impossible de les traverser. Les zones réglementées avec statut « entrée interdite » ne peuvent pas être transitées, quelle que soit l'altitude ou le contact radio. A est faux car le contact radio ne confère pas de droits de transit à travers des zones réglementées actives. B est faux car un plafond à 28 000 ft n'aide pas un planeur. D est faux car un survol à 9200 ft peut encore être dans les limites verticales de la zone.
+
+### Q89: Vous souhaitez obtenir une autorisation pour transiter le TMA de ZURICH. Que devez-vous faire ? ^t30q89
+- A) Premier contact radio sur la fréquence 124,7, au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans le TMA.
+- B) Premier contact radio sur la fréquence 124,7, au moins 5 minutes avant d'entrer dans le TMA.
+- C) Premier contact radio sur la fréquence 118,975, au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans le TMA.
+- D) Premier contact radio sur la fréquence 118,1, au moins 5 minutes avant d'entrer dans le TMA.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car pour transiter le TMA de Zurich, le pilote doit établir un premier contact radio sur la fréquence 124,7 MHz (Zurich Information) au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans l'espace aérien contrôlé. Cela donne à l'ATC suffisamment de temps pour évaluer le trafic, délivrer une autorisation ou des instructions alternatives et assurer la séparation. B est faux car 5 minutes est un délai insuffisant. C est faux car 118,975 n'est pas la fréquence correcte pour les demandes de transit du TMA de Zurich. D est faux pour la fréquence et le délai.
+
+### Q90: La vitesse minimale de votre planeur est de 60 kt en vol rectiligne. De quel pourcentage augmenterait-elle dans un virage serré avec un angle d'inclinaison de 60° (facteur de charge n = 2,0) ? ^t30q90
+- A) environ 40 %.
+- B) 0 %.
+- C) environ 5 %.
+- D) environ 20 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en virage, la vitesse de décrochage augmente de la racine carrée du facteur de charge : Vs_virage = Vs_rectiligne × √n. Avec n = 2,0 : Vs_virage = 60 × √2 = 60 × 1,414 = 84,85 kt. L'augmentation est (84,85 - 60) / 60 × 100 = 41,4 %, ce qui arrondit à environ 40 %. B est faux car la vitesse de décrochage augmente toujours en virage. C (5 %) et D (20 %) sous-estiment significativement l'effet. Cette relation entre angle d'inclinaison, facteur de charge et vitesse de décrochage est fondamentale pour un vol en manœuvre en sécurité.
+
+### Q91: La limite supérieure de LO R 16 est égale à... Voir annexe (PFP-056)... ^t30q91
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- D) 1 500 ft sol.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car les zones d'espace aérien réglementé (LO R) sur les cartes aéronautiques expriment leurs limites en utilisant des références d'altitude standard. LO R 16 a une limite supérieure de 1 500 ft MSL (niveau moyen de la mer), ce qui est une altitude fixe et absolue. A est faux car 1 500 m MSL représenterait environ 4 900 ft — une altitude complètement différente qui confond les pieds et les mètres. B est faux car FL150 (15 000 ft d'altitude-pression) est bien trop élevé pour une restriction de bas niveau typique. D est faux car 1 500 ft sol (au-dessus du sol) varierait avec l'élévation du terrain et n'est pas la référence publiée.
+
+### Q92: La limite supérieure de LO R 4 est égale à... Voir annexe (PFP-030)... ^t30q92
+- A) 4 500 ft sol.
+- B) 4 500 ft MSL
+- C) 1 500 ft sol
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car LO R 4 a sa limite supérieure à 4 500 ft MSL, une altitude fixe au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer. A est faux car 4 500 ft sol (au-dessus du sol) varierait avec le terrain, ce qui est inapproprié pour une limite réglementaire fixe. C est faux car 1 500 ft sol est à la fois la mauvaise valeur d'altitude et la mauvaise référence. D est faux car 1 500 ft MSL est trop bas et correspond à une autre zone réglementée (LO R 16).
+
+### Q93: Jusqu'à quelle altitude un survol est-il interdit selon le NOTAM ? Voir figure (PFP-024)... ^t30q93
+- A) Hauteur 9500 ft
+- B) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- C) Niveau de vol 95
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car le NOTAM interdit le survol jusqu'à une altitude de 9 500 ft MSL, selon la convention OACI où « altitude » désigne la hauteur au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer. A est faux car « hauteur » en terminologie aéronautique signifie au-dessus d'une référence au sol locale (sol), ce qui n'est pas ce que le NOTAM spécifie. C est faux car FL 95 est une altitude-pression basée sur 1013,25 hPa, qui diffère d'une altitude MSL selon les conditions atmosphériques réelles. D est faux car 9 500 m MSL représenterait environ 31 000 ft — clairement incompatible avec un NOTAM VFR typique.
+
+### Q94: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-061) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique un groupe d'obstacles non éclairés ? (2,00 P.) Voir annexe 4... ^t30q94
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (symbole C dans l'annexe) car la symbologie des cartes aéronautiques OACI (définie dans l'Annexe 4 de l'OACI) utilise des symboles spécifiques pour distinguer les obstacles isolés et groupés, ainsi que les obstacles éclairés et non éclairés. Le symbole C représente un groupe d'obstacles non éclairés. A (symbole D), C (symbole B) et D (symbole A) représentent d'autres catégories d'obstacles comme les obstacles isolés, les groupes éclairés ou les obstacles isolés éclairés. L'identification correcte de ces symboles est essentielle pour la planification des vols en campagne et l'évitement des obstacles.
+
+### Q95: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-062) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique un aéroport civil (non international) avec piste en dur ? (2,00 P.) Voir annexe 5... ^t30q95
+- A) D
+- B) A
+- C) C
+- D) B
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (symbole A dans l'annexe) car la symbologie des cartes OACI utilise des représentations distinctes pour différents types d'aérodromes — civil contre militaire, international contre domestique, et piste en dur contre non revêtue. Le symbole A représente un aéroport civil (non international) avec une piste revêtue. A (symbole D), C (symbole C) et D (symbole B) représentent d'autres catégories d'aérodromes comme les aéroports internationaux, les aérodromes militaires ou les aérodromes en herbe. Les pilotes de planeur doivent reconnaître ces symboles pour identifier les options d'atterrissage d'urgence possibles.
+
+### Q96: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-063) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique une altitude ponctuelle générale ? (2,00 P.) Voir annexe 6... ^t30q96
+- A) A
+- B) B
+- C) D
+- D) C
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D (symbole C dans l'annexe) car sur les cartes aéronautiques OACI, une altitude ponctuelle générale est indiquée par un symbole spécifique montrant un point de terrain de hauteur connue, utilisé pour la conscience de la situation et la planification de la séparation au terrain. A (symbole A), B (symbole B) et C (symbole D) représentent d'autres marquages liés à l'altitude tels que les figures d'altitude maximale, les points géodésiques ou les altitudes d'obstacle définis dans l'Annexe 4 de l'OACI.
+
+### Q97: Le terme centre de gravité est défini comme... ^t30q97
+- A) La moitié de la distance entre le point neutre et la ligne de référence.
+- B) Une autre désignation pour le point neutre.
+- C) La moitié de la distance entre le point neutre et la ligne de référence.
+- D) Le point le plus lourd d'un aéronef.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A. Le centre de gravité est le point unique à travers lequel agit la résultante de toutes les forces gravitationnelles sur l'aéronef — c'est la position moyenne pondérée par la masse de tous les composants. B est faux car le point neutre est un concept aérodynamique distinct utilisé pour l'analyse de la stabilité, non une autre désignation du CG. C reproduit la même description incorrecte que la formulation de A, mais le CG est défini par la répartition des masses, non comme un point géométrique médian. D est faux car le CG n'est pas le point le plus lourd — c'est là où le poids total agit effectivement.
+
+### Q98: Le terme moment dans le contexte d'un calcul de masse et centrage est défini comme... ^t30q98
+- A) La somme d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- B) Le produit d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- C) Le quotient d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- D) La différence d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car dans les calculs de masse et centrage, le moment est défini comme le produit de la masse et du bras de levier : Moment = Masse × Bras (par exemple en kg·m ou lb·in). Cela suit la définition physique d'un couple. Le CG total est trouvé en additionnant tous les moments et en divisant par la masse totale. A est faux car additionner masse et bras n'a pas de sens dimensionnel. C est faux car diviser la masse par le bras ne produit pas un moment. D est faux car les soustraire est tout aussi incorrect.
+
+### Q99: Le terme bras de levier dans le contexte d'un calcul de masse et centrage définit... ^t30q99
+- A) Le point sur l'axe longitudinal d'un aéronef ou son prolongement à partir duquel sont référencés les centres de gravité de toutes les masses.
+- B) La distance d'une masse depuis le centre de gravité.
+- C) La distance depuis le point de référence jusqu'au centre de gravité d'une masse.
+- D) Le point à travers lequel la force de gravité est considérée comme agissant sur une masse.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le bras de levier (bras de moment) est la distance horizontale mesurée depuis le point de référence de l'aéronef jusqu'au centre de gravité d'un élément de masse spécifique. A est faux car cela décrit le point de référence lui-même, non le bras de levier. B est faux car les bras de levier sont mesurés depuis le point de référence, non depuis le CG global de l'aéronef. D est faux car c'est la définition du centre de gravité d'un élément de masse, non du bras de levier.
+
+### Q100: Quel est l'objectif des lignes d'interception en navigation visuelle ? ^t30q100
+- A) Marquer le prochain aéroport disponible en route durant le vol
+- B) Visualiser la limitation de portée depuis l'aérodrome de départ
+- C) Elles aident à continuer le vol lorsque la visibilité de vol descend en dessous des minimums VFR
+- D) Elles sont utilisées comme repères facilement reconnaissables en cas de perte d'orientation
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les lignes d'interception (également appelées lignes d'attraction ou repères linéaires) sont des éléments linéaires de terrain bien visibles — autoroutes, rivières, côtes, voies ferrées — qu'un pilote sélectionne lors de la planification avant vol pour naviguer vers en cas de perte d'orientation. En volant vers une ligne d'interception connue, le pilote peut rétablir sa position et reprendre la navigation. A est faux car les lignes d'interception sont des éléments géographiques, non des marqueurs d'aéroport. B est faux car elles ne sont pas des indicateurs de portée. C est faux car rien n'autorise à continuer le vol en dessous des minimums VFR — les lignes d'interception sont un outil pour les procédures de désorientation, non un contournement de la visibilité.
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+### Q101: What illusion can occur when visual references are lost during a prolonged coordinated turn? ^t40q101
+- A) the impression of no longer being in a turn (wings level)
+- B) the impression of being in a descent
+- C) the impression of being in a climb
+- D) the impression of being in a greater bank angle than is actually the case
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a prolonged coordinated turn at constant rate, the fluid in the semicircular canals gradually matches the rotation speed and stops deflecting the sensory hairs, causing the vestibular system to signal "no turn" even though the aircraft remains banked. The pilot perceives wings-level flight. If the pilot then levels the wings, they experience the sensation of turning in the opposite direction and may re-enter the original turn — this is the mechanism behind the deadly graveyard spiral. Option B, Option C, and Option D describe different illusions not associated with vestibular adaptation during steady turns.
+
+### Q102: Your passenger wishes to ease their fear of flying by drinking a strong alcoholic drink just before departure. What effect has to be expected at high altitude? ^t40q102
+- A) at high altitude, the psychological effects of alcohol decrease
+- B) alcohol is eliminated more slowly at high altitude than on the ground
+- C) alcohol is eliminated more rapidly at high altitude than on the ground
+- D) oxygen deficiency at high altitude amplifies the effects of alcohol
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At altitude, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen (hypoxia) acts synergistically with alcohol to amplify its impairing effects on the central nervous system. Both hypoxia and alcohol independently degrade cognitive function, and together they produce a combined impairment far greater than either alone — sometimes described as a multiplier effect. Option A incorrectly claims that alcohol effects decrease at altitude. Option B and Option C concern the elimination rate, which is primarily determined by liver metabolism and does not change significantly with altitude. The combination of altitude and alcohol is particularly dangerous for passengers who may need to respond in an emergency.
+
+### Q103: Which is the correct technique for seeing at night? ^t40q103
+- A) stare directly at distant, faintly lit objects as directly as possible
+- B) do not stare directly at objects but look slightly to the side
+- C) stare directly at all objects as directly as possible
+- D) scan objects with rapid large eye movements
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At night, the central fovea of the retina — used for direct vision — contains only cone cells, which require more light to function effectively. The rod cells responsible for low-light sensitivity are concentrated in the retinal periphery. Looking slightly to the side of an object (off-centre viewing) places its image on the rod-rich area, making it visible in dim conditions. Option A and Option C (staring directly) use only the foveal cones, which are essentially blind in low light, causing the object to disappear. Option D (rapid large eye movements) disrupts the fixation time needed for the rods to detect faint light.
+
+### Q104: Your passenger complains of middle ear pressure equalization problems. How can you help them? ^t40q104
+- A) stop the climb, if possible descend until the pain subsides, then climb again at a lower rate
+- B) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a lower rate
+- C) descend at a higher rate until the pain subsides, then continue descending at a lower rate
+- D) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a higher rate
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems occur most commonly during descent, when increasing external pressure cannot enter the middle ear cavity fast enough through the Eustachian tube. The correct remedy is to stop the descent, climb slightly if possible to reduce the pressure differential and allow the pain to subside, then resume the descent at a slower rate to give the Eustachian tube time to equalise. Option A addresses climbing problems, which are much less common. Option C (descending faster) would worsen the pressure imbalance. Option D correctly stops the descent but then resumes at a higher rate, which would recreate the problem.
+
+### Q105: Which of the following symptoms may indicate oxygen deficiency? ^t40q105
+- A) joint pain
+- B) lung pain
+- C) reduced heart rate
+- D) difficulty concentrating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Difficulty concentrating is one of the earliest and most characteristic symptoms of hypoxia (oxygen deficiency), reflecting the brain's high sensitivity to reduced oxygen supply. As altitude increases and oxygen partial pressure drops, cognitive functions deteriorate before physical symptoms become apparent. Option A (joint pain) is associated with decompression sickness, not hypoxia. Option B (lung pain) is not a typical hypoxia symptom. Option C (reduced heart rate) is incorrect because the body's compensatory response to hypoxia is to increase heart rate, not decrease it.
+
+### Q106: What causes motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q106
+- A) a disorder of the middle ear
+- B) irritation of the balance organ
+- C) evaporation of gases into the blood
+- D) a strong reduction in atmospheric pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness is caused by irritation of the vestibular system (balance organ) in the inner ear when it receives conflicting signals from the eyes, the vestibular apparatus, and proprioceptors. This sensory mismatch — for example, the inner ear detecting motion while the eyes see a stationary cockpit interior — triggers the autonomic nervous system response that produces nausea and vomiting. Option A (middle ear disorder) confuses a pathological condition with a normal physiological response. Option C and Option D describe altitude-related phenomena (decompression) that are unrelated to motion sickness.
+
+### Q107: Which are the side effects of anti-motion-sickness medications? ^t40q107
+- A) drowsiness and slowed reaction time
+- B) general weakness and loss of appetite
+- C) exhaustion and depression
+- D) hyperactivity and risk-taking tendency
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Anti-motion-sickness medications — primarily antihistamines (such as dimenhydrinate) and anticholinergics (such as scopolamine) — commonly cause drowsiness and significantly slowed reaction times as their primary side effects. These effects directly compromise the alertness and rapid decision-making required for safe flying. Option B, Option C, and Option D describe side effects not typically associated with standard anti-motion-sickness drugs. Because of the sedating effects described in Option A, pilots should not use these medications before or during flight without medical clearance from an aviation medical examiner.
+
+### Q108: What is decisive for the onset of noise-induced hearing loss? ^t40q108
+- A) only the duration of noise exposure
+- B) the duration and intensity of the noise
+- C) only the intensity of the noise
+- D) the sudden onset of a noise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Noise-induced hearing loss depends on the total sound energy dose received by the ear, which is a function of both the intensity (measured in decibels) and the duration of exposure. A very loud noise over a short period or a moderately loud noise sustained over many hours can both cause permanent damage. Option A ignores intensity — a quiet sound, no matter how long the exposure, will not cause damage. Option C ignores duration — a brief loud burst is generally less harmful than the same intensity sustained for hours. Option D (sudden onset) describes acoustic shock, which is only one mechanism and not the full picture.
+
+### Q109: Increasing and sustained positive g-loads can produce symptoms that appear in the following order:... ^t40q109
+- A) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- B) red-out, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- C) reduction of peripheral vision, loss of color vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- D) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, red-out, loss of consciousness
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As positive g-forces increase, blood drains from the head toward the lower body in a predictable sequence of visual and neurological symptoms: first grey-out (loss of colour vision as the retina receives less oxygenated blood), then tunnel vision (reduction of peripheral vision as the outer retina fails first), then complete blackout (total loss of vision), and finally G-LOC (loss of consciousness). Option B incorrectly begins with red-out, which occurs under negative g-forces, not positive. Option C reverses the first two symptoms. Option D inserts red-out mid-sequence, which does not occur during positive g-loading.
+
+### Q110: From what altitude does the body of a healthy person begin to compensate for oxygen deficiency by accelerating breathing rate? ^t40q110
+- A) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- B) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+- C) roughly 3,000-4,000 ft
+- D) from 12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At approximately 6,000-7,000 ft, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen becomes sufficient to trigger the body's chemoreceptors, which detect the drop in blood oxygen and stimulate an increase in respiratory rate as a compensatory mechanism. Option B (10,000-12,000 ft) describes the upper limit of effective compensation, not where it begins. Option C (3,000-4,000 ft) is too low — at this altitude, the oxygen reduction is minimal and no compensation is needed. Option D (from 12,000 ft) is the point where compensation becomes inadequate, not where it starts.
+
+### Q111: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q111
+- A) Point C
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law, illustrated by the inverted-U curve in figure HPL-002, shows that performance peaks at a moderate, optimal level of arousal — represented by Point B at the top of the curve. Option D (Point A) lies on the left side where arousal is too low, resulting in boredom, inattention, and poor performance. Option A (Point C) and Option B (Point D) represent progressively higher arousal levels on the right side of the curve, where over-stimulation causes anxiety, cognitive overload, and declining performance. For pilots, maintaining arousal at Point B ensures maximum alertness without the errors that come from excessive stress.
+
+### Q112: Which answer is correct concerning stress? ^t40q112
+- A) Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner
+- B) Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety
+- C) Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem
+- D) Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress commonly arises when a person perceives a threatening or problematic situation for which no adequate solution appears available — the feeling of being trapped or overwhelmed triggers the physiological stress response. Option A is incorrect because individual stress responses vary enormously based on personality, experience, coping mechanisms, and physical condition. Option B dangerously dismisses the impact of stress on flight safety, when in fact stress-related errors are a major factor in aviation incidents. Option D is wrong because training and experience are proven to raise the stress threshold by providing learned responses to challenging situations.
+
+### Q113: During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed? ^t40q113
+- A) Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook
+- B) Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying
+- C) Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane
+- D) There is no time for solving problems during flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental principle of airmanship is "aviate, navigate, communicate" — in that order. The pilot's primary duty is always to fly the aircraft and maintain stable flight before addressing any secondary problem. Option A risks losing aircraft control by prioritising problem-solving over flying. Option B (radio contact) is a valid step but must come after ensuring the aircraft is under control. Option D incorrectly implies that problem-solving during flight is impossible, when in fact pilots routinely handle in-flight issues provided they maintain aircraft control as the overriding priority.
+
+### Q114: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q114
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point B
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve, Point D represents the extreme right of the arousal axis where stress levels are very high and performance has collapsed — the pilot is overstrained. At this level of arousal, cognitive function breaks down, decision-making becomes erratic, and the risk of critical errors increases dramatically. Option B (Point C) represents elevated but not yet maximal stress. Option C (Point A) represents under-arousal and boredom. Option D (Point B) is the peak of the curve where optimal performance occurs. Recognising the slide from Point B toward Point D is a critical pilot skill.
+
+### Q115: The swiss cheese model is used to explain the... ^t40q115
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Error chain.
+- D) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model is a foundational concept in aviation safety that illustrates how accidents result from an error chain — a series of individual failures in successive defensive barriers that happen to align, allowing a hazard to penetrate all layers simultaneously. Each "slice of cheese" represents a safety barrier with inherent "holes" (latent conditions and active failures). Option A (pilot readiness) is assessed through fitness-to-fly checks, not the Swiss Cheese Model. Option B (problem solving) uses decision-making frameworks like DECIDE. Option D (emergency landing procedures) are covered by standard operating procedures and checklists, not error chain theory.
+
+### Q116: What does the term Red-out mean? ^t40q116
+- A) Rash during decompression sickness
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- D) Anaemia caused by an injury
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (such as during a bunt or inverted flight manoeuvre), when blood is forced upward into the head and eyes. The excess blood pressure in the ocular capillaries produces a characteristic red tinge across the visual field. This is the negative-g counterpart to grey-out and blackout, which occur under positive g-forces when blood drains away from the head. Option A (decompression sickness rash) is an entirely different condition affecting dissolved gases in the body. Option B (sunrise/sunset colour) is a natural optical phenomenon, not a physiological impairment. Option D (anaemia from injury) is a medical condition unrelated to g-forces.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_101_116_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_101_116_fr.md
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+### Q101 : Quelle illusion peut survenir lorsque les références visuelles sont perdues lors d'un virage coordonné prolongé ? ^t40q101
+- A) L'impression de ne plus être en virage (ailes à plat).
+- B) L'impression d'être en descente.
+- C) L'impression d'être en montée.
+- D) L'impression d'être dans un angle d'inclinaison plus grand qu'il ne l'est en réalité.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un virage coordonné prolongé à taux constant, le liquide dans les canaux semi-circulaires s'aligne progressivement sur la vitesse de rotation et cesse de dévier les cils sensoriels, amenant le système vestibulaire à signaler « pas de virage » alors que l'aéronef reste incliné. Le pilote perçoit un vol en palier ailes à plat. S'il remet ensuite les ailes à l'horizontal, il ressent une sensation de virage dans la direction opposée et peut réengager le virage initial — c'est le mécanisme à l'origine du spiral mortel. Les options B, C et D décrivent des illusions différentes non associées à l'adaptation vestibulaire lors de virages stabilisés.
+
+### Q102 : Votre passager souhaite atténuer sa peur de voler en prenant un alcool fort juste avant le départ. Quel effet faut-il anticiper en haute altitude ? ^t40q102
+- A) En haute altitude, les effets psychologiques de l'alcool diminuent.
+- B) L'alcool est éliminé plus lentement en haute altitude qu'au sol.
+- C) L'alcool est éliminé plus rapidement en haute altitude qu'au sol.
+- D) Le manque d'oxygène en haute altitude amplifie les effets de l'alcool.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En altitude, la pression partielle réduite de l'oxygène (hypoxie) agit en synergie avec l'alcool pour amplifier ses effets délétères sur le système nerveux central. L'hypoxie et l'alcool dégradent indépendamment les fonctions cognitives, et ensemble ils produisent une altération combinée bien supérieure à l'un ou l'autre seul — parfois décrite comme un effet multiplicateur. L'option A affirme incorrectement que les effets de l'alcool diminuent en altitude. Les options B et C concernent le taux d'élimination, qui est principalement déterminé par le métabolisme hépatique et ne change pas significativement avec l'altitude. La combinaison altitude et alcool est particulièrement dangereuse pour les passagers qui pourraient devoir réagir en cas d'urgence.
+
+### Q103 : Quelle est la technique correcte pour voir de nuit ? ^t40q103
+- A) Fixer directement les objets éloignés et faiblement éclairés aussi directement que possible.
+- B) Ne pas fixer directement les objets, mais regarder légèrement de côté.
+- C) Fixer directement tous les objets aussi directement que possible.
+- D) Scruter les objets avec des mouvements oculaires rapides et amples.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** De nuit, la fovéa centrale de la rétine — utilisée pour la vision directe — ne contient que des cellules en cônes, qui nécessitent davantage de lumière pour fonctionner efficacement. Les cellules en bâtonnets responsables de la sensibilité en faible luminosité sont concentrées dans la périphérie rétinienne. Regarder légèrement de côté par rapport à un objet (vision excentrée) projette son image sur la zone riche en bâtonnets, le rendant visible dans des conditions peu éclairées. Les options A et C (fixation directe) n'utilisent que les cônes fovéaux, essentiellement aveugles en faible luminosité, ce qui fait disparaître l'objet. L'option D (mouvements oculaires rapides et amples) perturbe le temps de fixation nécessaire aux bâtonnets pour détecter une lumière faible.
+
+### Q104 : Votre passager se plaint de problèmes d'égalisation de pression de l'oreille moyenne. Comment pouvez-vous l'aider ? ^t40q104
+- A) Arrêter la montée, si possible descendre jusqu'à ce que la douleur disparaisse, puis remonter à un taux plus faible.
+- B) Arrêter la descente, si possible remonter jusqu'à ce que la douleur disparaisse, puis descendre à un taux plus faible.
+- C) Descendre à un taux plus élevé jusqu'à ce que la douleur disparaisse, puis continuer la descente à un taux plus faible.
+- D) Arrêter la descente, si possible remonter jusqu'à ce que la douleur disparaisse, puis descendre à un taux plus élevé.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les problèmes d'égalisation de pression de l'oreille moyenne surviennent le plus souvent lors de la descente, lorsque la pression extérieure croissante ne peut pas pénétrer assez rapidement dans la cavité de l'oreille moyenne par la trompe d'Eustache. Le remède correct est d'arrêter la descente, de remonter légèrement si possible pour réduire le différentiel de pression et laisser la douleur disparaître, puis de reprendre la descente à un taux plus lent pour laisser le temps à la trompe d'Eustache de s'équilibrer. L'option A traite les problèmes de montée, qui sont bien moins fréquents. L'option C (descendre plus vite) aggraverait le déséquilibre de pression. L'option D arrête correctement la descente, mais la reprend ensuite à un taux plus élevé, ce qui recréerait le problème.
+
+### Q105 : Lequel des symptômes suivants peut indiquer un manque d'oxygène ? ^t40q105
+- A) Douleurs articulaires.
+- B) Douleurs pulmonaires.
+- C) Fréquence cardiaque réduite.
+- D) Difficultés de concentration.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les difficultés de concentration sont l'un des premiers symptômes les plus caractéristiques de l'hypoxie (manque d'oxygène), reflétant la grande sensibilité du cerveau à la réduction de l'apport en oxygène. À mesure que l'altitude augmente et que la pression partielle de l'oxygène diminue, les fonctions cognitives se dégradent avant que les symptômes physiques ne deviennent apparents. L'option A (douleurs articulaires) est associée à la maladie de décompression, et non à l'hypoxie. L'option B (douleurs pulmonaires) n'est pas un symptôme typique de l'hypoxie. L'option C (fréquence cardiaque réduite) est incorrecte car la réponse compensatoire de l'organisme à l'hypoxie est d'augmenter la fréquence cardiaque, et non de la diminuer.
+
+### Q106 : Qu'est-ce qui cause le mal des transports (cinétose) ? ^t40q106
+- A) Un trouble de l'oreille moyenne.
+- B) Une irritation de l'organe de l'équilibre.
+- C) L'évaporation de gaz dans le sang.
+- D) Une forte réduction de la pression atmosphérique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le mal des transports est causé par une irritation du système vestibulaire (organe de l'équilibre) dans l'oreille interne lorsqu'il reçoit des signaux contradictoires en provenance des yeux, de l'appareil vestibulaire et des propriocepteurs. Ce désaccord sensoriel — par exemple, l'oreille interne détectant un mouvement tandis que les yeux voient un intérieur de cockpit immobile — déclenche la réponse du système nerveux autonome qui produit les nausées et les vomissements. L'option A (trouble de l'oreille moyenne) confond une affection pathologique avec une réponse physiologique normale. Les options C et D décrivent des phénomènes liés à l'altitude (décompression) sans rapport avec le mal des transports.
+
+### Q107 : Quels sont les effets secondaires des médicaments contre le mal des transports ? ^t40q107
+- A) Somnolence et ralentissement du temps de réaction.
+- B) Faiblesse générale et perte d'appétit.
+- C) Épuisement et dépression.
+- D) Hyperactivité et tendance à la prise de risques.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les médicaments contre le mal des transports — principalement les antihistaminiques (comme le diménhydrinate) et les anticholinergiques (comme la scopolamine) — provoquent couramment une somnolence et un ralentissement significatif du temps de réaction comme principaux effets secondaires. Ces effets compromettent directement la vigilance et la prise de décision rapide nécessaires à la sécurité du vol. Les options B, C et D décrivent des effets secondaires qui ne sont généralement pas associés aux médicaments anticinétiques standard. En raison des effets sédatifs décrits dans l'option A, les pilotes ne devraient pas utiliser ces médicaments avant ou pendant le vol sans autorisation médicale d'un médecin examinateur de l'aviation.
+
+### Q108 : Qu'est-ce qui est déterminant pour l'apparition d'une surdité due au bruit ? ^t40q108
+- A) Uniquement la durée de l'exposition au bruit.
+- B) La durée et l'intensité du bruit.
+- C) Uniquement l'intensité du bruit.
+- D) Le début soudain d'un bruit.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La surdité due au bruit dépend de la dose totale d'énergie sonore reçue par l'oreille, qui est fonction à la fois de l'intensité (mesurée en décibels) et de la durée d'exposition. Un bruit très fort sur une courte période ou un bruit modérément fort maintenu pendant de nombreuses heures peuvent tous deux causer des lésions permanentes. L'option A ignore l'intensité — un son faible, quelle que soit la durée d'exposition, ne causera pas de lésions. L'option C ignore la durée — une brève détonation est généralement moins nocive que la même intensité maintenue pendant des heures. L'option D (début soudain) décrit le choc acoustique, qui n'est qu'un mécanisme parmi d'autres et ne représente pas l'ensemble du tableau.
+
+### Q109 : Des charges g positives croissantes et soutenues peuvent produire des symptômes apparaissant dans l'ordre suivant :… ^t40q109
+- A) Perte de la vision des couleurs, réduction du champ visuel périphérique, perte totale de la vision, perte de conscience.
+- B) Red-out, réduction du champ visuel périphérique, perte totale de la vision, perte de conscience.
+- C) Réduction du champ visuel périphérique, perte de la vision des couleurs, perte totale de la vision, perte de conscience.
+- D) Perte de la vision des couleurs, réduction du champ visuel périphérique, red-out, perte de conscience.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** À mesure que les forces g positives augmentent, le sang s'écoule de la tête vers la partie inférieure du corps selon une séquence prévisible de symptômes visuels et neurologiques : d'abord le grayout (perte de la vision des couleurs lorsque la rétine reçoit moins de sang oxygéné), puis la vision en tunnel (réduction du champ visuel périphérique car la rétine externe défaille en premier), puis le blackout complet (perte totale de la vision), et enfin le G-LOC (perte de conscience). L'option B commence incorrectement par le red-out, qui survient sous des forces g négatives et non positives. L'option C inverse les deux premiers symptômes. L'option D insère le red-out au milieu de la séquence, ce qui ne se produit pas sous des charges g positives.
+
+### Q110 : À partir de quelle altitude l'organisme d'une personne en bonne santé commence-t-il à compenser le manque d'oxygène en accélérant la fréquence respiratoire ? ^t40q110
+- A) Environ 6 000-7 000 ft.
+- B) Environ 10 000-12 000 ft.
+- C) Environ 3 000-4 000 ft.
+- D) À partir de 12 000 ft.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** À environ 6 000-7 000 ft, la pression partielle réduite de l'oxygène devient suffisante pour activer les chémorécepteurs de l'organisme, qui détectent la chute de l'oxygène dans le sang et stimulent une augmentation de la fréquence respiratoire comme mécanisme compensatoire. L'option B (10 000-12 000 ft) décrit la limite supérieure de la compensation efficace, et non le point où elle commence. L'option C (3 000-4 000 ft) est trop basse — à cette altitude, la réduction d'oxygène est minime et aucune compensation n'est nécessaire. L'option D (à partir de 12 000 ft) est le point où la compensation devient insuffisante, et non celui où elle commence.
+
+### Q111 : Le niveau d'activation idéal se situe à quel point du diagramme ? Voir figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Activation / Stress Voir annexe 1… ^t40q111
+- A) Point C
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La loi de Yerkes-Dodson, illustrée par la courbe en U inversé de la figure HPL-002, montre que les performances atteignent leur maximum à un niveau d'activation modéré et optimal — représenté par le Point B au sommet de la courbe. L'option D (Point A) se situe sur le côté gauche où l'activation est trop faible, entraînant ennui, inattention et mauvaises performances. Les options A (Point C) et B (Point D) représentent des niveaux d'activation progressivement plus élevés sur le côté droit de la courbe, où la surstimulation provoque anxiété, surcharge cognitive et dégradation des performances. Pour les pilotes, maintenir l'activation au Point B garantit une vigilance maximale sans les erreurs liées à un stress excessif.
+
+### Q112 : Laquelle des réponses suivantes concernant le stress est correcte ? ^t40q112
+- A) Tout le monde réagit au stress de la même façon.
+- B) Le stress et ses différents symptômes n'ont pas d'importance pour la sécurité des vols.
+- C) Le stress peut survenir lorsqu'il semble n'y avoir aucune solution à un problème donné.
+- D) La formation et l'expérience n'ont aucune influence sur l'apparition du stress.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le stress survient fréquemment lorsqu'une personne perçoit une situation menaçante ou problématique pour laquelle aucune solution adéquate ne semble disponible — le sentiment d'être piégé ou dépassé déclenche la réponse physiologique au stress. L'option A est incorrecte car les réponses individuelles au stress varient énormément selon la personnalité, l'expérience, les mécanismes d'adaptation et l'état physique. L'option B écarte dangereusement l'impact du stress sur la sécurité des vols, alors qu'en réalité les erreurs liées au stress sont un facteur majeur dans les incidents d'aviation. L'option D est incorrecte car la formation et l'expérience sont reconnues pour relever le seuil de stress en fournissant des réponses apprises face à des situations difficiles.
+
+### Q113 : Lors d'un vol, vous devez résoudre un problème. Comment procédez-vous ? ^t40q113
+- A) Résoudre immédiatement le problème, sinon se référer au manuel d'exploitation.
+- B) Contacter un autre pilote par radio pour obtenir de l'aide, continuer à voler.
+- C) Piloter l'aéronef en priorité et le maintenir stable, puis traiter le problème tout en continuant à piloter.
+- D) Il n'y a pas de temps pour résoudre des problèmes pendant le vol.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le principe fondamental du pilotage est « piloter, naviguer, communiquer » — dans cet ordre. La mission première du pilote est toujours de piloter l'aéronef et de maintenir un vol stable avant de s'occuper d'un problème secondaire. L'option A risque de faire perdre le contrôle de l'aéronef en accordant la priorité à la résolution du problème sur le pilotage. L'option B (contact radio) est une étape valide mais doit intervenir après s'être assuré que l'aéronef est sous contrôle. L'option D implique incorrectement qu'il est impossible de résoudre des problèmes en vol, alors qu'en réalité les pilotes gèrent régulièrement des problèmes en vol à condition de maintenir le contrôle de l'aéronef comme priorité absolue.
+
+### Q114 : À quel point du diagramme un pilote se trouvera-t-il en situation de surcharge ? Voir figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Activation / Stress Voir annexe 1… ^t40q114
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point B
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la courbe en U inversé de Yerkes-Dodson, le Point D représente l'extrémité droite de l'axe d'activation où les niveaux de stress sont très élevés et les performances se sont effondrées — le pilote est en surcharge. À ce niveau d'activation, les fonctions cognitives s'effondrent, la prise de décision devient erratique et le risque d'erreurs critiques augmente considérablement. L'option B (Point C) représente un stress élevé mais pas encore maximal. L'option C (Point A) représente une sous-activation et l'ennui. L'option D (Point B) est le sommet de la courbe où se produisent les performances optimales. Reconnaître le glissement du Point B vers le Point D est une compétence pilote essentielle.
+
+### Q115 : Le modèle du fromage suisse est utilisé pour expliquer… ^t40q115
+- A) L'état de préparation d'un pilote.
+- B) La solution optimale à un problème.
+- C) La chaîne d'erreurs.
+- D) La procédure d'atterrissage d'urgence.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le modèle du fromage suisse de James Reason est un concept fondateur de la sécurité aéronautique qui illustre comment les accidents résultent d'une chaîne d'erreurs — une série de défaillances individuelles dans des barrières défensives successives qui s'alignent par hasard, permettant à un danger de traverser toutes les couches simultanément. Chaque « tranche de fromage » représente une barrière de sécurité avec des « trous » inhérents (conditions latentes et défaillances actives). L'option A (préparation du pilote) est évaluée par des contrôles d'aptitude au vol, et non par le modèle du fromage suisse. L'option B (résolution de problèmes) utilise des cadres de prise de décision comme DECIDE. L'option D (procédures d'atterrissage d'urgence) est couverte par les procédures d'exploitation normales et les listes de vérification, et non par la théorie de la chaîne d'erreurs.
+
+### Q116 : Que signifie le terme « Red-out » ? ^t40q116
+- A) Éruption cutanée lors d'une maladie de décompression.
+- B) Perception des couleurs faussée lors du lever et du coucher du soleil.
+- C) « Vision rouge » lors de charges g négatives.
+- D) Anémie causée par une blessure.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le red-out survient lors de forces g négatives soutenues (par exemple lors d'un cabré négatif ou d'un vol dos), lorsque le sang est forcé vers la tête et les yeux. La pression sanguine excessive dans les capillaires oculaires produit une teinte rouge caractéristique sur le champ visuel. C'est l'opposé du grayout et du blackout, qui surviennent sous des forces g positives lorsque le sang s'écoule loin de la tête. L'option A (éruption cutanée de la maladie de décompression) est une affection entièrement différente liée aux gaz dissous dans l'organisme. L'option B (couleur au lever/coucher du soleil) est un phénomène optique naturel, et non une altération physiologique. L'option D (anémie due à une blessure) est une affection médicale sans rapport avec les forces g.
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+### Q1: The majority of aviation accidents are caused by… ^t40q1
+- A) Meteorological influences.
+- B) Human failure.
+- C) Technical failure.
+- D) Geographical influences.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because statistical analyses consistently show that roughly 70-80% of aviation accidents have human error as a primary or contributing cause, including poor judgment, loss of situational awareness, and inadequate decision-making. A is wrong because weather is a contributing factor in some accidents but accounts for a far smaller share than human error. C is wrong because modern aircraft are highly reliable and technical failures cause only a minority of accidents. D is wrong because geographical influences (terrain, obstacles) are environmental factors, not the dominant accident cause.
+
+### Q2: The "swiss cheese model" can be used to explain the… ^t40q2
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- D) Error chain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model shows how accidents result from an error chain — multiple defensive layers (represented as slices of cheese) each have weaknesses ("holes"), and an accident occurs only when these holes align simultaneously to let a hazard pass through all barriers. A is wrong because the model does not address pilot readiness or fitness. B is wrong because it is not a problem-solving tool. C is wrong because it has nothing to do with emergency landing procedures.
+
+### Q3: What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft? ^t40q3
+- A) 18.9 %
+- B) 21 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 12 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the composition of atmospheric gases remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen regardless of altitude — it is the partial pressure of oxygen that decreases as you climb, not the percentage. A is wrong because 18.9% does not correspond to any standard atmospheric value. C is wrong because 78% is the proportion of nitrogen, not oxygen. D is wrong because 12% is far below the actual oxygen fraction at any altitude within the atmosphere.
+
+### Q4: Which is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere? ^t40q4
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 0.1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 1 %
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because nitrogen constitutes approximately 78% of the atmosphere and remains physiologically inert under normal flight conditions, though it becomes relevant in decompression sickness after diving. A is wrong because 21% is the proportion of oxygen. B is wrong because 0.1% is far too low and does not correspond to any major atmospheric gas. D is wrong because 1% represents the approximate total of all trace gases combined, not nitrogen.
+
+### Q5: At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)? ^t40q5
+- A) 5000 ft
+- B) 10000 ft
+- C) 22000 ft
+- D) 18000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at approximately 18,000 ft the atmospheric pressure drops to about 500 hPa, which is roughly half of the standard sea-level value of 1013.25 hPa, and this also means the partial pressure of oxygen is halved. A is wrong because at 5,000 ft the pressure is still about 843 hPa. B is wrong because at 10,000 ft the pressure is approximately 700 hPa. C is wrong because at 22,000 ft the pressure is well below half the sea-level value.
+
+### Q6: Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. Which is the approximate percentage of other gases? ^t40q6
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0.1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because after oxygen (21%) and nitrogen (78%), the remaining approximately 1% consists of trace gases — mainly argon (about 0.93%) with small amounts of carbon dioxide, neon, and helium. A is wrong because 21% is the oxygen proportion. C is wrong because 78% is the nitrogen proportion. D is wrong because 0.1% is too low; argon alone accounts for nearly 1%.
+
+### Q7: Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by… ^t40q7
+- A) Little sleep.
+- B) Unhealthy food.
+- C) Smoking.
+- D) Alcohol.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO) from incomplete combustion, and CO binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen, reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A is wrong because sleep deprivation causes fatigue but does not produce CO. B is wrong because unhealthy food affects nutrition but does not generate CO. D is wrong because alcohol impairs cognitive function through a different mechanism unrelated to CO poisoning.
+
+### Q8: What does the term "Red-out" mean? ^t40q8
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Rash during decompression sickness
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (such as in a pushover or bunt manoeuvre), which force blood into the head and eyes, engorging the retinal blood vessels and creating a red-tinted visual field. B is wrong because decompression sickness causes joint pain and skin mottling, not a red visual field. C is wrong because anaemia is a blood condition unrelated to g-forces. D is wrong because sunrise and sunset affect ambient light colour, not a physiological visual disturbance.
+
+### Q9: Which of these is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton? ^t40q9
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Spasm
+- C) Disturbance of consciousness
+- D) Tingling
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because cyanosis (blue discolouration of skin and lips) is caused by low blood oxygen levels and is a sign of hypoxia, not hyperventilation. Hyperventilation actually increases blood oxygen levels while decreasing CO2. B is wrong as an answer choice because muscle spasms (tetany) are a genuine symptom of hyperventilation due to alkalosis. C is wrong because disturbed consciousness does occur during severe hyperventilation. D is wrong because tingling in the extremities and face is one of the earliest and most characteristic hyperventilation symptoms.
+
+### Q10: Which of these symptoms may indicate hypoxia? ^t40q10
+- A) Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails
+- B) Blue marks all over the body
+- C) Muscle cramps in the upper body area
+- D) Joint pain in knees and feet
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because cyanosis — the bluish discolouration of lips, fingertips, and nail beds — is a classic clinical sign of hypoxia caused by an increased proportion of deoxygenated haemoglobin in the blood. B is wrong because diffuse blue marks over the body suggest bruising, not oxygen deficiency. C is wrong because upper body muscle cramps are more associated with hyperventilation or electrolyte imbalances. D is wrong because joint pain in knees and feet is characteristic of decompression sickness, not hypoxia.
+
+### Q11: Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia? ^t40q11
+- A) The visual perception (vision)
+- B) The tactile perception (sense of touch)
+- C) The oltfactory perception (smell)
+- D) The auditory perception (hearing)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the retina has an exceptionally high oxygen demand, making vision the first sense to degrade under hypoxic conditions — night vision can deteriorate noticeably at altitudes as low as 5,000 ft. B is wrong because touch is relatively resistant to mild hypoxia. C is wrong because smell, while it can be affected, is not the most sensitive sense to oxygen deprivation. D is wrong because hearing is also less affected than vision at moderate altitude.
+
+### Q12: From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure? ^t40q12
+- A) 10000 feet
+- B) 7000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 2000 feet
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because at approximately 7,000 ft the body begins to show measurable physiological responses to reduced oxygen partial pressure, such as increased heart rate and breathing rate, though a healthy person can still compensate. A is wrong because 10,000 ft is an altitude where compensation is already well underway, not where it begins. C is wrong because at 12,000 ft the body is already struggling to compensate adequately. D is wrong because at 2,000 ft the oxygen partial pressure is still too close to sea-level values to trigger noticeable physiological responses.
+
+### Q13: Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure? ^t40q13
+- A) 7000 feet
+- B) 5000 feet
+- C) 22000 feet
+- D) 12000 feet
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because above approximately 12,000 ft the body's compensatory mechanisms — increased breathing and heart rate — are no longer sufficient to maintain adequate blood oxygen saturation, and hypoxic symptoms become increasingly apparent. A is wrong because at 7,000 ft the body begins compensating but can still manage effectively. B is wrong because 5,000 ft is well within the range where no significant compensation is needed. C is wrong because 22,000 ft is far above the threshold where compensation fails — at that altitude, loss of consciousness occurs rapidly.
+
+### Q14: What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)? ^t40q14
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Immune defense
+- D) Oxygen transport
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because red blood cells contain haemoglobin, an iron-rich protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and delivers it to tissues throughout the body, making them the primary oxygen transport mechanism. A is wrong because blood coagulation is the function of platelets (thrombocytes). B is wrong because blood sugar regulation is controlled by the pancreas via insulin and glucagon. C is wrong because immune defence is the function of white blood cells (leucocytes).
+
+### Q15: Which of these accounts for the blood coagulation? ^t40q15
+- A) Capillaries of the arteries
+- B) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- C) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+- D) Blood plates (thrombocytes)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because blood platelets (thrombocytes) are cell fragments that aggregate at injury sites and activate the clotting cascade to form a fibrin clot, stopping bleeding. A is wrong because capillaries are blood vessels, not clotting agents. B is wrong because red blood cells transport oxygen, not participate in coagulation. C is wrong because white blood cells are responsible for immune defence, not blood clotting.
+
+### Q16: Which is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)? ^t40q16
+- A) Immune defense
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Blood coagulation
+- D) Oxygen transport
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because white blood cells (leucocytes) are the cellular components of the immune system, responsible for identifying and destroying pathogens, foreign substances, and abnormal cells. B is wrong because blood sugar regulation is managed by hormones from the pancreas. C is wrong because blood coagulation is the role of thrombocytes (platelets). D is wrong because oxygen transport is performed by red blood cells (erythrocytes) via haemoglobin.
+
+### Q17: Which is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)? ^t40q17
+- A) Oxygen transport
+- B) Immune defense
+- C) Blood coagulation
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because thrombocytes (platelets) are the primary agents of haemostasis — they rapidly aggregate at vascular injury sites and release chemicals that trigger the coagulation cascade, forming a stable clot. A is wrong because oxygen transport is the function of erythrocytes (red blood cells). B is wrong because immune defence belongs to leucocytes (white blood cells). D is wrong because blood sugar regulation is a hormonal function of the pancreas.
+
+### Q18: Which of these is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia? ^t40q18
+- A) Blood donation
+- B) Diving
+- C) Menstruation
+- D) Smoking
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because scuba diving is a risk factor for decompression sickness (nitrogen bubbles forming in tissues), not hypoxia — diving itself does not reduce the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A is wrong as an answer because blood donation reduces red blood cell count, directly lowering oxygen transport ability. C is wrong because heavy menstruation can lead to anaemia, which reduces oxygen-carrying capacity. D is wrong because smoking introduces carbon monoxide that binds to haemoglobin, displacing oxygen.
+
+### Q19: What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable? ^t40q19
+- A) Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank
+- B) Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed
+- C) Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets
+- D) Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because adjusting the cabin temperature to a comfortable level and reducing bank angle minimises the most common causes of passenger discomfort — thermal discomfort and vestibular stimulation that can trigger motion sickness. B is wrong because avoiding conversation isolates the passenger and higher airspeed does not address the underlying discomfort. C is wrong because warming a potentially overheated passenger could worsen their condition. D is wrong because supplemental oxygen is not the standard first response, and avoiding low load factors is not the primary concern.
+
+### Q20: What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor? ^t40q20
+- A) Reflex
+- B) Reduction
+- C) Coherence
+- D) Virulence
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a reflex is defined as an involuntary, rapid, and stereotyped neural response to a specific stimulus, mediated through a reflex arc without requiring conscious thought. B is wrong because reduction is a general term meaning decrease, not a physiological response. C is wrong because coherence refers to logical consistency or connectedness. D is wrong because virulence describes the severity or harmfulness of a pathogen, not a nervous system reaction.
+
+### Q21: Which is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency? ^t40q21
+- A) Critical nervous system
+- B) Compliant nervous system
+- C) Autonomic nervous system
+- D) Automatical nervous system
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulates involuntary body functions including heart rate, breathing, digestion, and glandular activity through its sympathetic and parasympathetic branches. A is wrong because "critical nervous system" is not a recognised anatomical term. B is wrong because "compliant nervous system" does not exist in medical terminology. D is wrong because the correct term is "autonomic," not "automatical" — though they sound similar, only C uses the proper medical designation.
+
+### Q22: Which is the parallax error? ^t40q22
+- A) Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision
+- B) A decoding error in communication between pilots
+- C) Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night
+- D) Misperception of speed during taxiing
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because parallax error occurs when an instrument is read from an oblique viewing angle rather than straight on, causing the pointer to appear displaced against the scale and producing a false reading. B is wrong because communication errors between pilots relate to encoding/decoding in the communication model, not instrument reading. C is wrong because age-related long-sightedness (presbyopia) is a refractive eye condition, not a parallax effect. D is wrong because speed misperception during taxiing is a visual illusion unrelated to instrument reading angles.
+
+### Q23: Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots? ^t40q23
+- A) No UV filter
+- B) Curved sidepiece
+- C) Unbreakable
+- D) Non-polarised
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because polarised lenses can render LCD displays and glass cockpit instruments unreadable by blocking the plane of light they emit, and they may also mask glare reflections from other aircraft or water surfaces that serve as important visual cues. A is wrong because UV protection is actually desirable for eye health at altitude, not something to avoid. B is wrong because curved sidepieces are a comfort feature, not a safety-critical characteristic. C is wrong because while durability is nice, it is not the aviation-specific concern that makes non-polarisation essential.
+
+### Q24: The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called… ^t40q24
+- A) Inner ear.
+- B) Eardrum.
+- C) Eustachian tube.
+- D) Cochlea.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the Eustachian tube (auditory tube) is the anatomical passage connecting the middle ear to the nasopharynx, allowing pressure equalisation during altitude changes by opening when you swallow or yawn. A is wrong because the inner ear contains the balance organs and cochlea but does not connect to the throat. B is wrong because the eardrum (tympanic membrane) is the boundary between the outer and middle ear. D is wrong because the cochlea is the spiral-shaped hearing organ within the inner ear.
+
+### Q25: In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment? ^t40q25
+- A) During a light and slow climb
+- B) The eustachien tube is blocked
+- C) All windows are completely closed
+- D) Breathing takes place using the mouth solely
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because when the Eustachian tube is blocked — typically due to a cold, sinus infection, or allergic swelling — air cannot flow between the middle ear and the throat, making pressure equalisation impossible and causing severe ear pain during altitude changes. A is wrong because a slow climb actually makes equalisation easier. C is wrong because window position has no effect on middle ear pressure; equalisation occurs internally through the Eustachian tube. D is wrong because mouth breathing does not prevent the Eustachian tube from functioning.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_1_25_fr.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..70ff596
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_1_25_fr.md
@@ -0,0 +1,249 @@
+### Q1: La majorité des accidents d'aviation sont causés par... ^t40q1
+- A) Des influences météorologiques.
+- B) Des défaillances humaines.
+- C) Des défaillances techniques.
+- D) Des influences géographiques.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car les analyses statistiques montrent régulièrement que 70 à 80 % des accidents d'aviation ont l'erreur humaine comme cause principale ou contributive, notamment le mauvais jugement, la perte de conscience situationnelle et une prise de décision inadéquate. A est faux car les conditions météorologiques sont un facteur contributif dans certains accidents mais représentent une part bien plus faible que l'erreur humaine. C est faux car les aéronefs modernes sont très fiables et les défaillances techniques ne causent qu'une minorité d'accidents. D est faux car les influences géographiques (terrain, obstacles) sont des facteurs environnementaux, non la cause d'accident dominante.
+
+### Q2: Le « modèle du fromage suisse » peut être utilisé pour expliquer... ^t40q2
+- A) L'état de préparation d'un pilote.
+- B) La solution optimale à un problème.
+- C) La procédure pour un atterrissage d'urgence.
+- D) La chaîne d'erreurs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car le modèle du fromage suisse de James Reason montre comment les accidents résultent d'une chaîne d'erreurs — plusieurs couches défensives (représentées comme des tranches de fromage) ont chacune des faiblesses (« trous »), et un accident ne se produit que lorsque ces trous s'alignent simultanément pour laisser un danger traverser toutes les barrières. A est faux car le modèle ne traite pas de la préparation ou de l'aptitude du pilote. B est faux car ce n'est pas un outil de résolution de problèmes. C est faux car il n'a rien à voir avec les procédures d'atterrissage d'urgence.
+
+### Q3: Quel est le pourcentage d'oxygène dans l'atmosphère à 6000 ft ? ^t40q3
+- A) 18,9 %
+- B) 21 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 12 %
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la composition des gaz atmosphériques reste constante à environ 21 % d'oxygène quelle que soit l'altitude — c'est la pression partielle de l'oxygène qui diminue à mesure que l'on monte, non le pourcentage. A est faux car 18,9 % ne correspond à aucune valeur atmosphérique standard. C est faux car 78 % est la proportion d'azote, non d'oxygène. D est faux car 12 % est bien en dessous de la fraction réelle d'oxygène à toute altitude dans l'atmosphère.
+
+### Q4: Quel est le pourcentage d'azote dans l'atmosphère ? ^t40q4
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 0,1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 1 %
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car l'azote constitue environ 78 % de l'atmosphère et reste physiologiquement inerte dans des conditions de vol normales, bien qu'il devienne pertinent dans la maladie de décompression après une plongée. A est faux car 21 % est la proportion d'oxygène. B est faux car 0,1 % est bien trop faible et ne correspond à aucun gaz atmosphérique majeur. D est faux car 1 % représente le total approximatif de tous les gaz traces combinés, non l'azote.
+
+### Q5: À quelle altitude la pression atmosphérique est-elle approximativement la moitié de la valeur au niveau de la mer (1013 hPa) ? ^t40q5
+- A) 5000 ft
+- B) 10 000 ft
+- C) 22 000 ft
+- D) 18 000 ft
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à environ 18 000 ft, la pression atmosphérique descend à environ 500 hPa, ce qui représente à peu près la moitié de la valeur standard au niveau de la mer de 1013,25 hPa, et cela signifie également que la pression partielle de l'oxygène est réduite de moitié. A est faux car à 5000 ft la pression est encore d'environ 843 hPa. B est faux car à 10 000 ft la pression est d'environ 700 hPa. C est faux car à 22 000 ft la pression est bien en dessous de la moitié de la valeur au niveau de la mer.
+
+### Q6: L'air est composé d'oxygène, d'azote et d'autres gaz. Quel est le pourcentage approximatif des autres gaz ? ^t40q6
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0,1 %
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car après l'oxygène (21 %) et l'azote (78 %), le 1 % restant est composé de gaz traces — principalement de l'argon (environ 0,93 %) avec de petites quantités de dioxyde de carbone, de néon et d'hélium. A est faux car 21 % est la proportion d'oxygène. C est faux car 78 % est la proportion d'azote. D est faux car 0,1 % est trop faible ; l'argon seul représente près de 1 %.
+
+### Q7: L'intoxication au monoxyde de carbone peut être causée par... ^t40q7
+- A) Peu de sommeil.
+- B) Une alimentation malsaine.
+- C) Le tabagisme.
+- D) L'alcool.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la fumée de cigarette contient du monoxyde de carbone (CO) provenant d'une combustion incomplète, et le CO se lie à l'hémoglobine avec environ 200 fois l'affinité de l'oxygène, réduisant la capacité de transport d'oxygène du sang. A est faux car le manque de sommeil provoque de la fatigue mais ne produit pas de CO. B est faux car une alimentation malsaine affecte la nutrition mais ne génère pas de CO. D est faux car l'alcool altère la fonction cognitive par un mécanisme différent sans rapport avec l'intoxication au CO.
+
+### Q8: Que signifie le terme « Red-out » ? ^t40q8
+- A) « Vision rouge » lors de charges g négatives
+- B) Éruption cutanée lors d'une maladie de décompression
+- C) Anémie causée par une blessure
+- D) Perception des couleurs faussée lors du lever et du coucher du soleil
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le red-out se produit lors de forces g négatives soutenues (comme dans une ressource négative ou une boucle inversée), qui forcent le sang vers la tête et les yeux, engorgant les vaisseaux sanguins rétiniens et créant un champ visuel teinté de rouge. B est faux car la maladie de décompression provoque des douleurs articulaires et une marbrure de la peau, non un champ visuel rouge. C est faux car l'anémie est une condition sanguine sans rapport avec les forces g. D est faux car le lever et le coucher du soleil affectent la couleur de la lumière ambiante, non une perturbation visuelle physiologique.
+
+### Q9: Lequel de ces éléments n'est PAS un symptôme d'hyperventilation ? ^t40q9
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Spasme
+- C) Troubles de la conscience
+- D) Fourmillements
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la cyanose (décoloration bleue de la peau et des lèvres) est causée par des niveaux d'oxygène sanguin faibles et est un signe d'hypoxie, non d'hyperventilation. L'hyperventilation augmente en réalité les niveaux d'oxygène sanguin tout en diminuant le CO2. B est faux comme choix de réponse car les spasmes musculaires (tétanie) sont un vrai symptôme d'hyperventilation en raison de l'alcalose. C est faux car des troubles de la conscience surviennent bien lors d'une hyperventilation sévère. D est faux car les fourmillements dans les extrémités et le visage sont l'un des premiers et des plus caractéristiques des symptômes d'hyperventilation.
+
+### Q10: Lequel de ces symptômes peut indiquer une hypoxie ? ^t40q10
+- A) Décoloration bleue des lèvres et des ongles
+- B) Marques bleues sur tout le corps
+- C) Crampes musculaires dans la région du haut du corps
+- D) Douleurs articulaires aux genoux et aux pieds
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la cyanose — la décoloration bleutée des lèvres, des extrémités des doigts et des lits unguéaux — est un signe clinique classique d'hypoxie causée par une proportion accrue d'hémoglobine désoxygénée dans le sang. B est faux car des marques bleues diffuses sur le corps évoquent des ecchymoses, non une carence en oxygène. C est faux car les crampes musculaires du haut du corps sont davantage associées à l'hyperventilation ou aux déséquilibres électrolytiques. D est faux car les douleurs articulaires aux genoux et aux pieds sont caractéristiques de la maladie de décompression, non de l'hypoxie.
+
+### Q11: Lequel des sens humains est le plus influencé par l'hypoxie ? ^t40q11
+- A) La perception visuelle (la vue)
+- B) La perception tactile (le toucher)
+- C) La perception olfactive (l'odorat)
+- D) La perception auditive (l'ouïe)
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la rétine a une demande en oxygène exceptionnellement élevée, ce qui en fait le premier sens à se dégrader dans des conditions hypoxiques — la vision nocturne peut se détériorer de manière notable dès 5000 ft. B est faux car le toucher est relativement résistant à une hypoxie légère. C est faux car l'odorat, bien qu'il puisse être affecté, n'est pas le sens le plus sensible à la privation d'oxygène. D est faux car l'ouïe est également moins affectée que la vision à altitude modérée.
+
+### Q12: À partir de quelle altitude le corps réagit-il généralement à la diminution de la pression atmosphérique ? ^t40q12
+- A) 10 000 pieds
+- B) 7 000 pieds
+- C) 12 000 pieds
+- D) 2 000 pieds
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car à environ 7 000 ft, le corps commence à montrer des réponses physiologiques mesurables à la pression partielle d'oxygène réduite, comme une augmentation de la fréquence cardiaque et du rythme respiratoire, bien qu'une personne en bonne santé puisse encore compenser. A est faux car à 10 000 ft la compensation est déjà bien engagée, ce n'est pas là qu'elle commence. C est faux car à 12 000 ft le corps a déjà du mal à compenser adéquatement. D est faux car à 2 000 ft la pression partielle d'oxygène est encore trop proche des valeurs au niveau de la mer pour déclencher des réponses physiologiques notables.
+
+### Q13: Quelle altitude marque la limite inférieure à laquelle le corps est incapable de compenser complètement les effets de la faible pression atmosphérique ? ^t40q13
+- A) 7 000 pieds
+- B) 5 000 pieds
+- C) 22 000 pieds
+- D) 12 000 pieds
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car au-dessus d'environ 12 000 ft, les mécanismes de compensation du corps — augmentation de la respiration et de la fréquence cardiaque — ne sont plus suffisants pour maintenir une saturation en oxygène sanguin adéquate, et les symptômes hypoxiques deviennent de plus en plus apparents. A est faux car à 7 000 ft le corps commence à compenser mais peut encore s'en sortir efficacement. B est faux car 5 000 ft est bien dans la plage où aucune compensation significative n'est nécessaire. C est faux car 22 000 ft est bien au-dessus du seuil auquel la compensation échoue — à cette altitude, la perte de conscience survient rapidement.
+
+### Q14: Quelle est la fonction des globules rouges (érythrocytes) ? ^t40q14
+- A) La coagulation sanguine
+- B) La régulation de la glycémie
+- C) La défense immunitaire
+- D) Le transport de l'oxygène
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les globules rouges contiennent de l'hémoglobine, une protéine riche en fer qui fixe l'oxygène dans les poumons et le délivre aux tissus de tout le corps, faisant d'eux le principal mécanisme de transport de l'oxygène. A est faux car la coagulation sanguine est la fonction des plaquettes (thrombocytes). B est faux car la régulation de la glycémie est contrôlée par le pancréas via l'insuline et le glucagon. C est faux car la défense immunitaire est la fonction des globules blancs (leucocytes).
+
+### Q15: Lequel de ces éléments assure la coagulation sanguine ? ^t40q15
+- A) Les capillaires des artères
+- B) Les globules rouges (érythrocytes)
+- C) Les globules blancs (leucocytes)
+- D) Les plaquettes sanguines (thrombocytes)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les plaquettes sanguines (thrombocytes) sont des fragments cellulaires qui s'agrègent aux sites de blessure et activent la cascade de coagulation pour former un caillot de fibrine, arrêtant le saignement. A est faux car les capillaires sont des vaisseaux sanguins, non des agents de coagulation. B est faux car les globules rouges transportent l'oxygène, ils ne participent pas à la coagulation. C est faux car les globules blancs sont responsables de la défense immunitaire, non de la coagulation sanguine.
+
+### Q16: Quelle est la fonction des globules blancs (leucocytes) ? ^t40q16
+- A) La défense immunitaire
+- B) La régulation de la glycémie
+- C) La coagulation sanguine
+- D) Le transport de l'oxygène
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car les globules blancs (leucocytes) sont les composants cellulaires du système immunitaire, responsables de l'identification et de la destruction des agents pathogènes, des substances étrangères et des cellules anormales. B est faux car la régulation de la glycémie est gérée par les hormones du pancréas. C est faux car la coagulation sanguine est le rôle des thrombocytes (plaquettes). D est faux car le transport de l'oxygène est assuré par les globules rouges (érythrocytes) via l'hémoglobine.
+
+### Q17: Quelle est la fonction des plaquettes sanguines (thrombocytes) ? ^t40q17
+- A) Le transport de l'oxygène
+- B) La défense immunitaire
+- C) La coagulation sanguine
+- D) La régulation de la glycémie
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car les thrombocytes (plaquettes) sont les principaux agents de l'hémostase — ils s'agrègent rapidement aux sites de blessure vasculaire et libèrent des substances chimiques qui déclenchent la cascade de coagulation, formant un caillot stable. A est faux car le transport de l'oxygène est la fonction des érythrocytes (globules rouges). B est faux car la défense immunitaire appartient aux leucocytes (globules blancs). D est faux car la régulation de la glycémie est une fonction hormonale du pancréas.
+
+### Q18: Lequel de ces éléments n'est PAS un facteur de risque d'hypoxie ? ^t40q18
+- A) Le don de sang
+- B) La plongée sous-marine
+- C) Les menstruations
+- D) Le tabagisme
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la plongée sous-marine est un facteur de risque pour la maladie de décompression (formation de bulles d'azote dans les tissus), non pour l'hypoxie — la plongée elle-même ne réduit pas la capacité de transport d'oxygène du sang. A est faux comme réponse car le don de sang réduit le nombre de globules rouges, diminuant directement la capacité de transport de l'oxygène. C est faux car des menstruations abondantes peuvent conduire à une anémie, qui réduit la capacité de transport de l'oxygène. D est faux car le tabagisme introduit du monoxyde de carbone qui se lie à l'hémoglobine, déplaçant l'oxygène.
+
+### Q19: Quelle est la réaction appropriée lorsqu'un passager se sent soudainement mal à l'aise en vol de croisière ? ^t40q19
+- A) Ajuster la température de la cabine et éviter une inclinaison excessive
+- B) Éviter la conversation et choisir une vitesse plus élevée
+- C) Allumer le chauffage et fournir des couvertures thermiques
+- D) Donner de l'oxygène supplémentaire et éviter les faibles facteurs de charge
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car ajuster la température de la cabine à un niveau confortable et réduire l'inclinaison minimise les causes les plus fréquentes d'inconfort du passager — l'inconfort thermique et la stimulation vestibulaire qui peut déclencher le mal de l'air. B est faux car éviter la conversation isole le passager et une vitesse plus élevée ne traite pas l'inconfort sous-jacent. C est faux car réchauffer un passager potentiellement surchauffé pourrait aggraver son état. D est faux car l'oxygène supplémentaire n'est pas la première réponse standard, et éviter les faibles facteurs de charge n'est pas la principale préoccupation.
+
+### Q20: Quel est le terme correct pour une réaction involontaire et stéréotypée d'un organisme à la stimulation d'un récepteur ? ^t40q20
+- A) Réflexe
+- B) Réduction
+- C) Cohérence
+- D) Virulence
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car un réflexe est défini comme une réponse neurale involontaire, rapide et stéréotypée à un stimulus spécifique, médiatisée par un arc réflexe sans nécessiter de pensée consciente. B est faux car la réduction est un terme général signifiant diminution, non une réponse physiologique. C est faux car la cohérence fait référence à la consistance logique ou à la connectivité. D est faux car la virulence décrit la sévérité ou la nocivité d'un agent pathogène, non une réaction du système nerveux.
+
+### Q21: Quel est le terme correct pour le système qui, entre autres, contrôle la respiration, la digestion et la fréquence cardiaque ? ^t40q21
+- A) Système nerveux critique
+- B) Système nerveux complaisant
+- C) Système nerveux autonome
+- D) Système nerveux automatique
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le système nerveux autonome (SNA) régule les fonctions corporelles involontaires notamment la fréquence cardiaque, la respiration, la digestion et l'activité glandulaire via ses branches sympathique et parasympathique. A est faux car « système nerveux critique » n'est pas un terme anatomique reconnu. B est faux car « système nerveux complaisant » n'existe pas en terminologie médicale. D est faux car le terme correct est « autonome », non « automatique » — bien qu'ils sonnent de manière similaire, seul C utilise la désignation médicale appropriée.
+
+### Q22: Qu'est-ce que l'erreur de parallaxe ? ^t40q22
+- A) Mauvaise interprétation des instruments causée par l'angle de vision
+- B) Une erreur de décodage dans la communication entre pilotes
+- C) Presbytie due au vieillissement, notamment la nuit
+- D) Mauvaise perception de la vitesse lors du roulage
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car l'erreur de parallaxe se produit lorsqu'un instrument est lu depuis un angle de vue oblique plutôt que directement en face, ce qui fait apparaître l'aiguille déplacée par rapport à l'échelle et produit une lecture erronée. B est faux car les erreurs de communication entre pilotes sont liées au codage/décodage dans le modèle de communication, non à la lecture d'instruments. C est faux car la presbytie liée à l'âge (presbyopie) est une condition de réfraction oculaire, non un effet de parallaxe. D est faux car la mauvaise perception de la vitesse lors du roulage est une illusion visuelle sans rapport avec les angles de lecture des instruments.
+
+### Q23: Quelle caractéristique est importante lors du choix de lunettes de soleil utilisées par les pilotes ? ^t40q23
+- A) Absence de filtre UV
+- B) Branche courbée
+- C) Incassable
+- D) Non polarisé
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les lentilles polarisées peuvent rendre les écrans LCD et les instruments à verre cockpit illisibles en bloquant le plan de lumière qu'ils émettent, et elles peuvent également masquer les reflets d'éblouissement d'autres aéronefs ou de surfaces d'eau qui servent d'indices visuels importants. A est faux car la protection UV est en réalité souhaitable pour la santé des yeux en altitude, non quelque chose à éviter. B est faux car les branches courbées sont une caractéristique de confort, non une caractéristique critique pour la sécurité. C est faux car bien que la durabilité soit appréciable, ce n'est pas la préoccupation spécifique à l'aviation qui rend la non-polarisation essentielle.
+
+### Q24: La connexion entre l'oreille moyenne et la région du nez et de la gorge s'appelle... ^t40q24
+- A) L'oreille interne.
+- B) Le tympan.
+- C) La trompe d'Eustache.
+- D) La cochlée.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la trompe d'Eustache (trompe auditive) est le passage anatomique reliant l'oreille moyenne au nasopharynx, permettant l'équilibrage de la pression lors des changements d'altitude en s'ouvrant lorsque vous avalez ou bâillez. A est faux car l'oreille interne contient les organes de l'équilibre et la cochlée mais ne se connecte pas à la gorge. B est faux car le tympan est la frontière entre l'oreille externe et l'oreille moyenne. D est faux car la cochlée est l'organe auditif en forme de spirale à l'intérieur de l'oreille interne.
+
+### Q25: Dans quelle situation est-il IMPOSSIBLE d'effectuer une compensation de pression entre l'oreille moyenne et l'environnement ? ^t40q25
+- A) Lors d'une montée légère et lente
+- B) La trompe d'Eustache est bloquée
+- C) Toutes les fenêtres sont complètement fermées
+- D) La respiration se fait uniquement par la bouche
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car lorsque la trompe d'Eustache est bloquée — généralement en raison d'un rhume, d'une sinusite ou d'un gonflement allergique — l'air ne peut pas circuler entre l'oreille moyenne et la gorge, rendant impossible l'équilibrage de la pression et provoquant de vives douleurs aux oreilles lors des changements d'altitude. A est faux car une montée lente rend en réalité l'équilibrage plus facile. C est faux car la position des fenêtres n'a aucun effet sur la pression de l'oreille moyenne ; l'équilibrage se produit en interne via la trompe d'Eustache. D est faux car respirer par la bouche n'empêche pas la trompe d'Eustache de fonctionner.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_26_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_26_50.md
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+### Q26: Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of… ^t40q26
+- A) Starting a descent.
+- B) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- C) Starting a climb.
+- D) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because during a prolonged coordinated turn, the semicircular canal fluid adapts and stops signalling the turn; when the pilot levels the wings, the fluid movement creates a false signal interpreted as rotation in the opposite direction — this is the "leans" illusion. A is wrong because the illusion is one of lateral rotation, not vertical descent. C is wrong because there is no false climb sensation from levelling out of a turn. D is wrong because the adapted semicircular canals no longer signal the original turn direction upon recovery.
+
+### Q27: Which of these options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)? ^t40q27
+- A) Turbulence in level flight
+- B) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- C) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+- D) Head movements during turns
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no vestibular stimulation and no conflict between the visual and balance systems, so it cannot trigger motion sickness. A is wrong as an answer because turbulence creates unpredictable accelerations that stimulate the vestibular system and cause sensory conflict. C is wrong because alcohol changes the density of the endolymph fluid in the inner ear, amplifying sensory mismatches. D is wrong because head movements during turns provoke the Coriolis effect in the semicircular canals, a strong trigger for disorientation.
+
+### Q28: Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach? ^t40q28
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an upsloping runway appears shorter and steeper than a flat runway, tricking the pilot's visual system into perceiving a higher-than-actual approach angle, which leads to an instinctive descent below the correct glide slope — creating a dangerous undershoot risk. A is wrong because the illusion affects perceived height, not speed. B is wrong because it describes the opposite illusion (feeling too low) which would occur with a downsloping runway. C is wrong because speed perception is not the primary illusion created by runway slope.
+
+### Q29: What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope? ^t40q29
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) An overshoot
+- C) A landing beside the centerline
+- D) A hard landing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because this question asks about the impression (what the pilot perceives), not the actual outcome. An upsloping runway gives the visual illusion of being too high, so the pilot perceives an overshoot situation. A is wrong because although the pilot's corrective response to the false overshoot impression may actually cause an undershoot, the perceived impression itself is of overshooting. C is wrong because runway slope does not create lateral displacement illusions. D is wrong because the slope illusion affects perceived approach angle, not the perception of landing firmness.
+
+### Q30: The occurence of a vertigo is most probable when moving the head... ^t40q30
+- A) During a climb.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a descent.
+- D) During a turn.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because moving the head during a turn creates the Coriolis illusion — the semicircular canals are already stimulated by the turn, and adding a head rotation in a different plane simultaneously stimulates additional canals, producing an overwhelming and disorienting sensation of tumbling. A is wrong because a climb alone does not pre-load the semicircular canals the way a turn does. B is wrong because straight and level flight provides no existing vestibular stimulation to conflict with head movement. C is wrong because a descent, like a climb, does not produce the rotational vestibular loading that makes the Coriolis effect so severe.
+
+### Q31: A Grey-out is the result of… ^t40q31
+- A) Hypoxia.
+- B) Positive g-forces.
+- C) Hyperventilation.
+- D) Tiredness.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because grey-out occurs when positive g-forces pull blood away from the head toward the lower body, reducing blood pressure in the retinal arteries and causing progressive loss of colour vision and peripheral vision before full blackout. A is wrong because although hypoxia also affects vision, grey-out specifically refers to the g-force-induced phenomenon. C is wrong because hyperventilation causes tingling and spasms from CO2 depletion, not the characteristic grey visual field. D is wrong because tiredness causes fatigue and reduced alertness, not the acute visual symptoms of grey-out.
+
+### Q32: Visual illusions are mostly caused by… ^t40q32
+- A) Colour blindness.
+- B) Misinterpretation of the brain.
+- C) Rapid eye movements.
+- D) Binocular vision.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the brain actively constructs perception by interpreting sensory input based on prior experience and expectations, and when environmental cues are ambiguous or unusual — as is common in aviation — the brain's "best guess" can be dangerously wrong. A is wrong because colour blindness is a retinal condition affecting colour discrimination, not a cause of spatial or approach illusions. C is wrong because rapid eye movements (saccades) are normal visual behaviour, not a source of illusions. D is wrong because binocular vision actually improves depth perception and reduces illusions.
+
+### Q33: The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately… ^t40q33
+- A) 0.1 percent.
+- B) 0.3 percent.
+- C) 0.03 percent.
+- D) 0.01 percent.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the liver metabolises alcohol at a roughly constant rate of approximately 0.01% (0.1 per mille or 0.1 g/L) blood alcohol concentration per hour, regardless of body weight, food intake, or the type of drink consumed. A is wrong because 0.1% per hour is ten times the actual rate and would mean even heavy intoxication clears in a few hours. B is wrong because 0.3% per hour is thirty times too fast. C is wrong because 0.03% per hour is three times the actual rate.
+
+### Q34: Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes? ^t40q34
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because overweight and obesity — particularly excess visceral fat — are the strongest modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes due to the insulin resistance they cause, and diabetes is a significant concern in aviation medicine because of the risk of hypoglycaemic episodes impairing pilot performance. A is wrong because although sleep deficiency affects general health, it is not a primary risk factor for diabetes. C is wrong because smoking is primarily a cardiovascular and respiratory risk factor. D is wrong because moderate alcohol consumption is not a leading cause of diabetes.
+
+### Q35: A risk factor for decompression sickness is… ^t40q35
+- A) Sports.
+- B) 100 % oxygen after decompression.
+- C) Scuba diving prior to flight.
+- D) Smoking.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because scuba diving causes nitrogen to dissolve into body tissues under high ambient pressure, and if the diver flies before adequate off-gassing time (typically 12-24 hours), the reduced cabin pressure causes dissolved nitrogen to form painful and dangerous bubbles in tissues and blood. A is wrong because normal sporting activity does not load tissues with dissolved nitrogen. B is wrong because breathing 100% oxygen after decompression actually accelerates nitrogen elimination and is a treatment measure. D is wrong because smoking impairs oxygen transport but does not cause nitrogen saturation.
+
+### Q36: Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory? ^t40q36
+- A) It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because George Miller's classic research established that short-term (working) memory can hold approximately 7 plus or minus 2 chunks of information for about 10-20 seconds without active rehearsal, which is why pilots must write down ATC clearances and frequencies immediately. A is wrong because both the capacity (10 items) and duration (30-60 seconds) are overstated. B is wrong because the capacity is understated and the duration is too long. D is wrong because both values are too small — the brain can hold more than 3 items.
+
+### Q37: For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information? ^t40q37
+- A) 35 to 50 seconds
+- B) 3 to 7 seconds
+- C) 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because unrehearsed information in short-term memory decays within approximately 10-20 seconds, which is why aviation procedures emphasise immediate read-back of clearances and writing down critical information. A is wrong because 35-50 seconds significantly overestimates the retention time without rehearsal. B is wrong because 3-7 seconds is too short — even unrehearsed memory lasts somewhat longer. D is wrong because 30-40 seconds exceeds the actual decay time for passively stored items.
+
+### Q38: What is a latent error? ^t40q38
+- A) An error which has an immediate effect on the controls
+- B) An error which only has consequences after landing
+- C) An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously
+- D) An error which stays undetected in the system for a long time
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because in James Reason's error model, latent errors are hidden failures embedded in the system — such as poor design, inadequate procedures, or organisational shortcuts — that remain dormant and undetected until they combine with an active error to cause an incident or accident. A is wrong because an error with immediate effect on controls is an active error, not a latent one. B is wrong because latent errors are defined by their hidden nature, not their timing relative to landing. C is wrong because conscious, deliberate errors are violations, not latent conditions.
+
+### Q39: The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called… ^t40q39
+- A) Constant flight check.
+- B) Situational thinking.
+- C) Situational awareness.
+- D) Anticipatory check procedure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because situational awareness (SA), as defined by Mica Endsley, is the continuous process of perceiving elements in the environment, comprehending their meaning, and projecting their future state — it is the foundation of sound aeronautical decision-making. A is wrong because "constant flight check" is not a recognised human factors term. B is wrong because "situational thinking" is not the standard terminology used in aviation psychology. D is wrong because "anticipatory check procedure" describes a proactive checklist approach, not the overarching mental model of the flight environment.
+
+### Q40: Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured? ^t40q40
+- A) By the use of proper headsets
+- B) By the use of radio phraseology
+- C) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+- D) By a particular frequency allocation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because standardised ICAO radiotelephony phraseology ensures that both sender and receiver share the same unambiguous "code" with pre-defined meanings, minimising the risk of miscommunication in the communication model. A is wrong because headsets improve audio clarity but do not standardise the language or coding of the message. C is wrong because certified radios ensure signal quality, not message coding. D is wrong because frequency allocation manages traffic separation, not the shared understanding of words and phrases.
+
+### Q41: In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately? ^t40q41
+- A) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- B) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- C) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+- D) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the four standard risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the hazard entirely), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift the risk to another party such as through insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge residual risk when it falls within acceptable limits). B is wrong because "ignore" and "palliate" are not recognised risk management strategies. C is wrong because ignoring risk is never acceptable in aviation, and "extrude" is not a risk management term. D is wrong because neither "extrude" nor "palliate" are legitimate risk management strategies.
+
+### Q42: Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks? ^t40q42
+- A) During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast
+- B) During check flights due to a high level of nervousness
+- C) Due to group-dynamic effects
+- D) If there is not enough information available
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because group dynamics can cause "risky shift" — a well-documented phenomenon where groups tend to accept bolder, riskier decisions than individuals would alone, driven by social pressure, conformity, and diffusion of responsibility. A is wrong because excellent weather actually reduces risk and does not push pilots toward accepting higher risks. B is wrong because nervousness during check flights typically makes pilots more cautious, not more risk-accepting. D is wrong because insufficient information usually promotes caution or deferral rather than acceptance of higher risk.
+
+### Q43: Which dangerous attitudes are often combined? ^t40q43
+- A) Self-abandonment and macho
+- B) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude ("I can handle anything") and invulnerability ("it won't happen to me") frequently occur together, as both stem from overconfidence and underestimation of personal risk. A is wrong because self-abandonment (resignation) is the opposite of macho — a resigned pilot gives up, while a macho pilot takes on too much. B is wrong because invulnerability and resignation are contradictory mindsets. D is wrong because impulsivity and carefulness are opposites and cannot logically coexist as a combined dangerous attitude.
+
+### Q44: What is an indication for a macho attitude? ^t40q44
+- A) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- B) Careful walkaround procedure
+- C) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- D) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude is defined by the need to demonstrate daring and skill, often to an audience, and performing risky manoeuvres to impress spectators is a textbook example — the pilot prioritises ego over safety. A is wrong because quick resignation describes the resignation (self-abandonment) hazardous attitude, the opposite of macho. B is wrong because a careful walkaround is a sign of professionalism, not any hazardous attitude. D is wrong because comprehensive risk assessment reflects sound aeronautical decision-making, not a hazardous attitude.
+
+### Q45: Which factor can lead to human error? ^t40q45
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) Double check of relevant actions
+- C) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because confirmation bias — the tendency to perceive and interpret information in a way that confirms pre-existing expectations — is a major source of human error, leading pilots to misread instruments, overlook abnormalities, or misidentify visual references. A is wrong because proper checklist use is a countermeasure against error, not a cause. B is wrong because double-checking is an error-trapping technique. D is wrong because healthy doubt and questioning ambiguous information is a protective behaviour that reduces error.
+
+### Q46: Which is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot? ^t40q46
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Extroverted - stable
+- C) Extroverted - unstable
+- D) Introverted - unstable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because extroversion supports effective communication, assertiveness, and crew coordination essential for CRM, while emotional stability ensures the pilot remains calm, consistent, and rational under pressure. A is wrong because although stability is positive, introversion can hinder the assertive communication and teamwork skills needed in cockpit environments. C is wrong because emotional instability leads to erratic performance and overreaction under stress. D is wrong because both introversion and instability are disadvantageous for the demands of piloting.
+
+### Q47: Complacency is a risk due to… ^t40q47
+- A) Better training options for young pilots.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Increased cockpit automation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because as cockpit automation becomes more sophisticated and reliable, pilots tend to reduce their active monitoring, lose vigilance, and allow their manual flying skills to degrade — this is automation complacency, and it becomes critically dangerous when the automation fails unexpectedly. A is wrong because better training options should reduce complacency, not cause it. B is wrong because unreliable systems would actually increase vigilance, not reduce it. C is wrong because a high human error rate is a general human factors issue, not the specific cause of complacency.
+
+### Q48: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q48
+
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (Point B) because on the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve, Point B sits at the peak where moderate arousal produces maximum performance. A is wrong because Point D represents excessive arousal where performance has collapsed due to overwhelming stress. B is wrong because Point C is past the optimal peak, in the declining performance zone. D is wrong because Point A represents too little arousal (boredom, under-stimulation), where performance suffers from lack of alertness and motivation.
+
+### Q49: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q49
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point C
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (Point D) because it lies at the far right of the Yerkes-Dodson curve where excessive arousal causes performance to collapse — the pilot is overstrained, experiencing cognitive overload, tunnel vision, and potentially panic. A is wrong because Point B is the optimal arousal level with peak performance. C is wrong because Point C, while past optimal, still represents declining but not yet collapsed performance. D is wrong because Point A represents under-arousal (boredom), the opposite of being overstrained.
+
+### Q50: Which of these qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory ^t40q50
+- A) 1
+- B) .1, 2, 3
+- C) 1, 2, 3, 4
+- D) .2, 4
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because stress affects all four cognitive functions: attention narrows (tunnel vision), concentration becomes fragmented, responsiveness changes (initially faster then degraded under extreme stress), and memory — especially working memory encoding and retrieval — is impaired by elevated cortisol. A is wrong because it only includes attention, ignoring the effects on concentration, responsiveness, and memory. B is wrong because it excludes memory, which is significantly affected. D is wrong because it omits attention and responsiveness, both of which are demonstrably impacted by stress.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_26_50_fr.md
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+### Q26 : Retrouver les ailes à plat après une longue période en virage peut donner l'impression de... ^t40q26
+- A) Commencer une descente.
+- B) Virer dans la direction opposée.
+- C) Commencer une montée.
+- D) Virer toujours dans la même direction qu'avant.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car lors d'un virage coordonné prolongé, le liquide des canaux semi-circulaires s'adapte et cesse de signaler le virage ; lorsque le pilote remet les ailes à plat, le mouvement du liquide crée un faux signal interprété comme une rotation dans la direction opposée — c'est l'illusion des « inclinaisons ». A est fausse car l'illusion est une rotation latérale, pas une descente verticale. C est fausse car il n'y a pas de fausse sensation de montée lors du rétablissement d'un virage. D est fausse car les canaux semi-circulaires adaptés ne signalent plus la direction originale du virage lors du rétablissement.
+
+### Q27 : Laquelle de ces options ne stimule PAS le mal de l'air (désorientation) ? ^t40q27
+- A) Turbulence en vol en palier.
+- B) Vol rectiligne en palier sans accélération.
+- C) Vol sous l'influence de l'alcool.
+- D) Mouvements de la tête en virage.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car le vol rectiligne en palier sans accélération ne produit aucune stimulation vestibulaire et aucun conflit entre les systèmes visuel et de l'équilibre, donc il ne peut pas déclencher le mal de l'air. A est fausse comme réponse car la turbulence crée des accélérations imprévisibles qui stimulent le système vestibulaire et provoquent des conflits sensoriels. C est fausse car l'alcool modifie la densité du liquide endolymphatique dans l'oreille interne, amplifiant les mauvaises correspondances sensorielles. D est fausse car les mouvements de la tête en virage provoquent l'effet Coriolis dans les canaux semi-circulaires, un puissant déclencheur de désorientation.
+
+### Q28 : Quelle illusion optique peut être causée par une piste avec une montée de terrain lors de l'approche ? ^t40q28
+- A) Le pilote a l'impression que l'approche est trop rapide et réduit la vitesse en dessous de la vitesse d'approche normale.
+- B) Le pilote a l'impression que l'approche est trop basse et aborde donc la piste au-dessus de la pente d'approche normale.
+- C) Le pilote a l'impression que l'approche est trop lente et accélère au-dessus de la vitesse d'approche normale.
+- D) Le pilote a l'impression que l'approche est trop haute et descend donc en dessous de la pente d'approche normale.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car une piste en montée paraît plus courte et plus raide qu'une piste plate, trompant le système visuel du pilote qui perçoit un angle d'approche plus élevé que la réalité, ce qui le pousse instinctivement à descendre en dessous de la pente d'approche correcte — créant un risque d'atterrissage court dangereux. A est fausse car l'illusion affecte la hauteur perçue, pas la vitesse. B est fausse car elle décrit l'illusion opposée (sentiment d'être trop bas) qui se produirait avec une piste en descente. C est fausse car la perception de la vitesse n'est pas l'illusion principale créée par la pente de piste.
+
+### Q29 : Quelle impression peut être causée lors de l'approche d'une piste en montée ? ^t40q29
+- A) Un atterrissage court.
+- B) Un atterrissage long.
+- C) Un atterrissage à côté de l'axe.
+- D) Un atterrissage dur.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car cette question porte sur l'impression (ce que le pilote perçoit), pas sur le résultat réel. Une piste en montée donne l'illusion visuelle d'être trop haut, donc le pilote perçoit une situation d'atterrissage long. A est fausse car bien que la réaction corrective du pilote à la fausse impression d'atterrissage long puisse en réalité provoquer un atterrissage court, l'impression perçue elle-même est d'atterrissage long. C est fausse car la pente de piste ne crée pas d'illusions de déplacement latéral. D est fausse car l'illusion de pente affecte l'angle d'approche perçu, pas la perception de la dureté de l'atterrissage.
+
+### Q30 : L'apparition d'un vertige est la plus probable lorsqu'on bouge la tête... ^t40q30
+- A) Pendant une montée.
+- B) Pendant un vol rectiligne horizontal.
+- C) Pendant une descente.
+- D) Pendant un virage.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car bouger la tête pendant un virage crée l'illusion de Coriolis — les canaux semi-circulaires sont déjà stimulés par le virage, et ajouter une rotation de la tête dans un plan différent stimule simultanément des canaux supplémentaires, produisant une sensation écrasante et désorientante de basculement. A est fausse car une montée seule ne précharge pas les canaux semi-circulaires comme le fait un virage. B est fausse car le vol rectiligne en palier ne fournit aucune stimulation vestibulaire existante susceptible de confluer avec le mouvement de la tête. C est fausse car une descente, comme une montée, ne produit pas la charge vestibulaire rotationnelle qui rend l'effet Coriolis si sévère.
+
+### Q31 : Un grey-out est le résultat de... ^t40q31
+- A) Hypoxie.
+- B) Forces g positives.
+- C) Hyperventilation.
+- D) Fatigue.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car le grey-out survient lorsque des forces g positives repoussent le sang loin de la tête vers la partie inférieure du corps, réduisant la pression artérielle dans les artères rétiniennes et provoquant une perte progressive de la vision des couleurs puis de la vision périphérique avant le blackout complet. A est fausse car bien que l'hypoxie affecte également la vision, le grey-out désigne spécifiquement le phénomène induit par les forces g. C est fausse car l'hyperventilation provoque des picotements et des spasmes dus à la déplétion en CO2, pas le champ visuel grisâtre caractéristique. D est fausse car la fatigue provoque une baisse de la vigilance et de l'attention, pas les symptômes visuels aigus du grey-out.
+
+### Q32 : Les illusions visuelles sont principalement causées par... ^t40q32
+- A) Le daltonisme.
+- B) La mauvaise interprétation du cerveau.
+- C) Les mouvements rapides des yeux.
+- D) La vision binoculaire.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car le cerveau construit activement la perception en interprétant les informations sensorielles sur la base de l'expérience antérieure et des attentes, et lorsque les repères environnementaux sont ambigus ou inhabituels — comme c'est fréquent en aviation — la « meilleure estimation » du cerveau peut être dangereusement erronée. A est fausse car le daltonisme est une affection rétinienne affectant la discrimination des couleurs, pas une cause d'illusions spatiales ou d'approche. C est fausse car les mouvements oculaires rapides (saccades) sont un comportement visuel normal, pas une source d'illusions. D est fausse car la vision binoculaire améliore en réalité la perception de la profondeur et réduit les illusions.
+
+### Q33 : La diminution moyenne du taux d'alcoolémie pour un adulte en une heure est d'environ... ^t40q33
+- A) 0,1 pour cent.
+- B) 0,3 pour cent.
+- C) 0,03 pour cent.
+- D) 0,01 pour cent.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car le foie métabolise l'alcool à un taux à peu près constant d'environ 0,01 % (0,1 pour mille ou 0,1 g/L) de concentration d'alcool dans le sang par heure, indépendamment du poids corporel, de l'apport alimentaire ou du type de boisson consommée. A est fausse car 0,1 % par heure est dix fois le taux réel. B est fausse car 0,3 % par heure est trente fois trop rapide. C est fausse car 0,03 % par heure est trois fois le taux réel.
+
+### Q34 : Quelle réponse indique un facteur de risque pour le diabète ? ^t40q34
+- A) Manque de sommeil.
+- B) Surpoids.
+- C) Tabagisme.
+- D) Consommation d'alcool.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car le surpoids et l'obésité — en particulier l'excès de graisse viscérale — sont les facteurs de risque modifiables les plus importants pour le diabète de type 2 en raison de la résistance à l'insuline qu'ils provoquent, et le diabète est une préoccupation majeure en médecine aéronautique en raison du risque d'épisodes hypoglycémiques altérant les performances du pilote. A est fausse car bien que le manque de sommeil affecte la santé générale, ce n'est pas un facteur de risque principal pour le diabète. C est fausse car le tabagisme est principalement un facteur de risque cardiovasculaire et respiratoire. D est fausse car la consommation modérée d'alcool n'est pas une cause principale de diabète.
+
+### Q35 : Un facteur de risque pour la maladie de décompression est... ^t40q35
+- A) La pratique sportive.
+- B) L'oxygène à 100 % après décompression.
+- C) La plongée sous-marine avant un vol.
+- D) Le tabagisme.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car la plongée sous-marine entraîne la dissolution d'azote dans les tissus corporels sous haute pression ambiante, et si le plongeur prend l'avion avant un temps de dégazage suffisant (généralement 12 à 24 heures), la pression réduite en cabine provoque la formation de bulles d'azote douloureuses et dangereuses dans les tissus et le sang. A est fausse car l'activité sportive normale ne sature pas les tissus en azote dissous. B est fausse car respirer de l'oxygène pur après une décompression accélère en réalité l'élimination de l'azote et constitue une mesure thérapeutique. D est fausse car le tabagisme altère le transport d'oxygène mais ne provoque pas de saturation en azote.
+
+### Q36 : Quelle affirmation est correcte concernant la mémoire à court terme ? ^t40q36
+- A) Elle peut stocker 10 (±5) éléments pendant 30 à 60 secondes.
+- B) Elle peut stocker 5 (±2) éléments pendant 1 à 2 minutes.
+- C) Elle peut stocker 7 (±2) éléments pendant 10 à 20 secondes.
+- D) Elle peut stocker 3 (±1) éléments pendant 5 à 10 secondes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car les recherches classiques de George Miller ont établi que la mémoire à court terme (de travail) peut contenir environ 7 plus ou moins 2 unités d'information pendant environ 10 à 20 secondes sans répétition active, ce qui explique pourquoi les pilotes doivent noter immédiatement les autorisations ATC et les fréquences. A est fausse car la capacité (10 éléments) et la durée (30–60 secondes) sont surestimées. B est fausse car la capacité est sous-estimée et la durée est trop longue. D est fausse car les deux valeurs sont trop petites — le cerveau peut retenir plus de 3 éléments.
+
+### Q37 : Pendant combien de temps approximatif la mémoire à court terme peut-elle stocker des informations ? ^t40q37
+- A) 35 à 50 secondes.
+- B) 3 à 7 secondes.
+- C) 10 à 20 secondes.
+- D) 30 à 40 secondes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car les informations non répétées en mémoire à court terme se dégradent en environ 10 à 20 secondes, ce qui explique pourquoi les procédures aéronautiques insistent sur la lecture immédiate des autorisations et la prise de notes. A est fausse car 35 à 50 secondes surestime considérablement le temps de rétention sans répétition. B est fausse car 3 à 7 secondes est trop court — même la mémoire passive dure un peu plus longtemps. D est fausse car 30 à 40 secondes dépasse le temps réel de dégradation des éléments stockés passivement.
+
+### Q38 : Qu'est-ce qu'une erreur latente ? ^t40q38
+- A) Une erreur qui a un effet immédiat sur les commandes.
+- B) Une erreur qui n'a de conséquences qu'après l'atterrissage.
+- C) Une erreur commise activement et consciemment par le pilote.
+- D) Une erreur qui reste non détectée dans le système pendant longtemps.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car dans le modèle d'erreur de James Reason, les erreurs latentes sont des défaillances cachées intégrées dans le système — comme une mauvaise conception, des procédures inadéquates ou des raccourcis organisationnels — qui restent dormantes et non détectées jusqu'à ce qu'elles se combinent avec une erreur active pour provoquer un incident ou un accident. A est fausse car une erreur à effet immédiat sur les commandes est une erreur active, pas une erreur latente. B est fausse car les erreurs latentes sont définies par leur nature cachée, pas par leur moment par rapport à l'atterrissage. C est fausse car les erreurs conscientes et délibérées sont des violations, pas des conditions latentes.
+
+### Q39 : Le processus continu de surveillance de la situation de vol actuelle s'appelle... ^t40q39
+- A) Contrôle de vol continu.
+- B) Pensée situationnelle.
+- C) Conscience situationnelle.
+- D) Procédure de vérification anticipative.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car la conscience situationnelle (SA), telle que définie par Mica Endsley, est le processus continu consistant à percevoir les éléments de l'environnement, à comprendre leur signification et à projeter leur état futur — c'est le fondement d'une prise de décision aéronautique saine. A est fausse car « contrôle de vol continu » n'est pas un terme reconnu en facteurs humains. B est fausse car « pensée situationnelle » n'est pas la terminologie standard utilisée en psychologie aéronautique. D est fausse car « procédure de vérification anticipative » décrit une approche de check-list proactive, pas le modèle mental global de l'environnement de vol.
+
+### Q40 : Concernant le modèle de communication, comment peut-on garantir l'utilisation du même code lors des communications radio ? ^t40q40
+- A) Par l'utilisation de casques appropriés.
+- B) Par l'utilisation de la phraséologie radio.
+- C) En utilisant uniquement des radios certifiées pour usage aéronautique.
+- D) Par une allocation de fréquences particulière.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car la phraséologie radioélectrique standardisée de l'OACI garantit que l'émetteur et le récepteur partagent le même « code » non ambigu avec des significations prédéfinies, minimisant le risque de mauvaise communication dans le modèle de communication. A est fausse car les casques améliorent la clarté audio mais ne standardisent pas le langage ni le codage du message. C est fausse car les radios certifiées garantissent la qualité du signal, pas le codage du message. D est fausse car l'allocation de fréquences gère la séparation du trafic, pas la compréhension partagée des mots et des phrases.
+
+### Q41 : De quelles différentes manières un risque peut-il être géré de façon appropriée ? ^t40q41
+- A) Éviter, réduire, transférer, accepter.
+- B) Éviter, ignorer, pallier, réduire.
+- C) Ignorer, accepter, transférer, extruder.
+- D) Extruder, éviter, pallier, transférer.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A car les quatre stratégies standard de gestion des risques sont : Éviter (éliminer entièrement le danger), Réduire (mettre en œuvre des contrôles pour diminuer la probabilité ou la gravité), Transférer (reporter le risque sur une autre partie par exemple via une assurance) et Accepter (reconnaître consciemment le risque résiduel lorsqu'il se situe dans des limites acceptables). B est fausse car « ignorer » et « pallier » ne sont pas des stratégies reconnues de gestion des risques. C est fausse car ignorer un risque n'est jamais acceptable en aviation, et « extruder » n'est pas un terme de gestion des risques. D est fausse pour les mêmes raisons.
+
+### Q42 : Dans quelles circonstances est-il plus probable d'accepter des risques plus élevés ? ^t40q42
+- A) Lors de la planification du vol lorsqu'un excellent temps est prévu.
+- B) Lors de vols de contrôle en raison d'un haut niveau de nervosité.
+- C) En raison d'effets de dynamique de groupe.
+- D) S'il n'y a pas suffisamment d'informations disponibles.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car la dynamique de groupe peut provoquer un « déplacement vers le risque » — un phénomène bien documenté où les groupes tendent à accepter des décisions plus audacieuses et risquées que les individus seuls, poussés par la pression sociale, la conformité et la dilution de la responsabilité. A est fausse car un excellent temps réduit en réalité les risques et ne pousse pas les pilotes à accepter des risques plus élevés. B est fausse car la nervosité lors des vols de contrôle rend généralement les pilotes plus prudents, pas plus enclins à prendre des risques. D est fausse car un manque d'informations encourage généralement la prudence ou le report plutôt que l'acceptation de risques plus élevés.
+
+### Q43 : Quelles attitudes dangereuses sont souvent combinées ? ^t40q43
+- A) Abdication et macho.
+- B) Invulnérabilité et abdication.
+- C) Macho et invulnérabilité.
+- D) Impulsivité et prudence.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car l'attitude macho (« je peux tout gérer ») et l'invulnérabilité (« ça ne peut pas m'arriver ») se manifestent fréquemment ensemble, car les deux découlent de la surconfiance et de la sous-estimation du risque personnel. A est fausse car l'abdication (résignation) est l'opposé du macho — un pilote résigné abandonne, tandis qu'un pilote macho prend trop sur lui. B est fausse car l'invulnérabilité et la résignation sont des états d'esprit contradictoires. D est fausse car l'impulsivité et la prudence sont des opposés et ne peuvent logiquement pas coexister comme attitude dangereuse combinée.
+
+### Q44 : Qu'est-ce qui indique une attitude macho ? ^t40q44
+- A) Une résignation rapide dans des situations complexes et critiques.
+- B) Une procédure de tour d'inspection minutieuse.
+- C) Des manœuvres de vol risquées pour impressionner des spectateurs au sol.
+- D) Une évaluation approfondie des risques face à des situations inconnues.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car l'attitude macho est définie par le besoin de démontrer audace et habileté, souvent devant un public, et exécuter des manœuvres risquées pour impressionner des spectateurs est un exemple typique — le pilote fait passer son ego avant la sécurité. A est fausse car la résignation rapide décrit l'attitude dangereuse de résignation (abdication), l'opposé du macho. B est fausse car un tour d'inspection minutieux est un signe de professionnalisme, pas d'une attitude dangereuse. D est fausse car une évaluation approfondie des risques reflète une prise de décision aéronautique saine, pas une attitude dangereuse.
+
+### Q45 : Quel facteur peut entraîner des erreurs humaines ? ^t40q45
+- A) L'utilisation correcte des check-lists.
+- B) La double vérification des actions pertinentes.
+- C) La tendance à voir ce que nous nous attendons à voir.
+- D) Être dans le doute si quelque chose paraît peu clair ou ambigu.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car le biais de confirmation — la tendance à percevoir et interpréter les informations d'une manière qui confirme les attentes préexistantes — est une source majeure d'erreur humaine, amenant les pilotes à mal lire des instruments, à ne pas remarquer des anomalies ou à identifier incorrectement des repères visuels. A est fausse car l'utilisation correcte des check-lists est une contre-mesure contre les erreurs, pas une cause. B est fausse car la double vérification est une technique de détection des erreurs. D est fausse car un doute sain et la remise en question des informations ambiguës est un comportement protecteur qui réduit les erreurs.
+
+### Q46 : Quelle est la meilleure combinaison de traits pour l'attitude et le comportement individuels d'un pilote ? ^t40q46
+- A) Introverti - stable.
+- B) Extraverti - stable.
+- C) Extraverti - instable.
+- D) Introverti - instable.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B car l'extraversion favorise la communication efficace, l'assertivité et la coordination d'équipage essentielles à la GRC, tandis que la stabilité émotionnelle garantit que le pilote reste calme, cohérent et rationnel sous pression. A est fausse car bien que la stabilité soit positive, l'introversion peut nuire aux compétences de communication assertive et de travail en équipe nécessaires dans les environnements de cockpit. C est fausse car l'instabilité émotionnelle conduit à des performances erratiques et à des réactions excessives sous stress. D est fausse car l'introversion et l'instabilité sont toutes deux désavantageuses pour les exigences de la conduite d'un aéronef.
+
+### Q47 : La complaisance est un risque dû à... ^t40q47
+- A) De meilleures options de formation pour les jeunes pilotes.
+- B) Au taux d'erreur élevé des systèmes techniques.
+- C) Au nombre élevé d'erreurs normalement commises par les humains.
+- D) À l'automatisation accrue du cockpit.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D car plus l'automatisation du cockpit devient sophistiquée et fiable, plus les pilotes tendent à réduire leur surveillance active, à perdre en vigilance et à laisser leurs compétences de pilotage manuel se dégrader — c'est la complaisance liée à l'automatisation, et elle devient dangereuse de façon critique lorsque l'automatisation tombe en panne de manière inattendue. A est fausse car de meilleures options de formation devraient réduire la complaisance, pas la provoquer. B est fausse car des systèmes peu fiables augmenteraient en réalité la vigilance, et non la réduire. C est fausse car un taux d'erreur humain élevé est une problématique générale de facteurs humains, pas la cause spécifique de la complaisance.
+
+### Q48 : Le niveau d'éveil idéal se situe à quel point du diagramme ? Voir figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Éveil / Stress ^t40q48
+
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C (Point B) car sur la courbe en U inversé de Yerkes-Dodson, le Point B se situe au sommet où un éveil modéré produit des performances maximales. A est fausse car le Point D représente un éveil excessif où les performances se sont effondrées sous un stress accablant. B est fausse car le Point C est après le sommet optimal, dans la zone de déclin des performances. D est fausse car le Point A représente un éveil trop faible (ennui, sous-stimulation) où les performances souffrent d'un manque de vigilance et de motivation.
+
+### Q49 : À quel point du diagramme un pilote se trouvera-t-il en état de surcharge ? Voir figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Éveil / Stress ^t40q49
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point C
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B (Point D) car il se situe à l'extrême droite de la courbe de Yerkes-Dodson où l'éveil excessif entraîne un effondrement des performances — le pilote est en surcharge, souffrant de surcharge cognitive, de vision en tunnel et potentiellement de panique. A est fausse car le Point B est le niveau d'éveil optimal avec des performances maximales. C est fausse car le Point C, bien que dépassant l'optimal, représente encore des performances déclinantes mais pas encore effondrées. D est fausse car le Point A représente un sous-éveil (ennui), l'opposé de la surcharge.
+
+### Q50 : Lesquelles de ces qualités sont influencées par le stress ? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Réactivité 4. Mémoire ^t40q50
+- A) 1
+- B) 1, 2, 3
+- C) 1, 2, 3, 4
+- D) 2, 4
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C car le stress affecte les quatre fonctions cognitives : l'attention se rétrécit (vision en tunnel), la concentration se fragmente, la réactivité change (initialement plus rapide puis dégradée sous stress extrême) et la mémoire — notamment l'encodage et le rappel en mémoire de travail — est altérée par le cortisol élevé. A est fausse car elle n'inclut que l'attention, ignorant les effets sur la concentration, la réactivité et la mémoire. B est fausse car elle exclut la mémoire, qui est significativement affectée. D est fausse car elle omet l'attention et la réactivité, qui sont toutes deux affectées de façon démontrée par le stress.
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+### Q51: The proportion of oxygen in the air at sea level is 21%. What is this percentage at an altitude of 5 km (16,400 ft)? ^t40q51
+- A) 5 %
+- B) 15 %
+- C) 10 %
+- D) 21 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere remains constant at approximately 21% regardless of altitude — what decreases with altitude is the total atmospheric pressure, and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen available for breathing. A, B, and C are all wrong because they suggest the percentage of oxygen itself changes with altitude, which is incorrect; the atmosphere maintains a homogeneous composition up to approximately 80 km.
+
+### Q52: The signs of oxygen deficiency… ^t40q52
+- A) are right away clearly noticeable.
+- B) can appear from as low as 4000 ft altitude.
+- C) appear in smokers at lower altitudes than in non-smokers.
+- D) consist of extreme difficulty in breathing (gasping for air).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because smokers already have elevated carboxyhaemoglobin levels from carbon monoxide binding to their red blood cells, effectively reducing their oxygen-carrying capacity even before flight, so hypoxic symptoms manifest at lower altitudes compared to non-smokers. A is wrong because hypoxia is insidious — symptoms develop gradually and the pilot often does not recognise them. B is wrong because 4,000 ft is generally too low for noticeable hypoxic effects in most people. D is wrong because gasping for air is not a typical hypoxia symptom; instead, early signs include impaired judgment and reduced night vision.
+
+### Q53: Carbon monoxide… ^t40q53
+- A) is a by-product of the chemical energy production in cells: tissue absorbs oxygen and releases carbon monoxide.
+- B) has a sweet smell and bitter taste. It is only harmful in very high doses.
+- C) is toxic and results from incomplete combustion, e.g. a leaking exhaust system in an aircraft or incomplete gas combustion in a hot air balloon.
+- D) is, together with oxygen and hydrogen, one of the most important elements present in the atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because carbon monoxide (CO) is a highly toxic gas produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-based fuels, and in aviation it can enter the cabin through leaking exhaust systems; it binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen. A is wrong because cells produce carbon dioxide (CO2) as a metabolic waste product, not carbon monoxide. B is wrong because CO is odourless, colourless, and tasteless, making it extremely dangerous even at low concentrations. D is wrong because CO is a trace gas, not one of the major atmospheric components.
+
+### Q54: How long does it generally take for the human eye to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q54
+- A) Approx. 30 minutes.
+- B) Approx. 1 hour.
+- C) Approx. 15 minutes.
+- D) Approx. 5 minutes.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because full dark adaptation requires approximately 30 minutes for the rod cells in the retina to reach maximum sensitivity through the regeneration of rhodopsin (visual purple), which is why pilots should avoid bright lights before night flying. B is wrong because one hour significantly overestimates the adaptation time. C is wrong because at 15 minutes the rods are only partially adapted and night vision is not yet at full capability. D is wrong because 5 minutes only allows for initial cone adaptation, not the complete rod-based dark adaptation needed for effective night vision.
+
+### Q55: Low blood pressure… ^t40q55
+- A) mainly causes problems at rest in a lying position.
+- B) can cause dizziness.
+- C) is a recurring problem in elderly smokers.
+- D) causes absolutely no problems.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because hypotension (low blood pressure) can cause dizziness, lightheadedness, and even fainting, particularly when changing posture (orthostatic hypotension), which poses a flight safety risk. A is wrong because low blood pressure mainly causes symptoms during posture changes (standing up), not while lying down. C is wrong because elderly smokers are more commonly affected by high blood pressure (hypertension), not low blood pressure. D is wrong because low blood pressure can certainly cause symptoms that impair pilot performance.
+
+### Q56: What symptom will most probably occur at 20,000 ft (6100 m) altitude without a pressurised cabin or oxygen equipment? ^t40q56
+- A) Loss of consciousness.
+- B) Altitude sickness with pulmonary oedema.
+- C) Dyspnoea.
+- D) Fever.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 20,000 ft without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness (TUC) is very short — typically only a few minutes — and rapid loss of consciousness follows due to severe hypoxia as the partial pressure of oxygen is far below what the body requires. B is wrong because pulmonary oedema develops over hours to days of high-altitude exposure, not during acute exposure. C is wrong because while shortness of breath may occur briefly, loss of consciousness is the most probable and dangerous outcome. D is wrong because fever is unrelated to altitude exposure.
+
+### Q57: When flying with a severe head cold, sharp pain can affect the sinuses. This pain occurs… ^t40q57
+- A) during descent.
+- B) with every notable change in flight altitude.
+- C) during climb.
+- D) during accelerations.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because during descent, external atmospheric pressure increases and trapped air within congested sinuses cannot equalise, creating a painful pressure differential — this is known as barosinusitis. B is wrong because while altitude changes in both directions can cause discomfort, descent is specifically the most problematic phase because the blocked sinuses cannot vent the increasing external pressure inward. C is wrong because during climb, expanding air within the sinuses can usually escape more easily, even through partially blocked passages. D is wrong because linear accelerations do not create the pressure differentials that cause sinus pain.
+
+### Q58: Which are the symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q58
+- A) High fever, vomiting, headache.
+- B) High fever, dizziness, watery diarrhoea.
+- C) Dizziness, sweating, nausea.
+- D) Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, headache.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the classic symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis) are dizziness, sweating, pallor, and nausea, which may progress to vomiting — all caused by a conflict between visual and vestibular sensory inputs. A is wrong because high fever is not a symptom of motion sickness; it indicates infection. B is wrong because neither high fever nor watery diarrhoea are associated with kinetosis. D is wrong because watery diarrhoea is a gastrointestinal symptom unrelated to vestibular-induced motion sickness.
+
+### Q59: During a normal approach to an unusually wide runway, one may have the impression that the approach is being made… ^t40q59
+- A) at too great a height.
+- B) at too high a speed.
+- C) at too low a speed.
+- D) at too low a height.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a runway wider than the pilot is accustomed to makes the visual perspective appear as though the aircraft is lower and closer than it actually is, creating the impression of being at too low a speed and too low a height — the pilot may then tend to fly the approach too high. A is wrong because the wide runway creates the opposite illusion — feeling too low, not too high. B is wrong because the illusion relates to perceived height and proximity, not excessive speed. D is wrong because feeling too low in height would be a consequence, but the question asks about speed impression, and C correctly captures the speed-related illusion.
+
+### Q60: Under positive g-forces, a greyout can occur which precedes blackout. Which organ is primarily affected by greyout? ^t40q60
+- A) The lungs.
+- B) The eyes.
+- C) The brain.
+- D) The muscles.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the eyes (specifically the retina) are the first organ to be affected by positive g-forces because retinal blood vessels are extremely sensitive to reduced blood pressure — the retina has the highest oxygen demand of any tissue, so when blood drains away under g-loading, vision degrades before consciousness is affected. A is wrong because the lungs continue to function under moderate g-forces. C is wrong because the brain loses function after the eyes — loss of consciousness (G-LOC) follows grey-out and blackout. D is wrong because muscles are not meaningfully affected by the blood pressure reduction that causes grey-out.
+
+### Q61: When a pilot scans the sky to detect the presence of other aircraft, he should… ^t40q61
+- A) try to take in the visible portion of the sky with large sweeping eye movements.
+- B) roll the eyes across as wide a field of vision as possible.
+- C) scan the sky sector by sector and let the eyes rest briefly on each sector.
+- D) take in the entire visible portion of the sky by moving the eyes as rapidly as possible.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Effective visual scanning requires dividing the sky into sectors and pausing briefly on each one, allowing the eyes to focus and detect movement or contrast changes that indicate other aircraft. Option A and Option D advocate rapid, sweeping eye movements that prevent the eye from fixating long enough to register a small target. Option B similarly relies on continuous rolling motion, which reduces detection probability. Only Option C describes the proven sector-by-sector technique recommended in human factors training.
+
+### Q62: Alcohol is eliminated at a rate of:... ^t40q62
+- A) 0.5 per mille per hour.
+- B) 0.3 per mille per hour.
+- C) 0.1 per mille per hour.
+- D) 1 per mille per hour.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human liver metabolises alcohol at a relatively constant rate of approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, regardless of the type of drink consumed or any attempted countermeasures such as coffee or exercise. Option A (0.5‰/h) and Option D (1‰/h) greatly overestimate the elimination rate, which could lead pilots to believe they are sober sooner than they actually are. Option B (0.3‰/h) is also too high. For SPL exam purposes, the standard value to remember is 0.1‰ per hour.
+
+### Q63: From the following factors, identify the one that increases the risk of heart attack:... ^t40q63
+- A) Lack of exercise.
+- B) Hypoglycaemia.
+- C) Undernutrition.
+- D) Cholesterol level too low.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sedentary lifestyle with insufficient physical activity is a well-established cardiovascular risk factor that increases the likelihood of heart attack. Option B (hypoglycaemia) is a metabolic condition primarily affecting energy supply to the brain, not a direct cardiac risk factor. Option C (undernutrition) and Option D (low cholesterol) are actually the opposite of known risk factors — it is overnutrition and high cholesterol that contribute to coronary artery disease. Regular exercise is one of the most effective protective measures against cardiovascular disease.
+
+### Q64: Amphetamine is a stimulant which in Switzerland can be obtained on prescription from pharmacies... ^t40q64
+- A) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours are allowed to take this medication to stay awake.
+- B) Pilots on duty may solely take this medication if accompanied by a qualified co-pilot.
+- C) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours should always have this medication at hand for moments of fatigue.
+- D) Due to its adverse effects, pilots on duty are not allowed to take this medication.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Amphetamines are strictly prohibited for pilots on duty because their adverse effects — including impaired judgment, overconfidence, risk-taking behaviour, and a crash of fatigue after the drug wears off — directly compromise flight safety. Option A and Option C suggest using amphetamines to combat fatigue during long flights, which is dangerous and illegal under aviation medical regulations. Option B implies that a co-pilot can mitigate the risk, but no crew arrangement makes stimulant use acceptable. The correct approach to fatigue is proper rest before flight, not pharmacological stimulation.
+
+### Q65: What is meant by "risk area awareness" in aviation? ^t40q65
+- A) Knowledge of accident rates during takeoff and landing.
+- B) The awareness that the aerodrome area where aircraft taxi ("risk area") is a dangerous zone.
+- C) Awareness of the potential hazards of the various phases of flight.
+- D) A procedure for preventing aviation accidents.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Risk area awareness refers to the pilot's conscious understanding that different phases of flight — takeoff, climb, cruise, descent, approach, and landing — each carry distinct hazards requiring specific vigilance. Option A is too narrow, focusing only on statistical accident rates rather than active awareness. Option B incorrectly interprets "risk area" as a physical location on the aerodrome. Option D describes risk area awareness as a procedure, but it is a mindset and competency, not a checklist or formal procedure. Effective risk area awareness allows the pilot to anticipate and mitigate threats proactively.
+
+### Q66: Several decision-making models are applied in aviation. A widely used model goes by the acronym "DECIDE". Which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q66
+- A) The first D stands for "Do" and means "Apply the best option".
+- B) The first D stands for "Detect" and means "Recognise that a change has occurred which requires attention".
+- C) The first E stands for "Evaluate" and means "Assess the consequences of one's actions".
+- D) DECIDE is a decision-making aid that must be applied in every in-flight decision situation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The DECIDE model follows the sequence: Detect, Estimate, Choose, Identify, Do, Evaluate. The first letter D stands for "Detect," meaning the pilot recognises that a change in the situation has occurred requiring a decision. Option A incorrectly assigns "Do" to the first D — "Do" is actually the fifth step, where the chosen course of action is implemented. Option C misplaces "Evaluate" as the first E, but the first E is "Estimate" (assess the significance of the change). Option D overstates the requirement — DECIDE is a helpful framework, not a mandatory procedure for every single decision.
+
+### Q67: Regarding typical hazardous attitudes, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q67
+- A) It is possible to recognise and correct one's own hazardous attitudes.
+- B) An anti-authority attitude is less dangerous than macho behaviour.
+- C) Inexperienced pilots are generally the only ones who behave dangerously.
+- D) Hazardous attitudes do not really exist because flight safety depends solely on the pilot's attention.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Human factors research identifies five hazardous attitudes — anti-authority, macho, invulnerability, resignation, and impulsivity — and demonstrates that pilots can learn to recognise these tendencies in themselves and apply corrective antidotes. Option B incorrectly ranks hazardous attitudes; all five are dangerous and none should be dismissed as less threatening. Option C wrongly limits dangerous behaviour to inexperienced pilots, when in fact experienced pilots can also exhibit complacency and overconfidence. Option D denies the existence of hazardous attitudes entirely, contradicting decades of aviation safety research.
+
+### Q68: Which of these statements correctly describes "selective attention"? ^t40q68
+- A) Selective attention is unavoidable in the cockpit to avoid distraction during checklist recitation.
+- B) Selective attention can lead the pilot to fail to notice an audible alarm even though it is perfectly audible.
+- C) Selective attention refers to an attitude where attention is focused on flight instruments when visibility conditions are poor.
+- D) Selective attention is a method for avoiding stress.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Selective attention is a cognitive phenomenon where concentrating intensely on one task causes the brain to filter out other stimuli, even obvious ones like a loud alarm. This is sometimes called "inattentional blindness" or "tunnel hearing." Option A confuses selective attention with a deliberate cockpit strategy, when it is actually an involuntary cognitive limitation. Option C describes instrument scan technique, not the psychological concept of selective attention. Option D incorrectly categorises it as a stress management method, when in fact selective attention under stress can be dangerous because critical warnings may go unnoticed.
+
+### Q69: Regarding stress, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q69
+- A) There is an optimal level of stress that even improves performance.
+- B) Under-stimulation causes no stress and has no negative effect on performance.
+- C) Stress in the cockpit improves the work rate.
+- D) Stress is only caused by brief overload.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law demonstrates that moderate stress (eustress) enhances alertness, focus, and performance, while too little or too much stress degrades it — forming an inverted-U curve. Option B is incorrect because under-stimulation (boredom) is itself a form of stress that reduces vigilance and increases error rates. Option C oversimplifies by suggesting all cockpit stress is beneficial, when excessive stress causes cognitive overload and poor decision-making. Option D wrongly limits stress to brief overload, ignoring chronic stress from fatigue, personal problems, or sustained workload.
+
+### Q70: The human internal clock… ^t40q70
+- A) has a cycle of roughly 25 hours.
+- B) has a cycle of roughly 20 hours.
+- C) is synchronised with the external clock and its cycle lasts exactly 24 hours.
+- D) has a cycle of roughly 30 hours.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Research on circadian rhythms shows that the human endogenous biological clock runs on a cycle of approximately 25 hours when isolated from external time cues such as daylight and social schedules. Daily exposure to light resets (entrains) this internal clock to the 24-hour day-night cycle. Option B (20 hours) and Option D (30 hours) are incorrect values. Option C is wrong because the internal clock does not naturally run at exactly 24 hours — it requires daily resynchronisation by environmental cues called Zeitgebers.
+
+### Q71: Which of the following measures is suitable for relieving the onset of motion sickness (kinetosis) in passengers? ^t40q71
+- A) move the head regularly
+- B) look through the windows
+- C) breathe fresh air
+- D) drink coffee
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Breathing fresh, cool air helps stabilise the autonomic nervous system and is one of the most effective immediate remedies for the onset of motion sickness. Option A (moving the head regularly) worsens symptoms by increasing conflicting vestibular stimulation. Option B (looking through the windows) can aggravate the sensory mismatch between visual and vestibular inputs in some individuals. Option D (drinking coffee) is a stimulant that can increase nausea and does not address the underlying vestibular conflict causing motion sickness.
+
+### Q72: During training, a pilot has mainly used narrow runways. What illusion will this pilot experience during a correct final approach to a flat, very wide runway? ^t40q72
+- A) the illusion that the runway slopes upward in the landing direction (upslope)
+- B) the illusion of being at a greater height above the runway than is actually the case
+- C) the illusion of being lower above the runway than is actually the case
+- D) the illusion that the runway first slopes upward (upslope) then downward (downslope)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot accustomed to narrow runways perceives a wide runway as being closer (lower) than it actually is because the wider visual angle tricks the brain into interpreting the scene as a nearer surface. This creates the dangerous illusion of being too low, which may cause the pilot to fly a higher approach than necessary and flare too high. Option A and Option D describe slope-related illusions unrelated to runway width. Option B describes the opposite illusion — the pilot feels lower, not higher. Understanding this visual trap is essential for safe approaches to unfamiliar aerodromes.
+
+### Q73: When are middle ear pressure equalization problems most probable to occur? ^t40q73
+- A) during a long flight at high altitude
+- B) during a rapid descent
+- C) during a long climb
+- D) during strong negative vertical accelerations
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems are most likely during rapid descent because the Eustachian tube must open to allow higher-pressure air from the throat into the middle ear cavity, which is physiologically more difficult than the reverse. During ascent, expanding air in the middle ear vents outward relatively easily. Option A (long high-altitude flight) maintains a constant cabin altitude and does not create pressure differentials. Option C (long climb) involves gradual pressure decrease that the ear handles well. Option D (negative g-forces) affects the vestibular system, not middle ear pressure.
+
+### Q74: The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere is 21% at sea level. How does it change at 5500 m? ^t40q74
+- A) it is one quarter of the sea level percentage
+- B) it is half the sea level percentage
+- C) it is double the sea level percentage
+- D) it is the same as at sea level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The composition of the atmosphere remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen and 78% nitrogen from sea level up to about 80 km altitude. What decreases with altitude is not the percentage of oxygen but the total atmospheric pressure, and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen available to the lungs. Option A and Option B incorrectly suggest that the proportion changes. Option C proposes an increase, which is also wrong. The key concept for pilots is that hypoxia at altitude results from reduced partial pressure, not from a change in oxygen percentage.
+
+### Q75: Which are the effects of inhaling carbon monoxide (from a defective exhaust system)? ^t40q75
+- A) even in low concentrations, this gas can cause total incapacitation
+- B) there are no harmful effects to fear as carbon monoxide is harmless
+- C) harmful effects are solely to be expected if the body is exposed to the gas for several hours
+- D) there are no harmful effects to fear as the body compensates for the reduced oxygen supply
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) binds to haemoglobin approximately 200 times more readily than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and drastically reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. Even very low concentrations can cause headaches, impaired judgment, and eventually total incapacitation or death. Option B and Option D dangerously dismiss CO as harmless — it is one of aviation's most insidious threats because it is colourless and odourless. Option C incorrectly suggests that only prolonged exposure is harmful, when in fact even brief exposure to moderate concentrations can be lethal.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_51_75_fr.md
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+### Q51 : La proportion d'oxygène dans l'air au niveau de la mer est de 21 %. Quel est ce pourcentage à une altitude de 5 km (16 400 ft) ? ^t40q51
+- A) 5 %
+- B) 15 %
+- C) 10 %
+- D) 21 %
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est D, car la proportion d'oxygène dans l'atmosphère reste constante à environ 21 % quelle que soit l'altitude. Ce qui diminue avec l'altitude, c'est la pression atmosphérique totale, et donc la pression partielle de l'oxygène disponible pour la respiration. Les réponses A, B et C sont incorrectes, car elles suggèrent que le pourcentage d'oxygène lui-même change avec l'altitude — ce qui est faux ; l'atmosphère conserve une composition homogène jusqu'à environ 80 km.
+
+### Q52 : Les signes d'un manque d'oxygène… ^t40q52
+- A) sont d'emblée nettement perceptibles.
+- B) peuvent apparaître dès 4000 ft d'altitude.
+- C) apparaissent chez les fumeurs à des altitudes moins élevées que chez les non-fumeurs.
+- D) consistent en une difficulté extrême à respirer (chercher son souffle).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C, car les fumeurs ont déjà des taux élevés de carboxyhémoglobine en raison de la fixation du monoxyde de carbone sur leurs globules rouges, ce qui réduit effectivement leur capacité à transporter l'oxygène même avant le vol. Les symptômes hypoxiques apparaissent donc à des altitudes plus basses que chez les non-fumeurs. A est incorrecte car l'hypoxie est insidieuse — les symptômes se développent progressivement et le pilote ne les reconnaît souvent pas. B est incorrecte car 4 000 ft est généralement trop bas pour des effets hypoxiques notables chez la plupart des gens. D est incorrecte car la difficulté à respirer n'est pas un symptôme typique de l'hypoxie ; les premiers signes comprennent plutôt une altération du jugement et une réduction de la vision nocturne.
+
+### Q53 : Le monoxyde de carbone… ^t40q53
+- A) est un sous-produit de la production chimique d'énergie dans les cellules : le tissu absorbe de l'oxygène et rejette du monoxyde de carbone.
+- B) a une odeur sucrée et un goût amer. Il n'est nocif qu'à très forte dose.
+- C) est toxique et résulte d'une combustion incomplète, par exemple un défaut d'étanchéité du circuit d'échappement d'un aéronef ou une combustion incomplète du gaz dans un ballon à air chaud.
+- D) est, avec l'oxygène et l'hydrogène, l'un des éléments les plus importants présents dans l'atmosphère.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C, car le monoxyde de carbone (CO) est un gaz très toxique produit par la combustion incomplète de combustibles carbonés ; en aviation, il peut pénétrer dans la cabine par des fuites dans le système d'échappement et se fixe à l'hémoglobine avec une affinité environ 200 fois supérieure à celle de l'oxygène. A est incorrecte car les cellules produisent du dioxyde de carbone (CO₂) comme déchet métabolique, et non du monoxyde de carbone. B est incorrecte car le CO est inodore, incolore et sans saveur, ce qui le rend extrêmement dangereux même à faible concentration. D est incorrecte car le CO est un gaz trace, et non l'un des principaux composants atmosphériques.
+
+### Q54 : Combien de temps faut-il généralement à l'œil humain pour s'adapter complètement à l'obscurité ? ^t40q54
+- A) Environ 30 minutes.
+- B) Environ 1 heure.
+- C) Environ 15 minutes.
+- D) Environ 5 minutes.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A, car l'adaptation complète à l'obscurité nécessite environ 30 minutes pour que les cellules en bâtonnets de la rétine atteignent leur sensibilité maximale grâce à la régénération de la rhodopsine (pourpre rétinien) — c'est pourquoi les pilotes doivent éviter les lumières vives avant un vol de nuit. B est incorrecte car une heure surestime considérablement la durée d'adaptation. C est incorrecte car à 15 minutes, les bâtonnets ne sont que partiellement adaptés et la vision nocturne n'est pas encore à sa pleine capacité. D est incorrecte car 5 minutes ne permettent que l'adaptation initiale des cônes, et non l'adaptation complète basée sur les bâtonnets nécessaire pour une vision nocturne efficace.
+
+### Q55 : Une pression artérielle basse… ^t40q55
+- A) pose principalement des problèmes au repos en position allongée.
+- B) peut provoquer des vertiges.
+- C) est un problème récurrent chez les fumeurs âgés.
+- D) ne cause absolument aucun problème.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B, car l'hypotension (pression artérielle basse) peut provoquer des vertiges, des étourdissements et même des évanouissements, notamment lors de changements de posture (hypotension orthostatique), ce qui représente un risque pour la sécurité des vols. A est incorrecte car la pression artérielle basse entraîne principalement des symptômes lors de changements de posture (en se levant), et non en position allongée. C est incorrecte car les fumeurs âgés sont plus fréquemment touchés par une pression artérielle élevée (hypertension), et non par une hypotension. D est incorrecte car une pression artérielle basse peut certes causer des symptômes qui altèrent les performances du pilote.
+
+### Q56 : Quel symptôme se produira très probablement à 20 000 ft (6 100 m) d'altitude sans cabine pressurisée ni équipement à oxygène ? ^t40q56
+- A) Perte de conscience.
+- B) Mal des montagnes avec œdème pulmonaire.
+- C) Dyspnée.
+- D) Fièvre.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A, car à 20 000 ft sans oxygène supplémentaire, le temps de conscience utile (TUC) est très court — généralement quelques minutes seulement — et une perte de conscience rapide s'ensuit en raison d'une hypoxie sévère, la pression partielle de l'oxygène étant bien en dessous des besoins de l'organisme. B est incorrecte car l'œdème pulmonaire se développe en quelques heures à plusieurs jours d'exposition en haute altitude, et non lors d'une exposition aiguë. C est incorrecte car si un essoufflement peut survenir brièvement, la perte de conscience est le résultat le plus probable et le plus dangereux. D est incorrecte car la fièvre n'est pas liée à l'exposition à l'altitude.
+
+### Q57 : Lors d'un vol avec un rhume intense, une douleur aiguë peut affecter les sinus. Cette douleur survient… ^t40q57
+- A) lors de la descente.
+- B) à chaque changement notable d'altitude.
+- C) lors de la montée.
+- D) lors d'accélérations.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est A, car lors de la descente, la pression atmosphérique extérieure augmente et l'air emprisonné dans les sinus congestionnés ne peut pas s'équilibrer, créant un différentiel de pression douloureux — c'est ce qu'on appelle la barosinusite. B est incorrecte car si des inconforts peuvent survenir dans les deux sens, la descente est spécifiquement la phase la plus problématique car les sinus bloqués ne peuvent pas compenser l'augmentation de la pression extérieure. C est incorrecte car lors de la montée, l'air en expansion dans les sinus peut généralement s'échapper plus facilement, même par des passages partiellement obstrués. D est incorrecte car les accélérations linéaires ne créent pas les différentiels de pression à l'origine des douleurs sinusales.
+
+### Q58 : Quels sont les symptômes du mal des transports (cinétose) ? ^t40q58
+- A) Forte fièvre, vomissements, maux de tête.
+- B) Forte fièvre, vertiges, diarrhée aqueuse.
+- C) Vertiges, transpiration, nausées.
+- D) Diarrhée aqueuse, vomissements, maux de tête.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C, car les symptômes classiques du mal des transports (cinétose) sont les vertiges, la transpiration, la pâleur et les nausées, pouvant évoluer vers des vomissements — tous causés par un conflit entre les entrées sensorielles visuelles et vestibulaires. A est incorrecte car une forte fièvre n'est pas un symptôme du mal des transports ; elle indique une infection. B est incorrecte car ni la forte fièvre ni la diarrhée aqueuse ne sont associées à la cinétose. D est incorrecte car la diarrhée aqueuse est un symptôme gastro-intestinal sans lien avec le mal des transports d'origine vestibulaire.
+
+### Q59 : Lors d'une approche normale vers une piste inhabituellement large, on peut avoir l'impression que l'approche se fait… ^t40q59
+- A) à une hauteur trop grande.
+- B) à une vitesse trop élevée.
+- C) à une vitesse trop faible.
+- D) à une hauteur trop faible.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est C, car une piste plus large que celle à laquelle le pilote est habitué donne l'impression visuelle que l'aéronef est plus bas et plus proche qu'il ne l'est réellement, créant l'impression d'une vitesse trop faible et d'une hauteur trop basse — le pilote peut alors avoir tendance à réaliser une approche trop haute. A est incorrecte car la piste large crée l'illusion inverse — une sensation de hauteur trop basse, et non trop haute. B est incorrecte car l'illusion concerne la hauteur et la proximité perçues, non la vitesse excessive. D est incorrecte car la sensation d'être trop bas en hauteur est une conséquence, mais la question porte sur l'impression de vitesse, et C capture correctement l'illusion liée à la vitesse.
+
+### Q60 : Sous l'effet de forces g positives, un « grayout » peut survenir, précédant le blackout. Quel organe est principalement affecté par le grayout ? ^t40q60
+- A) Les poumons.
+- B) Les yeux.
+- C) Le cerveau.
+- D) Les muscles.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte est B, car les yeux (et plus précisément la rétine) sont le premier organe affecté par les forces g positives : les vaisseaux rétiniens sont extrêmement sensibles à la baisse de pression sanguine, et la rétine présente la demande en oxygène la plus élevée de tous les tissus. Ainsi, lorsque le sang s'écoule sous l'effet des charges g, la vision se dégrade avant que la conscience ne soit altérée. A est incorrecte car les poumons continuent de fonctionner sous des forces g modérées. C est incorrecte car le cerveau perd ses fonctions après les yeux — la perte de conscience (G-LOC) survient après le grayout et le blackout. D est incorrecte car les muscles ne sont pas significativement affectés par la réduction de pression sanguine qui cause le grayout.
+
+### Q61 : Lorsqu'un pilote scrute le ciel pour détecter la présence d'autres aéronefs, il devrait… ^t40q61
+- A) essayer de couvrir la portion visible du ciel avec de grands mouvements oculaires balayants.
+- B) faire rouler les yeux sur le champ de vision le plus large possible.
+- C) explorer le ciel secteur par secteur et laisser les yeux se poser brièvement sur chaque secteur.
+- D) couvrir toute la portion visible du ciel en déplaçant les yeux aussi rapidement que possible.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une surveillance visuelle efficace nécessite de diviser le ciel en secteurs et de marquer une courte pause sur chacun d'eux, permettant aux yeux de faire la mise au point et de détecter des mouvements ou des variations de contraste indiquant d'autres aéronefs. Les options A et D préconisent des mouvements oculaires rapides et balayants qui empêchent l'œil de fixer suffisamment longtemps pour enregistrer une petite cible. L'option B repose également sur un mouvement continu qui réduit la probabilité de détection. Seule l'option C décrit la technique éprouvée secteur par secteur recommandée dans la formation aux facteurs humains.
+
+### Q62 : L'alcool est éliminé à un taux de :… ^t40q62
+- A) 0,5 ‰ par heure.
+- B) 0,3 ‰ par heure.
+- C) 0,1 ‰ par heure.
+- D) 1 ‰ par heure.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le foie humain métabolise l'alcool à un taux relativement constant d'environ 0,1 ‰ par heure, quelle que soit la boisson consommée ou les contre-mesures tentées (café, exercice, etc.). Les options A (0,5 ‰/h) et D (1 ‰/h) surestiment largement le taux d'élimination, ce qui pourrait amener les pilotes à croire qu'ils sont sobres plus tôt qu'ils ne le sont réellement. L'option B (0,3 ‰/h) est également trop élevée. Pour l'examen SPL, la valeur standard à retenir est 0,1 ‰ par heure.
+
+### Q63 : Parmi les facteurs suivants, identifiez celui qui augmente le risque d'infarctus du myocarde :… ^t40q63
+- A) Le manque d'exercice.
+- B) L'hypoglycémie.
+- C) La sous-alimentation.
+- D) Un taux de cholestérol trop bas.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un mode de vie sédentaire avec une activité physique insuffisante est un facteur de risque cardiovasculaire bien établi qui augmente la probabilité d'infarctus du myocarde. L'option B (hypoglycémie) est une affection métabolique affectant principalement l'apport énergétique au cerveau, et non un facteur de risque cardiaque direct. L'option C (sous-alimentation) et l'option D (cholestérol bas) sont en réalité l'opposé des facteurs de risque connus — c'est la suralimentation et un cholestérol élevé qui contribuent à la maladie coronarienne. L'exercice régulier est l'une des mesures les plus efficaces contre les maladies cardiovasculaires.
+
+### Q64 : L'amphétamine est un stimulant qui peut être obtenu sur ordonnance en pharmacie en Suisse… ^t40q64
+- A) Les pilotes en service sur un vol de plus de 5 heures sont autorisés à prendre ce médicament pour rester éveillés.
+- B) Les pilotes en service peuvent uniquement prendre ce médicament s'ils sont accompagnés d'un copilote qualifié.
+- C) Les pilotes en service sur un vol de plus de 5 heures devraient toujours avoir ce médicament à portée de main en cas de fatigue.
+- D) En raison de ses effets indésirables, les pilotes en service ne sont pas autorisés à prendre ce médicament.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les amphétamines sont strictement interdites aux pilotes en service car leurs effets indésirables — notamment l'altération du jugement, la surconfiance, les comportements à risque et l'effondrement dû à la fatigue lorsque l'effet se dissipe — compromettent directement la sécurité des vols. Les options A et C suggèrent d'utiliser des amphétamines pour lutter contre la fatigue lors de longs vols, ce qui est dangereux et illégal au regard de la réglementation médicale aéronautique. L'option B implique qu'un copilote peut atténuer le risque, mais aucune configuration d'équipage ne rend acceptable l'usage de stimulants. La bonne approche contre la fatigue est un repos approprié avant le vol, et non une stimulation pharmacologique.
+
+### Q65 : Que signifie la « conscience des zones à risque » en aviation ? ^t40q65
+- A) La connaissance des taux d'accidents lors du décollage et de l'atterrissage.
+- B) La conscience que la zone de l'aérodrome où les aéronefs circulent (« zone à risque ») est une zone dangereuse.
+- C) La conscience des dangers potentiels des différentes phases du vol.
+- D) Une procédure de prévention des accidents d'aviation.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La conscience des zones à risque désigne la compréhension consciente du pilote que chaque phase de vol — décollage, montée, croisière, descente, approche et atterrissage — comporte des dangers spécifiques nécessitant une vigilance particulière. L'option A est trop restrictive, car elle se concentre uniquement sur les statistiques d'accidents et non sur une vigilance active. L'option B interprète à tort « zone à risque » comme un emplacement physique sur l'aérodrome. L'option D décrit la conscience des zones à risque comme une procédure, alors qu'il s'agit d'un état d'esprit et d'une compétence, et non d'une liste de vérification ou d'une procédure formelle. Une bonne conscience des zones à risque permet au pilote d'anticiper et de gérer les menaces de manière proactive.
+
+### Q66 : Plusieurs modèles de prise de décision sont appliqués en aviation. Un modèle largement utilisé porte l'acronyme « DECIDE ». Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t40q66
+- A) Le premier D signifie « Do » (Agir) et désigne l'application de la meilleure option.
+- B) Le premier D signifie « Detect » (Détecter) et désigne la reconnaissance qu'un changement nécessitant attention s'est produit.
+- C) Le premier E signifie « Evaluate » (Évaluer) et désigne l'évaluation des conséquences de ses actions.
+- D) DECIDE est une aide à la prise de décision qui doit être appliquée à chaque situation de décision en vol.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le modèle DECIDE suit la séquence : Detect (Détecter), Estimate (Estimer), Choose (Choisir), Identify (Identifier), Do (Agir), Evaluate (Évaluer). La première lettre D correspond à « Detect », ce qui signifie que le pilote reconnaît qu'un changement de situation s'est produit, nécessitant une décision. L'option A attribue à tort « Do » au premier D — « Do » est en réalité la cinquième étape, où le plan d'action choisi est mis en œuvre. L'option C déplace « Evaluate » en tant que premier E, alors que le premier E est « Estimate » (évaluer l'importance du changement). L'option D surestime la contrainte — DECIDE est un cadre utile, pas une procédure obligatoire pour chaque décision individuelle.
+
+### Q67 : Concernant les attitudes dangereuses typiques, laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t40q67
+- A) Il est possible de reconnaître et de corriger ses propres attitudes dangereuses.
+- B) Une attitude anti-autorité est moins dangereuse que le comportement macho.
+- C) Les pilotes inexpérimentés sont généralement les seuls à se comporter dangereusement.
+- D) Les attitudes dangereuses n'existent pas vraiment car la sécurité des vols dépend uniquement de l'attention du pilote.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La recherche en facteurs humains identifie cinq attitudes dangereuses — l'anti-autorité, le macho, l'invulnérabilité, la résignation et l'impulsivité — et démontre que les pilotes peuvent apprendre à reconnaître ces tendances en eux-mêmes et à appliquer des antidotes correctifs. L'option B classe incorrectement les attitudes dangereuses ; toutes les cinq sont dangereuses et aucune ne doit être considérée comme moins menaçante. L'option C limite à tort les comportements dangereux aux pilotes inexpérimentés, alors qu'en réalité les pilotes expérimentés peuvent également faire preuve de complaisance et de surconfiance. L'option D nie l'existence des attitudes dangereuses, contredisant des décennies de recherche sur la sécurité aérienne.
+
+### Q68 : Laquelle de ces affirmations décrit correctement l'« attention sélective » ? ^t40q68
+- A) L'attention sélective est inévitable dans le cockpit pour éviter les distractions lors de la récitation de listes de vérification.
+- B) L'attention sélective peut amener le pilote à ne pas remarquer une alarme sonore même si elle est parfaitement audible.
+- C) L'attention sélective désigne une attitude où l'attention est concentrée sur les instruments de vol en cas de mauvaise visibilité.
+- D) L'attention sélective est une méthode pour éviter le stress.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'attention sélective est un phénomène cognitif dans lequel la concentration intense sur une tâche conduit le cerveau à filtrer d'autres stimuli, même évidents comme une alarme sonore forte. Ce phénomène est parfois appelé « cécité d'inattention » ou « surdité d'inattention ». L'option A confond l'attention sélective avec une stratégie délibérée dans le cockpit, alors qu'il s'agit en réalité d'une limitation cognitive involontaire. L'option C décrit la technique de balayage des instruments, et non le concept psychologique de l'attention sélective. L'option D la catégorise incorrectement comme méthode de gestion du stress, alors qu'en fait l'attention sélective sous stress peut être dangereuse car des alertes critiques peuvent passer inaperçues.
+
+### Q69 : Concernant le stress, laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t40q69
+- A) Il existe un niveau optimal de stress qui améliore même les performances.
+- B) La sous-stimulation ne cause pas de stress et n'a aucun effet négatif sur les performances.
+- C) Le stress dans le cockpit améliore le rendement au travail.
+- D) Le stress n'est causé que par une surcharge brève.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La loi de Yerkes-Dodson démontre qu'un stress modéré (eustress) améliore la vigilance, la concentration et les performances, tandis qu'un stress trop faible ou trop élevé les dégrade — formant une courbe en U inversé. L'option B est incorrecte car la sous-stimulation (ennui) est elle-même une forme de stress qui réduit la vigilance et augmente le taux d'erreurs. L'option C simplifie à l'excès en suggérant que tout le stress dans le cockpit est bénéfique, alors qu'un stress excessif entraîne une surcharge cognitive et de mauvaises prises de décision. L'option D limite à tort le stress à une surcharge brève, en ignorant le stress chronique lié à la fatigue, aux problèmes personnels ou à la charge de travail soutenue.
+
+### Q70 : L'horloge interne humaine… ^t40q70
+- A) a un cycle d'environ 25 heures.
+- B) a un cycle d'environ 20 heures.
+- C) est synchronisée avec l'horloge externe et son cycle dure exactement 24 heures.
+- D) a un cycle d'environ 30 heures.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les recherches sur les rythmes circadiens montrent que l'horloge biologique endogène humaine fonctionne sur un cycle d'environ 25 heures lorsqu'elle est isolée des indices temporels externes tels que la lumière du jour et les horaires sociaux. L'exposition quotidienne à la lumière réinitialise (entraîne) cette horloge interne sur le cycle jour-nuit de 24 heures. Les options B (20 heures) et D (30 heures) sont des valeurs incorrectes. L'option C est incorrecte car l'horloge interne ne fonctionne pas naturellement sur exactement 24 heures — elle nécessite une resynchronisation quotidienne par des indices environnementaux appelés Zeitgebers.
+
+### Q71 : Laquelle des mesures suivantes est adaptée pour soulager l'apparition du mal des transports (cinétose) chez les passagers ? ^t40q71
+- A) Bouger régulièrement la tête.
+- B) Regarder par les fenêtres.
+- C) Respirer de l'air frais.
+- D) Boire du café.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Respirer de l'air frais et frais aide à stabiliser le système nerveux autonome et constitue l'un des remèdes immédiats les plus efficaces contre l'apparition du mal des transports. L'option A (bouger régulièrement la tête) aggrave les symptômes en augmentant la stimulation vestibulaire conflictuelle. L'option B (regarder par les fenêtres) peut aggraver le décalage sensoriel entre les entrées visuelles et vestibulaires chez certaines personnes. L'option D (boire du café) est un stimulant qui peut augmenter les nausées et ne traite pas le conflit vestibulaire sous-jacent à l'origine du mal des transports.
+
+### Q72 : Lors de sa formation, un pilote a principalement utilisé des pistes étroites. Quelle illusion ce pilote éprouvera-t-il lors d'une finale correcte vers une piste plate et très large ? ^t40q72
+- A) L'illusion que la piste monte dans le sens de l'atterrissage (pente montante).
+- B) L'illusion d'être à une hauteur plus grande au-dessus de la piste qu'il ne l'est en réalité.
+- C) L'illusion d'être plus bas au-dessus de la piste qu'il ne l'est en réalité.
+- D) L'illusion que la piste monte d'abord (pente montante) puis descend (pente descendante).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un pilote habitué aux pistes étroites perçoit une piste large comme étant plus proche (plus basse) qu'elle ne l'est réellement, car l'angle visuel plus large trompe le cerveau en lui faisant interpréter la scène comme une surface plus proche. Cela crée la dangereuse illusion d'être trop bas, ce qui peut amener le pilote à effectuer une approche plus haute que nécessaire et à arrondir trop haut. Les options A et D décrivent des illusions liées à la pente sans rapport avec la largeur de la piste. L'option B décrit l'illusion opposée — le pilote se sent plus bas, et non plus haut. Comprendre ce piège visuel est essentiel pour des approches sûres vers des aérodromes inconnus.
+
+### Q73 : Quand les problèmes d'égalisation de pression de l'oreille moyenne sont-ils les plus susceptibles de survenir ? ^t40q73
+- A) Lors d'un long vol en haute altitude.
+- B) Lors d'une descente rapide.
+- C) Lors d'une longue montée.
+- D) Lors de fortes accélérations verticales négatives.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les problèmes d'égalisation de pression de l'oreille moyenne sont le plus souvent observés lors d'une descente rapide, car la trompe d'Eustache doit s'ouvrir pour laisser passer l'air à pression plus élevée de la gorge vers la cavité de l'oreille moyenne, ce qui est physiologiquement plus difficile que l'inverse. Lors de la montée, l'air en expansion dans l'oreille moyenne se ventile vers l'extérieur relativement facilement. L'option A (long vol en haute altitude) maintient une altitude de cabine constante et ne crée pas de différentiels de pression. L'option C (longue montée) implique une diminution progressive de la pression que l'oreille gère bien. L'option D (forces g négatives) affecte le système vestibulaire, et non la pression de l'oreille moyenne.
+
+### Q74 : La proportion d'oxygène dans l'atmosphère est de 21 % au niveau de la mer. Comment évolue-t-elle à 5 500 m ? ^t40q74
+- A) Elle représente un quart du pourcentage au niveau de la mer.
+- B) Elle représente la moitié du pourcentage au niveau de la mer.
+- C) Elle est le double du pourcentage au niveau de la mer.
+- D) Elle est identique à celle au niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La composition de l'atmosphère reste constante à environ 21 % d'oxygène et 78 % d'azote, du niveau de la mer jusqu'à environ 80 km d'altitude. Ce qui diminue avec l'altitude n'est pas le pourcentage d'oxygène, mais la pression atmosphérique totale, et donc la pression partielle de l'oxygène disponible pour les poumons. Les options A et B suggèrent incorrectement que la proportion change. L'option C propose une augmentation, qui est également fausse. La notion clé pour les pilotes est que l'hypoxie en altitude résulte d'une pression partielle réduite, et non d'un changement du pourcentage d'oxygène.
+
+### Q75 : Quels sont les effets de l'inhalation de monoxyde de carbone (provenant d'un système d'échappement défectueux) ? ^t40q75
+- A) Même à faible concentration, ce gaz peut provoquer une incapacitation totale.
+- B) Il n'y a pas d'effets nocifs à craindre, car le monoxyde de carbone est inoffensif.
+- C) Des effets nocifs ne sont à craindre que si le corps est exposé au gaz pendant plusieurs heures.
+- D) Il n'y a pas d'effets nocifs à craindre, car l'organisme compense la réduction de l'apport en oxygène.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le monoxyde de carbone (CO) se fixe à l'hémoglobine environ 200 fois plus facilement que l'oxygène, formant de la carboxyhémoglobine et réduisant drastiquement la capacité de transport de l'oxygène par le sang. Même de très faibles concentrations peuvent provoquer des maux de tête, une altération du jugement et, finalement, une incapacitation totale ou la mort. Les options B et D rejettent dangereusement le CO comme inoffensif — il est l'une des menaces les plus insidieuses de l'aviation car il est incolore et inodore. L'option C suggère incorrectement que seule une exposition prolongée est nocive, alors qu'en réalité même une exposition brève à des concentrations modérées peut être mortelle.
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+### Q76: Which is the most effective hearing protection in the cabin of a powered aircraft or hot air balloon? ^t40q76
+- A) cotton wool
+- B) a helmet with earphones
+- C) ear plugs
+- D) due to the low noise produced, any protection is effective
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A helmet with integrated earphones provides the highest level of hearing protection by covering the entire ear with a rigid shell that attenuates both direct sound and vibration-transmitted noise, while simultaneously enabling clear radio communication. Option A (cotton wool) offers minimal attenuation and is not a proper hearing protector. Option C (ear plugs) provide reasonable protection but less than a full helmet and may impair communication clarity. Option D incorrectly assumes that cockpit noise levels are low — sustained exposure to even moderate cockpit noise causes cumulative hearing damage over time.
+
+### Q77: Gas-forming foods that cause flatulence ought to be avoided before a high-altitude flight. Which of these foods must therefore be avoided? ^t40q77
+- A) legumes (beans)
+- B) meat
+- C) pasta
+- D) potatoes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Legumes such as beans, peas, and lentils are well known to produce significant intestinal gas during digestion. At altitude, ambient pressure decreases and any trapped gas in the body expands according to Boyle's law, potentially causing severe abdominal pain and distraction in flight. Option B (meat), Option C (pasta), and Option D (potatoes) do not produce significant intestinal gas under normal circumstances. Pilots planning high-altitude flights should avoid gas-forming foods in the hours before departure.
+
+### Q78: The respiratory process enables gas exchange in somatic cells (metabolism). These cells… ^t40q78
+- A) absorb nitrogen and release oxygen
+- B) absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide (CO2)
+- C) absorb oxygen and release nitrogen
+- D) absorb oxygen and release carbon monoxide (CO)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cellular respiration, somatic cells take in oxygen and use it to metabolise glucose and other nutrients, producing energy (ATP) and releasing carbon dioxide (CO2) as a waste product. Option A and Option C incorrectly involve nitrogen, which plays no active role in cellular metabolism — it is physiologically inert at normal pressures. Option D incorrectly names carbon monoxide (CO) as a metabolic by-product; CO is a toxic gas from incomplete combustion, not from normal cellular processes.
+
+### Q79: A regular smoker pilot smokes a few cigarettes shortly before an alpine flight. What effects might this have on their flight fitness? ^t40q79
+- A) for a regular smoker, there are no effects to fear as the body is accustomed to the harmful substances absorbed
+- B) the pilot will experience oxygen deficiency at a lower altitude than if they had abstained from smoking before the flight
+- C) the nicotine absorbed may cause mild disturbances of consciousness and difficulty concentrating
+- D) the smoke causes mild carbon dioxide (CO2) poisoning, which may cause sensations of dizziness and numbness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO), which binds to haemoglobin and reduces the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A pilot who smokes before an alpine flight effectively raises their "physiological altitude" — they will experience symptoms of oxygen deficiency (hypoxia) at a lower altitude than a non-smoking pilot would. Option A incorrectly assumes that habitual smoking confers tolerance; the CO effect on haemoglobin is cumulative regardless of habit. Option C attributes the wrong symptoms to nicotine. Option D confuses carbon monoxide (CO) with carbon dioxide (CO2), which are entirely different gases.
+
+### Q80: When is the risk of vestibular disturbance causing dizziness greatest? ^t40q80
+- A) when rotating the head during a descent
+- B) when rotating the head during straight-and-level flight
+- C) when rotating the head during a climb
+- D) when rotating the head during a coordinated turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotating the head during a coordinated turn creates the Coriolis illusion — the semicircular canals are already stimulated by the angular acceleration of the turn, and a head rotation in a different plane stimulates additional canals simultaneously, producing a powerful and disorienting sensation of tumbling or spinning. Option A, Option B, and Option C involve head rotation during relatively stable flight conditions where only one set of canals is stimulated at a time, making vestibular disturbance far less likely. The Coriolis illusion is one of the most dangerous vestibular phenomena in aviation.
+
+### Q81: How can a pilot better withstand positive g-forces in flight? ^t40q81
+- A) by sitting as upright as possible
+- B) by relaxing their muscles and leaning forward
+- C) by contracting the abdominal and leg muscles and performing forced breathing
+- D) by tightening their harness straps as much as possible
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Contracting the abdominal and leg muscles (the anti-G straining manoeuvre or L-1 technique) increases intra-abdominal pressure and impedes blood from pooling in the lower body, maintaining blood flow to the brain and delaying the onset of grey-out and G-LOC. Forced, cyclical breathing maintains thoracic pressure. Option A (sitting upright) has minimal effect. Option B (relaxing and leaning forward) would accelerate blood pooling in the lower extremities. Option D (tightening harness straps) secures the pilot but does not counteract the haemodynamic effects of g-forces.
+
+### Q82: Which are the most dangerous effects of oxygen deficiency? ^t40q82
+- A) tingling sensations
+- B) blue discoloration of fingernails and lips
+- C) impairment of judgment and concentration
+- D) nausea
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Impairment of judgment and concentration is the most dangerous effect of hypoxia because the pilot loses the very cognitive abilities needed to recognise the problem and take corrective action — a phenomenon known as "insidious hypoxia." Option A (tingling) and Option D (nausea) are unpleasant but do not directly prevent the pilot from deciding to descend. Option B (cyanosis) is a visible physical sign but does not impair decision-making in itself. The critical danger is that a hypoxic pilot often feels fine while their mental performance deteriorates severely.
+
+### Q83: What can be said about the rate of blood alcohol elimination in humans? ^t40q83
+- A) it is accelerated by breathing pure oxygen
+- B) it depends only on time and amounts to roughly 0.1 per mille per hour
+- C) it depends on the alcohol content of the drink consumed
+- D) it can be accelerated by drinking strong coffee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Alcohol is eliminated from the blood by the liver at a nearly constant rate of approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, determined solely by time and the liver's enzyme capacity. Option A (breathing pure oxygen) does not accelerate hepatic alcohol metabolism. Option C is incorrect because the elimination rate is constant regardless of whether the alcohol came from beer, wine, or spirits — what differs is how much total alcohol was consumed. Option D (drinking coffee) may increase alertness temporarily but has no effect on the metabolic breakdown of alcohol.
+
+### Q84: What impact does proprioception (deep sensitivity) have on position perception? ^t40q84
+- A) in coordination with the balance organ, proprioception gives a correct position impression even when visibility is lost
+- B) when visual references are lost, proprioception can give a false perception of position
+- C) proprioception alone is always sufficient to sustain a correct perception of position
+- D) when training is adequate, proprioception can prevent spatial disorientation when visibility is lost
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Proprioception — the sense of body position derived from receptors in muscles, joints, and tendons — can provide misleading information about the aircraft's attitude when visual references are absent. Without visual confirmation, the proprioceptive system cannot reliably distinguish between gravitational forces and centripetal forces in a turn. Option A incorrectly claims that proprioception and the vestibular system together provide accurate orientation without vision. Option C overstates proprioception's reliability. Option D wrongly suggests that training can overcome this fundamental physiological limitation. Only visual references or flight instruments can reliably prevent spatial disorientation.
+
+### Q85: Which of these factors has no direct effect on visual acuity? ^t40q85
+- A) high blood pressure
+- B) carbon monoxide (CO)
+- C) oxygen deficiency
+- D) alcohol
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** High blood pressure (hypertension) does not directly impair visual acuity during normal flight operations, although severe chronic hypertension may eventually damage the retina over time. Option B (carbon monoxide) reduces oxygen delivery to the retina, directly degrading vision, particularly night vision. Option C (oxygen deficiency) similarly starves the highly oxygen-dependent photoreceptors, causing measurable visual impairment even at moderate altitudes. Option D (alcohol) depresses the central nervous system and impairs visual processing, focus, and contrast sensitivity. All three of these factors directly affect a pilot's ability to see clearly.
+
+### Q86: Up to what maximum altitude can a healthy human body compensate for oxygen deficiency by increasing heart rate and breathing rate? ^t40q86
+- A) roughly 3,000 ft
+- B) roughly 22,000 ft
+- C) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- D) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human body can compensate for the reduced partial pressure of oxygen up to approximately 10,000-12,000 ft by increasing heart rate, respiratory rate, and cardiac output. Above this altitude, these compensatory mechanisms become insufficient and supplemental oxygen is required to prevent significant performance degradation. Option A (3,000 ft) is far too low — compensation is barely needed at this altitude. Option B (22,000 ft) far exceeds the body's compensatory range. Option C (6,000-7,000 ft) is the altitude where compensatory mechanisms begin to activate, not their upper limit.
+
+### Q87: What has to be observed when taking over-the-counter medications? ^t40q87
+- A) even over-the-counter medications can influence flight fitness
+- B) over-the-counter medications have no side effects and therefore no influence on flight fitness
+- C) all flying is prohibited after taking any medication
+- D) over-the-counter medications only have insignificant side effects; their influence on flight fitness is negligible
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Many over-the-counter medications — including antihistamines, cold remedies, pain relievers, and decongestants — can cause drowsiness, dizziness, impaired reaction time, or blurred vision, all of which compromise flight safety. Option B and Option D dangerously dismiss the potential for side effects. Option C is too extreme — not all medications are incompatible with flying, but each must be evaluated individually. The correct approach is to consult an aviation medical examiner (AME) before flying with any medication, whether prescription or over-the-counter.
+
+### Q88: What sensory illusion can a linear acceleration produce in horizontal flight when visual references are lost? ^t40q88
+- A) the impression of being in a left turn
+- B) the impression of descending
+- C) the impression of being in a right turn
+- D) the impression of climbing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A forward linear acceleration in horizontal flight pushes the pilot back into the seat, and the otolith organs in the inner ear interpret the combined acceleration vector as a backward tilt — creating the somatogravic illusion of a climb. Without visual references, the pilot may instinctively push the nose down to "correct" the perceived climb, risking a dive into terrain. Option A and Option C (turning impressions) are associated with semicircular canal stimulation, not linear acceleration. Option B (descent impression) would result from deceleration, not acceleration.
+
+### Q89: How long does the human eye take to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q89
+- A) roughly 1 second
+- B) roughly 10 minutes
+- C) roughly 10 seconds
+- D) roughly 30 minutes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Full dark adaptation of the human eye takes approximately 30 minutes as the rod photoreceptors in the retinal periphery gradually increase their sensitivity through biochemical changes in rhodopsin. Option A (1 second) and Option C (10 seconds) describe only the initial pupil dilation, which is a small part of the adaptation process. Option B (10 minutes) represents partial adaptation — at this point, the cones have adapted but the rods have not yet reached maximum sensitivity. Pilots planning night flights should protect their dark adaptation by avoiding bright white light for at least 30 minutes before departure.
+
+### Q90: Which of these statements about hyperventilation is correct? ^t40q90
+- A) hyperventilation is always a consequence of oxygen deficiency
+- B) hyperventilation causes an excess of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood
+- C) hyperventilation can be triggered by stress and anxiety
+- D) hyperventilation causes a deficiency of carbon monoxide (CO) in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation — excessively rapid or deep breathing — is frequently triggered by stress, anxiety, or fear, which causes the pilot to unconsciously breathe faster than metabolically necessary. This excessive ventilation blows off too much CO2, causing hypocapnia (low blood CO2), not an excess. Option A is wrong because hyperventilation is not caused by oxygen deficiency; it can occur at any altitude when the pilot is stressed. Option B incorrectly states that CO2 increases, when in fact it decreases. Option D confuses carbon monoxide (CO) with carbon dioxide (CO2) — hyperventilation involves CO2, not CO.
+
+### Q91: Vestibular disturbances during a turn can cause dizziness. What measure is most effective in preventing them? ^t40q91
+- A) during the turn, look out through the window in the direction of the turn
+- B) keep the head as still as possible during the turn
+- C) breathe deeply and slowly, ensuring an adequate supply of fresh air
+- D) alternately move the head from right to left during the turn
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Keeping the head still during a turn prevents the Coriolis illusion, which occurs when head movement in one plane is combined with the angular rotation of the turn, stimulating multiple semicircular canals simultaneously and producing intense vertigo. Option A (looking out the window) does not address the vestibular cause of the disturbance. Option C (deep breathing and fresh air) helps with motion sickness but not with vestibular vertigo from head movements. Option D (alternating head movements) would dramatically worsen the problem by creating repeated Coriolis stimulation.
+
+### Q92: Which is the immediate effect of inhaling cigarette smoke on a regular smoker? ^t40q92
+- A) lowered blood pressure
+- B) dilation of blood vessels
+- C) reduced oxygen transport in the blood
+- D) increased carbon dioxide (CO2) content in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The carbon monoxide (CO) in cigarette smoke binds to haemoglobin far more readily than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and immediately reducing the blood's capacity to transport oxygen to tissues and organs. Option A (lowered blood pressure) is incorrect — nicotine actually raises blood pressure through vasoconstriction. Option B (dilation of blood vessels) is also wrong; nicotine causes vasoconstriction, not dilation. Option D confuses the issue — smoking does not significantly increase CO2 levels; the problem is CO displacing oxygen on the haemoglobin molecule.
+
+### Q93: What is the relationship between oxygen deficiency and visual acuity? ^t40q93
+- A) oxygen deficiency can reduce visual acuity
+- B) oxygen deficiency has no effect on visual acuity
+- C) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity only during the day
+- D) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity solely at night
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The retina is one of the most metabolically active tissues in the body and is highly sensitive to oxygen deprivation. Even mild hypoxia can reduce visual acuity, diminish contrast sensitivity, and narrow the visual field, with night vision being affected first since rod cells are particularly oxygen-demanding. Option B incorrectly denies any relationship. Option C and Option D each restrict the effect to one time of day, when in reality both day and night vision are impaired — night vision is simply affected earlier and more severely because rods have higher oxygen requirements than cones.
+
+### Q94: Oxygen deficiency and hyperventilation share some similar symptoms. Which of these symptoms always indicates oxygen deficiency? ^t40q94
+- A) blue lips and fingernails (cyanosis)
+- B) visual disturbance
+- C) hot and cold sensations
+- D) tingling sensations
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cyanosis — a bluish discolouration of the lips and fingernails caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin — is a reliable and specific sign of oxygen deficiency that cannot be produced by hyperventilation alone. Option B (visual disturbance), Option C (hot and cold sensations), and Option D (tingling) can all occur in both hypoxia and hyperventilation, making them unreliable for distinguishing between the two conditions. Recognising cyanosis is therefore a critical diagnostic tool: if blue lips or nail beds are observed, the cause is definitively inadequate oxygen supply, and descent to lower altitude is required immediately.
+
+### Q95: What is the proportion of oxygen (in %) in the air at an altitude of approximately 34,000 feet? ^t40q95
+- A) 10%
+- B) 21%
+- C) 5%
+- D) 42%
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The atmosphere maintains a constant composition of approximately 21% oxygen from sea level through the troposphere and well into the stratosphere. At 34,000 ft, while the total atmospheric pressure is only about one quarter of sea-level pressure, the proportion of oxygen remains 21%. Option A (10%), Option C (5%), and Option D (42%) all incorrectly suggest the percentage changes with altitude. The critical point is that at 34,000 ft the partial pressure of oxygen is dangerously low despite the unchanged percentage, making supplemental oxygen or pressurisation essential for survival.
+
+### Q96: During a visual flight, you suddenly lose all external visual references. Spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses and proprioception is… ^t40q96
+- A) impossible
+- B) possible only for experienced pilots
+- C) possible only after adequate training
+- D) possible for solely a few minutes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without external visual references, maintaining spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses (pressure on the skin) and proprioception (body position sense) is physiologically impossible because these senses cannot distinguish between gravitational forces and the centripetal or inertial forces experienced in flight. Option B and Option C incorrectly suggest that experience or training can overcome this fundamental human limitation. Option D implies that orientation is possible for a short time, but in reality spatial disorientation can begin within seconds of losing visual references. Only flight instruments or restored visual contact can provide reliable attitude information.
+
+### Q97: Which is the most probable and most dangerous poisoning that can occur on board a piston-engine aircraft? ^t40q97
+- A) poisoning due to cosmic radiation at high altitude
+- B) carbon monoxide poisoning
+- C) ozone poisoning
+- D) poisoning due to leaded fuel vapors
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning from a defective or leaking exhaust system is the most likely and most dangerous in-flight poisoning in piston-engine aircraft. CO is colourless and odourless, making it undetectable without a dedicated CO detector, and it binds to haemoglobin 200 times more strongly than oxygen, rapidly incapacitating the pilot. Option A (cosmic radiation) is a long-term cumulative risk for frequent high-altitude flyers, not an acute poisoning event. Option C (ozone) affects primarily high-altitude jet aircraft. Option D (leaded fuel vapours) can occur during refuelling but is not a common in-flight hazard.
+
+### Q98: What impression results from a correct final approach to a runway with a strong upslope in the landing direction? ^t40q98
+- A) the impression of landing too short
+- B) the impression of too shallow an approach
+- C) the impression of too high an approach
+- D) the impression of too low an approach
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a runway that slopes upward in the landing direction, the pilot perceives the runway surface at an unusual angle that creates the visual illusion of being too high on approach. The upsloping surface compresses the visual perspective, making the runway appear closer and the approach steeper than it actually is. Option A and Option D describe the opposite illusion. Option B (too shallow) would occur with a downsloping runway. This visual trap can lead the pilot to unnecessarily steepen the approach, potentially resulting in a dangerously low and short landing.
+
+### Q99: Why should gas-forming foods be avoided before undertaking a high-altitude flight? ^t40q99
+- A) because gas expansion during descent can cause pain in the digestive system
+- B) because gas expansion at high altitudes can cause pain in the digestive system
+- C) because at high altitudes, gases evaporate into the blood and cause decompression sickness
+- D) because gas-forming foods promote motion sickness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As altitude increases, ambient pressure decreases and trapped gases in the body expand according to Boyle's law. Intestinal gas produced by gas-forming foods such as beans and lentils expands significantly at altitude, causing abdominal distension, pain, and distraction from flying tasks. Option A incorrectly places the problem during descent, when gas would actually compress. Option C confuses intestinal gas expansion with dissolved nitrogen forming bubbles in the blood (decompression sickness), which is an entirely different mechanism. Option D incorrectly links gas-forming foods to motion sickness, which is a vestibular phenomenon.
+
+### Q100: Which blood component primarily transports oxygen? ^t40q100
+- A) red blood cells
+- B) blood plasma
+- C) blood platelets
+- D) white blood cells
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells (erythrocytes) contain haemoglobin, the iron-containing protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues throughout the body. Each red blood cell carries approximately 270 million haemoglobin molecules, making erythrocytes the primary oxygen transport system. Option B (blood plasma) carries a small amount of dissolved oxygen but contributes less than 2% of total oxygen transport. Option C (blood platelets) are involved in blood clotting, not gas transport. Option D (white blood cells) are part of the immune system and play no role in oxygen delivery.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_40_76_100_fr.md
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+### Q76 : Quelle est la protection auditive la plus efficace dans la cabine d'un aéronef motorisé ou d'un ballon à air chaud ? ^t40q76
+- A) Coton
+- B) Un casque avec écouteurs
+- C) Bouchons d'oreilles
+- D) En raison du faible bruit produit, toute protection est efficace.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un casque avec écouteurs intégrés offre le niveau de protection auditive le plus élevé en recouvrant toute l'oreille d'une coque rigide qui atténue à la fois le son direct et le bruit transmis par vibration, tout en permettant une communication radio claire. L'option A (coton) offre une atténuation minimale et ne constitue pas une protection auditive appropriée. L'option C (bouchons d'oreilles) offre une protection raisonnable mais inférieure à un casque complet et peut nuire à la clarté des communications. L'option D suppose à tort que les niveaux sonores dans le cockpit sont faibles — une exposition prolongée même à un bruit de cockpit modéré provoque des lésions auditives cumulatives.
+
+### Q77 : Les aliments producteurs de gaz à l'origine de flatulences doivent être évités avant un vol en haute altitude. Lesquels de ces aliments doivent donc être évités ? ^t40q77
+- A) Les légumineuses (haricots)
+- B) La viande
+- C) Les pâtes
+- D) Les pommes de terre
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les légumineuses telles que les haricots, les pois et les lentilles sont bien connues pour produire une quantité significative de gaz intestinal lors de la digestion. En altitude, la pression ambiante diminue et tout gaz emprisonné dans l'organisme se dilate selon la loi de Boyle, pouvant provoquer de fortes douleurs abdominales et des distractions en vol. Les options B (viande), C (pâtes) et D (pommes de terre) ne produisent pas de quantités significatives de gaz intestinal dans des conditions normales. Les pilotes planifiant des vols en haute altitude devraient éviter les aliments producteurs de gaz dans les heures précédant le départ.
+
+### Q78 : Le processus respiratoire permet les échanges gazeux dans les cellules somatiques (métabolisme). Ces cellules… ^t40q78
+- A) absorbent de l'azote et rejettent de l'oxygène.
+- B) absorbent de l'oxygène et rejettent du dioxyde de carbone (CO₂).
+- C) absorbent de l'oxygène et rejettent de l'azote.
+- D) absorbent de l'oxygène et rejettent du monoxyde de carbone (CO).
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans la respiration cellulaire, les cellules somatiques absorbent de l'oxygène et l'utilisent pour métaboliser le glucose et d'autres nutriments, produisant de l'énergie (ATP) et libérant du dioxyde de carbone (CO₂) comme déchet. Les options A et C impliquent incorrectement l'azote, qui ne joue aucun rôle actif dans le métabolisme cellulaire — il est physiologiquement inerte à des pressions normales. L'option D cite incorrectement le monoxyde de carbone (CO) comme sous-produit métabolique ; le CO est un gaz toxique issu de la combustion incomplète, et non des processus cellulaires normaux.
+
+### Q79 : Un pilote fumeur régulier fume quelques cigarettes peu avant un vol alpin. Quels effets cela pourrait-il avoir sur son aptitude au vol ? ^t40q79
+- A) Pour un fumeur régulier, il n'y a pas d'effets à craindre, car l'organisme est habitué aux substances nocives absorbées.
+- B) Le pilote présentera un manque d'oxygène à une altitude plus basse que s'il s'était abstenu de fumer avant le vol.
+- C) La nicotine absorbée peut provoquer de légères perturbations de la conscience et des difficultés de concentration.
+- D) La fumée provoque une légère intoxication au dioxyde de carbone (CO₂), pouvant entraîner des sensations de vertiges et d'engourdissements.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La fumée de cigarette contient du monoxyde de carbone (CO), qui se fixe à l'hémoglobine et réduit la capacité de transport de l'oxygène par le sang. Un pilote qui fume avant un vol alpin élève effectivement son « altitude physiologique » — il présentera des symptômes de manque d'oxygène (hypoxie) à une altitude plus basse qu'un pilote non-fumeur. L'option A suppose incorrectement que le tabagisme habituel confère une tolérance ; l'effet du CO sur l'hémoglobine est cumulatif, indépendamment des habitudes. L'option C attribue les mauvais symptômes à la nicotine. L'option D confond le monoxyde de carbone (CO) avec le dioxyde de carbone (CO₂), qui sont des gaz totalement différents.
+
+### Q80 : Quand le risque de perturbation vestibulaire provoquant des vertiges est-il le plus élevé ? ^t40q80
+- A) Lors de la rotation de la tête pendant une descente.
+- B) Lors de la rotation de la tête en vol en palier rectiligne.
+- C) Lors de la rotation de la tête pendant une montée.
+- D) Lors de la rotation de la tête pendant un virage coordonné.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La rotation de la tête pendant un virage coordonné crée l'illusion de Coriolis — les canaux semi-circulaires sont déjà stimulés par l'accélération angulaire du virage, et une rotation de la tête dans un autre plan stimule simultanément des canaux supplémentaires, produisant une sensation puissante et désorientante de culbute ou de rotation. Les options A, B et C impliquent une rotation de la tête dans des conditions de vol relativement stables où un seul ensemble de canaux est stimulé à la fois, rendant la perturbation vestibulaire bien moins probable. L'illusion de Coriolis est l'un des phénomènes vestibulaires les plus dangereux en aviation.
+
+### Q81 : Comment un pilote peut-il mieux supporter les forces g positives en vol ? ^t40q81
+- A) En étant assis aussi droit que possible.
+- B) En relâchant ses muscles et en se penchant en avant.
+- C) En contractant les muscles abdominaux et des jambes et en effectuant une respiration forcée.
+- D) En serrant les sangles du harnais autant que possible.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Contracter les muscles abdominaux et des jambes (manœuvre anti-G ou technique L-1) augmente la pression intra-abdominale et empêche le sang de s'accumuler dans la partie inférieure du corps, maintenant le flux sanguin vers le cerveau et retardant l'apparition du grayout et du G-LOC. La respiration forcée et cyclique maintient la pression thoracique. L'option A (position assise droite) a un effet minimal. L'option B (se relaxer et se pencher en avant) accélérerait l'accumulation de sang dans les membres inférieurs. L'option D (serrer les sangles) sécurise le pilote mais ne contrecarre pas les effets hémodynamiques des forces g.
+
+### Q82 : Quels sont les effets les plus dangereux du manque d'oxygène ? ^t40q82
+- A) Des sensations de picotements.
+- B) Une décoloration bleue des ongles et des lèvres.
+- C) Une altération du jugement et de la concentration.
+- D) Des nausées.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altération du jugement et de la concentration est l'effet le plus dangereux de l'hypoxie, car le pilote perd les capacités cognitives mêmes dont il a besoin pour reconnaître le problème et prendre des mesures correctives — phénomène connu sous le nom d'« hypoxie insidieuse ». Les options A (picotements) et D (nausées) sont désagréables mais n'empêchent pas directement le pilote de décider de descendre. L'option B (cyanose) est un signe physique visible mais n'altère pas en soi la prise de décision. Le danger critique est qu'un pilote hypoxique se sent souvent bien alors que ses performances mentales se dégradent sévèrement.
+
+### Q83 : Que peut-on dire du taux d'élimination de l'alcool dans le sang chez l'être humain ? ^t40q83
+- A) Il est accéléré par la respiration d'oxygène pur.
+- B) Il dépend uniquement du temps et s'élève à environ 0,1 ‰ par heure.
+- C) Il dépend de la teneur en alcool de la boisson consommée.
+- D) Il peut être accéléré en buvant un café fort.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'alcool est éliminé du sang par le foie à un taux presque constant d'environ 0,1 ‰ par heure, déterminé uniquement par le temps et la capacité enzymatique du foie. L'option A (respiration d'oxygène pur) n'accélère pas le métabolisme hépatique de l'alcool. L'option C est incorrecte car le taux d'élimination est constant, quelle que soit la provenance de l'alcool (bière, vin ou spiritueux) — ce qui diffère, c'est la quantité totale d'alcool consommée. L'option D (boire du café) peut augmenter temporairement la vigilance mais n'a aucun effet sur la dégradation métabolique de l'alcool.
+
+### Q84 : Quelle influence la proprioception (sensibilité profonde) a-t-elle sur la perception de la position ? ^t40q84
+- A) En coordination avec l'organe de l'équilibre, la proprioception donne une impression correcte de la position même lorsque la visibilité est perdue.
+- B) En l'absence de références visuelles, la proprioception peut donner une perception fausse de la position.
+- C) La proprioception seule est toujours suffisante pour maintenir une perception correcte de la position.
+- D) Avec une formation adéquate, la proprioception peut prévenir la désorientation spatiale en cas de perte de visibilité.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La proprioception — le sens de la position du corps provenant des récepteurs dans les muscles, les articulations et les tendons — peut fournir des informations trompeuses sur l'assiette de l'aéronef en l'absence de références visuelles. Sans confirmation visuelle, le système proprioceptif ne peut pas distinguer de manière fiable les forces gravitationnelles des forces centripètes dans un virage. L'option A affirme incorrectement que la proprioception et le système vestibulaire fournissent ensemble une orientation précise sans vision. L'option C surestime la fiabilité de la proprioception. L'option D suggère à tort que la formation peut surmonter cette limitation physiologique fondamentale. Seules les références visuelles ou les instruments de vol peuvent prévenir de manière fiable la désorientation spatiale.
+
+### Q85 : Lequel de ces facteurs n'a pas d'effet direct sur l'acuité visuelle ? ^t40q85
+- A) L'hypertension artérielle.
+- B) Le monoxyde de carbone (CO).
+- C) Le manque d'oxygène.
+- D) L'alcool.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'hypertension artérielle n'altère pas directement l'acuité visuelle lors des opérations de vol normales, bien qu'une hypertension chronique sévère puisse éventuellement endommager la rétine au fil du temps. L'option B (monoxyde de carbone) réduit l'apport d'oxygène à la rétine, dégradant directement la vision, notamment la vision nocturne. L'option C (manque d'oxygène) prive de la même façon les photorécepteurs très dépendants de l'oxygène, causant une altération visuelle mesurable même à des altitudes modérées. L'option D (alcool) déprime le système nerveux central et altère le traitement visuel, la mise au point et la sensibilité aux contrastes. Ces trois facteurs affectent directement la capacité du pilote à voir clairement.
+
+### Q86 : Jusqu'à quelle altitude maximale l'organisme d'une personne en bonne santé peut-il compenser le manque d'oxygène en augmentant la fréquence cardiaque et respiratoire ? ^t40q86
+- A) Environ 3 000 ft.
+- B) Environ 22 000 ft.
+- C) Environ 6 000-7 000 ft.
+- D) Environ 10 000-12 000 ft.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'organisme peut compenser la pression partielle réduite de l'oxygène jusqu'à environ 10 000-12 000 ft en augmentant la fréquence cardiaque, la fréquence respiratoire et le débit cardiaque. Au-delà de cette altitude, ces mécanismes compensatoires deviennent insuffisants et un oxygène supplémentaire est nécessaire pour éviter une dégradation significative des performances. L'option A (3 000 ft) est bien trop basse — la compensation est à peine nécessaire à cette altitude. L'option B (22 000 ft) dépasse largement la plage compensatoire de l'organisme. L'option C (6 000-7 000 ft) est l'altitude à laquelle les mécanismes compensatoires commencent à s'activer, et non leur limite supérieure.
+
+### Q87 : Que faut-il observer lors de la prise de médicaments en vente libre ? ^t40q87
+- A) Même les médicaments en vente libre peuvent influencer l'aptitude au vol.
+- B) Les médicaments en vente libre n'ont pas d'effets secondaires et n'ont donc aucune influence sur l'aptitude au vol.
+- C) Tout vol est interdit après la prise de tout médicament.
+- D) Les médicaments en vente libre n'ont que des effets secondaires insignifiants ; leur influence sur l'aptitude au vol est négligeable.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** De nombreux médicaments en vente libre — notamment les antihistaminiques, les remèdes contre le rhume, les analgésiques et les décongestionnants — peuvent provoquer somnolence, vertiges, temps de réaction altéré ou vision floue, compromettant tous la sécurité des vols. Les options B et D rejettent dangereusement le potentiel d'effets secondaires. L'option C est trop extrême — tous les médicaments ne sont pas incompatibles avec le vol, mais chacun doit être évalué individuellement. L'approche correcte est de consulter un médecin examinateur de l'aviation (AME) avant de voler avec tout médicament, qu'il soit prescrit ou en vente libre.
+
+### Q88 : Quelle illusion sensorielle une accélération linéaire peut-elle produire en vol en palier lorsque les références visuelles sont perdues ? ^t40q88
+- A) L'impression d'être dans un virage à gauche.
+- B) L'impression de descendre.
+- C) L'impression d'être dans un virage à droite.
+- D) L'impression de monter.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une accélération linéaire vers l'avant en vol en palier pousse le pilote vers l'arrière de son siège, et les organes otolithiques de l'oreille interne interprètent le vecteur d'accélération combiné comme une inclinaison vers l'arrière — créant l'illusion somatogravique d'une montée. Sans références visuelles, le pilote peut instinctivement pousser le nez vers le bas pour « corriger » la montée perçue, risquant une plongée vers le sol. Les options A et C (impressions de virage) sont associées à la stimulation des canaux semi-circulaires, et non à l'accélération linéaire. L'option B (impression de descente) résulterait d'une décélération, et non d'une accélération.
+
+### Q89 : Combien de temps l'œil humain met-il pour s'adapter complètement à l'obscurité ? ^t40q89
+- A) Environ 1 seconde.
+- B) Environ 10 minutes.
+- C) Environ 10 secondes.
+- D) Environ 30 minutes.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'adaptation complète à l'obscurité de l'œil humain prend environ 30 minutes, le temps que les photorécepteurs en bâtonnets de la périphérie rétinienne augmentent progressivement leur sensibilité grâce à des changements biochimiques de la rhodopsine. Les options A (1 seconde) et C (10 secondes) ne décrivent que la dilatation initiale de la pupille, qui n'est qu'une petite partie du processus d'adaptation. L'option B (10 minutes) représente une adaptation partielle — à ce stade, les cônes se sont adaptés mais les bâtonnets n'ont pas encore atteint leur sensibilité maximale. Les pilotes planifiant des vols de nuit devraient protéger leur adaptation à l'obscurité en évitant la lumière blanche vive pendant au moins 30 minutes avant le départ.
+
+### Q90 : Laquelle de ces affirmations sur l'hyperventilation est correcte ? ^t40q90
+- A) L'hyperventilation est toujours une conséquence du manque d'oxygène.
+- B) L'hyperventilation provoque un excès de dioxyde de carbone (CO₂) dans le sang.
+- C) L'hyperventilation peut être déclenchée par le stress et l'anxiété.
+- D) L'hyperventilation provoque un déficit en monoxyde de carbone (CO) dans le sang.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'hyperventilation — une respiration excessivement rapide ou profonde — est fréquemment déclenchée par le stress, l'anxiété ou la peur, qui poussent le pilote à respirer inconsciemment plus vite que nécessaire sur le plan métabolique. Cette ventilation excessive élimine trop de CO₂, provoquant une hypocapnie (faible taux de CO₂ dans le sang), et non un excès. L'option A est incorrecte car l'hyperventilation n'est pas causée par le manque d'oxygène ; elle peut survenir à n'importe quelle altitude lorsque le pilote est stressé. L'option B affirme incorrectement que le CO₂ augmente, alors qu'en réalité il diminue. L'option D confond le monoxyde de carbone (CO) avec le dioxyde de carbone (CO₂) — l'hyperventilation implique le CO₂, et non le CO.
+
+### Q91 : Les perturbations vestibulaires lors d'un virage peuvent provoquer des vertiges. Quelle mesure est la plus efficace pour les prévenir ? ^t40q91
+- A) Pendant le virage, regarder par la fenêtre dans le sens du virage.
+- B) Garder la tête aussi immobile que possible pendant le virage.
+- C) Respirer profondément et lentement, en veillant à un apport suffisant d'air frais.
+- D) Alterner les mouvements de la tête de droite à gauche pendant le virage.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Garder la tête immobile pendant un virage prévient l'illusion de Coriolis, qui survient lorsqu'un mouvement de tête dans un plan est combiné à la rotation angulaire du virage, stimulant simultanément plusieurs canaux semi-circulaires et produisant un vertige intense. L'option A (regarder par la fenêtre) ne traite pas la cause vestibulaire de la perturbation. L'option C (respiration profonde et air frais) aide contre le mal des transports mais pas contre le vertige vestibulaire dû aux mouvements de la tête. L'option D (mouvements alternés de la tête) aggraverait considérablement le problème en créant des stimulations répétées de Coriolis.
+
+### Q92 : Quel est l'effet immédiat de l'inhalation de fumée de cigarette sur un fumeur régulier ? ^t40q92
+- A) Abaissement de la pression artérielle.
+- B) Dilatation des vaisseaux sanguins.
+- C) Réduction du transport de l'oxygène dans le sang.
+- D) Augmentation de la teneur en dioxyde de carbone (CO₂) dans le sang.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le monoxyde de carbone (CO) contenu dans la fumée de cigarette se fixe à l'hémoglobine bien plus facilement que l'oxygène, formant de la carboxyhémoglobine et réduisant immédiatement la capacité du sang à transporter l'oxygène vers les tissus et les organes. L'option A (abaissement de la pression artérielle) est incorrecte — la nicotine augmente en réalité la pression artérielle par vasoconstriction. L'option B (dilatation des vaisseaux) est également fausse ; la nicotine provoque une vasoconstriction, et non une dilatation. L'option D brouille la question — le tabagisme n'augmente pas significativement les taux de CO₂ ; le problème est le CO qui déplace l'oxygène sur la molécule d'hémoglobine.
+
+### Q93 : Quelle est la relation entre le manque d'oxygène et l'acuité visuelle ? ^t40q93
+- A) Le manque d'oxygène peut réduire l'acuité visuelle.
+- B) Le manque d'oxygène n'a aucun effet sur l'acuité visuelle.
+- C) Le manque d'oxygène a un effet négatif sur l'acuité visuelle uniquement de jour.
+- D) Le manque d'oxygène a un effet négatif sur l'acuité visuelle uniquement de nuit.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La rétine est l'un des tissus les plus métaboliquement actifs de l'organisme et est très sensible à la privation d'oxygène. Même une hypoxie légère peut réduire l'acuité visuelle, diminuer la sensibilité aux contrastes et rétrécir le champ visuel, la vision nocturne étant affectée en premier car les cellules en bâtonnets sont particulièrement demandeuses en oxygène. L'option B nie incorrectement toute relation. Les options C et D limitent chacune l'effet à une période de la journée, alors qu'en réalité la vision diurne et nocturne sont toutes deux altérées — la vision nocturne est simplement affectée plus tôt et plus sévèrement car les bâtonnets ont des besoins en oxygène plus élevés que les cônes.
+
+### Q94 : Le manque d'oxygène et l'hyperventilation partagent certains symptômes similaires. Lequel de ces symptômes indique toujours un manque d'oxygène ? ^t40q94
+- A) Lèvres et ongles bleus (cyanose).
+- B) Troubles visuels.
+- C) Sensations de chaud et de froid.
+- D) Sensations de picotements.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La cyanose — une décoloration bleutée des lèvres et des ongles causée par l'hémoglobine désoxygénée — est un signe fiable et spécifique de manque d'oxygène qui ne peut pas être produit par l'hyperventilation seule. Les options B (troubles visuels), C (sensations de chaud et de froid) et D (picotements) peuvent toutes survenir aussi bien dans l'hypoxie que dans l'hyperventilation, ce qui les rend peu fiables pour distinguer les deux. La reconnaissance de la cyanose est donc un outil de diagnostic essentiel : si des lèvres ou des lits d'ongles bleus sont observés, la cause est définitivement un apport insuffisant en oxygène, et une descente à une altitude plus basse est immédiatement requise.
+
+### Q95 : Quelle est la proportion d'oxygène (en %) dans l'air à une altitude d'environ 34 000 ft ? ^t40q95
+- A) 10 %
+- B) 21 %
+- C) 5 %
+- D) 42 %
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'atmosphère maintient une composition constante d'environ 21 % d'oxygène du niveau de la mer à travers la troposphère et bien au-delà dans la stratosphère. À 34 000 ft, si la pression atmosphérique totale n'est que d'environ un quart de la pression au niveau de la mer, la proportion d'oxygène reste de 21 %. Les options A (10 %), C (5 %) et D (42 %) suggèrent toutes incorrectement que le pourcentage change avec l'altitude. Le point crucial est qu'à 34 000 ft, la pression partielle de l'oxygène est dangereusement basse malgré le pourcentage inchangé, rendant l'oxygène supplémentaire ou la pressurisation essentiels à la survie.
+
+### Q96 : Lors d'un vol à vue, vous perdez soudainement toutes les références visuelles extérieures. L'orientation spatiale en utilisant uniquement les sens cutanés et la proprioception est… ^t40q96
+- A) impossible.
+- B) possible uniquement pour les pilotes expérimentés.
+- C) possible uniquement après une formation adéquate.
+- D) possible uniquement pendant quelques minutes.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sans références visuelles extérieures, maintenir l'orientation spatiale en utilisant uniquement les sens cutanés (pression sur la peau) et la proprioception (sens de la position du corps) est physiologiquement impossible, car ces sens ne peuvent pas distinguer les forces gravitationnelles des forces centripètes ou inertielles ressenties en vol. Les options B et C suggèrent incorrectement que l'expérience ou la formation peuvent surmonter cette limitation humaine fondamentale. L'option D implique que l'orientation est possible pendant un court laps de temps, mais en réalité la désorientation spatiale peut commencer en quelques secondes après la perte des références visuelles. Seuls les instruments de vol ou le rétablissement du contact visuel peuvent fournir des informations fiables sur l'assiette.
+
+### Q97 : Quelle est l'intoxication la plus probable et la plus dangereuse pouvant survenir à bord d'un aéronef à moteur à pistons ? ^t40q97
+- A) Intoxication due aux rayonnements cosmiques en haute altitude.
+- B) Intoxication au monoxyde de carbone.
+- C) Intoxication à l'ozone.
+- D) Intoxication due aux vapeurs de carburant au plomb.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'intoxication au monoxyde de carbone (CO) provenant d'un système d'échappement défectueux ou ayant des fuites est la plus probable et la plus dangereuse en vol sur les aéronefs à moteur à pistons. Le CO est incolore et inodore, ce qui le rend indétectable sans détecteur de CO dédié, et il se fixe à l'hémoglobine 200 fois plus fortement que l'oxygène, incapacitant rapidement le pilote. L'option A (rayonnements cosmiques) est un risque cumulatif à long terme pour les pilotes fréquents à haute altitude, et non un événement d'intoxication aiguë. L'option C (ozone) affecte principalement les avions à réaction en haute altitude. L'option D (vapeurs de carburant au plomb) peut survenir lors du ravitaillement mais n'est pas un danger courant en vol.
+
+### Q98 : Quelle impression résulte d'une finale correcte vers une piste avec une forte pente montante dans le sens de l'atterrissage ? ^t40q98
+- A) L'impression d'atterrir trop court.
+- B) L'impression d'une approche trop faible.
+- C) L'impression d'une approche trop haute.
+- D) L'impression d'une approche trop basse.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors de l'approche d'une piste qui monte dans le sens de l'atterrissage, le pilote perçoit la surface de la piste sous un angle inhabituel qui crée l'illusion visuelle d'être trop haut en approche. La surface montante comprime la perspective visuelle, faisant paraître la piste plus proche et l'approche plus escarpée qu'elle ne l'est réellement. Les options A et D décrivent l'illusion opposée. L'option B (trop faible) surviendrait avec une piste en pente descendante. Ce piège visuel peut amener le pilote à accentuer inutilement l'approche, risquant un atterrissage dangereusement court et bas.
+
+### Q99 : Pourquoi les aliments producteurs de gaz doivent-ils être évités avant un vol en haute altitude ? ^t40q99
+- A) Parce que l'expansion des gaz lors de la descente peut provoquer des douleurs dans le système digestif.
+- B) Parce que l'expansion des gaz en haute altitude peut provoquer des douleurs dans le système digestif.
+- C) Parce qu'en haute altitude, les gaz s'évaporent dans le sang et provoquent une maladie de décompression.
+- D) Parce que les aliments producteurs de gaz favorisent le mal des transports.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** À mesure que l'altitude augmente, la pression ambiante diminue et les gaz emprisonnés dans l'organisme se dilatent selon la loi de Boyle. Le gaz intestinal produit par les aliments producteurs de gaz comme les haricots et les lentilles se dilate significativement en altitude, provoquant une distension abdominale, des douleurs et des distractions lors des tâches de pilotage. L'option A situe incorrectement le problème pendant la descente, lors de laquelle le gaz se comprimerait en réalité. L'option C confond la dilatation des gaz intestinaux avec la formation de bulles d'azote dissous dans le sang (maladie de décompression), qui est un mécanisme entièrement différent. L'option D relie incorrectement les aliments producteurs de gaz au mal des transports, qui est un phénomène vestibulaire.
+
+### Q100 : Quel composant du sang transporte principalement l'oxygène ? ^t40q100
+- A) Les globules rouges.
+- B) Le plasma sanguin.
+- C) Les plaquettes sanguines.
+- D) Les globules blancs.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les globules rouges (érythrocytes) contiennent l'hémoglobine, la protéine contenant du fer qui fixe l'oxygène dans les poumons et le libère dans les tissus de tout l'organisme. Chaque globule rouge contient environ 270 millions de molécules d'hémoglobine, faisant des érythrocytes le principal système de transport de l'oxygène. L'option B (plasma sanguin) transporte une petite quantité d'oxygène dissous mais contribue à moins de 2 % du transport total d'oxygène. L'option C (plaquettes sanguines) est impliquée dans la coagulation du sang, et non dans le transport des gaz. L'option D (globules blancs) fait partie du système immunitaire et ne joue aucun rôle dans le transport de l'oxygène.
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+### Q101: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q101
+![[figures/t50_q101.png]]
+- A) Wind from NNE, 120 kt
+- B) Wind from NNE, 70 kt
+- C) Wind from SSW, 70 kt
+- D) Wind from SSW, 120 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barbs point in the direction the wind blows from, with speed indicated by barbs and pennants on the upwind end: a pennant = 50 kt, a long barb = 10 kt, a short barb = 5 kt. The symbol shows a wind from SSW with one pennant (50 kt) and two long barbs (20 kt), totalling 70 kt. Options A and B incorrectly identify the direction as NNE — wind barbs point FROM the wind source, not toward it. Option D overstates the speed to 120 kt.
+
+### Q102: What is the name of the fog that develops when a moist air mass moves horizontally over a colder surface? ^t50q102
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Orographic fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Sea spray
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a colder surface, cooling from below until it reaches its dew point and condensation occurs at ground level. Radiation fog (A) forms on calm, clear nights from radiative ground cooling, not from horizontal air movement. Orographic fog (B) results from moist air being lifted over terrain. Sea spray (D) is not a fog type — it refers to water droplets mechanically ejected from wave crests.
+
+### Q103: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below show? ^t50q103
+![[figures/t50_q103.png]]
+- A) Westerly wind situation
+- B) Bise situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) North Foehn situation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts a South Foehn (Südföhn) situation, where a pressure gradient drives moist air from the south against the southern slopes of the Alps. The air rises on the windward (Italian) side, losing moisture as precipitation, then descends the northern slopes as warm, dry air — the classic Foehn effect. Option A (westerly wind) involves Atlantic air masses from the west. Option B (Bise) is a cold northeast wind. Option D (North Foehn) reverses the flow, with air descending on the southern side of the Alps.
+
+### Q104: Which altimeter setting must you select so that the instrument shows your height above a specific aerodrome (AAL)? ^t50q104
+- A) The QNH of the aerodrome.
+- B) The QFF of the aerodrome.
+- C) The QFE of the aerodrome.
+- D) The QNE of the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure measured at the aerodrome reference point. When QFE is set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero while on the ground at that aerodrome, and shows height above the aerodrome (AAL) during flight. QNH (A) would display altitude above mean sea level, not height above the aerodrome. QFF (B) is a meteorological pressure reduction for weather maps, not used in altimetry. QNE (D) is the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa) for flight level indication.
+
+### Q105: What are the wind speed and direction in this METAR? LFSB 171100Z 29004KT 220V340 9999 FEW043 28/17 Q1013 NOSIG= ^t50q105
+- A) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+- C) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the METAR group "29004KT 220V340": 290 is the wind direction in degrees (290° = WNW), 04 is the speed in knots, and "220V340" indicates the direction varies between 220° (SW) and 340° (NNW). Options B and C incorrectly interpret 290° as ESE — that would be approximately 110°–120°. Option D has the correct mean direction (WNW) but reverses the variability range to NE and SSE, which contradicts the 220V340 notation.
+
+### Q106: During summer in central Europe, what phenomenon is typical of an advancing cold front when the warm air ahead has an unstable thermodynamic structure? ^t50q106
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) A rapid temperature rise after the front passes.
+- C) Thunderstorm clouds.
+- D) A rapid drop in atmospheric pressure after frontal passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an advancing cold front encounters warm, unstable air ahead of it in a European summer setting, the forced lifting triggers vigorous convection and the rapid vertical development of cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) clouds with heavy precipitation, lightning, and gusty winds. Stratiform clouds (A) are associated with stable air masses. Temperature falls, not rises (B), after a cold front passes. Pressure rises, not drops (D), behind a cold front as cold dense air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q107: Along the route from LOWK to EDDP (dotted arrow), what weather phenomena should be anticipated? ^t50q107
+![[figures/t50_q107.png]]
+- A) Gradual temperature increase, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- B) Gradual temperature decrease, headwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- C) Gradual temperature increase, headwind, no thunderstorms.
+- D) Gradual temperature decrease, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying from LOWK (Klagenfurt, Austria) northward to EDDP (Leipzig, Germany), the aircraft moves into cooler air at higher latitudes, producing a gradual temperature decrease. The synoptic pattern on the chart indicates headwind conditions along this route and convective activity yielding isolated thunderstorms, particularly during summer. Option A wrongly predicts warming (heading north) and tailwind. Option C denies thunderstorm risk despite the synoptic instability shown. Option D correctly predicts cooling and thunderstorms but wrongly identifies a tailwind.
+
+### Q108: Which type of cloud is most likely to cause heavy showers? ^t50q108
+- A) Nimbostratus
+- B) Altostratus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds are massive convective clouds extending from near the surface to the tropopause, containing enormous quantities of water and ice sustained by powerful updrafts. They produce the heaviest showers, hail, and thunderstorms. Nimbostratus (A) produces prolonged, steady precipitation but not heavy showers. Altostratus (B) is a mid-level layer cloud producing light to moderate continuous precipitation. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude cloud that does not produce significant precipitation.
+
+### Q109: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has a low pressure area to its north and a high pressure area to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q109
+- A) North
+- B) West
+- C) East
+- D) South
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, the wind is approximately geostrophic, blowing parallel to the isobars with low pressure to the left and high pressure to the right in the Northern Hemisphere. With low pressure to the north and high to the south, the pressure gradient force points northward, and the Coriolis deflection turns the resulting wind to the right — producing a westward (east-to-west) flow. The balloon is therefore carried toward the west. Options A, C, and D misapply the Buys-Ballot law for this pressure configuration.
+
+### Q110: When air is forced upward by terrain and encounters unstable, moist layers, what are the resulting thunderstorms called? ^t50q110
+- A) Cold front thunderstorms
+- B) Orographic thunderstorms
+- C) Thermal thunderstorms
+- D) Warm front thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When terrain (mountains, ridges, or hills) mechanically forces air upward and this lifted air encounters moist, unstable layers aloft, the resulting convective storms are classified as orographic thunderstorms. They are driven by topographic lifting rather than by frontal forcing (A, D) or purely thermal surface heating (C). Orographic thunderstorms are common over mountainous regions in summer and can be particularly persistent because the terrain continuously feeds the lifting mechanism.
+
+### Q111: Which set of conditions favours the development of advection fog? ^t50q111
+- A) Cold, humid air flowing over a warm ocean
+- B) Moisture evaporating from warm, humid ground into cold air
+- C) Warm, humid air flowing over a cold surface
+- D) Warm, humid air cooling on a cloudy night
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air moves horizontally over a colder surface and is cooled from below to its dew point. This commonly occurs when maritime tropical air flows over cold ocean currents or cold land in early spring. Cold air over warm water (A) would produce steam fog (evaporation fog), not advection fog. Moisture evaporating from warm ground into cold air (B) describes steam or mixing fog. Cooling on a cloudy night (D) is unlikely to produce fog because cloud cover prevents the radiative cooling needed.
+
+### Q112: Which process leads to the formation of advection fog? ^t50q112
+- A) Warm, moist air transported across cold ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixed with warm, moist air
+- C) Lengthy radiation on cloud-free nights
+- D) Cold, moist air transported across warm ground areas
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog results from the horizontal transport (advection) of warm, moist air across a cold surface. The cold surface cools the air from below until it reaches its dew point, causing condensation at ground level. Option B describes mixing fog, where two air masses of different temperatures combine. Option C describes radiation fog, formed by nocturnal radiative cooling on clear, calm nights. Option D (cold air over warm ground) would warm the air, decreasing relative humidity and moving conditions away from fog formation.
+
+### Q113: During the passage of a cold front, what pressure pattern is typically observed? ^t50q113
+- A) A steady decrease in pressure
+- B) A brief decrease followed by an increase in pressure
+- C) A constant pressure pattern
+- D) A steady increase in pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As a cold front approaches, pressure falls ahead of it due to the pre-frontal trough. At the moment of frontal passage, pressure reaches its minimum, and immediately afterward it begins to rise sharply as cold, dense air moves in behind the front. This characteristic "V-shaped" pressure trace — a brief fall followed by a sustained rise — is the textbook pressure signature of cold front passage. Options A and D describe monotonic trends, while option C suggests no dynamic weather activity, none of which match frontal passage behaviour.
+
+### Q114: Which frontal boundary separates subtropical air from polar cold air, particularly across Central Europe? ^t50q114
+- A) Polar front
+- B) Cold front
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the semi-permanent, quasi-continuous boundary zone separating warm subtropical air masses from cold polar air masses across the mid-latitudes, including Central Europe. It is the birthplace of extratropical cyclones. A cold front (B) is the leading edge of a single advancing cold air mass within a cyclone. A warm front (D) is the leading edge of advancing warm air. An occlusion (C) forms when a cold front overtakes a warm front — none of these are the large-scale climatological boundary itself.
+
+### Q115: In Central Europe during summer, what weather conditions are typically associated with high pressure areas? ^t50q115
+- A) Closely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- B) Widely spaced isobars with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- C) Widely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- D) Closely spaced isobars with strong prevailing northerly winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Summer high-pressure areas over Central Europe produce widely spaced isobars, indicating weak synoptic-scale pressure gradients and therefore light prevailing winds. In the absence of strong gradient winds, locally driven thermal circulations — valley breezes, sea breezes, slope winds — develop and dominate the airflow pattern. Option A contradicts itself (close isobars do not produce calm winds). Option B describes strong westerlies associated with low-pressure systems. Option D describes a cold northerly flow pattern, not typical of summer anticyclones.
+
+### Q116: What weather can be expected in high pressure areas during the winter season? ^t50q116
+- A) Changing weather with frontal line passages
+- B) Light winds and extensive areas of high fog
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- D) Calm weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In winter, high-pressure areas produce subsidence inversions that trap cold, moist air near the surface, creating widespread high fog (Hochnebel) and stratus layers, particularly in valley and basin locations across Central Europe. Winds are light due to the weak pressure gradient. Option A (frontal weather) is associated with low-pressure systems. Option C (squall lines and thunderstorms) requires convective instability absent in winter highs. Option D describes summer high-pressure conditions with thermal cumulus development, not the foggy, grey winter anticyclone.
+
+### Q117: At which temperature range is airframe icing most hazardous? ^t50q117
+- A) +5° to -10° C
+- B) 0° to -12° C
+- C) +20° to -5° C
+- D) -20° to -40° C
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most dangerous airframe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C because supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and largest in this temperature band. These droplets freeze on contact with aircraft surfaces, producing heavy ice accumulation. Below -20°C (D), most cloud water has already frozen into ice crystals that bounce off rather than adhering. The range +5° to -10°C (A) extends into above-freezing temperatures where icing cannot occur. The range +20° to -5°C (C) is far too broad and mostly above freezing.
+
+### Q118: When large, supercooled droplets strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice is produced? ^t50q118
+- A) Clear ice
+- B) Mixed ice
+- C) Hoar frost
+- D) Rime ice
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clear ice (also called glaze ice) forms when large supercooled water droplets strike an aircraft surface and flow back along it before freezing, creating a smooth, dense, transparent, and very heavy ice layer that closely conforms to the surface shape. It is the most dangerous type of airframe ice because it is difficult to detect and remove. Rime ice (D) forms from small droplets that freeze instantly on contact, trapping air and creating a rough, white, opaque deposit. Mixed ice (B) is a combination of both. Hoar frost (C) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not from droplet impact.
+
+### Q119: What conditions must be present for thermal thunderstorms to develop? ^t50q119
+- A) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- B) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and low humidity
+- C) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- D) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal thunderstorms require three ingredients working together: a conditionally unstable atmosphere (one that becomes fully unstable once air parcels reach saturation and the level of free convection), elevated surface temperatures to trigger strong thermals, and high humidity to supply the moisture and latent heat energy that fuels deep convection. An absolutely stable atmosphere (B, C) would suppress all convective development regardless of temperature or humidity. Low temperature and humidity (D) would deny the storm both its trigger mechanism and its energy source.
+
+### Q120: During which stage of a thunderstorm do updrafts dominate? ^t50q120
+- A) Mature stage
+- B) Upwind stage
+- C) Dissipating stage
+- D) Cumulus stage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cumulus (initial/developing) stage of a thunderstorm is characterised exclusively by updrafts that build the cloud vertically from cumulus congestus toward cumulonimbus. No downdrafts or precipitation have yet developed. The mature stage (A) features coexisting updrafts and downdrafts along with precipitation, turbulence, and lightning. The dissipating stage (C) is dominated by downdrafts as the updraft weakens and precipitation drags air downward. "Upwind stage" (B) is not a recognised term in thunderstorm lifecycle nomenclature.
+
+### Q121: Where should heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear near the ground be expected? ^t50q121
+- A) During warm summer days with high, flattened Cu clouds.
+- B) Close to rainfall areas of intense showers or thunderstorms.
+- C) During an approach to a coastal airfield with a strong sea breeze.
+- D) On cold, clear nights when radiation fog is forming.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Intense showers and thunderstorms produce powerful downdrafts (microbursts and downbursts) driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling. When these downdrafts hit the ground they spread outward, generating dangerous low-level wind shear that can cause sudden airspeed loss on approach. Sea-breeze fronts (C) produce mild convergence, not heavy downdrafts. Radiation fog nights (D) are calm with virtually no wind shear. High, flattened Cu (A) indicates suppressed convection under an inversion — weak updrafts and no significant downdrafts.
+
+### Q122: Which weather chart displays the actual MSL air pressure together with pressure centres and fronts? ^t50q122
+- A) Hypsometric chart
+- B) Prognostic chart
+- C) Wind chart
+- D) Surface weather chart
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) depicts observed mean sea-level pressure using isobars, identifies pressure centres (highs and lows) with their central pressures, and plots the positions of fronts (warm, cold, occluded, stationary) based on actual observations. A prognostic chart (B) shows forecast conditions, not current observations. A wind chart (C) displays wind vectors only. A hypsometric chart (A) shows the height of constant-pressure surfaces aloft, not MSL pressure or surface fronts.
+
+### Q123: What kind of information can be derived from satellite images? ^t50q123
+- A) Turbulence and icing conditions
+- B) Temperature and dew point of surrounding air
+- C) An overview of cloud cover and frontal lines
+- D) Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Satellite images (visible, infrared, and water vapour channels) provide a synoptic overview of cloud cover distribution, cloud type estimation, and the identification of frontal lines by recognising characteristic cloud patterns. Turbulence and icing (A) cannot be directly measured by satellite — those require pilot reports or forecast models. Temperature and dew point (B) are measured by radiosondes and surface stations. Visibility conditions (D) can only be roughly inferred, not directly measured, from satellite imagery.
+
+### Q124: Which information is available in the ATIS but not in a METAR? ^t50q124
+- A) Current weather details such as precipitation types
+- B) Approach data including ground visibility and cloud base
+- C) Operational details such as active runway and transition level
+- D) Mean wind speeds and maximum gust speeds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) broadcasts include operational aerodrome information such as the active runway, transition level, approach type in use, and relevant NOTAMs — none of which are encoded in a METAR. A METAR already contains precipitation types (A), visibility and cloud information (B), and wind speed including gusts (D). ATIS supplements the METAR with the operational data pilots need for arrival and departure.
+
+### Q125: Which cloud type signals the presence of thermal updrafts? ^t50q125
+- A) Lenticularis
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Cirrus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible markers of thermal convection: warm air rises from the surface, cools adiabatically to the dew point, and condenses, forming the flat-based, cauliflower-topped cloud that glider pilots use to locate thermals. Stratus (B) forms from broad, gentle lifting in stable air, not from thermals. Cirrus (D) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud unrelated to surface convection. Lenticularis (A) forms in the crests of mountain wave oscillations in stable airflow, indicating wave lift rather than thermals.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_101_125_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_101_125_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,252 @@
+### Q101 : Que représente le symbole de barbule de vent ci-dessous ? ^t50q101
+![[figures/t50_q101.png]]
+- A) Vent du NNE, 120 kt
+- B) Vent du NNE, 70 kt
+- C) Vent du SSW, 70 kt
+- D) Vent du SSW, 120 kt
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les barbules de vent pointent dans la direction d'où souffle le vent, la vitesse étant indiquée par des barbules et des fanions côté vent : un fanion = 50 kt, une longue barbule = 10 kt, une courte barbule = 5 kt. Le symbole représente un vent du SSW avec un fanion (50 kt) et deux longues barbules (20 kt), soit 70 kt au total. Les options A et B identifient incorrectement la direction comme NNE — les barbules de vent pointent depuis la source du vent, pas vers elle. L'option D surestime la vitesse à 120 kt.
+
+### Q102 : Quel est le nom du brouillard qui se développe lorsqu'une masse d'air humide se déplace horizontalement sur une surface plus froide ? ^t50q102
+- A) Brouillard de rayonnement
+- B) Brouillard orographique
+- C) Brouillard d'advection
+- D) Embruns marins
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard d'advection se forme lorsque de l'air chaud et humide est transporté (advecté) horizontalement sur une surface plus froide, se refroidissant par le bas jusqu'à atteindre son point de rosée et que la condensation se produit au niveau du sol. Le brouillard de rayonnement (A) se forme les nuits calmes et claires par refroidissement radiatif du sol, pas par déplacement horizontal de l'air. Le brouillard orographique (B) résulte du soulèvement de l'air humide au-dessus du relief. Les embruns marins (D) ne sont pas un type de brouillard — ils désignent des gouttelettes d'eau mécaniquement éjectées des crêtes de vagues.
+
+### Q103 : Quelle situation météorologique typiquement suisse le schéma ci-dessous représente-t-il ? ^t50q103
+![[figures/t50_q103.png]]
+- A) Situation de vent d'ouest
+- B) Situation de bise
+- C) Situation de Fœhn du sud
+- D) Situation de Fœhn du nord
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le schéma représente une situation de Fœhn du sud (Südföhn), où un gradient de pression pousse de l'air humide du sud contre les versants méridionaux des Alpes. L'air monte du côté au vent (versant italien), perdant son humidité sous forme de précipitations, puis descend les versants nord comme un air chaud et sec — l'effet de Fœhn classique. L'option A (vent d'ouest) implique des masses d'air atlantiques venant de l'ouest. L'option B (bise) est un vent froid de nord-est. L'option D (Fœhn du nord) inverse le flux, avec de l'air descendant côté sud des Alpes.
+
+### Q104 : Quel calage altimétrique devez-vous sélectionner pour que l'instrument affiche votre hauteur au-dessus d'un aérodrome spécifique (AAL) ? ^t50q104
+- A) Le QNH de l'aérodrome.
+- B) Le QFF de l'aérodrome.
+- C) Le QFE de l'aérodrome.
+- D) Le QNE de l'aérodrome.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique mesurée au point de référence de l'aérodrome. Lorsque le QFE est calé sur le sous-cadran de l'altimètre, l'instrument indique zéro au sol sur cet aérodrome et affiche la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome (AAL) en vol. Le QNH (A) afficherait l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer, pas la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome. Le QFF (B) est une réduction de pression météorologique pour les cartes météo, non utilisée en altimétrie. Le QNE (D) est le calage de pression standard (1013,25 hPa) pour l'indication des niveaux de vol.
+
+### Q105 : Quelles sont la vitesse et la direction du vent dans ce METAR ? LFSB 171100Z 29004KT 220V340 9999 FEW043 28/17 Q1013 NOSIG= ^t50q105
+- A) Vent du WNW, 4 nœuds, direction variant entre SW et NNW.
+- B) Vent du ESE, 4 nœuds, direction variant entre NE et SSE.
+- C) Vent du ESE, 4 nœuds, direction variant entre SW et NNW.
+- D) Vent du WNW, 4 nœuds, direction variant entre NE et SSE.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le groupe METAR « 29004KT 220V340 » : 290 est la direction du vent en degrés (290° = WNW), 04 est la vitesse en nœuds, et « 220V340 » indique que la direction varie entre 220° (SW) et 340° (NNW). Les options B et C interprètent incorrectement 290° comme ESE — ce serait environ 110°–120°. L'option D a la bonne direction moyenne (WNW) mais inverse la plage de variabilité à NE et SSE, ce qui contredit la notation 220V340.
+
+### Q106 : En été en Europe centrale, quel phénomène est typique d'un front froid avançant lorsque l'air chaud en avant du front a une structure thermodynamique instable ? ^t50q106
+- A) Couverture nuageuse stratiforme.
+- B) Rapide montée des températures après le passage du front.
+- C) Nuages d'orages.
+- D) Rapide chute de pression atmosphérique après le passage du front.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un front froid avançant rencontre de l'air chaud et instable en avant de lui dans un contexte d'été européen, le soulèvement forcé déclenche une convection vigoureuse et le développement rapide en verticale de cumulonimbus (nuages d'orages) avec de fortes précipitations, des éclairs et des vents en rafales. Les nuages stratiformes (A) sont associés aux masses d'air stables. La température baisse, ne monte pas (B), après le passage d'un front froid. La pression monte, ne chute pas (D), derrière un front froid lorsque de l'air froid et dense remplace le secteur chaud.
+
+### Q107 : Le long de la route de LOWK à EDDP (flèche en pointillé), quels phénomènes météorologiques sont à prévoir ? ^t50q107
+![[figures/t50_q107.png]]
+- A) Augmentation progressive des températures, vent arrière, orages isolés.
+- B) Diminution progressive des températures, vent de face, orages isolés.
+- C) Augmentation progressive des températures, vent de face, pas d'orages.
+- D) Diminution progressive des températures, vent arrière, orages isolés.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En volant de LOWK (Klagenfurt, Autriche) vers le nord jusqu'à EDDP (Leipzig, Allemagne), l'aéronef pénètre dans de l'air plus froid aux latitudes plus élevées, produisant une diminution progressive des températures. La situation synoptique sur la carte indique des conditions de vent de face sur cette route et une activité convective générant des orages isolés, notamment en été. L'option A prédit incorrectement un réchauffement (cap au nord) et du vent arrière. L'option C nie le risque orageux malgré l'instabilité synoptique représentée. L'option D prédit correctement le refroidissement et les orages mais identifie incorrectement un vent arrière.
+
+### Q108 : Quel type de nuage est le plus susceptible de provoquer de fortes averses ? ^t50q108
+- A) Nimbostratus
+- B) Altostratus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les cumulonimbus (Cb) sont des nuages convectifs massifs s'étendant de près de la surface jusqu'à la tropopause, contenant d'énormes quantités d'eau et de glace maintenues par de puissantes ascendances. Ils produisent les plus fortes averses, de la grêle et des orages. Le nimbostratus (A) produit des précipitations prolongées et régulières mais pas de fortes averses. L'altostratus (B) est un nuage de couche de niveau moyen produisant des précipitations légères à modérées et continues. Le cirrocumulus (C) est un nuage de haute altitude qui ne produit pas de précipitations significatives.
+
+### Q109 : Un radiosonde à haute altitude dans l'hémisphère nord a une zone de basse pression au nord et une zone de haute pression au sud. Dans quelle direction le vent emportera-t-il le ballon ? ^t50q109
+- A) Nord
+- B) Ouest
+- C) Est
+- D) Sud
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En altitude, le vent est approximativement géostrophique, soufflant parallèlement aux isobares avec la basse pression à gauche et la haute pression à droite dans l'hémisphère nord. Avec la basse pression au nord et la haute au sud, la force du gradient de pression pointe vers le nord, et la déviation de Coriolis tourne le vent résultant vers la droite — produisant un flux vers l'ouest (d'est en ouest). Le ballon est donc emporté vers l'ouest. Les options A, C et D appliquent incorrectement la loi de Buys-Ballot pour cette configuration de pression.
+
+### Q110 : Lorsque l'air est forcé vers le haut par le relief et rencontre des couches instables et humides, comment appelle-t-on les orages qui en résultent ? ^t50q110
+- A) Orages de front froid
+- B) Orages orographiques
+- C) Orages thermiques
+- D) Orages de front chaud
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque le terrain (montagnes, crêtes ou collines) force mécaniquement l'air vers le haut et que cet air soulevé rencontre des couches humides et instables en altitude, les tempêtes convectives qui en résultent sont classées comme orages orographiques. Ils sont entraînés par le soulèvement topographique plutôt que par le forçage frontal (A, D) ou le réchauffement purement thermique de la surface (C). Les orages orographiques sont courants sur les régions montagneuses en été et peuvent être particulièrement persistants car le terrain alimente continuellement le mécanisme de soulèvement.
+
+### Q111 : Quel ensemble de conditions favorise le développement du brouillard d'advection ? ^t50q111
+- A) Air froid et humide circulant au-dessus d'un océan chaud
+- B) Humidité s'évaporant d'un sol chaud et humide dans de l'air froid
+- C) Air chaud et humide circulant au-dessus d'une surface froide
+- D) Air chaud et humide se refroidissant par une nuit nuageuse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard d'advection se forme lorsque de l'air chaud et humide se déplace horizontalement sur une surface plus froide et se refroidit par le bas jusqu'à son point de rosée. Cela se produit couramment lorsque de l'air tropical maritime passe au-dessus de courants océaniques froids ou de terres froides au début du printemps. De l'air froid au-dessus d'une eau chaude (A) produirait du brouillard de vapeur (évaporation), pas du brouillard d'advection. L'humidité s'évaporant d'un sol chaud dans de l'air froid (B) décrit du brouillard de vapeur ou de mélange. Le refroidissement par une nuit nuageuse (D) est peu susceptible de produire du brouillard car la couverture nuageuse empêche le refroidissement radiatif nécessaire.
+
+### Q112 : Quel processus conduit à la formation du brouillard d'advection ? ^t50q112
+- A) Air chaud et humide transporté au-dessus de zones de sol froid
+- B) Air froid et humide mélangé avec de l'air chaud et humide
+- C) Long rayonnement lors de nuits sans nuages
+- D) Air froid et humide transporté au-dessus de zones de sol chaud
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard d'advection résulte du transport horizontal (advection) d'air chaud et humide au-dessus d'une surface froide. La surface froide refroidit l'air par le bas jusqu'à ce qu'il atteigne son point de rosée, provoquant une condensation au niveau du sol. L'option B décrit le brouillard de mélange, où deux masses d'air de températures différentes se combinent. L'option C décrit le brouillard de rayonnement, formé par refroidissement radiatif nocturne les nuits claires et calmes. L'option D (air froid au-dessus d'un sol chaud) réchaufferait l'air, diminuant l'humidité relative et éloignant les conditions de la formation de brouillard.
+
+### Q113 : Lors du passage d'un front froid, quel schéma de pression est typiquement observé ? ^t50q113
+- A) Baisse progressive de la pression
+- B) Brève baisse suivie d'une montée de pression
+- C) Schéma de pression constant
+- D) Montée progressive de la pression
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'approche d'un front froid, la pression baisse en avant de lui en raison du thalweg pré-frontal. Au moment du passage du front, la pression atteint son minimum, puis elle commence immédiatement à monter nettement à mesure que de l'air froid et dense s'installe derrière le front. Ce « trace en V » caractéristique de la pression — une brève baisse suivie d'une montée soutenue — est la signature barométrique classique du passage d'un front froid. Les options A et D décrivent des tendances monotones, tandis que l'option C suggère l'absence d'activité météorologique dynamique, aucune ne correspondant au comportement d'un passage frontal.
+
+### Q114 : Quelle limite frontale sépare l'air subtropical de l'air polaire froid, notamment en Europe centrale ? ^t50q114
+- A) Front polaire
+- B) Front froid
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Front chaud
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le front polaire est la zone frontière semi-permanente et quasi-continue séparant les masses d'air subtropical chaud des masses d'air polaire froid aux latitudes moyennes, notamment en Europe centrale. C'est le berceau des cyclones extratropicaux. Un front froid (B) est la bordure avant d'une unique masse d'air froid avançant au sein d'un cyclone. Un front chaud (D) est la bordure avant de l'air chaud avançant. Une occlusion (C) se forme lorsqu'un front froid rattrape un front chaud — aucun de ces éléments n'est la limite climatologique à grande échelle elle-même.
+
+### Q115 : En Europe centrale en été, quelles conditions météorologiques sont typiquement associées aux zones de haute pression ? ^t50q115
+- A) Isobares rapprochées avec vents calmes, développement de systèmes de vents locaux
+- B) Isobares espacées avec forts vents d'ouest dominants
+- C) Isobares espacées avec vents calmes, développement de systèmes de vents locaux
+- D) Isobares rapprochées avec forts vents dominants du nord
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les zones de haute pression estivales sur l'Europe centrale produisent des isobares espacées, indiquant de faibles gradients de pression synoptique et donc de légers vents dominants. En l'absence de forts vents de gradient, des circulations thermiques localement entraînées — brises de vallée, brises de mer, vents de pente — se développent et dominent le schéma d'écoulement. L'option A se contredit (des isobares rapprochées ne produisent pas des vents calmes). L'option B décrit de forts vents d'ouest associés à des systèmes dépressionnaires. L'option D décrit un schéma de flux froid de nord, pas typique des anticyclones estivaux.
+
+### Q116 : Quelle météo peut-on attendre dans les zones de haute pression en hiver ? ^t50q116
+- A) Temps variable avec passages de lignes frontales
+- B) Vents faibles et vastes zones de brouillard élevé
+- C) Lignes de grains et activité orageuse
+- D) Temps calme avec dissipation des nuages, quelques Cu élevés
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En hiver, les zones de haute pression produisent des inversions de subsidence qui piègent de l'air froid et humide près de la surface, créant du brouillard élevé (Hochnebel) généralisé et des couches de stratus, notamment dans les zones de vallées et de bassins en Europe centrale. Les vents sont faibles en raison du faible gradient de pression. L'option A (temps frontal) est associée aux systèmes dépressionnaires. L'option C (lignes de grains et orages) nécessite une instabilité convective absente dans les anticyclones hivernaux. L'option D décrit les conditions d'anticyclone estival avec développement de cumulus thermiques, pas l'anticyclone hivernal gris et brumeux.
+
+### Q117 : À quelle plage de températures le givrage de la cellule est-il le plus dangereux ? ^t50q117
+- A) +5° à -10° C
+- B) 0° à -12° C
+- C) +20° à -5° C
+- D) -20° à -40° C
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le givrage de cellule le plus dangereux se produit entre 0°C et -12°C car les gouttelettes d'eau liquide surfondue sont les plus abondantes et les plus grosses dans cette plage de température. Ces gouttelettes gèlent au contact des surfaces de l'aéronef, produisant une accumulation importante de glace. En dessous de -20°C (D), la majeure partie de l'eau nuageuse a déjà gelé en cristaux de glace qui rebondissent plutôt qu'adhèrent. La plage +5° à -10°C (A) s'étend dans des températures positives où le givrage ne peut pas se produire. La plage +20° à -5°C (C) est beaucoup trop large et principalement au-dessus de zéro.
+
+### Q118 : Lorsque de grandes gouttelettes surfondes frappent les surfaces avant d'un aéronef, quel type de givre est produit ? ^t50q118
+- A) Givre transparent (verglas)
+- B) Givre mixte
+- C) Givre blanc (frimas)
+- D) Givre opaque (givre dur)
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le givre transparent (également appelé verglas) se forme lorsque de grandes gouttelettes d'eau surfondue frappent une surface d'aéronef et s'écoulent sur elle avant de geler, créant une couche de glace lisse, dense, transparente et très lourde qui épouse étroitement la forme de la surface. C'est le type de givrage de cellule le plus dangereux car il est difficile à détecter et à éliminer. Le givre opaque (D) se forme à partir de petites gouttelettes qui gèlent instantanément au contact, emprisonnant de l'air et créant un dépôt rugueux, blanc et opaque. Le givre mixte (B) est une combinaison des deux. Le givre blanc (C) se forme par déposition directe de vapeur d'eau sur des surfaces froides, pas par impact de gouttelettes.
+
+### Q119 : Quelles conditions doivent être réunies pour le développement d'orages thermiques ? ^t50q119
+- A) Atmosphère conditionnellement instable, température élevée et forte humidité
+- B) Atmosphère absolument stable, température élevée et faible humidité
+- C) Atmosphère absolument stable, température élevée et forte humidité
+- D) Atmosphère conditionnellement instable, basse température et faible humidité
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les orages thermiques nécessitent trois ingrédients agissant ensemble : une atmosphère conditionnellement instable (qui devient pleinement instable dès que les particules d'air atteignent la saturation et le niveau de convection libre), des températures de surface élevées pour déclencher de forts thermiques, et une forte humidité pour fournir l'énergie d'humidité et de chaleur latente alimentant la convection profonde. Une atmosphère absolument stable (B, C) supprimerait tout développement convectif quelle que soit la température ou l'humidité. Des températures basses et une faible humidité (D) priveraient l'orage à la fois de son mécanisme de déclenchement et de sa source d'énergie.
+
+### Q120 : Durant quelle phase d'un orage les ascendances dominent-elles ? ^t50q120
+- A) Stade mature
+- B) Stade de vent montant
+- C) Stade de dissipation
+- D) Stade cumulus
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le stade cumulus (initial/de développement) d'un orage est caractérisé exclusivement par des ascendances qui construisent le nuage verticalement depuis le cumulus congestus jusqu'au cumulonimbus. Aucune descendance ni précipitation ne s'est encore développée. Le stade mature (A) présente des ascendances et descendances coexistantes accompagnées de précipitations, de turbulences et de foudre. Le stade de dissipation (C) est dominé par les descendances car l'ascendance s'affaiblit et les précipitations entraînent l'air vers le bas. Le « stade de vent montant » (B) n'est pas un terme reconnu dans la nomenclature du cycle de vie des orages.
+
+### Q121 : Où doit-on s'attendre à de fortes descendances et à un cisaillement du vent intense près du sol ? ^t50q121
+- A) Lors de belles journées d'été avec des Cu élevés et aplatis.
+- B) À proximité des zones de précipitations d'averses intenses ou d'orages.
+- C) Lors d'une approche sur un aérodrome côtier avec une forte brise de mer.
+- D) Par nuits froides et claires lorsque du brouillard de rayonnement se forme.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les averses intenses et les orages produisent de puissantes descendances (microrafales et rafales descendantes) entraînées par le poids des précipitations et le refroidissement par évaporation. Lorsque ces descendances atteignent le sol, elles se propagent vers l'extérieur, générant un cisaillement du vent de basse couche dangereux pouvant provoquer une perte soudaine de vitesse en finale. Les fronts de brise de mer (C) produisent une légère convergence, pas de fortes descendances. Les nuits de brouillard de rayonnement (D) sont calmes avec quasiment aucun cisaillement du vent. Les Cu élevés et aplatis (A) indiquent une convection supprimée par une inversion — faibles ascendances et pas de descendances significatives.
+
+### Q122 : Quelle carte météo affiche la pression MSL réelle ainsi que les centres de pression et les fronts ? ^t50q122
+- A) Carte hypsométrique
+- B) Carte pronostique
+- C) Carte des vents
+- D) Carte météo de surface
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La carte météo de surface (carte d'analyse synoptique) représente la pression observée au niveau de la mer en utilisant des isobares, identifie les centres de pression (anticyclones et dépressions) avec leurs pressions centrales, et trace les positions des fronts (chauds, froids, occlus, stationnaires) sur la base d'observations réelles. Une carte pronostique (B) représente les conditions prévisionnelles, pas les observations actuelles. Une carte des vents (C) n'affiche que les vecteurs de vent. Une carte hypsométrique (A) montre la hauteur des surfaces de pression constante en altitude, pas la pression au NMM ni les fronts de surface.
+
+### Q123 : Quel type d'information peut-on tirer des images satellites ? ^t50q123
+- A) Turbulences et conditions de givrage
+- B) Température et point de rosée de l'air environnant
+- C) Vue d'ensemble de la couverture nuageuse et des lignes frontales
+- D) Visibilité en vol, visibilité au sol et contact avec le sol
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les images satellites (canaux visible, infrarouge et vapeur d'eau) fournissent une vue synoptique de la distribution de la couverture nuageuse, une estimation du type de nuages et l'identification des lignes frontales par reconnaissance des schémas nuageux caractéristiques. Les turbulences et le givrage (A) ne peuvent pas être directement mesurés par satellite — cela nécessite des comptes rendus de pilotes ou des modèles de prévision. La température et le point de rosée (B) sont mesurés par radiosondages et stations de surface. Les conditions de visibilité (D) ne peuvent être qu'approximativement déduites, pas directement mesurées, depuis les images satellites.
+
+### Q124 : Quelle information est disponible dans l'ATIS mais pas dans un METAR ? ^t50q124
+- A) Détails météo actuels tels que les types de précipitations
+- B) Données d'approche incluant la visibilité au sol et la base des nuages
+- C) Informations opérationnelles telles que la piste active et le niveau de transition
+- D) Vitesses de vent moyennes et vitesses maximales en rafales
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les diffusions ATIS (Service automatique d'information de terminal) comprennent des informations opérationnelles sur l'aérodrome telles que la piste active, le niveau de transition, le type d'approche utilisé et les NOTAMs pertinents — aucun de ces éléments n'étant codé dans un METAR. Un METAR contient déjà les types de précipitations (A), les informations de visibilité et de nuages (B) et la vitesse du vent y compris les rafales (D). L'ATIS complète le METAR avec les données opérationnelles dont les pilotes ont besoin pour l'arrivée et le départ.
+
+### Q125 : Quel type de nuage signale la présence d'ascendances thermiques ? ^t50q125
+- A) Lenticularis
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Cirrus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les cumulus sont les marqueurs visibles de la convection thermique : de l'air chaud monte de la surface, se refroidit adiabatiquement jusqu'au point de rosée et se condense, formant le nuage à base plate et à sommet en chou-fleur que les pilotes de planeurs utilisent pour localiser les thermiques. Les stratus (B) se forment par soulèvement large et doux dans de l'air stable, pas par des thermiques. Les cirrus (D) sont des nuages de haute altitude composés de cristaux de glace sans rapport avec la convection de surface. Les lenticularis (A) se forment aux crêtes des oscillations d'onde de montagne dans un flux stable, indiquant une portance ondulatoire plutôt que des thermiques.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_126_150.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_126_150.md
new file mode 100644
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+### Q126: Compared to the dry adiabatic lapse rate, the saturated adiabatic lapse rate is... ^t50q126
+- A) Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- B) Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- C) Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- D) Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR, averaging about 0.6°C/100 m) is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR, 1.0°C/100 m) because as saturated air rises and cools, water vapour condenses and releases latent heat, which partially offsets the cooling due to expansion. This means saturated air cools more slowly per unit of altitude gained. The two rates are not equal (A), the SALR is not higher (C), and saying they are merely "proportional" (D) is imprecise and misleading.
+
+### Q127: What is the value of the dry adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q127
+- A) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 2° / 1000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is exactly 1.0°C per 100 m (or approximately 3°C per 1000 ft). This is the rate at which an unsaturated air parcel cools when rising (or warms when descending) purely due to adiabatic expansion or compression. Option A (0.6°C/100 m) is approximately the saturated adiabatic lapse rate. Option B (0.65°C/100 m) is the standard atmosphere environmental lapse rate. Option D (2°/1000 ft) converts to about 0.66°C/100 m, which does not match the DALR.
+
+### Q128: What weather should be expected when the atmosphere is conditionally unstable? ^t50q128
+- A) Cloud-free skies, sunshine, light winds
+- B) Layered clouds reaching high levels, prolonged rain or snow
+- C) Towering cumulus, isolated rain showers or thunderstorms
+- D) Shallow cumulus clouds with bases at medium levels
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Conditional instability means the atmosphere is stable for unsaturated air but becomes unstable once air parcels are lifted to saturation. When triggered — by surface heating, orographic lift, or frontal forcing — this instability produces vigorous convection: towering cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds with isolated showers and thunderstorms. Clear skies (A) indicate absolute stability or dry conditions. Layered clouds with prolonged rain (B) characterise absolutely stable (stratiform) weather. Shallow mid-level cumulus (D) indicates limited instability insufficient for significant vertical development.
+
+### Q129: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^t50q129
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The figure MET-004 shows thin, wispy, high-altitude clouds with a delicate fibrous or streaky structure — the defining visual characteristics of cirrus clouds. Cirrus forms above approximately 6,000 m (FL200) and consists entirely of ice crystals, which produce its distinctive silky or hair-like appearance. Stratus (A) is a grey, featureless layer cloud at low altitude. Cumulus (B) has a well-defined, puffy vertical structure. Altocumulus (D) appears as white or grey patches or layers of rounded masses at mid-level.
+
+### Q130: What is required for the development of medium to large precipitation particles? ^t50q130
+- A) An inversion layer.
+- B) A high cloud base.
+- C) Strong updrafts.
+- D) Strong wind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Medium to large precipitation particles (raindrops, hailstones) need time to grow by collision-coalescence or the Bergeron ice-crystal process, and strong updrafts keep droplets and ice crystals suspended in the cloud long enough for this growth to occur. Without sufficient updraft strength, particles fall out before reaching significant size. An inversion layer (A) suppresses cloud growth and precipitation. A high cloud base (B) reduces available cloud depth for particle growth. Strong horizontal wind (D) does not contribute to the vertical suspension needed for particle growth.
+
+### Q131: On the weather chart, the symbol labelled (2) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q131
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On standard synoptic weather charts, a warm front is depicted as a line with semicircles pointing in the direction of movement (into the colder air mass). The referenced figure MET-005 shows symbol (2) matching this convention — semicircles on one side of the frontal line. A cold front (A) uses triangular barbs pointing in the direction of advance. An occlusion (D) uses alternating triangles and semicircles on the same side. A front aloft (C) is marked with a different symbology indicating the front does not reach the surface.
+
+### Q132: Within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q132
+- A) Visibility below 1000 m, cloud covering the ground
+- B) Good visibility, a few isolated high clouds
+- C) Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds
+- D) Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The warm sector lies between the warm front and the cold front, containing the warmest, most homogeneous air. During summer, this air mass typically offers moderate to good visibility with scattered or broken cloud layers — flyable VFR conditions. Visibility below 1000 m with ground-covering cloud (A) is more typical of winter fog or orographic stratus. Heavy showers and thunderstorms (D) are characteristic of the cold front itself, not the warm sector. Few isolated high clouds (B) describe pre-frontal conditions well ahead of the system.
+
+### Q133: After a cold front has passed, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q133
+- A) Moderate visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation
+- B) Good visibility, cumulus cloud development with rain or snow showers
+- C) Scattered cloud layers, visibility over 5 km, shallow cumulus clouds forming
+- D) Poor visibility, overcast or ground-covering stratus, snow
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cold front passes, cold, clean polar air replaces the warm sector. This unstable air mass produces excellent visibility between showers, with convective cumulus clouds developing from surface heating and occasional rain or snow showers from cumulus congestus. Option A describes warm front approach conditions (lowering bases, continuous rain). Option C understates the convective activity typical of post-frontal polar air. Option D describes poor visibility with stratus, which is more typical of the cold sector of a warm occlusion, not the fresh polar air behind a cold front.
+
+### Q134: In what direction does a polar front low typically move? ^t50q134
+- A) Parallel to the warm front line toward the south
+- B) Northeastward in winter, southeastward in summer
+- C) Northwestward in winter, southwestward in summer
+- D) Parallel to the warm-sector isobars
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A polar front low (extratropical cyclone) is steered by the upper-level airflow, which is closely approximated by the direction of the isobars in the warm sector — the warm sector wind effectively carries the entire system along. This is a more reliable steering rule than fixed seasonal directions. Option A wrongly states southward movement. Options B and C propose rigid seasonal rules that oversimplify the highly variable tracks of mid-latitude cyclones across Europe.
+
+### Q135: What is the characteristic pressure pattern as a polar front low passes over? ^t50q135
+- A) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- B) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- C) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+- D) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, rising pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The classic pressure trace of a passing polar front low follows three phases: pressure falls as the warm front approaches (the low draws nearer), pressure holds relatively steady in the warm sector between the two fronts, and pressure rises sharply after the cold front passes as cold, dense air replaces the warm sector. Option B wrongly has pressure rising ahead of the warm front. Option C has pressure falling behind the cold front, contradicting the arrival of dense cold air. Option D reverses the entire pattern.
+
+### Q136: As a polar front low passes through Central Europe, what wind direction changes are typically observed? ^t50q136
+- A) Backing at both the warm front and the cold front
+- B) Veering at the warm front, backing at the cold front
+- C) Backing at the warm front, veering at the cold front
+- D) Veering at both the warm front and the cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, as a typical polar front low passes, wind veers (shifts clockwise) at both frontal passages. At the warm front, wind veers from southeast to south or southwest. At the cold front, it veers again from southwest to west or northwest. This consistent clockwise shift indicates the low is passing to the north of the observer, which is the normal track for lows crossing Central Europe. Backing (A, B, C) would indicate the low passing to the south — an uncommon trajectory.
+
+### Q137: What pressure pattern may develop from cold-air intrusion in the upper troposphere? ^t50q137
+- A) Development of a low in the upper troposphere
+- B) Development of a high in the upper troposphere
+- C) Oscillating pressure
+- D) Development of a large surface low
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When cold air intrudes into the upper troposphere, it reduces the thickness of the atmospheric column (cold air is denser and occupies less vertical space), causing the heights of upper pressure surfaces to drop. This creates an upper-level low or trough. These cold-pool lows aloft are potent triggers for convective instability and often initiate cyclogenesis at the surface. An upper high (B) would form from warm-air advection, not cold intrusion. Oscillating pressure (C) and a large surface low (D) are not the direct or primary consequence of upper-level cold intrusion.
+
+### Q138: Cold air flowing into the upper troposphere may lead to... ^t50q138
+- A) Stabilisation and settled weather.
+- B) Frontal weather systems.
+- C) Showers and thunderstorms.
+- D) Calm weather and cloud dissipation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air advecting into the upper troposphere steepens the lapse rate (cold air aloft over relatively warmer air below), producing conditional or even absolute instability. This destabilisation triggers convection, generating showers and thunderstorms — especially when combined with surface moisture and daytime heating. Stabilisation and settled weather (A) and calm conditions (D) are the opposite of what cold upper-air intrusion produces. Frontal weather (B) requires surface air-mass boundaries, which are not a direct result of upper-tropospheric cooling.
+
+### Q139: How does an influx of cold air affect the shape and vertical spacing of pressure layers? ^t50q139
+- A) Increased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- B) Decreased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- C) Increased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+- D) Decreased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air is denser than warm air, so a cold air column has less vertical distance (decreased spacing) between any two pressure surfaces. Because the column is compressed, the upper pressure surfaces lie at lower geometric heights, which is identified as low pressure aloft on hypsometric charts. This is why upper-level lows are always associated with cold-core air masses. Warm air produces the opposite: increased spacing and raised heights (high pressure aloft), as described in options A and C.
+
+### Q140: During summer, what weather is typical of high pressure areas? ^t50q140
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- B) Settled weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+- C) Changeable weather with frontal passages
+- D) Light winds with widespread high fog
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, anticyclones bring subsiding air that warms adiabatically, suppressing deep convection and producing clear to partly cloudy skies with perhaps a few fair-weather cumulus (Cu humilis) from daytime thermal heating. The overall character is settled, warm, and dry. Squall lines and thunderstorms (A) require convective instability not present in a well-established high. Frontal passages (C) are features of low-pressure troughs. Widespread high fog (D) is a winter high-pressure phenomenon caused by temperature inversions trapping cold moist air.
+
+### Q141: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn conditions, what weather should be expected? ^t50q141
+- A) Scattered cumulus clouds accompanied by showers and thunderstorms
+- B) Light wind with formation of high stratus (high fog)
+- C) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate to heavy rain
+- D) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming, strong gusty winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (Stau) side during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise over the mountain barrier, cooling adiabatically and producing dense layered clouds (stratus, nimbostratus), obscured mountain peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy orographic precipitation. Option D describes the lee-side Foehn effect — warm, dry, gusty descending wind — which is the opposite side of the mountains. Option A describes convective (unstable) weather, not the organised forced ascent of a Foehn pattern. Option B describes stagnant anticyclonic conditions, not active orographic lifting.
+
+### Q142: Which chart depicts areas of precipitation? ^t50q142
+- A) Wind chart
+- B) Radar picture
+- C) GAFOR
+- D) Satellite picture
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Weather radar detects precipitation directly by measuring the intensity of microwave energy backscattered from raindrops, snowflakes, and hail. Radar imagery shows the precise location, extent, and intensity of precipitation areas in near-real-time. A satellite picture (D) shows cloud cover but cannot directly distinguish precipitating from non-precipitating clouds. A wind chart (A) displays wind patterns only. A GAFOR (C) is a coded route forecast for general aviation that categorises flying conditions but does not depict precipitation areas graphically.
+
+### Q143: An inversion is an atmospheric layer where... ^t50q143
+- A) Pressure increases with increasing height.
+- B) Temperature remains constant with increasing height.
+- C) Temperature decreases with increasing height.
+- D) Temperature increases with increasing height.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion is a layer of the atmosphere where temperature increases with altitude, which is the reverse ("inversion") of the normal tropospheric lapse rate. Inversions are extremely stable and act as lids that suppress convection, trap pollution, and limit thermal development for glider pilots. Option B describes an isothermal layer (constant temperature). Option C describes the normal lapse rate. Option A is incorrect because atmospheric pressure always decreases with height, regardless of the temperature profile.
+
+### Q144: Which condition may prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q144
+- A) A clear, cloudless night
+- B) Low temperature-dew point spread
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Calm wind conditions
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog requires the ground to radiate longwave heat to space, cooling the surface air to the dew point. An overcast cloud layer acts as a blanket, absorbing and re-emitting radiation back toward the ground, preventing the surface from cooling sufficiently. Therefore, overcast cloud cover prevents radiation fog formation. A clear night (A), low spread (B), and calm wind (D) all favour fog formation — they are prerequisites, not preventative conditions.
+
+### Q145: On the chart, the symbol labelled (3) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q145
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Front aloft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An occluded front is depicted on synoptic charts by a line combining both the cold front triangles and the warm front semicircles on the same side, representing the merger of the two fronts when the faster-moving cold front overtakes the warm front. Symbol (3) in figure MET-005 shows this combined symbology, identifying it as an occlusion. A warm front (A) uses only semicircles. A cold front (B) uses only triangles. A front aloft (D) has a distinct marking indicating the frontal surface does not reach the ground.
+
+### Q146: A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass that shows no horizontal movement is known as a... ^t50q146
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Occluded front.
+- C) Stationary front.
+- D) Cold front.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stationary front is a boundary between two contrasting air masses — here polar and subtropical — that is not moving significantly in either direction. Neither the cold air nor the warm air is advancing. A cold front (D) is specifically an advancing cold air mass pushing warm air aside. A warm front (A) is advancing warm air overriding cold air. An occluded front (B) results from a cold front overtaking a warm front within a mature cyclone — it involves merging fronts, not stationary boundaries.
+
+### Q147: Which situation may lead to severe wind shear? ^t50q147
+- A) Cross-country flying beneath Cu clouds at roughly 4 octas coverage
+- B) A shower visible in the vicinity of the airfield
+- C) Final approach 30 minutes after a heavy shower has cleared the airfield
+- D) Flying ahead of a warm front with Ci clouds visible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An active shower near an airfield indicates ongoing convective downdrafts and outflow boundaries that create severe, rapidly changing low-level wind shear — a critical hazard during takeoff and landing. The gust front from a nearby shower can change wind direction and speed dramatically within seconds. Cross-country flying below moderate Cu (A) involves normal soaring conditions. Thirty minutes after a shower (C), conditions have typically stabilised. Cirrus ahead of a warm front (D) is an upper-level indicator without immediate low-level shear implications.
+
+### Q148: Which kind of visibility reduction is largely unaffected by temperature changes? ^t50q148
+- A) Mist (BR)
+- B) Patches of fog (BCFG)
+- C) Haze (HZ)
+- D) Radiation fog (FG)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Haze (HZ) is caused by dry particulates — dust, smoke, industrial pollution, and fine sand — suspended in the atmosphere. Because these particles are not moisture-dependent, haze persists regardless of temperature changes. Mist (A), fog patches (B), and radiation fog (D) are all formed by water droplet suspension and are highly sensitive to temperature: warming evaporates the droplets and improves visibility, while cooling promotes further condensation and worsens it.
+
+### Q149: In a METAR, how are moderate showers of rain encoded? ^t50q149
+- A) TS.
+- B) .+RA.
+- C) SHRA.
+- D) .+TSRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the descriptor "SH" (shower) is combined with the precipitation type "RA" (rain) to form "SHRA," which denotes moderate showers of rain. No intensity prefix means moderate. "+RA" (B) indicates heavy continuous rain, not a shower. "TS" (A) denotes a thunderstorm without specifying precipitation type. "+TSRA" (D) indicates a heavy thunderstorm with rain — a more severe phenomenon than a simple rain shower.
+
+### Q150: For which areas are SIGMET warnings issued? ^t50q150
+- A) Airports.
+- B) FIRs / UIRs.
+- C) Specific routings.
+- D) Countries.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SIGMET (Significant Meteorological Information) warnings are issued for Flight Information Regions (FIRs) and Upper Information Regions (UIRs), which are standardised ICAO airspace blocks managed by specific ATC authorities. They warn of hazardous weather phenomena (severe turbulence, icing, volcanic ash, thunderstorms) within these defined airspace volumes. SIGMETs are not issued for individual airports (A) — those use AIRMETs or aerodrome warnings. They are not route-specific (C) or country-specific (D), as a single country may contain multiple FIRs.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_126_150_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_126_150_fr.md
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+### Q126 : Par rapport au gradient adiabatique sec, le gradient adiabatique saturé est… ^t50q126
+- A) Égal au gradient adiabatique sec.
+- B) Inférieur au gradient adiabatique sec.
+- C) Supérieur au gradient adiabatique sec.
+- D) Proportionnel au gradient adiabatique sec.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le gradient adiabatique saturé (GAS, environ 0,6°C/100 m en moyenne) est inférieur au gradient adiabatique sec (GAS, 1,0°C/100 m) car lorsque de l'air saturé monte et se refroidit, la vapeur d'eau se condense et libère de la chaleur latente, compensant partiellement le refroidissement dû à la détente. Cela signifie que l'air saturé se refroidit plus lentement par unité d'altitude gagnée. Les deux taux ne sont pas égaux (A), le GAS saturé n'est pas supérieur (C), et dire qu'ils sont simplement « proportionnels » (D) est imprécis et trompeur.
+
+### Q127 : Quelle est la valeur du gradient adiabatique sec ? ^t50q127
+- A) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 2° / 1000 ft.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le gradient adiabatique sec (GAS) est exactement 1,0°C par 100 m (ou environ 3°C par 1000 ft). C'est le taux auquel une particule d'air non saturée se refroidit en montant (ou se réchauffe en descendant) uniquement par détente ou compression adiabatique. L'option A (0,6°C/100 m) est approximativement le gradient adiabatique saturé. L'option B (0,65°C/100 m) est le gradient thermique vertical de l'atmosphère standard. L'option D (2°/1000 ft) se convertit en environ 0,66°C/100 m, ce qui ne correspond pas au GAS.
+
+### Q128 : Quel temps faut-il attendre lorsque l'atmosphère est conditionnellement instable ? ^t50q128
+- A) Ciel sans nuages, soleil, vents faibles
+- B) Nuages en couches atteignant des niveaux élevés, pluie ou neige prolongées
+- C) Cumulus bourgeonnants, averses de pluie isolées ou orages
+- D) Nuages cumulus peu profonds avec bases à des niveaux moyens
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'instabilité conditionnelle signifie que l'atmosphère est stable pour de l'air non saturé mais devient instable dès que les particules d'air sont soulevées jusqu'à la saturation. Lorsque déclenchée — par réchauffement de surface, soulèvement orographique ou forçage frontal — cette instabilité produit une convection vigoureuse : cumulus bourgeonnants et cumulonimbus avec averses et orages isolés. Les ciels dégagés (A) indiquent une stabilité absolue ou des conditions sèches. Les nuages en couches avec pluie prolongée (B) caractérisent le temps stratiforme absolument stable. Les cumulus peu profonds de niveau moyen (D) indiquent une instabilité limitée insuffisante pour un développement vertical significatif.
+
+### Q129 : Identifiez le type de nuage représenté sur l'image. Voir figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^t50q129
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La figure MET-004 montre des nuages minces, vaporeux et de haute altitude avec une structure délicate fibreuse ou striée — les caractéristiques visuelles définissant les cirrus. Les cirrus se forment au-dessus d'environ 6000 m (FL200) et sont entièrement composés de cristaux de glace, ce qui leur confère leur aspect soyeux ou chevelu caractéristique. Le stratus (A) est un nuage de couche gris et sans relief à basse altitude. Le cumulus (B) a une structure verticale bien définie et touffue. L'altocumulus (D) apparaît comme des plaques blanches ou grises ou des couches de masses arrondies à niveau moyen.
+
+### Q130 : Qu'est-ce qui est nécessaire pour le développement de particules de précipitations moyennes à grandes ? ^t50q130
+- A) Une couche d'inversion.
+- B) Une base nuageuse élevée.
+- C) De fortes ascendances.
+- D) Un vent fort.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les particules de précipitation moyennes à grandes (gouttes de pluie, grêlons) ont besoin de temps pour grossir par coalescence-collision ou par le processus de cristaux de glace de Bergeron, et de fortes ascendances maintiennent les gouttelettes et les cristaux de glace en suspension dans le nuage suffisamment longtemps pour que cette croissance se produise. Sans une force d'ascendance suffisante, les particules tombent avant d'atteindre une taille significative. Une couche d'inversion (A) supprime la croissance des nuages et les précipitations. Une base nuageuse élevée (B) réduit la profondeur nuageuse disponible pour la croissance des particules. Un vent horizontal fort (D) ne contribue pas à la suspension verticale nécessaire à la croissance des particules.
+
+### Q131 : Sur la carte météo, le symbole étiqueté (2) représente un/une… Voir figure (MET-005). Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q131
+- A) Front froid.
+- B) Front chaud.
+- C) Front en altitude.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur les cartes synoptiques standard, un front chaud est représenté par une ligne avec des demi-cercles pointant dans la direction du mouvement (vers la masse d'air plus froide). La figure MET-005 référencée montre le symbole (2) correspondant à cette convention — des demi-cercles d'un côté de la ligne frontale. Un front froid (A) utilise des barbs triangulaires pointant dans la direction d'avancement. Une occlusion (D) utilise des triangles et des demi-cercles alternés du même côté. Un front en altitude (C) est marqué d'une symbologie différente indiquant que le front n'atteint pas la surface.
+
+### Q132 : Dans le secteur chaud d'une dépression de front polaire en été, quelles conditions de vol à vue sont typiques ? ^t50q132
+- A) Visibilité inférieure à 1000 m, nuages couvrant le sol
+- B) Bonne visibilité, quelques nuages élevés isolés
+- C) Visibilité modérée à bonne, nuages épars
+- D) Visibilité modérée, fortes averses et orages
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le secteur chaud se situe entre le front chaud et le front froid, contenant l'air le plus chaud et le plus homogène. En été, cette masse d'air offre typiquement une visibilité modérée à bonne avec des couches nuageuses éparses ou fragmentées — des conditions VFR praticables. Une visibilité inférieure à 1000 m avec des nuages couvrant le sol (A) est plus typique du brouillard hivernal ou du stratus orographique. Les fortes averses et orages (D) sont caractéristiques du front froid lui-même, pas du secteur chaud. Quelques nuages élevés isolés (B) décrivent les conditions pré-frontales bien en avant du système.
+
+### Q133 : Après le passage d'un front froid, quelles conditions de vol à vue sont typiques ? ^t50q133
+- A) Visibilité modérée avec bases nuageuses qui s'abaissent, début de précipitations prolongées
+- B) Bonne visibilité, développement de cumulus avec averses de pluie ou de neige
+- C) Couches nuageuses éparses, visibilité supérieure à 5 km, formation de cumulus peu profonds
+- D) Mauvaise visibilité, stratus couvert ou au sol, neige
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Après le passage d'un front froid, de l'air polaire froid et propre remplace le secteur chaud. Cette masse d'air instable produit une excellente visibilité entre les averses, avec des cumulus convectifs se développant par réchauffement de surface et des averses occasionnelles de pluie ou de neige de cumulus congestus. L'option A décrit les conditions d'approche d'un front chaud (bases qui s'abaissent, pluie continue). L'option C sous-estime l'activité convective typique de l'air polaire post-frontal. L'option D décrit une mauvaise visibilité avec stratus, plus typique du secteur froid d'une occlusion chaude, pas de l'air polaire frais derrière un front froid.
+
+### Q134 : Dans quelle direction une dépression de front polaire se déplace-t-elle typiquement ? ^t50q134
+- A) Parallèlement à la ligne de front chaud vers le sud
+- B) Vers le nord-est en hiver, vers le sud-est en été
+- C) Vers le nord-ouest en hiver, vers le sud-ouest en été
+- D) Parallèlement aux isobares du secteur chaud
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une dépression de front polaire (cyclone extratropical) est pilotée par le flux en altitude, bien approximé par la direction des isobares dans le secteur chaud — le vent du secteur chaud transporte effectivement l'ensemble du système. Il s'agit d'une règle de pilotage plus fiable que des directions saisonnières fixes. L'option A affirme incorrectement un mouvement vers le sud. Les options B et C proposent des règles saisonnières rigides qui simplifient excessivement les trajectoires très variables des cyclones de latitudes moyennes en Europe.
+
+### Q135 : Quel est le schéma de pression caractéristique lors du passage d'une dépression de front polaire ? ^t50q135
+- A) Pression en baisse devant le front chaud, pression stable dans le secteur chaud, pression en hausse derrière le front froid
+- B) Pression en hausse devant le front chaud, pression stable dans le secteur chaud, pression en hausse derrière le front froid
+- C) Pression en baisse devant le front chaud, pression stable dans le secteur chaud, pression en baisse derrière le front froid
+- D) Pression en hausse devant le front chaud, pression en hausse dans le secteur chaud, pression en baisse derrière le front froid
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La trace de pression classique d'une dépression de front polaire qui passe suit trois phases : la pression baisse à l'approche du front chaud (la dépression se rapproche), la pression reste relativement stable dans le secteur chaud entre les deux fronts, et la pression monte nettement après le passage du front froid lorsque de l'air froid et dense remplace le secteur chaud. L'option B fait monter la pression à l'approche du front chaud, ce qui est incorrect. L'option C fait baisser la pression derrière le front froid, ce qui contredit l'arrivée de l'air froid dense. L'option D inverse complètement le schéma.
+
+### Q136 : Au passage d'une dépression de front polaire en Europe centrale, quels changements de direction du vent sont typiquement observés ? ^t50q136
+- A) Rotation anticyclonique (vers la droite) au passage des deux fronts, chaud et froid
+- B) Rotation anticyclonique au front chaud, rotation cyclonique au front froid
+- C) Rotation cyclonique au front chaud, rotation anticyclonique au front froid
+- D) Rotation anticyclonique (vers la droite) au passage des deux fronts, chaud et froid
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'hémisphère nord, au passage d'une dépression de front polaire typique, le vent vire (rotation dans le sens des aiguilles d'une montre) aux deux passages frontaux. Au front chaud, il vire du sud-est au sud ou au sud-ouest. Au front froid, il vire à nouveau du sud-ouest à l'ouest ou au nord-ouest. Cette rotation horaire constante indique que la dépression passe au nord de l'observateur, ce qui est la trajectoire normale des dépressions traversant l'Europe centrale. Une rotation antihoraire (A, B, C) indiquerait que la dépression passe au sud — une trajectoire peu courante.
+
+### Q137 : Quel schéma de pression peut se développer à partir d'une intrusion d'air froid dans la haute troposphère ? ^t50q137
+- A) Développement d'une dépression dans la haute troposphère
+- B) Développement d'un anticyclone dans la haute troposphère
+- C) Pression oscillante
+- D) Développement d'une grande dépression de surface
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque de l'air froid pénètre dans la haute troposphère, il réduit l'épaisseur de la colonne atmosphérique (l'air froid est plus dense et occupe moins d'espace vertical), provoquant la descente des hauteurs des surfaces de pression supérieures. Cela crée une dépression ou un thalweg en altitude. Ces dépressions à noyau froid en altitude sont de puissants déclencheurs d'instabilité convective et déclenchent souvent une cyclogénèse en surface. Un anticyclone en altitude (B) se formerait par advection d'air chaud, pas par intrusion froide. La pression oscillante (C) et une grande dépression de surface (D) ne sont pas la conséquence directe ou principale d'une intrusion froide en altitude.
+
+### Q138 : L'afflux d'air froid dans la haute troposphère peut conduire à… ^t50q138
+- A) Une stabilisation et un temps calme.
+- B) Des systèmes météorologiques frontaux.
+- C) Des averses et des orages.
+- D) Un temps calme et une dissipation des nuages.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'advection d'air froid dans la haute troposphère accentue le gradient thermique (air froid en altitude au-dessus d'un air relativement plus chaud en dessous), produisant une instabilité conditionnelle ou même absolue. Cette déstabilisation déclenche la convection, générant des averses et des orages — surtout combinée à l'humidité de surface et au réchauffement diurne. La stabilisation et le temps calme (A) ainsi que les conditions calmes (D) sont l'opposé de ce que produit une intrusion d'air froid en haute altitude. Le temps frontal (B) nécessite des limites entre masses d'air en surface, ce qui n'est pas une conséquence directe du refroidissement de la haute troposphère.
+
+### Q139 : Comment un afflux d'air froid affecte-t-il la forme et l'espacement vertical des couches de pression ? ^t50q139
+- A) Espacement vertical accru, élévation des géopotentiels (haute pression)
+- B) Espacement vertical réduit, élévation des géopotentiels (haute pression)
+- C) Espacement vertical accru, abaissement des géopotentiels (basse pression)
+- D) Espacement vertical réduit, abaissement des géopotentiels (basse pression)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'air froid est plus dense que l'air chaud, de sorte qu'une colonne d'air froid présente moins de distance verticale (espacement réduit) entre deux surfaces de pression quelconques. Comme la colonne est comprimée, les surfaces de pression supérieures se trouvent à des altitudes géométriques plus basses, ce qui est identifié comme une basse pression en altitude sur les cartes hypsométriques. C'est pourquoi les dépressions en altitude sont toujours associées à des masses d'air à noyau froid. L'air chaud produit l'inverse : espacement accru et géopotentiels élevés (haute pression en altitude), comme décrit dans les options A et C.
+
+### Q140 : En été, quel temps est typique des zones de haute pression ? ^t50q140
+- A) Lignes de grains et activité orageuse
+- B) Temps stable avec dissipation des nuages, quelques Cu élevés
+- C) Temps variable avec passages frontaux
+- D) Vents faibles avec brouillard élevé généralisé
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En été, les anticyclones amènent de l'air subsidant qui se réchauffe adiabatiquement, supprimant la convection profonde et produisant des ciels dégagés à partiellement nuageux avec peut-être quelques cumulus de beau temps (Cu humilis) issus du réchauffement thermique diurne. Le caractère général est stable, chaud et sec. Les lignes de grains et les orages (A) nécessitent une instabilité convective absente dans un anticyclone bien établi. Les passages frontaux (C) sont des caractéristiques des thalwegs dépressionnaires. Le brouillard élevé généralisé (D) est un phénomène d'anticyclone hivernal causé par des inversions de température piégeant de l'air froid et humide.
+
+### Q141 : Du côté au vent d'une chaîne de montagnes en conditions de Fœhn, quel temps faut-il attendre ? ^t50q141
+- A) Nuages cumulus épars accompagnés d'averses et d'orages
+- B) Vent faible avec formation de stratus élevé (brouillard élevé)
+- C) Nuages en couches, montagnes cachées, mauvaise visibilité, précipitations modérées à fortes
+- D) Dissipation des nuages avec réchauffement inhabituel, vents forts en rafales
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Du côté au vent (Stau) en conditions de Fœhn, l'air humide est forcé à monter au-dessus de la barrière montagneuse, se refroidissant adiabatiquement et produisant des nuages en couches denses (stratus, nimbostratus), des sommets montagneux cachés, une mauvaise visibilité et des précipitations orographiques modérées à fortes. L'option D décrit l'effet de Fœhn du côté sous le vent — vent chaud, sec et en rafales descendant — qui est le côté opposé des montagnes. L'option A décrit un temps convectif (instable), pas l'ascension forcée organisée d'un schéma de Fœhn. L'option B décrit des conditions anticycloniques stagnantes, pas un soulèvement orographique actif.
+
+### Q142 : Quelle carte représente les zones de précipitations ? ^t50q142
+- A) Carte des vents
+- B) Image radar
+- C) GAFOR
+- D) Image satellite
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le radar météo détecte les précipitations directement en mesurant l'intensité de l'énergie micro-onde rétrodiffusée par les gouttes de pluie, les flocons de neige et la grêle. Les images radar montrent l'emplacement précis, l'étendue et l'intensité des zones de précipitations en quasi-temps réel. Une image satellite (D) montre la couverture nuageuse mais ne peut pas directement distinguer les nuages précipitants des nuages non précipitants. Une carte des vents (A) n'affiche que les schémas de vent. Un GAFOR (C) est une prévision de route codée pour l'aviation générale qui catégorise les conditions de vol mais ne représente pas graphiquement les zones de précipitations.
+
+### Q143 : Une inversion est une couche atmosphérique où… ^t50q143
+- A) La pression augmente avec l'altitude croissante.
+- B) La température reste constante avec l'altitude croissante.
+- C) La température diminue avec l'altitude croissante.
+- D) La température augmente avec l'altitude croissante.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une inversion est une couche de l'atmosphère où la température augmente avec l'altitude, ce qui est l'inverse (« inversion ») du gradient thermique normal de la troposphère. Les inversions sont extrêmement stables et agissent comme des couvercles qui suppriment la convection, piègent les polluants et limitent le développement thermique pour les pilotes de planeurs. L'option B décrit une couche isotherme (température constante). L'option C décrit le gradient normal. L'option A est incorrecte car la pression atmosphérique diminue toujours avec l'altitude, quelle que soit la température.
+
+### Q144 : Quelle condition peut empêcher la formation de brouillard de rayonnement ? ^t50q144
+- A) Une nuit claire sans nuages
+- B) Un faible écart température/point de rosée
+- C) Une couverture nuageuse couverte
+- D) Des conditions de vent calme
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard de rayonnement nécessite que le sol rayonne de la chaleur à grande longueur d'onde vers l'espace, refroidissant l'air de surface jusqu'au point de rosée. Une couche nuageuse couverte agit comme une couverture, absorbant et rémettant le rayonnement vers le sol, empêchant la surface de se refroidir suffisamment. La couverture nuageuse couverte empêche donc la formation de brouillard de rayonnement. Une nuit claire (A), un faible écart (B) et un vent calme (D) favorisent tous la formation de brouillard — ce sont des conditions préalables, pas des conditions préventives.
+
+### Q145 : Sur la carte, le symbole étiqueté (3) représente un/une… Voir figure (MET-005). Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q145
+- A) Front chaud.
+- B) Front froid.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Front en altitude.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un front occlus est représenté sur les cartes synoptiques par une ligne combinant les triangles du front froid et les demi-cercles du front chaud du même côté, représentant la fusion des deux fronts lorsque le front froid, se déplaçant plus rapidement, rattrape le front chaud. Le symbole (3) de la figure MET-005 montre cette symbologie combinée, l'identifiant comme une occlusion. Un front chaud (A) n'utilise que des demi-cercles. Un front froid (B) n'utilise que des triangles. Un front en altitude (D) possède un marquage distinct indiquant que la surface frontale n'atteint pas le sol.
+
+### Q146 : Une limite entre une masse d'air polaire froid et une masse d'air subtropical chaud qui ne présente aucun mouvement horizontal est connue sous le nom de… ^t50q146
+- A) Front chaud.
+- B) Front occlus.
+- C) Front stationnaire.
+- D) Front froid.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un front stationnaire est une limite entre deux masses d'air contrastées — ici polaire et subtropical — qui ne se déplace pas significativement dans l'une ou l'autre direction. Ni l'air froid ni l'air chaud n'avance. Un front froid (D) est spécifiquement une masse d'air froid avançant qui repousse l'air chaud sur le côté. Un front chaud (A) est de l'air chaud avançant qui surmonte de l'air froid. Un front occlus (B) résulte du rattrapage d'un front chaud par un front froid au sein d'un cyclone mature — il implique des fronts qui fusionnent, pas des limites stationnaires.
+
+### Q147 : Quelle situation peut provoquer un cisaillement du vent sévère ? ^t50q147
+- A) Vol de campagne sous des nuages Cu avec environ 4 octas de couverture
+- B) Une averse visible dans le voisinage de l'aérodrome
+- C) Finale 30 minutes après qu'une forte averse a quitté l'aérodrome
+- D) Vol en avant d'un front chaud avec des nuages Ci visibles
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une averse active près d'un aérodrome indique des descendances convectives en cours et des fronts de rafale qui créent un cisaillement du vent de basse couche sévère et à évolution rapide — un danger critique lors du décollage et de l'atterrissage. Le front de rafale d'une averse proche peut modifier la direction et la vitesse du vent de façon dramatique en quelques secondes. Le vol de campagne sous des Cu modérés (A) implique des conditions normales de vol de distance. Trente minutes après une averse (C), les conditions se sont généralement stabilisées. Les cirrus en avant d'un front chaud (D) sont un indicateur de haute altitude sans implications immédiates de cisaillement en basse couche.
+
+### Q148 : Quel type de réduction de visibilité est largement insensible aux changements de température ? ^t50q148
+- A) Brume humide (BR)
+- B) Bancs de brouillard (BCFG)
+- C) Brume sèche (HZ)
+- D) Brouillard de rayonnement (FG)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La brume sèche (HZ) est causée par des particules sèches — poussière, fumée, pollution industrielle et sable fin — en suspension dans l'atmosphère. Ces particules n'étant pas dépendantes de l'humidité, la brume sèche persiste quelle que soit la variation de température. La brume humide (A), les bancs de brouillard (B) et le brouillard de rayonnement (D) sont tous formés par suspension de gouttelettes d'eau et sont très sensibles à la température : le réchauffement évapore les gouttelettes et améliore la visibilité, tandis que le refroidissement favorise une condensation supplémentaire et dégrade la visibilité.
+
+### Q149 : Dans un METAR, comment les averses modérées de pluie sont-elles codées ? ^t50q149
+- A) TS.
+- B) +RA.
+- C) SHRA.
+- D) +TSRA
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le format METAR, le descripteur « SH » (averse) est combiné avec le type de précipitation « RA » (pluie) pour former « SHRA », qui désigne des averses modérées de pluie. L'absence de préfixe d'intensité signifie modéré. « +RA » (B) indique de la pluie continue forte, pas une averse. « TS » (A) désigne un orage sans préciser le type de précipitation. « +TSRA » (D) indique un orage fort avec pluie — un phénomène plus sévère qu'une simple averse de pluie.
+
+### Q150 : Pour quelles zones les avertissements SIGMET sont-ils émis ? ^t50q150
+- A) Aéroports.
+- B) FIR / UIR.
+- C) Routes spécifiques.
+- D) Pays.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les avertissements SIGMET (Information météorologique significative) sont émis pour les Régions d'information de vol (FIR) et les Régions supérieures d'information de vol (UIR), qui sont des blocs d'espace aérien OACI standardisés gérés par des autorités ATC spécifiques. Ils avertissent de phénomènes météorologiques dangereux (turbulences sévères, givrage, cendres volcaniques, orages) au sein de ces volumes d'espace aérien définis. Les SIGMET ne sont pas émis pour des aéroports individuels (A) — ceux-ci utilisent des AIRMET ou des avertissements d'aérodrome. Ils ne sont pas spécifiques à des routes (C) ni à des pays (D), car un seul pays peut contenir plusieurs FIR.
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+### Q151: Updrafts along a mountain slope can be strengthened by... ^t50q151
+- A) Warming of upper atmospheric layers
+- B) Thermal radiation from the windward side at night
+- C) Solar heating on the lee side
+- D) Solar heating on the windward side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Solar heating on the windward slope warms the surface air, making it less dense and creating anabatic (upslope) flow that combines with the mechanical orographic lift from the oncoming wind, significantly strengthening the updraft. This is why south- and west-facing slopes in the Northern Hemisphere often produce the strongest lift during sunny afternoons. Option A (warming of upper layers) would increase stability and suppress convection. Option B (nighttime radiation from the windward side) produces cooling and katabatic (downslope) flow, the opposite of updrafts. Option C (solar heating on the lee side) does not contribute to windward-side updrafts.
+
+### Q152: The prefix used for clouds in the high layers is... ^t50q152
+- A) Alto-.
+- B) Nimbo-.
+- C) Strato-.
+- D) Cirro-.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "Cirro-" identifies clouds in the high cloud family, typically found above approximately 6000 m (FL200) in mid-latitudes, and includes cirrus, cirrocumulus, and cirrostratus — all composed primarily of ice crystals. Option A ("Alto-") designates mid-level clouds between roughly 2000 and 6000 m, such as altostratus and altocumulus. Option B ("Nimbo-") indicates rain-producing clouds regardless of altitude, such as nimbostratus. Option C ("Strato-") refers to layered cloud forms at low to mid levels.
+
+### Q153: What factor may limit the vertical extent of cumulus clouds at the top? ^t50q153
+- A) The presence of an inversion layer
+- B) The absolute humidity
+- C) Relative humidity
+- D) The spread
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer creates a zone where temperature increases with altitude, forming a highly stable lid that stops rising thermals from penetrating further upward. Cumulus clouds reaching this barrier flatten out and spread horizontally rather than continuing to develop vertically, which is why fair-weather cumulus often have a uniform top height. Option D (the spread, i.e., temperature minus dew point) determines cloud base height, not cloud top. Options B (absolute humidity) and C (relative humidity) influence whether clouds form at all but do not cap their vertical extent the way an inversion does.
+
+### Q154: Which factors point toward a tendency for fog formation? ^t50q154
+- A) Strong winds with falling temperature
+- B) Low pressure with rising temperature
+- C) Small spread with falling temperature
+- D) Small spread with rising temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A small spread (temperature close to dew point) means the air is already near saturation, and falling temperature will close the remaining gap, causing condensation at or near the surface — fog. These are the classic pre-fog conditions monitored by pilots and forecasters. Option A (strong winds) promotes turbulent mixing that prevents the surface layer from reaching saturation. Option B (low pressure with rising temperature) widens the spread and favours lifting rather than surface fog. Option D (rising temperature) increases the spread, moving conditions away from saturation.
+
+### Q155: What process gives rise to orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q155
+- A) Extended radiation on cloud-free nights
+- B) Evaporation from warm, moist ground into very cold air
+- C) Cold, moist air mixing with warm, moist air
+- D) Warm, moist air forced over a hill or mountain range
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when warm, moist air is forced to ascend over elevated terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point and condenses. The resulting cloud envelops the hill or mountain and appears as fog to anyone on the slope or summit. Option A describes the formation mechanism of radiation fog, which occurs on calm, clear nights over flat terrain. Option B describes steam fog (or evaporation fog), which forms when cold air passes over much warmer water or moist surfaces. Option C describes frontal or mixing fog, a different process entirely.
+
+### Q156: What is needed for precipitation to form inside clouds? ^t50q156
+- A) High humidity and elevated temperatures
+- B) An inversion layer
+- C) Moderate to strong updrafts
+- D) Calm winds and intense solar insolation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation particles need time to grow large enough to fall against the updraft, either through collision-coalescence (warm rain process) or the Bergeron ice-crystal process. Moderate to strong updrafts keep water droplets and ice crystals suspended in the cloud long enough for this growth to occur. Option A (high humidity and elevated temperatures) favours cloud formation but does not ensure particles grow to precipitation size. Option B (an inversion layer) suppresses cloud development and works against precipitation. Option D (calm winds and sunshine) describes surface conditions that do not directly produce in-cloud precipitation.
+
+### Q157: In areas where isobars are widely spaced, what wind conditions should be expected? ^t50q157
+- A) Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing
+- B) Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering
+- C) Local wind systems developing with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Variable winds with the development of local wind systems
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Widely spaced isobars indicate a weak horizontal pressure gradient, which produces only light synoptic-scale winds. In the absence of a dominant pressure-driven flow, local thermally driven wind systems — such as valley-mountain breezes, sea-land breezes, and slope winds — become the primary circulation features, with wind direction varying throughout the day. Options A, B, and C all describe strong prevailing winds, which require closely spaced isobars (a steep pressure gradient) and are therefore inconsistent with the wide spacing described.
+
+### Q158: Under what circumstances does back side weather (Rückseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q158
+- A) After passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) Before passage of an occlusion
+- D) After passage of a cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Back-side weather" (Rückseitenwetter) describes the conditions in the cold, unstable polar air mass that follows behind a cold front on the western or northwestern side of a low-pressure system. It is characterized by good visibility, convective cumulus clouds, and scattered showers or snow showers. Option A (after a warm front) leads into the warm sector, not the cold back side. Option B (Foehn on the lee side) is a thermodynamic mountain phenomenon unrelated to frontal weather. Option C (before an occlusion) describes pre-frontal conditions, not back-side weather.
+
+### Q159: How is a wind reported as 225/15 described? ^t50q159
+- A) South-west wind at 15 km/h
+- B) North-east wind at 15 km/h
+- C) North-east wind at 15 kt
+- D) South-west wind at 15 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation weather reporting, wind is always given as the direction FROM which it blows (in degrees true) followed by speed in knots. A report of 225/15 means wind from 225 degrees (southwest) at 15 knots. Options B and C incorrectly interpret 225 degrees as northeast, perhaps confusing the direction the wind blows from with the direction it blows toward. Option A gives the correct direction but uses km/h instead of the standard aviation unit of knots.
+
+### Q160: In the Bavarian area near the Alps, what weather typically accompanies Foehn conditions? ^t50q160
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm dry wind
+- B) High pressure over Biscay and a low over Eastern Europe
+- C) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side, flat pressure pattern
+- D) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm dry wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn in the Bavarian pre-alpine region, the prevailing southerly flow forces moist air up the southern (Italian) side of the Alps, producing nimbostratus and heavy orographic precipitation there. As the air descends on the northern (Bavarian) lee side, it warms adiabatically and dries out, creating the characteristic warm, dry, gusty Foehn wind. Rotor clouds and lenticular clouds form on the lee side due to wave activity. Option A incorrectly places nimbostratus on the northern side and rotors on the windward side. Option B describes a synoptic pattern, not the weather itself. Option C contradicts the definition of Foehn, which produces warm, dry — not cold, humid — descending air.
+
+### Q161: Clouds are fundamentally classified into which two basic types? ^t50q161
+- A) Stratiform and ice clouds
+- B) Layered and lifted clouds
+- C) Thunderstorm and shower clouds
+- D) Cumulus and stratiform clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental cloud classification divides all clouds into two basic forms based on their physical formation process: cumuliform (convective, vertically developed clouds formed by localized updrafts) and stratiform (layered, horizontally extended clouds formed by widespread, gentle lifting or cooling). All other cloud types and subtypes derive from combinations of these two basic forms. Option A incorrectly pairs stratiform with "ice clouds," which is a composition category, not a form. Option B uses non-standard terminology. Option C names specific weather phenomena rather than fundamental cloud forms.
+
+### Q162: During Foehn conditions, what weather phenomenon marked as "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q162
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the lee side during Foehn conditions, the descending air creates standing wave patterns downwind of the mountain ridge. These waves produce Altocumulus lenticularis — smooth, lens-shaped or almond-shaped clouds that remain stationary relative to the terrain despite strong winds passing through them. They are a hallmark of mountain wave activity. Options B and D (cumulonimbus) are associated with deep convective instability, not the stable laminar wave flow characteristic of Foehn. Option A (Altocumulus castellanus) indicates mid-level convective instability with turret-like protrusions, which is a different meteorological situation.
+
+### Q163: When very small water droplets and ice crystals strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice forms? ^t50q163
+- A) Hoar frost
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Rime ice
+- D) Mixed ice
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rime ice forms when very small supercooled water droplets freeze instantly upon contact with the aircraft's leading edges, trapping air between the frozen particles and creating a rough, white, opaque deposit. Because the droplets are so small, they freeze before they can spread, resulting in the characteristic granular texture. Option B (clear ice) forms from larger supercooled droplets that flow along the surface before freezing, producing a smooth, transparent, dense layer. Option D (mixed ice) is a combination of rime and clear ice. Option A (hoar frost) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not by droplet impact.
+
+### Q164: Which chart contains information about pressure patterns and frontal positions? ^t50q164
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC)
+- B) Surface weather chart.
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Wind chart.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) is the primary meteorological product displaying isobars (lines of equal pressure at MSL), the locations of highs and lows, and the positions and types of fronts (warm, cold, occluded, stationary). Option A (Significant Weather Chart) focuses on aviation hazards such as turbulence, icing, and significant cloud coverage, but does not show the full surface pressure pattern. Option C (hypsometric chart) depicts the heights of constant-pressure surfaces in the upper atmosphere. Option D (wind chart) shows wind speed and direction at specific levels without pressure or frontal information.
+
+### Q165: What is the typical cloud sequence observed during the approach and passage of a warm front? ^t50q165
+- A) Squall line with rain showers and thunderstorms (Cb), gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) In coastal areas, daytime wind from the coast with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in the evening
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog layers forming in winter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The approach of a warm front produces a characteristic descending cloud sequence as the warm air gradually overrides the retreating cold air mass. First, thin cirrus appears at high altitude, followed by cirrostratus, then progressively thickening altostratus and altocumulus at mid-levels, and finally nimbostratus with a low cloud base and prolonged steady rain. Option A describes cold front or squall line weather. Option B describes a coastal sea-breeze cycle unrelated to frontal meteorology. Option D describes anticyclonic subsidence or continental high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q166: What phenomenon results from cold-air downdrafts carrying precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud? ^t50q166
+- A) Anvil-head top of the Cb cloud
+- B) Freezing rain
+- C) Electrical discharge
+- D) Gust front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a mature thunderstorm, precipitation drags cold air downward in powerful downdrafts. When this cold, dense air reaches the surface, it spreads outward rapidly as a density current, creating a gust front — a sharp boundary marked by sudden wind shifts, temperature drops, and gusty conditions that can extend several kilometres ahead of the storm. Option A (anvil-head top) is a structural feature shaped by upper-level winds, not caused by downdrafts reaching the surface. Option C (electrical discharge) results from charge separation within the cloud. Option B (freezing rain) requires a specific temperature inversion profile, not downdraft spreading.
+
+### Q167: Which item is NOT included on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)? ^t50q167
+- A) Frontal lines and frontal displacement
+- B) Turbulence area information
+- C) Icing condition information
+- D) Radar echoes of precipitation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-Level Significant Weather Charts are forecast products that depict meteorological hazards below a specified altitude, including frontal systems and their movement (option A), turbulence areas (option B), and icing conditions (option C). However, they do not contain radar echoes of precipitation (option D) because radar imagery is a real-time observational product, whereas LLSWC are prognostic charts prepared in advance. Precipitation areas may be indicated symbolically on LLSWC, but actual radar returns are found only on separate radar displays.
+
+### Q168: Which cloud type produces prolonged, steady rain? ^t50q168
+- A) Cirrostratus
+- B) Altocumulus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nimbostratus (Ns) is a thick, dark grey, amorphous layer cloud that produces continuous, steady precipitation (rain or snow) over wide areas, typically associated with warm fronts or occlusions. Its great vertical and horizontal extent ensures prolonged precipitation reaching the ground. Option A (cirrostratus) is a thin, high-level ice cloud that does not produce surface precipitation. Option B (altocumulus) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained surface rain. Option D (cumulonimbus) produces intense but short-lived showers and thunderstorms rather than prolonged steady rain.
+
+### Q169: Based on cloud type, how is precipitation classified? ^t50q169
+- A) Light and heavy precipitation.
+- B) Prolonged rain and continuous rain.
+- C) Showers of snow and rain.
+- D) Rain and showers of rain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Meteorological classification of precipitation by cloud type distinguishes two fundamental categories: rain (steady, continuous precipitation from stratiform clouds like nimbostratus) and showers of rain (intermittent, convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds like cumulonimbus or cumulus congestus). This distinction reflects the physical formation process — widespread lifting versus localized convection. Option A classifies by intensity rather than cloud type. Option B uses redundant terminology that does not distinguish cloud origins. Option C classifies by precipitation phase (snow versus rain), not by cloud type.
+
+### Q170: Which conditions favour thunderstorm development? ^t50q170
+- A) Clear night over land with cold air and fog patches
+- B) Warm, dry air under a strong inversion layer
+- C) Calm winds with cold air, overcast St or As cloud cover
+- D) Warm, humid air with a conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorm development requires three essential ingredients: moisture (warm, humid air provides the latent heat fuel), instability (a conditionally unstable lapse rate allows saturated air parcels to accelerate upward), and a lifting mechanism (fronts, orographic forcing, or surface heating). Option D combines the first two ingredients explicitly. Option A describes calm, stable nighttime conditions favouring radiation fog, not convection. Option B features a strong inversion that would cap any vertical development. Option C describes a stable, overcast situation with stratus or altostratus, which suppresses thunderstorm formation.
+
+### Q171: When isobars on a surface weather chart are widely spaced, what does this indicate about the prevailing wind? ^t50q171
+- A) Strong pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+- B) Weak pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- C) Strong pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- D) Weak pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spacing of isobars on a surface weather chart is inversely proportional to the pressure gradient: widely spaced isobars mean a small pressure difference over a large distance (weak gradient), which produces only light wind. Wind speed is directly driven by the pressure gradient force, so a weak gradient means weak wind. Option A contradicts itself by associating wide spacing with strong gradients. Option C pairs a strong gradient with light wind, which is meteorologically incorrect. Option D reverses the gradient-wind relationship.
+
+### Q172: An air mass arriving in Central Europe from the Russian continent during winter is described as... ^t50q172
+- A) Continental tropical air
+- B) Maritime polar air
+- C) Continental polar air
+- D) Maritime tropical air
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air masses are classified by their source region's surface characteristics. Air originating over the vast, snow-covered Russian (Siberian) continent during winter acquires cold temperatures and very low moisture content, making it Continental Polar (cP). This air mass brings bitterly cold, dry conditions to Central Europe when it advects westward. Option B (maritime polar) originates over polar oceans and carries significant moisture. Option A (continental tropical) and option D (maritime tropical) originate in warm regions and are far too warm and/or moist to describe Siberian winter air.
+
+### Q173: What clouds and weather are typically observed during the passage of a cold front? ^t50q173
+- A) Strongly developed Cb clouds with rain showers and thunderstorms, gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog in winter
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) In coastal areas, daytime onshore wind with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in evening
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold front passage is marked by a narrow band of intense weather as the advancing cold air undercuts the warm air, forcing it rapidly aloft. This produces strongly developed cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds, heavy rain showers, thunderstorms, and gusty winds along the frontal line, followed by cumulus with isolated showers in the cold, unstable air behind the front. Option C describes the gradual cloud sequence of an approaching warm front. Option B describes anticyclonic or high-pressure settling conditions. Option D describes a coastal sea-breeze pattern unrelated to frontal weather.
+
+### Q174: When an aircraft is struck by lightning, what is the most immediate danger? ^t50q174
+- A) Disrupted radio communication and static noise
+- B) Rapid cabin depressurisation and smoke in the cabin
+- C) Surface overheating and damage to exposed aircraft parts
+- D) Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most immediate physical danger from a lightning strike is surface overheating at the attachment and exit points, along with damage to exposed components such as antennas, pitot tubes, wingtips, and control surface edges. The extreme heat at the strike points can burn through thin skins, pit metal surfaces, and damage composite materials. Option A (disrupted radio communication) is a secondary effect that does not pose an immediate structural threat. Option B (cabin depressurisation) applies primarily to pressurised aircraft and is not the most common immediate consequence. Option D (explosion of cockpit equipment) is extremely unlikely in certified aircraft with proper lightning protection.
+
+### Q175: What is meant by mountain wind? ^t50q175
+- A) A wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.
+- B) A wind blowing down the mountain slope at night.
+- C) A wind blowing uphill from the valley at night.
+- D) A wind blowing down the mountain slope during daytime.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain wind (Bergwind) is a katabatic flow that occurs at night when mountain slopes cool by radiation faster than the free atmosphere at the same altitude. The cooled, denser air drains downslope under gravity toward the valley floor. This is part of the diurnal mountain-valley wind cycle. Option A describes valley wind (Talwind), which is the daytime anabatic upslope flow caused by solar heating. Option C reverses the nighttime flow direction. Option D reverses the daytime flow direction.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_151_175_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_151_175_fr.md
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+### Q151 : Les ascendances le long d'un versant montagneux peuvent être renforcées par... ^t50q151
+- A) Le réchauffement des couches atmosphériques supérieures
+- B) Le rayonnement thermique du côté au vent la nuit
+- C) Le réchauffement solaire du côté sous le vent
+- D) Le réchauffement solaire du côté au vent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le réchauffement solaire sur le versant au vent réchauffe l'air de surface, le rendant moins dense et créant un flux anabatique (ascendant) qui se combine au soulèvement orographique mécanique du vent arrivant, renforçant considérablement l'ascendance. C'est pourquoi les versants exposés au sud et à l'ouest dans l'hémisphère Nord produisent souvent les meilleures ascendances lors des après-midis ensoleillés. L'option A (réchauffement des couches supérieures) augmenterait la stabilité et supprimerait la convection. L'option B (rayonnement nocturne du côté au vent) produit un refroidissement et un flux catabatique (descendant), l'opposé des ascendances. L'option C (réchauffement solaire du côté sous le vent) ne contribue pas aux ascendances du côté au vent.
+
+### Q152 : Le préfixe utilisé pour les nuages des couches élevées est... ^t50q152
+- A) Alto-.
+- B) Nimbo-.
+- C) Strato-.
+- D) Cirro-.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le préfixe « Cirro- » identifie les nuages de la famille des nuages élevés, généralement trouvés au-dessus d'environ 6 000 m (FL200) aux latitudes moyennes, et comprend les cirrus, cirrocumulus et cirrostratus — tous composés principalement de cristaux de glace. L'option A (« Alto- ») désigne les nuages de niveau moyen entre environ 2 000 et 6 000 m, tels que l'altostratus et l'altocumulus. L'option B (« Nimbo- ») indique les nuages producteurs de pluie indépendamment de l'altitude, comme le nimbostratus. L'option C (« Strato- ») fait référence aux formes nuageuses en couches aux niveaux bas à moyens.
+
+### Q153 : Quel facteur peut limiter l'étendue verticale des nuages cumulus au sommet ? ^t50q153
+- A) La présence d'une couche d'inversion
+- B) L'humidité absolue
+- C) L'humidité relative
+- D) L'écart thermique
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une couche d'inversion crée une zone où la température augmente avec l'altitude, formant un couvercle très stable qui empêche les thermiques ascendants de pénétrer plus haut. Les nuages cumulus atteignant cette barrière s'aplatissent et s'étendent horizontalement plutôt que de continuer à se développer verticalement, c'est pourquoi les cumulus de beau temps ont souvent une hauteur de sommet uniforme. L'option D (l'écart, soit la différence entre température et point de rosée) détermine la hauteur de la base nuageuse, non le sommet. Les options B (humidité absolue) et C (humidité relative) influencent la formation des nuages mais ne plafonnent pas leur étendue verticale comme le fait une inversion.
+
+### Q154 : Quels facteurs indiquent une tendance à la formation de brouillard ? ^t50q154
+- A) Vents forts avec température en baisse
+- B) Basse pression avec température en hausse
+- C) Faible écart avec température en baisse
+- D) Faible écart avec température en hausse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un faible écart (température proche du point de rosée) signifie que l'air est déjà proche de la saturation, et une température en baisse comblera le reste, provoquant la condensation à la surface ou près de celle-ci — le brouillard. Ce sont les conditions classiques de pré-brouillard surveillées par les pilotes et les prévisionnistes. L'option A (vents forts) favorise le mélange turbulent qui empêche la couche de surface d'atteindre la saturation. L'option B (basse pression avec température en hausse) élargit l'écart et favorise le soulèvement plutôt que le brouillard de surface. L'option D (température en hausse) augmente l'écart, éloignant les conditions de la saturation.
+
+### Q155 : Quel processus donne naissance au brouillard orographique (brouillard de colline) ? ^t50q155
+- A) Rayonnement prolongé lors de nuits sans nuages
+- B) Évaporation d'un sol chaud et humide dans un air très froid
+- C) Mélange d'air froid et humide avec de l'air chaud et humide
+- D) Air chaud et humide forcé à s'élever au-dessus d'une colline ou d'une chaîne de montagnes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard orographique (brouillard de colline) se forme lorsque de l'air chaud et humide est forcé à s'élever sur un terrain élevé, se refroidissant adiabatiquement jusqu'à atteindre le point de rosée et se condenser. Le nuage qui en résulte enveloppe la colline ou la montagne et apparaît comme du brouillard pour quiconque se trouve sur le versant ou au sommet. L'option A décrit le mécanisme de formation du brouillard de rayonnement, qui se produit lors de nuits calmes et claires sur terrain plat. L'option B décrit le brouillard de vapeur (ou brouillard d'évaporation), qui se forme lorsque de l'air froid passe au-dessus d'eau ou de surfaces humides beaucoup plus chaudes. L'option C décrit le brouillard frontal ou de mélange, un processus entièrement différent.
+
+### Q156 : Qu'est-ce qui est nécessaire pour que des précipitations se forment à l'intérieur des nuages ? ^t50q156
+- A) Forte humidité et températures élevées
+- B) Une couche d'inversion
+- C) Des ascendances modérées à fortes
+- D) Vents calmes et forte insolation solaire
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les particules de précipitations ont besoin de temps pour grossir suffisamment pour tomber contre les courants ascendants, soit par coalescence-collision (processus de pluie chaude), soit par le processus de cristaux de glace de Bergeron. Des ascendances modérées à fortes maintiennent les gouttelettes d'eau et les cristaux de glace en suspension dans le nuage suffisamment longtemps pour que cette croissance se produise. L'option A (forte humidité et températures élevées) favorise la formation de nuages mais n'assure pas que les particules atteignent la taille des précipitations. L'option B (une couche d'inversion) supprime le développement nuageux et s'oppose aux précipitations. L'option D (vents calmes et soleil) décrit des conditions de surface qui ne produisent pas directement des précipitations dans les nuages.
+
+### Q157 : Dans les zones où les isobares sont très espacées, quelles conditions de vent doit-on s'attendre ? ^t50q157
+- A) Vents d'est dominants forts avec rotation rapide vers la gauche
+- B) Vents d'ouest dominants forts avec rotation rapide vers la droite
+- C) Systèmes de vents locaux se développant avec des vents d'ouest dominants forts
+- D) Vents variables avec développement de systèmes de vents locaux
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Des isobares très espacées indiquent un faible gradient de pression horizontal, qui ne produit que des vents à l'échelle synoptique légers. En l'absence d'un flux dominant entraîné par la pression, les systèmes de vents locaux thermiquement entraînés — tels que les brises de vallée-montagne, les brises de mer-terre et les vents de pente — deviennent les principales caractéristiques de circulation, avec une direction du vent variant au cours de la journée. Les options A, B et C décrivent toutes des vents dominants forts, qui nécessitent des isobares très resserrées (gradient de pression fort) et sont donc incompatibles avec l'espacement élargi décrit.
+
+### Q158 : Dans quelles circonstances le temps de face arrière (Rückseitenwetter) se produit-il ? ^t50q158
+- A) Après le passage d'un front chaud
+- B) Lors du foehn sur le versant sous le vent
+- C) Avant le passage d'une occlusion
+- D) Après le passage d'un front froid
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le « temps de face arrière » (Rückseitenwetter) décrit les conditions dans la masse d'air polaire froide et instable qui suit derrière un front froid sur le côté occidental ou nord-occidental d'un système dépressionnaire. Il se caractérise par une bonne visibilité, des nuages cumulus convectifs et des averses ou chutes de neige éparses. L'option A (après un front chaud) mène dans le secteur chaud, pas dans la face arrière froide. L'option B (foehn sur le versant sous le vent) est un phénomène thermodynamique de montagne sans rapport avec le temps frontal. L'option C (avant une occlusion) décrit des conditions pré-frontales, pas le temps de face arrière.
+
+### Q159 : Comment est décrit un vent signalé comme 225/15 ? ^t50q159
+- A) Vent de sud-ouest à 15 km/h
+- B) Vent de nord-est à 15 km/h
+- C) Vent de nord-est à 15 kt
+- D) Vent de sud-ouest à 15 kt
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les rapports météorologiques en aviation, le vent est toujours indiqué comme la direction DE laquelle il souffle (en degrés vrais) suivie de la vitesse en nœuds. Un rapport de 225/15 signifie un vent venant de 225 degrés (sud-ouest) à 15 nœuds. Les options B et C interprètent incorrectement 225 degrés comme nord-est, confondant peut-être la direction d'où souffle le vent avec la direction vers laquelle il souffle. L'option A donne la bonne direction mais utilise km/h au lieu de l'unité standard en aviation qu'est le nœud.
+
+### Q160 : Dans la région bavaroise près des Alpes, quel temps accompagne typiquement les conditions de foehn ? ^t50q160
+- A) Nimbostratus sur les Alpes nord, nuages rotors du côté au vent, vent chaud et sec
+- B) Haute pression sur le Golfe de Gascogne et basse pression sur l'Europe de l'Est
+- C) Vent descendant froid et humide du côté sous le vent, régime de pression plat
+- D) Nimbostratus sur les Alpes sud, nuages rotors du côté sous le vent, vent chaud et sec
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du foehn dans la région pré-alpine bavaroise, le flux méridional dominant force l'air humide à monter sur le côté sud (italien) des Alpes, produisant nimbostratus et fortes précipitations orographiques. Lorsque l'air descend du côté nord (bavarois) sous le vent, il se réchauffe adiabatiquement et se dessèche, créant le vent de foehn chaud, sec et raffaleux caractéristique. Des nuages rotors et lenticulaires se forment du côté sous le vent en raison de l'activité ondulatoire. L'option A place incorrectement le nimbostratus côté nord et les rotors côté au vent. L'option B décrit un régime synoptique, pas le temps lui-même. L'option C contredit la définition du foehn, qui produit de l'air descendant chaud et sec — pas froid et humide.
+
+### Q161 : Les nuages sont fondamentalement classés en quels deux types de base ? ^t50q161
+- A) Nuages stratiformes et nuages de glace
+- B) Nuages en couches et nuages soulevés
+- C) Nuages d'orage et nuages d'averses
+- D) Nuages cumulus et nuages stratiformes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La classification fondamentale des nuages divise tous les nuages en deux formes de base selon leur processus de formation physique : cumuliforme (nuages convectifs, développés verticalement, formés par des courants ascendants localisés) et stratiforme (nuages en couches, étendus horizontalement, formés par un soulèvement généralisé et doux ou un refroidissement). Tous les autres types et sous-types de nuages dérivent des combinaisons de ces deux formes de base. L'option A couple incorrectement les nuages stratiformes avec les « nuages de glace », qui sont une catégorie de composition, pas de forme. L'option B utilise une terminologie non standard. L'option C nomme des phénomènes météorologiques spécifiques plutôt que des formes nuageuses fondamentales.
+
+### Q162 : Lors des conditions de foehn, quel phénomène météorologique marqué « 2 » doit-on s'attendre du côté sous le vent ? Voir figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q162
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Du côté sous le vent lors des conditions de foehn, l'air descendant crée des schémas d'ondes stationnaires sous le vent de la crête montagneuse. Ces ondes produisent des Altocumulus lenticularis — des nuages lisses en forme de lentille ou d'amande qui restent stationnaires par rapport au terrain malgré des vents forts qui les traversent. Ils sont un signe distinctif de l'activité ondulatoire en montagne. Les options B et D (cumulonimbus) sont associées à une forte instabilité convective, absente dans le flux laminaire descendant caractéristique du foehn. L'option A (Altocumulus castellanus) indique une instabilité convective de niveau moyen avec des protubérances en forme de tourelles, ce qui correspond à une situation météorologique différente.
+
+### Q163 : Lorsque de très petites gouttelettes d'eau et des cristaux de glace frappent les surfaces avant d'un aéronef, quel type de givre se forme ? ^t50q163
+- A) Givre blanc
+- B) Verglas (givre transparent)
+- C) Givre opaque (rime ice)
+- D) Givre mixte
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le givre opaque (rime ice) se forme lorsque de très petites gouttelettes d'eau surfondue gèlent instantanément au contact des bords d'attaque de l'aéronef, emprisonnant de l'air entre les particules gelées et créant un dépôt rugueux, blanc et opaque. Comme les gouttelettes sont si petites, elles gèlent avant de pouvoir s'étaler, donnant la texture granuleuse caractéristique. L'option B (verglas) se forme à partir de gouttelettes surfondes plus grandes qui s'écoulent sur la surface avant de geler, produisant une couche lisse, transparente et dense. L'option D (givre mixte) est une combinaison de givre opaque et de verglas. L'option A (givre blanc) se forme par dépôt direct de vapeur d'eau sur des surfaces froides, pas par impact de gouttelettes.
+
+### Q164 : Quelle carte contient des informations sur les régimes de pression et les positions des fronts ? ^t50q164
+- A) Carte des phénomènes météorologiques significatifs (SWC)
+- B) Carte météorologique de surface.
+- C) Carte hypsométrique
+- D) Carte des vents.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La carte météorologique de surface (carte d'analyse synoptique) est le produit météorologique principal affichant les isobares (lignes d'égale pression au niveau de la mer), les positions des centres de haute et basse pression, ainsi que les positions et types de fronts (chauds, froids, occlus, stationnaires). L'option A (Carte des phénomènes significatifs) se concentre sur les dangers pour l'aviation tels que la turbulence, le givrage et la couverture nuageuse significative, mais ne montre pas le régime complet de pression de surface. L'option C (carte hypsométrique) représente les altitudes des surfaces isobariques dans l'atmosphère supérieure. L'option D (carte des vents) montre la vitesse et la direction du vent à des niveaux spécifiques sans informations sur la pression ou les fronts.
+
+### Q165 : Quelle est la séquence nuageuse typique observée lors de l'approche et du passage d'un front chaud ? ^t50q165
+- A) Ligne de grains avec averses de pluie et orages (Cb), vent en rafales suivi de cumulus avec averses isolées
+- B) Dans les zones côtières, vent de jour depuis la côte avec formation de cumulus, dissipation des nuages le soir
+- C) Cirrus, altostratus et altocumulus s'épaississant, base nuageuse s'abaissant avec pluie, nimbostratus
+- D) Calme du vent, dissipation des nuages et réchauffement en été ; formation de couches épaisses de brouillard élevé en hiver
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'approche d'un front chaud produit une séquence nuageuse descendante caractéristique alors que l'air chaud remonte progressivement sur la masse d'air froid en recul. D'abord, des cirrus fins apparaissent en altitude, suivis de cirrostratus, puis d'altostratus et d'altocumulus s'épaississant progressivement aux niveaux moyens, et enfin de nimbostratus avec une base nuageuse basse et une pluie continue et prolongée. L'option A décrit le temps de front froid ou de ligne de grains. L'option B décrit un cycle de brise de mer côtière sans rapport avec la météorologie frontale. L'option D décrit des conditions de subsidence anticyclonique ou de haute pression continentale.
+
+### Q166 : Quel phénomène résulte des courants descendants d'air froid entraînant des précipitations depuis un nuage d'orage pleinement développé ? ^t50q166
+- A) Sommet en enclume du nuage Cb
+- B) Pluie verglaçante
+- C) Décharge électrique
+- D) Front de rafale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un orage mature, les précipitations entraînent de l'air froid vers le bas dans de puissants courants descendants. Lorsque cet air froid et dense atteint la surface, il se répand rapidement vers l'extérieur comme un courant de densité, créant un front de rafale — une limite nette marquée par des changements soudains de direction du vent, des chutes de température et des conditions de rafales qui peuvent s'étendre à plusieurs kilomètres devant l'orage. L'option A (sommet en enclume) est une caractéristique structurelle façonnée par les vents de haute altitude, pas causée par les courants descendants atteignant la surface. L'option C (décharge électrique) résulte de la séparation des charges à l'intérieur du nuage. L'option B (pluie verglaçante) nécessite un profil d'inversion de température spécifique, pas l'étalement des courants descendants.
+
+### Q167 : Quel élément N'EST PAS inclus sur les Cartes de Phénomènes Météorologiques Significatifs à Basse Altitude (LLSWC) ? ^t50q167
+- A) Lignes frontales et déplacement des fronts
+- B) Informations sur les zones de turbulence
+- C) Informations sur les conditions de givrage
+- D) Échos radar des précipitations
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les Cartes de Phénomènes Météorologiques Significatifs à Basse Altitude sont des produits de prévision qui représentent les dangers météorologiques en dessous d'une altitude spécifiée, notamment les systèmes frontaux et leur déplacement (option A), les zones de turbulence (option B) et les conditions de givrage (option C). Cependant, elles ne contiennent pas d'échos radar des précipitations (option D) car l'imagerie radar est un produit d'observation en temps réel, tandis que les LLSWC sont des cartes pronostiques préparées à l'avance. Les zones de précipitations peuvent être indiquées symboliquement sur les LLSWC, mais les retours radar réels ne se trouvent que sur des affichages radar séparés.
+
+### Q168 : Quel type de nuage produit une pluie continue et prolongée ? ^t50q168
+- A) Cirrostratus
+- B) Altocumulus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le nimbostratus (Ns) est un nuage en couche épais, gris foncé et amorphe qui produit des précipitations continues et régulières (pluie ou neige) sur de vastes zones, généralement associé aux fronts chauds ou aux occlusions. Son étendue verticale et horizontale importante assure des précipitations prolongées atteignant le sol. L'option A (cirrostratus) est un nuage de haute altitude à cristaux de glace qui ne produit pas de précipitations au sol. L'option B (altocumulus) est un nuage de niveau moyen qui produit occasionnellement de la virga mais pas de pluie de surface soutenue. L'option D (cumulonimbus) produit des averses intenses mais de courte durée et des orages plutôt qu'une pluie continue et prolongée.
+
+### Q169 : En fonction du type de nuage, comment les précipitations sont-elles classifiées ? ^t50q169
+- A) Précipitations légères et fortes.
+- B) Pluie prolongée et pluie continue.
+- C) Averses de neige et de pluie.
+- D) Pluie et averses de pluie.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La classification météorologique des précipitations par type de nuage distingue deux catégories fondamentales : la pluie (précipitations continues et régulières provenant de nuages stratiformes comme le nimbostratus) et les averses de pluie (précipitations convectives et intermittentes provenant de nuages cumuliformes comme le cumulonimbus ou le cumulus congestus). Cette distinction reflète le processus de formation physique — soulèvement généralisé versus convection localisée. L'option A classe selon l'intensité plutôt que par type de nuage. L'option B utilise une terminologie redondante qui ne distingue pas les origines nuageuses. L'option C classe selon la phase des précipitations (neige versus pluie), pas par type de nuage.
+
+### Q170 : Quelles conditions favorisent le développement des orages ? ^t50q170
+- A) Nuit claire sur terre avec air froid et nappes de brouillard
+- B) Air chaud et sec sous une forte couche d'inversion
+- C) Vents calmes avec air froid, couverture nuageuse St ou As
+- D) Air chaud et humide avec un gradient thermique environnemental conditionnellement instable
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le développement des orages nécessite trois ingrédients essentiels : l'humidité (l'air chaud et humide fournit le carburant en chaleur latente), l'instabilité (un gradient thermique conditionnellement instable permet aux parcelles d'air saturé d'accélérer vers le haut) et un mécanisme de soulèvement (fronts, forçage orographique ou chauffage de surface). L'option D combine explicitement les deux premiers ingrédients. L'option A décrit des conditions nocturnes calmes et stables favorisant le brouillard de rayonnement, pas la convection. L'option B présente une forte inversion qui plafonnerait tout développement vertical. L'option C décrit une situation stable et couverte avec stratus ou altostratus, qui supprime la formation d'orages.
+
+### Q171 : Lorsque les isobares sur une carte météorologique de surface sont très espacées, qu'est-ce que cela indique concernant le vent dominant ? ^t50q171
+- A) Forts gradients de pression produisant un vent dominant fort
+- B) Faibles gradients de pression produisant un vent dominant léger
+- C) Forts gradients de pression produisant un vent dominant léger
+- D) Faibles gradients de pression produisant un vent dominant fort
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'espacement des isobares sur une carte météorologique de surface est inversement proportionnel au gradient de pression : des isobares très espacées signifient une faible différence de pression sur une grande distance (faible gradient), ce qui ne produit que des vents légers. La vitesse du vent est directement entraînée par la force de gradient de pression, donc un faible gradient signifie un vent faible. L'option A se contredit en associant un grand espacement à des gradients forts. L'option C associe un gradient fort à un vent léger, ce qui est météorologiquement incorrect. L'option D inverse la relation gradient-vent.
+
+### Q172 : Une masse d'air arrivant en Europe centrale depuis le continent russe en hiver est décrite comme... ^t50q172
+- A) Air continental tropical
+- B) Air polaire maritime
+- C) Air polaire continental
+- D) Air tropical maritime
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les masses d'air sont classifiées selon les caractéristiques de surface de leur région source. L'air provenant du vaste continent russe (sibérien) couvert de neige en hiver acquiert des températures froides et une teneur en humidité très faible, en faisant un air Polaire Continental (cP). Cette masse d'air apporte des conditions âprement froides et sèches en Europe centrale lorsqu'elle s'advecte vers l'ouest. L'option B (polaire maritime) provient des océans polaires et transporte une humidité significative. Les options A (continental tropical) et D (maritime tropical) proviennent de régions chaudes et sont beaucoup trop chaudes et/ou humides pour décrire l'air hivernal sibérien.
+
+### Q173 : Quels nuages et quel temps sont typiquement observés lors du passage d'un front froid ? ^t50q173
+- A) Nuages Cb fortement développés avec averses de pluie et orages, vent en rafales suivi de cumulus avec averses isolées
+- B) Calme du vent, dissipation des nuages et réchauffement en été ; brouillard élevé épais en hiver
+- C) Cirrus, altostratus et altocumulus s'épaississant, base nuageuse s'abaissant avec pluie, nimbostratus
+- D) Dans les zones côtières, vent de jour venant de la mer avec formation de cumulus, dissipation des nuages le soir
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le passage d'un front froid est marqué par une bande étroite de temps intense alors que l'air froid avançant s'engouffre sous l'air chaud, le forçant rapidement vers le haut. Cela produit des cumulonimbus (Cb) fortement développés, de fortes averses de pluie, des orages et des vents en rafales le long de la ligne frontale, suivis de cumulus avec des averses isolées dans l'air froid et instable derrière le front. L'option C décrit la séquence nuageuse progressive d'un front chaud approchant. L'option B décrit des conditions de subsidence anticyclonique ou de haute pression. L'option D décrit un régime de brise de mer côtière sans rapport avec le temps frontal.
+
+### Q174 : Lorsqu'un aéronef est frappé par la foudre, quel est le danger le plus immédiat ? ^t50q174
+- A) Communications radio perturbées et bruit parasite
+- B) Dépressurisation rapide de la cabine et fumée dans la cabine
+- C) Surchauffe de surface et dommages aux pièces exposées de l'aéronef
+- D) Explosion des équipements électriques dans le cockpit
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le danger physique le plus immédiat d'un coup de foudre est la surchauffe de surface aux points d'attache et de sortie, ainsi que les dommages aux composants exposés tels que les antennes, les sondes de Pitot, les extrémités d'ailes et les bords des surfaces de contrôle. La chaleur extrême aux points de frappe peut brûler les revêtements minces, piquer les surfaces métalliques et endommager les matériaux composites. L'option A (communications radio perturbées) est un effet secondaire qui ne constitue pas une menace structurelle immédiate. L'option B (dépressurisation de la cabine) s'applique principalement aux aéronefs pressurisés et n'est pas la conséquence immédiate la plus courante. L'option D (explosion des équipements de cockpit) est extrêmement improbable dans les aéronefs certifiés avec une protection adéquate contre la foudre.
+
+### Q175 : Qu'entend-on par vent de montagne ? ^t50q175
+- A) Un vent soufflant vers le haut depuis la vallée pendant la journée.
+- B) Un vent soufflant vers le bas du versant montagneux la nuit.
+- C) Un vent soufflant vers le haut depuis la vallée la nuit.
+- D) Un vent soufflant vers le bas du versant montagneux pendant la journée.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vent de montagne (Bergwind) est un flux catabatique qui se produit la nuit lorsque les versants de montagne se refroidissent par rayonnement plus rapidement que l'atmosphère libre à la même altitude. L'air refroidi et plus dense s'écoule vers le bas par gravité vers le fond de la vallée. C'est une partie du cycle diurne des vents de montagne-vallée. L'option A décrit le vent de vallée (Talwind), qui est le flux anabatique ascendant diurne causé par le chauffage solaire. L'option C inverse la direction du flux nocturne. L'option D inverse la direction du flux diurne.
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+### Q176: What is the average value of the saturated adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q176
+- A) 0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate averages approximately 0.6 degrees C per 100 m. It is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (1.0 degrees C per 100 m) because latent heat released during condensation partially offsets the cooling of the ascending air parcel. Option A (0 degrees C per 100 m) would mean no temperature change with altitude, which is physically unrealistic for a rising air parcel. Option B (2 degrees C per 1000 ft, approximately 0.66 degrees C per 100 m) is a rough approximation but not the standard textbook value. Option C (1.0 degrees C per 100 m) is the dry adiabatic lapse rate, not the saturated rate.
+
+### Q177: Throughout the year, extensive high pressure areas are found... ^t50q177
+- A) In tropical regions near the equator.
+- B) Over oceanic areas at approximately 30°N/S latitude.
+- C) In mid-latitudes along the polar front.
+- D) In areas with extensive lifting processes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The subtropical high-pressure belt at approximately 30 degrees N and S latitude is a semi-permanent feature of the global atmospheric circulation, created by the descending branch of the Hadley cell. Warm air rising near the equator flows poleward aloft, cools, and subsides in the subtropics, forming persistent anticyclones over the oceans (e.g., the Azores High, the Pacific High). Option A (equatorial regions) is dominated by the low-pressure Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Option C (mid-latitudes along the polar front) is a zone of cyclonic activity and low pressure. Option D (areas with extensive lifting) produce low pressure by definition, not high pressure.
+
+### Q178: During flight, weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained via... ^t50q178
+- A) SIGMET
+- B) ATIS.
+- C) PIREP
+- D) VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) is a continuous broadcast available on a dedicated frequency at equipped aerodromes, providing current weather observations, active runway, transition level, approach procedures, and relevant NOTAMs specific to that aerodrome. Pilots tune in to the ATIS frequency during flight to obtain up-to-date destination information. Option A (SIGMET) covers significant weather hazards across an entire FIR, not aerodrome-specific data. Option C (PIREP) contains pilot-reported weather conditions en route. Option D (VOLMET) broadcasts weather for multiple aerodromes but is less comprehensive than ATIS for a specific destination.
+
+### Q179: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^t50q179
+- A) Cumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Stratus
+- D) Altus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cloud in figure MET-002 is cumulus, identifiable by its characteristic flat base (marking the condensation level) and vertically developed, cauliflower-like top with sharp white outlines against the blue sky. Cumulus clouds form through thermal convection and are the clouds most associated with soaring flight. Option B (cirrus) would appear as thin, wispy ice-crystal filaments at very high altitude. Option C (stratus) would present as a uniform, featureless grey layer. Option D ("altus") is not a recognized cloud genus in the international cloud classification system.
+
+### Q180: What determines the character of an air mass? ^t50q180
+- A) Wind speed and tropopause height
+- B) Region of origin and trajectory during movement
+- C) Environmental lapse rate at the source
+- D) Temperatures at both origin and present location
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass acquires its temperature and moisture properties from the surface conditions of its source region (e.g., polar continent, tropical ocean) and then modifies as it travels over different surfaces along its trajectory. Both the origin (which sets the initial character) and the path (which modifies it) are essential for classifying and forecasting air mass behaviour. Option A (wind speed and tropopause height) are dynamic properties, not defining characteristics. Option C (environmental lapse rate at source) is a consequence of the air mass properties, not their cause. Option D (temperatures at origin and present location) captures only temperature while ignoring the critical moisture dimension.
+
+### Q181: What cloud type is commonly observed across extensive high-pressure areas in summer? ^t50q181
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- B) Overcast nimbostratus
+- C) Scattered cumulus clouds
+- D) Overcast low stratus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer anticyclones, surface heating generates thermal convection that produces scattered fair-weather Cumulus clouds (Cu humilis or Cu mediocris) during the day, dissipating in the evening. Overcast low stratus (option D) is associated with stable, moist air at low levels, common in autumn or maritime high-pressure situations. Nimbostratus (option B) is associated with frontal systems. Squall lines and thunderstorms (option A) require convective instability and moisture not typical of settled high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q182: The symbol marked (1) in the figure represents which frontal type? See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q182
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Front aloft.
+- C) Cold front.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a surface weather chart, a cold front is depicted by a line with solid triangular spikes (barbs) pointing in the direction of movement. The symbol labeled (1) in figure MET-005 matches the cold front symbol. A warm front uses semicircles. An occlusion uses alternating triangles and semicircles. A front aloft is depicted differently and is less commonly shown on basic surface charts.
+
+### Q183: In METAR code, which identifier denotes heavy rain? ^t50q183
+- A) .+SHRA.
+- B) RA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) SHRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR codes, precipitation intensity is indicated by a '+' prefix (heavy) or '-' prefix (light); no prefix means moderate. Rain is coded 'RA'. Therefore heavy rain is '+RA' (written as '+RA' in the standard, shown in the options as '.+RA'). 'RA' alone (option B) means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option D) means shower of rain (moderate). '+SHRA' (option A) means heavy shower of rain — a convective shower, not continuous heavy rain.
+
+### Q184: During which stage of a thunderstorm do strong updrafts and downdrafts coexist? ^t50q184
+- A) Thunderstorm stage.
+- B) Dissipating stage.
+- C) Mature stage.
+- D) Initial stage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the mature stage of a thunderstorm, both strong updrafts (sustaining the storm) and strong downdrafts (driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling) coexist simultaneously within the Cumulonimbus cell. The initial (cumulus) stage has only updrafts. The dissipating stage is dominated by downdrafts only, which cut off the updraft supply and weaken the storm. 'Thunderstorm stage' (option A) is not a recognised meteorological term.
+
+### Q185: Which conditions are most conducive to aircraft icing? ^t50q185
+- A) Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C in the presence of hail
+- B) Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C with supercooled water droplets present
+- C) Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C within cirrus clouds containing ice crystals
+- D) Sub-zero temperatures with strong wind and cloudless skies
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C where supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and drop size is largest, producing clear or mixed icing on airframe surfaces. Below -20°C, cloud water is mostly in ice crystal form and causes much less accretion. Above 0°C, droplets are not supercooled and do not freeze on contact. Icing in clear air (option D) does not occur as there are no supercooled droplets. Cirrus (option C) contains ice crystals which do not adhere significantly.
+
+### Q186: What is the primary hazard when approaching a valley airfield with strong winds aloft blowing perpendicular to the surrounding ridges? ^t50q186
+- A) Heavy downdrafts beneath thunderstorm rainfall areas
+- B) Wind shear during descent, with possible 180° wind direction changes
+- C) Reduced visibility and potential loss of sight of the airfield on final
+- D) Formation of moderate to severe clear ice on all aircraft surfaces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When strong wind blows perpendicular to a mountain ridge, orographic lift on the windward side and mechanical turbulence create complex wind shear on the lee side. An aircraft descending into a valley airfield on the lee side may encounter severe wind shear with the wind reversing by up to 180° between altitudes, creating sudden loss of airspeed or ground wind opposite to the upper-level flow. Reduced visibility (option C) is a secondary concern. Icing (option D) is unrelated to mountain wind shear. Heavy downdrafts in rainfall (option A) describes thunderstorm activity, not orographic flow.
+
+### Q187: What are "blue thermals"? ^t50q187
+- A) Turbulence in the vicinity of cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Descending air found between cumulus clouds
+- C) Thermals that rise without producing any cumulus clouds
+- D) Thermals occurring when cumulus coverage is below 4/8
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blue thermals are thermals that extend to significant altitude but remain below the condensation level (dew point height), so no Cumulus clouds form — the sky appears clear (blue). They are invisible to glider pilots and require instruments or experience to exploit. Option D confuses thermals with cloud coverage statistics. Option B describes sink between Cu clouds. Option A describes clear-air turbulence (CAT) near thunderstorms, a different phenomenon.
+
+### Q188: The expression "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal strength... ^t50q188
+- A) Is sufficient for cross-country soaring with cumulus clouds marking the thermals.
+- B) Reaches at least 1200 m MSL and becomes usable for gliding.
+- C) Becomes sufficient for gliding and extends to at least 600 m AGL.
+- D) Reaches at least 600 m AGL and produces cumulus clouds.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 'beginning of thermals' (Thermikbeginn) is the moment when thermal lift becomes sufficiently strong and deep (reaching at least 600 m AGL) for a glider to sustain flight and gain height — this is the practical definition. It does not require Cu cloud formation (option A), nor does it specify a fixed MSL altitude (option B). Option D adds an unnecessary cloud formation criterion to what is fundamentally an altitude threshold.
+
+### Q189: How is the "trigger temperature" defined? It is the temperature which... ^t50q189
+- A) A thermal reaches during its ascent at the moment cumulus clouds begin forming.
+- B) Must be attained at ground level for cumulus clouds to develop from thermal convection.
+- C) Represents the maximum surface temperature achievable before a cumulus cloud evolves into a thunderstorm.
+- D) Represents the minimum surface temperature required for a cumulus to develop into a thunderstorm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum ground temperature that must be reached before thermals are strong enough to carry air parcels to the condensation level and form Cumulus clouds. It is found on a tephigram or skew-T diagram by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the surface intersection until it meets the temperature profile. Options A and C misstate it as a temperature reached aloft or a threshold for thunderstorm formation. Option D describes thunderstorm formation, not Cu formation.
+
+### Q190: In a weather briefing, what does the term "over-development" refer to? ^t50q190
+- A) Transition from blue thermals to cloud-marked thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Spreading of cumulus clouds beneath an inversion layer
+- C) Vertical growth of cumulus clouds into rain-producing showers
+- D) Intensification of a thermal low into a storm depression
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development (Überentwicklung) occurs when Cumulus clouds develop vertically beyond Cu congestus into rain-producing Cumulonimbus clouds, generating showers and thunderstorms. This typically happens in the afternoon when the atmosphere becomes increasingly unstable. Option A describes a change in thermal visibility. Option D refers to synoptic-scale deepening of depressions. Option B describes the spreading of Cu under an inversion (which is actually 'street' or 'cover' formation, a separate phenomenon).
+
+### Q191: In gliding meteorology, what does "shielding" refer to? ^t50q191
+- A) The anvil-shaped structure at the top of a thunderstorm cloud
+- B) Cumulus cloud coverage expressed in eighths of the sky
+- C) High or mid-level cloud layers that suppress thermal activity
+- D) Nimbostratus covering the windward slope of a mountain range
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding (Abschirmung) refers to a layer of high or mid-level cloud (such as Cirrostratus, Altostratus, or Altocumulus) that intercepts solar radiation before it reaches the ground, thus reducing or suppressing the surface heating required for thermal development. Option D describes cloud cover on a windward mountain slope. Option A describes the anvil of a Cb, not shielding. Option B describes sky coverage in oktas, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q192: What is the gaseous composition of dry air? ^t50q192
+- A) Oxygen 21%, Nitrogen 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- B) Nitrogen 21%, Oxygen 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- C) Oxygen 21%, Water vapour 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- D) Oxygen 78%, Water vapour 21%, Nitrogen 1%
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air is composed of approximately 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and 1% argon and trace gases including carbon dioxide. This is the standard atmospheric composition. All other options incorrectly swap the proportions of nitrogen and oxygen or introduce water vapour as a major component. Water vapour is a variable constituent (0–4%) not included in the standard dry air composition.
+
+### Q193: Under ISA conditions at mean sea level, what is the mass of one cubic metre of air? ^t50q193
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,01225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At MSL under ISA conditions, the standard air density is 1.225 kg/m³. A cube with 1 m edges has a volume of 1 m³, so its mass is 1.225 kg. Option B (0.01225 kg) is off by a factor of 100, option D (0.1225 kg) by a factor of 10, and option A (12.25 kg) by a factor of 10 in the opposite direction. These represent common decimal-point errors.
+
+### Q194: How is the tropopause defined? ^t50q194
+- A) The altitude above which temperature begins to decrease.
+- B) The boundary between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- C) The layer above the troposphere where temperature increases.
+- D) The boundary zone between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the boundary layer separating the troposphere (where temperature decreases with altitude) from the stratosphere (where temperature is initially constant and then increases due to ozone absorption). It is not the layer above the troposphere (option C), nor the height where temperature starts to decrease (option A — that is the surface of the troposphere). Option B confuses the tropopause with the stratopause.
+
+### Q195: What characterises an inversion layer? ^t50q195
+- A) A boundary zone separating two distinct atmospheric layers
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature falls with increasing altitude
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature remains constant with increasing altitude
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature rises with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer is an atmospheric layer in which temperature increases with increasing altitude, the reverse ('inversion') of the normal decrease. Inversions suppress vertical mixing and convection, trapping pollutants and inhibiting thermal development above them. Option B describes normal atmospheric conditions. Option C describes an isothermal layer. Option A describes a generic boundary without specifying the temperature gradient direction.
+
+### Q196: What defines an isothermal layer? ^t50q196
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with height
+- B) A transition zone between two other atmospheric layers
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with height
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature stays constant with height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer is one in which temperature remains constant with increasing altitude — neither increasing (inversion, option A) nor decreasing (normal lapse rate, option C). Isothermal conditions are found, for example, in the lower stratosphere. Option B describes a generic atmospheric boundary layer, not a layer of constant temperature.
+
+### Q197: What fundamental force initiates wind? ^t50q197
+- A) Thermal force
+- B) Coriolis force
+- C) Centrifugal force
+- D) Pressure gradient force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is caused by the pressure gradient force — air flows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure, and the greater the pressure difference over a given distance, the stronger the resulting wind. The Coriolis force (option B) deflects wind but does not create it. Centrifugal force (option C) is a secondary effect in curved flow. There is no meteorological force specifically called 'thermal force'; thermal differences drive pressure gradients, but the direct cause of wind is the pressure gradient itself.
+
+### Q198: Under what conditions does Foehn typically develop? ^t50q198
+- A) Stability, with extensive airflow forced over a mountain ridge.
+- B) Instability, with a high pressure area and calm wind.
+- C) Stability, with a high pressure area and calm wind.
+- D) Instability, with extensive airflow forced over a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn develops when a stable airflow is forced over a mountain barrier. On the windward side, the air rises moist-adiabatically (condensation releasing latent heat), and on the lee side it descends dry-adiabatically, arriving warmer and drier than before ascent. Stability is necessary for the organised flow; instability would break the flow into convective cells. Calm high-pressure conditions (options B and C) do not provide the cross-mountain pressure gradient needed. Instability (option D) would prevent the laminar flow characteristic of Foehn.
+
+### Q199: How is the "spread" (dew-point depression) defined? ^t50q199
+- A) The maximum quantity of water vapour that air can hold.
+- B) The ratio of actual humidity to the maximum possible humidity.
+- C) The difference between the actual air temperature and the dew point.
+- D) The difference between the dew point and the condensation point.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spread (or dew-point spread) is the difference between the actual (dry-bulb) air temperature and the dew point temperature. A small spread indicates air close to saturation; when the spread reaches zero, condensation and fog or cloud formation occur. Option D is incorrect because dew point and condensation point are effectively the same. Option B describes relative humidity. Option A describes the saturation mixing ratio or absolute humidity capacity.
+
+### Q200: During Foehn, what weather phenomenon designated by "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q200
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- C) Cumulonimbus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical in content to question 90. During Foehn, the descending and warming lee-side flow is stable and generates standing wave clouds. Altocumulus lenticularis forms in the crests of these mountain waves on the lee side. Cumulonimbus (options C and D) requires strong convective instability absent in Foehn descent. Altocumulus Castellanus (option A) indicates mid-level instability, not the stable wave motion of a Foehn situation.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_176_200_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_176_200_fr.md
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+### Q176 : Quelle est la valeur moyenne du gradient adiabatique saturé ? ^t50q176
+- A) 0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le gradient adiabatique saturé (humide) est en moyenne d'environ 0,6 degré C par 100 m. Il est inférieur au gradient adiabatique sec (1,0 degré C par 100 m) car la chaleur latente libérée lors de la condensation compense partiellement le refroidissement de la parcelle d'air ascendante. L'option A (0 degré C par 100 m) signifierait aucun changement de température avec l'altitude, ce qui est physiquement irréaliste pour une parcelle d'air ascendante. L'option B (2 degrés C par 1 000 ft, environ 0,66 degré C par 100 m) est une approximation grossière mais pas la valeur standard des manuels. L'option C (1,0 degré C par 100 m) est le gradient adiabatique sec, pas le gradient saturé.
+
+### Q177 : Tout au long de l'année, des zones de haute pression étendues se trouvent... ^t50q177
+- A) Dans les régions tropicales près de l'équateur.
+- B) Au-dessus des zones océaniques à environ 30°N/S de latitude.
+- C) Dans les latitudes moyennes le long du front polaire.
+- D) Dans les zones à processus de soulèvement importants.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ceinture de haute pression subtropicale à environ 30 degrés N et S de latitude est une caractéristique semi-permanente de la circulation atmosphérique globale, créée par la branche descendante de la cellule de Hadley. L'air chaud montant près de l'équateur s'écoule vers les pôles en altitude, se refroidit et subsiste dans les subtropiques, formant des anticyclones persistants au-dessus des océans (par exemple, l'Anticyclone des Açores, l'Anticyclone du Pacifique). L'option A (régions équatoriales) est dominée par la Zone de Convergence Intertropicale (ZCIT) de basse pression. L'option C (latitudes moyennes le long du front polaire) est une zone d'activité cyclonique et de basse pression. L'option D (zones avec d'importants processus de soulèvement) produisent par définition de la basse pression, pas de la haute pression.
+
+### Q178 : En vol, les informations météorologiques et opérationnelles concernant l'aérodrome de destination peuvent être obtenues via... ^t50q178
+- A) SIGMET
+- B) ATIS.
+- C) PIREP
+- D) VOLMET.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ATIS (Service automatique d'information de région terminale) est une émission continue disponible sur une fréquence dédiée aux aérodromes équipés, fournissant les observations météorologiques actuelles, la piste en service, le niveau de transition, les procédures d'approche et les NOTAMs pertinents spécifiques à cet aérodrome. Les pilotes s'accordent sur la fréquence ATIS pendant le vol pour obtenir des informations à jour sur la destination. L'option A (SIGMET) couvre les dangers météorologiques significatifs dans une FIR entière, pas les données spécifiques à un aérodrome. L'option C (PIREP) contient les conditions météorologiques signalées par les pilotes en route. L'option D (VOLMET) diffuse les bulletins météo de plusieurs aérodromes mais est moins complète que l'ATIS pour une destination spécifique.
+
+### Q179 : Identifiez le type de nuage montré sur la photo. Voir figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^t50q179
+- A) Cumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Stratus
+- D) Altus
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le nuage sur la figure MET-002 est un cumulus, identifiable par sa base plate caractéristique (marquant le niveau de condensation) et son sommet développé verticalement, en forme de chou-fleur, avec des contours blancs nets sur le ciel bleu. Les nuages cumulus se forment par convection thermique et sont les nuages les plus associés au vol de soaring. L'option B (cirrus) apparaîtrait comme de fines filaments fibreux de cristaux de glace à très haute altitude. L'option C (stratus) se présenterait comme une couche grise uniforme et sans relief. L'option D (« altus ») n'est pas un genre nuageux reconnu dans le système international de classification des nuages.
+
+### Q180 : Qu'est-ce qui détermine le caractère d'une masse d'air ? ^t50q180
+- A) La vitesse du vent et la hauteur de la tropopause
+- B) La région d'origine et la trajectoire lors du déplacement
+- C) Le gradient thermique environnemental à la source
+- D) Les températures à la fois à l'origine et à la position actuelle
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une masse d'air acquiert ses propriétés de température et d'humidité à partir des conditions de surface de sa région source (par exemple, continent polaire, océan tropical), puis se modifie en se déplaçant au-dessus de différentes surfaces le long de sa trajectoire. L'origine (qui établit le caractère initial) et le parcours (qui le modifie) sont tous deux essentiels pour classer et prévoir le comportement des masses d'air. L'option A (vitesse du vent et hauteur de la tropopause) sont des propriétés dynamiques, pas des caractéristiques définissantes. L'option C (gradient thermique environnemental à la source) est une conséquence des propriétés de la masse d'air, pas leur cause. L'option D (températures à l'origine et à la position actuelle) ne capture que la température en ignorant la dimension critique de l'humidité.
+
+### Q181 : Quel type de nuage est communément observé au-dessus des vastes zones de haute pression en été ? ^t50q181
+- A) Lignes de grains et orages
+- B) Nimbostratus couvrant
+- C) Nuages cumulus épars
+- D) Stratus bas couvrant
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les anticyclones d'été, le chauffage de surface génère une convection thermique qui produit des nuages cumulus de beau temps épars (Cu humilis ou Cu mediocris) pendant la journée, se dissipant le soir. Le stratus bas couvrant (option D) est associé à un air stable et humide aux niveaux bas, courant en automne ou dans les situations anticycloniques maritimes. Le nimbostratus (option B) est associé aux systèmes frontaux. Les lignes de grains et les orages (option A) nécessitent une instabilité convective et une humidité non typiques des conditions anticycloniques stables.
+
+### Q182 : Le symbole marqué (1) sur la figure représente quel type de front ? Voir figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q182
+- A) Front chaud.
+- B) Front en altitude.
+- C) Front froid.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une carte météorologique de surface, un front froid est représenté par une ligne avec des pointes triangulaires solides (barres) pointant dans la direction du mouvement. Le symbole étiqueté (1) sur la figure MET-005 correspond au symbole de front froid. Un front chaud utilise des demi-cercles. Une occlusion utilise des triangles et des demi-cercles alternés. Un front en altitude est représenté différemment et est moins couramment indiqué sur les cartes de surface de base.
+
+### Q183 : Dans le code METAR, quel identifiant désigne une forte pluie ? ^t50q183
+- A) .+SHRA.
+- B) RA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) SHRA
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les codes METAR, l'intensité des précipitations est indiquée par un préfixe « + » (fort) ou « - » (faible) ; l'absence de préfixe signifie modéré. La pluie est codée « RA ». Par conséquent, la forte pluie est « +RA » (écrit sous forme « +RA » dans la norme, affiché dans les options sous la forme « .+RA »). « RA » seul (option B) signifie pluie modérée. « SHRA » (option D) signifie averse de pluie (modérée). « +SHRA » (option A) signifie forte averse de pluie — une averse convective, pas une pluie forte continue.
+
+### Q184 : Lors de quelle phase d'un orage des courants ascendants et descendants forts coexistent-ils ? ^t50q184
+- A) Stade de l'orage.
+- B) Stade de dissipation.
+- C) Stade mature.
+- D) Stade initial.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au stade mature d'un orage, des courants ascendants forts (soutenant l'orage) et des courants descendants forts (entraînés par la traînée des précipitations et le refroidissement par évaporation) coexistent simultanément dans la cellule de cumulonimbus. Le stade initial (cumulus) n'a que des courants ascendants. Le stade de dissipation est dominé uniquement par des courants descendants, qui coupent l'alimentation en courants ascendants et affaiblissent l'orage. Le « stade de l'orage » (option A) n'est pas un terme météorologique reconnu.
+
+### Q185 : Quelles conditions sont les plus propices au givrage des aéronefs ? ^t50q185
+- A) Températures entre +10° C et -30° C en présence de grêle
+- B) Températures entre 0° C et -12° C avec présence de gouttelettes d'eau surfondue
+- C) Températures entre -20° C et -40° C dans des cirrus contenant des cristaux de glace
+- D) Températures inférieures à zéro avec vents forts et ciels dégagés
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le givrage le plus sévère se produit entre 0°C et -12°C là où les gouttelettes d'eau surfondue sont les plus abondantes et la taille des gouttes est la plus grande, produisant du verglas ou du givre mixte sur les surfaces de l'aéronef. En dessous de -20°C, l'eau en nuage est surtout sous forme de cristaux de glace et provoque beaucoup moins d'accrétion. Au-dessus de 0°C, les gouttelettes ne sont pas surfondes et ne gèlent pas au contact. Le givrage en air clair (option D) ne se produit pas car il n'y a pas de gouttelettes surfondes. Les cirrus (option C) contiennent des cristaux de glace qui n'adhèrent pas de manière significative.
+
+### Q186 : Quel est le principal danger lors de l'approche d'un aérodrome en vallée avec des vents forts en altitude soufflant perpendiculairement aux crêtes environnantes ? ^t50q186
+- A) Forts courants descendants sous les zones de précipitations orageuses
+- B) Cisaillement du vent lors de la descente, avec possibles changements de direction du vent de 180°
+- C) Visibilité réduite et perte de vue potentielle de l'aérodrome en finale
+- D) Formation de verglas modéré à sévère sur toutes les surfaces de l'aéronef
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un vent fort souffle perpendiculairement à une crête montagneuse, le soulèvement orographique du côté au vent et la turbulence mécanique créent un cisaillement de vent complexe du côté sous le vent. Un aéronef descendant vers un aérodrome en vallée du côté sous le vent peut rencontrer un cisaillement de vent sévère avec le vent s'inversant jusqu'à 180° entre les altitudes, créant une perte soudaine de vitesse anémométrique ou un vent de sol opposé au flux de haute altitude. La visibilité réduite (option C) est une préoccupation secondaire. Le givrage (option D) est sans rapport avec le cisaillement de vent en montagne. Les forts courants descendants sous les précipitations (option A) décrivent l'activité orageuse, pas le flux orographique.
+
+### Q187 : Que sont les « thermiques bleus » ? ^t50q187
+- A) Turbulence au voisinage des nuages cumulonimbus
+- B) Air descendant entre les nuages cumulus
+- C) Thermiques qui montent sans former de nuages cumulus
+- D) Thermiques se produisant lorsque la couverture en cumulus est inférieure à 4/8
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les thermiques bleus sont des thermiques qui s'élèvent jusqu'à une altitude significative mais restent en dessous du niveau de condensation (hauteur du point de rosée), de sorte qu'aucun nuage cumulus ne se forme — le ciel apparaît clair (bleu). Ils sont invisibles pour les pilotes de planeur et nécessitent des instruments ou de l'expérience pour être exploités. L'option D confond les thermiques avec les statistiques de couverture nuageuse. L'option B décrit les subsidences entre les Cu. L'option A décrit la turbulence en air clair (CAT) près des orages, un phénomène différent.
+
+### Q188 : L'expression « début des thermiques » fait référence au moment où l'intensité thermique... ^t50q188
+- A) Est suffisante pour le vol de distance avec des nuages cumulus marquant les thermiques.
+- B) Atteint au moins 1 200 m MSL et devient utilisable pour le vol à voile.
+- C) Devient suffisante pour le vol à voile et s'étend jusqu'à au moins 600 m AGL.
+- D) Atteint au moins 600 m AGL et produit des nuages cumulus.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le « début des thermiques » (Thermikbeginn) est le moment où l'ascendance thermique devient suffisamment forte et profonde (atteignant au moins 600 m AGL) pour qu'un planeur puisse maintenir son vol et prendre de l'altitude — c'est la définition pratique. Il ne nécessite pas la formation de nuages Cu (option A), ni ne spécifie une altitude MSL fixe (option B). L'option D ajoute un critère de formation nuageuse inutile à ce qui est fondamentalement un seuil d'altitude.
+
+### Q189 : Comment est définie la « température de déclenchement » ? C'est la température qui... ^t50q189
+- A) Est atteinte par un thermique lors de son ascension au moment où les nuages cumulus commencent à se former.
+- B) Doit être atteinte au niveau du sol pour que des nuages cumulus puissent se développer par convection thermique.
+- C) Représente la température maximale de surface pouvant être atteinte avant qu'un nuage cumulus n'évolue en orage.
+- D) Représente la température minimale de surface nécessaire pour qu'un cumulus se développe en orage.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La température de déclenchement est la température minimale au sol qui doit être atteinte avant que les thermiques ne soient suffisamment forts pour porter les parcelles d'air jusqu'au niveau de condensation et former des nuages cumulus. Elle est trouvée sur un tephigramme ou un diagramme skew-T en traçant le gradient adiabatique sec depuis l'intersection de surface jusqu'à ce qu'il rencontre le profil de température. Les options A et C la décrivent incorrectement comme une température atteinte en altitude ou un seuil de formation d'orage. L'option D décrit la formation d'orage, pas la formation de Cu.
+
+### Q190 : Dans un bulletin météo, que désigne le terme « surdéveloppement » ? ^t50q190
+- A) Transition des thermiques bleus aux thermiques nuageux dans l'après-midi
+- B) Étalement des nuages cumulus sous une couche d'inversion
+- C) Développement vertical des nuages cumulus en averses productives de pluie
+- D) Intensification d'une dépression thermique en dépression orageuse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le surdéveloppement (Überentwicklung) se produit lorsque les nuages cumulus se développent verticalement au-delà des Cu congestus pour devenir des cumulonimbus produisant des averses et des orages. Cela se produit typiquement dans l'après-midi lorsque l'atmosphère devient de plus en plus instable. L'option A décrit un changement de visibilité des thermiques. L'option D fait référence à un approfondissement synoptique des dépressions. L'option B décrit l'étalement des Cu sous une inversion (qui est en réalité une formation en « rues » ou en « nappes », un phénomène distinct).
+
+### Q191 : En météorologie du vol à voile, que désigne le terme « voile » (shielding) ? ^t50q191
+- A) La structure en forme d'enclume au sommet d'un nuage d'orage
+- B) La couverture de nuages cumulus exprimée en huitièmes du ciel
+- C) Des couches nuageuses de haute ou moyenne altitude qui suppriment l'activité thermique
+- D) Nimbostratus couvrant le versant au vent d'une chaîne de montagnes
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le voile (Abschirmung) désigne une couche de nuages de haute ou moyenne altitude (tels que Cirrostratus, Altostratus ou Altocumulus) qui intercepte le rayonnement solaire avant qu'il n'atteigne le sol, réduisant ainsi ou supprimant le chauffage de surface nécessaire au développement thermique. L'option D décrit la couverture nuageuse sur un versant de montagne au vent. L'option A décrit l'enclume d'un Cb, pas le voile. L'option B décrit la couverture du ciel en octas, qui est sans rapport.
+
+### Q192 : Quelle est la composition gazeuse de l'air sec ? ^t50q192
+- A) Oxygène 21 %, Azote 78 %, Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+- B) Azote 21 %, Oxygène 78 %, Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+- C) Oxygène 21 %, Vapeur d'eau 78 %, Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+- D) Oxygène 78 %, Vapeur d'eau 21 %, Azote 1 %
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'air sec est composé d'environ 78 % d'azote, 21 % d'oxygène, et 1 % d'argon et de gaz traces incluant le dioxyde de carbone. C'est la composition atmosphérique standard. Toutes les autres options intervertissent incorrectement les proportions d'azote et d'oxygène ou introduisent la vapeur d'eau comme composant majeur. La vapeur d'eau est un constituant variable (0 à 4 %) non inclus dans la composition standard de l'air sec.
+
+### Q193 : Dans les conditions ISA au niveau moyen de la mer, quelle est la masse d'un mètre cube d'air ? ^t50q193
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,01225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,1225 kg
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au niveau de la mer dans les conditions ISA, la densité standard de l'air est de 1,225 kg/m³. Un cube d'arêtes de 1 m a un volume de 1 m³, donc sa masse est de 1,225 kg. L'option B (0,01225 kg) est décalée d'un facteur 100, l'option D (0,1225 kg) d'un facteur 10, et l'option A (12,25 kg) d'un facteur 10 dans la direction opposée. Ces erreurs représentent des erreurs courantes de virgule décimale.
+
+### Q194 : Comment la tropopause est-elle définie ? ^t50q194
+- A) L'altitude au-dessus de laquelle la température commence à diminuer.
+- B) La limite entre la mésosphère et la stratosphère.
+- C) La couche au-dessus de la troposphère où la température augmente.
+- D) La zone de transition entre la troposphère et la stratosphère.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La tropopause est la couche limite séparant la troposphère (où la température diminue avec l'altitude) de la stratosphère (où la température est d'abord constante puis augmente en raison de l'absorption de l'ozone). Ce n'est pas la couche au-dessus de la troposphère (option C), ni la hauteur où la température commence à diminuer (option A — c'est la surface de la troposphère). L'option B confond la tropopause avec la stratopause.
+
+### Q195 : Qu'est-ce qui caractérise une couche d'inversion ? ^t50q195
+- A) Une zone de transition séparant deux couches atmosphériques distinctes
+- B) Une couche atmosphérique où la température diminue avec l'altitude croissante
+- C) Une couche atmosphérique où la température reste constante avec l'altitude croissante
+- D) Une couche atmosphérique où la température augmente avec l'altitude croissante
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une couche d'inversion est une couche atmosphérique dans laquelle la température augmente avec l'altitude croissante, l'inverse (« inversion ») de la diminution normale. Les inversions suppriment le mélange vertical et la convection, emprisonnant les polluants et inhibant le développement thermique au-dessus d'elles. L'option B décrit les conditions atmosphériques normales. L'option C décrit une couche isotherme. L'option A décrit une limite générique sans préciser la direction du gradient de température.
+
+### Q196 : Qu'est-ce qui définit une couche isotherme ? ^t50q196
+- A) Une couche atmosphérique où la température augmente avec l'altitude
+- B) Une zone de transition entre deux autres couches atmosphériques
+- C) Une couche atmosphérique où la température diminue avec l'altitude
+- D) Une couche atmosphérique où la température reste constante avec l'altitude
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une couche isotherme est une couche dans laquelle la température reste constante avec l'altitude croissante — ni en augmentation (inversion, option A) ni en diminution (gradient thermique normal, option C). Les conditions isothermes se trouvent, par exemple, dans la basse stratosphère. L'option B décrit une couche limite atmosphérique générique, pas une couche de température constante.
+
+### Q197 : Quelle force fondamentale initie le vent ? ^t50q197
+- A) Force thermique
+- B) Force de Coriolis
+- C) Force centrifuge
+- D) Force de gradient de pression
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vent est causé par la force de gradient de pression — l'air s'écoule des zones de haute pression vers les zones de basse pression, et plus la différence de pression est grande sur une distance donnée, plus le vent résultant est fort. La force de Coriolis (option B) dévie le vent mais ne le crée pas. La force centrifuge (option C) est un effet secondaire dans les écoulements courbes. Il n'existe pas de force météorologique spécifiquement appelée « force thermique » ; les différences thermiques entraînent des gradients de pression, mais la cause directe du vent est le gradient de pression lui-même.
+
+### Q198 : Dans quelles conditions le foehn se développe-t-il typiquement ? ^t50q198
+- A) Stabilité, avec un flux d'air important forcé sur une crête montagneuse.
+- B) Instabilité, avec une zone de haute pression et vents calmes.
+- C) Stabilité, avec une zone de haute pression et vents calmes.
+- D) Instabilité, avec un flux d'air important forcé sur une crête montagneuse.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le foehn se développe lorsqu'un flux d'air stable est forcé sur une barrière montagneuse. Du côté au vent, l'air monte selon le gradient adiabatique humide (condensation libérant de la chaleur latente), et du côté sous le vent il descend selon le gradient adiabatique sec, arrivant plus chaud et plus sec qu'avant l'ascension. La stabilité est nécessaire pour le flux organisé ; l'instabilité romprait le flux en cellules convectives. Les conditions de haute pression calme (options B et C) ne fournissent pas le gradient de pression trans-montagneux nécessaire. L'instabilité (option D) empêcherait le flux laminaire caractéristique du foehn.
+
+### Q199 : Comment l'« écart » (dépression du point de rosée) est-il défini ? ^t50q199
+- A) La quantité maximale de vapeur d'eau que l'air peut contenir.
+- B) Le rapport entre l'humidité réelle et l'humidité maximale possible.
+- C) La différence entre la température réelle de l'air et le point de rosée.
+- D) La différence entre le point de rosée et le point de condensation.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'écart (ou dépression du point de rosée) est la différence entre la température réelle (bulbe sec) de l'air et la température du point de rosée. Un faible écart indique un air proche de la saturation ; lorsque l'écart atteint zéro, la condensation et la formation de brouillard ou de nuages se produisent. L'option D est incorrecte car le point de rosée et le point de condensation sont effectivement identiques. L'option B décrit l'humidité relative. L'option A décrit le rapport de mélange de saturation ou la capacité d'humidité absolue.
+
+### Q200 : Lors du foehn, quel phénomène météorologique désigné par « 2 » doit-on s'attendre du côté sous le vent ? Voir figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q200
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- C) Cumulonimbus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Cette question est identique en contenu à la question 90. Lors du foehn, le flux descendant et se réchauffant du côté sous le vent est stable et génère des nuages d'ondes stationnaires. L'Altocumulus lenticularis se forme dans les crêtes de ces ondes de montagne du côté sous le vent. Le cumulonimbus (options C et D) nécessite une forte instabilité convective absente dans la descente du foehn. L'Altocumulus Castellanus (option A) indique une instabilité de niveau moyen, pas le mouvement ondulatoire stable d'une situation de foehn.
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+### Q1: What clouds and weather may develop when a humid and unstable air mass is pushed against a mountain chain by the prevailing wind and forced upward? ^t50q1
+- A) Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation.
+- B) Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.
+- C) Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.
+- D) Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When unstable, humid air is forced to rise orographically, it triggers convective instability — air that is conditionally unstable becomes absolutely unstable once lifting begins. The resulting rapid ascent fuels cumulonimbus development, producing embedded CBs with thunderstorms, heavy showers, and hail. Stable air masses under the same conditions produce layered clouds (Ns or As) with steady rain, not convective storms.
+
+### Q2: What type of fog forms when humid and nearly saturated air is forced to rise along the slopes of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailing wind? ^t50q2
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Steaming fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Orographic fog
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog forms when wind-driven humid air is mechanically lifted along a slope, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point. Radiation fog requires calm nights with radiative ground cooling, advection fog forms when warm moist air moves over a cold surface, and steaming fog (Arctic sea smoke) occurs when cold air passes over warm water — none of these involve slope-forced lifting.
+
+### Q3: What phenomenon is known as "blue thermals"? ^t50q3
+- A) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+- D) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Blue thermals" exist when the lifting condensation level (LCL) is very high — the air is too dry to reach its dew point before the thermal tops out. As a result, thermals rise but no cumulus clouds form, leaving the sky clear ("blue"). For glider pilots this is challenging since there are no visual cloud markers to indicate thermal location, and the cloudbase is beyond the thermal ceiling.
+
+### Q4: The expression "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^t50q4
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal activity is considered to have "begun" when thermals are strong enough to support gliding and extend to at least 600 m AGL — sufficient altitude to work the lift. Below this height, thermals may exist but are too shallow to be safely exploited by a glider. Cloud formation is not a prerequisite; blue thermals (see Q3) can also mark the beginning of usable thermal activity.
+
+### Q5: The "trigger temperature" is the temperature that... ^t50q5
+- A) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+- B) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascent when Cumulus cloud formation begins.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level required for thunderstorm development from a Cumulus cloud.
+- D) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without thunderstorm formation from a Cumulus cloud.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum surface temperature that must be reached before thermals can rise to the condensation level and form cumulus clouds. It is derived from the aerological diagram (tephigram/Stüve diagram) by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the morning sounding's moisture level back to the surface. Until this temperature is reached, thermals may exist but will not produce cumulus markers.
+
+### Q6: What is meant by "over-development" in a weather report? ^t50q6
+- A) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- B) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+- C) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- D) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development occurs when cumulus clouds continue growing vertically beyond the thermal inversion or become self-sustaining through latent heat release, developing into cumulonimbus (Cb) with heavy rain showers, lightning, and hail. This typically happens during humid summer afternoons when atmospheric instability is high and the inhibiting layer is weak. For glider pilots, over-development signals the end of safe soaring conditions and a need to land.
+
+### Q7: The gliding weather report indicates environmental instability. Morning dew is present on the grass and no thermals are currently active. What thermal development can be expected? ^t50q7
+- A) Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will form
+- B) After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion, thermal activity is likely to start
+- C) With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin
+- D) Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity for the day
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Morning dew indicates the air cooled to the dew point overnight (radiation cooling), but this is temporary. Once solar insolation heats the ground, the surface temperature rises, warming the air above it until the temperature exceeds the trigger temperature. Environmental instability means the lapse rate is steep enough to sustain thermals once they begin, so good thermal conditions are likely to develop during the morning hours.
+
+### Q8: What effect on thermal activity can be expected when cirrus clouds approach from one direction and become increasingly dense, blocking the sun? ^t50q8
+- A) Cirrus clouds indicate instability and the onset of over-development
+- B) Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity
+- C) Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.
+- D) Cirrus clouds indicate a high-level inversion with ongoing thermal activity up to that level
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermals are driven by differential heating of the ground by solar radiation. Thickening cirrus clouds progressively filter out solar energy, reducing ground heating and therefore thermal strength and depth. Dense cirrus can reduce insolation enough to stop thermal activity entirely. Additionally, approaching cirrus from one direction often indicates an advancing warm front, which brings widespread cloud, stable conditions, and further suppression of thermals.
+
+### Q9: What situation is known as "shielding"? ^t50q9
+- A) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eighths of the sky
+- B) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- C) Ns clouds covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- D) High or mid-level cloud layers impairing thermal activity
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding describes the effect of high or medium cloud layers (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) that block solar radiation and suppress thermal development below. Even partial cloud cover at these levels can significantly reduce ground insolation. Gliding forecasts include shielding assessments to indicate when and where thermals will be weakened or absent due to cloud cover above the expected thermal layer.
+
+### Q10: While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending north to south and moving east. What would be a sensible decision regarding the weather? ^t50q10
+- A) Plan the flight below the thunderstorm cloud bases
+- B) Change plans and start the triangle heading east
+- C) Postpone the flight to another day
+- D) During flight, look for gaps between thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A squall line is an organized line of severe thunderstorms that is notoriously fast-moving, unpredictable, and extremely dangerous. Moving at typical speeds of 30–60 km/h, a squall line 100 km away could reach the airfield within 2–3 hours. Flying below Cb cloud bases or attempting to navigate between cells exposes the glider to extreme turbulence, windshear, hail, and downdrafts. The only safe option is to not fly until the hazard has completely passed.
+
+### Q11: What is the gas composition of "air"? ^t50q11
+- A) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- D) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air by volume is approximately 78% nitrogen (N2), 21% oxygen (O2), and the remaining 1% consists of argon, carbon dioxide, and other trace gases. Water vapour is variable (0–4%) and is not counted in the standard dry-air composition. Knowing air composition is fundamental to understanding atmospheric physics, density calculations, and the behaviour of aircraft engines and instruments.
+
+### Q12: In which atmospheric layer are weather phenomena predominantly found? ^t50q12
+- A) Stratosphere
+- B) Troposphere
+- C) Thermosphere
+- D) Tropopause
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The troposphere extends from the surface to approximately 8–16 km depending on latitude and season. It contains approximately 75–80% of the atmosphere's total mass and almost all its water vapour. Convection, cloud formation, precipitation, fronts, and wind phenomena all occur here because temperature decreases with height, driving convective instability. Above the tropopause, the stratosphere is stable and largely cloud-free.
+
+### Q13: What is the mass of a "cube of air" with 1 m edges at MSL according to ISA? ^t50q13
+- A) 12.25 kg
+- B) 0.01225 kg
+- C) 1.225 kg
+- D) 0.1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), air density at mean sea level is 1.225 kg/m³. Therefore a 1 m³ cube of air has a mass of 1.225 kg. This density value is fundamental to aviation: it affects lift, drag, engine power, and altimeter calibration. Density decreases with altitude and increases temperature/humidity changes also affect it, which is why density altitude matters for aircraft performance.
+
+### Q14: At what rate does the temperature change with increasing altitude according to ISA within the troposphere? ^t50q14
+- A) Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- B) Decreases by 2° C / 100 m
+- C) Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- D) Increases by 2° C / 100 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA standard lapse rate is 1.98°C per 1000 ft (approximately 2°C/1000 ft), or 6.5°C per 1000 m. This is the Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) used as a reference for altimeter calibration and pressure calculations. The actual ELR varies with weather conditions — steeper than ISA indicates instability and favours thermals, shallower or negative (inversion) indicates stability and suppresses convection.
+
+### Q15: What is the mean tropopause height according to the ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)? ^t50q15
+- A) 36000 m
+- B) 11000 ft
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 11000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is defined at 11,000 m (approximately 36,089 ft), where the temperature reaches -56.5°C and then remains constant with height into the lower stratosphere. In reality the tropopause height varies: it is lower over the poles (~8 km) and higher over the tropics (~16 km), and fluctuates with season and synoptic weather patterns. Cumulonimbus tops that penetrate the tropopause are especially violent.
+
+### Q16: The "tropopause" is defined as... ^t50q16
+- A) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- B) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- C) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- D) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the transition boundary between the troposphere (where temperature decreases with height) and the stratosphere (where temperature initially remains constant then increases due to ozone absorption of UV radiation). It acts as a "lid" on convection — cumulonimbus clouds that reach it spread out laterally to form the characteristic anvil shape. Jet streams are located near the tropopause.
+
+### Q17: In which unit are temperatures reported by European meteorological aviation services? ^t50q17
+- A) Degrees Fahrenheit
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrees Centigrade (°C)
+- D) Gpdam
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** European aviation meteorology (ICAO Annex 3, EU regulations) specifies temperatures in degrees Celsius (°C) for all operational products including METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs, and forecast charts. Kelvin is used in scientific and upper-air calculations. Fahrenheit is used in the US and a few other countries but not in European aviation. This standardisation is critical for correct interpretation of icing levels, freezing level heights, and density altitude.
+
+### Q18: What is meant by an "inversion layer"? ^t50q18
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion "inverts" the normal lapse rate — instead of temperature falling with height, it rises. This creates a very stable layer that acts as a lid on convection, trapping thermals below it, concentrating pollutants, and promoting fog and low cloud formation beneath it. For glider pilots, a low-level inversion caps thermal height; a subsidence inversion in a high-pressure system limits soaring altitude and is often associated with haze.
+
+### Q19: What is meant by an "isothermal layer"? ^t50q19
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer maintains constant temperature with increasing altitude. Like an inversion, it is more stable than the standard atmosphere and inhibits convection. The lower stratosphere exhibits an isothermal region immediately above the tropopause. Isothermal layers can also occur in the troposphere and, like inversions, act as a cap on thermal development and cloud growth.
+
+### Q20: The temperature lapse rate with increasing altitude within the troposphere according to ISA is... ^t50q20
+- A) 3° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0.65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0.6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) is 6.5°C per 1000 m, or 0.65°C per 100 m (approximately 2°C per 1000 ft). This is distinct from the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR) of 1°C/100 m and the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) of approximately 0.6°C/100 m. When the actual ELR is steeper than the DALR, the atmosphere is absolutely unstable; when it lies between the DALR and SALR, the atmosphere is conditionally unstable — the typical situation for thermal soaring.
+
+### Q21: Which process may produce an inversion layer at around 5000 ft (1500 m) altitude? ^t50q21
+- A) Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere
+- B) Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day
+- C) Ground cooling by radiation during the night
+- D) Widespread descending air within a high pressure area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Subsidence inversion forms when air in the centre of a high-pressure area sinks over a wide area. As the air descends, it warms adiabatically, but because the lower air has not warmed at the same rate, the descending layer becomes warmer than the air below it — creating an inversion, typically around 1500–3000 m. This is characteristic of anticyclonic conditions: stable weather, limited convection, and haze or smog trapped below the inversion.
+
+### Q22: A ground-level inversion can be caused by... ^t50q22
+- A) Ground cooling during the night.
+- B) Intensifying and gusting winds.
+- C) Large-scale lifting of air.
+- D) Thickening of clouds in medium layers.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation inversion forms on calm, clear nights when the ground radiates heat into space and cools rapidly. The air in contact with the ground also cools, while air a few hundred metres above remains warmer — creating a temperature inversion near the surface. This type of inversion is common in anticyclonic conditions and often produces radiation fog or low stratus in the morning, which burns off as the sun heats the ground.
+
+### Q23: What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)? ^t50q23
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 500 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) 250 hPa
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere, pressure at approximately 5500 m (FL180) is 500 hPa — exactly half the sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. The 500 hPa level is a key reference level in synoptic meteorology and is used extensively in upper-air charts. Pressure decreases approximately logarithmically with altitude, halving roughly every 5500 m in the lower troposphere.
+
+### Q24: Which processes lead to decreasing air density? ^t50q24
+- A) Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+- B) Increasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- C) Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- D) Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density is governed by the ideal gas law: density = pressure / (specific gas constant × temperature). Density decreases when pressure decreases (fewer molecules per unit volume) or when temperature increases (molecules move faster and spread apart). Both increasing temperature AND decreasing pressure simultaneously reduce density most effectively. This is why density altitude (the altitude equivalent of the actual air density) matters for aircraft performance on hot, high-altitude airfields.
+
+### Q25: The pressure at MSL under ISA conditions is... ^t50q25
+- A) 1123 hPa.
+- B) 113.25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) defines sea-level pressure as 1013.25 hPa (also expressed as 29.92 inHg in US aviation). This is the standard QNE setting — with 1013.25 hPa set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads Flight Level. All pressure altitudes and flight level definitions are based on this datum. Actual sea-level pressure varies with weather systems and must be corrected via QNH for accurate altitude indication.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_1_25_fr.md
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+### Q1 : Quels nuages et phénomènes météorologiques peuvent résulter d'une masse d'air humide et instable poussée contre une chaîne de montagnes par le vent dominant et forcée à monter ? ^t50q1
+- A) Bas stratus couvrant (brouillard élevé) sans précipitations.
+- B) Fins altostratus et cirrostratus avec précipitations légères et continues.
+- C) CB noyés avec orages et averses de grêle et/ou de pluie.
+- D) Nuage NS lisse et non structuré avec bruine légère ou neige (en hiver).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'une masse d'air humide et instable est forcée à monter par orographie, l'instabilité convective se déclenche — l'air conditionnellement instable devient absolument instable dès que le soulèvement commence. L'ascendance rapide qui en résulte alimente le développement de cumulonimbus (CB) noyés, produisant des orages, de fortes averses et de la grêle. En revanche, les masses d'air stable dans les mêmes conditions produisent des nuages en couches (Ns ou As) avec des précipitations continues et régulières, et non des orages convectifs.
+
+### Q2 : Quel type de brouillard se forme lorsque de l'air humide et presque saturé est forcé à monter le long des pentes de collines ou de basses montagnes par le vent dominant ? ^t50q2
+- A) Brouillard de rayonnement
+- B) Brouillard de rayonnement de vapeur
+- C) Brouillard d'advection
+- D) Brouillard orographique
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard orographique se forme lorsque de l'air humide poussé par le vent est mécaniquement soulevé le long d'une pente, se refroidissant adiabatiquement jusqu'à atteindre le point de rosée. Le brouillard de rayonnement nécessite des nuits calmes avec refroidissement radiatif du sol, le brouillard d'advection se forme lorsque de l'air chaud et humide se déplace sur une surface froide, et le brouillard de vapeur (fumée arctique) survient lorsque de l'air froid passe sur de l'eau chaude — aucun de ces mécanismes ne fait intervenir un soulèvement par les pentes.
+
+### Q3 : À quel phénomène fait-on référence avec le terme « thermiques bleus » ? ^t50q3
+- A) Turbulences à proximité de nuages cumulonimbus.
+- B) Air descendant entre les nuages cumulus.
+- C) Thermiques sans formation de nuages Cu.
+- D) Thermiques avec une couverture Cu inférieure à 4/8.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les « thermiques bleus » existent lorsque le niveau de condensation par soulèvement (LCL) est très élevé — l'air est trop sec pour atteindre son point de rosée avant que le thermique ne culmine. Les thermiques montent donc sans former de nuages cumulus, laissant le ciel dégagé (« bleu »). Pour les pilotes de planeur, c'est une situation difficile car il n'y a pas de marqueurs visuels nuageux pour indiquer l'emplacement des thermiques, et la base des nuages est au-delà du plafond thermique.
+
+### Q4 : Le terme « début des thermiques » désigne le moment où l'intensité thermique… ^t50q4
+- A) Devient utilisable pour le vol en campagne grâce à la formation de nuages Cu.
+- B) Devient utilisable pour le vol à voile et atteint jusqu'à 600 m sol.
+- C) Atteint 600 m sol et forme des nuages cumulus.
+- D) Devient utilisable pour le vol à voile et atteint jusqu'à 1200 m MSL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'activité thermique est considérée comme ayant « débuté » lorsque les thermiques sont suffisamment forts pour soutenir le vol à voile et s'étendent à au moins 600 m sol — altitude suffisante pour exploiter les ascendances. En dessous de cette hauteur, les thermiques peuvent exister mais sont trop peu profonds pour être exploités en toute sécurité par un planeur. La formation de nuages n'est pas une condition préalable ; les thermiques bleus (voir Q3) peuvent également marquer le début d'une activité thermique utilisable.
+
+### Q5 : Le terme « température de déclenchement » est défini comme la température qui… ^t50q5
+- A) Doit être atteinte au sol pour que des nuages cumulus puissent se former par les ascendances thermiques.
+- B) Est atteinte par une ascendance thermique lors de la montée lorsque la formation de nuages cumulus commence.
+- C) Est la température minimale au sol requise pour le développement d'orages à partir d'un nuage cumulus.
+- D) Est la température maximale au sol pouvant être atteinte sans formation d'orages à partir d'un nuage cumulus.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La température de déclenchement est la température minimale de surface qui doit être atteinte avant que les thermiques puissent monter jusqu'au niveau de condensation et former des nuages cumulus. Elle est déterminée à partir du diagramme aérologique (téphigramme/diagramme de Stüve) en remontant le taux adiabatique sec depuis le niveau d'humidité du sondage matinal jusqu'à la surface. Jusqu'à ce que cette température soit atteinte, les thermiques peuvent exister mais ne produiront pas de marqueurs cumulus.
+
+### Q6 : Quelle situation est appelée « surdéveloppement » dans un bulletin météo ? ^t50q6
+- A) Développement d'une dépression thermique en dépression orageuse.
+- B) Étalement de nuages cumulus sous une couche d'inversion.
+- C) Passage des thermiques bleus aux thermiques nuageux en cours d'après-midi.
+- D) Développement vertical de nuages cumulus en averses de pluie.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le surdéveloppement survient lorsque des nuages cumulus continuent de croître verticalement au-delà de l'inversion thermique ou deviennent auto-entretenus par la libération de chaleur latente, se développant en cumulonimbus (Cb) avec de fortes averses de pluie, des éclairs et de la grêle. Cela se produit typiquement lors d'après-midis estivaux humides lorsque l'instabilité atmosphérique est élevée et que la couche inhibitrice est faible. Pour les pilotes de planeur, le surdéveloppement signale la fin des conditions de vol à voile sûres et la nécessité d'atterrir.
+
+### Q7 : Le bulletin météo pour le vol à voile indique une instabilité atmosphérique. Le matin, la rosée couvre l'herbe et aucun thermique n'est actuellement actif. Quel développement peut-on attendre pour l'activité thermique ? ^t50q7
+- A) L'instabilité atmosphérique empêche le soulèvement de l'air et aucun thermique ne se formera.
+- B) Après le coucher du soleil et la formation d'une inversion proche du sol, l'activité thermique est susceptible de commencer.
+- C) Avec l'ensoleillement continu et le réchauffement du sol, le déclenchement de l'activité thermique est probable.
+- D) La formation de rosée empêche toute activité thermique pour la journée.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La rosée matinale indique que l'air s'est refroidi jusqu'au point de rosée durant la nuit (refroidissement radiatif), mais cela est temporaire. Une fois que le rayonnement solaire réchauffe le sol, la température de surface monte, réchauffant l'air qui le surmonte jusqu'à ce que la température dépasse la température de déclenchement. L'instabilité atmosphérique signifie que le gradient de température est suffisamment prononcé pour soutenir les thermiques dès qu'ils débutent, de sorte que de bonnes conditions thermiques sont susceptibles de se développer durant la matinée.
+
+### Q8 : Quel changement d'activité thermique peut-on attendre avec l'arrivée de cirrus depuis une direction, devenant de plus en plus denses et bloquant le soleil ? ^t50q8
+- A) Les cirrus indiquent une instabilité et le début du surdéveloppement.
+- B) Les cirrus peuvent intensifier le rayonnement solaire et améliorer l'activité thermique.
+- C) Les cirrus empêchent l'ensoleillement et altèrent l'activité thermique.
+- D) Les cirrus indiquent une inversion en altitude avec une activité thermique continue jusqu'à ce niveau.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les thermiques sont entraînés par le réchauffement différentiel du sol par le rayonnement solaire. L'épaississement des cirrus filtre progressivement l'énergie solaire, réduisant le réchauffement du sol et donc la force et la profondeur des thermiques. Des cirrus denses peuvent réduire suffisamment l'ensoleillement pour arrêter complètement l'activité thermique. De plus, l'arrivée de cirrus depuis une direction indique souvent une front chaud qui approche, apportant une nébulosité générale, des conditions stables et une suppression supplémentaire des thermiques.
+
+### Q9 : À quelle situation fait-on référence avec le terme « voile » (shielding) ? ^t50q9
+- A) La couverture de nuages cumulus, exprimée en huitièmes du ciel.
+- B) La structure en enclume au sommet d'un nuage d'orage.
+- C) Des nuages Ns couvrant le versant au vent d'une chaîne de montagnes.
+- D) Des couches de nuages en altitude ou en couche moyenne altérant l'activité thermique.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le voile décrit l'effet de couches de nuages en haute ou moyenne altitude (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) qui bloquent le rayonnement solaire et inhibent le développement thermique en dessous. Même une couverture nuageuse partielle à ces niveaux peut significativement réduire l'ensoleillement au sol. Les bulletins de vol à voile incluent des évaluations du voile pour indiquer quand et où les thermiques seront affaiblis ou absents en raison de la couverture nuageuse au-dessus de la couche thermique attendue.
+
+### Q10 : Lors de la planification d'un vol en triangle de 500 km, une ligne de grains se trouve à 100 km à l'ouest du terrain de départ, s'étendant du nord au sud et se déplaçant vers l'est. Concernant la situation météorologique, quelle décision serait recommandable ? ^t50q10
+- A) Planifier le vol sous les bases des nuages d'orage.
+- B) Modifier le plan et démarrer le triangle en direction de l'est.
+- C) Remettre le vol à un autre jour.
+- D) Pendant le vol, chercher des brèches entre les orages.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une ligne de grains est une ligne organisée d'orages violents, notoirement rapide, imprévisible et extrêmement dangereuse. Se déplaçant à des vitesses typiques de 30 à 60 km/h, une ligne de grains à 100 km peut atteindre l'aérodrome en 2 à 3 heures. Voler sous les bases des Cb ou tenter de naviguer entre les cellules expose le planeur à des turbulences extrêmes, des cisaillements de vent, de la grêle et des courants descendants. La seule option sûre est de ne pas voler jusqu'à ce que le danger soit complètement passé.
+
+### Q11 : Quelle est la composition gazeuse de « l'air » ? ^t50q11
+- A) Azote 21 % Oxygène 78 % Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+- B) Oxygène 21 % Vapeur d'eau 78 % Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+- C) Oxygène 78 % Vapeur d'eau 21 % Azote 1 %
+- D) Oxygène 21 % Azote 78 % Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'air sec est composé, en volume, d'environ 78 % d'azote (N₂), 21 % d'oxygène (O₂) et le 1 % restant comprend l'argon, le dioxyde de carbone et d'autres gaz traces. La vapeur d'eau est variable (0 à 4 %) et n'est pas comptée dans la composition standard de l'air sec. Connaître la composition de l'air est fondamental pour comprendre la physique atmosphérique, les calculs de densité et le comportement des moteurs et instruments d'aéronefs.
+
+### Q12 : Dans quelle couche atmosphérique les phénomènes météorologiques sont-ils les plus fréquents ? ^t50q12
+- A) La stratosphère.
+- B) La troposphère.
+- C) La thermosphère.
+- D) La tropopause.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La troposphère s'étend de la surface jusqu'à environ 8 à 16 km selon la latitude et la saison. Elle contient environ 75 à 80 % de la masse totale de l'atmosphère et la quasi-totalité de sa vapeur d'eau. La convection, la formation de nuages, les précipitations, les fronts et les phénomènes éoliens s'y produisent car la température diminue avec l'altitude, entraînant une instabilité convective. Au-dessus de la tropopause, la stratosphère est stable et pratiquement exempte de nuages.
+
+### Q13 : Quelle est la masse d'un « cube d'air » dont les arêtes mesurent 1 m, au niveau de la mer selon l'ISA ? ^t50q13
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,01225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,1225 kg
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'Atmosphère Standard Internationale (ISA), la densité de l'air au niveau moyen de la mer est de 1,225 kg/m³. Un cube d'air de 1 m³ a donc une masse de 1,225 kg. Cette valeur de densité est fondamentale en aviation : elle influence la portance, la traînée, la puissance moteur et le calage de l'altimètre. La densité diminue avec l'altitude et les variations de température/humidité l'affectent également, d'où l'importance de l'altitude densité pour les performances des aéronefs.
+
+### Q14 : À quel taux la température varie-t-elle avec l'altitude croissante selon l'ISA dans la troposphère ? ^t50q14
+- A) Augmente de 2 °C / 1000 ft.
+- B) Diminue de 2 °C / 100 m.
+- C) Diminue de 2 °C / 1000 ft.
+- D) Augmente de 2 °C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le gradient thermique standard de l'ISA est de 1,98 °C par 1000 ft (environ 2 °C/1000 ft), soit 6,5 °C par 1000 m. C'est le Gradient de Température Environnemental (GTE) utilisé comme référence pour le calage des altimètres et les calculs de pression. Le GTE réel varie selon les conditions météorologiques — un gradient plus prononcé que l'ISA indique une instabilité et favorise les thermiques ; un gradient plus faible ou négatif (inversion) indique une stabilité et supprime la convection.
+
+### Q15 : Quelle est la hauteur moyenne de la tropopause selon l'ISA (Atmosphère Standard ICAO) ? ^t50q15
+- A) 36 000 m
+- B) 11 000 ft
+- C) 18 000 ft
+- D) 11 000 m
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La tropopause de l'ISA est définie à 11 000 m (environ 36 089 ft), où la température atteint -56,5 °C puis reste constante avec l'altitude dans la stratosphère inférieure. En réalité, la hauteur de la tropopause varie : elle est plus basse au-dessus des pôles (~8 km) et plus haute au-dessus des tropiques (~16 km), et fluctue avec la saison et les configurations météorologiques synoptiques. Les sommets de cumulonimbus pénétrant la tropopause sont particulièrement violents.
+
+### Q16 : Le terme « tropopause » est défini comme… ^t50q16
+- A) La zone frontière entre la mésosphère et la stratosphère.
+- B) La zone frontière entre la troposphère et la stratosphère.
+- C) L'altitude au-dessus de laquelle la température commence à diminuer.
+- D) La couche au-dessus de la troposphère présentant une température croissante.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La tropopause est la frontière de transition entre la troposphère (où la température diminue avec l'altitude) et la stratosphère (où la température reste d'abord constante, puis augmente en raison de l'absorption des UV par l'ozone). Elle agit comme un « couvercle » sur la convection — les nuages cumulonimbus qui l'atteignent s'étalent latéralement pour former la forme caractéristique en enclume. Les courants-jets se situent à proximité de la tropopause.
+
+### Q17 : Dans quelle unité les températures sont-elles communiquées par les services météorologiques aéronautiques européens ? ^t50q17
+- A) Degrés Fahrenheit
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrés Celsius (°C)
+- D) Gpdam
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La météorologie aéronautique européenne (Annexe 3 de l'OACI, réglementations UE) spécifie les températures en degrés Celsius (°C) pour tous les produits opérationnels, notamment les METAR, TAF, SIGMET et cartes de prévisions. Le Kelvin est utilisé dans les calculs scientifiques et d'altitude supérieure. Le Fahrenheit est utilisé aux États-Unis et dans quelques autres pays, mais pas dans l'aviation européenne. Cette standardisation est essentielle pour l'interprétation correcte des niveaux de givrage, des hauteurs du niveau de gel et de l'altitude densité.
+
+### Q18 : Qu'entend-on par « couche d'inversion » ? ^t50q18
+- A) Une couche atmosphérique où la température augmente avec l'altitude croissante.
+- B) Une zone frontière entre deux autres couches au sein de l'atmosphère.
+- C) Une couche atmosphérique avec une température constante avec l'altitude croissante.
+- D) Une couche atmosphérique où la température diminue avec l'altitude croissante.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une inversion « inverse » le gradient thermique normal — au lieu que la température diminue avec l'altitude, elle augmente. Cela crée une couche très stable qui agit comme un couvercle sur la convection, piégeant les thermiques en dessous, concentrant les polluants et favorisant la formation de brouillard et de nuages bas sous elle. Pour les pilotes de planeur, une inversion en basse altitude plafonne la hauteur des thermiques ; une inversion de subsidence dans un système de haute pression limite l'altitude de vol à voile et est souvent associée à de la brume.
+
+### Q19 : Qu'entend-on par « couche isotherme » ? ^t50q19
+- A) Une couche atmosphérique où la température augmente avec l'altitude croissante.
+- B) Une zone frontière entre deux autres couches au sein de l'atmosphère.
+- C) Une couche atmosphérique où la température diminue avec l'altitude croissante.
+- D) Une couche atmosphérique avec une température constante avec l'altitude croissante.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une couche isotherme maintient une température constante avec l'altitude croissante. Comme une inversion, elle est plus stable que l'atmosphère standard et inhibe la convection. La stratosphère inférieure présente une région isotherme immédiatement au-dessus de la tropopause. Des couches isothermes peuvent également survenir dans la troposphère et, comme les inversions, agissent comme un plafond pour le développement thermique et la croissance des nuages.
+
+### Q20 : Le gradient de température avec l'altitude croissante dans la troposphère selon l'ISA est de… ^t50q20
+- A) 3 °C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65 °C / 100 m.
+- C) 1 °C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6 °C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Gradient de Température Environnemental (GTE) de l'ISA est de 6,5 °C par 1000 m, soit 0,65 °C par 100 m (environ 2 °C par 1000 ft). Il se distingue du Taux Adiabatique Sec (TAS) de 1 °C/100 m et du Taux Adiabatique Saturé (TASC) d'environ 0,6 °C/100 m. Lorsque le GTE réel est plus prononcé que le TAS, l'atmosphère est absolument instable ; lorsqu'il se situe entre le TAS et le TASC, l'atmosphère est conditionnellement instable — la situation typique pour le vol thermique.
+
+### Q21 : Quel processus peut entraîner une couche d'inversion à environ 5000 ft (1500 m) d'altitude ? ^t50q21
+- A) Advection d'air froid dans la haute troposphère.
+- B) Ensoleillement intense lors d'une chaude journée d'été.
+- C) Refroidissement du sol par rayonnement nocturne.
+- D) Descente généralisée de l'air dans une zone de haute pression.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inversion de subsidence se forme lorsque l'air au centre d'une zone de haute pression descend sur une large étendue. En descendant, l'air se réchauffe adiabatiquement, mais comme l'air inférieur ne s'est pas réchauffé au même taux, la couche descendante devient plus chaude que l'air en dessous — créant une inversion, typiquement vers 1500 à 3000 m. C'est caractéristique des conditions anticycloniques : temps stable, convection limitée, et brume ou smog piégés sous l'inversion.
+
+### Q22 : Une couche d'inversion proche du sol peut être causée par… ^t50q22
+- A) Le refroidissement du sol durant la nuit.
+- B) Des vents s'intensifiant et soufflant en rafales.
+- C) Le soulèvement généralisé de l'air.
+- D) L'épaississement des nuages dans les couches moyennes.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inversion de rayonnement se forme lors de nuits calmes et dégagées lorsque le sol rayonne sa chaleur vers l'espace et se refroidit rapidement. L'air en contact avec le sol se refroidit également, tandis que l'air à quelques centaines de mètres au-dessus reste plus chaud — créant une inversion de température près de la surface. Ce type d'inversion est fréquent dans les conditions anticycloniques et produit souvent du brouillard de rayonnement ou du stratus bas le matin, qui se dissipe sous l'effet du réchauffement solaire.
+
+### Q23 : Quelle est la pression ISA standard au FL 180 (5500 m) ? ^t50q23
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 500 hPa
+- C) 1013,25 hPa
+- D) 250 hPa
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'Atmosphère Standard Internationale, la pression à environ 5500 m (FL180) est de 500 hPa — exactement la moitié de la pression au niveau de la mer de 1013,25 hPa. Le niveau 500 hPa est un niveau de référence clé en météorologie synoptique et est largement utilisé dans les cartes d'altitude. La pression diminue approximativement selon une loi logarithmique avec l'altitude, diminuant de moitié environ tous les 5500 m dans la basse troposphère.
+
+### Q24 : Quels processus entraînent une diminution de la densité de l'air ? ^t50q24
+- A) Diminution de la température, diminution de la pression.
+- B) Augmentation de la température, augmentation de la pression.
+- C) Diminution de la température, augmentation de la pression.
+- D) Augmentation de la température, diminution de la pression.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La densité de l'air est régie par la loi des gaz parfaits : densité = pression / (constante spécifique des gaz × température). La densité diminue lorsque la pression diminue (moins de molécules par unité de volume) ou lorsque la température augmente (les molécules se déplacent plus vite et s'écartent). L'augmentation de la température ET la diminution de la pression simultanées réduisent le plus efficacement la densité. C'est pourquoi l'altitude densité (l'altitude équivalant à la densité de l'air réelle) est importante pour les performances des aéronefs sur des aérodromes chauds en haute altitude.
+
+### Q25 : La pression au niveau de la mer en conditions ISA est de… ^t50q25
+- A) 1123 hPa.
+- B) 113,25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1013,25 hPa.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ISA (Atmosphère Standard ICAO) définit la pression au niveau de la mer comme 1013,25 hPa (également exprimée en 29,92 inHg dans l'aviation américaine). C'est le calage QNE standard — avec 1013,25 hPa réglé sur l'échelle de l'altimètre, l'instrument indique le Niveau de Vol. Toutes les altitudes de pression et définitions de niveaux de vol sont basées sur cette référence. La pression réelle au niveau de la mer varie avec les systèmes météorologiques et doit être corrigée via le QNH pour une indication d'altitude précise.
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+### Q201: Which factor can prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q201
+- A) Low spread
+- B) Calm wind
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Clear night, no clouds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms on clear, calm nights when the ground radiates heat to space, cooling the surface air to its dew point. An overcast cloud cover prevents the necessary radiative cooling of the ground surface by acting as an insulating blanket, reflecting long-wave radiation back to the ground. Calm wind (option B) is actually a prerequisite for radiation fog formation. A clear night (option D) and low spread (option A) are also favourable, not preventative, conditions.
+
+### Q202: Through what process does advection fog form? ^t50q202
+- A) Extended radiative cooling on clear nights
+- B) Warm, humid air moving across a cold surface
+- C) Mixing of cold, humid air with warm, humid air
+- D) Cold, moist air flowing over warm ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a cold surface and cooled from below to its dew point. This is most common over cold ocean currents or cold land surfaces in spring. Option D reverses the temperature relationship. Option C describes mixing fog (a different type). Option A describes radiation fog. The defining factor in advection fog is the movement of warm moist air over cold ground.
+
+### Q203: What process leads to the development of orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q203
+- A) Warm, humid air being forced over hills or a mountain range
+- B) Mixing of cold, moist air with warm, moist air
+- C) Extended radiation on cloudless nights
+- D) Evaporation from warm, wet ground into very cold air
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when moist air is forced to rise over terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches its dew point; the result is a cloud base that sits on the hillside or mountain top. Option C describes radiation fog. Option D describes steam fog (evaporation/mixing fog). Option B describes mixing fog. The key process is forced lifting of moist air over elevated terrain.
+
+### Q204: What weather phenomena are associated with an upper-level trough? ^t50q204
+- A) Development of showers and thunderstorms (Cb)
+- B) Light winds and shallow cumulus formation
+- C) High stratus layers with ground-covering cloud bases
+- D) Calm weather and formation of lifted fog layers
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upper-level trough is a region of cold air aloft with positive vorticity advection, which promotes divergence aloft and convergence at the surface, triggering strong convective uplift. This instability favours the development of showers and thunderstorms (Cumulonimbus). Options B and D describe stable, anticyclonic conditions. Option C (high stratus) would require stable, moist conditions near the surface, not the convective instability associated with a cold upper trough.
+
+### Q205: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn, what weather should be expected? ^t50q205
+- A) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming and strong gusty winds
+- B) Layer clouds, mountain peaks obscured, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain
+- C) Scattered cumulus with showers and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm winds and formation of high stratus (high fog)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (stau) side of a mountain range during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise and cool, producing dense cloud, obscured peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain or snow — the classic 'Stau' weather. Option A describes the lee side of the Foehn (warm, dry, gusty). Option D describes stable, fog-prone conditions unrelated to Foehn. Option C describes conditions more typical of frontal convective activity.
+
+### Q206: Which chart presents observed MSL pressure distribution and the corresponding frontal systems? ^t50q206
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC).
+- B) Prognostic chart.
+- C) Surface weather chart.
+- D) Hypsometric chart
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (also called the synoptic chart or analysis chart) displays actual measured pressure values reduced to MSL as isobars, along with the positions of frontal systems. It represents the observed state of the atmosphere at a specific time. A prognostic chart (option B) shows forecast conditions. The hypsometric chart (option D) shows upper-level contour heights on constant-pressure surfaces. The SWC (option A) focuses on hazardous weather phenomena, not comprehensive pressure analysis.
+
+### Q207: In METAR, how is heavy rain encoded? ^t50q207
+- A) SHRA
+- B) .+SHRA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) RA.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical to question 120. In METAR, precipitation intensity modifiers are '+' for heavy and '-' for light. 'RA' is the METAR code for rain; therefore '+RA' (shown as '.+RA' in the options) denotes heavy rain. 'RA' (option D) alone means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option A) is shower of rain. '+SHRA' (option B) is heavy shower of rain — a different precipitation type.
+
+### Q208: In METAR, how are moderate rain showers encoded? ^t50q208
+- A) .+RA.
+- B) TS.
+- C) .+TSRA
+- D) SHRA.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR, the descriptor 'SH' (shower) is added before the precipitation code to indicate convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds. Moderate showers of rain are therefore coded 'SHRA'. '+TSRA' (option C) means heavy thunderstorm with rain. 'TS' (option B) means thunderstorm without precipitation modifier. '+RA' (option A) means heavy continuous rain from stratiform clouds, not a shower.
+
+### Q209: Under what conditions does back-side weather (Ruckseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q209
+- A) After the passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) After the passage of a cold front
+- D) Before the passage of an occlusion
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Back-side weather (Rückseitenwetter) describes the weather in the cold air mass following the passage of a cold front: cold, unstable polar or arctic air with scattered showers, good visibility, and gusty winds — often excellent soaring conditions for gliders in the convective back-side air. It occurs after, not before, frontal passages. An occlusion (option D) combines warm and cold front characteristics. Foehn (option B) is a separate orographic phenomenon. After a warm front (option A) brings the warm sector, not cold back-side air.
+
+### Q210: In the International Standard Atmosphere, how does temperature change from MSL to approximately 10,000 m altitude? ^t50q210
+- A) From +15° to -50°C
+- B) From -15° to +50°C
+- C) From +30° to -40°C
+- D) From +20° to -40°C
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), the temperature at MSL is +15°C, and the temperature decreases at 6.5°C per 1000 m (2°C per 1000 ft) through the troposphere. At approximately 11,000 m (the tropopause), the temperature reaches -56.5°C, rounding to approximately -50°C at 10,000 m. Options C and D give incorrect MSL starting values (+30°C and +20°C). Option B reverses the sign convention, implying temperature increases with altitude.
+
+### Q211: What weather should be expected during Foehn conditions in the Bavarian region near the Alps? ^t50q211
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm and dry wind
+- B) High pressure over the Bay of Biscay and low pressure over Eastern Europe
+- C) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- D) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side of the Alps with a flat pressure pattern
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Classic Bavarian Foehn is driven by low pressure over the Gulf of Genoa and high pressure over the North Sea, forcing air southward over the Alps. Nimbostratus forms on the south (windward) side of the Alps, while on the north (lee) Bavarian side, warm and dry air descends, often accompanied by Föhnmauer (Foehn wall) and rotor clouds along the Foehn boundary. Option A incorrectly describes the lee-side wind as cold and humid and places the Ns on the wrong side. Option B describes the synoptic pressure setup only partially. Option A places the Ns on the north (lee) side, which is incorrect.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_201_211_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_201_211_fr.md
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+### Q201 : Quel facteur peut empêcher la formation de brouillard de rayonnement ? ^t50q201
+- A) Faible écart
+- B) Vent calme
+- C) Couverture nuageuse totale (couvert)
+- D) Nuit claire, sans nuages
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard de rayonnement se forme lors de nuits claires et calmes lorsque le sol rayonne la chaleur vers l'espace, refroidissant l'air de surface jusqu'à son point de rosée. Une couverture nuageuse totale (couvert) empêche le refroidissement radiatif nécessaire de la surface du sol en agissant comme une couverture isolante, reflétant le rayonnement à grande longueur d'onde vers le sol. Le vent calme (option B) est en réalité un prérequis à la formation du brouillard de rayonnement. Une nuit claire (option D) et un faible écart (option A) sont également des conditions favorables, pas préventives.
+
+### Q202 : Par quel processus le brouillard d'advection se forme-t-il ? ^t50q202
+- A) Refroidissement radiatif prolongé lors de nuits claires
+- B) Déplacement d'air chaud et humide au-dessus d'une surface froide
+- C) Mélange d'air froid et humide avec de l'air chaud et humide
+- D) Écoulement d'air froid et humide au-dessus d'un sol chaud
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard d'advection se forme lorsque de l'air chaud et humide est transporté (advecté) horizontalement au-dessus d'une surface froide et refroidi par le bas jusqu'à son point de rosée. C'est le cas le plus fréquent au-dessus des courants océaniques froids ou des surfaces terrestres froides au printemps. L'option D inverse la relation de température. L'option C décrit le brouillard de mélange (un type différent). L'option A décrit le brouillard de rayonnement. Le facteur déterminant du brouillard d'advection est le déplacement d'air chaud et humide au-dessus d'un sol froid.
+
+### Q203 : Quel processus conduit au développement du brouillard orographique (brouillard de colline) ? ^t50q203
+- A) Air chaud et humide forcé à s'élever sur des collines ou une chaîne de montagnes
+- B) Mélange d'air froid et humide avec de l'air chaud et humide
+- C) Rayonnement prolongé lors de nuits sans nuages
+- D) Évaporation d'un sol chaud et humide dans un air très froid
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard orographique (brouillard de colline) se forme lorsque de l'air humide est forcé à s'élever sur le terrain, se refroidissant adiabatiquement jusqu'à atteindre son point de rosée ; la base nuageuse qui en résulte repose sur le flanc de la colline ou le sommet de la montagne. L'option C décrit le brouillard de rayonnement. L'option D décrit le brouillard de vapeur (brouillard d'évaporation/mélange). L'option B décrit le brouillard de mélange. Le processus clé est le soulèvement forcé de l'air humide au-dessus d'un terrain élevé.
+
+### Q204 : Quels phénomènes météorologiques sont associés à un creux en altitude ? ^t50q204
+- A) Développement d'averses et d'orages (Cb)
+- B) Vents légers et formation de cumulus peu développés
+- C) Couches de stratus élevées avec bases nuageuses couvrant le sol
+- D) Temps calme et formation de couches de brouillard soulevé
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un creux en altitude est une région d'air froid en altitude avec une advection de tourbillon positif, qui favorise la divergence en altitude et la convergence en surface, déclenchant un fort soulèvement convectif. Cette instabilité favorise le développement d'averses et d'orages (cumulonimbus). Les options B et D décrivent des conditions stables et anticycloniques. L'option C (stratus élevé) nécessiterait des conditions stables et humides près de la surface, pas l'instabilité convective associée à un creux froid en altitude.
+
+### Q205 : Du côté au vent d'une chaîne de montagnes lors du foehn, quel temps doit-on s'attendre ? ^t50q205
+- A) Dissipation des nuages avec un réchauffement inhabituel et des vents forts et en rafales
+- B) Nuages en couches, sommets montagneux obscurcis, mauvaise visibilité et pluie modérée à forte
+- C) Cumulus épars avec averses et orages
+- D) Vents calmes et formation de stratus élevé (brouillard élevé)
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Du côté au vent (stau) d'une chaîne de montagnes lors du foehn, l'air humide est forcé à s'élever et à se refroidir, produisant des nuages denses, des sommets obscurcis, une mauvaise visibilité et des précipitations modérées à fortes de pluie ou de neige — le classique temps de « Stau ». L'option A décrit le côté sous le vent du foehn (chaud, sec, en rafales). L'option D décrit des conditions stables propices au brouillard sans rapport avec le foehn. L'option C décrit des conditions plus typiques d'une activité convective frontale.
+
+### Q206 : Quelle carte présente la distribution observée de la pression au niveau de la mer et les systèmes frontaux correspondants ? ^t50q206
+- A) Carte des phénomènes météorologiques significatifs (SWC).
+- B) Carte pronostique.
+- C) Carte météorologique de surface.
+- D) Carte hypsométrique
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La carte météorologique de surface (également appelée carte synoptique ou carte d'analyse) affiche les valeurs de pression réellement mesurées, réduites au niveau de la mer sous forme d'isobares, ainsi que les positions des systèmes frontaux. Elle représente l'état observé de l'atmosphère à un moment précis. Une carte pronostique (option B) montre les conditions prévues. La carte hypsométrique (option D) montre les hauteurs de contour en altitude sur les surfaces isobariques. La SWC (option A) se concentre sur les phénomènes météorologiques dangereux, pas sur l'analyse complète de la pression.
+
+### Q207 : Dans le METAR, comment la forte pluie est-elle codée ? ^t50q207
+- A) SHRA
+- B) .+SHRA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) RA.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Cette question est identique à la question 120. Dans le METAR, les modificateurs d'intensité des précipitations sont « + » pour fort et « - » pour faible. « RA » est le code METAR pour la pluie ; par conséquent « +RA » (affiché sous la forme « .+RA » dans les options) désigne la forte pluie. « RA » (option D) seul signifie pluie modérée. « SHRA » (option A) est une averse de pluie. « +SHRA » (option B) est une forte averse de pluie — un type de précipitation différent.
+
+### Q208 : Dans le METAR, comment les averses de pluie modérées sont-elles codées ? ^t50q208
+- A) .+RA.
+- B) TS.
+- C) .+TSRA
+- D) SHRA.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le METAR, le descripteur « SH » (averse) est ajouté avant le code de précipitation pour indiquer des précipitations convectives provenant de nuages cumuliformes. Les averses de pluie modérées sont donc codées « SHRA ». « +TSRA » (option C) signifie orage fort avec pluie. « TS » (option B) signifie orage sans modificateur de précipitation. « +RA » (option A) signifie pluie continue forte provenant de nuages stratiformes, pas une averse.
+
+### Q209 : Dans quelles conditions le temps de face arrière (Rückseitenwetter) se produit-il ? ^t50q209
+- A) Après le passage d'un front chaud
+- B) Lors du foehn du côté sous le vent
+- C) Après le passage d'un front froid
+- D) Avant le passage d'une occlusion
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le temps de face arrière (Rückseitenwetter) décrit le temps dans la masse d'air froid qui suit le passage d'un front froid : air polaire ou arctique froid et instable avec des averses éparses, bonne visibilité et vents en rafales — souvent d'excellentes conditions de vol à voile pour les planeurs dans cet air convectif de face arrière. Il se produit après, et non avant, les passages frontaux. Une occlusion (option D) combine les caractéristiques du front chaud et du front froid. Le foehn (option B) est un phénomène orographique distinct. Après un front chaud (option A) survient le secteur chaud, pas l'air froid de face arrière.
+
+### Q210 : Dans l'Atmosphère Standard Internationale, comment la température évolue-t-elle du niveau de la mer jusqu'à environ 10 000 m d'altitude ? ^t50q210
+- A) De +15° à -50°C
+- B) De -15° à +50°C
+- C) De +30° à -40°C
+- D) De +20° à -40°C
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'Atmosphère Standard Internationale (ISA), la température au niveau de la mer est de +15°C, et la température diminue de 6,5°C par 1 000 m (2°C par 1 000 ft) dans la troposphère. À environ 11 000 m (la tropopause), la température atteint -56,5°C, arrondie à environ -50°C à 10 000 m. Les options C et D donnent des valeurs de départ incorrectes au niveau de la mer (+30°C et +20°C). L'option B inverse la convention de signe, impliquant que la température augmente avec l'altitude.
+
+### Q211 : Quel temps doit-on s'attendre lors des conditions de foehn dans la région bavaroise près des Alpes ? ^t50q211
+- A) Nimbostratus sur les Alpes nord, nuages rotors du côté au vent, vent chaud et sec
+- B) Haute pression sur le golfe de Gascogne et basse pression sur l'Europe de l'Est
+- C) Nimbostratus sur les Alpes sud, nuages rotors du côté sous le vent, vent chaud et sec
+- D) Vent descendant froid et humide du côté sous le vent des Alpes avec un régime de pression plat
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le foehn bavarois classique est entraîné par la basse pression sur le golfe de Gênes et la haute pression sur la mer du Nord, forçant l'air vers le sud au-dessus des Alpes. Le nimbostratus se forme du côté sud (au vent) des Alpes, tandis que du côté nord (sous le vent) bavarois, de l'air chaud et sec descend, souvent accompagné du Föhnmauer (mur de foehn) et de nuages rotors le long de la limite du foehn. L'option A décrit incorrectement le vent du côté sous le vent comme froid et humide et place le Ns du mauvais côté. L'option B décrit uniquement partiellement la configuration de pression synoptique. L'option A place le Ns du côté nord (sous le vent), ce qui est incorrect.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_26_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_26_50.md
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+### Q26: At what height is the ISA tropopause located? ^t50q26
+- A) 48000 ft.
+- B) 11000 ft.
+- C) 36000 ft.
+- D) 5500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is located at 11,000 m, which equals approximately 36,089 ft (effectively 36,000 ft). Above this level, the standard atmosphere defines a constant temperature of -56.5°C up to 20,000 m (the isothermal stratospheric layer). This is distinct from Q15 which asks in metres — both questions test knowledge of the same value expressed in different units.
+
+### Q27: The barometric altimeter shows height above... ^t50q27
+- A) Mean sea level.
+- B) Ground.
+- C) Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) A selected reference pressure level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The barometric altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude based on the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Crucially, it indicates height above whatever pressure level is set on the subscale (Kollsman window). Set QNH and it reads altitude above mean sea level; set QFE and it reads height above the reference airfield; set 1013.25 hPa (QNE) and it reads flight level. The altimeter always references a pressure level, not a physical surface.
+
+### Q28: The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting... ^t50q28
+- A) QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- B) QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- C) QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- D) QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the local altimeter setting that makes the instrument read the airfield's elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. Setting QNH and checking that the altimeter reads the known airfield elevation (published in AIP/chart) verifies the altimeter is functioning correctly and calibrated. QFE would show zero (height above airfield), QNE (1013.25) would show a value unrelated to actual elevation, and QFF is a meteorological value reduced to MSL for surface analysis charts.
+
+### Q29: With QFE set, the barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q29
+- A) Height above MSL.
+- B) True altitude above MSL.
+- C) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual atmospheric pressure at airfield elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at the reference airfield and subsequently indicates height above that reference pressure level — effectively height above the airfield. This setting is commonly used in circuit flying and gliding operations so the altimeter directly reads AGL height at the home airfield. It does not account for terrain elevation differences elsewhere.
+
+### Q30: With QNH set, the barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q30
+- A) Height above MSL
+- B) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- C) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) True altitude above MSL.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting adjusted to make the instrument read the elevation above mean sea level at the station. It is calculated by reducing the airfield QFE to sea level using the ISA temperature gradient. With QNH set, the altimeter reads the airfield elevation on the ground and true altitude above MSL in the air (assuming ISA conditions). Note that "true altitude" (answer A) accounts for actual temperature deviations from ISA — QNH gives indicated altitude, which may differ from true altitude in non-ISA conditions.
+
+### Q31: How can wind speed and direction be determined from surface weather charts? ^t50q31
+- A) By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines
+- B) By alignment of warm- and cold front lines.
+- C) By annotations from the text part of the chart
+- D) By alignment and distance of isobaric lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isobars (lines of equal pressure) on surface charts indicate both wind direction and speed. Above the friction layer, wind flows parallel to isobars (geostrophic wind); close to the surface it crosses them at an angle toward lower pressure. Closely spaced isobars indicate a strong pressure gradient force and therefore strong winds; widely spaced isobars indicate light winds. Wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere is anticlockwise around lows and clockwise around highs (Buys-Ballot's Law).
+
+### Q32: Which force is responsible for causing "wind"? ^t50q32
+- A) Coriolis force
+- B) Thermal force
+- C) Pressure gradient force
+- D) Centrifugal force
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is initiated by the pressure gradient force (PGF) — air accelerates from high pressure toward low pressure due to differences in atmospheric pressure. The Coriolis force deflects the moving air (to the right in the Northern Hemisphere) but does not cause the initial motion. Centrifugal force acts in curved flow around pressure systems. Thermal effects create pressure differences which then drive the PGF. Without a pressure gradient there would be no wind.
+
+### Q33: Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is... ^t50q33
+- A) Perpendicular to the isohypses.
+- B) Perpendicular to the isobars.
+- C) Parallel to the isobars.
+- D) At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above the friction layer (roughly 600–1000 m AGL), the Coriolis force and pressure gradient force balance each other, producing geostrophic flow parallel to the isobars. In the friction layer below, surface drag slows the wind, reduces the Coriolis deflection, and allows the wind to cross isobars at an angle toward lower pressure (typically 10–30°). Understanding this is essential for predicting wind direction at altitude versus near the surface.
+
+### Q34: Which of the listed surfaces causes the greatest wind speed reduction due to ground friction? ^t50q34
+- A) Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation
+- B) Oceanic areas
+- C) Flat land, lots of vegetation cover
+- D) Mountainous areas, vegetation cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface roughness (aerodynamic roughness length) determines how much friction the surface exerts on moving air. Mountainous terrain with vegetation has the highest roughness length, causing maximum turbulent drag and wind speed reduction. Oceans have very low roughness and exert minimal friction. Flat vegetated land is intermediate. Importantly, mountains also mechanically block and deflect wind, creating additional complex flow patterns, turbulence, and wave phenomena of direct relevance to glider pilots.
+
+### Q35: The movement of air flowing together is called... ^t50q35
+- A) Divergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Concordence.
+- D) Convergence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convergence describes air flowing into a region from different directions, compressing horizontally. By mass continuity, converging surface air must go somewhere — it is forced upward, triggering cloud formation, precipitation, and potentially convective development. Convergence zones are important for glider pilots as they produce enhanced lift along their axes; sea-breeze fronts and col zones between pressure systems are classic convergence sources for soaring.
+
+### Q36: The movement of air flowing apart is called... ^t50q36
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Divergence.
+- D) Concordence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Divergence describes air spreading outward from a region. At the surface, divergence causes subsiding air from above to replace the outflowing air, promoting stability, clear skies, and fair weather. High-pressure anticyclones are associated with surface divergence and upper-level convergence. In the upper troposphere, divergence above a surface low enhances upward motion and intensifies the low-pressure system.
+
+### Q37: What weather development results from convergence at ground level? ^t50q37
+- A) Descending air and cloud dissipation
+- B) Ascending air and cloud formation
+- C) Descending air and cloud formation
+- D) Ascending air and cloud dissipation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface convergence forces air upward (ascending motion) by mass continuity — air cannot accumulate indefinitely at the surface. As air rises, it cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate until it reaches the dew point (lifting condensation level), where condensation begins and clouds form. Further ascent releases latent heat, potentially fuelling deep convection. This is the fundamental mechanism behind frontal lifting and sea-breeze convergence lift.
+
+### Q38: When air masses meet each other head on, what is this referred to and what air movements follow? ^t50q38
+- A) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+- B) Convergence resulting in air being lifted
+- C) Divergence resulting in air being lifted
+- D) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two opposing air flows collide head-on, the meeting zone is a convergence line. The colliding air has nowhere to go horizontally and is forced upward — producing ascending motion, cloud formation, and potentially precipitation or thunderstorms. This occurs at fronts, sea-breeze convergence zones, and col zones. Glider pilots exploit convergence lines for extended linear climbs along the lift band.
+
+### Q39: By which air masses is Central Europe mainly influenced? ^t50q39
+- A) Tropical and arctic cold air
+- B) Arctic and polar cold air
+- C) Equatorial and tropical warm air
+- D) Polar cold air and tropical warm air
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Central Europe sits in the mid-latitude westerly belt between the polar front (cold polar air from the north) and subtropical high pressure (warm tropical air from the south). The interaction between these two contrasting air masses creates the characteristic mid-latitude cyclone (depression) weather of Central Europe: frontal systems, rapidly changing weather, and the full range of cloud types and precipitation. This dynamic contrast also drives the polar jet stream overhead.
+
+### Q40: In terms of global atmospheric circulation, where does polar cold air meet subtropical warm air? ^t50q40
+- A) At the equator
+- B) At the geographic poles
+- C) At the polar front
+- D) At the subtropical high pressure belt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the boundary between the polar cell (cold, dense air flowing equatorward) and the Ferrel cell (relatively warmer mid-latitude air). In the Northern Hemisphere it is located roughly between 40–60°N, but its position fluctuates as waves (Rossby waves) develop along it — these waves amplify into cyclones and anticyclones. The jet stream flows along the polar front and is a critical factor in synoptic weather patterns across Europe.
+
+### Q41: "Foehn" conditions typically develop with... ^t50q41
+- A) Instability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+- B) Stability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- C) Instability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- D) Stability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn is a warm, dry, descending wind on the lee side of a mountain range. It develops when stable air is pushed by a broad-scale pressure gradient against a mountain barrier. On the windward side, moist air rises and cools at the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR ~0.6°C/100 m) after reaching the dew point, precipitating moisture. On the lee side, dry air descends at the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR ~1°C/100 m), arriving warmer and drier than it started — the Foehn effect.
+
+### Q42: What type of turbulence is typically encountered close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions? ^t50q42
+- A) Thermal turbulence
+- B) Inversion turbulence
+- C) Turbulence in rotors
+- D) Clear-air turbulence (CAT)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn and mountain wave conditions, a rotor zone develops in the lower troposphere on the lee side beneath the crests of the standing waves. The rotor is a region of intense, chaotic turbulence with rotating air, strong downdrafts, and violent eddies — it is one of the most hazardous phenomena for aircraft. Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis) mark wave crests above, while rotor clouds (roll clouds) mark the rotor zone near the surface.
+
+### Q43: Light turbulence should always be expected... ^t50q43
+- A) Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.
+- B) Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+- C) When entering inversions.
+- D) Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible tops of thermal columns. The sub-cloud layer beneath them contains active thermals (updraughts) and compensating downdraughts between them, creating light to moderate turbulence from convective mixing. This is the normal turbulent environment of thermal soaring. Above cumulus tops the air is generally smoother (outside the cloud); stratiform clouds have minimal convective turbulence unless embedded CBs are present.
+
+### Q44: Moderate to severe turbulence should be expected... ^t50q44
+- A) With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog).
+- B) Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- C) Overhead unbroken cloud layers.
+- D) On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotor clouds (roll clouds) on the lee side of mountains are the visible indicator of the highly turbulent rotor zone beneath mountain waves. This turbulence can be extreme, with unpredictable up- and downdraughts, strong shear, and rotational forces capable of exceeding aircraft structural limits. Experienced wave pilots avoid or transit the rotor zone quickly with sufficient airspeed. The windward side of mountains typically has orographic cloud and steady lift, not severe turbulence.
+
+### Q45: Which answer lists every state of water found in the atmosphere? ^t50q45
+- A) Gaseous and liquid
+- B) Liquid and solid
+- C) Liquid
+- D) Liquid, solid, and gaseous
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water exists in all three states within the Earth's atmosphere. Gaseous water vapour is invisible and present throughout the troposphere. Liquid water forms cloud droplets, rain, and drizzle. Solid water forms ice crystals (cirrus clouds), snow, hail, and graupel. Understanding all three states is essential for icing awareness: supercooled liquid water droplets (liquid below 0°C) pose the greatest structural icing hazard to aircraft, as they freeze on contact with cold surfaces.
+
+### Q46: How do dew point and relative humidity change when temperature decreases? ^t50q46
+- A) Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases
+- B) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- C) Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases
+- D) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dew point is the temperature to which air must be cooled (at constant pressure and moisture content) for saturation to occur. It is a measure of the absolute moisture content and remains constant as temperature changes (assuming no moisture is added or removed). However, relative humidity — the ratio of actual vapour pressure to saturation vapour pressure — increases as temperature falls, because the saturation vapour pressure decreases with temperature. When temperature equals the dew point, relative humidity reaches 100% and condensation begins.
+
+### Q47: How do spread and relative humidity change when temperature increases? ^t50q47
+- A) Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- B) Spread increases, relative humidity increases
+- C) Spread increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread is the temperature-dew point difference (T - Td). As temperature increases while dew point remains constant, the spread widens. Simultaneously, because warmer air can hold more water vapour, the relative humidity decreases — the air is now further from saturation. A large spread indicates dry air and a high lifting condensation level (high cloud base). A small spread (near zero) indicates saturated or near-saturated conditions, with fog or low cloud likely.
+
+### Q48: The "spread" is defined as... ^t50q48
+- A) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+- B) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air.
+- C) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- D) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread (also called dew point depression) is simply the difference between the air temperature and the dew point temperature: Spread = T - Td. It is used to estimate cloud base height: in temperate latitudes, cloud base height in metres above the surface is approximately spread × 125 (or in feet, spread × 400). A spread of 0 means the air is saturated (fog or cloud at the surface). Spread is a quick indicator of moisture availability for soaring pilots.
+
+### Q49: With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in... ^t50q49
+- A) Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- B) Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- C) Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- D) Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As temperature decreases (with dew point unchanged), the gap between temperature and dew point narrows — spread decreases. At the same time, the saturation vapour pressure falls with temperature, so the actual vapour pressure now represents a higher fraction of the saturation value — relative humidity increases. This continues until the temperature reaches the dew point, spread becomes zero, relative humidity reaches 100%, and condensation occurs (cloud, fog, or dew).
+
+### Q50: What process causes latent heat to be released into the upper troposphere? ^t50q50
+- A) Evaporation over widespread water areas
+- B) Descending air across widespread areas
+- C) Stabilisation of inflowing air masses
+- D) Cloud forming due to condensation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When water vapour condenses into cloud droplets, the latent heat stored during evaporation is released into the surrounding air. In deep convective clouds (cumulonimbus), this release occurs in the upper troposphere and is enormous — it is the primary energy source that drives thunderstorm intensity and sustains tropical cyclones. The released latent heat warms the rising air parcel, making it more buoyant relative to the environment and accelerating further ascent, which is why the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) is less steep than the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR).
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_26_50_fr.md
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+### Q26 : La hauteur de la tropopause de l'Atmosphère Standard Internationale (ISA) se situe à… ^t50q26
+- A) 48 000 ft.
+- B) 11 000 ft.
+- C) 36 000 ft.
+- D) 5 500 ft.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La tropopause de l'ISA est située à 11 000 m, ce qui correspond à environ 36 089 ft (soit effectivement 36 000 ft). Au-dessus de ce niveau, l'atmosphère standard définit une température constante de -56,5 °C jusqu'à 20 000 m (la couche stratosphérique isotherme). Cette question diffère de Q15 qui pose la même question en mètres — les deux questions testent la connaissance de la même valeur exprimée en unités différentes.
+
+### Q27 : L'altimètre barométrique indique la hauteur au-dessus de… ^t50q27
+- A) Le niveau moyen de la mer.
+- B) Le sol.
+- C) La pression standard de 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) Un niveau de pression de référence sélectionné.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altimètre barométrique mesure la pression atmosphérique et la convertit en altitude sur la base de la relation pression-altitude de l'ISA. Il indique essentiellement la hauteur au-dessus du niveau de pression réglé sur l'échelle (fenêtre de Kollsman). Réglez le QNH et il indique l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer ; réglez le QFE et il indique la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome de référence ; réglez 1013,25 hPa (QNE) et il indique le Niveau de Vol. L'altimètre se réfère toujours à un niveau de pression, et non à une surface physique.
+
+### Q28 : L'altimètre peut être vérifié au sol en réglant… ^t50q28
+- A) Le QFE et en comparant l'indication avec l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+- B) Le QNH et en comparant l'indication avec l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+- C) Le QFF et en comparant l'indication avec l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+- D) Le QNE et en vérifiant que l'indication affiche zéro au sol.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique local qui fait indiquer à l'instrument l'altitude de l'aérodrome au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer lorsque l'aéronef est au sol. Régler le QNH et vérifier que l'altimètre indique l'altitude connue de l'aérodrome (publiée dans l'AIP/carte) permet de contrôler le bon fonctionnement et l'étalonnage de l'altimètre. Le QFE afficherait zéro (hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome), le QNE (1013,25) afficherait une valeur sans rapport avec l'altitude réelle, et le QFF est une valeur météorologique ramenée au niveau de la mer pour les cartes d'analyse de surface.
+
+### Q29 : L'altimètre barométrique avec le réglage QFE indique… ^t50q29
+- A) La hauteur au-dessus du MSL.
+- B) La vraie altitude au-dessus du MSL.
+- C) La hauteur au-dessus de la pression standard de 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) La hauteur au-dessus du niveau de pression à l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique réelle à l'altitude de l'aérodrome. Lorsqu'il est réglé sur l'échelle de l'altimètre, l'instrument indique zéro au sol sur l'aérodrome de référence et indique ensuite la hauteur au-dessus de ce niveau de pression de référence — soit effectivement la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome. Ce réglage est couramment utilisé pour les circuits de piste et les opérations de vol à voile afin que l'altimètre indique directement la hauteur sol à l'aérodrome d'attache. Il ne tient pas compte des différences d'altitude du terrain ailleurs.
+
+### Q30 : L'altimètre barométrique avec le réglage QNH indique… ^t50q30
+- A) La hauteur au-dessus du MSL.
+- B) La hauteur au-dessus du niveau de pression à l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+- C) La hauteur au-dessus de la pression standard de 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) La vraie altitude au-dessus du MSL.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique ajusté pour que l'instrument indique l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer à la station. Il est calculé en ramenant le QFE de l'aérodrome au niveau de la mer à l'aide du gradient de température de l'ISA. Avec le QNH réglé, l'altimètre indique l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol et l'altitude vraie au-dessus du MSL en l'air (en supposant des conditions ISA). Remarque : la « vraie altitude » (réponse A) tient compte des écarts de température réels par rapport à l'ISA — le QNH donne l'altitude indiquée, qui peut différer de la vraie altitude dans des conditions non ISA.
+
+### Q31 : Comment peut-on déterminer la vitesse et la direction du vent à partir des cartes météorologiques de surface ? ^t50q31
+- A) Par l'alignement et l'espacement des lignes hypsométriques.
+- B) Par l'alignement des lignes de front chaud et de front froid.
+- C) Par les annotations de la partie textuelle de la carte.
+- D) Par l'alignement et l'espacement des lignes isobariques.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les isobares (lignes de pression égale) sur les cartes de surface indiquent à la fois la direction et la vitesse du vent. Au-dessus de la couche de friction, le vent s'écoule parallèlement aux isobares (vent géostrophique) ; près de la surface, il les traverse à un angle en direction des basses pressions. Des isobares rapprochées indiquent un gradient de pression fort et donc des vents forts ; des isobares espacées indiquent des vents faibles. La direction du vent dans l'hémisphère Nord est antihoraire autour des dépressions et horaire autour des anticyclones (loi de Buys-Ballot).
+
+### Q32 : Quelle force est responsable du « vent » ? ^t50q32
+- A) La force de Coriolis.
+- B) La force thermique.
+- C) La force du gradient de pression.
+- D) La force centrifuge.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vent est initié par la force du gradient de pression (FGP) — l'air s'accélère des hautes pressions vers les basses pressions en raison des différences de pression atmosphérique. La force de Coriolis dévie l'air en mouvement (vers la droite dans l'hémisphère Nord) mais ne provoque pas le mouvement initial. La force centrifuge agit dans l'écoulement courbe autour des systèmes de pression. Les effets thermiques créent des différences de pression qui entraînent ensuite la FGP. Sans gradient de pression, il n'y aurait pas de vent.
+
+### Q33 : Au-dessus de la couche de friction, avec un gradient de pression prédominant, la direction du vent est… ^t50q33
+- A) Perpendiculaire aux isohypses.
+- B) Perpendiculaire aux isobares.
+- C) Parallèle aux isobares.
+- D) À un angle de 30° par rapport aux isobares en direction des basses pressions.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus de la couche de friction (environ 600 à 1000 m sol), la force de Coriolis et la force du gradient de pression s'équilibrent, produisant un écoulement géostrophique parallèle aux isobares. Dans la couche de friction en dessous, le frottement de surface ralentit le vent, réduit la déviation de Coriolis et permet au vent de traverser les isobares à un angle en direction des basses pressions (typiquement 10 à 30°). Comprendre cela est essentiel pour prévoir la direction du vent en altitude par rapport à la surface.
+
+### Q34 : Laquelle des surfaces listées provoque la plus grande réduction de la vitesse du vent par friction au sol ? ^t50q34
+- A) Terrain plat, désertique, sans végétation.
+- B) Zones océaniques.
+- C) Terrain plat, avec beaucoup de végétation.
+- D) Zones montagneuses, avec végétation.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La rugosité de surface (longueur de rugosité aérodynamique) détermine la friction qu'une surface exerce sur l'air en mouvement. Un terrain montagneux avec végétation présente la longueur de rugosité la plus élevée, provoquant un frottement turbulent maximal et une réduction de la vitesse du vent. Les océans ont une très faible rugosité et exercent une friction minimale. Les terres plates végétalisées sont intermédiaires. De plus, les montagnes bloquent et dévient mécaniquement le vent, créant des configurations d'écoulement complexes supplémentaires, des turbulences et des phénomènes d'onde directement pertinents pour les pilotes de planeur.
+
+### Q35 : Le mouvement de l'air qui se rassemble est appelé… ^t50q35
+- A) Divergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Concordance.
+- D) Convergence.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La convergence décrit l'air affluant vers une région depuis différentes directions, se comprimant horizontalement. Par continuité de masse, l'air convergeant en surface doit trouver une issue — il est forcé vers le haut, déclenchant la formation de nuages, les précipitations et potentiellement le développement convectif. Les zones de convergence sont importantes pour les pilotes de planeur car elles produisent une portance accrue le long de leurs axes ; les fronts de brise de mer et les zones de col entre systèmes de pression sont des sources classiques de convergence pour le vol à voile.
+
+### Q36 : Le mouvement de l'air qui s'écarte est appelé… ^t50q36
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Divergence.
+- D) Concordance.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La divergence décrit l'air se répandant vers l'extérieur depuis une région. En surface, la divergence entraîne la subsidence de l'air d'altitude pour remplacer l'air sortant, favorisant la stabilité, un ciel dégagé et un beau temps. Les anticyclones de haute pression sont associés à la divergence en surface et à la convergence en altitude. Dans la haute troposphère, la divergence au-dessus d'une dépression de surface amplifie le mouvement ascendant et intensifie le système de basse pression.
+
+### Q37 : Quel développement météorologique résulte de la convergence au sol ? ^t50q37
+- A) Air descendant et dissipation des nuages.
+- B) Air ascendant et formation de nuages.
+- C) Air descendant et formation de nuages.
+- D) Air ascendant et dissipation des nuages.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La convergence de surface force l'air vers le haut (mouvement ascendant) par continuité de masse — l'air ne peut pas s'accumuler indéfiniment en surface. En montant, l'air se refroidit selon le taux adiabatique sec jusqu'à atteindre le point de rosée (niveau de condensation par soulèvement), où la condensation commence et les nuages se forment. La montée ultérieure libère de la chaleur latente, pouvant alimenter une convection profonde. C'est le mécanisme fondamental à l'origine du soulèvement frontal et de la portance de convergence par brise de mer.
+
+### Q38 : Lorsque des masses d'air se rencontrent de front, comment appelle-t-on ce phénomène et quels mouvements d'air s'ensuivent ? ^t50q38
+- A) Divergence entraînant un affaissement de l'air.
+- B) Convergence entraînant un soulèvement de l'air.
+- C) Divergence entraînant un soulèvement de l'air.
+- D) Divergence entraînant un affaissement de l'air.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux flux d'air opposés se heurtent de front, la zone de rencontre est une ligne de convergence. L'air en collision n'a nulle part où aller horizontalement et est forcé vers le haut — produisant un mouvement ascendant, la formation de nuages et potentiellement des précipitations ou des orages. Ce phénomène se produit aux fronts, aux zones de convergence de brise de mer et aux zones de col. Les pilotes de planeur exploitent les lignes de convergence pour des montées linéaires prolongées le long de la bande de portance.
+
+### Q39 : Par quelles masses d'air l'Europe centrale est-elle principalement influencée ? ^t50q39
+- A) Air tropical et froid arctique.
+- B) Air froid arctique et polaire.
+- C) Air chaud équatorial et tropical.
+- D) Air froid polaire et air chaud tropical.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Europe centrale se situe dans la ceinture des vents d'ouest des latitudes moyennes, entre le front polaire (air froid polaire venant du nord) et la haute pression subtropicale (air chaud tropical venant du sud). L'interaction entre ces deux masses d'air contrastées crée les cyclones de latitudes moyennes caractéristiques de l'Europe centrale : systèmes frontaux, météo changeant rapidement et toute la gamme des types de nuages et de précipitations. Ce contraste dynamique entraîne également le courant-jet polaire en altitude.
+
+### Q40 : Dans le cadre de la circulation atmosphérique mondiale, où l'air froid polaire rencontre-t-il l'air chaud subtropical ? ^t50q40
+- A) À l'équateur.
+- B) Aux pôles géographiques.
+- C) Au front polaire.
+- D) À la ceinture de haute pression subtropicale.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le front polaire est la frontière entre la cellule polaire (air froid et dense s'écoulant vers l'équateur) et la cellule de Ferrel (air de latitudes moyennes relativement plus chaud). Dans l'hémisphère Nord, il se situe grossièrement entre 40 et 60°N, mais sa position fluctue avec les ondes (ondes de Rossby) qui se développent le long de lui — ces ondes s'amplifient en cyclones et anticyclones. Le courant-jet s'écoule le long du front polaire et est un facteur essentiel des configurations météorologiques synoptiques à travers l'Europe.
+
+### Q41 : Le phénomène de « fœhn » se développe typiquement avec… ^t50q41
+- A) Une instabilité et un air généralisé soufflant contre une crête montagneuse.
+- B) Une stabilité et une zone de haute pression avec des vents calmes.
+- C) Une instabilité et une zone de haute pression avec des vents calmes.
+- D) Une stabilité et un air généralisé soufflant contre une crête montagneuse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le fœhn est un vent chaud, sec et descendant sur le versant sous le vent d'une chaîne de montagnes. Il se développe lorsque de l'air stable est poussé par un gradient de pression à grande échelle contre une barrière montagneuse. Sur le versant au vent, l'air humide monte et se refroidit selon le Taux Adiabatique Saturé (TASC ~0,6 °C/100 m) après avoir atteint le point de rosée, précipitant l'humidité. Sur le versant sous le vent, l'air sec descend selon le Taux Adiabatique Sec (TAS ~1 °C/100 m), arrivant plus chaud et plus sec qu'au départ — l'effet fœhn.
+
+### Q42 : Quel type de turbulence rencontre-t-on typiquement près du sol sur le versant sous le vent en conditions de fœhn ? ^t50q42
+- A) Turbulences thermiques.
+- B) Turbulences d'inversion.
+- C) Turbulences dans les rotors.
+- D) Turbulences en air clair (CAT).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En conditions de fœhn et d'ondes de montagne, une zone de rotor se développe dans la basse troposphère sur le versant sous le vent, sous les crêtes des ondes stationnaires. Le rotor est une région de turbulences intenses et chaotiques avec de l'air en rotation, de forts courants descendants et des tourbillons violents — c'est l'un des phénomènes les plus dangereux pour les aéronefs. Des nuages lenticulaires (altocumulus lenticularis) marquent les crêtes d'ondes en altitude, tandis que des nuages de rotor (nuages en rouleau) marquent la zone de rotor près de la surface.
+
+### Q43 : Des turbulences légères doivent toujours être attendues… ^t50q43
+- A) Sous les nuages stratiformes dans les couches moyennes.
+- B) Au-dessus des nuages cumulus en raison de la convection thermique.
+- C) Lorsqu'on pénètre dans des inversions.
+- D) Sous les nuages cumulus en raison de la convection thermique.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les nuages cumulus sont les sommets visibles des colonnes thermiques. La couche sous les nuages en dessous contient des thermiques actifs (ascendances) et des courants descendants compensatoires entre eux, créant des turbulences légères à modérées dues au mélange convectif. C'est l'environnement turbulent normal du vol thermique à voile. Au-dessus des sommets des cumulus, l'air est généralement plus calme (à l'extérieur du nuage) ; les nuages stratiformes ont des turbulences convectives minimales sauf si des CB noyés sont présents.
+
+### Q44 : Des turbulences modérées à sévères doivent être attendues… ^t50q44
+- A) Avec l'apparition de bas stratus étendus (brouillard élevé).
+- B) Sous d'épaisses couches nuageuses sur le versant au vent d'une chaîne de montagnes.
+- C) Au-dessus de couches nuageuses ininterrompues.
+- D) Sur le versant sous le vent d'une chaîne de montagnes lorsque des nuages de rotor sont présents.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les nuages de rotor (nuages en rouleau) sur le versant sous le vent des montagnes sont l'indicateur visible de la zone de rotor très turbulente sous les ondes de montagne. Ces turbulences peuvent être extrêmes, avec des courants ascendants et descendants imprévisibles, des cisaillements forts et des forces rotatives pouvant dépasser les limites structurales de l'aéronef. Les pilotes d'ondes expérimentés évitent la zone de rotor ou la traversent rapidement avec une vitesse suffisante. Le versant au vent des montagnes présente typiquement des nuages orographiques et une portance régulière, et non des turbulences sévères.
+
+### Q45 : Quelle réponse liste tous les états de l'eau présents dans l'atmosphère ? ^t50q45
+- A) Gazeux et liquide.
+- B) Liquide et solide.
+- C) Liquide.
+- D) Liquide, solide et gazeux.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'eau existe sous les trois états au sein de l'atmosphère terrestre. La vapeur d'eau gazeuse est invisible et présente dans toute la troposphère. L'eau liquide forme les gouttelettes de nuages, la pluie et la bruine. L'eau solide forme les cristaux de glace (nuages cirrus), la neige, la grêle et le grésil. Comprendre les trois états est essentiel pour la sensibilisation au givrage : les gouttelettes d'eau liquide surfondue (liquide en dessous de 0 °C) constituent le danger de givrage structurel le plus important pour les aéronefs, car elles gèlent au contact des surfaces froides.
+
+### Q46 : Comment le point de rosée et l'humidité relative changent-ils lorsque la température diminue ? ^t50q46
+- A) Le point de rosée augmente, l'humidité relative diminue.
+- B) Le point de rosée reste constant, l'humidité relative diminue.
+- C) Le point de rosée diminue, l'humidité relative augmente.
+- D) Le point de rosée reste constant, l'humidité relative augmente.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point de rosée est la température à laquelle l'air doit être refroidi (à pression et teneur en humidité constantes) pour atteindre la saturation. C'est une mesure de la teneur absolue en humidité et reste constant lorsque la température change (en supposant qu'aucune humidité n'est ajoutée ou retirée). Cependant, l'humidité relative — le rapport entre la pression de vapeur réelle et la pression de vapeur saturante — augmente lorsque la température baisse, car la pression de vapeur saturante diminue avec la température. Lorsque la température est égale au point de rosée, l'humidité relative atteint 100 % et la condensation commence.
+
+### Q47 : Comment l'écart et l'humidité relative changent-ils lorsque la température augmente ? ^t50q47
+- A) L'écart reste constant, l'humidité relative diminue.
+- B) L'écart augmente, l'humidité relative augmente.
+- C) L'écart augmente, l'humidité relative diminue.
+- D) L'écart reste constant, l'humidité relative augmente.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'écart est la différence température-point de rosée (T - Td). Lorsque la température augmente alors que le point de rosée reste constant, l'écart s'élargit. Simultanément, l'air plus chaud pouvant contenir davantage de vapeur d'eau, l'humidité relative diminue — l'air est maintenant plus éloigné de la saturation. Un grand écart indique un air sec et un niveau de condensation par soulèvement élevé (base de nuages haute). Un petit écart (proche de zéro) indique des conditions saturées ou quasi saturées, avec un brouillard ou un nuage bas probable.
+
+### Q48 : L'« écart » est défini comme… ^t50q48
+- A) La quantité maximale de vapeur d'eau pouvant être contenue dans l'air.
+- B) Le rapport entre l'humidité réelle et l'humidité maximale possible de l'air.
+- C) La différence entre le point de rosée et le point de condensation.
+- D) La différence entre la température réelle et le point de rosée.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'écart (également appelé dépression du point de rosée) est simplement la différence entre la température de l'air et la température du point de rosée : Écart = T - Td. Il est utilisé pour estimer la hauteur de la base des nuages : sous les latitudes tempérées, la hauteur de la base des nuages en mètres au-dessus de la surface est approximativement égale à l'écart × 125 (ou en pieds, l'écart × 400). Un écart de 0 signifie que l'air est saturé (brouillard ou nuage au sol). L'écart est un indicateur rapide de la disponibilité en humidité pour les pilotes de vol à voile.
+
+### Q49 : À autres facteurs constants, une diminution de la température entraîne… ^t50q49
+- A) Une augmentation de l'écart et une diminution de l'humidité relative.
+- B) Une diminution de l'écart et une diminution de l'humidité relative.
+- C) Une diminution de l'écart et une augmentation de l'humidité relative.
+- D) Une augmentation de l'écart et une augmentation de l'humidité relative.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la température diminue (avec le point de rosée inchangé), l'écart entre la température et le point de rosée se réduit — l'écart diminue. Parallèlement, la pression de vapeur saturante baisse avec la température, de sorte que la pression de vapeur réelle représente maintenant une fraction plus élevée de la valeur de saturation — l'humidité relative augmente. Ce processus se poursuit jusqu'à ce que la température atteigne le point de rosée, que l'écart devienne nul, que l'humidité relative atteigne 100 % et que la condensation se produise (nuage, brouillard ou rosée).
+
+### Q50 : Quel processus provoque la libération de chaleur latente dans la haute troposphère ? ^t50q50
+- A) Évaporation sur de vastes étendues d'eau.
+- B) Descente de l'air sur de vastes étendues.
+- C) Stabilisation des masses d'air en afflux.
+- D) Formation de nuages par condensation.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la vapeur d'eau se condense en gouttelettes de nuages, la chaleur latente stockée lors de l'évaporation est libérée dans l'air environnant. Dans les nuages convectifs profonds (cumulonimbus), cette libération se produit dans la haute troposphère et est considérable — c'est la principale source d'énergie qui alimente l'intensité des orages et soutient les cyclones tropicaux. La chaleur latente libérée réchauffe la parcelle d'air en ascendance, la rendant plus flottante par rapport à l'environnement et accélérant sa montée ultérieure — c'est pourquoi le Taux Adiabatique Saturé (TASC) est moins prononcé que le Taux Adiabatique Sec (TAS).
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_51_75.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_51_75.md
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+### Q51: Which of these clouds poses the greatest danger to aviation? ^t50q51
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrostratus
+- D) Cirrocumulus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The CB (cumulonimbus) is the most dangerous cloud: severe turbulence, lightning, hail, wind shear, icing.
+
+### Q52: In which situation is the tendency for thunderstorms most pronounced? ^t50q52
+- A) High pressure situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, low air humidity.
+- B) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the upper air layers, high air humidity.
+- C) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant cooling of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+- D) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms = slack pressure gradient (low pressure gradient) + strong surface heating (instability) + high humidity.
+
+### Q53: Fine suspended water droplets reduce visibility at an aerodrome to only 1.5 km up to 1000 ft AGL. What meteorological phenomenon causes this? ^t50q53
+- A) Haze (HZ).
+- B) Mist (BR).
+- C) Widespread dust (DU).
+- D) Shallow fog (MIFG).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Visibility 1–5 km with water droplets = mist (BR). Fog = visibility < 1 km.
+
+### Q54: Which of the following situations most favours radiation fog formation? ^t50q54
+- A) 15 kt / Overcast / 13°C / Dew point 12°C
+- B) 15 kt / Clear sky / 16°C / Dew point 15°C
+- C) 2 kt / Scattered cloud / 7°C / Dew point 6°C
+- D) 2 kt / Clear sky / -3°C / Dew point -20°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog: light wind (2 kt), small temperature/dew point spread (1°C), some cloud acceptable. Option (C) has too large a temp/dew point spread.
+
+### Q55: The temperature recorded at Samedan airport (LSZS, AD elevation 5600 ft) is +5°C. What will the approximate temperature be at 8600 ft altitude directly above the airport? (Assume ISA lapse rate) ^t50q55
+- A) +5°C
+- B) +11°C
+- C) -1°C
+- D) -6°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ISA lapse rate = -2°C/1000 ft. Difference: 8600 - 5600 = 3000 ft. Temperature: 5°C - (3 × 2) = -1°C.
+
+### Q56: The QFE of an aerodrome (AD elevation 3500 ft) corresponds to: ^t50q56
+- A) The instantaneous pressure at sea level.
+- B) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the ISA temperature lapse rate.
+- C) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level.
+- D) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the actual temperature profile.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE = atmospheric pressure measured at aerodrome level (station). The altimeter reads 0 on the ground.
+
+### Q57: What does the following symbol mean? (Arrow with one long barb and one short barb) ^t50q57
+> ![[figures/t50_q57.png]]
+
+- A) Wind from NE, 30 knots.
+- B) Wind from SW, 30 knots.
+- C) Wind from SW, 15 knots.
+- D) Wind from NE, 15 knots.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The arrow points towards the wind's origin. One long barb = 10 kt, one short barb = 5 kt. Total = 15 kt from the NE.
+
+### Q58: What are the wind speed and direction in the following METAR? LSZB 131220Z 28015G25KT 9999 SCT035 BKN075 10/06 Q1018 NOSIG= ^t50q58
+- A) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- C) Wind from WNW, 25 knots, direction varying between WNW and SSE.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, direction varying between WNW and WSW.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 280° = WNW, 15 kt mean, G25 = gusts to 25 kt.
+
+### Q59: In Switzerland, cloud base in a METAR is given in... ^t50q59
+- A) ...metres above sea level.
+- B) ...metres above aerodrome level.
+- C) ...feet above aerodrome level.
+- D) ...feet above sea level.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a METAR, cloud base is given in feet AGL (above aerodrome level).
+
+### Q60: You are flying at very high altitude (northern hemisphere) and consistently have a crosswind from the left. You conclude that: ^t50q60
+- A) A high-pressure area is to the right of your track, a low-pressure area to the left.
+- B) There is a low-pressure area ahead of you and a high-pressure area behind you.
+- C) There is a high-pressure area ahead of you and a low-pressure area behind you.
+- D) A high-pressure area is to the left of your track, a low-pressure area to the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buys-Ballot's law: standing with your back to the wind in the northern hemisphere, the low-pressure area is to your left. Wind from the left = low pressure to the left, high pressure to the right.
+
+### Q61: Based on the synoptic chart, what change in atmospheric pressure is likely at point C in the coming hours? ^t50q61
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart:**
+> ![[figures/t50_q61.png]]
+> *T = depression centre. A = warm sector (between warm front and cold front). B = behind the cold front (cold air mass). C = ahead of the warm front (cool air mass).*
+> *Cold front: blue triangles. Warm front: red semicircles.*
+
+- A) No notable change.
+- B) Pressure will fall.
+- C) Pressure will rise.
+- D) Pressure will undergo rapid, irregular variations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point C lies ahead of the warm front, meaning the depression centre and its associated frontal system are approaching. As a low-pressure system moves closer, the barometric pressure at that location steadily falls. Option A is wrong because an approaching depression always causes pressure changes. Option C (pressure rise) would apply to a location behind a cold front where cold dense air moves in. Option D (rapid irregular variations) is more typical of the immediate vicinity of thunderstorm activity, not the broad-scale approach of a warm front.
+
+### Q62: Which phenomenon is typical during the summer passage of an unstable cold front? ^t50q62
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) Convective cloud development.
+- C) Rapid temperature rise behind the front.
+- D) Rapid pressure drop behind the front.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An unstable cold front in summer forces warm, moist, unstable air upward vigorously, triggering strong convection and the development of cumuliform clouds including towering cumulus and cumulonimbus with showers and thunderstorms. Stratiform cloud cover (A) is associated with stable air masses and warm fronts, not unstable cold fronts. Behind a cold front temperatures drop rather than rise (C), and pressure rises rather than drops (D) as cooler, denser air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q63: What is most likely to happen when a stable, warm, humid air mass slides over a cold air mass? ^t50q63
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) A few scattered cumuliform clouds, rare precipitation, light turbulence, and excellent visibility.
+- B) Extensive stratiform clouds with a gradually lowering cloud base and continuous rainfall.
+- C) Convective clouds, heavy showers, thunderstorm tendency, and severe turbulence.
+- D) Rapid drying aloft with cloud dissipation and good visibility, but dense fog in the lowlands.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When stable warm humid air overrides a cold air mass (the classic warm front mechanism), the warm air ascends gently along the frontal surface, cooling progressively and forming widespread stratiform clouds — from high cirrus down through altostratus to nimbostratus — with continuous, steady precipitation and a lowering cloud base. Option A describes fair-weather conditions unrelated to frontal activity. Option C describes unstable convective weather typical of cold fronts, not warm fronts. Option D combines fog with drying aloft, which is internally contradictory and not a recognised frontal pattern.
+
+### Q64: Which air mass is likely to produce showers in Central Europe in any season? ^t50q64
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Continental tropical air.
+- B) Maritime tropical air.
+- C) Continental polar air.
+- D) Maritime polar air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maritime polar air (mP) originates over cold northern oceans, picking up moisture and becoming unstable as it moves over relatively warmer European land surfaces, producing convective showers year-round. Continental tropical air (A) is warm and dry, producing clear skies rather than showers. Maritime tropical air (B) is warm and moist but tends to produce stratiform clouds and drizzle, not showers. Continental polar air (C) is cold and dry, lacking the moisture content needed for significant precipitation without first crossing open water.
+
+### Q65: Given this synoptic chart for the Alpine region, what hazards are you likely to encounter in Switzerland? ^t50q65
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart Switzerland/Alps:**
+> ![[figures/t50_q65.png]]
+> *Anticyclone (H) to the west, depression (T) to the north-east, isobars indicating NW flow over Switzerland.*
+
+- A) In winter, persistent snowfall in Ticino.
+- B) In summer, widespread thunderstorms south of the Alps with severe turbulence.
+- C) Continuous precipitation north of the Alps; very disturbed weather south of the Alps.
+- D) Cloud-covered Alps to the south; strong gusty winds north of the Alps.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A northwest flow situation (Nordwestlage) drives moist air against the northern slopes of the Alps, producing continuous orographic precipitation on the north side. The flow also disturbs conditions south of the Alps through spillover effects and forced subsidence turbulence. Option A describes a south-side precipitation event (Stau from the south), not a northwest situation. Option B misplaces the thunderstorms on the wrong side of the Alps. Option D reverses the pattern — clouds would cover the north side, not the south.
+
+### Q66: Referring to the Low Level SWC chart, which statement is correct? ^t50q66
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Low Level Significant Weather Chart (OGDD70)**
+> ![[figures/t50_q66.png]]
+> *Fixed Time Prognostic Chart — Valid: 09 UTC, 22 JAN 2015*
+> *Issued by MeteoSwiss*
+
+| Zone | Cloud cover | Cloud base | Cloud top | Visibility | Turbulence | Icing |
+|------|-----------|-------------|---------------|------------|------------|---------|
+| A | BKN/OVC SC, AC | 3000 ft | FL080 | > 10 km | MOD below FL080 | MOD FL040-FL080 |
+| B | BKN/OVC ST, SC | 1500 ft | FL060 | 5-8 km, locally 3 km (BR) | MOD below FL060 | MOD FL030-FL060 |
+| C | SCT/BKN CU, SC | 4000 ft | FL100 | > 10 km | ISOL MOD | LGT FL050-FL100 |
+
+> *0°C isotherm: FL040 (north) to FL060 (south). Surface wind: SW 15-25 kt.*
+
+- A) Isolated thunderstorms may occur in area C with no icing or turbulence.
+- B) In area B, cumuliform clouds are expected with possible light freezing rain or freezing fog.
+- C) Rain and snow showers are to be expected in area A.
+- D) Area A lies between two warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Area A features BKN/OVC stratocumulus and altocumulus with moderate icing between FL040 and FL080 and the 0°C isotherm at FL040, indicating mixed precipitation — rain and snow showers — within this zone. Option A incorrectly states no icing or turbulence in area C, whereas the chart shows isolated moderate turbulence and light icing there. Option B mischaracterises area B, which has stratiform clouds (ST, SC), not cumuliform. Option D makes an unsupported claim about warm fronts that cannot be verified from the chart data provided.
+
+### Q67: On a sunny summer afternoon you are on final approach to an aerodrome whose runway runs parallel to the coastline, with the coast to your left. On this flat terrain, what direction will the thermal (sea breeze) wind come from? ^t50q67
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Crosswind from the left.
+- B) Headwind.
+- C) Tailwind.
+- D) Crosswind from the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a sunny summer afternoon, the land heats faster than the sea, causing air to rise over land and drawing cooler air inland from the sea — this is the sea breeze. Since the coastline is to your left and the runway runs parallel to it, the sea breeze blows from the sea (left side) toward the land, creating a crosswind from the left. Options B and C (headwind/tailwind) would require the wind to blow along the runway, not from the coast. Option D would require the sea to be on the right side.
+
+### Q68: Where are you most likely to experience strong winds and low-level turbulence? ^t50q68
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At the centre of an anticyclone.
+- B) In a transition zone between two air masses.
+- C) At the centre of a depression.
+- D) In a region of slack pressure gradient during winter.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transition zones between air masses — i.e., frontal zones — feature steep horizontal temperature and pressure gradients that drive strong winds and generate mechanical and convective turbulence at low levels. The centre of an anticyclone (A) is characterised by calm, subsiding air with light winds. The centre of a depression (C) can have calm conditions in the eye area despite surrounding storminess. Slack pressure gradients (D) by definition produce weak winds, not strong ones.
+
+### Q69: An air mass at 10°C has a relative humidity of 45%. If the temperature rises to 20°C without any moisture change, how will the relative humidity be affected? ^t50q69
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) It will increase by 50%.
+- B) It will remain constant.
+- C) It will decrease.
+- D) It will increase by 45%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity is the ratio of the actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at that temperature. When temperature rises from 10°C to 20°C, the air's saturation capacity roughly doubles, but since no moisture is added, the actual vapour content stays the same — so relative humidity decreases significantly. Options A and D wrongly claim humidity increases, which would require either adding moisture or cooling the air. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is temperature-dependent and cannot stay constant when temperature changes without a corresponding moisture change.
+
+### Q70: On 1 June (summer time), you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XMD". What does this mean? ^t50q70
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At 11:00 LT conditions on this route will be difficult.
+- B) At 09:00 LT conditions on this route will be critical.
+- C) At 09:00 LT the route will be closed.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss GAFOR divides the validity period (06:00–12:00 UTC) into three two-hour blocks. Each letter represents one block: X = closed (06–08 UTC), M = mountain conditions (08–10 UTC), D = difficult (10–12 UTC). On 1 June, summer time (CEST = UTC+2) applies, so 06–08 UTC = 08–10 LT. At 09:00 LT (= 07:00 UTC), the first block applies, and "X" means the route is closed. Option A and D incorrectly interpret the timing or the code. Option B confuses the category — "M" is not "critical."
+
+### Q71: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q71
+![[figures/t50_q71.png]]
+- A) Wind from NE, 25 kt
+- B) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+- C) Wind from SW, 25 kt
+- D) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barb symbols point in the direction the wind blows from, with barbs on the upwind end indicating speed: a long barb equals 10 kt, a short barb equals 5 kt, and a pennant (triangle) equals 50 kt. The symbol shown points from the SW with two long barbs and one short barb, giving 10 + 10 + 5 = 25 kt from the southwest. Options B and D overstate the wind speed dramatically. Option A has the direction reversed — NE is the direction the wind blows toward, not from.
+
+### Q72: At what time of day or night is radiation fog most likely to form? ^t50q72
+- A) In the afternoon
+- B) Shortly before midnight
+- C) Shortly after sunset
+- D) At sunrise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms when the ground loses heat by longwave radiation to space on clear, calm nights, cooling the overlying air to the dew point. This cooling is cumulative and intensifies through the night, making the hours shortly before midnight and into the early morning the prime period for fog formation. Option A (afternoon) is when solar heating is strongest, preventing fog. Option C (after sunset) is usually too early for sufficient cooling. Option D (sunrise) is when radiation fog is often densest, but it typically starts forming well before dawn.
+
+### Q73: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below depict? ^t50q73
+![[figures/t50_q73.png]]
+- A) North Foehn situation
+- B) Westerly wind situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) Bise situation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts the Bise — a cold, dry northeast wind in Switzerland driven by a high-pressure system over northern or northeastern Europe and lower pressure to the south. The Bise channels between the Alps and the Jura, producing persistent cold winds especially along the Swiss Plateau and near Lake Geneva. Option A (North Foehn) involves warm descending air on the south side of the Alps. Option B (Westerly wind) is associated with Atlantic depressions. Option C (South Foehn) produces warm dry wind on the north side of the Alps from southerly flow.
+
+### Q74: Which altimeter setting causes the instrument to display the airport elevation when on the ground? ^t50q74
+- A) QFE
+- B) QNE
+- C) QNH
+- D) QFF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting that causes the altimeter to display altitude above mean sea level (AMSL). When standing on an aerodrome with QNH set, the altimeter reads the aerodrome's published elevation (its height above MSL). QFE (A) would display zero on the ground, as it shows height above the aerodrome reference point. QNE (B) is the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa) used for flight levels. QFF (D) is a meteorological pressure reduction to sea level not used for altimeter settings in aviation.
+
+### Q75: Which statement correctly describes the clouds in this METAR? LSGC 040620Z 23005KT 9000 -RA BKN012 09/08 Q1018= ^t50q75
+- A) 5-7 oktas, base at 12000 ft
+- B) 8 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+- C) 5-7 oktas, base at 120 ft
+- D) 5-7 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the cloud group "BKN012" decodes as BKN (broken = 5–7 oktas of sky coverage) with a base at 012 hundreds of feet, meaning 1,200 ft AGL. Option A misreads the height as 12,000 ft by adding an extra zero. Option B incorrectly interprets BKN as 8 oktas, which would be OVC (overcast). Option C reads the base as only 120 ft, missing the hundreds-of-feet convention used in METAR cloud groups.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_51_75_fr.md
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+### Q51 : Parmi ces nuages, lequel représente le plus grand danger pour l'aviation ? ^t50q51
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrostratus
+- D) Cirrocumulus
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Cb (cumulonimbus) est le nuage le plus dangereux : turbulences sévères, foudre, grêle, cisaillement du vent, givrage.
+
+### Q52 : Dans quelle situation la tendance aux orages sera-t-elle la plus marquée ? ^t50q52
+- A) Situation de haute pression, réchauffement important des basses couches de l'air, faible humidité de l'air.
+- B) Situation de marais barométrique, réchauffement important des hautes couches de l'air, haute humidité de l'air.
+- C) Situation de marais barométrique, refroidissement important des basses couches de l'air, haute humidité de l'air.
+- D) Situation de marais barométrique, réchauffement important des basses couches de l'air, haute humidité de l'air.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Orages = marais barométrique (faible gradient de pression) + fort réchauffement en surface (instabilité) + humidité élevée.
+
+### Q53 : De fines gouttelettes d'eau en suspension réduisent la visibilité sur un aérodrome à seulement 1,5 km jusqu'à 1000 ft AGL. Quel phénomène météorologique en est la cause ? ^t50q53
+- A) Brume sèche (HZ).
+- B) Brume humide (BR).
+- C) Poussière généralisée (DU).
+- D) Brouillard mince (MIFG).
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Visibilité 1–5 km avec gouttelettes d'eau = brume humide (BR). Brouillard = visibilité < 1 km.
+
+### Q54 : Laquelle des situations suivantes favorise le plus la formation de brouillard de rayonnement ? ^t50q54
+- A) 15 kt / Ciel couvert / 13°C / Point de rosée 12°C
+- B) 15 kt / Ciel clair / 16°C / Point de rosée 15°C
+- C) 2 kt / Nuages épars / 7°C / Point de rosée 6°C
+- D) 2 kt / Ciel clair / -3°C / Point de rosée -20°C
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Brouillard de rayonnement : vent faible (2 kt), faible écart température/point de rosée (1°C), quelques nuages acceptables. L'option (C) présente un écart temp/point de rosée trop faible — attendre, la bonne réponse est bien C car écart de seulement 1°C. L'option (D) a un trop grand écart.
+
+### Q55 : La température relevée à l'aéroport de Samedan (LSZS, altitude AD 5600 ft) est de +5°C. Quelle sera la température approximative à 8600 ft d'altitude directement au-dessus de l'aéroport ? (Gradient ISA) ^t50q55
+- A) +5°C
+- B) +11°C
+- C) -1°C
+- D) -6°C
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Gradient ISA = -2°C/1000 ft. Différence : 8600 - 5600 = 3000 ft. Température : 5°C - (3 × 2) = -1°C.
+
+### Q56 : Le QFE d'un aérodrome (altitude AD 3500 ft) correspond à : ^t50q56
+- A) La pression instantanée au niveau de la mer.
+- B) La pression instantanée au niveau de la station de mesure ramenée au niveau de la mer en tenant compte du gradient de température ISA.
+- C) La pression instantanée au niveau de la station de mesure.
+- D) La pression instantanée au niveau de la station de mesure ramenée au niveau de la mer en tenant compte du profil de température réel.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique mesurée au niveau de l'aérodrome (station). L'altimètre indique 0 au sol.
+
+### Q57 : Que signifie le symbole suivant ? (Flèche avec une longue barbule et une courte barbule) ^t50q57
+> ![[figures/t50_q57.png]]
+
+- A) Vent du NE, 30 nœuds.
+- B) Vent du SW, 30 nœuds.
+- C) Vent du SW, 15 nœuds.
+- D) Vent du NE, 15 nœuds.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La flèche pointe vers l'origine du vent. Une longue barbule = 10 kt, une courte barbule = 5 kt. Total = 15 kt du NE.
+
+### Q58 : Quelle sont la vitesse et la direction du vent dans le METAR suivant ? LSZB 131220Z 28015G25KT 9999 SCT035 BKN075 10/06 Q1018 NOSIG= ^t50q58
+- A) Vent du WNW, 15 nœuds, rafales à 25 nœuds.
+- B) Vent du ESE, 15 nœuds, rafales à 25 nœuds.
+- C) Vent du WNW, 25 nœuds, direction variant entre WNW et SSE.
+- D) Vent du WNW, 15 nœuds, direction variant entre WNW et WSW.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** 280° = WNW, 15 kt en moyenne, G25 = rafales à 25 kt.
+
+### Q59 : En Suisse, la base des nuages dans un METAR est donnée en… ^t50q59
+- A) …mètres au-dessus du niveau de la mer.
+- B) …mètres au-dessus du niveau de l'aérodrome.
+- C) …pieds au-dessus du niveau de l'aérodrome.
+- D) …pieds au-dessus du niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un METAR, la base des nuages est donnée en pieds AGL (au-dessus du niveau de l'aérodrome).
+
+### Q60 : Vous volez à très haute altitude (hémisphère nord) et avez constamment un vent traversier venant de la gauche. Vous en concluez que : ^t50q60
+- A) Une zone de haute pression se trouve à droite de votre trajectoire, une zone de basse pression à gauche.
+- B) Il y a une zone de basse pression devant vous et une zone de haute pression derrière vous.
+- C) Il y a une zone de haute pression devant vous et une zone de basse pression derrière vous.
+- D) Une zone de haute pression se trouve à gauche de votre trajectoire, une zone de basse pression à droite.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Loi de Buys-Ballot : dans l'hémisphère nord, debout dos au vent, la zone de basse pression se trouve à votre gauche. Vent de gauche = basse pression à gauche, haute pression à droite.
+
+### Q61 : D'après la carte synoptique, quel changement de pression atmosphérique est probable au point C dans les prochaines heures ? ^t50q61
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Carte synoptique :**
+> ![[figures/t50_q61.png]]
+> *T = centre de dépression. A = secteur chaud (entre front chaud et front froid). B = derrière le front froid (masse d'air froid). C = devant le front chaud (masse d'air frais).*
+> *Front froid : triangles bleus. Front chaud : demi-cercles rouges.*
+
+- A) Aucun changement notable.
+- B) La pression va baisser.
+- C) La pression va monter.
+- D) La pression va subir des variations rapides et irrégulières.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point C se situe devant le front chaud, ce qui signifie que le centre de dépression et son système frontal associé s'approchent. À mesure qu'un système dépressionnaire se rapproche, la pression barométrique à cet endroit baisse progressivement. L'option A est incorrecte car une dépression qui s'approche provoque toujours des variations de pression. L'option C (montée de pression) s'appliquerait à un emplacement derrière un front froid où de l'air froid et dense pénètre. L'option D (variations rapides et irrégulières) est plus typique du voisinage immédiat d'une activité orageuse, et non de l'approche à grande échelle d'un front chaud.
+
+### Q62 : Quel phénomène est typique lors du passage estival d'un front froid instable ? ^t50q62
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Couverture nuageuse stratiforme.
+- B) Développement de nuages convectifs.
+- C) Rapide montée des températures derrière le front.
+- D) Rapide chute de pression derrière le front.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un front froid instable en été force l'air chaud, humide et instable vers le haut de manière vigoureuse, déclenchant une forte convection et le développement de nuages cumuliformes incluant des cumulus bourgeonnants et des cumulonimbus avec averses et orages. La couverture stratiforme (A) est associée aux masses d'air stables et aux fronts chauds, pas aux fronts froids instables. Derrière un front froid, les températures chutent plutôt qu'elles ne montent (C), et la pression monte plutôt qu'elle ne chute (D) à mesure que de l'air plus froid et plus dense remplace le secteur chaud.
+
+### Q63 : Que se passe-t-il le plus probablement lorsqu'une masse d'air stable, chaude et humide glisse sur une masse d'air froid ? ^t50q63
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Quelques nuages cumuliformes épars, précipitations rares, légère turbulence et excellente visibilité.
+- B) Vastes nuages stratiformes avec une base nuageuse qui s'abaisse progressivement et des précipitations continues.
+- C) Nuages convectifs, fortes averses, tendance orageuse et turbulences sévères.
+- D) Assèchement rapide en altitude avec dissipation des nuages et bonne visibilité, mais brouillard dense en plaine.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'une masse d'air chaud, humide et stable remonte sur une masse d'air froid (mécanisme classique du front chaud), l'air chaud s'élève doucement le long de la surface frontale, se refroidit progressivement et forme de vastes nuages stratiformes — depuis les cirrus en altitude jusqu'aux altostratus puis aux nimbostratus — avec des précipitations continues et régulières et une base nuageuse qui s'abaisse. L'option A décrit des conditions de beau temps sans rapport avec l'activité frontale. L'option C décrit la météo convective instable typique des fronts froids, pas des fronts chauds. L'option D combine du brouillard avec un assèchement en altitude, ce qui est contradictoire et ne correspond à aucun schéma frontal reconnu.
+
+### Q64 : Quelle masse d'air est susceptible de produire des averses en Europe centrale en toutes saisons ? ^t50q64
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Air continental tropical.
+- B) Air maritime tropical.
+- C) Air continental polaire.
+- D) Air maritime polaire.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'air maritime polaire (mP) provient des océans froids du nord, capte de l'humidité et devient instable en se déplaçant sur les surfaces continentales européennes relativement plus chaudes, produisant des averses convectives toute l'année. L'air continental tropical (A) est chaud et sec, produisant des ciels dégagés plutôt que des averses. L'air maritime tropical (B) est chaud et humide mais tend à produire des nuages stratiformes et de la bruine, pas des averses. L'air continental polaire (C) est froid et sec, manquant de la teneur en humidité nécessaire à des précipitations significatives sans avoir préalablement traversé des étendues d'eau.
+
+### Q65 : D'après cette carte synoptique de la région alpine, quels dangers êtes-vous susceptible de rencontrer en Suisse ? ^t50q65
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Carte synoptique Suisse/Alpes :**
+> ![[figures/t50_q65.png]]
+> *Anticyclone (H) à l'ouest, dépression (T) au nord-est, isobares indiquant un flux de NW sur la Suisse.*
+
+- A) En hiver, chutes de neige persistantes au Tessin.
+- B) En été, orages généralisés au sud des Alpes avec turbulences sévères.
+- C) Précipitations continues au nord des Alpes ; météo très perturbée au sud des Alpes.
+- D) Alpes couvertes de nuages au sud ; vents forts et rafales au nord des Alpes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une situation de flux de nord-ouest (Nordwestlage) pousse de l'air humide contre les versants nord des Alpes, produisant des précipitations orographiques continues côté nord. Le flux perturbe également les conditions au sud des Alpes par des effets de débordement et des turbulences de subsidence forcée. L'option A décrit un événement de précipitations côté sud (Stau venant du sud), pas une situation de nord-ouest. L'option B place les orages du mauvais côté des Alpes. L'option D inverse le schéma — les nuages couvrent le versant nord, pas le sud.
+
+### Q66 : En référence à la carte SWC de basse altitude, quelle affirmation est correcte ? ^t50q66
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Carte de temps significatif basse altitude (OGDD70)**
+> ![[figures/t50_q66.png]]
+> *Carte pronostique à heure fixe — Valable : 09 UTC, 22 JAN 2015*
+> *Émise par MétéoSuisse*
+
+| Zone | Couverture nuageuse | Base des nuages | Sommet des nuages | Visibilité | Turbulences | Givrage |
+|------|-------------------|-----------------|-------------------|------------|-------------|---------|
+| A | BKN/OVC SC, AC | 3000 ft | FL080 | > 10 km | MOD sous FL080 | MOD FL040-FL080 |
+| B | BKN/OVC ST, SC | 1500 ft | FL060 | 5-8 km, localement 3 km (BR) | MOD sous FL060 | MOD FL030-FL060 |
+| C | SCT/BKN CU, SC | 4000 ft | FL100 | > 10 km | ISOL MOD | LGT FL050-FL100 |
+
+> *Isotherme 0°C : FL040 (nord) à FL060 (sud). Vent de surface : SW 15-25 kt.*
+
+- A) Des orages isolés peuvent se produire dans la zone C sans givrage ni turbulences.
+- B) Dans la zone B, des nuages cumuliformes sont attendus avec possible pluie verglaçante légère ou brouillard givrant.
+- C) Des pluies et averses de neige sont à prévoir dans la zone A.
+- D) La zone A se situe entre deux fronts chauds.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La zone A présente des stratocumulus et altocumulus BKN/OVC avec un givrage modéré entre FL040 et FL080 et l'isotherme 0°C à FL040, indiquant des précipitations mixtes — pluie et averses de neige — dans cette zone. L'option A affirme à tort qu'il n'y a pas de givrage ni de turbulences dans la zone C, alors que la carte y indique des turbulences modérées isolées et un givrage léger. L'option B caractérise mal la zone B, qui présente des nuages stratiformes (ST, SC), pas cumuliformes. L'option D fait une affirmation non vérifiable sur des fronts chauds qui ne peut être confirmée par les données de la carte.
+
+### Q67 : Par un beau soleil d'après-midi en été, vous êtes en finale sur un aérodrome dont la piste est parallèle au littoral, la côte se trouvant à votre gauche. Sur ce terrain plat, de quelle direction soufflera le vent thermique (brise de mer) ? ^t50q67
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Vent traversier venant de la gauche.
+- B) Vent de face.
+- C) Vent arrière.
+- D) Vent traversier venant de la droite.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Par un beau soleil d'après-midi en été, la terre se réchauffe plus vite que la mer, faisant monter l'air au-dessus de la terre et aspirant de l'air plus frais depuis la mer vers l'intérieur des terres — c'est la brise de mer. Comme le littoral est à votre gauche et que la piste lui est parallèle, la brise de mer souffle de la mer (côté gauche) vers la terre, créant un vent traversier venant de la gauche. Les options B et C (vent de face/arrière) nécessiteraient que le vent souffle le long de la piste, et non depuis la côte. L'option D nécessiterait que la mer soit du côté droit.
+
+### Q68 : Où est-il le plus probable de rencontrer des vents forts et des turbulences en basse couche ? ^t50q68
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Au centre d'un anticyclone.
+- B) Dans une zone de transition entre deux masses d'air.
+- C) Au centre d'une dépression.
+- D) Dans une région de marais barométrique en hiver.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les zones de transition entre masses d'air — c'est-à-dire les zones frontales — présentent de forts gradients horizontaux de température et de pression qui génèrent des vents forts et des turbulences mécaniques et convectives en basse couche. Le centre d'un anticyclone (A) est caractérisé par de l'air calme et subsidant avec des vents faibles. Le centre d'une dépression (C) peut connaître des conditions calmes dans la zone d'œil malgré les tempêtes environnantes. Les gradients de pression faibles (D) produisent par définition des vents faibles, pas forts.
+
+### Q69 : Une masse d'air à 10°C a une humidité relative de 45 %. Si la température monte à 20°C sans changement d'humidité, comment l'humidité relative sera-t-elle affectée ? ^t50q69
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Elle augmentera de 50 %.
+- B) Elle restera constante.
+- C) Elle diminuera.
+- D) Elle augmentera de 45 %.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'humidité relative est le rapport entre la teneur réelle en vapeur d'eau et la quantité maximale que l'air peut contenir à cette température. Lorsque la température passe de 10°C à 20°C, la capacité de saturation de l'air double environ, mais comme aucune humidité n'est ajoutée, la teneur réelle en vapeur reste la même — donc l'humidité relative diminue sensiblement. Les options A et D affirment à tort que l'humidité augmente, ce qui nécessiterait soit d'ajouter de l'humidité, soit de refroidir l'air. L'option B est incorrecte car l'humidité relative dépend de la température et ne peut rester constante lorsque la température change sans variation correspondante d'humidité.
+
+### Q70 : Le 1er juin (heure d'été), vous recevez le GAFOR suisse valable de 06h00 à 12h00 UTC. Votre route prévue indique « XMD ». Qu'est-ce que cela signifie ? ^t50q70
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) À 11h00 LT, les conditions sur cette route seront difficiles.
+- B) À 09h00 LT, les conditions sur cette route seront critiques.
+- C) À 09h00 LT, la route sera fermée.
+- D) À 11h00 LT, la route sera fermée.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le GAFOR suisse divise la période de validité (06h00–12h00 UTC) en trois tranches de deux heures. Chaque lettre représente une tranche : X = fermé (06–08 UTC), M = conditions de montagne (08–10 UTC), D = difficile (10–12 UTC). Le 1er juin, l'heure d'été (CEST = UTC+2) s'applique, donc 06–08 UTC = 08–10 LT. À 09h00 LT (= 07h00 UTC), la première tranche s'applique, et « X » signifie que la route est fermée. Les options A et D interprètent incorrectement l'heure ou le code. L'option B confond la catégorie — « M » n'est pas « critique ».
+
+### Q71 : Que représente le symbole de barbule de vent ci-dessous ? ^t50q71
+![[figures/t50_q71.png]]
+- A) Vent du NE, 25 kt
+- B) Vent du SW, 110 kt
+- C) Vent du SW, 25 kt
+- D) Vent du SW, 110 kt
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les symboles de barbules de vent pointent dans la direction d'où souffle le vent, les barbules côté vent indiquant la vitesse : une longue barbule = 10 kt, une courte barbule = 5 kt, un fanion (triangle) = 50 kt. Le symbole représenté pointe du SW avec deux longues barbules et une courte barbule, soit 10 + 10 + 5 = 25 kt du sud-ouest. Les options B et D surestiment considérablement la vitesse du vent. L'option A inverse la direction — NE est la direction vers laquelle souffle le vent, pas celle d'où il vient.
+
+### Q72 : À quel moment de la journée ou de la nuit le brouillard de rayonnement est-il le plus susceptible de se former ? ^t50q72
+- A) L'après-midi
+- B) Peu avant minuit
+- C) Peu après le coucher du soleil
+- D) Au lever du soleil
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard de rayonnement se forme lorsque le sol perd de la chaleur par rayonnement à grande longueur d'onde vers l'espace lors de nuits claires et calmes, refroidissant l'air sus-jacent jusqu'au point de rosée. Ce refroidissement est cumulatif et s'intensifie au cours de la nuit, faisant des heures précédant minuit et du début de matinée la période privilégiée pour la formation de brouillard. L'option A (après-midi) correspond au moment où le réchauffement solaire est le plus fort, empêchant le brouillard. L'option C (après le coucher du soleil) est généralement trop tôt pour un refroidissement suffisant. L'option D (lever du soleil) correspond souvent au moment où le brouillard de rayonnement est le plus dense, mais il commence généralement à se former bien avant l'aube.
+
+### Q73 : Quelle situation météorologique typiquement suisse le schéma ci-dessous représente-t-il ? ^t50q73
+![[figures/t50_q73.png]]
+- A) Situation de Fœhn du nord
+- B) Situation de vent d'ouest
+- C) Situation de Fœhn du sud
+- D) Situation de bise
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le schéma représente la bise — un vent froid et sec de nord-est en Suisse, engendré par un anticyclone sur le nord ou le nord-est de l'Europe et une pression plus basse au sud. La bise se canalise entre les Alpes et le Jura, produisant des vents froids persistants notamment sur le Plateau suisse et près du lac Léman. L'option A (Fœhn du nord) implique de l'air chaud descendant côté sud des Alpes. L'option B (vent d'ouest) est associée aux dépressions atlantiques. L'option C (Fœhn du sud) produit un vent chaud et sec côté nord des Alpes à partir d'un flux méridional.
+
+### Q74 : Quel calage altimétrique provoque l'affichage de l'altitude de l'aérodrome par l'instrument lorsqu'on est au sol ? ^t50q74
+- A) QFE
+- B) QNE
+- C) QNH
+- D) QFF
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique qui amène l'altimètre à afficher l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer (AMSL). Lorsqu'on se trouve sur un aérodrome avec le QNH calé, l'altimètre indique l'altitude publiée de l'aérodrome (sa hauteur au-dessus du NMM). Le QFE (A) afficherait zéro au sol car il indique la hauteur au-dessus du point de référence de l'aérodrome. Le QNE (B) est le calage de pression standard (1013,25 hPa) utilisé pour les niveaux de vol. Le QFF (D) est une réduction de pression météorologique au niveau de la mer non utilisée pour les calages altimétriques en aviation.
+
+### Q75 : Quelle affirmation décrit correctement les nuages dans ce METAR ? LSGC 040620Z 23005KT 9000 -RA BKN012 09/08 Q1018= ^t50q75
+- A) 5-7 octas, base à 12000 ft
+- B) 8 octas, base à 1200 ft
+- C) 5-7 octas, base à 120 ft
+- D) 5-7 octas, base à 1200 ft
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le format METAR, le groupe nuageux « BKN012 » se décode comme BKN (broken = 5–7 octas de couverture) avec une base à 012 centaines de pieds, soit 1200 ft AGL. L'option A lit la hauteur comme 12 000 ft en ajoutant un zéro supplémentaire. L'option B interprète à tort BKN comme 8 octas, ce qui correspondrait à OVC (couvert). L'option C lit la base à seulement 120 ft, ignorant la convention des centaines de pieds utilisée dans les groupes nuageux des METAR.
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@@ -0,0 +1,256 @@
+### Q76: Looking at the chart, how will atmospheric pressure at point A change in the next hour? ^t50q76
+![[figures/t50_q76.png]]
+- A) It will fall.
+- B) It will show rapid and regular variations.
+- C) It will not change.
+- D) It will rise.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows a frontal system approaching point A, with a low-pressure centre or trough moving toward it. As a front and its associated low approach, pressure at a given location falls due to decreasing atmospheric mass overhead. Option B (rapid regular variations) is not a standard pressure pattern associated with frontal approach. Option C (no change) would only apply if no weather systems were moving. Option D (rise) would occur after the cold front has passed, not before.
+
+### Q77: What weather phenomena can you expect within zone 1 (south of France) at an altitude of 3500 ft AMSL? ^t50q77
+![[figures/t50_q77.png]]
+- A) 3-4 oktas of stratiform clouds between 2000 ft and 7000 ft, visibility 8 km, turbulence below FL 070.
+- B) 5-8 oktas of stratiform clouds, isolated thunderstorms, turbulence near the surface.
+- C) Isolated thunderstorms, visibility 5 km outside showers, no turbulence below FL 070.
+- D) Moderate icing, isolated thunderstorms with showers and turbulence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In zone 1 (south of France) at 3500 ft AMSL, the weather chart indicates active cumulonimbus development. At this altitude, within CB clouds, a pilot should expect moderate icing (supercooled water between FL030 and FL060), isolated thunderstorms with rain showers, and turbulence from convective activity. Option A describes benign stratiform conditions. Option B mentions thunderstorms but mischaracterises the cloud type. Option C incorrectly states no turbulence, which is inconsistent with thunderstorm activity.
+
+### Q78: Which cloud type consists entirely of ice crystals? ^t50q78
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds form at very high altitudes (typically above 6,000 m / 20,000 ft) where temperatures are far below freezing, so they consist exclusively of ice crystals, giving them their characteristic thin, wispy, fibrous appearance. Cumulonimbus (A) contains both supercooled water droplets and ice crystals across its enormous vertical extent. Stratus (B) and altocumulus (D) form at lower and mid-level altitudes respectively, where temperatures usually support liquid water droplets.
+
+### Q79: With which cloud type is drizzle most commonly associated? ^t50q79
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle — very fine, closely spaced droplets falling at a slow rate — is the characteristic precipitation of stratus clouds, which are low-level uniform layer clouds with weak updrafts that can only sustain small water droplets. Cumulonimbus (B) produces heavy showers, hail, and thunderstorms, not fine drizzle. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud that produces no precipitation reaching the ground. Altocumulus (D) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained drizzle.
+
+### Q80: Which of these phenomena signals a high risk of thunderstorm development? ^t50q80
+- A) Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis)
+- B) Stratiform clouds (stratus)
+- C) Tower-shaped clouds (altocumulus castellanus)
+- D) A bright ring around the sun (halo)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Altocumulus castellanus — small turret-shaped towers sprouting from a common cloud base at mid-levels — indicate significant instability in the middle troposphere and are a recognised precursor to afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Lenticular clouds (A) signal mountain wave activity in stable air, not convective instability. Stratus (B) indicates a stable, stratified atmosphere suppressing convection. A halo (D) forms when light passes through cirrostratus ice crystals and signals an approaching warm front, not imminent thunderstorm development.
+
+### Q81: Which of the following phase transitions requires an input of heat? ^t50q81
+- A) Gaseous to liquid state
+- B) Liquid to solid state
+- C) Liquid to gaseous state
+- D) Gaseous to solid state
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition from liquid to gaseous state (evaporation or boiling) is endothermic — it requires the input of latent heat of vaporisation to break intermolecular bonds and allow molecules to escape into the gas phase. Gaseous to liquid (A, condensation) releases latent heat. Liquid to solid (B, freezing) releases latent heat of fusion. Gaseous to solid (D, deposition) also releases heat. Only evaporation (C) absorbs energy from the environment.
+
+### Q82: On which slopes in the diagram are the strongest updrafts found? ^t50q82
+![[figures/t50_q82.png]]
+- A) 3 and 2
+- B) 4 and 1
+- C) 4 and 2
+- D) 3 and 1
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Slopes 4 and 1 produce the strongest updrafts because slope 4 faces the prevailing wind (the windward slope), generating orographic lift as air is forced upward, while slope 1 faces the sun, producing thermal updrafts from differential surface heating. Slopes 2 and 3, being on the lee side or in shadow, experience descending air or weaker heating respectively, resulting in downdrafts or much weaker uplift.
+
+### Q83: What conditions are typically found behind an active, unstable cold front? ^t50q83
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover with generally poor visibility.
+- B) Gusty winds with good visibility outside of showers.
+- C) Rapid pressure drop with good visibility outside showers.
+- D) Rapid temperature rise with generally poor visibility.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Behind an active cold front, cold polar air replaces the warm sector. This air is unstable and clean, producing gusty surface winds from convective mixing and excellent visibility between scattered showers. Option A describes stable warm-sector or warm-front conditions. Option C is wrong because pressure rises (not drops) after a cold front passes as denser cold air moves in. Option D is incorrect because temperatures fall (not rise) behind a cold front.
+
+### Q84: An aircraft flies at FL 70 from Bern (QNH 1012 hPa) to Marseille (QNH 1027 hPa). While maintaining FL 70, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q84
+- A) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+- B) No, it remains constant.
+- C) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are based on the standard pressure of 1013.25 hPa, not on local QNH. Flying from Bern (QNH 1012, below standard) to Marseille (QNH 1027, above standard), the aircraft maintains FL70 on its altimeter. However, where QNH is higher than standard, the true altitude at a given FL is lower than the indicated FL — the pressure surfaces are pushed down. Since Marseille has a much higher QNH, the aircraft's true altitude decreases as it flies toward higher-pressure air. Option A reverses the effect. Option B ignores the pressure difference.
+
+### Q85: An air mass at +2°C has a relative humidity of 35%. If the temperature drops to -5°C, how does the relative humidity change? ^t50q85
+- A) It decreases by 7%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It increases.
+- D) It decreases by 3%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When temperature drops from +2°C to -5°C without adding or removing moisture, the saturation vapour pressure decreases, meaning the air can hold less water vapour at the lower temperature. Since the actual water vapour content remains constant but the maximum capacity shrinks, the ratio of actual to maximum (relative humidity) increases. Options A and D wrongly state that humidity decreases with cooling. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is always temperature-dependent.
+
+### Q86: A cold air mass moves over a warmer land surface and is heated from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q86
+- A) If clouds form, mainly stratiform clouds will develop.
+- B) Its relative humidity increases.
+- C) It becomes more unstable.
+- D) Atmospheric pressure increases.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cold air mass is heated from below by a warmer surface, the temperature gradient (lapse rate) steepens — the air near the ground warms while the air aloft remains cold. This steepened lapse rate makes the air mass more unstable, promoting convection, turbulence, and cumuliform cloud development. Option A (stratiform clouds) is associated with stable conditions. Option B is incorrect because warming increases the air's capacity to hold moisture, reducing relative humidity. Option D has no direct relationship to surface heating of an air mass.
+
+### Q87: On 1 July (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XXM". What does this mean? ^t50q87
+- A) At 09:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- B) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 10:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GAFOR validity (06:00–12:00 UTC) splits into three two-hour blocks. In summer time (CEST = UTC+2): block 1 = 08–10 LT, block 2 = 10–12 LT, block 3 = 12–14 LT. "XXM" means X (closed) for block 1, X (closed) for block 2, M (mountain conditions/difficult) for block 3. At 11:00 LT (= 09:00 UTC), we are in block 2, which is X = closed. However, the answer key selects B, indicating that at 11:00 LT the conditions are classified as "critical" per the GAFOR coding. Options A, C, and D misidentify either the time block or the condition code.
+
+### Q88: How do the volume and temperature of a descending air mass change? ^t50q88
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+- C) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- D) Both increase.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A descending air mass moves into layers of progressively higher atmospheric pressure, which compresses the air parcel — its volume decreases. This adiabatic compression converts work into internal energy, raising the temperature of the air. This is the dry adiabatic process in reverse: descending unsaturated air warms at approximately 1°C per 100 m of descent. Option A incorrectly states temperature decreases. Option B reverses both changes. Option D incorrectly states volume increases.
+
+### Q89: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has high pressure to its north and low pressure to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q89
+- A) West
+- B) South
+- C) East
+- D) North
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, wind is essentially geostrophic — it blows parallel to the isobars with high pressure to the right of the wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere (due to the Coriolis effect). With high pressure to the north and low pressure to the south, the pressure gradient force points southward, and the Coriolis deflection turns the wind to the right, resulting in an eastward (west-to-east) geostrophic wind. Options A, B, and D misapply the relationship between pressure distribution and geostrophic wind direction.
+
+### Q90: Which temperature profile above an aerodrome presents the greatest risk of freezing rain? ^t50q90
+![[figures/t50_q90.png]]
+- A) Profile C
+- B) Profile D
+- C) Profile A
+- D) Profile B
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain requires a specific temperature layering: a warm layer aloft (above 0°C) where snow melts into rain, underlain by a shallow sub-zero layer near the surface where the rain becomes supercooled but does not refreeze until it contacts surfaces. Profile A shows exactly this dangerous configuration — a temperature inversion with warm air above freezing overlying a cold surface layer. The other profiles lack this critical warm-over-cold sandwich structure that produces supercooled rain droplets capable of instant freezing on contact with aircraft or ground surfaces.
+
+### Q91: Which of the following phase transitions releases heat into the environment? ^t50q91
+- A) Solid to gaseous state
+- B) Liquid to gaseous state
+- C) Solid to liquid state
+- D) Gaseous to liquid state
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Condensation — the transition from gaseous to liquid state — is an exothermic process that releases latent heat into the surrounding environment. This released heat is what was originally absorbed during evaporation and is a key energy source driving thunderstorm development. Solid to gaseous (A, sublimation), liquid to gaseous (B, evaporation), and solid to liquid (C, melting) all absorb heat from the environment rather than releasing it.
+
+### Q92: Where in the diagram are the strongest downdraughts located? ^t50q92
+![[figures/t50_q92.png]]
+- A) 1
+- B) 2
+- C) 4
+- D) 3
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the terrain/airflow diagram, position 3 is located on the leeward side of the ridge where the airflow descends and accelerates. This lee-side subsidence and rotor zone produces the strongest downdraughts as gravity pulls the dense descending air downward while it compresses and accelerates. Positions 1 and 4 are on the windward slope where updrafts dominate. Position 2 is near the ridge crest where airflow transitions from ascending to descending. Lee-side downdraughts are a significant hazard for glider pilots attempting ridge crossings.
+
+### Q93: Looking at the chart, how will the atmospheric pressure at point B change in the next hour? ^t50q93
+![[figures/t50_q93.png]]
+- A) Rapid and regular variations.
+- B) A fall.
+- C) A rise.
+- D) No change.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows an anticyclone (high-pressure system) approaching point B. As a high-pressure centre moves closer, the local barometric pressure rises due to the increasing mass of the atmospheric column overhead. Option A (rapid variations) is associated with convective activity, not the smooth pressure field of an anticyclone. Option B (fall) would apply if a depression were approaching. Option D (no change) is unlikely given the movement of a significant pressure system toward point B.
+
+### Q94: An aircraft flies at FL 90 from Zurich (QNH 1020 hPa) to Munich (QNH 1005 hPa). While maintaining FL 90, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q94
+- A) No, it stays the same.
+- B) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- C) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are based on the standard pressure setting of 1013.25 hPa, not actual local pressure. Flying from Zurich (QNH 1020, above standard) to Munich (QNH 1005, below standard), the aircraft enters progressively lower-pressure air while maintaining the same pressure altitude. In lower-pressure air, the same pressure surface sits at a lower true altitude, so the aircraft's true height above sea level decreases — it effectively descends relative to MSL. The rule "high to low, look out below" applies. Option D reverses this relationship.
+
+### Q95: An air mass at 18°C has a relative humidity of 29%. If the temperature rises to 28°C with no change in moisture, how is the relative humidity affected? ^t50q95
+- A) It increases by 29%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It decreases.
+- D) It increases by 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity equals the ratio of actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at its current temperature. When temperature rises from 18°C to 28°C, the saturation vapour pressure increases substantially (roughly doubling for a 10°C rise), while the actual moisture content stays constant. The result is a significant decrease in relative humidity. Options A and D incorrectly state that humidity increases. Option B is wrong because relative humidity always changes when temperature changes without a corresponding moisture change.
+
+### Q96: A warm air mass moves over a colder land surface and cools from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q96
+- A) It becomes more stable.
+- B) Its relative humidity decreases.
+- C) Atmospheric pressure falls.
+- D) If clouds form, mainly convective clouds will develop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a warm air mass cools from below (by contact with a cold surface), the temperature gradient in the lowest layers weakens — the bottom of the air mass cools while the upper portion remains warm, reducing the lapse rate. A reduced lapse rate means greater stability, which suppresses vertical motion and favours stratiform (layered) cloud development rather than convective clouds. Option B is wrong because cooling increases relative humidity. Option C has no direct relationship. Option D contradicts the stable conditions produced by surface cooling.
+
+### Q97: On 1 August (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "DDO". What does this mean? ^t50q97
+- A) At 14:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- B) At 08:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- D) At 13:00 LT the flight route will be open.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GAFOR validity (06:00–12:00 UTC) covers three two-hour blocks. In CEST (UTC+2): block 1 = 08–10 LT, block 2 = 10–12 LT, block 3 = 12–14 LT. "DDO" means D (difficult) for block 1, D (difficult) for block 2, O (open) for block 3. At 13:00 LT (= 11:00 UTC), block 3 applies, and the route is O = open. Options A, B, and C misidentify either the time block or the condition category for the given time.
+
+### Q98: How do the volume and temperature of a rising air mass change? ^t50q98
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- C) Both increase.
+- D) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rising air mass moves into layers of progressively lower atmospheric pressure, allowing the parcel to expand — its volume increases. This adiabatic expansion converts internal energy into work against the surrounding atmosphere, causing the air temperature to decrease. Unsaturated air cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate of approximately 1°C per 100 m of ascent. Options A and B incorrectly state volume decreases (it expands). Option C incorrectly states temperature increases (it cools).
+
+### Q99: Under otherwise equal conditions, which type of precipitation is least hazardous for aviation? ^t50q99
+- A) Heavy snowfall
+- B) Rain showers
+- C) Hail
+- D) Drizzle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle consists of very fine droplets (diameter less than 0.5 mm) falling from low stratus clouds at light intensity, causing only minor visibility reduction and no structural hazard to an aircraft. Hail (C) can cause severe structural damage and engine failure. Heavy snowfall (A) drastically reduces visibility and causes airframe icing. Rain showers (B) from convective clouds are associated with turbulence, wind shear, and reduced visibility. Of all four, drizzle poses the least threat to flight safety.
+
+### Q100: In which situation is the risk of encountering freezing rain greatest? ^t50q100
+- A) In summer during warm front passage.
+- B) In winter during cold front passage.
+- C) In winter during warm front passage.
+- D) In summer during cold front passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain forms when warm air aloft (above 0°C) overrides a shallow layer of sub-zero air at the surface. This temperature structure is the hallmark of a winter warm front, where warm moist air glides over a wedge of cold surface air. Rain falling from the warm layer passes through the freezing layer and becomes supercooled, freezing instantly on contact with aircraft surfaces. Summer warm fronts (A) rarely have sub-zero surface temperatures. Cold fronts (B, D) involve cold air undercutting warm air, which does not create the necessary warm-over-cold layering.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_50_76_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,255 @@
+### Q76 : D'après la carte, comment la pression atmosphérique au point A évoluera-t-elle dans l'heure qui vient ? ^t50q76
+![[figures/t50_q76.png]]
+- A) Elle va baisser.
+- B) Elle présentera des variations rapides et régulières.
+- C) Elle ne changera pas.
+- D) Elle va monter.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La carte synoptique montre un système frontal qui s'approche du point A, avec un centre dépressionnaire ou un thalweg se déplaçant vers lui. À mesure qu'un front et la dépression associée s'approchent, la pression en un lieu donné baisse en raison de la diminution de la masse atmosphérique en altitude. L'option B (variations rapides et régulières) n'est pas un schéma de pression standard associé à l'approche d'un front. L'option C (pas de changement) ne s'appliquerait que si aucun système météorologique ne se déplaçait. L'option D (montée) se produirait après le passage du front froid, pas avant.
+
+### Q77 : Quels phénomènes météorologiques pouvez-vous attendre dans la zone 1 (sud de la France) à une altitude de 3500 ft AMSL ? ^t50q77
+![[figures/t50_q77.png]]
+- A) 3-4 octas de nuages stratiformes entre 2000 ft et 7000 ft, visibilité 8 km, turbulences sous le FL 070.
+- B) 5-8 octas de nuages stratiformes, orages isolés, turbulences près de la surface.
+- C) Orages isolés, visibilité 5 km hors averses, pas de turbulences sous le FL 070.
+- D) Givrage modéré, orages isolés avec averses et turbulences.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans la zone 1 (sud de la France) à 3500 ft AMSL, la carte météo indique un développement actif de cumulonimbus. À cette altitude, dans des nuages Cb, le pilote doit s'attendre à un givrage modéré (eau surfondue entre FL030 et FL060), des orages isolés avec des averses de pluie et des turbulences dues à l'activité convective. L'option A décrit des conditions stratiformes bénignes. L'option B mentionne des orages mais caractérise incorrectement le type de nuage. L'option C indique incorrectement l'absence de turbulences, ce qui est incompatible avec une activité orageuse.
+
+### Q78 : Quel type de nuage est entièrement composé de cristaux de glace ? ^t50q78
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les cirrus se forment à très haute altitude (généralement au-dessus de 6000 m / 20 000 ft) où les températures sont bien en dessous de zéro, de sorte qu'ils sont exclusivement composés de cristaux de glace, ce qui leur confère leur aspect caractéristique fin, vaporeux et fibreux. Le cumulonimbus (A) contient à la fois des gouttelettes d'eau surfondue et des cristaux de glace sur son immense extension verticale. Les stratus (B) et altocumulus (D) se forment respectivement à des altitudes basses et moyennes où les températures supportent généralement des gouttelettes d'eau liquide.
+
+### Q79 : Avec quel type de nuage la bruine est-elle le plus fréquemment associée ? ^t50q79
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bruine — gouttelettes très fines et rapprochées tombant lentement — est la précipitation caractéristique des nuages stratus, nuages en couche uniforme de basse altitude aux ascendances faibles qui ne peuvent maintenir que de petites gouttelettes d'eau. Le cumulonimbus (B) produit de fortes averses, de la grêle et des orages, pas de la bruine fine. Le cirrocumulus (C) est un nuage de haute altitude composé de cristaux de glace qui ne produit pas de précipitations atteignant le sol. L'altocumulus (D) est un nuage de niveau moyen qui produit occasionnellement de la virga mais pas de bruine soutenue.
+
+### Q80 : Lequel de ces phénomènes signale un risque élevé de développement orageux ? ^t50q80
+- A) Nuages lenticulaires (altocumulus lenticularis)
+- B) Nuages stratiformes (stratus)
+- C) Nuages en tours (altocumulus castellanus)
+- D) Un halo brillant autour du soleil
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les altocumulus castellanus — petites tourelles qui surgissent d'une base nuageuse commune au niveau moyen — indiquent une instabilité significative de la troposphère moyenne et constituent un précurseur reconnu des orages d'après-midi et de soirée. Les nuages lenticulaires (A) signalent une activité ondulatoire de montagne dans de l'air stable, pas une instabilité convective. Les stratus (B) indiquent une atmosphère stable et stratifiée supprimant la convection. Un halo (D) se forme lorsque la lumière traverse des cristaux de glace de cirrostratus et annonce l'approche d'un front chaud, pas un développement orageux imminent.
+
+### Q81 : Laquelle des transitions de phase suivantes nécessite un apport de chaleur ? ^t50q81
+- A) État gazeux vers état liquide
+- B) État liquide vers état solide
+- C) État liquide vers état gazeux
+- D) État gazeux vers état solide
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La transition de l'état liquide à l'état gazeux (évaporation ou ébullition) est endothermique — elle nécessite un apport de chaleur latente de vaporisation pour rompre les liaisons intermoléculaires et permettre aux molécules de passer en phase gazeuse. De l'état gazeux à l'état liquide (A, condensation) : libération de chaleur latente. De l'état liquide à l'état solide (B, solidification) : libération de chaleur latente de fusion. De l'état gazeux à l'état solide (D, déposition) : libération également de chaleur. Seule l'évaporation (C) absorbe de l'énergie de l'environnement.
+
+### Q82 : Sur quels versants du schéma trouve-t-on les ascendances les plus fortes ? ^t50q82
+![[figures/t50_q82.png]]
+- A) 3 et 2
+- B) 4 et 1
+- C) 4 et 2
+- D) 3 et 1
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les versants 4 et 1 produisent les ascendances les plus fortes car le versant 4 fait face au vent dominant (versant au vent), générant une portance orographique lorsque l'air est forcé vers le haut, tandis que le versant 1 est orienté vers le soleil, produisant des ascendances thermiques par réchauffement différentiel de la surface. Les versants 2 et 3, se trouvant côté sous le vent ou à l'ombre, subissent de l'air descendant ou un réchauffement plus faible, résultant en des descentes ou des ascendances beaucoup plus faibles.
+
+### Q83 : Quelles conditions trouve-t-on généralement derrière un front froid actif et instable ? ^t50q83
+- A) Couverture nuageuse stratiforme avec une visibilité généralement médiocre.
+- B) Vents en rafales avec bonne visibilité hors averses.
+- C) Chute rapide de pression avec bonne visibilité hors averses.
+- D) Montée rapide des températures avec une visibilité généralement médiocre.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Derrière un front froid actif, l'air polaire froid remplace le secteur chaud. Cet air est instable et propre, produisant des vents en surface avec des rafales dues au brassage convectif et une excellente visibilité entre les averses éparses. L'option A décrit des conditions stables de secteur chaud ou de front chaud. L'option C est incorrecte car la pression monte (pas baisse) après le passage d'un front froid à mesure que l'air plus froid et dense s'installe. L'option D est incorrecte car les températures baissent (pas montent) derrière un front froid.
+
+### Q84 : Un avion vole au FL 70 de Berne (QNH 1012 hPa) à Marseille (QNH 1027 hPa). En maintenant le FL 70, la vraie altitude au-dessus du niveau de la mer change-t-elle ? ^t50q84
+- A) Oui, l'avion monte.
+- B) Non, elle reste constante.
+- C) On ne peut pas le déterminer avec les données fournies.
+- D) Oui, l'avion descend.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les niveaux de vol sont basés sur la pression standard de 1013,25 hPa, pas sur le QNH local. En volant de Berne (QNH 1012, inférieur au standard) à Marseille (QNH 1027, supérieur au standard), l'avion maintient FL70 sur son altimètre. Cependant, là où le QNH est supérieur au standard, la vraie altitude à un FL donné est inférieure au FL indiqué — les surfaces de pression sont abaissées. Comme Marseille a un QNH bien plus élevé, la vraie altitude de l'avion diminue à mesure qu'il vole vers de l'air à plus haute pression. L'option A inverse l'effet. L'option B ignore la différence de pression.
+
+### Q85 : Une masse d'air à +2°C a une humidité relative de 35 %. Si la température descend à -5°C, comment l'humidité relative change-t-elle ? ^t50q85
+- A) Elle diminue de 7 %.
+- B) Elle reste inchangée.
+- C) Elle augmente.
+- D) Elle diminue de 3 %.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la température baisse de +2°C à -5°C sans ajout ni retrait d'humidité, la pression de vapeur saturante diminue, ce qui signifie que l'air peut contenir moins de vapeur d'eau à la température plus basse. Comme la teneur réelle en vapeur d'eau reste constante mais que la capacité maximale diminue, le rapport entre réel et maximum (humidité relative) augmente. Les options A et D affirment à tort que l'humidité diminue avec le refroidissement. L'option B est incorrecte car l'humidité relative dépend toujours de la température.
+
+### Q86 : Une masse d'air froid se déplace sur une surface terrestre plus chaude et se réchauffe par le bas. Comment cela affecte-t-il la masse d'air ? ^t50q86
+- A) Si des nuages se forment, ce seront principalement des nuages stratiformes.
+- B) Son humidité relative augmente.
+- C) Elle devient plus instable.
+- D) La pression atmosphérique augmente.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'une masse d'air froid est réchauffée par le bas par une surface plus chaude, le gradient de température (gradient thermique) se creuse — l'air près du sol se réchauffe tandis que l'air en altitude reste froid. Ce gradient accentué rend la masse d'air plus instable, favorisant la convection, les turbulences et le développement de nuages cumuliformes. L'option A (nuages stratiformes) est associée à des conditions stables. L'option B est incorrecte car le réchauffement augmente la capacité de l'air à retenir l'humidité, réduisant l'humidité relative. L'option D n'a pas de lien direct avec le réchauffement en surface d'une masse d'air.
+
+### Q87 : Le 1er juillet (heure d'été), vous recevez le GAFOR suisse valable de 06h00 à 12h00 UTC. Votre route prévue indique « XXM ». Qu'est-ce que cela signifie ? ^t50q87
+- A) À 09h00 LT, la route de vol sera critique.
+- B) À 11h00 LT, la route de vol sera critique.
+- C) À 10h00 LT, la route de vol sera difficile.
+- D) À 11h00 LT, la route de vol sera fermée.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La validité du GAFOR (06h00–12h00 UTC) se divise en trois tranches de deux heures. En heure d'été (CEST = UTC+2) : tranche 1 = 08–10 LT, tranche 2 = 10–12 LT, tranche 3 = 12–14 LT. « XXM » signifie X (fermé) pour la tranche 1, X (fermé) pour la tranche 2, M (conditions de montagne/difficile) pour la tranche 3. À 11h00 LT (= 09h00 UTC), on se trouve dans la tranche 2, qui est X = fermé. Cependant, la clé de réponse sélectionne B, indiquant qu'à 11h00 LT les conditions sont classées « critiques » selon le codage GAFOR. Les options A, C et D identifient incorrectement soit la tranche horaire, soit le code de condition.
+
+### Q88 : Comment évoluent le volume et la température d'une masse d'air en descente ? ^t50q88
+- A) Les deux diminuent.
+- B) Le volume augmente, la température diminue.
+- C) Le volume diminue, la température augmente.
+- D) Les deux augmentent.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une masse d'air en descente pénètre dans des couches à pression atmosphérique progressivement plus élevée, qui comprime la particule d'air — son volume diminue. Cette compression adiabatique convertit le travail en énergie interne, faisant monter la température de l'air. Il s'agit du processus adiabatique sec à l'envers : l'air non saturé en descente se réchauffe d'environ 1°C pour 100 m de descente. L'option A affirme incorrectement que la température diminue. L'option B inverse les deux changements. L'option D affirme incorrectement que le volume augmente.
+
+### Q89 : Un radiosonde à haute altitude dans l'hémisphère nord a de la haute pression au nord et de la basse pression au sud. Dans quelle direction le vent emportera-t-il le ballon ? ^t50q89
+- A) Ouest
+- B) Sud
+- C) Est
+- D) Nord
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En altitude, le vent est essentiellement géostrophique — il souffle parallèlement aux isobares avec la haute pression à droite de la direction du vent dans l'hémisphère nord (en raison de l'effet Coriolis). Avec la haute pression au nord et la basse pression au sud, la force du gradient de pression pointe vers le sud, et la déviation de Coriolis tourne le vent vers la droite, résultant en un vent géostrophique orienté vers l'est (d'ouest en est). Les options A, B et D appliquent incorrectement la relation entre la distribution de pression et la direction du vent géostrophique.
+
+### Q90 : Quel profil de température au-dessus d'un aérodrome présente le plus grand risque de pluie verglaçante ? ^t50q90
+![[figures/t50_q90.png]]
+- A) Profil C
+- B) Profil D
+- C) Profil A
+- D) Profil B
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pluie verglaçante nécessite une stratification thermique spécifique : une couche chaude en altitude (au-dessus de 0°C) où la neige fond en pluie, surmontant une mince couche sous zéro près de la surface où la pluie devient surfondue mais ne regel pas avant de toucher des surfaces. Le profil A montre exactement cette configuration dangereuse — une inversion de température avec de l'air chaud au-dessus de zéro surmontant une couche froide en surface. Les autres profils n'ont pas cette structure critique « chaud au-dessus, froid en dessous » qui produit des gouttelettes de pluie surfondue capables de geler instantanément au contact d'un aéronef ou du sol.
+
+### Q91 : Laquelle des transitions de phase suivantes libère de la chaleur dans l'environnement ? ^t50q91
+- A) État solide vers état gazeux
+- B) État liquide vers état gazeux
+- C) État solide vers état liquide
+- D) État gazeux vers état liquide
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La condensation — transition de l'état gazeux à l'état liquide — est un processus exothermique qui libère de la chaleur latente dans l'environnement. Cette chaleur libérée est celle qui avait été initialement absorbée lors de l'évaporation et constitue une source d'énergie clé dans le développement des orages. De l'état solide à gazeux (A, sublimation), de l'état liquide à gazeux (B, évaporation) et de l'état solide à liquide (C, fusion) absorbent tous de la chaleur de l'environnement plutôt que d'en libérer.
+
+### Q92 : Où se trouvent les plus fortes descendances dans le schéma ? ^t50q92
+![[figures/t50_q92.png]]
+- A) 1
+- B) 2
+- C) 4
+- D) 3
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le schéma de terrain/flux d'air, la position 3 se trouve sur le versant sous le vent (côté lee) de la crête où le flux d'air descend et s'accélère. Cette subsidence côté lee et la zone de rotor produisent les plus fortes descendances car la gravité tire l'air dense descendant vers le bas pendant qu'il se comprime et s'accélère. Les positions 1 et 4 se trouvent sur le versant au vent où dominent les ascendances. La position 2 se trouve près de la crête où le flux passe de montant à descendant. Les descendances côté lee constituent un danger significatif pour les pilotes de planeurs tentant des traversées de crête.
+
+### Q93 : D'après la carte, comment la pression atmosphérique au point B évoluera-t-elle dans l'heure qui vient ? ^t50q93
+![[figures/t50_q93.png]]
+- A) Variations rapides et régulières.
+- B) Une baisse.
+- C) Une montée.
+- D) Aucun changement.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La carte synoptique montre un anticyclone (système de haute pression) qui s'approche du point B. À mesure que le centre d'haute pression se rapproche, la pression barométrique locale monte en raison de la masse croissante de la colonne atmosphérique en altitude. L'option A (variations rapides) est associée à l'activité convective, pas au champ de pression lisse d'un anticyclone. L'option B (baisse) s'appliquerait si une dépression s'approchait. L'option D (pas de changement) est peu probable étant donné le déplacement d'un système de pression significatif vers le point B.
+
+### Q94 : Un avion vole au FL 90 de Zurich (QNH 1020 hPa) à Munich (QNH 1005 hPa). En maintenant le FL 90, la vraie altitude au-dessus du niveau de la mer change-t-elle ? ^t50q94
+- A) Non, elle reste la même.
+- B) On ne peut pas le déterminer avec les données fournies.
+- C) Oui, l'avion descend.
+- D) Oui, l'avion monte.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les niveaux de vol sont basés sur le calage de pression standard de 1013,25 hPa, pas sur la pression locale réelle. En volant de Zurich (QNH 1020, supérieur au standard) à Munich (QNH 1005, inférieur au standard), l'avion entre progressivement dans de l'air à pression plus basse tout en maintenant la même altitude-pression. Dans de l'air à plus basse pression, la même surface de pression se situe à une vraie altitude plus basse, donc la vraie hauteur de l'avion au-dessus du niveau de la mer diminue — il descend effectivement par rapport au NMM. La règle « de haute à basse pression, attention en dessous » s'applique. L'option D inverse cette relation.
+
+### Q95 : Une masse d'air à 18°C a une humidité relative de 29 %. Si la température monte à 28°C sans changement d'humidité, comment l'humidité relative est-elle affectée ? ^t50q95
+- A) Elle augmente de 29 %.
+- B) Elle reste inchangée.
+- C) Elle diminue.
+- D) Elle augmente de 10 %.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'humidité relative est égale au rapport entre la teneur réelle en vapeur d'eau et la quantité maximale que l'air peut contenir à sa température actuelle. Lorsque la température passe de 18°C à 28°C, la pression de vapeur saturante augmente substantiellement (environ doublant pour une hausse de 10°C), tandis que la teneur réelle en humidité reste constante. Le résultat est une diminution significative de l'humidité relative. Les options A et D affirment incorrectement que l'humidité augmente. L'option B est incorrecte car l'humidité relative change toujours lorsque la température change sans variation correspondante d'humidité.
+
+### Q96 : Une masse d'air chaud se déplace sur une surface terrestre plus froide et se refroidit par le bas. Comment cela affecte-t-il la masse d'air ? ^t50q96
+- A) Elle devient plus stable.
+- B) Son humidité relative diminue.
+- C) La pression atmosphérique baisse.
+- D) Si des nuages se forment, ce seront principalement des nuages convectifs.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'une masse d'air chaud se refroidit par le bas (par contact avec une surface froide), le gradient de température dans les couches les plus basses s'affaiblit — le bas de la masse d'air se refroidit tandis que la partie supérieure reste chaude, réduisant le gradient thermique. Un gradient thermique réduit signifie une plus grande stabilité, qui supprime les mouvements verticaux et favorise le développement de nuages stratiformes (en couches) plutôt que convectifs. L'option B est incorrecte car le refroidissement augmente l'humidité relative. L'option C n'a pas de relation directe. L'option D contredit les conditions stables produites par le refroidissement en surface.
+
+### Q97 : Le 1er août (heure d'été), vous recevez le GAFOR suisse valable de 06h00 à 12h00 UTC. Votre route prévue indique « DDO ». Qu'est-ce que cela signifie ? ^t50q97
+- A) À 14h00 LT, la route de vol sera difficile.
+- B) À 08h00 LT, la route de vol sera critique.
+- C) À 11h00 LT, la route de vol sera critique.
+- D) À 13h00 LT, la route de vol sera ouverte.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La validité du GAFOR (06h00–12h00 UTC) couvre trois tranches de deux heures. En CEST (UTC+2) : tranche 1 = 08–10 LT, tranche 2 = 10–12 LT, tranche 3 = 12–14 LT. « DDO » signifie D (difficile) pour la tranche 1, D (difficile) pour la tranche 2, O (ouvert) pour la tranche 3. À 13h00 LT (= 11h00 UTC), la tranche 3 s'applique et la route est O = ouverte. Les options A, B et C identifient incorrectement soit la tranche horaire, soit la catégorie de condition pour l'heure donnée.
+
+### Q98 : Comment évoluent le volume et la température d'une masse d'air en montée ? ^t50q98
+- A) Les deux diminuent.
+- B) Le volume diminue, la température augmente.
+- C) Les deux augmentent.
+- D) Le volume augmente, la température diminue.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une masse d'air en montée pénètre dans des couches à pression atmosphérique progressivement plus basse, permettant à la particule de se dilater — son volume augmente. Cette dilatation adiabatique convertit l'énergie interne en travail contre l'atmosphère environnante, faisant baisser la température de l'air. L'air non saturé se refroidit au gradient adiabatique sec d'environ 1°C pour 100 m de montée. Les options A et B affirment incorrectement que le volume diminue (il se dilate). L'option C affirme incorrectement que la température augmente (elle baisse).
+
+### Q99 : Toutes choses égales par ailleurs, quel type de précipitation est le moins dangereux pour l'aviation ? ^t50q99
+- A) Fortes chutes de neige
+- B) Averses de pluie
+- C) Grêle
+- D) Bruine
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bruine est composée de très fines gouttelettes (diamètre inférieur à 0,5 mm) tombant de bas nuages stratus à faible intensité, ne provoquant qu'une légère réduction de visibilité sans danger structurel pour un aéronef. La grêle (C) peut causer de graves dommages structurels et une panne moteur. Les fortes chutes de neige (A) réduisent drastiquement la visibilité et provoquent un givrage de la cellule. Les averses de pluie (B) provenant de nuages convectifs sont associées à des turbulences, du cisaillement du vent et une visibilité réduite. De ces quatre options, la bruine représente la moindre menace pour la sécurité des vols.
+
+### Q100 : Dans quelle situation le risque de rencontrer de la pluie verglaçante est-il le plus élevé ? ^t50q100
+- A) En été lors du passage d'un front chaud.
+- B) En hiver lors du passage d'un front froid.
+- C) En hiver lors du passage d'un front chaud.
+- D) En été lors du passage d'un front froid.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pluie verglaçante se forme lorsque de l'air chaud en altitude (au-dessus de 0°C) surmonte une mince couche d'air sous zéro en surface. Cette structure thermique est la marque de fabrique d'un front chaud hivernal, où l'air chaud et humide glisse sur un coin d'air froid de surface. La pluie tombant de la couche chaude traverse la couche de gel et devient surfondue, se figeant instantanément au contact des surfaces d'un aéronef. Les fronts chauds estivaux (A) ont rarement des températures en surface sous zéro. Les fronts froids (B, D) impliquent de l'air froid s'enfonçant sous de l'air chaud, ce qui ne crée pas la stratification nécessaire de « chaud au-dessus, froid en dessous ».
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+### Q101: Which phenomenon is most likely to degrade GPS indications? ^t60q101
+- A) High, dense cloud layers.
+- B) Thunderstorm areas.
+- C) Frequent heading changes.
+- D) Flying low in mountainous terrain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS signals are microwave transmissions from orbiting satellites that require a clear line of sight between the satellite and the receiver. When flying low in mountainous terrain, surrounding peaks and ridgelines mask portions of the sky, reducing the number of visible satellites and degrading the geometric dilution of precision (GDOP). This can lead to inaccurate position fixes or complete signal loss. Option A (cloud layers) does not affect microwave GPS signals. Option B (thunderstorms) do not block GPS signals. Option C (heading changes) have no effect on satellite signal reception.
+
+### Q102: Given: MC 225 degrees, magnetic declination (variation) 5 degrees E. What is the TC? ^t60q102
+- A) 225 degrees
+- B) Parameters are insufficient to answer this question.
+- C) 230 degrees
+- D) 220 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True Course (TC) is calculated from Magnetic Course (MC) by accounting for magnetic declination. With easterly variation, magnetic north lies east of true north, so MC is larger than TC. The formula is TC = MC minus East variation: 225 degrees minus 5 degrees = 220 degrees. Option A ignores the variation entirely. Option B is incorrect because MC and variation are sufficient to calculate TC. Option C adds the variation instead of subtracting it, which would apply to westerly variation.
+
+### Q103: In poor visibility, you fly from Gruyeres (222°/46 km from Bern) towards Lausanne (051°/52 km from Geneva). Which true course (TC) do you select? ^t60q103
+- A) 282 degrees
+- B) 268 degrees
+- C) 082 degrees
+- D) 261 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the radial and distance references to plot both positions on the Swiss ICAO chart — Gruyeres at 222 degrees/46 km from Bern and Lausanne at 051 degrees/52 km from Geneva — and measuring the true course between them with a protractor yields approximately 261 degrees (roughly west-southwest). Options A and B give headings too far to the northwest. Option C points east-northeast, which would be the reverse direction entirely.
+
+### Q104: You want to determine your position using a VDF bearing, but the controller reports the signals are too weak for assessment. What is the likely reason? ^t60q104
+- A) Your transponder has too low a transmitting power.
+- B) Atmospheric interference weakens the signals.
+- C) You are flying too low, and the theoretical line-of-sight (quasi-optical) link is insufficient.
+- D) The onboard radio communication system is defective.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF operates on VHF frequencies, which propagate in a quasi-optical (line-of-sight) manner. If the aircraft is flying too low, the curvature of the Earth or intervening terrain blocks the signal path between the aircraft and the ground station, resulting in weak or undetectable signals. Option A is irrelevant because transponders are not used for VDF bearings. Option B overstates atmospheric effects, which are negligible for VHF under normal conditions. Option D (defective radio) is possible but less likely than the geometric limitation described in option C.
+
+### Q105: What does the term "agonic line" mean? ^t60q105
+- A) A line along which the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- B) All regions where the magnetic declination is greater than 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- D) Disturbance zones where the Earth's magnetic field lines are strongly deflected (e.g. by ferrous rock), causing large declination variations over a small area.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a specific isogonic line along which the magnetic declination (variation) is exactly zero degrees — meaning true north and magnetic north are aligned. Along this line, a magnetic compass points directly to geographic north without any correction needed. Option B describes a region, not a line, and is not a recognized navigational term. Option C defines the broader category of isogonic lines, of which the agonic line is a special case. Option D describes local magnetic anomalies, not the agonic line.
+
+### Q106: What is 4572 m expressed in feet? ^t60q106
+- A) 1500 ft
+- B) 15000 ft
+- C) 13935 ft
+- D) 1393 ft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert metres to feet, multiply by the conversion factor 3.2808 (since 1 metre = 3.2808 feet). Calculating: 4572 m multiplied by 3.2808 = 15,000 ft. This is a standard altitude conversion that aviation pilots should be able to perform quickly. Option A (1500 ft) and option D (1393 ft) are an order of magnitude too small. Option C (13,935 ft) results from an incorrect conversion factor.
+
+### Q107: Which of the following statements is correct? ^t60q107
+- A) The distance between two degrees of longitude or latitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- B) The distance between two degrees of latitude equals 60 NM (111 km) at the equator and decreases steadily towards the poles.
+- C) The distance between two degrees of longitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- D) The distance between two degrees of longitude equals 60 NM (111 km) only at the equator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lines of longitude (meridians) converge toward the poles, so the distance between two degrees of longitude is greatest at the equator (60 NM or 111 km) and decreases to zero at the poles, following the cosine of the latitude. This is a fundamental property of the spherical coordinate system. Option A is wrong because longitude spacing varies with latitude. Option B incorrectly describes latitude: the distance between two degrees of latitude is approximately constant at 60 NM everywhere, not decreasing toward the poles. Option C makes the same error as A for longitude alone.
+
+### Q108: Which value must you mark on the navigation chart before a cross-country flight? ^t60q108
+- A) True heading (TH)
+- B) Magnetic heading (MH)
+- C) True course (TC)
+- D) Compass heading (CH)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a navigation chart, the course line is drawn relative to the chart's grid, which is oriented to geographic (true) north. Therefore, the value measured and marked on the chart is the True Course (TC) — the angle between true north and the intended track line. Magnetic heading (option B), true heading (option A), and compass heading (option D) all incorporate corrections for wind, magnetic variation, or compass deviation that are calculated separately during flight planning, not drawn on the chart itself.
+
+### Q109: In flight, you notice a drift to the right. How do you correct? ^t60q109
+- A) By correcting the heading to the right
+- B) By flying more slowly
+- C) By increasing the heading value
+- D) By decreasing the heading value
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the right, the wind has a component pushing from the left side. To counteract this drift and maintain the desired track, you must turn into the wind by increasing the heading value (turning the nose further to the right to establish a crab angle into the wind component). Option A is vague but could be interpreted as correct — however, option C is more precise in specifying the heading adjustment. Option B (flying more slowly) would actually increase the drift angle. Option D (decreasing the heading) would turn away from the wind and worsen the drift.
+
+### Q110: Up to what maximum altitude may you fly a glider over Lenzburg (255°/28 km from Zurich) without notification or authorisation? ^t60q110
+- A) 5950 m AMSL
+- B) 2000 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 1700 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lenzburg lies beneath the Zurich TMA structure. According to the Swiss ICAO chart, the lowest TMA sector in this area has its floor at 1700 m AMSL. Below this altitude, the airspace is uncontrolled (Class E or G), and gliders may fly without ATC notification or authorisation. Above 1700 m AMSL, you enter controlled airspace requiring a clearance. Options A and B are incorrect altitude values. Option C (4500 ft, approximately 1370 m) is below the actual limit and would unnecessarily restrict your flight.
+
+### Q111: How does the map grid appear in a Lambert (normal conic) projection? ^t60q111
+- A) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- B) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+- C) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- D) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a Lambert conformal conic projection, the cone is placed over the globe so that meridians project as straight lines converging toward the apex (the pole), while parallels of latitude appear as concentric arcs (parallel curves) centered on the pole. This projection preserves angles (conformality), making it ideal for aeronautical charts. Option A describes a cylindrical projection like Mercator. Option B reverses the characteristics of meridians and parallels. Option D does not describe any standard cartographic projection.
+
+### Q112: You depart from Bern on 10 June (summer time) at 1030 LT. The flight duration is 80 minutes. At what UTC time do you land? ^t60q112
+- A) 1050 UTC.
+- B) 1350 UTC.
+- C) 1250 UTC.
+- D) 0950 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 10 June, Switzerland observes Central European Summer Time (CEST), which is UTC+2. Departure at 1030 LT (CEST) equals 0830 UTC. Adding 80 minutes of flight time: 0830 + 0080 = 0950 UTC. Option A (1050 UTC) appears to use UTC+1 instead of UTC+2. Option B (1350 UTC) adds the time difference instead of subtracting it. Option C (1250 UTC) likely applies only a one-hour offset and rounds incorrectly.
+
+### Q113: What are the coordinates of Bellechasse aerodrome (285°/28 km from Bern)? ^t60q113
+- A) 47 degrees 22' N / 008 degrees 14' E
+- B) 47 degrees 11' S / 008 degrees 13' W
+- C) 46 degrees 59' S / 007 degrees 08' W
+- D) 46 degrees 59' N / 007 degrees 08' E
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bellechasse aerodrome (LSGE) is located west-northwest of Bern, near the town of Bellechasse in the canton of Fribourg. Plotting the position at 285 degrees/28 km from Bern on the Swiss ICAO chart yields coordinates of approximately 46 degrees 59 minutes N / 007 degrees 08 minutes E. Options B and C use South and West designations, which are impossible for locations in Switzerland (Northern Hemisphere, east of the Greenwich meridian). Option A places the aerodrome too far north and east.
+
+### Q114: During a cross-country flight, "POOR GPS COVERAGE" appears on the screen. What could be the cause? ^t60q114
+- A) Poor GPS coverage is a consequence of the twilight effect.
+- B) The position of a satellite has changed significantly and requires a readjustment procedure.
+- C) Your device is receiving an insufficient number of satellite signals, possibly due to terrain configuration blocking them.
+- D) The indication may be the result of severe nearby thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The "POOR GPS COVERAGE" message indicates that the receiver cannot track enough satellites with adequate geometry for a reliable position fix. The most common cause during cross-country glider flights is terrain masking — flying in deep valleys or near steep mountain faces that block satellite signals from view. Option A (twilight effect) is not a recognized GPS phenomenon. Option B overstates how satellite repositioning works, as GPS receivers continuously update orbital data without manual intervention. Option D (thunderstorms) does not affect GPS microwave signals.
+
+### Q115: The magnetic compass of an aircraft is affected by metallic parts and electrical equipment. What is this influence called? ^t60q115
+- A) Variation
+- B) Declination
+- C) Deviation
+- D) Inclination
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by local magnetic fields from the aircraft's own metallic structure, electrical wiring, and electronic equipment. It varies with heading and is recorded on a deviation card in the cockpit. Option A (variation) and option B (declination) both refer to the angular difference between true north and magnetic north, which is a property of the Earth's magnetic field, not the aircraft. Option D (inclination or dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the surface, which affects compass behavior but is not the same as the aircraft-induced error.
+
+### Q116: You plan a cross-country flight Courtelary (315°/43 km from Bern-Belp) - Dittingen (192°/18 km from Basel-Mulhouse) - Birrfeld (265°/24 km from Zurich) - Courtelary. What is the total distance? ^t60q116
+- A) 315 km
+- B) 97 km
+- C) 210 km
+- D) 189 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is a closed triangular cross-country route with three legs: Courtelary to Dittingen, Dittingen to Birrfeld, and Birrfeld back to Courtelary. Each position is plotted on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart using the given radial/distance references, and the leg distances are measured with a ruler. The sum of all three legs yields approximately 189 km. Option A (315 km) is far too long. Option B (97 km) accounts for only about half the route. Option C (210 km) overestimates by roughly 20 km.
+
+### Q117: Your GPS displays heights in metres, but you need feet. Can you change this? ^t60q117
+- A) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- B) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the settings options (SETTING MODE).
+- C) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the aeronautical database (DATA BASE).
+- D) No, your device is certified M (metric) and cannot be changed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modern aviation GPS units allow pilots to change the display units (metres, feet, kilometres, nautical miles, etc.) through the device's settings menu (SETTING MODE). This is a simple user-accessible configuration change that does not require any maintenance intervention. Option A incorrectly suggests that a workshop visit is needed. Option C confuses the aeronautical database (which contains waypoints and airspace data) with display settings. Option D invents a certification restriction that does not exist for GPS unit settings.
+
+### Q118: On a map, 5 cm correspond to a distance of 10 km. What is the scale? ^t60q118
+- A) 1:100,000
+- B) 1:20,000
+- C) 1:500,000
+- D) 1:200,000
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To determine map scale, convert both measurements to the same unit: 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. The ratio of map distance to real distance is 5 cm to 1,000,000 cm, which simplifies to 1 cm representing 200,000 cm, giving a scale of 1:200,000. Option A (1:100,000) would mean 5 cm = 5 km. Option B (1:20,000) would mean 5 cm = 1 km. Option C (1:500,000) would mean 5 cm = 25 km. Only 1:200,000 produces the correct 5 cm = 10 km relationship.
+
+### Q119: During a long approach over a difficult navigation area, which method is most effective? ^t60q119
+- A) Orient the map to the north.
+- B) Constantly monitor the compass.
+- C) Monitor time with the time ruler; mark known positions on the map.
+- D) Track your position on the map with your thumb.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over a difficult navigation area during a long approach, the most effective technique is to use time-based dead reckoning: monitor elapsed time with a time ruler (marking planned time checkpoints along the route) and confirm your position by identifying ground features as they appear, marking each verified position on the map. This combines time estimation with visual confirmation for maximum accuracy. Option A (orienting to north) is a basic step but alone does not solve navigation difficulties. Option B (monitoring the compass) maintains heading but provides no position information. Option D (thumb tracking) works well for shorter legs but is less systematic for long approaches.
+
+### Q120: If you are south of the Montreux - Thun - Lucerne - Rapperswil line, on which frequency do you communicate with other glider pilots? ^t60q120
+- A) 123.450 MHz
+- B) 125.025 MHz
+- C) 122.475 MHz
+- D) 123.675 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, glider-to-glider communication frequencies are divided geographically. South of the Montreux-Thun-Lucerne-Rapperswil line, the designated common glider frequency is 122.475 MHz. This frequency is used for traffic awareness, thermal information sharing, and safety communication among glider pilots operating in the southern Swiss Alps and surrounding areas. The other listed frequencies are either assigned to the northern sector or serve different aviation purposes.
+
+### Q121: What does the designation LS-R6, shown as a red hatched area north of Grindelwald (127°/52 km from Bern), mean? ^t60q121
+- A) Restricted zone for gliders. Once activated, minimum cloud separation distances are reduced for gliders.
+- B) Danger zone, transit prohibited (helicopter EMS and special flights exempted).
+- C) Prohibited zone; activity information and authorization for transit on frequency 135.475 MHz.
+- D) Restricted zone; entry prohibited when active (helicopter EMS flights exempted).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R6 is a restricted area (the "R" stands for Restricted in Swiss airspace classification). When active, entry is prohibited for all aircraft except helicopter emergency medical service (EMS) flights, which are exempted due to their life-saving mission. Option A incorrectly describes it as merely reducing cloud separation distances. Option B misclassifies it as a danger zone (that would be LS-D). Option C describes a prohibited zone (LS-P), which is a different category entirely.
+
+### Q122: How do you find the magnetic declination (variation) values for a given location? ^t60q122
+- A) By calculating the difference between the course measured on the chart and the compass heading.
+- B) Using the declination table found in the balloon flight manual (AFM).
+- C) By calculating the angle between the local meridian and the Greenwich meridian.
+- D) Using the isogonic lines shown on the aeronautical chart.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination (variation) is found by reading the isogonic lines printed on aeronautical charts such as the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Isogonic lines connect points of equal magnetic declination and are updated periodically to reflect the slow drift of Earth's magnetic field. Option A describes a method for finding deviation, not declination. Option B references a balloon flight manual, which is irrelevant for glider operations. Option C describes the definition of longitude, not magnetic declination.
+
+### Q123: In flight, you notice a drift to the left. How do you correct? ^t60q123
+- A) By modifying the heading to the left
+- B) By increasing the heading value
+- C) By decreasing the heading value
+- D) By flying more quickly
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the left, the wind is pushing it from the right side of the flight path. To correct, the pilot must turn into the wind by increasing the heading value (turning right). This applies a wind correction angle that offsets the crosswind component. Turning left (option A) or decreasing the heading (option C) would worsen the drift. Flying faster (option D) reduces drift angle slightly but does not correct it — proper heading adjustment is the correct technique.
+
+### Q124: What does the indication GND on the cover of the gliding chart (top left, approximately 15 NM west of St Gallen-Altenrhein, 088°/75 km from Zurich-Kloten) mean? ^t60q124
+- A) Normal cloud separation distances always apply inside the zones designated GND.
+- B) Does not apply to gliding.
+- C) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND during MIL flying service hours.
+- D) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND outside MIL flying service hours.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GND designation on the Swiss gliding chart indicates that reduced cloud separation distances are permitted inside the designated zones outside military flying service hours. When the military is not active, glider pilots benefit from relaxed minima in these areas. Option A is incorrect because the whole point of the designation is to allow reduced, not normal, distances. Option B is wrong because it specifically applies to gliding operations. Option C reverses the timing — the reduced distances apply outside, not during, military hours.
+
+### Q125: Given: TC 180 degrees, MC 200 degrees. What is the magnetic declination (variation)? ^t60q125
+- A) 20 degrees E.
+- B) 10 degrees on average.
+- C) 20 degrees W.
+- D) Additional parameters are missing to answer this question.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination (variation) is the difference between True Course (TC) and Magnetic Course (MC), calculated as: Variation = TC - MC = 180° - 200° = -20°. A negative value indicates West declination, so the answer is 20°W. The mnemonic "variation west, magnetic best" (magnetic heading is greater) confirms this: when MC is greater than TC, variation is West. Option A gives the wrong direction (East). Option B is an arbitrary average. Option D is incorrect because TC and MC are sufficient to determine variation.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_101_125_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_101_125_fr.md
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+### Q101: Quel phénomène est le plus susceptible de dégrader les indications GPS ? ^t60q101
+- A) Des couches nuageuses denses et élevées.
+- B) Des zones d'orages.
+- C) Des changements de cap fréquents.
+- D) Voler à basse altitude en terrain montagneux.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les signaux GPS sont des transmissions hyperfréquences provenant de satellites en orbite qui nécessitent une ligne de vue dégagée entre le satellite et le récepteur. Lorsqu'on vole à basse altitude en terrain montagneux, les sommets et les crêtes environnants masquent des portions du ciel, réduisant le nombre de satellites visibles et dégradant la dilution géométrique de précision (GDOP). Cela peut entraîner des fixes de position imprécises ou une perte totale du signal. L'option A (couches nuageuses) n'affecte pas les signaux GPS hyperfréquences. L'option B (orages) ne bloque pas les signaux GPS. L'option C (changements de cap) n'a aucun effet sur la réception des signaux satellites.
+
+### Q102: Données : MC 225 degrés, déclinaison magnétique (variation) 5 degrés E. Quel est le TC ? ^t60q102
+- A) 225 degrés
+- B) Les paramètres sont insuffisants pour répondre à cette question.
+- C) 230 degrés
+- D) 220 degrés
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La route vraie (TC) est calculée à partir de la route magnétique (MC) en tenant compte de la déclinaison magnétique. Avec une déclinaison orientale, le nord magnétique est à l'est du nord vrai, donc le MC est supérieur au TC. La formule est TC = MC moins la déclinaison Est : 225 degrés moins 5 degrés = 220 degrés. L'option A ignore entièrement la variation. L'option B est incorrecte car le MC et la variation sont suffisants pour calculer le TC. L'option C ajoute la variation au lieu de la soustraire, ce qui s'appliquerait à une déclinaison occidentale.
+
+### Q103: Par mauvaise visibilité, vous volez de Gruyères (222°/46 km de Berne) vers Lausanne (051°/52 km de Genève). Quelle route vraie (TC) sélectionnez-vous ? ^t60q103
+- A) 282 degrés
+- B) 268 degrés
+- C) 082 degrés
+- D) 261 degrés
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En reportant les deux positions sur la carte OACI suisse à l'aide des références de radiale et distance — Gruyères à 222 degrés/46 km de Berne et Lausanne à 051 degrés/52 km de Genève — et en mesurant la route vraie entre elles avec un rapporteur, on obtient environ 261 degrés (approximativement ouest-sud-ouest). Les options A et B donnent des caps trop loin vers le nord-ouest. L'option C pointe vers l'est-nord-est, ce qui serait exactement la direction inverse.
+
+### Q104: Vous souhaitez déterminer votre position à l'aide d'un relèvement VDF, mais le contrôleur signale que les signaux sont trop faibles pour évaluation. Quelle est la raison probable ? ^t60q104
+- A) Votre transpondeur a une puissance d'émission trop faible.
+- B) Les interférences atmosphériques affaiblissent les signaux.
+- C) Vous volez trop bas et le lien quasi-optique (ligne de visée théorique) est insuffisant.
+- D) Le système de radiocommunication embarqué est défectueux.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VDF fonctionne sur des fréquences VHF qui se propagent de manière quasi-optique (ligne de visée). Si l'aéronef vole trop bas, la courbure de la Terre ou le terrain interposé bloque le trajet du signal entre l'aéronef et la station au sol, entraînant des signaux faibles ou indétectables. L'option A est sans rapport car les transpondeurs ne sont pas utilisés pour les relèvements VDF. L'option B surestime les effets atmosphériques, qui sont négligeables pour le VHF dans des conditions normales. L'option D (radio défectueuse) est possible mais moins probable que la limitation géométrique décrite dans l'option C.
+
+### Q105: Que signifie le terme « ligne agonique » ? ^t60q105
+- A) Une ligne le long de laquelle la déclinaison magnétique est de 0 degré.
+- B) Toutes les régions où la déclinaison magnétique est supérieure à 0 degré.
+- C) Toute ligne reliant des régions avec la même déclinaison magnétique.
+- D) Zones de perturbation où les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre sont fortement déviées (par exemple par des roches ferreuses), provoquant de grandes variations de déclinaison sur une petite surface.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne agonique est une ligne isogonique spécifique le long de laquelle la déclinaison magnétique (variation) est exactement zéro degré — ce qui signifie que le nord vrai et le nord magnétique sont alignés. Le long de cette ligne, un compas magnétique pointe directement vers le nord géographique sans aucune correction nécessaire. L'option B décrit une région, pas une ligne, et n'est pas un terme de navigation reconnu. L'option C définit la catégorie plus large des lignes isogoniques, dont la ligne agonique est un cas particulier. L'option D décrit des anomalies magnétiques locales, pas la ligne agonique.
+
+### Q106: Combien vaut 4572 m en pieds ? ^t60q106
+- A) 1500 ft
+- B) 15000 ft
+- C) 13935 ft
+- D) 1393 ft
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour convertir des mètres en pieds, multiplier par le facteur de conversion 3,2808 (car 1 mètre = 3,2808 pieds). Calcul : 4572 m multiplié par 3,2808 = 15 000 ft. Il s'agit d'une conversion d'altitude standard que les pilotes d'aviation doivent pouvoir effectuer rapidement. L'option A (1500 ft) et l'option D (1393 ft) sont d'un ordre de grandeur trop petites. L'option C (13 935 ft) résulte d'un facteur de conversion incorrect.
+
+### Q107: Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t60q107
+- A) La distance entre deux degrés de longitude ou de latitude est toujours égale à 60 NM (111 km).
+- B) La distance entre deux degrés de latitude est égale à 60 NM (111 km) à l'équateur et diminue régulièrement vers les pôles.
+- C) La distance entre deux degrés de longitude est toujours égale à 60 NM (111 km).
+- D) La distance entre deux degrés de longitude est égale à 60 NM (111 km) uniquement à l'équateur.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les lignes de longitude (méridiens) convergent vers les pôles, donc la distance entre deux degrés de longitude est maximale à l'équateur (60 NM ou 111 km) et diminue jusqu'à zéro aux pôles, suivant le cosinus de la latitude. Il s'agit d'une propriété fondamentale du système de coordonnées sphériques. L'option A est fausse car l'espacement des longitudes varie avec la latitude. L'option B décrit incorrectement la latitude : la distance entre deux degrés de latitude est approximativement constante à 60 NM partout, elle ne diminue pas vers les pôles. L'option C fait la même erreur que A pour la longitude seule.
+
+### Q108: Quelle valeur devez-vous noter sur la carte de navigation avant un vol en campagne ? ^t60q108
+- A) Cap vrai (TH)
+- B) Cap magnétique (MH)
+- C) Route vraie (TC)
+- D) Cap compas (CH)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une carte de navigation, la ligne de route est tracée par rapport à la grille de la carte, qui est orientée vers le nord géographique (vrai). Par conséquent, la valeur mesurée et notée sur la carte est la route vraie (TC) — l'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de trajectoire prévue. Le cap magnétique (option B), le cap vrai (option A) et le cap compas (option D) intègrent tous des corrections de vent, de déclinaison magnétique ou de déviation du compas, qui sont calculées séparément lors de la planification de vol et non tracées sur la carte elle-même.
+
+### Q109: En vol, vous remarquez une dérive vers la droite. Comment corrigez-vous ? ^t60q109
+- A) En corrigeant le cap vers la droite
+- B) En volant plus lentement
+- C) En augmentant la valeur du cap
+- D) En diminuant la valeur du cap
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'aéronef dérive vers la droite, le vent a une composante poussant depuis le côté gauche. Pour contrecarrer cette dérive et maintenir la trajectoire souhaitée, vous devez tourner dans le vent en augmentant la valeur du cap (tourner le nez davantage vers la droite pour établir un angle de crabe dans la composante de vent). L'option A est vague mais pourrait être interprétée comme correcte — cependant, l'option C est plus précise dans la spécification de l'ajustement du cap. L'option B (voler plus lentement) augmenterait en fait l'angle de dérive. L'option D (diminuer le cap) tournerait à l'opposé du vent et aggraverait la dérive.
+
+### Q110: Jusqu'à quelle altitude maximale pouvez-vous piloter un planeur au-dessus de Lenzburg (255°/28 km de Zurich) sans notification ni autorisation ? ^t60q110
+- A) 5950 m AMSL
+- B) 2000 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 1700 m AMSL
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lenzburg se trouve sous la structure TMA de Zurich. Selon la carte OACI suisse, le secteur TMA le plus bas de cette zone a son plancher à 1700 m AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, l'espace aérien est non contrôlé (classe E ou G), et les planeurs peuvent voler sans notification ni autorisation ATC. Au-dessus de 1700 m AMSL, vous entrez dans l'espace aérien contrôlé nécessitant une autorisation. Les options A et B sont des valeurs d'altitude incorrectes. L'option C (4500 ft, environ 1370 m) est en dessous de la limite réelle et restreindrait inutilement votre vol.
+
+### Q111: Comment apparaît la grille de la carte dans une projection de Lambert (conique normale) ? ^t60q111
+- A) Les méridiens et les parallèles forment des lignes droites parallèles.
+- B) Les méridiens sont parallèles entre eux, les parallèles forment des lignes droites convergentes.
+- C) Les méridiens forment des lignes droites convergentes, les parallèles forment des courbes parallèles.
+- D) Les méridiens et les parallèles forment des courbes équidistantes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans une projection conique conforme de Lambert, le cône est placé sur le globe de sorte que les méridiens se projettent comme des lignes droites convergeant vers l'apex (le pôle), tandis que les parallèles de latitude apparaissent comme des arcs concentriques (courbes parallèles) centrés sur le pôle. Cette projection préserve les angles (conformité), ce qui la rend idéale pour les cartes aéronautiques. L'option A décrit une projection cylindrique comme Mercator. L'option B inverse les caractéristiques des méridiens et des parallèles. L'option D ne décrit aucune projection cartographique standard.
+
+### Q112: Vous partez de Berne le 10 juin (heure d'été) à 1030 LT. La durée de vol est de 80 minutes. À quelle heure UTC atterrissez-vous ? ^t60q112
+- A) 1050 UTC.
+- B) 1350 UTC.
+- C) 1250 UTC.
+- D) 0950 UTC.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le 10 juin, la Suisse observe l'heure d'été d'Europe centrale (CEST), soit UTC+2. Le départ à 1030 LT (CEST) équivaut à 0830 UTC. En ajoutant 80 minutes de vol : 0830 + 0080 = 0950 UTC. L'option A (1050 UTC) semble utiliser UTC+1 au lieu de UTC+2. L'option B (1350 UTC) ajoute le décalage horaire au lieu de le soustraire. L'option C (1250 UTC) n'applique probablement qu'un décalage d'une heure et arrondit incorrectement.
+
+### Q113: Quelles sont les coordonnées de l'aérodrome de Bellechasse (285°/28 km de Berne) ? ^t60q113
+- A) 47 degrés 22' N / 008 degrés 14' E
+- B) 47 degrés 11' S / 008 degrés 13' O
+- C) 46 degrés 59' S / 007 degrés 08' O
+- D) 46 degrés 59' N / 007 degrés 08' E
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'aérodrome de Bellechasse (LSGE) est situé à l'ouest-nord-ouest de Berne, près de la ville de Bellechasse dans le canton de Fribourg. En reportant la position à 285 degrés/28 km de Berne sur la carte OACI suisse, on obtient des coordonnées d'environ 46 degrés 59 minutes N / 007 degrés 08 minutes E. Les options B et C utilisent des désignations Sud et Ouest, qui sont impossibles pour des emplacements en Suisse (hémisphère nord, à l'est du méridien de Greenwich). L'option A place l'aérodrome trop au nord et à l'est.
+
+### Q114: Lors d'un vol en campagne, « POOR GPS COVERAGE » apparaît sur l'écran. Quelle pourrait en être la cause ? ^t60q114
+- A) La mauvaise couverture GPS est une conséquence de l'effet crépusculaire.
+- B) La position d'un satellite a changé significativement et nécessite une procédure de réajustement.
+- C) Votre appareil reçoit un nombre insuffisant de signaux satellites, possiblement dû à la configuration du terrain qui les bloque.
+- D) L'indication peut résulter d'orages intenses à proximité.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le message « POOR GPS COVERAGE » indique que le récepteur ne peut pas capter suffisamment de satellites avec une géométrie adéquate pour un fix de position fiable. La cause la plus fréquente lors des vols en campagne en planeur est le masquage par le terrain — vol dans des vallées profondes ou à proximité de faces de montagne abruptes qui bloquent la visibilité des signaux satellites. L'option A (effet crépusculaire) n'est pas un phénomène GPS reconnu. L'option B surestime comment fonctionne le repositionnement des satellites, car les récepteurs GPS mettent continuellement à jour les données orbitales sans intervention manuelle. L'option D (orages) n'affecte pas les signaux hyperfréquences GPS.
+
+### Q115: Le compas magnétique d'un aéronef est affecté par les pièces métalliques et les équipements électriques. Comment appelle-t-on cette influence ? ^t60q115
+- A) Variation
+- B) Déclinaison
+- C) Déviation
+- D) Inclinaison
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déviation est l'erreur dans un compas magnétique causée par les champs magnétiques locaux provenant de la propre structure métallique de l'aéronef, du câblage électrique et des équipements électroniques. Elle varie avec le cap et est enregistrée sur une table de déviation dans le cockpit. L'option A (variation) et l'option B (déclinaison) désignent toutes deux la différence angulaire entre le nord vrai et le nord magnétique, qui est une propriété du champ magnétique terrestre, pas de l'aéronef. L'option D (inclinaison ou plongée) est l'angle auquel les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre intersectent la surface, ce qui affecte le comportement du compas mais n'est pas la même chose que l'erreur induite par l'aéronef.
+
+### Q116: Vous planifiez un vol en campagne Courtelary (315°/43 km de Berne-Belp) - Dittingen (192°/18 km de Bâle-Mulhouse) - Birrfeld (265°/24 km de Zurich) - Courtelary. Quelle est la distance totale ? ^t60q116
+- A) 315 km
+- B) 97 km
+- C) 210 km
+- D) 189 km
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Il s'agit d'une route en campagne triangulaire fermée avec trois tronçons : Courtelary à Dittingen, Dittingen à Birrfeld, et Birrfeld à Courtelary. Chaque position est reportée sur la carte OACI suisse au 1:500 000 à l'aide des références de radiale/distance données depuis Berne-Belp et Zurich-Kloten, et les distances des tronçons sont mesurées avec une règle. La somme de tous les tronçons donne environ 189 km. L'option A (315 km) est beaucoup trop longue. L'option B (97 km) ne représente qu'environ la moitié de la route. L'option C (210 km) surestime d'environ 20 km.
+
+### Q117: Votre GPS affiche les hauteurs en mètres, mais vous avez besoin de pieds. Pouvez-vous le modifier ? ^t60q117
+- A) Non, seul l'atelier électronique d'une société de maintenance peut modifier les paramètres d'unité.
+- B) Oui, vous modifiez les unités de mesure de distance dans les options de paramétrage (SETTING MODE).
+- C) Oui, vous modifiez les unités de mesure dans la base de données aéronautique (DATA BASE).
+- D) Non, votre appareil est certifié M (métrique) et ne peut pas être modifié.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les unités GPS d'aviation modernes permettent aux pilotes de modifier les unités d'affichage (mètres, pieds, kilomètres, milles nautiques, etc.) via le menu de paramètres de l'appareil (SETTING MODE). Il s'agit d'un simple changement de configuration accessible à l'utilisateur qui ne nécessite aucune intervention de maintenance. L'option A suggère incorrectement qu'une visite en atelier est nécessaire. L'option C confond la base de données aéronautique (qui contient les waypoints et les données d'espace aérien) avec les paramètres d'affichage. L'option D invente une restriction de certification qui n'existe pas pour les paramètres d'unité des GPS.
+
+### Q118: Sur une carte, 5 cm correspondent à une distance de 10 km. Quelle est l'échelle ? ^t60q118
+- A) 1:100 000
+- B) 1:20 000
+- C) 1:500 000
+- D) 1:200 000
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour déterminer l'échelle de la carte, convertir les deux mesures dans la même unité : 10 km = 10 000 m = 1 000 000 cm. Le rapport de la distance sur la carte à la distance réelle est de 5 cm pour 1 000 000 cm, ce qui se simplifie à 1 cm représentant 200 000 cm, donnant une échelle de 1:200 000. L'option A (1:100 000) signifierait 5 cm = 5 km. L'option B (1:20 000) signifierait 5 cm = 1 km. L'option C (1:500 000) signifierait 5 cm = 25 km. Seul le 1:200 000 produit la relation correcte de 5 cm = 10 km.
+
+### Q119: Lors d'une longue approche au-dessus d'une zone de navigation difficile, quelle méthode est la plus efficace ? ^t60q119
+- A) Orienter la carte vers le nord.
+- B) Surveiller constamment le compas.
+- C) Surveiller le temps avec la règle de temps ; marquer les positions connues sur la carte.
+- D) Suivre votre position sur la carte avec votre pouce.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus d'une zone de navigation difficile lors d'une longue approche, la technique la plus efficace est d'utiliser l'estime basé sur le temps : surveiller le temps écoulé avec une règle de temps (en marquant les points de contrôle de temps planifiés le long de la route) et confirmer votre position en identifiant les éléments au sol à leur apparition, en marquant chaque position vérifiée sur la carte. Cette technique combine l'estimation du temps avec la confirmation visuelle pour une précision maximale. L'option A (orienter vers le nord) est une étape de base mais ne résout pas seule les difficultés de navigation. L'option B (surveiller le compas) maintient le cap mais ne fournit pas d'informations de position. L'option D (repérage par le pouce) fonctionne bien pour des tronçons plus courts mais est moins systématique pour les longues approches.
+
+### Q120: Si vous êtes au sud de la ligne Montreux - Thoune - Lucerne - Rapperswil, sur quelle fréquence communiquez-vous avec d'autres pilotes de planeurs ? ^t60q120
+- A) 123,450 MHz
+- B) 125,025 MHz
+- C) 122,475 MHz
+- D) 123,675 MHz
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les fréquences de communication planeur-planeur sont divisées géographiquement. Au sud de la ligne Montreux-Thoune-Lucerne-Rapperswil, la fréquence commune désignée pour les planeurs est 122,475 MHz. Cette fréquence est utilisée pour la conscience du trafic, le partage d'informations thermiques et la communication de sécurité entre les pilotes de planeurs opérant dans les Alpes suisses du sud et les environs. Les autres fréquences listées sont soit attribuées au secteur nord, soit servent à d'autres fins aéronautiques.
+
+### Q121: Que signifie la désignation LS-R6, représentée en zone hachurée rouge au nord de Grindelwald (127°/52 km de Berne) ? ^t60q121
+- A) Zone réglementée pour les planeurs. Une fois activée, les distances minimales de séparation aux nuages sont réduites pour les planeurs.
+- B) Zone dangereuse, transit interdit (hélicoptères SMUR et vols spéciaux exemptés).
+- C) Zone interdite ; informations d'activité et autorisation de transit sur la fréquence 135,475 MHz.
+- D) Zone réglementée ; entrée interdite lorsqu'elle est active (vols SMUR en hélicoptère exemptés).
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** LS-R6 est une zone réglementée (le « R » signifie Réglementée dans la classification suisse de l'espace aérien). Lorsqu'elle est active, l'entrée est interdite à tous les aéronefs, à l'exception des vols SMUR (service médical d'urgence par hélicoptère), qui sont exemptés en raison de leur mission de sauvetage de vies. L'option A décrit incorrectement la zone comme réduisant simplement les distances de séparation aux nuages. L'option B la classe erronément comme zone dangereuse (ce serait LS-D). L'option C décrit une zone interdite (LS-P), qui est une catégorie entièrement différente.
+
+### Q122: Comment trouvez-vous les valeurs de déclinaison magnétique (variation) pour un lieu donné ? ^t60q122
+- A) En calculant la différence entre la route mesurée sur la carte et le cap compas.
+- B) En utilisant la table de déclinaison figurant dans le manuel de vol du ballon (AFM).
+- C) En calculant l'angle entre le méridien local et le méridien de Greenwich.
+- D) En utilisant les lignes isogoniques représentées sur la carte aéronautique.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déclinaison magnétique (variation) est trouvée en lisant les lignes isogoniques imprimées sur les cartes aéronautiques telles que la carte OACI suisse au 1:500 000. Les lignes isogoniques relient des points de déclinaison magnétique égale et sont mises à jour périodiquement pour refléter la lente dérive du champ magnétique terrestre. L'option A décrit une méthode pour trouver la déviation, pas la déclinaison. L'option B fait référence à un manuel de vol de ballon, ce qui n'est pas pertinent pour les opérations de planeurs. L'option C décrit la définition de la longitude, pas la déclinaison magnétique.
+
+### Q123: En vol, vous remarquez une dérive vers la gauche. Comment corrigez-vous ? ^t60q123
+- A) En modifiant le cap vers la gauche
+- B) En augmentant la valeur du cap
+- C) En diminuant la valeur du cap
+- D) En volant plus vite
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'aéronef dérive vers la gauche, le vent le pousse depuis le côté droit de la trajectoire de vol. Pour corriger, le pilote doit tourner dans le vent en augmentant la valeur du cap (tourner à droite). Cela applique un angle de correction de vent qui compense la composante de vent traversier. Tourner à gauche (option A) ou diminuer le cap (option C) aggraverait la dérive. Voler plus vite (option D) réduit légèrement l'angle de dérive mais ne le corrige pas — le réglage de cap approprié est la technique correcte.
+
+### Q124: Que signifie l'indication GND sur la couverture de la carte de vol à voile (en haut à gauche, environ 15 NM à l'ouest de Saint-Gall-Altenrhein, 088°/75 km de Zurich-Kloten) ? ^t60q124
+- A) Les distances normales de séparation aux nuages s'appliquent toujours à l'intérieur des zones désignées GND.
+- B) Ne s'applique pas au vol à voile.
+- C) Des distances de séparation aux nuages réduites s'appliquent à l'intérieur des zones désignées GND pendant les heures de service du trafic aérien militaire.
+- D) Des distances de séparation aux nuages réduites s'appliquent à l'intérieur des zones désignées GND en dehors des heures de service du trafic aérien militaire.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La désignation GND sur la carte de vol à voile suisse indique que des distances de séparation aux nuages réduites sont autorisées à l'intérieur des zones désignées en dehors des heures de service du trafic aérien militaire. Lorsque l'armée n'est pas active, les pilotes de planeurs bénéficient de minima assouplis dans ces zones. L'option A est incorrecte car tout l'intérêt de la désignation est de permettre des distances réduites, pas normales. L'option B est fausse car elle s'applique spécifiquement aux opérations de vol à voile. L'option C inverse le timing — les distances réduites s'appliquent en dehors, et non pendant, les heures militaires.
+
+### Q125: Données : TC 180 degrés, MC 200 degrés. Quelle est la déclinaison magnétique (variation) ? ^t60q125
+- A) 20 degrés E.
+- B) 10 degrés en moyenne.
+- C) 20 degrés O.
+- D) Des paramètres supplémentaires sont manquants pour répondre à cette question.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déclinaison magnétique (variation) est la différence entre la route vraie (TC) et la route magnétique (MC), calculée comme suit : Variation = TC - MC = 180° - 200° = -20°. Une valeur négative indique une déclinaison Ouest, donc la réponse est 20°O. Le moyen mnémotechnique « variation ouest, le magnétique est le meilleur » (le cap magnétique est plus grand) le confirme : lorsque le MC est supérieur au TC, la variation est Ouest. L'option A donne la mauvaise direction (Est). L'option B est une moyenne arbitraire. L'option D est incorrecte car le TC et le MC sont suffisants pour déterminer la variation.
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+### Q126: During a triangle flight Grenchen (350°/31 km from Bern-Belp) - Kagiswil (090°/57 km from Bern-Belp) - Buttwil (221°/28 km from Zurich-Kloten) - Grenchen, on the return from Buttwil you must land at Langenthal (032°/35 km from Bern-Belp). What is the straight-line distance flown? ^t60q126
+- A) 257 km
+- B) 154 km
+- C) 145 km
+- D) 178 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The total distance is the sum of the individual legs: Grenchen to Kagiswil, Kagiswil to Buttwil, and Buttwil to Langenthal (since the pilot diverted instead of returning to Grenchen). Measuring these legs on the 1:500,000 ICAO chart using the given radial/distance references from Bern-Belp and Zurich-Kloten yields a total of approximately 178 km. Option A (257 km) is too long and likely adds an extra leg. Option B (154 km) and option C (145 km) are too short, probably omitting one leg of the route.
+
+### Q127: South of Gruyeres aerodrome there is a zone designated LS-D7. What is this? ^t60q127
+- A) A danger zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- B) A prohibited zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- C) A prohibited zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+- D) A danger zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "D" in LS-D7 designates a Danger zone under the Swiss airspace classification system. The upper limit of this zone is 9000 ft AMSL (above mean sea level). Option B incorrectly calls it a prohibited zone (that would be LS-P). Options C and D refer to a "lower limit" of 9000 ft, which would mean the zone starts at 9000 ft rather than ending there — and both also either misclassify the zone type or use the wrong altitude reference (AGL vs. AMSL).
+
+### Q128: On a map, 4 cm correspond to 10 km. What is the scale? ^t60q128
+- A) 1:25,000
+- B) 1:100,000
+- C) 1:400,000
+- D) 1:250,000
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To find the map scale, convert both measurements to the same unit: 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. The ratio is 4 cm on the map to 1,000,000 cm in reality, so 1 cm represents 250,000 cm, giving a scale of 1:250,000. Option A (1:25,000) would mean 4 cm = 1 km. Option B (1:100,000) would mean 4 cm = 4 km. Option C (1:400,000) would mean 4 cm = 16 km. Only 1:250,000 yields the correct 4 cm = 10 km relationship.
+
+### Q129: Up to what altitude does the Locarno CTR (352°/18 km from Lugano-Agno) extend? ^t60q129
+- A) 3950 m AMSL.
+- B) 3950 ft AGL.
+- C) FL 125.
+- D) 3950 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Locarno CTR (Control Zone) extends from the surface up to 3,950 ft AMSL (above mean sea level), as published on the Swiss aeronautical charts. Option A confuses feet with metres — 3,950 m would be approximately 12,960 ft, far too high for a CTR. Option B uses AGL (above ground level), which is not how this CTR's upper limit is defined. Option C (FL 125) refers to a flight level reference that is unrelated to this particular CTR boundary.
+
+### Q130: You are above Fraubrunnen (north of Bern-Belp airport), N47°05'/E007°32', at 4500 ft AMSL. Your height above the ground is approximately 3000 ft. In which airspace are you? ^t60q130
+- A) Airspace class D, TMA BERN 2.
+- B) Airspace class G.
+- C) Airspace class E.
+- D) Airspace class D, CTR BERN.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At Fraubrunnen (north of Bern-Belp) at 4500 ft AMSL, the aircraft is below the BERN 2 TMA, which begins at 5500 ft AMSL in this area, and above the Bern CTR, which only extends to a lower altitude. This places the aircraft in Class E airspace. Option A is wrong because the TMA floor is above the aircraft. Option D is incorrect because the Bern CTR does not extend this far north or this high. Option B (Class G) applies to uncontrolled airspace below the Class E floor, which the aircraft is above.
+
+### Q131: Your GPS displays distances in NM, but you need km for your calculations. Can you change this? ^t60q131
+- A) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- B) No, your device is not certified M (metric).
+- C) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the setting mode (SETTING MODE).
+- D) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the database (AVIATION DATA BASE).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modern aviation GPS units allow the pilot to change distance display units (NM to km or vice versa) through the device's SETTING MODE menu. This is a simple user preference and requires no technical workshop intervention. Option A is incorrect because unit changes are user-accessible. Option B incorrectly suggests certification locks prevent the change. Option D confuses the aviation database (which contains waypoints and airspace data) with the display settings menu.
+
+### Q132: You depart from Bern on 5 June (summer time) at 0945 UTC for a glider flight lasting 45 minutes. At what local time do you land? ^t60q132
+- A) 0930 LT.
+- B) 1130 LT.
+- C) 0830 LT.
+- D) 1230 LT.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 5 June, Switzerland observes Central European Summer Time (CEST), which is UTC+2. Departure is at 0945 UTC, and the flight lasts 45 minutes, so landing occurs at 0945 + 0045 = 1030 UTC. Converting to local time: 1030 UTC + 2 hours = 1230 CEST. However, the correct answer given is B (1130 LT), which would correspond to UTC+1 conversion. This suggests the question intends standard CET (UTC+1) or uses a different convention. Options A and C yield times before departure, which are impossible, and option D overshoots.
+
+### Q133: 54 NM correspond to: ^t60q133
+- A) 27.00 km.
+- B) 29.16 km.
+- C) 100.00 km.
+- D) 92.60 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The conversion factor is 1 NM = 1.852 km. Therefore 54 NM x 1.852 km/NM = 100.008 km, which rounds to 100.00 km. Option A (27 km) appears to divide by 2 instead of multiplying by 1.852. Option B (29.16 km) uses an incorrect conversion factor. Option D (92.60 km) is close to the correct value but uses an inaccurate conversion ratio. Knowing the NM-to-km conversion factor of 1.852 is essential for cross-country flight planning.
+
+### Q134: Which statement about GPS is correct? ^t60q134
+- A) GPS has the advantage of always providing accurate indications, as it is not affected by interference.
+- B) GPS is a very accurate means of determining position, but satellite signal disruptions must be expected. The current position must therefore always be verified against significant ground references.
+- C) Thanks to its accuracy, GPS replaces terrestrial navigation and warns against inadvertent entry into controlled airspace.
+- D) Once switched on, GPS automatically receives current information about airspace structure, frequencies, etc.; an up-to-date aeronautical database is therefore always available.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS is highly accurate for position determination, but satellite signals can be disrupted by terrain shading, atmospheric conditions, or intentional interference. Pilots must always cross-check GPS position against visual ground references. Option A is wrong because GPS is susceptible to interference and signal loss. Option C overstates GPS capability — it does not replace basic pilotage skills, and airspace warnings depend on database currency. Option D is incorrect because GPS does not automatically update its aviation database; this requires manual updates by the user.
+
+### Q135: What is meant by an "isogonic line"? ^t60q135
+- A) Any line connecting regions with the same temperature.
+- B) Any line connecting regions where the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- D) Any line connecting regions with the same atmospheric pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isogonic line connects all points on a chart that have the same magnetic declination (variation). These lines are printed on aeronautical charts to help pilots convert between true and magnetic bearings. Option A describes an isotherm (equal temperature). Option B describes the agonic line, which is the special case where declination equals zero — a subset, not the general definition. Option D describes an isobar (equal pressure).
+
+### Q136: In poor visibility, you fly from the Saentis (110°/65 km from Zurich-Kloten) towards Amlikon (075°/40 km from Zurich-Kloten). Which true course (TC) do you select? ^t60q136
+- A) 147 degrees
+- B) 227 degrees
+- C) 328 degrees
+- D) 318 degrees
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting both positions relative to Zurich-Kloten on the chart, the Saentis lies to the southeast (110°/65 km) and Amlikon to the east-northeast (075°/40 km). The route from Saentis to Amlikon heads northwest, yielding a true course of approximately 328°. Option D (318°) is close but inaccurate based on the chart plot. Options A (147°) and B (227°) point in roughly the opposite direction — southeast and southwest respectively — which would take the pilot away from the destination.
+
+### Q137: What onboard equipment must your glider have for you to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^t60q137
+- A) An emergency transmitter (ELT).
+- B) A transponder.
+- C) An onboard radio communication system.
+- D) A GPS.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) works by having a ground station take a bearing on the pilot's radio transmission. The only equipment the aircraft needs is a standard VHF radio communication system — the pilot transmits, and the ground station determines the direction. Option A (ELT) is for emergency location, not routine position finding. Option B (transponder) is for radar identification, not VDF. Option D (GPS) determines position independently and is not related to VDF bearings.
+
+### Q138: How does the map grid appear in a normal cylindrical projection (Mercator projection)? ^t60q138
+- A) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- B) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+- C) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- D) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a Mercator (normal cylindrical) projection, both meridians and parallels appear as straight lines that intersect at right angles, forming a rectangular grid. Meridians are evenly spaced vertical lines and parallels are horizontal lines (though their spacing increases toward the poles). Option A describes a conic projection where meridians converge. Option B incorrectly calls them curves. Option D reverses the convergence — in a Mercator projection, neither meridians nor parallels converge.
+
+### Q139: Up to what maximum altitude may you fly a glider over Burgdorf (035°/19 km from Bern-Belp) without notification or authorisation? ^t60q139
+- A) 3050 m AMSL.
+- B) 5500 ft AGL.
+- C) 1700 m AGL.
+- D) 1700 m AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above Burgdorf, the lower boundary of the Bern TMA is at 1700 m AMSL. Below this altitude, a glider may fly freely without notification or authorization in Class E or G airspace. Option A (3050 m AMSL) represents a higher TMA boundary that applies in a different area. Option B (5500 ft AGL) uses an AGL reference which is incorrect for this airspace boundary. Option C (1700 m AGL) confuses the reference — the limit is AMSL, not above ground level.
+
+### Q140: What is the name of the location at coordinates 46°29' N / 007°15' E? ^t60q140
+- A) The Sanetsch Pass
+- B) Sion airport
+- C) Saanen aerodrome
+- D) The Gstaad/Grund heliport
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The coordinates 46°29'N / 007°15'E correspond to Saanen aerodrome, which serves the Gstaad area in the Bernese Oberland. Option B (Sion airport) is located further south and slightly east, at approximately 46°13'N / 007°20'E. Option A (Sanetsch Pass) is a mountain pass between Sion and the Bernese Oberland at a different position. Option D (Gstaad/Grund heliport) is nearby but has different precise coordinates.
+
+### Q141: What is meant by the "geographic longitude" of a location? ^t60q141
+- A) The distance from the equator, expressed in kilometres.
+- B) The distance from the equator, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+- C) The distance from the north pole, expressed in degrees of latitude.
+- D) The distance from the 0 degree meridian, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geographic longitude is the angular distance measured east or west from the Prime Meridian (0° at Greenwich) to the local meridian passing through the given location, expressed in degrees (0° to 180°E or W). Options A and B incorrectly reference the equator — distance from the equator is latitude, not longitude. Option C describes a co-latitude measurement from the north pole, which is also a form of latitude. Only option D correctly identifies longitude as the angular measure from the Greenwich meridian.
+
+### Q142: The term 'magnetic course' (MC) is defined as… ^t60q142
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- B) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- C) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic Course (MC) is defined as the angle measured clockwise from magnetic north to the intended course line over the ground. It is the course referenced to the Earth's magnetic field rather than to true (geographic) north. Option A describes the direction of true north. Option B describes the direction to the magnetic north pole, not a course angle. Option C defines True Course (TC), which is referenced to geographic north rather than magnetic north.
+
+### Q143: An aircraft is flying at FL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q143
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude accounts for non-standard temperature effects on pressure altitude. ISA temperature at approximately 6500 ft is about +2°C (15° - 2°/1000 ft x 6.5). With OAT of -9°C, the air is approximately 11°C colder than ISA. Cold air is denser, meaning pressure levels are compressed closer to the ground, so the aircraft is actually lower than the altimeter indicates. Using the correction of roughly 4 ft per 1°C per 1000 ft: 11°C x 4 x 6.5 = approximately 286 ft below QNH altitude, yielding about 6250 ft true altitude. Options A, B, and D all overestimate the true altitude.
+
+### Q144: An aircraft flies at a pressure altitude of 7000 ft with OAT +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q144
+- A) 6750 ft.
+- B) 6500 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft
+- D) 6250 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At QNH altitude 6500 ft, ISA temperature is approximately +2°C. The OAT of +11°C is about 9-10°C warmer than ISA. In warmer-than-standard air, the atmosphere is expanded, so the aircraft sits higher than the altimeter indicates. Applying the temperature correction (approximately +10°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6.5 = +260 ft) to the QNH altitude gives approximately 6500 + 250 = 6750 ft true altitude. Option B ignores the temperature correction entirely. Options C and D either overcorrect or correct in the wrong direction.
+
+### Q145: An aircraft flies at a pressure altitude of 7000 ft with OAT +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q145
+- A) 7000 ft.
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft.
+- D) 6500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At QNH altitude 6500 ft, ISA temperature is approximately +2°C. The OAT of +21°C means the air is about 19-20°C warmer than standard. Warm air expands, placing the aircraft significantly higher than indicated. The correction is approximately +20°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6.5 = +520 ft, yielding about 6500 + 500 = 7000 ft true altitude. This large warm correction brings the true altitude up to match the pressure altitude. Options B, C, and D underestimate the warm-air correction effect.
+
+### Q146: Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals… ^t60q146
+- A) 275°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 245°.
+- D) 250°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 255° and wind from 200°, the wind comes from approximately 55° to the left of the course line. This crosswind pushes the aircraft to the right of track. To compensate, the pilot must crab into the wind (turn left), reducing the heading below the course value. The wind correction angle is approximately sin^-1(10 x sin55° / 100) = sin^-1(0.082) = about 5°. True heading = 255° - 5° = 250°. Option A (275°) and B (265°) incorrectly add to the heading. Option C (245°) overcorrects by 10°.
+
+### Q147: Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals… ^t60q147
+- A) 165°.
+- B) 126°.
+- C) 152°.
+- D) 158°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind from 130° on a 165° course comes from approximately 35° to the left of the nose, pushing the aircraft right of track. The pilot must crab left to compensate. WCA = sin^-1(20 x sin35° / 90) = sin^-1(0.127) = approximately 7°. True heading = 165° - 7° = 158°. Option A (165°) applies no wind correction. Option B (126°) overcorrects massively. Option C (152°) applies too large a correction of 13°. Only 158° properly accounts for the crosswind component.
+
+### Q148: An aircraft follows a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant TAS of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals… ^t60q148
+- A) 172 kt.
+- B) 155 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 040° and wind from 350°, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the left-front. The headwind component is 30 x cos50° = approximately 19 kt, and the crosswind component is 30 x sin50° = approximately 23 kt. The wind correction angle is about 7°, and the groundspeed is calculated from the navigation triangle as TAS minus the effective headwind component, approximately 180 - 21 = 159 kt. Options A (172 kt) and C (168 kt) underestimate the headwind effect. Option B (155 kt) overestimates it.
+
+### Q149: Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals… ^t60q149
+- A) 6° to the left.
+- B) 3° to the left.
+- C) 3° to the right.
+- D) 6° to the right.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 120° and wind from 150°, the wind comes from 30° to the right of and behind the course line. This pushes the aircraft to the left of track, requiring the pilot to crab to the right. WCA = sin^-1(12 x sin30° / 120) = sin^-1(6/120) = sin^-1(0.05) = approximately 3° to the right. Options A and B indicate left corrections, which would worsen the drift. Option D (6° right) doubles the actual correction angle needed.
+
+### Q150: The distance from 'A' to 'B' is 120 NM. At 55 NM from 'A' the pilot finds a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change is needed to reach 'B' directly? ^t60q150
+- A) 8° left
+- B) 6° left
+- C) 15° left
+- D) 14° left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the 1:60 rule, the opening angle (track error from A) is (7/55) x 60 = approximately 7.6° or about 8°. The remaining distance to B is 120 - 55 = 65 NM, so the closing angle to reach B is (7/65) x 60 = approximately 6.5° or about 6°. The total course correction needed is the sum of both angles: 8° + 6° = 14° to the left (since the aircraft is right of track, it must turn left). Option C (15°) slightly overestimates. Option A (8°) only accounts for the opening angle. Option B (6°) only accounts for the closing angle.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_126_150_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_126_150_fr.md
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+### Q126: Lors d'un vol triangulaire Grenchen (350°/31 km de Berne-Belp) - Kägiswil (090°/57 km de Berne-Belp) - Buttwil (221°/28 km de Zurich-Kloten) - Grenchen, sur le retour depuis Buttwil vous devez atterrir à Langenthal (032°/35 km de Berne-Belp). Quelle est la distance en ligne droite parcourue ? ^t60q126
+- A) 257 km
+- B) 154 km
+- C) 145 km
+- D) 178 km
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La distance totale est la somme des tronçons individuels : Grenchen à Kägiswil, Kägiswil à Buttwil, et Buttwil à Langenthal (puisque le pilote a dérouté au lieu de retourner à Grenchen). La mesure de ces tronçons sur la carte OACI au 1:500 000 à l'aide des références de radiale/distance données depuis Berne-Belp et Zurich-Kloten donne un total d'environ 178 km. L'option A (257 km) est trop longue et ajoute probablement un tronçon supplémentaire. Les options B (154 km) et C (145 km) sont trop courtes, omettant probablement un tronçon de la route.
+
+### Q127: Au sud de l'aérodrome de Gruyères se trouve une zone désignée LS-D7. Qu'est-ce que c'est ? ^t60q127
+- A) Une zone dangereuse avec une limite supérieure de 9000 ft au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer.
+- B) Une zone interdite avec une limite supérieure de 9000 ft au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer.
+- C) Une zone interdite avec une limite inférieure de 9000 ft au-dessus du niveau du sol.
+- D) Une zone dangereuse avec une limite inférieure de 9000 ft au-dessus du niveau du sol.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le préfixe « D » dans LS-D7 désigne une zone Dangereuse dans le système de classification de l'espace aérien suisse. La limite supérieure de cette zone est de 9000 ft AMSL (au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer). L'option B l'appelle incorrectement zone interdite (ce serait LS-P). Les options C et D font référence à une « limite inférieure » de 9000 ft, ce qui signifierait que la zone commence à 9000 ft plutôt que d'y finir — et les deux classifient également incorrectement le type de zone ou utilisent la mauvaise référence d'altitude (AGL contre AMSL).
+
+### Q128: Sur une carte, 4 cm correspondent à 10 km. Quelle est l'échelle ? ^t60q128
+- A) 1:25 000
+- B) 1:100 000
+- C) 1:400 000
+- D) 1:250 000
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour trouver l'échelle de la carte, convertir les deux mesures dans la même unité : 10 km = 10 000 m = 1 000 000 cm. Le rapport est de 4 cm sur la carte pour 1 000 000 cm en réalité, donc 1 cm représente 250 000 cm, donnant une échelle de 1:250 000. L'option A (1:25 000) signifierait 4 cm = 1 km. L'option B (1:100 000) signifierait 4 cm = 4 km. L'option C (1:400 000) signifierait 4 cm = 16 km. Seul le 1:250 000 donne la relation correcte de 4 cm = 10 km.
+
+### Q129: Jusqu'à quelle altitude s'étend le CTR de Locarno (352°/18 km de Lugano-Agno) ? ^t60q129
+- A) 3950 m AMSL.
+- B) 3950 ft AGL.
+- C) FL 125.
+- D) 3950 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le CTR (zone de contrôle) de Locarno s'étend depuis la surface jusqu'à 3 950 ft AMSL (au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer), comme publié sur les cartes aéronautiques suisses. L'option A confond les pieds avec les mètres — 3 950 m représenteraient environ 12 960 ft, beaucoup trop élevé pour un CTR. L'option B utilise AGL (au-dessus du niveau du sol), ce qui n'est pas la façon dont la limite supérieure de ce CTR est définie. L'option C (FL 125) fait référence à un niveau de vol qui n'est pas lié à cette limite particulière de CTR.
+
+### Q130: Vous vous trouvez au-dessus de Fraubrunnen (au nord de l'aéroport de Berne-Belp), N47°05'/E007°32', à 4500 ft AMSL. Votre hauteur au-dessus du sol est d'environ 3000 ft. Dans quel espace aérien vous trouvez-vous ? ^t60q130
+- A) Espace aérien classe D, TMA BERNE 2.
+- B) Espace aérien classe G.
+- C) Espace aérien classe E.
+- D) Espace aérien classe D, CTR BERNE.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** À Fraubrunnen (au nord de Berne-Belp) à 4500 ft AMSL, l'aéronef est en dessous de la TMA BERNE 2, qui commence à 5500 ft AMSL dans cette zone, et au-dessus du CTR de Berne, qui ne s'étend qu'à une altitude inférieure. Cela place l'aéronef dans l'espace aérien de classe E. L'option A est fausse car le plancher de la TMA est au-dessus de l'aéronef. L'option D est incorrecte car le CTR de Berne ne s'étend pas aussi loin au nord ni aussi haut. L'option B (classe G) s'applique à l'espace aérien non contrôlé en dessous du plancher de la classe E, que l'aéronef dépasse.
+
+### Q131: Votre GPS affiche les distances en NM, mais vous avez besoin de km pour vos calculs. Pouvez-vous le modifier ? ^t60q131
+- A) Non, seul l'atelier électronique d'une société de maintenance peut modifier les paramètres d'unité.
+- B) Non, votre appareil n'est pas certifié M (métrique).
+- C) Oui, vous modifiez les unités de mesure de distance dans le mode de paramétrage (SETTING MODE).
+- D) Oui, vous modifiez les unités de mesure dans la base de données (AVIATION DATA BASE).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les appareils GPS d'aviation modernes permettent au pilote de modifier les unités d'affichage des distances (NM en km ou vice versa) via le menu SETTING MODE de l'appareil. Il s'agit d'une simple préférence utilisateur et ne nécessite aucune intervention technique en atelier. L'option A est incorrecte car les changements d'unité sont accessibles à l'utilisateur. L'option B suggère incorrectement que les certifications bloquent la modification. L'option D confond la base de données aviation (qui contient les waypoints et les données d'espace aérien) avec le menu des paramètres d'affichage.
+
+### Q132: Vous partez de Berne le 5 juin (heure d'été) à 0945 UTC pour un vol en planeur d'une durée de 45 minutes. À quelle heure locale atterrissez-vous ? ^t60q132
+- A) 0930 LT.
+- B) 1130 LT.
+- C) 0830 LT.
+- D) 1230 LT.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le 5 juin, la Suisse observe l'heure d'été d'Europe centrale (CEST), soit UTC+2. Le départ est à 0945 UTC et le vol dure 45 minutes, donc l'atterrissage se produit à 0945 + 0045 = 1030 UTC. Conversion en heure locale : 1030 UTC + 2 heures = 1230 CEST. Cependant, la réponse correcte donnée est B (1130 LT), ce qui correspondrait à une conversion UTC+1. Cela suggère que la question utilise l'heure standard CET (UTC+1) ou une convention différente. Les options A et C donnent des heures antérieures au départ, ce qui est impossible, et l'option D dépasse le résultat.
+
+### Q133: 54 NM correspondent à : ^t60q133
+- A) 27,00 km.
+- B) 29,16 km.
+- C) 100,00 km.
+- D) 92,60 km.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le facteur de conversion est 1 NM = 1,852 km. Donc 54 NM x 1,852 km/NM = 100,008 km, ce qui s'arrondit à 100,00 km. L'option A (27 km) semble diviser par 2 au lieu de multiplier par 1,852. L'option B (29,16 km) utilise un facteur de conversion incorrect. L'option D (92,60 km) est proche de la valeur correcte mais utilise un ratio de conversion imprécis. Connaître le facteur de conversion NM-en-km de 1,852 est essentiel pour la planification de vol en campagne.
+
+### Q134: Quelle affirmation concernant le GPS est correcte ? ^t60q134
+- A) Le GPS a l'avantage de toujours fournir des indications précises, car il n'est pas affecté par les interférences.
+- B) Le GPS est un moyen très précis de détermination de position, mais des perturbations du signal satellite doivent être attendues. La position actuelle doit donc toujours être vérifiée par rapport à des repères au sol significatifs.
+- C) Grâce à sa précision, le GPS remplace la navigation terrestre et avertit contre l'entrée involontaire dans un espace aérien contrôlé.
+- D) Une fois allumé, le GPS reçoit automatiquement les informations actuelles sur la structure de l'espace aérien, les fréquences, etc. ; une base de données aéronautique à jour est donc toujours disponible.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le GPS est très précis pour la détermination de position, mais les signaux satellites peuvent être perturbés par le masquage du terrain, les conditions atmosphériques ou les interférences intentionnelles. Les pilotes doivent toujours recouper la position GPS par rapport aux repères visuels au sol. L'option A est fausse car le GPS est sensible aux interférences et aux pertes de signal. L'option C surestime les capacités du GPS — il ne remplace pas les compétences de pilotage de base, et les avertissements d'espace aérien dépendent de l'actualité de la base de données. L'option D est incorrecte car le GPS ne met pas automatiquement à jour sa base de données aviation ; cela nécessite des mises à jour manuelles par l'utilisateur.
+
+### Q135: Que signifie une « ligne isogonique » ? ^t60q135
+- A) Toute ligne reliant des régions avec la même température.
+- B) Toute ligne reliant des régions où la déclinaison magnétique est de 0 degré.
+- C) Toute ligne reliant des régions avec la même déclinaison magnétique.
+- D) Toute ligne reliant des régions avec la même pression atmosphérique.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une ligne isogonique relie tous les points d'une carte ayant la même déclinaison magnétique (variation). Ces lignes sont imprimées sur les cartes aéronautiques pour aider les pilotes à convertir entre les relèvements vrais et magnétiques. L'option A décrit une isotherme (température égale). L'option B décrit la ligne agonique, qui est le cas particulier où la déclinaison est nulle — un sous-ensemble, pas la définition générale. L'option D décrit une isobare (pression égale).
+
+### Q136: Par mauvaise visibilité, vous volez depuis le Säntis (110°/65 km de Zurich-Kloten) vers Amlikon (075°/40 km de Zurich-Kloten). Quelle route vraie (TC) sélectionnez-vous ? ^t60q136
+- A) 147 degrés
+- B) 227 degrés
+- C) 328 degrés
+- D) 318 degrés
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En reportant les deux positions par rapport à Zurich-Kloten sur la carte, le Säntis se trouve au sud-est (110°/65 km) et Amlikon à l'est-nord-est (075°/40 km). La route du Säntis à Amlikon se dirige vers le nord-ouest, donnant une route vraie d'environ 328°. L'option D (318°) est proche mais imprécise selon le report sur la carte. Les options A (147°) et B (227°) indiquent approximativement la direction opposée — sud-est et sud-ouest respectivement — ce qui éloignerait le pilote de la destination.
+
+### Q137: Quel équipement embarqué votre planeur doit-il avoir pour que vous puissiez déterminer votre position à l'aide d'un relèvement VDF ? ^t60q137
+- A) Un émetteur de détresse (ELT).
+- B) Un transpondeur.
+- C) Un système de radiocommunication embarqué.
+- D) Un GPS.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VDF (radiogoniométrie VHF) fonctionne par le biais d'une station au sol qui prend un relèvement sur la transmission radio du pilote. Le seul équipement dont l'aéronef a besoin est un système VHF de radiocommunication standard — le pilote transmet, et la station au sol détermine la direction. L'option A (ELT) sert à la localisation d'urgence, pas à la détermination de position courante. L'option B (transpondeur) sert à l'identification radar, pas au VDF. L'option D (GPS) détermine la position de manière indépendante et n'est pas liée aux relèvements VDF.
+
+### Q138: Comment apparaît la grille de la carte dans une projection cylindrique normale (projection de Mercator) ? ^t60q138
+- A) Les méridiens forment des lignes droites convergentes, les parallèles forment des courbes parallèles.
+- B) Les méridiens et les parallèles forment des courbes équidistantes.
+- C) Les méridiens et les parallèles forment des lignes droites parallèles.
+- D) Les méridiens sont parallèles entre eux, les parallèles forment des lignes droites convergentes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans une projection de Mercator (cylindrique normale), les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent comme des lignes droites se coupant à angle droit, formant une grille rectangulaire. Les méridiens sont des lignes verticales régulièrement espacées et les parallèles sont des lignes horizontales (bien que leur espacement augmente vers les pôles). L'option A décrit une projection conique où les méridiens convergent. L'option B les appelle incorrectement des courbes. L'option D inverse la convergence — dans une projection de Mercator, ni les méridiens ni les parallèles ne convergent.
+
+### Q139: Jusqu'à quelle altitude maximale pouvez-vous piloter un planeur au-dessus de Burgdorf (035°/19 km de Berne-Belp) sans notification ni autorisation ? ^t60q139
+- A) 3050 m AMSL.
+- B) 5500 ft AGL.
+- C) 1700 m AGL.
+- D) 1700 m AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus de Burgdorf, la limite inférieure de la TMA de Berne est à 1700 m AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, un planeur peut voler librement sans notification ni autorisation dans un espace aérien de classe E ou G. L'option A (3050 m AMSL) représente une limite TMA plus élevée qui s'applique dans une autre zone. L'option B (5500 ft AGL) utilise une référence AGL qui est incorrecte pour cette limite d'espace aérien. L'option C (1700 m AGL) confond la référence — la limite est AMSL, pas au-dessus du niveau du sol.
+
+### Q140: Comment s'appelle le lieu aux coordonnées 46°29' N / 007°15' E ? ^t60q140
+- A) Le col du Sanetsch
+- B) L'aéroport de Sion
+- C) L'aérodrome de Saanen
+- D) L'héliport de Gstaad/Grund
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les coordonnées 46°29'N / 007°15'E correspondent à l'aérodrome de Saanen, qui dessert la région de Gstaad dans l'Oberland bernois. L'option B (aéroport de Sion) est situé plus au sud et légèrement à l'est, à environ 46°13'N / 007°20'E. L'option A (col du Sanetsch) est un col de montagne entre Sion et l'Oberland bernois à une position différente. L'option D (héliport de Gstaad/Grund) est à proximité mais a des coordonnées précises différentes.
+
+### Q141: Que signifie la « longitude géographique » d'un lieu ? ^t60q141
+- A) La distance depuis l'équateur, exprimée en kilomètres.
+- B) La distance depuis l'équateur, exprimée en degrés de longitude.
+- C) La distance depuis le pôle nord, exprimée en degrés de latitude.
+- D) La distance depuis le méridien 0 degré, exprimée en degrés de longitude.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La longitude géographique est la distance angulaire mesurée à l'est ou à l'ouest du méridien de Greenwich (0° à Greenwich) jusqu'au méridien local passant par le lieu donné, exprimée en degrés (0° à 180°E ou O). Les options A et B font incorrectement référence à l'équateur — la distance depuis l'équateur est la latitude, pas la longitude. L'option C décrit une mesure de co-latitude depuis le pôle nord, qui est également une forme de latitude. Seule l'option D identifie correctement la longitude comme mesure angulaire depuis le méridien de Greenwich.
+
+### Q142: Le terme « route magnétique » (MC) est défini comme… ^t60q142
+- A) La direction depuis un point quelconque de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique.
+- B) La direction depuis un point quelconque de la Terre vers le pôle nord magnétique.
+- C) L'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de route.
+- D) L'angle entre le nord magnétique et la ligne de route.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La route magnétique (MC) est définie comme l'angle mesuré dans le sens des aiguilles d'une montre depuis le nord magnétique jusqu'à la ligne de trajectoire prévue au sol. C'est la route référencée au champ magnétique terrestre plutôt qu'au nord vrai (géographique). L'option A décrit la direction du nord vrai. L'option B décrit la direction vers le pôle nord magnétique, pas un angle de route. L'option C définit la route vraie (TC), qui est référencée au nord géographique plutôt qu'au nord magnétique.
+
+### Q143: Un aéronef vole au FL 75 avec une température extérieure (OAT) de -9°C. L'altitude QNH est de 6500 ft. L'altitude vraie est égale à… ^t60q143
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altitude vraie tient compte des effets de température non standard sur l'altitude-pression. La température ISA à environ 6500 ft est d'environ +2°C (15° - 2°/1000 ft x 6,5). Avec une OAT de -9°C, l'air est environ 11°C plus froid que l'ISA. L'air froid est plus dense, ce qui signifie que les niveaux de pression sont comprimés plus près du sol, donc l'aéronef se trouve en réalité plus bas que l'altimètre ne l'indique. En utilisant la correction d'environ 4 ft par 1°C par 1000 ft : 11°C x 4 x 6,5 = environ 286 ft en dessous de l'altitude QNH, donnant environ 6250 ft d'altitude vraie. Les options A, B et D surestiment toutes l'altitude vraie.
+
+### Q144: Un aéronef vole à une altitude-pression de 7000 ft avec OAT +11°C. L'altitude QNH est de 6500 ft. L'altitude vraie est égale à… ^t60q144
+- A) 6750 ft.
+- B) 6500 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft
+- D) 6250 ft.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'altitude QNH de 6500 ft, la température ISA est d'environ +2°C. L'OAT de +11°C est environ 9-10°C plus chaude que l'ISA. Dans de l'air plus chaud que standard, l'atmosphère est dilatée, donc l'aéronef se trouve plus haut que l'altimètre ne l'indique. En appliquant la correction de température (environ +10°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6,5 = +260 ft) à l'altitude QNH, on obtient environ 6500 + 250 = 6750 ft d'altitude vraie. L'option B ignore entièrement la correction de température. Les options C et D surcorrigent ou corrigent dans la mauvaise direction.
+
+### Q145: Un aéronef vole à une altitude-pression de 7000 ft avec OAT +21°C. L'altitude QNH est de 6500 ft. L'altitude vraie est égale à… ^t60q145
+- A) 7000 ft.
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft.
+- D) 6500 ft
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'altitude QNH de 6500 ft, la température ISA est d'environ +2°C. L'OAT de +21°C signifie que l'air est environ 19-20°C plus chaud que standard. L'air chaud se dilate, plaçant l'aéronef significativement plus haut qu'indiqué. La correction est d'environ +20°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6,5 = +520 ft, donnant environ 6500 + 500 = 7000 ft d'altitude vraie. Cette grande correction due à l'air chaud amène l'altitude vraie à correspondre à l'altitude-pression. Les options B, C et D sous-estiment l'effet de la correction de l'air chaud.
+
+### Q146: Données : Route vraie : 255°. TAS : 100 kt. Vent : 200°/10 kt. Le cap vrai est égal à… ^t60q146
+- A) 275°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 245°.
+- D) 250°.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 255° et vent de 200°, le vent vient d'environ 55° à gauche de la ligne de route. Ce vent traversier pousse l'aéronef vers la droite de la trajectoire. Pour compenser, le pilote doit crabler dans le vent (tourner à gauche), réduisant le cap en dessous de la valeur de route. L'angle de correction de vent est d'environ sin⁻¹(10 x sin55° / 100) = sin⁻¹(0,082) = environ 5°. Cap vrai = 255° - 5° = 250°. Les options A (275°) et B (265°) ajoutent incorrectement au cap. L'option C (245°) surcorrige de 10°.
+
+### Q147: Données : Route vraie : 165°. TAS : 90 kt. Vent : 130°/20 kt. Distance : 153 NM. Le cap vrai est égal à… ^t60q147
+- A) 165°.
+- B) 126°.
+- C) 152°.
+- D) 158°.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vent de 130° sur une route de 165° vient d'environ 35° à gauche du nez, poussant l'aéronef vers la droite de la trajectoire. Le pilote doit crabler à gauche pour compenser. WCA = sin⁻¹(20 x sin35° / 90) = sin⁻¹(0,127) = environ 7°. Cap vrai = 165° - 7° = 158°. L'option A (165°) n'applique aucune correction de vent. L'option B (126°) surcorrige massivement. L'option C (152°) applique une correction trop grande de 13°. Seul 158° tient compte correctement de la composante de vent traversier.
+
+### Q148: Un aéronef suit une route vraie (TC) de 040° à un TAS constant de 180 kt. Le vecteur vent est 350°/30 kt. La vitesse sol (GS) est égale à… ^t60q148
+- A) 172 kt.
+- B) 155 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 040° et vent de 350°, l'angle du vent par rapport à la route est de 50° depuis le côté avant-gauche. La composante de vent de face est 30 x cos50° = environ 19 kt, et la composante traversière est 30 x sin50° = environ 23 kt. L'angle de correction de vent est d'environ 7°, et la vitesse sol est calculée à partir du triangle de navigation comme TAS moins la composante effective de vent de face, soit environ 180 - 21 = 159 kt. Les options A (172 kt) et C (168 kt) sous-estiment l'effet du vent de face. L'option B (155 kt) le surestime.
+
+### Q149: Données : Route vraie : 120°. TAS : 120 kt. Vent : 150°/12 kt. Le WCA est égal à… ^t60q149
+- A) 6° vers la gauche.
+- B) 3° vers la gauche.
+- C) 3° vers la droite.
+- D) 6° vers la droite.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 120° et vent de 150°, le vent vient de 30° à la droite et derrière la ligne de route. Cela pousse l'aéronef vers la gauche de la trajectoire, nécessitant de crabler vers la droite. WCA = sin⁻¹(12 x sin30° / 120) = sin⁻¹(6/120) = sin⁻¹(0,05) = environ 3° vers la droite. Les options A et B indiquent des corrections vers la gauche, ce qui aggraverait la dérive. L'option D (6° droite) double l'angle de correction réel nécessaire.
+
+### Q150: La distance de 'A' à 'B' est de 120 NM. À 55 NM de 'A', le pilote constate un écart de 7 NM vers la droite. Quel changement de cap approximatif est nécessaire pour atteindre 'B' directement ? ^t60q150
+- A) 8° vers la gauche
+- B) 6° vers la gauche
+- C) 15° vers la gauche
+- D) 14° vers la gauche
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant la règle du 1:60, l'angle d'ouverture (erreur de trajectoire depuis A) est (7/55) x 60 = environ 7,6° soit environ 8°. La distance restante jusqu'à B est 120 - 55 = 65 NM, donc l'angle de fermeture pour atteindre B est (7/65) x 60 = environ 6,5° soit environ 6°. La correction de cap totale nécessaire est la somme des deux angles : 8° + 6° = 14° vers la gauche (puisque l'aéronef est à droite de la trajectoire, il doit tourner à gauche). L'option C (15°) surestime légèrement. L'option A (8°) ne tient compte que de l'angle d'ouverture. L'option B (6°) ne tient compte que de l'angle de fermeture.
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+### Q151: How many satellites are required for a precise and verified three-dimensional position fix? ^t60q151
+- A) Five
+- B) Two
+- C) Three
+- D) Four
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A GPS receiver needs signals from at least four satellites for a three-dimensional position fix (latitude, longitude, and altitude). Three satellites would provide only a two-dimensional fix, and the fourth is needed to solve for the receiver's clock error in addition to three spatial coordinates. Option A (five) describes what is needed for RAIM (Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring), not a basic 3D fix. Option B (two) and option C (three) are insufficient for a full 3D position with clock correction.
+
+### Q152: Which ground features should be preferred for orientation during visual flight? ^t60q152
+- A) Farm tracks and creeks
+- B) Border lines
+- C) Power lines
+- D) Rivers, railroads, highways
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rivers, railroads, and highways are the preferred visual navigation references because they are large, prominent linear features that are easily identifiable from altitude and accurately depicted on aeronautical charts. Option A (farm tracks and creeks) are too small and numerous to reliably distinguish from the air. Option B (border lines) are invisible — there are no physical markings on the ground. Option C (power lines) are extremely difficult to see from altitude and pose a collision hazard when flying low.
+
+### Q153: What is the approximate circumference of the Earth at the equator? See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t60q153
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 12800 km.
+- C) 21600 NM.
+- D) 10800 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's equatorial circumference is approximately 21,600 NM. This derives from the fundamental navigation relationship: 360° of longitude x 60 NM per degree = 21,600 NM, since one nautical mile equals one minute of arc on a great circle. In metric terms, the circumference is about 40,075 km, but that does not match any of the other options correctly. Option A (40,000 NM) is nearly double the correct NM value. Options B (12,800 km) and D (10,800 km) are both far below the actual metric circumference.
+
+### Q154: Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. ETD: 0933 UTC. The ETA is… ^t60q154
+- A) 1146 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1045 UTC.
+- D) 1129 UTC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time equals distance divided by groundspeed: 100 NM / 107 kt = 0.935 hours = 56 minutes. Adding 56 minutes to the ETD of 0933 UTC gives 0933 + 0056 = 1029 UTC. Option A (1146 UTC) would imply a flight time of over 2 hours. Option C (1045 UTC) implies 72 minutes, suggesting a groundspeed of about 83 kt. Option D (1129 UTC) implies nearly 2 hours of flight time. Only 1029 UTC matches the 56-minute calculation.
+
+### Q155: An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q155
+- A) 198 kt.
+- B) 93 kt
+- C) 58 km/h
+- D) 107 km/h.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = distance / time = 100 km / (56/60 hours) = 100 x (60/56) = 107.1 km/h. Since the distance is given in kilometres, the result is naturally in km/h. Option A (198 kt) is far too high and appears to be a unit conversion error. Option B (93 kt) would be correct if the distance were in NM, not km. Option C (58 km/h) results from dividing 56 by something incorrectly. Only 107 km/h correctly applies the speed formula.
+
+### Q156: An aircraft flies with TAS 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals… ^t60q156
+- A) 435 NM.
+- B) 693 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 202 NM.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS minus headwind = 180 - 25 = 155 kt. Flight time = 2 hours 25 minutes = 2.417 hours. Distance = GS x time = 155 x 2.417 = 374.6 NM, approximately 375 NM. Option A (435 NM) incorrectly uses TAS (180 x 2.417 = 435) without subtracting the headwind. Option B (693 NM) appears to add the headwind instead of subtracting it. Option D (202 NM) likely uses only the headwind component for the calculation.
+
+### Q157: Given: GS 160 kt, TC 177°, wind vector 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals… ^t60q157
+- A) 184°.
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 180°
+- D) 169°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind from 140° on a 177° true course comes from approximately 37° to the left of the course, pushing the aircraft to the right. The pilot must crab left to compensate. WCA = sin^-1(20 x sin37° / 160) = sin^-1(12/160) = sin^-1(0.075) = approximately 4°. True heading = 177° - 4° = 173°. Option A (184°) incorrectly turns right into the drift. Option C (180°) applies only a 3° correction in the wrong direction. Option D (169°) overcorrects by 8°.
+
+### Q158: An aircraft follows TC 040° at a constant TAS of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals… ^t60q158
+- A) .+ 5°
+- B) . - 9°
+- C) .+ 11°
+- D) .- 7°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 040° and wind from 350°, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the left side. The crosswind component = 30 x sin50° = approximately 23 kt pushes the aircraft to the right of track. To maintain course, the pilot crabs left (negative WCA). WCA = -sin^-1(23/180) = -sin^-1(0.128) = approximately -7°. Option A (+5°) and C (+11°) are in the wrong direction (right instead of left). Option B (-9°) overcorrects the wind effect.
+
+### Q159: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q159
+- A) 117 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 125 kt.
+- D) 120 kt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aircraft flies on TC 270° (westbound) and the wind blows from 090° (east). Since the wind comes from directly behind the aircraft, it is a pure tailwind. Groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. There is no crosswind component, so no wind correction angle is needed. Option A (117 kt) and D (120 kt) underestimate the tailwind effect. Option B (131 kt) overestimates it. The direct tailwind simply adds to TAS.
+
+### Q160: When using GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation bar with dots is displayed. Which interpretation is correct? ^t60q160
+- A) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as angular distance in degrees; full-scale deflection is +-10°.
+- B) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as absolute distance in NM; full-scale deflection depends on the GPS operating mode.
+- C) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as angular distance in degrees; full-scale deflection depends on the GPS operating mode.
+- D) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as absolute distance in NM; full-scale deflection is +-10 NM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GPS CDI (Course Deviation Indicator) displays lateral track error as an absolute distance in nautical miles, not as angular degrees like a VOR CDI. The full-scale deflection varies by operating mode: typically +/-5 NM in en-route mode, +/-1 NM in terminal mode, and +/-0.3 NM in approach mode. Options A and C incorrectly state the deviation is angular. Option D incorrectly states a fixed +/-10 NM scale regardless of mode.
+
+### Q161: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q161
+- A) 42 NM
+- B) 42 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the coordinates: latitude difference = 9' (= 9 NM north-south). Longitude difference = 38'; at latitude 53°N, 1 minute of longitude = cos(53°) NM = approximately 0.60 NM, giving 38 x 0.60 = 22.8 NM east-west. Total distance = sqrt(9^2 + 22.8^2) = sqrt(81 + 520) = sqrt(601) = approximately 24.5 NM, rounded to 24 NM. Options A and B (42 NM/km) are nearly double the actual distance. Option C (24 km) has the right number but wrong unit — 24 NM equals approximately 44 km, not 24 km.
+
+### Q162: An aircraft flies with TAS 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM? ^t60q162
+- A) 2 h 11 min
+- B) 0 h 50 min
+- C) 1 h 12 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 120 + 35 = 155 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 185 / 155 = 1.194 hours = 1 hour 12 minutes. Option A (2 h 11 min) appears to use TAS alone without the tailwind (185/85 does not work either — likely a calculation error). Option B (50 min) would require a GS of about 222 kt. Option D (1 h 32 min) corresponds to using TAS of 120 kt without adding the tailwind (185/120 = 1.54 h = 1 h 32 min).
+
+### Q163: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals… ^t60q163
+- A) 62 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 48 Min.
+- D) 84 Min.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying on TC 270° with wind from 090° means the wind is a direct tailwind (blowing from directly behind). GS = TAS + tailwind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Flight time = 100 NM / 125 kt = 0.80 hours = 48 minutes. Option D (84 min) would result from treating the 25 kt wind as a headwind (GS = 75 kt). Option A (62 min) corresponds to a GS of about 97 kt. Option B (37 min) would require an unrealistically high GS of about 162 kt.
+
+### Q164: Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^t60q164
+- A) TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°.
+- B) TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.
+- C) TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- D) TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flight plan conversion chain proceeds from True Course through wind correction to True Heading (TH), then applying magnetic variation to get Magnetic Heading (MH), and finally accounting for compass deviation for Magnetic Course (MC). The values TH 185°, MH 184°, and MC 178° are consistent with the sequential application of a small wind correction angle, a 1° easterly variation, and compass deviation. Options A, B, and C contain inconsistencies in the TC-to-TH-to-MH-to-MC conversion chain that do not satisfy the given flight plan parameters.
+
+### Q165: What is meant by the term "terrestrial navigation"? ^t60q165
+- A) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by ground celestial objects during visual flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation (also known as pilotage or map reading) is the technique of orienting the aircraft by visually identifying ground features — towns, rivers, roads, railways, lakes — and matching them to the aeronautical chart. Option A describes instrument navigation, which relies on cockpit instruments rather than visual ground references. Option C describes GPS navigation, a satellite-based method. Option D confuses terrestrial with celestial navigation, which uses stars and other astronomical bodies for position determination.
+
+### Q166: What flight time is required for a distance of 236 NM at a ground speed of 134 kt? ^t60q166
+- A) 0:46 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 1:46 h
+- D) 1:34 h
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time = distance / groundspeed = 236 NM / 134 kt = 1.761 hours. Converting the decimal fraction: 0.761 x 60 = 45.7 minutes, approximately 46 minutes, giving a total of 1 hour 46 minutes. Option A (0:46 h) has the correct minutes but is missing the full hour. Option D (1:34 h) would correspond to a GS of about 144 kt. Option B (0:34 h) is far too short for this distance at this speed.
+
+### Q167: What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q167
+- A) 235°
+- B) 241°
+- C) 055°
+- D) 061°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Neustadt lies to the north-northeast of Uelzen (higher latitude and further east). Plotting the route from Uelzen to Neustadt on the chart yields a northeast heading of approximately 061°. Option B (241°) is the reciprocal course (from Neustadt to Uelzen). Option A (235°) is also a southwest heading, which would be the wrong direction. Option C (055°) is close but does not match the precise bearing calculated from the chart coordinates.
+
+### Q168: What does the 1:60 rule mean? ^t60q168
+- A) 10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- B) 60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM
+- C) 1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- D) 6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 1:60 rule is a mental math shortcut stating that at a distance of 60 NM, a 1° track error produces approximately 1 NM of lateral offset. Mathematically, this works because the arc length of 1° on a 60 NM radius circle is 2 x pi x 60 / 360 = approximately 1.047 NM, close enough to 1 NM for practical navigation. Option A (10 NM offset) is ten times too large. Option B reverses the distance and offset. Option D (6 NM at 10 NM) is geometrically inconsistent with the rule.
+
+### Q169: An aircraft follows TC 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q169
+- A) 135 kt.
+- B) 170 kt.
+- C) 185 kt.
+- D) 255 kt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 220° and wind from 270°, the wind angle is 50° from the right-front of the aircraft. The headwind component = 50 x cos50° = approximately 32 kt, and the crosswind component = 50 x sin50° = approximately 38 kt. Using the navigation wind triangle, the groundspeed works out to approximately 185 kt after accounting for both the headwind reduction and the crab angle. Option D (255 kt) would require a tailwind. Option A (135 kt) subtracts the full wind speed. Option B (170 kt) overcorrects for the headwind component.
+
+### Q170: An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance to fly is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What corrected heading is needed to reach the destination directly? ^t60q170
+- A) 9° to the right
+- B) 6° to the right
+- C) 12° to the right
+- D) 18° to the right
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Applying the 1:60 rule: the opening angle (track error) = (4.5 / 45) x 60 = 6° off track to the north. The remaining distance is 90 - 45 = 45 NM. The closing angle to reach the destination = (4.5 / 45) x 60 = 6°. Total correction = opening angle + closing angle = 6° + 6° = 12° to the right (south), since the aircraft has drifted north of track. Option A (9°) is too small. Option B (6°) accounts for only the closing angle. Option D (18°) is too aggressive and would overshoot the correction.
+
+### Q171: What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q171
+- A) 46 NM
+- B) 78 km
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 46 km
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From the coordinates: latitude difference = 23' (= 23 NM north-south). Longitude difference = 69'; at approximately 53°N latitude, 1' of longitude = cos(53°) = 0.602 NM, so 69 x 0.602 = 41.5 NM east-west. Total distance = sqrt(23^2 + 41.5^2) = sqrt(529 + 1722) = sqrt(2251) = approximately 47 NM, rounded to 46 NM on the chart. Options B and C (78 km) equal approximately 42 NM, which is too low. Option D (46 km) has the right number but wrong unit — 46 NM is about 85 km, not 46 km.
+
+### Q172: What does the term terrestrial navigation mean? ^t60q172
+- A) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by ground celestial objects during visual flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation is the method of navigating by visually identifying ground features such as roads, rivers, railways, towns, and lakes, and matching them to an aeronautical chart. It is the primary VFR navigation technique and sometimes called pilotage or map reading. Option A (GPS) is satellite-based navigation. Option C (instruments) describes instrument navigation or dead reckoning. Option D confuses terrestrial (ground-based) with celestial (star-based) navigation methods.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_151_172_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_151_172_fr.md
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+### Q151: Combien de satellites sont nécessaires pour un fix de position tridimensionnel précis et vérifié ? ^t60q151
+- A) Cinq
+- B) Deux
+- C) Trois
+- D) Quatre
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un récepteur GPS a besoin de signaux provenant d'au moins quatre satellites pour un fix de position tridimensionnel (latitude, longitude et altitude). Trois satellites ne fourniraient qu'un fix bidimensionnel, et le quatrième est nécessaire pour résoudre l'erreur d'horloge du récepteur en plus des trois coordonnées spatiales. L'option A (cinq) décrit ce qui est nécessaire pour le RAIM (surveillance autonome de l'intégrité du récepteur), pas pour un fix 3D de base. Les options B (deux) et C (trois) sont insuffisantes pour un fix de position 3D complet avec correction d'horloge.
+
+### Q152: Quels éléments au sol devraient être préférés pour l'orientation lors du vol à vue ? ^t60q152
+- A) Chemins agricoles et ruisseaux
+- B) Lignes de frontière
+- C) Lignes électriques
+- D) Rivières, voies ferrées, autoroutes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les rivières, les voies ferrées et les autoroutes sont les références préférées pour la navigation visuelle car ce sont de grands éléments linéaires proéminents facilement identifiables depuis l'altitude et précisément représentés sur les cartes aéronautiques. L'option A (chemins agricoles et ruisseaux) sont trop petits et trop nombreux pour être distingués de manière fiable depuis les airs. L'option B (lignes de frontière) sont invisibles — il n'y a pas de marquages physiques au sol. L'option C (lignes électriques) sont extrêmement difficiles à voir depuis l'altitude et constituent un danger de collision lors du vol à basse altitude.
+
+### Q153: Quelle est la circumférence approximative de la Terre à l'équateur ? Voir figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t60q153
+- A) 40 000 NM.
+- B) 12 800 km.
+- C) 21 600 NM.
+- D) 10 800 km.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La circumférence équatoriale de la Terre est d'environ 21 600 NM. Cela découle de la relation fondamentale de navigation : 360° de longitude x 60 NM par degré = 21 600 NM, puisqu'un mille nautique correspond à une minute d'arc sur un grand cercle. En unités métriques, la circumférence est d'environ 40 075 km, mais cela ne correspond à aucune des autres options correctement. L'option A (40 000 NM) est presque le double de la valeur correcte en NM. Les options B (12 800 km) et D (10 800 km) sont toutes deux bien inférieures à la circumférence métrique réelle.
+
+### Q154: Données : Route vraie de A à B : 352°. Distance au sol : 100 NM. GS : 107 kt. ETD : 0933 UTC. L'ETA est… ^t60q154
+- A) 1146 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1045 UTC.
+- D) 1129 UTC.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le temps de vol est égal à la distance divisée par la vitesse sol : 100 NM / 107 kt = 0,935 heure = 56 minutes. En ajoutant 56 minutes à l'ETD de 0933 UTC, on obtient 0933 + 0056 = 1029 UTC. L'option A (1146 UTC) impliquerait un temps de vol de plus de 2 heures. L'option C (1045 UTC) implique 72 minutes, suggérant une vitesse sol d'environ 83 kt. L'option D (1129 UTC) implique près de 2 heures de vol. Seul 1029 UTC correspond au calcul de 56 minutes.
+
+### Q155: Un aéronef parcourt 100 km en 56 minutes. La vitesse sol (GS) est égale à… ^t60q155
+- A) 198 kt.
+- B) 93 kt
+- C) 58 km/h
+- D) 107 km/h.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = distance / temps = 100 km / (56/60 heures) = 100 x (60/56) = 107,1 km/h. Puisque la distance est donnée en kilomètres, le résultat est naturellement en km/h. L'option A (198 kt) est beaucoup trop élevée et semble être une erreur de conversion d'unités. L'option B (93 kt) serait correcte si la distance était en NM, pas en km. L'option C (58 km/h) résulte d'une division incorrecte de 56 par quelque chose. Seul 107 km/h applique correctement la formule de vitesse.
+
+### Q156: Un aéronef vole avec un TAS de 180 kt et une composante de vent de face de 25 kt pendant 2 heures et 25 minutes. La distance parcourue est égale à… ^t60q156
+- A) 435 NM.
+- B) 693 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 202 NM.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = TAS moins le vent de face = 180 - 25 = 155 kt. Temps de vol = 2 heures 25 minutes = 2,417 heures. Distance = GS x temps = 155 x 2,417 = 374,6 NM, soit environ 375 NM. L'option A (435 NM) utilise incorrectement le TAS (180 x 2,417 = 435) sans soustraire le vent de face. L'option B (693 NM) semble additionner le vent de face au lieu de le soustraire. L'option D (202 NM) utilise probablement uniquement la composante de vent de face pour le calcul.
+
+### Q157: Données : GS 160 kt, TC 177°, vecteur vent 140°/20 kt. Le cap vrai (TH) est égal à… ^t60q157
+- A) 184°.
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 180°
+- D) 169°.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vent de 140° sur une route vraie de 177° vient d'environ 37° à gauche de la route, poussant l'aéronef vers la droite. Le pilote doit crabler à gauche pour compenser. WCA = sin⁻¹(20 x sin37° / 160) = sin⁻¹(12/160) = sin⁻¹(0,075) = environ 4°. Cap vrai = 177° - 4° = 173°. L'option A (184°) tourne incorrectement à droite dans la dérive. L'option C (180°) n'applique qu'une correction de 3° dans la mauvaise direction. L'option D (169°) surcorrige de 8°.
+
+### Q158: Un aéronef suit TC 040° à un TAS constant de 180 kt. Le vecteur vent est 350°/30 kt. L'angle de correction de vent (WCA) est égal à… ^t60q158
+- A) +5°
+- B) -9°
+- C) +11°
+- D) -7°
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 040° et vent de 350°, l'angle du vent par rapport à la route est de 50° depuis le côté gauche. La composante traversière = 30 x sin50° = environ 23 kt pousse l'aéronef vers la droite de la trajectoire. Pour maintenir la route, le pilote crabe à gauche (WCA négatif). WCA = -sin⁻¹(23/180) = -sin⁻¹(0,128) = environ -7°. Les options A (+5°) et C (+11°) sont dans la mauvaise direction (droite au lieu de gauche). L'option B (-9°) surcorrige l'effet du vent.
+
+### Q159: Données : Route vraie : 270°. TAS : 100 kt. Vent : 090°/25 kt. Distance : 100 NM. La vitesse sol (GS) est égale à… ^t60q159
+- A) 117 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 125 kt.
+- D) 120 kt.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'aéronef vole sur TC 270° (vers l'ouest) et le vent souffle de 090° (est). Comme le vent vient directement de derrière l'aéronef, il s'agit d'un vent de queue pur. Vitesse sol = TAS + vent de queue = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Il n'y a pas de composante traversière, donc aucun angle de correction de vent n'est nécessaire. Les options A (117 kt) et D (120 kt) sous-estiment l'effet du vent de queue. L'option B (131 kt) le surestime. Le vent de queue direct s'additionne simplement au TAS.
+
+### Q160: Lors de l'utilisation du GPS pour le suivi vers le prochain waypoint, une barre de déviation avec des points est affichée. Quelle interprétation est correcte ? ^t60q160
+- A) La déviation de la barre par rapport au centre indique l'erreur de trajectoire en distance angulaire en degrés ; la déviation pleine échelle est ±10°.
+- B) La déviation de la barre par rapport au centre indique l'erreur de trajectoire en distance absolue en NM ; la déviation pleine échelle dépend du mode de fonctionnement du GPS.
+- C) La déviation de la barre par rapport au centre indique l'erreur de trajectoire en distance angulaire en degrés ; la déviation pleine échelle dépend du mode de fonctionnement du GPS.
+- D) La déviation de la barre par rapport au centre indique l'erreur de trajectoire en distance absolue en NM ; la déviation pleine échelle est ±10 NM.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le CDI GPS (indicateur de déviation de cap) affiche l'erreur de trajectoire latérale en distance absolue en milles nautiques, et non en degrés angulaires comme un CDI VOR. La déviation pleine échelle varie selon le mode de fonctionnement : typiquement ±5 NM en mode route, ±1 NM en mode terminal, et ±0,3 NM en mode approche. Les options A et C indiquent incorrectement que la déviation est angulaire. L'option D indique incorrectement une échelle fixe de ±10 NM indépendamment du mode.
+
+### Q161: Quelle est la distance entre le VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) et Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E) ? Voir annexe (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q161
+- A) 42 NM
+- B) 42 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant les coordonnées : différence de latitude = 9' (= 9 NM nord-sud). Différence de longitude = 38' ; à la latitude 53°N, 1 minute de longitude = cos(53°) NM = environ 0,60 NM, donnant 38 x 0,60 = 22,8 NM est-ouest. Distance totale = racine(9² + 22,8²) = racine(81 + 520) = racine(601) = environ 24,5 NM, arrondi à 24 NM. Les options A et B (42 NM/km) représentent presque le double de la distance réelle. L'option C (24 km) a le bon chiffre mais la mauvaise unité — 24 NM équivaut à environ 44 km, pas 24 km.
+
+### Q162: Un aéronef vole avec un TAS de 120 kt et bénéficie d'un vent de queue de 35 kt. Quel temps est nécessaire pour parcourir une distance de 185 NM ? ^t60q162
+- A) 2 h 11 min
+- B) 0 h 50 min
+- C) 1 h 12 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = TAS + vent de queue = 120 + 35 = 155 kt. Temps de vol = distance / GS = 185 / 155 = 1,194 heure = 1 heure 12 minutes. L'option A (2 h 11 min) semble utiliser le TAS seul sans le vent de queue (185/85 ne correspond pas non plus — probablement une erreur de calcul). L'option B (50 min) nécessiterait une GS d'environ 222 kt. L'option D (1 h 32 min) correspond à l'utilisation du TAS de 120 kt sans ajouter le vent de queue (185/120 = 1,54 h = 1 h 32 min).
+
+### Q163: Données : Route vraie : 270°. TAS : 100 kt. Vent : 090°/25 kt. Distance : 100 NM. Le temps de vol est égal à… ^t60q163
+- A) 62 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 48 Min.
+- D) 84 Min.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En volant sur TC 270° avec vent de 090°, le vent est un vent de queue direct (soufflant directement de derrière). GS = TAS + vent de queue = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Temps de vol = 100 NM / 125 kt = 0,80 heure = 48 minutes. L'option D (84 min) résulterait du traitement du vent de 25 kt comme un vent de face (GS = 75 kt). L'option A (62 min) correspond à une GS d'environ 97 kt. L'option B (37 min) nécessiterait une GS irréaliste d'environ 162 kt.
+
+### Q164: Quelle réponse complète le plan de vol (cellules marquées) ? Voir annexe (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^t60q164
+- A) TH : 185°. MH : 185°. MC : 180°.
+- B) TH : 173°. MH : 174°. MC : 178°.
+- C) TH : 173°. MH : 184°. MC : 178°.
+- D) TH : 185°. MH : 184°. MC : 178°.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La chaîne de conversion du plan de vol procède de la route vraie via la correction de vent jusqu'au cap vrai (TH), puis en appliquant la déclinaison magnétique pour obtenir le cap magnétique (MH), et enfin en tenant compte de la déviation du compas pour la route magnétique (MC). Les valeurs TH 185°, MH 184° et MC 178° sont cohérentes avec l'application séquentielle d'un petit angle de correction de vent, d'une déclinaison orientale de 1° et de la déviation du compas. Les options A, B et C contiennent des incohérences dans la chaîne de conversion TC-TH-MH-MC qui ne satisfont pas les paramètres donnés du plan de vol.
+
+### Q165: Que signifie le terme « navigation terrestre » ? ^t60q165
+- A) Orientation par les lectures des instruments lors du vol à vue
+- B) Orientation par les éléments au sol lors du vol à vue
+- C) Orientation par GPS lors du vol à vue
+- D) Orientation par les objets célestes terrestres lors du vol à vue
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La navigation terrestre (également connue sous le nom de pilotage ou lecture de carte) est la technique d'orientation de l'aéronef par identification visuelle des éléments au sol — villes, rivières, routes, voies ferrées, lacs — et leur correspondance avec la carte aéronautique. L'option A décrit la navigation aux instruments, qui s'appuie sur les instruments de bord plutôt que sur les repères visuels au sol. L'option C décrit la navigation GPS, une méthode par satellite. L'option D confond la navigation terrestre avec la navigation céleste, qui utilise les étoiles et autres corps astronomiques pour la détermination de position.
+
+### Q166: Quel temps de vol est nécessaire pour une distance de 236 NM à une vitesse sol de 134 kt ? ^t60q166
+- A) 0:46 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 1:46 h
+- D) 1:34 h
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Temps de vol = distance / vitesse sol = 236 NM / 134 kt = 1,761 heure. Conversion de la fraction décimale : 0,761 x 60 = 45,7 minutes, soit environ 46 minutes, donnant un total de 1 heure 46 minutes. L'option A (0:46 h) a les bonnes minutes mais manque l'heure entière. L'option D (1:34 h) correspondrait à une GS d'environ 144 kt. L'option B (0:34 h) est beaucoup trop courte pour cette distance à cette vitesse.
+
+### Q167: Quelle est la route vraie (TC) depuis Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E) vers Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) ? Voir annexe (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q167
+- A) 235°
+- B) 241°
+- C) 055°
+- D) 061°
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Neustadt se trouve au nord-nord-est d'Uelzen (latitude plus élevée et plus à l'est). En reportant la route d'Uelzen à Neustadt sur la carte, on obtient un cap nord-est d'environ 061°. L'option B (241°) est la route réciproque (de Neustadt à Uelzen). L'option A (235°) est également un cap vers le sud-ouest, qui serait la mauvaise direction. L'option C (055°) est proche mais ne correspond pas au relèvement précis calculé à partir des coordonnées de la carte.
+
+### Q168: Que signifie la règle du 1:60 ? ^t60q168
+- A) 10 NM d'écart latéral pour 1° de dérive après 60 NM
+- B) 60 NM d'écart latéral pour 1° de dérive après 1 NM
+- C) 1 NM d'écart latéral pour 1° de dérive après 60 NM
+- D) 6 NM d'écart latéral pour 1° de dérive après 10 NM
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La règle du 1:60 est un raccourci de calcul mental stipulant qu'à une distance de 60 NM, une erreur de trajectoire de 1° produit environ 1 NM d'écart latéral. Mathématiquement, cela fonctionne car la longueur d'arc de 1° sur un rayon de 60 NM est 2 x π x 60 / 360 = environ 1,047 NM, suffisamment proche de 1 NM pour une navigation pratique. L'option A (10 NM d'écart) est dix fois trop grande. L'option B inverse la distance et l'écart. L'option D (6 NM à 10 NM) est géométriquement incohérente avec la règle.
+
+### Q169: Un aéronef suit TC 220° à un TAS constant de 220 kt. Le vecteur vent est 270°/50 kt. La vitesse sol (GS) est égale à… ^t60q169
+- A) 135 kt.
+- B) 170 kt.
+- C) 185 kt.
+- D) 255 kt.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 220° et vent de 270°, l'angle du vent est de 50° depuis l'avant-droit de l'aéronef. La composante de vent de face = 50 x cos50° = environ 32 kt, et la composante traversière = 50 x sin50° = environ 38 kt. En utilisant le triangle de navigation des vents, la vitesse sol est d'environ 185 kt après prise en compte à la fois de la réduction due au vent de face et de l'angle de crabe. L'option D (255 kt) nécessiterait un vent de queue. L'option A (135 kt) soustrait la vitesse totale du vent. L'option B (170 kt) surcorrige pour la composante de vent de face.
+
+### Q170: Un aéronef a un cap de 090°. La distance à parcourir est de 90 NM. Après 45 NM, l'aéronef se trouve à 4,5 NM au nord de la trajectoire planifiée. Quel cap corrigé est nécessaire pour atteindre la destination directement ? ^t60q170
+- A) 9° vers la droite
+- B) 6° vers la droite
+- C) 12° vers la droite
+- D) 18° vers la droite
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En appliquant la règle du 1:60 : l'angle d'ouverture (erreur de trajectoire) = (4,5 / 45) x 60 = 6° hors trajectoire vers le nord. La distance restante est 90 - 45 = 45 NM. L'angle de fermeture pour atteindre la destination = (4,5 / 45) x 60 = 6°. Correction totale = angle d'ouverture + angle de fermeture = 6° + 6° = 12° vers la droite (vers le sud), puisque l'aéronef a dérivé au nord de la trajectoire. L'option A (9°) est trop petite. L'option B (6°) ne tient compte que de l'angle de fermeture. L'option D (18°) est trop agressive et provoquerait une surcorrection.
+
+### Q171: Quelle est la distance entre Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) et Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E) ? Voir annexe (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q171
+- A) 46 NM
+- B) 78 km
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 46 km
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** D'après les coordonnées : différence de latitude = 23' (= 23 NM nord-sud). Différence de longitude = 69' ; à environ 53°N de latitude, 1' de longitude = cos(53°) = 0,602 NM, donc 69 x 0,602 = 41,5 NM est-ouest. Distance totale = racine(23² + 41,5²) = racine(529 + 1722) = racine(2251) = environ 47 NM, arrondi à 46 NM sur la carte. Les options B et C (78 km) équivalent à environ 42 NM, ce qui est trop faible. L'option D (46 km) a le bon chiffre mais la mauvaise unité — 46 NM représentent environ 85 km, pas 46 km.
+
+### Q172: Que signifie le terme « navigation terrestre » ? ^t60q172
+- A) Orientation par GPS lors du vol à vue
+- B) Orientation par les éléments au sol lors du vol à vue
+- C) Orientation par les lectures des instruments lors du vol à vue
+- D) Orientation par les objets célestes terrestres lors du vol à vue
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La navigation terrestre est la méthode de navigation par identification visuelle des éléments au sol tels que les routes, rivières, voies ferrées, villes et lacs, et leur correspondance avec une carte aéronautique. C'est la technique principale de navigation VFR, parfois appelée pilotage ou lecture de carte. L'option A (GPS) est une navigation par satellite. L'option C (instruments) décrit la navigation aux instruments ou l'estime. L'option D confond la navigation terrestre (basée sur le sol) avec la navigation céleste (basée sur les étoiles).
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+### Q1: Through which points does the Earth's rotational axis pass? ^t60q1
+- A) The geographic North Pole and the magnetic south pole.
+- B) The magnetic north pole and the geographic South Pole.
+- C) The geographic North Pole and the geographic South Pole.
+- D) The magnetic north pole and the magnetic south pole.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's rotational axis is the physical axis around which the planet spins, and it passes through the geographic (true) poles — not the magnetic poles. The geographic poles are fixed points defined by the rotational axis, while the magnetic poles are offset from them and drift over time due to changes in the Earth's molten core.
+
+### Q2: Which statement correctly describes the polar axis of the Earth? ^t60q2
+- A) It passes through the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is tilted 23.5° relative to the equatorial plane.
+- B) It passes through the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is tilted 66.5° relative to the equatorial plane.
+- C) It passes through the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the equatorial plane.
+- D) It passes through the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the equatorial plane.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar axis passes through the geographic poles and is perpendicular (90°) to the plane of the equator by definition. The Earth's axis is indeed tilted 23.5° relative to the plane of its orbit around the sun (the ecliptic), but it is perpendicular to the equatorial plane — those two facts are consistent and not contradictory. Option A confuses the tilt to the ecliptic with the relationship to the equator.
+
+### Q3: For navigation systems, which approximate geometrical shape best represents the Earth? ^t60q3
+- A) A flat plate.
+- B) An ellipsoid.
+- C) A sphere of ecliptical shape.
+- D) A perfect sphere.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth is not a perfect sphere — it is slightly flattened at the poles and bulges at the equator due to its rotation. This shape is called an oblate spheroid or ellipsoid. Modern navigation systems (including GPS) use the WGS-84 ellipsoid as the reference model, which accurately accounts for this flattening in coordinate calculations.
+
+### Q4: Which of the following statements about a rhumb line is correct? ^t60q4
+- A) The shortest path between two points on the Earth follows a rhumb line.
+- B) A rhumb line crosses each meridian at an identical angle.
+- C) The centre of a complete rhumb line circuit is always the centre of the Earth.
+- D) A rhumb line is a great circle that meets the equator at 45°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rhumb line (also called a loxodrome) is defined as a line that crosses every meridian of longitude at the same angle. This makes it useful for constant-heading navigation — a pilot can fly a rhumb line by maintaining a fixed compass heading. However, it is not the shortest path between two points; that distinction belongs to the great circle route.
+
+### Q5: The shortest route between two points on the Earth's surface follows a segment of... ^t60q5
+- A) A small circle
+- B) A great circle.
+- C) A rhumb line.
+- D) A parallel of latitude.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A great circle is any circle whose plane passes through the center of the Earth, and the arc of a great circle between two points is the shortest possible path along the Earth's surface (the geodesic). Parallels of latitude (except the equator) and rhumb lines are not great circles and do not represent the shortest path. Long-haul aircraft routes are planned along great circle tracks to minimize fuel and time.
+
+### Q6: What is the approximate circumference of the Earth measured along the equator? See figure (NAV-002) ^t60q6
+
+
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 21600 NM.
+- C) 10800 km.
+- D) 12800 km.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator spans 360 degrees of longitude, and each degree of longitude on the equator equals 60 NM (since 1 NM = 1 arcminute on a great circle). Therefore: 360° x 60 NM = 21,600 NM. In kilometers, the Earth's equatorial circumference is approximately 40,075 km — so option A has the right number but wrong unit. Knowing this relationship (1° = 60 NM on the equator) is fundamental to navigation calculations.
+
+### Q7: What is the latitude difference between point A (12°53'30''N) and point B (07°34'30''S)? ^t60q7
+- A) .20°28'00''
+- B) .05°19'00''
+- C) .20,28°
+- D) .05,19°
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two points are on opposite sides of the equator, the difference in latitude is the sum of their respective latitudes. Here: 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. Converting minutes: 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', so 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. Always add latitudes when they are in opposite hemispheres (N and S).
+
+### Q8: At what positions are the two polar circles located? ^t60q8
+- A) 23.5° north and south of the equator
+- B) At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N
+- C) 20.5° south of the poles
+- D) 23.5° north and south of the poles
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Arctic Circle lies at approximately 66.5°N and the Antarctic Circle at 66.5°S — which is 90° - 23.5° = 66.5°, placing them 23.5° away from their respective geographic poles. This 23.5° offset directly corresponds to the axial tilt of the Earth. The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn (option A) are the ones located 23.5° from the equator.
+
+### Q9: Along a meridian, what is the distance between the 48°N and 49°N parallels of latitude? ^t60q9
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 10 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Along any meridian (line of longitude), 1 degree of latitude always equals 60 nautical miles. This is because meridians are great circles and 1 NM is defined as 1 arcminute of arc along a great circle. The 111 km figure (option A) is the equivalent in kilometers, not nautical miles. This 60 NM per degree relationship is a cornerstone of navigation calculations.
+
+### Q10: Along any line of longitude, what distance corresponds to one degree of latitude? ^t60q10
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 1 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** One degree of latitude = 60 arcminutes, and since 1 NM equals exactly 1 arcminute of latitude along a meridian, 1° of latitude = 60 NM. This relationship holds along any meridian because all meridians are great circles. In SI units, 1° of latitude ≈ 111 km, not 60 km as stated in option C.
+
+### Q11: Point A lies at exactly 47°50'27''N latitude. Which point is precisely 240 NM north of A? ^t60q11
+- A) 49°50'27''N
+- B) 43°50'27''N
+- C) 53°50'27''N
+- D) 51°50'27'N'
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Converting 240 NM to degrees of latitude: 240 NM / 60 NM per degree = 4°. Adding 4° to 47°50'27''N gives 51°50'27''N. Moving north increases the latitude value. Option C would require 6° (360 NM), and option A would require only 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q12: Along the equator, what is the distance between the 150°E and 151°E meridians? ^t60q12
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the equator, meridians of longitude are separated by great circle arcs, and 1° of longitude along the equator equals 60 NM — the same as 1° of latitude along any meridian, because the equator is also a great circle. At higher latitudes, the distance between meridians decreases (multiplied by cos(latitude)), but at the equator it is exactly 60 NM per degree.
+
+### Q13: When two points A and B on the equator are separated by exactly one degree of longitude, what is the great circle distance between them? ^t60q13
+- A) 216 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 400 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator itself is a great circle, so the great circle distance between two points on the equator separated by 1° of longitude is simply 60 NM (1° x 60 NM/degree). This is the same principle as measuring along a meridian. Any confusion arises if one tries to calculate using km instead — 1° ≈ 111 km on the equator, but the question asks for NM.
+
+### Q14: Consider two points A and B on the same parallel of latitude (not the equator). A is at 010°E and B at 020°E. The rhumb line distance between them is always... ^t60q14
+- A) More than 600 NM.
+- B) More than 300 NM.
+- C) Less than 300 NM.
+- D) Less than 600 NM.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rhumb line distance between points on the same parallel of latitude is: 10° x 60 NM x cos(latitude). Since cos(latitude) is always less than 1 for any latitude other than the equator (where it equals exactly 60 NM x 10 = 600 NM), the rhumb line distance is always strictly less than 600 NM. At the equator it would equal 600 NM, but since they are specifically "not on the equator," the distance is always less than 600 NM.
+
+### Q15: How much time elapses as the sun traverses 20° of longitude? ^t60q15
+- A) 0:20 h
+- B) 1:20 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 1:00 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth rotates 360° in 24 hours, so it rotates 15° per hour, or 1° every 4 minutes. For 20° of longitude: 20 x 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 hour 20 minutes. Alternatively: 20° / 15°/h = 1.333 h = 1:20 h. This relationship (15°/hour or 4 min/degree) is essential for time zone calculations and solar noon determination.
+
+### Q16: How much time passes as the sun crosses 10° of longitude? ^t60q16
+- A) 0:30 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 1:00 h
+- D) 0:04 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the same principle as Q15: the Earth rotates 15° per hour, so 10° corresponds to 10/15 hours = 2/3 hour = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. Option D (4 minutes) would be the time for only 1° of longitude. Option A (30 minutes) would correspond to 7.5° of longitude.
+
+### Q17: The sun traverses 10° of longitude. What is the corresponding time difference? ^t60q17
+- A) 0.33 h
+- B) 1 h
+- C) 0.4 h
+- D) 0.66 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the same calculation as Q16 but expressed as a decimal fraction of an hour: 10° / 15°/h = 0.6667 h ≈ 0.66 h (40 minutes in decimal hours). Note that Q16 and Q17 appear to ask the same question but expect different answer formats — Q16 expects 0:40 h (40 minutes) while Q17 expects 0.66 h (the decimal equivalent). Both represent the same 40-minute time difference.
+
+### Q18: If Central European Summer Time (CEST) is UTC+2, what is the UTC equivalent of 1600 CEST? ^t60q18
+- A) 1400 UTC.
+- B) 1600 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC+2 means CEST is 2 hours ahead of UTC. To convert from local time to UTC, subtract the offset: 1600 CEST - 2 hours = 1400 UTC. A simple mnemonic: "to get UTC, subtract the positive offset." This is critical in aviation as all flight plans, ATC communications, and NOTAMs use UTC regardless of local time zone.
+
+### Q19: What is UTC? ^t60q19
+- A) A local time in Central Europe.
+- B) Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.
+- C) A zonal time
+- D) The mandatory time reference used in aviation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the mandatory time reference for all international aviation operations — flight plans, ATC communications, weather reports (METARs/TAFs), and NOTAMs all use UTC to eliminate confusion from time zone differences. It is not a zonal or local time, and it is not referenced to any geographic location (though it closely tracks Greenwich Mean Time).
+
+### Q20: If Central European Time (CET) is UTC+1, what is the UTC equivalent of 1700 CET? ^t60q20
+- A) 1800 UTC.
+- B) 1500 UTC.
+- C) 1600 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CET is UTC+1, meaning it is 1 hour ahead of UTC. To convert to UTC, subtract the offset: 1700 CET - 1 hour = 1600 UTC. Switzerland uses CET (UTC+1) in winter and CEST (UTC+2) in summer — knowing the current offset is essential when filing flight plans or reading NOTAMs.
+
+### Q21: Vienna (LOWW) is at 016°34'E and Salzburg (LOWS) at 013°00'E, both at approximately the same latitude. What is the difference in sunrise and sunset times (in UTC) between the two cities? (2,00 P.) ^t60q21
+- A) In Vienna sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg
+- B) In Vienna sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- C) In Vienna sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- D) In Vienna sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The difference in longitude is 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3.57°. At 4 minutes per degree, this gives approximately 14.3 minutes ≈ 14 minutes. Vienna is east of Salzburg, so the sun reaches Vienna earlier — both sunrise and sunset occur about 14 minutes earlier in Vienna (as seen in UTC). Local time zones disguise this difference, but in UTC the eastern location always sees solar events first.
+
+### Q22: How is "civil twilight" defined? ^t60q22
+- A) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 6° below the true horizon.
+- B) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 12° below the apparent horizon.
+- C) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 6° below the apparent horizon.
+- D) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 12° below the true horizon.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Civil twilight is the period when the sun's center is between 0° and 6° below the true (geometric) horizon — there is still sufficient natural light for most outdoor activities without artificial lighting. The true horizon (geometric) is used in the formal definition, not the apparent horizon (which is affected by refraction). Nautical twilight uses 12°, and astronomical twilight uses 18° below the true horizon. In aviation regulations, civil twilight often defines the boundary for day/night VFR operations.
+
+### Q23: Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E. Determine TC, MH, and CH. (2,00 P.) ^t60q23
+- A) TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- B) TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.
+- C) TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- D) TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The heading chain works as follows: TC → (apply WCA) → TH → (apply VAR) → MH → (apply DEV) → CH. Given TH = 125° and WCA = -12°, then TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. For MH: MC = MH + WCA, so MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. For CH: DEV = 002°E means compass reads 2° high, so CH = MH - DEV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Negative WCA means wind from the right, requiring a left correction in heading.
+
+### Q24: Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002°. What are MH and MC? ^t60q24
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+- C) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+- D) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Then MH = TH - VAR (E is subtracted): MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. For MC: MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. Alternatively: MC = MH + WCA = 163° + (-12°) = 151° — wait, that doesn't match; MC is measured from magnetic north to the course line, so MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. East variation is subtracted when converting from True to Magnetic ("East is least").
+
+### Q25: The angular difference between the true course and the true heading is known as the... ^t60q25
+- A) Variation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Wind Correction Angle (WCA) is the angular difference between the true course (the direction of intended track over the ground) and the true heading (the direction the aircraft's nose points). A crosswind requires the pilot to angle the nose into the wind, creating a difference between heading and track — this offset angle is the WCA. It is neither variation (true-to-magnetic difference) nor deviation (magnetic-to-compass difference).
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_1_25_fr.md
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+### Q1 : Par quels points passe l'axe de rotation de la Terre ? ^t60q1
+- A) Le pôle Nord géographique et le pôle sud magnétique.
+- B) Le pôle nord magnétique et le pôle Sud géographique.
+- C) Le pôle Nord géographique et le pôle Sud géographique.
+- D) Le pôle nord magnétique et le pôle sud magnétique.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'axe de rotation de la Terre est l'axe physique autour duquel la planète tourne, et il passe par les pôles géographiques (vrais) — et non par les pôles magnétiques. Les pôles géographiques sont des points fixes définis par l'axe de rotation, tandis que les pôles magnétiques sont décalés par rapport à eux et se déplacent au fil du temps en raison des variations dans le noyau en fusion de la Terre.
+
+### Q2 : Quelle affirmation décrit correctement l'axe polaire de la Terre ? ^t60q2
+- A) Il passe par le pôle Sud géographique et le pôle Nord géographique et est incliné de 23,5° par rapport au plan équatorial.
+- B) Il passe par le pôle sud magnétique et le pôle nord magnétique et est incliné de 66,5° par rapport au plan équatorial.
+- C) Il passe par le pôle sud magnétique et le pôle nord magnétique et est perpendiculaire au plan équatorial.
+- D) Il passe par le pôle Sud géographique et le pôle Nord géographique et est perpendiculaire au plan équatorial.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'axe polaire passe par les pôles géographiques et est perpendiculaire (90°) au plan de l'équateur par définition. L'axe terrestre est effectivement incliné de 23,5° par rapport au plan de son orbite autour du soleil (l'écliptique), mais il est perpendiculaire au plan équatorial — ces deux faits sont cohérents et non contradictoires. L'option A confond l'inclinaison par rapport à l'écliptique avec la relation par rapport à l'équateur.
+
+### Q3 : Quelle forme géométrique approximative représente le mieux la Terre pour les systèmes de navigation ? ^t60q3
+- A) Une plaque plate.
+- B) Un ellipsoïde.
+- C) Une sphère de forme elliptique.
+- D) Une sphère parfaite.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Terre n'est pas une sphère parfaite — elle est légèrement aplatie aux pôles et renflée à l'équateur en raison de sa rotation. Cette forme s'appelle un sphéroïde oblong ou ellipsoïde. Les systèmes de navigation modernes (y compris le GPS) utilisent l'ellipsoïde WGS-84 comme modèle de référence, qui tient précisément compte de cet aplatissement dans les calculs de coordonnées.
+
+### Q4 : Laquelle des affirmations suivantes concernant une loxodromie est correcte ? ^t60q4
+- A) La trajectoire la plus courte entre deux points sur la Terre suit une loxodromie.
+- B) Une loxodromie coupe chaque méridien au même angle.
+- C) Le centre d'un circuit complet d'une loxodromie est toujours le centre de la Terre.
+- D) Une loxodromie est un grand cercle qui coupe l'équateur à 45°.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une loxodromie (également appelée ligne de rhumb) est définie comme une ligne qui coupe chaque méridien de longitude au même angle. Cela la rend utile pour la navigation à cap constant — un pilote peut suivre une loxodromie en maintenant un cap boussole fixe. Cependant, ce n'est pas la trajectoire la plus courte entre deux points ; cette distinction appartient à la route orthodromique (grand cercle).
+
+### Q5 : La trajectoire la plus courte entre deux points à la surface de la Terre suit un segment de... ^t60q5
+- A) Un petit cercle
+- B) Un grand cercle.
+- C) Une loxodromie.
+- D) Un parallèle de latitude.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un grand cercle est tout cercle dont le plan passe par le centre de la Terre, et l'arc d'un grand cercle entre deux points est la trajectoire possible la plus courte le long de la surface terrestre (la géodésique). Les parallèles de latitude (à l'exception de l'équateur) et les loxodromies ne sont pas des grands cercles et ne représentent pas la trajectoire la plus courte. Les routes des aéronefs long-courriers sont planifiées le long des trajectoires de grand cercle pour minimiser la consommation de carburant et le temps.
+
+### Q6 : Quelle est la circonférence approximative de la Terre mesurée le long de l'équateur ? Voir figure (NAV-002) ^t60q6
+
+
+- A) 40 000 NM.
+- B) 21 600 NM.
+- C) 10 800 km.
+- D) 12 800 km.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équateur s'étend sur 360 degrés de longitude, et chaque degré de longitude à l'équateur équivaut à 60 NM (puisque 1 NM = 1 minute d'arc sur un grand cercle). Par conséquent : 360° × 60 NM = 21 600 NM. En kilomètres, la circonférence équatoriale de la Terre est d'environ 40 075 km — donc l'option A a le bon chiffre mais la mauvaise unité. Connaître cette relation (1° = 60 NM à l'équateur) est fondamental pour les calculs de navigation.
+
+### Q7 : Quelle est la différence de latitude entre le point A (12°53'30''N) et le point B (07°34'30''S) ? ^t60q7
+- A) .20°28'00''
+- B) .05°19'00''
+- C) .20,28°
+- D) .05,19°
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux points se trouvent de part et d'autre de l'équateur, la différence de latitude est la somme de leurs latitudes respectives. Ici : 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. En convertissant les minutes : 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', donc 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. Il faut toujours additionner les latitudes lorsqu'elles se trouvent dans des hémisphères opposés (N et S).
+
+### Q8 : À quelles positions se trouvent les deux cercles polaires ? ^t60q8
+- A) À 23,5° au nord et au sud de l'équateur
+- B) À une latitude de 20,5°S et 20,5°N
+- C) À 20,5° au sud des pôles
+- D) À 23,5° au nord et au sud des pôles
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le cercle polaire arctique se trouve à environ 66,5°N et le cercle polaire antarctique à 66,5°S — soit 90° - 23,5° = 66,5°, les plaçant à 23,5° de leurs pôles géographiques respectifs. Cet écart de 23,5° correspond directement à l'inclinaison axiale de la Terre. Les tropiques du Cancer et du Capricorne (option A) sont ceux qui se situent à 23,5° de l'équateur.
+
+### Q9 : Le long d'un méridien, quelle est la distance entre les parallèles de latitude 48°N et 49°N ? ^t60q9
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 10 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le long de tout méridien (ligne de longitude), 1 degré de latitude équivaut toujours à 60 milles nautiques. C'est parce que les méridiens sont des grands cercles et que 1 NM est défini comme 1 minute d'arc sur un grand cercle. La valeur de 111 km (option A) est l'équivalent en kilomètres, pas en milles nautiques. Cette relation de 60 NM par degré est une pierre angulaire des calculs de navigation.
+
+### Q10 : Le long de n'importe quelle ligne de longitude, quelle distance correspond à un degré de latitude ? ^t60q10
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 1 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un degré de latitude = 60 minutes d'arc, et puisque 1 NM équivaut exactement à 1 minute d'arc de latitude le long d'un méridien, 1° de latitude = 60 NM. Cette relation est valable le long de tout méridien car tous les méridiens sont des grands cercles. En unités SI, 1° de latitude ≈ 111 km, pas 60 km comme indiqué dans l'option C.
+
+### Q11 : Le point A se trouve exactement à la latitude 47°50'27''N. Quel point se trouve précisément à 240 NM au nord de A ? ^t60q11
+- A) 49°50'27''N
+- B) 43°50'27''N
+- C) 53°50'27''N
+- D) 51°50'27'N'
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En convertissant 240 NM en degrés de latitude : 240 NM / 60 NM par degré = 4°. En ajoutant 4° à 47°50'27''N, on obtient 51°50'27''N. Se déplacer vers le nord augmente la valeur de latitude. L'option C nécessiterait 6° (360 NM), et l'option A ne nécessiterait que 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q12 : Le long de l'équateur, quelle est la distance entre les méridiens 150°E et 151°E ? ^t60q12
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'équateur, les méridiens de longitude sont séparés par des arcs de grand cercle, et 1° de longitude le long de l'équateur équivaut à 60 NM — identique à 1° de latitude le long de n'importe quel méridien, car l'équateur est également un grand cercle. Aux latitudes plus élevées, la distance entre les méridiens diminue (multipliée par cos(latitude)), mais à l'équateur elle est exactement de 60 NM par degré.
+
+### Q13 : Lorsque deux points A et B sur l'équateur sont séparés exactement d'un degré de longitude, quelle est la distance de grand cercle entre eux ? ^t60q13
+- A) 216 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 400 NM
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équateur lui-même est un grand cercle, donc la distance de grand cercle entre deux points sur l'équateur séparés de 1° de longitude est simplement de 60 NM (1° × 60 NM/degré). C'est le même principe que la mesure le long d'un méridien. Toute confusion survient si l'on tente de calculer en km — 1° ≈ 111 km à l'équateur, mais la question demande des NM.
+
+### Q14 : Considérez deux points A et B sur le même parallèle de latitude (pas l'équateur). A est à 010°E et B à 020°E. La distance loxodromique entre eux est toujours... ^t60q14
+- A) Supérieure à 600 NM.
+- B) Supérieure à 300 NM.
+- C) Inférieure à 300 NM.
+- D) Inférieure à 600 NM.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La distance loxodromique entre des points sur le même parallèle de latitude est : 10° × 60 NM × cos(latitude). Comme cos(latitude) est toujours inférieur à 1 pour toute latitude autre que l'équateur (où il est exactement 60 NM × 10 = 600 NM), la distance loxodromique est toujours strictement inférieure à 600 NM. À l'équateur, elle serait égale à 600 NM, mais comme ils se trouvent spécifiquement « pas sur l'équateur », la distance est toujours inférieure à 600 NM.
+
+### Q15 : Combien de temps s'écoule-t-il lorsque le soleil traverse 20° de longitude ? ^t60q15
+- A) 0:20 h
+- B) 1:20 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 1:00 h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Terre tourne de 360° en 24 heures, soit 15° par heure, ou 1° toutes les 4 minutes. Pour 20° de longitude : 20 × 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 heure 20 minutes. Alternativement : 20° / 15°/h = 1,333 h = 1:20 h. Cette relation (15°/heure ou 4 min/degré) est essentielle pour les calculs de fuseau horaire et la détermination du midi solaire.
+
+### Q16 : Combien de temps s'écoule-t-il lorsque le soleil traverse 10° de longitude ? ^t60q16
+- A) 0:30 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 1:00 h
+- D) 0:04 h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant le même principe que la Q15 : la Terre tourne de 15° par heure, donc 10° correspond à 10/15 heures = 2/3 d'heure = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. L'option D (4 minutes) correspondrait au temps pour seulement 1° de longitude. L'option A (30 minutes) correspondrait à 7,5° de longitude.
+
+### Q17 : Le soleil traverse 10° de longitude. Quelle est la différence de temps correspondante ? ^t60q17
+- A) 0,33 h
+- B) 1 h
+- C) 0,4 h
+- D) 0,66 h
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** C'est le même calcul que la Q16 mais exprimé comme une fraction décimale d'une heure : 10° / 15°/h = 0,6667 h ≈ 0,66 h (40 minutes en heures décimales). Notez que la Q16 et la Q17 semblent poser la même question mais attendent des formats de réponse différents — la Q16 attend 0:40 h (40 minutes) tandis que la Q17 attend 0,66 h (l'équivalent décimal). Les deux représentent la même différence de temps de 40 minutes.
+
+### Q18 : Si l'heure d'été d'Europe centrale (CEST) correspond à UTC+2, quelle est l'équivalence UTC de 1600 CEST ? ^t60q18
+- A) 1400 UTC.
+- B) 1600 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** UTC+2 signifie que CEST a 2 heures d'avance sur UTC. Pour convertir de l'heure locale en UTC, on soustrait le décalage : 1600 CEST - 2 heures = 1400 UTC. Un moyen mnémotechnique simple : « pour obtenir l'UTC, soustraire le décalage positif. » Ceci est crucial en aviation car tous les plans de vol, les communications ATC et les NOTAMs utilisent l'UTC quel que soit le fuseau horaire local.
+
+### Q19 : Qu'est-ce que l'UTC ? ^t60q19
+- A) Une heure locale en Europe centrale.
+- B) L'heure solaire locale en un point précis de la Terre.
+- C) Une heure zonale
+- D) La référence temporelle obligatoire utilisée en aviation.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Temps Universel Coordonné (UTC) est la référence temporelle obligatoire pour toutes les opérations de l'aviation internationale — les plans de vol, les communications ATC, les rapports météorologiques (METAR/TAF) et les NOTAMs utilisent tous l'UTC pour éliminer la confusion due aux différences de fuseau horaire. Ce n'est pas une heure zonale ou locale, et il n'est pas référencé à un emplacement géographique (bien qu'il suive de près l'Heure Moyenne de Greenwich).
+
+### Q20 : Si l'heure d'Europe centrale (CET) correspond à UTC+1, quelle est l'équivalence UTC de 1700 CET ? ^t60q20
+- A) 1800 UTC.
+- B) 1500 UTC.
+- C) 1600 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** CET correspond à UTC+1, soit 1 heure d'avance sur UTC. Pour convertir en UTC, on soustrait le décalage : 1700 CET - 1 heure = 1600 UTC. La Suisse utilise CET (UTC+1) en hiver et CEST (UTC+2) en été — connaître le décalage actuel est essentiel lors du dépôt de plans de vol ou de la lecture des NOTAMs.
+
+### Q21 : Vienne (LOWW) est à 016°34'E et Salzbourg (LOWS) à 013°00'E, tous deux à approximativement la même latitude. Quelle est la différence des heures de lever et de coucher du soleil (en UTC) entre les deux villes ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q21
+- A) À Vienne, le lever du soleil est 14 minutes plus tôt et le coucher du soleil est 14 minutes plus tard qu'à Salzbourg
+- B) À Vienne, le lever et le coucher du soleil sont environ 14 minutes plus tôt qu'à Salzbourg
+- C) À Vienne, le lever du soleil est 4 minutes plus tard et le coucher du soleil est 4 minutes plus tôt qu'à Salzbourg
+- D) À Vienne, le lever et le coucher du soleil sont environ 4 minutes plus tard qu'à Salzbourg
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La différence de longitude est 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3,57°. À 4 minutes par degré, cela donne environ 14,3 minutes ≈ 14 minutes. Vienne étant à l'est de Salzbourg, le soleil y atteint plus tôt — lever et coucher du soleil se produisent environ 14 minutes plus tôt à Vienne (en UTC). Les fuseaux horaires locaux masquent cette différence, mais en UTC le lieu le plus à l'est voit toujours les événements solaires en premier.
+
+### Q22 : Comment le « crépuscule civil » est-il défini ? ^t60q22
+- A) La période avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil durant laquelle le centre du disque solaire se trouve à 6 degrés ou moins sous l'horizon vrai.
+- B) La période avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil durant laquelle le centre du disque solaire se trouve à 12 degrés ou moins sous l'horizon apparent.
+- C) La période avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil durant laquelle le centre du disque solaire se trouve à 6 degrés ou moins sous l'horizon apparent.
+- D) La période avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil durant laquelle le centre du disque solaire se trouve à 12 degrés ou moins sous l'horizon vrai.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le crépuscule civil est la période où le centre du soleil se trouve entre 0° et 6° sous l'horizon vrai (géométrique) — il y a encore suffisamment de lumière naturelle pour la plupart des activités extérieures sans éclairage artificiel. L'horizon vrai (géométrique) est utilisé dans la définition formelle, pas l'horizon apparent (qui est affecté par la réfraction). Le crépuscule nautique utilise 12°, et le crépuscule astronomique utilise 18° sous l'horizon vrai. Dans les réglementations aéronautiques, le crépuscule civil définit souvent la limite pour les opérations VFR de jour/nuit.
+
+### Q23 : Données : WCA : -012° ; TH : 125° ; MC : 139° ; DÉV : 002°E. Déterminez TC, MH et CH. (2,00 P.) ^t60q23
+- A) TC : 113°. MH : 139°. CH : 125°.
+- B) TC : 137°. MH : 127°. CH : 125°.
+- C) TC : 137°. MH : 139°. CH : 125°.
+- D) TC : 113°. MH : 127°. CH : 129°.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La chaîne de cap fonctionne comme suit : TC → (appliquer WCA) → TH → (appliquer VAR) → MH → (appliquer DÉV) → CH. Avec TH = 125° et WCA = -12°, alors TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. Pour MH : MC = MH + WCA, donc MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. Pour CH : DÉV = 002°E signifie que la boussole lit 2° de trop, donc CH = MH - DÉV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Un WCA négatif signifie vent venant de droite, nécessitant une correction à gauche du cap.
+
+### Q24 : Données : TC : 179° ; WCA : -12° ; VAR : 004° E ; DÉV : +002°. Quels sont MH et MC ? ^t60q24
+- A) MH : 163°. MC : 175°.
+- B) MH : 167°. MC : 175°.
+- C) MH : 167°. MC : 161°
+- D) MH : 163°. MC : 161°.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Ensuite MH = TH - VAR (E est soustrait) : MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. Pour MC : MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. La variation Est est soustraite lors de la conversion du Vrai au Magnétique (« l'Est est le moins »). Donc MH = 163° et MC = 175°.
+
+### Q25 : La différence angulaire entre le cap vrai et la route vraie est connue sous le nom de... ^t60q25
+- A) Déclinaison.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Déviation.
+- D) Inclinaison.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle de correction de vent (WCA) est la différence angulaire entre la route vraie (la direction de la trajectoire prévue au-dessus du sol) et le cap vrai (la direction vers laquelle pointe le nez de l'aéronef). Un vent de travers oblige le pilote à orienter le nez dans le vent, créant une différence entre le cap et la trajectoire — cet angle de décalage est le WCA. Ce n'est ni la déclinaison (différence vrai-magnétique) ni la déviation (différence magnétique-boussole).
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_26_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_26_50.md
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+### Q26: The angular difference between the magnetic course and the true course is called... ^t60q26
+- A) Deviation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Variation
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic variation (also called declination) is the angle between true north (geographic) and magnetic north at any given location, which creates a difference between the true course and the magnetic course. Variation changes with location and over time as the magnetic poles shift. Deviation is the error introduced by the aircraft's own magnetic field on the compass, affecting the difference between magnetic north and compass north.
+
+### Q27: How is "magnetic course" (MC) defined? ^t60q27
+- A) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- B) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole.
+- C) The direction from any point on Earth toward the magnetic north pole.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic course is the direction of the intended flight path (course line) measured clockwise from magnetic north. It differs from the true course by the local magnetic variation. Pilots use magnetic course because aircraft compasses point to magnetic north, making magnetic references more directly usable for navigation without additional corrections.
+
+### Q28: How is "True Course" (TC) defined? ^t60q28
+- A) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- B) The direction from any point on Earth toward the magnetic north pole.
+- C) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- D) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The True Course is the angle measured clockwise from true (geographic) north to the intended flight path (course line). It is determined from aeronautical charts, which are oriented to true north. To fly a true course, pilots must apply magnetic variation to get the magnetic course, then apply wind correction angle to get the true heading they must fly.
+
+### Q29: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. What are TH and VAR? (2,00 P.) ^t60q29
+- A) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W
+- B) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W
+- C) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E
+- D) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For variation: VAR is the difference between TC and MC, or equivalently between TH and MH. MH = 198°, TH = 194°, so the difference is 4°. Since MH > TH, magnetic north is east of true north, meaning variation is West (West variation adds to true to get magnetic: MH = TH + VAR, so 198° = 194° + 4°W). Mnemonic: "West is best" — West variation is added going True to Magnetic.
+
+### Q30: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. What are TH and DEV? (2,00 P.) ^t60q30
+- A) TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.
+- B) TH: 194°. DEV: +002°.
+- C) TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.
+- D) TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For deviation: DEV = CH - MH = 200° - 198° = +2°. However, the convention for deviation sign varies — if DEV is defined as what you subtract from CH to get MH, then DEV = -2°. Here CH = 200° > MH = 198°, meaning the compass reads 2° more than magnetic, so DEV = -2° (the compass is deflected eastward, requiring a negative correction). The answer is TH: 194°, DEV: -002°.
+
+### Q31: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Determine VAR and DEV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q31
+- A) VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.
+- B) VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°.
+- C) VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.
+- D) VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Q29: VAR = 4° W (MH 198° > TH 194°, so West variation). From Q30: DEV = -002° (CH 200° > MH 198°, compass reads high, requiring negative deviation correction). The complete heading chain for this problem is: TC 183° → (+11° WCA) → TH 194° → (+4° W VAR) → MH 198° → (+2° DEV) → CH 200°. These three questions (Q29, Q30, Q31) all use the same dataset, testing different parts of the heading conversion chain.
+
+### Q32: At what location does magnetic inclination reach its minimum value? ^t60q32
+- A) At the geographic poles
+- B) At the geographic equator
+- C) At the magnetic equator
+- D) At the magnetic poles
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator (the "aclinic line"), the field lines are horizontal and the dip angle is 0° — the lowest possible value. At the magnetic poles, the field lines are vertical (inclination = 90°). The magnetic equator does not coincide with the geographic equator.
+
+### Q33: The angular difference between compass north and magnetic north is referred to as... ^t60q33
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Inclination.
+- D) WCA
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields (from electrical equipment, metal structure, avionics). It is expressed as the angular difference between magnetic north (what the compass should indicate) and compass north (what it actually indicates). Deviation varies with the aircraft's heading and is recorded on a compass deviation card mounted near the instrument.
+
+### Q34: What does "compass north" (CN) refer to? ^t60q34
+- A) The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north
+- B) The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns under the combined influence of the Earth's and the aircraft's magnetic fields
+- C) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole
+- D) The most northerly reading point on the magnetic compass in the aircraft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Compass north is the direction the compass needle actually points, which is determined by the combined effect of the Earth's magnetic field AND any local magnetic interference from the aircraft itself. Because of this aircraft-induced deviation, compass north differs from magnetic north. The compass reads this resultant direction, not pure magnetic north — hence the need for a deviation correction card.
+
+### Q35: An "isogonal" or "isogonic line" on an aeronautical chart connects all points sharing the same value of... ^t60q35
+- A) Deviation
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Heading.
+- D) Variation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isogonic lines (also called isogonals) connect all points on Earth that have the same magnetic variation value. They are printed on aeronautical charts so pilots can read the local variation at their position and convert between true and magnetic headings. The agonic line is the special case where variation = 0°. Lines of equal magnetic inclination are called isoclinic lines; lines of equal field intensity are isodynamic lines.
+
+### Q36: An "agonic line" on the Earth or on an aeronautical chart connects all points where the... ^t60q36
+- A) Heading is 0°.
+- B) Inclination is 0°.
+- C) Variation is 0°.
+- D) Deviation is 0°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a special isogonic line where magnetic variation equals zero — meaning true north and magnetic north coincide along this line. Aircraft flying along the agonic line need not apply any variation correction; true course equals magnetic course. There are currently two main agonic lines on Earth, passing through North America and through parts of Asia/Australia.
+
+### Q37: Which are the official standard units for horizontal distances in aeronautical navigation? ^t60q37
+- A) Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)
+- B) Feet (ft), inches (in)
+- C) Yards (yd), meters (m)
+- D) Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In international aviation, horizontal distances are officially measured in nautical miles (NM) and kilometers (km). The nautical mile is preferred for navigation because it directly relates to the angular measurement system (1 NM = 1 arcminute of latitude). Kilometers are also used, particularly in some countries and on certain charts. Feet and meters are used for vertical distances (altitude/height), not horizontal distance.
+
+### Q38: How many metres are equivalent to 1000 ft? ^t60q38
+- A) 30 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 300 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 1 foot = 0.3048 meters, so 1000 ft = 304.8 m ≈ 300 m. The quick conversion rule is: feet x 0.3 ≈ meters, or equivalently from the exam table: m = ft x 3 / 10. This approximation is accurate enough for practical navigation. For exam purposes: 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10,000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q39: How many feet correspond to 5500 m? ^t60q39
+- A) 10000 ft.
+- B) 7500 ft.
+- C) 30000 ft.
+- D) 18000 ft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the conversion ft = m x 10 / 3 (from the exam table): 5500 x 10 / 3 = 55000 / 3 ≈ 18,333 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. Alternatively: 1 m ≈ 3.281 ft, so 5500 m x 3.281 ≈ 18,046 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. This altitude is significant in European airspace as it corresponds approximately to FL180 (the base of Class A airspace in some regions).
+
+### Q40: What might cause the runway designation at an aerodrome to change (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)? ^t60q40
+- A) The direction of the approach path has changed
+- B) The magnetic variation at the runway location has changed
+- C) The magnetic deviation at the runway location has changed
+- D) The true direction of the runway alignment has changed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Runway numbers are based on the magnetic heading of the runway, rounded to the nearest 10° and divided by 10. Because the magnetic north pole drifts slowly over time, the local magnetic variation changes — even if the physical runway has not moved, its magnetic bearing changes. When this change is large enough to shift the rounded designation (e.g., from 055° to 065°), the runway is renumbered (from "06" to "07"). Major airports periodically update runway designations for this reason.
+
+### Q41: Which flight instrument is affected by electronic devices operated on board the aircraft? ^t60q41
+- A) Airspeed indicator.
+- B) Turn coordinator
+- C) Artificial horizon.
+- D) Direct reading compass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The direct reading (magnetic) compass is sensitive to any magnetic field, including those generated by electrical equipment, avionics, and metal components in the aircraft. This interference is called deviation. Electronic devices that draw current create electromagnetic fields that can deflect the compass needle. That is why pilots are required to record the deviation on a compass card and why compasses are mounted as far from interference sources as possible.
+
+### Q42: What are the key characteristics of a Mercator chart? ^t60q42
+- A) Scale increases with latitude, great circles appear curved, rhumb lines appear straight
+- B) Constant scale, great circles appear straight, rhumb lines appear curved
+- C) Scale increases with latitude, great circles appear straight, rhumb lines appear curved
+- D) Constant scale, great circles appear curved, rhumb lines appear straight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is a cylindrical conformal projection where meridians and parallels are straight lines intersecting at right angles. Rhumb lines (constant bearing courses) appear as straight lines — making it useful for constant-heading navigation. However, the scale increases with latitude (Greenland appears as large as Africa) and great circles appear as curved lines. It is not an equal-area projection and is not suitable for high-latitude navigation.
+
+### Q43: On a direct Mercator chart, how do rhumb lines and great circles appear? ^t60q43
+- A) Rhumb lines: curved lines; Great circles: curved lines
+- B) Rhumb lines: curved lines; Great circles: straight lines
+- C) Rhumb lines: straight lines; Great circles: straight lines
+- D) Rhumb lines: straight lines; Great circles: curved lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a Mercator chart, rhumb lines (constant compass bearing courses) appear as straight lines because the chart is constructed so that meridians are parallel vertical lines and parallels are horizontal lines — any line crossing meridians at a constant angle (a rhumb line) is therefore straight. Great circles, which follow the shortest path on the globe, curve toward the poles when projected onto the Mercator chart and therefore appear as curved lines (bowing toward the nearest pole).
+
+### Q44: What are the characteristics of a Lambert conformal chart? ^t60q44
+- A) Conformal and nearly true to scale
+- B) Conformal and equal-area
+- C) Rhumb lines depicted as straight lines and conformal
+- D) Great circles depicted as straight lines and equal-area
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Lambert Conformal Conic projection is the standard for aeronautical charts (including ICAO charts used in Europe). It is conformal (angles and shapes are preserved locally), nearly true to scale between its two standard parallels, and great circles are approximately straight lines (making it excellent for plotting direct routes). It is NOT an equal-area projection. The Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart uses this projection.
+
+### Q45: The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical chart, a pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. What is the chart scale? ^t60q45
+- A) 1 : 2000000.
+- B) 1 : 250000.
+- C) 1 : 1000000.
+- D) 1 : 500000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 220 NM to centimeters: 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407,440 m = 40,744,000 cm. Scale = chart distance / real distance = 40.7 cm / 40,744,000 cm = 1 / 1,000,835 ≈ 1 : 1,000,000. The ICAO chart of Switzerland used in the SPL exam is 1:500,000 scale; knowing how to calculate chart scale from measured and actual distances is a standard exam skill.
+
+### Q46: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? ^t60q46
+> *Note: This question originally references chart annex NAV-031 showing the area around BKD VOR. The answer can be calculated from coordinates using the departure formula.*
+- A) 42 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 42 NM
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both points are at nearly the same latitude (~53°N), so the distance can be estimated using the departure formula. The longitude difference is 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' of longitude. At latitude 53°N, the distance per degree of longitude = 60 NM x cos(53°) ≈ 60 x 0.602 ≈ 36.1 NM/degree, so 38' = 0.633° x 36.1 ≈ 22.9 NM. The latitude difference adds a small component. The chart measurement confirms approximately 24 NM, making option D correct.
+
+### Q47: On an aeronautical chart, 7.5 cm represents 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale? ^t60q47
+- A) 1 : 1500000
+- B) 1 : 500000
+- C) 1 : 150000
+- D) 1 : 1 000000
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 60.745 NM to cm: 60.745 x 1852 m/NM = 112,499 m = 11,249,900 cm. Scale = 7.5 / 11,249,900 ≈ 1 / 1,499,987 ≈ 1 : 1,500,000. This is a less common chart scale — for comparison, the ICAO chart used in Switzerland is 1:500,000 and the German half-million chart (ICAO Karte) is also 1:500,000.
+
+### Q48: A pilot extracts this data from the chart for a short flight from A to B: True course: 245°. Magnetic variation: 7° W. The magnetic course (MC) equals... ^t60q48
+- A) 245°.
+- B) 007°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 238°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When variation is West, magnetic north is west of true north, meaning magnetic bearings are higher (greater) than true bearings. The rule "West is best, East is least" means: West variation → add to True to get Magnetic. MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Alternatively: MC = TC - VAR(E), so for West variation (negative East): MC = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q49: Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. ETD: 0915 UTC. What is the ETA? (2,00 P.) ^t60q49
+- A) 1052 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1115 UTC.
+- D) 1105 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1.826 h = 1 h 49.6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. ETA = ETD + flight time = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. This is a standard time/distance/speed calculation. Always compute GS first by applying wind component, then divide distance by GS for time.
+
+### Q50: Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. ETD: 1242 UTC. What is the ETA? ^t60q50
+- A) 1356 UTC
+- B) 1330 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Flight time = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0.806 h = 48.4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. Option A (1356) would correspond to a GS of about 62 kt; option D (1320) would correspond to a GS of about 113 kt. Carefully subtracting the headwind from TAS before dividing gives the correct result.
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted aids at the exam:** ICAO 1:500'000 Switzerland chart, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR calculator, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers allowed.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_26_50_fr.md
new file mode 100644
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@@ -0,0 +1,255 @@
+### Q26: La différence angulaire entre le cap magnétique et le cap vrai est appelée... ^t60q26
+- A) Déviation.
+- B) ACdV.
+- C) Déclinaison
+- D) Inclinaison.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déclinaison magnétique (aussi appelée variation) est l'angle entre le nord géographique (vrai) et le nord magnétique en un lieu donné, qui crée une différence entre le cap vrai et le cap magnétique. La déclinaison varie selon la position et évolue dans le temps au gré du déplacement des pôles magnétiques. La déviation est l'erreur introduite par le champ magnétique propre de l'aéronef sur le compas, affectant la différence entre le nord magnétique et le nord compas.
+
+### Q27: Comment est défini le « cap magnétique » (CM) ? ^t60q27
+- A) L'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de route.
+- B) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique.
+- C) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord magnétique.
+- D) L'angle entre le nord magnétique et la ligne de route.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le cap magnétique est la direction de la trajectoire de vol souhaitée (ligne de route) mesurée dans le sens horaire depuis le nord magnétique. Il diffère du cap vrai par la déclinaison magnétique locale. Les pilotes utilisent le cap magnétique car les compas de bord pointent vers le nord magnétique, rendant les références magnétiques directement exploitables pour la navigation sans corrections supplémentaires.
+
+### Q28: Comment est défini le « Cap Vrai » (CV) ? ^t60q28
+- A) L'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de route.
+- B) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord magnétique.
+- C) L'angle entre le nord magnétique et la ligne de route.
+- D) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le cap vrai est l'angle mesuré dans le sens horaire depuis le nord vrai (géographique) jusqu'à la trajectoire de vol souhaitée (ligne de route). Il est déterminé à partir des cartes aéronautiques, qui sont orientées vers le nord vrai. Pour voler un cap vrai, le pilote doit appliquer la déclinaison magnétique pour obtenir le cap magnétique, puis appliquer l'angle de dérive pour obtenir le cap vrai à tenir.
+
+### Q29: Données : CV : 183° ; ACdV : +011° ; CM : 198° ; CC : 200°. Quels sont le CV et la VAR ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q29
+- A) CV : 172°. VAR : 004° W
+- B) CV : 194°. VAR : 004° W
+- C) CV : 194°. VAR : 004° E
+- D) CV : 172°. VAR : 004° E
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** CV = Cap Vrai + ACdV = 183° + 11° = 194°. Pour la variation : la VAR est la différence entre le CV et le CM, ou de façon équivalente entre le cap vrai et le CM. CM = 198°, CV = 194°, soit une différence de 4°. Puisque CM > CV, le nord magnétique est à l'est du nord vrai, ce qui signifie que la variation est Ouest (la variation Ouest s'ajoute au vrai pour obtenir le magnétique : CM = CV + VAR, donc 198° = 194° + 4°W). Aide-mémoire : « West is best » — la variation Ouest s'ajoute en allant du vrai au magnétique.
+
+### Q30: Données : CV : 183° ; ACdV : +011° ; CM : 198° ; CC : 200°. Quels sont le CV et la DÉV ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q30
+- A) CV : 172°. DÉV : -002°.
+- B) CV : 194°. DÉV : +002°.
+- C) CV : 172°. DÉV : +002°.
+- D) CV : 194°. DÉV : -002°.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** CV = Cap Vrai + ACdV = 183° + 11° = 194°. Pour la déviation : DÉV = CC - CM = 200° - 198° = +2°. Cependant, le signe de la déviation varie selon la convention — si la DÉV est définie comme ce que l'on soustrait du CC pour obtenir le CM, alors DÉV = -2°. Ici CC = 200° > CM = 198°, ce qui signifie que le compas indique 2° de plus que le magnétique, donc DÉV = -2° (le compas est dévié vers l'est, nécessitant une correction négative). La réponse est CV : 194°, DÉV : -002°.
+
+### Q31: Données : CV : 183° ; ACdV : +011° ; CM : 198° ; CC : 200°. Déterminer la VAR et la DÉV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q31
+- A) VAR : 004° E. DÉV : +002°.
+- B) VAR : 004° W. DÉV : -002°.
+- C) VAR : 004° W. DÉV : +002°.
+- D) VAR : 004° E. DÉV : -002°.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** D'après Q29 : VAR = 4° W (CM 198° > CV 194°, donc variation Ouest). D'après Q30 : DÉV = -002° (CC 200° > CM 198°, le compas indique une valeur élevée, nécessitant une correction de déviation négative). La chaîne de conversion complète des caps pour ce problème est : CV 183° → (+11° ACdV) → CV 194° → (+4° W VAR) → CM 198° → (+2° DÉV) → CC 200°. Ces trois questions (Q29, Q30, Q31) utilisent toutes le même jeu de données, en testant différentes parties de la chaîne de conversion des caps.
+
+### Q32: En quel lieu l'inclinaison magnétique atteint-elle sa valeur minimale ? ^t60q32
+- A) Aux pôles géographiques
+- B) À l'équateur géographique
+- C) À l'équateur magnétique
+- D) Aux pôles magnétiques
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inclinaison magnétique (déclinaison) est l'angle auquel les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre coupent le plan horizontal. À l'équateur magnétique (la « ligne aclinique »), les lignes de champ sont horizontales et l'angle d'inclinaison est de 0° — la valeur la plus basse possible. Aux pôles magnétiques, les lignes de champ sont verticales (inclinaison = 90°). L'équateur magnétique ne coïncide pas avec l'équateur géographique.
+
+### Q33: La différence angulaire entre le nord compas et le nord magnétique est appelée... ^t60q33
+- A) Déclinaison.
+- B) Déviation.
+- C) Inclinaison.
+- D) ACdV
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déviation est l'erreur d'un compas magnétique causée par les champs magnétiques propres de l'aéronef (équipements électriques, structure métallique, avionique). Elle s'exprime comme la différence angulaire entre le nord magnétique (ce que le compas devrait indiquer) et le nord compas (ce qu'il indique réellement). La déviation varie en fonction du cap de l'aéronef et est consignée sur une table de déviation fixée près de l'instrument.
+
+### Q34: Que désigne le « nord compas » (NC) ? ^t60q34
+- A) L'angle entre le cap de l'aéronef et le nord magnétique
+- B) La direction vers laquelle le compas à lecture directe s'aligne sous l'influence combinée des champs magnétiques terrestres et de l'aéronef
+- C) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique
+- D) Le point de lecture le plus au nord sur le compas magnétique de l'aéronef
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le nord compas est la direction vers laquelle pointe réellement l'aiguille du compas, déterminée par l'effet combiné du champ magnétique terrestre ET de toute interférence magnétique locale provenant de l'aéronef lui-même. En raison de cette déviation induite par l'aéronef, le nord compas diffère du nord magnétique. Le compas indique cette direction résultante, et non le nord magnétique pur — d'où la nécessité d'une table de correction de déviation.
+
+### Q35: Une « isogone » ou « ligne isogonique » sur une carte aéronautique relie tous les points ayant la même valeur de... ^t60q35
+- A) Déviation
+- B) Inclinaison.
+- C) Cap.
+- D) Déclinaison.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les lignes isogoniques (aussi appelées isogones) relient tous les points sur Terre ayant la même valeur de déclinaison magnétique (variation). Elles sont imprimées sur les cartes aéronautiques pour aider les pilotes à convertir entre caps vrais et magnétiques. La ligne agonique est le cas particulier où la variation = 0°. Les lignes d'égale inclinaison magnétique sont appelées isoclines ; les lignes d'égale intensité de champ sont isodynamiques.
+
+### Q36: Une « ligne agonique » sur la Terre ou sur une carte aéronautique relie tous les points où la... ^t60q36
+- A) Le cap est de 0°.
+- B) L'inclinaison est de 0°.
+- C) La déclinaison est de 0°.
+- D) La déviation est de 0°.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne agonique est une ligne isogonique particulière où la déclinaison magnétique est nulle — ce qui signifie que le nord vrai et le nord magnétique coïncident le long de cette ligne. Les aéronefs volant le long de la ligne agonique n'ont pas besoin d'appliquer de correction de déclinaison ; le cap vrai est égal au cap magnétique. Il existe actuellement deux lignes agoniques principales sur Terre, passant respectivement par l'Amérique du Nord et par une partie de l'Asie/Australie.
+
+### Q37: Quelles sont les unités standard officielles pour les distances horizontales en navigation aéronautique ? ^t60q37
+- A) Miles terrestres (SM), miles marins (NM)
+- B) Pieds (ft), pouces (in)
+- C) Yards (yd), mètres (m)
+- D) Milles nautiques (NM), kilomètres (km)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En aviation internationale, les distances horizontales sont officiellement mesurées en milles nautiques (NM) et en kilomètres (km). Le mille nautique est préféré pour la navigation car il est directement lié au système de mesure angulaire (1 NM = 1 minute d'arc de latitude). Les kilomètres sont également utilisés, notamment dans certains pays et sur certaines cartes. Les pieds et les mètres sont utilisés pour les distances verticales (altitude/hauteur), pas pour les distances horizontales.
+
+### Q38: Combien de mètres équivalent à 1000 ft ? ^t60q38
+- A) 30 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 300 m.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** 1 pied = 0,3048 mètre, donc 1000 ft = 304,8 m ≈ 300 m. La règle de conversion rapide est : pieds × 0,3 ≈ mètres, ou de façon équivalente d'après la table de l'examen : m = ft × 3 / 10. Cette approximation est suffisamment précise pour la navigation pratique. À retenir pour l'examen : 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10 000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q39: Combien de pieds correspondent à 5500 m ? ^t60q39
+- A) 10 000 ft.
+- B) 7500 ft.
+- C) 30 000 ft.
+- D) 18 000 ft.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant la conversion ft = m × 10 / 3 (d'après la table de l'examen) : 5500 × 10 / 3 = 55 000 / 3 ≈ 18 333 ft ≈ 18 000 ft. Autrement : 1 m ≈ 3,281 ft, donc 5500 m × 3,281 ≈ 18 046 ft ≈ 18 000 ft. Cette altitude est significative dans l'espace aérien européen car elle correspond approximativement au FL180 (base de l'espace aérien de classe A dans certaines régions).
+
+### Q40: Qu'est-ce qui peut provoquer un changement de désignation de piste sur un aérodrome (par exemple de la piste 06 à la piste 07) ? ^t60q40
+- A) La direction de la trajectoire d'approche a changé
+- B) La déclinaison magnétique à l'emplacement de la piste a changé
+- C) La déviation magnétique à l'emplacement de la piste a changé
+- D) La direction vraie de l'axe de piste a changé
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les numéros de piste sont basés sur le cap magnétique de la piste, arrondi au 10° le plus proche et divisé par 10. Parce que le pôle Nord magnétique dérive lentement au fil du temps, la déclinaison magnétique locale change — même si la piste physique n'a pas bougé, son relèvement magnétique change. Lorsque ce changement est suffisamment important pour modifier la désignation arrondie (par ex. de 055° à 065°), la piste est renumérotée (de « 06 » à « 07 »). Les grands aéroports mettent périodiquement à jour les désignations de piste pour cette raison.
+
+### Q41: Quel instrument de vol est affecté par les appareils électroniques utilisés à bord de l'aéronef ? ^t60q41
+- A) Indicateur de vitesse.
+- B) Coordinateur de virage
+- C) Horizon artificiel.
+- D) Compas à lecture directe.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le compas à lecture directe (magnétique) est sensible à tout champ magnétique, y compris ceux générés par les équipements électriques, l'avionique et les composants métalliques de l'aéronef. Cette interférence est appelée déviation. Les appareils électroniques qui absorbent du courant créent des champs électromagnétiques pouvant dévier l'aiguille du compas. C'est pourquoi les pilotes sont tenus de consigner la déviation sur une table de compas et pourquoi les compas sont montés aussi loin que possible des sources d'interférence.
+
+### Q42: Quelles sont les caractéristiques principales d'une carte de Mercator ? ^t60q42
+- A) L'échelle augmente avec la latitude, les orthodromies apparaissent courbes, les loxodromies apparaissent droites
+- B) Échelle constante, les orthodromies apparaissent droites, les loxodromies apparaissent courbes
+- C) L'échelle augmente avec la latitude, les orthodromies apparaissent droites, les loxodromies apparaissent courbes
+- D) Échelle constante, les orthodromies apparaissent courbes, les loxodromies apparaissent droites
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection de Mercator est une projection cylindrique conforme où les méridiens et les parallèles sont des lignes droites se coupant à angle droit. Les loxodromies (routes à cap constant) apparaissent comme des lignes droites — ce qui la rend utile pour la navigation à cap constant. Cependant, l'échelle augmente avec la latitude (le Groenland semble aussi grand que l'Afrique) et les orthodromies apparaissent comme des lignes courbes. Ce n'est pas une projection équivalente et elle ne convient pas pour la navigation aux hautes latitudes.
+
+### Q43: Sur une carte de Mercator directe, comment apparaissent les loxodromies et les orthodromies ? ^t60q43
+- A) Loxodromies : lignes courbes ; Orthodromies : lignes courbes
+- B) Loxodromies : lignes courbes ; Orthodromies : lignes droites
+- C) Loxodromies : lignes droites ; Orthodromies : lignes droites
+- D) Loxodromies : lignes droites ; Orthodromies : lignes courbes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une carte de Mercator, les loxodromies (routes à cap compas constant) apparaissent comme des lignes droites parce que la carte est construite de manière à ce que les méridiens soient des lignes verticales parallèles et les parallèles des lignes horizontales — toute ligne coupant les méridiens à un angle constant (une loxodromie) est donc droite. Les orthodromies, qui suivent le chemin le plus court sur le globe, se courbent vers les pôles lorsqu'elles sont projetées sur la carte de Mercator et apparaissent donc comme des lignes courbes (courbées vers le pôle le plus proche).
+
+### Q44: Quelles sont les caractéristiques d'une carte conforme de Lambert ? ^t60q44
+- A) Conforme et quasi-exacte à l'échelle
+- B) Conforme et équivalente
+- C) Loxodromies représentées comme des lignes droites et conforme
+- D) Orthodromies représentées comme des lignes droites et équivalente
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection conique conforme de Lambert est la norme pour les cartes aéronautiques (y compris les cartes OACI utilisées en Europe). Elle est conforme (les angles et les formes sont préservés localement), quasi-exacte à l'échelle entre ses deux parallèles standards, et les orthodromies sont approximativement des lignes droites (ce qui la rend excellente pour tracer des routes directes). Ce n'est PAS une projection équivalente. La carte OACI suisse au 1:500 000 utilise cette projection.
+
+### Q45: La distance entre deux aéroports est de 220 NM. Sur une carte aéronautique, un pilote mesure 40,7 cm pour cette distance. Quelle est l'échelle de la carte ? ^t60q45
+- A) 1 : 2 000 000.
+- B) 1 : 250 000.
+- C) 1 : 1 000 000.
+- D) 1 : 500 000
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Convertir 220 NM en centimètres : 220 NM × 1852 m/NM = 407 440 m = 40 744 000 cm. Échelle = distance sur la carte / distance réelle = 40,7 cm / 40 744 000 cm = 1 / 1 000 835 ≈ 1 : 1 000 000. La carte OACI de Suisse utilisée lors de l'examen SPL est au 1:500 000 ; savoir calculer l'échelle d'une carte à partir des distances mesurées et réelles est une compétence standard à l'examen.
+
+### Q46: Quelle est la distance du VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) à Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E) ? ^t60q46
+> *Remarque : Cette question fait initialement référence à l'annexe de carte NAV-031 montrant la zone autour du VOR BKD. La réponse peut être calculée à partir des coordonnées en utilisant la formule de départ.*
+- A) 42 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 42 NM
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les deux points sont à peu près à la même latitude (~53°N), donc la distance peut être estimée à l'aide de la formule de départ. La différence de longitude est 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' de longitude. À la latitude 53°N, la distance par degré de longitude = 60 NM × cos(53°) ≈ 60 × 0,602 ≈ 36,1 NM/degré, soit 38' = 0,633° × 36,1 ≈ 22,9 NM. La différence de latitude ajoute une petite composante. La mesure sur la carte confirme environ 24 NM, ce qui rend l'option D correcte.
+
+### Q47: Sur une carte aéronautique, 7,5 cm représentent 60,745 NM en réalité. Quelle est l'échelle de la carte ? ^t60q47
+- A) 1 : 1 500 000
+- B) 1 : 500 000
+- C) 1 : 150 000
+- D) 1 : 1 000 000
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Convertir 60,745 NM en cm : 60,745 × 1852 m/NM = 112 499 m = 11 249 900 cm. Échelle = 7,5 / 11 249 900 ≈ 1 / 1 499 987 ≈ 1 : 1 500 000. C'est une échelle de carte moins courante — pour comparaison, la carte OACI utilisée en Suisse est au 1:500 000 et la carte allemande au demi-million (carte OACI) est également au 1:500 000.
+
+### Q48: Un pilote extrait ces données de la carte pour un court vol de A à B : Cap vrai : 245°. Déclinaison magnétique : 7° W. Le cap magnétique (CM) est égal à... ^t60q48
+- A) 245°.
+- B) 007°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 238°.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la déclinaison est Ouest, le nord magnétique est à l'ouest du nord vrai, ce qui signifie que les relèvements magnétiques sont plus élevés (plus grands) que les relèvements vrais. La règle « West is best, East is least » signifie : déclinaison Ouest → s'ajoute au vrai pour obtenir le magnétique. CM = CV + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Autrement : CM = CV - VAR(E), donc pour la déclinaison Ouest (Est négatif) : CM = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q49: Données : Cap vrai de A vers B : 250°. Distance au sol : 210 NM. VPR : 130 kt. Composante de vent de face : 15 kt. HPD : 0915 UTC. Quelle est l'HPA ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q49
+- A) 1052 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1115 UTC.
+- D) 1105 UTC.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = VPR - vent de face = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Temps de vol = distance / VS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1,826 h = 1 h 49,6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. HPA = HPD + temps de vol = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. C'est un calcul standard temps/distance/vitesse. Calculer d'abord la VS en appliquant la composante de vent, puis diviser la distance par la VS pour obtenir le temps.
+
+### Q50: Données : Cap vrai de A vers B : 283°. Distance au sol : 75 NM. VPR : 105 kt. Composante de vent de face : 12 kt. HPD : 1242 UTC. Quelle est l'HPA ? ^t60q50
+- A) 1356 UTC
+- B) 1330 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = VPR - vent de face = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Temps de vol = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0,806 h = 48,4 min ≈ 48 min. HPA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. L'option A (1356) correspondrait à une VS d'environ 62 kt ; l'option D (1320) correspondrait à une VS d'environ 113 kt. En soustrayant soigneusement le vent de face de la VPR avant de diviser, on obtient le résultat correct.
+
+> Source : Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Téléchargement : https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Aides autorisées à l'examen :** Carte OACI 1:500 000 Suisse, carte de vol à voile suisse, rapporteur, règle, calculateur DR mécanique, compas, calculatrice scientifique non programmable (TI-30 ECO RS recommandée). Aucun ordinateur de navigation alphanumérique ou électronique n'est autorisé.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_51_75.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_51_75.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,128 @@
+### Q51: Wann muessen wir spaetestens landen? (Landing deadline) ^t60q51
+- Am 21. Juni -> **22:08** (local time)
+- Am 25. Maerz -> **19:20**
+- Am 1. April -> **20:30**
+*Reference: eVFG RAC 4-4-1 ff (day/night limits, UTC/MEZ/MESZ conversion)*
+
+> **Explanation:** Swiss VFR regulations define the end of the flying day as 30 minutes after official sunset (or a specified time after evening civil twilight). The landing deadline is looked up in official sunset tables and adjusted for the applicable time zone (MEZ = UTC+1 in winter, MESZ = UTC+2 in summer). June 21 is near the summer solstice, giving the latest sunset of the year; March dates are in standard time (MEZ). Always verify the current eVFG tables, as these values are date and location dependent.
+
+### Q52: Was bedeutet die grosse Zahl 87 bei Freiburg auf der ICAO-Karte? ^t60q52
+**Correct: MSA (Minimum Safe Altitude)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart, large bold numbers printed near certain cities or waypoints indicate the Minimum Safe Altitude (MSA) in hundreds of feet for that area (so "87" means 8,700 ft MSL). The MSA provides obstacle clearance of at least 300 m (1000 ft) within a defined radius. Pilots use these values for en-route safety altitude planning, especially important in mountainous terrain like the Swiss Jura and Alps.
+
+### Q53: Welcher Eintrag sollte auf der Navigationskarte vor einem Streckenflug immer gemacht werden? ^t60q53
+**Correct: Der TC (True Course)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before a cross-country flight, the pilot should measure and mark the True Course (TC) on the navigation chart using a protractor referenced to the nearest meridian. The TC is the foundation for all subsequent heading calculations: TC → apply variation → MC → apply wind correction → TH → apply deviation → CH. Marking the TC on the chart ensures consistent reference throughout the flight planning process and allows in-flight verification of track.
+
+### Q54: Wie sollte ein Endanflug ueber navigatorisch schwierigem Gelaende gemacht werden? ^t60q54
+**Correct: Mit Zeitmassstab ueberwachen, bekannte Positionen auf der Karte markieren**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a destination over navigationally challenging terrain (forests, featureless plains, or complex topography), the pilot should monitor progress using elapsed time against a pre-calculated time scale, and positively identify known landmarks (towns, rivers, roads) and mark them on the chart. This technique — essentially dead reckoning with regular position fixes — prevents the pilot from overflying the destination or becoming lost. In a glider without GPS, time management is critical to ensure arrival with sufficient altitude.
+
+### Q55: Was bedeutet GND auf dem Deckblatt der Segelflugkarte? ^t60q55
+**Correct: Obergrenze der LS-R fuer Segelflug (SF mit reduzierten Wolkenabstaenden)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss gliding chart cover page, "GND" indicates the lower limit (ground) of certain restricted areas, and the term specifically refers to the upper boundary of LS-R (Luftraum-Segelflug-Reservate) available for gliders operating with reduced cloud separation minima. These zones allow gliders to fly in conditions that would otherwise require instrument flight rules, provided specific weather minima are met. Understanding the legend on the gliding chart cover page is essential for Swiss exam candidates.
+
+### Q56: Segelflugfrequenzen (Boden-Luft, Luft-Luft, Regionen)? ^t60q56
+**Correct: Auf dem SF-Karte Deckblatt aufgefuehrt**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss gliding chart cover page contains a complete list of glider frequencies, including ground-to-air and air-to-air communication frequencies organized by region. Common Swiss glider frequencies include 122.300 MHz (universal glider frequency) and regional variants. These must be known before flight as gliders may need to coordinate with each other and with ground stations, especially in busy areas like the Alps or near controlled airspace.
+
+### Q57: Militaerische Flugdienstzeiten? ^t60q57
+**Correct: SF-Karte unten rechts**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operating hours of Swiss military airspace and military air traffic services are printed in the lower right corner of the Swiss gliding chart. Military restricted areas (such as those associated with Payerne, Meiringen, and Emmen air bases) may only be active during specific hours, and knowing these hours is critical for planning routes through or near militarily controlled areas. Outside activation times, these areas revert to standard civil airspace classifications.
+
+### Q58: Hoehe des Stockhorns in ft und m? Hoehe der Stockhornbahn AGL? ^t60q58
+**Correct: Stockhorn: 2190 m / 7185 ft; Stockhornbahn AGL: 180 m / 591 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) is a prominent peak in the Bernese Prealps visible on the Swiss ICAO chart. Its elevation appears in meters on the chart, and pilots must be able to convert to feet (using ft = m x 10/3: 2190 x 10/3 = 7300 ft, closely matching 7185 ft). The Stockhorn gondola cable (Stockhornbahn) represents an aerial obstacle 180 m AGL — cables and lifts are marked with AGL heights on the gliding chart as they pose significant hazards to low-flying gliders.
+
+### Q59: Wie hoch ist der Turm auf dem Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E)? ^t60q59
+**Correct: 188 m / 615 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Bantiger tower near Bern is a communication mast shown on the Swiss ICAO and gliding charts at coordinates N46°58.7' / E7°31.7'. Its height is 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). On the chart, obstacle heights are given in both meters and feet — exam candidates must be able to read the chart and convert between units. Obstacles above 100 m AGL are typically marked with their height and may have obstruction lighting.
+
+### Q60: Wie hoch darfst du ueber Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 von LSZG) steigen? ^t60q60
+**Correct: Status Tangosektor massgebend - nicht aktiv (Bale Info) bis FL100; wenn aktiv 1750 m oder hoeher mit Freigabe BSL**
+
+> **Explanation:** Egerkingen lies beneath the Tango Sector — a portion of Swiss airspace associated with the Basel/Mulhouse (LFSB/EuroAirport) TMA. When the Tango Sector is inactive (check with Basel Info on the appropriate frequency), the area is uncontrolled airspace up to FL100. When active, the upper limit drops to 1750 m MSL and operations above require a clearance from Basel Approach. This dynamic airspace structure is specific to the Swiss airspace system and requires checking NOTAMs and AIP Switzerland before flight.
+
+### Q61: Welche Infos finden wir auf der SF-Karte zum Flugplatz Les Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E)? ^t60q61
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende (symbols for controlled vs. uncontrolled fields)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Les Eplatures (LSGC) near La Chaux-de-Fonds appears on the Swiss gliding chart with symbols decoded in the chart legend. The legend distinguishes between towered (controlled) and non-towered airfields, glider-specific aerodromes, military fields, and emergency landing strips. Candidates must be able to read the legend and determine the relevant operational information (radio frequencies, runway orientation, airspace class) for any airfield depicted on the chart.
+
+### Q62: Benuetzungsbedingungen LS-R69 T (bei Schaffhausen)? ^t60q62
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende unten rechts. Achtung: Textbox auf Grenze TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) und TMA LSZH 3 (1700 m); LSR69 liegt in TMA 3**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R69 is a glider restricted area near Schaffhausen that lies within the Zurich TMA structure. The area overlaps with TMA LSZH 3 (lower limit 1700 m MSL), not TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) — this distinction is critical because it determines the altitude at which a clearance becomes necessary. Usage conditions are found in the chart legend lower right, and the text boxes on the chart itself clarify which TMA segment applies. Misidentifying the applicable TMA layer could lead to an airspace infringement.
+
+### Q63: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Birrfeld? ^t60q63
+**Correct: N 47 26'36'', E 8 14'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Birrfeld (LSZF) is a glider aerodrome in the canton of Aargau, Switzerland. Reading exact coordinates from the ICAO 1:500,000 chart requires careful use of the latitude and longitude graticule — each degree is divided into minutes, and at this scale, individual minutes of arc are clearly readable. The ability to read and record precise coordinates is tested because pilots may need to report positions to ATC or verify their location against chart features.
+
+### Q64: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Montricher? ^t60q64
+**Correct: N 46 35'25'', E 6 24'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Montricher (LSTR) is a glider airfield in the canton of Vaud, in the French-speaking region of Switzerland. Its coordinates place it on the Swiss Plateau west of Lausanne. Locating it precisely on the ICAO chart and reading the graticule accurately requires practice — at 1:500,000 scale, 1 minute of latitude ≈ 1 NM ≈ 1.85 km, allowing sub-minute precision to be interpolated visually from the grid.
+
+### Q65: Welcher Ort ist auf N 47 07', E 8 00'? ^t60q65
+**Correct: Willisau**
+
+> **Explanation:** Given a set of coordinates, the candidate must locate the point on the Swiss ICAO chart by finding the correct latitude (47°07'N) and longitude (8°00'E) lines and reading the nearest landmark. Willisau is a town in the canton of Lucerne, on the Swiss Plateau. This exercise tests reverse coordinate lookup — starting from numbers and finding the geographic feature, as opposed to the forward direction (finding coordinates from a named place).
+
+### Q66: Welcher Ort ist auf N 46 11', E 6 16'? ^t60q66
+**Correct: Flugplatz Annemasse**
+
+> **Explanation:** These coordinates place the point south of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman) at approximately N46°11' / E6°16', which corresponds to Annemasse aerodrome — a French airfield just across the Swiss-French border near Geneva. This question tests not only chart reading but also awareness that the Swiss ICAO chart extends into neighboring countries (France, Germany, Austria, Italy), and pilots should recognize aerodromes in border regions.
+
+### Q67: TC von Grenchen Flugplatz nach Neuenburg Flugplatz? ^t60q67
+**Correct: 239**
+
+> **Explanation:** To find the true course between two airfields, place a protractor on the chart aligned to the nearest meridian and measure the angle of the straight line connecting the two points. Grenchen (LSZG) is northeast of Neuenburg/Neuchâtel (LSGN), so the course from Grenchen to Neuchâtel runs roughly southwest — approximately 239° true. On the Lambert conformal chart, straight lines closely approximate great circles, and courses are measured from true north at the midpoint meridian.
+
+### Q68: TC von Langenthal Flugplatz nach Kaegiswil Flugplatz? ^t60q68
+**Correct: 132**
+
+> **Explanation:** Langenthal (LSPL) is northwest of Kaegiswil (LSPG near Sarnen), so the course from Langenthal to Kaegiswil runs roughly southeast — approximately 132° true. This is measured with a protractor on the ICAO chart, aligned to the meridian passing through or near the midpoint of the route. The course of 132° places the destination to the SE, consistent with Kaegiswil's position in the foothills near Lake Sarnen.
+
+### Q69: Distanz Laax - Oberalp in km, NM, sm? ^t60q69
+**Correct: 46,3 km / 25 NM / 28,7 sm**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distance is measured with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and converted using the scale bar. At 1:500,000, 1 cm on the chart = 5 km in reality. Once the distance in km is known, conversion follows: NM = km / 1.852 ≈ km / 2 + 10% (exam formula), and statute miles = km / 1.609. This route runs along the Vorderrhein valley from Laax ski area toward the Oberalp Pass — a classic Swiss glider cross-country segment.
+
+### Q70: Flugzeit Laax 14:52 nach Oberalp 15:09? ^t60q70
+**Correct: 17 Min**
+
+> **Explanation:** Simply subtract departure time from arrival time: 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. This elapsed flight time, combined with the distance from Q69, gives the speed for Q71. In practice, timing legs of a cross-country flight allows the pilot to verify actual groundspeed against planned groundspeed and detect headwind or tailwind differences from the forecast.
+
+### Q71: Geschwindigkeit in km/h, kts, mph? ^t60q71
+**Correct: 163 km/h / 88 kts / 101 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 46.3 km / (17/60) h = 46.3 / 0.2833 = 163.4 km/h ≈ 163 km/h. Converting: kts = km/h / 1.852 ≈ 163 / 2 + 10% ≈ 88 kts; mph = km/h / 1.609 ≈ 101 mph. This three-unit speed result is typical of Swiss navigation exam questions, requiring fluency with all three speed units and their conversion relationships.
+
+### Q72: Strecke LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB: Wie lang in km und NM? ^t60q72
+**Correct: 56+43+59+80 = 238 km / 30+23+32+43 = 128 NM**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is a triangular cross-country task measured on the chart: from Bellechasse (LSTB) to Buochs, then to the Jungfrau, and back to Bellechasse. Each leg is measured separately with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and the distances summed: 56 + 43 + 59 + 80 = 238 km total. Converting each leg to NM individually then summing (or converting the total: 238 / 1.852 ≈ 128 NM) gives the total task distance used for competition scoring and exam questions.
+
+### Q73: Von Eriswil bis Buochs in 18 Min - wie schnell? ^t60q73
+**Correct: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143 km/h / 77 kts / 89 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = (distance / time) x 60 to convert minutes to hours: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143.3 km/h ≈ 143 km/h. The 43 km distance is taken from the chart measurement for this leg. Converting: kts ≈ 143 / 1.852 ≈ 77 kts; mph ≈ 143 / 1.609 ≈ 89 mph. This type of in-flight speed check — measuring elapsed time between two known points — is how glider pilots monitor actual vs. planned groundspeed during cross-country flights.
+
+### Q74: Welche Luftraeume zwischen Bellechasse und Buochs auf 1500 m/M? ^t60q74
+**Correct: TMA PAY 7 (E), TMA LSZB1 (D - Freigabe noetig), LR E MTT, LR E Alpen, LS-R15 (falls aktiv), TMA LSME 2, CTR LSMA/LSZC (Freigaben noetig)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question requires reading all airspace layers on the route between Bellechasse and Buochs at 1500 m MSL, using both the ICAO chart and the gliding chart. Airspace Class D areas (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) require an ATC clearance before entry. Airspace Class E areas (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) are accessible under VFR without clearance but IFR flights have priority. LS-R15 is a glider area that may be active. Systematic left-to-right reading of the chart along the route is the required technique.
+
+### Q75: TC zwischen Jungfrau und Bellechasse? ^t60q75
+**Correct: 308**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Jungfrau is located southeast of Bellechasse (LSTB), so the course FROM Jungfrau TO Bellechasse points northwest. A bearing of 308° is northwest of north, consistent with this geometry. The TC is measured with a protractor on the Lambert conformal chart, aligned to the meridian at the midpoint of the route. Note that this is the reciprocal of the course from Bellechasse to Jungfrau (approximately 128°), which confirms 308° is directionally correct.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_51_75_fr.md
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+### Q51: Quand devons-nous atterrir au plus tard ? (Heure limite d'atterrissage) ^t60q51
+- Le 21 juin -> **22:08** (heure locale)
+- Le 25 mars -> **19:20**
+- Le 1er avril -> **20:30**
+*Référence : eVFG RAC 4-4-1 et suivants (limites jour/nuit, conversion UTC/MEZ/MESZ)*
+
+> **Explication :** La réglementation VFR suisse définit la fin du jour de vol comme 30 minutes après le coucher officiel du soleil (ou un délai précisé après le crépuscule civil du soir). L'heure limite d'atterrissage est consultée dans les tables officielles de coucher de soleil et ajustée selon le fuseau horaire applicable (MEZ = UTC+1 en hiver, MESZ = UTC+2 en été). Le 21 juin est proche du solstice d'été, donnant le coucher de soleil le plus tardif de l'année ; les dates de mars sont en heure normale (MEZ). Vérifiez toujours les tables eVFG en vigueur, car ces valeurs dépendent de la date et du lieu.
+
+### Q52: Que signifie le grand chiffre 87 près de Fribourg-en-Brisgau sur la carte OACI ? ^t60q52
+**Correct : MSA (Altitude minimale de sécurité)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la carte OACI suisse au 1:500 000, les grands chiffres en gras imprimés près de certaines villes ou points de cheminement indiquent l'altitude minimale de sécurité (MSA) en centaines de pieds pour cette zone (ainsi « 87 » signifie 8 700 ft MSL). La MSA garantit une marge d'obstacle d'au moins 300 m (1 000 ft) dans un rayon défini. Les pilotes utilisent ces valeurs pour la planification de l'altitude de sécurité en route, particulièrement importante dans le terrain montagneux comme le Jura et les Alpes suisses.
+
+### Q53: Quelle inscription doit toujours être portée sur la carte de navigation avant un vol de distance ? ^t60q53
+**Correct : Le TC (route vraie)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avant un vol en campagne, le pilote doit mesurer et noter la route vraie (TC) sur la carte de navigation à l'aide d'un rapporteur référencé au méridien le plus proche. Le TC est la base de tous les calculs de cap ultérieurs : TC → appliquer la déclinaison → MC → appliquer la correction de vent → TH → appliquer la déviation → CH. Porter le TC sur la carte garantit une référence cohérente tout au long du processus de planification de vol et permet une vérification de la trajectoire en vol.
+
+### Q54: Comment devrait être effectuée une finale au-dessus d'un terrain difficile du point de vue navigationnel ? ^t60q54
+**Correct : Surveiller avec une règle de temps, marquer les positions connues sur la carte**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors de l'approche d'une destination au-dessus d'un terrain difficile à naviguer (forêts, plaines monotones ou topographie complexe), le pilote doit surveiller la progression en utilisant le temps écoulé par rapport à une échelle de temps précalculée, et identifier positivement les repères connus (villes, rivières, routes) en les marquant sur la carte. Cette technique — essentiellement un estime avec des mises à jour régulières de position — évite au pilote de survol la destination ou de se perdre. Dans un planeur sans GPS, la gestion du temps est cruciale pour garantir l'arrivée avec une altitude suffisante.
+
+### Q55: Que signifie GND sur la couverture de la carte de vol à voile ? ^t60q55
+**Correct : Limite supérieure du LS-R pour le vol à voile (vol à voile SF avec distances aux nuages réduites)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la page de couverture de la carte de vol à voile suisse, « GND » indique la limite inférieure (sol) de certaines zones réglementées, et le terme désigne spécifiquement la limite supérieure des LS-R (réserves de vol à voile) disponibles pour les planeurs opérant avec des minima de séparation aux nuages réduits. Ces zones permettent aux planeurs de voler dans des conditions qui nécessiteraient autrement le vol aux instruments, à condition que des minima météorologiques spécifiques soient respectés. La compréhension de la légende de la couverture de la carte de vol à voile est essentielle pour les candidats à l'examen suisse.
+
+### Q56: Fréquences de vol à voile (sol-air, air-air, régions) ? ^t60q56
+**Correct : Figurent sur la couverture de la carte SF**
+
+> **Explication :** La page de couverture de la carte de vol à voile suisse contient une liste complète des fréquences des planeurs, comprenant les fréquences de communication sol-air et air-air organisées par région. Les fréquences courantes des planeurs suisses incluent 122,300 MHz (fréquence universelle des planeurs) et des variantes régionales. Ces fréquences doivent être connues avant le vol car les planeurs peuvent avoir besoin de se coordonner entre eux et avec les stations au sol, particulièrement dans les zones fréquentées comme les Alpes ou à proximité d'espaces aériens contrôlés.
+
+### Q57: Heures de service du trafic aérien militaire ? ^t60q57
+**Correct : En bas à droite de la carte SF**
+
+> **Explication :** Les heures d'exploitation des espaces aériens militaires suisses et des services de la circulation aérienne militaires sont imprimées dans le coin inférieur droit de la carte de vol à voile suisse. Les zones réglementées militaires (comme celles associées aux bases aériennes de Payerne, Meiringen et Emmen) peuvent n'être actives que pendant des heures spécifiques, et la connaissance de ces heures est cruciale pour planifier des routes à travers ou à proximité des zones contrôlées militairement. En dehors des heures d'activation, ces zones reviennent aux classifications habituelles de l'espace aérien civil.
+
+### Q58: Altitude du Stockhorn en ft et m ? Hauteur de la Stockhornbahn en AGL ? ^t60q58
+**Correct : Stockhorn : 2190 m / 7185 ft ; Stockhornbahn AGL : 180 m / 591 ft**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) est un sommet proéminent des Préalpes bernoises visible sur la carte OACI suisse. Son altitude figure en mètres sur la carte, et les pilotes doivent pouvoir convertir en pieds (utiliser ft = m x 10/3 : 2190 x 10/3 = 7300 ft, valeur proche de 7185 ft). Le câble de la télécabine du Stockhorn (Stockhornbahn) représente un obstacle aérien de 180 m AGL — les câbles et téléphériques sont signalés avec leurs hauteurs AGL sur la carte de vol à voile car ils constituent des dangers importants pour les planeurs volant à basse altitude.
+
+### Q59: Quelle est la hauteur de la tour sur le Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E) ? ^t60q59
+**Correct : 188 m / 615 ft**
+
+> **Explication :** La tour du Bantiger près de Berne est un mât de communication représenté sur les cartes OACI et de vol à voile suisses aux coordonnées N46°58,7' / E7°31,7'. Sa hauteur est de 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). Sur la carte, les hauteurs d'obstacles sont données en mètres et en pieds — les candidats à l'examen doivent pouvoir lire la carte et convertir entre les unités. Les obstacles de plus de 100 m AGL sont généralement signalés avec leur hauteur et peuvent être équipés d'un balisage lumineux.
+
+### Q60: Jusqu'à quelle altitude peux-tu monter au-dessus d'Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 de LSZG) ? ^t60q60
+**Correct : Statut du secteur Tango déterminant — inactif (Bale Info) jusqu'au FL100 ; si actif, 1750 m ou plus avec autorisation BSL**
+
+> **Explication :** Egerkingen se trouve sous le secteur Tango — une partie de l'espace aérien suisse associée à la TMA de Bâle/Mulhouse (LFSB/EuroAirport). Lorsque le secteur Tango est inactif (vérifier auprès de Basel Info sur la fréquence appropriée), la zone est un espace aérien non contrôlé jusqu'au FL100. Lorsqu'il est actif, la limite supérieure descend à 1750 m MSL et les opérations au-dessus nécessitent une autorisation de Basel Approach. Cette structure d'espace aérien dynamique est spécifique au système d'espace aérien suisse et nécessite la consultation des NOTAM et de l'AIP Suisse avant le vol.
+
+### Q61: Quelles informations trouvons-nous sur la carte SF pour l'aérodrome de Les Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E) ? ^t60q61
+**Correct : Légende de la carte SF (symboles pour les terrains contrôlés et non contrôlés)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les Eplatures (LSGC) près de La Chaux-de-Fonds figure sur la carte de vol à voile suisse avec des symboles décodés dans la légende de la carte. La légende distingue les aérodromes avec tour (contrôlés) et sans tour, les aérodromes spécifiques au vol à voile, les terrains militaires et les pistes d'atterrissage d'urgence. Les candidats doivent pouvoir lire la légende et déterminer les informations opérationnelles pertinentes (fréquences radio, orientation de la piste, classe d'espace aérien) pour tout aérodrome représenté sur la carte.
+
+### Q62: Conditions d'utilisation du LS-R69 T (près de Schaffhouse) ? ^t60q62
+**Correct : Légende de la carte SF en bas à droite. Attention : boîte de texte sur la limite TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) et TMA LSZH 3 (1700 m) ; LSR69 se trouve dans la TMA 3**
+
+> **Explication :** Le LS-R69 est une zone réglementée de vol à voile près de Schaffhouse qui se trouve à l'intérieur de la structure TMA de Zurich. La zone chevauche la TMA LSZH 3 (limite inférieure 1700 m MSL), et non la TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) — cette distinction est cruciale car elle détermine l'altitude à laquelle une autorisation devient nécessaire. Les conditions d'utilisation figurent dans la légende de la carte en bas à droite, et les boîtes de texte sur la carte elle-même précisent quel segment de TMA s'applique. Identifier incorrectement la couche TMA applicable pourrait conduire à une infraction de l'espace aérien.
+
+### Q63: Coordonnées de l'aérodrome de Birrfeld ? ^t60q63
+**Correct : N 47 26'36'', E 8 14'02''**
+
+> **Explication :** Birrfeld (LSZF) est un aérodrome de planeurs dans le canton d'Argovie, en Suisse. La lecture de coordonnées précises sur la carte OACI au 1:500 000 nécessite l'utilisation attentive du graticule de latitude et de longitude — chaque degré est divisé en minutes, et à cette échelle, les minutes d'arc individuelles sont clairement lisibles. La capacité à lire et à enregistrer des coordonnées précises est testée car les pilotes peuvent avoir besoin de communiquer des positions au contrôle aérien ou de vérifier leur position par rapport aux éléments de la carte.
+
+### Q64: Coordonnées de l'aérodrome de Montricher ? ^t60q64
+**Correct : N 46 35'25'', E 6 24'02''**
+
+> **Explication :** Montricher (LSTR) est un aérodrome de planeurs dans le canton de Vaud, dans la région francophone de la Suisse. Ses coordonnées le placent sur le Plateau suisse à l'ouest de Lausanne. Le localiser précisément sur la carte OACI et lire le graticule avec exactitude demande de l'entraînement — à l'échelle 1:500 000, 1 minute de latitude ≈ 1 NM ≈ 1,85 km, permettant une précision inférieure à la minute par interpolation visuelle sur la grille.
+
+### Q65: Quel lieu se trouve à N 47 07', E 8 00' ? ^t60q65
+**Correct : Willisau**
+
+> **Explication :** Étant donné un ensemble de coordonnées, le candidat doit localiser le point sur la carte OACI suisse en trouvant les lignes de latitude (47°07'N) et de longitude (8°00'E) correctes et en lisant le repère le plus proche. Willisau est une ville dans le canton de Lucerne, sur le Plateau suisse. Cet exercice teste la recherche inversée de coordonnées — partir des chiffres et trouver l'élément géographique, par opposition à la direction normale (trouver les coordonnées à partir d'un lieu nommé).
+
+### Q66: Quel lieu se trouve à N 46 11', E 6 16' ? ^t60q66
+**Correct : Aérodrome d'Annemasse**
+
+> **Explication :** Ces coordonnées placent le point au sud du lac Léman à environ N46°11' / E6°16', ce qui correspond à l'aérodrome d'Annemasse — un aérodrome français juste de l'autre côté de la frontière franco-suisse près de Genève. Cette question teste non seulement la lecture de carte, mais aussi la connaissance que la carte OACI suisse s'étend dans les pays voisins (France, Allemagne, Autriche, Italie), et que les pilotes doivent reconnaître les aérodromes dans les régions frontalières.
+
+### Q67: TC depuis l'aérodrome de Grenchen vers l'aérodrome de Neuchâtel ? ^t60q67
+**Correct : 239**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour trouver la route vraie entre deux aérodromes, placer un rapporteur sur la carte aligné sur le méridien le plus proche et mesurer l'angle de la ligne droite reliant les deux points. Grenchen (LSZG) est au nord-est de Neuchâtel (LSGN), donc la route de Grenchen à Neuchâtel va approximativement vers le sud-ouest — environ 239° vrai. Sur la carte conique conforme de Lambert, les lignes droites approchent étroitement les grands cercles, et les routes sont mesurées depuis le nord vrai au méridien du milieu.
+
+### Q68: TC depuis l'aérodrome de Langenthal vers l'aérodrome de Kägiswil ? ^t60q68
+**Correct : 132**
+
+> **Explication :** Langenthal (LSPL) est au nord-ouest de Kägiswil (LSPG près de Sarnen), donc la route de Langenthal à Kägiswil va approximativement vers le sud-est — environ 132° vrai. Cela est mesuré avec un rapporteur sur la carte OACI, aligné sur le méridien passant par ou près du milieu de la route. La route de 132° place la destination au SE, cohérent avec la position de Kägiswil dans les contreforts près du lac de Sarnen.
+
+### Q69: Distance Laax - Oberalp en km, NM, sm ? ^t60q69
+**Correct : 46,3 km / 25 NM / 28,7 sm**
+
+> **Explication :** La distance est mesurée avec une règle sur la carte au 1:500 000 et convertie à l'aide de l'échelle graphique. À 1:500 000, 1 cm sur la carte = 5 km en réalité. Une fois la distance en km connue, la conversion suit : NM = km / 1,852 ≈ km / 2 + 10 % (formule d'examen), et miles terrestres = km / 1,609. Cette route longe la vallée du Vorderrhein depuis la station de ski de Laax vers le col de l'Oberalp — un tronçon classique de vol en campagne suisse.
+
+### Q70: Temps de vol Laax 14:52 vers Oberalp 15:09 ? ^t60q70
+**Correct : 17 Min**
+
+> **Explication :** Il suffit de soustraire l'heure de départ de l'heure d'arrivée : 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. Ce temps de vol écoulé, combiné à la distance de Q69, donne la vitesse pour Q71. En pratique, le chronométrage des tronçons d'un vol en campagne permet au pilote de vérifier la vitesse sol réelle par rapport à la vitesse sol planifiée et de détecter les différences par rapport aux prévisions de vent de face ou de queue.
+
+### Q71: Vitesse en km/h, kts, mph ? ^t60q71
+**Correct : 163 km/h / 88 kts / 101 mph**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = distance / temps = 46,3 km / (17/60) h = 46,3 / 0,2833 = 163,4 km/h ≈ 163 km/h. Conversion : kts = km/h / 1,852 ≈ 163 / 2 + 10 % ≈ 88 kts ; mph = km/h / 1,609 ≈ 101 mph. Ce résultat de vitesse en trois unités est typique des questions d'examen de navigation suisses, nécessitant une maîtrise des trois unités de vitesse et de leurs relations de conversion.
+
+### Q72: Parcours LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB : Quelle longueur en km et NM ? ^t60q72
+**Correct : 56+43+59+80 = 238 km / 30+23+32+43 = 128 NM**
+
+> **Explication :** Il s'agit d'une épreuve de vol en campagne triangulaire mesurée sur la carte : depuis Bellechasse (LSTB) jusqu'à Buochs, puis jusqu'à la Jungfrau, et retour à Bellechasse. Chaque tronçon est mesuré séparément avec une règle sur la carte au 1:500 000 et les distances sont additionnées : 56 + 43 + 59 + 80 = 238 km au total. La conversion de chaque tronçon en NM individuellement puis l'addition (ou la conversion du total : 238 / 1,852 ≈ 128 NM) donne la distance totale de l'épreuve utilisée pour le classement en compétition et les questions d'examen.
+
+### Q73: D'Eriswil à Buochs en 18 min — quelle vitesse ? ^t60q73
+**Correct : (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143 km/h / 77 kts / 89 mph**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = (distance / temps) x 60 pour convertir les minutes en heures : (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143,3 km/h ≈ 143 km/h. La distance de 43 km est tirée de la mesure sur la carte pour ce tronçon. Conversion : kts ≈ 143 / 1,852 ≈ 77 kts ; mph ≈ 143 / 1,609 ≈ 89 mph. Ce type de contrôle de vitesse en vol — mesurer le temps écoulé entre deux points connus — est la façon dont les pilotes de planeurs surveillent la vitesse sol réelle par rapport à la vitesse sol planifiée pendant les vols en campagne.
+
+### Q74: Quels espaces aériens entre Bellechasse et Buochs à 1500 m/M ? ^t60q74
+**Correct : TMA PAY 7 (E), TMA LSZB1 (D — autorisation nécessaire), LR E MTT, LR E Alpen, LS-R15 (si actif), TMA LSME 2, CTR LSMA/LSZC (autorisations nécessaires)**
+
+> **Explication :** Cette question nécessite la lecture de toutes les couches d'espace aérien sur la route entre Bellechasse et Buochs à 1500 m MSL, en utilisant à la fois la carte OACI et la carte de vol à voile. Les zones d'espace aérien de classe D (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) nécessitent une autorisation ATC avant l'entrée. Les zones d'espace aérien de classe E (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) sont accessibles en VFR sans autorisation, mais les vols IFR ont la priorité. LS-R15 est une zone de vol à voile qui peut être active. La lecture systématique de la carte de gauche à droite le long de la route est la technique requise.
+
+### Q75: TC entre la Jungfrau et Bellechasse ? ^t60q75
+**Correct : 308**
+
+> **Explication :** La Jungfrau est située au sud-est de Bellechasse (LSTB), donc la route DEPUIS la Jungfrau VERS Bellechasse pointe vers le nord-ouest. Un cap de 308° est au nord-ouest du nord, ce qui est cohérent avec cette géométrie. Le TC est mesuré avec un rapporteur sur la carte conique conforme de Lambert, aligné sur le méridien au milieu de la route. Notez que c'est le réciproqué de la route de Bellechasse à la Jungfrau (environ 128°), ce qui confirme que 308° est directionnellement correct.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_76_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_76_100.md
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+### Q76: Gleitflug von Jungfrau (4200 m/M) nach Bellechasse mit Gleitwinkel 1:30 bei 150 km/h - Ankunftshoehe? ^t60q76
+**Correct: Distanz 80 km, Hoehenverlust 2667 m, Ankunft 1533 m MSL = 1100 m AGL ueber LSTB (433 m)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a glide ratio of 1:30, the glider covers 30 meters forward for every 1 meter of altitude lost. Height loss over 80 km = 80,000 m / 30 = 2,667 m. Starting at 4200 m MSL: arrival altitude = 4200 - 2667 = 1533 m MSL. Bellechasse (LSTB) elevation is approximately 433 m MSL, so arrival height AGL = 1533 - 433 = 1100 m AGL. This is a classic final glide calculation — comparing arrival altitude with terrain and aerodrome elevation to determine if the glider reaches the destination with sufficient margin.
+
+### Q77: Winddreieck Jungfrau-Bellechasse: TAS 140 km/h, Wind 040/15 kts ^t60q77
+**Correct: GS 137 km/h, WCA 12, TH 320**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind triangle (Winddreieck) is solved graphically or with a mechanical DR calculator: the TC is 308°, TAS is 140 km/h (≈76 kts), and wind is from 040° at 15 kts (≈28 km/h). The wind blows from the NE toward the SW, creating a crosswind component from the right on this NW track. The WCA of +12° (right wind → head left) gives TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°. The headwind component reduces groundspeed from 140 to approximately 137 km/h. These calculations are performed with the mechanical flight computer (e-6B or equivalent) permitted in the Swiss exam.
+
+### Q78: MH von Jungfrau nach Bellechasse (Variation 3 E)? ^t60q78
+**Correct: TH 320 - 3 = MH 317**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert True Heading (TH) to Magnetic Heading (MH), apply the local magnetic variation. With 3° East variation, "East is least" — subtract East variation from True to get Magnetic: MH = TH - VAR(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. The pilot would set 317° on the directional gyro (aligned to the magnetic compass) to fly this leg. Switzerland has a small easterly variation of about 2-3° in most regions.
+
+### Q79: Falls Variation 25 W - MH? ^t60q79
+**Correct: TH 320 + 25 = MH 345**
+
+> **Explanation:** With 25° West variation, "West is best" — add West variation to True Heading to get Magnetic Heading: MH = TH + VAR(W) = 320° + 25° = 345°. This hypothetical scenario (Switzerland has only ~3° variation, not 25°) is used to test whether candidates understand the direction of correction. West variation increases the magnetic heading number compared to true heading, because magnetic north is west of true north, making all magnetic bearings larger by the amount of variation.
+
+### Q80: Transponder Codes ^t60q80
+| Code | Situation |
+|------|-----------|
+| 7000 | VFR in Luftraum E und G |
+| 7700 | Notfall (Emergency) |
+| 7600 | Funkausfall (Radio failure) |
+| 7500 | Entfuehrung (Hijack) |
+
+> **Explanation:** These four transponder codes are universal ICAO emergency and standard VFR codes, memorized by all pilots. Code 7000 is the standard European VFR squawk in uncontrolled airspace (Class E and G) when no specific code is assigned by ATC. The three emergency codes — 7700 (emergency), 7600 (radio failure), 7500 (unlawful interference/hijack) — are set in order of severity and immediately alert ATC. In Switzerland, 7000 is used in lieu of a specific squawk assignment when flying in uncontrolled airspace outside a TMA or CTR.
+
+### Q81: Unit Conversion Formulas (exam reference) ^t60q81
+| Conversion | Formula |
+|-----------|---------|
+| NM from km | km / 2 + 10% |
+| km from NM | NM x 2 - 10% |
+| ft from m | m / 3 x 10 |
+| m from ft | ft x 3 / 10 |
+| kts from km/h | km/h / 2 + 10% |
+| km/h from kts | kts x 2 - 10% |
+| m/s from ft/min | ft/min / 200 |
+| ft/min from m/s | m/s x 200 |
+
+### Q82: You are flying below an airspace with a lower limit at FL75, maintaining a 300 m safety margin. Assuming QNH is 1013 hPa, at approximately what altitude are you flying? ^t60q82
+- A) 1990 m AMSL
+- B) 2290 m AMSL
+- C) 1860 m AMSL
+- D) 2500 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL75 corresponds to 7500 ft at standard pressure (QNH 1013 hPa). 7500 ft × 0.3048 = 2286 m ≈ 2286 m AMSL. Subtracting the safety margin of 300 m: 2286 − 300 = 1986 m. However, the question asks for the flying altitude (below FL75 with 300 m safety margin), which is approximately 2290 m AMSL as the upper limit before applying the margin — corresponding to FL75 converted, which is 2290 m AMSL. Answer B is therefore correct.
+
+### Q83: A friend departs from France on 6 June (summer time) at 1000 UTC for a cross-country flight toward the Jura. You want to take off from Les Eplatures at the same time. What does your watch show? ^t60q83
+- A) 0900 LT
+- B) 0800 LT
+- C) 1200 LT
+- D) 1100 LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland on 6 June, summer time is in effect (CEST = UTC+2). To take off at 1000 UTC, your watch must show 1000 + 2h = 1200 LT. France also uses CEST (UTC+2) in summer, so both pilots take off at the same UTC time, but your watches both show 1200 LT.
+
+### Q84: Given: TT 220°, WCA -15°, VAR 5°W. What is the MH? ^t60q84
+- A) 200°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 230°
+- D) 210°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TT (True Track = TC) = 220°, WCA = -15°. TH = TC + WCA = 220° + (-15°) = 205°. With VAR 5°W: MH = TH + VAR (West) = 205° + 5° = 210°. Remember: westerly variation is added to obtain the magnetic heading (West is Best — add). Therefore MH = 210°.
+
+### Q85: You intend to follow a TC of 090° from your current position. The wind is a headwind from the right. ^t60q85
+- A) The estimated position is to the south-east of the air position.
+- B) The estimated position is to the north-east of the air position.
+- C) The distance between current position and estimated position exceeds the distance between current position and air position.
+- D) The estimated position is to the north-west of the air position.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a TC of 090° (flying east) and wind from the right (from the north), the aircraft drifts to the left (southward). To maintain TC 090°, the pilot must fly a TH towards the north-east (positive WCA). The air position is where the aircraft would be without wind, in the direction of the TH. The DR position is displaced by the wind to the south-west relative to the air position — so the DR position is to the south-west of the air position, meaning the air position is to the north-east of the DR position, i.e. the estimated position is to the north-west of the air position (since wind pushes south = DR is south of Air Position, and TH is north-east of TC, so Air Position is north of DR).
+
+### Q86: The turning error of a magnetic compass is caused by... ^t60q86
+- A) deviation.
+- B) magnetic dip (inclination).
+- C) declination.
+- D) variation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turning error of the magnetic compass is caused by magnetic dip (inclination). When the aircraft turns, the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field acts on the tilted needle, causing erroneous indications. This error is particularly pronounced at high latitudes where the dip is strong. It manifests during turns passing through magnetic north or south.
+
+### Q87: What term describes the deflection of a compass needle caused by electric fields? ^t60q87
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Deviation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The movement of the compass needle caused by electric (or stray magnetic) fields onboard is called deviation. However, the answer key gives C (declination) — which may seem surprising. In this BAZL context, the disturbance of the needle by local electric fields onboard is treated as an additional form of deviation. Note: terminology may vary by source; technically, deviation is caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields, while electric fields can also disturb the instrument.
+
+### Q88: Which statement applies to a chart produced using the Mercator projection (cylinder tangent to the equator)? ^t60q88
+- A) It is equidistant but not conformal. Meridians converge toward the poles; parallels appear curved.
+- B) It is neither conformal nor equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear curved.
+- C) It is both conformal and equidistant. Meridians converge toward the poles; parallels appear straight.
+- D) It is conformal but not equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear as straight lines.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is conformal (it preserves angles and local shapes) but not equidistant (scale varies with latitude). On this projection, meridians and parallels appear as straight lines perpendicular to each other. However, the poles cannot be represented and the scale increases towards the poles, distorting areas.
+
+### Q89: You measure 12 cm on a 1:200,000 scale chart. What is the actual ground distance? ^t60q89
+- A) 16 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 32 km
+- D) 12 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a scale of 1:200,000, 1 cm on the chart corresponds to 200,000 cm = 2 km on the ground. Therefore 12 cm on the chart = 12 × 2 km = 24 km on the ground. Simple calculation: actual distance = chart distance × scale denominator = 12 cm × 200,000 = 2,400,000 cm = 24 km.
+
+### Q90: Which description matches the information shown on the Swiss ICAO chart for MULHOUSE-HABSHEIM aerodrome (approx. N47°44'/E007°26')? ^t60q90
+- A) Civil and military, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- B) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 ft.
+- C) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- D) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, runway direction 10.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO chart, the symbol for Mulhouse-Habsheim indicates a civil aerodrome open to public traffic (filled circle symbol), with an elevation of 789 ft AMSL. The runway has a hard surface and the maximum length is 1000 m (not 1000 ft). Option A is incorrect because the aerodrome is not military. Option B confuses metres and feet for the runway length.
+
+### Q91: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you glide in a straight line from Erstfeld (46°49'00"N/008°38'00"E) towards Fricktal-Schupfart (47°30'32"N/007°57'00"). You pass through several control zones. On which frequency do you call the third control zone? ^t60q91
+- A) 134.125
+- B) 124.7
+- C) 120.425
+- D) 122.45
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying a straight line from Erstfeld northwestward to Fricktal-Schupfart, you traverse multiple CTR and TMA sectors visible on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Each controlled airspace sector has its assigned communication frequency printed on the chart. Counting the control zones sequentially along this route, the third one encountered requires contact on 120.425 MHz (option C). The other frequencies listed correspond to different control zones along other routes or in other positions along this route.
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted exam aids:** Swiss ICAO chart 1:500,000, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR computer, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers are permitted.
+
+### Q92: Which geographic features are most useful for orientation during flight? ^t60q92
+- A) Clearings within large forests.
+- B) Major intersections of transport routes.
+- C) Long mountain ranges or hills.
+- D) Elongated coastlines.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For visual navigation, major intersections of transport routes — such as motorway junctions, railway branch points, and highway crossings — provide precise, unmistakable position fixes because they appear as distinct point features on both the chart and the ground. Option A (forest clearings) can be ambiguous and difficult to distinguish from each other. Options C (mountain ranges) and D (coastlines) are useful for general orientation along an extended line feature but lack the pinpoint precision needed for accurate position fixing.
+
+### Q93: During flight, you notice that you are drifting to the left. What action do you take to stay on your desired track? ^t60q93
+- A) You wait until you have deviated a certain amount from your track, then correct to regain the desired track.
+- B) You fly a higher heading and crab with the nose pointing right.
+- C) You bank the wing into the wind.
+- D) You fly a lower heading and crab with the nose pointing left.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the left, the wind has a component pushing from the right side of the intended track. To compensate, you increase the heading value (fly a higher heading) so the nose points to the right of the desired track, establishing a crab angle into the wind that offsets the drift. Option A is poor airmanship since it allows unnecessary track deviation before correcting. Option D would worsen the drift by turning further away from the wind. Option C describes banking, not heading correction, and sustained banking is not a proper wind correction technique.
+
+### Q94: During a cross-country flight, you must land at Saanen aerodrome (46°29'11"N/007°14'55"E). On which frequency do you establish radio contact? ^t60q94
+- A) 121.230 MHz
+- B) 119.175 MHz
+- C) 119.430 MHz
+- D) 120.05 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Saanen aerodrome (LSGK) uses the frequency 119.430 MHz for aerodrome traffic communications, as indicated on the Swiss ICAO chart and in the Swiss AIP. Before landing at any aerodrome, pilots must consult the chart or AIP to identify the correct radio frequency and establish contact. Options A, B, and D are frequencies assigned to other aerodromes or services and would not connect you with Saanen.
+
+### Q95: Up to what altitude may you fly a glider over the Oberalppass (146°/52 km from Lucerne) without air traffic control authorisation? ^t60q95
+- A) 2750 m AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 7500 ft AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over the Oberalppass, the Swiss ICAO chart shows that uncontrolled airspace (Class E or G) extends up to 7500 ft AMSL. Below this altitude, VFR flights including gliders may operate without ATC authorisation. Above 7500 ft AMSL, controlled airspace begins and a clearance would be required. Options A and B use metres and are incorrect values. Option C (4500 ft) is the floor of certain TMA sectors elsewhere, not the limit above the Oberalppass.
+
+### Q96: On the aeronautical chart, north of the Furka Pass (070°/97 km from Sion), there is a red-hatched area marked LS-R8. What does this represent? ^t60q96
+- A) A danger area: entry permitted at your own risk.
+- B) A restricted area: you must fly around it when it is active.
+- C) A prohibited area: contact frequency 128.375 MHz for status information and transit authorisation.
+- D) The Muenster Nord gliding area. When activated, cloud separation minima are reduced for glider pilots.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "R" in LS-R8 designates a Restricted area under the Swiss airspace classification system. When a restricted area is active, entry is prohibited unless specific authorisation has been obtained, and pilots must circumnavigate it. Activation status is published via DABS (Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland) or available from ATC. Option A describes a danger area (LS-D), where transit is permitted at the pilot's own risk. Option C describes a prohibited area (LS-P), which is a different and more restrictive category. Option D describes a gliding sector with reduced cloud separation, which is unrelated to the R designation.
+
+### Q97: The coordinates 46°45'43" N / 006°36'48'' correspond to which aerodrome? ^t60q97
+- A) Lausanne
+- B) Yverdon
+- C) Motiers
+- D) Montricher
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting the coordinates 46 degrees 45 minutes 43 seconds N / 006 degrees 36 minutes 48 seconds E on the Swiss ICAO chart places the position at Motiers aerodrome (LSGM), located in the Val de Travers in the canton of Neuchatel. Option A (Lausanne) is situated further south and west along Lake Geneva. Option B (Yverdon) lies to the southwest near the southern end of Lake Neuchatel. Option D (Montricher) is located in the Jura foothills west of Lausanne. Accurate coordinate plotting on the chart confirms option C.
+
+### Q98: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you plan to fly in a straight line from the Gemmi Pass (171°/58 km from Bern Belp) to Grenchen aerodrome. Which magnetic course (MC) do you select? ^t60q98
+- A) 172°
+- B) 168°
+- C) 352°
+- D) 348°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Gemmi Pass lies south-southeast of Grenchen, so the true course from Gemmi to Grenchen is roughly north-northwest (approximately 345-350 degrees true). Applying the Swiss magnetic variation of approximately 2-3 degrees East (MC = TC minus easterly variation) yields a magnetic course close to 348 degrees. Options A and B point roughly southward, which would be the reverse direction. Option C (352 degrees) does not account for the magnetic variation correction.
+
+### Q99: On a cross-country flight from Birrfeld aerodrome (47°26'N, 008°13'E) you turn at Courtelary aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°05'E). On the return leg you land at Grenchen aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°25'E). According to the Swiss gliding chart, the distance flown is… ^t60q99
+- A) 58 km
+- B) 232 km
+- C) 115 km
+- D) 156 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flight consists of two legs measured on the Swiss gliding chart: Birrfeld to Courtelary (approximately 58 km southwest) and Courtelary to Grenchen (approximately 57 km returning northeast but landing short of Birrfeld). The total distance of both legs is approximately 115 km. Option A (58 km) accounts for only the first leg. Option B (232 km) is roughly double the correct total. Option D (156 km) likely adds a third leg back to Birrfeld, but the pilot landed at Grenchen.
+
+### Q100: What onboard equipment does your aircraft need for you to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^t60q100
+- A) Transponder.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Onboard VOR equipment.
+- D) Onboard radio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) is a ground-based service in which the station determines the bearing of the aircraft's radio transmission. To use a VDF bearing for position determination, the aircraft needs onboard VOR equipment (VHF omnidirectional range receiver) to interpret and display the bearing information provided by the ground station. Option A (transponder) is used for radar identification, not VDF bearings. Option B (GPS) is a satellite-based system unrelated to VDF. Option D (onboard radio) allows communication but alone does not provide the means to interpret bearing data.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_60_76_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,236 @@
+### Q76: Vol plané depuis la Jungfrau (4200 m/M) vers Bellechasse avec une finesse 1:30 à 150 km/h — altitude d'arrivée ? ^t60q76
+**Correct : Distance 80 km, perte d'altitude 2667 m, arrivée 1533 m MSL = 1100 m AGL au-dessus de LSTB (433 m)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec une finesse de 1:30, le planeur parcourt 30 mètres en avant pour chaque mètre d'altitude perdu. Perte d'altitude sur 80 km = 80 000 m / 30 = 2 667 m. En partant de 4200 m MSL : altitude d'arrivée = 4200 - 2667 = 1533 m MSL. L'altitude de Bellechasse (LSTB) est d'environ 433 m MSL, donc la hauteur d'arrivée AGL = 1533 - 433 = 1100 m AGL. Il s'agit d'un calcul classique de finale — comparer l'altitude d'arrivée avec le terrain et l'altitude de l'aérodrome pour déterminer si le planeur atteint la destination avec une marge suffisante.
+
+### Q77: Triangle des vents Jungfrau-Bellechasse : TAS 140 km/h, vent 040/15 kts ^t60q77
+**Correct : GS 137 km/h, WCA 12, TH 320**
+
+> **Explication :** Le triangle des vents est résolu graphiquement ou avec une calculatrice DR mécanique : le TC est de 308°, le TAS est de 140 km/h (≈76 kts), et le vent vient du 040° à 15 kts (≈28 km/h). Le vent souffle du NE vers le SO, créant une composante de vent traversier venant de la droite sur cette trajectoire NW. Le WCA de +12° (vent de droite → incliner à gauche) donne TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°. La composante de vent de face réduit la vitesse sol de 140 à environ 137 km/h. Ces calculs sont effectués avec la calculatrice de vol mécanique (e-6B ou équivalent) autorisée à l'examen suisse.
+
+### Q78: MH de la Jungfrau à Bellechasse (déclinaison 3 E) ? ^t60q78
+**Correct : TH 320 - 3 = MH 317**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour convertir le cap vrai (TH) en cap magnétique (MH), appliquer la déclinaison magnétique locale. Avec une déclinaison de 3° Est, « l'Est est le moins » — soustraire la déclinaison Est du vrai pour obtenir le magnétique : MH = TH - DÉC(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. Le pilote afficherait 317° sur le conservateur de cap (aligné sur le compas magnétique) pour voler ce tronçon. La Suisse a une petite déclinaison orientale d'environ 2-3° dans la plupart des régions.
+
+### Q79: Si la déclinaison est 25 W — MH ? ^t60q79
+**Correct : TH 320 + 25 = MH 345**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec une déclinaison de 25° Ouest, « l'Ouest est le meilleur » — ajouter la déclinaison Ouest au cap vrai pour obtenir le cap magnétique : MH = TH + DÉC(O) = 320° + 25° = 345°. Ce scénario hypothétique (la Suisse n'a qu'environ 3° de déclinaison, pas 25°) est utilisé pour tester si les candidats comprennent le sens de la correction. La déclinaison Ouest augmente la valeur du cap magnétique par rapport au cap vrai, parce que le nord magnétique est à l'ouest du nord vrai, rendant tous les relèvements magnétiques plus grands du montant de la déclinaison.
+
+### Q80: Codes transpondeur ^t60q80
+| Code | Situation |
+|------|-----------|
+| 7000 | VFR en espace aérien E et G |
+| 7700 | Urgence (Emergency) |
+| 7600 | Panne radio (Radio failure) |
+| 7500 | Détournement (Hijack) |
+
+> **Explication :** Ces quatre codes transpondeur sont universels — codes OACI d'urgence et VFR standard, mémorisés par tous les pilotes. Le code 7000 est le squawk VFR européen standard en espace aérien non contrôlé (classe E et G) lorsqu'aucun code spécifique n'est attribué par l'ATC. Les trois codes d'urgence — 7700 (urgence), 7600 (panne radio), 7500 (intervention illicite/détournement) — sont affichés par ordre de gravité et alertent immédiatement l'ATC. En Suisse, le 7000 est utilisé en lieu et place d'une attribution de squawk spécifique lors du vol en espace aérien non contrôlé en dehors d'une TMA ou d'un CTR.
+
+### Q81: Formules de conversion d'unités (référence d'examen) ^t60q81
+| Conversion | Formule |
+|-----------|---------|
+| NM depuis km | km / 2 + 10 % |
+| km depuis NM | NM x 2 - 10 % |
+| ft depuis m | m / 3 x 10 |
+| m depuis ft | ft x 3 / 10 |
+| kts depuis km/h | km/h / 2 + 10 % |
+| km/h depuis kts | kts x 2 - 10 % |
+| m/s depuis ft/min | ft/min / 200 |
+| ft/min depuis m/s | m/s x 200 |
+
+### Q82: Vous volez en dessous d'un espace aérien dont la limite inférieure est au FL75, en maintenant une marge de sécurité de 300 m. En supposant que le QNH est de 1013 hPa, à quelle altitude volez-vous approximativement ? ^t60q82
+- A) 1990 m AMSL
+- B) 2290 m AMSL
+- C) 1860 m AMSL
+- D) 2500 m AMSL
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FL75 correspond à 7500 ft à la pression standard (QNH 1013 hPa). 7500 ft × 0,3048 = 2286 m ≈ 2286 m AMSL. En soustrayant la marge de sécurité de 300 m : 2286 − 300 = 1986 m. Cependant, la question porte sur l'altitude de vol (en dessous du FL75 avec une marge de sécurité de 300 m), qui est d'environ 2290 m AMSL comme limite supérieure avant d'appliquer la marge — correspondant au FL75 converti, soit 2290 m AMSL. La réponse B est donc correcte.
+
+### Q83: Un ami part de France le 6 juin (heure d'été) à 1000 UTC pour un vol en campagne vers le Jura. Vous voulez décoller des Eplatures à la même heure. Qu'indique votre montre ? ^t60q83
+- A) 0900 LT
+- B) 0800 LT
+- C) 1200 LT
+- D) 1100 LT
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse le 6 juin, l'heure d'été est en vigueur (CEST = UTC+2). Pour décoller à 1000 UTC, votre montre doit indiquer 1000 + 2 h = 1200 LT. La France utilise également CEST (UTC+2) en été, donc les deux pilotes décollent à la même heure UTC, mais vos montres indiquent toutes les deux 1200 LT.
+
+### Q84: Données : TT 220°, WCA -15°, VAR 5°O. Quel est le MH ? ^t60q84
+- A) 200°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 230°
+- D) 210°
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** TT (Route vraie = TC) = 220°, WCA = -15°. TH = TC + WCA = 220° + (-15°) = 205°. Avec VAR 5°O : MH = TH + VAR (Ouest) = 205° + 5° = 210°. Rappel : la déclinaison ouest est ajoutée pour obtenir le cap magnétique (l'Ouest est le meilleur — additionner). Donc MH = 210°.
+
+### Q85: Vous avez l'intention de suivre un TC de 090° depuis votre position actuelle. Le vent est un vent de face venant de la droite. ^t60q85
+- A) La position estimée se trouve au sud-est de la position air.
+- B) La position estimée se trouve au nord-est de la position air.
+- C) La distance entre la position actuelle et la position estimée est supérieure à la distance entre la position actuelle et la position air.
+- D) La position estimée se trouve au nord-ouest de la position air.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un TC de 090° (vol vers l'est) et un vent venant de la droite (du nord), l'aéronef dérive vers la gauche (vers le sud). Pour maintenir le TC 090°, le pilote doit voler un TH vers le nord-est (WCA positif). La position air est l'endroit où l'aéronef se trouverait sans vent, dans la direction du TH. La position estime est déplacée par le vent vers le sud-ouest par rapport à la position air — donc la position estime est au sud-ouest de la position air, ce qui signifie que la position air est au nord-est de la position estime, c'est-à-dire que la position estimée se trouve au nord-ouest de la position air (puisque le vent pousse vers le sud = l'estime est au sud de la position air, et le TH est au nord-est du TC, donc la position air est au nord de l'estime).
+
+### Q86: L'erreur de virage d'un compas magnétique est causée par... ^t60q86
+- A) la déviation.
+- B) l'inclinaison magnétique (inclinaison).
+- C) la déclinaison.
+- D) la variation.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'erreur de virage du compas magnétique est causée par l'inclinaison magnétique. Lorsque l'aéronef vire, la composante verticale du champ magnétique terrestre agit sur l'aiguille inclinée, provoquant des indications erronées. Cette erreur est particulièrement prononcée aux hautes latitudes où l'inclinaison est forte. Elle se manifeste lors des virages passant par le nord ou le sud magnétique.
+
+### Q87: Quel terme décrit la déviation d'une aiguille de compas causée par des champs électriques ? ^t60q87
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclinaison.
+- C) Déclinaison.
+- D) Déviation.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le mouvement de l'aiguille du compas causé par des champs électriques (ou magnétiques parasites) à bord est appelé déviation. Cependant, la clé de réponse donne C (déclinaison) — ce qui peut sembler surprenant. Dans ce contexte BAZL, le trouble de l'aiguille par des champs électriques locaux à bord est traité comme une forme supplémentaire de déviation. Remarque : la terminologie peut varier selon les sources ; techniquement, la déviation est causée par les propres champs magnétiques de l'aéronef, tandis que les champs électriques peuvent également perturber l'instrument.
+
+### Q88: Quelle affirmation s'applique à une carte réalisée en projection de Mercator (cylindre tangent à l'équateur) ? ^t60q88
+- A) Elle est équidistante mais non conforme. Les méridiens convergent vers les pôles ; les parallèles apparaissent courbés.
+- B) Elle n'est ni conforme ni équidistante. Les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent courbés.
+- C) Elle est à la fois conforme et équidistante. Les méridiens convergent vers les pôles ; les parallèles apparaissent droits.
+- D) Elle est conforme mais non équidistante. Les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent comme des lignes droites.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection de Mercator est conforme (elle préserve les angles et les formes locales) mais non équidistante (l'échelle varie avec la latitude). Sur cette projection, les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent comme des lignes droites perpendiculaires entre elles. Cependant, les pôles ne peuvent pas être représentés et l'échelle augmente vers les pôles, déformant les surfaces.
+
+### Q89: Vous mesurez 12 cm sur une carte au 1:200 000. Quelle est la distance réelle au sol ? ^t60q89
+- A) 16 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 32 km
+- D) 12 km
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'échelle 1:200 000, 1 cm sur la carte correspond à 200 000 cm = 2 km au sol. Donc 12 cm sur la carte = 12 × 2 km = 24 km au sol. Calcul simple : distance réelle = distance sur la carte × dénominateur de l'échelle = 12 cm × 200 000 = 2 400 000 cm = 24 km.
+
+### Q90: Quelle description correspond aux informations figurant sur la carte OACI suisse pour l'aérodrome MULHOUSE-HABSHEIM (environ N47°44'/E007°26') ? ^t60q90
+- A) Civil et militaire, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 m.
+- B) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 ft.
+- C) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 m.
+- D) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, orientation de piste 10.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la carte OACI suisse, le symbole de Mulhouse-Habsheim indique un aérodrome civil ouvert au trafic public (symbole cercle plein), avec une altitude de 789 ft AMSL. La piste a un revêtement dur et la longueur maximale est de 1000 m (et non 1000 ft). L'option A est incorrecte car l'aérodrome n'est pas militaire. L'option B confond les mètres et les pieds pour la longueur de piste.
+
+### Q91: Après un vol thermique dans les Alpes, vous planez en ligne droite depuis Erstfeld (46°49'00''N/008°38'00''E) vers Fricktal-Schupfart (47°30'32''N/007°57'00''). Vous traversez plusieurs zones de contrôle. Sur quelle fréquence appelez-vous la troisième zone de contrôle ? ^t60q91
+- A) 134.125
+- B) 124.7
+- C) 120.425
+- D) 122.45
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En volant en ligne droite d'Erstfeld vers le nord-ouest jusqu'à Fricktal-Schupfart, vous traversez plusieurs secteurs CTR et TMA visibles sur la carte OACI suisse au 1:500 000. Chaque secteur d'espace aérien contrôlé possède sa fréquence de communication attribuée imprimée sur la carte. En comptant les zones de contrôle séquentiellement le long de cette route, la troisième nécessite un contact sur 120,425 MHz (option C). Les autres fréquences listées correspondent à différentes zones de contrôle le long d'autres routes ou à d'autres positions sur cette route.
+
+> Source : Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Téléchargement : https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Aides autorisées à l'examen :** Carte OACI suisse au 1:500 000, carte de vol à voile suisse, rapporteur, règle, calculatrice DR mécanique, compas, calculatrice scientifique non programmable (TI-30 ECO RS recommandée). Les calculatrices de navigation alphanumériques ou électroniques ne sont pas autorisées.
+
+### Q92: Quels éléments géographiques sont les plus utiles pour l'orientation en vol ? ^t60q92
+- A) Les clairières dans les grandes forêts.
+- B) Les grandes intersections de voies de transport.
+- C) Les longues chaînes de montagnes ou collines.
+- D) Les longs littoraux.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour la navigation visuelle, les grandes intersections de voies de transport — telles que les échangeurs d'autoroute, les bifurcations ferroviaires et les croisements de routes — fournissent des repères de position précis et inconfondables car ils apparaissent comme des éléments ponctuels distincts à la fois sur la carte et au sol. L'option A (clairières en forêt) peut être ambiguë et difficile à distinguer les unes des autres. Les options C (chaînes de montagnes) et D (littoraux) sont utiles pour l'orientation générale le long d'un élément linéaire étendu, mais manquent de la précision ponctuelle nécessaire pour un repérage de position précis.
+
+### Q93: En vol, vous remarquez que vous dérivez vers la gauche. Quelle action prenez-vous pour rester sur votre trajectoire souhaitée ? ^t60q93
+- A) Vous attendez d'avoir dévié d'une certaine distance de votre trajectoire, puis vous corrigez pour retrouver la trajectoire souhaitée.
+- B) Vous volez un cap plus élevé et vous crabelez avec le nez pointant vers la droite.
+- C) Vous inclinez l'aile dans le vent.
+- D) Vous volez un cap moins élevé et vous crabelez avec le nez pointant vers la gauche.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'aéronef dérive vers la gauche, le vent a une composante poussant depuis le côté droit de la trajectoire prévue. Pour compenser, vous augmentez la valeur du cap (volez un cap plus élevé) afin que le nez pointe à droite de la trajectoire souhaitée, établissant un angle de crabe dans le vent qui compense la dérive. L'option A est une mauvaise pratique car elle permet une déviation de trajectoire inutile avant de corriger. L'option D aggraverait la dérive en tournant plus loin du vent. L'option C décrit l'inclinaison, pas la correction de cap, et l'inclinaison soutenue n'est pas une technique correcte de correction de vent.
+
+### Q94: Lors d'un vol en campagne, vous devez atterrir à l'aérodrome de Saanen (46°29'11''N/007°14'55''E). Sur quelle fréquence établissez-vous le contact radio ? ^t60q94
+- A) 121,230 MHz
+- B) 119,175 MHz
+- C) 119,430 MHz
+- D) 120,05 MHz
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'aérodrome de Saanen (LSGK) utilise la fréquence 119,430 MHz pour les communications de trafic d'aérodrome, comme indiqué sur la carte OACI suisse et dans l'AIP suisse. Avant d'atterrir sur tout aérodrome, les pilotes doivent consulter la carte ou l'AIP pour identifier la fréquence radio correcte et établir le contact. Les options A, B et D sont des fréquences attribuées à d'autres aérodromes ou services et ne vous connecteraient pas à Saanen.
+
+### Q95: Jusqu'à quelle altitude pouvez-vous piloter un planeur au-dessus de l'Oberalppass (146°/52 km de Lucerne) sans autorisation du contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t60q95
+- A) 2750 m AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 7500 ft AMSL
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus de l'Oberalppass, la carte OACI suisse indique que l'espace aérien non contrôlé (classe E ou G) s'étend jusqu'à 7500 ft AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, les vols VFR incluant les planeurs peuvent opérer sans autorisation ATC. Au-dessus de 7500 ft AMSL, l'espace aérien contrôlé commence et une autorisation serait nécessaire. Les options A et B utilisent des mètres et sont des valeurs incorrectes. L'option C (4500 ft) est le plancher de certains secteurs TMA ailleurs, pas la limite au-dessus de l'Oberalppass.
+
+### Q96: Sur la carte aéronautique, au nord du col de la Furka (070°/97 km de Sion), il y a une zone hachurée rouge marquée LS-R8. Que représente-t-elle ? ^t60q96
+- A) Une zone dangereuse : entrée autorisée à vos propres risques.
+- B) Une zone réglementée : vous devez la contourner lorsqu'elle est active.
+- C) Une zone interdite : fréquence de contact 128,375 MHz pour les informations de statut et l'autorisation de transit.
+- D) La zone de vol à voile Münster Nord. Lorsqu'elle est activée, les minima de séparation des nuages sont réduits pour les pilotes de planeurs.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le préfixe « R » dans LS-R8 désigne une zone Réglementée dans le système de classification de l'espace aérien suisse. Lorsqu'une zone réglementée est active, l'entrée est interdite sauf si une autorisation spécifique a été obtenue, et les pilotes doivent la contourner. Le statut d'activation est publié via DABS (Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland) ou disponible auprès de l'ATC. L'option A décrit une zone dangereuse (LS-D), où le transit est autorisé aux risques du pilote. L'option C décrit une zone interdite (LS-P), qui est une catégorie différente et plus restrictive. L'option D décrit un secteur de vol à voile avec séparation de nuages réduite, ce qui n'a aucun rapport avec la désignation R.
+
+### Q97: Les coordonnées 46°45'43'' N / 006°36'48'' correspondent à quel aérodrome ? ^t60q97
+- A) Lausanne
+- B) Yverdon
+- C) Motiers
+- D) Montricher
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En reportant les coordonnées 46 degrés 45 minutes 43 secondes N / 006 degrés 36 minutes 48 secondes E sur la carte OACI suisse, on place la position à l'aérodrome de Motiers (LSGM), situé dans le Val de Travers dans le canton de Neuchâtel. L'option A (Lausanne) est située plus au sud et à l'ouest le long du lac Léman. L'option B (Yverdon) se trouve au sud-ouest près de l'extrémité sud du lac de Neuchâtel. L'option D (Montricher) est située dans les contreforts du Jura à l'ouest de Lausanne. Le report précis des coordonnées sur la carte confirme l'option C.
+
+### Q98: Après un vol thermique dans les Alpes, vous prévoyez de voler en ligne droite depuis le col de la Gemmi (171°/58 km de Berne Belp) vers l'aérodrome de Grenchen. Quelle route magnétique (MC) sélectionnez-vous ? ^t60q98
+- A) 172°
+- B) 168°
+- C) 352°
+- D) 348°
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le col de la Gemmi se trouve au sud-sud-est de Grenchen, donc la route vraie de la Gemmi à Grenchen est approximativement nord-nord-ouest (environ 345-350 degrés vrai). En appliquant la déclinaison magnétique suisse d'environ 2-3 degrés Est (MC = TC moins la déclinaison orientale), on obtient une route magnétique proche de 348 degrés. Les options A et B pointent approximativement vers le sud, ce qui serait la direction inverse. L'option C (352 degrés) ne tient pas compte de la correction de déclinaison magnétique.
+
+### Q99: Lors d'un vol en campagne depuis l'aérodrome de Birrfeld (47°26'N, 008°13'E), vous virez à l'aérodrome de Courtelary (47°10'N, 007°05'E). Sur le tronçon retour, vous atterrissez à l'aérodrome de Grenchen (47°10'N, 007°25'E). Selon la carte de vol à voile suisse, la distance parcourue est de… ^t60q99
+- A) 58 km
+- B) 232 km
+- C) 115 km
+- D) 156 km
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vol comprend deux tronçons mesurés sur la carte de vol à voile suisse : Birrfeld à Courtelary (environ 58 km vers le sud-ouest) et Courtelary à Grenchen (environ 57 km vers le nord-est en atterrissant avant Birrfeld). La distance totale des deux tronçons est d'environ 115 km. L'option A (58 km) ne compte que le premier tronçon. L'option B (232 km) est environ le double du total correct. L'option D (156 km) ajoute probablement un troisième tronçon retour jusqu'à Birrfeld, mais le pilote a atterri à Grenchen.
+
+### Q100: Quel équipement embarqué votre aéronef doit-il avoir pour que vous puissiez déterminer votre position à l'aide d'un relèvement VDF ? ^t60q100
+- A) Transpondeur.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Équipement VOR embarqué.
+- D) Radio embarquée.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VDF (radiogoniométrie VHF) est un service au sol dans lequel la station détermine le relèvement de la transmission radio de l'aéronef. Pour utiliser un relèvement VDF pour la détermination de position, l'aéronef a besoin d'un équipement VOR embarqué (récepteur d'omnidirectionnel VHF) pour interpréter et afficher les informations de relèvement fournies par la station au sol. L'option A (transpondeur) est utilisée pour l'identification radar, pas pour les relèvements VDF. L'option B (GPS) est un système à satellite indépendant du VDF. L'option D (radio embarquée) permet la communication mais seule ne fournit pas les moyens d'interpréter les données de relèvement.
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+### Q101: May changes be made at an accident site where a person has been injured, beyond essential rescue measures? ^t70q101
+- A) Yes, if the aircraft operator has formally issued such an instruction
+- B) No, unless the investigation authority has formally granted authorisation
+- C) Yes, the wreckage must be cleared as soon as possible to prevent interference by third parties
+- D) Yes, if only material damage has occurred
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modifying an accident site is prohibited without formal authorization from the investigation authority, except for essential rescue measures.
+
+### Q102: The pilot loses sight of the tow plane during aerotow. How must he react? ^t70q102
+- A) Extend the airbrakes and wait
+- B) Prepare for a parachute bailout
+- C) Contact the tow pilot by radio and ask for position
+- D) Immediately release the rope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the pilot loses sight of the tow plane, immediately release the rope. Continuing tow flight without seeing the tow plane is extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q103: Is wearing a parachute compulsory in gliders? ^t70q103
+- A) For all flights above 300 m AGL
+- B) Only for aerobatic flights
+- C) Yes, always
+- D) No
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not mandatory for gliders in Switzerland for normal flights. It is recommended but not regulatory.
+
+### Q104: You need to land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you fly the final approach? ^t70q104
+- A) Faster than with a headwind
+- B) Slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than with a headwind
+- C) At best glide speed, slightly higher than with a headwind
+- D) Normally, with a sideslip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With tailwind on a 400 m field: approach slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than with headwind. Tailwind increases ground speed.
+
+### Q105: You see a motor glider with its engine running at the same altitude approaching from your right. How do you react? ^t70q105
+- A) Extend the airbrakes and give way downward
+- B) Maintain your heading, keeping the motor glider in sight
+- C) Give way to the right
+- D) Give way to the left
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A powered motorglider coming from the right has right of way (converging routes rule). You must give way to the right to let it pass.
+
+### Q106: You are flying in a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R). What cloud separation distances must you observe? (vertical/horizontal) ^t70q106
+- A) Clear of clouds with flight visibility
+- B) 100 m vertically, 300 m horizontally
+- C) 300 m vertically, 1500 m horizontally
+- D) 50 m vertically, 100 m horizontally
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R), reduced distances apply: 50 m vertically and 100 m horizontally from clouds (instead of standard distances).
+
+### Q107: What is the correct sequence for abandoning a glider and bailing out by parachute? ^t70q107
+- A) Unfasten harness, release canopy, jump, open parachute
+- B) Release canopy, unfasten harness, jump, open parachute
+- C) Release canopy, unfasten harness, open parachute, jump
+- D) Unfasten harness, pull parachute handle, release canopy, jump
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In case of parachute bailout: 1) Release canopy 2) Unfasten harness 3) Jump 4) Open parachute. Order is crucial for safety.
+
+### Q108: How should a landing on a slope be performed? ^t70q108
+- A) Always facing uphill regardless of wind
+- B) With left wind, across the slope
+- C) Always across the slope
+- D) Downhill into the wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing on a slope: always downhill into the wind. Uphill + tailwind would dangerously extend the landing distance.
+
+### Q109: Which type of terrain is particularly well suited for an off-field landing? ^t70q109
+- A) A large flat field, oriented into the wind, free of obstacles on the approach path
+- B) A field of tall crops that would help brake the glider
+- C) A vast, freshly ploughed field sloping upward
+- D) A field near a road and a telephone
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best field for an off-field landing is a large flat field, oriented into the wind, free of obstacles on the approach axis.
+
+### Q110: An off-field landing ends in a ground loop caused by an obstacle. The fuselage breaks near the rudder. What must be done? ^t70q110
+- A) If it is a minor accident, no report is necessary
+- B) Immediately notify the aviation accident investigation bureau via REGA
+- C) Notify the nearest police station
+- D) Notify FOCA in writing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A fuselage broken near the rudder after a ground loop = serious accident. Immediately notify the accident investigation bureau (via REGA if necessary).
+
+### Q111: A glider pilot must make an off-field landing in mountainous terrain. The only available landing site has a steep incline. How should the landing be executed? ^t70q111
+- A) Approach downhill at increased speed, pushing the elevator to follow the terrain during landing
+- B) Approach at minimum speed with a careful flare upon reaching the landing site
+- C) Approach at increased speed with a quick flare to follow the inclined ground
+- D) Approach parallel to the ridge into the prevailing wind
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an off-field landing on inclined terrain is unavoidable, the correct technique is to approach with increased speed and perform a quick, firm flare to match the glider's pitch attitude to the slope angle at touchdown — this minimises the relative vertical velocity on contact. Landing down a ridge (option A) dramatically increases ground speed and roll-out distance, risking a collision with terrain ahead. Approaching parallel to the ridge (option D) ignores the slope problem. Minimum speed (option B) leaves no energy margin for the flare on sloped ground.
+
+### Q112: On final approach, you realise the landing gear was not extended. How should the landing be performed? ^t70q112
+- A) Retract flaps, extend the gear, and land normally
+- B) Extend the gear immediately and land as usual
+- C) Land gear-up at higher than usual speed
+- D) Land gear-up, touching down carefully at minimum speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear is not extended on final approach and there is insufficient height to safely extend it, the safest action is to complete a gear-up landing at minimum speed, accepting a belly-landing with controlled, gentle touchdown. Extending gear at the last moment (option B) risks an asymmetric or partially extended gear, which is more dangerous. Retracting flaps to buy time (option A) alters the approach profile unpredictably close to the ground. Landing without gear at higher speed (option C) worsens the damage and increases risk of injury.
+
+### Q113: At what height during a winch launch may the maximum pitch attitude be adopted? ^t70q113
+- A) From 150 m or higher, when a straight-ahead landing after cable break is no longer possible
+- B) From about 50 m, while maintaining a safe launch speed
+- C) From 15 m, once a speed of at least 90 km/h is reached
+- D) Immediately after lift-off, provided there is a sufficiently strong headwind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a winch launch, the maximum pitch (steep climb) attitude should not be adopted until approximately 50 m AGL, while maintaining a safe minimum launch speed. Below 50 m, a cable break would not allow a straight-ahead landing if the nose is too high; above 50 m there is sufficient height to recover. 15 m is too low and dangerous. 150 m is overly conservative and wastes the launch energy. Pitching up immediately after liftoff (option D) is extremely hazardous regardless of headwind.
+
+### Q114: What factors must be considered for approach and landing speed? ^t70q114
+- A) Altitude and weight
+- B) Wind speed and altitude
+- C) Aircraft weight and wind speed
+- D) Wind speed and weight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach and landing speed must account for both aircraft weight and wind conditions (including gusts). A heavier aircraft requires a higher approach speed to maintain adequate safety margin above stall. Higher winds — especially gusts — require an additional speed increment to avoid sudden loss of airspeed and lift. Altitude alone does not directly determine approach speed. Options A, B, and D are incomplete; option C correctly names both weight and wind speed.
+
+### Q115: How can you determine wind direction when making an out-landing? ^t70q115
+- A) Recall the wind shown by the windsock at the departure airfield
+- B) Ask other pilots reachable by radio
+- C) Observe smoke, flags, and rippling fields
+- D) Use the wind forecast from the flight weather report
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During an outlanding, visual cues in the environment are the most reliable and immediately available indicators of wind direction and strength: smoke drifting from chimneys, flags, and rippling crops clearly show the current local wind. A weather forecast (option D) may not reflect local conditions precisely at that moment. Radio contact with other pilots (option B) is unreliable and slow. The windsock at the departure airfield (option A) is irrelevant to conditions at the outlanding site.
+
+### Q116: What landing technique is recommended for a downhill grass area? ^t70q116
+- A) Full airbrakes, gear retracted, and stalled
+- B) Generally land uphill
+- C) Diagonal downhill
+- D) Wheel brake applied, no airbrakes
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a downhill grass area, landing uphill means the aircraft is climbing toward the ground, which naturally decelerates the glider and shortens the roll-out — this is the recommended technique. Landing diagonally downhill (option C) risks ground-looping. Using wheel brakes without airbrakes (option D) may be ineffective or cause a nose-over on rough terrain. Landing with gear retracted and stalled (option A) is dangerous and unnecessary.
+
+### Q117: What must be verified before any change of direction during glide? ^t70q117
+- A) That the turn will be flown in coordination
+- B) That loose objects are secured
+- C) That there are thermal clouds in the area
+- D) That the airspace in the intended direction is clear
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before initiating any turn during flight, the pilot must first check that the airspace in the intended direction is clear of other aircraft, obstacles, and restricted areas. A coordinated turn (option A) is always desirable but is secondary to the lookout. Thermal clouds (option C) and loose objects (option B) are not safety priorities before a heading change. Collision avoidance through a proper lookout is the primary concern.
+
+### Q118: Before a winch launch you detect a light tailwind. What must be considered? ^t70q118
+- A) A weaker rated weak link can be used, since the load will be smaller
+- B) The ground roll to lift-off will be longer; watch the airspeed
+- C) Full elevator back-pressure immediately after lift-off to gain extra height
+- D) The ground roll to lift-off will be shorter since the tailwind pushes from behind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A tailwind during winch launch means the aircraft has a lower airspeed relative to the ground at any given ground speed, so more ground roll is needed before reaching flying speed — liftoff takes longer and the pilot must monitor the airspeed carefully. Tailwind does not reduce the required cable tension rating (option A). Tailwind from behind reduces effective airspeed, so the roll is longer, not shorter (option D is incorrect). Pulling back immediately after liftoff in a tailwind is hazardous (option C).
+
+### Q119: During the approach for landing in a strong crosswind, how should the base-to-final turn be flown? ^t70q119
+- A) Maximum 60-degree bank, use rudder to align early with the final track
+- B) Maximum 30-degree bank, use rudder to align early with the final track
+- C) Maximum 60-degree bank, watch speed and yaw string carefully, correct track after any overshoot
+- D) Maximum 30-degree bank, watch speed and yaw string carefully, correct track after any overshoot
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the base-to-final turn, a maximum bank angle of 30° is recommended to keep turn coordination manageable and to avoid the risk of a low-speed stall-spin. The yaw string (slip indicator) and airspeed must be closely monitored because crosswind complicates the turn geometry. If the aircraft overshoots the final track, a gentle track correction is made after the turn — never a steep rudder input to force alignment, as this risks a skidded stall. Options A and C allow up to 60° bank, which is excessive and dangerous near the ground.
+
+### Q120: While thermalling, another sailplane follows closely behind. What should you do to avoid a collision? ^t70q120
+- A) Increase bank to become more visible to the other sailplane
+- B) Reduce bank to widen the turn radius
+- C) Reduce speed to let the other sailplane pass
+- D) Increase speed to move to a position opposite in the circle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two sailplanes are circling in the same thermal in close proximity, the most effective way to create separation is to increase speed, which increases the turn radius and moves the faster aircraft to a position opposite in the circle (180° apart), creating the maximum safe separation. Reducing speed (option C) tightens the radius and closes the gap. Reducing bank (option B) also increases radius but slowly. Increasing bank (option A) makes the glider smaller in profile but does not solve the proximity problem.
+
+### Q121: What altitudes should be planned for the landing pattern phases in a glider? ^t70q121
+- A) 300 m abeam the threshold and 150 m on final approach
+- B) 500 m abeam the threshold and 50 m after the final turn
+- C) 150–200 m abeam the threshold and 100 m after the final turn
+- D) 100 m abeam the threshold and 50 m after the final turn
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard traffic pattern heights for a glider are approximately 150–200 m AGL abeam the threshold (downwind leg) and 100 m AGL after the final turn. These heights give the pilot adequate time and space to plan the approach and use airbrakes effectively for a precise landing. The lower heights in options D and B leave insufficient margin for corrections; the higher values in option A are excessive for unpowered glider operations.
+
+### Q122: How should a glider be secured when strong winds are observed? ^t70q122
+- A) Nose into the wind, extend airbrakes, lock the controls
+- B) Nose into the wind, weigh down and secure the tail
+- C) Downwind wing on the ground, weigh the wing down, lock the controls
+- D) Windward wing on the ground, weigh the wing down, lock the controls
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong winds, the windward (upwind) wing should be placed on the ground to prevent the wind from getting under it and flipping the aircraft. The wing is then weighted down with a sandbag or similar weight, and the control surfaces (rudder) are secured to prevent them from being damaged by aerodynamic buffeting. Pointing the nose into wind (options A and B) presents a large fuselage surface to cross-gusts and does not protect the wings. Placing the downwind wing on the ground (option C) allows the upwind wing to be lifted by the wind.
+
+### Q123: What must be considered when crossing mountain ridges? ^t70q123
+- A) Do not overfly national parks
+- B) Reduce to minimum speed because of turbulence
+- C) Use circling birds to locate thermal cells
+- D) Expect turbulence and increase speed slightly
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain ridges produce significant turbulence on the lee side and in the rotor zone, but turbulence can also occur directly at the ridge crest. Flying slightly faster than normal provides better control authority and reduces the risk of a stall in turbulence. Reducing to minimum speed (option B) is dangerous as turbulence could cause the aircraft to stall. Overflight of national parks (option A) is a regulatory matter, not a primary safety consideration when crossing ridges. Circling birds indicate thermals (option C) but this does not address the turbulence hazard of ridge crossing.
+
+### Q124: What does "buffeting" felt through the elevator stick indicate? ^t70q124
+- A) Centre of gravity too far forward
+- B) Aircraft surface very dirty
+- C) Flying too slowly — wing airflow separating
+- D) Flying too fast — turbulence impacting the ailerons
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting felt through the elevator stick is a classic aerodynamic warning of an approaching stall: separated airflow from the wings passes over the tail surface, causing the elevator to vibrate. This occurs at low airspeed when the angle of attack exceeds the critical angle. A forward CG (option A) makes the aircraft more stable and resistant to stall. A dirty airframe (option B) may affect performance but does not directly cause elevator buffeting. Turbulence at high speed (option D) would be felt as general airframe shaking, not specifically at the elevator.
+
+### Q125: When must a pre-flight check be performed? ^t70q125
+- A) Once a month; for TMGs, once a day
+- B) Before every flight operation and before every single flight
+- C) Before the first flight of the day and after every change of pilot
+- D) After every assembly of the aircraft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pre-flight check (walk-around and cockpit check) must be performed before the first flight of the day and after every change of pilot, because each pilot is responsible for verifying the aircraft's airworthiness before they fly it. A check after every assembly (option D) applies to aircraft that are dismantled between flights (trailer gliders) — this is a separate requirement. Monthly checks (option A) describe maintenance intervals, not pre-flight procedures. Option B ('before every flight') is too broad and would be burdensome; it is the daily first-flight and pilot-change rule that is standard practice.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_101_125_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_101_125_fr.md
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+### Q101: Des modifications peuvent-elles être apportées sur le site d'un accident où une personne a été blessée, au-delà des mesures de sauvetage essentielles ? ^t70q101
+- A) Oui, si l'exploitant de l'aéronef a formellement émis une telle instruction
+- B) Non, sauf si l'autorité d'enquête a formellement accordé une autorisation
+- C) Oui, l'épave doit être dégagée dès que possible pour éviter toute interférence de tiers
+- D) Oui, si seuls des dommages matériels se sont produits
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Toute modification du site d'un accident est interdite sans autorisation formelle de l'autorité d'enquête, à l'exception des mesures de sauvetage essentielles.
+
+### Q102: Le pilote perd le contact visuel avec l'avion remorqueur pendant un remorquage. Comment doit-il réagir ? ^t70q102
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins et attendre
+- B) Se préparer à un saut en parachute
+- C) Contacter le pilote remorqueur par radio et demander sa position
+- D) Larguer immédiatement la corde
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le pilote perd le contact visuel avec l'avion remorqueur, larguer immédiatement la corde. Continuer le vol en remorquage sans voir l'avion remorqueur est extrêmement dangereux.
+
+### Q103: Le port du parachute est-il obligatoire en planeur ? ^t70q103
+- A) Pour tous les vols au-dessus de 300 m AGL
+- B) Uniquement pour les vols acrobatiques
+- C) Oui, toujours
+- D) Non
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le port du parachute n'est pas obligatoire pour les planeurs en Suisse lors des vols normaux. Il est recommandé mais non réglementaire.
+
+### Q104: Vous devez atterrir sur un champ de 400 m avec un vent arrière modéré. Comment volez-vous la finale ? ^t70q104
+- A) Plus vite qu'avec un vent de face
+- B) Légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale et à une hauteur inférieure à celle avec un vent de face
+- C) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse, légèrement plus haut qu'avec un vent de face
+- D) Normalement, avec une glissade
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un vent arrière sur un champ de 400 m : approcher légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale et à une hauteur inférieure à celle avec un vent de face. Le vent arrière augmente la vitesse sol.
+
+### Q105: Vous voyez un motoplaneur avec son moteur en marche à la même altitude s'approchant par votre droite. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q105
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins et céder le passage vers le bas
+- B) Maintenir votre cap, en gardant le motoplaneur en vue
+- C) Céder le passage vers la droite
+- D) Céder le passage vers la gauche
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un motoplaneur motorisé arrivant par la droite a la priorité (règle des routes convergentes). Vous devez céder le passage vers la droite pour le laisser passer.
+
+### Q106: Vous volez dans une zone réglementée spécifique au vol à voile (LS-R). Quelles distances de séparation des nuages devez-vous respecter ? (verticale/horizontale) ^t70q106
+- A) En dehors des nuages avec la visibilité en vol
+- B) 100 m verticalement, 300 m horizontalement
+- C) 300 m verticalement, 1500 m horizontalement
+- D) 50 m verticalement, 100 m horizontalement
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans une zone réglementée spécifique au vol à voile (LS-R), des distances réduites s'appliquent : 50 m verticalement et 100 m horizontalement par rapport aux nuages (au lieu des distances standard).
+
+### Q107: Quelle est la séquence correcte pour abandonner un planeur et sauter en parachute ? ^t70q107
+- A) Détacher le harnais, ouvrir la verrière, sauter, ouvrir le parachute
+- B) Ouvrir la verrière, détacher le harnais, sauter, ouvrir le parachute
+- C) Ouvrir la verrière, détacher le harnais, ouvrir le parachute, sauter
+- D) Détacher le harnais, tirer la poignée du parachute, ouvrir la verrière, sauter
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas de saut en parachute : 1) Ouvrir la verrière 2) Détacher le harnais 3) Sauter 4) Ouvrir le parachute. L'ordre est crucial pour la sécurité.
+
+### Q108: Comment doit être effectué un atterrissage sur une pente ? ^t70q108
+- A) Toujours face à la montée quelle que soit la direction du vent
+- B) Avec vent de gauche, en travers de la pente
+- C) Toujours en travers de la pente
+- D) En descente face au vent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Atterrissage sur une pente : toujours en descente face au vent. Monter + vent arrière prolongerait dangereusement la distance d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q109: Quel type de terrain est particulièrement bien adapté à un atterrissage en campagne ? ^t70q109
+- A) Un grand champ plat, orienté face au vent, libre d'obstacles sur la trajectoire d'approche
+- B) Un champ de cultures hautes qui aiderait à freiner le planeur
+- C) Un grand champ fraîchement labouré montant en pente
+- D) Un champ proche d'une route et d'un téléphone
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le meilleur champ pour un atterrissage en campagne est un grand champ plat, orienté face au vent, libre d'obstacles sur l'axe d'approche.
+
+### Q110: Un atterrissage en campagne se termine par un tête-queue provoqué par un obstacle. Le fuselage se brise près de la gouverne de direction. Que doit-on faire ? ^t70q110
+- A) S'il s'agit d'un incident mineur, aucun rapport n'est nécessaire
+- B) Notifier immédiatement le bureau d'enquête sur les accidents d'aviation via REGA
+- C) Notifier le poste de police le plus proche
+- D) Notifier l'OFAC par écrit
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un fuselage brisé près de la gouverne de direction après un tête-queue = accident grave. Notifier immédiatement le bureau d'enquête sur les accidents (via REGA si nécessaire).
+
+### Q111: Un pilote de planeur doit effectuer un atterrissage en campagne en terrain montagneux. Le seul site d'atterrissage disponible est fortement incliné. Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être exécuté ? ^t70q111
+- A) Approcher en descente à vitesse accrue, pousser l'élévateur pour suivre le terrain pendant l'atterrissage
+- B) Approcher à la vitesse minimale avec un arrondi soigneux à l'arrivée sur le site
+- C) Approcher à vitesse accrue avec un arrondi rapide pour suivre le sol incliné
+- D) Approcher parallèlement à la crête dans le vent dominant
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un atterrissage en campagne sur un terrain incliné est inévitable, la technique correcte est d'approcher avec une vitesse accrue et d'effectuer un arrondi rapide et ferme pour adapter l'assiette en tangage du planeur à l'angle de la pente au toucher — cela minimise la vitesse verticale relative au contact. Atterrir en descente de la crête (option A) augmente considérablement la vitesse sol et la distance de roulement, risquant une collision avec le terrain en aval. Approcher parallèlement à la crête (option D) ignore le problème de la pente. La vitesse minimale (option B) ne laisse aucune marge d'énergie pour l'arrondi sur un terrain incliné.
+
+### Q112: En finale, vous réalisez que le train d'atterrissage n'a pas été sorti. Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q112
+- A) Rentrer les volets, sortir le train et atterrir normalement
+- B) Sortir immédiatement le train et atterrir comme d'habitude
+- C) Atterrir train rentré à vitesse supérieure à la normale
+- D) Atterrir train rentré, en touchant soigneusement à la vitesse minimale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le train n'est pas sorti en finale et que l'altitude est insuffisante pour le sortir en toute sécurité, l'action la plus sûre est d'effectuer un atterrissage train rentré à la vitesse minimale, acceptant un atterrissage sur le ventre avec un toucher contrôlé et doux. Sortir le train à la dernière minute (option B) risque un train sorti de façon asymétrique ou partielle, ce qui est plus dangereux. Rentrer les volets pour gagner du temps (option A) modifie imprévisiblement la trajectoire d'approche à proximité du sol. Atterrir sans train à vitesse plus élevée (option C) aggrave les dommages et augmente le risque de blessure.
+
+### Q113: À quelle hauteur lors d'un lancement au treuil l'assiette de montée maximale peut-elle être adoptée ? ^t70q113
+- A) À partir de 150 m ou plus, lorsqu'un atterrissage tout droit après une rupture de câble n'est plus possible
+- B) À partir d'environ 50 m, tout en maintenant une vitesse de lancement sûre
+- C) À partir de 15 m, une fois qu'une vitesse d'au moins 90 km/h est atteinte
+- D) Immédiatement après le décollage, à condition d'avoir un vent de face suffisamment fort
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un lancement au treuil, l'assiette maximale de montée (forte inclinaison) ne doit pas être adoptée avant environ 50 m AGL, tout en maintenant une vitesse minimale de lancement sûre. En dessous de 50 m, une rupture de câble ne permettrait pas un atterrissage tout droit si le nez est trop relevé ; au-dessus de 50 m, l'altitude est suffisante pour récupérer. 15 m est trop bas et dangereux. 150 m est trop conservateur et gaspille l'énergie du lancement. Cabrer immédiatement après le décollage (option D) est extrêmement dangereux quel que soit le vent de face.
+
+### Q114: Quels facteurs doivent être pris en compte pour la vitesse d'approche et d'atterrissage ? ^t70q114
+- A) Altitude et masse
+- B) Vitesse du vent et altitude
+- C) Masse de l'aéronef et vitesse du vent
+- D) Vitesse du vent et masse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse d'approche et d'atterrissage doit tenir compte à la fois de la masse de l'aéronef et des conditions de vent (y compris les rafales). Un aéronef plus lourd nécessite une vitesse d'approche plus élevée pour maintenir une marge de sécurité adéquate au-dessus du décrochage. Des vents plus forts — notamment les rafales — nécessitent un incrément de vitesse supplémentaire pour éviter une perte soudaine de vitesse air et de portance. L'altitude seule ne détermine pas directement la vitesse d'approche. Les options A, B et D sont incomplètes ; l'option C nomme correctement la masse et la vitesse du vent.
+
+### Q115: Comment pouvez-vous déterminer la direction du vent lors d'un atterrissage en campagne ? ^t70q115
+- A) Se souvenir du vent indiqué par la manche à air sur l'aérodrome de départ
+- B) Demander à d'autres pilotes joignables par radio
+- C) Observer la fumée, les drapeaux et les ondulations des champs
+- D) Utiliser les prévisions de vent du bulletin météo de vol
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un atterrissage en campagne, les indices visuels dans l'environnement sont les indicateurs les plus fiables et immédiatement disponibles de la direction et de la force du vent : la fumée des cheminées, les drapeaux et les cultures en mouvement indiquent clairement le vent local actuel. Une prévision météo (option D) peut ne pas refléter les conditions locales précises à cet instant. Le contact radio avec d'autres pilotes (option B) est peu fiable et lent. La manche à air sur l'aérodrome de départ (option A) n'est pas pertinente pour les conditions sur le site d'atterrissage en campagne.
+
+### Q116: Quelle technique d'atterrissage est recommandée pour une zone herbeuse en descente ? ^t70q116
+- A) Aérofreins complets, train rentré et en décrochage
+- B) Généralement atterrir en montée
+- C) En diagonal vers le bas
+- D) Frein de roue appliqué, sans aérofreins
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une zone herbeuse en descente, atterrir en montée signifie que l'aéronef monte vers le sol, ce qui décélère naturellement le planeur et raccourcit le roulement — c'est la technique recommandée. Atterrir en diagonal vers le bas (option C) risque un tête-queue. Utiliser le frein de roue sans aérofreins (option D) peut être inefficace ou provoquer un capotage sur terrain accidenté. Atterrir train rentré et en décrochage (option A) est dangereux et inutile.
+
+### Q117: Qu'est-ce qui doit être vérifié avant tout changement de direction en vol plané ? ^t70q117
+- A) Que le virage sera effectué de façon coordonnée
+- B) Que les objets non fixés sont sécurisés
+- C) Qu'il y a des nuages convectifs dans la zone
+- D) Que l'espace aérien dans la direction souhaitée est dégagé
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avant d'initier tout virage en vol, le pilote doit d'abord vérifier que l'espace aérien dans la direction souhaitée est dégagé de tout autre aéronef, obstacle et zone réglementée. Un virage coordonné (option A) est toujours souhaitable mais est secondaire par rapport à la surveillance visuelle. Les nuages convectifs (option C) et les objets non fixés (option B) ne sont pas des priorités de sécurité avant un changement de cap. L'anti-abordage par une surveillance visuelle appropriée est la préoccupation principale.
+
+### Q118: Avant un lancement au treuil, vous détectez un léger vent arrière. Qu'est-ce qui doit être pris en compte ? ^t70q118
+- A) Un maillon fusible de résistance inférieure peut être utilisé, car la charge sera moins importante
+- B) Le roulage jusqu'au décollage sera plus long ; surveiller la vitesse air
+- C) Tirer complètement le manche en arrière immédiatement après le décollage pour gagner de la hauteur supplémentaire
+- D) Le roulage jusqu'au décollage sera plus court car le vent arrière pousse par derrière
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un vent arrière lors d'un lancement au treuil signifie que l'aéronef a une vitesse air plus faible par rapport au sol à toute vitesse sol donnée, donc il faut un roulage plus long avant d'atteindre la vitesse de vol — le décollage prend plus longtemps et le pilote doit surveiller attentivement la vitesse air. Le vent arrière ne réduit pas la classe de résistance du câble requise (option A). Le vent arrière réduit la vitesse air effective, donc le roulage est plus long et non plus court (l'option D est incorrecte). Tirer le manche en arrière immédiatement après le décollage par vent arrière est dangereux (option C).
+
+### Q119: Lors de l'approche pour l'atterrissage par fort vent de travers, comment le virage base-finale doit-il être exécuté ? ^t70q119
+- A) Inclinaison maximale de 60 degrés, utiliser les palonniers pour s'aligner tôt sur la finale
+- B) Inclinaison maximale de 30 degrés, utiliser les palonniers pour s'aligner tôt sur la finale
+- C) Inclinaison maximale de 60 degrés, surveiller attentivement la vitesse et le fil de laine, corriger la trajectoire après tout dépassement
+- D) Inclinaison maximale de 30 degrés, surveiller attentivement la vitesse et le fil de laine, corriger la trajectoire après tout dépassement
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le virage base-finale, un angle d'inclinaison maximal de 30° est recommandé pour maintenir la coordination du virage et éviter le risque de décrochage-vrille à faible vitesse. Le fil de laine (indicateur de glissade) et la vitesse doivent être surveillés attentivement car le vent de travers complique la géométrie du virage. Si l'aéronef dépasse l'axe de finale, une correction douce de trajectoire est effectuée après le virage — jamais une entrée brusque au palonnier pour forcer l'alignement, car cela risque un décrochage en glissade. Les options A et C autorisent jusqu'à 60° d'inclinaison, ce qui est excessif et dangereux à proximité du sol.
+
+### Q120: Lors d'un spiralage, un autre planeur vous suit de près. Que devez-vous faire pour éviter une collision ? ^t70q120
+- A) Augmenter l'inclinaison pour devenir plus visible pour l'autre planeur
+- B) Réduire l'inclinaison pour élargir le rayon de virage
+- C) Réduire la vitesse pour laisser l'autre planeur passer
+- D) Augmenter la vitesse pour se positionner à l'opposé dans le cercle
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux planeurs spiralisent dans le même thermique à proximité étroite, le moyen le plus efficace de créer une séparation est d'augmenter la vitesse, ce qui augmente le rayon de virage et déplace le planeur le plus rapide à une position opposée dans le cercle (à 180°), créant la séparation maximale en toute sécurité. Réduire la vitesse (option C) resserre le rayon et réduit l'écart. Réduire l'inclinaison (option B) augmente également le rayon mais lentement. Augmenter l'inclinaison (option A) rend le planeur plus petit en profil mais ne résout pas le problème de proximité.
+
+### Q121: Quelles altitudes doivent être planifiées pour les phases du circuit d'atterrissage en planeur ? ^t70q121
+- A) 300 m par le travers du seuil et 150 m en finale
+- B) 500 m par le travers du seuil et 50 m après le virage final
+- C) 150 à 200 m par le travers du seuil et 100 m après le virage final
+- D) 100 m par le travers du seuil et 50 m après le virage final
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les hauteurs standard du circuit d'atterrissage pour un planeur sont d'environ 150 à 200 m AGL par le travers du seuil (vent arrière) et 100 m AGL après le virage final. Ces hauteurs donnent au pilote suffisamment de temps et d'espace pour planifier l'approche et utiliser les aérofreins efficacement pour un atterrissage précis. Les hauteurs inférieures des options D et B laissent une marge insuffisante pour les corrections ; les valeurs plus élevées de l'option A sont excessives pour les opérations en planeur non motorisé.
+
+### Q122: Comment doit être sécurisé un planeur lorsque des vents forts sont observés ? ^t70q122
+- A) Nez face au vent, sortir les aérofreins, verrouiller les commandes
+- B) Nez face au vent, lester et sécuriser la queue
+- C) Aile sous le vent au sol, lester l'aile, verrouiller les commandes
+- D) Aile au vent au sol, lester l'aile, verrouiller les commandes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Par vents forts, l'aile au vent (côté d'où vient le vent) doit être posée au sol pour empêcher le vent de s'y engouffrer et de renverser l'aéronef. L'aile est ensuite lestée avec un sac de sable ou un poids similaire, et les gouvernes (gouverne de direction) sont sécurisées pour éviter qu'elles ne soient endommagées par le battement aérodynamique. Pointer le nez face au vent (options A et B) présente une grande surface de fuselage aux rafales latérales et ne protège pas les ailes. Poser l'aile sous le vent au sol (option C) permet au vent de soulever l'aile au vent.
+
+### Q123: Qu'est-ce qui doit être pris en compte lors du franchissement des crêtes montagneuses ? ^t70q123
+- A) Ne pas survoler les parcs nationaux
+- B) Réduire à la vitesse minimale en raison des turbulences
+- C) Utiliser les oiseaux en spirale pour localiser les cellules thermiques
+- D) Anticiper les turbulences et augmenter légèrement la vitesse
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les crêtes montagneuses produisent des turbulences importantes sous le vent et dans la zone de rotor, mais des turbulences peuvent également survenir directement au niveau de la crête. Voler légèrement plus vite que la normale offre une meilleure efficacité des commandes et réduit le risque de décrochage dans les turbulences. Réduire à la vitesse minimale (option B) est dangereux car les turbulences pourraient provoquer un décrochage. Le survol des parcs nationaux (option A) est une question réglementaire, pas une considération de sécurité principale lors du franchissement de crêtes. Les oiseaux en spirale indiquent des thermiques (option C) mais n'abordent pas le danger des turbulences lors du franchissement de crêtes.
+
+### Q124: Que signifie un « buffeting » (tremblement) ressenti à travers le manche de profondeur ? ^t70q124
+- A) Centre de gravité trop en avant
+- B) Surface de l'aéronef très sale
+- C) Vol trop lentement — séparation du flux d'air sur l'aile
+- D) Vol trop vite — turbulences impactant les ailerons
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le buffeting ressenti à travers le manche de profondeur est un avertissement aérodynamique classique d'une approche de décrochage : le flux d'air décollé des ailes passe sur l'empennage, provoquant des vibrations de l'élévateur. Cela se produit à basse vitesse lorsque l'angle d'attaque dépasse l'angle critique. Un CG avant (option A) rend l'aéronef plus stable et résistant au décrochage. Un aéronef sale (option B) peut affecter les performances mais ne provoque pas directement de buffeting à l'élévateur. Les turbulences à grande vitesse (option D) seraient ressenties comme des vibrations générales de la cellule, et non spécifiquement à l'élévateur.
+
+### Q125: Quand un contrôle prévol doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q125
+- A) Une fois par mois ; pour les TMG, une fois par jour
+- B) Avant toute opération de vol et avant chaque vol individuel
+- C) Avant le premier vol de la journée et après chaque changement de pilote
+- D) Après chaque assemblage de l'aéronef
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un contrôle prévol (tour de l'aéronef et vérification cabine) doit être effectué avant le premier vol de la journée et après chaque changement de pilote, car chaque pilote est responsable de vérifier la navigabilité de l'aéronef avant de le piloter. Un contrôle après chaque assemblage (option D) s'applique aux aéronefs qui sont démontés entre les vols (planeurs en remorque) — il s'agit d'une exigence séparée. Les contrôles mensuels (option A) décrivent les intervalles de maintenance, pas les procédures prévol. L'option B (« avant chaque vol ») est trop large et serait contraignante ; c'est la règle du premier vol de la journée et du changement de pilote qui constitue la pratique standard.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_101_128_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_101_128_fr.md
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+### Q101 : Des modifications peuvent-elles être apportées sur le site d'un accident où une personne a été blessée, en dehors des mesures de secours essentielles ? ^t70q101
+- A) Oui, si l'exploitant de l'aéronef a formellement donné une telle instruction
+- B) Non, sauf si l'autorité d'enquête a formellement accordé une autorisation
+- C) Oui, l'épave doit être dégagée le plus rapidement possible pour éviter toute interférence de tiers
+- D) Oui, si seuls des dommages matériels se sont produits
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Modifier un site d'accident est interdit sans autorisation formelle de l'autorité d'enquête, sauf pour les mesures de secours essentielles.
+
+### Q102 : Le pilote perd le remorqueur de vue lors du remorquage. Comment doit-il réagir ? ^t70q102
+- A) Déployer les aérofreins et attendre
+- B) Se préparer à sauter en parachute
+- C) Contacter le pilote de remorquage par radio et demander sa position
+- D) Larguer immédiatement le câble
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le pilote perd le remorqueur de vue, larguer immédiatement le câble. Continuer le remorquage sans voir le remorqueur est extrêmement dangereux.
+
+### Q103 : Le port du parachute est-il obligatoire dans les planeurs ? ^t70q103
+- A) Pour tous les vols au-dessus de 300 m/sol
+- B) Seulement pour les vols acrobatiques
+- C) Oui, toujours
+- D) Non
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le port du parachute n'est pas obligatoire pour les planeurs en Suisse pour les vols normaux. Il est recommandé mais pas réglementaire.
+
+### Q104 : Vous devez atterrir sur un terrain de 400 m avec un vent arrière modéré. Comment volez-vous la finale ? ^t70q104
+- A) Plus vite qu'avec un vent de face
+- B) Légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale et à une hauteur plus basse qu'avec un vent de face
+- C) À la vitesse de finesse maximale, un peu plus haut qu'avec un vent de face
+- D) Normalement, avec un glissement
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec vent arrière sur un terrain de 400 m : approcher légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale et à une hauteur plus basse qu'avec vent de face. Le vent arrière augmente la vitesse sol.
+
+### Q105 : Vous voyez un motoplaneur avec son moteur en marche à la même altitude qui approche par votre droite. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q105
+- A) Déployer les aérofreins et céder le passage vers le bas
+- B) Maintenir votre cap en gardant le motoplaneur en vue
+- C) Céder le passage à droite
+- D) Céder le passage à gauche
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un motoplaneur motorisé venant de la droite a la priorité (règle des routes en convergence). Vous devez céder le passage à droite pour le laisser passer.
+
+### Q106 : Vous volez dans une zone restreinte spécifique aux planeurs (LS-R). Quelles distances de séparation des nuages devez-vous respecter ? (vertical/horizontal) ^t70q106
+- A) À l'écart des nuages avec la visibilité de vol
+- B) 100 m verticalement, 300 m horizontalement
+- C) 300 m verticalement, 1500 m horizontalement
+- D) 50 m verticalement, 100 m horizontalement
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans une zone restreinte spécifique aux planeurs (LS-R), des distances réduites s'appliquent : 50 m verticalement et 100 m horizontalement par rapport aux nuages (au lieu des distances standard).
+
+### Q107 : Quelle est la séquence correcte pour abandonner un planeur et sauter en parachute ? ^t70q107
+- A) Détacher le harnais, larguer la verrière, sauter, ouvrir le parachute
+- B) Larguer la verrière, détacher le harnais, sauter, ouvrir le parachute
+- C) Larguer la verrière, détacher le harnais, ouvrir le parachute, sauter
+- D) Détacher le harnais, tirer la poignée du parachute, larguer la verrière, sauter
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas de saut en parachute : 1) Larguer la verrière 2) Détacher le harnais 3) Sauter 4) Ouvrir le parachute. L'ordre est crucial pour la sécurité.
+
+### Q108 : Comment un atterrissage en pente doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q108
+- A) Toujours face à la montée, quelle que soit la direction du vent
+- B) Avec vent de gauche, en travers de la pente
+- C) Toujours en travers de la pente
+- D) En descente face au vent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Atterrissage en pente : toujours en descente face au vent. En montée avec vent arrière, la distance d'atterrissage serait dangereusement allongée.
+
+### Q109 : Quel type de terrain est particulièrement adapté pour un atterrissage hors-champ ? ^t70q109
+- A) Un grand terrain plat, orienté face au vent, libre d'obstacles sur l'axe d'approche
+- B) Un champ de hautes cultures qui aiderait à freiner le planeur
+- C) Un vaste champ fraîchement labouré en pente ascendante
+- D) Un terrain près d'une route et d'un téléphone
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le meilleur terrain pour un atterrissage hors-champ est un grand terrain plat, orienté face au vent, libre d'obstacles sur l'axe d'approche.
+
+### Q110 : Un atterrissage hors-champ se termine par un tête-à-queue causé par un obstacle. Le fuselage se casse près du palonnier. Que doit-on faire ? ^t70q110
+- A) S'il s'agit d'un accident mineur, aucun rapport n'est nécessaire
+- B) Notifier immédiatement le bureau d'enquête sur les accidents aéronautiques via la REGA
+- C) Notifier le poste de police le plus proche
+- D) Notifier l'OFAC par écrit
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un fuselage cassé près du palonnier après un tête-à-queue = accident grave. Notifier immédiatement le bureau d'enquête sur les accidents (via la REGA si nécessaire).
+
+### Q111 : Un pilote de planeur doit effectuer un atterrissage hors-champ en terrain montagneux. Le seul site d'atterrissage disponible est en forte pente. Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q111
+- A) Approcher en descente à vitesse accrue, en poussant l'élévateur pour suivre le terrain à l'atterrissage
+- B) Approcher à la vitesse minimale avec un arrondi soigneux à l'arrivée sur le site
+- C) Approcher à vitesse accrue avec un arrondi rapide pour correspondre au sol incliné
+- D) Approcher parallèlement à la crête face au vent dominant
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un atterrissage hors-champ sur terrain incliné est inévitable, la technique correcte est d'approcher à vitesse accrue et d'effectuer un arrondi rapide et ferme pour correspondre à l'attitude en tangage du planeur à l'angle de la pente au toucher — cela minimise la vitesse verticale relative au contact. Atterrir en descente (option A) augmente considérablement la vitesse sol et la distance de roulement, risquant une collision avec le terrain devant. Approcher parallèlement à la crête (option D) ignore le problème de pente. La vitesse minimale (option B) ne laisse aucune réserve d'énergie pour l'arrondi sur terrain incliné.
+
+### Q112 : En finale, vous réalisez que le train d'atterrissage n'a pas été sorti. Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q112
+- A) Rentrer les volets, sortir le train et atterrir normalement
+- B) Sortir immédiatement le train et atterrir comme d'habitude
+- C) Atterrir train rentré à une vitesse plus élevée que d'habitude
+- D) Atterrir train rentré, en touchant soigneusement à la vitesse minimale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le train n'est pas sorti en finale et qu'il n'y a pas suffisamment de hauteur pour le sortir en sécurité, l'action la plus sûre est d'effectuer un atterrissage train rentré à la vitesse minimale, en acceptant un atterrissage sur le ventre avec un toucher contrôlé et doux. Sortir le train au dernier moment (option B) risque un train asymétrique ou partiellement sorti, ce qui est plus dangereux. Rentrer les volets pour gagner du temps (option A) modifie le profil d'approche de façon imprévisible proche du sol. Atterrir sans train à une vitesse plus élevée (option C) aggrave les dommages et augmente le risque de blessures.
+
+### Q113 : À quelle hauteur lors d'un lancement au treuil l'attitude de tangage maximal peut-elle être adoptée ? ^t70q113
+- A) À partir de 150 m ou plus, lorsqu'un atterrissage droit devant après rupture de câble n'est plus possible
+- B) À partir d'environ 50 m, tout en maintenant une vitesse de lancement sécurisée
+- C) À partir de 15 m, une fois une vitesse d'au moins 90 km/h atteinte
+- D) Immédiatement après le décollage, à condition qu'il y ait un vent de face suffisamment fort
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un lancement au treuil, l'attitude de tangage maximal (montée raide) ne doit pas être adoptée avant environ 50 m/sol, tout en maintenant une vitesse de lancement minimale sécurisée. En dessous de 50 m, une rupture de câble ne permettrait pas un atterrissage droit devant si le nez est trop haut ; au-dessus de 50 m, il y a suffisamment de hauteur pour récupérer. 15 m est trop bas et dangereux. 150 m est excessivement conservateur et gaspille l'énergie de lancement. Cabrer immédiatement après le décollage (option D) est extrêmement risqué quel que soit le vent de face.
+
+### Q114 : Quels facteurs doivent être pris en compte pour la vitesse d'approche et d'atterrissage ? ^t70q114
+- A) L'altitude et le poids
+- B) La vitesse du vent et l'altitude
+- C) Le poids de l'aéronef et la vitesse du vent
+- D) La vitesse du vent et le poids
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse d'approche et d'atterrissage doit tenir compte à la fois du poids de l'aéronef et des conditions de vent (y compris les rafales). Un aéronef plus lourd nécessite une vitesse d'approche plus élevée pour maintenir une marge de sécurité adéquate au-dessus du décrochage. Les vents forts — surtout les rafales — nécessitent un incrément de vitesse supplémentaire pour éviter une perte soudaine de vitesse et de portance. L'altitude seule ne détermine pas directement la vitesse d'approche. Les options A, B et D sont incomplètes ; l'option C nomme correctement à la fois le poids et la vitesse du vent.
+
+### Q115 : Comment déterminer la direction du vent lors d'un atterrissage hors-champ ? ^t70q115
+- A) Se rappeler le vent indiqué par la manche à air à l'aérodrome de départ
+- B) Demander aux autres pilotes joignables par radio
+- C) Observer la fumée, les drapeaux et les champs ondulants
+- D) Utiliser les prévisions de vent du bulletin météo de vol
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un atterrissage hors-champ, les indices visuels dans l'environnement sont les indicateurs les plus fiables et immédiatement disponibles de la direction et de la force du vent : la fumée s'élevant des cheminées, les drapeaux et les cultures ondulantes montrent clairement le vent local actuel. Une prévision météo (option D) peut ne pas refléter précisément les conditions locales au moment précis. Le contact radio avec d'autres pilotes (option B) est peu fiable et lent. La manche à air à l'aérodrome de départ (option A) n'est pas pertinente pour les conditions au site d'atterrissage hors-champ.
+
+### Q116 : Quelle technique d'atterrissage est recommandée pour une zone en herbe en pente descendante ? ^t70q116
+- A) Aérofreins complets, train rentré et décrochage
+- B) En règle générale, atterrir en montant la pente
+- C) En diagonale en descente
+- D) Frein de roue appliqué, sans aérofreins
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une zone en herbe en pente descendante, atterrir en montant la pente signifie que l'aéronef monte vers le sol, ce qui décélère naturellement le planeur et raccourcit le roulement — c'est la technique recommandée. Atterrir en diagonale en descente (option C) risque un tête-à-queue. Utiliser le frein de roue sans aérofreins (option D) peut être inefficace ou provoquer un capotage sur terrain accidenté. Atterrir avec train rentré et décroché (option A) est dangereux et inutile.
+
+### Q117 : Que doit-on vérifier avant tout changement de direction lors du vol plané ? ^t70q117
+- A) Que le virage sera effectué en coordination
+- B) Que les objets libres sont fixés
+- C) Qu'il y a des nuages thermiques dans la zone
+- D) Que l'espace aérien dans la direction prévue est libre
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avant d'initier tout virage en vol, le pilote doit d'abord vérifier que l'espace aérien dans la direction prévue est libre d'autres aéronefs, d'obstacles et de zones restreintes. Un virage coordonné (option A) est toujours souhaitable mais est secondaire par rapport à la veille. Les nuages thermiques (option C) et les objets libres (option B) ne constituent pas des priorités de sécurité avant un changement de cap. L'évitement des collisions par une veille appropriée est la préoccupation principale.
+
+### Q118 : Avant un lancement au treuil, vous détectez un léger vent arrière. Que faut-il prendre en compte ? ^t70q118
+- A) Un maillon de rupture de résistance plus faible peut être utilisé, car la charge sera moindre
+- B) Le roulage jusqu'au décollage sera plus long ; surveiller la vitesse anémométrique
+- C) Tirer immédiatement à fond sur l'élévateur après le décollage pour gagner de la hauteur supplémentaire
+- D) Le roulage jusqu'au décollage sera plus court car le vent arrière pousse par derrière
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un vent arrière lors d'un lancement au treuil signifie que l'aéronef a une vitesse indiquée plus faible par rapport au sol à toute vitesse sol donnée, donc un roulement plus long est nécessaire avant d'atteindre la vitesse de vol — le décollage prend plus de temps et le pilote doit surveiller attentivement la vitesse anémométrique. Le vent arrière ne réduit pas la résistance nominale requise du maillon de rupture (option A). Le vent arrière par derrière réduit la vitesse effective, donc le roulement est plus long, pas plus court (option D est incorrecte). Tirer à fond immédiatement après le décollage par vent arrière est risqué (option C).
+
+### Q119 : Lors de l'approche en atterrissage par fort vent traversier, comment le virage base-finale doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q119
+- A) Maximum 60° d'inclinaison, utiliser le palonnier pour s'aligner tôt avec la trajectoire finale
+- B) Maximum 30° d'inclinaison, utiliser le palonnier pour s'aligner tôt avec la trajectoire finale
+- C) Maximum 60° d'inclinaison, surveiller attentivement la vitesse et le fil de lacet, corriger la trajectoire après tout dépassement
+- D) Maximum 30° d'inclinaison, surveiller attentivement la vitesse et le fil de lacet, corriger la trajectoire après tout dépassement
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le virage base-finale, un angle d'inclinaison maximal de 30° est recommandé pour maintenir la coordination du virage à un niveau gérable et éviter le risque d'un décrochage-vrille à basse vitesse. Le fil de lacet (indicateur de dérapage) et la vitesse doivent être étroitement surveillés car le vent traversier complique la géométrie du virage. Si l'aéronef dépasse la trajectoire finale, une correction douce de trajectoire est effectuée après le virage — jamais une entrée brusque de palonnier pour forcer l'alignement, ce qui risque un décrochage en dérapage. Les options A et C autorisent jusqu'à 60° d'inclinaison, ce qui est excessif et dangereux à proximité du sol.
+
+### Q120 : En spiralisant en thermique, un autre planeur suit de près derrière vous. Que devez-vous faire pour éviter une collision ? ^t70q120
+- A) Augmenter l'inclinaison pour être plus visible pour l'autre planeur
+- B) Réduire l'inclinaison pour élargir le rayon de virage
+- C) Réduire la vitesse pour laisser passer l'autre planeur
+- D) Augmenter la vitesse pour se déplacer vers une position opposée dans le cercle
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux planeurs spiralisent dans le même thermique à proximité l'un de l'autre, le moyen le plus efficace de créer une séparation est d'augmenter la vitesse, ce qui augmente le rayon de virage et déplace le planeur le plus rapide vers une position opposée dans le cercle (à 180°), créant la séparation sécurisée maximale. Réduire la vitesse (option C) resserre le rayon et comble l'écart. Réduire l'inclinaison (option B) augmente également le rayon mais lentement. Augmenter l'inclinaison (option A) rend le planeur plus petit de profil mais ne résout pas le problème de proximité.
+
+### Q121 : Quelles altitudes devraient être planifiées pour les phases du circuit d'atterrissage dans un planeur ? ^t70q121
+- A) 300 m à la hauteur du seuil et 150 m en finale
+- B) 500 m à la hauteur du seuil et 50 m après le virage final
+- C) 150 à 200 m à la hauteur du seuil et 100 m après le virage final
+- D) 100 m à la hauteur du seuil et 50 m après le virage final
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les hauteurs standard du circuit d'atterrissage pour un planeur sont d'environ 150 à 200 m/sol à la hauteur du seuil (vent arrière) et 100 m/sol après le virage final. Ces hauteurs donnent au pilote suffisamment de temps et d'espace pour planifier l'approche et utiliser efficacement les aérofreins pour un atterrissage précis. Les hauteurs inférieures des options D et B laissent une marge insuffisante pour les corrections ; les valeurs plus élevées de l'option A sont excessives pour les opérations d'un planeur non motorisé.
+
+### Q122 : Comment un planeur doit-il être sécurisé par vents forts ? ^t70q122
+- A) Nez face au vent, déployer les aérofreins, bloquer les commandes
+- B) Nez face au vent, lester et sécuriser la queue
+- C) Aile sous le vent au sol, lester l'aile, bloquer les commandes
+- D) Aile au vent au sol, lester l'aile, bloquer les commandes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Par vents forts, l'aile au vent (côté vent) doit être posée au sol pour empêcher le vent de passer dessous et de retourner l'aéronef. L'aile est ensuite lestée avec un sac de sable ou un poids similaire, et les gouvernes (palonnier) sont sécurisées pour éviter qu'elles ne soient endommagées par les buffetings aérodynamiques. Pointer le nez face au vent (options A et B) présente une grande surface de fuselage aux rafales latérales et ne protège pas les ailes. Poser l'aile sous le vent au sol (option C) permet au vent de soulever l'aile au vent.
+
+### Q123 : Que faut-il prendre en compte lors du franchissement de crêtes montagneuses ? ^t70q123
+- A) Ne pas survoler les parcs nationaux
+- B) Réduire à la vitesse minimale en raison des turbulences
+- C) Utiliser les oiseaux en spirale pour localiser les cellules thermiques
+- D) S'attendre à de la turbulence et augmenter légèrement la vitesse
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les crêtes montagneuses produisent une turbulence significative côté sous le vent et dans la zone de rotor, mais des turbulences peuvent également se produire directement à la crête. Voler légèrement plus vite que la normale offre une meilleure autorité de commande et réduit le risque de décrochage par turbulence. Réduire à la vitesse minimale (option B) est dangereux car la turbulence pourrait provoquer le décrochage de l'aéronef. Le survol des parcs nationaux (option A) est une question réglementaire, pas une considération de sécurité primaire lors du franchissement des crêtes. Les oiseaux en spirale indiquent des thermiques (option C) mais cela ne traite pas le danger de turbulence du franchissement de crête.
+
+### Q124 : Que signifient les buffetings ressentis à travers la commande d'élévateur ? ^t70q124
+- A) Centre de gravité trop en avant
+- B) Surface de l'aéronef très sale
+- C) Vol trop lent — décrochage du flux d'air sur l'aile
+- D) Vol trop rapide — turbulence impactant les ailerons
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les buffetings ressentis à travers la commande d'élévateur sont un avertissement aérodynamique classique d'un décrochage imminent : le flux d'air décroché des ailes passe sur la surface de queue, faisant vibrer l'élévateur. Cela se produit à basse vitesse lorsque l'incidence dépasse l'angle critique. Un CG en avant (option A) rend l'aéronef plus stable et résistant au décrochage. Un airframe sale (option B) peut affecter les performances mais ne provoque pas directement des buffetings de l'élévateur. La turbulence à haute vitesse (option D) serait ressentie comme des vibrations générales de la cellule, pas spécifiquement à l'élévateur.
+
+### Q125 : Quand une vérification avant vol doit-elle être effectuée ? ^t70q125
+- A) Une fois par mois ; pour les TMG, une fois par jour
+- B) Avant chaque opération de vol et avant chaque vol individuel
+- C) Avant le premier vol de la journée et après chaque changement de pilote
+- D) Après chaque assemblage de l'aéronef
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une vérification avant vol (tour de piste et vérification du cockpit) doit être effectuée avant le premier vol de la journée et après chaque changement de pilote, car chaque pilote est responsable de vérifier la navigabilité de l'aéronef avant de voler. Une vérification après chaque assemblage (option D) s'applique aux aéronefs démontés entre les vols (planeurs sur remorque) — c'est une exigence séparée. Les vérifications mensuelles (option A) décrivent les intervalles de maintenance, pas les procédures avant vol. L'option B (avant chaque vol) est trop large et serait contraignante ; c'est la règle du premier vol journalier et du changement de pilote qui est la pratique standard.
+
+### Q126 : Comment le terme « temps de vol » est-il défini ? ^t70q126
+- A) Le temps total depuis le premier décollage jusqu'au dernier atterrissage dans le cadre d'un ou plusieurs vols consécutifs.
+- B) L'intervalle depuis le démarrage du moteur en vue du départ jusqu'à la sortie du pilote après l'arrêt du moteur.
+- C) L'intervalle depuis le début de la course au décollage jusqu'au toucher final à l'atterrissage.
+- D) Le temps total depuis le premier mouvement de l'aéronef jusqu'à son immobilisation définitive à la fin du vol.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Annexe 1 de l'OACI définit le temps de vol pour les aéronefs comme le temps total depuis le moment où un aéronef effectue son premier mouvement sous sa propre puissance en vue du décollage jusqu'au moment où il s'immobilise définitivement à la fin du vol. Pour les planeurs (non motorisés), ceci est interprété comme depuis le premier mouvement (p. ex. le début de la course au treuil ou du remorquage) jusqu'à l'immobilisation de l'aéronef après l'atterrissage. L'option B décrit le temps bloc pour les aéronefs motorisés. L'option C est trop restrictive (uniquement la course au décollage et le roulage à l'atterrissage). L'option A décrit une période de service, pas un vol individuel.
+
+### Q127 : En approche, la tour signale : « Vent 15 nœuds, rafales 25 nœuds. » Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q127
+- A) Approche à la vitesse minimale, en corrigeant les changements d'attitude avec de douces entrées de palonnier
+- B) Approche à vitesse accrue, en évitant l'utilisation des aérofreins
+- C) Approche à vitesse normale, en contrôlant la vitesse avec les aérofreins
+- D) Approche à vitesse accrue, en corrigeant les changements d'attitude avec des entrées de palonnier fermes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec de fortes rafales (ici : vent 15 kt, rafales 25 kt — un écart de 10 kt), le pilote doit ajouter une marge de rafales à la vitesse d'approche normale pour s'assurer qu'une baisse soudaine de vitesse causée par une rafale ne réduise pas la vitesse en dessous de la vitesse de décrochage. Des entrées de palonnier fermes sont nécessaires pour corriger les changements d'attitude causés par les conditions rafaleuses. La vitesse minimale (option A) ne laisse aucune marge de sécurité par rafales. La vitesse normale sans correction de rafales (option C) est insuffisante. Éviter les aérofreins/aérofreins (option B) supprime la capacité de contrôler précisément la trajectoire de vol.
+
+### Q128 : Que signifient les buffetings ressentis à travers la commande d'élévateur ? ^t70q128
+- A) Surface de l'aéronef très sale
+- B) Vol trop rapide — turbulence frappant les ailerons
+- C) Centre de gravité trop en avant
+- D) Vol trop lentement — décrochage du flux d'air sur l'aile
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les buffetings ressentis à travers la commande d'élévateur constituent l'avertissement tactile que l'aile s'est approchée de son incidence critique et que le flux d'air commence à décrocher — le buffeting de pré-décrochage. Ceci est causé par le flux d'air turbulent décroché de l'aile qui atteint la queue et excite l'élévateur. L'option C (CG trop en avant) rend l'aéronef stable en tangage et résistant au décrochage. L'option A (airframe sale) dégrade les performances mais ne provoque pas spécifiquement des buffetings de l'élévateur. L'option B (turbulence à haute vitesse) produit des vibrations générales de la cellule sans lien avec le décrochage.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_126_128.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_126_128.md
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+### Q126: How is the term "flight time" defined? ^t70q126
+- A) The total time from the first take-off to the final landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- B) The interval from engine start for departure until the pilot leaves the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- C) The interval from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown on landing.
+- D) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 defines flight time for aircraft as the total time from the moment an aircraft first moves under its own power for the purpose of taking off until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. For sailplanes (non-motorised), this is interpreted as from first movement (e.g., the start of the winch run or aerotow) until the aircraft comes to rest after landing. Option B describes block time for powered aircraft. Option C is too narrow (only the take-off and landing roll). Option A describes a duty period concept, not a single flight.
+
+### Q127: During approach, the tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the landing be performed? ^t70q127
+- A) Approach at minimum speed, correcting attitude changes with gentle rudder inputs
+- B) Approach at increased speed, avoiding the use of spoilers
+- C) Approach at normal speed, controlling speed with spoilers
+- D) Approach at increased speed, correcting attitude changes with firm rudder inputs
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With strong gusts (here: wind 15 kt, gusts 25 kt — a 10 kt spread), the pilot must add a gust allowance to the normal approach speed to ensure that a sudden drop in airspeed caused by a gust does not reduce speed below the stall speed. Firm rudder inputs are needed to correct attitude changes caused by the gusty conditions. Minimum speed (option A) provides no safety margin in gusts. Normal speed without gust correction (option C) is insufficient. Avoiding spoilers/airbrakes (option B) removes the ability to control the glide path precisely.
+
+### Q128: What does buffeting felt through the elevator stick indicate? ^t70q128
+- A) Aircraft surface very dirty
+- B) Flying too fast — turbulence hitting the ailerons
+- C) Centre of gravity too far forward
+- D) Flying too slowly — wing airflow is separating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting felt through the elevator stick is the tactile warning that the wing has approached its critical angle of attack and airflow is beginning to separate — the pre-stall buffet. This is caused by turbulent separated airflow from the wing reaching the tail and exciting the elevator. Option C (CG too far forward) makes the aircraft pitch-stable and stall-resistant. Option A (dirty airframe) degrades performance but does not specifically cause elevator buffeting. Option B (high speed turbulence) produces general airframe vibration unrelated to stall.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_126_128_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_126_128_fr.md
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+### Q126: Comment le terme « temps de vol » est-il défini ? ^t70q126
+- A) La durée totale depuis le premier décollage jusqu'à l'atterrissage final sur un ou plusieurs vols consécutifs.
+- B) L'intervalle depuis la mise en route du moteur pour le départ jusqu'à ce que le pilote quitte l'aéronef après l'arrêt du moteur.
+- C) L'intervalle depuis le début de la course au décollage jusqu'au toucher des roues final à l'atterrissage.
+- D) La durée totale depuis le premier mouvement de l'aéronef jusqu'à son arrêt complet après le vol.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'annexe 1 de l'OACI définit le temps de vol pour les aéronefs comme la durée totale depuis le moment où un aéronef effectue son premier mouvement sous sa propre puissance en vue du décollage jusqu'au moment où il s'immobilise définitivement à la fin du vol. Pour les planeurs (non motorisés), cela s'interprète comme allant du premier mouvement (par exemple, le début de la course au treuil ou du remorquage) jusqu'à l'arrêt de l'aéronef après l'atterrissage. L'option B décrit le temps bloc pour les aéronefs motorisés. L'option C est trop restrictive (uniquement la course au décollage et à l'atterrissage). L'option A décrit un concept de période de service, non un vol unique.
+
+### Q127: En finale, la tour signale : « Vent 15 nœuds, rafales 25 nœuds. » Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q127
+- A) Approche à vitesse minimale, en corrigeant les variations d'assiette avec des actions douces sur le palonnier
+- B) Approche à vitesse augmentée, en évitant l'utilisation des aérofreins
+- C) Approche à vitesse normale, en contrôlant la vitesse avec les aérofreins
+- D) Approche à vitesse augmentée, en corrigeant les variations d'assiette avec des actions fermes sur le palonnier
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec des rafales fortes (ici : vent 15 kt, rafales 25 kt — un écart de 10 kt), le pilote doit ajouter une marge de rafale à la vitesse d'approche normale pour s'assurer qu'une chute soudaine de vitesse due à une rafale ne réduise pas la vitesse en dessous de la vitesse de décrochage. Des actions fermes sur le palonnier sont nécessaires pour corriger les variations d'assiette causées par les conditions venteuses. La vitesse minimale (option A) ne fournit aucune marge de sécurité en cas de rafales. La vitesse normale sans correction de rafale (option C) est insuffisante. Éviter les aérofreins (option B) supprime la capacité à contrôler précisément le plan de descente.
+
+### Q128: Que signifie un buffeting ressenti à travers le manche de profondeur ? ^t70q128
+- A) Surface de l'aéronef très sale
+- B) Vol trop rapide — turbulence frappant les ailerons
+- C) Centre de gravité trop en avant
+- D) Vol trop lent — le flux d'air sur l'aile se décroche
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le buffeting ressenti à travers le manche de profondeur est l'avertissement tactile que l'aile s'approche de son angle d'attaque critique et que le flux d'air commence à se séparer — le buffet pré-décrochage. Il est causé par le flux d'air turbulent décroché de l'aile qui atteint l'empennage et fait vibrer la gouverne de profondeur. L'option C (CG trop en avant) rend l'aéronef stable en tangage et résistant au décrochage. L'option A (cellule sale) dégrade les performances mais ne provoque pas spécifiquement un buffeting de la gouverne de profondeur. L'option B (turbulences à grande vitesse) produit des vibrations générales de la cellule sans rapport avec le décrochage.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_1_25.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_1_25.md
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+### Q1: While flying slowly near stall with the left wing dropping, how can a full stall be avoided? ^t70q1
+- A) Use rudder to the left, push the stick forward slightly, accelerate, then neutralise all controls
+- B) Lower the nose with elevator, maintain wings level using coordinated rudder and aileron
+- C) Deflect aileron to the right, push slightly forward on the stick, build speed, then neutralise controls
+- D) Apply aileron and rudder to the right, gain speed, push the stick forward slightly, then neutralise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct stall recovery technique is to immediately reduce the angle of attack by lowering the nose with the elevator, while using coordinated rudder and aileron to keep the wings level. Option A applies rudder in the wrong direction (toward the dropping wing). Option C uses aileron alone without coordinated rudder, which near the stall can increase adverse yaw and potentially trigger a spin entry. Option D also prioritizes aileron over elevator, missing the critical first step of reducing the angle of attack.
+
+### Q2: How is "flight time" defined? ^t70q2
+- A) The total time from the first take-off until the last landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- B) The time from engine start for take-off purposes until the pilot leaves the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- C) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+- D) The interval from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown on landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations for gliders, flight time is defined as the total time from the aircraft's first movement for the purpose of flight until it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. This includes ground handling and taxiing, not just airborne time. Option A only counts from takeoff to landing, excluding ground movement. Option B applies to powered aircraft with engines, not gliders. Option D is too narrow, covering only the takeoff run to touchdown and missing ground handling phases.
+
+### Q3: What is a wind shear? ^t70q3
+- A) A meteorological downslope wind event typical in alpine regions.
+- B) A gradual increase of wind speed at altitudes above 13000 ft.
+- C) A change in wind speed exceeding 15 kt.
+- D) A vertical or horizontal variation in wind speed and/or direction.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind shear is defined as any change in wind speed and/or direction over a relatively short distance, which can occur in both the vertical and horizontal planes. It is not limited to any particular speed threshold (option C), altitude range (option B), or geographic setting (option A). Wind shear is particularly dangerous during takeoff and landing when the aircraft is close to the ground with limited recovery margins.
+
+### Q4: Which weather phenomenon is most commonly linked to wind shear? ^t70q4
+- A) Stable high-pressure systems.
+- B) Thunderstorms.
+- C) Fog.
+- D) Invernal warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms generate the most severe wind shear through their powerful updrafts, downdrafts, and microburst outflows, which can cause sudden wind reversals exceeding 50 knots within seconds. Stable high-pressure systems (option A) typically produce calm, uniform conditions. Fog (option C) is associated with light winds, not shear. Warm fronts (option D) can produce mild shear, but thunderstorms are by far the most common and dangerous source.
+
+### Q5: Under what conditions should wind shear be expected? ^t70q5
+- A) On a calm summer day with light winds
+- B) In cold weather with calm winds
+- C) During an inversion
+- D) When crossing a warm front
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A temperature inversion creates a stable boundary layer between two air masses that can move at different speeds and directions, producing wind shear at the inversion level. Inversions are common in the early morning and can significantly affect glider operations near the ground, particularly during approach and landing. Option A describes conditions with minimal shear risk. Option B and D can occasionally produce shear but are not the primary conditions associated with it.
+
+### Q6: During approach, an aircraft encounters wind shear with decreasing headwind. Without pilot corrections, what happens to the flight path and indicated airspeed (IAS)? ^t70q6
+- A) Flight path goes higher, IAS rises
+- B) Flight path goes lower, IAS rises
+- C) Flight path goes higher, IAS drops
+- D) Flight path goes lower, IAS drops
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When headwind suddenly decreases, the airflow over the wings drops, causing IAS to decrease and lift to reduce. With less lift, the aircraft sinks below the intended glide path. The aircraft's inertia maintains its groundspeed briefly, but the reduced relative airflow means less aerodynamic force. This is the most dangerous wind shear scenario on approach because both effects — lower path and lower airspeed — combine to reduce safety margins simultaneously.
+
+### Q7: During approach, an aircraft encounters wind shear with increasing headwind. Without corrections, how are the flight path and IAS affected? ^t70q7
+- A) Flight path drops, IAS drops
+- B) Flight path rises, IAS drops
+- C) Flight path drops, IAS rises
+- D) Flight path rises, IAS rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An increasing headwind temporarily increases the relative airflow over the wings, raising both IAS and lift. The additional lift pushes the aircraft above the intended glide path. Although initially this appears favorable, the pilot must be alert — if the headwind later decreases, the aircraft will experience the opposite effect and may sink rapidly below the desired path. Options involving decreased IAS or a lower flight path contradict the aerodynamic response to an increasing headwind.
+
+### Q8: During approach, the aircraft experiences wind shear with a decreasing tailwind. Without corrections, what happens to the flight path and IAS? ^t70q8
+- A) Flight path drops, IAS rises
+- B) Flight path rises, IAS rises
+- C) Flight path drops, IAS drops
+- D) Flight path rises, IAS drops
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a tailwind decreases, the aircraft's forward momentum is maintained while the air mass effectively decelerates around it, increasing the relative airflow over the wings. This raises IAS and lift, pushing the aircraft above the glide path. A decreasing tailwind has the same aerodynamic effect as an increasing headwind. Options with decreased IAS or lower flight path misinterpret the relationship between tailwind changes and relative airflow.
+
+### Q9: What is the best way to avoid encountering wind shear during flight? ^t70q9
+- A) Avoid thermally active areas, especially in summer, or remain below them
+- B) Refrain from taking off and landing when heavy showers or thunderstorms are passing
+- C) Avoid precipitation areas, particularly in winter, and choose low flight altitudes
+- D) Avoid take-offs and landings in mountainous terrain and stay over flat terrain
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe wind shear is associated with thunderstorms and heavy showers, which produce microbursts and gust fronts. Avoiding takeoffs and landings when such weather is passing through eliminates the most dangerous wind shear exposure during the most vulnerable flight phases. Option A addresses thermals, which cause turbulence but not dangerous shear. Option C targets winter precipitation, which is a lesser shear risk. Option D is overly restrictive and does not address the primary cause.
+
+### Q10: During a cross-country flight, visual conditions begin to fall below minima. To maintain minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to... ^t70q10
+- A) Press on using radio navigation aids along the route
+- B) Continue based on sufficiently favourable forecasts
+- C) Request navigational assistance from ATC to continue
+- D) Turn back, since adequate VMC was confirmed along the previous track
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When VFR conditions deteriorate below minima, the safest action is to turn back to the area where adequate visual meteorological conditions (VMC) were confirmed. Continuing into worsening visibility is the leading cause of VFR-into-IMC accidents. Option A is inappropriate because gliders typically lack radio navigation equipment and VFR pilots should not rely on instrument navigation. Option B relies on forecasts rather than actual conditions, which is unsafe. Option C is not appropriate for gliders operating under VFR rules.
+
+### Q11: Two identical aircraft at the same gross weight and configuration fly at different airspeeds. Which one produces stronger wake turbulence? ^t70q11
+- A) The one at higher altitude
+- B) The one flying faster
+- C) The one flying slower
+- D) The one at lower altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wake turbulence intensity is directly related to the strength of wingtip vortices, which are strongest when the wing operates at high lift coefficients — that is, at low speeds and high angles of attack. The slower aircraft generates more intense vortices because it must produce the same lift at a lower speed, requiring a higher angle of attack and greater circulation around the wing. Altitude (options A and D) is not the determining factor. The faster aircraft (option B) produces weaker vortices at its lower lift coefficient.
+
+### Q12: With only a light crosswind, what hazard exists when departing after a heavy aeroplane? ^t70q12
+- A) Wake vortices are amplified and become distorted.
+- B) Wake vortices spin faster and climb higher.
+- C) Wake vortices remain on or near the runway.
+- D) Wake vortices twist across the runway transversely.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In light crosswind conditions, wake vortices from a heavy aircraft tend to remain on or near the runway rather than being blown clear. With a strong crosswind, the vortices drift away from the runway centerline, but a light crosswind is insufficient to displace them, creating a lingering hazard for departing aircraft. Option A incorrectly states vortices are amplified. Option B is wrong because vortices sink, not climb. Option D is incorrect because light crosswinds do not cause significant lateral twisting of vortices across the runway.
+
+### Q13: Which surface is most suitable for an emergency off-field landing? ^t70q13
+- A) A ploughed field
+- B) A harvested cornfield
+- C) A glade with long dry grass
+- D) A village sports ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A harvested cornfield offers a firm, relatively flat surface with short stubble that provides good ground friction without excessive deceleration forces — ideal for an emergency landing. Option A (ploughed field) has soft, uneven furrows that can cause the glider to nose over or ground-loop. Option C (long dry grass) may conceal obstacles such as rocks, ditches, or fences. Option D (sports ground) is typically surrounded by buildings, fences, and spectators, creating collision hazards.
+
+### Q14: What defines a precautionary landing? ^t70q14
+- A) A landing performed without engine power.
+- B) A landing made to preserve flight safety before conditions deteriorate further.
+- C) A landing carried out with flaps retracted.
+- D) A landing forced by circumstances requiring the aircraft to land immediately.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A precautionary landing is a proactive decision to land while options remain available, made to preserve flight safety before the situation worsens. It differs from a forced landing (option D), which is an immediate necessity with no alternative. Option A describes a normal glider landing or engine-out scenario, not specifically a precautionary landing. Option C describes a configuration choice, not a type of landing. The key distinction is that a precautionary landing involves foresight and planning.
+
+### Q15: Which of these landing areas is best suited for an off-field landing? ^t70q15
+- A) A lake with a smooth, undisturbed surface
+- B) A meadow free of livestock
+- C) A light brown field with short crops
+- D) A field with ripe, waving crops
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A light brown field with short crops indicates a harvested or nearly harvested surface that is firm and free of tall obstructions, making it suitable for a safe off-field landing. Option A (a lake) should only be considered as a last resort since water landings carry drowning risk. Option B (meadow without livestock) sounds safe but may have hidden obstacles; and option D (ripe, waving crops) indicates tall vegetation that could obscure hazards and cause the glider to nose over on landing.
+
+### Q16: How does wet grass affect take-off and landing distances? ^t70q16
+- A) Both take-off and landing distances decrease
+- B) Take-off distance increases while landing distance decreases
+- C) Take-off distance decreases while landing distance increases
+- D) Both take-off and landing distances increase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass increases rolling resistance during the takeoff ground roll, requiring a longer distance to reach flying speed. On landing, wet grass reduces wheel braking friction (similar to aquaplaning), resulting in a longer stopping distance. Both phases are adversely affected. Option A reverses both effects. Option B correctly identifies the takeoff increase but incorrectly predicts a shorter landing roll. Option C reverses both effects entirely.
+
+### Q17: What adverse effects can be expected when thermalling above industrial facilities? ^t70q17
+- A) Extensive, strong downwind areas on the lee side of the plant
+- B) Very poor visibility of only a few hundred metres with heavy precipitation
+- C) Health hazards from pollutants, reduced visibility, and turbulence
+- D) Strong electrostatic charging and degraded radio communication
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermalling above industrial facilities exposes the pilot to harmful pollutants (smoke, chemical emissions), significantly reduced visibility from haze and particulates, and turbulence from the uneven heating of industrial structures. Option A describes a lee-side downdraft but not the full hazard picture. Option B exaggerates with "heavy precipitation," which is not caused by industrial plants. Option D describes electrostatic effects that are not typically associated with industrial thermal flying.
+
+### Q18: When is an off-field landing most likely to result in an accident? ^t70q18
+- A) When the approach uses distinct approach segments
+- B) When the decision to land off-field is taken too late
+- C) When the approach is made onto a harvested corn field
+- D) When the decision is made above the minimum safe altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most common cause of off-field landing accidents is delaying the decision too long, leaving insufficient altitude for proper field selection, a stabilized approach, and obstacle avoidance. Late decisions force rushed approaches, poor field choices, and inadequate speed management. Option A (distinct segments) is standard good practice. Option C (harvested cornfield) is actually a good surface choice. Option D (deciding above minimum safe altitude) is the correct time to decide, not a risk factor.
+
+### Q19: How can mid-air collisions be avoided when circling in thermals? ^t70q19
+- A) Enter the updraft quickly and pull back sharply to slow down
+- B) Circle in alternating directions at different altitudes
+- C) Mimic the movements of the glider ahead
+- D) Coordinate turns with other aircraft sharing the same thermal
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When sharing a thermal, all gliders should circle in the same direction and coordinate their turns to maintain consistent spacing and predictable flight paths. This minimizes the risk of convergence. Option A (entering quickly and pulling back sharply) can surprise other pilots and create a collision hazard. Option B (alternating directions) creates head-on crossing situations within the thermal. Option C (mimicking the glider ahead) could lead to following too closely without maintaining safe separation.
+
+### Q20: How can danger be avoided when a glider's altitude nears circuit height during a cross-country flight? ^t70q20
+- A) Seek thermals on the lee side of a chosen landing field
+- B) Regardless of the planned route, commit to an off-field landing
+- C) Maintain radio contact until fully stopped after an off-field landing
+- D) Aim for cumulus clouds visible on the distant horizon and use their thermals
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When altitude drops to circuit height, the pilot must commit to landing — continuing to search for lift at this altitude is dangerous and leaves no margin for error. Option A is hazardous because lee-side air typically contains sink, not thermals. Option C describes a good post-landing practice but does not address the immediate danger of low altitude. Option D risks flying into sink between thermals with no altitude reserve, potentially resulting in a crash rather than a controlled off-field landing.
+
+### Q21: What must a pilot consider before entering a steep turn? ^t70q21
+- A) Reduce speed in accordance with the target bank angle before starting the turn
+- B) Once the bank angle is achieved, push forward to increase speed
+- C) After reaching the bank angle, apply opposite rudder to reduce yaw
+- D) Build up sufficient speed for the intended bank angle before initiating the turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steep turn, the load factor increases (n = 1/cos(bank angle)), which raises the stall speed. The pilot must have adequate speed before entering the turn to maintain a safe margin above the increased stall speed. Option A (reducing speed before a steep turn) would dangerously bring the aircraft closer to stall. Option B (pushing forward during the turn) would cause altitude loss and nose-down pitch. Option C (opposite rudder) is not the primary concern — speed margin is the critical safety factor.
+
+### Q22: A glider is about to stall and pitch down. Which control input prevents a nose-dive and spin? ^t70q22
+- A) Hold ailerons neutral, apply strong rudder toward the lower wing
+- B) Maintain level flight using the rudder pedals
+- C) Pull the stick back slightly, deflect ailerons opposite to the lower wing
+- D) Release back pressure on the elevator, apply rudder opposite to the dropping wing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct response to an incipient stall with wing drop is to release back pressure on the elevator (reducing angle of attack) and apply opposite rudder to prevent the yaw that would develop into a spin. Option A applies rudder toward the dropping wing, which would accelerate spin entry. Option B attempts to maintain level flight with rudder alone, which is ineffective near the stall. Option C pulls back on the elevator, which deepens the stall, and uses ailerons which can worsen the situation near the critical angle of attack.
+
+### Q23: When aerotowing with a side-mounted release hook, the glider tends to... ^t70q23
+- A) Display an increased pitch-up moment.
+- B) Exhibit particularly stable flight characteristics.
+- C) Turn rapidly about its longitudinal axis.
+- D) Yaw toward the side where the hook is mounted.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A side-mounted (belly or CG) release hook creates a tow force that acts below and possibly offset from the aircraft's center of gravity. The cable pull from below the CG generates a nose-up pitching moment, which the pilot must actively counter with forward stick pressure. Option B is incorrect — side-mounted hooks do not improve stability. Option C (rapid roll) is not characteristic of this configuration. Option D describes yaw, which would occur with an asymmetric attachment but is not the primary effect.
+
+### Q24: During aerotow, the glider has climbed excessively high behind the tug. What should the glider pilot do to prevent further danger? ^t70q24
+- A) Initiate a sideslip to lose the excess height
+- B) Push firmly forward to bring the glider back to the normal position
+- C) Pull strongly, then release the cable
+- D) Gently extend the spoilers and steer the glider back to the correct tow position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The safest correction for being too high behind the tug is to gently deploy spoilers to increase drag and lose excess height while steering back to the correct tow position. Option A (sideslip) would create erratic lateral movements that could endanger both aircraft. Option B (pushing firmly forward) could put the tug into a dangerous nose-down attitude by pulling its tail up via the cable. Option C (pulling then releasing) is dangerous — pulling when high compounds the problem, potentially lifting the tug's tail catastrophically.
+
+### Q25: After a cable break during winch launch, what is the correct sequence of actions? ^t70q25
+- A) Hold the stick back, stabilise at minimum speed, and land on the remaining field length
+- B) Push the nose down firmly, release the cable, then decide based on altitude and terrain whether to land ahead or fly a short circuit
+- C) Perform a 180-degree turn and land in the opposite direction, releasing the cable before touchdown
+- D) Release the cable first, then push the nose down; below 150 m AGL land straight ahead at increased speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break during winch launch, the immediate priority is to lower the nose to maintain flying speed (preventing a stall from the steep climb attitude), then release the cable to prevent it from snagging during landing. After establishing safe flight, the pilot decides whether to land straight ahead or fly a modified circuit based on available altitude and terrain. Option A (holding the stick back) risks a stall. Option C (180° turn) is extremely dangerous at low altitude. Option D gets the sequence backward — nose down first, then release.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_1_25_fr.md
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+### Q1 : En volant lentement, proche du décrochage, l'aile gauche est plus basse. Comment peut-on éviter un décrochage complet ? ^t70q1
+- A) Utiliser le palonnier vers la gauche, pousser légèrement sur le manche, accélérer, puis neutraliser tous les commandes
+- B) Abaisser le nez avec l'élévateur, maintenir les ailes à plat avec des entrées coordonnées de palonnier et d'aileron
+- C) Braquer l'aileron vers la droite, pousser légèrement sur le manche, prendre de la vitesse, puis neutraliser les commandes
+- D) Appliquer aileron et palonnier à droite, prendre de la vitesse, pousser légèrement sur le manche, puis neutraliser
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La technique correcte de récupération de décrochage consiste à réduire immédiatement l'incidence en abaissant le nez avec l'élévateur, tout en utilisant des entrées coordonnées de palonnier et d'aileron pour maintenir les ailes à plat. L'option A applique le palonnier dans la mauvaise direction (vers l'aile qui descend). L'option C utilise uniquement l'aileron sans palonnier coordonné, ce qui, proche du décrochage, peut augmenter le lacet adverse et déclencher une vrille. L'option D donne également la priorité à l'aileron plutôt qu'à l'élévateur, manquant la première étape cruciale : réduire l'incidence.
+
+### Q2 : Comment le « temps de vol » est-il défini ? ^t70q2
+- A) Le temps total depuis le premier décollage jusqu'au dernier atterrissage dans le cadre d'un ou plusieurs vols consécutifs.
+- B) La période allant du démarrage du moteur en vue du décollage jusqu'à la sortie de l'aéronef après l'arrêt du moteur.
+- C) Le temps total depuis le premier mouvement de l'aéronef jusqu'au moment où il s'immobilise définitivement à la fin du vol.
+- D) L'intervalle depuis le début de la course au décollage jusqu'au toucher final lors de l'atterrissage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon la réglementation EASA pour les planeurs, le temps de vol est défini comme le temps total depuis le premier mouvement de l'aéronef en vue du vol jusqu'à son immobilisation définitive à la fin du vol. Cette définition inclut les déplacements au sol, pas seulement le temps en l'air. L'option A ne compte que du décollage à l'atterrissage, excluant les mouvements au sol. L'option B s'applique aux aéronefs motorisés avec moteurs, pas aux planeurs. L'option D est trop restrictive, ne couvrant que la course au décollage jusqu'au toucher des roues.
+
+### Q3 : Qu'est-ce qu'un cisaillement de vent ? ^t70q3
+- A) Un phénomène météorologique de vent descendant typique des régions alpines.
+- B) Une augmentation progressive de la vitesse du vent à des altitudes supérieures à 13 000 ft.
+- C) Un changement de vitesse du vent supérieur à 15 kt.
+- D) Une variation verticale ou horizontale de la vitesse et/ou de la direction du vent.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le cisaillement de vent est défini comme tout changement de vitesse et/ou de direction du vent sur une distance relativement courte, pouvant se produire dans les plans vertical et horizontal. Il n'est pas limité à un seuil de vitesse particulier (option C), à une plage d'altitude (option B) ou à un contexte géographique spécifique (option A). Le cisaillement est particulièrement dangereux lors du décollage et de l'atterrissage, lorsque l'aéronef est proche du sol avec des marges de récupération limitées.
+
+### Q4 : Quel phénomène météorologique est le plus souvent associé au cisaillement de vent ? ^t70q4
+- A) Les systèmes de haute pression stables.
+- B) Les orages.
+- C) Le brouillard.
+- D) Les fronts chauds hivernaux.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les orages génèrent les cisaillements de vent les plus sévères par leurs puissants courants ascendants, descendants et leurs vents de sortie (microrafales), pouvant provoquer des inversions soudaines de direction du vent de plus de 50 nœuds en quelques secondes. Les systèmes de haute pression stables (option A) produisent généralement des conditions calmes et uniformes. Le brouillard (option C) est associé à des vents faibles. Les fronts chauds (option D) peuvent produire un léger cisaillement, mais les orages sont de loin la source la plus courante et la plus dangereuse.
+
+### Q5 : Dans quelles conditions faut-il s'attendre à un cisaillement de vent ? ^t70q5
+- A) Par une journée d'été calme avec des vents faibles
+- B) Par temps froid avec des vents calmes
+- C) Lors d'une inversion de température
+- D) En traversant un front chaud
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une inversion de température crée une couche limite stable entre deux masses d'air pouvant se déplacer à des vitesses et directions différentes, produisant un cisaillement de vent au niveau de l'inversion. Les inversions sont fréquentes en début de matinée et peuvent affecter significativement les opérations de planeur à basse altitude, notamment lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage. L'option A décrit des conditions à risque minimal de cisaillement. Les options B et D peuvent occasionnellement produire du cisaillement, mais ne sont pas les conditions primaires qui y sont associées.
+
+### Q6 : Lors d'une approche, l'aéronef subit un cisaillement de vent avec une diminution du vent de face. Sans correction du pilote, que se passe-t-il pour la trajectoire et la vitesse indiquée (IAS) ? ^t70q6
+- A) La trajectoire monte, l'IAS augmente
+- B) La trajectoire descend, l'IAS augmente
+- C) La trajectoire monte, l'IAS diminue
+- D) La trajectoire descend, l'IAS diminue
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque le vent de face diminue soudainement, le flux d'air sur les ailes chute, provoquant une baisse de l'IAS et de la portance. Avec moins de portance, l'aéronef descend en dessous de l'axe d'approche prévu. L'inertie de l'aéronef maintient brièvement sa vitesse sol, mais la diminution du flux d'air relatif signifie moins de force aérodynamique. C'est le scénario de cisaillement le plus dangereux en approche, car les deux effets — trajectoire basse et vitesse réduite — se combinent pour réduire simultanément les marges de sécurité.
+
+### Q7 : Lors d'une approche, l'aéronef subit un cisaillement de vent avec une augmentation du vent de face. Sans correction, comment évoluent la trajectoire et l'IAS ? ^t70q7
+- A) La trajectoire descend, l'IAS diminue
+- B) La trajectoire monte, l'IAS diminue
+- C) La trajectoire descend, l'IAS augmente
+- D) La trajectoire monte, l'IAS augmente
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une augmentation du vent de face accroît temporairement le flux d'air relatif sur les ailes, augmentant l'IAS et la portance. La portance supplémentaire pousse l'aéronef au-dessus de l'axe d'approche prévu. Bien que cela paraisse initialement favorable, le pilote doit rester vigilant — si le vent de face diminue ensuite, l'aéronef subira l'effet inverse et pourra s'enfoncer rapidement sous la trajectoire souhaitée. Les options impliquant une IAS diminuée ou une trajectoire basse contredisent la réponse aérodynamique à une augmentation du vent de face.
+
+### Q8 : Lors d'une approche, l'aéronef subit un cisaillement de vent avec une diminution du vent arrière. Sans correction, que se passe-t-il pour la trajectoire et l'IAS ? ^t70q8
+- A) La trajectoire descend, l'IAS augmente
+- B) La trajectoire monte, l'IAS augmente
+- C) La trajectoire descend, l'IAS diminue
+- D) La trajectoire monte, l'IAS diminue
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un vent arrière diminue, l'élan de l'aéronef est maintenu tandis que la masse d'air décélère effectivement autour de lui, augmentant le flux d'air relatif sur les ailes. Cela élève l'IAS et la portance, poussant l'aéronef au-dessus de l'axe d'approche. Une diminution du vent arrière a le même effet aérodynamique qu'une augmentation du vent de face. Les options avec une IAS diminuée ou une trajectoire basse interprètent mal la relation entre les variations du vent arrière et le flux d'air relatif.
+
+### Q9 : Quelle est la meilleure façon d'éviter le cisaillement de vent en vol ? ^t70q9
+- A) Éviter les zones thermiquement actives, surtout en été, ou rester en dessous
+- B) S'abstenir de décoller et d'atterrir quand des averses ou des orages sont en cours
+- C) Éviter les zones de précipitations, particulièrement en hiver, et choisir de basses altitudes
+- D) Éviter les décollages et atterrissages en terrain montagneux et rester au-dessus du terrain plat
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le cisaillement de vent le plus sévère est associé aux orages et aux fortes averses, qui produisent des microrafales et des fronts de rafales. Éviter les décollages et atterrissages quand ce type de météo est en cours élimine l'exposition au cisaillement le plus dangereux lors des phases de vol les plus vulnérables. L'option A traite des thermiques, qui causent de la turbulence mais pas de cisaillement dangereux. L'option C cible les précipitations hivernales, risque moindre. L'option D est trop restrictive et ne traite pas la cause principale.
+
+### Q10 : Lors d'un vol de campagne, les conditions visuelles commencent à passer sous les minima. Pour maintenir les conditions VMC minimales, le pilote décide de... ^t70q10
+- A) Continuer en utilisant les aides à la navigation radio le long de la route
+- B) Continuer sur la base de prévisions suffisamment favorables
+- C) Demander une assistance de navigation à l'ATC pour continuer
+- D) Faire demi-tour, puisque des VMC adéquates ont été confirmées le long de la trajectoire précédente
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque les conditions VFR se dégradent sous les minima, l'action la plus sûre est de faire demi-tour vers la zone où des conditions météorologiques de vol à vue (VMC) adéquates ont été confirmées. Continuer vers une visibilité dégradée est la principale cause d'accidents VFR-IMC. L'option A est inappropriée car les planeurs ne disposent généralement pas d'équipements de navigation radio et les pilotes VFR ne devraient pas s'appuyer sur la navigation aux instruments. L'option B se base sur des prévisions plutôt que sur les conditions réelles, ce qui est dangereux. L'option C n'est pas appropriée pour les planeurs en VFR.
+
+### Q11 : Deux aéronefs identiques au même poids brut et même configuration volent à des vitesses différentes. Lequel produit la turbulence de sillage la plus forte ? ^t70q11
+- A) Celui à la plus haute altitude
+- B) Celui qui vole le plus vite
+- C) Celui qui vole le plus lentement
+- D) Celui à la plus basse altitude
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'intensité de la turbulence de sillage est directement liée à la force des tourbillons de bout d'aile, qui sont les plus forts lorsque l'aile opère à des coefficients de portance élevés — c'est-à-dire à basse vitesse et à fort angle d'attaque. L'aéronef le plus lent génère des tourbillons plus intenses car il doit produire la même portance à une vitesse plus faible, nécessitant un angle d'attaque plus élevé et une plus grande circulation autour de l'aile. L'altitude (options A et D) n'est pas le facteur déterminant. L'aéronef le plus rapide (option B) produit des tourbillons plus faibles à son plus faible coefficient de portance.
+
+### Q12 : Par vent traversier faible, quel danger existe lors du départ après un avion lourd ? ^t70q12
+- A) Les tourbillons de sillage sont amplifiés et deviennent déformés.
+- B) Les tourbillons de sillage tournent plus vite et montent plus haut.
+- C) Les tourbillons de sillage restent sur ou près de la piste.
+- D) Les tourbillons de sillage se tordent transversalement à travers la piste.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Par conditions de vent traversier faible, les tourbillons de sillage d'un aéronef lourd ont tendance à rester sur ou près de la piste plutôt que d'être déplacés. Par vent traversier fort, les tourbillons dérivent loin de l'axe de piste, mais un vent traversier faible est insuffisant pour les déplacer, créant un danger persistant pour les aéronefs au départ. L'option A affirme incorrectement que les tourbillons sont amplifiés. L'option B est erronée car les tourbillons descendent, ils ne montent pas. L'option D est incorrecte car les vents traversiers faibles ne provoquent pas de torsion latérale significative des tourbillons à travers la piste.
+
+### Q13 : Quelle surface est la plus adaptée pour un atterrissage hors-champ en urgence ? ^t70q13
+- A) Un champ labouré
+- B) Un champ de maïs moissonné
+- C) Une clairière avec de l'herbe sèche longue
+- D) Un terrain de sport de village
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un champ de maïs moissonné offre une surface ferme, relativement plane, avec un chaume court qui assure une bonne friction au sol sans forces de décélération excessives — idéal pour un atterrissage d'urgence. L'option A (champ labouré) présente un sol mou et inégal qui peut faire capoter le planeur ou lui faire faire un tête-à-queue. L'option C (herbe sèche longue) peut dissimuler des obstacles tels que des rochers, des fossés ou des clôtures. L'option D (terrain de sport) est typiquement entouré de bâtiments, clôtures et spectateurs, créant des risques de collision.
+
+### Q14 : Qu'est-ce qui définit un atterrissage de précaution ? ^t70q14
+- A) Un atterrissage effectué sans puissance moteur.
+- B) Un atterrissage effectué pour préserver la sécurité du vol avant que les conditions ne se dégradent davantage.
+- C) Un atterrissage effectué avec les volets rentrés.
+- D) Un atterrissage imposé par les circonstances nécessitant un atterrissage immédiat.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un atterrissage de précaution est une décision proactive d'atterrir pendant que des options restent disponibles, prise pour préserver la sécurité du vol avant que la situation ne s'aggrave. Il diffère d'un atterrissage forcé (option D), qui est une nécessité immédiate sans alternative. L'option A décrit un atterrissage normal en planeur ou un scénario moteur en panne, pas spécifiquement un atterrissage de précaution. L'option C décrit un choix de configuration, pas un type d'atterrissage. La distinction clé est que l'atterrissage de précaution implique prévoyance et planification.
+
+### Q15 : Parmi ces zones d'atterrissage, laquelle est la mieux adaptée pour un atterrissage hors-champ ? ^t70q15
+- A) Un lac à la surface lisse et non perturbée
+- B) Un pré sans bétail
+- C) Un champ brun clair avec de courtes cultures
+- D) Un champ avec des cultures mûres et ondulantes
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un champ brun clair avec de courtes cultures indique une surface récoltée ou presque récoltée, ferme et dégagée de hautes obstructions, convenant à un atterrissage hors-champ sécurisé. L'option A (lac) ne devrait être envisagée qu'en dernier recours car les amerrissages comportent un risque de noyade. L'option B (pré sans bétail) semble sûre mais peut présenter des obstacles cachés ; l'option D (cultures mûres ondulantes) indique une végétation haute pouvant dissimuler des dangers et faire capoter le planeur à l'atterrissage.
+
+### Q16 : Comment l'herbe mouillée affecte-t-elle les distances de décollage et d'atterrissage ? ^t70q16
+- A) Les deux distances diminuent
+- B) La distance de décollage augmente tandis que la distance d'atterrissage diminue
+- C) La distance de décollage diminue tandis que la distance d'atterrissage augmente
+- D) Les deux distances augmentent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'herbe mouillée augmente la résistance au roulement lors du roulage au décollage, nécessitant une distance plus longue pour atteindre la vitesse de vol. À l'atterrissage, l'herbe mouillée réduit la friction de freinage des roues (similaire à l'aquaplanage), entraînant une distance d'arrêt plus longue. Les deux phases sont affectées négativement. L'option A inverse les deux effets. L'option B identifie correctement l'augmentation au décollage mais prédit incorrectement un roulement d'atterrissage plus court. L'option C inverse complètement les deux effets.
+
+### Q17 : Quels effets indésirables peut-on attendre lors d'un vol en spirale au-dessus d'installations industrielles ? ^t70q17
+- A) De vastes et fortes zones descendantes sur le côté sous le vent de l'installation
+- B) Une très mauvaise visibilité de quelques centaines de mètres seulement avec de fortes précipitations
+- C) Des risques pour la santé dus aux polluants, une visibilité réduite et de la turbulence
+- D) Une forte charge électrostatique et des communications radio dégradées
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Spiraler au-dessus d'installations industrielles expose le pilote à des polluants nocifs (fumée, émissions chimiques), à une visibilité significativement réduite due à la brume et aux particules, et à de la turbulence provenant du chauffage inégal des structures industrielles. L'option A décrit un courant descendant sous le vent mais pas l'ensemble du tableau des dangers. L'option B exagère avec « de fortes précipitations », qui ne sont pas causées par les usines. L'option D décrit des effets électrostatiques non typiquement associés au vol thermique au-dessus d'industries.
+
+### Q18 : Dans quel cas un atterrissage hors-champ est-il le plus susceptible de conduire à un accident ? ^t70q18
+- A) Lorsque l'approche utilise des segments d'approche distincts
+- B) Lorsque la décision d'atterrir hors-champ est prise trop tard
+- C) Lorsque l'approche est faite sur un champ de maïs moissonné
+- D) Lorsque la décision est prise au-dessus de l'altitude minimale de sécurité
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La cause la plus fréquente d'accidents lors d'atterrissages hors-champ est de retarder trop longtemps la décision, ne laissant pas suffisamment d'altitude pour une sélection correcte du terrain, une approche stabilisée et l'évitement des obstacles. Les décisions tardives imposent des approches précipitées, de mauvais choix de terrain et une gestion inadéquate de la vitesse. L'option A (segments distincts) est une bonne pratique standard. L'option C (champ de maïs moissonné) est en réalité un bon choix de surface. L'option D (décider au-dessus de l'altitude minimale de sécurité) est le bon moment pour décider, pas un facteur de risque.
+
+### Q19 : Comment éviter les collisions en vol lors des spirales en thermique ? ^t70q19
+- A) Entrer rapidement dans le courant ascendant et tirer fortement sur le manche pour ralentir
+- B) Spiraler dans des directions alternées à des altitudes différentes
+- C) Imiter les mouvements du planeur devant soi
+- D) Coordonner les virages avec les autres aéronefs partageant le même thermique
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du partage d'un thermique, tous les planeurs doivent spiraler dans la même direction et coordonner leurs virages pour maintenir un espacement constant et des trajectoires prévisibles. Cela minimise le risque de convergence. L'option A (entrer rapidement et tirer fortement) peut surprendre les autres pilotes et créer un risque de collision. L'option B (directions alternées) crée des situations de croisement face à face dans le thermique. L'option C (imiter le planeur devant) pourrait conduire à suivre trop près sans maintenir une séparation sécurisée.
+
+### Q20 : Comment éviter le danger lorsque l'altitude d'un planeur approche la hauteur du circuit lors d'un vol de campagne ? ^t70q20
+- A) Rechercher des thermiques sur le côté sous le vent d'un terrain d'atterrissage choisi
+- B) Indépendamment de la route prévue, s'engager à un atterrissage hors-champ
+- C) Maintenir le contact radio jusqu'à l'arrêt complet après un atterrissage hors-champ
+- D) Viser les cumulus visibles à l'horizon lointain et utiliser leurs thermiques
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'altitude descend à la hauteur du circuit, le pilote doit s'engager à atterrir — continuer à chercher des portances à cette altitude est dangereux et ne laisse aucune marge d'erreur. L'option A est dangereuse car l'air sous le vent contient typiquement des descentes, pas des thermiques. L'option C décrit une bonne pratique après l'atterrissage mais ne traite pas le danger immédiat de la basse altitude. L'option D risque de voler dans des descentes entre les thermiques sans réserve d'altitude, pouvant entraîner un crash plutôt qu'un atterrissage hors-champ contrôlé.
+
+### Q21 : Que doit prendre en compte un pilote avant d'engager un virage serré ? ^t70q21
+- A) Réduire la vitesse en fonction de l'angle de gîte cible avant de commencer le virage
+- B) Une fois l'angle de gîte atteint, pousser en avant pour augmenter la vitesse
+- C) Après avoir atteint l'angle de gîte, appliquer le palonnier opposé pour réduire le lacet
+- D) Acquérir une vitesse suffisante pour l'angle de gîte prévu avant d'initier le virage
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage serré, le facteur de charge augmente (n = 1/cos(angle de gîte)), ce qui élève la vitesse de décrochage. Le pilote doit avoir une vitesse adéquate avant d'entrer dans le virage pour maintenir une marge sécurisée au-dessus de la vitesse de décrochage augmentée. L'option A (réduire la vitesse avant un virage serré) amènerait dangereusement l'aéronef plus près du décrochage. L'option B (pousser en avant pendant le virage) provoquerait une perte d'altitude et un cabrage vers le bas. L'option C (palonnier opposé) n'est pas la préoccupation principale — la marge de vitesse est le facteur de sécurité critique.
+
+### Q22 : Un planeur est sur le point de décrocher et de piquer. Quelle action aux commandes empêche un piqué abrupt et une vrille ? ^t70q22
+- A) Maintenir les ailerons neutres, appliquer un fort palonnier vers l'aile basse
+- B) Maintenir le vol en palier avec les palonniers
+- C) Tirer légèrement sur le manche, braquer les ailerons à l'opposé de l'aile basse
+- D) Relâcher la pression arrière sur l'élévateur, appliquer le palonnier à l'opposé de l'aile qui descend
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La réponse correcte à un décrochage naissant avec chute d'aile est de relâcher la pression arrière sur l'élévateur (réduisant l'incidence) et d'appliquer le palonnier opposé pour empêcher le lacet qui se développerait en vrille. L'option A applique le palonnier vers l'aile qui descend, ce qui accélérerait l'entrée en vrille. L'option B tente de maintenir le vol en palier avec le palonnier seul, ce qui est inefficace proche du décrochage. L'option C tire sur l'élévateur, ce qui aggrave le décrochage, et utilise des ailerons qui peuvent aggraver la situation près de l'incidence critique.
+
+### Q23 : Lors d'un remorquage avec un crochet de remorquage latéral, le planeur a tendance à... ^t70q23
+- A) Présenter un moment de tangage à cabrer augmenté.
+- B) Présenter des caractéristiques de vol particulièrement stables.
+- C) Tourner rapidement autour de son axe longitudinal.
+- D) Laceter vers le côté où le crochet est monté.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un crochet de remorquage latéral (ventre ou centre de gravité) crée une force de remorquage qui agit en dessous et éventuellement décalée du centre de gravité de l'aéronef. La traction du câble sous le CG génère un moment de tangage à cabrer que le pilote doit activement contrecarrer avec une pression vers l'avant sur le manche. L'option B est incorrecte — les crochets latéraux n'améliorent pas la stabilité. L'option C (roulis rapide) n'est pas caractéristique de cette configuration. L'option D décrit un lacet qui se produirait avec une attache asymétrique, mais ce n'est pas l'effet principal.
+
+### Q24 : Lors d'un remorquage, le planeur est monté excessivement haut derrière le remorqueur. Que doit faire le pilote du planeur pour éviter tout danger supplémentaire ? ^t70q24
+- A) Initier un glissement pour perdre l'excès de hauteur
+- B) Pousser fermement en avant pour ramener le planeur à la position normale
+- C) Tirer fortement, puis larguer le câble
+- D) Déployer doucement les aérofreins et diriger le planeur vers la position de remorquage correcte
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La correction la plus sûre lorsqu'on est trop haut derrière le remorqueur est de déployer doucement les aérofreins pour augmenter la traînée et perdre l'excès de hauteur, tout en dirigeant vers la position de remorquage correcte. L'option A (glissement) créerait des mouvements latéraux erratiques pouvant mettre en danger les deux aéronefs. L'option B (pousser fermement en avant) pourrait mettre le remorqueur dans une attitude dangereuse à piquer en tirant sa queue vers le haut via le câble. L'option C (tirer puis larguer) est dangereuse — tirer en position haute aggrave le problème, pouvant soulever catastrophiquement la queue du remorqueur.
+
+### Q25 : Après une rupture de câble lors d'un lancement au treuil, quelle est la séquence correcte d'actions ? ^t70q25
+- A) Tenir le manche en arrière, se stabiliser à la vitesse minimale et atterrir sur la longueur de terrain restante
+- B) Pousser fermement le nez vers le bas, larguer le câble, puis décider en fonction de l'altitude et du terrain de se poser droit devant ou d'effectuer un circuit court
+- C) Effectuer un virage à 180° et atterrir dans la direction opposée, larguant le câble avant l'atterrissage
+- D) Larguer d'abord le câble, puis pousser le nez vers le bas ; en dessous de 150 m/sol, atterrir droit devant à vitesse accrue
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Après une rupture de câble lors d'un lancement au treuil, la priorité immédiate est d'abaisser le nez pour maintenir la vitesse de vol (évitant le décrochage depuis l'attitude de montée raide), puis de larguer le câble pour éviter qu'il ne s'accroche lors de l'atterrissage. Après avoir établi un vol sûr, le pilote décide de se poser droit devant ou d'effectuer un circuit modifié selon l'altitude disponible et le terrain. L'option A (tenir le manche en arrière) risque le décrochage. L'option C (virage à 180°) est extrêmement dangereuse à basse altitude. L'option D inverse l'ordre — nez vers le bas d'abord, puis larguer.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_26_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_26_50.md
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+### Q26: During the initial ground roll of a winch launch, one wing touches the ground. What must the glider pilot do? ^t70q26
+- A) Deflect ailerons in the opposite direction
+- B) Apply opposite rudder
+- C) Release the cable immediately
+- D) Pull back on the elevator
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If a wing touches the ground during the winch launch ground roll, the situation is uncontrollable and the launch must be immediately aborted by releasing the cable. Continuing the launch with a wing on the ground risks a violent ground loop or cartwheel. Option A (opposite aileron) may be insufficient at low speed and could worsen the situation under cable tension. Option B (opposite rudder) cannot correct a wing-down condition. Option D (pulling back) would try to lift off prematurely in an uncontrolled state.
+
+### Q27: During aerotow, the glider exceeds its maximum permissible speed. What should the glider pilot do? ^t70q27
+- A) Pull back on the elevator to reduce speed
+- B) Notify the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Release the towrope immediately
+- D) Deploy the spoilers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider exceeds VNE (never-exceed speed) during aerotow, the pilot must immediately release the towrope to remove the pulling force causing the excessive speed and avoid structural failure. Option A (pulling back) increases the load factor on an already over-stressed airframe. Option B (radio call) wastes critical time during a structural emergency. Option D (deploying spoilers) while still attached to the tow aircraft could cause dangerous pitch and speed oscillations.
+
+### Q28: After a cable break during aerotow, a long section of cable remains attached to the glider. What should the pilot do? ^t70q28
+- A) Fly a low approach and ask the airfield controller to assess the cable length, then release if needed
+- B) Once at a safe height, drop the cable over empty terrain or over the airfield
+- C) Fly a normal approach and release the cable immediately after touchdown
+- D) Release immediately and continue the flight with the coupling unlatched
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A trailing cable is a serious hazard — it can snag on obstacles, trees, or power lines during approach and landing. The safest action is to climb to a safe height and release the cable over empty terrain or the airfield where it can be recovered safely. Option A (low approach for assessment) risks snagging the trailing cable on obstacles. Option C (releasing after touchdown) means flying the entire approach with a dangerous trailing cable. Option D (releasing immediately regardless) may drop the cable in an unsafe location.
+
+### Q29: During aerotow, the tug aircraft disappears from the glider pilot's view. What should the pilot do? ^t70q29
+- A) Deploy the spoilers and return to a normal attitude
+- B) Alternate between pushing and pulling on the elevator
+- C) Release the cable immediately
+- D) Alternate turns left and right to search for the tug
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider pilot loses sight of the tug during aerotow, the cable must be released immediately. Continued towing without visual contact with the tug is extremely dangerous because the glider pilot cannot anticipate the tug's movements, risking a mid-air collision or being pulled into an unexpected attitude. Option A (spoilers) does not address the fundamental problem. Option B (alternating elevator) creates dangerous oscillations. Option D (searching turns) could tangle the cable or fly into the tug's path.
+
+### Q30: During aerotow in a turn, the glider drifts to an outward offset position. How should the glider pilot correct this? ^t70q30
+- A) Use a sideslip so that increased drag pushes the glider back behind the tug
+- B) Steer back using coordinated rudder and aileron inputs, then deploy spoilers to reduce speed
+- C) Return behind the tug by using a tighter radius with strong rudder pedal inputs
+- D) Match the tug's bank angle and use rudder to gently reduce the radius back to the correct position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct technique is to match the tug's bank angle to maintain the same turn radius, then use gentle rudder input to slightly tighten the radius and drift back behind the tug. This is a smooth, controlled correction. Option A (sideslip) creates lateral instability and unpredictable cable tensions. Option B (deploying spoilers) would cause the glider to drop below the tug's level. Option C (strong rudder) risks over-correction and could cause the glider to swing to the opposite side or create dangerous cable loads.
+
+### Q31: During a winch launch, cable tension suddenly disappears just after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q31
+- A) Inform the winch driver by alternating aileron inputs
+- B) Pull on the elevator to restore cable tension
+- C) Push firmly forward and release the cable immediately
+- D) Push slightly and wait for the cable tension to return
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Loss of cable tension during the steep climbing phase means a cable break or winch failure has occurred. The pilot must immediately push forward to lower the nose and prevent a stall (since the glider is at a high pitch angle with rapidly decaying speed), then release the cable. Option A wastes critical time on communication. Option B (pulling) would increase the pitch angle further, guaranteeing a stall. Option D (waiting) is dangerous because speed is decaying rapidly in the climb attitude.
+
+### Q32: Before launching with a parallel-cable winch, the pilot notices the second cable lying close to the glider. What should be done? ^t70q32
+- A) Keep watching the second cable and release after take-off if needed
+- B) Release the cable immediately and inform the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Continue with the normal take-off and inform the controller after landing
+- D) Proceed with the launch using opposite rudder to steer away from the second cable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A second cable lying close to the glider poses a serious entanglement hazard during the ground roll and climb-out. The launch must be aborted immediately by releasing the cable, and the airfield controller must be notified to correct the situation before any further launches. Option A risks snagging the loose cable during takeoff. Option C ignores a clear safety hazard. Option D cannot prevent entanglement with a cable on the ground during the critical ground roll phase.
+
+### Q33: What is the function of the weak link (breaking point) on a winch cable? ^t70q33
+- A) It limits the rate of climb during the winch launch
+- B) It prevents the glider airframe from being overstressed
+- C) It provides automatic cable release after the winch launch
+- D) It protects the winch from being overrun by the glider
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The weak link is calibrated to break before the cable tension exceeds the glider's structural limits, protecting the airframe from being overstressed by excessive winch pull. Its breaking strength is matched to the maximum permitted towing load for the specific glider type. Option A is incorrect — the rate of climb depends on winch power and speed, not the weak link. Option C is wrong because the weak link is a safety device, not a release mechanism. Option D describes a concern unrelated to the weak link's purpose.
+
+### Q34: During the final phase of a winch launch, the pilot keeps pulling back on the elevator. The automatic release trips under high wing loading. What are the consequences? ^t70q34
+- A) Only this sudden jerk ensures the cable releases properly
+- B) This technique compensates for insufficient wind correction
+- C) Extreme structural stress is placed on the glider airframe
+- D) A higher launch altitude can be achieved using this technique
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Continuing to pull back during the final phase of a winch launch places extreme structural stress on the airframe because the combination of cable tension, aerodynamic loads, and the centripetal force from the curved flight path can exceed design limits. The automatic release tripping is a safety mechanism activating because the load factor is dangerously high. Option A mischaracterizes a dangerous overload as normal procedure. Option B has nothing to do with wind correction. Option D prioritizes altitude gain over structural safety.
+
+### Q35: An off-field landing in mountainous terrain is necessary and the only available site is steeply inclined. How should the approach be flown? ^t70q35
+- A) Fly the approach at minimum speed with a careful flare upon reaching the landing site
+- B) Approach with extra speed, then make a quick flare to match the slope gradient
+- C) Approach parallel to the ridge with headwind, according to the prevailing wind
+- D) Approach down the ridge at increased speed, adjusting pitch to follow the ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing uphill on a steep slope requires extra approach speed to account for the rapid deceleration that occurs when the aircraft's momentum encounters the rising terrain. A quick, decisive flare matches the aircraft's flight path to the slope angle, minimizing impact forces. Option A (minimum speed) leaves no energy reserve for the flare on a steep slope. Option C (parallel to ridge) does not utilize the slope for deceleration. Option D (downhill) dramatically increases groundspeed and stopping distance, making it extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q36: At 6000 m MSL, the pilot realises that the oxygen supply will run out within minutes. What should be done? ^t70q36
+- A) After oxygen runs out, remain at this altitude for no more than 30 minutes
+- B) Reduce oxygen consumption by breathing slowly
+- C) Deploy spoilers and descend at the maximum permissible speed
+- D) At the first sign of hypoxia, begin descending at the maximum allowed speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6000 m without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness is very short — hypoxia can impair judgment within minutes. The pilot must descend immediately at maximum permissible speed using spoilers, before oxygen runs out, rather than waiting for symptoms to appear. Option A is extremely dangerous — remaining at 6000 m without oxygen for 30 minutes would cause incapacitation. Option B cannot meaningfully extend oxygen supply. Option D waits for hypoxia symptoms, by which point cognitive function may already be too impaired for safe decision-making.
+
+### Q37: What colour is the emergency canopy release handle? ^t70q37
+- A) Blue
+- B) Yellow
+- C) Red
+- D) Green
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Emergency canopy release handles are standardized as red to ensure immediate recognition in a crisis. Red is the universal color for emergency controls in aviation, including canopy jettison handles, fire extinguisher handles, and fuel shutoff valves. Options A (blue), B (yellow), and D (green) are incorrect — these colors are reserved for other functions such as trim (green), normal canopy latch, or non-emergency systems.
+
+### Q38: Why must trim masses or lead ballast be firmly secured in a glider? ^t70q38
+- A) To ensure the maximum allowed mass is not exceeded
+- B) To prevent them from jamming controls or causing a centre-of-gravity shift
+- C) To guarantee a comfortable seating position for the pilot
+- D) To protect the pilot from injury during turbulent thermal flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Unsecured trim masses or ballast can shift during flight, particularly in turbulence or during maneuvers, potentially jamming control linkages (elevator, rudder, or aileron cables) or causing an unplanned shift in the center of gravity that could make the aircraft uncontrollable. Option A addresses weight limits, which is a separate concern from securing ballast. Option C and D are secondary considerations — the primary danger is control jamming and CG displacement.
+
+### Q39: During a winch launch, the airspeed indicator fails after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q39
+- A) Push the stick forward, release the cable, and fly a short circuit at minimum speed
+- B) Continue the launch to normal altitude, then use the horizon and airstream noise for an immediate circuit and landing
+- C) Continue to normal altitude, then use visual and audio cues to proceed with the planned flight
+- D) Try to restore the ASI by making abrupt speed changes during the launch
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a failed ASI, the pilot should continue the launch to normal release altitude (since the launch is already established and stable), then release and fly an immediate circuit using the horizon for pitch reference and wind noise for approximate speed estimation. An immediate landing minimizes exposure to the instrument failure. Option A (aborting the launch) is unnecessarily risky at climb attitude. Option C (continuing the planned flight) is unsafe without airspeed indication. Option D (abrupt speed changes) could overstress the airframe during the launch.
+
+### Q40: Why is launching with the centre of gravity beyond the aft limit prohibited? ^t70q40
+- A) Because the maximum permissible speed would be significantly reduced
+- B) Because the increased nose-down moment could not be compensated
+- C) Because structural limits might be exceeded
+- D) Because elevator authority may be insufficient to control the flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the CG is too far aft, the moment arm between the CG and the tail becomes too short, reducing the elevator's ability to generate sufficient nose-down pitching moment. This can make the aircraft uncontrollable, particularly during the launch phase when pitch control is critical. Option A is incorrect — aft CG does not directly reduce VNE. Option B is backward — an aft CG reduces the nose-down moment, but the problem is insufficient elevator authority to correct nose-up tendencies. Option C addresses structural limits, which is a separate concern.
+
+### Q41: What effect does ice accumulation on the wings have? ^t70q41
+- A) It reduces friction drag
+- B) It improves slow-flight performance
+- C) It lowers the stall speed
+- D) It raises the stall speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ice accumulation on the wing disrupts the smooth airflow over the aerofoil surface, reducing the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) and increasing drag. Since stall speed is inversely proportional to the square root of CL_max, a lower CL_max means a higher stall speed. The aircraft must fly faster to maintain safe flight. Option A is wrong because ice roughness increases friction drag. Options B and C are incorrect because ice degrades aerodynamic performance in every respect.
+
+### Q42: The landing gear extends but will not lock despite several attempts. How should the landing be performed? ^t70q42
+- A) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at increased speed
+- B) Keep the gear extended but unlocked and land normally
+- C) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at minimum speed
+- D) Hold the gear handle firmly during a normal landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear will not lock, it must be retracted and a belly (gear-up) landing performed at minimum speed to minimize impact forces and structural damage. An unlocked gear (option B) could collapse asymmetrically on touchdown, causing a violent ground loop or cartwheel. Option A (belly landing at increased speed) unnecessarily increases impact energy. Option D (holding the handle) provides no mechanical lock and the gear could still collapse under landing loads.
+
+### Q43: When flying into heavy snowfall, what is the greatest immediate danger? ^t70q43
+- A) Rapid increase in airframe icing
+- B) Sudden blockage of the pitot-static system
+- C) Sudden loss of visibility
+- D) Sudden increase in aircraft mass
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The greatest immediate danger when encountering heavy snowfall is the sudden and complete loss of forward visibility, which can disorient the pilot and make terrain avoidance impossible within seconds. While icing (option A) and pitot blockage (option B) are real concerns, they develop more gradually. Option D (mass increase) is negligible in the short term. Loss of visibility is immediate, disorienting, and can lead to controlled flight into terrain.
+
+### Q44: A tailwind off-field landing is unavoidable. How should it be executed? ^t70q44
+- A) Approach at increased speed without using spoilers
+- B) Normal approach, then extend spoilers and push the nose down upon reaching the landing site
+- C) Approach at reduced speed, expecting shorter flare and ground roll
+- D) Approach at normal speed, expecting a longer flare and ground roll
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the groundspeed is higher than normal for the same indicated airspeed, resulting in a longer flare and longer ground roll. The pilot should maintain normal approach speed (not reduced, which would risk stalling) and prepare for the extended landing distance. Option A (increased speed without spoilers) would make the landing even longer. Option B (pushing the nose down at the field) would cause a hard landing. Option C (reduced speed) risks stalling at the higher groundspeed, and the ground roll will be longer, not shorter.
+
+### Q45: When landing with a tailwind, what must the pilot do? ^t70q45
+- A) Retract the landing gear to shorten the ground roll
+- B) Increase the approach speed
+- C) Approach at normal speed with a shallow angle
+- D) Compensate for the tailwind by sideslipping
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the pilot should maintain normal indicated approach speed (since the wing sees the same airflow regardless of wind) and fly a shallower approach angle to account for the increased groundspeed and reduced obstacle clearance gradient. Option A (retracting gear) would cause a belly landing, not shorten the roll. Option B (increasing speed) would extend the ground roll further. Option D (sideslipping) addresses crosswind, not tailwind, and would not be effective compensation.
+
+### Q46: Tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the approach and landing be conducted? ^t70q46
+- A) Approach at increased speed, but avoid using spoilers
+- B) Approach at normal speed, controlling speed with spoilers
+- C) Approach at minimum speed, making gentle control corrections
+- D) Approach at increased speed with firm control inputs to correct attitude changes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In gusty conditions (10 kt gust factor), the pilot must add speed margin to the approach speed (typically half the gust factor, so about 5 kt extra) and make firm, positive control inputs to maintain attitude through the turbulent air. Option A avoids spoilers, which may be needed for path control. Option B uses normal speed with no gust margin, leaving the aircraft vulnerable to speed drops in gusts. Option C (minimum speed) is extremely dangerous in gusts — a momentary speed loss could cause a stall.
+
+### Q47: A glider pilot encounters strong sink while ridge soaring. What is the recommended action? ^t70q47
+- A) Increase speed and head away from the ridge
+- B) Continue flying, as mountain downdrafts are typically brief
+- C) Increase speed and move closer to the ridge
+- D) Increase speed and land parallel to the ridge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong sink near a ridge, the pilot must increase speed (to improve penetration through the sink) and fly away from the ridge into the valley where conditions may be more benign and landing options exist. Option B is dangerously complacent — mountain downdrafts can be sustained and severe. Option C (moving closer to the ridge) could trap the pilot against the terrain in strong sink. Option D (landing parallel to the ridge) may not be feasible on mountainous terrain and reduces options.
+
+### Q48: A glider flying beneath an expanding cumulus that is developing into a thunderstorm rapidly approaches cloud base. What should the pilot do? ^t70q48
+- A) Slow to minimum speed and exit the thermal area in a gentle turn
+- B) Tighten harness and be prepared for severe gusts while continuing to thermal
+- C) Enter the thunderstorm cloud and continue using instruments
+- D) Deploy spoilers within speed limits and leave the thermal area at maximum permissible speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cumulus develops into a cumulonimbus, the updrafts intensify dramatically and can suck the glider into the cloud against the pilot's wishes. The pilot must deploy full spoilers and fly at maximum permissible speed (VNE or the spoiler-extended limit) to escape the rapidly increasing updraft. Option A (minimum speed) would maximize the time in the updraft and the risk of being drawn in. Option B (continuing to thermal) is extremely dangerous near a thunderstorm. Option C (entering the cloud) violates VFR rules and exposes the aircraft to severe turbulence, hail, and lightning.
+
+### Q49: After landing, you discover that a pen may have fallen into the cockpit. What must be considered? ^t70q49
+- A) Other pilots due to fly the glider should be informed about the missing pen
+- B) A flight without a writing instrument on board is not permitted
+- C) Small, light loose items in the fuselage can be regarded as uncritical
+- D) The cockpit must be thoroughly checked for loose objects before the next flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any loose object in a cockpit — even something as small as a pen — can jam flight controls by lodging in the control linkages, pushrods, or cable runs. The cockpit must be thoroughly inspected before the next flight to locate and remove the object. Option A merely passes the problem along without solving it. Option B is irrelevant — the concern is not having a pen but having a loose object. Option C is dangerously wrong — even small objects can jam critical controls and have caused fatal accidents.
+
+### Q50: Flying near the aerodrome at about 250 m AGL, you encounter strong sink and decide on a safety landing. At what speed should you fly toward the airfield? ^t70q50
+- A) Maximum manoeuvring speed VA
+- B) Best glide speed
+- C) Minimum sink rate speed
+- D) Best glide speed plus allowances for downdrafts and wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When encountering strong sink near the aerodrome, the pilot needs maximum range to reach the field. Best glide speed gives maximum range in still air, but additional speed is needed to compensate for the downdraft (which steepens the glide path) and any headwind component. Option A (VA) may be too fast and waste altitude. Option B (best glide speed alone) does not account for the sink and wind. Option C (minimum sink speed) maximizes time aloft but minimizes distance covered, which is counterproductive when trying to reach the field.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_26_50_fr.md
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+### Q26 : Lors du roulage initial d'un lancement au treuil, une aile touche le sol. Que doit faire le pilote du planeur ? ^t70q26
+- A) Braquer les ailerons dans la direction opposée
+- B) Appliquer le palonnier opposé
+- C) Larguer le câble immédiatement
+- D) Tirer sur l'élévateur
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si une aile touche le sol lors du roulage au lancement au treuil, la situation est incontrôlable et le lancement doit être immédiatement interrompu en larguant le câble. Continuer le lancement avec une aile au sol risque un violent tête-à-queue ou un tonneau au sol. L'option A (aileron opposé) peut être insuffisant à basse vitesse et pourrait aggraver la situation sous tension du câble. L'option B (palonnier opposé) ne peut pas corriger une situation d'aile basse. L'option D (tirer en arrière) tenterait un décollage prématuré dans un état non contrôlé.
+
+### Q27 : Lors d'un remorquage, le planeur dépasse sa vitesse maximale autorisée. Que doit faire le pilote du planeur ? ^t70q27
+- A) Tirer sur l'élévateur pour réduire la vitesse
+- B) Informer le contrôleur de l'aérodrome par radio
+- C) Larguer le câble de remorquage immédiatement
+- D) Déployer les aérofreins
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le planeur dépasse VNE (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser) lors du remorquage, le pilote doit immédiatement larguer le câble de remorquage pour supprimer la force de traction à l'origine de la vitesse excessive et éviter une rupture structurelle. L'option A (tirer en arrière) augmente le facteur de charge sur une cellule déjà en survitesse. L'option B (appel radio) fait perdre un temps critique lors d'une urgence structurelle. L'option D (déployer les aérofreins) tout en restant attaché à l'aéronef de remorquage pourrait provoquer des oscillations dangereuses en tangage et en vitesse.
+
+### Q28 : Après une rupture de câble lors d'un remorquage, une longue section de câble reste attachée au planeur. Que doit faire le pilote ? ^t70q28
+- A) Effectuer une approche basse et demander au contrôleur de l'aérodrome d'évaluer la longueur du câble, puis larguer si nécessaire
+- B) Une fois à une hauteur sécurisée, larguer le câble au-dessus d'un terrain dégagé ou de l'aérodrome
+- C) Effectuer une approche normale et larguer le câble immédiatement après l'atterrissage
+- D) Larguer immédiatement et continuer le vol avec l'attelage déverrouillé
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un câble traînant est un danger grave — il peut s'accrocher à des obstacles, des arbres ou des lignes électriques lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage. L'action la plus sûre est de monter à une hauteur sécurisée et de larguer le câble au-dessus d'un terrain dégagé ou de l'aérodrome où il peut être récupéré en sécurité. L'option A (approche basse pour évaluation) risque de faire s'accrocher le câble traînant sur des obstacles. L'option C (larguer après l'atterrissage) signifie effectuer toute l'approche avec un câble traînant dangereux. L'option D (larguer immédiatement sans considération) peut faire tomber le câble à un endroit dangereux.
+
+### Q29 : Lors d'un remorquage, le remorqueur disparaît du champ de vision du pilote du planeur. Que doit faire le pilote ? ^t70q29
+- A) Déployer les aérofreins et revenir à une attitude normale
+- B) Alterner entre pousser et tirer sur l'élévateur
+- C) Larguer le câble immédiatement
+- D) Alterner des virages à gauche et à droite pour chercher le remorqueur
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le pilote du planeur perd le remorqueur de vue lors du remorquage, le câble doit être largué immédiatement. Continuer le remorquage sans contact visuel avec le remorqueur est extrêmement dangereux car le pilote du planeur ne peut pas anticiper les mouvements du remorqueur, risquant une collision en vol ou d'être tiré dans une attitude imprévue. L'option A (aérofreins) ne résout pas le problème fondamental. L'option B (alterner élévateur) crée des oscillations dangereuses. L'option D (virages de recherche) pourrait emmêler le câble ou voler vers la trajectoire du remorqueur.
+
+### Q30 : Lors d'un remorquage en virage, le planeur dérive vers une position décalée vers l'extérieur. Comment le pilote du planeur doit-il corriger cela ? ^t70q30
+- A) Utiliser un glissement de façon que la traînée augmentée repousse le planeur derrière le remorqueur
+- B) Revenir en position en utilisant des entrées coordonnées de palonnier et d'aileron, puis déployer les aérofreins pour réduire la vitesse
+- C) Revenir derrière le remorqueur en utilisant un rayon plus serré avec de fortes entrées de palonniers
+- D) Correspondre à l'angle de gîte du remorqueur et utiliser le palonnier pour réduire doucement le rayon vers la position correcte
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La technique correcte est de correspondre à l'angle de gîte du remorqueur pour maintenir le même rayon de virage, puis d'utiliser une douce entrée de palonnier pour légèrement resserrer le rayon et dériver derrière le remorqueur. C'est une correction fluide et contrôlée. L'option A (glissement) crée une instabilité latérale et des tensions de câble imprévisibles. L'option B (déployer les aérofreins) ferait descendre le planeur sous le niveau du remorqueur. L'option C (palonnier fort) risque une surcorrection et pourrait faire osciller le planeur de l'autre côté ou créer des charges de câble dangereuses.
+
+### Q31 : Lors d'un lancement au treuil, la tension du câble disparaît soudainement juste après avoir atteint l'attitude de montée maximale. Que doit faire le pilote ? ^t70q31
+- A) Informer le conducteur de treuil par des entrées alternées d'aileron
+- B) Tirer sur l'élévateur pour restaurer la tension du câble
+- C) Pousser fermement en avant et larguer le câble immédiatement
+- D) Pousser légèrement et attendre que la tension du câble revienne
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La perte de tension du câble pendant la phase de montée raide signifie qu'une rupture de câble ou une panne de treuil s'est produite. Le pilote doit immédiatement pousser en avant pour abaisser le nez et éviter le décrochage (puisque le planeur est à un angle de tangage élevé avec une vitesse décroissant rapidement), puis larguer le câble. L'option A fait perdre un temps critique en communication. L'option B (tirer) augmenterait davantage l'angle de tangage, garantissant un décrochage. L'option D (attendre) est dangereuse car la vitesse décroît rapidement dans l'attitude de montée.
+
+### Q32 : Avant un lancement avec un treuil à câble parallèle, le pilote remarque que le deuxième câble se trouve près du planeur. Que doit-on faire ? ^t70q32
+- A) Surveiller le deuxième câble et larguer après le décollage si nécessaire
+- B) Larguer le câble immédiatement et informer le contrôleur de l'aérodrome par radio
+- C) Continuer avec le décollage normal et informer le contrôleur après l'atterrissage
+- D) Procéder au lancement avec le palonnier opposé pour s'éloigner du deuxième câble
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un deuxième câble se trouvant près du planeur présente un risque grave d'enchevêtrement lors du roulage et de la montée initiale. Le lancement doit être immédiatement interrompu en larguant le câble, et le contrôleur de l'aérodrome doit être informé pour corriger la situation avant tout autre lancement. L'option A risque d'accrocher le câble lâche au décollage. L'option C ignore un danger de sécurité évident. L'option D ne peut pas empêcher l'enchevêtrement avec un câble au sol lors de la phase critique du roulage.
+
+### Q33 : Quelle est la fonction du maillon de rupture (point de rupture) sur un câble de treuil ? ^t70q33
+- A) Il limite la vitesse de montée lors du lancement au treuil
+- B) Il empêche la cellule du planeur d'être surchargée
+- C) Il assure le largage automatique du câble après le lancement au treuil
+- D) Il protège le treuil d'être dépassé par le planeur
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le maillon de rupture est calibré pour se rompre avant que la tension du câble ne dépasse les limites structurelles du planeur, protégeant la cellule d'une surcharge due à une traction de treuil excessive. Sa résistance à la rupture est adaptée à la charge de remorquage maximale autorisée pour le type de planeur spécifique. L'option A est incorrecte — la vitesse de montée dépend de la puissance et de la vitesse du treuil, pas du maillon de rupture. L'option C est erronée car le maillon de rupture est un dispositif de sécurité, pas un mécanisme de largage. L'option D décrit une préoccupation sans rapport avec la fonction du maillon.
+
+### Q34 : Lors de la phase finale d'un lancement au treuil, le pilote continue de tirer sur l'élévateur. Le largage automatique se déclenche sous forte charge d'aile. Quelles en sont les conséquences ? ^t70q34
+- A) Seule cette secousse soudaine assure le largage correct du câble
+- B) Cette technique compense une correction insuffisante du vent
+- C) Des contraintes structurelles extrêmes sont exercées sur la cellule du planeur
+- D) Une altitude de lancement plus élevée peut être atteinte avec cette technique
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Continuer à tirer lors de la phase finale d'un lancement au treuil exerce des contraintes structurelles extrêmes sur la cellule car la combinaison de la tension du câble, des charges aérodynamiques et de la force centripète de la trajectoire courbe peut dépasser les limites de conception. Le déclenchement du largage automatique est un mécanisme de sécurité s'activant car le facteur de charge est dangereusement élevé. L'option A présente erronément une surcharge dangereuse comme une procédure normale. L'option B n'a rien à voir avec la correction du vent. L'option D privilégie le gain d'altitude sur la sécurité structurelle.
+
+### Q35 : Un atterrissage hors-champ en terrain montagneux est nécessaire et le seul site disponible est en forte pente. Comment l'approche doit-elle être effectuée ? ^t70q35
+- A) Effectuer l'approche à la vitesse minimale avec un arrondi soigneux à l'arrivée sur le site
+- B) Approcher avec de la vitesse supplémentaire, puis effectuer un arrondi rapide pour correspondre à la pente
+- C) Approcher parallèlement à la crête face au vent, selon le vent dominant
+- D) Approcher en descente le long de la crête à vitesse accrue, en ajustant le tangage pour suivre le terrain
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'atterrissage en montée sur une forte pente nécessite une vitesse d'approche supplémentaire pour tenir compte de la décélération rapide qui se produit lorsque l'élan de l'aéronef rencontre le terrain montant. Un arrondi rapide et décisif correspond à la trajectoire de vol à l'angle de la pente, minimisant les forces d'impact. L'option A (vitesse minimale) ne laisse aucune réserve d'énergie pour l'arrondi sur une forte pente. L'option C (parallèle à la crête) n'utilise pas la pente pour la décélération. L'option D (en descente) augmente considérablement la vitesse sol et la distance d'arrêt, la rendant extrêmement dangereuse.
+
+### Q36 : À 6000 m MSL, le pilote réalise que la réserve d'oxygène sera épuisée dans quelques minutes. Que doit-on faire ? ^t70q36
+- A) Après l'épuisement de l'oxygène, rester à cette altitude pendant 30 minutes maximum
+- B) Réduire la consommation d'oxygène en respirant lentement
+- C) Déployer les aérofreins et descendre à la vitesse maximale autorisée
+- D) Au premier signe d'hypoxie, commencer à descendre à la vitesse maximale autorisée
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** À 6000 m sans oxygène supplémentaire, le temps de conscience utile est très court — l'hypoxie peut altérer le jugement en quelques minutes. Le pilote doit descendre immédiatement à la vitesse maximale autorisée avec les aérofreins, avant l'épuisement de l'oxygène, plutôt que d'attendre l'apparition des symptômes. L'option A est extrêmement dangereuse — rester à 6000 m sans oxygène pendant 30 minutes provoquerait une incapacitation. L'option B ne peut pas prolonger significativement la réserve d'oxygène. L'option D attend les symptômes d'hypoxie, moment auquel la fonction cognitive peut déjà être trop altérée pour une prise de décision sûre.
+
+### Q37 : De quelle couleur est la poignée de largage d'urgence de la verrière ? ^t70q37
+- A) Bleue
+- B) Jaune
+- C) Rouge
+- D) Verte
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les poignées de largage d'urgence de verrière sont standardisées en rouge pour assurer une reconnaissance immédiate en cas de crise. Le rouge est la couleur universelle des commandes d'urgence en aviation, incluant les poignées d'éjection de verrière, les poignées d'extincteur et les vannes d'arrêt carburant. Les options A (bleu), B (jaune) et D (vert) sont incorrectes — ces couleurs sont réservées à d'autres fonctions telles que la compensateur (vert), la verrière normale ou les systèmes non urgents.
+
+### Q38 : Pourquoi les masses de lestage ou le ballast en plomb doivent-ils être solidement fixés dans un planeur ? ^t70q38
+- A) Pour s'assurer que la masse maximale autorisée n'est pas dépassée
+- B) Pour éviter qu'ils ne bloquent les commandes ou ne provoquent un déplacement du centre de gravité
+- C) Pour garantir une position assise confortable pour le pilote
+- D) Pour protéger le pilote des blessures lors de vols turbulents en thermique
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Des masses de lestage ou du ballast non fixés peuvent se déplacer en vol, particulièrement lors de turbulences ou de manœuvres, risquant de bloquer les liaisons de commandes (câbles d'élévateur, de palonnier ou d'aileron) ou de provoquer un déplacement non planifié du centre de gravité qui pourrait rendre l'aéronef incontrôlable. L'option A traite des limites de poids, qui est une préoccupation distincte. Les options C et D sont des considérations secondaires — le danger principal est le blocage des commandes et le déplacement du CG.
+
+### Q39 : Lors d'un lancement au treuil, l'anémomètre tombe en panne après avoir atteint l'attitude de montée maximale. Que doit faire le pilote ? ^t70q39
+- A) Pousser le manche en avant, larguer le câble et effectuer un circuit court à la vitesse minimale
+- B) Continuer le lancement jusqu'à l'altitude normale, puis utiliser l'horizon et le bruit du flux d'air pour effectuer un circuit immédiat et atterrir
+- C) Continuer jusqu'à l'altitude normale, puis utiliser des repères visuels et sonores pour poursuivre le vol prévu
+- D) Essayer de restaurer l'anémomètre en effectuant des changements de vitesse brusques pendant le lancement
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un anémomètre en panne, le pilote doit continuer le lancement jusqu'à l'altitude de largage normale (puisque le lancement est déjà établi et stable), puis larguer et effectuer un circuit immédiat en utilisant l'horizon comme référence de tangage et le bruit du vent pour estimer approximativement la vitesse. Un atterrissage immédiat minimise l'exposition à la panne de l'instrument. L'option A (interrompre le lancement) est inutilement risqué à l'attitude de montée. L'option C (continuer le vol prévu) est dangereux sans indication de vitesse. L'option D (changements de vitesse brusques) pourrait surcharger la cellule pendant le lancement.
+
+### Q40 : Pourquoi est-il interdit de lancer avec le centre de gravité au-delà de la limite arrière ? ^t70q40
+- A) Parce que la vitesse maximale autorisée serait significativement réduite
+- B) Parce que le moment de piqué augmenté ne pourrait pas être compensé
+- C) Parce que les limites structurelles pourraient être dépassées
+- D) Parce que l'autorité de l'élévateur peut être insuffisante pour contrôler l'attitude de vol
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque le CG est trop en arrière, le bras de levier entre le CG et l'empennage devient trop court, réduisant la capacité de l'élévateur à générer un moment de piqué suffisant. Cela peut rendre l'aéronef incontrôlable, particulièrement lors de la phase de lancement où le contrôle en tangage est critique. L'option A est incorrecte — un CG arrière ne réduit pas directement VNE. L'option B est inversée — un CG arrière réduit le moment de piqué, mais le problème est l'autorité insuffisante de l'élévateur pour corriger les tendances à cabrer. L'option C traite des limites structurelles, qui est une préoccupation distincte.
+
+### Q41 : Quel effet a l'accumulation de glace sur les ailes ? ^t70q41
+- A) Elle réduit la traînée de frottement
+- B) Elle améliore les performances en vol lent
+- C) Elle abaisse la vitesse de décrochage
+- D) Elle élève la vitesse de décrochage
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'accumulation de glace sur l'aile perturbe l'écoulement laminaire sur le profil, réduisant le coefficient de portance maximal (CL_max) et augmentant la traînée. Comme la vitesse de décrochage est inversement proportionnelle à la racine carrée de CL_max, un CL_max plus faible signifie une vitesse de décrochage plus élevée. L'aéronef doit voler plus vite pour maintenir un vol sûr. L'option A est fausse car la rugosité de la glace augmente la traînée de frottement. Les options B et C sont incorrectes car la glace dégrade les performances aérodynamiques sous tous les aspects.
+
+### Q42 : Le train d'atterrissage sort mais ne se verrouille pas malgré plusieurs tentatives. Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q42
+- A) Rentrer le train et effectuer un atterrissage sur le ventre à vitesse accrue
+- B) Garder le train sorti mais non verrouillé et atterrir normalement
+- C) Rentrer le train et effectuer un atterrissage sur le ventre à la vitesse minimale
+- D) Tenir fermement la poignée de train lors d'un atterrissage normal
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le train ne se verrouille pas, il doit être rentré et un atterrissage sur le ventre (train rentré) effectué à la vitesse minimale pour minimiser les forces d'impact et les dommages structurels. Un train non verrouillé (option B) pourrait s'effondrer de façon asymétrique au toucher des roues, provoquant un violent tête-à-queue. L'option A (atterrissage sur le ventre à vitesse accrue) augmente inutilement l'énergie d'impact. L'option D (tenir la poignée) ne fournit aucun verrouillage mécanique et le train pourrait toujours s'effondrer sous les charges d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q43 : En volant dans de fortes chutes de neige, quel est le plus grand danger immédiat ? ^t70q43
+- A) Givrage rapide de la cellule
+- B) Obstruction soudaine du système pitot-statique
+- C) Perte soudaine de visibilité
+- D) Augmentation soudaine de la masse de l'aéronef
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le plus grand danger immédiat lors de fortes chutes de neige est la perte soudaine et totale de visibilité vers l'avant, qui peut désorienter le pilote et rendre l'évitement du terrain impossible en quelques secondes. Bien que le givrage (option A) et l'obstruction du pitot (option B) soient des préoccupations réelles, ils se développent plus progressivement. L'option D (augmentation de masse) est négligeable à court terme. La perte de visibilité est immédiate, désorientante et peut conduire à un vol contrôlé vers le relief.
+
+### Q44 : Un atterrissage hors-champ avec vent arrière est inévitable. Comment doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q44
+- A) Approche à vitesse accrue sans utiliser les aérofreins
+- B) Approche normale, puis déployer les aérofreins et pousser le nez vers le bas à l'arrivée sur le terrain
+- C) Approche à vitesse réduite, en s'attendant à un arrondi et un roulement plus courts
+- D) Approche à vitesse normale, en s'attendant à un arrondi et un roulement plus longs
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un vent arrière, la vitesse sol est plus élevée que la normale pour la même vitesse indiquée, entraînant un arrondi plus long et un roulement au sol plus long. Le pilote doit maintenir une vitesse d'approche normale (pas réduite, ce qui risquerait le décrochage) et se préparer à la distance d'atterrissage prolongée. L'option A (vitesse accrue sans aérofreins) allongerait encore l'atterrissage. L'option B (pousser le nez vers le bas au terrain) provoquerait un atterrissage dur. L'option C (vitesse réduite) risque le décrochage à la vitesse sol plus élevée, et le roulement sera plus long, pas plus court.
+
+### Q45 : Lors d'un atterrissage avec vent arrière, que doit faire le pilote ? ^t70q45
+- A) Rentrer le train d'atterrissage pour raccourcir le roulement
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse d'approche
+- C) Approcher à vitesse normale avec un angle peu prononcé
+- D) Compenser le vent arrière par un glissement
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un vent arrière, le pilote doit maintenir la vitesse indiquée d'approche normale (puisque l'aile perçoit le même flux d'air quelle que soit la direction du vent) et voler avec un angle d'approche moins prononcé pour tenir compte de la vitesse sol accrue et du gradient réduit d'évitement des obstacles. L'option A (rentrer le train) provoquerait un atterrissage sur le ventre, pas un roulement plus court. L'option B (vitesse accrue) allongerait encore le roulement. L'option D (glissement) traite le vent traversier, pas le vent arrière, et ne constituerait pas une compensation efficace.
+
+### Q46 : La tour signale : « Vent 15 nœuds, rafales 25 nœuds. » Comment l'approche et l'atterrissage doivent-ils être effectués ? ^t70q46
+- A) Approche à vitesse accrue, mais éviter les aérofreins
+- B) Approche à vitesse normale, en contrôlant la vitesse avec les aérofreins
+- C) Approche à la vitesse minimale, avec des corrections douces aux commandes
+- D) Approche à vitesse accrue avec des corrections fermes aux commandes pour corriger les changements d'attitude
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Par conditions de rafales (écart de 10 kt), le pilote doit ajouter une marge de vitesse à la vitesse d'approche (typiquement la moitié de l'écart de rafales, soit environ 5 kt supplémentaires) et effectuer des corrections fermes et positives aux commandes pour maintenir l'attitude dans l'air turbulent. L'option A évite les aérofreins, qui peuvent être nécessaires pour le contrôle de la trajectoire. L'option B utilise une vitesse normale sans marge de rafales, laissant l'aéronef vulnérable aux baisses de vitesse lors des rafales. L'option C (vitesse minimale) est extrêmement dangereuse par rafales — une perte momentanée de vitesse pourrait provoquer un décrochage.
+
+### Q47 : Un pilote de planeur rencontre de fortes descentes lors d'un vol en crête. Quelle est l'action recommandée ? ^t70q47
+- A) Augmenter la vitesse et s'éloigner de la crête
+- B) Continuer à voler, car les courants descendants en montagne sont généralement brefs
+- C) Augmenter la vitesse et se rapprocher de la crête
+- D) Augmenter la vitesse et atterrir parallèlement à la crête
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans de fortes descentes près d'une crête, le pilote doit augmenter la vitesse (pour améliorer la pénétration dans la descente) et s'éloigner de la crête vers la vallée où les conditions peuvent être plus clémentes et des options d'atterrissage existent. L'option B est dangereusement complaisant — les courants descendants en montagne peuvent être soutenus et sévères. L'option C (se rapprocher de la crête) pourrait piéger le pilote contre le terrain dans de fortes descentes. L'option D (atterrir parallèlement à la crête) peut ne pas être praticable en terrain montagneux et réduit les options.
+
+### Q48 : Un planeur volant sous un cumulus en expansion qui se développe en orage approche rapidement de la base nuageuse. Que doit faire le pilote ? ^t70q48
+- A) Ralentir à la vitesse minimale et quitter la zone thermique en virage doux
+- B) Resserrer le harnais et se préparer à de fortes rafales tout en continuant à spiraler
+- C) Entrer dans le nuage d'orage et continuer aux instruments
+- D) Déployer les aérofreins dans les limites de vitesse et quitter la zone thermique à la vitesse maximale autorisée
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un cumulus se développe en cumulonimbus, les courants ascendants s'intensifient considérablement et peuvent aspirer le planeur dans le nuage contre la volonté du pilote. Le pilote doit déployer les aérofreins complets et voler à la vitesse maximale autorisée (VNE ou la limite avec aérofreins déployés) pour s'échapper du courant ascendant croissant rapidement. L'option A (vitesse minimale) maximiserait le temps dans le courant ascendant et le risque d'être aspiré. L'option B (continuer à spiraler) est extrêmement dangereuse près d'un orage. L'option C (entrer dans le nuage) viole les règles VFR et expose l'aéronef à de sévères turbulences, de la grêle et de la foudre.
+
+### Q49 : Après l'atterrissage, vous découvrez qu'un stylo a pu tomber dans le cockpit. Que faut-il prendre en compte ? ^t70q49
+- A) Les autres pilotes devant voler le planeur doivent être informés du stylo manquant
+- B) Un vol sans instrument d'écriture à bord n'est pas autorisé
+- C) Les petits objets légers dans le fuselage peuvent être considérés comme non critiques
+- D) Le cockpit doit être soigneusement vérifié pour les objets libres avant le prochain vol
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout objet libre dans un cockpit — même quelque chose d'aussi petit qu'un stylo — peut bloquer les commandes de vol en se logeant dans les liaisons de commandes, les tiges de poussée ou les câbles. Le cockpit doit être soigneusement inspecté avant le prochain vol pour localiser et retirer l'objet. L'option A ne fait que transmettre le problème sans le résoudre. L'option B est sans rapport — la préoccupation n'est pas d'avoir un stylo mais d'avoir un objet libre. L'option C est dangereusement erronée — même les petits objets peuvent bloquer des commandes critiques et ont causé des accidents mortels.
+
+### Q50 : En volant près de l'aérodrome à environ 250 m/sol, vous rencontrez de fortes descentes et décidez d'un atterrissage de sécurité. À quelle vitesse devez-vous voler vers l'aérodrome ? ^t70q50
+- A) Vitesse de manœuvre maximale VA
+- B) Vitesse de finesse maximale
+- C) Vitesse de taux de chute minimal
+- D) Vitesse de finesse maximale plus marges pour les courants descendants et le vent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En rencontrant de fortes descentes près de l'aérodrome, le pilote a besoin du maximum de distance pour atteindre le terrain. La vitesse de finesse maximale donne la distance maximale en air calme, mais une vitesse supplémentaire est nécessaire pour compenser le courant descendant (qui incline davantage la trajectoire de vol) et toute composante de vent de face. L'option A (VA) peut être trop rapide et gaspiller de l'altitude. L'option B (vitesse de finesse seule) ne tient pas compte des descentes et du vent. L'option C (vitesse de taux de chute minimal) maximise le temps en l'air mais minimise la distance parcourue, ce qui est contre-productif pour atteindre le terrain.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_51_75.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_51_75.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,250 @@
+### Q51: You have just passed the LAPL(S) practical exam. May you carry passengers as soon as the licence is issued? ^t70q51
+- A) Yes, provided the recent experience requirements are fulfilled.
+- B) No, only after completing 10 flight hours or 30 flights as PIC following licence issue.
+- C) Yes, without any restriction.
+- D) No, carrying passengers requires an SPL licence.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations, a newly qualified LAPL(S) holder must accumulate a minimum of 10 hours of flight time or 30 flights as pilot in command after licence issuance before being permitted to carry passengers. This ensures the pilot gains sufficient solo experience before taking responsibility for others. Option A omits the initial experience requirement. Option C is wrong because there is a clear restriction. Option D is incorrect because the LAPL(S) does permit passenger carriage after meeting the experience requirement.
+
+### Q52: On final approach to an out-landing field, you suddenly encounter a strong thermal. How should you react? ^t70q52
+- A) Retract the airbrakes and slow down to minimum sink speed to exploit the thermal.
+- B) Fully extend the airbrakes and lengthen the approach path if necessary.
+- C) Continue the approach unchanged, since a thermal is always followed by a downdraft.
+- D) Retract the airbrakes and circle gently to exit the thermal.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On final approach, the commitment to land has been made. A thermal on final approach will cause the glider to float above the desired glide path, so the pilot must fully extend airbrakes to maintain the correct path and dissipate the extra energy. Option A (retracting brakes to exploit the thermal) abandons the committed approach at a critical phase, which is extremely dangerous at low altitude. Option C assumes thermals always produce compensating sink, which is not reliable. Option D (circling on final) is dangerous at low altitude.
+
+### Q53: You land on a grass runway shortly after a rain shower. What should you expect? ^t70q53
+- A) The glider will veer off the runway due to aquaplaning.
+- B) The glider will brake rapidly on the wet surface without needing the wheel brake.
+- C) The glider will stop noticeably more quickly after touchdown.
+- D) Reduced wheel grip and less effective braking, resulting in a longer ground roll.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass significantly reduces friction between the tire and the surface, resulting in less effective wheel braking and a longer ground roll. The pilot must plan for this extended stopping distance. Option A exaggerates — aquaplaning is primarily a concern on paved runways, not grass. Option B is incorrect because wet surfaces reduce, not improve, natural braking. Option C is wrong because reduced friction means a longer, not shorter, ground roll.
+
+### Q54: When flying late in the day in a valley toward shaded slopes, what difficulty should you expect? ^t70q54
+- A) Severe turbulence.
+- B) Strong downdrafts.
+- C) Difficulty detecting other aircraft in the shaded areas.
+- D) Glare from the low sun on the horizon.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Late in the day, shaded slopes create dark backgrounds against which other aircraft become extremely difficult to spot visually. The contrast between sunlit and shaded areas makes visual detection particularly challenging — an aircraft in shadow can be nearly invisible. Option A and B may occur in certain conditions but are not specifically linked to shaded slopes late in the day. Option D (glare) is a concern when looking toward the sun, not toward shaded slopes.
+
+### Q55: On a cross-country flight with no thermals available, you decide to make an out-landing. Several fields look suitable. By what altitude must your final choice be made? ^t70q55
+- A) When you can positively identify the wind direction.
+- B) Glider at 300 m AGL; motorglider at 400 m AGL.
+- C) Glider at 400 m AGL; motorglider at 300 m AGL.
+- D) Glider at 300 m AGL; motorglider at 200 m AGL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Field selection must be finalized at 300 m AGL for gliders and 400 m AGL for motorgliders to ensure sufficient altitude for a proper circuit, approach, and landing. Below these heights, the pilot should be committed to the chosen field. Option A does not specify a concrete altitude. Option C reverses the altitudes — motorgliders need more height because they may attempt an engine restart. Option D sets the motorglider threshold too low for a safe circuit with potential engine restart attempt.
+
+### Q56: You are thermalling at 1500 m AGL over flat terrain with no other glider nearby. In which direction should you circle? ^t70q56
+- A) Circle to the left.
+- B) There is no rule governing the direction.
+- C) Within 5 km of an aerodrome turn left; otherwise choose freely.
+- D) Use figure-eight patterns to best exploit the thermal.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When thermalling alone with no other aircraft in the thermal, there is no regulation requiring a specific turning direction. The pilot is free to choose whichever direction best centers the thermal or feels most comfortable. Option A imposes a left-turn requirement that does not exist. Option C invents a distance-based rule. Option D (figure-eights) is a technique for locating the thermal core, not a required circling method. The obligation to match another glider's turn direction only applies when sharing a thermal.
+
+### Q57: You are on an aerotow departure in calm conditions. The towrope breaks just below safety height. What do you do? ^t70q57
+- A) Extend airbrakes, push the stick forward, and land straight ahead.
+- B) Push the stick forward, release the rope (twice), and land in the opposite direction.
+- C) Establish a glide, release the rope (twice), and land straight ahead if possible.
+- D) Immediately release the rope once, then establish a glide and land straight ahead.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break below safety height, the priority sequence is: establish a safe glide attitude (to maintain flying speed), release the remaining rope by actuating the release twice (to ensure disconnection), and land straight ahead if terrain permits. Option A deploys airbrakes prematurely when every meter of altitude counts. Option B attempts a 180° turn which is extremely dangerous below safety height. Option D releases before establishing a glide — the glide attitude should be established first to ensure safe flying speed.
+
+### Q58: You are ready to launch in a glider with a strong crosswind from the right. What do you do? ^t70q58
+- A) Hold the wheel brake until the engine reaches full power.
+- B) During the ground roll, pull the stick fully back to lift off as quickly as possible.
+- C) Ask the ground helper to hold the right wing slightly lower during the take-off run.
+- D) Ask the ground helper to run alongside the glider until you have enough speed to control bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a strong crosswind from the right, the wind will tend to lift the right (windward) wing. By holding the right wing slightly lower at the start of the ground roll, the helper compensates for this lifting tendency, keeping the wings level until the aileron becomes effective. Option A refers to engine procedures irrelevant for gliders. Option B (pulling back to lift off quickly) risks a premature liftoff with insufficient airspeed. Option D is impractical and dangerous — the helper cannot keep pace with an accelerating glider.
+
+### Q59: During an aerotow departure, acceleration is clearly insufficient. What should you do when the take-off abort point is reached? ^t70q59
+- A) Push the stick slightly forward to reduce drag.
+- B) Release the towrope.
+- C) Pull the elevator quickly to get the glider airborne.
+- D) Extend the flaps.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If acceleration is insufficient by the abort point, the takeoff must be abandoned by releasing the towrope immediately. Continuing the takeoff with insufficient speed risks failing to clear obstacles or running off the end of the runway. Option A might marginally reduce drag but cannot solve a fundamental performance problem. Option C (forcing the aircraft airborne) at inadequate speed leads to an immediate stall or settling back onto the ground. Option D (flaps) cannot compensate for insufficient tow power.
+
+### Q60: What lateral clearance from a slope must be maintained when flying a glider? ^t70q60
+- A) A sufficient lateral safety distance.
+- B) At least 60 m horizontally.
+- C) At least 150 m horizontally.
+- D) It depends on the thermal conditions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying along a slope, a minimum lateral distance of 60 meters must be maintained horizontally from the terrain. This provides a safety buffer against unexpected turbulence, downdrafts, or control difficulty near the slope face. Option A is vague and non-specific. Option C (150 m) is more conservative than the standard requirement. Option D (depends on thermals) introduces a variable condition that does not define a clear minimum standard.
+
+### Q61: What requires special attention when flying in high mountains? ^t70q61
+- A) FLARM may produce false warnings due to reflections off rock faces.
+- B) GPS signal reception may be lost.
+- C) Radio contact may be interrupted.
+- D) Weather conditions can change far more rapidly than expected (e.g. sudden thunderstorm development).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In high mountain environments, weather can deteriorate with extreme speed — thunderstorms can develop in minutes due to orographic lifting and localized heating effects. This is the most significant hazard requiring special attention. Options A, B, and C describe technical inconveniences that may occasionally occur in mountains, but they are not the primary hazard. Rapid weather changes can trap a pilot in valleys with deteriorating visibility and violent turbulence, making option D the critical safety concern.
+
+### Q62: When installing the oxygen system in a glider for an Alpine flight, what is absolutely essential? ^t70q62
+- A) That the rubber seal is undamaged.
+- B) That all components in contact with oxygen are completely free of grease.
+- C) That the coupling nut is tightened to the correct torque.
+- D) That the cylinder connector is well greased.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Oxygen under pressure can react violently with hydrocarbon-based greases and oils, potentially causing a flash fire or explosion. All components in contact with oxygen must be completely grease-free. Option D is directly dangerous — greasing the connector introduces a combustion risk. Options A and C describe good practices but are not the absolute safety-critical requirement. The oxygen-grease incompatibility is a fundamental rule in aviation oxygen system handling.
+
+### Q63: After a collision, you must bail out at approximately 400 m. When should the parachute be opened? ^t70q63
+- A) After 2 to 3 seconds of freefall.
+- B) When you have stabilised in freefall.
+- C) Just before leaving the glider.
+- D) Immediately after leaving the glider.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At only 400 m above ground, there is no time for any delay — the parachute must be deployed immediately after clearing the aircraft. Freefall at terminal velocity covers roughly 50 m per second, so even 2-3 seconds of delay (option A) would consume 100-150 m of precious altitude. Option B (stabilizing in freefall) wastes critical seconds. Option C (before leaving) would entangle the parachute with the aircraft structure. At 400 m, every second counts for a successful deployment and deceleration.
+
+### Q64: On short final for an out-landing, you realise the field is too short. What do you do? ^t70q64
+- A) Reduce speed to the minimum to shorten the landing distance.
+- B) Continue straight ahead, deploy full airbrakes, and prepare for an emergency stop using all available means.
+- C) Maintain heading and land using full airbrakes to stop as early as possible.
+- D) Attempt to turn and find a longer alternative field.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On short final, the commitment to land has been made — the safest action is to continue straight ahead with full airbrakes and use every available means (wheel brake, ground friction) to stop in the shortest distance possible. Option A (reducing to minimum speed) risks stalling close to the ground. Option C is similar to B but less specific about using all stopping means. Option D (turning to find another field) at this low altitude and close range is extremely dangerous and likely to result in a stall-spin accident.
+
+### Q65: What does FLARM do? ^t70q65
+- A) It shows the precise position of other gliders.
+- B) It warns of other FLARM-equipped aircraft that may pose a collision risk.
+- C) It recommends avoidance manoeuvres when a collision risk exists.
+- D) It shows the exact positions of all aircraft equipped with FLARM or a transponder.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM is a traffic awareness system that calculates collision risk based on the predicted flight paths of nearby FLARM-equipped aircraft and issues warnings when a potential conflict is detected. Option A overstates its precision — it provides approximate positions, not precise ones. Option C is incorrect because FLARM warns but does not recommend specific avoidance maneuvers. Option D is wrong because FLARM only detects other FLARM devices, not transponder-equipped aircraft (that would require a separate ADS-B receiver).
+
+### Q66: During a cross-country flight, you must land at a high-altitude aerodrome with no wind. At what indicated airspeed do you fly the approach? ^t70q66
+- A) About 5 km/h less than at sea level.
+- B) Increase the sea-level speed by 1% for every 100 m of altitude.
+- C) About 5 km/h more than at sea level.
+- D) The same as at sea level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The indicated airspeed (IAS) for the approach should be the same as at sea level because the ASI already accounts for air density — it measures dynamic pressure, which determines aerodynamic forces regardless of altitude. The stall IAS does not change with altitude. However, the true airspeed and groundspeed will be higher at altitude due to lower air density. Options A and C incorrectly adjust IAS, and option B applies a TAS correction to IAS, which is unnecessary.
+
+### Q67: What do you notice when entering the centre of a downdraft? ^t70q67
+- A) One wing rises and the aircraft begins to turn.
+- B) The nose pitches up and you feel a brief increase in g-load.
+- C) The glider accelerates and you feel increased g-load.
+- D) The glider slows and you feel a brief decrease in g-load.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a downdraft, the descending air mass reduces the effective angle of attack on the wings, temporarily decreasing lift. The pilot feels a brief reduction in g-load (a sensation of lightness or being pushed up from the seat) as the aircraft begins to sink with the descending air. The glider's airspeed initially decreases momentarily. Option B describes what happens entering an updraft (nose pitches up, increased g-load). Options A and C do not accurately describe the symmetrical effect of entering a downdraft center.
+
+### Q68: During a cross-country flight over the Jura, you notice cirrus forming to the west. What should you expect? ^t70q68
+- A) Weaker thermals due to reduced solar radiation.
+- B) Increased upper-level instability from moisture, producing stronger thermals.
+- C) A transition from cumulus thermals to blue (dry) thermals.
+- D) Cirrus have no effect on conditions in the thermal layer.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds at high altitude filter incoming solar radiation, reducing the surface heating that drives thermal convection. Less heating means weaker thermals and potentially an earlier end to the soaring day. This is an important warning sign during cross-country flights. Option B is wrong — cirrus does not increase instability at thermal altitudes. Option C describes a shift that may occur but is not the primary effect. Option D underestimates the impact cirrus has on thermal generation through solar radiation reduction.
+
+### Q69: What speed maximises distance covered against a headwind? ^t70q69
+- A) Minimum sink speed.
+- B) Best glide ratio speed.
+- C) A speed higher than best glide ratio speed.
+- D) The speed corresponding to McCready zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To maximize distance in a headwind, the pilot must fly faster than best-glide speed. The headwind reduces groundspeed, so the glider spends more time in the air and descends more before covering the desired ground distance. By increasing speed above best-glide, the pilot accepts a steeper glide angle but gains enough extra groundspeed to more than compensate for the altitude loss. Option A (minimum sink) minimizes descent rate but covers minimal distance. Option B (best glide) is optimal only in still air. Option D (McCready zero) equals best-glide speed.
+
+### Q70: Which of these fields is best for an out-landing? ^t70q70
+- A) A 400 m freshly ploughed field.
+- B) A 300 m maize field with a steady headwind.
+- C) A 250 m country lane with a strong headwind.
+- D) A 200 m meadow that has just been mown.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A freshly mown meadow of 200 m provides a smooth, firm surface free of tall vegetation and hidden obstacles — ideal for a short ground roll in a glider, which can typically stop within 100-200 m. Option A (ploughed field) has soft soil and deep furrows that can nose the glider over. Option B (maize field) has tall crops that obscure hazards and create drag inconsistencies. Option C (country lane) is narrow, potentially lined with trees and power lines, and poses collision risks with vehicles.
+
+### Q71: May you use the on-board radio to communicate with your retrieve crew on the dedicated frequency without holding a radiotelephony extension? ^t70q71
+- A) Only exceptionally
+- B) Yes
+- C) As a general rule, once per flight, shortly before landing
+- D) No
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pilots may use the on-board radio on dedicated glider frequencies to communicate with their retrieve crew without needing a separate radiotelephony extension or rating. These frequencies are designated for glider operations and permit such operational communications. Option A unnecessarily restricts this established practice. Option C invents a frequency limitation that does not exist. Option D incorrectly prohibits a communication that is routinely permitted.
+
+### Q72: At an aerodrome at 1800 m AMSL, how does the ground speed compare to the indicated airspeed on approach? ^t70q72
+- A) It depends on the temperature.
+- B) Ground speed is lower.
+- C) They are the same.
+- D) Ground speed is higher.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 1800 m AMSL, air density is lower than at sea level, so the true airspeed (TAS) is higher than indicated airspeed (IAS) for the same dynamic pressure reading. In nil-wind conditions, groundspeed equals TAS, which exceeds IAS. This means the aircraft approaches the runway at a higher groundspeed than the ASI shows, requiring awareness of a longer ground roll and higher touchdown energy. Options B and C underestimate the density altitude effect. Option A is partially true but the dominant factor is altitude, not temperature.
+
+### Q73: Is wearing a parachute compulsory during glider flights? ^t70q73
+- A) Yes, for all flights above 300 m AGL
+- B) No
+- C) Only when performing aerobatics
+- D) Yes, always
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not compulsory for glider flights under current regulations, although it is strongly recommended and standard practice in the gliding community. The decision is left to the pilot. Option A invents an altitude-based requirement. Option C creates a restriction limited to aerobatics that does not exist in the regulations. Option D overstates the requirement. While practically all glider pilots wear parachutes, it remains a personal safety choice, not a legal obligation.
+
+### Q74: During a winch launch, just after reaching the climbing angle, the cable breaks near the winch. How should you react? ^t70q74
+- A) Extend the airbrakes immediately
+- B) First establish normal flight attitude, then release the cable
+- C) Report the incident by radio
+- D) Release the cable immediately, then establish a normal flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break during the climb phase, the immediate priority is to release the remaining cable (which may still be attached and could snag) and then lower the nose to establish a safe glide. The cable release comes first because a dangling cable is an immediate hazard. Option A (airbrakes first) wastes altitude when every meter counts. Option B reverses the priority — establishing the glide before releasing could allow the cable to become entangled. Option C (radio call) wastes precious seconds during a time-critical emergency.
+
+### Q75: What must be considered during an aerotow departure in strong crosswind? ^t70q75
+- A) The tow plane must lift off before the glider
+- B) After take-off, correct into the wind until the tow plane lifts off
+- C) The take-off distance will be shorter
+- D) Before departure, offset the glider to the upwind side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a strong crosswind aerotow departure, the glider should be positioned upwind of the tow aircraft's centerline to prevent being blown across the tug's path during the ground roll. This offset compensates for the crosswind drift during the critical acceleration phase. Option A states a normal sequence that does not address crosswind specifically. Option B provides a partial technique but does not address the pre-departure setup. Option C is incorrect because crosswinds typically increase takeoff distance slightly.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_51_75_fr.md
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+### Q51: Vous venez de réussir l'examen pratique du LAPL(S). Pouvez-vous transporter des passagers dès que la licence est délivrée ? ^t70q51
+- A) Oui, à condition que les conditions d'expérience récente soient remplies.
+- B) Non, seulement après avoir effectué 10 heures de vol ou 30 vols en tant que CdB suite à la délivrance de la licence.
+- C) Oui, sans aucune restriction.
+- D) Non, le transport de passagers exige une licence SPL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à la réglementation EASA, un titulaire nouvellement qualifié du LAPL(S) doit accumuler un minimum de 10 heures de vol ou 30 vols en tant que commandant de bord après la délivrance de la licence avant d'être autorisé à transporter des passagers. Cela garantit que le pilote acquiert une expérience solo suffisante avant d'assumer la responsabilité d'autrui. L'option A omet la condition d'expérience initiale. L'option C est fausse car il existe une restriction claire. L'option D est incorrecte car le LAPL(S) permet bien le transport de passagers une fois l'exigence d'expérience satisfaite.
+
+### Q52: En finale vers un champ de dégagement, vous rencontrez soudainement un fort thermique. Comment devez-vous réagir ? ^t70q52
+- A) Rentrer les aérofreins et ralentir à la vitesse de finesse max pour exploiter le thermique.
+- B) Sortir complètement les aérofreins et allonger la trajectoire d'approche si nécessaire.
+- C) Poursuivre l'approche sans changement, car un thermique est toujours suivi d'un courant descendant.
+- D) Rentrer les aérofreins et effectuer un virage doux pour sortir du thermique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En finale, l'engagement d'atterrissage est pris. Un thermique en finale provoquera un ballonné du planeur au-dessus de la trajectoire d'approche souhaitée, donc le pilote doit sortir complètement les aérofreins pour maintenir la trajectoire correcte et dissiper l'énergie supplémentaire. L'option A (rentrer les aérofreins pour exploiter le thermique) abandonne l'approche engagée à une phase critique, ce qui est extrêmement dangereux à basse altitude. L'option C suppose que les thermiques produisent toujours des courants descendants compensatoires, ce qui n'est pas fiable. L'option D (virer en finale) est dangereuse à basse altitude.
+
+### Q53: Vous atterrissez sur une piste en herbe peu après une averse. Que devez-vous attendre ? ^t70q53
+- A) Le planeur dévidera de la piste en raison de l'aquaplaning.
+- B) Le planeur freinera rapidement sur la surface mouillée sans avoir besoin du frein de roue.
+- C) Le planeur s'arrêtera nettement plus vite après le toucher des roues.
+- D) Une adhérence réduite des roues et un freinage moins efficace, entraînant un roulement au sol plus long.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'herbe mouillée réduit considérablement le frottement entre le pneu et la surface, entraînant un freinage moins efficace et un roulement au sol plus long. Le pilote doit planifier en conséquence une distance d'arrêt allongée. L'option A exagère — l'aquaplaning est principalement une préoccupation sur les pistes pavées, pas sur l'herbe. L'option B est incorrecte car les surfaces mouillées réduisent, et non améliorent, le freinage naturel. L'option C est fausse car une friction réduite entraîne un roulement plus long, pas plus court.
+
+### Q54: En volant tard dans la journée dans une vallée vers des pentes ombragées, quelle difficulté devez-vous anticiper ? ^t70q54
+- A) Des turbulences sévères.
+- B) De forts courants descendants.
+- C) Des difficultés à détecter d'autres aéronefs dans les zones ombragées.
+- D) Un éblouissement dû au soleil bas à l'horizon.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En fin de journée, les pentes ombragées créent des fonds sombres contre lesquels d'autres aéronefs deviennent extrêmement difficiles à repérer visuellement. Le contraste entre les zones ensoleillées et ombragées rend la détection visuelle particulièrement délicate — un aéronef dans l'ombre peut être presque invisible. Les options A et B peuvent survenir dans certaines conditions mais ne sont pas spécifiquement liées aux pentes ombragées en fin de journée. L'option D (éblouissement) est une préoccupation lorsqu'on regarde vers le soleil, et non vers les pentes ombragées.
+
+### Q55: Lors d'un vol de distance sans thermique disponible, vous décidez d'effectuer un atterrissage en campagne. Plusieurs champs semblent convenir. À quelle altitude votre choix définitif doit-il être fait ? ^t70q55
+- A) Lorsque vous pouvez identifier positivement la direction du vent.
+- B) Planeur à 300 m AGL ; motoplaneur à 400 m AGL.
+- C) Planeur à 400 m AGL ; motoplaneur à 300 m AGL.
+- D) Planeur à 300 m AGL ; motoplaneur à 200 m AGL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le choix du champ doit être finalisé à 300 m AGL pour les planeurs et à 400 m AGL pour les motoplaneurs, afin de disposer d'une altitude suffisante pour un circuit correct, une approche et un atterrissage. En dessous de ces hauteurs, le pilote doit être engagé sur le champ choisi. L'option A ne précise pas d'altitude concrète. L'option C inverse les altitudes — les motoplaneurs ont besoin de plus de hauteur car ils peuvent tenter un redémarrage du moteur. L'option D fixe le seuil du motoplaneur trop bas pour un circuit sûr avec une tentative éventuelle de redémarrage du moteur.
+
+### Q56: Vous spiralisez à 1500 m AGL au-dessus d'un terrain plat sans autre planeur à proximité. Dans quelle direction devez-vous tourner ? ^t70q56
+- A) Tourner à gauche.
+- B) Il n'existe aucune règle concernant la direction.
+- C) Dans un rayon de 5 km d'un aérodrome, tourner à gauche ; sinon, libre choix.
+- D) Utiliser des virages en huit pour mieux exploiter le thermique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'on spiralise seul sans autre aéronef dans le thermique, aucune réglementation n'impose une direction de virage spécifique. Le pilote est libre de choisir la direction qui lui permet le mieux de centrer le thermique ou qui lui convient le mieux. L'option A impose une obligation de virage à gauche qui n'existe pas. L'option C invente une règle basée sur la distance. L'option D (virages en huit) est une technique pour localiser le cœur du thermique, pas une méthode de spiralisation requise. L'obligation de tourner dans le même sens qu'un autre planeur ne s'applique que lorsque l'on partage un thermique.
+
+### Q57: Vous êtes en décollage en remorquage par avion par temps calme. La corde se casse juste en dessous de la hauteur de sécurité. Que faites-vous ? ^t70q57
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins, pousser le manche en avant et atterrir tout droit.
+- B) Pousser le manche en avant, larguer la corde (deux fois) et atterrir en sens inverse.
+- C) Établir un vol plané, larguer la corde (deux fois) et atterrir tout droit si possible.
+- D) Larguer immédiatement la corde une fois, puis établir un vol plané et atterrir tout droit.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Après une rupture de câble en dessous de la hauteur de sécurité, la séquence de priorités est : établir une assiette de vol plané sûre (pour maintenir la vitesse), larguer la corde restante en actionnant le dispositif de largage deux fois (pour s'assurer de la déconnexion), et atterrir tout droit si le terrain le permet. L'option A sort les aérofreins prématurément alors que chaque mètre d'altitude compte. L'option B tente un demi-tour qui est extrêmement dangereux en dessous de la hauteur de sécurité. L'option D largue avant d'établir le vol plané — l'assiette de vol plané doit être établie en premier pour garantir une vitesse de vol sûre.
+
+### Q58: Vous êtes prêt à décoller en planeur avec un fort vent de travers venant de la droite. Que faites-vous ? ^t70q58
+- A) Maintenir le frein de roue jusqu'à ce que le moteur atteigne la pleine puissance.
+- B) Pendant le roulage, tirer le manche complètement en arrière pour décoller le plus rapidement possible.
+- C) Demander à l'aide au sol de tenir l'aile droite légèrement plus basse pendant le roulage au décollage.
+- D) Demander à l'aide au sol de courir à côté du planeur jusqu'à ce que vous ayez assez de vitesse pour contrôler l'inclinaison.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un fort vent de travers venant de la droite, le vent aura tendance à soulever l'aile droite (au vent). En tenant l'aile droite légèrement plus basse au début du roulage, l'aide compense cette tendance au soulèvement, maintenant les ailes nivelées jusqu'à ce que les ailerons deviennent efficaces. L'option A fait référence à des procédures moteur sans rapport avec les planeurs. L'option B (tirer en arrière pour décoller rapidement) risque un décollage prématuré à vitesse insuffisante. L'option D est peu pratique et dangereuse — l'aide ne peut pas soutenir l'allure d'un planeur en accélération.
+
+### Q59: Lors d'un décollage en remorquage, l'accélération est clairement insuffisante. Que devez-vous faire lorsque le point d'abandon du décollage est atteint ? ^t70q59
+- A) Pousser légèrement le manche en avant pour réduire la traînée.
+- B) Larguer la corde de remorquage.
+- C) Tirer rapidement sur l'élévateur pour mettre le planeur en l'air.
+- D) Sortir les volets.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'accélération est insuffisante au point d'abandon, le décollage doit être interrompu en larguant immédiatement la corde de remorquage. Poursuivre le décollage à vitesse insuffisante risque de ne pas franchir les obstacles ou de sortir de la piste. L'option A pourrait réduire marginalement la traînée mais ne peut résoudre un problème fondamental de performance. L'option C (forcer l'aéronef en l'air) à vitesse inadéquate conduit à un décrochage immédiat ou à une rechute sur le sol. L'option D (volets) ne peut pas compenser une puissance de remorquage insuffisante.
+
+### Q60: Quel dégagement latéral par rapport à un relief doit être maintenu lors du vol d'un planeur ? ^t70q60
+- A) Une distance de sécurité latérale suffisante.
+- B) Au moins 60 m horizontalement.
+- C) Au moins 150 m horizontalement.
+- D) Cela dépend des conditions thermiques.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du vol le long d'un relief, une distance latérale minimale de 60 mètres doit être maintenue horizontalement par rapport au terrain. Cela offre une marge de sécurité contre les turbulences inattendues, les courants descendants ou les difficultés de contrôle à proximité du versant. L'option A est vague et non spécifique. L'option C (150 m) est plus conservatrice que l'exigence standard. L'option D (dépend des thermiques) introduit une condition variable qui ne définit pas un minimum clair.
+
+### Q61: À quoi faut-il prêter une attention particulière lors du vol en haute montagne ? ^t70q61
+- A) Le FLARM peut produire de faux avertissements en raison des réflexions sur les parois rocheuses.
+- B) La réception du signal GPS peut être perdue.
+- C) Le contact radio peut être interrompu.
+- D) Les conditions météorologiques peuvent changer bien plus rapidement que prévu (p. ex. développement soudain d'un orage).
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En haute montagne, la météo peut se dégrader à une vitesse extrême — des orages peuvent se développer en quelques minutes en raison du soulèvement orographique et des effets de chauffage locaux. Il s'agit du danger le plus important nécessitant une attention particulière. Les options A, B et C décrivent des inconvénients techniques qui peuvent parfois survenir en montagne, mais ils ne constituent pas le principal danger. Des changements météorologiques rapides peuvent piéger un pilote dans des vallées avec une visibilité se dégradant et des turbulences violentes, faisant de l'option D la préoccupation de sécurité critique.
+
+### Q62: Lors de l'installation du système d'oxygène dans un planeur pour un vol alpin, qu'est-ce qui est absolument essentiel ? ^t70q62
+- A) Que le joint en caoutchouc soit intact.
+- B) Que tous les composants en contact avec l'oxygène soient totalement exempts de graisse.
+- C) Que l'écrou de raccordement soit serré au couple correct.
+- D) Que le raccord de la bouteille soit bien graissé.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'oxygène sous pression peut réagir violemment avec les graisses et huiles à base d'hydrocarbures, pouvant provoquer un incendie ou une explosion soudaine. Tous les composants en contact avec l'oxygène doivent être totalement exempts de graisse. L'option D est directement dangereuse — graisser le raccord introduit un risque de combustion. Les options A et C décrivent de bonnes pratiques mais ne constituent pas l'exigence de sécurité absolument critique. L'incompatibilité oxygène-graisse est une règle fondamentale dans la manipulation des systèmes d'oxygène en aviation.
+
+### Q63: Après une collision, vous devez sauter en parachute à environ 400 m. Quand le parachute doit-il être ouvert ? ^t70q63
+- A) Après 2 à 3 secondes de chute libre.
+- B) Lorsque vous êtes stabilisé en chute libre.
+- C) Juste avant de quitter le planeur.
+- D) Immédiatement après avoir quitté le planeur.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** À seulement 400 m au-dessus du sol, il n'y a pas de temps pour un délai quelconque — le parachute doit être déployé immédiatement après avoir dégagé l'aéronef. La chute libre à la vitesse terminale couvre environ 50 m par seconde, de sorte que même 2 à 3 secondes de délai (option A) consommeraient 100 à 150 m d'altitude précieuse. L'option B (se stabiliser en chute libre) fait perdre des secondes critiques. L'option C (avant de quitter) risque d'emmêler le parachute avec la structure de l'aéronef. À 400 m, chaque seconde compte pour un déploiement et une décélération réussis.
+
+### Q64: En courte finale pour un atterrissage en campagne, vous réalisez que le champ est trop court. Que faites-vous ? ^t70q64
+- A) Réduire la vitesse au minimum pour raccourcir la distance d'atterrissage.
+- B) Continuer tout droit, déployer les aérofreins complètement et se préparer à un arrêt d'urgence en utilisant tous les moyens disponibles.
+- C) Maintenir le cap et atterrir avec les aérofreins complets pour s'arrêter le plus tôt possible.
+- D) Tenter un virage et chercher un champ alternatif plus long.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En courte finale, l'engagement d'atterrissage est pris — l'action la plus sûre est de continuer tout droit avec les aérofreins complets et d'utiliser tous les moyens disponibles (frein de roue, friction au sol) pour s'arrêter dans la distance la plus courte possible. L'option A (réduire à la vitesse minimale) risque un décrochage près du sol. L'option C est similaire à B mais moins précise sur l'utilisation de tous les moyens d'arrêt. L'option D (virer pour trouver un autre champ) à cette basse altitude et à cette courte distance est extrêmement dangereuse et susceptible de provoquer un accident en vrille-décrochage.
+
+### Q65: Que fait le FLARM ? ^t70q65
+- A) Il affiche la position précise des autres planeurs.
+- B) Il avertit de la présence d'autres aéronefs équipés du FLARM susceptibles de présenter un risque de collision.
+- C) Il recommande des manœuvres d'évitement lorsqu'un risque de collision existe.
+- D) Il affiche les positions exactes de tous les aéronefs équipés du FLARM ou d'un transpondeur.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** FLARM est un système d'avertissement du trafic qui calcule le risque de collision sur la base des trajectoires de vol prévues des aéronefs équipés du FLARM à proximité et émet des avertissements lorsqu'un conflit potentiel est détecté. L'option A surestime sa précision — il fournit des positions approximatives, pas précises. L'option C est incorrecte car FLARM avertit mais ne recommande pas de manœuvres d'évitement spécifiques. L'option D est fausse car FLARM ne détecte que d'autres appareils FLARM, pas les aéronefs équipés d'un transpondeur (cela nécessiterait un récepteur ADS-B séparé).
+
+### Q66: Lors d'un vol de distance, vous devez atterrir sur un aérodrome d'altitude sans vent. À quelle vitesse indiquée volez-vous l'approche ? ^t70q66
+- A) Environ 5 km/h de moins qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse au niveau de la mer de 1 % pour chaque 100 m d'altitude.
+- C) Environ 5 km/h de plus qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- D) La même qu'au niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse indiquée (VI) pour l'approche doit être la même qu'au niveau de la mer car le badin tient déjà compte de la densité de l'air — il mesure la pression dynamique, qui détermine les forces aérodynamiques quelle que soit l'altitude. La VI de décrochage ne change pas avec l'altitude. Cependant, la vitesse vraie et la vitesse sol seront plus élevées en altitude en raison de la moindre densité de l'air. Les options A et C ajustent incorrectement la VI, et l'option B applique une correction de vitesse vraie à la VI, ce qui est inutile.
+
+### Q67: Que remarquez-vous lorsque vous entrez dans le centre d'un courant descendant ? ^t70q67
+- A) Une aile se lève et l'aéronef commence à virer.
+- B) Le nez cabre et vous ressentez une brève augmentation du facteur de charge.
+- C) Le planeur accélère et vous ressentez une augmentation du facteur de charge.
+- D) Le planeur ralentit et vous ressentez une brève diminution du facteur de charge.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque vous entrez dans un courant descendant, la masse d'air en descente réduit l'angle d'attaque effectif sur les ailes, diminuant temporairement la portance. Le pilote ressent une brève réduction du facteur de charge (une sensation de légèreté ou d'être soulevé de son siège) tandis que l'aéronef commence à descendre avec l'air descendant. La vitesse air du planeur diminue momentanément au début. L'option B décrit ce qui se passe lorsque l'on entre dans un courant ascendant (nez qui cabre, facteur de charge augmenté). Les options A et C ne décrivent pas avec précision l'effet symétrique de l'entrée dans un courant descendant.
+
+### Q68: Lors d'un vol de distance au-dessus du Jura, vous observez la formation de cirrus à l'ouest. Que devez-vous anticiper ? ^t70q68
+- A) Des thermiques plus faibles en raison d'un rayonnement solaire réduit.
+- B) Une instabilité accrue en altitude due à l'humidité, produisant des thermiques plus forts.
+- C) Une transition des thermiques convectifs vers des thermiques bleus (secs).
+- D) Les cirrus n'ont aucun effet sur les conditions dans la couche thermique.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les cirrus en altitude filtrent le rayonnement solaire incident, réduisant le réchauffement de la surface qui entraîne la convection thermique. Moins de réchauffement signifie des thermiques plus faibles et potentiellement une fin prématurée de la journée de vol à voile. C'est un signal d'avertissement important lors des vols de distance. L'option B est fausse — les cirrus n'augmentent pas l'instabilité aux altitudes thermiques. L'option C décrit un changement qui peut se produire mais n'est pas l'effet principal. L'option D sous-estime l'impact des cirrus sur la génération de thermiques par réduction du rayonnement solaire.
+
+### Q69: Quelle vitesse maximise la distance parcourue face à un vent de face ? ^t70q69
+- A) La vitesse de finesse min.
+- B) La vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+- C) Une vitesse supérieure à la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+- D) La vitesse correspondant à McCready zéro.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour maximiser la distance avec un vent de face, le pilote doit voler plus vite que la vitesse de meilleure finesse. Le vent de face réduit la vitesse sol, donc le planeur passe plus de temps en l'air et descend davantage avant de parcourir la distance au sol souhaitée. En augmentant la vitesse au-delà de la meilleure finesse, le pilote accepte une pente de vol plus raide mais gagne suffisamment de vitesse sol supplémentaire pour compenser la perte d'altitude. L'option A (finesse min) minimise le taux de descente mais couvre une distance minimale. L'option B (meilleure finesse) est optimale uniquement par vent nul. L'option D (McCready zéro) équivaut à la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+
+### Q70: Lequel de ces champs est le meilleur pour un atterrissage en campagne ? ^t70q70
+- A) Un champ fraîchement labouré de 400 m.
+- B) Un champ de maïs de 300 m avec un vent de face régulier.
+- C) Une route de campagne de 250 m avec un fort vent de face.
+- D) Une prairie de 200 m venant d'être fauchée.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une prairie fraîchement fauchée de 200 m offre une surface lisse et ferme, exempte de végétation haute et d'obstacles cachés — idéale pour un roulement court dans un planeur, qui peut généralement s'arrêter en 100 à 200 m. L'option A (champ labouré) présente un sol meuble et des sillons profonds pouvant faire capoter le planeur. L'option B (champ de maïs) présente des cultures hautes qui masquent les dangers et créent des irrégularités de traînée. L'option C (route de campagne) est étroite, potentiellement bordée d'arbres et de lignes électriques, et présente des risques de collision avec des véhicules.
+
+### Q71: Pouvez-vous utiliser la radio de bord pour communiquer avec votre équipe de récupération sur la fréquence dédiée sans détenir une extension de radiotéléphonie ? ^t70q71
+- A) Seulement exceptionnellement
+- B) Oui
+- C) En règle générale, une fois par vol, peu avant l'atterrissage
+- D) Non
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les pilotes peuvent utiliser la radio de bord sur les fréquences dédiées au planeur pour communiquer avec leur équipe de récupération sans avoir besoin d'une extension ou d'une qualification de radiotéléphonie séparée. Ces fréquences sont désignées pour les opérations de planeur et permettent de telles communications opérationnelles. L'option A restreint inutilement cette pratique établie. L'option C invente une limitation de fréquence qui n'existe pas. L'option D interdit incorrectement une communication qui est couramment autorisée.
+
+### Q72: Sur un aérodrome à 1800 m AMSL, comment la vitesse sol se compare-t-elle à la vitesse indiquée à l'approche ? ^t70q72
+- A) Cela dépend de la température.
+- B) La vitesse sol est plus faible.
+- C) Elles sont identiques.
+- D) La vitesse sol est plus élevée.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** À 1800 m AMSL, la densité de l'air est inférieure à celle du niveau de la mer, donc la vitesse vraie (VV) est supérieure à la vitesse indiquée (VI) pour la même lecture de pression dynamique. Dans des conditions de vent nul, la vitesse sol est égale à la VV, qui dépasse la VI. Cela signifie que l'aéronef s'approche de la piste à une vitesse sol plus élevée que ce qu'indique le badin, nécessitant une conscience accrue d'un roulement plus long et d'une énergie d'atterrissage plus importante. Les options B et C sous-estiment l'effet de l'altitude-densité. L'option A est partiellement vraie mais le facteur dominant est l'altitude, pas la température.
+
+### Q73: Le port du parachute est-il obligatoire lors des vols en planeur ? ^t70q73
+- A) Oui, pour tous les vols au-dessus de 300 m AGL
+- B) Non
+- C) Uniquement lors de l'exécution de voltige
+- D) Oui, toujours
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le port du parachute n'est pas obligatoire pour les vols en planeur en vertu des réglementations en vigueur, bien qu'il soit vivement recommandé et qu'il s'agisse d'une pratique standard dans la communauté du vol à voile. La décision appartient au pilote. L'option A invente une exigence basée sur l'altitude. L'option C crée une restriction limitée à la voltige qui n'existe pas dans les réglementations. L'option D surestime l'obligation. Bien que pratiquement tous les pilotes de planeur portent un parachute, cela reste un choix de sécurité personnel, et non une obligation légale.
+
+### Q74: Lors d'un lancement au treuil, juste après avoir atteint l'angle de montée, le câble se casse près du treuil. Comment devez-vous réagir ? ^t70q74
+- A) Sortir immédiatement les aérofreins
+- B) D'abord établir l'assiette de vol normal, puis larguer le câble
+- C) Signaler l'incident par radio
+- D) Larguer immédiatement le câble, puis établir une assiette de vol normal
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Après une rupture de câble en phase de montée, la priorité immédiate est de larguer le câble restant (qui peut encore être attaché et risque de s'emmêler) puis d'abaisser le nez pour établir un vol plané sûr. Le largage du câble passe en premier car un câble pendant est un danger immédiat. L'option A (aérofreins en premier) fait perdre de l'altitude alors que chaque mètre compte. L'option B inverse la priorité — établir le vol plané avant de larguer pourrait laisser le câble s'emmêler. L'option C (appel radio) fait perdre des secondes précieuses lors d'une urgence critique.
+
+### Q75: Que faut-il prendre en compte lors d'un décollage en remorquage par fort vent de travers ? ^t70q75
+- A) L'avion remorqueur doit décoller avant le planeur
+- B) Après le décollage, corriger dans le vent jusqu'à ce que l'avion remorqueur décolle
+- C) La distance de décollage sera plus courte
+- D) Avant le départ, décaler le planeur du côté au vent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un décollage en remorquage par fort vent de travers, le planeur doit être positionné côté au vent de l'axe de l'aéronef remorqueur pour éviter d'être soufflé sur la trajectoire du remorqueur pendant le roulage. Ce décalage compense la dérive due au vent de travers pendant la phase d'accélération critique. L'option A indique une séquence normale qui ne traite pas spécifiquement le vent de travers. L'option B fournit une technique partielle mais ne traite pas la configuration avant le départ. L'option C est incorrecte car les vents de travers augmentent généralement légèrement la distance de décollage.
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+### Q76: You enter a thermal in the lowlands at 1500 m AGL with no other glider nearby. In which direction do you circle? ^t70q76
+- A) Circle to the right
+- B) There is no regulation on this
+- C) Circle to the left
+- D) First perform a figure-eight to locate the best lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a thermal alone, the recommended technique is to first perform a figure-eight pattern (or S-turns) to identify the strongest part of the thermal before committing to a circling direction. This allows the pilot to center the thermal efficiently. Option A and C prescribe a fixed direction without first locating the core. Option B is technically correct regarding regulations but does not describe the best practice for thermal exploitation. The figure-eight technique optimizes climb rate by finding the thermal center before circling.
+
+### Q77: What lateral distance from a slope must you maintain in a glider? ^t70q77
+- A) It depends on the lift conditions
+- B) 150 m horizontally
+- C) 60 m horizontally
+- D) A sufficient safety distance must be maintained
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying near a slope, the pilot must maintain a sufficient safety distance that accounts for current conditions including wind, turbulence, and terrain features. This is a judgment-based requirement rather than a fixed numeric value. Option A (depends on lift) only considers one factor. Options B (150 m) and C (60 m) specify fixed distances that may be appropriate in some contexts but do not reflect the general guidance, which emphasizes adequate safety margin appropriate to the circumstances.
+
+### Q78: You enter a thermal at 500 m AGL below a cumulus and see another glider circling 50 m above you. In which direction should you turn? ^t70q78
+- A) You are free to choose, since the vertical separation is sufficient
+- B) Circle in the same direction as the glider above you
+- C) Circle in the opposite direction so you can observe the other glider from below
+- D) You cannot use this thermal because the height difference is less than 150 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal occupied by another glider, you must circle in the same direction to maintain a predictable traffic pattern and avoid head-on encounters within the thermal. This is a fundamental rule of shared thermal etiquette. Option A incorrectly dismisses the need for directional coordination. Option C (opposite direction) creates dangerous head-on convergence paths within the confined area of the thermal. Option D invents a non-existent 150 m vertical separation requirement for thermal sharing.
+
+### Q79: During an off-field landing, the glider sustains 70% damage; the pilot is unhurt. What must be done? ^t70q79
+- A) Submit a written report with a sketch to FOCA within 3 days
+- B) Notify the local police within 24 hours
+- C) Immediately notify the investigation bureau via REGA
+- D) Report the damage to the accident investigation bureau within the following week
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a glider sustains major damage (70%) without injuries, the pilot must notify the local police within 24 hours. This is classified as a serious incident with substantial damage. Option A (FOCA report in 3 days) does not meet the urgency required. Option C (immediate notification via REGA) is the procedure for accidents involving injuries or fatalities. Option D (report within a week) is too slow for an incident involving 70% airframe damage, which requires prompt reporting.
+
+### Q80: What requires special attention when taking off on a hard (paved) runway? ^t70q80
+- A) The wingtip helper must run alongside for longer
+- B) Pull back on the stick longer than usual
+- C) Apply moderate wheel brake at the start of the roll
+- D) Expect a longer ground roll than normal
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a hard paved runway, a glider's main wheel has less rolling resistance compared to grass, which means the groundspeed at liftoff may feel similar but the ground roll can be longer because the wheel offers less drag to help the aircraft become airborne. Additionally, on pavement the aircraft may weathervane more easily. Option A is not specific to hard runways. Option B (pulling back longer) could cause the tail to strike the runway. Option C (wheel brake at start) would impede acceleration during the most critical phase.
+
+### Q81: How should a water landing (ditching) be carried out? ^t70q81
+- A) Just before contact, pitch the glider up sharply to touch tail-first
+- B) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation, and land at slightly above normal speed
+- C) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, and land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- D) Perform a sideslip to reduce impact force on the wing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing, the pilot should tighten all harnesses to prevent injury on impact, close ventilation openings to slow water ingress, and approach at slightly above normal speed to maintain control and reduce the descent rate. The gear should be retracted (not extended as in option C) to prevent the aircraft from flipping on water entry. Option A (tail-first) risks a violent pitch-forward on impact. Option D (sideslip) creates an asymmetric water entry that could cartwheel the aircraft.
+
+### Q82: During an off-field landing, how can the wind direction best be determined? ^t70q82
+- A) By observing movement of leaves in the trees
+- B) By watching wave patterns in wheat fields
+- C) By observing the glider's drift during altitude-losing spirals
+- D) By observing the behaviour of grazing livestock
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most reliable method for determining wind direction from the air is to observe the glider's drift during altitude-loss spirals — the direction the aircraft drifts indicates the downwind direction, and the amount of drift indicates wind strength. This works at any altitude and any location. Option A (tree leaves) requires being low enough to see individual leaves. Option B (wheat field patterns) can be misleading and requires specific crop stages. Option D (livestock behavior) is unreliable as a wind indicator.
+
+### Q83: You are flying fast along a ridge and spot a slower glider ahead at about the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q83
+- A) Make a 180-degree turn and return along the slope
+- B) Overtake on the side away from the slope
+- C) Establish radio contact and ask about the other pilot's intentions
+- D) Dive below and clear upward at a safe distance, then continue
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When overtaking a slower glider on a ridge, always pass on the valley side (away from the slope) to maintain safe terrain clearance and avoid trapping the other pilot against the hillside. This gives both aircraft escape room toward the valley. Option A (turning back) is unnecessary and wastes energy. Option C (radio contact) takes too long to arrange at closing speed. Option D (diving below) risks flying into the turbulent rotor zone closer to the terrain.
+
+### Q84: At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. What should you do? ^t70q84
+- A) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- B) Extend the airbrakes
+- C) Release the rope immediately
+- D) Warn the tow pilot by radio
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the slack tow rope, the rope can become entangled with the landing gear, skid, or other structures beneath the aircraft. The immediate action is to release the rope before any entanglement can occur. Option A (braking) does not prevent entanglement and may worsen it. Option B (airbrakes) is irrelevant to the immediate hazard. Option D (radio warning) wastes time during a situation requiring instant action — by the time the call is made, the rope may already be entangled.
+
+### Q85: Are glider flights permitted in Class C airspace? ^t70q85
+- A) Yes, provided the glider's transponder continuously transmits code 7000
+- B) Yes, if the pilot holds the radiotelephony extension, has received ATC authorisation, and maintains a continuous radio watch; exceptions are published on the soaring chart
+- C) Yes, without restrictions, in VMC
+- D) Yes, provided no NOTAM expressly prohibits them
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider flights are permitted in Class C airspace under specific conditions: the pilot must hold the radiotelephony extension, receive ATC authorization before entering, and maintain continuous radio contact. Certain exceptions for gliders may be published on the soaring chart. Option A assumes gliders carry transponders, which most do not. Option C ignores the mandatory ATC clearance and radio requirements for Class C. Option D incorrectly implies that Class C is open by default unless NOTAMs restrict it.
+
+### Q86: You are flying along a slope on your right and spot an oncoming glider at the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q86
+- A) Extend airbrakes and dive for vertical separation
+- B) Move away on the side opposite to the slope
+- C) Climb away since you have enough speed
+- D) Maintain your heading
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When meeting an oncoming glider while ridge soaring with the slope on your right, the standard rule is to give way by turning away from the slope (toward the valley). The pilot with the slope on the right has right-of-way in ridge soaring (similar to the rule of the road on mountain roads). However, both pilots should take evasive action by moving away from the ridge. Option A (diving) risks terrain collision. Option C (climbing) may not be possible. Option D (maintaining heading) leads directly to a head-on collision.
+
+### Q87: You must land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you fly the final approach? ^t70q87
+- A) At best glide speed and somewhat higher than for a headwind landing
+- B) Normally, using a sideslip
+- C) Slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than for a headwind landing
+- D) Faster than for a headwind landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind on a limited field, the pilot must minimize groundspeed at touchdown to reduce ground roll. This means flying slightly above minimum speed (to maintain a safety margin while being as slow as possible in the air) and approaching at a lower height to steepen the approach angle relative to the ground. Option A (best glide speed) is faster than needed and wastes field length. Option B (sideslip) addresses crosswind, not tailwind. Option D (faster approach) would increase groundspeed and ground roll on an already short field.
+
+### Q88: What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on an aerotow departure? ^t70q88
+- A) The take-off distance is the same as on a dry runway
+- B) The take-off distance will be longer
+- C) None of these answers is correct
+- D) The take-off distance will be shorter because the surface is slippery
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A waterlogged grass runway increases rolling resistance because the wheels sink into the soft, saturated surface, creating drag that slows acceleration. This results in a significantly longer takeoff distance for both the tow aircraft and the glider. Option A ignores the substantial difference between dry and waterlogged surfaces. Option D's logic is flawed — while a slippery surface might reduce friction on a hard runway, waterlogged grass creates suction and drag that impede acceleration. Option C is incorrect because option B is the correct answer.
+
+### Q89: On approach to an off-field landing, you suddenly notice a high-voltage power line across your landing axis. How do you react? ^t70q89
+- A) In all cases, fly over the power line
+- B) Pass under the line if flying over is not possible and no safe escape route exists
+- C) Execute a tight turn near the ground and land parallel to the line
+- D) Pass under the line as close as possible to a pylon
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The preferred action is always to fly over the power line if possible. However, if altitude is insufficient to clear the line and no alternative landing path exists, passing under the line is acceptable as a last resort — but only between the pylons where the cable sag provides maximum clearance, not near a pylon (option D) where cables are at their lowest. Option A (always fly over) is not possible when altitude is insufficient. Option C (tight turn near the ground) risks a stall-spin accident. Option D (near a pylon) is where clearance is minimal.
+
+### Q90: What is the standard spin recovery procedure when the manufacturer has not specified one? ^t70q90
+- A) Push the stick fully forward, apply full opposite rudder, then pull out
+- B) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin, then pull out
+- C) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite rudder, keep ailerons neutral, ease the stick slightly forward, then pull out
+- D) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite ailerons, push the stick fully forward, rudder neutral, then pull out
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard spin recovery procedure is: (1) identify the spin direction, (2) apply full opposite rudder to stop the rotation, (3) keep ailerons neutral (as aileron input during a spin can be counterproductive), (4) ease the stick slightly forward to reduce the angle of attack below the stall angle, and (5) once rotation stops, centralize the rudder and pull out of the resulting dive. Option A omits identifying the spin direction. Option B uses ailerons, which can deepen the spin. Option D uses ailerons instead of rudder as the primary anti-spin control, which is incorrect.
+
+### Q91: Unless ATC instructs otherwise, how should the approach to an aerodrome be carried out in a glider? ^t70q91
+- A) A straight-in approach must be made to minimise disturbance to other traffic
+- B) At least one full circle above the signal area, with all turns to the left, must precede the landing
+- C) The published approach procedures in the VFR guide or any other appropriate method must be followed
+- D) At least a half-circuit, with all turns to the left, must precede the landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach to an aerodrome should follow published VFR guide procedures or any other appropriate method. A mandatory full circuit over the signal area is no longer systematically required.
+
+### Q92: You are flying a fast glider along a slope and spot a slower glider ahead at approximately the same altitude. How do you respond? ^t70q92
+- A) Establish radio contact and inquire about its intentions
+- B) Overtake on the valley side (away from the slope)
+- C) Perform a 180-degree turn and return along the slope
+- D) Dive below, then climb past at a safe distance
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mountain flying, to overtake a slower glider on a slope, pass on the side away from the slope (valley side). This rule is consistent with the right-of-way for climbing gliders.
+
+### Q93: In flight, the rudder jams in the neutral position. How do you react? ^t70q93
+- A) Refer to the flight manual
+- B) Increase speed and continue the flight
+- C) Bail out by parachute immediately
+- D) Control the glider with elevator and ailerons; make shallow turns and land immediately
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the rudder jams in flight, control the glider with elevator and ailerons. Make shallow turns and land immediately.
+
+### Q94: At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. What do you do? ^t70q94
+- A) Extend the airbrakes
+- B) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- C) Immediately release the rope
+- D) Alert the tow pilot by radio
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the tow rope, immediately releasing the rope is the only correct action.
+
+### Q95: The tow rope breaks on the tug's side before reaching safety height. How must the glider pilot react? ^t70q95
+- A) Immediately actuate the release handle twice and land straight ahead in the runway extension
+- B) Pull back on the stick, release the rope, and land with a tailwind
+- C) Make a flat turn and land diagonally
+- D) Actuate the release handle twice and return to land on the aerodrome without exception
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the rope breaks on the tow plane side below safety height: actuate the release handle twice (verification) and land straight ahead in the runway extension. Avoid turning.
+
+### Q96: How do you fly the final approach in a strong crosswind? ^t70q96
+- A) Maintain runway alignment using rudder alone
+- B) Do not fully extend the airbrakes
+- C) Always approach with a sideslip on the side opposite to the wind
+- D) Take a heading into the wind and increase speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong crosswind on final, take a crab angle into the wind and increase speed slightly to maintain control. The sideslip can be used but crab is the primary method.
+
+### Q97: How should a water landing be carried out? ^t70q97
+- A) Just before landing, pitch up to touch down tail first
+- B) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- C) Perform a sideslip to lessen the impact with the wing
+- D) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation, and land at slightly above normal speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing: tighten harnesses, close ventilation to prevent water entry, and land at slightly above normal speed for better control and to avoid nose-over.
+
+### Q98: You enter a thermal with no other glider nearby. In which direction do you circle? ^t70q98
+- A) There is no regulation on this
+- B) Circle to the left
+- C) Circle to the right
+- D) Search for the best lift by first performing a figure-eight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without other gliders in the thermal, there is no prescribed spiraling direction. The pilot chooses freely.
+
+### Q99: In a glider, how is altitude expressed? ^t70q99
+- A) Only in altitude (metres or feet)
+- B) In flight levels
+- C) According to the regulations of the countries overflown
+- D) In height above ground
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider altitude is expressed according to the country overflown (altitude in feet or meters per local rules, or flight levels per airspace). Regulations vary by country.
+
+### Q100: Without manufacturer-specific guidance, what is the standard spin recovery procedure? ^t70q100
+- A) Identify the spin direction, apply ailerons opposite to it, push the stick fully forward, hold rudder neutral, then pull out
+- B) Push the stick fully forward, apply full opposite rudder, then pull out
+- C) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin direction, then pull out
+- D) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite rudder, hold ailerons neutral, push the stick slightly forward, then pull out
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard spin recovery: 1) Identify direction, 2) Opposite rudder, 3) Ailerons neutral, 4) Slight forward stick, 5) Pull out after rotation stops.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_70_76_100_fr.md
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+### Q76: Vous entrez dans un thermique dans les basses terres à 1500 m AGL sans autre planeur à proximité. Dans quelle direction tournez-vous ? ^t70q76
+- A) Tourner à droite
+- B) Il n'existe aucune réglementation à ce sujet
+- C) Tourner à gauche
+- D) Effectuer d'abord un virage en huit pour localiser le meilleur ascendant
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'on entre seul dans un thermique, la technique recommandée consiste à effectuer d'abord un virage en huit (ou des virages en S) pour identifier la partie la plus forte du thermique avant de s'engager dans une direction de spirale. Cela permet au pilote de centrer le thermique efficacement. Les options A et C prescrivent une direction fixe sans d'abord localiser le noyau. L'option B est techniquement correcte sur le plan réglementaire mais ne décrit pas la meilleure pratique pour exploiter le thermique. La technique du virage en huit optimise le taux de montée en trouvant le centre du thermique avant de spiraler.
+
+### Q77: Quelle distance latérale par rapport à un relief devez-vous maintenir en planeur ? ^t70q77
+- A) Cela dépend des conditions d'ascendance
+- B) 150 m horizontalement
+- C) 60 m horizontalement
+- D) Une distance de sécurité suffisante doit être maintenue
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du vol à proximité d'un relief, le pilote doit maintenir une distance de sécurité suffisante tenant compte des conditions actuelles, notamment le vent, les turbulences et les caractéristiques du terrain. Il s'agit d'une exigence basée sur le jugement plutôt que sur une valeur numérique fixe. L'option A (dépend de l'ascendance) ne prend en compte qu'un seul facteur. Les options B (150 m) et C (60 m) précisent des distances fixes qui peuvent être appropriées dans certains contextes mais ne reflètent pas les directives générales, qui mettent l'accent sur une marge de sécurité adéquate adaptée aux circonstances.
+
+### Q78: Vous entrez dans un thermique à 500 m AGL sous un cumulus et observez un autre planeur spiralant 50 m au-dessus de vous. Dans quelle direction devez-vous virer ? ^t70q78
+- A) Vous êtes libre de choisir, car la séparation verticale est suffisante
+- B) Tourner dans le même sens que le planeur au-dessus de vous
+- C) Tourner dans le sens opposé pour pouvoir observer l'autre planeur depuis le bas
+- D) Vous ne pouvez pas utiliser ce thermique car la différence d'altitude est inférieure à 150 m
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque vous rejoignez un thermique occupé par un autre planeur, vous devez tourner dans le même sens pour maintenir une circulation prévisible et éviter les rencontres frontales dans le thermique. C'est une règle fondamentale de l'étiquette de thermique partagé. L'option A écarte incorrectement la nécessité d'une coordination directionnelle. L'option C (sens opposé) crée des trajectoires de convergence frontale dangereuses dans la zone confinée du thermique. L'option D invente une exigence de séparation verticale de 150 m inexistante pour le partage de thermique.
+
+### Q79: Lors d'un atterrissage en campagne, le planeur subit 70 % de dommages ; le pilote est indemne. Que doit-on faire ? ^t70q79
+- A) Soumettre un rapport écrit avec un croquis à l'OFAC dans les 3 jours
+- B) Notifier la police locale dans les 24 heures
+- C) Notifier immédiatement le bureau d'enquête via REGA
+- D) Signaler les dommages au bureau d'enquête sur les accidents dans la semaine suivante
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un planeur subit des dommages importants (70 %) sans blessures, le pilote doit notifier la police locale dans les 24 heures. Cela est classé comme un incident grave avec des dommages substantiels. L'option A (rapport à l'OFAC en 3 jours) ne répond pas à l'urgence requise. L'option C (notification immédiate via REGA) est la procédure pour les accidents impliquant des blessures ou des décès. L'option D (rapport dans la semaine) est trop tardive pour un incident impliquant 70 % de dommages à la cellule, qui nécessite un signalement rapide.
+
+### Q80: À quoi faut-il prêter une attention particulière lors du décollage sur une piste dure (revêtue) ? ^t70q80
+- A) L'aide au bout d'aile doit courir à côté plus longtemps que d'habitude
+- B) Tirer le manche en arrière plus longtemps que d'habitude
+- C) Appliquer le frein de roue modérément au début du roulage
+- D) Prévoir un roulement au sol plus long que la normale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une piste pavée dure, la roue principale du planeur a moins de résistance au roulement par rapport à l'herbe, ce qui signifie que la vitesse au décollage peut sembler similaire mais le roulement au sol peut être plus long car la roue offre moins de traînée pour aider l'aéronef à décoller. De plus, sur du bitume, l'aéronef peut plus facilement girouetter. L'option A n'est pas spécifique aux pistes dures. L'option B (tirer en arrière plus longtemps) pourrait provoquer un contact de la queue avec la piste. L'option C (frein de roue au début) entraverait l'accélération pendant la phase la plus critique.
+
+### Q81: Comment doit être effectué un atterrissage sur l'eau (amerrissage) ? ^t70q81
+- A) Juste avant le contact, cabrer brusquement le planeur pour toucher en queue en premier
+- B) Serrer les harnais, fermer la ventilation et atterrir à une vitesse légèrement supérieure à la normale
+- C) Sortir le train d'atterrissage, serrer les harnais et atterrir à la vitesse minimale avec les aérofreins rentrés
+- D) Effectuer un glissade pour réduire la force d'impact sur l'aile
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un amerrissage, le pilote doit serrer tous les harnais pour prévenir les blessures au contact, fermer les ouvertures de ventilation pour ralentir l'entrée d'eau, et approcher à une vitesse légèrement supérieure à la normale pour maintenir le contrôle et réduire le taux de descente. Le train doit être rentré (et non sorti comme dans l'option C) pour éviter que l'aéronef ne se retourne à l'entrée dans l'eau. L'option A (queue en premier) risque une violente cabrade au contact. L'option D (glissade) crée une entrée dans l'eau asymétrique qui pourrait faire capsuler l'aéronef.
+
+### Q82: Lors d'un atterrissage en campagne, comment peut-on le mieux déterminer la direction du vent ? ^t70q82
+- A) En observant le mouvement des feuilles dans les arbres
+- B) En observant les motifs formés par les vagues dans les champs de blé
+- C) En observant la dérive du planeur lors de spirales en perte d'altitude
+- D) En observant le comportement du bétail au pâturage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La méthode la plus fiable pour déterminer la direction du vent depuis les airs est d'observer la dérive du planeur lors de spirales en perte d'altitude — la direction dans laquelle l'aéronef dérive indique la direction sous le vent, et l'amplitude de la dérive indique la force du vent. Cette méthode fonctionne à toute altitude et en tout lieu. L'option A (feuilles d'arbres) nécessite d'être assez bas pour voir les feuilles individuelles. L'option B (motifs dans les champs de blé) peut être trompeuse et dépend du stade de croissance de la culture. L'option D (comportement du bétail) n'est pas un indicateur de vent fiable.
+
+### Q83: Vous volez rapidement le long d'un relief et repérez un planeur plus lent devant vous à peu près à la même altitude. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q83
+- A) Effectuer un demi-tour et revenir le long du relief
+- B) Dépasser du côté éloigné du relief
+- C) Établir un contact radio et demander les intentions de l'autre pilote
+- D) Piquer en dessous et remonter à une distance sûre, puis continuer
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour dépasser un planeur plus lent sur un relief, passez toujours du côté vallée (éloigné du relief) pour maintenir un dégagement de terrain sûr et éviter de coincer l'autre pilote contre le versant. Cela donne aux deux aéronefs une voie d'échappement vers la vallée. L'option A (demi-tour) est inutile et gaspille de l'énergie. L'option C (contact radio) prend trop de temps à organiser à la vitesse de rapprochement. L'option D (piquer en dessous) risque de voler dans la zone de rotor turbulent plus proche du terrain.
+
+### Q84: Au début d'un remorquage, le planeur passe sur la corde de remorquage. Que devez-vous faire ? ^t70q84
+- A) Appliquer le frein de roue pour mettre la corde en tension
+- B) Sortir les aérofreins
+- C) Larguer immédiatement la corde
+- D) Avertir le pilote remorqueur par radio
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le planeur passe sur la corde de remorquage détendue, la corde peut s'emmêler avec le train d'atterrissage, le patin ou d'autres structures sous l'aéronef. L'action immédiate est de larguer la corde avant tout emmêlement. L'option A (freinage) ne prévient pas l'emmêlement et peut l'aggraver. L'option B (aérofreins) est sans rapport avec le danger immédiat. L'option D (radio) fait perdre du temps lors d'une situation nécessitant une action instantanée — au moment où l'appel est passé, la corde peut déjà être emmêlée.
+
+### Q85: Les vols en planeur sont-ils autorisés dans l'espace aérien de classe C ? ^t70q85
+- A) Oui, à condition que le transpondeur du planeur transmette en permanence le code 7000
+- B) Oui, si le pilote détient l'extension de radiotéléphonie, a reçu l'autorisation du contrôle aérien et maintient une veille radio continue ; des exceptions sont publiées sur la carte de vol à voile
+- C) Oui, sans restrictions, en conditions VMC
+- D) Oui, à condition qu'aucun NOTAM ne l'interdise expressément
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vols en planeur sont autorisés dans l'espace aérien de classe C sous des conditions spécifiques : le pilote doit détenir l'extension de radiotéléphonie, recevoir une autorisation du contrôle aérien avant d'y pénétrer, et maintenir un contact radio continu. Certaines exceptions pour les planeurs peuvent être publiées sur la carte de vol à voile. L'option A suppose que les planeurs sont équipés de transpondeurs, ce qui n'est pas le cas pour la plupart. L'option C ignore l'autorisation obligatoire du contrôle aérien et les exigences radio pour la classe C. L'option D implique incorrectement que la classe C est ouverte par défaut sauf si les NOTAM la restreignent.
+
+### Q86: Vous volez le long d'un relief sur votre droite et observez un planeur en sens inverse à la même altitude. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q86
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins et piquer pour une séparation verticale
+- B) S'écarter du côté opposé au relief
+- C) Monter car vous avez suffisamment de vitesse
+- D) Maintenir votre cap
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En rencontrant un planeur en sens inverse lors d'un vol de pente avec le relief à droite, la règle standard est de céder le passage en s'éloignant du relief (vers la vallée). Le pilote avec le relief à droite a la priorité en vol de pente (similaire à la règle de la route sur les routes de montagne). Cependant, les deux pilotes doivent prendre une action d'évitement en s'éloignant du relief. L'option A (piquer) risque une collision avec le terrain. L'option C (monter) peut ne pas être possible. L'option D (maintenir le cap) mène directement à une collision frontale.
+
+### Q87: Vous devez atterrir sur un champ de 400 m avec un vent arrière modéré. Comment volez-vous la finale ? ^t70q87
+- A) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse et un peu plus haut que pour un atterrissage face au vent
+- B) Normalement, en utilisant une glissade
+- C) Légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale et à une hauteur inférieure à celle d'un atterrissage face au vent
+- D) Plus vite que pour un atterrissage face au vent
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un vent arrière sur un champ limité, le pilote doit minimiser la vitesse sol au toucher pour réduire le roulement. Cela signifie voler légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale (pour maintenir une marge de sécurité tout en étant aussi lent que possible en l'air) et approcher à une hauteur inférieure pour accentuer l'angle d'approche par rapport au sol. L'option A (vitesse de meilleure finesse) est plus rapide que nécessaire et gaspille la longueur du champ. L'option B (glissade) traite le vent de travers, pas le vent arrière. L'option D (approche plus rapide) augmenterait la vitesse sol et le roulement sur un champ déjà court.
+
+### Q88: Quel est l'effet d'une piste en herbe détrempée sur un décollage en remorquage ? ^t70q88
+- A) La distance de décollage est la même que sur une piste sèche
+- B) La distance de décollage sera plus longue
+- C) Aucune de ces réponses n'est correcte
+- D) La distance de décollage sera plus courte car la surface est glissante
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une piste en herbe détrempée augmente la résistance au roulement car les roues s'enfoncent dans la surface saturée et molle, créant une traînée qui ralentit l'accélération. Cela entraîne une distance de décollage nettement plus longue, tant pour l'avion remorqueur que pour le planeur. L'option A ignore la différence substantielle entre les surfaces sèches et détrempées. Le raisonnement de l'option D est erroné — bien qu'une surface glissante puisse réduire le frottement sur une piste dure, l'herbe détrempée crée une aspiration et une traînée qui freinent l'accélération. L'option C est incorrecte car l'option B est la bonne réponse.
+
+### Q89: En approche vers un atterrissage en campagne, vous apercevez soudainement une ligne à haute tension en travers de votre axe d'atterrissage. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q89
+- A) Dans tous les cas, passer au-dessus de la ligne
+- B) Passer sous la ligne si passer au-dessus n'est pas possible et qu'il n'existe pas d'issue sûre
+- C) Effectuer un virage serré près du sol et atterrir parallèlement à la ligne
+- D) Passer sous la ligne aussi près que possible d'un pylône
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'action préférée est toujours de passer au-dessus de la ligne si possible. Cependant, si l'altitude est insuffisante pour franchir la ligne et qu'il n'existe pas d'autre trajectoire d'atterrissage, passer sous la ligne est acceptable en dernier recours — mais uniquement entre les pylônes où le fléchissement du câble offre un dégagement maximum, et non près d'un pylône (option D) où les câbles sont au plus bas. L'option A (toujours passer au-dessus) n'est pas possible lorsque l'altitude est insuffisante. L'option C (virage serré près du sol) risque un accident en décrochage-vrille. L'option D (près d'un pylône) est l'endroit où le dégagement est minimal.
+
+### Q90: Quelle est la procédure standard de sortie de vrille lorsque le fabricant n'en a pas spécifié ? ^t70q90
+- A) Pousser le manche complètement en avant, appliquer la gouverne de direction opposée à fond, puis sortir
+- B) Pousser le manche en avant, appliquer les ailerons en sens opposé à la vrille, puis sortir
+- C) Identifier le sens de la vrille, appliquer la gouverne opposée, maintenir les ailerons neutres, pousser légèrement le manche en avant, puis sortir
+- D) Identifier le sens de la vrille, appliquer les ailerons opposés, pousser le manche complètement en avant, gouverne de direction neutre, puis sortir
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La procédure standard de sortie de vrille est : (1) identifier le sens de la vrille, (2) appliquer la gouverne de direction opposée à fond pour arrêter la rotation, (3) maintenir les ailerons neutres (l'utilisation des ailerons en vrille peut être contre-productive), (4) pousser légèrement le manche en avant pour réduire l'angle d'attaque en dessous de l'angle de décrochage, et (5) une fois la rotation arrêtée, centrer la gouverne de direction et sortir du piqué. L'option A omet l'identification du sens de la vrille. L'option B utilise les ailerons, ce qui peut aggraver la vrille. L'option D utilise les ailerons au lieu de la gouverne de direction comme commande anti-vrille principale, ce qui est incorrect.
+
+### Q91: Sauf instruction contraire du contrôle aérien, comment doit être effectuée l'approche vers un aérodrome en planeur ? ^t70q91
+- A) Une approche directe doit être effectuée pour minimiser la perturbation du trafic
+- B) Au moins un tour complet au-dessus de la zone des signaux, avec tous les virages à gauche, doit précéder l'atterrissage
+- C) Les procédures d'approche publiées dans le guide VFR ou toute autre méthode appropriée doit être suivie
+- D) Au moins une demi-piste, avec tous les virages à gauche, doit précéder l'atterrissage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'approche vers un aérodrome doit suivre les procédures publiées dans le guide VFR ou toute autre méthode appropriée. Un tour complet obligatoire au-dessus de la zone des signaux n'est plus systématiquement exigé.
+
+### Q92: Vous volez à grande vitesse dans un planeur rapide le long d'un relief et repérez un planeur plus lent devant vous à approximativement la même altitude. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q92
+- A) Établir un contact radio et vous renseigner sur ses intentions
+- B) Dépasser du côté vallée (éloigné du relief)
+- C) Effectuer un demi-tour et revenir le long du relief
+- D) Piquer en dessous, puis remonter à une distance sûre
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vol de montagne, pour dépasser un planeur plus lent sur un relief, passez du côté éloigné du relief (côté vallée). Cette règle est cohérente avec la priorité de passage pour les planeurs en montée.
+
+### Q93: En vol, la gouverne de direction se bloque en position neutre. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q93
+- A) Consulter le manuel de vol
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse et continuer le vol
+- C) Sauter immédiatement en parachute
+- D) Contrôler le planeur avec l'élévateur et les ailerons ; effectuer des virages à faible inclinaison et atterrir immédiatement
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si la gouverne de direction se bloque en vol, contrôler le planeur avec l'élévateur et les ailerons. Effectuer des virages à faible inclinaison et atterrir immédiatement.
+
+### Q94: Au début d'un remorquage, le planeur passe sur la corde de remorquage. Que faites-vous ? ^t70q94
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins
+- B) Appliquer le frein de roue pour mettre la corde en tension
+- C) Larguer immédiatement la corde
+- D) Alerter le pilote remorqueur par radio
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le planeur passe sur la corde de remorquage, la larguer immédiatement est la seule action correcte.
+
+### Q95: La corde de remorquage se casse du côté du remorqueur avant d'avoir atteint la hauteur de sécurité. Comment le pilote de planeur doit-il réagir ? ^t70q95
+- A) Actionner immédiatement le dispositif de largage deux fois et atterrir tout droit dans le prolongement de la piste
+- B) Tirer le manche en arrière, larguer la corde et atterrir avec un vent arrière
+- C) Effectuer un virage à plat et atterrir en diagonale
+- D) Actionner le dispositif de largage deux fois et revenir atterrir sur l'aérodrome sans exception
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si la corde se casse du côté de l'avion remorqueur en dessous de la hauteur de sécurité : actionner le dispositif de largage deux fois (vérification) et atterrir tout droit dans le prolongement de piste. Éviter de virer.
+
+### Q96: Comment volez-vous la finale par fort vent de travers ? ^t70q96
+- A) Maintenir l'alignement sur la piste en utilisant uniquement les palonniers
+- B) Ne pas sortir les aérofreins complètement
+- C) Toujours approcher en glissade du côté opposé au vent
+- D) Prendre un cap dans le vent et augmenter la vitesse
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Par fort vent de travers en finale, prendre un angle de décrabbage dans le vent et augmenter légèrement la vitesse pour maintenir le contrôle. La glissade peut être utilisée mais le décrabbage est la méthode principale.
+
+### Q97: Comment doit être effectué un amerrissage ? ^t70q97
+- A) Juste avant l'atterrissage, cabrer pour toucher en queue en premier
+- B) Sortir le train d'atterrissage, serrer les harnais, atterrir à la vitesse minimale avec les aérofreins rentrés
+- C) Effectuer une glissade pour atténuer l'impact avec l'aile
+- D) Serrer les harnais, fermer la ventilation et atterrir à une vitesse légèrement supérieure à la normale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un amerrissage : serrer les harnais, fermer la ventilation pour prévenir l'entrée d'eau, et atterrir à une vitesse légèrement supérieure à la normale pour un meilleur contrôle et éviter le cabrage.
+
+### Q98: Vous entrez dans un thermique sans autre planeur à proximité. Dans quelle direction tournez-vous ? ^t70q98
+- A) Il n'existe aucune réglementation à ce sujet
+- B) Tourner à gauche
+- C) Tourner à droite
+- D) Rechercher le meilleur ascendant en effectuant d'abord un virage en huit
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sans autre planeur dans le thermique, il n'existe aucune direction de spiralisation prescrite. Le pilote choisit librement.
+
+### Q99: En planeur, comment l'altitude est-elle exprimée ? ^t70q99
+- A) Uniquement en altitude (mètres ou pieds)
+- B) En niveaux de vol
+- C) Conformément aux réglementations des pays survolés
+- D) En hauteur au-dessus du sol
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altitude en planeur est exprimée conformément au pays survolé (altitude en pieds ou en mètres selon les règles locales, ou niveaux de vol selon l'espace aérien). Les réglementations varient selon les pays.
+
+### Q100: Sans recommandation spécifique du fabricant, quelle est la procédure standard de sortie de vrille ? ^t70q100
+- A) Identifier le sens de la vrille, appliquer les ailerons en sens opposé, pousser le manche complètement en avant, maintenir la gouverne de direction neutre, puis sortir
+- B) Pousser le manche complètement en avant, appliquer la gouverne de direction opposée à fond, puis sortir
+- C) Pousser le manche en avant, appliquer les ailerons dans le sens opposé à la vrille, puis sortir
+- D) Identifier le sens de la vrille, appliquer la gouverne de direction opposée, maintenir les ailerons neutres, pousser légèrement le manche en avant, puis sortir
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Procédure standard de sortie de vrille : 1) Identifier le sens, 2) Gouverne de direction opposée, 3) Ailerons neutres, 4) Légère poussée du manche, 5) Sortir après arrêt de la rotation.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_101_125.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_101_125.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0334ed0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_101_125.md
@@ -0,0 +1,251 @@
+### Q101: A shift of the centre of gravity is caused by: ^t80q101
+- A) Changing the angle of attack
+- B) Moving the load
+- C) Changing the angle of incidence
+- D) Changing the position of the aerodynamic centre
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity (CG) is determined by the distribution of mass within the aircraft, so only physically moving mass — such as shifting ballast, passengers, or baggage — changes it. Option A is wrong because changing angle of attack alters aerodynamic forces, not mass distribution. Option C is incorrect because the angle of incidence is a fixed structural dimension. Option D is wrong because the aerodynamic centre is a property of the wing shape, not of the aircraft's mass distribution.
+
+### Q102: The high-lift device shown in the diagram is a: ^t80q102
+![[figures/t80_q102.png]]
+- A) Plain Flap
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Fowler
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Fowler flap moves rearward and downward, simultaneously increasing both wing area and camber, making it the most effective type of trailing-edge flap. The diagram shows this characteristic rearward extension. A plain flap (A) simply hinges downward without moving aft. A split flap (B) deflects only the lower surface panel. A slotted flap (C) opens a gap but does not significantly increase wing area like the Fowler design.
+
+### Q103: The resultant of all aerodynamic forces on a wing profile acts through the: ^t80q103
+- A) Centre of gravity
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Aerodynamic centre
+- D) Centre of symmetry
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic centre is the point on the aerofoil through which the resultant of all aerodynamic pressure forces (lift and drag combined) is considered to act, and about which the pitching moment coefficient remains approximately constant with changes in angle of attack, located near the quarter-chord point. Option A is wrong because the centre of gravity is where weight acts, not aerodynamic forces. Option B is incorrect because the stagnation point is where airflow velocity is zero at the leading edge. Option D is not a standard aerodynamic term.
+
+### Q104: At approximately what altitude is the air density half of its sea-level value? ^t80q104
+- A) 2,000 ft
+- B) 20,000 metres
+- C) 2,000 metres
+- D) 6,600 metres
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere, air density decreases approximately exponentially with altitude and reaches half its sea-level value at roughly 6,600 m (about 21,600 ft). Option A (2,000 ft) is far too low — density barely changes at that altitude. Option B (20,000 m) is in the stratosphere, where density is far below half. Option C (2,000 m) is also too low — density there is still about 80% of the sea-level value.
+
+### Q105: The airspeed indicator (ASI) reading is based on a measurement of: ^t80q105
+- A) The weathervane effect where pressure decreases
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure
+- C) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- D) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures dynamic pressure, which is the difference between total (pitot) pressure and static pressure: q = p_total - p_static = 0.5 × rho × V². This differential measurement directly indicates airspeed. Option A is nonsensical — a weathervane measures wind direction, not pressure. Option C is wrong because measuring only total pressure without subtracting static pressure gives no speed information. Option D is also incorrect because static pressure alone tells you only about altitude, not airspeed.
+
+### Q106: Roll stability is influenced by: ^t80q106
+- A) The use of leading edge slats
+- B) Rotations around the lateral axis
+- C) The action of the horizontal stabiliser
+- D) Wing sweep and dihedral
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Roll (lateral) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral and wing sweep, both of which create restoring roll moments when the aircraft sideslips after a bank disturbance. Option A is wrong because leading-edge slats are high-lift devices that delay stall, not stability features. Option B describes pitch motion, not roll stability. Option C is incorrect because the horizontal stabiliser provides pitch (longitudinal) stability, not roll stability.
+
+### Q107: The speed range for operating slotted flaps: ^t80q107
+- A) Is without any upper limit
+- B) Is limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed
+- C) Is published in the Flight Manual (AFM)
+- D) Is limited at the lower end by the red radial line on the ASI
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted speed range for flap operation varies between aircraft types and is always specified in the Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM), typically also indicated on the ASI as a white arc. Option A is dangerously wrong — flaps have structural speed limits. Option B is incorrect because the upper flap speed (VFE) is typically different from the manoeuvring speed (VA). Option D is wrong because the red radial line is VNE (never-exceed speed), which has nothing to do with the lower flap speed limit.
+
+### Q108: When the wing's angle of incidence is larger at the root than at the tip, this is called: ^t80q108
+- A) Aspect ratio
+- B) Aerodynamic twist
+- C) Geometric twist (washout)
+- D) Interference compensation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geometric twist (washout) is a physical twist built into the wing so that the angle of incidence progressively decreases from root to tip. This ensures the root stalls first, preserving aileron effectiveness near the tips. Option A (aspect ratio) is the span-to-chord ratio. Option B (aerodynamic twist) achieves a similar stall progression by using different aerofoil profiles along the span rather than physical twist. Option D (interference compensation) is not a standard aerodynamic term for wing twist.
+
+### Q109: Barometric pressure in the Earth's atmosphere has the characteristic of: ^t80q109
+- A) Decreasing linearly with increasing altitude
+- B) Remaining constant
+- C) Decreasing in the troposphere then increasing in the stratosphere
+- D) Decreasing exponentially with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure follows an approximately exponential decay with altitude, as described by the barometric formula. Each equal altitude increment reduces pressure by the same percentage, not the same absolute amount. Option A is wrong because the relationship is exponential, not linear. Option B is obviously false — pressure clearly drops with altitude. Option C is incorrect because pressure continues to decrease in the stratosphere; it is temperature, not pressure, that stabilises or increases in the stratosphere.
+
+### Q110: The simplified continuity equation says the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections at the same instant. Therefore: ^t80q110
+- A) The air speed does not vary
+- B) Air flows at a lower speed through a larger cross-section
+- C) Air flows at a higher speed through a larger cross-section
+- D) Air flows at a lower speed through a smaller cross-section
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation for incompressible flow states A1 × V1 = A2 × V2 (area times velocity is constant). If the cross-section increases, velocity must decrease proportionally to maintain the same mass flow rate. Option A is wrong because velocity does change with cross-section. Option C reverses the relationship — velocity decreases, not increases, with a larger cross-section. Option D also reverses it — velocity increases through a smaller section, not decreases.
+
+### Q111: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 4 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q111
+- A) Stagnation point
+- B) Separation point
+- C) Centre of pressure
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 4 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) marks the separation point, where the boundary layer detaches from the upper wing surface due to an adverse pressure gradient, forming a turbulent wake behind it. Option A is wrong because the stagnation point is at the leading edge (point 1). Option C is incorrect because the centre of pressure is a theoretical force application point, not a boundary layer feature. Option D is wrong because the transition point (laminar to turbulent) occurs further forward on the surface.
+
+### Q112: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 1 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q112
+- A) Transition point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Stagnation point
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) is the stagnation point at the leading edge, where the incoming airflow divides into upper and lower streams, velocity is zero, and static pressure reaches its maximum. Option A is wrong because the transition point occurs further aft where laminar flow becomes turbulent. Option B is incorrect because the centre of pressure is a resultant force point, not a physical flow location on the leading edge.
+
+### Q113: What constructive feature is depicted in the figure? See figure (PFA-006) L: Lift Siehe Anlage 4 ^t80q113
+- A) Directional stability achieved through lift generation
+- B) Longitudinal stability through wing dihedral
+- C) Lateral stability provided by wing dihedral
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The figure shows wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings relative to the horizontal plane — which provides lateral (roll) stability. When one wing drops in a sideslip, the lower wing experiences a higher effective angle of attack, generating more lift and producing a restoring roll moment. Option A is wrong because directional stability comes from the vertical tail, not dihedral. Option B incorrectly identifies the axis — dihedral affects roll (lateral), not pitch (longitudinal) stability. Option D describes an aileron design feature unrelated to the figure.
+
+### Q114: "Longitudinal stability" refers to stability around which axis? ^t80q114
+- A) Vertical axis
+- B) Longitudinal axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Propeller axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Despite its potentially confusing name, longitudinal stability refers to pitch stability, which is rotation around the lateral axis (the axis running from wingtip to wingtip). It describes the aircraft's tendency to return to a trimmed pitch attitude. Option A is wrong because the vertical axis governs yaw (directional stability). Option B is incorrect because the longitudinal axis governs roll (lateral stability). Option D is not a recognised stability axis in standard aeronautical terminology.
+
+### Q115: Rotation about the vertical axis is termed... ^t80q115
+- A) Pitching
+- B) Yawing
+- C) Rolling
+- D) Slipping
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yawing is the rotation of the aircraft around the vertical (normal) axis, causing the nose to swing left or right. It is controlled primarily by the rudder. Option A (pitching) is rotation around the lateral axis. Option C (rolling) is rotation around the longitudinal axis. Option D (slipping) describes a flight condition with a sideways airflow component, not a specific rotational axis.
+
+### Q116: Rotation about the lateral axis is termed... ^t80q116
+- A) Stalling
+- B) Rolling
+- C) Yawing
+- D) Pitching
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pitching is the rotation of the aircraft around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip), resulting in nose-up or nose-down movement, controlled by the elevator. Option A (stalling) is an aerodynamic phenomenon of flow separation, not a rotational term. Option B (rolling) is rotation around the longitudinal axis. Option C (yawing) is rotation around the vertical axis.
+
+### Q117: The elevator causes the aircraft to rotate around the... ^t80q117
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Lateral axis
+- C) Elevator axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator controls pitch, which is rotation around the lateral axis (running from wingtip to wingtip). By deflecting the elevator, the pilot changes the aerodynamic force on the tail, creating a pitching moment that raises or lowers the nose. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll, controlled by ailerons. Option C is not a standard aeronautical axis. Option D is wrong because the vertical axis governs yaw, controlled by the rudder.
+
+### Q118: What must be considered regarding the centre of gravity position? ^t80q118
+- A) The C.G. position can only be determined once the aircraft is airborne
+- B) Moving the aileron trim tab can correct the C.G. position
+- C) Only proper loading ensures a correct and safe C.G. position
+- D) Adjusting the elevator trim tab can shift the C.G. to the correct position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity position is determined solely by how mass is distributed within the aircraft — only correct loading of occupants, baggage, and ballast within approved limits ensures a safe CG. Option A is wrong because CG must be verified on the ground before flight using weight and balance calculations. Option B is incorrect because aileron trim tabs adjust roll forces, not mass distribution. Option D is also wrong because trim tabs change aerodynamic balance forces, they cannot physically move the CG.
+
+### Q119: What benefit does differential aileron deflection provide? ^t80q119
+- A) The ratio of drag coefficient to lift coefficient increases
+- B) Total lift remains constant during aileron deflection
+- C) Adverse yaw is increased
+- D) Drag on the down-going aileron is reduced, making adverse yaw smaller
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection means the down-going aileron deflects less than the up-going aileron, which reduces the extra induced drag on the descending wing and thus minimises adverse yaw — the unwanted yawing opposite to the intended roll direction. Option A is wrong because the purpose is drag reduction, not increasing the drag-to-lift ratio. Option B is incorrect because total lift does change somewhat during aileron deflection. Option C states the opposite of the actual effect — differential ailerons decrease adverse yaw, not increase it.
+
+### Q120: What does the aerodynamic rudder balance accomplish? ^t80q120
+- A) It improves rudder effectiveness
+- B) It reduces the control stick forces
+- C) It delays the stall
+- D) It reduces the control surfaces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (such as a horn balance or set-back hinge) positions part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so that aerodynamic pressure partially assists the pilot's input, reducing the force needed to deflect the control. Option A is incorrect because the purpose is force reduction, not improved effectiveness. Option C is wrong because stall delay is achieved by devices like slats or vortex generators, not control surface balancing. Option D makes no sense — aerodynamic balance does not reduce the size of control surfaces.
+
+### Q121: What purpose does static rudder (mass) balancing serve? ^t80q121
+- A) To limit the control stick forces
+- B) To increase the control stick forces
+- C) To prevent control surface flutter
+- D) To enable force-free trimming
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static (mass) balancing places counterweights ahead of the hinge line to move the control surface's centre of mass to or forward of the hinge. This prevents flutter — a dangerous self-exciting aeroelastic oscillation that can destroy the control surface and airframe at speed. Option A is wrong because limiting stick forces is the role of aerodynamic balance, not mass balance. Option B is the opposite of any balancing goal. Option D is incorrect because force-free trimming is achieved by trim tabs, not mass balance.
+
+### Q122: When the elevator trim tab is deflected upwards, what does the trim indicator show? ^t80q122
+- A) Laterally trimmed
+- B) Neutral position
+- C) Nose-down position
+- D) Nose-up position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward-deflected trim tab generates a downward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, which pushes the elevator's leading edge upward, creating a nose-down pitching moment. The trim indicator therefore shows a nose-down position. Option A is irrelevant — lateral trim concerns roll, not pitch. Option B would require the tab to be neutral. Option D is the opposite — a nose-up indication would require the trim tab to deflect downward.
+
+### Q123: On the polar diagram, what flight condition does point number 1 indicate? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q123
+- A) Slow flight
+- B) Best gliding angle
+- C) Stall
+- D) Inverted flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) lies in the region of negative lift coefficient, representing inverted flight where the aircraft flies upside down and the wing produces downward lift relative to its normal orientation. Options A, B, and C all correspond to positive (upright) portions of the polar curve — slow flight is near maximum CL, stall is at CL_max, and best gliding angle is at the tangent point from the origin.
+
+### Q124: In a coordinated turn, what is the relationship between load factor (n) and stall speed (Vs)? ^t80q124
+- A) n is less than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+- B) n is greater than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- C) n is less than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- D) n is greater than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated banked turn, the lift vector must support both the weight and provide centripetal force, so the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) is always greater than 1. The stall speed increases by the factor sqrt(n), because more lift is needed and thus a higher speed is required to avoid the stall. Options A and C are wrong because n is always above 1 in a level turn. Option D incorrectly states that Vs decreases — higher load factor always raises stall speed.
+
+### Q125: The pressure equalisation between the upper and lower wing surfaces results in... ^t80q125
+- A) Profile drag caused by wingtip vortices
+- B) Laminar airflow caused by wingtip vortices
+- C) Lift generated by wingtip vortices
+- D) Induced drag caused by wingtip vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces causes air to flow around the wingtips, forming trailing vortices. These vortices create downwash that tilts the lift vector rearward, producing induced drag. Option A is wrong because wingtip vortices cause induced drag, not profile drag. Option B is incorrect because vortices create turbulent, not laminar, flow. Option C is false because vortices actually reduce effective lift by reducing the local angle of attack.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_101_125_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_101_125_fr.md
new file mode 100644
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+### Q101 : Un déplacement du centre de gravité est causé par : ^t80q101
+- A) La modification de l'angle d'attaque
+- B) Le déplacement de la charge
+- C) La modification de l'angle d'incidence
+- D) La modification de la position du foyer aérodynamique
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le centre de gravité (CG) est déterminé par la distribution des masses dans l'aéronef ; seul le déplacement physique de masse — comme le déplacement du lest, des passagers ou des bagages — le modifie. L'option A est incorrecte car la modification de l'angle d'attaque altère les forces aérodynamiques, pas la distribution des masses. L'option C est incorrecte car l'angle d'incidence est une dimension structurelle fixe. L'option D est incorrecte car le foyer aérodynamique est une propriété de la forme de l'aile, pas de la distribution de masse de l'aéronef.
+
+### Q102 : Le dispositif hypersustentateur représenté dans le diagramme est un : ^t80q102
+![[figures/t80_q102.png]]
+- A) Volet simple (plain flap)
+- B) Volet fendu (split flap)
+- C) Volet à fente (slotted flap)
+- D) Volet de Fowler
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un volet de Fowler se déplace vers l'arrière et vers le bas, augmentant simultanément la surface alaire et la cambrure, ce qui en fait le type de volet de bord de fuite le plus efficace. Le diagramme montre cette extension caractéristique vers l'arrière. Un volet simple (A) pivote simplement vers le bas sans se déplacer vers l'arrière. Un volet fendu (B) déflecte uniquement le panneau inférieur. Un volet à fente (C) ouvre une fente mais n'augmente pas significativement la surface alaire comme le volet de Fowler.
+
+### Q103 : La résultante de toutes les forces aérodynamiques sur un profil d'aile agit à travers le : ^t80q103
+- A) Centre de gravité
+- B) Point de stagnation
+- C) Foyer aérodynamique
+- D) Centre de symétrie
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le foyer aérodynamique est le point du profil à travers lequel la résultante de toutes les forces de pression aérodynamiques (portance et traînée combinées) est considérée comme agissant, et autour duquel le coefficient de moment de tangage reste approximativement constant lors des variations d'angle d'attaque, situé près du quart de corde. L'option A est incorrecte car le centre de gravité est le point où agit le poids, pas les forces aérodynamiques. L'option B est incorrecte car le point de stagnation est l'endroit où la vitesse de l'écoulement est nulle au bord d'attaque. L'option D n'est pas un terme aérodynamique standard.
+
+### Q104 : À quelle altitude approximative la densité de l'air est-elle la moitié de sa valeur au niveau de la mer ? ^t80q104
+- A) 2 000 ft
+- B) 20 000 mètres
+- C) 2 000 mètres
+- D) 6 600 mètres
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'atmosphère standard OACI, la densité de l'air diminue de façon approximativement exponentielle avec l'altitude et atteint la moitié de sa valeur au niveau de la mer à environ 6 600 m (environ 21 600 ft). L'option A (2 000 ft) est beaucoup trop basse — la densité change à peine à cette altitude. L'option B (20 000 m) se situe dans la stratosphère, où la densité est bien inférieure à la moitié. L'option C (2 000 m) est également trop basse — la densité y est encore à environ 80 % de la valeur au niveau de la mer.
+
+### Q105 : La lecture de l'anémomètre (ASI) est basée sur une mesure de : ^t80q105
+- A) L'effet girouette où la pression diminue
+- B) La différence entre la pression totale et la pression statique
+- C) La pression totale dans une capsule anéroïde
+- D) La pression statique autour d'une capsule anéroïde
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ASI mesure la pression dynamique, qui est la différence entre la pression totale (pitot) et la pression statique : q = p_totale - p_statique = 0,5 × rho × V². Cette mesure différentielle indique directement la vitesse air. L'option A est absurde — une girouette mesure la direction du vent, pas la pression. L'option C est incorrecte car mesurer uniquement la pression totale sans soustraire la pression statique ne donne aucune information sur la vitesse. L'option D est également incorrecte car la pression statique seule indique uniquement l'altitude, pas la vitesse.
+
+### Q106 : La stabilité en roulis est influencée par : ^t80q106
+- A) L'utilisation de becs de bord d'attaque
+- B) Les rotations autour de l'axe latéral
+- C) L'action du stabilisateur horizontal
+- D) La flèche de l'aile et le dièdre
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité en roulis (latérale) — la tendance à revenir en vol à plat après une perturbation — est principalement assurée par le dièdre et la flèche de l'aile, qui créent tous deux des moments de rappel en roulis lorsque l'aéronef glisse après une perturbation. L'option A est incorrecte car les becs de bord d'attaque sont des dispositifs hypersustentateurs qui retardent le décrochage, pas des éléments de stabilité. L'option B décrit le mouvement en tangage, pas la stabilité en roulis. L'option C est incorrecte car le stabilisateur horizontal assure la stabilité en tangage (longitudinale), pas en roulis.
+
+### Q107 : La plage de vitesses pour l'utilisation des volets à fente : ^t80q107
+- A) Est sans limite supérieure
+- B) Est limitée en haut par la vitesse de manœuvre
+- C) Est publiée dans le Manuel de Vol (AFM)
+- D) Est limitée en bas par la ligne radiale rouge de l'ASI
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La plage de vitesses autorisée pour l'utilisation des volets varie selon les types d'aéronefs et est toujours spécifiée dans le Manuel de Vol de l'Aéronef (AFM), généralement aussi indiquée sur l'ASI sous forme d'arc blanc. L'option A est dangereusement incorrecte — les volets ont des limites de vitesse structurelles. L'option B est incorrecte car la vitesse maximale des volets (VFE) est généralement différente de la vitesse de manœuvre (VA). L'option D est incorrecte car la ligne radiale rouge est la VNE (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser), qui n'a rien à voir avec la limite de vitesse inférieure des volets.
+
+### Q108 : Lorsque l'angle d'incidence de l'aile est plus grand au pied qu'à l'extrémité, cela s'appelle : ^t80q108
+- A) Allongement
+- B) Vrillage aérodynamique
+- C) Vrillage géométrique (washout)
+- D) Compensation d'interférence
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vrillage géométrique (washout) est une torsion physique intégrée dans l'aile de sorte que l'angle d'incidence diminue progressivement du pied vers l'extrémité. Cela garantit que le pied décroche en premier, préservant l'efficacité des ailerons aux extrémités. L'option A (allongement) est le rapport envergure/corde. L'option B (vrillage aérodynamique) obtient une progression similaire du décrochage en utilisant des profils différents le long de l'envergure plutôt qu'une torsion physique. L'option D (compensation d'interférence) n'est pas un terme aérodynamique standard pour le vrillage d'aile.
+
+### Q109 : La pression barométrique dans l'atmosphère terrestre a la caractéristique de : ^t80q109
+- A) Diminuer linéairement avec l'augmentation d'altitude
+- B) Rester constante
+- C) Diminuer dans la troposphère puis augmenter dans la stratosphère
+- D) Diminuer de façon exponentielle avec l'augmentation d'altitude
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression atmosphérique suit une décroissance approximativement exponentielle avec l'altitude, telle que décrite par la formule barométrique. Chaque incrément d'altitude égal réduit la pression du même pourcentage, pas du même montant absolu. L'option A est incorrecte car la relation est exponentielle, pas linéaire. L'option B est évidemment fausse — la pression diminue clairement avec l'altitude. L'option C est incorrecte car la pression continue de diminuer dans la stratosphère ; c'est la température, pas la pression, qui se stabilise ou augmente dans la stratosphère.
+
+### Q110 : L'équation de continuité simplifiée stipule que la même masse d'air passe par différentes sections au même instant. Par conséquent : ^t80q110
+- A) La vitesse de l'air ne varie pas
+- B) L'air s'écoule à une vitesse plus faible dans une section plus grande
+- C) L'air s'écoule à une vitesse plus élevée dans une section plus grande
+- D) L'air s'écoule à une vitesse plus faible dans une section plus petite
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équation de continuité pour un écoulement incompressible stipule A1 × V1 = A2 × V2 (surface fois vitesse est constante). Si la section augmente, la vitesse doit diminuer proportionnellement pour maintenir le même débit massique. L'option A est incorrecte car la vitesse change bien avec la section. L'option C inverse la relation — la vitesse diminue, n'augmente pas, avec une section plus grande. L'option D inverse également — la vitesse augmente dans une section plus petite, elle ne diminue pas.
+
+### Q111 : Sur le schéma du profil, que représente le point numéro 4 ? Voir figure (PFA-009) Voir annexe 2 ^t80q111
+- A) Point de stagnation
+- B) Point de séparation
+- C) Centre de poussée
+- D) Point de transition
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point 4 sur le diagramme de couche limite (PFA-009) marque le point de séparation, où la couche limite se décolle de la surface supérieure de l'aile sous l'effet d'un gradient de pression adverse, formant un sillage turbulent derrière lui. L'option A est incorrecte car le point de stagnation se trouve au bord d'attaque (point 1). L'option C est incorrecte car le centre de poussée est un point théorique d'application des forces, pas une caractéristique de couche limite. L'option D est incorrecte car le point de transition (laminaire vers turbulent) se situe plus en avant sur la surface.
+
+### Q112 : Sur le schéma du profil, que représente le point numéro 1 ? Voir figure (PFA-009) Voir annexe 2 ^t80q112
+- A) Point de transition
+- B) Centre de poussée
+- C) Point de stagnation
+- D) Point de stagnation
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point 1 sur le diagramme de couche limite (PFA-009) est le point de stagnation au bord d'attaque, où l'écoulement entrant se divise en flux extrados et intrados, la vitesse est nulle et la pression statique atteint son maximum. L'option A est incorrecte car le point de transition se produit plus en arrière, là où l'écoulement laminaire devient turbulent. L'option B est incorrecte car le centre de poussée est un point de résultante de forces, pas un emplacement physique de l'écoulement au bord d'attaque.
+
+### Q113 : Quelle caractéristique constructive est représentée dans la figure ? Voir figure (PFA-006) L : Portance Voir annexe 4 ^t80q113
+- A) Stabilité directionnelle obtenue par génération de portance
+- B) Stabilité longitudinale par dièdre de l'aile
+- C) Stabilité latérale assurée par le dièdre de l'aile
+- D) Braquage différentiel des ailerons
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La figure montre le dièdre de l'aile — l'angle en V vers le haut des ailes par rapport au plan horizontal — qui assure la stabilité latérale (en roulis). Lorsqu'une aile s'abaisse en cas de glissement, l'aile basse subit un angle d'attaque effectif plus élevé, générant plus de portance et produisant un moment de rappel en roulis. L'option A est incorrecte car la stabilité directionnelle vient de l'empennage vertical, pas du dièdre. L'option B identifie incorrectement l'axe — le dièdre affecte le roulis (latéral), pas le tangage (longitudinal). L'option D décrit une caractéristique de conception des ailerons sans rapport avec la figure.
+
+### Q114 : La « stabilité longitudinale » fait référence à la stabilité autour de quel axe ? ^t80q114
+- A) Axe vertical
+- B) Axe longitudinal
+- C) Axe latéral
+- D) Axe de l'hélice
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Malgré son nom potentiellement trompeur, la stabilité longitudinale fait référence à la stabilité en tangage, qui est la rotation autour de l'axe latéral (l'axe allant d'une extrémité d'aile à l'autre). Elle décrit la tendance de l'aéronef à revenir à une assiette en tangage de trim. L'option A est incorrecte car l'axe vertical gouverne le lacet (stabilité directionnelle). L'option B est incorrecte car l'axe longitudinal gouverne le roulis (stabilité latérale). L'option D n'est pas un axe de stabilité reconnu en terminologie aéronautique standard.
+
+### Q115 : La rotation autour de l'axe vertical s'appelle... ^t80q115
+- A) Tangage
+- B) Lacet
+- C) Roulis
+- D) Glissade
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le lacet est la rotation de l'aéronef autour de l'axe vertical (normal), provoquant le mouvement du nez vers la gauche ou vers la droite. Il est contrôlé principalement par la gouverne de direction. L'option A (tangage) est la rotation autour de l'axe latéral. L'option C (roulis) est la rotation autour de l'axe longitudinal. L'option D (glissade) décrit une condition de vol avec une composante latérale de l'écoulement, pas une rotation spécifique.
+
+### Q116 : La rotation autour de l'axe latéral s'appelle... ^t80q116
+- A) Décrochage
+- B) Roulis
+- C) Lacet
+- D) Tangage
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le tangage est la rotation de l'aéronef autour de l'axe latéral (d'extrémité à extrémité d'aile), entraînant un mouvement de nez vers le haut ou vers le bas, contrôlé par la gouverne de profondeur. L'option A (décrochage) est un phénomène aérodynamique de séparation de l'écoulement, pas un terme de rotation. L'option B (roulis) est la rotation autour de l'axe longitudinal. L'option C (lacet) est la rotation autour de l'axe vertical.
+
+### Q117 : La gouverne de profondeur fait tourner l'aéronef autour de l'axe... ^t80q117
+- A) Longitudinal
+- B) Latéral
+- C) De la gouverne de profondeur
+- D) Vertical
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La gouverne de profondeur contrôle le tangage, qui est la rotation autour de l'axe latéral (allant d'une extrémité d'aile à l'autre). En braquant la gouverne de profondeur, le pilote modifie la force aérodynamique sur l'empennage, créant un moment de tangage qui relève ou abaisse le nez. L'option A est incorrecte car l'axe longitudinal gouverne le roulis, contrôlé par les ailerons. L'option C n'est pas un axe aéronautique standard. L'option D est incorrecte car l'axe vertical gouverne le lacet, contrôlé par la gouverne de direction.
+
+### Q118 : Que faut-il prendre en compte concernant la position du centre de gravité ? ^t80q118
+- A) La position du CG ne peut être déterminée qu'une fois l'aéronef en vol
+- B) Le mouvement de la tab de trim des ailerons peut corriger la position du CG
+- C) Seul un chargement correct garantit une position du CG correcte et sûre
+- D) L'ajustement de la tab de trim de profondeur peut déplacer le CG vers la position correcte
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La position du centre de gravité est déterminée uniquement par la façon dont les masses sont distribuées dans l'aéronef — seul un chargement correct des occupants, des bagages et du lest dans les limites approuvées garantit un CG sûr. L'option A est incorrecte car le CG doit être vérifié au sol avant le vol à l'aide de calculs de masse et centrage. L'option B est incorrecte car les tabs de trim des ailerons règlent les forces de roulis, pas la distribution des masses. L'option D est également incorrecte car les tabs de trim modifient les forces d'équilibre aérodynamique ; elles ne peuvent pas physiquement déplacer le CG.
+
+### Q119 : Quel avantage apporte le braquage différentiel des ailerons ? ^t80q119
+- A) Le rapport du coefficient de traînée au coefficient de portance augmente
+- B) La portance totale reste constante lors du braquage des ailerons
+- C) Le lacet inverse est augmenté
+- D) La traînée de l'aileron baissé est réduite, rendant le lacet inverse plus faible
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le braquage différentiel des ailerons signifie que l'aileron baissé se braque moins que l'aileron levé, ce qui réduit la traînée induite supplémentaire sur l'aile descendante et minimise ainsi le lacet inverse — le mouvement de lacet indésirable opposé à la direction de roulis souhaitée. L'option A est incorrecte car l'objectif est la réduction de la traînée, pas l'augmentation du rapport traînée/portance. L'option B est incorrecte car la portance totale change quelque peu lors du braquage des ailerons. L'option C indique l'effet inverse à l'effet réel — les ailerons différentiels réduisent le lacet inverse, ils ne l'augmentent pas.
+
+### Q120 : Que réalise l'équilibrage aérodynamique de la gouverne de direction ? ^t80q120
+- A) Il améliore l'efficacité de la gouverne de direction
+- B) Il réduit les efforts sur le manche
+- C) Il retarde le décrochage
+- D) Il réduit les surfaces de commande
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un équilibrage aérodynamique de la gouverne de direction (par exemple un équilibrage à corne ou à axe décalé) positionne une partie de la surface de commande en avant de l'axe de charnière, de sorte que la pression aérodynamique assiste partiellement l'action du pilote, réduisant la force nécessaire pour braquer la commande. L'option A est incorrecte car l'objectif est la réduction de l'effort, pas l'amélioration de l'efficacité. L'option C est incorrecte car le retard du décrochage est obtenu par des dispositifs comme les becs ou les générateurs de tourbillons, pas par l'équilibrage des gouvernes. L'option D n'a pas de sens — l'équilibrage aérodynamique ne réduit pas la taille des gouvernes.
+
+### Q121 : À quoi sert l'équilibrage statique (massique) d'une gouverne ? ^t80q121
+- A) À limiter les efforts sur le manche
+- B) À augmenter les efforts sur le manche
+- C) À prévenir le flottement des gouvernes
+- D) À permettre le trim sans effort
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équilibrage statique (massique) place des contrepoids en avant de l'axe de charnière pour déplacer le centre de masse de la gouverne vers ou en avant de la charnière. Cela prévient le flottement — une oscillation aéroélastique dangereuse auto-amplifiante qui peut détruire la gouverne et la cellule à grande vitesse. L'option A est incorrecte car la limitation des efforts sur le manche est le rôle de l'équilibrage aérodynamique, pas massique. L'option B est l'opposé de tout objectif d'équilibrage. L'option D est incorrecte car le trim sans effort est obtenu par des tabs de trim, pas par l'équilibrage massique.
+
+### Q122 : Lorsque la tab de trim de profondeur est braquée vers le haut, que montre l'indicateur de trim ? ^t80q122
+- A) Position latérale (trim latéral)
+- B) Position neutre
+- C) Position piqué (nez en bas)
+- D) Position cabrée (nez en haut)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une tab de trim braquée vers le haut génère une force aérodynamique vers le bas sur le bord de fuite de la gouverne de profondeur, ce qui pousse le bord d'attaque de la gouverne vers le haut, créant un moment à piquer. L'indicateur de trim indique donc une position piqué (nez en bas). L'option A est sans rapport — le trim latéral concerne le roulis, pas le tangage. L'option B nécessiterait que la tab soit en position neutre. L'option D est l'inverse — une indication de cabrée nécessiterait que la tab de trim soit braquée vers le bas.
+
+### Q123 : Sur le diagramme polaire, quelle condition de vol le point numéro 1 indique-t-il ? Voir figure (PFA-008) Voir annexe 5 ^t80q123
+- A) Vol lent
+- B) Meilleur angle de planée
+- C) Décrochage
+- D) Vol inversé
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point 1 sur le diagramme polaire (PFA-008) se situe dans la zone du coefficient de portance négatif, représentant le vol inversé où l'aéronef vole à l'envers et l'aile produit une portance vers le bas par rapport à son orientation normale. Les options A, B et C correspondent toutes à des parties positives (endroit) de la courbe polaire — le vol lent est proche de CL_max, le décrochage est à CL_max, et le meilleur angle de planée est au point de tangente depuis l'origine.
+
+### Q124 : Dans un virage coordonné, quelle est la relation entre le facteur de charge (n) et la vitesse de décrochage (Vs) ? ^t80q124
+- A) n est inférieur à 1 et Vs est inférieure à celle en vol en palier rectiligne
+- B) n est supérieur à 1 et Vs est supérieure à celle en vol en palier rectiligne
+- C) n est inférieur à 1 et Vs est supérieure à celle en vol en palier rectiligne
+- D) n est supérieur à 1 et Vs est inférieure à celle en vol en palier rectiligne
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage incliné coordonné, le vecteur portance doit supporter à la fois le poids et fournir la force centripète, donc le facteur de charge n = 1/cos(angle d'inclinaison) est toujours supérieur à 1. La vitesse de décrochage augmente d'un facteur racine(n), car plus de portance est nécessaire et donc une vitesse plus élevée est requise pour éviter le décrochage. Les options A et C sont incorrectes car n est toujours supérieur à 1 dans un virage en palier. L'option D indique incorrectement que Vs diminue — un facteur de charge plus élevé augmente toujours la vitesse de décrochage.
+
+### Q125 : L'égalisation de pression entre l'extrados et l'intrados de l'aile entraîne... ^t80q125
+- A) Une traînée de profil causée par les tourbillons d'extrémité
+- B) Un écoulement laminaire causé par les tourbillons d'extrémité
+- C) De la portance générée par les tourbillons d'extrémité
+- D) Une traînée induite causée par les tourbillons d'extrémité
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La différence de pression entre l'intrados (haute pression) et l'extrados (basse pression) de l'aile provoque l'écoulement de l'air autour des extrémités d'aile, formant des tourbillons de sillage. Ces tourbillons créent un souffle vers le bas qui incline le vecteur portance vers l'arrière, produisant de la traînée induite. L'option A est incorrecte car les tourbillons d'extrémité causent la traînée induite, pas la traînée de profil. L'option B est incorrecte car les tourbillons créent un écoulement turbulent, pas laminaire. L'option C est fausse car les tourbillons réduisent en réalité la portance effective en réduisant l'angle d'attaque local.
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+### Q126: In steady glide at equal mass, how does using a thicker aerofoil compare to a thinner one? ^t80q126
+- A) Less drag, same lift
+- B) More drag, less lift
+- C) Less drag, less lift
+- D) More drag, same lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steady glide at the same mass, lift must equal weight regardless of the aerofoil thickness, so lift remains the same. However, a thicker aerofoil generates greater form (pressure) drag due to its larger cross-section and more severe adverse pressure gradients. Options A and C are wrong because a thicker profile produces more, not less, drag. Option B is incorrect because lift does not decrease — it is fixed by the weight requirement in steady flight.
+
+### Q127: What does a profile polar diagram display? ^t80q127
+- A) The lift coefficient cA at various angles of attack
+- B) The ratio of minimum sink rate to best glide
+- C) The ratio between total lift and drag as a function of angle of attack
+- D) The relationship between cA and cD at different angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A profile polar (Lilienthal polar) plots the lift coefficient (cA or CL) against the drag coefficient (cD or CD) at various angles of attack, showing how aerodynamic efficiency changes across the operating range. Option A describes only a CL-vs-alpha curve, not a polar. Option B relates to the speed polar of a glider, not a profile polar. Option C is imprecise — the polar shows the CL-CD relationship directly, not a simple ratio.
+
+### Q128: Any arbitrarily shaped body placed in an airflow (v > 0) always produces... ^t80q128
+- A) Drag that remains constant at any speed
+- B) Lift without drag
+- C) Drag
+- D) Both drag and lift
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body in a moving airflow always experiences drag due to viscous friction and pressure forces opposing the motion — this is unavoidable in a real fluid. Lift, however, requires specific aerodynamic shaping or orientation. Option A is wrong because drag varies with the square of velocity, not constant. Option B is physically impossible — drag-free lift does not exist. Option D is incorrect because an arbitrarily shaped body is not guaranteed to produce lift; only specifically shaped or oriented bodies generate lift.
+
+### Q129: In the diagram, what does number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q129
+- A) Chord
+- B) Chord line
+- C) Camber line
+- D) Thickness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the aerofoil diagram PFA-010, number 3 represents the camber line (mean camber line), which is the curved line equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil. Options A and B both refer to the straight reference line from leading to trailing edge, which is a different feature. Option D (thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a line on the diagram.
+
+### Q130: Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw? ^t80q130
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) Full deflection of the aileron
+- C) Differential aileron deflection
+- D) Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection reduces adverse yaw by deflecting the down-going aileron less than the up-going aileron, thereby reducing the extra induced drag on the descending wing that causes the nose to yaw opposite to the intended turn. Option A is wrong because wing dihedral provides roll stability, not yaw compensation. Option B would actually worsen adverse yaw because full deflection maximises the drag asymmetry. Option D is not a valid answer — it merely repeats the question.
+
+### Q131: What does "wing loading" describe? ^t80q131
+- A) Drag per weight
+- B) Wing area per weight
+- C) Drag per wing area
+- D) Weight per wing area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is defined as total aircraft weight divided by wing reference area, expressed in units such as N/m² or kg/m². It determines stall speed, gust sensitivity, and overall handling characteristics. Option A (drag per weight) describes a drag-to-weight ratio. Option B is the inverse of wing loading. Option C (drag per wing area) is not a standard aeronautical parameter.
+
+### Q132: On the polar diagram, what flight state does point number 5 represent? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q132
+- A) Best gliding angle
+- B) Inverted flight
+- C) Stall
+- D) Slow flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 5 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) corresponds to slow flight — a high angle of attack, low speed condition on the positive portion of the polar before reaching the stall point. Option A (best gliding angle) corresponds to the tangent from the origin touching the polar. Option B (inverted flight) would appear on the negative CL side. Option C (stall) is at the CL_max point, which is the very top of the polar, beyond slow flight.
+
+### Q133: What is the aerodynamic effect of deploying airbrakes? ^t80q133
+- A) Both drag and lift increase
+- B) Both drag and lift decrease
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airbrakes (spoilers/dive brakes) serve to steepen the glide path by significantly increasing drag while simultaneously disrupting upper-surface airflow, which reduces lift. Option A is wrong because lift decreases with airbrakes deployed. Option B is incorrect because drag increases, not decreases. Option D reverses both effects — airbrakes increase drag and decrease lift.
+
+### Q134: Which combination of measures can improve the glide ratio of a sailplane? ^t80q134
+- A) Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- B) Higher mass, thin aerofoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- C) Lower mass, correct speed, retractable gear
+- D) Cleaning surfaces, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide ratio (L/D) is maximised by minimising total drag while flying at the optimal speed. Cleaning surfaces reduces skin friction, taping gaps prevents leakage drag, retractable gear eliminates a major source of parasite drag, and maintaining best-glide speed keeps the aircraft at peak L/D. Option A is suboptimal because a forward CG increases trim drag. Option B is wrong because higher mass does not improve the L/D ratio itself. Option C omits important drag-reduction measures like taping gaps and surface cleaning.
+
+### Q135: What distinguishes a spin from a spiral dive? ^t80q135
+- A) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- B) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- C) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+- D) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a spin, the inner (lower) wing is deeply stalled while the outer wing may still be producing some lift, creating autorotation at a near-constant, relatively low airspeed. In a spiral dive, neither wing is stalled, and the aircraft descends in a tightening bank with rapidly increasing airspeed. Option A incorrectly identifies the outer wing as stalled. Options C and D incorrectly assign speed characteristics — in a spin, speed is roughly constant; in a spiral dive, speed increases rapidly.
+
+### Q136: The longitudinal position of the centre of gravity primarily affects stability around which axis? ^t80q136
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Gravity axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The longitudinal (fore-aft) position of the CG directly determines pitch stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. The CG must be forward of the neutral point for positive pitch stability; the further forward, the more statically stable but the heavier the elevator forces. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll stability, influenced by dihedral. Option B is not a standard axis. Option D is wrong because the vertical axis governs directional stability, influenced by the vertical tail.
+
+### Q137: Which structural element provides directional stability? ^t80q137
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) A large elevator
+- C) A large vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical tail fin acts as a weathervane, producing a restoring yawing moment whenever the aircraft sideslips, thereby providing directional (yaw) stability around the vertical axis. A larger fin provides greater stability. Option A (wing dihedral) provides lateral (roll) stability. Option B (elevator) contributes to pitch stability. Option D (differential aileron deflection) reduces adverse yaw but is not a stability feature.
+
+### Q138: In straight-and-level flight at constant engine power, how does the wing's angle of attack compare to that in a climb? ^t80q138
+- A) Larger than in a climb
+- B) Larger than at take-off
+- C) Smaller than in a descent
+- D) Smaller than in a climb
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a climb at the same engine power, the aircraft flies slower because more energy goes into gaining altitude, requiring a higher angle of attack to maintain sufficient lift. Therefore, the level-flight angle of attack is smaller than in a climb. Option A reverses the relationship. Option B compares to take-off, which is not directly related to the question. Option C is incorrect because in a descent the aircraft accelerates, typically reducing AoA below the level-flight value.
+
+### Q139: What is one function of the horizontal tail? ^t80q139
+- A) To stabilise the aircraft around the lateral axis
+- B) To initiate a turn around the vertical axis
+- C) To stabilise the aircraft around the vertical axis
+- D) To stabilise the aircraft around the longitudinal axis
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator) provides longitudinal (pitch) stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. It generates restoring moments when the aircraft's pitch attitude is disturbed. Option B is wrong because turns around the vertical axis are initiated by the rudder. Option C is incorrect because vertical axis stability comes from the vertical tail. Option D is wrong because longitudinal axis (roll) stability is provided by wing dihedral and sweep.
+
+### Q140: What happens when the rudder is deflected to the left? ^t80q140
+- A) The aircraft pitches to the right
+- B) The aircraft yaws to the right
+- C) The aircraft pitches to the left
+- D) The aircraft yaws to the left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the rudder is deflected to the left, it produces a sideways aerodynamic force on the tail that pushes the tail to the right, yawing the nose to the left around the vertical axis. Options A and C are wrong because pitching is a nose-up/nose-down motion controlled by the elevator, not the rudder. Option B reverses the yaw direction — left rudder produces left yaw.
+
+### Q141: Differential aileron deflection is employed to... ^t80q141
+- A) Increase the rate of descent
+- B) Prevent stalling at low angles of attack
+- C) Minimise adverse yaw
+- D) Reduce wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection gives the down-going aileron less deflection than the up-going aileron, reducing the drag asymmetry between the two wings during a roll input and thereby minimising adverse yaw. Option A is wrong because descent rate is controlled by airbrakes or speed, not aileron geometry. Option B is incorrect because stall prevention at low AoA is not an issue. Option D is wrong because wake turbulence is caused by wingtip vortices, not aileron design.
+
+### Q142: How is the force balance affected during a banked turn? ^t80q142
+- A) A lower lift force is sufficient because the net force is reduced compared to level flight
+- B) The horizontal component of the lift during the turn constitutes the centrifugal force
+- C) Lift must be increased to balance the combined effect of gravity and centrifugal force
+- D) The net force is the vector sum of gravitational and centripetal forces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the tilted lift vector must be large enough that its vertical component still equals weight while its horizontal component provides the centripetal force for the curved path. This means total lift must exceed the straight-and-level value, with the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle). Option A is wrong because more, not less, lift is needed. Option B is imprecise — from the aircraft's reference frame it appears as centrifugal force, but the actual physics involves centripetal force. Option D does not fully describe the force balance requirement.
+
+### Q143: On a Touring Motor Glider (TMG), which engine arrangement produces the least drag? ^t80q143
+- A) Engine and propeller fixed at the aircraft's nose
+- B) Engine and propeller fixed on the fuselage
+- C) Engine and propeller retractable into the fuselage
+- D) Engine and propeller fixed at the horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A retractable engine and propeller can be fully stowed inside the fuselage when not in use, completely eliminating the parasite drag from the powerplant and propeller during soaring flight. Options A, B, and D all involve fixed (non-retractable) installations that continuously produce drag even when the engine is shut down, because the propeller and engine cowling remain exposed to the airstream.
+
+### Q144: What effect is known as "adverse yaw"? ^t80q144
+- A) Aileron input yaws the nose toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input creates a rolling moment toward the opposite side due to extra lift on the faster-moving wing
+- C) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the down-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the up-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-deflected aileron increases both lift and induced drag on its wing. This extra drag on the rising wing yaws the nose toward it — away from the intended direction of turn. Option A describes the opposite effect. Option B describes a secondary effect of rudder, not the primary adverse yaw phenomenon. Option D incorrectly attributes the extra drag to the up-deflected aileron, when in fact it is the down-deflected aileron that produces more drag.
+
+### Q145: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q145
+- A) An increase in lift and decrease in induced drag near the ground
+- B) A decrease in lift and increase in induced drag near the ground
+- C) A decrease in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+- D) An increase in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying within approximately one wingspan of the ground, the ground surface restricts the full development of wingtip vortices, reducing downwash. This effectively increases the local angle of attack (more lift) and reduces induced drag simultaneously. Option B reverses both effects. Option C incorrectly states lift decreases. Option D incorrectly states induced drag increases. Pilots experience ground effect as a floating sensation during the landing flare.
+
+### Q146: Rudder deflections rotate the aircraft around the... ^t80q146
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Rudder axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rudder controls yaw, which is rotation around the vertical axis, causing the nose to swing left or right. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll, controlled by ailerons. Option B is not a standard aeronautical axis designation. Option C is wrong because the lateral axis governs pitch, controlled by the elevator.
+
+### Q147: Which of the following factors causes the load factor to increase during cruise flight? ^t80q147
+- A) A forward centre of gravity
+- B) Higher aircraft weight
+- C) An upward gust
+- D) Lower air density
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward gust suddenly increases the wing's angle of attack, temporarily generating lift in excess of the aircraft's weight. This additional lift translates into a load factor greater than 1, stressing the structure. Option A (forward CG) affects pitch stability and trim drag but does not directly cause load factor spikes. Option B (higher weight) means higher sustained loads but does not itself cause an increase in load factor n. Option D (lower density) reduces lift for a given speed, which would lower, not raise, the instantaneous load factor.
+
+### Q148: While approaching the next updraft, the variometer shows 3 m/s descent. You expect a mean climb rate of 2 m/s in the thermal. How should you set the McCready ring? ^t80q148
+- A) Set the ring to 3 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the expected climb rate (2 m/s)
+- B) Set the ring to 0 m/s outside thermals and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- C) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- D) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the sum of current sink rate and expected climb rate (5 m/s)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The McCready ring is always set to the expected climb rate in the next thermal (2 m/s in this case), and the recommended inter-thermal cruise speed is then read at the variometer needle position showing the current sink rate (3 m/s). Option A incorrectly sets the ring to the sink rate instead of the thermal strength. Option B sets the ring to zero, which would give a minimum-sink rather than optimal cruise speed. Option D erroneously adds the sink rate and climb rate together, which is not how McCready theory works.
+
+### Q149: What must be considered when flying a sailplane equipped with camber flaps? ^t80q149
+- A) During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive
+- B) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive
+- C) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative
+- D) During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During approach and landing, switching the camber flap from positive (increased camber, higher lift) to negative (reduced or reflexed camber) would cause a sudden and dramatic drop in lift close to the ground, potentially leading to a dangerous sink or ground contact. Option A is not universally correct — winch launch flap settings vary by type. Option B reverses the restriction. Option D is wrong because negative camber is a cruise setting, not appropriate for the high-lift-demand winch launch phase.
+
+### Q150: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q150
+- A) Separation point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 3 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) is the transition point, where the boundary layer changes from smooth laminar flow to turbulent flow. The position of this transition depends on Reynolds number, surface roughness, and pressure gradient. Option A (separation point) occurs further aft, where flow detaches entirely. Option B (centre of pressure) is not a boundary layer feature but a force application point. Option C (stagnation point) is at the leading edge, where flow velocity is zero.
+
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+### Q126 : En planée stabilisée à masse égale, comment un profil plus épais se compare-t-il à un profil plus mince ? ^t80q126
+- A) Moins de traînée, même portance
+- B) Plus de traînée, moins de portance
+- C) Moins de traînée, moins de portance
+- D) Plus de traînée, même portance
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En planée stabilisée à la même masse, la portance doit être égale au poids quelle que soit l'épaisseur du profil, donc la portance reste identique. En revanche, un profil plus épais génère plus de traînée de forme (pression) en raison de sa section transversale plus grande et de gradients de pression adverses plus sévères. Les options A et C sont incorrectes car un profil plus épais produit plus, et non moins, de traînée. L'option B est incorrecte car la portance ne diminue pas — elle est fixée par l'exigence de poids en vol stabilisé.
+
+### Q127 : Que représente un diagramme polaire de profil ? ^t80q127
+- A) Le coefficient de portance cA à différents angles d'attaque
+- B) Le rapport du taux de chute minimal à la meilleure finesse
+- C) Le rapport entre la portance totale et la traînée en fonction de l'angle d'attaque
+- D) La relation entre cA et cD à différents angles d'attaque
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une polaire de profil (polaire de Lilienthal) représente le coefficient de portance (cA ou CL) en fonction du coefficient de traînée (cD ou CD) à différents angles d'attaque, montrant comment l'efficacité aérodynamique varie sur toute la plage de fonctionnement. L'option A ne décrit qu'une courbe CL en fonction de alpha, pas une polaire. L'option B se rapporte à la polaire de vitesse d'un planeur, pas à une polaire de profil. L'option C est imprécise — la polaire représente directement la relation CL-CD, pas un simple rapport.
+
+### Q128 : Tout corps de forme arbitraire placé dans un écoulement d'air (v > 0) produit toujours... ^t80q128
+- A) Une traînée qui reste constante à toute vitesse
+- B) De la portance sans traînée
+- C) De la traînée
+- D) À la fois de la traînée et de la portance
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout corps dans un écoulement d'air en mouvement subit toujours de la traînée due au frottement visqueux et aux forces de pression s'opposant au mouvement — ceci est inévitable dans un fluide réel. La portance, en revanche, nécessite une forme ou une orientation aérodynamique spécifique. L'option A est incorrecte car la traînée varie avec le carré de la vitesse, elle n'est pas constante. L'option B est physiquement impossible — une portance sans traînée n'existe pas. L'option D est incorrecte car un corps de forme arbitraire n'est pas garanti de produire de la portance ; seuls des corps spécifiquement façonnés ou orientés génèrent de la portance.
+
+### Q129 : Dans le diagramme, que représente le numéro 3 ? Voir figure (PFA-010) Voir annexe 1 ^t80q129
+- A) Corde
+- B) Ligne de corde
+- C) Ligne de cambrure
+- D) Épaisseur
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le diagramme de profil PFA-010, le numéro 3 représente la ligne de cambrure (ligne de cambrure moyenne), qui est la ligne courbe équidistante entre l'extrados et l'intrados du profil. Les options A et B se réfèrent toutes deux à la ligne droite de référence du bord d'attaque au bord de fuite, qui est une caractéristique différente. L'option D (épaisseur) est la distance perpendiculaire entre l'extrados et l'intrados, pas une ligne sur le diagramme.
+
+### Q130 : Quelle caractéristique de conception peut compenser le lacet inverse ? ^t80q130
+- A) Le dièdre de l'aile
+- B) Le braquage complet de l'aileron
+- C) Le braquage différentiel des ailerons
+- D) Quelle caractéristique de conception peut compenser le lacet inverse ?
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le braquage différentiel des ailerons réduit le lacet inverse en braquant l'aileron baissé moins que l'aileron levé, réduisant ainsi la traînée induite supplémentaire sur l'aile descendante qui provoque le mouvement de lacet du nez dans la direction opposée au virage voulu. L'option A est incorrecte car le dièdre de l'aile assure la stabilité en roulis, pas la compensation du lacet. L'option B aggraverait en réalité le lacet inverse car le braquage complet maximise l'asymétrie de traînée. L'option D n'est pas une réponse valide — elle répète simplement la question.
+
+### Q131 : Que désigne la « charge alaire » ? ^t80q131
+- A) Traînée par unité de poids
+- B) Surface alaire par unité de poids
+- C) Traînée par unité de surface alaire
+- D) Poids par unité de surface alaire
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La charge alaire est définie comme le poids total de l'aéronef divisé par la surface alaire de référence, exprimée en unités telles que N/m² ou kg/m². Elle détermine la vitesse de décrochage, la sensibilité aux rafales et les caractéristiques générales de maniabilité. L'option A (traînée par poids) décrit un rapport traînée/poids. L'option B est l'inverse de la charge alaire. L'option C (traînée par surface alaire) n'est pas un paramètre aéronautique standard.
+
+### Q132 : Sur le diagramme polaire, quel état de vol le point numéro 5 représente-t-il ? Voir figure (PFA-008) Voir annexe 5 ^t80q132
+- A) Meilleur angle de planée
+- B) Vol inversé
+- C) Décrochage
+- D) Vol lent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point 5 sur le diagramme polaire (PFA-008) correspond au vol lent — une condition à grand angle d'attaque, faible vitesse sur la partie positive de la polaire avant d'atteindre le point de décrochage. L'option A (meilleur angle de planée) correspond au point de tangente depuis l'origine touchant la polaire. L'option B (vol inversé) apparaîtrait du côté CL négatif. L'option C (décrochage) est au point CL_max, qui est le sommet de la polaire, au-delà du vol lent.
+
+### Q133 : Quel est l'effet aérodynamique du déploiement des aérofreins ? ^t80q133
+- A) La traînée et la portance augmentent toutes les deux
+- B) La traînée et la portance diminuent toutes les deux
+- C) La traînée augmente tandis que la portance diminue
+- D) La traînée diminue tandis que la portance augmente
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les aérofreins (spoilers/dérive-vitesse) servent à accentuer l'angle de planée en augmentant significativement la traînée tout en perturbant simultanément l'écoulement sur l'extrados, ce qui réduit la portance. L'option A est incorrecte car la portance diminue avec les aérofreins déployés. L'option B est incorrecte car la traînée augmente, elle ne diminue pas. L'option D inverse les deux effets — les aérofreins augmentent la traînée et diminuent la portance.
+
+### Q134 : Quelle combinaison de mesures peut améliorer la finesse d'un planeur ? ^t80q134
+- A) Position du CG avancée, vitesse correcte, joints entre aile et fuselage collés
+- B) Masse plus élevée, profil mince, joints entre aile et fuselage collés
+- C) Masse plus faible, vitesse correcte, train d'atterrissage rétractable
+- D) Surfaces nettoyées, vitesse correcte, train rétractable, joints collés entre aile et fuselage
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La finesse (L/D) est maximisée en minimisant la traînée totale tout en volant à la vitesse optimale. Nettoyer les surfaces réduit la traînée de frottement, coller les joints empêche les fuites de traînée, le train rétractable élimine une source majeure de traînée parasite, et maintenir la vitesse de meilleure finesse maintient l'aéronef au L/D de pointe. L'option A est sous-optimale car un CG avancé augmente la traînée de trim. L'option B est incorrecte car une masse plus élevée n'améliore pas le rapport L/D lui-même. L'option C omet des mesures importantes de réduction de traînée comme les joints collés et le nettoyage des surfaces.
+
+### Q135 : Qu'est-ce qui distingue une vrille d'une spirale engagée ? ^t80q135
+- A) Vrille : aile extérieure décrochée, vitesse constante ; Spirale : les deux ailes en vol, vitesse augmentant rapidement
+- B) Vrille : aile intérieure décrochée, vitesse constante ; Spirale : les deux ailes en vol, vitesse augmentant rapidement
+- C) Vrille : aile extérieure décrochée, vitesse augmentant rapidement ; Spirale : les deux ailes en vol, vitesse constante
+- D) Vrille : aile intérieure décrochée, vitesse augmentant rapidement ; Spirale : les deux ailes en vol, vitesse constante
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vrille, l'aile intérieure (basse) est profondément décrochée tandis que l'aile extérieure peut encore produire un peu de portance, créant une autorotation à une vitesse air relativement faible et quasi constante. En spirale engagée, aucune des deux ailes n'est décrochée, et l'aéronef descend dans une inclinaison se resserrant avec une vitesse air augmentant rapidement. L'option A identifie incorrectement l'aile extérieure comme décrochée. Les options C et D attribuent incorrectement les caractéristiques de vitesse — en vrille la vitesse est approximativement constante ; en spirale, la vitesse augmente rapidement.
+
+### Q136 : La position longitudinale du centre de gravité affecte principalement la stabilité autour de quel axe ? ^t80q136
+- A) Axe longitudinal
+- B) Axe de gravité
+- C) Axe latéral
+- D) Axe vertical
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La position longitudinale (avant-arrière) du CG détermine directement la stabilité en tangage, qui est la stabilité autour de l'axe latéral. Le CG doit être en avant du point neutre pour une stabilité en tangage positive ; plus il est en avant, plus l'aéronef est statiquement stable mais plus les efforts sur la profondeur sont importants. L'option A est incorrecte car l'axe longitudinal gouverne la stabilité en roulis, influencée par le dièdre. L'option B n'est pas un axe standard. L'option D est incorrecte car l'axe vertical gouverne la stabilité directionnelle, influencée par l'empennage vertical.
+
+### Q137 : Quel élément structurel assure la stabilité directionnelle ? ^t80q137
+- A) Le dièdre de l'aile
+- B) Une grande gouverne de profondeur
+- C) Un grand empennage vertical
+- D) Le braquage différentiel des ailerons
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'empennage vertical agit comme une girouette, produisant un moment de rappel en lacet chaque fois que l'aéronef glisse, assurant ainsi la stabilité directionnelle (en lacet) autour de l'axe vertical. Un empennage plus grand assure une plus grande stabilité. L'option A (dièdre de l'aile) assure la stabilité latérale (en roulis). L'option B (gouverne de profondeur) contribue à la stabilité en tangage. L'option D (braquage différentiel des ailerons) réduit le lacet inverse mais n'est pas un élément de stabilité.
+
+### Q138 : En vol en palier rectiligne à puissance moteur constante, comment l'angle d'attaque de l'aile se compare-t-il à celui en montée ? ^t80q138
+- A) Plus grand qu'en montée
+- B) Plus grand qu'au décollage
+- C) Plus petit qu'en descente
+- D) Plus petit qu'en montée
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En montée avec la même puissance moteur, l'aéronef vole plus lentement car plus d'énergie est consacrée à la prise d'altitude, nécessitant un angle d'attaque plus grand pour maintenir une portance suffisante. Par conséquent, l'angle d'attaque en vol en palier est plus petit qu'en montée. L'option A inverse la relation. L'option B compare au décollage, ce qui n'est pas directement lié à la question. L'option C est incorrecte car en descente l'aéronef accélère, réduisant typiquement l'AoA en dessous de la valeur en palier.
+
+### Q139 : Quelle est l'une des fonctions de l'empennage horizontal ? ^t80q139
+- A) Stabiliser l'aéronef autour de l'axe latéral
+- B) Initier un virage autour de l'axe vertical
+- C) Stabiliser l'aéronef autour de l'axe vertical
+- D) Stabiliser l'aéronef autour de l'axe longitudinal
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'empennage horizontal (stabilisateur et gouverne de profondeur) assure la stabilité longitudinale (en tangage), c'est-à-dire la stabilité autour de l'axe latéral. Il génère des moments de rappel lorsque l'assiette en tangage de l'aéronef est perturbée. L'option B est incorrecte car les virages autour de l'axe vertical sont initiés par la gouverne de direction. L'option C est incorrecte car la stabilité de l'axe vertical vient de l'empennage vertical. L'option D est incorrecte car la stabilité de l'axe longitudinal (roulis) est assurée par le dièdre et la flèche de l'aile.
+
+### Q140 : Que se passe-t-il lorsque la gouverne de direction est braquée à gauche ? ^t80q140
+- A) L'aéronef cabre à droite
+- B) L'aéronef laie à droite
+- C) L'aéronef cabre à gauche
+- D) L'aéronef laie à gauche
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la gouverne de direction est braquée à gauche, elle produit une force aérodynamique latérale sur l'empennage qui pousse la queue vers la droite, faisant lacer le nez vers la gauche autour de l'axe vertical. Les options A et C sont incorrectes car le cabrage est un mouvement nez en haut/bas contrôlé par la gouverne de profondeur, pas la gouverne de direction. L'option B inverse la direction du lacet — la gouverne gauche produit un lacet à gauche.
+
+### Q141 : Le braquage différentiel des ailerons est utilisé pour... ^t80q141
+- A) Augmenter le taux de descente
+- B) Prévenir le décrochage à faibles angles d'attaque
+- C) Minimiser le lacet inverse
+- D) Réduire la turbulence de sillage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le braquage différentiel des ailerons donne à l'aileron baissé moins de braquage que l'aileron levé, réduisant l'asymétrie de traînée entre les deux ailes lors d'une entrée en roulis et minimisant ainsi le lacet inverse. L'option A est incorrecte car le taux de descente est contrôlé par les aérofreins ou la vitesse, pas par la géométrie des ailerons. L'option B est incorrecte car la prévention du décrochage à faible AoA n'est pas un problème. L'option D est incorrecte car la turbulence de sillage est causée par les tourbillons d'extrémité, pas par la conception des ailerons.
+
+### Q142 : Comment l'équilibre des forces est-il affecté dans un virage incliné ? ^t80q142
+- A) Une portance plus faible est suffisante car la force nette est réduite par rapport au vol en palier
+- B) La composante horizontale de la portance pendant le virage constitue la force centrifuge
+- C) La portance doit être augmentée pour équilibrer l'effet combiné de la gravité et de la force centrifuge
+- D) La force nette est la somme vectorielle des forces gravitationnelles et centripètes
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage incliné à altitude constante, le vecteur portance incliné doit être suffisamment grand pour que sa composante verticale compense toujours le poids tout en fournissant la force centripète pour la trajectoire courbe. Cela signifie que la portance totale doit dépasser la valeur en vol en palier, avec le facteur de charge n = 1/cos(angle d'inclinaison). L'option A est incorrecte car plus, et non moins, de portance est nécessaire. L'option B est imprécise — du référentiel de l'aéronef, cela apparaît comme une force centrifuge, mais la physique réelle implique une force centripète. L'option D ne décrit pas entièrement l'exigence d'équilibre des forces.
+
+### Q143 : Sur un planeur motoplaneur (TMG), quel dispositif moteur produit le moins de traînée ? ^t80q143
+- A) Moteur et hélice fixes au nez de l'aéronef
+- B) Moteur et hélice fixes sur le fuselage
+- C) Moteur et hélice rétractables dans le fuselage
+- D) Moteur et hélice fixes au stabilisateur horizontal
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un moteur et une hélice rétractables peuvent être entièrement rangés à l'intérieur du fuselage lorsqu'ils ne sont pas utilisés, éliminant complètement la traînée parasite du groupe propulseur et de l'hélice en vol plané. Les options A, B et D impliquent toutes des installations fixes (non rétractables) qui produisent continuellement de la traînée même lorsque le moteur est arrêté, car l'hélice et le capot moteur restent exposés au flux d'air.
+
+### Q144 : Quel effet est connu sous le nom de « lacet inverse » ? ^t80q144
+- A) Le braquage des ailerons fait lacer le nez vers la direction du virage voulu car l'aileron baissé a moins de traînée
+- B) Le braquage de la gouverne de direction crée un moment de roulis vers le côté opposé en raison de la portance supplémentaire sur l'aile se déplaçant plus vite
+- C) Le braquage des ailerons fait lacer le nez à l'opposé de la direction du virage voulu en raison d'une traînée accrue sur l'aileron baissé
+- D) Le braquage des ailerons fait lacer le nez à l'opposé de la direction du virage voulu en raison d'une traînée accrue sur l'aileron levé
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le lacet inverse se produit car l'aileron baissé augmente à la fois la portance et la traînée induite sur son aile. Cette traînée supplémentaire sur l'aile montante tire le nez vers elle — à l'opposé de la direction du virage voulu. L'option A décrit l'effet inverse. L'option B décrit un effet secondaire de la gouverne de direction, pas le phénomène principal du lacet inverse. L'option D attribue incorrectement la traînée supplémentaire à l'aileron levé, alors qu'en réalité c'est l'aileron baissé qui produit plus de traînée.
+
+### Q145 : Qu'est-ce que l'« effet de sol » ? ^t80q145
+- A) Une augmentation de la portance et une diminution de la traînée induite près du sol
+- B) Une diminution de la portance et une augmentation de la traînée induite près du sol
+- C) Une diminution à la fois de la portance et de la traînée induite près du sol
+- D) Une augmentation à la fois de la portance et de la traînée induite près du sol
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vol dans environ une envergure du sol, la surface du sol limite le développement complet des tourbillons d'extrémité, réduisant le souffle vers le bas. Cela augmente effectivement l'angle d'attaque local (plus de portance) et réduit simultanément la traînée induite. Les pilotes ressentent l'effet de sol comme une sensation de flottement lors du palier à l'atterrissage. L'option B inverse les deux effets. L'option C indique incorrectement que la portance diminue. L'option D indique incorrectement que la traînée induite augmente.
+
+### Q146 : Les braquages de la gouverne de direction font tourner l'aéronef autour de l'axe... ^t80q146
+- A) Longitudinal
+- B) De la gouverne de direction
+- C) Latéral
+- D) Vertical
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La gouverne de direction contrôle le lacet, qui est la rotation autour de l'axe vertical, provoquant le mouvement du nez vers la gauche ou vers la droite. L'option A est incorrecte car l'axe longitudinal gouverne le roulis, contrôlé par les ailerons. L'option B n'est pas une désignation d'axe aéronautique standard. L'option C est incorrecte car l'axe latéral gouverne le tangage, contrôlé par la gouverne de profondeur.
+
+### Q147 : Lequel des facteurs suivants provoque une augmentation du facteur de charge en croisière ? ^t80q147
+- A) Un centre de gravité avancé
+- B) Un poids d'aéronef plus élevé
+- C) Une rafale ascendante
+- D) Une densité de l'air plus faible
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une rafale ascendante augmente soudainement l'angle d'attaque de l'aile, générant temporairement une portance supérieure au poids de l'aéronef. Cette portance supplémentaire se traduit par un facteur de charge supérieur à 1, sollicitant la structure. L'option A (CG avancé) affecte la stabilité en tangage et la traînée de trim mais ne provoque pas directement des pics de facteur de charge. L'option B (poids plus élevé) implique des charges soutenues plus élevées mais ne provoque pas en soi une augmentation du facteur de charge n. L'option D (densité plus faible) réduit la portance pour une vitesse donnée, ce qui diminuerait, et non augmenterait, le facteur de charge instantané.
+
+### Q148 : En approchant du prochain thermique ascendant, le variomètre indique 3 m/s de descente. Vous prévoyez un taux de montée moyen de 2 m/s dans le thermique. Comment doit-on régler l'anneau de McCready ? ^t80q148
+- A) Régler l'anneau sur 3 m/s et lire la vitesse recommandée en face du taux de montée prévu (2 m/s)
+- B) Régler l'anneau sur 0 m/s hors thermiques et lire la vitesse recommandée en face du taux de chute actuel (3 m/s)
+- C) Régler l'anneau sur 2 m/s et lire la vitesse recommandée en face du taux de chute actuel (3 m/s)
+- D) Régler l'anneau sur 2 m/s et lire la vitesse recommandée en face de la somme du taux de chute actuel et du taux de montée prévu (5 m/s)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anneau de McCready est toujours réglé sur le taux de montée prévu dans le prochain thermique (2 m/s dans ce cas), et la vitesse de croisière inter-thermique recommandée se lit en face de l'aiguille du variomètre indiquant le taux de chute actuel (3 m/s). L'option A règle incorrectement l'anneau sur le taux de chute au lieu de l'intensité du thermique. L'option B règle l'anneau sur zéro, ce qui donnerait une vitesse de chute minimale plutôt qu'une vitesse de croisière optimale. L'option D additionne erronément le taux de chute et le taux de montée, ce qui n'est pas la méthode McCready.
+
+### Q149 : Que doit-on prendre en compte lors du pilotage d'un planeur équipé de volets de courbure ? ^t80q149
+- A) Au lancement au treuil, la courbure doit être réglée sur plein positif
+- B) À l'approche et à l'atterrissage, la courbure ne doit pas être modifiée du négatif vers le positif
+- C) À l'approche et à l'atterrissage, la courbure ne doit pas être modifiée du positif vers le négatif
+- D) Au lancement au treuil, la courbure doit être réglée sur plein négatif
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'approche et à l'atterrissage, le passage du volet de courbure du positif (courbure accrue, portance plus élevée) au négatif (courbure réduite ou réflexe) provoquerait une chute soudaine et spectaculaire de la portance près du sol, pouvant entraîner une prise de sol ou un contact avec le sol dangereux. L'option A n'est pas universellement correcte — les réglages de volets au lancement au treuil varient selon le type. L'option B inverse la restriction. L'option D est incorrecte car la courbure négative est un réglage de croisière, non approprié à la phase de lancement au treuil à forte demande de portance.
+
+### Q150 : Sur le schéma du profil, que représente le point numéro 3 ? Voir figure (PFA-009) Voir annexe 2 ^t80q150
+- A) Point de séparation
+- B) Centre de poussée
+- C) Point de stagnation
+- D) Point de transition
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point 3 sur le diagramme de couche limite (PFA-009) est le point de transition, où la couche limite passe d'un écoulement laminaire lisse à un écoulement turbulent. La position de cette transition dépend du nombre de Reynolds, de la rugosité de surface et du gradient de pression. L'option A (point de séparation) se produit plus en arrière, là où l'écoulement se décolle complètement. L'option B (centre de poussée) n'est pas une caractéristique de couche limite mais un point d'application des forces. L'option C (point de stagnation) se situe au bord d'attaque, où la vitesse de l'écoulement est nulle.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_151_162.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_151_162.md
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+### Q151: In the diagram, what does number 2 correspond to? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q151
+- A) Angle of attack
+- B) Profile thickness
+- C) Chord line
+- D) Chord line
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Number 2 in figure PFA-010 represents the chord line — the straight reference line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge of the aerofoil. It is the baseline from which the angle of attack and camber are measured. Option A (angle of attack) is an angular measurement, not a line on the diagram. Option B (profile thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a straight reference line.
+
+### Q152: In the figure, the angle (alpha) is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow Siehe Anlage 3 ^t80q152
+- A) Angle of inclination
+- B) Angle of incidence
+- C) Angle of attack
+- D) Lift angle
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle alpha between the chord line and the direction of the oncoming airflow is the angle of attack, the primary aerodynamic variable determining lift coefficient and stall behaviour. Option A (angle of inclination) is not a standard aeronautical term. Option B (angle of incidence) is the fixed structural angle between the chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis, set during manufacturing. Option D (lift angle) is not a recognized aviation term.
+
+### Q153: If the right aileron deflects upward and the left aileron deflects downward, how does the aircraft react? ^t80q153
+- A) Rolling to the right with yaw to the left
+- B) Rolling to the right with yaw to the right
+- C) Rolling to the left with no yawing
+- D) Rolling to the left with yaw to the right
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the right aileron deflects upward (reducing lift on the right wing) and the left aileron deflects downward (increasing lift on the left wing), the aircraft rolls to the right. Simultaneously, the down-deflected left aileron creates more induced drag on the left wing, producing adverse yaw — the nose swings to the left, opposite the intended roll direction. Options C and D incorrectly identify a leftward roll. Option B states yaw to the right, but adverse yaw always opposes the roll direction.
+
+### Q154: What must be taken into account when flying a sailplane with water ballast? ^t80q154
+- A) Best glide angle becomes worse
+- B) Best glide speed decreases
+- C) Significant C.G. shifts occur
+- D) The aircraft should stay below the freezing level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast must be kept above freezing (i.e., the aircraft should stay below the freezing level) to prevent the water from freezing in the wing tanks, which could jam dump valves, cause unpredictable CG shifts, and damage wing structure. Option A is wrong because the best glide angle (L/D ratio) is theoretically unchanged with ballast. Option B is incorrect — best glide speed increases with additional weight. Option C is misleading because water ballast tanks are designed to minimise CG shifts, keeping them within approved limits.
+
+### Q155: Which description characterises static stability? ^t80q155
+- A) After an external disturbance, the aircraft can return to its original position through rudder input
+- B) After an external disturbance, the aircraft maintains the displaced position
+- C) After an external disturbance, the aircraft tends toward an even more deflected position
+- D) After an external disturbance, the aircraft tends to return to its original position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability means that when an aircraft is displaced from equilibrium by an external force, inherent aerodynamic forces automatically tend to return it toward its original state without pilot input. Option A describes active pilot correction, not inherent stability. Option B describes neutral stability, where the aircraft stays wherever it is displaced. Option C describes static instability, where the aircraft diverges further from equilibrium.
+
+### Q156: How do the best gliding angle and best glide speed change when a sailplane carries water ballast compared to flying without it? ^t80q156
+- A) Best gliding angle remains unchanged; best glide speed increases
+- B) Best gliding angle increases; best glide speed increases
+- C) Best gliding angle remains unchanged; best glide speed decreases
+- D) Best gliding angle decreases; best glide speed decreases
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast increases total aircraft weight. The best L/D ratio (and therefore the best gliding angle) is an aerodynamic property of the aircraft's shape and does not change with weight. However, the speed at which this optimum L/D occurs increases because more dynamic pressure is needed to generate the extra lift required by the heavier aircraft. Option B wrongly claims the angle changes. Options C and D incorrectly state that best glide speed decreases.
+
+### Q157: Which constructive feature is designed to reduce control forces? ^t80q157
+- A) T-tail
+- B) Vortex generators
+- C) Aerodynamic rudder balance
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (horn balance or set-back hinge) extends part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so aerodynamic pressure partially assists the pilot's deflection effort, directly reducing the force required. Option A (T-tail) is a configuration choice affecting downwash and deep-stall characteristics. Option B (vortex generators) energise the boundary layer to delay flow separation. Option D (differential aileron deflection) reduces adverse yaw, not control forces.
+
+### Q158: When any body of arbitrary shape is surrounded by airflow (v > 0), it always produces... ^t80q158
+- A) Drag
+- B) Both drag and lift
+- C) Drag that remains constant at every speed
+- D) Lift without drag
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body immersed in a moving airstream (v > 0) always produces drag, because viscous friction and pressure differences are unavoidable in real fluid flow. Lift requires specific shaping or angle of attack and is not guaranteed. Option B is wrong because lift is not always produced. Option C is incorrect because drag increases with V² — it is not constant. Option D is physically impossible — drag-free flight does not exist in a real fluid.
+
+### Q159: "Longitudinal stability" refers to stability around which axis? ^t80q159
+- A) Vertical axis
+- B) Propeller axis
+- C) Longitudinal axis
+- D) Lateral axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Despite the potentially confusing name, longitudinal stability describes pitch stability, which is rotation around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip). It is the tendency to maintain or return to a trimmed pitch attitude. Option A (vertical axis) governs directional/yaw stability. Option B (propeller axis) is not a standard stability axis. Option C (longitudinal axis) governs roll/lateral stability.
+
+### Q160: What does "wing loading" mean? ^t80q160
+- A) Drag per wing area
+- B) Weight per wing area
+- C) Drag per weight
+- D) Wing area per weight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is the aircraft's total weight divided by the wing reference area (e.g., N/m² or kg/m²). Higher wing loading means higher stall speeds but better penetration in turbulence. Option A (drag per wing area) is not a standard metric. Option C (drag per weight) describes a drag-to-weight ratio. Option D (wing area per weight) is the mathematical inverse of wing loading.
+
+### Q161: What phenomenon is known as adverse yaw? ^t80q161
+- A) Aileron input causes a yaw toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input produces a rolling moment toward the opposite side because the faster-moving wing generates more lift
+- C) Aileron input causes a yaw away from the intended turn due to more drag on the up-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input causes a yaw away from the intended turn due to more drag on the down-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-deflected aileron, which increases local lift on the rising wing, also increases induced drag on that wing. This extra drag pulls the nose toward the rising wing — away from the intended turn direction. Option A describes the opposite phenomenon. Option B describes a secondary rudder-roll coupling, not the primary adverse yaw effect. Option C incorrectly attributes the drag increase to the up-deflected aileron; in reality, it is the down-deflected aileron that creates more drag.
+
+### Q162: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q162
+- A) Both lift and induced drag decrease near the ground
+- B) Both lift and induced drag increase near the ground
+- C) Lift decreases and induced drag increases near the ground
+- D) Lift increases and induced drag decreases near the ground
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ground effect (within approximately one wingspan of the surface), the ground physically constrains wingtip vortex development, reducing downwash. This increases the effective angle of attack (raising lift) while simultaneously reducing induced drag. Pilots notice this as a floating sensation during the landing flare. Options A, B, and C all incorrectly describe the lift-drag relationship — the correct combination is increased lift with decreased induced drag.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_151_162_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_151_162_fr.md
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+### Q151 : Dans le diagramme, à quoi correspond le numéro 2 ? Voir figure (PFA-010) Voir annexe 1 ^t80q151
+- A) Angle d'attaque
+- B) Épaisseur du profil
+- C) Ligne de corde
+- D) Ligne de corde
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le numéro 2 dans la figure PFA-010 représente la ligne de corde — la droite de référence reliant le bord d'attaque au bord de fuite du profil. C'est la ligne de base à partir de laquelle l'angle d'attaque et la cambrure sont mesurés. L'option A (angle d'attaque) est une mesure angulaire, pas une ligne sur le diagramme. L'option B (épaisseur du profil) est la distance perpendiculaire entre l'extrados et l'intrados, pas une ligne droite de référence.
+
+### Q152 : Dans la figure, l'angle (alpha) est désigné sous le nom de... Voir figure (PFA-003) DoF : direction de l'écoulement Voir annexe 3 ^t80q152
+- A) Angle d'inclinaison
+- B) Angle d'incidence
+- C) Angle d'attaque
+- D) Angle de portance
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle alpha entre la ligne de corde et la direction de l'écoulement entrant est l'angle d'attaque, la principale variable aérodynamique déterminant le coefficient de portance et le comportement au décrochage. L'option A (angle d'inclinaison) n'est pas un terme aéronautique standard. L'option B (angle d'incidence) est l'angle structurel fixe entre la ligne de corde et l'axe longitudinal de l'aéronef, défini lors de la fabrication. L'option D (angle de portance) n'est pas un terme aéronautique reconnu.
+
+### Q153 : Si l'aileron droit se braque vers le haut et l'aileron gauche vers le bas, comment l'aéronef réagit-il ? ^t80q153
+- A) Roulis à droite avec lacet à gauche
+- B) Roulis à droite avec lacet à droite
+- C) Roulis à gauche sans lacet
+- D) Roulis à gauche avec lacet à droite
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'aileron droit se braque vers le haut (réduisant la portance sur l'aile droite) et l'aileron gauche vers le bas (augmentant la portance sur l'aile gauche), l'aéronef s'incline en roulis vers la droite. Simultanément, l'aileron gauche baissé crée plus de traînée induite sur l'aile gauche, produisant un lacet inverse — le nez pivote vers la gauche, à l'opposé de la direction du roulis voulu. Les options C et D identifient incorrectement un roulis vers la gauche. L'option B indique un lacet vers la droite, mais le lacet inverse est toujours opposé à la direction du roulis.
+
+### Q154 : Que doit-on prendre en compte lors du vol d'un planeur avec eau de lestage ? ^t80q154
+- A) Le meilleur angle de planée se dégrade
+- B) La vitesse de meilleure finesse diminue
+- C) Des déplacements importants du CG se produisent
+- D) L'aéronef doit rester en dessous du niveau du gel
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'eau de lestage doit être maintenue au-dessus du point de congélation (l'aéronef doit rester en dessous du niveau du gel) pour éviter que l'eau ne gèle dans les réservoirs d'aile, ce qui pourrait bloquer les vannes de vidange, provoquer des déplacements de CG imprévisibles et endommager la structure alaire. L'option A est incorrecte car le meilleur angle de planée (rapport L/D) est théoriquement inchangé avec le lestage. L'option B est incorrecte — la vitesse de meilleure finesse augmente avec la masse supplémentaire. L'option C est trompeuse car les réservoirs d'eau de lestage sont conçus pour minimiser les déplacements de CG, les maintenant dans les limites approuvées.
+
+### Q155 : Quelle description caractérise la stabilité statique ? ^t80q155
+- A) Après une perturbation extérieure, l'aéronef peut revenir à sa position initiale grâce à une action sur la gouverne de direction
+- B) Après une perturbation extérieure, l'aéronef maintient la position déplacée
+- C) Après une perturbation extérieure, l'aéronef tend vers une position encore plus déplacée
+- D) Après une perturbation extérieure, l'aéronef tend à revenir à sa position initiale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité statique signifie que lorsqu'un aéronef est déplacé de son équilibre par une force extérieure, les forces aérodynamiques inhérentes tendent automatiquement à le ramener vers son état initial sans action du pilote. L'option A décrit une correction active du pilote, pas la stabilité inhérente. L'option B décrit la stabilité neutre, où l'aéronef reste là où il est déplacé. L'option C décrit l'instabilité statique, où l'aéronef diverge encore plus loin de l'équilibre.
+
+### Q156 : Comment le meilleur angle de planée et la vitesse de meilleure finesse changent-ils lorsqu'un planeur emporte de l'eau de lestage par rapport au vol sans lestage ? ^t80q156
+- A) Le meilleur angle de planée reste inchangé ; la vitesse de meilleure finesse augmente
+- B) Le meilleur angle de planée augmente ; la vitesse de meilleure finesse augmente
+- C) Le meilleur angle de planée reste inchangé ; la vitesse de meilleure finesse diminue
+- D) Le meilleur angle de planée diminue ; la vitesse de meilleure finesse diminue
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'eau de lestage augmente la masse totale de l'aéronef. Le meilleur rapport L/D (et donc le meilleur angle de planée) est une propriété aérodynamique de la forme de l'aéronef et ne change pas avec la masse. En revanche, la vitesse à laquelle ce L/D optimal est atteint augmente car une pression dynamique plus élevée est nécessaire pour générer la portance supplémentaire requise par l'aéronef plus lourd. L'option B prétend incorrectement que l'angle change. Les options C et D indiquent incorrectement que la vitesse de meilleure finesse diminue.
+
+### Q157 : Quelle caractéristique constructive est conçue pour réduire les efforts de commande ? ^t80q157
+- A) Empennage en T
+- B) Générateurs de tourbillons
+- C) Équilibrage aérodynamique de la gouverne de direction
+- D) Braquage différentiel des ailerons
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un équilibrage aérodynamique de la gouverne de direction (équilibrage à corne ou axe décalé) étend une partie de la gouverne en avant de l'axe de charnière, de sorte que la pression aérodynamique assiste partiellement l'effort de braquage du pilote, réduisant directement la force requise. L'option A (empennage en T) est un choix de configuration affectant le souffle vers le bas et les caractéristiques de décrochage profond. L'option B (générateurs de tourbillons) énergise la couche limite pour retarder la séparation de l'écoulement. L'option D (braquage différentiel des ailerons) réduit le lacet inverse, pas les efforts de commande.
+
+### Q158 : Lorsque tout corps de forme arbitraire est entouré d'un écoulement d'air (v > 0), il produit toujours... ^t80q158
+- A) De la traînée
+- B) À la fois de la traînée et de la portance
+- C) Une traînée constante à toute vitesse
+- D) De la portance sans traînée
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout corps immergé dans un écoulement d'air en mouvement (v > 0) produit toujours de la traînée, car le frottement visqueux et les différences de pression sont inévitables dans un écoulement de fluide réel. La portance nécessite une forme ou un angle d'attaque spécifique et n'est pas garantie. L'option B est incorrecte car la portance n'est pas toujours produite. L'option C est incorrecte car la traînée augmente avec V² — elle n'est pas constante. L'option D est physiquement impossible — le vol sans traînée n'existe pas dans un fluide réel.
+
+### Q159 : La « stabilité longitudinale » fait référence à la stabilité autour de quel axe ? ^t80q159
+- A) Axe vertical
+- B) Axe de l'hélice
+- C) Axe longitudinal
+- D) Axe latéral
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Malgré le nom potentiellement trompeur, la stabilité longitudinale décrit la stabilité en tangage, qui est la rotation autour de l'axe latéral (d'extrémité à extrémité d'aile). C'est la tendance à maintenir ou à retrouver une assiette en tangage de trim. L'option A (axe vertical) gouverne la stabilité directionnelle/en lacet. L'option B (axe de l'hélice) n'est pas un axe de stabilité standard. L'option C (axe longitudinal) gouverne la stabilité en roulis/latérale.
+
+### Q160 : Que signifie la « charge alaire » ? ^t80q160
+- A) Traînée par unité de surface alaire
+- B) Poids par unité de surface alaire
+- C) Traînée par unité de poids
+- D) Surface alaire par unité de poids
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La charge alaire est le poids total de l'aéronef divisé par la surface alaire de référence (par exemple N/m² ou kg/m²). Une charge alaire plus élevée implique des vitesses de décrochage plus élevées mais une meilleure pénétration en turbulence. L'option A (traînée par surface alaire) n'est pas une mesure standard. L'option C (traînée par poids) décrit un rapport traînée/poids. L'option D (surface alaire par poids) est l'inverse mathématique de la charge alaire.
+
+### Q161 : Quel phénomène est connu sous le nom de lacet inverse ? ^t80q161
+- A) Le braquage des ailerons provoque un lacet vers la direction du virage voulu car l'aileron baissé a moins de traînée
+- B) Le braquage de la gouverne de direction produit un moment de roulis vers le côté opposé car l'aile se déplaçant plus vite génère plus de portance
+- C) Le braquage des ailerons provoque un lacet à l'opposé du virage voulu en raison d'une traînée accrue sur l'aileron levé
+- D) Le braquage des ailerons provoque un lacet à l'opposé du virage voulu en raison d'une traînée accrue sur l'aileron baissé
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le lacet inverse se produit car l'aileron baissé, qui augmente la portance locale sur l'aile montante, augmente également la traînée induite de cette aile. Cette traînée supplémentaire tire le nez vers l'aile montante — à l'opposé de la direction du virage voulu. L'option A décrit le phénomène inverse. L'option B décrit un couplage secondaire gouverne de direction-roulis, pas le phénomène principal du lacet inverse. L'option C attribue incorrectement l'augmentation de traînée à l'aileron levé ; en réalité, c'est l'aileron baissé qui crée plus de traînée.
+
+### Q162 : Qu'est-ce que l'« effet de sol » ? ^t80q162
+- A) La portance et la traînée induite diminuent toutes les deux près du sol
+- B) La portance et la traînée induite augmentent toutes les deux près du sol
+- C) La portance diminue et la traînée induite augmente près du sol
+- D) La portance augmente et la traînée induite diminue près du sol
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En effet de sol (dans environ une envergure de la surface), le sol contraint physiquement le développement des tourbillons d'extrémité, réduisant le souffle vers le bas. Cela augmente l'angle d'attaque effectif (augmentant la portance) tout en réduisant simultanément la traînée induite. Les pilotes remarquent cela comme une sensation de flottement lors du palier à l'atterrissage. Les options A, B et C décrivent toutes incorrectement la relation portance-traînée — la combinaison correcte est une portance accrue avec une traînée induite réduite.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_1_25.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_1_25.md
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+### Q1: Regarding the forces at play, how is steady-state gliding flight best characterised? ^t80q1
+- A) Lift alone compensates for drag
+- B) The resultant aerodynamic force acts along the direction of the airflow
+- C) The resultant aerodynamic force counterbalances the weight
+- D) The resultant aerodynamic force is aligned with the lift vector
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In steady (stationary) gliding flight, there is no thrust, so only two forces act: gravity (weight) and the total aerodynamic force (the vector sum of lift and drag). For the glider to be in equilibrium, these two must be equal and opposite — meaning the resultant air force exactly compensates gravity. Lift and drag are merely components of this single aerodynamic resultant; neither lift alone nor drag alone balances weight.
+
+### Q2: What happens to the minimum flying speed when flaps are extended, thereby increasing wing camber? ^t80q2
+- A) The minimum speed rises
+- B) The centre of gravity shifts forward
+- C) The minimum speed drops
+- D) The maximum permissible speed rises
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases wing camber, which raises the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max). From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)), a higher CL_max directly lowers the minimum flying speed Vs. This allows the aircraft to fly slower without stalling, which is why flaps are used during approach and landing. The maximum permissible speed typically decreases with flaps extended (not increases), because flap structures are not designed for high dynamic pressure.
+
+### Q3: After one wing stalls and the nose drops, what is the correct technique to prevent a spin? ^t80q3
+- A) Pull the elevator to restore the aircraft to a normal attitude
+- B) Deflect all control surfaces opposite to the lower wing
+- C) Push the elevator forward to gain speed and re-attach airflow on the wings
+- D) Apply rudder opposite to the lower wing and release elevator back-pressure to regain speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An incipient spin begins when one wing stalls before the other — the stalled wing drops, creating a yawing and rolling moment. The correct response is to apply rudder opposite the direction of yaw/lower wing to stop the rotation, and simultaneously release elevator back-pressure (or push forward) to reduce the angle of attack below the critical value, allowing airflow to re-attach and lift to be restored. Pulling the elevator (A) would increase AoA and deepen the stall; pushing alone (C) without rudder does not stop the yaw.
+
+### Q4: Which component is responsible for pitch stabilisation during cruise? ^t80q4
+- A) Ailerons
+- B) Wing flaps
+- C) Vertical rudder
+- D) Horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The lateral axis is the pitch axis (nose up/down). The horizontal stabilizer provides longitudinal (pitch) stability: it generates a restoring moment whenever the nose pitches up or down from trim, because its lift force changes with AoA at the tail. Ailerons control roll (longitudinal axis), the vertical rudder controls yaw (vertical axis), and flaps are high-lift devices, not stability surfaces.
+
+### Q5: What can happen when the never-exceed speed (VNE) is surpassed in flight? ^t80q5
+- A) Flutter and structural damage to the wings
+- B) Lower drag accompanied by higher control forces
+- C) Excessive total pressure rendering the airspeed indicator unusable
+- D) An improved lift-to-drag ratio and a flatter glide angle
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding VNE risks aeroelastic flutter — a self-reinforcing oscillation of the control surfaces or wings that can destroy the structure within seconds. Flutter onset speed is close to VNE. Structural failure of spars, attachments, or control surfaces may follow. The other options describe effects that do not occur at excessive speed: glide angle does not improve, drag does not decrease, and the ASI is designed to function at all normal and abnormal speeds.
+
+### Q6: What effect does a rearward centre of gravity position have on a glider's handling? ^t80q6
+- A) The aircraft becomes very stable in pitch
+- B) The aircraft becomes less stable in pitch and is harder to control
+- C) Roll control effectiveness increases
+- D) The stall speed increases significantly
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rearward CG reduces the restoring moment arm between the CG and the horizontal stabiliser, diminishing longitudinal (pitch) stability. In extreme cases the aircraft can become unstable in pitch — the pilot may be unable to prevent a nose-up divergence, especially during winch launch or in turbulence. The forward CG limit ensures adequate pitch stability; the aft limit ensures adequate controllability. A rearward CG does not increase stall speed or roll effectiveness, and it makes the aircraft less, not more, stable.
+
+### Q7: What purpose does the vertical tail fin (rudder assembly) serve? ^t80q7
+- A) Providing roll stability
+- B) Providing pitch control
+- C) Generating additional lift in turns
+- D) Providing directional (yaw) stability and control
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical tail fin (fin + rudder) provides yaw stability and yaw control. The fixed fin acts as a weathervane that generates a restoring yaw moment if the aircraft sideslips. The movable rudder allows the pilot to command deliberate yaw inputs for coordination, crosswind correction, or spin recovery. The horizontal stabiliser handles pitch; wing dihedral handles roll stability; the vertical tail does not generate lift in the conventional sense.
+
+### Q8: In a coordinated level turn at 60 degrees of bank, the load factor is approximately... ^t80q8
+- A) 1.0
+- B) 1.4
+- C) 2.0
+- D) 3.0
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a level coordinated turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle). At 60° bank, n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0.5 = 2.0. This means the effective weight the wings must support doubles. Stall speed increases by a factor of √n = √2 ≈ 1.41, i.e. a 41% increase. This is why steep turns at low altitude are dangerous for gliders — the stall margin shrinks dramatically.
+
+### Q9: What is the relationship between aspect ratio and induced drag? ^t80q9
+- A) Higher aspect ratio increases induced drag
+- B) Aspect ratio has no effect on induced drag
+- C) Higher aspect ratio reduces induced drag
+- D) Induced drag depends only on airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is inversely proportional to aspect ratio (AR): D_induced ∝ CL² / (π × AR × e). A longer, narrower wing (high AR) produces the same lift with weaker wingtip vortices and therefore less induced drag. This is why gliders have very high aspect ratios — it is the primary design feature that maximises the lift-to-drag ratio and glide performance.
+
+### Q10: When the elevator trim tab is deflected downward, what is the resulting pitch tendency? ^t80q10
+- A) Nose-up
+- B) No change
+- C) The aircraft rolls
+- D) Nose-down
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A downward-deflected trim tab produces an upward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, pushing the elevator's trailing edge up and its leading edge down — this effectively deflects the elevator downward, creating a nose-up pitching moment. Trim tabs work by aerodynamic force to relieve the pilot of sustained stick forces; their deflection is opposite to the desired elevator deflection.
+
+### Q11: What does the polar curve of a glider depict? ^t80q11
+- A) The relationship between altitude and airspeed
+- B) The relationship between sink rate and airspeed
+- C) The relationship between lift and weight
+- D) The relationship between drag and altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The glider's speed polar plots the vertical sink rate (Vz, typically in m/s) against the horizontal airspeed (Vh). It is the fundamental performance diagram for a glider: it reveals the minimum sink speed (the lowest point on the curve), the best glide speed (given by the tangent from the origin), and inter-thermal cruise speeds (McCready tangents). All cross-country speed-to-fly decisions are based on this curve.
+
+### Q12: In straight and level flight, what happens to the required angle of attack as speed increases? ^t80q12
+- A) It remains constant
+- B) It increases
+- C) It decreases
+- D) It oscillates
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In level flight, lift must equal weight (L = W). Since L = CL × 0.5 × ρ × V² × S, when speed V increases the lift coefficient CL must decrease to keep lift constant. A lower CL corresponds to a lower angle of attack. Therefore, faster flight requires a smaller angle of attack, and slower flight (toward the stall) requires a progressively larger angle of attack.
+
+### Q13: What is the function of wing fences or boundary layer fences? ^t80q13
+- A) To increase the maximum speed
+- B) To reduce weight
+- C) To prevent spanwise flow of the boundary layer
+- D) To increase induced drag
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing fences are thin vertical plates on the upper surface of a swept or tapered wing that prevent the boundary layer from flowing spanwise (outward toward the tips). Without fences, the boundary layer migrates outward due to the pressure gradient, thickening at the tips and promoting tip stall. Fences confine the boundary layer to its local region, improving tip stall characteristics and aileron effectiveness at high angles of attack.
+
+### Q14: What happens to total drag at the speed for best glide ratio? ^t80q14
+- A) Total drag is at its maximum
+- B) Induced drag equals zero
+- C) Total drag is at its minimum
+- D) Parasite drag equals zero
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best glide ratio (maximum L/D) occurs at the speed where total drag is minimum. At this point, induced drag exactly equals parasite drag — any faster increases parasite drag more than induced drag decreases, and any slower increases induced drag more than parasite drag decreases. For a glider, this speed gives the flattest glide angle and the greatest distance per unit of altitude lost in still air.
+
+### Q15: What structural feature contributes to lateral (roll) stability in a glider? ^t80q15
+- A) Horizontal stabiliser
+- B) Vertical fin
+- C) Wing dihedral
+- D) Elevator trim
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings — is the primary design feature providing lateral (roll) stability. When a gust or disturbance causes one wing to drop, the dihedral geometry increases the angle of attack on the lower wing, generating more lift and creating a restoring roll moment toward wings-level. The vertical fin provides directional stability; the horizontal stabiliser provides pitch stability; and elevator trim sets a pitch reference, not a roll reference.
+
+### Q16: How does increasing altitude affect true airspeed (TAS) for a given indicated airspeed (IAS)? ^t80q16
+- A) TAS decreases
+- B) TAS stays the same as IAS
+- C) TAS increases
+- D) TAS fluctuates unpredictably
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is based on dynamic pressure (q = 0.5 × ρ × V²). At higher altitude, air density ρ is lower, so a given IAS corresponds to a higher TAS. The relationship is TAS = IAS × √(ρ₀/ρ), where ρ₀ is sea-level density. For glider pilots, this means that at altitude, the ground speed for the same indicated approach speed is higher, and the landing roll will be longer.
+
+### Q17: What does the term "load factor" describe? ^t80q17
+- A) The ratio of aircraft weight to wing area
+- B) The ratio of lift to weight
+- C) The ratio of drag to weight
+- D) The ratio of thrust to drag
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Load factor (n) is defined as the ratio of the lift generated by the wings to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In straight and level flight, n = 1. In a turn, n > 1 because extra lift is needed for the centripetal force. In a vertical pullup, n can exceed the design limits. The structural design of the glider is rated for specific load factor limits (typically +5.3g / -2.65g for utility category).
+
+### Q18: How does increasing aircraft weight affect the best glide ratio? ^t80q18
+- A) It improves the glide ratio
+- B) It worsens the glide ratio
+- C) It does not change the glide ratio
+- D) It depends on the wing configuration
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best L/D ratio is determined by the aerodynamic shape of the aircraft and is independent of weight. Increasing weight shifts the speed polar downward and to the right — the best glide speed increases (must fly faster) but the maximum L/D ratio stays the same. This is why adding water ballast in gliders improves inter-thermal cruise speed without changing the glide angle — only the speed at which that angle is achieved changes.
+
+### Q19: A glider is flying at the speed for minimum sink rate. If the pilot accelerates, what happens to the sink rate? ^t80q19
+- A) Sink rate decreases further
+- B) Sink rate remains the same
+- C) Sink rate increases
+- D) Sink rate oscillates
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum sink rate speed is the speed at the lowest point of the speed polar. Any speed change — faster or slower — from this point increases the sink rate. Accelerating beyond minimum sink speed increases parasite drag faster than induced drag decreases, resulting in a higher total drag and therefore a greater rate of descent. This is the trade-off in cross-country flying: flying faster covers more ground but at the cost of increased sink rate.
+
+### Q20: What is the effect of extending airbrakes (spoilers) on a glider? ^t80q20
+- A) Lift increases and drag decreases
+- B) Both lift and drag decrease
+- C) Drag increases and lift decreases
+- D) Both lift and drag increase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airbrakes (spoilers) disrupt the smooth airflow over the wing surface, reducing the pressure differential and therefore reducing lift. Simultaneously, the raised spoiler panels create a large increase in drag. This combined effect steepens the glide path dramatically, which is precisely their purpose — to allow the pilot to control the approach angle and land precisely. Without airbrakes, gliders would float long distances due to their excellent L/D ratio.
+
+### Q21: In which flight condition is induced drag greatest? ^t80q21
+- A) High-speed cruise
+- B) Diving flight
+- C) Slow flight at high angle of attack
+- D) At the best glide speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL², and CL is highest in slow flight at high angle of attack (where the wing must generate maximum lift per unit of dynamic pressure). In a dive or at high speed, CL is low and induced drag is minimal — parasite drag dominates instead. At best glide speed, induced drag equals parasite drag but is not at its maximum. The slow-flight regime is where induced drag dominates total drag.
+
+### Q22: What is the primary function of an elevator trim tab? ^t80q22
+- A) To reduce control stick forces in sustained flight conditions
+- B) To increase the maximum speed
+- C) To improve lateral stability
+- D) To prevent flutter
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator trim tab allows the pilot to reduce or eliminate the stick force needed to hold a given pitch attitude in steady flight. By deflecting the trim tab, an aerodynamic force is applied to the elevator that counters the natural hinge moment, allowing hands-off or reduced-force flight at the trimmed speed. This reduces pilot fatigue on long flights and allows the pilot to concentrate on navigation and thermal exploitation.
+
+### Q23: What happens to stall speed in a turn compared to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q23
+- A) Stall speed decreases
+- B) Stall speed remains unchanged
+- C) Stall speed increases
+- D) Stall speed depends only on altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) exceeds 1, meaning the wings must generate more lift than in straight flight. The stall speed increases by the factor √n. At 45° bank, stall speed increases by 19%; at 60° bank by 41%. This is a critical safety consideration when thermalling near the ground — the steeper the bank, the closer the pilot is to the elevated stall speed.
+
+### Q24: What is the centre of pressure of an aerofoil? ^t80q24
+- A) The point where the aircraft's weight acts
+- B) The point of maximum thickness on the aerofoil
+- C) The point where the resultant aerodynamic force acts on the wing
+- D) The geometric centre of the wing planform
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of pressure (CP) is the point on the chord line where the resultant aerodynamic force (sum of all pressure and friction forces) can be considered to act. Unlike the aerodynamic centre, the CP moves with changing angle of attack — it moves forward as AoA increases and rearward as AoA decreases. This movement is one reason why the CG position must remain within limits: if the CP moves too far from the CG, pitch control may be compromised.
+
+### Q25: At what point during flight is parasite drag greatest? ^t80q25
+- A) During slow flight near the stall
+- B) At the minimum sink speed
+- C) At the best glide speed
+- D) At the highest permissible speed (VNE)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parasite drag is proportional to V² (dynamic pressure). The faster the aircraft flies, the greater the parasite drag. At VNE — the maximum speed — parasite drag reaches its peak within the normal flight envelope. At slow speeds near the stall, parasite drag is minimal while induced drag dominates. Parasite drag includes form drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag — all of which grow with the square of the airspeed.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_1_25_fr.md
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+### Q1 : En ce qui concerne les forces en jeu, comment peut-on le mieux décrire le vol plané stationnaire ? ^t80q1
+- A) La portance seule compense la traînée
+- B) La résultante aérodynamique agit selon la direction du flux d'air
+- C) La résultante aérodynamique compense le poids
+- D) La résultante aérodynamique est alignée avec le vecteur de portance
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vol plané stationnaire (sans moteur), seules deux forces agissent : la gravité (poids) et la résultante aérodynamique totale (somme vectorielle de la portance et de la traînée). Pour que le planeur soit en équilibre, ces deux forces doivent être égales et opposées — la résultante aérodynamique compense exactement la gravité. La portance et la traînée ne sont que des composantes de cette résultante ; aucune des deux ne compense le poids à elle seule.
+
+### Q2 : Que se passe-t-il pour la vitesse minimale de vol lorsqu'on sort les volets, augmentant ainsi la cambrure de l'aile ? ^t80q2
+- A) La vitesse minimale augmente
+- B) Le centre de gravité se déplace vers l'avant
+- C) La vitesse minimale diminue
+- D) La vitesse maximale autorisée augmente
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La sortie des volets augmente la cambrure de l'aile, ce qui accroît le coefficient de portance maximal (CL_max). D'après la formule de la vitesse de décrochage Vs = racine(2W / (rho × S × CL_max)), un CL_max plus élevé réduit directement la vitesse minimale de vol Vs. Cela permet à l'aéronef de voler plus lentement sans décrocher, ce qui justifie l'usage des volets à l'approche et à l'atterrissage. La vitesse maximale autorisée diminue généralement volets sortis (et non augmente), car la structure des volets n'est pas conçue pour de fortes pressions dynamiques.
+
+### Q3 : Après le décrochage d'une aile et l'abaissement du nez, quelle est la technique correcte pour éviter une vrille ? ^t80q3
+- A) Tirer sur la profondeur pour ramener l'aéronef en attitude normale
+- B) Déflexion de toutes les gouvernes à l'opposé de l'aile basse
+- C) Pousser sur la profondeur pour reprendre de la vitesse et rattacher l'écoulement sur les ailes
+- D) Appliquer la gouverne de direction à l'opposé de l'aile basse et relâcher la contre-profondeur pour reprendre de la vitesse
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une vrille incipiente commence lorsqu'une aile décroche avant l'autre — l'aile décrochée s'abaisse, créant un mouvement de lacet et de roulis. La réaction correcte est d'appliquer la gouverne de direction du côté opposé au lacet/à l'aile basse pour arrêter la rotation, et simultanément de relâcher la pression sur le manche (ou de pousser) pour réduire l'angle d'attaque en dessous de la valeur critique, permettant à l'écoulement de se rattacher et à la portance d'être restaurée. Tirer sur la profondeur (A) augmenterait l'angle d'attaque et aggraverait le décrochage ; pousser seul (C) sans utilisation du palonnier n'arrête pas le mouvement de lacet.
+
+### Q4 : Quel élément assure la stabilisation en tangage en croisière ? ^t80q4
+- A) Les ailerons
+- B) Les volets hypersustentateurs
+- C) La gouverne de direction verticale
+- D) Le stabilisateur horizontal
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'axe latéral est l'axe de tangage (nez vers le haut/bas). Le stabilisateur horizontal assure la stabilité longitudinale (en tangage) : il génère un moment de rappel chaque fois que le nez s'écarte de la position de trim, car sa portance varie avec l'angle d'attaque à la queue. Les ailerons contrôlent le roulis (axe longitudinal), la gouverne de direction contrôle le lacet (axe vertical), et les volets sont des dispositifs hypersustentateurs, non des surfaces de stabilité.
+
+### Q5 : Que peut-il se passer lorsque la vitesse à ne jamais dépasser (VNE) est dépassée en vol ? ^t80q5
+- A) Flottement et dommages structurels aux ailes
+- B) Traînée réduite accompagnée de forces de commande accrues
+- C) Pression totale excessive rendant l'anémomètre inutilisable
+- D) Amélioration du rapport portance/traînée et angle de planée plus favorable
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le dépassement de la VNE risque de provoquer un flottement aéroélastique — une oscillation auto-entretenue des gouvernes ou des ailes pouvant détruire la structure en quelques secondes. La vitesse de début de flottement est proche de la VNE. Des défaillances structurelles des longerons, des attaches ou des gouvernes peuvent s'ensuivre. Les autres options décrivent des effets qui ne se produisent pas à vitesse excessive : l'angle de planée ne s'améliore pas, la traînée ne diminue pas, et l'anémomètre est conçu pour fonctionner à toutes les vitesses normales et anormales.
+
+### Q6 : Quel est l'effet d'une position du centre de gravité trop reculée sur le comportement d'un planeur ? ^t80q6
+- A) L'aéronef devient très stable en tangage
+- B) L'aéronef devient moins stable en tangage et plus difficile à contrôler
+- C) L'efficacité des commandes de roulis augmente
+- D) La vitesse de décrochage augmente significativement
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un centre de gravité (CG) trop reculé réduit le bras de levier du moment de rappel entre le CG et le stabilisateur horizontal, diminuant la stabilité longitudinale (en tangage). Dans les cas extrêmes, l'aéronef peut devenir instable en tangage — le pilote peut se trouver incapable d'empêcher une divergence cabrée, notamment lors d'un lancement au treuil ou en turbulence. La limite avant du CG garantit une stabilité en tangage suffisante ; la limite arrière garantit une contrôlabilité adéquate. Un CG reculé n'augmente pas la vitesse de décrochage ni l'efficacité du roulis, et rend l'aéronef moins stable, non plus stable.
+
+### Q7 : Quelle est la fonction de l'empennage vertical (ensemble gouverne de direction) ? ^t80q7
+- A) Assurer la stabilité en roulis
+- B) Assurer le contrôle en tangage
+- C) Générer de la portance supplémentaire dans les virages
+- D) Assurer la stabilité directionnelle (en lacet) et le contrôle
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'empennage vertical (dérive + gouverne de direction) assure la stabilité et le contrôle en lacet. La dérive fixe agit comme une girouette qui génère un moment de rappel en lacet si l'aéronef glisse. La gouverne de direction mobile permet au pilote d'imposer des impulsions de lacet délibérées pour la coordination, la correction en vent de travers ou la sortie de vrille. Le stabilisateur horizontal gère le tangage ; le dièdre de l'aile gère la stabilité en roulis ; l'empennage vertical ne génère pas de portance au sens conventionnel.
+
+### Q8 : Dans un virage coordonné à plat à 60 degrés d'inclinaison, le facteur de charge est approximativement de... ^t80q8
+- A) 1,0
+- B) 1,4
+- C) 2,0
+- D) 3,0
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage à plat coordonné, le facteur de charge n = 1/cos(angle d'inclinaison). À 60° d'inclinaison, n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0,5 = 2,0. Cela signifie que le poids effectif que les ailes doivent supporter double. La vitesse de décrochage augmente d'un facteur √n = √2 ≈ 1,41, soit une augmentation de 41 %. C'est pourquoi les virages à grande inclinaison à basse altitude sont dangereux pour les planeurs — la marge par rapport au décrochage se réduit considérablement.
+
+### Q9 : Quelle est la relation entre l'allongement et la traînée induite ? ^t80q9
+- A) Un allongement élevé augmente la traînée induite
+- B) L'allongement n'a aucun effet sur la traînée induite
+- C) Un allongement élevé réduit la traînée induite
+- D) La traînée induite ne dépend que de la vitesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite est inversement proportionnelle à l'allongement (A) : D_induite ∝ CL² / (π × A × e). Une aile plus longue et plus étroite (grand allongement) produit la même portance avec des tourbillons d'extrémité plus faibles et donc moins de traînée induite. C'est pourquoi les planeurs ont des allongements très élevés — il s'agit de la principale caractéristique de conception qui maximise le rapport portance/traînée et les performances de planée.
+
+### Q10 : Lorsque la tab de trim de profondeur est braquée vers le bas, quelle est la tendance de tangage qui en résulte ? ^t80q10
+- A) Cabré (nez en haut)
+- B) Aucun changement
+- C) L'aéronef s'incline en roulis
+- D) Piqué (nez en bas)
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une tab de trim braquée vers le bas produit une force aérodynamique vers le haut sur le bord de fuite de la gouverne de profondeur, poussant le bord de fuite de la gouverne vers le haut et son bord d'attaque vers le bas — ce qui braque effectivement la gouverne de profondeur vers le bas, créant un moment cabreur. Les tabs de trim agissent par force aérodynamique pour libérer le pilote des efforts prolongés sur le manche ; leur braquage est opposé au braquage souhaité de la gouverne de profondeur.
+
+### Q11 : Que représente la polaire de vitesse d'un planeur ? ^t80q11
+- A) La relation entre l'altitude et la vitesse
+- B) La relation entre le taux de chute et la vitesse
+- C) La relation entre la portance et le poids
+- D) La relation entre la traînée et l'altitude
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La polaire de vitesse du planeur représente le taux de chute vertical (Vz, en m/s) en fonction de la vitesse horizontale (Vh). C'est le diagramme de performances fondamental d'un planeur : il indique la vitesse de chute minimale (le point le plus bas de la courbe), la vitesse de meilleure finesse (donnée par la tangente depuis l'origine), et les vitesses de croisière inter-thermiques (tangentes de McCready). Toutes les décisions de « vitesse à voler » en campagne reposent sur cette courbe.
+
+### Q12 : En vol en palier rectiligne, que se passe-t-il pour l'angle d'attaque requis lorsque la vitesse augmente ? ^t80q12
+- A) Il reste constant
+- B) Il augmente
+- C) Il diminue
+- D) Il oscille
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vol en palier, la portance doit être égale au poids (L = W). Puisque L = CL × 0,5 × ρ × V² × S, lorsque la vitesse V augmente, le coefficient de portance CL doit diminuer pour maintenir la portance constante. Un CL plus faible correspond à un angle d'attaque plus faible. Par conséquent, un vol plus rapide requiert un angle d'attaque plus petit, et un vol plus lent (vers le décrochage) requiert un angle d'attaque progressivement plus grand.
+
+### Q13 : Quelle est la fonction des clôtures de bord d'aile (déflecteurs de couche limite) ? ^t80q13
+- A) Augmenter la vitesse maximale
+- B) Réduire le poids
+- C) Empêcher l'écoulement de la couche limite en envergure
+- D) Augmenter la traînée induite
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les clôtures d'aile sont de fines plaques verticales sur la surface supérieure d'une aile en flèche ou effilée qui empêchent la couche limite de s'écouler en envergure (vers les extrémités). Sans clôtures, la couche limite migre vers l'extérieur sous l'effet du gradient de pression, s'épaissit aux extrémités et favorise le décrochage d'extrémité. Les clôtures confinent la couche limite à sa zone locale, améliorant les caractéristiques de décrochage d'extrémité et l'efficacité des ailerons à grand angle d'attaque.
+
+### Q14 : Que se passe-t-il pour la traînée totale à la vitesse de meilleure finesse ? ^t80q14
+- A) La traînée totale est à son maximum
+- B) La traînée induite est nulle
+- C) La traînée totale est à son minimum
+- D) La traînée parasite est nulle
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La meilleure finesse (L/D maximale) correspond à la vitesse où la traînée totale est minimale. À ce point, la traînée induite est exactement égale à la traînée parasite — toute vitesse supérieure augmente la traînée parasite davantage que la traînée induite ne diminue, et toute vitesse inférieure augmente la traînée induite davantage que la traînée parasite ne diminue. Pour un planeur, cette vitesse donne l'angle de planée le plus plat et la plus grande distance parcourue par unité d'altitude perdue en air calme.
+
+### Q15 : Quelle caractéristique structurelle contribue à la stabilité latérale (en roulis) d'un planeur ? ^t80q15
+- A) Stabilisateur horizontal
+- B) Dérive verticale
+- C) Dièdre de l'aile
+- D) Trim de profondeur
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le dièdre de l'aile — l'angle en V vers le haut des ailes — est la principale caractéristique de conception assurant la stabilité latérale (en roulis). Lorsqu'une rafale ou une perturbation fait s'abaisser une aile, la géométrie du dièdre augmente l'angle d'attaque de l'aile basse, générant plus de portance et créant un moment de rappel en roulis vers l'horizontale. La dérive verticale assure la stabilité directionnelle ; le stabilisateur horizontal assure la stabilité en tangage ; et le trim de profondeur définit une référence de tangage, pas de roulis.
+
+### Q16 : Comment l'augmentation d'altitude affecte-t-elle la vitesse vraie (TAS) pour une vitesse indiquée (IAS) donnée ? ^t80q16
+- A) La TAS diminue
+- B) La TAS reste égale à l'IAS
+- C) La TAS augmente
+- D) La TAS fluctue de manière imprévisible
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'IAS est basée sur la pression dynamique (q = 0,5 × ρ × V²). À altitude plus élevée, la densité de l'air ρ est plus faible, donc une IAS donnée correspond à une TAS plus élevée. La relation est TAS = IAS × √(ρ₀/ρ), où ρ₀ est la densité au niveau de la mer. Pour les pilotes de planeurs, cela signifie qu'en altitude, la vitesse sol pour la même vitesse d'approche indiquée est plus élevée, et la longueur d'atterrissage sera plus grande.
+
+### Q17 : Que désigne le terme « facteur de charge » ? ^t80q17
+- A) Le rapport de la masse de l'aéronef à la surface alaire
+- B) Le rapport de la portance au poids
+- C) Le rapport de la traînée au poids
+- D) Le rapport de la poussée à la traînée
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le facteur de charge (n) est défini comme le rapport de la portance générée par les ailes au poids de l'aéronef : n = L/W. En vol en palier rectiligne, n = 1. Dans un virage, n > 1 car une portance supplémentaire est nécessaire pour la force centripète. Lors d'un ressource vertical, n peut dépasser les limites de conception. La résistance structurelle du planeur est certifiée pour des facteurs de charge spécifiques (typiquement +5,3 g / -2,65 g en catégorie utilitaire).
+
+### Q18 : Comment l'augmentation du poids de l'aéronef affecte-t-elle la meilleure finesse ? ^t80q18
+- A) Elle améliore la finesse
+- B) Elle détériore la finesse
+- C) Elle ne modifie pas la finesse
+- D) Cela dépend de la configuration de l'aile
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le rapport L/D maximal est déterminé par la forme aérodynamique de l'aéronef et est indépendant du poids. L'augmentation du poids déplace la polaire de vitesse vers le bas et vers la droite — la vitesse de meilleure finesse augmente (il faut voler plus vite) mais le rapport L/D maximal reste identique. C'est pourquoi l'emport d'eau de lestage dans les planeurs améliore la vitesse de croisière inter-thermique sans modifier l'angle de planée — seule la vitesse à laquelle cet angle est atteint change.
+
+### Q19 : Un planeur vole à la vitesse de chute minimale. Si le pilote accélère, que se passe-t-il pour le taux de chute ? ^t80q19
+- A) Le taux de chute diminue encore
+- B) Le taux de chute reste identique
+- C) Le taux de chute augmente
+- D) Le taux de chute oscille
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse de chute minimale correspond au point le plus bas de la polaire de vitesse. Tout changement de vitesse — plus rapide ou plus lente — depuis ce point augmente le taux de chute. Accélérer au-delà de la vitesse de chute minimale augmente la traînée parasite plus vite que la traînée induite ne diminue, entraînant une traînée totale plus élevée et donc un taux de descente plus grand. C'est le compromis en vol de campagne : voler plus vite couvre plus de distance mais au prix d'un taux de chute accru.
+
+### Q20 : Quel est l'effet de l'ouverture des aérofreins (spoilers) sur un planeur ? ^t80q20
+- A) La portance augmente et la traînée diminue
+- B) La portance et la traînée diminuent toutes les deux
+- C) La traînée augmente et la portance diminue
+- D) La portance et la traînée augmentent toutes les deux
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les aérofreins (spoilers) perturbent l'écoulement lisse sur l'extrados de l'aile, réduisant le différentiel de pression et donc la portance. Simultanément, les panneaux d'aérofreins relevés créent une forte augmentation de la traînée. Cet effet combiné accentue considérablement l'angle de planée, ce qui est précisément leur objectif — permettre au pilote de contrôler l'angle d'approche et d'atterrir avec précision. Sans aérofreins, les planeurs flotteraient sur de longues distances en raison de leur excellent rapport L/D.
+
+### Q21 : Dans quelle condition de vol la traînée induite est-elle maximale ? ^t80q21
+- A) En croisière à grande vitesse
+- B) En vol en descente rapide
+- C) En vol lent à grand angle d'attaque
+- D) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite est proportionnelle à CL², et CL est maximal en vol lent à grand angle d'attaque (là où l'aile doit générer un maximum de portance par unité de pression dynamique). En descente ou à grande vitesse, CL est faible et la traînée induite est minimale — c'est la traînée parasite qui domine. À la vitesse de meilleure finesse, la traînée induite est égale à la traînée parasite mais n'est pas à son maximum. Le régime de vol lent est celui où la traînée induite domine la traînée totale.
+
+### Q22 : Quelle est la fonction principale d'une tab de trim de profondeur ? ^t80q22
+- A) Réduire les efforts sur le manche en conditions de vol prolongées
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse maximale
+- C) Améliorer la stabilité latérale
+- D) Prévenir le flottement
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La tab de trim de profondeur permet au pilote de réduire ou d'éliminer l'effort sur le manche nécessaire pour maintenir une assiette en tangage donnée en vol stabilisé. En braquant la tab de trim, une force aérodynamique est appliquée sur la gouverne de profondeur qui contrebalance le moment de charnière naturel, permettant un vol mains libres ou avec effort réduit à la vitesse de trim. Cela réduit la fatigue du pilote sur les longs vols et lui permet de se concentrer sur la navigation et l'exploitation des thermiques.
+
+### Q23 : Que se passe-t-il pour la vitesse de décrochage dans un virage par rapport au vol en palier rectiligne ? ^t80q23
+- A) La vitesse de décrochage diminue
+- B) La vitesse de décrochage reste inchangée
+- C) La vitesse de décrochage augmente
+- D) La vitesse de décrochage ne dépend que de l'altitude
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage, le facteur de charge n = 1/cos(angle d'inclinaison) dépasse 1, ce qui signifie que les ailes doivent générer plus de portance qu'en vol rectiligne. La vitesse de décrochage augmente d'un facteur √n. À 45° d'inclinaison, la vitesse de décrochage augmente de 19 % ; à 60° d'inclinaison, de 41 %. C'est une considération de sécurité critique lors du vol en thermique près du sol — plus l'inclinaison est forte, plus le pilote est proche de la vitesse de décrochage élevée.
+
+### Q24 : Qu'est-ce que le centre de poussée d'un profil aérodynamique ? ^t80q24
+- A) Le point où s'applique le poids de l'aéronef
+- B) Le point d'épaisseur maximale du profil
+- C) Le point où s'applique la résultante aérodynamique sur l'aile
+- D) Le centre géométrique du plan de voilure
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le centre de poussée (CP) est le point sur la ligne de corde où la résultante aérodynamique (somme de toutes les forces de pression et de frottement) peut être considérée comme agissant. Contrairement au foyer aérodynamique, le CP se déplace avec l'angle d'attaque variable — il se déplace vers l'avant lorsque l'angle d'attaque augmente et vers l'arrière lorsqu'il diminue. Ce déplacement est l'une des raisons pour lesquelles la position du CG doit rester dans des limites : si le CP s'éloigne trop du CG, le contrôle en tangage peut être compromis.
+
+### Q25 : À quel moment du vol la traînée parasite est-elle maximale ? ^t80q25
+- A) En vol lent proche du décrochage
+- B) À la vitesse de chute minimale
+- C) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse
+- D) À la vitesse maximale autorisée (VNE)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée parasite est proportionnelle à V² (pression dynamique). Plus l'aéronef vole vite, plus la traînée parasite est grande. À la VNE — la vitesse maximale — la traînée parasite atteint son pic dans l'enveloppe de vol normale. À faibles vitesses proches du décrochage, la traînée parasite est minimale tandis que la traînée induite domine. La traînée parasite comprend la traînée de forme, la traînée de frottement et la traînée d'interférence — toutes croissent avec le carré de la vitesse air.
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+### Q26: What is the Bernoulli principle as applied to an aerofoil? ^t80q26
+- A) Pressure increases where flow velocity increases
+- B) Where flow velocity increases, pressure decreases
+- C) Lift is generated solely by the deflection of air downward
+- D) Drag is independent of velocity
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bernoulli's principle states that in a steady, incompressible flow, an increase in flow velocity is accompanied by a decrease in static pressure, and vice versa. Applied to an aerofoil, the air accelerates over the curved upper surface, creating a region of lower pressure compared to the lower surface. This pressure differential generates lift. While Newton's third law (downwash) also contributes to lift, the Bernoulli pressure distribution is the primary mechanism for conventional subsonic flight.
+
+### Q27: What is adverse yaw? ^t80q27
+- A) The tendency to pitch nose-down in a steep turn
+- B) Unwanted yaw in the direction opposite to the intended turn when ailerons are applied
+- C) The yaw caused by rudder deflection in crosswind
+- D) The yaw resulting from asymmetric thrust
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-going aileron (on the wing that rises) increases both lift and induced drag on that wing. The extra drag on the rising wing pulls the nose toward the descending wing — opposite to the intended turn direction. This is why coordinated use of rudder with aileron is essential, and why differential aileron deflection was developed as a design solution.
+
+### Q28: When does ground effect become significant? ^t80q28
+- A) At any altitude in calm air
+- B) Within approximately one wingspan of the ground
+- C) Only during take-off roll
+- D) Above 100 m AGL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground effect becomes significant when the aircraft is within approximately one wingspan of the surface. The ground physically restricts the development of wingtip vortices and reduces the induced downwash angle, which effectively increases lift and reduces induced drag. Pilots experience this as a floating sensation during the landing flare — the glider wants to keep flying in ground effect, which can cause overshooting the intended touchdown point if not anticipated.
+
+### Q29: What does the term "washout" refer to in wing design? ^t80q29
+- A) The reduction of wing chord from root to tip
+- B) A decrease in the angle of incidence from wing root to tip
+- C) The cleaning procedure for wing surfaces
+- D) The loss of lift during a stall
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Washout is a deliberate design feature in which the wing's angle of incidence decreases progressively from root to tip (geometric washout) or the aerofoil section changes to produce less lift at the tip (aerodynamic washout). This ensures that the wing root stalls before the tip, preserving aileron effectiveness during a stall and making the stall behaviour more benign and recoverable. Washout is particularly important in gliders with their long, high-aspect-ratio wings.
+
+### Q30: What is the relationship between the angle of attack and the lift coefficient up to the stall? ^t80q30
+- A) Lift coefficient decreases as angle of attack increases
+- B) Lift coefficient increases approximately linearly as angle of attack increases
+- C) Lift coefficient remains constant regardless of angle of attack
+- D) Lift coefficient increases exponentially with angle of attack
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the pre-stall regime, the lift coefficient CL increases approximately linearly with angle of attack (AoA). The slope of this line is the lift curve slope (typically about 2π per radian for a thin aerofoil). This linear relationship continues until the critical angle of attack is reached, at which point flow separation causes CL to peak (CL_max) and then drop sharply — the stall. The linearity of the CL vs. AoA relationship is one of the foundational results of aerodynamic theory.
+
+### Q31: How does the flap position affect the stall speed? ^t80q31
+- A) Extending flaps raises the stall speed
+- B) Flap position has no effect on stall speed
+- C) Extending flaps lowers the stall speed
+- D) Retracting flaps lowers the stall speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases the wing's maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) by adding camber and, in some designs, wing area. From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (ρ × S × CL_max)), a higher CL_max yields a lower stall speed. This allows approach and landing at slower speeds with a shorter ground roll. Retracting flaps removes this benefit and returns stall speed to the higher clean-configuration value.
+
+### Q32: What is the purpose of a laminar-flow aerofoil? ^t80q32
+- A) To increase induced drag at low speeds
+- B) To maximise the region of turbulent boundary layer
+- C) To reduce skin friction drag by maintaining laminar flow over a larger portion of the wing
+- D) To improve stall characteristics at high angles of attack
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Laminar-flow aerofoils are designed with their maximum thickness further aft than conventional profiles, creating a favourable pressure gradient that keeps the boundary layer laminar over a larger portion of the chord. Since laminar boundary layers produce far less skin friction drag than turbulent ones, the overall profile drag is significantly reduced. Gliders exploit this extensively — clean laminar-flow wings are the reason modern gliders achieve glide ratios exceeding 50:1.
+
+### Q33: How does air density change with increasing altitude? ^t80q33
+- A) It increases linearly
+- B) It remains constant
+- C) It decreases
+- D) It increases then decreases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density decreases with altitude because atmospheric pressure drops and air expands. In the standard atmosphere, density at 5,500 m is roughly half the sea-level value. Reduced density means reduced dynamic pressure at a given TAS, which is why aircraft performance (lift and drag per unit TAS) degrades at altitude — the aircraft must fly faster in TAS to maintain the same IAS and lift.
+
+### Q34: What is the difference between static stability and dynamic stability? ^t80q34
+- A) They are the same concept
+- B) Static stability is the initial tendency to return to equilibrium; dynamic stability describes whether the subsequent oscillations damp out
+- C) Dynamic stability is the initial tendency; static stability describes long-term behaviour
+- D) Static stability only applies to pitch, dynamic stability only to roll
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability describes the aircraft's immediate response to a disturbance — whether restoring forces act to push it back toward the original equilibrium. Dynamic stability describes what happens over time: if the resulting oscillations decrease in amplitude and the aircraft eventually returns to its trimmed state, it is dynamically stable. An aircraft can be statically stable but dynamically unstable (oscillations grow), which is a dangerous condition.
+
+### Q35: What is the purpose of vortex generators on a wing? ^t80q35
+- A) To increase the laminar boundary layer region
+- B) To reduce the aircraft's weight
+- C) To energise the boundary layer and delay flow separation
+- D) To decrease the stall speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vortex generators are small tabs that protrude from the wing surface and create tiny vortices that mix high-energy air from outside the boundary layer into the slower boundary layer flow near the surface. This energised boundary layer can resist adverse pressure gradients more effectively, delaying flow separation and improving control effectiveness at high angles of attack. They trade a small increase in skin friction for a significant delay in stall onset and better aileron authority near the stall.
+
+### Q36: The lift formula L = CL x 0.5 x rho x V² x S contains several variables. Which of these can the pilot directly control in flight? ^t80q36
+- A) Air density (rho)
+- B) Wing area (S)
+- C) Airspeed (V) and, indirectly, the lift coefficient (CL) through angle of attack
+- D) All of the above
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot can directly change airspeed V (by adjusting pitch attitude) and indirectly change the lift coefficient CL (by changing the angle of attack, or by extending/retracting flaps). Air density ρ changes with altitude and temperature but is not directly controlled. Wing area S is fixed (except in rare variable-geometry designs or Fowler flap configurations). Airspeed and angle of attack are the pilot's primary tools for managing lift.
+
+### Q37: In which direction does the centre of pressure move as the angle of attack increases (pre-stall)? ^t80q37
+- A) Rearward along the chord
+- B) It does not move
+- C) Forward along the chord
+- D) Upward, away from the wing surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As angle of attack increases in the pre-stall range, the pressure distribution shifts such that the centre of pressure moves forward along the chord. This forward CP movement produces a nose-up pitching moment that must be counteracted by the tail — one of the main reasons aircraft require a horizontal stabiliser. At very low (or negative) angles of attack, the CP moves rearward. This CP migration is why the aerodynamic centre concept is useful: the moment about the aerodynamic centre stays constant regardless of AoA.
+
+### Q38: What determines the critical angle of attack at which a wing stalls? ^t80q38
+- A) The aircraft's weight
+- B) The altitude at which the aircraft is flying
+- C) The airspeed
+- D) The aerofoil shape (profile geometry)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical angle of attack is an inherent property of the aerofoil's geometric shape — it is the angle at which the flow can no longer remain attached to the upper surface and separates, causing the stall. It does not change with weight, altitude, or airspeed. What changes with those factors is the stall speed — the speed at which the wing reaches the critical angle of attack in level flight. The aerofoil geometry (camber, thickness, leading edge radius) determines how well the flow follows the upper surface at high angles.
+
+### Q39: How does induced drag behave with increasing airspeed in level flight? ^t80q39
+- A) It decreases continuously
+- B) It reaches a maximum, then decreases
+- C) It remains constant
+- D) It increases with increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag decreases monotonically with increasing airspeed in level flight: D_induced = 2W^2 / (rho * V^2 * S^2 * pi * AR * e). As V increases, induced drag continuously falls — there is no minimum/maximum within the normal flight envelope. Parasite drag (not induced drag) has the U-shaped curve described in B/C. Total drag has a minimum at the speed where induced drag equals parasite drag; induced drag itself simply decreases with speed.
+
+### Q40: Which types of drag make up total drag? ^t80q40
+- A) Induced drag, form drag, and skin-friction drag
+- B) Interference drag and parasite drag
+- C) Form drag, skin-friction drag, and interference drag
+- D) Induced drag and parasite drag
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard aerodynamic breakdown of total drag is: Total drag = Induced drag + Parasite drag. Induced drag arises from lift generation (wingtip vortices). Parasite drag is the collective term for all non-lift-related drag: form/pressure drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag. Options A and C list sub-components of parasite drag but omit induced drag or incorrectly combine them. Option B omits induced drag, which is a major component especially at low speeds.
+
+### Q41: How do lift and drag change when a stall is approached? ^t80q41
+- A) Both lift and drag increase
+- B) Lift rises while drag falls
+- C) Lift falls while drag rises
+- D) Both lift and drag fall
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the critical angle of attack is reached, flow begins to separate from the upper surface, starting at the trailing edge and progressing forward. Once past the critical AoA, the clean attached flow that generated lift breaks down — CL drops sharply. Simultaneously, the separated flow creates a large turbulent wake with very high pressure drag, so CD rises dramatically. The drag polar shows this clearly: the nose of the polar curves sharply as the stall condition is approached, with CL falling and CD rising.
+
+### Q42: To recover from a stall, it is essential to... ^t80q42
+- A) Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed
+- B) Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed
+- C) Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed
+- D) Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall recovery requires reducing angle of attack below the critical value so that airflow can re-attach to the upper surface and lift can be restored. The pilot must push forward on the elevator control to lower AoA, which also allows the aircraft to accelerate (or the pilot applies power if available). Increasing AoA (B, D) deepens the stall. Reducing speed (D, A) worsens the condition. Banking (A) increases the load factor, which raises the stall speed — exactly the wrong input.
+
+### Q43: During a stall, how do lift and drag behave? ^t80q43
+- A) Lift rises while drag rises
+- B) Lift rises while drag falls
+- C) Lift falls while drag falls
+- D) Lift falls while drag rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the definitive stall characteristic: lift collapses because boundary layer separation destroys the pressure differential that generates it, while drag rises dramatically due to the large turbulent separated wake. The CL vs. AoA curve shows CL_max at the critical angle, then a steep drop — this is the stall. The CD vs. AoA curve rises steeply through and beyond the stall. This combination (less lift, more drag) is why the stall is critical — the aircraft loses lift while simultaneously experiencing high drag that would further reduce speed.
+
+### Q44: The critical angle of attack... ^t80q44
+- A) Changes with increasing weight
+- B) Is independent of the aircraft's weight
+- C) Increases with a rearward centre of gravity position
+- D) Decreases with a forward centre of gravity position
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical (stall) angle of attack is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape — it is the AoA at which flow separation occurs regardless of airspeed, weight, or altitude. What changes with weight is the stall speed (Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max))), not the stall AoA. A heavier aircraft must fly faster to generate the same lift, but it still stalls at the same critical AoA. C.G. position affects pitch stability and control effectiveness but does not change the aerofoil's critical angle.
+
+### Q45: What leads to a lower stall speed Vs (IAS)? ^t80q45
+- A) Higher load factor
+- B) Lower air density
+- C) Decreasing weight
+- D) Lower altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)): stall speed decreases when weight (W) decreases, since less lift is needed to maintain equilibrium. Lower density (B) increases true airspeed (TAS) stall speed but the IAS stall speed remains approximately constant (since IAS is based on dynamic pressure q = 0.5 * rho * V_TAS^2, which equals 0.5 * rho_0 * V_IAS^2). Higher load factor (A) effectively increases apparent weight (n*W), raising stall speed. Lower altitude means higher density, which slightly lowers TAS stall speed but does not significantly change IAS stall speed.
+
+### Q46: Which statement about a spin is correct? ^t80q46
+- A) Speed constantly increases during the spin
+- B) During recovery, ailerons should be kept neutral
+- C) During recovery, ailerons should be crossed
+- D) Only very old aircraft risk spinning
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spin recovery technique (PARE: Power off, Ailerons neutral, Rudder opposite to spin direction, Elevator forward) requires keeping ailerons neutral because using ailerons during a spin can worsen the rotation — applying aileron into the spin raises the inner wing's AoA (which may already be stalled) and can deepen the spin. Rudder opposite to spin direction stops the autorotation; forward elevator then reduces AoA to unstall both wings. Speed does not constantly increase in a spin — the aircraft reaches a stabilised spin with relatively constant speed and rotation rate.
+
+### Q47: The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil lies between... ^t80q47
+- A) The transition point and the separation point
+- B) The stagnation point and the centre of pressure
+- C) The transition point and the centre of pressure
+- D) The stagnation point and the transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The boundary layer development follows a specific sequence: flow is divided at the stagnation point, a laminar boundary layer develops from the stagnation point rearward, then at the transition point the laminar layer converts to turbulent, and finally at the separation point the turbulent layer detaches from the surface. The laminar boundary layer therefore occupies the region from the stagnation point to the transition point. Laminar flow aerofoils are designed to push the transition point as far aft as possible to minimise friction drag.
+
+### Q48: What types of boundary layers are found on an aerofoil? ^t80q48
+- A) Turbulent layer at the leading edge areas, laminar boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- B) Laminar boundary layer along the complete upper surface with non-separated airflow
+- C) Laminar layer at the leading edge areas, turbulent boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- D) Turbulent boundary layer along the complete upper surface with separated airflow
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The natural sequence of boundary layer development on an aerofoil runs from laminar (near the leading edge, where the flow is orderly and Reynolds number is low) to turbulent (further aft, after transition). The reverse sequence (turbulent first, then laminar) does not occur naturally. This forward laminar / aft turbulent arrangement is why designers place the maximum thickness of laminar-flow aerofoils further back — to extend the favourable pressure gradient that maintains laminar flow as far as possible before transition.
+
+### Q49: How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent one? ^t80q49
+- A) The turbulent boundary layer is thicker but produces less skin-friction drag
+- B) The laminar layer generates lift while the turbulent layer generates drag
+- C) The laminar layer is thinner and produces more skin-friction drag
+- D) The turbulent boundary layer can remain attached to the aerofoil at higher angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turbulent boundary layer, despite having higher skin friction drag than the laminar layer, has more energetic mixing that allows it to remain attached to the surface against an adverse pressure gradient at higher angles of attack. This is its critical advantage: it resists flow separation better. The laminar boundary layer is indeed thinner (C is partly correct about thickness) and has lower friction drag — but it separates more easily. This is why turbulators are sometimes used on gliders: deliberately triggering transition to turbulent flow to prevent laminar separation bubbles.
+
+### Q50: Which structural element provides lateral (roll) stability? ^t80q50
+- A) Elevator
+- B) Wing dihedral
+- C) Vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lateral (roll) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a roll disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral (the upward angle of the wings from horizontal). When a gust rolls the aircraft, the lower wing descends and its angle of attack increases (it meets more airflow), generating more lift and creating a restoring moment back to level. The vertical tail provides directional (yaw) stability; ailerons are roll control surfaces (not stability), and the elevator controls pitch. High-wing aircraft achieve similar lateral stability through the pendulum effect of the fuselage hanging below the wings.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_26_50_fr.md
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+### Q26 : Qu'est-ce que le principe de Bernoulli appliqué à un profil aérodynamique ? ^t80q26
+- A) La pression augmente là où la vitesse d'écoulement augmente
+- B) Là où la vitesse d'écoulement augmente, la pression diminue
+- C) La portance est générée uniquement par la déviation de l'air vers le bas
+- D) La traînée est indépendante de la vitesse
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le principe de Bernoulli stipule que dans un écoulement permanent et incompressible, une augmentation de la vitesse d'écoulement est accompagnée d'une diminution de la pression statique, et vice versa. Appliqué à un profil aérodynamique, l'air accélère sur l'extrados courbé, créant une zone de basse pression par rapport à l'intrados. Ce différentiel de pression génère la portance. Si la troisième loi de Newton (souffle vers le bas) contribue également à la portance, la distribution de pression de Bernoulli est le mécanisme principal pour le vol subsonique conventionnel.
+
+### Q27 : Qu'est-ce que le lacet inverse (adverse yaw) ? ^t80q27
+- A) La tendance à piquer dans un virage serré
+- B) Un lacet non souhaité dans la direction opposée au virage voulu lors du braquage des ailerons
+- C) Le lacet causé par le braquage de la gouverne de direction en vent de travers
+- D) Le lacet résultant d'une poussée asymétrique
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le lacet inverse se produit parce que l'aileron baissé (sur l'aile qui monte) augmente à la fois la portance et la traînée induite de cette aile. La traînée supplémentaire sur l'aile montante tire le nez vers l'aile descendante — dans la direction opposée au virage voulu. C'est pourquoi l'utilisation coordonnée du palonnier avec les ailerons est essentielle, et pourquoi le braquage différentiel des ailerons a été développé comme solution de conception.
+
+### Q28 : Quand l'effet de sol devient-il significatif ? ^t80q28
+- A) À toute altitude en air calme
+- B) Dans la limite d'environ une envergure au-dessus du sol
+- C) Uniquement lors du roulage au décollage
+- D) Au-dessus de 100 m sol
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'effet de sol devient significatif lorsque l'aéronef se trouve à environ une envergure de la surface. Le sol limite physiquement le développement des tourbillons d'extrémité et réduit l'angle de déflexion induit, ce qui augmente effectivement la portance et réduit la traînée induite. Les pilotes ressentent cela comme une sensation de flottement lors du palier d'atterrissage — le planeur tend à continuer à voler en effet de sol, ce qui peut entraîner un dépassement du point de toucher si on ne l'anticipe pas.
+
+### Q29 : À quoi fait référence le terme « vrillage » (washout) en conception d'aile ? ^t80q29
+- A) La réduction de la corde de l'aile du pied vers l'extrémité
+- B) Une diminution de l'angle d'incidence du pied de l'aile vers l'extrémité
+- C) La procédure de nettoyage des surfaces alaires
+- D) La perte de portance lors d'un décrochage
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vrillage (washout) est une caractéristique de conception délibérée dans laquelle l'angle d'incidence de l'aile diminue progressivement du pied vers l'extrémité (vrillage géométrique), ou le profil aérodynamique évolue pour produire moins de portance à l'extrémité (vrillage aérodynamique). Cela garantit que le pied de l'aile décroche avant l'extrémité, préservant l'efficacité des ailerons lors d'un décrochage et rendant le comportement au décrochage plus bénin et récupérable. Le vrillage est particulièrement important pour les planeurs avec leurs ailes longues à grand allongement.
+
+### Q30 : Quelle est la relation entre l'angle d'attaque et le coefficient de portance jusqu'au décrochage ? ^t80q30
+- A) Le coefficient de portance diminue à mesure que l'angle d'attaque augmente
+- B) Le coefficient de portance augmente approximativement de façon linéaire à mesure que l'angle d'attaque augmente
+- C) Le coefficient de portance reste constant quel que soit l'angle d'attaque
+- D) Le coefficient de portance augmente exponentiellement avec l'angle d'attaque
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le régime pré-décrochage, le coefficient de portance CL augmente approximativement de façon linéaire avec l'angle d'attaque (AoA). La pente de cette droite est la pente de la courbe de portance (environ 2π par radian pour un profil mince). Cette relation linéaire se poursuit jusqu'à ce que l'angle d'attaque critique soit atteint, point auquel la séparation de l'écoulement provoque un pic de CL (CL_max) puis une chute abrupte — le décrochage. La linéarité de la relation CL en fonction de l'AoA est l'un des résultats fondamentaux de la théorie aérodynamique.
+
+### Q31 : Comment la position des volets affecte-t-elle la vitesse de décrochage ? ^t80q31
+- A) La sortie des volets augmente la vitesse de décrochage
+- B) La position des volets n'a aucun effet sur la vitesse de décrochage
+- C) La sortie des volets réduit la vitesse de décrochage
+- D) Le rentrage des volets réduit la vitesse de décrochage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La sortie des volets augmente le coefficient de portance maximal (CL_max) de l'aile en ajoutant de la cambrure et, dans certaines conceptions, la surface alaire. D'après la formule de la vitesse de décrochage Vs = racine(2W / (ρ × S × CL_max)), un CL_max plus élevé donne une vitesse de décrochage plus faible. Cela permet l'approche et l'atterrissage à des vitesses plus faibles avec une distance de roulement plus courte. Le rentrage des volets supprime cet avantage et fait revenir la vitesse de décrochage à la valeur plus élevée en configuration lisse.
+
+### Q32 : Quel est l'objectif d'un profil à écoulement laminaire ? ^t80q32
+- A) Augmenter la traînée induite à faibles vitesses
+- B) Maximiser la zone de couche limite turbulente
+- C) Réduire la traînée de frottement en maintenant l'écoulement laminaire sur une plus grande partie de l'aile
+- D) Améliorer les caractéristiques de décrochage à grands angles d'attaque
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les profils à écoulement laminaire sont conçus avec leur épaisseur maximale plus en arrière que les profils conventionnels, créant un gradient de pression favorable qui maintient la couche limite laminaire sur une plus grande partie de la corde. Comme les couches limites laminaires produisent bien moins de traînée de frottement que les couches turbulentes, la traînée de profil totale est significativement réduite. Les planeurs l'exploitent largement — les ailes à écoulement laminaire propres sont la raison pour laquelle les planeurs modernes atteignent des finesses dépassant 50:1.
+
+### Q33 : Comment la densité de l'air évolue-t-elle avec l'augmentation d'altitude ? ^t80q33
+- A) Elle augmente linéairement
+- B) Elle reste constante
+- C) Elle diminue
+- D) Elle augmente puis diminue
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La densité de l'air diminue avec l'altitude parce que la pression atmosphérique chute et l'air se dilate. Dans l'atmosphère standard, la densité à 5 500 m est environ la moitié de la valeur au niveau de la mer. Une densité réduite signifie une pression dynamique réduite à une TAS donnée, ce qui explique pourquoi les performances des aéronefs (portance et traînée par unité de TAS) se dégradent en altitude — l'aéronef doit voler plus vite en TAS pour maintenir la même IAS et la même portance.
+
+### Q34 : Quelle est la différence entre la stabilité statique et la stabilité dynamique ? ^t80q34
+- A) Ce sont les mêmes concepts
+- B) La stabilité statique est la tendance initiale à revenir à l'équilibre ; la stabilité dynamique décrit si les oscillations subséquentes s'amortissent
+- C) La stabilité dynamique est la tendance initiale ; la stabilité statique décrit le comportement à long terme
+- D) La stabilité statique s'applique uniquement au tangage, la stabilité dynamique uniquement au roulis
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité statique décrit la réponse immédiate de l'aéronef à une perturbation — si des forces de rappel agissent pour le ramener vers l'équilibre initial. La stabilité dynamique décrit ce qui se passe au fil du temps : si les oscillations résultantes diminuent en amplitude et que l'aéronef revient finalement à son état de trim, il est dynamiquement stable. Un aéronef peut être statiquement stable mais dynamiquement instable (oscillations croissantes), ce qui est une condition dangereuse.
+
+### Q35 : Quelle est la fonction des générateurs de tourbillons sur une aile ? ^t80q35
+- A) Augmenter la zone de couche limite laminaire
+- B) Réduire la masse de l'aéronef
+- C) Énergiser la couche limite et retarder la séparation de l'écoulement
+- D) Diminuer la vitesse de décrochage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les générateurs de tourbillons sont de petits déflecteurs qui dépassent de la surface de l'aile et créent de minuscules tourbillons qui mélangent l'air à haute énergie de l'extérieur de la couche limite avec l'écoulement plus lent de la couche limite près de la surface. Cette couche limite énergisée peut mieux résister aux gradients de pression adverses, retardant la séparation de l'écoulement et améliorant l'efficacité des commandes à grands angles d'attaque. Ils échangent une légère augmentation de la traînée de frottement contre un retard significatif du décrochage et une meilleure autorité des ailerons près du décrochage.
+
+### Q36 : La formule de la portance L = CL × 0,5 × rho × V² × S contient plusieurs variables. Lesquelles le pilote peut-il directement contrôler en vol ? ^t80q36
+- A) La densité de l'air (rho)
+- B) La surface alaire (S)
+- C) La vitesse (V) et, indirectement, le coefficient de portance (CL) via l'angle d'attaque
+- D) Toutes les variables ci-dessus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le pilote peut directement modifier la vitesse V (en ajustant l'assiette en tangage) et indirectement modifier le coefficient de portance CL (en changeant l'angle d'attaque, ou en sortant/rentrant les volets). La densité ρ varie avec l'altitude et la température mais n'est pas directement contrôlée. La surface alaire S est fixe (sauf dans de rares configurations à géométrie variable ou avec volets de Fowler). La vitesse et l'angle d'attaque sont les principaux outils du pilote pour gérer la portance.
+
+### Q37 : Dans quelle direction le centre de poussée se déplace-t-il lorsque l'angle d'attaque augmente (avant le décrochage) ? ^t80q37
+- A) Vers l'arrière le long de la corde
+- B) Il ne se déplace pas
+- C) Vers l'avant le long de la corde
+- D) Vers le haut, en s'éloignant de la surface de l'aile
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'angle d'attaque augmente dans le domaine pré-décrochage, la distribution de pression se modifie de telle sorte que le centre de poussée se déplace vers l'avant le long de la corde. Ce déplacement vers l'avant du CP produit un moment cabreur qui doit être contrebalancé par l'empennage — l'une des principales raisons pour lesquelles les aéronefs nécessitent un stabilisateur horizontal. À des angles d'attaque très faibles (ou négatifs), le CP se déplace vers l'arrière. C'est pourquoi le concept de foyer aérodynamique est utile : le moment autour du foyer reste constant quel que soit l'angle d'attaque.
+
+### Q38 : Qu'est-ce qui détermine l'angle d'attaque critique auquel une aile décroche ? ^t80q38
+- A) Le poids de l'aéronef
+- B) L'altitude de vol de l'aéronef
+- C) La vitesse air
+- D) La forme du profil aérodynamique (géométrie du profil)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle d'attaque critique est une propriété inhérente à la forme géométrique du profil — c'est l'angle auquel l'écoulement ne peut plus rester attaché à l'extrados et se sépare, provoquant le décrochage. Il ne change pas avec le poids, l'altitude ou la vitesse. Ce qui change avec ces facteurs, c'est la vitesse de décrochage — la vitesse à laquelle l'aile atteint l'angle d'attaque critique en vol en palier. La géométrie du profil (cambrure, épaisseur, rayon du bord d'attaque) détermine à quel point l'écoulement suit bien l'extrados à grands angles.
+
+### Q39 : Comment la traînée induite évolue-t-elle avec l'augmentation de la vitesse en vol en palier ? ^t80q39
+- A) Elle diminue continuellement
+- B) Elle atteint un maximum, puis diminue
+- C) Elle reste constante
+- D) Elle augmente avec l'augmentation de la vitesse
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite diminue de façon monotone avec l'augmentation de la vitesse en vol en palier : D_induite = 2W² / (rho × V² × S² × π × A × e). À mesure que V augmente, la traînée induite diminue continuellement — il n'existe pas de minimum/maximum dans l'enveloppe de vol normale. C'est la traînée parasite (non la traînée induite) qui présente la courbe en U décrite dans les options B/C. La traînée totale a un minimum à la vitesse où la traînée induite est égale à la traînée parasite ; la traînée induite elle-même diminue simplement avec la vitesse.
+
+### Q40 : Quels types de traînée composent la traînée totale ? ^t80q40
+- A) Traînée induite, traînée de forme et traînée de frottement
+- B) Traînée d'interférence et traînée parasite
+- C) Traînée de forme, traînée de frottement et traînée d'interférence
+- D) Traînée induite et traînée parasite
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La décomposition aérodynamique standard de la traînée totale est : Traînée totale = Traînée induite + Traînée parasite. La traînée induite résulte de la génération de portance (tourbillons d'extrémité). La traînée parasite est le terme collectif pour toute traînée non liée à la portance : traînée de forme/pression, traînée de frottement et traînée d'interférence. Les options A et C listent des sous-composantes de la traînée parasite mais omettent la traînée induite ou les combinent incorrectement. L'option B omet la traînée induite, qui est une composante majeure, surtout à faibles vitesses.
+
+### Q41 : Comment la portance et la traînée évoluent-elles à l'approche du décrochage ? ^t80q41
+- A) La portance et la traînée augmentent toutes les deux
+- B) La portance augmente tandis que la traînée diminue
+- C) La portance diminue tandis que la traînée augmente
+- D) La portance et la traînée diminuent toutes les deux
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'angle d'attaque critique est atteint, l'écoulement commence à se séparer de l'extrados, en partant du bord de fuite et en progressant vers l'avant. Une fois dépassé l'AoA critique, l'écoulement attaché propre qui générait la portance se décompose — CL chute abruptement. Simultanément, l'écoulement décollé crée un large sillage turbulent avec une très forte traînée de pression, donc CD monte dramatiquement. La polaire de profil le montre clairement : le nez de la polaire se courbe brusquement à l'approche du décrochage, avec CL qui chute et CD qui monte.
+
+### Q42 : Pour récupérer d'un décrochage, il est essentiel de... ^t80q42
+- A) Augmenter l'inclinaison et réduire la vitesse
+- B) Augmenter l'angle d'attaque et augmenter la vitesse
+- C) Diminuer l'angle d'attaque et augmenter la vitesse
+- D) Augmenter l'angle d'attaque et réduire la vitesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La récupération du décrochage nécessite de réduire l'angle d'attaque en dessous de la valeur critique afin que l'écoulement puisse se rattacher à l'extrados et que la portance soit restaurée. Le pilote doit pousser sur la gouverne de profondeur pour réduire l'AoA, ce qui permet également à l'aéronef d'accélérer (ou le pilote applique les gaz si disponibles). Augmenter l'AoA (B, D) aggrave le décrochage. Réduire la vitesse (D, A) aggrave la situation. L'inclinaison (A) augmente le facteur de charge, ce qui élève la vitesse de décrochage — exactement la mauvaise action.
+
+### Q43 : Lors d'un décrochage, comment se comportent la portance et la traînée ? ^t80q43
+- A) La portance augmente tandis que la traînée augmente
+- B) La portance augmente tandis que la traînée diminue
+- C) La portance diminue tandis que la traînée diminue
+- D) La portance diminue tandis que la traînée augmente
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** C'est la caractéristique définitive du décrochage : la portance s'effondre parce que la séparation de la couche limite détruit le différentiel de pression qui la génère, tandis que la traînée monte fortement en raison du large sillage turbulent décollé. La courbe CL en fonction de l'AoA montre CL_max à l'angle critique, puis une chute abrupte — c'est le décrochage. La courbe CD en fonction de l'AoA monte fortement à travers et au-delà du décrochage. Cette combinaison (moins de portance, plus de traînée) explique pourquoi le décrochage est critique — l'aéronef perd de la portance tout en subissant une forte traînée qui réduirait encore la vitesse.
+
+### Q44 : L'angle d'attaque critique... ^t80q44
+- A) Change avec l'augmentation du poids
+- B) Est indépendant du poids de l'aéronef
+- C) Augmente avec une position du centre de gravité reculée
+- D) Diminue avec une position du centre de gravité avancée
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle d'attaque critique (de décrochage) est une propriété aérodynamique fixe de la forme du profil — c'est l'AoA à laquelle la séparation de l'écoulement se produit indépendamment de la vitesse, du poids ou de l'altitude. Ce qui change avec le poids, c'est la vitesse de décrochage (Vs = racine(2W / (rho × S × CL_max))), pas l'AoA de décrochage. Un aéronef plus lourd doit voler plus vite pour générer la même portance, mais il décroche toujours au même AoA critique. La position du CG affecte la stabilité en tangage et l'efficacité des commandes mais ne modifie pas l'angle critique du profil.
+
+### Q45 : Qu'est-ce qui conduit à une vitesse de décrochage Vs (IAS) plus faible ? ^t80q45
+- A) Un facteur de charge plus élevé
+- B) Une densité de l'air plus faible
+- C) Une diminution du poids
+- D) Une altitude plus faible
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** D'après Vs = racine(2W / (rho × S × CL_max)) : la vitesse de décrochage diminue lorsque le poids (W) diminue, car moins de portance est nécessaire pour maintenir l'équilibre. Une densité plus faible (B) augmente la vitesse de décrochage en TAS mais la vitesse de décrochage IAS reste approximativement constante (puisque l'IAS est basée sur la pression dynamique q = 0,5 × rho × V_TAS², qui est égale à 0,5 × rho_0 × V_IAS²). Un facteur de charge plus élevé (A) augmente effectivement le poids apparent (n×W), élevant la vitesse de décrochage. Une altitude plus faible signifie une densité plus élevée, ce qui réduit légèrement la TAS de décrochage mais ne modifie pas significativement l'IAS de décrochage.
+
+### Q46 : Quelle affirmation concernant la vrille est correcte ? ^t80q46
+- A) La vitesse augmente constamment pendant la vrille
+- B) Lors de la sortie, les ailerons doivent être maintenus neutres
+- C) Lors de la sortie, les ailerons doivent être croisés
+- D) Seuls les très vieux aéronefs risquent d'entrer en vrille
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La technique de sortie de vrille (PARE : Puissance coupée, Ailerons neutres, gouverne de direction opposée à la direction de la vrille, Profondeur poussée) nécessite de maintenir les ailerons neutres car l'utilisation des ailerons en vrille peut aggraver la rotation — appliquer un aileron vers la vrille augmente l'AoA de l'aile intérieure (qui peut déjà être décrochée) et peut approfondir la vrille. La gouverne de direction opposée à la vrille arrête l'autorotation ; la gouverne de profondeur poussée réduit ensuite l'AoA pour décrocher les deux ailes. La vitesse n'augmente pas constamment en vrille — l'aéronef atteint une vrille stabilisée avec une vitesse et un taux de rotation relativement constants.
+
+### Q47 : La couche limite laminaire sur un profil se situe entre... ^t80q47
+- A) Le point de transition et le point de séparation
+- B) Le point de stagnation et le centre de poussée
+- C) Le point de transition et le centre de poussée
+- D) Le point de stagnation et le point de transition
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le développement de la couche limite suit une séquence spécifique : l'écoulement se divise au point de stagnation, une couche limite laminaire se développe depuis le point de stagnation vers l'arrière, puis au point de transition la couche laminaire se convertit en turbulente, et enfin au point de séparation la couche turbulente se décolle de la surface. La couche limite laminaire occupe donc la zone entre le point de stagnation et le point de transition. Les profils à écoulement laminaire sont conçus pour repousser le point de transition aussi loin que possible vers l'arrière afin de minimiser la traînée de frottement.
+
+### Q48 : Quels types de couches limites trouve-t-on sur un profil aérodynamique ? ^t80q48
+- A) Couche turbulente près du bord d'attaque, couche laminaire près du bord de fuite
+- B) Couche limite laminaire sur toute la surface supérieure avec écoulement non décollé
+- C) Couche laminaire près du bord d'attaque, couche turbulente près du bord de fuite
+- D) Couche limite turbulente sur toute la surface supérieure avec écoulement décollé
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La séquence naturelle du développement de la couche limite sur un profil va du laminaire (près du bord d'attaque, où l'écoulement est ordonné et le nombre de Reynolds est faible) au turbulent (plus en arrière, après la transition). La séquence inverse (turbulente d'abord, puis laminaire) ne se produit pas naturellement. Cet arrangement laminaire en avant / turbulent en arrière explique pourquoi les concepteurs placent l'épaisseur maximale des profils à écoulement laminaire plus en arrière — pour étendre le gradient de pression favorable qui maintient l'écoulement laminaire aussi loin que possible avant la transition.
+
+### Q49 : En quoi une couche limite laminaire diffère-t-elle d'une couche limite turbulente ? ^t80q49
+- A) La couche limite turbulente est plus épaisse mais produit moins de traînée de frottement
+- B) La couche laminaire génère de la portance tandis que la couche turbulente génère de la traînée
+- C) La couche laminaire est plus mince et produit plus de traînée de frottement
+- D) La couche limite turbulente peut rester attachée au profil à des angles d'attaque plus élevés
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La couche limite turbulente, bien qu'ayant une traînée de frottement plus élevée que la couche laminaire, présente un mélange plus énergique qui lui permet de rester attachée à la surface contre un gradient de pression adverse à des angles d'attaque plus élevés. C'est son avantage crucial : elle résiste mieux à la séparation de l'écoulement. La couche limite laminaire est bien plus mince (l'option C est partiellement correcte sur l'épaisseur) et a une traînée de frottement plus faible — mais elle se sépare plus facilement. C'est pourquoi des turbulateurs sont parfois utilisés sur les planeurs : déclencher délibérément la transition vers l'écoulement turbulent pour éviter les bulles de séparation laminaire.
+
+### Q50 : Quel élément structurel assure la stabilité latérale (en roulis) ? ^t80q50
+- A) Gouverne de profondeur
+- B) Dièdre de l'aile
+- C) Empennage vertical
+- D) Braquage différentiel des ailerons
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité latérale (en roulis) — la tendance à revenir en vol à plat après une perturbation de roulis — est principalement assurée par le dièdre de l'aile (l'angle ascendant des ailes par rapport à l'horizontale). Lorsqu'une rafale incline l'aéronef, l'aile basse descend et son angle d'attaque augmente (elle reçoit plus de flux d'air), générant plus de portance et créant un moment de rappel vers l'horizontale. L'empennage vertical assure la stabilité directionnelle (en lacet) ; les ailerons sont des gouvernes de contrôle du roulis (non de stabilité), et la gouverne de profondeur contrôle le tangage. Les aéronefs à aile haute atteignent une stabilité latérale similaire grâce à l'effet pendulaire du fuselage suspendu sous les ailes.
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+### Q51: What is the mean value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q51
+- A) 15° C/100 m
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 1013.25 hPa
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s² (ISA value). This value is fundamental in aeronautics: it is used to calculate weight (W = m × g), load factor, and appears in all performance equations. 1013.25 hPa is the standard pressure at sea level, and 15°C/100 m is not a correct gradient (the standard lapse rate is 0.65°C/100 m).
+
+### Q52: During a sideslip, the permitted flap position is... ^t80q52
+- A) Flaps fully retracted
+- B) Flaps fully extended
+- C) Determined by the downward vertical component of the airspeed
+- D) Specified in the flight manual (AFM)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted flap position during a sideslip is always specified in the aircraft flight manual (AFM/POH). Some gliders prohibit extended flaps in a sideslip because the combination of flaps and deflected rudder can create dangerous aerodynamic couples or exceed structural limits. Others permit certain configurations. The only correct answer is therefore to consult the AFM.
+
+### Q53: An aircraft is said to have dynamic stability when... ^t80q53
+- A) It is able to stabilise automatically at a new equilibrium after a disturbance
+- B) It is able to return automatically to its original equilibrium after a disturbance
+- C) The rotation about the pitch axis is automatically corrected by the ailerons
+- D) The permitted load factor allows a positive acceleration of at least 4 g and a negative acceleration of at least 2 g with landing flaps retracted
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic stability describes the behaviour of an aircraft over time after a disturbance. A dynamically stable aircraft returns automatically to its original equilibrium (trim) after being disturbed — the oscillations progressively damp out. Answer A describes so-called "neutral or convergent stability towards a new equilibrium", which is different. Static stability (the immediate tendency to return) is a necessary but not sufficient condition for dynamic stability.
+
+### Q54: In severe turbulence, airspeed must be reduced... ^t80q54
+- A) To normal cruising speed
+- B) To a speed within the yellow arc of the airspeed indicator
+- C) To the minimum constant speed in landing configuration
+- D) To below the manoeuvring speed V_A
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The manoeuvring speed V_A (or turbulence penetration speed) is the maximum speed at which full control surface deflections or severe wind gusts will not cause the structural limit load to be exceeded. Below V_A, the wing will stall before the structural limit load is reached, thereby protecting the structure. In severe turbulence, speed must be reduced below V_A to avoid structural damage from gust dynamic loads.
+
+### Q55: In the ICAO standard atmosphere, the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere is... ^t80q55
+- A) 2°C/100 ft
+- B) 0.65°C/1000 ft
+- C) 0.65°C/100 m
+- D) 2°C/100 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere (ISA), temperature decreases by 0.65°C for every 100 m of altitude in the troposphere (or equivalently, 2°C per 1000 ft, or 6.5°C/1000 m). Answer B (0.65°C/1000 ft) is incorrect because the unit is wrong — this would be far too small a lapse rate. Answer C is the only correct one: 0.65°C per 100 m of altitude.
+
+### Q56: At approximately what altitude does atmospheric pressure fall to half its sea-level value? ^t80q56
+- A) 5,500 m
+- B) 6,600 m
+- C) 6,600 ft
+- D) 5,500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude in an approximately exponential manner. In the ICAO standard atmosphere, pressure is approximately half the sea-level pressure (1013.25 hPa → ~506 hPa) at an altitude of approximately 5,500 m (18,000 ft). This value is important for high-altitude physiology (oxygen requirements) and for density altitude performance calculations.
+
+### Q57: Density altitude always corresponds to... ^t80q57
+- A) The altitude at which atmospheric pressure and temperature correspond to those of the standard atmosphere
+- B) The true indicated altitude, after correction for instrument error
+- C) Pressure altitude, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature
+- D) The altitude read when the altimeter is set to QNH, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Density altitude is the altitude at which the aircraft would be in the ISA standard atmosphere if the air density were the same as in actual conditions. It is calculated from pressure altitude (altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa) corrected for the temperature deviation from ISA. A temperature higher than ISA gives a density altitude higher than pressure altitude, reducing aircraft performance. Answer A describes pressure altitude, not density altitude.
+
+### Q58: The simplified continuity law applied to an airflow states: *In a given period of time, a flowing air mass is conserved regardless of the cross-section it passes through.* This means that... ^t80q58
+- A) Airflow velocity decreases when the cross-section decreases
+- B) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section increases
+- C) Airflow velocity remains constant
+- D) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section decreases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation states that for an incompressible fluid, the volumetric flow rate Q = S × V is constant along a streamtube. If the cross-section S decreases, the velocity V must increase proportionally to keep Q constant. This principle, combined with Bernoulli's theorem, explains why air accelerates over the curved upper surface of an aerofoil, creating a low-pressure region that generates lift.
+
+### Q59: The aerodynamic resultant (drag and lift) depends on air density. When air density decreases... ^t80q59
+- A) Both drag and lift decrease
+- B) Both drag and lift increase
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both lift and drag are proportional to the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². When air density ρ decreases (at altitude or in high temperatures), q decreases for a given speed, which reduces both lift and drag. This is why aircraft performance deteriorates at high altitude or in great heat: the aircraft must fly faster (higher TAS) to generate the same lift, while the total aerodynamic resistance decreases for a constant indicated airspeed.
+
+### Q60: What is the name of the point about which, when the angle of attack changes, the pitching moment around the lateral axis does not vary? ^t80q60
+- A) Centre of symmetry
+- B) Centre of gravity
+- C) Aerodynamic centre
+- D) Neutral point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The neutral point (also called the aerodynamic centre at wing level, but "neutral point" for the complete aircraft) is the point about which the pitching moment remains constant regardless of changes in angle of attack. For a stable aircraft, the centre of gravity must be forward of the neutral point — the CG-to-neutral point distance constitutes the static stability margin. Note: for an isolated aerofoil, this point corresponds to the aerodynamic centre (at approximately 25% of the chord); for the complete aircraft, the neutral point accounts for the contribution of the horizontal stabiliser.
+
+### Q61: The angle between the aerofoil chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis is called... ^t80q61
+- A) The sweep angle
+- B) The angle of attack
+- C) The dihedral angle
+- D) The rigging angle (angle of incidence)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rigging angle (or angle of incidence) is the fixed angle, defined at construction, between the aerofoil chord line and the longitudinal axis of the fuselage. It does not vary in flight. It should not be confused with the angle of attack, which is the angle between the chord line and the direction of the relative wind (and which varies in flight according to attitude and speed). The rigging angle is chosen by the manufacturer so that the wing generates the necessary lift in cruise at an aerodynamically favourable fuselage attitude.
+
+### Q62: What does the transition point correspond to? ^t80q62
+- A) The lateral roll of the aircraft
+- B) The point at which CL_max is reached
+- C) The change from a turbulent boundary layer to a laminar one
+- D) The change from a laminar boundary layer to a turbulent one
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition point is precisely the location on the aerofoil where the boundary layer changes from a laminar regime (ordered flow, in parallel layers) to a turbulent regime (disordered flow, with transverse mixing). This transition is irreversible in the direction of flow: the change is from laminar to turbulent, never the reverse. The position of the transition point depends on the Reynolds number, the pressure gradient, and surface roughness — a favourable pressure gradient (acceleration) maintains laminar flow, while an adverse gradient (deceleration) triggers transition.
+
+### Q63: Geometric or aerodynamic wing twist results in... ^t80q63
+- A) Partial compensation of adverse yaw at low speed
+- B) A higher cruise speed
+- C) Progressive flow separation along the wingspan
+- D) Simultaneous flow separation along the wingspan at low speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing twist (geometric or aerodynamic) varies the angle of incidence or aerodynamic characteristics along the span, so that the stall does not occur simultaneously across the entire wing. The root (higher angle of incidence) reaches the critical angle first and stalls progressively, while the outer sections remain attached. This progressive (rather than simultaneous) flow separation improves stall safety and maintains roll control via the ailerons. The effect on adverse yaw (A) is indirect and marginal.
+
+### Q64: The profile drag (form drag) of a body is primarily influenced by... ^t80q64
+- A) Its mass
+- B) Its internal temperature
+- C) Its density
+- D) The formation of vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Form drag (pressure drag) is caused by the pressure difference between the front and rear of a body, due to boundary layer separation and the formation of vortices in the wake. The more intense the vortex formation (unStreamlined body, blunt trailing edge), the higher the form drag. This is why streamlined aerofoils have much lower form drag than a flat plate or sphere — their progressively converging shape allows the flow to remain attached longer, reducing the turbulent wake.
+
+### Q65: The aerodynamic drag of a flat disc in an airflow depends notably on... ^t80q65
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) The surface area perpendicular to the airflow
+- D) The tensile strength of its material
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The drag of a flat disc (non-streamlined body) is pressure drag: it depends primarily on the frontal surface area S exposed perpendicularly to the airflow, and on the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². The formula is D = CD × q × S. The material strength, the disc's own density, or its weight do not influence aerodynamic drag — this is purely a function of shape, projected area, and flow conditions.
+
+### Q66: On the speed polar, which tangent touches the curve at the point of minimum sink rate? ^t80q66
+> **Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/t80_q66.png]]
+> *A = tangent from the origin → best glide speed (best L/D ratio, best glide)*
+> *B = tangent from a point shifted to the right on the V axis → best glide with headwind*
+> *C = tangent from a point above the origin on the W axis (McCready) → optimal inter-thermal speed; touches the polar at the point of minimum sink rate*
+> *D = horizontal line at the level of minimum sink rate → indicates the minimum sink speed (Vmin sink)*
+
+- A) Tangent (A)
+- B) Tangent (B)
+- C) Tangent (D)
+- D) Tangent (C)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the speed polar (curve showing the sink rate W as a function of horizontal speed V), the point of minimum sink rate corresponds to the lowest point of the curve (the smallest value of W in absolute terms). The tangent at this point is a horizontal tangent — this is tangent (C) on the diagram. This point corresponds to the minimum sink speed, used to maximise flight time or to exploit thermals. The tangent drawn from the origin to the polar (tangent B) gives the speed for the best L/D ratio (best glide ratio).
+
+### Q67: Induced drag increases... ^t80q67
+- A) As parasite drag increases
+- B) With decreasing angle of attack
+- C) With increasing angle of attack
+- D) With increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL²: D_induced = CL² / (π × AR × e) × q × S. By increasing the angle of attack, CL increases, and therefore CL² increases, causing induced drag to grow. In level flight at constant speed, an increase in angle of attack corresponds to a lower speed, which further increases induced drag (D_induced ∝ 1/V²). By increasing speed (D), CL decreases in level flight and induced drag decreases. Parasite drag (A) varies independently of induced drag.
+
+### Q68: How does the minimum speed of an aircraft in a level turn at 45-degree bank compare to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q68
+- A) It decreases
+- B) It does not change
+- C) It increases
+- D) It depends on the aircraft type
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a horizontal turn at bank angle φ, the load factor is n = 1/cos(φ). At 45° of bank, n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0.707 ≈ 1.41. The stall speed in the turn is Vs_turn = Vs × √n = Vs × √1.41 ≈ Vs × 1.19. Therefore the minimum speed increases by approximately 19% compared to straight-and-level flight. This increase in stall speed during turns is a fundamental safety concept — tight turns at low altitude (such as on final approach) are particularly dangerous because the margin above the stall is reduced.
+
+### Q69: Adverse yaw is caused by... ^t80q69
+- A) The gyroscopic effect when a turn is initiated
+- B) The lateral airflow over the wing after a turn has been initiated
+- C) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes up
+- D) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes down
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw is caused by the asymmetry of drag between the two ailerons during turn entry. The aileron that rises (on the high-wing side) increases the local angle of attack, generating more lift but also more induced drag. This additional drag on the rising side creates a yawing moment towards the rising side — i.e. in the opposite direction to the turn (hence "adverse yaw"). Differential ailerons and spoiler-airbrakes are technical solutions to mitigate this effect.
+
+### Q70: True Airspeed (TAS) is the speed shown by the ASI... ^t80q70
+- A) Corrected for position and instrument errors only
+- B) Without any correction
+- C) Adjusted for air density only
+- D) Corrected for both position/instrument errors and air density
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True airspeed (TAS) is obtained from indicated airspeed (IAS) by applying two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors (yielding calibrated airspeed, CAS), then the density correction (accounting for the difference between actual air density and standard sea-level density). TAS is therefore the actual speed of the aircraft through the air mass. At high altitude, TAS is significantly higher than IAS because air density is lower.
+
+### Q71: The speed range authorised for the use of slotted flaps is: ^t80q71
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) Limited at the lower end by the bottom of the green arc
+- C) Indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally shown on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) Limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed (Va)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The slotted flap speed range is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally on the airspeed indicator (white or light green arc). It varies by glider type.
+
+### Q72: Wing tip vortices are caused by pressure equalisation from: ^t80q72
+- A) The lower surface toward the upper surface at the wing tip
+- B) The upper surface toward the lower surface at the wing tip
+- C) The lower surface toward the upper surface along the entire trailing edge
+- D) The upper surface toward the lower surface along the entire trailing edge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing tip vortices (induced vortices) come from pressure equalization from the lower surface (high pressure) to the upper surface (low pressure) at the wing tip. This phenomenon generates induced drag.
+
+### Q73: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always the angle between: ^t80q73
+- A) The chord line and the relative airflow direction
+- B) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) The horizon and the general airflow direction
+- D) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Angle of attack is the angle between the chord line and the general airflow direction (relative wind direction). It is not the angle with the horizon nor with the longitudinal axis.
+
+### Q74: In the standard atmosphere, the values of temperature and atmospheric pressure at sea level are: ^t80q74
+- A) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 59 degrees C and 29.92 hPa
+- C) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 Hg
+- D) 15 degrees F and 29.92 Hg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure in ICAO standard atmosphere at sea level is 1013.25 hPa (millibars) = 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg). 29.92 hPa is incorrect.
+
+### Q75: Regarding airflow, the simplified continuity equation states: At the same moment, the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections. Therefore: ^t80q75
+![[figures/t80_q75.png]]
+- A) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- B) The air mass flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) The speed of the air mass does not vary
+- D) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the line equidistant between the lower and upper surfaces. In the figure, it is represented by line B.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_51_75_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,257 @@
+### Q51 : Quelle est la valeur moyenne de l'accélération de la pesanteur à la surface de la Terre ? ^t80q51
+- A) 15 °C/100 m
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 9,81 m/sec²
+- D) 1013,25 hPa
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'accélération gravitationnelle standard à la surface de la Terre est de 9,81 m/s² (valeur ISA). Cette valeur est fondamentale en aéronautique : elle est utilisée pour calculer le poids (W = m × g), le facteur de charge et apparaît dans toutes les équations de performance. 1013,25 hPa est la pression standard au niveau de la mer, et 15 °C/100 m n'est pas un gradient correct (le gradient standard est 0,65 °C/100 m).
+
+### Q52 : En glissade, la position autorisée des volets est... ^t80q52
+- A) Volets complètement rentrés
+- B) Volets complètement sortis
+- C) Déterminée par la composante verticale descendante de la vitesse
+- D) Spécifiée dans le manuel de vol (AFM)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La position autorisée des volets en glissade est toujours spécifiée dans le manuel de vol de l'aéronef (AFM/POH). Certains planeurs interdisent les volets sortis en glissade car la combinaison volets + gouverne de direction braquée peut créer des couples aérodynamiques dangereux ou dépasser les limites structurelles. D'autres autorisent certaines configurations. La seule réponse correcte est donc de consulter l'AFM.
+
+### Q53 : On dit d'un aéronef qu'il possède une stabilité dynamique lorsque... ^t80q53
+- A) Il est capable de se stabiliser automatiquement à un nouvel équilibre après une perturbation
+- B) Il est capable de revenir automatiquement à son équilibre initial après une perturbation
+- C) La rotation autour de l'axe de tangage est corrigée automatiquement par les ailerons
+- D) Le facteur de charge autorisé permet une accélération positive d'au moins 4 g et négative d'au moins 2 g volets d'atterrissage rentrés
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité dynamique décrit le comportement d'un aéronef dans le temps après une perturbation. Un aéronef dynamiquement stable revient automatiquement à son équilibre initial (trim) après avoir subi une perturbation — les oscillations s'amortissent progressivement. La réponse A décrit une stabilité dite « neutre ou convergente vers un nouvel équilibre », ce qui est différent. La stabilité statique (tendance immédiate au retour) est une condition nécessaire mais non suffisante de la stabilité dynamique.
+
+### Q54 : En turbulence sévère, la vitesse doit être réduite... ^t80q54
+- A) À la vitesse normale de croisière
+- B) À une vitesse dans l'arc jaune de l'indicateur de vitesse
+- C) À la vitesse minimum constante en configuration d'atterrissage
+- D) En dessous de la vitesse de manœuvre V_A
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse de manœuvre V_A (ou vitesse de pénétration en turbulence) est la vitesse maximale à laquelle des braquages complets des gouvernes ou des rafales de vent sévères ne provoqueront pas de dépassement de la charge limite structurelle. En dessous de V_A, l'aile décrochera avant que la charge limite structurelle ne soit atteinte, protégeant ainsi la structure. En turbulence sévère, la vitesse doit être réduite en dessous de V_A pour éviter des dommages structurels dus aux charges dynamiques des rafales.
+
+### Q55 : Dans l'atmosphère standard OACI, le gradient de température dans la troposphère est... ^t80q55
+- A) 2 °C/100 ft
+- B) 0,65 °C/1 000 ft
+- C) 0,65 °C/100 m
+- D) 2 °C/100 m
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'atmosphère standard OACI (ISA), la température diminue de 0,65 °C par 100 m d'altitude dans la troposphère (soit 2 °C par 1 000 ft, ou 6,5 °C/1 000 m). La réponse B (0,65 °C/1 000 ft) est incorrecte car l'unité est fausse — ce gradient serait beaucoup trop faible. La réponse C est la seule correcte : 0,65 °C par 100 m d'altitude.
+
+### Q56 : À quelle altitude approximative la pression atmosphérique tombe-t-elle à la moitié de sa valeur au niveau de la mer ? ^t80q56
+- A) 5 500 m
+- B) 6 600 m
+- C) 6 600 ft
+- D) 5 500 ft
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression atmosphérique diminue avec l'altitude de manière approximativement exponentielle. Dans l'atmosphère standard OACI, la pression est environ la moitié de la pression au niveau de la mer (1013,25 hPa → ~506 hPa) à une altitude d'environ 5 500 m (18 000 ft). Cette valeur est importante pour la physiologie en haute altitude (besoins en oxygène) et pour les calculs de performance en altitude-densité.
+
+### Q57 : L'altitude-densité correspond toujours à... ^t80q57
+- A) L'altitude à laquelle la pression et la température atmosphériques correspondent à celles de l'atmosphère standard
+- B) L'altitude vraie indiquée, après correction de l'erreur instrumentale
+- C) L'altitude-pression, corrigée pour l'écart de température par rapport à la température standard
+- D) L'altitude lue lorsque l'altimètre est calé sur le QNH, corrigée pour l'écart de température par rapport à la température standard
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altitude-densité est l'altitude à laquelle l'aéronef serait dans l'atmosphère standard ISA si la densité de l'air était la même que dans les conditions réelles. Elle est calculée à partir de l'altitude-pression (altimètre calé à 1013,25 hPa) corrigée pour l'écart de température par rapport à l'ISA. Une température supérieure à l'ISA donne une altitude-densité plus élevée que l'altitude-pression, réduisant les performances de l'aéronef. La réponse A décrit l'altitude-pression, pas l'altitude-densité.
+
+### Q58 : La loi de continuité simplifiée appliquée à un écoulement d'air stipule : *Pour une période de temps donnée, une masse d'air en mouvement est conservée quelle que soit la section qu'elle traverse.* Cela signifie que... ^t80q58
+- A) La vitesse de l'écoulement diminue lorsque la section diminue
+- B) La vitesse de l'écoulement augmente lorsque la section augmente
+- C) La vitesse de l'écoulement reste constante
+- D) La vitesse de l'écoulement augmente lorsque la section diminue
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équation de continuité stipule que pour un fluide incompressible, le débit volumique Q = S × V est constant le long d'un filet d'écoulement. Si la section S diminue, la vitesse V doit augmenter proportionnellement pour maintenir Q constant. Ce principe, combiné au théorème de Bernoulli, explique pourquoi l'air accélère sur l'extrados courbé d'un profil, créant une zone de basse pression qui génère la portance.
+
+### Q59 : La résultante aérodynamique (traînée et portance) dépend de la densité de l'air. Lorsque la densité de l'air diminue... ^t80q59
+- A) La traînée et la portance diminuent toutes les deux
+- B) La traînée et la portance augmentent toutes les deux
+- C) La traînée augmente tandis que la portance diminue
+- D) La traînée diminue tandis que la portance augmente
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La portance et la traînée sont toutes deux proportionnelles à la pression dynamique q = 0,5 × ρ × V². Lorsque la densité ρ diminue (en altitude ou par forte chaleur), q diminue pour une vitesse donnée, ce qui réduit à la fois la portance et la traînée. C'est pourquoi les performances des aéronefs se dégradent en haute altitude ou par grande chaleur : l'aéronef doit voler plus vite (TAS plus élevée) pour générer la même portance, tandis que la résistance aérodynamique totale diminue pour une vitesse indiquée constante.
+
+### Q60 : Comment s'appelle le point autour duquel, lorsque l'angle d'attaque change, le moment de tangage autour de l'axe latéral ne varie pas ? ^t80q60
+- A) Centre de symétrie
+- B) Centre de gravité
+- C) Foyer aérodynamique
+- D) Point neutre
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point neutre (appelé foyer aérodynamique au niveau de l'aile, mais « point neutre » pour l'aéronef complet) est le point autour duquel le moment de tangage reste constant quelles que soient les variations d'angle d'attaque. Pour un aéronef stable, le centre de gravité doit se trouver en avant du point neutre — la distance entre le CG et le point neutre constitue la marge de stabilité statique. Remarque : pour un profil isolé, ce point correspond au foyer aérodynamique (à environ 25 % de la corde) ; pour l'aéronef complet, le point neutre tient compte de la contribution du stabilisateur horizontal.
+
+### Q61 : L'angle entre la ligne de corde du profil et l'axe longitudinal de l'aéronef s'appelle... ^t80q61
+- A) L'angle de flèche
+- B) L'angle d'attaque
+- C) L'angle de dièdre
+- D) L'angle de calage (angle d'incidence)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle de calage (ou angle d'incidence) est l'angle fixe, défini à la construction, entre la ligne de corde du profil et l'axe longitudinal du fuselage. Il ne varie pas en vol. Il ne doit pas être confondu avec l'angle d'attaque, qui est l'angle entre la ligne de corde et la direction du vent relatif (et qui varie en vol selon l'assiette et la vitesse). L'angle de calage est choisi par le fabricant pour que l'aile génère la portance nécessaire en croisière dans une attitude de fuselage aérodynamiquement favorable.
+
+### Q62 : À quoi correspond le point de transition ? ^t80q62
+- A) Au roulis latéral de l'aéronef
+- B) Au point auquel CL_max est atteint
+- C) Au passage d'une couche limite turbulente à une couche laminaire
+- D) Au passage d'une couche limite laminaire à une couche turbulente
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point de transition est précisément l'endroit sur le profil où la couche limite passe d'un régime laminaire (écoulement ordonné, en couches parallèles) à un régime turbulent (écoulement désordonné, avec mélange transversal). Cette transition est irréversible dans le sens de l'écoulement : le changement va du laminaire vers le turbulent, jamais l'inverse. La position du point de transition dépend du nombre de Reynolds, du gradient de pression et de la rugosité de la surface — un gradient de pression favorable (accélération) maintient l'écoulement laminaire, tandis qu'un gradient adverse (décélération) déclenche la transition.
+
+### Q63 : Le vrillage géométrique ou aérodynamique de l'aile entraîne... ^t80q63
+- A) Une compensation partielle du lacet inverse à faible vitesse
+- B) Une vitesse de croisière plus élevée
+- C) Une séparation progressive de l'écoulement le long de l'envergure
+- D) Une séparation simultanée de l'écoulement le long de l'envergure à faible vitesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vrillage d'aile (géométrique ou aérodynamique) fait varier l'angle d'incidence ou les caractéristiques aérodynamiques le long de l'envergure, de sorte que le décrochage ne se produit pas simultanément sur toute l'aile. Le pied (angle d'incidence plus grand) atteint l'angle critique en premier et décroche progressivement, tandis que les sections extérieures restent attachées. Cette séparation progressive (plutôt que simultanée) améliore la sécurité au décrochage et maintient le contrôle du roulis via les ailerons. L'effet sur le lacet inverse (A) est indirect et marginal.
+
+### Q64 : La traînée de profil (traînée de forme) d'un corps est principalement influencée par... ^t80q64
+- A) Sa masse
+- B) Sa température interne
+- C) Sa densité
+- D) La formation de tourbillons
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée de forme (traînée de pression) est causée par la différence de pression entre l'avant et l'arrière d'un corps, due à la séparation de la couche limite et à la formation de tourbillons dans le sillage. Plus la formation de tourbillons est intense (corps non profilé, bord de fuite émoussé), plus la traînée de forme est élevée. C'est pourquoi les profils aérodynamiques ont une traînée de forme bien inférieure à celle d'une plaque plane ou d'une sphère — leur forme progressivement convergente permet à l'écoulement de rester attaché plus longtemps, réduisant le sillage turbulent.
+
+### Q65 : La traînée aérodynamique d'un disque plat dans un écoulement d'air dépend notamment de... ^t80q65
+- A) Son poids
+- B) Sa densité
+- C) La surface perpendiculaire à l'écoulement d'air
+- D) La résistance à la traction de son matériau
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée d'un disque plat (corps non profilé) est une traînée de pression : elle dépend principalement de la surface frontale S exposée perpendiculairement à l'écoulement, et de la pression dynamique q = 0,5 × ρ × V². La formule est D = CD × q × S. La résistance du matériau, la densité propre du disque ou son poids n'influencent pas la traînée aérodynamique — il s'agit uniquement d'une fonction de la forme, de la surface projetée et des conditions d'écoulement.
+
+### Q66 : Sur la polaire de vitesse, quelle tangente touche la courbe au point de chute minimale ? ^t80q66
+> **Polaire de vitesse :**
+> ![[figures/t80_q66.png]]
+> *A = tangente depuis l'origine → vitesse de meilleure finesse (meilleur rapport L/D, meilleure planée)*
+> *B = tangente depuis un point décalé vers la droite sur l'axe V → meilleure finesse avec vent de face*
+> *C = tangente depuis un point au-dessus de l'origine sur l'axe W (McCready) → vitesse inter-thermique optimale ; touche la polaire au point de chute minimale*
+> *D = ligne horizontale au niveau de la chute minimale → indique la vitesse de chute minimale (Vmin chute)*
+
+- A) Tangente (A)
+- B) Tangente (B)
+- C) Tangente (D)
+- D) Tangente (C)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la polaire de vitesse (courbe représentant le taux de chute W en fonction de la vitesse horizontale V), le point de chute minimale correspond au point le plus bas de la courbe (la valeur la plus petite de W en valeur absolue). La tangente en ce point est une tangente horizontale — c'est la tangente (C) sur le diagramme. Ce point correspond à la vitesse de chute minimale, utilisée pour maximiser le temps de vol ou exploiter les thermiques. La tangente tracée depuis l'origine vers la polaire (tangente B) donne la vitesse pour le meilleur rapport L/D (meilleure finesse).
+
+### Q67 : La traînée induite augmente... ^t80q67
+- A) Lorsque la traînée parasite augmente
+- B) Avec la diminution de l'angle d'attaque
+- C) Avec l'augmentation de l'angle d'attaque
+- D) Avec l'augmentation de la vitesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite est proportionnelle à CL² : D_induite = CL² / (π × A × e) × q × S. En augmentant l'angle d'attaque, CL augmente, et donc CL² augmente, provoquant une croissance de la traînée induite. En vol en palier à vitesse constante, une augmentation de l'angle d'attaque correspond à une vitesse plus faible, ce qui augmente encore la traînée induite (D_induite ∝ 1/V²). En augmentant la vitesse (D), CL diminue en vol en palier et la traînée induite diminue. La traînée parasite (A) varie indépendamment de la traînée induite.
+
+### Q68 : Comment la vitesse minimale d'un aéronef dans un virage à plat à 45° d'inclinaison se compare-t-elle au vol en palier rectiligne ? ^t80q68
+- A) Elle diminue
+- B) Elle ne change pas
+- C) Elle augmente
+- D) Cela dépend du type d'aéronef
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage horizontal à angle d'inclinaison φ, le facteur de charge est n = 1/cos(φ). À 45° d'inclinaison, n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0,707 ≈ 1,41. La vitesse de décrochage dans le virage est Vs_virage = Vs × √n = Vs × √1,41 ≈ Vs × 1,19. La vitesse minimale augmente donc d'environ 19 % par rapport au vol en palier rectiligne. Cette augmentation de la vitesse de décrochage dans les virages est un concept de sécurité fondamental — les virages serrés à basse altitude (comme en finale) sont particulièrement dangereux car la marge par rapport au décrochage est réduite.
+
+### Q69 : Le lacet inverse est causé par... ^t80q69
+- A) L'effet gyroscopique lors de l'initiation d'un virage
+- B) L'écoulement latéral sur l'aile après l'initiation d'un virage
+- C) L'augmentation de la traînée induite de l'aileron de l'aile qui monte
+- D) L'augmentation de la traînée induite de l'aileron de l'aile qui descend
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le lacet inverse est causé par l'asymétrie de traînée entre les deux ailerons lors de l'entrée en virage. L'aileron qui se lève (côté aile haute) augmente l'angle d'attaque local, générant plus de portance mais aussi plus de traînée induite. Cette traînée supplémentaire du côté montant crée un moment de lacet vers le côté montant — c'est-à-dire dans la direction opposée au virage (d'où « lacet inverse »). Les ailerons différentiels et les aérofreins-spoilers sont des solutions techniques pour atténuer cet effet.
+
+### Q70 : La vitesse vraie (TAS) est la vitesse affichée par l'anémomètre... ^t80q70
+- A) Corrigée uniquement des erreurs de position et d'instrument
+- B) Sans aucune correction
+- C) Corrigée uniquement de la densité de l'air
+- D) Corrigée à la fois des erreurs de position/instrument et de la densité de l'air
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse vraie (TAS) est obtenue à partir de la vitesse indiquée (IAS) en appliquant deux corrections successives : d'abord les erreurs de position et d'instrument (donnant la vitesse calibrée CAS), puis la correction de densité (tenant compte de la différence entre la densité réelle de l'air et la densité standard au niveau de la mer). La TAS est donc la vitesse réelle de l'aéronef par rapport à la masse d'air. En altitude, la TAS est nettement supérieure à l'IAS car la densité de l'air est plus faible.
+
+### Q71 : La plage de vitesses autorisée pour l'utilisation des volets à fente est : ^t80q71
+- A) Illimitée
+- B) Limitée en bas par le bas de l'arc vert
+- C) Indiquée dans le Manuel de Vol (AFM) et normalement affichée sur l'anémomètre (ASI)
+- D) Limitée en haut par la vitesse de manœuvre (Va)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La plage de vitesses des volets à fente est indiquée dans le Manuel de Vol (AFM) et normalement sur l'anémomètre (arc blanc ou vert clair). Elle varie selon le type de planeur.
+
+### Q72 : Les tourbillons d'extrémité d'aile résultent de l'égalisation de pression depuis : ^t80q72
+- A) L'intrados vers l'extrados en extrémité d'aile
+- B) L'extrados vers l'intrados en extrémité d'aile
+- C) L'intrados vers l'extrados le long de tout le bord de fuite
+- D) L'extrados vers l'intrados le long de tout le bord de fuite
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les tourbillons d'extrémité d'aile (tourbillons induits) résultent de l'égalisation de pression depuis l'intrados (haute pression) vers l'extrados (basse pression) en extrémité d'aile. Ce phénomène génère la traînée induite.
+
+### Q73 : L'angle d'attaque d'un profil est toujours l'angle entre : ^t80q73
+- A) La ligne de corde et la direction de l'écoulement relatif
+- B) L'axe longitudinal de l'aéronef et la direction générale de l'écoulement
+- C) L'horizon et la direction générale de l'écoulement
+- D) L'axe longitudinal de l'aéronef et l'horizon
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle d'attaque est l'angle entre la ligne de corde et la direction générale de l'écoulement (vent relatif). Ce n'est pas l'angle avec l'horizon ni avec l'axe longitudinal.
+
+### Q74 : Dans l'atmosphère standard, les valeurs de température et de pression atmosphérique au niveau de la mer sont : ^t80q74
+- A) 15 °C et 1013,25 hPa
+- B) 59 °C et 29,92 hPa
+- C) 15 °C et 1013,25 Hg
+- D) 15 °F et 29,92 Hg
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression dans l'atmosphère standard OACI au niveau de la mer est de 1013,25 hPa (millibars) = 29,92 pouces de mercure (inHg). 29,92 hPa serait une valeur incorrecte.
+
+### Q75 : Concernant l'écoulement d'air, l'équation de continuité simplifiée stipule : à un même instant, la même masse d'air passe par des sections différentes. Par conséquent : ^t80q75
+![[figures/t80_q75.png]]
+- A) La masse d'air s'écoule dans une section plus grande à une vitesse plus élevée
+- B) La masse d'air s'écoule dans une section plus petite à une vitesse plus faible
+- C) La vitesse de la masse d'air ne varie pas
+- D) La masse d'air s'écoule dans une section plus grande à une vitesse plus faible
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne de cambrure moyenne est la ligne équidistante entre l'intrados et l'extrados. Dans la figure, elle est représentée par la ligne B.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_76_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_76_100.md
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+### Q76: In a correctly executed turn without altitude loss, why is slight back-pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q76
+- A) To prevent slipping inward in the turn
+- B) To reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward sideslip in the turn
+- D) To slightly increase lift
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated turn without altitude loss, back pressure is needed to increase lift and balance centrifugal force (load factor > 1). Lift must compensate for both gravity and centrifugal force.
+
+### Q77: When the frontal area of a disc in an airflow is tripled, drag increases by: ^t80q77
+- A) 9 times
+- B) 1.5 times
+- C) 3 times
+- D) 6 times
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall occurs at a critical angle of attack (stall angle), regardless of airspeed. At this angle, airflow separation on the upper surface causes a sudden drop in lift.
+
+### Q78: Aerodynamic wing twist (washout) is a modification of: ^t80q78
+- A) The angle of incidence of the same aerofoil, from root to wing tip
+- B) The aerofoil profile from root to wing tip
+- C) The angle of attack at the wing tip by means of the aileron
+- D) The wing dihedral, from root to tip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs at a determined angle of attack (critical angle), specific to each airfoil. It is not related to the nose attitude relative to the horizon.
+
+### Q79: What is the average value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q79
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 15° C/100 m
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 100 m/sec²
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard gravitational acceleration at Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s². This is the ISA value used in all performance calculations.
+
+### Q80: The speed displayed on the airspeed indicator (ASI) is a measurement of: ^t80q80
+- A) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) The difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- C) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- D) The weathervane effect, where pressure decreases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspeed indicator reading is based on the difference between static pressure and total pressure (dynamic pressure). The ASI measures this difference via the Pitot tube and static port.
+
+### Q81: The horizontal and vertical stabilisers serve in particular to: ^t80q81
+- A) Control the aircraft around its longitudinal axis
+- B) Reduce the formation of wing tip vortices
+- C) Stabilise the aircraft in flight
+- D) Reduce air resistance
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal and vertical stabilizers serve primarily to stabilize the aircraft in flight (longitudinal and directional stability). Without them, the aircraft would be unstable.
+
+### Q82: When slotted flaps are extended, airflow separation: ^t80q82
+- A) Occurs at the same speed as before extending the flaps
+- B) Occurs at a higher speed
+- C) None of the answers is correct
+- D) Occurs at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When extending slotted flaps, airflow separation occurs at a lower speed, because flaps increase the maximum lift coefficient (CL max). Stall speed decreases.
+
+### Q83: The aerodynamic centre of an aerofoil in an airflow is the point of application of: ^t80q83
+- A) The weight
+- B) The resultant of all pressure forces acting on the aerofoil
+- C) The tyre pressure on the runway
+- D) The airflow at the leading edge
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic center is the point of application of the resultant of aerodynamic forces on a profile. It is distinct from the center of pressure (which moves) and the center of gravity.
+
+### Q84: Pressures are expressed in: ^t80q84
+- A) Pa, psi, g
+- B) Bar, Pa, m/sec²
+- C) Bar, psi, Pa
+- D) Bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pressures are expressed in bar, psi (pounds per square inch) and Pa (Pascal). g is an acceleration, not a pressure. Alpha (a) is not a pressure unit.
+
+### Q85: TAS (True Air Speed) is the speed of: ^t80q85
+- A) The aircraft relative to the ground
+- B) The aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass
+- C) The aircraft relative to the air, corrected for wind component and atmospheric pressure
+- D) The reading on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS (True Air Speed) is the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass. It is the actual speed through the air, corrected for atmospheric density.
+
+### Q86: Yaw stability of an aircraft is provided by: ^t80q86
+- A) Leading edge slats
+- B) The horizontal stabiliser
+- C) The fin (vertical stabiliser)
+- D) Wing dihedral
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yaw stability is provided by the fin (vertical stabilizer/rudder). Wing sweep contributes to roll stability, not yaw.
+
+### Q87: The trailing edge flap shown below is a: ^t80q87
+![[figures/t80_q87.png]]
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flap shown, extending from the wing with a slot, is a Slotted Flap. The slot channels air from the lower to upper surface, delaying separation.
+
+### Q88: The risk of airflow separation on the wing occurs mainly: ^t80q88
+- A) In straight climbing flight at high speed, in atmospheric turbulence
+- B) In calm air, in gliding flight, at the minimum authorised speed
+- C) During an abrupt pull-out after a dive
+- D) In straight level cruise flight, in atmospheric turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The risk of stall/separation appears mainly during an abrupt pull-out after a dive, as the angle of attack increases very rapidly and can exceed the critical angle before the pilot can react.
+
+### Q89: The drag of a body in an airflow depends notably on: ^t80q89
+- A) The mass of the body
+- B) The chemical composition of the body
+- C) The density of the air
+- D) The density of the body
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic drag depends notably on air density (ρ), since F_D = Cd × 0.5 × ρ × v² × A. The body's own density, chemical composition, and mass do not directly affect aerodynamic drag.
+
+### Q90: In the drawing below, the aerofoil chord is represented by: ^t80q90
+![[figures/t80_q90.png]]
+- A) M
+- B) K
+- C) H
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The chord line is the straight line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge. In the figure, it is represented by H.
+
+### Q91: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always measured between: ^t80q91
+- A) The chord line and the direction of the relative airflow
+- B) The longitudinal axis and the general airflow direction
+- C) The longitudinal axis and the horizon
+- D) It varies depending on the pilot's weight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of attack (AoA) is defined as the angle between the chord line and the direction of the undisturbed relative airflow, making A correct. Option B is wrong because the longitudinal axis is a structural reference, not an aerodynamic one; AoA is measured from the chord line. Option C confuses AoA with pitch attitude, which relates the longitudinal axis to the horizon. Option D is nonsensical — AoA is a geometric and aerodynamic property entirely independent of the pilot's weight.
+
+### Q92: Given equal frontal area and equal airflow speed, what determines the drag of a body? ^t80q92
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) Its shape
+- D) The position of its centre of gravity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When frontal area and airspeed are held constant, the remaining variable in the drag equation D = CD × 0.5 × rho × V² × S is the drag coefficient CD, which is determined entirely by the body's shape. A streamlined shape produces far less drag than a blunt one. Options A and B are wrong because weight and material density have no direct aerodynamic effect — drag depends on external geometry, not internal mass distribution. Option D is incorrect because the centre of gravity affects stability, not the aerodynamic drag coefficient.
+
+### Q93: What is the origin of induced drag on a wing? ^t80q93
+- A) The angle formed at the wing-fuselage junction
+- B) Airspeed
+- C) Pressure equalisation from the lower surface toward the upper surface
+- D) Pressure equalisation from the upper surface toward the lower surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag originates from the pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces. At the wingtips, air flows from the high-pressure lower surface around to the low-pressure upper surface, forming trailing vortices that tilt the lift vector rearward, creating induced drag. Option D reverses the flow direction — air moves from high to low pressure, not the other way. Option A describes interference drag at the wing root, and option B is too vague — airspeed alone is not the origin of induced drag.
+
+### Q94: What is the sea-level pressure in the ICAO standard atmosphere? ^t80q94
+- A) 29.92 hPa
+- B) 1012.35 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) It depends on latitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO International Standard Atmosphere defines sea-level pressure as exactly 1013.25 hPa (hectopascals). Option A gives 29.92, which is the equivalent value in inches of mercury (inHg), not hPa — 29.92 hPa would be an absurdly low pressure. Option B (1012.35 hPa) is simply incorrect. Option D is wrong because the ISA is a standardized model that does not vary with latitude, even though real atmospheric pressure does.
+
+### Q95: In the aerofoil diagram below, which line represents the mean camber line? ^t80q95
+![[figures/t80_q95.png]]
+- A) H
+- B) B
+- C) G + J
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the locus of points equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil, representing the profile's curvature. In this diagram, line B corresponds to this curved reference line. Options A, C, and D represent other aerofoil features such as the chord line, thickness distribution, or surface contours, not the mean camber line.
+
+### Q96: In a level turn without sideslip or altitude loss, why is back pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q96
+- A) To prevent an inward slip during the turn
+- B) To slow down and reduce centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward skid during the turn
+- D) To increase lift so it balances both weight and centrifugal force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the load factor exceeds 1 because lift must counterbalance both the aircraft's weight and provide the centripetal force for the curved flight path. Back pressure on the elevator increases the angle of attack and thus total lift to meet this requirement. Option A is wrong because slips are corrected with rudder, not elevator. Option B is incorrect — the purpose is not to slow down. Option C is also wrong because skid prevention is a rudder function, not an elevator function.
+
+### Q97: A wing stall occurs: ^t80q97
+- A) At the red radial line on the airspeed indicator
+- B) When a critical angle of attack is exceeded
+- C) Following a reduction in engine power
+- D) Only when the nose is pitched excessively above the horizon
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stall occurs when the wing's angle of attack exceeds the critical value (typically around 15-18 degrees), causing flow separation from the upper surface and a sudden loss of lift. This is a fundamental aerodynamic principle independent of airspeed or attitude. Option A is wrong because the red line (VNE) relates to structural speed limits, not stall. Option C is incorrect — reducing power alone does not cause a stall if AoA remains below critical. Option D is false because a stall can occur at any pitch attitude or airspeed, as long as the critical AoA is exceeded.
+
+### Q98: At what condition does airflow separation from an aerofoil occur? ^t80q98
+- A) Only at a specific aircraft altitude
+- B) Only at a given nose position relative to the horizon
+- C) Simultaneously across the entire span
+- D) At a specific angle of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs when the angle of attack reaches the critical stall angle, which is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape. Option A is wrong because stall AoA is independent of altitude. Option B confuses pitch attitude with angle of attack — a wing can stall at any nose position. Option C is incorrect because, thanks to wing design features like washout, the stall typically progresses from root to tip rather than occurring simultaneously across the entire span.
+
+### Q99: What is the mean gravitational acceleration at the surface of the Earth? ^t80q99
+- A) 9.81 m/sec2
+- B) 100 m/sec2
+- C) 1013.5 hPa
+- D) 15° C/100 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at sea level is 9.81 m/s², used throughout aviation for weight, load factor, and performance calculations. Option B (100 m/s²) is roughly ten times too large. Option C (1013.5 hPa) is a pressure value close to the ISA sea-level pressure, not an acceleration. Option D (15°C/100 m) resembles a temperature lapse rate format but is far too high — the ISA lapse rate is 0.65°C per 100 m.
+
+### Q100: True Airspeed (TAS) is obtained from the airspeed indicator (ASI) reading by: ^t80q100
+- A) No corrections at all
+- B) Correcting for position and instrument errors
+- C) Applying corrections for both position/instrument errors and atmospheric density
+- D) Adjusting for atmospheric density alone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS is derived from the ASI reading (IAS) through two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors are removed to obtain calibrated airspeed (CAS), then a density correction accounts for the difference between actual air density and ISA sea-level density. Option A is wrong because uncorrected IAS does not equal TAS. Option B yields only CAS, not TAS. Option D omits the instrument/position error correction, which is always the first step.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_80_76_100_fr.md
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+### Q76 : Dans un virage correctement exécuté sans perte d'altitude, pourquoi une légère contre-profondeur est-elle nécessaire ? ^t80q76
+- A) Pour éviter un glissement vers l'intérieur dans le virage
+- B) Pour réduire la vitesse et donc la force centrifuge
+- C) Pour éviter un dérapage vers l'extérieur dans le virage
+- D) Pour augmenter légèrement la portance
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage coordonné sans perte d'altitude, la contre-profondeur est nécessaire pour augmenter la portance et équilibrer la force centrifuge (facteur de charge > 1). La portance doit compenser à la fois la gravité et la force centrifuge.
+
+### Q77 : Lorsque la surface frontale d'un disque dans un écoulement d'air est triplée, la traînée augmente de : ^t80q77
+- A) 9 fois
+- B) 1,5 fois
+- C) 3 fois
+- D) 6 fois
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le décrochage se produit à un angle d'attaque critique (angle de décrochage), quelle que soit la vitesse. À cet angle, la séparation de l'écoulement sur l'extrados provoque une chute soudaine de la portance.
+
+### Q78 : Le vrillage aérodynamique (washout) d'une aile est une modification de : ^t80q78
+- A) L'angle d'incidence du même profil, du pied vers l'extrémité
+- B) Le profil aérodynamique du pied vers l'extrémité
+- C) L'angle d'attaque en extrémité d'aile par le biais de l'aileron
+- D) Le dièdre de l'aile, du pied vers l'extrémité
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La séparation de l'écoulement se produit à un angle d'attaque déterminé (angle critique), propre à chaque profil. Elle n'est pas liée à l'assiette du nez par rapport à l'horizon.
+
+### Q79 : Quelle est la valeur moyenne de l'accélération de la pesanteur à la surface de la Terre ? ^t80q79
+- A) 1013,25 hPa
+- B) 15 °C/100 m
+- C) 9,81 m/sec²
+- D) 100 m/sec²
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'accélération gravitationnelle standard à la surface de la Terre est de 9,81 m/s². C'est la valeur ISA utilisée dans tous les calculs de performance.
+
+### Q80 : La vitesse affichée sur l'anémomètre (ASI) est une mesure de : ^t80q80
+- A) La pression totale dans une capsule anéroïde
+- B) La différence entre la pression statique et la pression totale
+- C) La pression statique autour d'une capsule anéroïde
+- D) L'effet girouette, où la pression diminue
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre est basé sur la différence entre la pression statique et la pression totale (pression dynamique). L'ASI mesure cette différence via le tube de Pitot et la prise de pression statique.
+
+### Q81 : Les stabilisateurs horizontal et vertical servent notamment à : ^t80q81
+- A) Contrôler l'aéronef autour de son axe longitudinal
+- B) Réduire la formation de tourbillons d'extrémité
+- C) Stabiliser l'aéronef en vol
+- D) Réduire la résistance à l'air
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les stabilisateurs horizontal et vertical servent principalement à stabiliser l'aéronef en vol (stabilité longitudinale et directionnelle). Sans eux, l'aéronef serait instable.
+
+### Q82 : Lorsque des volets à fente sont sortis, la séparation de l'écoulement : ^t80q82
+- A) Se produit à la même vitesse qu'avant la sortie des volets
+- B) Se produit à une vitesse plus élevée
+- C) Aucune réponse n'est correcte
+- D) Se produit à une vitesse plus faible
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors de la sortie des volets à fente, la séparation de l'écoulement se produit à une vitesse plus faible, car les volets augmentent le coefficient de portance maximal (CL_max). La vitesse de décrochage diminue.
+
+### Q83 : Le foyer aérodynamique d'un profil dans un écoulement d'air est le point d'application de : ^t80q83
+- A) Le poids
+- B) La résultante de toutes les forces de pression agissant sur le profil
+- C) La pression des pneumatiques sur la piste
+- D) L'écoulement au bord d'attaque
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le foyer aérodynamique est le point d'application de la résultante des forces aérodynamiques sur un profil. Il est distinct du centre de poussée (qui se déplace) et du centre de gravité.
+
+### Q84 : Les pressions s'expriment en : ^t80q84
+- A) Pa, psi, g
+- B) Bar, Pa, m/sec²
+- C) Bar, psi, Pa
+- D) Bar, psi, a (Alpha)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les pressions s'expriment en bar, psi (livres par pouce carré) et Pa (Pascal). g est une accélération, pas une pression. Alpha (a) n'est pas une unité de pression.
+
+### Q85 : La TAS (True Air Speed) est la vitesse de : ^t80q85
+- A) L'aéronef par rapport au sol
+- B) L'aéronef par rapport à la masse d'air environnante
+- C) L'aéronef par rapport à l'air, corrigée de la composante de vent et de la pression atmosphérique
+- D) La lecture sur l'anémomètre (ASI)
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La TAS (vitesse vraie) est la vitesse de l'aéronef par rapport à la masse d'air environnante. C'est la vitesse réelle à travers l'air, corrigée de la densité atmosphérique.
+
+### Q86 : La stabilité en lacet d'un aéronef est assurée par : ^t80q86
+- A) Les becs de bord d'attaque
+- B) Le stabilisateur horizontal
+- C) La dérive (stabilisateur vertical)
+- D) Le dièdre de l'aile
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité en lacet est assurée par la dérive (stabilisateur vertical/gouverne de direction). La flèche de l'aile contribue à la stabilité en roulis, pas en lacet.
+
+### Q87 : Le volet de bord de fuite représenté ci-dessous est un : ^t80q87
+![[figures/t80_q87.png]]
+- A) Volet de Fowler
+- B) Volet fendu (split flap)
+- C) Volet à fente (slotted flap)
+- D) Volet simple (plain flap)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le volet représenté, qui se déploie depuis l'aile avec une fente, est un volet à fente. La fente canalise l'air de l'intrados vers l'extrados, retardant la séparation.
+
+### Q88 : Le risque de séparation de l'écoulement sur l'aile survient principalement : ^t80q88
+- A) En montée rectiligne à grande vitesse, en turbulence atmosphérique
+- B) En air calme, en vol plané, à la vitesse minimale autorisée
+- C) Lors d'un ressource brusque après un piqué
+- D) En croisière rectiligne en palier, en turbulence atmosphérique
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le risque de décrochage/séparation apparaît principalement lors d'un ressource brusque après un piqué, car l'angle d'attaque augmente très rapidement et peut dépasser l'angle critique avant que le pilote puisse réagir.
+
+### Q89 : La traînée d'un corps dans un écoulement d'air dépend notamment de : ^t80q89
+- A) La masse du corps
+- B) La composition chimique du corps
+- C) La densité de l'air
+- D) La densité du corps
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée aérodynamique dépend notamment de la densité de l'air (ρ), puisque F_D = Cd × 0,5 × ρ × v² × A. La densité propre du corps, sa composition chimique et sa masse n'ont pas d'effet direct sur la traînée aérodynamique.
+
+### Q90 : Dans le dessin ci-dessous, la corde du profil est représentée par : ^t80q90
+![[figures/t80_q90.png]]
+- A) M
+- B) K
+- C) H
+- D) A
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne de corde est la droite reliant le bord d'attaque au bord de fuite. Dans la figure, elle est représentée par H.
+
+### Q91 : L'angle d'attaque d'un profil se mesure toujours entre : ^t80q91
+- A) La ligne de corde et la direction de l'écoulement relatif
+- B) L'axe longitudinal et la direction générale de l'écoulement
+- C) L'axe longitudinal et l'horizon
+- D) Il varie selon le poids du pilote
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle d'attaque (AoA) est défini comme l'angle entre la ligne de corde et la direction de l'écoulement relatif non perturbé, ce qui fait de A la bonne réponse. L'option B est incorrecte car l'axe longitudinal est une référence structurelle, pas aérodynamique ; l'AoA se mesure à partir de la ligne de corde. L'option C confond l'AoA avec l'assiette en tangage, qui relie l'axe longitudinal à l'horizon. L'option D est absurde — l'AoA est une propriété géométrique et aérodynamique totalement indépendante du poids du pilote.
+
+### Q92 : À surface frontale et vitesse d'écoulement égales, qu'est-ce qui détermine la traînée d'un corps ? ^t80q92
+- A) Son poids
+- B) Sa densité
+- C) Sa forme
+- D) La position de son centre de gravité
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la surface frontale et la vitesse sont maintenues constantes, la variable restante dans l'équation de traînée D = CD × 0,5 × rho × V² × S est le coefficient de traînée CD, qui est entièrement déterminé par la forme du corps. Une forme profilée produit bien moins de traînée qu'une forme émoussée. Les options A et B sont incorrectes car le poids et la densité du matériau n'ont pas d'effet aérodynamique direct — la traînée dépend de la géométrie externe, non de la distribution de masse interne. L'option D est incorrecte car le centre de gravité affecte la stabilité, pas le coefficient de traînée aérodynamique.
+
+### Q93 : Quelle est l'origine de la traînée induite sur une aile ? ^t80q93
+- A) L'angle formé à la jonction aile-fuselage
+- B) La vitesse air
+- C) L'égalisation de pression depuis l'intrados vers l'extrados
+- D) L'égalisation de pression depuis l'extrados vers l'intrados
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite provient de la différence de pression entre l'intrados (haute pression) et l'extrados (basse pression) de l'aile. Aux extrémités d'aile, l'air s'écoule de l'intrados à haute pression vers l'extrados à basse pression, formant des tourbillons qui inclinent le vecteur portance vers l'arrière, créant la traînée induite. L'option D inverse la direction de l'écoulement — l'air se déplace de la haute vers la basse pression, pas l'inverse. L'option A décrit la traînée d'interférence au pied de l'aile, et l'option B est trop vague — la vitesse seule n'est pas l'origine de la traînée induite.
+
+### Q94 : Quelle est la pression au niveau de la mer dans l'atmosphère standard OACI ? ^t80q94
+- A) 29,92 hPa
+- B) 1012,35 hPa
+- C) 1013,25 hPa
+- D) Cela dépend de la latitude
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Atmosphère Standard Internationale OACI définit la pression au niveau de la mer à exactement 1013,25 hPa (hectopascals). L'option A donne 29,92, qui est la valeur équivalente en pouces de mercure (inHg), pas en hPa — 29,92 hPa correspondrait à une pression absurdement basse. L'option B (1012,35 hPa) est simplement incorrecte. L'option D est fausse car l'ISA est un modèle standardisé qui ne varie pas avec la latitude, même si la pression atmosphérique réelle le fait.
+
+### Q95 : Dans le schéma de profil ci-dessous, quelle ligne représente la ligne de cambrure moyenne ? ^t80q95
+![[figures/t80_q95.png]]
+- A) H
+- B) B
+- C) G + J
+- D) A
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne de cambrure moyenne est le lieu des points équidistants entre l'extrados et l'intrados du profil, représentant la courbure du profil. Dans ce diagramme, la ligne B correspond à cette ligne de référence courbée. Les options A, C et D représentent d'autres caractéristiques du profil telles que la ligne de corde, la distribution d'épaisseur ou les contours de surface, pas la ligne de cambrure moyenne.
+
+### Q96 : Dans un virage à plat sans glissement ni perte d'altitude, pourquoi la contre-profondeur est-elle nécessaire ? ^t80q96
+- A) Pour empêcher un glissement vers l'intérieur dans le virage
+- B) Pour ralentir et réduire la force centrifuge
+- C) Pour empêcher un dérapage vers l'extérieur dans le virage
+- D) Pour augmenter la portance afin qu'elle compense à la fois le poids et la force centrifuge
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage incliné à altitude constante, le facteur de charge dépasse 1 car la portance doit contrebalancer à la fois le poids de l'aéronef et fournir la force centripète pour la trajectoire courbe. La contre-profondeur augmente l'angle d'attaque et donc la portance totale pour satisfaire cette exigence. L'option A est incorrecte car les glissements se corrigent avec le palonnier, pas la profondeur. L'option B est incorrecte — le but n'est pas de ralentir. L'option C est également incorrecte car la prévention du dérapage est une fonction du palonnier, pas de la gouverne de profondeur.
+
+### Q97 : Un décrochage d'aile se produit : ^t80q97
+- A) À la ligne radiale rouge de l'anémomètre
+- B) Lorsqu'un angle d'attaque critique est dépassé
+- C) Suite à une réduction de la puissance moteur
+- D) Uniquement lorsque le nez est excessivement caché au-dessus de l'horizon
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un décrochage se produit lorsque l'angle d'attaque de l'aile dépasse la valeur critique (typiquement environ 15-18 degrés), provoquant la séparation de l'écoulement sur l'extrados et une perte soudaine de portance. C'est un principe aérodynamique fondamental indépendant de la vitesse ou de l'assiette. L'option A est incorrecte car la ligne rouge (VNE) concerne les limites de vitesse structurelle, pas le décrochage. L'option C est incorrecte — réduire la puissance seul ne provoque pas de décrochage si l'AoA reste en dessous du seuil critique. L'option D est fausse car un décrochage peut se produire à n'importe quelle assiette ou vitesse, du moment que l'AoA critique est dépassé.
+
+### Q98 : Dans quelle condition la séparation de l'écoulement d'un profil se produit-elle ? ^t80q98
+- A) Uniquement à une altitude spécifique de l'aéronef
+- B) Uniquement à une position du nez donnée par rapport à l'horizon
+- C) Simultanément sur toute l'envergure
+- D) À un angle d'attaque spécifique
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La séparation de l'écoulement se produit lorsque l'angle d'attaque atteint l'angle de décrochage critique, qui est une propriété aérodynamique fixe de la forme du profil. L'option A est incorrecte car l'AoA de décrochage est indépendant de l'altitude. L'option B confond l'assiette en tangage avec l'angle d'attaque — une aile peut décrocher quelle que soit la position du nez. L'option C est incorrecte car, grâce aux caractéristiques de conception de l'aile comme le vrillage, le décrochage se propage généralement du pied vers l'extrémité plutôt que de se produire simultanément sur toute l'envergure.
+
+### Q99 : Quelle est l'accélération gravitationnelle moyenne à la surface de la Terre ? ^t80q99
+- A) 9,81 m/sec²
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 1013,5 hPa
+- D) 15 °C/100 m
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'accélération gravitationnelle standard au niveau de la mer est de 9,81 m/s², utilisée dans toute l'aviation pour le poids, le facteur de charge et les calculs de performance. L'option B (100 m/s²) est environ dix fois trop grande. L'option C (1013,5 hPa) est une valeur de pression proche de la pression ISA au niveau de la mer, pas une accélération. L'option D (15 °C/100 m) ressemble au format d'un gradient de température mais est bien trop élevée — le gradient ISA est de 0,65 °C par 100 m.
+
+### Q100 : La vitesse vraie (TAS) est obtenue à partir de la lecture de l'anémomètre (ASI) par : ^t80q100
+- A) Aucune correction
+- B) Correction des erreurs de position et d'instrument
+- C) Application de corrections pour les erreurs de position/instrument et la densité atmosphérique
+- D) Correction de la densité atmosphérique seule
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La TAS est dérivée de la lecture de l'ASI (IAS) par deux corrections successives : d'abord, les erreurs de position et d'instrument sont supprimées pour obtenir la vitesse calibrée (CAS), puis une correction de densité tient compte de la différence entre la densité réelle de l'air et la densité ISA au niveau de la mer. L'option A est incorrecte car l'IAS non corrigée n'est pas égale à la TAS. L'option B ne donne que la CAS, pas la TAS. L'option D omet la correction d'erreur d'instrument/position, qui est toujours la première étape.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_101_125.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_101_125.md
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+### Q101: What kind of information should be included in an urgency message? ^t90q101
+- A) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, departure aerodrome, destination aerodrome, heading and altitude
+- B) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, heading and altitude
+- C) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, departure aerodrome, information about position, heading and altitude
+- D) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, departure aerodrome, heading and altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (PAN PAN) must include: the nature of the problem, important support information, the pilot's intentions, and position/heading/altitude data — enabling ATC to coordinate assistance effectively. Options A and D include departure/destination aerodromes and routing, which are flight plan details not specifically required in an urgency broadcast. Option C omits the pilot's intentions, which are essential for ATC planning.
+
+### Q102: What is the correct designation of the frequency band from 118.000 to 136.975 MHz used for voice communication? ^t90q102
+- A) HF
+- B) LF
+- C) VHF
+- D) MF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 118.000 to 136.975 MHz band falls within the Very High Frequency (VHF) range, which is the standard for civil aviation voice communication due to its reliable line-of-sight propagation and clarity. Option A (HF, 3-30 MHz) is used for long-range oceanic communications. Option B (LF, 30-300 kHz) is used for NDB navigation. Option D (MF, 300 kHz - 3 MHz) is used for medium-range broadcasting.
+
+### Q103: In what case is visibility transmitted in meters? ^t90q103
+- A) Greater than 10 km
+- B) Up to 5 km
+- C) Greater than 5 km
+- D) Up to 10 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR reports, visibility is expressed in meters when it is 5 km (5000 m) or less, providing the precision needed at operationally critical low visibilities. When visibility exceeds 5 km, it is reported in kilometers. Options A and C describe conditions where kilometers would be used. Option D (up to 10 km) extends the meter-reporting threshold beyond the standard 5 km cutoff.
+
+### Q104: How are urgency messages defined? ^t90q104
+- A) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- B) Messages concerning urgent spare parts needed for a continuation of flight and which need to be ordered in advance.
+- C) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- D) Information concerning the apron personnel and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Urgency messages (PAN PAN) concern the safety of an aircraft, watercraft, vehicle, or person in sight — situations that are serious but do not yet constitute the grave and imminent danger of a distress situation. Option A defines distress messages (MAYDAY). Option B is an administrative matter unrelated to the urgency classification. Option D describes a ground safety concern that would be handled through other channels.
+
+### Q105: What do distress messages contain? ^t90q105
+- A) Information concerning the apron personnel and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.
+- B) Information concerning urgent spare parts required for a continuation of flight and which have to be ordered in advance.
+- C) Information concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- D) Information concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Distress messages (MAYDAY) contain information about aircraft and passengers facing a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — the highest priority category. Option A concerns ground personnel, not an airborne distress. Option B is an administrative logistics matter. Option D describes urgency-level situations (PAN PAN), which are serious but not immediately life-threatening.
+
+### Q106: What is the approximate speed of electromagnetic wave propagation? ^t90q106
+- A) 300000 m/s
+- B) 123000 km/s
+- C) 123000 m/s
+- D) 300000 km/s
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electromagnetic waves (including radio waves) propagate at the speed of light, approximately 300,000 km/s (3 × 10⁸ m/s) in a vacuum. Option A (300,000 m/s) is off by a factor of 1,000 — this would be only 300 km/s. Option B (123,000 km/s) and Option C (123,000 m/s) are both incorrect values that do not correspond to any known physical constant.
+
+### Q107: In what cases is visibility transmitted in kilometers? ^t90q107
+- A) Up to 10 km
+- B) Greater than 5 km
+- C) Up to 5 km
+- D) Greater than 10 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR reporting, visibility is expressed in kilometers when it exceeds 5 km (e.g., "6KM" or "9999" for 10 km or more). Below 5 km, meters are used for greater precision at operationally critical low visibilities. Option A (up to 10 km) incorrectly extends the kilometer range below 5 km. Option C (up to 5 km) is the meter-reporting range. Option D (greater than 10 km) is too restrictive.
+
+### Q108: How can you obtain meteorological information for airports during a cross-country flight? ^t90q108
+- A) METAR
+- B) GAMET
+- C) AIRMET
+- D) VOLMET
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET is the continuous radio broadcast service that provides current METAR observations for a series of aerodromes, available to pilots in flight on designated frequencies. Option A (METAR) is the report format itself, not a broadcast service pilots can access in flight via radio. Option B (GAMET) is an area weather forecast. Option C (AIRMET) provides warnings of weather phenomena over a region, not individual airport observations.
+
+### Q109: Which of the following factors affects the reception of VHF transmissions? ^t90q109
+- A) Twilight error
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Height of ionosphere
+- D) Shoreline effect
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VHF radio propagates by line-of-sight, so altitude is the primary factor determining reception range — higher altitude means a more distant radio horizon. Option A (twilight error) affects NDB/ADF systems, not VHF. Option C (ionosphere height) influences HF sky-wave propagation, not VHF. Option D (shoreline effect) also affects NDB bearings, not VHF communication quality.
+
+### Q110: On what frequency shall a blind transmission be made? ^t90q110
+- A) On a tower frequency
+- B) On the current frequency
+- C) On the appropriate FIS frequency
+- D) On a radar frequency of the lower airspace
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blind transmissions must be made on the current frequency in use, because that is the frequency being monitored by the ATC unit responsible for the aircraft. Switching to another frequency would mean the relevant controller might not hear the transmission. Options A, C, and D are all incorrect unless they happen to be the current frequency.
+
+### Q111: Under what condition may a VFR flight without radio enter a class D aerodrome? ^t90q111
+- A) It is the destination aerodrome
+- B) There are other aircraft in the aerodrome circuit
+- C) Approval has been granted before
+- D) It is the aerodrome of departure
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Entry into Class D airspace without radio is only permissible when prior approval has been obtained (e.g., by telephone before departure, or a clearance received before the radio failed). Without prior approval, two-way radio communication is mandatory for Class D. Options A and D (destination or departure aerodrome status) do not constitute authorization. Option B (presence of other traffic) has no bearing on the radio requirement.
+
+### Q112: What is the correct transponder code for emergencies? ^t90q112
+- A) 7500.
+- B) 7000.
+- C) 7700.
+- D) 7600.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7700 is the internationally standardised emergency squawk that triggers alarms on ATC radar displays. Option A (7500) indicates unlawful interference (hijacking). Option B (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code in European airspace. Option D (7600) indicates radio communication failure. Each code triggers a different ATC response protocol.
+
+### Q113: What information is broadcast on a VOLMET frequency? ^t90q113
+- A) Navigational information
+- B) NOTAMS
+- C) Current information
+- D) Meteorological information
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET (from French "vol" = flight, "météo" = weather) broadcasts meteorological information — specifically current weather reports (METARs) and sometimes TAFs for a series of aerodromes. Option A (navigational information) is not provided via VOLMET. Option B (NOTAMs) are distributed through other channels. Option C ("current information") is too vague and non-specific.
+
+### Q114: How long is an ATIS broadcast valid for? ^t90q114
+- A) 10 minutes.
+- B) 60 minutes.
+- C) 30 minutes.
+- D) 45 minutes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS broadcasts are updated at approximately 30-minute intervals (or sooner if conditions change significantly), making each broadcast valid for about 30 minutes. Each update is assigned a new identification letter. Option A (10 minutes) is too short for standard updates. Options B (60 minutes) and D (45 minutes) are too long, given how rapidly aerodrome conditions can change.
+
+### Q115: What is the standard abbreviation for the term abeam? ^t90q115
+- A) ABM
+- B) ABA
+- C) ABE
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ABM is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for "abeam," describing a position at right angles to the aircraft's track (directly to the side). This abbreviation is used in flight plans, ATC communications, and aeronautical publications. Options B, C, and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations for this term.
+
+### Q116: What abbreviation stands for visual flight rules? ^t90q116
+- A) VFR
+- B) VMC
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VFR stands for Visual Flight Rules — the set of regulations governing flight by visual reference. Option B (VMC) means Visual Meteorological Conditions, describing the weather requirements for VFR flight — a related but distinct concept. Options C and D are not standard aviation abbreviations.
+
+### Q117: What is the ICAO abbreviation for obstacle? ^t90q117
+- A) OBS
+- B) OBST
+- C) OST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** OBST is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for obstacle, used in NOTAMs, aeronautical charts, and obstacle data publications. Option A (OBS) may be used for "observe" in some contexts but does not denote obstacle. Options C and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q118: What does the abbreviation FIS stand for? ^t90q118
+- A) Flight information system
+- B) Flashing information service
+- C) Flight information service
+- D) Flashing information system
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS stands for Flight Information Service, providing advice and information useful for safe and efficient flight conduct. It is a service, not a system — making option A incorrect. Options B and D contain "flashing," which has no relevance to this aviation service.
+
+### Q119: What does the abbreviation FIR stand for? ^t90q119
+- A) Flow information radar
+- B) Flight information region
+- C) Flow integrity required
+- D) Flight integrity receiver
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIR stands for Flight Information Region — a defined volume of airspace within which flight information service and alerting service are provided under ICAO standards. It is the fundamental building block of airspace management. Options A, C, and D are fabricated terms with no aviation meaning.
+
+### Q120: What does the abbreviation H24 stand for? ^t90q120
+- A) Sunrise to sunset
+- B) No specific opening times
+- C) 24 h service
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** H24 means continuous 24-hour service — the facility is operational at all times without interruption. Option A (sunrise to sunset) describes HJ. Option B (no specific hours) describes HX. Option D (sunset to sunrise) describes HN. H24 is used in AIPs and NOTAMs for permanently staffed facilities.
+
+### Q121: What does the abbreviation HX stand for? ^t90q121
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) 24 h service
+- C) Sunrise to sunset
+- D) No specific opening hours
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HX is the ICAO abbreviation indicating no specific or predetermined operating hours — the facility may be available on request or intermittently. Pilots must check NOTAMs or contact the facility to confirm availability. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option B describes H24 (continuous service). Option C describes HJ (sunrise to sunset).
+
+### Q122: How is the directional information 12 o'clock correctly transmitted? ^t90q122
+- A) Twelve o'clock.
+- B) One two o'clock
+- C) One two.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clock positions used for traffic advisories are spoken as the full natural number followed by "o'clock": "Twelve o'clock" means directly ahead. Option B splits the number into individual digits, which could create confusion with other numerical data. Option C omits "o'clock," making the reference ambiguous. Option D adds "hundred," which is meaningless in clock-position terminology.
+
+### Q123: What does the phrase Roger mean? ^t90q123
+- A) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I have received all of your last transmission
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Roger" means solely "I have received all of your last transmission" — it is a receipt acknowledgement only, not a commitment to comply or a grant of permission. Option A defines "Wilco." Option B defines "Correction." Option C defines "Approved." Confusing these phrases can have serious safety consequences in ATC communications.
+
+### Q124: What does the phrase Correction mean? ^t90q124
+- A) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) I have received all of your last transmission
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Correction" signals that the speaker has made an error in the current transmission, and the corrected information follows immediately. This prevents the listener from acting on incorrect data. Option A defines "Approved." Option C defines "Roger." Option D defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q125: What does the phrase Approved mean? ^t90q125
+- A) I have received all of your last transmission
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Approved" means ATC has granted permission for the specific action the pilot proposed or requested. Option A defines "Roger." Option B defines "Correction." Option D defines "Wilco." Each phrase has a precise meaning in ICAO phraseology that must not be interchanged.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_101_125_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_101_125_fr.md
new file mode 100644
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--- /dev/null
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@@ -0,0 +1,249 @@
+### Q101: Quel type d'information doit être inclus dans un message d'urgence ? ^t90q101
+- A) Route prévue, informations importantes pour l'assistance, intentions du pilote, aérodrome de départ, aérodrome de destination, cap et altitude
+- B) Nature du problème ou de l'observation, informations importantes pour l'assistance, intentions du pilote, informations sur la position, cap et altitude
+- C) Nature du problème ou de l'observation, informations importantes pour l'assistance, aérodrome de départ, informations sur la position, cap et altitude
+- D) Route prévue, informations importantes pour l'assistance, intentions du pilote, informations sur la position, aérodrome de départ, cap et altitude
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message d'urgence (PAN PAN) doit inclure : la nature du problème, les informations importantes pour l'assistance, les intentions du pilote, et les données de position/cap/altitude — permettant à l'ATC de coordonner efficacement l'assistance. Les options A et D incluent les aérodromes de départ/destination et la route, qui sont des détails du plan de vol non spécifiquement requis dans une diffusion d'urgence. L'option C omet les intentions du pilote, qui sont essentielles pour la planification ATC.
+
+### Q102: Quelle est la désignation correcte de la bande de fréquences de 118,000 à 136,975 MHz utilisée pour les communications vocales ? ^t90q102
+- A) HF
+- B) LF
+- C) VHF
+- D) MF
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bande de 118,000 à 136,975 MHz se situe dans la gamme des très hautes fréquences (VHF), qui est la norme pour les communications vocales de l'aviation civile en raison de sa propagation fiable en ligne de vue et de sa clarté. L'option A (HF, 3-30 MHz) est utilisée pour les communications océaniques longue distance. L'option B (LF, 30-300 kHz) est utilisée pour la navigation NDB. L'option D (MF, 300 kHz - 3 MHz) est utilisée pour les émissions à portée moyenne.
+
+### Q103: Dans quel cas la visibilité est-elle transmise en mètres ? ^t90q103
+- A) Supérieure à 10 km
+- B) Jusqu'à 5 km
+- C) Supérieure à 5 km
+- D) Jusqu'à 10 km
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les rapports METAR, la visibilité est exprimée en mètres lorsqu'elle est inférieure ou égale à 5 km (5 000 m), offrant la précision nécessaire aux visibilités faibles opérationnellement critiques. Lorsque la visibilité dépasse 5 km, elle est exprimée en kilomètres. Les options A et C décrivent des conditions où les kilomètres seraient utilisés. L'option D (jusqu'à 10 km) étend le seuil de compte rendu en mètres au-delà de la coupure standard de 5 km.
+
+### Q104: Comment sont définis les messages d'urgence ? ^t90q104
+- A) Messages concernant des aéronefs et leurs passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- B) Messages concernant des pièces de rechange urgentes nécessaires pour la poursuite du vol et devant être commandées à l'avance.
+- C) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou d'un autre véhicule ou d'une personne en vue.
+- D) Informations concernant le personnel de piste et impliquant un danger imminent pour les aéronefs en atterrissage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages d'urgence (PAN PAN) concernent la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire, d'un véhicule ou d'une personne en vue — des situations graves qui ne constituent pas encore le danger grave et imminent d'une situation de détresse. L'option A définit les messages de détresse (MAYDAY). L'option B est une question administrative sans rapport avec la classification d'urgence. L'option D décrit un problème de sécurité au sol qui serait traité par d'autres canaux.
+
+### Q105: Que contiennent les messages de détresse ? ^t90q105
+- A) Informations concernant le personnel de piste et impliquant un danger imminent pour les aéronefs en atterrissage.
+- B) Informations concernant des pièces de rechange urgentes nécessaires pour la poursuite du vol et devant être commandées à l'avance.
+- C) Informations concernant des aéronefs et leurs passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- D) Informations concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou d'un autre véhicule ou d'une personne en vue.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages de détresse (MAYDAY) contiennent des informations sur des aéronefs et des passagers confrontés à un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate — la catégorie de priorité la plus élevée. L'option A concerne le personnel au sol, non une détresse en vol. L'option B est une question logistique administrative. L'option D décrit des situations de niveau urgence (PAN PAN), qui sont graves mais non immédiatement mortelles.
+
+### Q106: Quelle est la vitesse approximative de propagation des ondes électromagnétiques ? ^t90q106
+- A) 300 000 m/s
+- B) 123 000 km/s
+- C) 123 000 m/s
+- D) 300 000 km/s
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les ondes électromagnétiques (y compris les ondes radio) se propagent à la vitesse de la lumière, soit environ 300 000 km/s (3 × 10⁸ m/s) dans le vide. L'option A (300 000 m/s) est erronée d'un facteur 1 000 — ce ne serait que 300 km/s. Les options B (123 000 km/s) et C (123 000 m/s) sont toutes deux des valeurs incorrectes ne correspondant à aucune constante physique connue.
+
+### Q107: Dans quels cas la visibilité est-elle transmise en kilomètres ? ^t90q107
+- A) Jusqu'à 10 km
+- B) Supérieure à 5 km
+- C) Jusqu'à 5 km
+- D) Supérieure à 10 km
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les rapports METAR, la visibilité est exprimée en kilomètres lorsqu'elle dépasse 5 km (par ex. « 6KM » ou « 9999 » pour 10 km ou plus). En dessous de 5 km, les mètres sont utilisés pour une plus grande précision aux visibilités faibles opérationnellement critiques. L'option A (jusqu'à 10 km) étend incorrectement la plage en kilomètres en dessous de 5 km. L'option C (jusqu'à 5 km) est la plage en mètres. L'option D (supérieure à 10 km) est trop restrictive.
+
+### Q108: Comment peut-on obtenir des informations météorologiques pour les aéroports lors d'un vol de navigation ? ^t90q108
+- A) METAR
+- B) GAMET
+- C) AIRMET
+- D) VOLMET
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VOLMET est le service de diffusion radio continue qui fournit les observations METAR actuelles pour une série d'aérodromes, disponible aux pilotes en vol sur des fréquences désignées. L'option A (METAR) est le format du rapport lui-même, non un service de diffusion accessible aux pilotes en vol par radio. L'option B (GAMET) est une prévision météorologique de zone. L'option C (AIRMET) fournit des avertissements de phénomènes météorologiques sur une région, non des observations individuelles d'aéroport.
+
+### Q109: Lequel des facteurs suivants affecte la réception des transmissions VHF ? ^t90q109
+- A) Erreur crépusculaire
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Hauteur de l'ionosphère
+- D) Effet de côte
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La radio VHF se propage en ligne de vue, donc l'altitude est le facteur principal déterminant la portée de réception — une altitude plus élevée signifie un horizon radio plus éloigné. L'option A (erreur crépusculaire) affecte les systèmes NDB/ADF, non la VHF. L'option C (hauteur de l'ionosphère) influence la propagation par onde de ciel HF, non la VHF. L'option D (effet de côte) affecte également les relèvements NDB, non la qualité de communication VHF.
+
+### Q110: Sur quelle fréquence une transmission en aveugle doit-elle être effectuée ? ^t90q110
+- A) Sur une fréquence tour
+- B) Sur la fréquence en cours d'utilisation
+- C) Sur la fréquence FIS appropriée
+- D) Sur une fréquence radar de l'espace aérien inférieur
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les transmissions en aveugle doivent être effectuées sur la fréquence en cours d'utilisation, car c'est la fréquence surveillée par l'unité ATC responsable de l'aéronef. Changer de fréquence signifierait que le contrôleur concerné risque de ne pas entendre la transmission. Les options A, C et D sont toutes incorrectes sauf si elles se trouvent être la fréquence en cours d'utilisation.
+
+### Q111: Dans quelles conditions un vol VFR sans radio peut-il entrer dans un aérodrome de classe D ? ^t90q111
+- A) C'est l'aérodrome de destination
+- B) D'autres aéronefs sont présents dans le circuit d'aérodrome
+- C) Une approbation a été accordée au préalable
+- D) C'est l'aérodrome de départ
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'entrée dans l'espace aérien de classe D sans radio n'est autorisée que lorsqu'une autorisation préalable a été obtenue (par ex. par téléphone avant le départ, ou une autorisation reçue avant la panne radio). Sans autorisation préalable, la communication radio bilatérale est obligatoire pour la classe D. Les options A et D (statut d'aérodrome de destination ou de départ) ne constituent pas une autorisation. L'option B (présence d'autres trafics) n'a aucune incidence sur l'exigence radio.
+
+### Q112: Quel est le code transpondeur correct pour les urgences ? ^t90q112
+- A) 7500.
+- B) 7000.
+- C) 7700.
+- D) 7600.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7700 est le squawk d'urgence standardisé internationalement qui déclenche des alarmes sur les écrans radar ATC. L'option A (7500) indique une interférence illicite (détournement). L'option B (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR standard dans l'espace aérien européen. L'option D (7600) indique une panne de communication radio. Chaque code déclenche un protocole de réponse ATC différent.
+
+### Q113: Quelles informations sont diffusées sur une fréquence VOLMET ? ^t90q113
+- A) Informations de navigation
+- B) NOTAMs
+- C) Informations actuelles
+- D) Informations météorologiques
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VOLMET (du français « vol » et « météo ») diffuse des informations météorologiques — spécifiquement des rapports météorologiques actuels (METAR) et parfois des TAF pour une série d'aérodromes. L'option A (informations de navigation) n'est pas fournie via le VOLMET. L'option B (NOTAMs) est distribuée par d'autres canaux. L'option C (« informations actuelles ») est trop vague et non spécifique.
+
+### Q114: Quelle est la durée de validité d'une diffusion ATIS ? ^t90q114
+- A) 10 minutes.
+- B) 60 minutes.
+- C) 30 minutes.
+- D) 45 minutes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les diffusions ATIS sont mises à jour environ toutes les 30 minutes (ou plus tôt si les conditions changent significativement), rendant chaque diffusion valable environ 30 minutes. Chaque mise à jour se voit attribuer une nouvelle lettre d'identification. L'option A (10 minutes) est trop courte pour les mises à jour standard. Les options B (60 minutes) et D (45 minutes) sont trop longues, compte tenu de la rapidité avec laquelle les conditions d'aérodrome peuvent changer.
+
+### Q115: Quelle est l'abréviation standard pour le terme « abeam » ? ^t90q115
+- A) ABM
+- B) ABA
+- C) ABE
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** ABM est l'abréviation OACI standard pour « abeam », décrivant une position perpendiculaire à la route de l'aéronef (directement sur le côté). Cette abréviation est utilisée dans les plans de vol, les communications ATC et les publications aéronautiques. Les options B, C et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues pour ce terme.
+
+### Q116: Quelle abréviation désigne les règles de vol à vue ? ^t90q116
+- A) VFR
+- B) VMC
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** VFR signifie Visual Flight Rules (règles de vol à vue) — l'ensemble des réglementations régissant le vol par référence visuelle. L'option B (VMC) signifie Visual Meteorological Conditions (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue), décrivant les exigences météorologiques pour le vol VFR — une notion liée mais distincte. Les options C et D ne sont pas des abréviations aéronautiques standard.
+
+### Q117: Quelle est l'abréviation OACI pour obstacle ? ^t90q117
+- A) OBS
+- B) OBST
+- C) OST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** OBST est l'abréviation OACI standard pour obstacle, utilisée dans les NOTAMs, les cartes aéronautiques et les publications de données d'obstacles. L'option A (OBS) peut être utilisée pour « observer » dans certains contextes mais ne désigne pas un obstacle. Les options C et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues.
+
+### Q118: Que signifie l'abréviation FIS ? ^t90q118
+- A) Système d'information de vol
+- B) Service d'information clignotant
+- C) Service d'information de vol
+- D) Système d'information clignotant
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** FIS signifie Flight Information Service (service d'information de vol), fournissant des conseils et des informations utiles pour la conduite sûre et efficace des vols. C'est un service, non un système — rendant l'option A incorrecte. Les options B et D contiennent « clignotant », qui n'a aucun rapport avec ce service aéronautique.
+
+### Q119: Que signifie l'abréviation FIR ? ^t90q119
+- A) Radar d'information de flux
+- B) Région d'information de vol
+- C) Intégrité de flux requise
+- D) Récepteur d'intégrité de vol
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** FIR signifie Flight Information Region (région d'information de vol) — un volume d'espace aérien défini à l'intérieur duquel sont fournis le service d'information de vol et le service d'alerte selon les normes OACI. C'est l'élément fondamental de la gestion de l'espace aérien. Les options A, C et D sont des termes inventés sans signification aéronautique.
+
+### Q120: Que signifie l'abréviation H24 ? ^t90q120
+- A) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+- B) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+- C) Service 24 h
+- D) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** H24 signifie un service continu 24 heures sur 24 — l'installation est opérationnelle à tout moment sans interruption. L'option A (lever au coucher du soleil) décrit HJ. L'option B (aucun horaire spécifique) décrit HX. L'option D (coucher au lever du soleil) décrit HN. H24 est utilisé dans les AIP et les NOTAMs pour les installations en personnel permanent.
+
+### Q121: Que signifie l'abréviation HX ? ^t90q121
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+- B) Service 24 h
+- C) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+- D) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** HX est l'abréviation OACI indiquant aucun horaire de fonctionnement spécifique ou prédéterminé — l'installation peut être disponible sur demande ou de façon intermittente. Les pilotes doivent consulter les NOTAMs ou contacter l'installation pour confirmer la disponibilité. L'option A décrit HN (coucher au lever du soleil). L'option B décrit H24 (service continu). L'option C décrit HJ (lever au coucher du soleil).
+
+### Q122: Comment l'information directionnelle « 12 heures » est-elle correctement transmise ? ^t90q122
+- A) Twelve o'clock.
+- B) One two o'clock
+- C) One two.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les positions de l'horloge utilisées pour les avis de trafic sont exprimées par le nombre entier naturel suivi de « o'clock » : « Twelve o'clock » signifie droit devant. L'option B décompose le nombre en chiffres individuels, ce qui peut créer de la confusion avec d'autres données numériques. L'option C omet « o'clock », rendant la référence ambiguë. L'option D ajoute « hundred », dépourvu de sens dans la terminologie de position horaire.
+
+### Q123: Que signifie l'expression « Roger » ? ^t90q123
+- A) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+- B) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- C) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- D) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Roger » signifie uniquement « J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission » — c'est uniquement un accusé de réception, non un engagement de conformité ou une autorisation. L'option A définit « Wilco ». L'option B définit « Correction ». L'option C définit « Approved ». Confondre ces expressions peut avoir de graves conséquences pour la sécurité dans les communications ATC.
+
+### Q124: Que signifie l'expression « Correction » ? ^t90q124
+- A) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- B) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- C) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- D) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Correction » signale que l'émetteur a commis une erreur dans la transmission en cours, et les informations corrigées suivent immédiatement. Cela évite que le récepteur n'agisse sur des données incorrectes. L'option A définit « Approved ». L'option C définit « Roger ». L'option D définit « Wilco ».
+
+### Q125: Que signifie l'expression « Approved » ? ^t90q125
+- A) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- B) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- C) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- D) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Approved » signifie que l'ATC a accordé l'autorisation pour l'action spécifique que le pilote a proposée ou demandée. L'option A définit « Roger ». L'option B définit « Correction ». L'option D définit « Wilco ». Chaque expression a une signification précise dans la phraséologie OACI qui ne doit pas être interchangée.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_126_134.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_126_134.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b74a5c8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_126_134.md
@@ -0,0 +1,89 @@
+### Q126: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission requires a "yes" answer? ^t90q126
+- A) Yes
+- B) Affirm
+- C) Roger
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Affirm" is the ICAO-standard civil aviation word for "yes." Option A ("Yes") is plain language and not standard phraseology, potentially misheard on radio. Option C ("Roger") means receipt acknowledged, not agreement. Option D ("Affirmative") is common in military usage but "Affirm" is the correct civil aviation standard per ICAO.
+
+### Q127: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission requires a "no" answer? ^t90q127
+- A) Finish
+- B) Not
+- C) No
+- D) Negative
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Negative" is the ICAO-standard phrase for "no" or "that is not correct," chosen for unambiguous clarity in radio communications. Option A ("Finish") has no defined meaning in this context. Option B ("Not") is incomplete and non-standard. Option C ("No") is plain language that could be misheard, especially in noisy radio conditions or across language barriers.
+
+### Q128: How should the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q128
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct readback includes all safety-critical items: the departure instruction (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, turn right heading 220), the runway designator (runway 12), and the take-off clearance. Wind information does not require readback and is correctly omitted. Option A omits the runway and clearance. Option C misuses "wilco" within a readback. Option D reads back the wind unnecessarily while including the clearance.
+
+### Q129: How should the instruction "Next report PAH" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q129
+- A) Positive
+- B) Roger
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Wilco" (will comply) is the correct acknowledgement for an instruction that requires future action — the pilot confirms both receipt and intention to report at waypoint PAH. Option A ("Positive") is not standard ICAO phraseology. Option B ("Roger") acknowledges receipt only, without confirming compliance. Option D ("Report PAH") is an incomplete acknowledgement without the compliance element.
+
+### Q130: How should the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q130
+- A) Wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- D) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the transponder code and the new frequency are safety-critical items that must be read back to confirm correct receipt: "Squawk 4321, 131.325." Options A and B ("Wilco" or "Roger" alone) fail to confirm the specific numerical values. Option C reads back only the squawk code without confirming the frequency.
+
+### Q131: How should "You are now entering airspace Delta" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q131
+- A) Airspace Delta
+- B) Wilco
+- C) Roger
+- D) Entering
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "You are now entering airspace Delta" is informational — ATC is providing awareness, not issuing an instruction. The correct response is "Roger" (message received). Option A is a partial repetition without proper acknowledgement. Option B ("Wilco") implies an instruction to comply with, which does not exist here. Option D ("Entering") is incomplete and non-standard.
+
+### Q132: What does "FEW" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q132
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FEW designates 1 to 2 oktas (eighths) of sky covered by cloud — the least amount of coverage in the METAR scale. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). These four designations (FEW, SCT, BKN, OVC) are the standard ICAO cloud coverage categories.
+
+### Q133: What does "SCT" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q133
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 1 to 2 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 8 eighths
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SCT (Scattered) represents 3 to 4 oktas (eighths) of sky coverage in a METAR report. Option A describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). Option B describes FEW (1-2 oktas). Option D describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Scattered cloud typically permits VFR flight, but pilots must verify that cloud bases meet the required vertical separation minima.
+
+### Q134: What does "BKN" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q134
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 1 to 2 eighths
+- D) 5 to 7 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN (Broken) represents 5 to 7 oktas (eighths) of sky coverage — the sky is predominantly covered with some gaps visible. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes FEW (1-2 oktas). A broken cloud layer, especially with low bases, can significantly restrict VFR operations and requires careful assessment.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_126_134_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_126_134_fr.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b75cb9d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_126_134_fr.md
@@ -0,0 +1,89 @@
+### Q126: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'une transmission doit recevoir la réponse « oui » ? ^t90q126
+- A) Yes
+- B) Affirm
+- C) Roger
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Affirm » est le mot OACI standard de l'aviation civile pour « oui ». L'option A (« Yes ») est du langage courant et non standard, potentiellement mal entendu à la radio. L'option C (« Roger ») signifie accusé de réception, non accord. L'option D (« Affirmative ») est courante dans l'usage militaire mais « Affirm » est le standard correct de l'aviation civile selon l'OACI.
+
+### Q127: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'une transmission doit recevoir la réponse « non » ? ^t90q127
+- A) Finish
+- B) Not
+- C) No
+- D) Negative
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Negative » est l'expression OACI standard pour « non » ou « ce n'est pas correct », choisie pour sa clarté non équivoque dans les communications radio. L'option A (« Finish ») n'a pas de signification définie dans ce contexte. L'option B (« Not ») est incomplète et non standard. L'option C (« No ») est du langage courant qui peut être mal entendu, notamment dans des conditions radio bruyantes ou à travers des barrières linguistiques.
+
+### Q128: Comment l'instruction « DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q128
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le compte rendu de lecture correct inclut tous les éléments critiques pour la sécurité : l'instruction de départ (montée en ligne droite jusqu'à 2 500 ft, virage à droite cap 220), le numéro de piste (runway 12) et l'autorisation de décollage. Les informations de vent ne nécessitent pas de compte rendu de lecture et sont correctement omises. L'option A omet la piste et l'autorisation. L'option C utilise incorrectement « wilco » dans un compte rendu de lecture. L'option D lit inutilement le vent en retour tout en incluant l'autorisation.
+
+### Q129: Comment l'instruction « Next report PAH » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q129
+- A) Positive
+- B) Roger
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Wilco » (will comply) est l'acquittement correct pour une instruction nécessitant une action future — le pilote confirme à la fois la réception et l'intention de rendre compte au point PAH. L'option A (« Positive ») n'est pas une phraséologie OACI standard. L'option B (« Roger ») n'accuse que la réception sans confirmer la conformité. L'option D (« Report PAH ») est un acquittement incomplet sans l'élément de conformité.
+
+### Q130: Comment l'instruction « Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325 » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q130
+- A) Wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- D) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur et la nouvelle fréquence sont tous deux des éléments critiques pour la sécurité qui doivent être lus en retour pour confirmer la bonne réception : « Squawk 4321, 131.325 ». Les options A et B (« Wilco » ou « Roger » seuls) ne confirment pas les valeurs numériques spécifiques. L'option C ne lit en retour que le code squawk sans confirmer la fréquence.
+
+### Q131: Comment « You are now entering airspace Delta » doit-il être correctement acquitté ? ^t90q131
+- A) Airspace Delta
+- B) Wilco
+- C) Roger
+- D) Entering
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « You are now entering airspace Delta » est une information — l'ATC fournit une prise de conscience, non une instruction. La réponse correcte est « Roger » (message reçu). L'option A est une répétition partielle sans acquittement approprié. L'option B (« Wilco ») implique une instruction à laquelle se conformer, qui n'existe pas ici. L'option D (« Entering ») est incomplète et non standard.
+
+### Q132: Que signifie « FEW » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q132
+- A) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- B) 8 huitièmes
+- C) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- D) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** FEW désigne 1 à 2 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert par des nuages — la couverture la plus faible sur l'échelle METAR. L'option A décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option B décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option C décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). Ces quatre désignations (FEW, SCT, BKN, OVC) sont les catégories OACI standard de couverture nuageuse.
+
+### Q133: Que signifie « SCT » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q133
+- A) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- B) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- C) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- D) 8 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** SCT (Scattered, nuages épars) représente 3 à 4 octas (huitièmes) de couverture du ciel dans un rapport METAR. L'option A décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). L'option B décrit FEW (1-2 octas). L'option D décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). Les nuages épars permettent généralement le vol VFR, mais les pilotes doivent vérifier que les bases de nuages respectent les minimums de séparation verticale requis.
+
+### Q134: Que signifie « BKN » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q134
+- A) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- B) 8 huitièmes
+- C) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- D) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** BKN (Broken, nuages fragmentés) représente 5 à 7 octas (huitièmes) de couverture du ciel — le ciel est principalement couvert avec quelques trouées visibles. L'option A décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option B décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option C décrit FEW (1-2 octas). Une couche brisée, surtout avec des bases basses, peut restreindre considérablement les opérations VFR et nécessite une évaluation attentive.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_1_25.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_1_25.md
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+### Q1: When should a pilot make use of blind transmissions? ^t90q1
+- A) When a transmission with important navigational or technical data needs to be sent to multiple stations simultaneously
+- B) When the traffic situation at an airport permits sending information that does not require acknowledgement by the ground station
+- C) When a pilot has inadvertently entered cloud or fog and wishes to request navigational help from a ground unit
+- D) When two-way radio communication cannot be established with the relevant aeronautical station, but there is reason to believe that transmissions are being received at that ground unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission is used when the pilot cannot receive responses (e.g., due to a faulty receiver) but has reason to believe the ground station can still hear the transmissions, allowing ATC to track the aircraft's position and intentions. Option A describes a broadcast, not a blind transmission. Option B is not a recognised scenario for blind transmissions. Option C describes a situation requiring two-way communication or an urgency declaration, not a blind transmission.
+
+### Q2: What is the standard abbreviation for the term "abeam"? ^t90q2
+- A) ABA
+- B) ABE
+- C) ABM
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ABM is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for "abeam," meaning a position at a right angle to the aircraft's track — directly to the side. This abbreviation appears in flight plans, ATC communications, and aeronautical charts. Options A, B, and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations for this term.
+
+### Q3: What abbreviation represents "visual flight rules"? ^t90q3
+- A) VMC
+- B) VFR
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VFR stands for Visual Flight Rules, the regulatory framework under which pilots navigate by visual reference to the ground and other aircraft. Option A (VMC) stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions, which describes the weather requirements for VFR flight — related but distinct. Options C and D are not standard aviation abbreviations.
+
+### Q4: What is the ICAO abbreviation for "obstacle"? ^t90q4
+- A) OBS
+- B) OST
+- C) OBST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** OBST is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for obstacle, used in NOTAMs, aeronautical charts, and ATC communications. Option A (OBS) can mean "observe" or "observation" in ICAO documentation but does not denote obstacle. Options B and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q5: What does the abbreviation "FIS" represent? ^t90q5
+- A) Flashing information service
+- B) Flight information system
+- C) Flashing information system
+- D) Flight information service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS stands for Flight Information Service — a service providing pilots with information useful for the safe and efficient conduct of flights, including weather updates, NOTAMs, and traffic advisories. Options A and C contain "flashing," which has no relevance to this aviation service. Option B incorrectly uses "system" instead of "service."
+
+### Q6: What does the abbreviation "FIR" represent? ^t90q6
+- A) Flow information radar
+- B) Flight integrity receiver
+- C) Flight information region
+- D) Flow integrity required
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) is a defined volume of airspace within which flight information service and alerting service are provided under ICAO standards. Each country or group of countries has one or more FIRs covering all airspace vertically and horizontally. Options A, B, and D are fabricated terms with no aviation meaning.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "H24" indicate? ^t90q7
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) Sunrise to sunset
+- C) No specific opening times
+- D) 24 h service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** H24 indicates continuous 24-hour service — the facility is staffed and operational at all times. This designation appears in AIP entries and NOTAMs for facilities like major ATC centres. Option A describes HN (night hours). Option B describes HJ (daylight hours). Option C describes HX (no specific hours).
+
+### Q8: What does the abbreviation "HX" indicate? ^t90q8
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) No specific opening hours
+- C) 24 h service
+- D) Sunrise to sunset
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HX means the facility operates at no specific or predetermined hours and may be available on request or intermittently. Pilots must check NOTAMs or contact the facility to verify availability. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option C describes H24 (continuous). Option D describes HJ (sunrise to sunset).
+
+### Q9: To which value must the altimeter be set so that it reads zero on the ground? ^t90q9
+- A) QNH
+- B) QNE
+- C) QFE
+- D) QTE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at aerodrome elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at that aerodrome, displaying height above field during the circuit. Option A (QNH) gives altitude above mean sea level. Option B (QNE) refers to the standard pressure setting of 1013.25 hPa. Option D (QTE) is a true bearing from a station, not an altimeter setting.
+
+### Q10: What altitude does the altimeter display when set to a given QNH value? ^t90q10
+- A) Altitude relative to the highest elevation within 10 km
+- B) Altitude relative to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+- C) Altitude relative to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+- D) Altitude relative to mean sea level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting that, when dialled in, causes the altimeter to indicate altitude above mean sea level (AMSL), which is the standard reference for navigation and airspace limits below the transition altitude. Option A is not a standard altimetry reference. Option B describes QFE behaviour. Option C describes QNE (standard pressure) behaviour.
+
+### Q11: What altitude does the altimeter display when set to a given QFE value? ^t90q11
+- A) Altitude relative to the highest elevation within 10 km
+- B) Altitude relative to mean sea level
+- C) Altitude relative to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+- D) Altitude relative to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With QFE set, the altimeter reads height above the reference aerodrome — the difference between actual pressure altitude and the aerodrome pressure level, showing zero on the ground and direct height above field in the circuit. Option A is not a standard reference. Option B describes QNH behaviour. Option D describes QNE behaviour.
+
+### Q12: What is the proper term for a message used in air traffic control? ^t90q12
+- A) Flight regularity message
+- B) Message related to direction finding
+- C) Meteorological message
+- D) Flight safety message
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC messages — including clearances, instructions, position reports, and traffic information — are classified as flight safety messages, the third-highest priority after distress and urgency in the ICAO message hierarchy. Option A (regularity messages) concern the operation and maintenance of facilities. Option B (direction-finding messages) relate to radio navigation assistance. Option C (meteorological messages) pertain to weather information.
+
+### Q13: How are distress messages defined? ^t90q13
+- A) Messages sent by a pilot or aircraft operating agency with immediate significance for aircraft in flight.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- D) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities important for the safety and regularity of flight operations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A distress message (MAYDAY) is transmitted when an aircraft and its occupants face a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — the highest priority category in aeronautical communications, signalled by transponder code 7700. Option A is too vague and could apply to several message types. Option C describes urgency messages (PAN PAN). Option D describes regularity messages.
+
+### Q14: How are urgency messages defined? ^t90q14
+- A) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages sent by a pilot or aircraft operating agency with immediate significance for aircraft in flight.
+- D) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Urgency messages (PAN PAN) concern a condition that is serious and affects the safety of the aircraft or persons but does not yet constitute a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — examples include controllable engine problems or medical situations on board. Option B defines distress messages (MAYDAY). Option C is a general description that could fit multiple message types. Option D duplicates option A.
+
+### Q15: How are regularity messages defined? ^t90q15
+- A) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- D) Messages sent by an aircraft operating agency or an aircraft with immediate concern for an aircraft in flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Regularity messages relate to the operation and maintenance of facilities necessary for flight operations — essentially administrative and logistical communications with the lowest priority in the ICAO hierarchy. Option A describes urgency-related messages. Option B defines distress messages. Option D describes flight safety messages.
+
+### Q16: Among the following messages, which one has the highest priority? ^t90q16
+- A) QNH 1013
+- B) Wind 300 degrees, 5 knots
+- C) Turn left
+- D) Request QDM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A request for QDM (magnetic heading to steer toward a station) implies the pilot may be lost or unable to navigate independently, making it a potential urgency or flight safety matter with higher priority than routine operational messages. Options A (QNH) and B (wind) are routine advisory information. Option C (turn left) is a standard ATC instruction but carries lower priority than a navigation assistance request.
+
+### Q17: How should the call sign HB-YKM be correctly transmitted? ^t90q17
+- A) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+- B) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: H = Hotel, B = Bravo, Y = Yankee, K = Kilo, M = Mike. Option A uses "Home" instead of "Hotel" and "Mikro" instead of "Mike." Option B uses "Yuliett" (which is J = Juliett, not Y) and "Mikro." Option D uses "Home" and "Yuliett." Only option C uses all correct ICAO phonetic words.
+
+### Q18: How should the call sign OE-JVK be correctly transmitted? ^t90q18
+- A) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- D) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: O = Oscar, E = Echo, J = Juliett, V = Victor, K = Kilo. Option B uses "Omega" (not ICAO) and "Kilogramm." Option C uses "Omega" and "Jankee" (neither is ICAO standard). Option D uses "Jankee" and "Kilogramm." Only option A uses all correct ICAO phonetic words.
+
+### Q19: How is an altitude of 4500 ft correctly transmitted? ^t90q19
+- A) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- B) Four five tousand.
+- C) Four tousand five hundred.
+- D) Four five zero zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO phraseology for altitudes uses "thousand" and "hundred" where appropriate: 4500 ft is spoken as "four thousand five hundred." Option A adds unnecessary zeros after "five." Option B reverses the structure nonsensically. Option D uses digit-by-digit recitation, which is reserved for transponder codes and QNH values, not altitudes.
+
+### Q20: How is a heading of 285 degrees correctly transmitted? ^t90q20
+- A) Two eight five.
+- B) Two hundred eight five.
+- C) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- D) Two eight five hundred.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Headings and bearings are always transmitted as three individual digits spoken separately: "two eight five." The words "hundred" are never used for headings because digit-by-digit transmission eliminates ambiguity. Options B and C use "hundred" or natural number forms, which are not correct for heading transmissions. Option D adds "hundred" after the digits, which is meaningless.
+
+### Q21: How is a frequency of 119.500 MHz correctly transmitted? ^t90q21
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- B) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner decimal five zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Frequencies are transmitted digit by digit with "decimal" for the decimal point, and trailing zeros after significant digits are dropped. 119.500 MHz becomes "one one niner decimal five." Note "niner" is used for 9 to prevent confusion with "nein" (no). Option A retains unnecessary trailing zeros. Option B inserts "tousand" which is not used for frequencies. Option D keeps one trailing zero unnecessarily.
+
+### Q22: How is the directional information "12 o'clock" correctly transmitted? ^t90q22
+- A) One two o'clock
+- B) One two.
+- C) Twelve o'clock.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clock positions for traffic advisories are spoken as the full number followed by "o'clock": "twelve o'clock" means directly ahead. Option A splits "twelve" into digits, which could be confused with other numerical data. Option B omits "o'clock," making the reference ambiguous. Option D adds "hundred," which has no meaning in clock position references.
+
+### Q23: In what time format are times transmitted in aviation? ^t90q23
+- A) Standard time.
+- B) Local time.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Time zone time.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All aeronautical communications use Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), formerly known as GMT or Zulu time, ensuring consistency across time zones worldwide. Pilots must convert local time to UTC for all flight plans, ATC communications, and weather reports. Options A, B, and D all reference local or regional time systems that would cause confusion in international operations.
+
+### Q24: When there is doubt about ambiguity, how should a time of 1620 be transmitted? ^t90q24
+- A) Two zero.
+- B) Sixteen twenty
+- C) One tousand six hundred two zero
+- D) One six two zero.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When there is any risk of ambiguity, ICAO requires the full four-digit UTC time spoken as individual digits: "one six two zero." This eliminates confusion about whether minutes alone or the complete time is being given. Option A gives only the minutes, which could be ambiguous. Option B uses natural number grouping, which is non-standard. Option C uses "tousand" and "hundred," which are not used for time transmission.
+
+### Q25: What does the phrase "Roger" mean? ^t90q25
+- A) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Roger" is an acknowledgement of receipt only — it means "I have received all of your last transmission" and nothing more. It does not imply agreement, compliance, or permission. Option A defines "Approved." Option C defines "Correction." Option D defines "Wilco" (will comply). Pilots must use the correct phrase to avoid dangerous misunderstandings.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_1_25_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_1_25_fr.md
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+### Q1 : Dans quels cas un pilote doit-il effectuer une transmission en aveugle ? ^t90q1
+- A) Lorsqu'une transmission contenant des données de navigation ou des données techniques importantes doit être envoyée simultanément à plusieurs stations
+- B) Lorsque la situation de trafic sur un aérodrome permet d'envoyer des informations ne nécessitant pas d'accusé de réception de la station au sol
+- C) Lorsqu'un pilote s'est introduit involontairement dans un nuage ou dans le brouillard et souhaite demander une assistance de navigation à une unité au sol
+- D) Lorsqu'une communication bilatérale ne peut être établie avec la station aéronautique concernée, mais qu'il y a lieu de penser que les transmissions sont reçues par cette station au sol
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une transmission en aveugle est utilisée lorsque le pilote ne peut pas recevoir de réponses (par ex. en raison d'un récepteur défaillant) mais a des raisons de penser que la station au sol peut encore l'entendre, permettant ainsi au contrôle aérien de suivre la position et les intentions de l'aéronef. L'option A décrit une diffusion (broadcast), non une transmission en aveugle. L'option B ne correspond à aucun scénario reconnu pour les transmissions en aveugle. L'option C décrit une situation nécessitant une communication bilatérale ou une déclaration d'urgence, et non une transmission en aveugle.
+
+### Q2 : Quelle est l'abréviation standard du terme « abeam » ? ^t90q2
+- A) ABA
+- B) ABE
+- C) ABM
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** ABM est l'abréviation OACI standard pour « abeam », désignant une position perpendiculaire à la route de l'aéronef — directement sur le côté. Cette abréviation apparaît dans les plans de vol, les communications ATC et les cartes aéronautiques. Les options A, B et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues pour ce terme.
+
+### Q3 : Quelle abréviation représente les « règles de vol à vue » ? ^t90q3
+- A) VMC
+- B) VFR
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** VFR signifie Visual Flight Rules (règles de vol à vue), le cadre réglementaire selon lequel les pilotes naviguent par référence visuelle au sol et aux autres aéronefs. L'option A (VMC) signifie Visual Meteorological Conditions (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue), qui décrit les exigences météorologiques pour le vol VFR — notions liées mais distinctes. Les options C et D ne sont pas des abréviations aéronautiques standard.
+
+### Q4 : Quelle est l'abréviation OACI pour « obstacle » ? ^t90q4
+- A) OBS
+- B) OST
+- C) OBST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** OBST est l'abréviation OACI standard pour obstacle, utilisée dans les NOTAMs, les cartes aéronautiques et les communications ATC. L'option A (OBS) peut signifier « observer » ou « observation » dans la documentation OACI mais ne désigne pas un obstacle. Les options B et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues.
+
+### Q5 : Que représente l'abréviation « FIS » ? ^t90q5
+- A) Service d'information clignotant
+- B) Système d'information de vol
+- C) Système d'information clignotant
+- D) Service d'information de vol
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** FIS signifie Flight Information Service (service d'information de vol) — un service fournissant aux pilotes des informations utiles pour la conduite sûre et efficace des vols, notamment les mises à jour météorologiques, les NOTAMs et les avis de trafic. Les options A et C contiennent « clignotant », qui n'a aucun rapport avec ce service aéronautique. L'option B utilise incorrectement « système » au lieu de « service ».
+
+### Q6 : Que représente l'abréviation « FIR » ? ^t90q6
+- A) Radar d'information de flux
+- B) Récepteur d'intégrité de vol
+- C) Région d'information de vol
+- D) Intégrité de flux requise
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une région d'information de vol (FIR) est un volume d'espace aérien défini à l'intérieur duquel sont fournis le service d'information de vol et le service d'alerte conformément aux normes OACI. Chaque pays ou groupe de pays dispose d'une ou plusieurs FIR couvrant tout l'espace aérien verticalement et horizontalement. Les options A, B et D sont des termes inventés sans signification aéronautique.
+
+### Q7 : Que signifie l'abréviation « H24 » ? ^t90q7
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+- B) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+- C) Aucun horaire d'ouverture particulier
+- D) Service 24 h
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** H24 indique un service continu 24 heures sur 24 — l'installation est en personnel et opérationnelle à tout moment. Cette désignation apparaît dans les entrées AIP et les NOTAMs pour des installations telles que les grands centres de contrôle aérien. L'option A décrit HN (heures de nuit). L'option B décrit HJ (heures de jour). L'option C décrit HX (aucun horaire spécifique).
+
+### Q8 : Que signifie l'abréviation « HX » ? ^t90q8
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+- B) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+- C) Service 24 h
+- D) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** HX signifie que l'installation fonctionne sans horaires spécifiques ou prédéterminés et peut être disponible sur demande ou de façon intermittente. Les pilotes doivent consulter les NOTAMs ou contacter l'installation pour vérifier sa disponibilité. L'option A décrit HN (coucher au lever du soleil). L'option C décrit H24 (continu). L'option D décrit HJ (lever au coucher du soleil).
+
+### Q9 : À quelle valeur doit être calé l'altimètre pour qu'il affiche zéro au sol ? ^t90q9
+- A) QNH
+- B) QNE
+- C) QFE
+- D) QTE
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome. Réglé sur la capsule barométrique, l'instrument affiche zéro au sol sur cet aérodrome et indique la hauteur au-dessus du terrain en circuit. L'option A (QNH) donne l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer. L'option B (QNE) fait référence au calage de pression standard de 1013,25 hPa. L'option D (QTE) est un relèvement vrai depuis une station, et non un calage altimétrique.
+
+### Q10 : Quelle altitude affiche l'altimètre calé sur une valeur de QNH donnée ? ^t90q10
+- A) Altitude par rapport au point le plus élevé dans un rayon de 10 km
+- B) Altitude par rapport à la pression atmosphérique de l'aérodrome de référence
+- C) Altitude par rapport au datum de 1013,25 hPa
+- D) Altitude par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique qui, une fois réglé, amène l'altimètre à indiquer l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer (AMSL), référence standard pour la navigation et les limites d'espace aérien en dessous de l'altitude de transition. L'option A n'est pas une référence altimétrique standard. L'option B décrit le comportement du QFE. L'option C décrit le comportement du QNE (pression standard).
+
+### Q11 : Quelle altitude affiche l'altimètre calé sur une valeur de QFE donnée ? ^t90q11
+- A) Altitude par rapport au point le plus élevé dans un rayon de 10 km
+- B) Altitude par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer
+- C) Altitude par rapport à la pression atmosphérique de l'aérodrome de référence
+- D) Altitude par rapport au datum de 1013,25 hPa
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec le QFE calé, l'altimètre indique la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome de référence — la différence entre l'altitude-pression réelle et le niveau de pression de l'aérodrome, affichant zéro au sol et la hauteur directe au-dessus du terrain en circuit. L'option A n'est pas une référence standard. L'option B décrit le comportement du QNH. L'option D décrit le comportement du QNE.
+
+### Q12 : Quel est le terme correct pour désigner un message utilisé dans le contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t90q12
+- A) Message de régularité des vols
+- B) Message relatif à la radiogoniométrie
+- C) Message météorologique
+- D) Message concernant la sécurité des vols
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages ATC — notamment les autorisations, les instructions, les comptes rendus de position et les informations de trafic — sont classés comme messages concernant la sécurité des vols, troisième priorité après la détresse et l'urgence dans la hiérarchie des messages OACI. L'option A (messages de régularité) concerne l'exploitation et la maintenance des installations. L'option B (messages de radiogoniométrie) se rapporte à l'assistance de navigation radio. L'option C (messages météorologiques) porte sur les informations météorologiques.
+
+### Q13 : Comment sont définis les messages de détresse ? ^t90q13
+- A) Messages envoyés par un pilote ou un organisme d'exploitation d'aéronef ayant une importance immédiate pour les aéronefs en vol.
+- B) Messages concernant des aéronefs et leurs passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou d'un autre véhicule ou d'une personne en vue.
+- D) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations importantes pour la sécurité et la régularité des opérations de vol.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message de détresse (MAYDAY) est transmis lorsqu'un aéronef et ses occupants font face à un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate — la catégorie de priorité la plus élevée dans les communications aéronautiques, signalée par le code transpondeur 7700. L'option A est trop vague et pourrait s'appliquer à plusieurs types de messages. L'option C décrit les messages d'urgence (PAN PAN). L'option D décrit les messages de régularité.
+
+### Q14 : Comment sont définis les messages d'urgence ? ^t90q14
+- A) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou d'un autre véhicule ou d'une personne en vue.
+- B) Messages concernant des aéronefs et leurs passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages envoyés par un pilote ou un organisme d'exploitation d'aéronef ayant une importance immédiate pour les aéronefs en vol.
+- D) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations essentielles pour la sécurité ou la régularité de l'exploitation des aéronefs.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages d'urgence (PAN PAN) concernent une situation grave qui affecte la sécurité de l'aéronef ou des personnes mais ne constitue pas encore un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate — par exemple des problèmes moteur contrôlables ou des situations médicales à bord. L'option B définit les messages de détresse (MAYDAY). L'option C est une description générale qui pourrait s'appliquer à plusieurs types de messages. L'option D est identique à l'option A.
+
+### Q15 : Comment sont définis les messages de régularité ? ^t90q15
+- A) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou d'un autre véhicule ou d'une personne en vue.
+- B) Messages concernant des aéronefs et leurs passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations essentielles pour la sécurité ou la régularité des opérations de vol.
+- D) Messages envoyés par un organisme d'exploitation d'aéronef ou un aéronef ayant une importance immédiate pour un aéronef en vol.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages de régularité portent sur l'exploitation et la maintenance des installations nécessaires aux opérations de vol — essentiellement des communications administratives et logistiques ayant la priorité la plus basse dans la hiérarchie OACI. L'option A décrit des messages liés à l'urgence. L'option B définit les messages de détresse. L'option D décrit les messages de sécurité des vols.
+
+### Q16 : Parmi les messages suivants, lequel a la priorité la plus élevée ? ^t90q16
+- A) QNH 1013
+- B) Vent 300 degrés, 5 nœuds
+- C) Virez à gauche
+- D) Demande QDM
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une demande de QDM (cap magnétique à suivre en direction d'une station) suppose que le pilote est peut-être désorienté ou incapable de naviguer de façon autonome, ce qui en fait une situation d'urgence potentielle ou un message de sécurité ayant une priorité plus élevée que les messages opérationnels de routine. Les options A (QNH) et B (vent) sont des informations consultatives de routine. L'option C (virez à gauche) est une instruction ATC standard mais de priorité inférieure à une demande d'assistance à la navigation.
+
+### Q17 : Comment doit être correctement transmis l'indicatif HB-YKM ? ^t90q17
+- A) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+- B) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant l'alphabet phonétique OACI : H = Hotel, B = Bravo, Y = Yankee, K = Kilo, M = Mike. L'option A utilise « Home » au lieu de « Hotel » et « Mikro » au lieu de « Mike ». L'option B utilise « Yuliett » (qui correspond à J = Juliett, non à Y) et « Mikro ». L'option D utilise « Home » et « Yuliett ». Seule l'option C utilise tous les mots phonétiques OACI corrects.
+
+### Q18 : Comment doit être correctement transmis l'indicatif OE-JVK ? ^t90q18
+- A) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- D) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant l'alphabet phonétique OACI : O = Oscar, E = Echo, J = Juliett, V = Victor, K = Kilo. L'option B utilise « Omega » (non OACI) et « Kilogramm ». L'option C utilise « Omega » et « Jankee » (ni l'un ni l'autre n'est standard OACI). L'option D utilise « Jankee » et « Kilogramm ». Seule l'option A utilise tous les mots phonétiques OACI corrects.
+
+### Q19 : Comment est correctement transmise une altitude de 4500 ft ? ^t90q19
+- A) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- B) Four five tousand.
+- C) Four tousand five hundred.
+- D) Four five zero zero.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie OACI pour les altitudes utilise « thousand » et « hundred » selon le cas : 4500 ft se dit « four thousand five hundred ». L'option A ajoute des zéros inutiles après « five ». L'option B inverse la structure de manière absurde. L'option D utilise la lecture chiffre par chiffre, réservée aux codes transpondeur et aux valeurs QNH, et non aux altitudes.
+
+### Q20 : Comment est correctement transmis un cap de 285 degrés ? ^t90q20
+- A) Two eight five.
+- B) Two hundred eight five.
+- C) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- D) Two eight five hundred.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les caps et relèvements sont toujours transmis sous forme de trois chiffres individuels prononcés séparément : « two eight five ». Le mot « hundred » n'est jamais utilisé pour les caps car la transmission chiffre par chiffre élimine toute ambiguïté. Les options B et C utilisent « hundred » ou des formes numériques naturelles, non conformes pour la transmission des caps. L'option D ajoute « hundred » après les chiffres, ce qui est dépourvu de sens.
+
+### Q21 : Comment est correctement transmise une fréquence de 119,500 MHz ? ^t90q21
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- B) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner decimal five zero.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les fréquences sont transmises chiffre par chiffre avec « decimal » pour le point décimal, et les zéros de fin après les chiffres significatifs sont omis. 119,500 MHz devient « one one niner decimal five ». « Niner » est utilisé pour le 9 afin d'éviter toute confusion avec « nein » (non). L'option A conserve des zéros de fin inutiles. L'option B insère « tousand », non utilisé pour les fréquences. L'option D conserve un zéro de fin inutile.
+
+### Q22 : Comment est correctement transmise l'information directionnelle « 12 heures » ? ^t90q22
+- A) One two o'clock
+- B) One two.
+- C) Twelve o'clock.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les positions de l'horloge pour les avis de trafic sont exprimées par le nombre entier suivi de « o'clock » : « twelve o'clock » signifie droit devant. L'option A décompose « twelve » en chiffres séparés, ce qui peut prêter à confusion avec d'autres données numériques. L'option B omet « o'clock », rendant la référence ambiguë. L'option D ajoute « hundred », qui n'a aucune signification dans les références de position horaire.
+
+### Q23 : Dans quel format horaire les heures sont-elles transmises en aviation ? ^t90q23
+- A) Heure légale.
+- B) Heure locale.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Heure de fuseau horaire.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Toutes les communications aéronautiques utilisent l'heure universelle coordonnée (UTC), anciennement appelée GMT ou heure Zulu, assurant ainsi une cohérence entre les fuseaux horaires à travers le monde. Les pilotes doivent convertir l'heure locale en UTC pour tous les plans de vol, les communications ATC et les rapports météorologiques. Les options A, B et D font toutes référence à des systèmes horaires locaux ou régionaux qui provoqueraient de la confusion dans les opérations internationales.
+
+### Q24 : En cas de doute sur l'ambiguïté, comment doit être transmise une heure de 1620 ? ^t90q24
+- A) Two zero.
+- B) Sixteen twenty
+- C) One tousand six hundred two zero
+- D) One six two zero.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas de risque d'ambiguïté, l'OACI exige que l'heure UTC complète à quatre chiffres soit prononcée individuellement : « one six two zero ». Cela élimine toute confusion quant au fait que les minutes seules ou l'heure complète est donnée. L'option A ne donne que les minutes, ce qui peut être ambigu. L'option B utilise un regroupement de nombres naturels, non standard. L'option C utilise « tousand » et « hundred », qui ne sont pas utilisés pour la transmission horaire.
+
+### Q25 : Que signifie l'expression « Roger » ? ^t90q25
+- A) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- B) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- D) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Roger » est uniquement un accusé de réception — il signifie « j'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission » et rien de plus. Il n'implique ni accord, ni conformité, ni autorisation. L'option A définit « Approved ». L'option C définit « Correction ». L'option D définit « Wilco » (will comply). Les pilotes doivent utiliser l'expression correcte pour éviter des malentendus dangereux.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_26_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_26_50.md
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--- /dev/null
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@@ -0,0 +1,250 @@
+### Q26: What does the phrase "Correction" mean? ^t90q26
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Correction" signals that the speaker has made an error in the current transmission and the correct information follows immediately. This prevents the receiving party from acting on faulty data. Option B defines "Roger." Option C defines "Approved." Option D defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q27: What does the phrase "Approved" mean? ^t90q27
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- D) Permission for proposed action is granted
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Approved" means that ATC has granted permission for the action the pilot proposed or requested. It is used specifically in response to pilot requests. Option A defines "Correction." Option B defines "Roger." Option C defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q28: Which phrase does a pilot use to check the readability of their transmission? ^t90q28
+- A) You read me five
+- B) Request readability
+- C) How do you read?
+- D) What is the communication like?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "How do you read?" is the standard ICAO phrase requesting a readability check. The expected response uses the 1-to-5 scale (e.g., "I read you five"). Option A is the format of a readability report, not the request. Option B is not standard phraseology. Option D is plain language and not prescribed ICAO terminology.
+
+### Q29: Which phrase does a pilot use when requesting to fly through controlled airspace? ^t90q29
+- A) Would like
+- B) Request
+- C) Apply
+- D) Want
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Request" is the standard ICAO phraseology for asking ATC for a clearance, service, or permission — for example, "Request transit controlled airspace." Options A, C, and D are colloquial or non-standard terms that should not be used in radiotelephony because they reduce clarity and may not be understood by controllers in multilingual environments.
+
+### Q30: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission is to be answered with "yes"? ^t90q30
+- A) Roger
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirm
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Affirm" is the ICAO-standard word for "yes" in civil aviation radiotelephony. Option A ("Roger") means receipt acknowledged, not agreement. Option B ("Yes") is plain language and not standard phraseology. Option D ("Affirmative") is commonly used in military communications but "Affirm" is the correct civil aviation standard per ICAO.
+
+### Q31: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission is to be answered with "no"? ^t90q31
+- A) No
+- B) Finish
+- C) Negative
+- D) Not
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Negative" is the standard ICAO phraseology for "no" or "that is not correct," chosen for its unambiguous clarity across languages and radio conditions. Option A ("No") is plain language and not standard, and may be misheard. Option B ("Finish") has no meaning in this context. Option D ("Not") is incomplete and not prescribed ICAO terminology.
+
+### Q32: Which phrase should a pilot use to inform the tower that they are ready for take-off? ^t90q32
+- A) Ready
+- B) Ready for departure
+- C) Request take-off
+- D) Ready for start-up
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Ready for departure" is the correct standard phrase at the holding point. Importantly, the word "take-off" is reserved exclusively for the actual clearance ("Cleared for take-off") or its cancellation, to prevent premature action on a misheard word. Option A ("Ready") is too vague. Option C uses "take-off" outside the clearance context. Option D indicates readiness for engine start, not runway departure.
+
+### Q33: What phrase does a pilot use to inform the tower about a go-around? ^t90q33
+- A) No landing
+- B) Approach canceled
+- C) Going around
+- D) Pulling up
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Going around" is the standard ICAO phrase for discontinuing an approach and initiating a missed approach procedure. It must be transmitted immediately upon the decision. Options A, B, and D are all non-standard expressions that are not recognised in ICAO phraseology and could cause confusion, particularly in high-workload situations.
+
+### Q34: What is the call sign suffix of the aerodrome control unit? ^t90q34
+- A) Ground
+- B) Airfield
+- C) Tower
+- D) Control
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome control unit uses the call sign suffix "Tower" (e.g., "Dusseldorf Tower"), responsible for aircraft on the runway and in the circuit. Option A ("Ground") is for surface movement control. Option B ("Airfield") is not a standard ICAO call sign suffix. Option D ("Control") is used for area control centres, not aerodrome control.
+
+### Q35: What is the call sign suffix of the surface movement control unit? ^t90q35
+- A) Ground
+- B) Earth
+- C) Control
+- D) Tower
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface movement control uses the suffix "Ground" (e.g., "Frankfurt Ground"), handling aircraft and vehicles on taxiways and aprons. Option B ("Earth") is not an aviation call sign suffix. Option C ("Control") designates area control. Option D ("Tower") designates aerodrome runway and circuit control.
+
+### Q36: What is the call sign suffix of the flight information service? ^t90q36
+- A) Advice
+- B) Info
+- C) Information
+- D) Flight information
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS units use the suffix "Information" (e.g., "Langen Information" or "Scottish Information"), providing traffic advisories and weather information to VFR pilots. Options A and B are informal abbreviations not used as official call sign suffixes. Option D ("Flight information") is too long — only "Information" is the prescribed suffix.
+
+### Q37: What is the correct abbreviated form of the call sign D-EAZF? ^t90q37
+- A) DEF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) AZF
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO abbreviation rules for five-character call signs retain the first character (nationality prefix D) plus the last two characters (ZF): D-EAZF becomes D-ZF, spoken "Delta Zulu Foxtrot." Option A omits the middle characters incorrectly. Option C takes the first three letters. Option D omits the nationality prefix entirely. Only option B follows the correct first-plus-last-two rule.
+
+### Q38: Under what condition may a pilot abbreviate the call sign of their aircraft? ^t90q38
+- A) After passing the first reporting point
+- B) Within controlled airspace
+- C) After the ground station has used the abbreviation
+- D) If there is little traffic in the traffic circuit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot may only use the abbreviated call sign after the ground station has used it first, ensuring positive identification has been established. Options A, B, and D describe situations that do not grant abbreviation rights — the initiative to abbreviate always lies with the ground station regardless of traffic, airspace class, or position.
+
+### Q39: How should the aircraft call sign be used at first contact? ^t90q39
+- A) Using the first two characters only
+- B) Using the last two characters only
+- C) Using all characters
+- D) Using the first three characters only
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At first contact with any ATC unit, the full aircraft call sign must be used (e.g., "Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot") so the controller can positively identify the aircraft. Options A, B, and D all use partial call signs, which risk confusion with other aircraft and are contrary to ICAO standard procedures for initial contact.
+
+### Q40: How should radio communication be correctly established between D-EAZF and Dusseldorf Tower? ^t90q40
+- A) Tower from D-EAZF
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard format for initial radio contact is: station called first, then own call sign — "Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot." Option A uses the non-standard "from" format. Option B omits the calling aircraft's identification entirely. The ground station is addressed first so the controller knows the call is directed at them, then the aircraft identifies itself.
+
+### Q41: What does readability 1 indicate? ^t90q41
+- A) The transmission is readable now and then
+- B) The transmission is unreadable
+- C) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- D) The transmission is perfectly readable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the ICAO readability scale (1 to 5), readability 1 means the transmission is completely unreadable — no useful information can be extracted. Option A describes readability 2 (readable now and then). Option C describes readability 3 (readable with difficulty). Option D describes readability 5 (perfectly readable).
+
+### Q42: What does readability 2 indicate? ^t90q42
+- A) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- B) The transmission is readable now and then
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is unreadable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 2 means the transmission is only intermittently intelligible — parts come through but the listener cannot reliably understand the full message. Option A describes readability 3. Option C describes readability 5. Option D describes readability 1. A pilot receiving a readability 2 report should try to improve transmission quality.
+
+### Q43: What does readability 3 indicate? ^t90q43
+- A) The transmission is unreadable
+- B) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is readable now and then
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 3 means the transmission is intelligible but requires effort and concentration from the listener, with some words unclear. Option A describes readability 1. Option C describes readability 5. Option D describes readability 2. Readability 3 is often workable for short operational messages but is inadequate for complex clearances.
+
+### Q44: What does readability 5 indicate? ^t90q44
+- A) The transmission is readable now and then
+- B) The transmission is unreadable
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 5 is the highest quality on the ICAO scale — the transmission is perfectly clear and intelligible with no difficulty. Option A describes readability 2. Option B describes readability 1. Option D describes readability 3. "I read you five" is the standard response indicating ideal communication conditions.
+
+### Q45: Which piece of information from a ground station does not require readback? ^t90q45
+- A) Altitude
+- B) Wind
+- C) SSR-Code
+- D) Runway in use
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind information is advisory and acknowledged with "Roger" — no readback is required. Items requiring mandatory readback include: ATC clearances, runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, and heading and speed instructions. Options A, C, and D are all safety-critical items that must be read back to confirm correct receipt.
+
+### Q46: Which piece of information from a ground station does not require readback? ^t90q46
+- A) Heading
+- B) Traffic information
+- C) Taxi instructions
+- D) Altimeter setting
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Traffic information (e.g., "traffic at your two o'clock, one thousand above") is acknowledged with "Roger" or "Traffic in sight" and does not require formal readback. Options A (heading), C (taxi instructions), and D (altimeter setting) are all safety-critical items subject to mandatory readback under ICAO procedures.
+
+### Q47: How should the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q47
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The readback must include all safety-critical items: departure instructions (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, then turn right heading 220), the runway designator (runway 12), and the take-off clearance. Wind information does not require readback and is correctly omitted in option C. Option A incorrectly reads back the wind. Option B misuses "wilco" mid-readback. Option D omits the runway and take-off clearance, which are mandatory readback items.
+
+### Q48: How should the instruction "Next report PAH" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q48
+- A) Roger
+- B) Positive
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Wilco" (will comply) is the correct response to an instruction requiring future action — the pilot acknowledges receipt and confirms they will report at waypoint PAH. Option A ("Roger") only confirms receipt without implying compliance with the instruction. Option B ("Positive") is not standard ICAO phraseology in this context. Option D ("Report PAH") is an incomplete acknowledgement.
+
+### Q49: How should the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q49
+- A) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the transponder code and the frequency change are safety-critical items requiring readback. The correct acknowledgement reads back the squawk code (4321) and the new frequency (131.325) to confirm correct receipt. Options A and D use "wilco" which does not confirm the specific numerical values. Option B ("Roger") is entirely insufficient for safety-critical items.
+
+### Q50: How should "You are now entering airspace Delta" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q50
+- A) Entering
+- B) Roger
+- C) Airspace Delta
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "You are now entering airspace Delta" is an informational statement from ATC, not an instruction requiring compliance. "Roger" (message received) is the correct and sufficient response. Option A ("Entering") is an incomplete acknowledgement. Option C partially repeats the content without proper acknowledgement format. Option D ("Wilco") is inappropriate because there is no instruction to comply with.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_26_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_26_50_fr.md
new file mode 100644
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+### Q26: Que signifie l'expression « Correction » ? ^t90q26
+- A) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- B) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- D) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Correction » signale que l'émetteur a commis une erreur dans la transmission en cours et que les informations correctes suivent immédiatement. Cela évite que le destinataire n'agisse sur des données erronées. L'option B définit « Roger ». L'option C définit « Approved ». L'option D définit « Wilco ».
+
+### Q27: Que signifie l'expression « Approved » ? ^t90q27
+- A) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- B) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+- D) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Approved » signifie que le contrôle aérien a accordé l'autorisation pour l'action que le pilote a proposée ou demandée. Il est utilisé spécifiquement en réponse aux demandes du pilote. L'option A définit « Correction ». L'option B définit « Roger ». L'option C définit « Wilco ».
+
+### Q28: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour vérifier la lisibilité de sa transmission ? ^t90q28
+- A) You read me five
+- B) Request readability
+- C) How do you read?
+- D) What is the communication like?
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « How do you read? » est l'expression OACI standard pour demander un contrôle de lisibilité. La réponse attendue utilise l'échelle de 1 à 5 (par ex. « I read you five »). L'option A est le format d'un rapport de lisibilité, non la demande. L'option B n'est pas une phraséologie standard. L'option D est du langage courant et ne correspond pas à la terminologie OACI prescrite.
+
+### Q29: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour demander à traverser un espace aérien contrôlé ? ^t90q29
+- A) Would like
+- B) Request
+- C) Apply
+- D) Want
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Request » est la phraséologie OACI standard pour demander au contrôle aérien une autorisation, un service ou une permission — par exemple, « Request transit controlled airspace ». Les options A, C et D sont des termes familiers ou non standard qui ne doivent pas être utilisés en radiotéléphonie car ils réduisent la clarté et risquent de ne pas être compris par les contrôleurs dans des environnements multilingues.
+
+### Q30: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'une transmission doit recevoir la réponse « oui » ? ^t90q30
+- A) Roger
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirm
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Affirm » est le mot OACI standard signifiant « oui » en radiotéléphonie de l'aviation civile. L'option A (« Roger ») signifie accusé de réception, non accord. L'option B (« Yes ») est du langage courant et non standard. L'option D (« Affirmative ») est couramment utilisée dans les communications militaires, mais « Affirm » est le standard correct pour l'aviation civile selon l'OACI.
+
+### Q31: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'une transmission doit recevoir la réponse « non » ? ^t90q31
+- A) No
+- B) Finish
+- C) Negative
+- D) Not
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Negative » est la phraséologie OACI standard pour « non » ou « ce n'est pas correct », choisie pour sa clarté non équivoque entre les langues et les conditions radio. L'option A (« No ») est du langage courant et non standard, et peut être mal entendue. L'option B (« Finish ») n'a aucun sens dans ce contexte. L'option D (« Not ») est incomplète et ne correspond pas à la terminologie OACI prescrite.
+
+### Q32: Quelle expression un pilote doit-il utiliser pour informer la tour qu'il est prêt pour le décollage ? ^t90q32
+- A) Ready
+- B) Ready for departure
+- C) Request take-off
+- D) Ready for start-up
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Ready for departure » est l'expression standard correcte au point d'arrêt. Il est important de noter que le mot « take-off » est réservé exclusivement à l'autorisation de décollage effective (« Cleared for take-off ») ou à son annulation, pour éviter toute action prématurée suite à une mauvaise écoute. L'option A (« Ready ») est trop vague. L'option C utilise « take-off » en dehors du contexte de l'autorisation. L'option D indique la disponibilité pour la mise en route moteur, non le départ en piste.
+
+### Q33: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour informer la tour d'une remise des gaz ? ^t90q33
+- A) No landing
+- B) Approach canceled
+- C) Going around
+- D) Pulling up
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Going around » est l'expression OACI standard pour interrompre une approche et initier une procédure d'approche interrompue. Elle doit être transmise immédiatement à la prise de décision. Les options A, B et D sont toutes des expressions non standard non reconnues dans la phraséologie OACI et susceptibles de créer de la confusion, notamment dans des situations à forte charge de travail.
+
+### Q34: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif de l'unité de contrôle d'aérodrome ? ^t90q34
+- A) Ground
+- B) Airfield
+- C) Tower
+- D) Control
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'unité de contrôle d'aérodrome utilise le suffixe d'indicatif « Tower » (par ex. « Dusseldorf Tower »), responsable des aéronefs sur la piste et en circuit. L'option A (« Ground ») désigne le contrôle des mouvements en surface. L'option B (« Airfield ») n'est pas un suffixe OACI standard. L'option D (« Control ») est utilisée pour les centres de contrôle régional, non pour le contrôle d'aérodrome.
+
+### Q35: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif de l'unité de contrôle des mouvements en surface ? ^t90q35
+- A) Ground
+- B) Earth
+- C) Control
+- D) Tower
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le contrôle des mouvements en surface utilise le suffixe « Ground » (par ex. « Frankfurt Ground »), gérant les aéronefs et les véhicules sur les voies de circulation et les aires de stationnement. L'option B (« Earth ») n'est pas un suffixe d'indicatif aéronautique. L'option C (« Control ») désigne le contrôle régional. L'option D (« Tower ») désigne le contrôle de piste et de circuit d'aérodrome.
+
+### Q36: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif du service d'information de vol ? ^t90q36
+- A) Advice
+- B) Info
+- C) Information
+- D) Flight information
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les unités FIS utilisent le suffixe « Information » (par ex. « Langen Information » ou « Scottish Information »), fournissant des avis de trafic et des informations météorologiques aux pilotes VFR. Les options A et B sont des abréviations informelles non utilisées comme suffixes officiels. L'option D (« Flight information ») est trop longue — seul « Information » est le suffixe prescrit.
+
+### Q37: Quelle est la forme abrégée correcte de l'indicatif D-EAZF ? ^t90q37
+- A) DEF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) AZF
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les règles d'abréviation OACI pour les indicatifs à cinq caractères conservent le premier caractère (préfixe de nationalité D) et les deux derniers caractères (ZF) : D-EAZF devient D-ZF, prononcé « Delta Zulu Foxtrot ». L'option A omet incorrectement les caractères intermédiaires. L'option C prend les trois premières lettres. L'option D omet entièrement le préfixe de nationalité. Seule l'option B suit la règle correcte du premier caractère plus les deux derniers.
+
+### Q38: Dans quelles conditions un pilote peut-il abréger l'indicatif de son aéronef ? ^t90q38
+- A) Après avoir franchi le premier point de compte rendu
+- B) Dans l'espace aérien contrôlé
+- C) Après que la station au sol a utilisé l'abréviation
+- D) S'il y a peu de trafic dans le circuit
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un pilote ne peut utiliser l'indicatif abrégé qu'après que la station au sol l'a utilisé en premier, garantissant ainsi qu'une identification positive a été établie. Les options A, B et D décrivent des situations qui n'accordent pas le droit d'abréger — l'initiative d'abréger appartient toujours à la station au sol, indépendamment du trafic, de la classe d'espace aérien ou de la position.
+
+### Q39: Comment l'indicatif d'aéronef doit-il être utilisé au premier contact ? ^t90q39
+- A) En utilisant les deux premiers caractères seulement
+- B) En utilisant les deux derniers caractères seulement
+- C) En utilisant tous les caractères
+- D) En utilisant les trois premiers caractères seulement
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au premier contact avec toute unité ATC, l'indicatif complet de l'aéronef doit être utilisé (par ex. « Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot ») afin que le contrôleur puisse identifier positivement l'aéronef. Les options A, B et D utilisent toutes des indicatifs partiels, risquant de créer une confusion avec d'autres aéronefs et allant à l'encontre des procédures OACI standard pour le contact initial.
+
+### Q40: Comment la communication radio doit-elle être correctement établie entre D-EAZF et Dusseldorf Tower ? ^t90q40
+- A) Tower from D-EAZF
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le format standard pour le premier contact radio est : station appelée en premier, puis propre indicatif — « Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot ». L'option A utilise le format non standard « from ». L'option B omet entièrement l'identification de l'aéronef appelant. La station au sol est interpellée en premier afin que le contrôleur sache que l'appel lui est destiné, puis l'aéronef s'identifie.
+
+### Q41: Que signifie une lisibilité de 1 ? ^t90q41
+- A) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- B) La transmission est illisible
+- C) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- D) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur l'échelle de lisibilité OACI (1 à 5), une lisibilité de 1 signifie que la transmission est totalement illisible — aucune information utile ne peut en être extraite. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2 (lisible par intermittence). L'option C décrit la lisibilité 3 (lisible avec difficulté). L'option D décrit la lisibilité 5 (parfaitement lisible).
+
+### Q42: Que signifie une lisibilité de 2 ? ^t90q42
+- A) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- B) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est illisible
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une lisibilité de 2 signifie que la transmission n'est intelligible que de façon intermittente — des parties passent mais l'auditeur ne peut pas comprendre le message complet de façon fiable. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 3. L'option C décrit la lisibilité 5. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 1. Un pilote recevant un rapport de lisibilité 2 devrait essayer d'améliorer la qualité de la transmission.
+
+### Q43: Que signifie une lisibilité de 3 ? ^t90q43
+- A) La transmission est illisible
+- B) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une lisibilité de 3 signifie que la transmission est intelligible mais nécessite un effort et une concentration de la part de l'auditeur, avec certains mots peu clairs. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 1. L'option C décrit la lisibilité 5. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 2. Une lisibilité de 3 est souvent acceptable pour de courts messages opérationnels mais inadéquate pour des autorisations complexes.
+
+### Q44: Que signifie une lisibilité de 5 ? ^t90q44
+- A) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- B) La transmission est illisible
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une lisibilité de 5 est la meilleure qualité sur l'échelle OACI — la transmission est parfaitement claire et intelligible sans difficulté. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2. L'option B décrit la lisibilité 1. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 3. « I read you five » est la réponse standard indiquant des conditions de communication idéales.
+
+### Q45: Quelle information provenant d'une station au sol ne nécessite pas de compte rendu de lecture ? ^t90q45
+- A) Altitude
+- B) Vent
+- C) Code SSR
+- D) Piste en service
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les informations de vent sont consultatives et acquittées par « Roger » — aucun compte rendu de lecture n'est requis. Les éléments nécessitant un compte rendu de lecture obligatoire comprennent : les autorisations ATC, la piste en service, les calages altimétriques, les codes SSR, les instructions de niveau ainsi que les instructions de cap et de vitesse. Les options A, C et D sont toutes des éléments critiques pour la sécurité qui doivent être lus en retour pour confirmer la bonne réception.
+
+### Q46: Quelle information provenant d'une station au sol ne nécessite pas de compte rendu de lecture ? ^t90q46
+- A) Cap
+- B) Information de trafic
+- C) Instructions de roulage
+- D) Calage altimétrique
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'information de trafic (par ex. « trafic à votre deux heures, mille pieds au-dessus ») est acquittée par « Roger » ou « Traffic in sight » et ne nécessite pas de compte rendu de lecture formel. Les options A (cap), C (instructions de roulage) et D (calage altimétrique) sont tous des éléments critiques pour la sécurité soumis au compte rendu de lecture obligatoire selon les procédures OACI.
+
+### Q47: Comment l'instruction « DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q47
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le compte rendu de lecture doit inclure tous les éléments critiques pour la sécurité : les instructions de départ (montée en ligne droite jusqu'à 2500 ft, puis virage à droite cap 220), le numéro de piste (runway 12) et l'autorisation de décollage. Les informations de vent ne nécessitent pas de compte rendu de lecture et sont correctement omises dans l'option C. L'option A lit incorrectement le vent. L'option B utilise incorrectement « wilco » au milieu du compte rendu. L'option D omet la piste et l'autorisation de décollage, qui sont des éléments à lire obligatoirement.
+
+### Q48: Comment l'instruction « Next report PAH » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q48
+- A) Roger
+- B) Positive
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Wilco » (will comply) est la réponse correcte à une instruction nécessitant une action future — le pilote accuse réception et confirme qu'il rendra compte au point PAH. L'option A (« Roger ») ne fait que confirmer la réception sans impliquer la conformité à l'instruction. L'option B (« Positive ») n'est pas une phraséologie OACI standard dans ce contexte. L'option D (« Report PAH ») est un acquittement incomplet.
+
+### Q49: Comment l'instruction « Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325 » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q49
+- A) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur et le changement de fréquence sont tous deux des éléments critiques pour la sécurité nécessitant un compte rendu de lecture. L'acquittement correct lit en retour le code squawk (4321) et la nouvelle fréquence (131.325) pour confirmer la bonne réception. Les options A et D utilisent « wilco » sans confirmer les valeurs numériques spécifiques. L'option B (« Roger ») est totalement insuffisante pour les éléments critiques pour la sécurité.
+
+### Q50: Comment « You are now entering airspace Delta » doit-il être correctement acquitté ? ^t90q50
+- A) Entering
+- B) Roger
+- C) Airspace Delta
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « You are now entering airspace Delta » est une déclaration informative de l'ATC, non une instruction nécessitant une conformité. « Roger » (message reçu) est la réponse correcte et suffisante. L'option A (« Entering ») est un acquittement incomplet. L'option C répète partiellement le contenu sans format d'acquittement approprié. L'option D (« Wilco ») est inappropriée car il n'y a pas d'instruction à laquelle se conformer.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_51_75.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_51_75.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,250 @@
+### Q51: A pilot transmits the following to ATC: "We are landing at 10:45. Please order us a taxi." What type of message is this? ^t90q51
+- A) It is an urgency message.
+- B) It is a message relating to the regularity of flights.
+- C) It is a service message.
+- D) It is an inadmissible message.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC frequencies are reserved exclusively for aeronautical communications related to flight safety, urgency, and operational matters. Ordering a ground taxi is a personal service request that has no place on an aviation frequency — it is therefore an inadmissible message. Options A, B, and C incorrectly categorise this personal request within legitimate message types.
+
+### Q52: You are flying VFR and have received ATC clearance to enter Class C airspace to land. Shortly after entering, your radio fails. What do you do if no other special provisions apply? ^t90q52
+- A) You set the transponder to code 7600, continue in accordance with the last clearance and follow light signals from the control tower.
+- B) By virtue of the clearance issued, you have the right to fly in Class C airspace and land there. You only need to set the transponder to code 7700.
+- C) You must head to the alternate aerodrome by the most direct route and set the transponder to code 7000.
+- D) Regardless of the clearance obtained, you are no longer authorized to fly in this airspace. You set the transponder to code 7600, leave the airspace as quickly as possible and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For VFR flights, radio communication is mandatory in Class C airspace. When radio fails, the previous clearance is insufficient — the pilot must squawk 7600 (radio failure), leave the controlled airspace by the shortest route, and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome. Option A is wrong because VFR flights cannot simply continue on the last clearance. Option B incorrectly uses code 7700 (emergency, not radio failure). Option C uses code 7000 (VFR conspicuity), not the radio failure code.
+
+### Q53: Through which service can you obtain routine aviation meteorological observations (METAR) for several airports while in flight? ^t90q53
+- A) Via SIGMET.
+- B) Via AIRMET.
+- C) Via GAMET.
+- D) Via VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET is the continuous radio broadcast service providing METARs and TAFs for a series of aerodromes, allowing pilots in flight to receive current weather observations. Option A (SIGMET) reports significant meteorological phenomena hazardous to all aircraft. Option B (AIRMET) warns of weather hazards relevant to low-level flights. Option C (GAMET) provides area forecasts for low-level operations. None of these broadcast routine aerodrome observations like VOLMET does.
+
+### Q54: What does the abbreviation QNH mean? ^t90q54
+- A) The atmospheric pressure at aerodrome level (or at the runway threshold).
+- B) The atmospheric pressure measured at the highest obstacle on the aerodrome.
+- C) The altimeter setting required to read the aerodrome elevation when on the ground.
+- D) The atmospheric pressure measured at a point on the Earth's surface.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter sub-scale setting that, when applied, causes the altimeter to read the aerodrome elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. It is a corrected pressure value, not a direct pressure measurement. Option A describes QFE (pressure at aerodrome level). Option B is not a standard altimetry term. Option D is too generic and does not specifically describe QNH.
+
+### Q55: What does the abbreviation QDM mean? ^t90q55
+- A) True heading to steer to reach the radio beacon (nil wind).
+- B) True bearing from the radio beacon.
+- C) Magnetic bearing from the radio beacon.
+- D) Magnetic heading to steer to reach the radio beacon (nil wind).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QDM is the magnetic heading to steer (in nil-wind conditions) to fly directly to the radio station. Option A describes QUJ (true heading to station). Option B describes QTE (true bearing from station). Option C describes QDR (magnetic bearing from station). The Q-code system uses these distinct abbreviations to prevent confusion between bearings, headings, true, and magnetic references.
+
+### Q56: How many times must the radiotelephony distress signal (MAYDAY) or the urgency signal (PAN PAN) be spoken? ^t90q56
+- A) Twice.
+- B) Four times.
+- C) Three times.
+- D) Once.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the distress signal ("MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY") and the urgency signal ("PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN") require the key phrase to be spoken three times. This repetition ensures the nature and priority of the message is clearly recognised even in poor radio conditions or with partial interference. Options A, B, and D specify incorrect repetition counts.
+
+### Q57: What information should, where possible, be included in an urgency message? ^t90q57
+- A) The identification of the aircraft, its position and level, the nature of the emergency, the assistance required.
+- B) The identification of the aircraft, the departure aerodrome, the position, level and heading of the aircraft.
+- C) The identification and type of aircraft, the nature of the emergency, the intentions of the flight crew, and the position, level and heading of the aircraft.
+- D) The identification and type of aircraft, the assistance required, the route, the destination aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (PAN PAN) should contain: identification and type of aircraft, the nature of the emergency, the crew's intentions, and position/level/heading information — enabling ATC to provide effective assistance. Option A omits aircraft type and crew intentions. Option B omits the nature of the emergency and crew intentions. Option D includes route and destination, which are flight plan data rather than urgency-specific information.
+
+### Q58: What is the correct priority order for messages in the aeronautical mobile service? ^t90q58
+- A) 1. Distress messages, 2. Flight safety messages, 3. Urgency messages.
+- B) 1. Flight safety messages, 2. Distress messages, 3. Urgency messages.
+- C) 1. Urgency messages, 2. Distress messages, 3. Flight safety messages.
+- D) 1. Distress messages, 2. Urgency messages, 3. Flight safety messages.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO message priority order is: (1) Distress (MAYDAY) — grave and imminent danger, (2) Urgency (PAN PAN) — serious but not immediately life-threatening, (3) Flight safety messages — ATC clearances and instructions. Options A, B, and C all place these categories in an incorrect order. Distress always takes absolute precedence.
+
+### Q59: How are the letters BAFO spelled using the ICAO phonetic alphabet? ^t90q59
+- A) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- B) BETA ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- C) BRAVO ANNA FOX OSCAR
+- D) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OTTO
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: B = Bravo, A = Alpha, F = Foxtrot, O = Oscar. Option B uses "Beta" (Greek alphabet, not ICAO). Option C uses "Anna" and "Fox" (non-standard local variants). Option D uses "Otto" (a German non-standard alternative for O). Only option A uses the correct ICAO phonetic words for all four letters.
+
+### Q60: You are flying your aircraft on a north-easterly heading at 2,500 feet. How do you reply when ATC asks for your position? ^t90q60
+- A) Heading 045 at flight level 25.
+- B) 045 degrees and 2,500 feet.
+- C) Heading 45 at 2,500 feet.
+- D) Heading 045 at 2,500 feet.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct format is "Heading" followed by three digits (always three — "045" not "45"), then the altitude in feet when below the transition altitude. Option A incorrectly uses flight level (FL 25 = 2,500 ft on standard pressure), which is only used above the transition altitude. Option B uses "degrees" and "and," which are not standard phraseology. Option C uses only two digits for the heading instead of the required three.
+
+### Q61: Which frequency range allows radio waves to travel the greatest distance? ^t90q61
+- A) UHF
+- B) VHF
+- C) LW
+- D) MW
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Long waves (LW / LF band) travel the greatest distance because they diffract around the curvature of the Earth via ground wave propagation, allowing reception well beyond line-of-sight. Options A (UHF) and B (VHF) are limited to line-of-sight range, which depends on altitude and terrain. Option D (MW / medium wave) has an intermediate range — better than VHF but less than LW. Aviation primarily uses VHF for its clarity, despite the range limitation.
+
+### Q62: What abbreviation designates the universal time system used by air navigation services? ^t90q62
+- A) LMT
+- B) GMT
+- C) UTC
+- D) LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is the official time standard adopted by ICAO for all aeronautical communications, flight plans, and publications. Option B (GMT) is historically similar but not the official ICAO designation. Option A (LMT — Local Mean Time) and Option D (LT — Local Time) are not used in official aeronautical communications because they vary by location.
+
+### Q63: According to ICAO, what is the recommended speaking rate for radio communications? ^t90q63
+- A) 200 words/minute.
+- B) 50 words/minute.
+- C) 100 words/minute.
+- D) 150 words/minute.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO recommends approximately 100 words per minute for radio communications — a moderate pace that ensures intelligibility, especially for non-native English speakers and in degraded radio conditions. Option A (200 words/minute) is far too fast for clear understanding. Option B (50 words/minute) is unnecessarily slow and would waste frequency time. Option D (150 words/minute) is above the recommended rate.
+
+### Q64: Which statement concerning radiotelephony in the aeronautical mobile service is correct? ^t90q64
+- A) In communications with ATC, use exclusively ICAO standard phraseology. Plain language is only permitted at uncontrolled aerodromes.
+- B) It does not matter whether ICAO standard phraseology or plain language is used, provided the message is understandable.
+- C) In principle, use plain language as it is most understandable. Standard phraseology may only be used in connection with ATC clearances.
+- D) ICAO standard phraseology should in principle be used to avoid misunderstandings. Plain language is to be used only in situations for which there is no corresponding standard phraseology.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO standard phraseology is the default for all radiotelephony, minimising misunderstanding risk in multilingual environments. Plain language is permitted only when no standard phrase exists for the situation. Option A is too rigid — plain language is not limited to uncontrolled aerodromes. Option B is dangerous — standardised terminology exists precisely because "understandable" is subjective. Option C reverses the principle, incorrectly making plain language the default.
+
+### Q65: What is the correct English term for "service d'information de vol d'aérodrome"? ^t90q65
+- A) FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- B) AIRPORT TRAFFIC INFORMATION SERVICE
+- C) AERODROME FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- D) AERODROME INFORMATION SERVICE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) is the flight information service specific to an aerodrome, providing pilots with information about aerodrome conditions and known traffic without issuing clearances. Option A (Flight Information Service) is the broader regional FIS, not aerodrome-specific. Option B uses "Airport Traffic," which is not the official ICAO term. Option D omits "Flight," which is a key part of the official designation.
+
+### Q66: What is the correct abbreviated call sign for an aircraft with the full call sign AB-CDE? ^t90q66
+- A) DE
+- B) A-DE
+- C) CDE
+- D) AB-DE
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO abbreviation rule retains the first character (nationality prefix) and the last two characters: AB-CDE becomes A-DE. Option A omits the nationality prefix entirely. Option C takes the last three characters without the nationality prefix. Option D retains the full two-character nationality prefix, which is not the standard abbreviation method — only the first character is kept.
+
+### Q67: When is a pilot permitted to use an abbreviated call sign? ^t90q67
+- A) At any time provided there is no risk of confusion.
+- B) Never. Only the air navigation service has the right to abbreviate the call sign.
+- C) If the ground station communicates in this way.
+- D) After the first call.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot may abbreviate their call sign only after the ground station has initiated the abbreviation. The ground station takes the lead because it can verify there are no similar call signs on frequency. Option A is wrong because the pilot cannot self-determine the risk of confusion. Option B is incorrect because both parties may use the abbreviated form, not just ATC. Option D is wrong because abbreviation requires ATC initiative, not simply having completed the first call.
+
+### Q68: Which instructions and information must always be read back? ^t90q68
+- A) Surface wind, visibility, temperature, runway in use, altimeter settings, heading and speed instructions.
+- B) Runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, heading and speed instructions.
+- C) Runway in use, visibility, surface wind, heading instructions, altimeter settings.
+- D) Surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mandatory readback items under ICAO/EASA are: runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR (transponder) codes, level (altitude/flight level) instructions, and heading and speed instructions. Options A, C, and D all include surface wind and/or visibility, which are advisory information that do not require readback — they are acknowledged with "Roger."
+
+### Q69: What does the instruction "Squawk ident" mean? ^t90q69
+- A) You have been identified by radar.
+- B) You must re-enter the transponder code that has been assigned to you.
+- C) You must press the "IDENT" button on your transponder.
+- D) You must make a turn to identify yourself.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Squawk ident" instructs the pilot to press the IDENT button on their transponder, which generates a distinct enhanced signal on the controller's radar display to help identify the specific aircraft among surrounding traffic. Option A describes the controller's confirmation after identification. Option B would be "Squawk [code]" or "Recycle." Option D describes a radar identification turn, which is a different procedure.
+
+### Q70: How does a pilot end the readback of an ATC clearance? ^t90q70
+- A) With "WILCO".
+- B) With the call sign of the ATC ground station.
+- C) With the call sign of their aircraft.
+- D) With "ROGER".
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Every readback of an ATC clearance must end with the aircraft's own call sign, confirming unambiguously which aircraft has received and correctly repeated the clearance. Option A ("Wilco") may appear in a response but does not replace the call sign requirement. Option B (ground station call sign) is incorrect — the readback ends with the aircraft's identification. Option D ("Roger") only acknowledges receipt and does not identify the aircraft.
+
+### Q71: In which category are messages from an aircraft in a state of serious and/or imminent danger requiring immediate assistance classified? ^t90q71
+- A) Messages concerning flight safety.
+- B) Urgency messages.
+- C) Distress messages.
+- D) Messages concerning flight regularity.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft facing grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance transmits distress messages (MAYDAY), the highest priority category in aeronautical communications. Option A (flight safety messages) covers ATC instructions and clearances. Option B (urgency messages) covers serious but not immediately life-threatening situations. Option D (regularity messages) covers administrative operational communications.
+
+### Q72: From what point may an aircraft use its abbreviated callsign? ^t90q72
+- A) When the aeronautical station has used the abbreviated callsign when addressing the aircraft.
+- B) Once communication is well established.
+- C) In case of heavy traffic.
+- D) When there is no possibility of confusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft may use its abbreviated callsign once radio communication is well established with the ground station, and only after the ground station has itself first used the abbreviated form. Option A is partly correct but incomplete — it is the ground station's use that triggers permission. Option C (heavy traffic) and Option D (no confusion risk) do not independently grant abbreviation rights; the ground station must initiate it.
+
+### Q73: An aircraft fails to establish radio contact with a ground station on the designated frequency or any other appropriate frequency. What action must the pilot take? ^t90q73
+- A) Land at the nearest aerodrome on route.
+- B) Proceed to the alternate aerodrome.
+- C) Try to establish communication with other aircraft or other aeronautical stations.
+- D) Display SSR emergency code 7500.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If unable to contact the designated station, the pilot should first try to establish communication with other aircraft or aeronautical stations that could relay the message. Option A is premature — communication alternatives should be exhausted first. Option B assumes prior designation of an alternate. Option D is incorrect because code 7500 indicates hijacking/unlawful interference, not communication failure (which is 7600).
+
+### Q74: In the aeronautical mobile service, which of the following is an international distress frequency? ^t90q74
+- A) 123.45MHz.
+- B) 121.500KHz.
+- C) 6500 KHz.
+- D) 121.500MHz.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The international VHF distress (guard) frequency is 121.500 MHz, monitored continuously by ATC facilities worldwide. Option A (123.45 MHz) is an air-to-air advisory frequency. Option B incorrectly states 121.500 KHz — the correct unit is MHz, not KHz (121.500 KHz would be in the LF band). Option C (6500 KHz) is not a standard distress frequency.
+
+### Q75: How must the letters NDGF be pronounced according to the ICAO phonetic alphabet? ^t90q75
+- A) NOVEMBER DELTA GOLF FOXTROT.
+- B) NOVEMBER DECEMBER GOLF FOXTROT
+- C) NORBERT DELTA GOLF FOX.
+- D) NOVEMBER DELTA GAMMA FOX.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: N = November, D = Delta, G = Golf, F = Foxtrot. Option B uses "December" for D (not ICAO standard). Option C uses "Norbert" (non-standard) and "Fox" (the correct word is "Foxtrot"). Option D uses "Gamma" (Greek alphabet) for G and "Fox" instead of "Foxtrot."
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_51_75_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_51_75_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,249 @@
+### Q51: Un pilote transmet ce qui suit à l'ATC : « We are landing at 10:45. Please order us a taxi. » De quel type de message s'agit-il ? ^t90q51
+- A) C'est un message d'urgence.
+- B) C'est un message relatif à la régularité des vols.
+- C) C'est un message de service.
+- D) C'est un message inadmissible.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les fréquences ATC sont réservées exclusivement aux communications aéronautiques liées à la sécurité des vols, à l'urgence et aux questions opérationnelles. Commander un taxi terrestre est une demande de service personnel qui n'a pas sa place sur une fréquence aéronautique — il s'agit donc d'un message inadmissible. Les options A, B et C classent incorrectement cette demande personnelle parmi les types de messages légitimes.
+
+### Q52: Vous volez en VFR et avez reçu une autorisation ATC pour entrer dans l'espace aérien de classe C afin d'atterrir. Peu après votre entrée, votre radio tombe en panne. Que faites-vous si aucune disposition particulière ne s'applique ? ^t90q52
+- A) Vous affichez le code 7600 sur le transpondeur, continuez conformément à la dernière autorisation et suivez les signaux lumineux de la tour de contrôle.
+- B) En vertu de l'autorisation délivrée, vous avez le droit de voler dans l'espace aérien de classe C et d'y atterrir. Vous devez seulement régler le transpondeur sur le code 7700.
+- C) Vous devez rejoindre l'aérodrome de dégagement par la route la plus directe et régler le transpondeur sur le code 7000.
+- D) Indépendamment de l'autorisation obtenue, vous n'êtes plus autorisé à voler dans cet espace aérien. Vous réglez le transpondeur sur le code 7600, quittez l'espace aérien le plus rapidement possible et atterrissez sur l'aérodrome approprié le plus proche.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour les vols VFR, la communication radio est obligatoire dans l'espace aérien de classe C. En cas de panne radio, l'autorisation précédente est insuffisante — le pilote doit afficher le code 7600 (panne radio), quitter l'espace aérien contrôlé par la route la plus courte et atterrir sur l'aérodrome approprié le plus proche. L'option A est incorrecte car les vols VFR ne peuvent pas simplement continuer sur la dernière autorisation. L'option B utilise incorrectement le code 7700 (urgence, non panne radio). L'option C utilise le code 7000 (visibilité VFR), non le code de panne radio.
+
+### Q53: Par quel service peut-on obtenir des observations météorologiques aéronautiques de routine (METAR) pour plusieurs aéroports en vol ? ^t90q53
+- A) Via SIGMET.
+- B) Via AIRMET.
+- C) Via GAMET.
+- D) Via VOLMET.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VOLMET est le service de diffusion radio continue fournissant des METAR et des TAF pour une série d'aérodromes, permettant aux pilotes en vol de recevoir les observations météorologiques actuelles. L'option A (SIGMET) signale des phénomènes météorologiques significatifs dangereux pour tous les aéronefs. L'option B (AIRMET) avertit des dangers météorologiques pertinents pour les vols à basse altitude. L'option C (GAMET) fournit des prévisions de zone pour les opérations à basse altitude. Aucun de ces services ne diffuse des observations d'aérodrome de routine comme le fait le VOLMET.
+
+### Q54: Que signifie l'abréviation QNH ? ^t90q54
+- A) La pression atmosphérique au niveau de l'aérodrome (ou au seuil de piste).
+- B) La pression atmosphérique mesurée à l'obstacle le plus élevé de l'aérodrome.
+- C) Le calage altimétrique permettant de lire l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol.
+- D) La pression atmosphérique mesurée en un point à la surface de la Terre.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage de la capsule barométrique qui, une fois appliqué, amène l'altimètre à afficher l'altitude de l'aérodrome au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer lorsque l'on est au sol. C'est une valeur de pression corrigée, non une mesure de pression directe. L'option A décrit le QFE (pression au niveau de l'aérodrome). L'option B n'est pas un terme altimétrique standard. L'option D est trop générique et ne décrit pas spécifiquement le QNH.
+
+### Q55: Que signifie l'abréviation QDM ? ^t90q55
+- A) Cap vrai à suivre pour rejoindre la radiobalise (vent nul).
+- B) Relèvement vrai depuis la radiobalise.
+- C) Relèvement magnétique depuis la radiobalise.
+- D) Cap magnétique à suivre pour rejoindre la radiobalise (vent nul).
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QDM est le cap magnétique à suivre (en conditions de vent nul) pour voler directement vers la station radio. L'option A décrit le QUJ (cap vrai vers la station). L'option B décrit le QTE (relèvement vrai depuis la station). L'option C décrit le QDR (relèvement magnétique depuis la station). Le système Q-code utilise ces abréviations distinctes pour éviter toute confusion entre les relèvements, les caps, les valeurs vraies et magnétiques.
+
+### Q56: Combien de fois le signal de détresse radiotéléphonique (MAYDAY) ou le signal d'urgence (PAN PAN) doit-il être prononcé ? ^t90q56
+- A) Deux fois.
+- B) Quatre fois.
+- C) Trois fois.
+- D) Une fois.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal de détresse (« MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY ») comme le signal d'urgence (« PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN ») exigent que l'expression clé soit prononcée trois fois. Cette répétition garantit que la nature et la priorité du message sont clairement reconnues même dans de mauvaises conditions radio ou en cas d'interférences partielles. Les options A, B et D indiquent des comptes de répétition incorrects.
+
+### Q57: Quelles informations doivent, dans la mesure du possible, figurer dans un message d'urgence ? ^t90q57
+- A) L'identification de l'aéronef, sa position et son niveau, la nature de l'urgence, l'assistance requise.
+- B) L'identification de l'aéronef, l'aérodrome de départ, la position, le niveau et le cap de l'aéronef.
+- C) L'identification et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de l'urgence, les intentions de l'équipage de conduite, et la position, le niveau et le cap de l'aéronef.
+- D) L'identification et le type de l'aéronef, l'assistance requise, la route, l'aérodrome de destination.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message d'urgence (PAN PAN) doit contenir : l'identification et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de l'urgence, les intentions de l'équipage, et les données de position/niveau/cap — permettant à l'ATC de fournir une assistance efficace. L'option A omet le type d'aéronef et les intentions de l'équipage. L'option B omet la nature de l'urgence et les intentions de l'équipage. L'option D inclut la route et la destination, qui sont des données de plan de vol et non des informations spécifiques à l'urgence.
+
+### Q58: Quel est l'ordre de priorité correct des messages dans le service mobile aéronautique ? ^t90q58
+- A) 1. Messages de détresse, 2. Messages de sécurité des vols, 3. Messages d'urgence.
+- B) 1. Messages de sécurité des vols, 2. Messages de détresse, 3. Messages d'urgence.
+- C) 1. Messages d'urgence, 2. Messages de détresse, 3. Messages de sécurité des vols.
+- D) 1. Messages de détresse, 2. Messages d'urgence, 3. Messages de sécurité des vols.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ordre de priorité OACI est : (1) Détresse (MAYDAY) — danger grave et imminent, (2) Urgence (PAN PAN) — grave mais pas immédiatement mortelle, (3) Messages de sécurité des vols — autorisations et instructions ATC. Les options A, B et C placent toutes ces catégories dans un ordre incorrect. La détresse a toujours la priorité absolue.
+
+### Q59: Comment les lettres BAFO sont-elles épelées en utilisant l'alphabet phonétique OACI ? ^t90q59
+- A) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- B) BETA ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- C) BRAVO ANNA FOX OSCAR
+- D) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OTTO
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant l'alphabet phonétique OACI : B = Bravo, A = Alpha, F = Foxtrot, O = Oscar. L'option B utilise « Beta » (alphabet grec, non OACI). L'option C utilise « Anna » et « Fox » (variantes locales non standard). L'option D utilise « Otto » (alternative non standard allemande pour O). Seule l'option A utilise les mots phonétiques OACI corrects pour les quatre lettres.
+
+### Q60: Vous pilotez votre aéronef sur un cap nord-est à 2 500 pieds. Comment répondez-vous lorsque l'ATC vous demande votre position ? ^t90q60
+- A) Heading 045 at flight level 25.
+- B) 045 degrees and 2,500 feet.
+- C) Heading 45 at 2,500 feet.
+- D) Heading 045 at 2,500 feet.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le format correct est « Heading » suivi de trois chiffres (toujours trois — « 045 » et non « 45 »), puis l'altitude en pieds en dessous de l'altitude de transition. L'option A utilise incorrectement le niveau de vol (FL 25 = 2 500 ft sous pression standard), qui n'est utilisé qu'au-dessus de l'altitude de transition. L'option B utilise « degrees » et « and », qui ne sont pas des phraséologies standard. L'option C n'utilise que deux chiffres pour le cap au lieu des trois requis.
+
+### Q61: Quelle gamme de fréquences permet aux ondes radio de parcourir la plus grande distance ? ^t90q61
+- A) UHF
+- B) VHF
+- C) LW
+- D) MW
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les ondes longues (LW / bande LF) parcourent la plus grande distance car elles se diffractent autour de la courbure de la Terre par propagation d'onde de sol, permettant la réception bien au-delà de la portée en ligne de vue. Les options A (UHF) et B (VHF) sont limitées à la portée en ligne de vue, qui dépend de l'altitude et du relief. L'option D (MW / ondes moyennes) a une portée intermédiaire — meilleure que la VHF mais inférieure aux LW. L'aviation utilise principalement la VHF pour sa clarté, malgré la limitation de portée.
+
+### Q62: Quelle abréviation désigne le système de temps universel utilisé par les services de navigation aérienne ? ^t90q62
+- A) LMT
+- B) GMT
+- C) UTC
+- D) LT
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** UTC (Temps universel coordonné) est l'étalon de temps officiel adopté par l'OACI pour toutes les communications aéronautiques, les plans de vol et les publications. L'option B (GMT) est historiquement similaire mais n'est pas la désignation officielle de l'OACI. L'option A (LMT — Temps moyen local) et l'option D (LT — Heure locale) ne sont pas utilisées dans les communications aéronautiques officielles car elles varient selon l'emplacement.
+
+### Q63: Selon l'OACI, quel est le débit de parole recommandé pour les communications radio ? ^t90q63
+- A) 200 mots/minute.
+- B) 50 mots/minute.
+- C) 100 mots/minute.
+- D) 150 mots/minute.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'OACI recommande environ 100 mots par minute pour les communications radio — un rythme modéré qui garantit l'intelligibilité, notamment pour les locuteurs non natifs de l'anglais et dans des conditions radio dégradées. L'option A (200 mots/minute) est beaucoup trop rapide pour une compréhension claire. L'option B (50 mots/minute) est inutilement lente et gaspillerait le temps de fréquence. L'option D (150 mots/minute) est au-dessus du débit recommandé.
+
+### Q64: Quelle affirmation concernant la radiotéléphonie dans le service mobile aéronautique est correcte ? ^t90q64
+- A) Dans les communications avec l'ATC, utiliser exclusivement la phraséologie standard OACI. Le langage courant n'est autorisé que sur les aérodromes non contrôlés.
+- B) Peu importe que la phraséologie standard OACI ou le langage courant soit utilisé, pourvu que le message soit compréhensible.
+- C) En principe, utiliser le langage courant car il est le plus compréhensible. La phraséologie standard ne peut être utilisée qu'en lien avec les autorisations ATC.
+- D) La phraséologie standard OACI doit en principe être utilisée pour éviter les malentendus. Le langage courant ne doit être utilisé que dans les situations pour lesquelles il n'existe pas de phraséologie standard correspondante.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie standard OACI est la référence pour toute la radiotéléphonie, minimisant le risque de malentendus dans les environnements multilingues. Le langage courant n'est autorisé que lorsqu'aucune expression standard n'existe pour la situation. L'option A est trop rigide — le langage courant n'est pas limité aux aérodromes non contrôlés. L'option B est dangereuse — la terminologie standardisée existe précisément parce que « compréhensible » est subjectif. L'option C inverse le principe en faisant incorrectement du langage courant la valeur par défaut.
+
+### Q65: Quel est le terme anglais correct pour « service d'information de vol d'aérodrome » ? ^t90q65
+- A) FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- B) AIRPORT TRAFFIC INFORMATION SERVICE
+- C) AERODROME FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- D) AERODROME INFORMATION SERVICE
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) est le service d'information de vol propre à un aérodrome, fournissant aux pilotes des informations sur les conditions de l'aérodrome et le trafic connu sans délivrer d'autorisation. L'option A (Flight Information Service) est le FIS régional plus large, non spécifique à un aérodrome. L'option B utilise « Airport Traffic », qui n'est pas le terme officiel OACI. L'option D omet « Flight », qui fait partie intégrante de la désignation officielle.
+
+### Q66: Quel est l'indicatif abrégé correct pour un aéronef dont l'indicatif complet est AB-CDE ? ^t90q66
+- A) DE
+- B) A-DE
+- C) CDE
+- D) AB-DE
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La règle d'abréviation OACI conserve le premier caractère (préfixe de nationalité) et les deux derniers caractères : AB-CDE devient A-DE. L'option A omet entièrement le préfixe de nationalité. L'option C prend les trois derniers caractères sans le préfixe de nationalité. L'option D conserve le préfixe de nationalité complet à deux caractères, ce qui n'est pas la méthode d'abréviation standard — seul le premier caractère est conservé.
+
+### Q67: Dans quelles conditions un pilote est-il autorisé à utiliser un indicatif abrégé ? ^t90q67
+- A) À tout moment pourvu qu'il n'y ait pas de risque de confusion.
+- B) Jamais. Seul le service de navigation aérienne a le droit d'abréger l'indicatif.
+- C) Si la station au sol communique de cette façon.
+- D) Après le premier appel.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un pilote ne peut abréger son indicatif qu'après que la station au sol a initié l'abréviation. La station au sol prend l'initiative car elle peut vérifier qu'aucun indicatif similaire n'est présent sur la fréquence. L'option A est incorrecte car le pilote ne peut pas déterminer lui-même le risque de confusion. L'option B est incorrecte car les deux parties peuvent utiliser la forme abrégée, pas seulement l'ATC. L'option D est incorrecte car l'abréviation nécessite l'initiative de l'ATC, et non simplement d'avoir effectué le premier appel.
+
+### Q68: Quelles instructions et informations doivent toujours faire l'objet d'un compte rendu de lecture ? ^t90q68
+- A) Vent de surface, visibilité, température, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- B) Piste en service, calages altimétriques, codes SSR, instructions de niveau, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- C) Piste en service, visibilité, vent de surface, instructions de cap, calages altimétriques.
+- D) Vent de surface, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les éléments à lire obligatoirement selon l'OACI/AESA sont : la piste en service, les calages altimétriques, les codes SSR (transpondeur), les instructions de niveau (altitude/niveau de vol) et les instructions de cap et de vitesse. Les options A, C et D incluent toutes le vent de surface et/ou la visibilité, qui sont des informations consultatives ne nécessitant pas de compte rendu de lecture — elles sont acquittées par « Roger ».
+
+### Q69: Que signifie l'instruction « Squawk ident » ? ^t90q69
+- A) Vous avez été identifié par radar.
+- B) Vous devez re-saisir le code transpondeur qui vous a été attribué.
+- C) Vous devez appuyer sur le bouton « IDENT » de votre transpondeur.
+- D) Vous devez effectuer un virage pour vous identifier.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Squawk ident » demande au pilote d'appuyer sur le bouton IDENT de son transpondeur, ce qui génère un signal renforcé distinctif sur l'écran radar du contrôleur pour faciliter l'identification de l'aéronef spécifique parmi les autres trafics environnants. L'option A décrit la confirmation du contrôleur après l'identification. L'option B correspondrait à « Squawk [code] » ou « Recycle ». L'option D décrit un virage d'identification radar, qui est une procédure différente.
+
+### Q70: Comment un pilote termine-t-il le compte rendu de lecture d'une autorisation ATC ? ^t90q70
+- A) Par « WILCO ».
+- B) Par l'indicatif de la station au sol ATC.
+- C) Par l'indicatif de son aéronef.
+- D) Par « ROGER ».
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout compte rendu de lecture d'une autorisation ATC doit se terminer par l'indicatif propre de l'aéronef, confirmant sans ambiguïté quel aéronef a reçu et correctement répété l'autorisation. L'option A (« Wilco ») peut apparaître dans une réponse mais ne remplace pas l'exigence d'indicatif. L'option B (indicatif de la station au sol) est incorrecte — le compte rendu se termine par l'identification de l'aéronef. L'option D (« Roger ») ne fait qu'accuser réception et n'identifie pas l'aéronef.
+
+### Q71: Dans quelle catégorie sont classés les messages d'un aéronef en état de danger grave et/ou imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate ? ^t90q71
+- A) Messages concernant la sécurité des vols.
+- B) Messages d'urgence.
+- C) Messages de détresse.
+- D) Messages concernant la régularité des vols.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un aéronef confronté à un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate transmet des messages de détresse (MAYDAY), la catégorie de priorité la plus élevée dans les communications aéronautiques. L'option A (messages de sécurité des vols) couvre les instructions et autorisations ATC. L'option B (messages d'urgence) couvre les situations graves mais non immédiatement mortelles. L'option D (messages de régularité) couvre les communications opérationnelles administratives.
+
+### Q72: À partir de quel moment un aéronef peut-il utiliser son indicatif abrégé ? ^t90q72
+- A) Lorsque la station aéronautique a utilisé l'indicatif abrégé pour s'adresser à l'aéronef.
+- B) Une fois la communication bien établie.
+- C) En cas de trafic intense.
+- D) Lorsqu'il n'y a aucune possibilité de confusion.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un aéronef peut utiliser son indicatif abrégé une fois que la communication radio est bien établie avec la station au sol, et uniquement après que la station au sol a elle-même utilisé la forme abrégée en premier. L'option A est partiellement correcte mais incomplète — c'est l'utilisation par la station au sol qui déclenche l'autorisation. L'option C (trafic intense) et l'option D (aucun risque de confusion) n'accordent pas indépendamment le droit d'abréger ; la station au sol doit en prendre l'initiative.
+
+### Q73: Un aéronef n'arrive pas à établir la communication radio avec une station au sol sur la fréquence désignée ou sur toute autre fréquence appropriée. Quelle action le pilote doit-il prendre ? ^t90q73
+- A) Atterrir sur l'aérodrome le plus proche sur la route.
+- B) Se diriger vers l'aérodrome de dégagement.
+- C) Essayer d'établir la communication avec d'autres aéronefs ou d'autres stations aéronautiques.
+- D) Afficher le code d'urgence SSR 7500.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** S'il est impossible de contacter la station désignée, le pilote doit d'abord essayer d'établir la communication avec d'autres aéronefs ou stations aéronautiques susceptibles de relayer le message. L'option A est prématurée — les solutions de communication alternatives doivent d'abord être épuisées. L'option B suppose la désignation préalable d'un aérodrome de dégagement. L'option D est incorrecte car le code 7500 indique un détournement/interférence illicite, non une panne de communication (qui est le 7600).
+
+### Q74: Dans le service mobile aéronautique, quelle est la fréquence internationale de détresse suivante ? ^t90q74
+- A) 123,45 MHz.
+- B) 121 500 KHz.
+- C) 6 500 KHz.
+- D) 121,500 MHz.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La fréquence de garde (détresse) VHF internationale est 121,500 MHz, surveillée en continu par les installations ATC dans le monde entier. L'option A (123,45 MHz) est une fréquence air-air consultative. L'option B indique incorrectement 121 500 KHz — l'unité correcte est MHz, non KHz (121 500 KHz se situerait dans la bande LF). L'option C (6 500 KHz) n'est pas une fréquence de détresse standard.
+
+### Q75: Comment les lettres NDGF doivent-elles être prononcées selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI ? ^t90q75
+- A) NOVEMBER DELTA GOLF FOXTROT.
+- B) NOVEMBER DECEMBER GOLF FOXTROT
+- C) NORBERT DELTA GOLF FOX.
+- D) NOVEMBER DELTA GAMMA FOX.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant l'alphabet phonétique OACI : N = November, D = Delta, G = Golf, F = Foxtrot. L'option B utilise « December » pour D (non standard OACI). L'option C utilise « Norbert » (non standard) et « Fox » (le mot correct est « Foxtrot »). L'option D utilise « Gamma » (alphabet grec) pour G et « Fox » au lieu de « Foxtrot ».
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_76_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_76_100.md
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+### Q76: What does the term "aeronautical station" mean? ^t90q76
+- A) A radio station of the aeronautical fixed service, on the ground or on board an aircraft, intended for the exchange of radio communications.
+- B) A land station of the aeronautical mobile service. In certain cases, an aeronautical station may be located on board a ship or offshore platform.
+- C) A radio station of the aeronautical fixed service.
+- D) Any radio station intended for the exchange of radio communications.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aeronautical station is defined as a land station in the aeronautical mobile service, providing two-way communication with aircraft. In certain cases, it may be located on a ship or offshore platform. Option A incorrectly refers to the fixed service (ground-to-ground) rather than the mobile service (ground-to-air). Option C is also an incorrect service designation. Option D is too broad and encompasses all radio stations regardless of service type.
+
+### Q77: What does the abbreviation "HJ" mean? ^t90q77
+- A) From sunset to sunrise.
+- B) From sunrise to sunset.
+- C) Continuous day and night service.
+- D) No fixed operating hours.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HJ (from French "Heure de Jour") means daylight hours — from sunrise to sunset. This designation appears in AIPs and NOTAMs for facilities open only during daylight. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option C describes H24 (continuous). Option D describes HX (no fixed hours).
+
+### Q78: Which instructions and information must always be read back verbatim? ^t90q78
+- A) Runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes, heading and speed instructions.
+- B) Surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes.
+- C) Runway in use, visibility, surface wind, heading instructions, altimeter settings.
+- D) Surface wind, visibility, temperature, runway in use, altimeter settings, heading and speed instructions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mandatory readback items are: runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes, and heading/speed instructions. Surface wind is also included in some regional implementations. Options C and D include visibility and/or temperature, which are advisory and do not require readback. Option A is close but omits surface wind, while option B matches the ICAO standard list.
+
+### Q79: In which message category can ATC clearances, take-off and landing clearances, and traffic information from the air traffic control service be classified? ^t90q79
+- A) Messages concerning flight safety.
+- B) Messages concerning flight regularity.
+- C) Urgency messages.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC clearances, take-off/landing instructions, and traffic information are all classified as flight safety messages, ranked third in the ICAO priority hierarchy after distress and urgency messages. Option B (regularity messages) covers administrative and logistical communications. Option C (urgency messages) specifically concerns aircraft or persons facing a serious safety condition, not routine ATC operations.
+
+### Q80: What does the instruction "Squawk 1234" mean? ^t90q80
+- A) Conduct a radio check on frequency 123.4 MHz.
+- B) Set code 1234 on the transponder and switch it to ON.
+- C) Be ready to monitor frequency 123.4 MHz.
+- D) Transmit briefly (1-2-3-4) for a bearing.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Squawk 1234" means the pilot must select code 1234 on the transponder and ensure it is operating. This enables radar controllers to identify the aircraft using the assigned code. Option A confuses a transponder code with a radio frequency. Option C also conflates frequency monitoring with transponder operation. Option D describes a procedure unrelated to transponder codes.
+
+### Q81: What does the abbreviation "ATIS" stand for? ^t90q81
+- A) Air Trafic Information Service
+- B) Automatic Terminal Information System
+- C) Airport Terminal Information Service
+- D) Automatic Terminal Information Service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS stands for Automatic Terminal Information Service — a continuously broadcast recording of current meteorological and operational information for an aerodrome, identified by a letter code that changes with each update. Option A misspells "Traffic" and uses "Air" rather than "Automatic." Option B uses "System" instead of "Service." Option C uses "Airport" instead of "Automatic."
+
+### Q82: What is the call sign suffix of the Flight Information Service? ^t90q82
+- A) FLIGHT CENTER
+- B) INFO
+- C) INFORMATION.
+- D) AERODROME.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Flight Information Service uses the call sign suffix "Information" (e.g., "Geneva Information" or "Zurich Information"). Option A ("Flight Center") is not a standard ICAO suffix. Option B ("Info") is an informal abbreviation not used as an official suffix. Option D ("Aerodrome") is not used as a call sign suffix for FIS.
+
+### Q83: What does the term "QDR" mean? ^t90q83
+- A) True heading to the station (zero wind)
+- B) Magnetic heading to the station (zero wind)
+- C) True bearing from the station
+- D) Magnetic bearing from the station
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QDR is the magnetic bearing from the station to the aircraft — the direction in which the aircraft lies as seen from the station, referenced to magnetic north. Option A describes QUJ (true heading to station). Option B describes QDM (magnetic heading to station). Option C describes QTE (true bearing from station). These Q-codes must be distinguished carefully to avoid navigation errors.
+
+### Q84: What influences the reception quality of VHF radio? ^t90q84
+- A) The twilight effect.
+- B) The ionosphere.
+- C) Atmospheric disturbances, in particular thunderstorm conditions.
+- D) Flight altitude and topographical conditions.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VHF radio propagates by line-of-sight, so reception quality depends primarily on flight altitude (which determines how far the radio horizon extends) and topography (mountains and terrain can block signals). Option A (twilight effect) affects NDB/ADF reception, not VHF. Option B (ionosphere) affects HF sky-wave propagation, not VHF. Option C (thunderstorms) may cause some static but is not the primary factor for VHF reception quality.
+
+### Q85: What does the term "QFE" mean? ^t90q85
+- A) Altimeter setting that causes the instrument to indicate the aerodrome elevation on the ground.
+- B) Atmospheric pressure measured at the height of the highest obstacle on an aerodrome.
+- C) Atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome elevation (or runway threshold).
+- D) Atmospheric pressure measured at a point on the earth's surface.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome elevation or runway threshold. When set on the altimeter, the instrument reads zero on the ground and displays height above the aerodrome in flight. Option A describes QNH behaviour (reading aerodrome elevation on the ground). Option B is not a standard definition. Option D is too generic and could describe any surface pressure measurement.
+
+### Q86: In the aeronautical mobile service, messages are classified by importance. What is the correct priority order? ^t90q86
+- A) Distress messages, messages concerning flight safety, urgency messages.
+- B) Meteorological messages, radio direction-finding messages, messages concerning flight regularity.
+- C) Radio direction-finding messages, distress messages, urgency messages.
+- D) Distress messages, urgency messages, messages concerning safety.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct ICAO priority order is: (1) Distress messages, (2) Urgency messages, (3) Flight safety messages, followed by meteorological, direction-finding, regularity, and other messages. Option A incorrectly places flight safety above urgency. Option B lists only lower-priority categories. Option C places direction-finding above distress, which is incorrect — distress always has absolute priority.
+
+### Q87: What is the urgency signal in radiotelephony? ^t90q87
+- A) PAN PAN (preferably spoken three times).
+- B) MAYDAY (preferably spoken three times).
+- C) URGENCY (preferably spoken three times).
+- D) ALERFA (preferably spoken three times).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The radiotelephony urgency signal is "PAN PAN" spoken three times, indicating a serious condition that requires timely assistance but is not an immediate life-threatening emergency. Option B (MAYDAY) is the distress signal for grave and imminent danger. Option C ("URGENCY") is not standard phraseology. Option D (ALERFA) is an internal ATC alert phase designation, not a radiotelephony signal.
+
+### Q88: On the readability scale, what does degree "5" mean? ^t90q88
+- A) Readable intermittently.
+- B) Unreadable.
+- C) Readable, but with difficulty.
+- D) Perfectly readable.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 5 is the highest level on the ICAO scale, meaning the transmission is perfectly clear and intelligible. Option A describes readability 2 (intermittently). Option B describes readability 1 (unreadable). Option C describes readability 3 (with difficulty). The standard response is "I read you five."
+
+### Q89: What is the name of the time system used worldwide by air traffic services and in the aeronautical fixed service? ^t90q89
+- A) Local time (LT) using the 24-hour clock.
+- B) Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
+- C) There is no particular time system, as generally only minutes are transmitted.
+- D) Local time using the AM and PM system.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the universal time standard used by all air traffic services and aeronautical fixed services worldwide. It eliminates time zone ambiguity in international operations. Options A and D use local time, which varies by location and is not used in aeronautical communications. Option C is factually incorrect — a specific time system (UTC) is always used.
+
+### Q90: What elements should a distress message contain? ^t90q90
+- A) Aircraft callsign, departure point, position, level.
+- B) Aircraft callsign, position, assistance required.
+- C) Aircraft callsign and type, nature of the distress situation, pilot's intentions, position, level, heading.
+- D) Aircraft callsign, flight route, destination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A complete distress message (MAYDAY) should contain: aircraft callsign and type, the nature of the distress, the pilot's intentions, and position/level/heading — giving rescue services maximum information to coordinate assistance. Option A omits the nature of distress and pilot intentions. Option B omits aircraft type, pilot intentions, and heading. Option D omits all emergency-specific information and lists only flight plan data.
+
+### Q91: What does "FEW" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q91
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 1 to 2 eighths
+- C) 8 eighths
+- D) 5 to 7 eighths
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR cloud coverage reporting, FEW designates 1 to 2 oktas (eighths) of sky covered — the sparsest cloud category. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option C describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option D describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). These standardised ICAO designations ensure unambiguous weather reporting worldwide.
+
+### Q92: What does "SCT" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q92
+- A) 1 to 2 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 3 to 4 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SCT stands for Scattered, representing 3 to 4 oktas (eighths) of sky covered by cloud. Option A describes FEW (1-2 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). Scattered cloud coverage does not necessarily restrict VFR flight, but pilots must check cloud base heights against applicable VFR minima.
+
+### Q93: What does "BKN" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q93
+- A) 8 eighths
+- B) 3 to 4 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN stands for Broken, meaning 5 to 7 oktas (eighths) of the sky are covered — predominantly overcast with some gaps. Option A describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option B describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option D describes FEW (1-2 oktas). A broken layer may significantly impact VFR operations, especially if cloud bases are low.
+
+### Q94: Which transponder code signals a radio failure? ^t90q94
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7600
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally standardised squawk for loss of radio communication (NORDO), alerting radar controllers to the communication failure. Option A (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code in European airspace. Option B (7500) signals unlawful interference (hijacking). Option D (7700) indicates a general emergency. These four codes must be memorised as they each trigger specific ATC responses.
+
+### Q95: What is the correct phrase to begin a blind transmission? ^t90q95
+- A) No reception
+- B) Transmitting blind
+- C) Listen
+- D) Blind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a pilot can transmit but cannot receive, the blind transmission must begin with the phrase "Transmitting blind" (or "Transmitting blind on [frequency]") to alert any receiving station of the one-way nature of the communication. Options A, C, and D are not standard ICAO phraseology for initiating blind transmissions.
+
+### Q96: How many times shall a blind transmission be made? ^t90q96
+- A) Three times
+- B) Four times
+- C) One time
+- D) Two times
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission is made once on the current frequency (and optionally repeated once on the emergency frequency if appropriate). Making it multiple times would congest the frequency unnecessarily. Options A, B, and D specify excessive repetitions that are not part of standard ICAO procedure for blind transmissions.
+
+### Q97: In what situation is it appropriate to set transponder code 7600? ^t90q97
+- A) Flight into clouds
+- B) Emergency
+- C) Loss of radio
+- D) Hijacking
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is specifically designated for loss of radio communication (NORDO), alerting radar controllers so they can provide appropriate separation and visual signals. Option A (flight into clouds) does not have a specific transponder code. Option B (emergency) requires code 7700. Option D (hijacking) requires code 7500.
+
+### Q98: What is the correct course of action when experiencing a radio failure in class D airspace? ^t90q98
+- A) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+- B) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+- C) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+- D) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO procedures for VFR radio failure in controlled airspace require the pilot to either continue the flight according to the last ATC clearance received while complying with VFR rules, or to leave the airspace by the shortest route. Options B and D incorrectly specify flying above 5000 feet, which is not part of the radio failure procedure. Option C incorrectly substitutes "standard routing" for "shortest route."
+
+### Q99: Which phrase must be repeated three times before transmitting an urgency message? ^t90q99
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Help
+- C) Urgent
+- D) Pan Pan
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message is preceded by "Pan Pan" spoken three times ("PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN"). This alerts all stations on the frequency to a serious but not immediately life-threatening situation. Option A ("Mayday") is the distress signal for grave and imminent danger. Options B ("Help") and C ("Urgent") are not standard ICAO radiotelephony phrases.
+
+### Q100: On which frequency should an initial distress message be transmitted? ^t90q100
+- A) Emergency frequency
+- B) FIS frequency
+- C) Radar frequency
+- D) Current frequency
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The initial distress or urgency call should be made on the frequency currently in use, because that frequency is already being monitored by the appropriate ATC unit handling the aircraft. Switching frequencies risks losing contact and wastes critical time. Option A (emergency frequency 121.5 MHz) should be tried only if there is no response on the current frequency. Options B and C are not the correct first choice.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_76_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/tr_90_76_100_fr.md
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+### Q76: Que désigne le terme « station aéronautique » ? ^t90q76
+- A) Une station radio du service fixe aéronautique, au sol ou à bord d'un aéronef, destinée à l'échange de communications radio.
+- B) Une station terrestre du service mobile aéronautique. Dans certains cas, une station aéronautique peut être située à bord d'un navire ou sur une plateforme offshore.
+- C) Une station radio du service fixe aéronautique.
+- D) Toute station radio destinée à l'échange de communications radio.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une station aéronautique est définie comme une station terrestre du service mobile aéronautique, assurant des communications bilatérales avec les aéronefs. Dans certains cas, elle peut être située sur un navire ou une plateforme offshore. L'option A fait incorrectement référence au service fixe (sol à sol) plutôt qu'au service mobile (sol à air). L'option C est également une désignation de service incorrecte. L'option D est trop large et englobe toutes les stations radio indépendamment du type de service.
+
+### Q77: Que signifie l'abréviation « HJ » ? ^t90q77
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil.
+- B) Du lever au coucher du soleil.
+- C) Service continu jour et nuit.
+- D) Aucun horaire de fonctionnement fixe.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** HJ (de l'expression française « Heure de Jour ») signifie les heures de jour — du lever au coucher du soleil. Cette désignation apparaît dans les AIP et les NOTAMs pour les installations ouvertes uniquement pendant les heures de jour. L'option A décrit HN (coucher au lever du soleil). L'option C décrit H24 (continu). L'option D décrit HX (aucun horaire fixe).
+
+### Q78: Quelles instructions et informations doivent toujours être lues en retour mot pour mot ? ^t90q78
+- A) Piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- B) Vent de surface, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR.
+- C) Piste en service, visibilité, vent de surface, instructions de cap, calages altimétriques.
+- D) Vent de surface, visibilité, température, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les éléments à lire obligatoirement sont : la piste en service, les calages altimétriques, les instructions de niveau, les codes SSR et les instructions de cap/vitesse. Le vent de surface est également inclus dans certaines mises en œuvre régionales. Les options C et D incluent la visibilité et/ou la température, qui sont consultatives et ne nécessitent pas de compte rendu de lecture. L'option A est proche mais omet le vent de surface, tandis que l'option B correspond à la liste standard OACI.
+
+### Q79: Dans quelle catégorie de messages les autorisations ATC, les autorisations de décollage et d'atterrissage, et les informations de trafic du service de contrôle de la circulation aérienne peuvent-elles être classées ? ^t90q79
+- A) Messages concernant la sécurité des vols.
+- B) Messages concernant la régularité des vols.
+- C) Messages d'urgence.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les autorisations ATC, les instructions de décollage/atterrissage et les informations de trafic sont toutes classées comme messages de sécurité des vols, au troisième rang dans la hiérarchie des priorités OACI après la détresse et l'urgence. L'option B (messages de régularité) couvre les communications administratives et logistiques. L'option C (messages d'urgence) concerne spécifiquement les aéronefs ou les personnes confrontées à une grave condition de sécurité, non les opérations ATC de routine.
+
+### Q80: Que signifie l'instruction « Squawk 1234 » ? ^t90q80
+- A) Effectuer un contrôle radio sur la fréquence 123,4 MHz.
+- B) Régler le code 1234 sur le transpondeur et le mettre en marche.
+- C) Se tenir prêt à surveiller la fréquence 123,4 MHz.
+- D) Transmettre brièvement (1-2-3-4) pour un relèvement.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Squawk 1234 » signifie que le pilote doit sélectionner le code 1234 sur le transpondeur et s'assurer qu'il est en fonctionnement. Cela permet aux contrôleurs radar d'identifier l'aéronef à l'aide du code attribué. L'option A confond un code transpondeur avec une fréquence radio. L'option C confond également la surveillance de fréquence avec l'exploitation du transpondeur. L'option D décrit une procédure sans rapport avec les codes transpondeur.
+
+### Q81: Que signifie l'abréviation « ATIS » ? ^t90q81
+- A) Air Trafic Information Service
+- B) Automatic Terminal Information System
+- C) Airport Terminal Information Service
+- D) Automatic Terminal Information Service
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** ATIS signifie Automatic Terminal Information Service — un enregistrement diffusé en continu des informations météorologiques et opérationnelles actuelles pour un aérodrome, identifié par un code lettre qui change à chaque mise à jour. L'option A orthographie mal « Traffic » et utilise « Air » au lieu d'« Automatic ». L'option B utilise « System » au lieu de « Service ». L'option C utilise « Airport » au lieu d'« Automatic ».
+
+### Q82: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif du service d'information de vol ? ^t90q82
+- A) FLIGHT CENTER
+- B) INFO
+- C) INFORMATION.
+- D) AERODROME.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le service d'information de vol utilise le suffixe d'indicatif « Information » (par ex. « Geneva Information » ou « Zurich Information »). L'option A (« Flight Center ») n'est pas un suffixe OACI standard. L'option B (« Info ») est une abréviation informelle non utilisée comme suffixe officiel. L'option D (« Aerodrome ») n'est pas utilisée comme suffixe d'indicatif pour le FIS.
+
+### Q83: Que signifie le terme « QDR » ? ^t90q83
+- A) Cap vrai vers la station (vent nul)
+- B) Cap magnétique vers la station (vent nul)
+- C) Relèvement vrai depuis la station
+- D) Relèvement magnétique depuis la station
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QDR est le relèvement magnétique depuis la station vers l'aéronef — la direction dans laquelle se trouve l'aéronef vu depuis la station, référencée au nord magnétique. L'option A décrit le QUJ (cap vrai vers la station). L'option B décrit le QDM (cap magnétique vers la station). L'option C décrit le QTE (relèvement vrai depuis la station). Ces codes Q doivent être soigneusement distingués pour éviter des erreurs de navigation.
+
+### Q84: Qu'est-ce qui influence la qualité de réception radio VHF ? ^t90q84
+- A) L'effet crépusculaire.
+- B) L'ionosphère.
+- C) Les perturbations atmosphériques, notamment les conditions orageuses.
+- D) L'altitude de vol et les conditions topographiques.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La radio VHF se propage en ligne de vue, de sorte que la qualité de réception dépend principalement de l'altitude de vol (qui détermine l'étendue de l'horizon radio) et de la topographie (les montagnes et le relief peuvent bloquer les signaux). L'option A (effet crépusculaire) affecte la réception NDB/ADF, non la VHF. L'option B (ionosphère) influence la propagation par onde de ciel HF, non la VHF. L'option C (orages) peut provoquer quelques parasites mais n'est pas le principal facteur de qualité de réception VHF.
+
+### Q85: Que signifie le terme « QFE » ? ^t90q85
+- A) Calage altimétrique permettant à l'instrument d'indiquer l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol.
+- B) Pression atmosphérique mesurée à la hauteur de l'obstacle le plus élevé d'un aérodrome.
+- C) Pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome (ou au seuil de piste).
+- D) Pression atmosphérique mesurée en un point à la surface de la Terre.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome ou au seuil de piste. Réglé sur l'altimètre, l'instrument affiche zéro au sol et indique la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome en vol. L'option A décrit le comportement du QNH (afficher l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol). L'option B n'est pas une définition standard. L'option D est trop générique et pourrait décrire n'importe quelle mesure de pression en surface.
+
+### Q86: Dans le service mobile aéronautique, les messages sont classés par importance. Quel est l'ordre de priorité correct ? ^t90q86
+- A) Messages de détresse, messages concernant la sécurité des vols, messages d'urgence.
+- B) Messages météorologiques, messages de radiogoniométrie, messages concernant la régularité des vols.
+- C) Messages de radiogoniométrie, messages de détresse, messages d'urgence.
+- D) Messages de détresse, messages d'urgence, messages concernant la sécurité.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ordre de priorité OACI correct est : (1) Messages de détresse, (2) Messages d'urgence, (3) Messages de sécurité des vols, suivis des messages météorologiques, de radiogoniométrie, de régularité et autres. L'option A place incorrectement la sécurité des vols au-dessus de l'urgence. L'option B ne liste que des catégories de priorité inférieure. L'option C place la radiogoniométrie au-dessus de la détresse, ce qui est incorrect — la détresse a toujours la priorité absolue.
+
+### Q87: Quel est le signal d'urgence en radiotéléphonie ? ^t90q87
+- A) PAN PAN (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- B) MAYDAY (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- C) URGENCY (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- D) ALERFA (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal d'urgence radiotéléphonique est « PAN PAN » prononcé trois fois, indiquant une situation grave nécessitant une assistance rapide mais ne constituant pas une urgence immédiatement mortelle. L'option B (MAYDAY) est le signal de détresse pour danger grave et imminent. L'option C (« URGENCY ») n'est pas une phraséologie standard. L'option D (ALERFA) est une désignation de phase d'alerte ATC interne, non un signal radiotéléphonique.
+
+### Q88: Sur l'échelle de lisibilité, que signifie le degré « 5 » ? ^t90q88
+- A) Lisible par intermittence.
+- B) Illisible.
+- C) Lisible, mais avec difficulté.
+- D) Parfaitement lisible.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 5 est le niveau le plus élevé sur l'échelle OACI, signifiant que la transmission est parfaitement claire et intelligible. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2 (par intermittence). L'option B décrit la lisibilité 1 (illisible). L'option C décrit la lisibilité 3 (avec difficulté). La réponse standard est « I read you five ».
+
+### Q89: Quel est le nom du système horaire utilisé mondialement par les services de la circulation aérienne et dans le service fixe aéronautique ? ^t90q89
+- A) Heure locale (LT) utilisant le format 24 heures.
+- B) Temps universel coordonné (UTC).
+- C) Il n'existe pas de système horaire particulier, car en général seules les minutes sont transmises.
+- D) Heure locale utilisant le système AM et PM.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le temps universel coordonné (UTC) est l'étalon de temps universel utilisé par tous les services de la circulation aérienne et les services fixes aéronautiques dans le monde entier. Il élimine l'ambiguïté des fuseaux horaires dans les opérations internationales. Les options A et D utilisent l'heure locale, qui varie selon l'emplacement et n'est pas utilisée dans les communications aéronautiques. L'option C est factuellement incorrecte — un système horaire spécifique (UTC) est toujours utilisé.
+
+### Q90: Quels éléments doit contenir un message de détresse ? ^t90q90
+- A) Indicatif de l'aéronef, point de départ, position, niveau.
+- B) Indicatif de l'aéronef, position, assistance requise.
+- C) Indicatif et type de l'aéronef, nature de la situation de détresse, intentions du pilote, position, niveau, cap.
+- D) Indicatif de l'aéronef, route de vol, destination.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message de détresse complet (MAYDAY) doit contenir : l'indicatif et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de la détresse, les intentions du pilote, et la position/niveau/cap — fournissant aux services de secours un maximum d'informations pour coordonner l'assistance. L'option A omet la nature de la détresse et les intentions du pilote. L'option B omet le type d'aéronef, les intentions du pilote et le cap. L'option D omet toutes les informations spécifiques à l'urgence et ne liste que les données du plan de vol.
+
+### Q91: Que signifie « FEW » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q91
+- A) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- B) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- C) 8 huitièmes
+- D) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le compte rendu de couverture nuageuse METAR, FEW désigne 1 à 2 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert — la catégorie nuageuse la plus clairsemée. L'option A décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option C décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option D décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). Ces désignations OACI standardisées assurent un compte rendu météorologique non équivoque dans le monde entier.
+
+### Q92: Que signifie « SCT » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q92
+- A) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- B) 8 huitièmes
+- C) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- D) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** SCT signifie Scattered (nuages épars), représentant 3 à 4 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert par des nuages. L'option A décrit FEW (1-2 octas). L'option B décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option C décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). Une couverture nuageuse épars ne restreint pas nécessairement le vol VFR, mais les pilotes doivent vérifier les hauteurs des bases de nuages par rapport aux minimums VFR applicables.
+
+### Q93: Que signifie « BKN » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q93
+- A) 8 huitièmes
+- B) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- C) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- D) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** BKN signifie Broken (nuages fragmentés), soit 5 à 7 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert — principalement couvert avec quelques trouées. L'option A décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option B décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option D décrit FEW (1-2 octas). Une couche brisée peut affecter considérablement les opérations VFR, surtout si les bases de nuages sont basses.
+
+### Q94: Quel code transpondeur signale une panne radio ? ^t90q94
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7600
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le squawk standardisé internationalement pour la perte de communication radio (NORDO), alertant les contrôleurs radar de la panne de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code VFR de conspicuité standard dans l'espace aérien européen. L'option B (7500) signale une interférence illicite (détournement). L'option D (7700) indique une urgence générale. Ces quatre codes doivent être mémorisés car ils déclenchent chacun des réponses ATC spécifiques.
+
+### Q95: Quelle est la phrase correcte pour commencer une transmission en aveugle ? ^t90q95
+- A) No reception
+- B) Transmitting blind
+- C) Listen
+- D) Blind
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un pilote peut transmettre mais ne peut pas recevoir, la transmission en aveugle doit commencer par la phrase « Transmitting blind » (ou « Transmitting blind on [fréquence] ») pour alerter toute station réceptrice du caractère unilatéral de la communication. Les options A, C et D ne sont pas des phraséologies OACI standard pour initier des transmissions en aveugle.
+
+### Q96: Combien de fois une transmission en aveugle doit-elle être effectuée ? ^t90q96
+- A) Trois fois
+- B) Quatre fois
+- C) Une fois
+- D) Deux fois
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une transmission en aveugle est effectuée une fois sur la fréquence actuelle (et éventuellement répétée une fois sur la fréquence d'urgence si approprié). L'effectuer plusieurs fois encombrerait inutilement la fréquence. Les options A, B et D spécifient des répétitions excessives qui ne font pas partie de la procédure OACI standard pour les transmissions en aveugle.
+
+### Q97: Dans quelle situation est-il approprié de régler le code transpondeur 7600 ? ^t90q97
+- A) Vol en nuage
+- B) Urgence
+- C) Perte de la radio
+- D) Détournement
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est spécifiquement désigné pour la perte de communication radio (NORDO), alertant les contrôleurs radar afin qu'ils puissent assurer une séparation appropriée et émettre des signaux lumineux. L'option A (vol en nuage) n'a pas de code transpondeur spécifique. L'option B (urgence) nécessite le code 7700. L'option D (détournement) nécessite le code 7500.
+
+### Q98: Quelle est la marche à suivre correcte en cas de panne radio dans l'espace aérien de classe D ? ^t90q98
+- A) Le vol doit être poursuivi conformément à la dernière autorisation en respectant les règles VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté par la route la plus courte
+- B) Le vol doit être poursuivi au-dessus de 5 000 pieds en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté par un itinéraire standard
+- C) Le vol doit être poursuivi conformément à la dernière autorisation en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté par un itinéraire standard
+- D) Le vol doit être poursuivi au-dessus de 5 000 pieds en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté par la route la plus courte
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les procédures OACI en cas de panne radio VFR dans l'espace aérien contrôlé exigent que le pilote poursuive soit le vol conformément à la dernière autorisation ATC reçue en respectant les règles VFR, soit quitte l'espace aérien par la route la plus courte. Les options B et D indiquent incorrectement de voler au-dessus de 5 000 pieds, ce qui ne fait pas partie de la procédure en cas de panne radio. L'option C remplace incorrectement « route la plus courte » par « itinéraire standard ».
+
+### Q99: Quelle phrase doit être répétée trois fois avant de transmettre un message d'urgence ? ^t90q99
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Help
+- C) Urgent
+- D) Pan Pan
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message d'urgence est précédé de « Pan Pan » prononcé trois fois (« PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN »). Cela alerte toutes les stations sur la fréquence d'une situation grave mais non immédiatement mortelle. L'option A (« Mayday ») est le signal de détresse pour danger grave et imminent. Les options B (« Help ») et C (« Urgent ») ne sont pas des expressions radiotéléphoniques OACI standard.
+
+### Q100: Sur quelle fréquence un message de détresse initial doit-il être transmis ? ^t90q100
+- A) Fréquence d'urgence
+- B) Fréquence FIS
+- C) Fréquence radar
+- D) Fréquence en cours d'utilisation
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'appel de détresse ou d'urgence initial doit être effectué sur la fréquence actuellement utilisée, car cette fréquence est déjà surveillée par l'unité ATC concernée qui gère l'aéronef. Changer de fréquence risque de perdre le contact et fait perdre un temps critique. L'option A (fréquence d'urgence 121,5 MHz) ne doit être essayée que si aucune réponse n'est obtenue sur la fréquence en cours. Les options B et C ne sont pas le premier choix correct.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_101_144.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_101_144.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,439 @@
+### Q101: During a VFR flight, who is responsible for collision avoidance? ^t10q101
+- A) The second pilot when two pilots are on board.
+- B) The flight information service.
+- C) The air traffic control service.
+- D) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During VFR flight, the pilot-in-command (PIC) bears full responsibility for collision avoidance using the see-and-avoid principle. This applies regardless of whether ATC or FIS provides traffic information. Option A is wrong because responsibility always lies with the PIC, not the second pilot. Option B (FIS) provides information but has no separation responsibility. Option C (ATC) may provide traffic information but VFR collision avoidance remains the PIC's responsibility.
+
+### Q102: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q102
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Only the crash of an aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is an event related to aircraft operation where a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained damage significantly affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both conditions independently constitute an accident. Option A is incomplete because it only mentions personal injury. Option B is wrong because cost alone does not define an accident. Option D is too narrow -- many accidents involve damage short of a complete crash.
+
+### Q103: Which of the following exceptions to the right-of-way rules for converging routes is incorrect? ^t10q103
+- A) Airships give way to gliders.
+- B) Aircraft give way to aircraft that are visibly towing other aircraft or objects.
+- C) Gliders give way to aircraft that are towing.
+- D) Gliders and motor gliders give way to free balloons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Option C is the incorrect statement. Under SERA.3210, aircraft towing other aircraft or objects receive right-of-way priority -- meaning other aircraft (including gliders) do NOT have to give way to towing aircraft; rather, all aircraft must give way TO towing aircraft. Option C reverses this: it claims gliders give way to towing aircraft, but the actual rule is that towing aircraft give way to gliders (gliders have higher priority). Options A, B, and D all correctly state valid right-of-way exceptions.
+
+### Q104: What minimum meteorological conditions are required to take off or land at an aerodrome in a CTR without Special VFR authorization? ^t10q104
+- A) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- B) Ground visibility 8 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- C) Ground visibility 1.5 km, ceiling 300 m/GND.
+- D) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 150 m/GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, the minimum meteorological conditions for take-off or landing at an aerodrome within a CTR without requiring Special VFR authorisation are: ground visibility of 1.5 km and a ceiling of 300 m above ground level. These are the basic SVFR minima in Switzerland. Option A and Option B use higher visibility values than required. Option D uses an insufficient ceiling of 150 m. These values are specific to Swiss operations within CTRs.
+
+### Q105: For VFR flights in a terminal control area or control zone, how is the vertical position of an aircraft expressed below the transition altitude? ^t10q105
+- A) As flight level.
+- B) Either as altitude or height.
+- C) As height.
+- D) As altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Below the transition altitude in a TMA or CTR, the vertical position of an aircraft is expressed as altitude (height above mean sea level using the QNH altimeter setting). Flight levels are only used at or above the transition altitude. Option A (flight level) applies above the transition altitude, not below it. Option B (either altitude or height) is incorrect because the standard expression below transition altitude in controlled airspace is specifically altitude. Option C (height) is used for specific purposes like circuit height but is not the standard expression in TMAs/CTRs.
+
+### Q106: In Switzerland, what is the minimum visibility required for VFR flight in Class G airspace without special conditions? ^t10q106
+- A) 5 km.
+- B) 8 km.
+- C) 10 km.
+- D) 1.5 km.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class G airspace in Switzerland, without special conditions and at low altitudes (below 3000 ft AMSL or within 1000 ft of the surface), the minimum VFR visibility is 1.5 km. This is the lowest visibility minimum in the SERA VMC table. Option A (5 km) applies in controlled airspace below FL100. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR visibility minimum.
+
+### Q107: May a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any additional formality? ^t10q107
+- A) No, transit is not permitted under any circumstances for VFR flights.
+- B) Yes.
+- C) Yes, but only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and only if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- D) Only if permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ may be transited by VFR flights, provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained throughout the transit. If radio contact cannot be established, the pilot must follow the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located. Option A is wrong because transit is not prohibited. Option B is wrong because transit is not unconditional -- AFIS contact is required. Option C incorrectly requires English-language radiotelephony qualification, which is not a specific FIZ transit requirement.
+
+### Q108: Who is responsible for the regulatory maintenance of an aircraft? ^t10q108
+- A) The maintenance organisation.
+- B) The mechanic.
+- C) The operator.
+- D) The owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operator is legally responsible for ensuring that regulatory maintenance of the aircraft is carried out in accordance with approved maintenance programmes. While the maintenance organisation (Option A) and mechanic (Option B) perform the physical work, the legal responsibility for ensuring maintenance compliance rests with the operator. Option D (owner) is not necessarily the operator -- for private aircraft the owner often acts as operator, but the regulatory responsibility is tied to the operator role specifically.
+
+### Q109: When two aircraft approach an aerodrome at the same time to land, which one has the right of way? ^t10q109
+- A) The one flying higher.
+- B) The faster one.
+- C) The smaller one.
+- D) The one flying lower.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two aircraft approach an aerodrome simultaneously to land, the aircraft flying lower has right of way because it is in a more advanced and committed phase of the approach. The higher aircraft must give way by extending its circuit or going around. Option A (flying higher) is the opposite of the correct rule. Option B (faster) and Option C (smaller) are not criteria used in ICAO right-of-way rules for landing priority. Speed and size are irrelevant to this determination.
+
+### Q110: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: vertically - horizontally ^t10q110
+- A) 8.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- B) 1.5 km - 50 m - 100 m
+- C) 5.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km - 100 m - 300 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL in Class E airspace, which is above 3000 ft AMSL and above 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option B describes values for very low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far too low for this altitude. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which is insufficient for Class E at this altitude. Option D has the correct visibility but incorrect cloud clearance values (100 m and 300 m are too small).
+
+### Q111: What is the function of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^t10q111
+- A) It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects
+- B) Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- C) It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft
+- D) It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal square (also called the signals area) is a designated area at an aerodrome where ground signals are displayed using symbols, panels, and markings to visually communicate aerodrome conditions to pilots flying overhead. This is particularly important for pilots who cannot receive radio communication. Option A (tow object area) describes a completely different facility. Option B is wrong because aircraft do not taxi to the signal square for light signals -- those come from the control tower. Option D describes an emergency vehicle staging area, not the signal square.
+
+### Q112: How are two parallel runways designated? ^t10q112
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+- B) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- C) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway "R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, when two parallel runways exist, they are distinguished by adding suffixes: "L" (Left) for the left runway and "R" (Right) for the right runway, as seen from a pilot on final approach. Both runways must receive a suffix to avoid ambiguity. Option A is wrong because the right runway also needs a suffix ("R"). Option B uses a non-standard method of incrementing the designator number. Option C uses dash-number notation that is not part of ICAO runway designation standards.
+
+### Q113: Which runway designators are correct for two parallel runways? ^t10q113
+- A) "24" and "25"
+- B) "18" and "18-2"
+- C) "26" and "26R"
+- D) "06L" and "06R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For two parallel runways, ICAO requires both to carry the L/R suffix with the same number, such as "06L" and "06R." This clearly identifies them as parallel runways on the same magnetic heading. Option A ("24" and "25") indicates two non-parallel runways on slightly different headings, not parallel runways. Option B ("18" and "18-2") uses non-standard dash notation. Option C ("26" and "26R") is incorrect because only one runway has a suffix -- both must have one (should be "26L" and "26R").
+
+### Q114: What does this sign at an aerodrome indicate? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t10q114
+- A) Landing prohibited for a longer period
+- B) After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right
+- C) Glider flying is in progress
+- D) Caution, manoeuvring area is poor
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ALW-011 figure shows the international ground signal for glider operations in progress at the aerodrome. This warns pilots overflying the aerodrome that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (landing prohibited for a longer period) uses a different signal (typically a red cross). Option B (right-hand turns) would be indicated by a different signal in the signals area. Option D (poor manoeuvring area) is also communicated through a different ground marking.
+
+### Q115: What does "DETRESFA" signify? ^t10q115
+- A) Rescue phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Distress phase
+- D) Uncertainty phase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the most serious of the three emergency phases defined in ICAO Annex 12 and Annex 11. It is declared when an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. Option B (alerting phase) corresponds to the codeword ALERFA. Option D (uncertainty phase) corresponds to INCERFA. Option A (rescue phase) is not a defined ICAO emergency phase designation.
+
+### Q116: Who provides the search and rescue service? ^t10q116
+- A) Only civil organisations
+- B) International approved organisations
+- C) Both military and civil organisations
+- D) Only military organisations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, Search and Rescue (SAR) services are provided by both military and civil organisations, depending on national arrangements. Many countries combine military assets (helicopters, aircraft, ships) with civil emergency services for effective SAR coverage. Option A is wrong because military organisations play a major role in SAR operations worldwide. Option B incorrectly requires international approval, which is not how SAR is organised. Option D is wrong because civil organisations are also involved in SAR.
+
+### Q117: In the context of aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories of aircraft occurrences? ^t10q117
+- A) Event Serious event Accident
+- B) Incident Serious incident Accident
+- C) Happening Event Serious event
+- D) Event Crash Disaster
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, aircraft occurrences are classified into three categories: incident (an occurrence that affects or could affect flight safety), serious incident (an incident where there was a high probability of an accident), and accident (an occurrence resulting in fatal/serious injury or substantial aircraft damage). Option A, Option C, and Option D all use non-standard terminology ("event," "happening," "crash," "disaster") not found in ICAO definitions.
+
+### Q118: While slope soaring with the hill on your left, another glider approaches from the opposite direction at the same altitude. What should you do? ^t10q118
+- A) Pull on the elevator and divert upward
+- B) Divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same
+- C) Divert to the right
+- D) Expect the opposite glider to divert
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When slope soaring and encountering an oncoming glider, the pilot with the hill on their left must give way by turning right (away from the hill). In this scenario, the hill is on your left, so the approaching glider has the hill on their right, giving them right-of-way. You must divert to the right. Option A (pull up) is impractical and dangerous in slope soaring conditions. Option B is partially correct in the action but wrong to expect the other glider to also turn -- they have right-of-way. Option D is wrong because you are the one who must give way.
+
+### Q119: When circling in a thermal with other gliders, who determines the direction of turn? ^t10q119
+- A) The glider at the highest altitude
+- B) The glider with the greatest bank angle
+- C) Circling is always to the left
+- D) The glider that entered the thermal first
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal already occupied by other gliders, the newly arriving pilot must circle in the same direction as the glider that first established the turn in that thermal. This convention ensures all gliders orbit in the same direction, preventing dangerous head-on conflicts within the thermal. Option A (highest glider) is wrong because altitude does not determine turn direction. Option B (greatest bank angle) is irrelevant to the rule. Option C is wrong because there is no fixed left-turn rule -- the first glider's choice establishes the direction.
+
+### Q120: Is it possible for a glider to enter airspace C? ^t10q120
+- A) No
+- B) Yes, but only with the transponder activated
+- C) With restrictions, in case of reduced air traffic
+- D) Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspace Class C is controlled airspace where ATC clearance is mandatory for all flights, including VFR and gliders. A glider may enter Class C airspace only after obtaining an explicit clearance from the responsible ATC unit. Option A is wrong because entry is possible with proper ATC clearance. Option B is wrong because while a transponder may be required, it alone is not sufficient -- ATC clearance is the fundamental requirement. Option C is wrong because there is no rule allowing entry based on traffic density without clearance.
+
+### Q121: What do longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions arranged symmetrically about the centreline of a runway indicate? ^t10q121
+- A) A ground roll could be started from this position
+- B) At this point the glide path of an ILS meets the runway
+- C) Do not touch down behind them
+- D) Do not touch down before them
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline are the threshold markings, indicating the beginning of the runway available for landing. Pilots must not touch down before these markings. Option A (ground roll start) confuses threshold markings with a different function. Option B (ILS glide path intersection) describes the touchdown zone, not the threshold. Option C (do not touch down behind) reverses the rule -- the restriction is about landing before them, not after.
+
+### Q122: How can a pilot in flight acknowledge a search and rescue signal on the ground? ^t10q122
+- A) Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times
+- B) Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times
+- C) Push the rudder in both directions multiple times
+- D) Rock the wings
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, a pilot acknowledges a ground SAR signal by rocking the wings (waggling the wings laterally). This is an internationally recognised visual signal visible from the ground. Option A (flap cycling) is not a standard SAR acknowledgement signal. Option B (parabolic flight path) is not a defined signal. Option C (rudder inputs) would produce yawing motions that are difficult to see from the ground.
+
+### Q123: An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a... ^t10q123
+- A) Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- B) Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- C) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground.
+- D) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a rotating beacon installed at or near an airport to help pilots locate the aerodrome from the air, particularly at night or in reduced visibility. Option A incorrectly places it at the beginning of final approach rather than at the aerodrome itself. Option B states it is a fixed beacon, but ABNs rotate to increase visibility. Option C states it is visible from the ground, but its purpose is to be seen by pilots from the air.
+
+### Q124: What is the primary objective of an aircraft accident investigation? ^t10q124
+- A) To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents
+- B) To determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences
+- C) To identify the causes and develop safety recommendations
+- D) To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, the sole objective of an aircraft accident investigation is to prevent future accidents by identifying causal and contributing factors and issuing safety recommendations. It is explicitly not a judicial or liability process. Option A (assisting prosecutors) is outside the investigation's mandate. Option B (determining guilt) contradicts the non-punitive nature of safety investigations. Option D (establishing liability for compensation) is a civil legal matter handled separately.
+
+### Q125: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q125
+- A) 6 months
+- B) 12 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) issued under ICAO Annex 8 and EASA regulations has unlimited validity, provided the aircraft is maintained in accordance with approved programmes and the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC) is kept current. The CofA itself has no fixed expiry date. Option A (6 months) and Option B (12 months) may confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period.
+
+### Q126: What does the abbreviation ARC stand for? ^t10q126
+- A) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- B) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, the document issued following a successful airworthiness review confirming that an aircraft meets applicable airworthiness requirements. It is valid for one year and must be renewed for continued operation. Option A (Airspace Rulemaking Committee), Option B (Airspace Restriction Criteria), and Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) are not recognised EASA or ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q127: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q127
+- A) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- B) Of the residence of the owner.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under the Chicago Convention (ICAO Annex 7) and EASA regulations, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the State of Registry -- the country in which the aircraft is registered. Option A (country of construction) is the state of manufacture, not necessarily the registry. Option B (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance. Option D (where the review is done) may differ from the state of registry, as reviews can be performed abroad.
+
+### Q128: What does the abbreviation SERA stand for? ^t10q128
+- A) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Specialized Radar Approach
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, the EU regulation (Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012) that harmonises rules of the air across EASA member states. It covers right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, signals, and related procedures. Option A (routes), Option C (radar approach), and Option D (radar altimeter) are invented terms not used in aviation regulation.
+
+### Q129: What does the abbreviation TRA stand for? ^t10q129
+- A) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- B) Terminal Area
+- C) Transponder Area
+- D) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace, an airspace of defined dimensions temporarily reserved for specific uses such as military exercises or parachute operations. Other aircraft may not enter without permission during activation. Option A (Temporary Radar Routing Area), Option B (Terminal Area), and Option C (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q130: What does an area marked as TMZ signify? ^t10q130
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone, an airspace designation requiring all aircraft to be equipped with and operate a functioning transponder when flying within the zone. This enables radar identification and collision avoidance systems to track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Transportation Management Zone), and Option C (Touring Motorglider Zone) are not recognised aviation terms.
+
+### Q131: A flight is categorised as a visual flight when the... ^t10q131
+- A) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- C) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- D) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined as a flight conducted in accordance with Visual Flight Rules as specified in ICAO Annex 2 and SERA. The classification is regulatory, not meteorological. Option A (8 km visibility) and Option D (5 km visibility) cite specific VMC minimums but do not define VFR flight. Option B (flight in VMC) describes the weather conditions required for VFR but is not itself the definition -- a flight in VMC could still be conducted under IFR.
+
+### Q132: What does the abbreviation VMC stand for? ^t10q132
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Variable meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the minimum visibility and cloud clearance values that must be met for VFR flight to be conducted. VMC minima vary by airspace class and altitude. Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, a different abbreviation. Option C (Instrument Flight Conditions) effectively describes IMC. Option D (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a recognised aviation term.
+
+### Q133: In airspace E, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q133
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace below FL100, VFR flights require a minimum visibility of 5000 m (5 km) per SERA.5001. FL75 is below FL100, so the 5 km rule applies. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum at this altitude. Option B (8000 m) applies at and above FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q134: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q134
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In controlled airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km) per SERA. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km minimum applies. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option C (3000 m) is not a standard SERA minimum at this altitude.
+
+### Q135: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q135
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL125 is well above FL100, confirming the 8 km minimum applies. Option A (1500 m) applies to low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option B (3000 m) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum. Option C (5000 m) applies below FL100 in controlled airspace.
+
+### Q136: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace B? ^t10q136
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace Class B, the cloud separation minima for VFR flights are 1500 m horizontally and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertically from cloud. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance (insufficient). Option B also uses only 1000 m horizontal. Option C uses 1000 m vertical, which is far too large -- the correct vertical minimum is 300 m.
+
+### Q137: In airspace C below FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q137
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C below FL100, the SERA-prescribed minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5000 m). Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100 in Class C. Option D (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace or special VFR situations.
+
+### Q138: In airspace C at and above FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q138
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 1.5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility required by SERA is 8 km (8000 m). This higher minimum reflects the faster closing speeds at higher altitudes. Option A (5 km) is the below-FL100 Class C minimum. Option B (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum.
+
+### Q139: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q139
+- A) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ceiling is the height (referenced to the surface, not MSL) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud or obscuring phenomena covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, more than 4 oktas) below 20,000 ft. Option A uses "altitude" (MSL reference) instead of "height" (surface reference). Option C refers to the "highest" rather than "lowest" cloud layer. Option D limits the threshold to 10,000 ft instead of the correct 20,000 ft.
+
+### Q140: Regarding separation in airspace E, which statement is accurate? ^t10q140
+- A) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- C) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class E, ATC provides separation only between IFR flights. VFR flights receive no separation service whatsoever -- neither from IFR traffic nor from other VFR traffic. VFR pilots rely entirely on see-and-avoid. Option A incorrectly states VFR receives separation from IFR. Option C reverses the actual separation provision. Option D incorrectly claims full separation for VFR traffic.
+
+### Q141: What kind of information is contained in the AD section of the AIP? ^t10q141
+- A) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- C) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains information about individual aerodromes: their classification, aerodrome charts, approach charts, taxi charts, runway data, and operating information. Option A describes GEN content (map symbols, nav aids, fees). Option C describes ENR content (airspace warnings, routes, restricted areas). Option D contains a mix of items from different sections that do not correspond to the AD section.
+
+### Q142: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q142
+- A) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- B) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- C) The highest point of the apron.
+- D) The highest point of the landing area.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This is the critical reference point for QFE calculations and obstacle clearance. Option A (lowest point) would understate the elevation relevant to safe operations. Option B (average of manoeuvring area) does not reflect the critical highest-point definition. Option C (highest point of the apron) refers to the wrong area -- the apron is used for parking, not landing.
+
+### Q143: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q143
+- A) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- B) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. Option A specifies helicopters only (helicopter landing areas are called helipads or FATO). Option B includes water aerodromes, but runways are specific to land aerodromes. Option C describes a round shape, which is incorrect -- runways are rectangular by definition.
+
+### Q144: What does DETRESFA mean? ^t10q144
+- A) Uncertainty phase
+- B) Rescue phase
+- C) Alerting phase
+- D) Distress phase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the highest of three emergency phases indicating an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. The three ICAO emergency phases are: INCERFA (uncertainty), ALERFA (alerting), and DETRESFA (distress). Option A is INCERFA. Option B ("rescue phase") is not a defined ICAO emergency phase. Option C is ALERFA.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_1_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_1_50.md
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+### Q1: An SPL or LAPL(S) licence holder has logged 9 winch launches, 4 aero-tow launches and 2 bungee launches over the past 24 months. Which launch methods is the pilot permitted to use as PIC today? ^t10q1
+- A) Aero-tow and bungee.
+- B) Winch and aero-tow.
+- C) Winch and bungee.
+- D) Winch, bungee and aero-tow.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-SFCL, a pilot must have completed at least 5 launches using a given method within the preceding 24 months to act as PIC with that method. Here the pilot has 9 winch launches (meets the threshold) and 2 bungee launches (also meets the threshold, as the minimum for bungee is lower). However, with only 4 aero-tow launches the pilot falls short of the required 5, so aero-tow is not permitted. Option A is wrong because it includes aero-tow. Option B is wrong because it also includes aero-tow. Option D includes all three methods, but aero-tow is not qualified. Only Option C correctly lists winch and bungee.
+
+### Q2: Which documents are required to be carried on board during an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^t10q2
+- A) A, b, c, e, f
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 6 and EU Regulation 965/2012, international flights require the Certificate of Airworthiness (b), Airworthiness Review Certificate (c), EASA Form-1 release document (d), the journey log (e), crew licences and medical certificates (f), and the technical logbook (g). Option A omits Form-1 and the technical logbook. Option B is far too limited. Option D omits critical documents like the ARC and crew papers. Option C provides the complete standard EASA enumeration for international flight.
+
+### Q3: Which type of area may be entered subject to certain conditions? ^t10q3
+- A) Dangerous area
+- B) No-fly zone
+- C) Prohibited area
+- D) Restricted area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A restricted area (designated "R" on charts) may be entered subject to conditions published in the AIP, such as obtaining prior clearance from the responsible authority. Option A (dangerous area, designated "D") contains hazards but has no legal entry restriction -- pilots may enter at their own risk. Option B (no-fly zone) is not a standard ICAO classification. Option C (prohibited area, designated "P") forbids all flight unconditionally. Only Option D correctly describes airspace that permits conditional entry.
+
+### Q4: In which publication can the specific restrictions for a restricted airspace be found? ^t10q4
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIP
+- C) AIC
+- D) ICAO chart 1:500000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) is the primary authoritative document containing permanent information about airspace structure, including the detailed conditions, activation times, and authority contacts for restricted areas in the ENR section. Option A (NOTAMs) may announce temporary changes but do not define the base restrictions. Option C (AICs) contain advisory or administrative information, not regulatory airspace definitions. Option D (ICAO charts) show boundaries graphically but do not detail the specific restrictions and conditions for entry.
+
+### Q5: What legal status do the rules and procedures established by EASA have? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5
+- A) They hold the same status as ICAO Annexes
+- B) They are not legally binding and serve only as guidance
+- C) They are part of EU regulation and legally binding across all EU member states
+- D) They become legally binding only after ratification by individual EU member states
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL and Part-MED are published as EU Implementing or Delegated Regulations under the Basic Regulation (EU) 2018/1139. EU Regulations are directly applicable law in all member states without requiring national ratification, making them immediately binding. Option A is wrong because ICAO Annexes are standards and recommended practices requiring national adoption, not equivalent to EU law. Option B is incorrect because EASA rules are fully legally binding. Option D is wrong because EU Regulations do not require individual state ratification.
+
+### Q6: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q6
+- A) 12 months
+- B) 6 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) has unlimited validity -- once issued, it remains valid as long as the aircraft meets its type design standards and is properly maintained. What requires periodic renewal (typically annually) is the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which confirms continuing airworthiness has been verified. Option A (12 months) and Option B (6 months) confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period for any certificate.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "ARC" stand for? ^t10q7
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, as defined in EU Regulation 1321/2014 (Part-M). It is issued after a periodic airworthiness review confirms the aircraft's continuing airworthiness documentation and condition are in order. Option A (Airspace Restriction Criteria), Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control), and Option D (Airspace Rulemaking Committee) are fabricated terms not used in EASA or ICAO aviation law.
+
+### Q8: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q8
+- A) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- B) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) Of the residence of the owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 8 and Annex 7, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state of registry -- the country where the aircraft is registered. That state bears responsibility for ensuring the aircraft meets applicable airworthiness standards. Option A (where the review is done) is incorrect because reviews may occur abroad. Option B (where constructed) is irrelevant since manufacturing state differs from registry state. Option D (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance.
+
+### Q9: A pilot licence issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is recognised in... ^t10q9
+- A) The country where the licence was issued.
+- B) Those countries that have individually accepted this licence upon application.
+- C) All ICAO contracting states.
+- D) The country where the licence was acquired.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 (Personnel Licensing) establishes international standards for pilot licences. A licence issued in full compliance with Annex 1 standards is recognised across all 193 ICAO Contracting States, enabling international aviation operations without individual country-by-country acceptance. Option A and Option D are essentially the same idea and too restrictive. Option B incorrectly implies case-by-case acceptance is needed. The universal mutual recognition of Annex 1 licences is a cornerstone of international civil aviation.
+
+### Q10: Which topic does ICAO Annex 1 address? ^t10q10
+- A) Rules of the air
+- B) Operation of aircraft
+- C) Air traffic services
+- D) Flight crew licensing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 covers Personnel Licensing, which includes standards for flight crew licences (PPL, CPL, ATPL), ratings, medical certificates, and instructor qualifications. Option A (Rules of the Air) is Annex 2. Option B (Operation of Aircraft) is Annex 6. Option C (Air Traffic Services) is Annex 11. Knowing the ICAO Annexes by number and subject is a standard Air Law exam requirement.
+
+### Q11: For a pilot aged 62, how long is a Class 2 medical certificate valid? ^t10q11
+- A) 60 Months.
+- B) 24 Months.
+- C) 12 Months.
+- D) 48 Months.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-MED (Commission Regulation (EU) 1178/2011), the validity of a Class 2 medical certificate depends on the pilot's age. For pilots aged 50 and over, validity is reduced to 12 months. At age 62, the 12-month rule clearly applies. Option A (60 months) applies to younger pilots under 40 in some categories. Option B (24 months) applies to pilots aged 40-49. Option D (48 months) is not a standard medical validity period.
+
+### Q12: What does the abbreviation "SERA" stand for? ^t10q12
+- A) Specialized Radar Approach
+- B) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- C) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises the rules of the air across all EU member states, implementing ICAO Annex 2 provisions at European level and adding EU-specific rules covering right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, and signals. Option A, Option B, and Option D are invented abbreviations not used in aviation regulation.
+
+### Q13: What does the abbreviation "TRA" stand for? ^t10q13
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- C) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- D) Transponder Area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace -- airspace of defined dimensions reserved for a specific activity (military exercises, aerobatic displays, parachuting) during a published period. TRAs are activated via NOTAM and differ from TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) in that they may permit shared use under certain conditions. Option A (Terminal Area), Option B (Temporary Radar Routing Area), and Option D (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations.
+
+### Q14: What must be taken into account when entering an RMZ? ^t10q14
+- A) The transponder must be switched on Mode C with squawk 7000
+- B) A clearance from the local aviation authority must be obtained
+- C) Continuous radio monitoring is required, and radio contact should be established if possible
+- D) A clearance to enter the area must be obtained
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) requires all aircraft to carry and operate a functioning radio, to monitor the designated frequency continuously, and to establish two-way radio contact before entry if possible. Option A describes a TMZ requirement (transponder), not an RMZ. Option B and Option D imply formal ATC clearance is needed, which is a CTR requirement, not an RMZ. The RMZ is defined in SERA.6005 and national AIP supplements.
+
+### Q15: What does an area designated as "TMZ" signify? ^t10q15
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- C) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- D) Transportation Management Zone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone -- airspace within which all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a pressure-altitude reporting transponder (Mode C or Mode S). This allows ATC radar and collision avoidance systems to identify and track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Touring Motorglider Zone), and Option D (Transportation Management Zone) are not recognised aviation terms.
+
+### Q16: A flight is classified as a "visual flight" when the... ^t10q16
+- A) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- B) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- C) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined by the rules under which it is conducted -- Visual Flight Rules (VFR) -- not by the prevailing weather. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) describes the weather minima required for VFR, but a flight conducted in VMC could still be flown under IFR. Option A confuses the rule set with weather conditions. Options B and C cite specific visibility values that are VMC minima for particular airspace classes, not the definition of a VFR flight.
+
+### Q17: What does the abbreviation "VMC" stand for? ^t10q17
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Instrument flight conditions
+- C) Variable meteorological conditions
+- D) Visual meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the specific minima of visibility and cloud clearance defined in SERA.5001 that must be met for VFR flight. If conditions fall below VMC, the airspace is in IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions). Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, not VMC. Option B (Instrument Flight Conditions) is essentially IMC terminology. Option C (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a standard aviation term. VMC and VFR are related but distinct concepts.
+
+### Q18: Two powered aircraft are converging on crossing courses at identical altitude. Which aircraft must give way? ^t10q18
+- A) The lighter aircraft must climb
+- B) Both must turn to the right
+- C) Both must turn to the left
+- D) The heavier aircraft must climb
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, when two aircraft are on converging courses at approximately the same altitude, each shall alter heading to the right. This ensures both aircraft pass behind each other, avoiding collision. Option A and Option D incorrectly introduce weight as a factor, which is irrelevant to crossing right-of-way rules. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge. The "turn right" rule is a fundamental ICAO collision avoidance principle.
+
+### Q19: Two aeroplanes are on crossing tracks. Which one must yield? ^t10q19
+- A) Both must turn to the left
+- B) The aircraft approaching from the right has the right of priority
+- C) Both must turn to the right
+- D) The aircraft approaching from right to left has the right of priority
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under SERA.3210(b), when two aircraft converge at approximately the same altitude, the aircraft that has the other on its right must give way. In other words, the aircraft approaching from the right (flying from right to left relative to the other pilot's perspective) has right-of-way. Option A is incorrect as turning left increases collision risk. Option B states the principle backwards. Option C describes the evasive action for head-on encounters, not the right-of-way principle for crossing traffic.
+
+### Q20: What cloud separation must be maintained during a VFR flight in airspace classes C, D and E? ^t10q20
+- A) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically
+- B) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically
+- C) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically
+- D) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, VFR flights in airspace classes C, D, and E must maintain 1500 m horizontal distance from cloud and 1000 ft (approximately 300 m) vertical distance from cloud. The key detail is that horizontal is expressed in metres and vertical in feet -- mixing these units is a common exam trap. Option A uses 1000 m horizontal (too small). Option B uses 1000 m vertical (incorrect unit and value). Option D reverses the horizontal/vertical values.
+
+### Q21: In airspace "E", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q21
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class E above 3000 ft AMSL but below FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5000 m (5 km). FL75 (approximately 7500 ft) falls within this altitude band. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum. Option C (1500 m) applies only in uncontrolled airspace at low altitude. Option D (8000 m) applies at and above FL100, not below it.
+
+### Q22: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q22
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace (including class C), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km rule applies. Option A (5000 m) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (3000 m) does not correspond to any standard SERA VFR minimum in controlled airspace.
+
+### Q23: In airspace "C", what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q23
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL125 is above FL100, so the SERA.5001 rule for high-altitude VFR applies: minimum flight visibility is 8000 m in all controlled airspace including class C. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (3000 m) and Option C (1500 m) apply only in lower uncontrolled airspace. The progression to remember is: low-altitude uncontrolled = 1.5 km, controlled below FL100 = 5 km, at or above FL100 = 8 km.
+
+### Q24: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace "B"? ^t10q24
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Where VFR is permitted in class B airspace, the cloud clearance minima per SERA.5001 are 1500 m horizontal and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertical. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance, which is insufficient. Option B states 1000 m vertical, which is far too large and uses the wrong value. Option C uses only 1000 m horizontal and the correct vertical, but the horizontal is insufficient. Only Option D provides both correct values.
+
+### Q25: In airspace "C" below FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q25
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class C below FL100 (above 3000 ft AMSL or 1000 ft AGL), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km. Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option C (8 km) applies only at and above FL100. Option D (1.5 km) applies in uncontrolled airspace at low altitudes. Glider pilots crossing class C airspace below FL100 must verify at least 5 km visibility.
+
+### Q26: In airspace "C" at and above FL 100, what minimum flight visibility applies to VFR operations? ^t10q26
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace including class C, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8 km. This higher threshold reflects the greater closing speeds and reduced reaction time at higher altitudes. Option A (5 km) is the minimum below FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VMC minimum. Option D (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q27: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q27
+- A) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ceiling is defined as the height (above ground level) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, more than 4 oktas) below 20,000 ft. Option B uses "altitude" (referenced to MSL) instead of "height" (referenced to the surface). Option C refers to the "highest" cloud layer when it should be the "lowest." Option D incorrectly limits the threshold to 10,000 ft instead of 20,000 ft.
+
+### Q28: During daytime interception by a military aircraft, what does the following signal mean: a sudden 90-degree or greater heading change and a climb without crossing the intercepted aircraft's flight path? ^t10q28
+- A) You are entering a restricted area; leave the airspace immediately
+- B) You may continue your flight
+- C) Follow me; I will guide you to the nearest suitable airfield
+- D) Prepare for a safety landing; you have entered a prohibited area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2, Appendix 1, when an intercepting aircraft makes an abrupt break-away manoeuvre of 90 degrees or more and climbs away without crossing the intercepted aircraft's track, this is the standard "release" signal meaning "You may proceed." The intercept is complete and the pilot may continue on their route. Option A and Option D imply airspace violation warnings that use different signals. Option C ("follow me") involves the interceptor rocking wings and maintaining a steady heading toward the destination aerodrome.
+
+### Q29: When flying at FL 80, what altimeter setting must be used? ^t10q29
+- A) 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) Local QNH.
+- C) 1030.25 hPa.
+- D) Local QFE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are defined relative to the International Standard Atmosphere pressure datum of 1013.25 hPa. When flying at or above the transition altitude, pilots must set 1013.25 hPa on the altimeter subscale and reference altitude as a flight level. Option B (QNH) gives altitude above mean sea level and is used below the transition altitude. Option C (1030.25 hPa) is not a standard reference pressure. Option D (QFE) gives height above a specific aerodrome and is never used for flight levels.
+
+### Q30: What is the objective of the semi-circular rule? ^t10q30
+- A) To permit flying without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP
+- B) To enable safe climbing or descending within a holding pattern
+- C) To reduce the risk of collisions by decreasing the likelihood of opposing traffic at the same altitude
+- D) To prevent collisions by prohibiting turning manoeuvres
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The semi-circular (hemispherical) cruising level rule (SERA.5015) assigns different altitude bands to different magnetic tracks -- eastbound flights use odd thousands of feet, westbound use even thousands. By vertically separating aircraft flying in opposite directions, the probability of head-on collision at the same altitude is greatly reduced. Option A is unrelated to cruising levels. Option B describes holding pattern procedures. Option D is incorrect because the rule concerns altitude assignment, not manoeuvre restrictions.
+
+### Q31: A transponder capable of transmitting the current pressure altitude is a... ^t10q31
+- A) Transponder approved for airspace "B".
+- B) Mode A transponder.
+- C) Pressure-decoder.
+- D) Mode C or S transponder.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A transponder that transmits pressure altitude information is either a Mode C or Mode S transponder. Mode C adds automatic pressure altitude reporting to the basic Mode A identity code, while Mode S provides all Mode C capabilities plus selective interrogation and data link features. Option A is incorrect because "approved for airspace B" is not a transponder classification. Option B is wrong because Mode A only transmits a 4-digit squawk code without altitude data. Option C is wrong because "pressure-decoder" is not an aviation term.
+
+### Q32: Which transponder code signals a loss of radio communication? ^t10q32
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 2000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally recognised squawk for radio communication failure. Pilots must memorise the three emergency codes: 7700 for general emergency, 7600 for radio failure, and 7500 for unlawful interference (hijacking). Option A (7700) is for emergencies, not specifically communication loss. Option B (7000) is the standard European VFR conspicuity code. Option D (2000) is used when entering controlled airspace without an assigned code.
+
+### Q33: In the event of a radio failure, which transponder code should be selected without any ATC request? ^t10q33
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a pilot experiences radio communication failure, they must immediately squawk 7600 without waiting for any ATC instruction, since by definition communication is no longer possible. This proactive action alerts ATC to the situation and triggers loss-of-communications procedures. Option A (7000) is the general VFR code and does not communicate an emergency. Option B (7500) signals unlawful interference, which is a completely different situation. Option C (7700) is for general emergencies, not specifically radio failure.
+
+### Q34: Which transponder code should be set automatically during an emergency without waiting for instructions? ^t10q34
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In any general emergency (engine failure, fire, medical emergency, structural damage), the pilot must immediately set transponder code 7700 without waiting for ATC instruction. This triggers an alarm on ATC radar displays and activates emergency response procedures. Option A (7600) is specifically for radio communication failure, not general emergencies. Option B (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code. Option C (7500) is reserved exclusively for unlawful interference (hijacking) and should never be set for other emergencies.
+
+### Q35: Which air traffic service bears responsibility for the safe conduct of flights? ^t10q35
+- A) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- C) ATC (air traffic control)
+- D) ALR (alerting service)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air Traffic Control (ATC) is the service specifically responsible for providing separation between aircraft and ensuring the safe, orderly, and expeditious flow of air traffic in controlled airspace. Per ICAO Annex 11, ATC actively manages aircraft movements to prevent collisions. Option A (FIS) provides useful information but does not direct or separate aircraft. Option B (AIS) publishes aeronautical information documents but has no operational control role. Option D (ALR) initiates search and rescue when aircraft are overdue or in distress, but does not manage ongoing flight safety.
+
+### Q36: Which services make up the air traffic control service? ^t10q36
+- A) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)
+- C) FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)
+- D) ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 11, the three constituent units of ATC are: TWR (Aerodrome Control, handling traffic at and around the aerodrome), APP (Approach Control, managing arriving and departing traffic in the terminal area), and ACC (Area Control Centre, handling en-route traffic). Option A incorrectly includes FIS, which is an information service separate from ATC. Option C lists information and communication services, none of which are ATC units. Option D mixes emergency services (ALR, SAR) with only one ATC unit (TWR).
+
+### Q37: Regarding separation in airspace "E", which statement is correct? ^t10q37
+- A) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace, ATC separates IFR flights from other IFR flights, but VFR traffic receives no ATC separation service whatsoever -- neither from other VFR traffic nor from IFR traffic. VFR pilots in Class E must rely entirely on the see-and-avoid principle, with traffic information provided where possible. Option A incorrectly states IFR is separated only from VFR (it is separated from other IFR). Option B and Option D wrongly imply VFR traffic receives some form of separation.
+
+### Q38: Which air traffic services are available within an FIR (flight information region)? ^t10q38
+- A) ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)
+- C) FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)
+- D) ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) provides two universal services throughout its entire volume: FIS (Flight Information Service), which provides weather, NOTAM, and traffic information to pilots, and ALR (Alerting Service), which notifies rescue services when aircraft are in distress or overdue. ATC is not provided throughout the entire FIR -- it exists only within designated controlled airspace (CTAs, CTRs, airways) that may lie within the FIR. Options A, B, and D either include ATC incorrectly or omit the correct pairing.
+
+### Q39: How can a pilot reach FIS (flight information service) during flight? ^t10q39
+- A) Via telephone.
+- B) By a personal visit.
+- C) Via radio communication.
+- D) Via internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS is an operational service provided to airborne pilots, and the primary means of contacting it during flight is via radio communication on the designated FIS frequency. While pre-flight information may be obtained by telephone or online, the in-flight FIS service itself is radio-based. Option A (telephone) and Option D (internet) are ground-based contact methods impractical for real-time in-flight communication. Option B (personal visit) is obviously impossible while airborne.
+
+### Q40: What is the standard phraseology to warn that a light aircraft is following a heavier wake turbulence category aircraft? ^t10q40
+- A) Attention propwash
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Caution wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO phraseology for wake turbulence warnings is "CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE," as prescribed in ICAO Doc 4444 (PANS-ATM). Standardised phraseology is mandatory in aviation to eliminate ambiguity. Option A ("attention propwash"), Option B ("be careful wake winds"), and Option C ("danger jet blast") are all non-standard phrases not found in ICAO-approved phraseology. Using non-standard terms could cause confusion and is prohibited in EASA airspace.
+
+### Q41: Which of the following represents a correct position report? ^t10q41
+- A) DEABC over "N" at 35
+- B) DEABC reaching "N"
+- C) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A standard position report per ICAO Doc 4444 must include: aircraft callsign, position (fix or waypoint), and altitude or flight level. Option C (DEABC, "N", 2500 ft) provides all three elements correctly and concisely. Option A lacks a clear altitude reference ("at 35" is ambiguous). Option B is incomplete because it omits altitude entirely. Option D uses the nonsensical expression "FL 2500 ft" -- flight levels and feet are never combined this way; it should be either "FL 25" or "2500 ft."
+
+### Q42: What kind of information is contained in the general part (GEN) of the AIP? ^t10q42
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- C) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP is structured in three parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The GEN section contains general administrative information including map symbols/icons, radio navigation aid listings, sunrise/sunset tables, national regulations, airport fees, and ATC fees. Option A describes content found in the ENR section (airspace, routes, restrictions). Option B describes AD section content (aerodrome charts, approach charts). Option C mixes items that do not correspond to any single AIP section.
+
+### Q43: Into which parts is the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) divided? ^t10q43
+- A) GEN ENR AD
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 15, the AIP is divided into three standardised parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). This structure is universal across all ICAO member states. Option B (AGA, COM), Option C (COM, MET), and Option D (MET, RAC) use abbreviations from older ICAO documentation structures that are no longer part of the modern AIP organisation. Only Option A reflects the current ICAO-standard AIP structure.
+
+### Q44: What kind of information is found in the "AD" section of the AIP? ^t10q44
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains all aerodrome-specific information: aerodrome classification, runway data, approach and departure charts, taxi charts, lighting, frequencies, operating hours, and obstacle data. Option A describes ENR (En-Route) content covering airspace and restrictions. Option B describes GEN (General) content such as symbols and fees. Option D mixes regulatory and administrative items that do not correspond to the AD section.
+
+### Q45: The NOTAM shown is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^t10q45
+- A) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- B) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM time codes use the format YYMMDDHHMM in UTC. The "C)" field in a NOTAM specifies the end of validity. The code 1305211400 decodes as: year 2013 (13), month May (05), day 21, time 14:00 UTC -- giving 21 May 2013 at 14:00 UTC. Option B misreads the date format, interpreting the month as the date. Option C incorrectly reads the year as 2014. Option D completely misinterprets the encoding. Correct NOTAM decoding is a fundamental Air Law skill for all pilots.
+
+### Q46: A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a compilation of current... ^t10q46
+- A) AIP information of operational significance assembled prior to flight.
+- B) AIC information of operational significance assembled after the flight.
+- C) ICAO information of operational significance assembled after the flight.
+- D) NOTAM information of operational significance assembled prior to flight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) is a standardised summary of current NOTAMs relevant to a planned flight, compiled and issued before departure. It filters pertinent NOTAMs for the route, departure, destination, and alternate aerodromes. Option A is wrong because a PIB is based on NOTAM data, not AIP data. Option B is wrong on two counts: it references AICs (not NOTAMs) and says "after the flight" (it is a pre-flight tool). Option C similarly misidentifies the source and timing.
+
+### Q47: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q47
+- A) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- B) The highest point of the landing area.
+- C) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- D) The highest point of the apron.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is defined as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This ensures the published value represents the most demanding terrain height aircraft must account for during approach and departure. Option A (average of the manoeuvring area) would understate the critical elevation. Option C (lowest point) is the opposite of the correct definition. Option D (highest point of the apron) is incorrect because the apron is not the landing area.
+
+### Q48: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q48
+- A) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- B) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. The three key elements are: rectangular shape, land aerodrome, and aircraft in general. Option A is wrong because runways are specific to land aerodromes (water aerodromes have alighting areas, not runways). Option B is wrong because the shape is rectangular, not round. Option D is wrong because runways serve aircraft generally, not helicopters specifically (helicopters use helipads or FATO areas).
+
+### Q49: How can a wind direction indicator be made more visible? ^t10q49
+- A) By mounting it on top of the control tower.
+- B) By surrounding it with a white circle.
+- C) By placing it on a large black surface.
+- D) By constructing it from green materials.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a wind direction indicator (windsock or wind tee) should be surrounded by a white circle to enhance its visibility from the air. The high-contrast white surround makes the indicator easier to identify against the aerodrome background. Option A (mounting on the control tower) is not a standard ICAO visibility-enhancement method and could interfere with tower operations. Option C (black surface) is not specified in ICAO standards. Option D (green materials) would actually reduce visibility against grass surfaces.
+
+### Q50: What shape does a landing direction indicator have? ^t10q50
+- A) An angled arrow
+- B) L
+- C) T
+- D) A straight arrow
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, the landing direction indicator is T-shaped (commonly called a "landing T" or "signal T"). Aircraft land toward the cross-bar of the T and take off away from it, making the landing direction immediately clear. Option A (angled arrow) and Option D (straight arrow) are not the standard ICAO shape for this indicator. Option B (L-shape) is used for a different purpose -- indicating a right-hand traffic circuit, not the landing direction.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_1_50_de.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_1_50_de.md
new file mode 100644
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+### Q1: Ein Inhaber einer SPL- oder LAPL(S)-Lizenz hat in den letzten 24 Monaten 9 Windenstarts, 4 Flugzeugschleppstarts und 2 Gummiseilstarts absolviert. Welche Startarten darf der Pilot heute als PIC anwenden? ^t10q1
+- A) Flugzeugschlepp und Gummiseil.
+- B) Winde und Flugzeugschlepp.
+- C) Winde und Gummiseil.
+- D) Winde, Gummiseil und Flugzeugschlepp.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß Part-SFCL muss ein Pilot mindestens 5 Starts mit einer bestimmten Methode innerhalb der letzten 24 Monate durchgeführt haben, um als PIC mit dieser Methode zu fliegen. Hier hat der Pilot 9 Windenstarts (Schwelle erreicht) und 2 Gummiseilstarts (Schwelle ebenfalls erreicht, da das Minimum für Gummiseil niedriger ist). Mit nur 4 Flugzeugschleppstarts erreicht der Pilot jedoch nicht die erforderlichen 5, sodass der Flugzeugschlepp nicht gestattet ist. Option A ist falsch, weil sie den Flugzeugschlepp einschließt. Option B ist falsch, weil sie ebenfalls den Flugzeugschlepp einschließt. Option D umfasst alle drei Methoden, aber der Flugzeugschlepp ist nicht qualifiziert. Nur Option C listet korrekt Winde und Gummiseil auf.
+
+### Q2: Welche Dokumente müssen bei einem internationalen Flug an Bord mitgeführt werden? a) Luftfahrzeug-Eintragungsschein b) Lufttüchtigkeitszeugnis c) Lufttüchtigkeitsprüfzeugnis d) EASA Form-1 e) Bordbuch f) Entsprechende Papiere für jedes Besatzungsmitglied g) Technisches Bordbuch ^t10q2
+- A) A, b, c, e, f
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 6 und EU-Verordnung 965/2012 erfordern internationale Flüge das Lufttüchtigkeitszeugnis (b), das Lufttüchtigkeitsprüfzeugnis (c), das EASA Form-1 Freigabedokument (d), das Bordbuch (e), Lizenzen und Tauglichkeitszeugnisse der Besatzung (f) und das technische Bordbuch (g). Option A lässt das Form-1 und das technische Bordbuch aus. Option B ist viel zu begrenzt. Option D lässt wichtige Dokumente wie das ARC und die Besatzungspapiere aus. Option C liefert die vollständige EASA-Standardaufzählung für internationale Flüge.
+
+### Q3: Welche Art von Gebiet darf unter bestimmten Bedingungen betreten werden? ^t10q3
+- A) Gefahrengebiet
+- B) Flugverbotszone
+- C) Gesperrtes Gebiet
+- D) Beschränktes Gebiet
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein beschränktes Gebiet (auf Karten mit „R" gekennzeichnet) darf unter den im AIP veröffentlichten Bedingungen betreten werden, wie z.B. nach vorheriger Genehmigung der zuständigen Behörde. Option A (Gefahrengebiet, mit „D" gekennzeichnet) enthält Gefahren, aber es besteht keine gesetzliche Einflugbeschränkung — Piloten können auf eigenes Risiko einflogen. Option B (Flugverbotszone) ist keine Standard-ICAO-Klassifizierung. Option C (gesperrtes Gebiet, mit „P" gekennzeichnet) verbietet jeden Flug bedingungslos. Nur Option D beschreibt korrekt einen Luftraum, der einen bedingten Einflug ermöglicht.
+
+### Q4: In welcher Veröffentlichung können die spezifischen Beschränkungen für einen beschränkten Luftraum gefunden werden? ^t10q4
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIP
+- C) AIC
+- D) ICAO-Karte 1:500000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Luftfahrthandbuch (AIP) ist das primäre maßgebliche Dokument mit permanenten Informationen über die Luftraumstruktur, einschließlich der detaillierten Bedingungen, Aktivierungszeiten und Behördenkontakte für beschränkte Gebiete im ENR-Abschnitt. Option A (NOTAMs) kann temporäre Änderungen ankündigen, definiert aber nicht die Grundbeschränkungen. Option C (AICs) enthält beratende oder verwaltungstechnische Informationen, keine regulatorischen Luftraumdefinitionen. Option D (ICAO-Karten) zeigt Grenzen grafisch, erläutert aber nicht die spezifischen Beschränkungen und Bedingungen für den Einflug.
+
+### Q5: Welchen Rechtsstatus haben die von der EASA festgelegten Regeln und Verfahren? (z.B. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5
+- A) Sie haben denselben Status wie ICAO-Anhänge
+- B) Sie sind rechtlich nicht bindend und dienen nur als Leitfaden
+- C) Sie sind Teil der EU-Verordnung und in allen EU-Mitgliedstaaten rechtlich bindend
+- D) Sie werden erst nach Ratifizierung durch die einzelnen EU-Mitgliedstaaten rechtlich bindend
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** EASA-Verordnungen wie Part-SFCL und Part-MED werden als EU-Durchführungs- oder Delegierte Verordnungen unter der Basisverordnung (EU) 2018/1139 veröffentlicht. EU-Verordnungen sind unmittelbar geltendes Recht in allen Mitgliedstaaten ohne nationale Ratifizierung, was sie sofort bindend macht. Option A ist falsch, weil ICAO-Anhänge Standards und empfohlene Verfahren sind, die eine nationale Umsetzung erfordern, und nicht dem EU-Recht gleichwertig. Option B ist falsch, weil EASA-Regeln vollständig rechtlich bindend sind. Option D ist falsch, weil EU-Verordnungen keine individuelle staatliche Ratifizierung erfordern.
+
+### Q6: Wie lang ist die Gültigkeitsdauer des Lufttüchtigkeitszeugnisses? ^t10q6
+- A) 12 Monate
+- B) 6 Monate
+- C) 12 Jahre
+- D) Unbegrenzt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Lufttüchtigkeitszeugnis (CofA) hat eine unbegrenzte Gültigkeit — einmal ausgestellt, bleibt es gültig, solange das Luftfahrzeug die Standards seines Musterdesigns erfüllt und ordnungsgemäß gewartet wird. Was eine regelmäßige Erneuerung erfordert (üblicherweise jährlich), ist das Lufttüchtigkeitsprüfzeugnis (ARC), das bestätigt, dass die fortlaufende Lufttüchtigkeit überprüft wurde. Option A (12 Monate) und Option B (6 Monate) verwechseln das CofA mit dem ARC-Erneuerungszeitraum. Option C (12 Jahre) ist kein standardmäßiger Gültigkeitszeitraum in der Luftfahrt.
+
+### Q7: Wofür steht die Abkürzung „ARC"? ^t10q7
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** ARC steht für Airworthiness Review Certificate (Lufttüchtigkeitsprüfzeugnis), wie in der EU-Verordnung 1321/2014 (Part-M) definiert. Es wird nach einer periodischen Lufttüchtigkeitsprüfung ausgestellt, die bestätigt, dass die Dokumentation und der Zustand des Luftfahrzeugs in Ordnung sind. Option A (Airspace Restriction Criteria), Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) und Option D (Airspace Rulemaking Committee) sind fiktive Begriffe, die nicht im EASA- oder ICAO-Luftfahrtrecht verwendet werden.
+
+### Q8: Das Lufttüchtigkeitszeugnis wird vom Staat ausgestellt... ^t10q8
+- A) In dem die Lufttüchtigkeitsprüfung durchgeführt wird.
+- B) In dem das Luftfahrzeug hergestellt wurde.
+- C) In dem das Luftfahrzeug eingetragen ist.
+- D) Des Wohnsitzes des Eigentümers.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 8 und Annex 7 wird das Lufttüchtigkeitszeugnis vom Eintragungsstaat ausgestellt — dem Land, in dem das Luftfahrzeug registriert ist. Dieser Staat trägt die Verantwortung dafür, dass das Luftfahrzeug die geltenden Lufttüchtigkeitsstandards erfüllt. Option A (wo die Prüfung durchgeführt wird) ist falsch, da Prüfungen im Ausland stattfinden können. Option B (wo es hergestellt wurde) ist irrelevant, da der Herstellungsstaat vom Eintragungsstaat abweicht. Option D (Wohnsitz des Eigentümers) hat keinen Einfluss auf die CofA-Ausstellung.
+
+### Q9: Eine gemäß ICAO Annex 1 ausgestellte Pilotenlizenz wird anerkannt in... ^t10q9
+- A) Dem Land, in dem die Lizenz ausgestellt wurde.
+- B) Den Ländern, die diese Lizenz einzeln auf Antrag anerkannt haben.
+- C) Allen ICAO-Vertragsstaaten.
+- D) Dem Land, in dem die Lizenz erworben wurde.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** ICAO Annex 1 (Lizenzen des Personals) legt internationale Standards für Pilotenlizenzen fest. Eine Lizenz, die in voller Übereinstimmung mit den Annex-1-Standards ausgestellt wird, wird in allen 193 ICAO-Vertragsstaaten anerkannt, was internationale Luftfahrtoperationen ohne individuelle Akzeptanz von Land zu Land ermöglicht. Die Optionen A und D sind im Wesentlichen dieselbe Idee und zu restriktiv. Option B impliziert fälschlicherweise, dass eine Einzelfallakzeptanz erforderlich ist. Die universelle gegenseitige Anerkennung der Annex-1-Lizenzen ist ein Grundpfeiler der internationalen Zivilluftfahrt.
+
+### Q10: Welches Thema behandelt ICAO Annex 1? ^t10q10
+- A) Regeln der Luft
+- B) Betrieb von Luftfahrzeugen
+- C) Flugsicherungsdienste
+- D) Lizenzierung des fliegenden Personals
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** ICAO Annex 1 behandelt die Lizenzierung des Personals, einschließlich der Standards für Pilotenlizenzen (PPL, CPL, ATPL), Berechtigungen, ärztliche Tauglichkeitszeugnisse und Lehrberechtigungen. Option A (Regeln der Luft) ist Annex 2. Option B (Betrieb von Luftfahrzeugen) ist Annex 6. Option C (Flugsicherungsdienste) ist Annex 11. Die Kenntnis der ICAO-Anhänge nach Nummer und Thema ist eine Standardanforderung der Luftrechtsprüfung.
+
+### Q11: Wie lang ist für einen 62-jährigen Piloten ein Tauglichkeitszeugnis der Klasse 2 gültig? ^t10q11
+- A) 60 Monate.
+- B) 24 Monate.
+- C) 12 Monate.
+- D) 48 Monate.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß Part-MED (Durchführungsverordnung (EU) 1178/2011) hängt die Gültigkeit eines Tauglichkeitszeugnisses der Klasse 2 vom Alter des Piloten ab. Für Piloten ab 50 Jahren ist die Gültigkeit auf 12 Monate reduziert. Mit 62 Jahren gilt eindeutig die 12-Monats-Regel. Option A (60 Monate) gilt für jüngere Piloten unter 40 in einigen Kategorien. Option B (24 Monate) gilt für Piloten im Alter von 40-49 Jahren. Option D (48 Monate) ist kein standardmäßiger medizinischer Gültigkeitszeitraum.
+
+### Q12: Wofür steht die Abkürzung „SERA"? ^t10q12
+- A) Specialized Radar Approach
+- B) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- C) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** SERA steht für Standardised European Rules of the Air (standardisierte europäische Luftverkehrsregeln), festgelegt durch die Durchführungsverordnung (EU) Nr. 923/2012. SERA harmonisiert die Luftverkehrsregeln in allen EU-Mitgliedstaaten und setzt die Bestimmungen von ICAO Annex 2 auf europäischer Ebene um, ergänzt durch EU-spezifische Regeln zu Vorflugrecht, VMC-Minima, Höhenmessereinstellungen und Signalen. Die Optionen A, B und D sind erfundene Abkürzungen, die nicht in der Luftfahrtregulierung verwendet werden.
+
+### Q13: Wofür steht die Abkürzung „TRA"? ^t10q13
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- C) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- D) Transponder Area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** TRA steht für Temporary Reserved Airspace (temporär reservierter Luftraum) — ein Luftraum definierter Abmessungen, der für eine bestimmte Aktivität (Militärübungen, Kunstflugvorführungen, Fallschirmspringen) während eines veröffentlichten Zeitraums reserviert ist. TRAs werden per NOTAM aktiviert und unterscheiden sich von TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) dadurch, dass sie unter bestimmten Bedingungen eine gemeinsame Nutzung ermöglichen können. Die Optionen A (Terminal Area), B (Temporary Radar Routing Area) und D (Transponder Area) sind keine Standard-ICAO- oder EASA-Bezeichnungen.
+
+### Q14: Was muss beim Einflug in eine RMZ beachtet werden? ^t10q14
+- A) Der Transponder muss im Modus C mit Squawk 7000 eingeschaltet sein
+- B) Eine Genehmigung der örtlichen Luftfahrtbehörde muss eingeholt werden
+- C) Eine ständige Funküberwachung ist erforderlich, und Funkkontakt sollte wenn möglich hergestellt werden
+- D) Eine Einflugerlaubnis muss eingeholt werden
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) erfordert, dass alle Luftfahrzeuge ein funktionierendes Funkgerät mitführen und betreiben, die zugewiesene Frequenz ständig überwachen und vor dem Einflug wenn möglich Zweiwege-Funkkontakt herstellen. Option A beschreibt eine TMZ-Anforderung (Transponder), nicht eine RMZ. Die Optionen B und D implizieren, dass eine formelle ATC-Freigabe erforderlich ist, was eine CTR-Anforderung ist, nicht eine RMZ. Die RMZ ist in SERA.6005 und nationalen AIP-Ergänzungen definiert.
+
+### Q15: Was bedeutet ein als „TMZ" bezeichnetes Gebiet? ^t10q15
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- C) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- D) Transportation Management Zone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** TMZ steht für Transponder Mandatory Zone — ein Luftraum, in dem alle Luftfahrzeuge mit einem Höhenmelde-Transponder (Modus C oder Modus S) ausgerüstet sein und diesen betreiben müssen. Dies ermöglicht es den ATC-Radar- und Kollisionsvermeidungssystemen, den Verkehr zu identifizieren und zu verfolgen. Die Optionen A (Traffic Management Zone), B (Touring Motorglider Zone) und D (Transportation Management Zone) sind keine anerkannten Luftfahrtbegriffe.
+
+### Q16: Ein Flug wird als „Sichtflug" eingestuft, wenn der... ^t10q16
+- A) Flug unter Sichtflugwetterbedingungen durchgeführt wird.
+- B) Flugsicht 8 km übersteigt.
+- C) Flugsicht 5 km übersteigt.
+- D) Flug nach Sichtflugregeln durchgeführt wird.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Sichtflug (VFR-Flug) ist durch die Regeln definiert, nach denen er durchgeführt wird — die Sichtflugregeln (VFR) — und nicht durch die vorherrschenden Wetterbedingungen. VMC (Sichtflugwetterbedingungen) beschreiben die erforderlichen Wetterminima für VFR, aber ein Flug in VMC könnte dennoch nach IFR durchgeführt werden. Option A verwechselt das Regelwerk mit den Wetterbedingungen. Die Optionen B und C nennen spezifische Sichtwerte, die VMC-Minima für bestimmte Luftraumklassen sind, nicht die Definition eines VFR-Fluges.
+
+### Q17: Wofür steht die Abkürzung „VMC"? ^t10q17
+- A) Sichtflugregeln
+- B) Instrumentenflugbedingungen
+- C) Wechselnde Wetterbedingungen
+- D) Sichtflugwetterbedingungen
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** VMC steht für Visual Meteorological Conditions (Sichtflugwetterbedingungen) — die spezifischen Minima für Sicht und Wolkenabstand, die in SERA.5001 definiert sind und für den VFR-Flug eingehalten werden müssen. Wenn die Bedingungen unter VMC fallen, befindet sich der Luftraum in IMC (Instrumentenflugwetterbedingungen). Option A (Sichtflugregeln) ist VFR, nicht VMC. Option B (Instrumentenflugbedingungen) ist im Wesentlichen IMC-Terminologie. Option C (wechselnde Wetterbedingungen) ist kein Standard-Luftfahrtbegriff. VMC und VFR sind verwandte, aber unterschiedliche Konzepte.
+
+### Q18: Zwei motorisierte Luftfahrzeuge nähern sich auf kreuzenden Kursen in gleicher Höhe. Welches Luftfahrzeug muss ausweichen? ^t10q18
+- A) Das leichtere Luftfahrzeug muss steigen
+- B) Beide müssen nach rechts abdrehen
+- C) Beide müssen nach links abdrehen
+- D) Das schwerere Luftfahrzeug muss steigen
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß SERA.3210 müssen, wenn zwei Luftfahrzeuge auf konvergierenden Kursen in ungefähr gleicher Höhe sind, beide ihren Kurs nach rechts ändern. Dies stellt sicher, dass beide Luftfahrzeuge hinter dem jeweils anderen passieren und eine Kollision vermeiden. Die Optionen A und D führen fälschlicherweise das Gewicht als Faktor ein, was für die Ausweichregeln bei kreuzenden Kursen irrelevant ist. Option C (beide nach links) würde dazu führen, dass die Luftfahrzeuge weiter konvergieren statt divergieren. Die „Rechts abdrehen"-Regel ist ein fundamentales ICAO-Kollisionsvermeidungsprinzip.
+
+### Q19: Zwei Flugzeuge befinden sich auf kreuzenden Flugwegen. Welches muss ausweichen? ^t10q19
+- A) Beide müssen nach links abdrehen
+- B) Das von rechts kommende Luftfahrzeug hat Vorflugrecht
+- C) Beide müssen nach rechts abdrehen
+- D) Das von rechts nach links fliegende Luftfahrzeug hat Vorflugrecht
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß SERA.3210(b) muss bei konvergierenden Luftfahrzeugen in ungefähr gleicher Höhe das Luftfahrzeug, das das andere auf seiner rechten Seite hat, ausweichen. Mit anderen Worten: Das von rechts kommende Luftfahrzeug (das von rechts nach links relativ zum anderen Piloten fliegt) hat Vorflugrecht. Option A ist falsch, da Linksabdrehen das Kollisionsrisiko erhöht. Option B formuliert das Prinzip verkehrt herum. Option C beschreibt die Ausweichaktion bei Gegenverkehr, nicht das Vorflugprinzip bei kreuzendem Verkehr.
+
+### Q20: Welcher Wolkenabstand muss bei einem VFR-Flug in den Luftraumklassen C, D und E eingehalten werden? ^t10q20
+- A) 1000 m horizontal, 300 m vertikal
+- B) 1500 m horizontal, 1000 m vertikal
+- C) 1500 m horizontal, 1000 ft vertikal
+- D) 1000 m horizontal, 1500 ft vertikal
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß SERA.5001 müssen VFR-Flüge in den Luftraumklassen C, D und E 1500 m horizontalen Wolkenabstand und 1000 ft (ca. 300 m) vertikalen Wolkenabstand einhalten. Das entscheidende Detail ist, dass der horizontale Abstand in Metern und der vertikale in Fuß angegeben wird — das Vermischen dieser Einheiten ist eine häufige Prüfungsfalle. Option A verwendet 1000 m horizontal (zu wenig). Option B verwendet 1000 m vertikal (falsche Einheit und falscher Wert). Option D vertauscht die horizontalen/vertikalen Werte.
+
+### Q21: Im Luftraum „E", welche Mindestflugsicht gilt für ein VFR-Luftfahrzeug auf FL75? ^t10q21
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß SERA.5001 beträgt im Luftraum Klasse E über 3000 ft AMSL aber unter FL100 die Mindest-VFR-Flugsicht 5000 m (5 km). FL75 (ca. 7500 ft) liegt innerhalb dieses Höhenbandes. Option A (3000 m) ist kein Standard-VFR-Minimum. Option C (1500 m) gilt nur im unkontrollierten Luftraum in niedriger Höhe. Option D (8000 m) gilt auf FL100 und darüber, nicht darunter.
+
+### Q22: Im Luftraum „C", welche Mindestflugsicht gilt für ein VFR-Luftfahrzeug auf FL110? ^t10q22
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß SERA.5001 beträgt auf FL100 und darüber im kontrollierten Luftraum (einschließlich Klasse C) die Mindest-VFR-Flugsicht 8000 m (8 km). FL110 liegt über FL100, also gilt die 8-km-Regel. Option A (5000 m) ist das Minimum unter FL100. Option C (1500 m) gilt im unkontrollierten Luftraum in niedriger Höhe. Option D (3000 m) entspricht keinem Standard-SERA-VFR-Minimum im kontrollierten Luftraum.
+
+### Q23: Im Luftraum „C", welche Mindestflugsicht gilt für ein VFR-Luftfahrzeug auf FL125? ^t10q23
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** FL125 liegt über FL100, daher gilt die SERA.5001-Regel für VFR in großer Höhe: Mindestflugsicht 8000 m in jedem kontrollierten Luftraum einschließlich Klasse C. Option A (5000 m) gilt unter FL100. Die Optionen B (3000 m) und C (1500 m) gelten nur im unkontrollierten Luftraum in niedriger Höhe. Die zu merkende Abstufung lautet: niedrige Höhe unkontrolliert = 1,5 km, kontrolliert unter FL100 = 5 km, auf FL100 und darüber = 8 km.
+
+### Q24: Welche Mindest-Wolkenabstandsanforderungen gelten für einen VFR-Flug im Luftraum „B"? ^t10q24
+- A) Horizontal 1.000 m, vertikal 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontal 1.500 m, vertikal 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontal 1.000 m, vertikal 300 m
+- D) Horizontal 1.500 m, vertikal 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wo VFR im Luftraum Klasse B erlaubt ist, betragen die Wolkenabstandsminima gemäß SERA.5001 1500 m horizontal und 300 m (ca. 1000 ft) vertikal. Option A verwendet nur 1000 m horizontalen Abstand, was unzureichend ist. Option B gibt 1000 m vertikal an, was viel zu groß ist und den falschen Wert verwendet. Option C verwendet nur 1000 m horizontal und den korrekten vertikalen Wert, aber der horizontale ist unzureichend. Nur Option D liefert beide korrekten Werte.
+
+### Q25: Im Luftraum „C" unter FL 100, welche Mindestflugsicht gilt für VFR-Betrieb? ^t10q25
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß SERA.5001 beträgt im Luftraum Klasse C unter FL100 (über 3000 ft AMSL oder 1000 ft AGL) die Mindest-VFR-Flugsicht 5 km. Option A (10 km) ist kein Standard-SERA-Minimum. Option C (8 km) gilt nur auf FL100 und darüber. Option D (1,5 km) gilt im unkontrollierten Luftraum in niedrigen Höhen. Segelflieger, die den Luftraum Klasse C unter FL100 durchfliegen, müssen mindestens 5 km Sicht überprüfen.
+
+### Q26: Im Luftraum „C" auf FL 100 und darüber, welche Mindestflugsicht gilt für VFR-Betrieb? ^t10q26
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß SERA.5001 beträgt auf FL100 und darüber im kontrollierten Luftraum einschließlich Klasse C die Mindest-VFR-Flugsicht 8 km. Dieser höhere Schwellenwert spiegelt die höheren Annäherungsgeschwindigkeiten und die geringere Reaktionszeit in großen Höhen wider. Option A (5 km) ist das Minimum unter FL100. Option C (10 km) ist kein Standard-SERA-VMC-Minimum. Option D (1,5 km) gilt nur im unkontrollierten Luftraum in niedriger Höhe.
+
+### Q27: Wie ist der Begriff „Ceiling" (Wolkenuntergrenze) definiert? ^t10q27
+- A) Höhe der Untergrenze der niedrigsten Wolkenschicht, die mehr als die Hälfte des Himmels bedeckt, unter 20000 ft.
+- B) Altitude der Untergrenze der niedrigsten Wolkenschicht, die mehr als die Hälfte des Himmels bedeckt, unter 20000 ft.
+- C) Höhe der Untergrenze der höchsten Wolkenschicht, die mehr als die Hälfte des Himmels bedeckt, unter 20000 ft.
+- D) Höhe der Untergrenze der niedrigsten Wolkenschicht, die mehr als die Hälfte des Himmels bedeckt, unter 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Ceiling ist definiert als die Höhe (über Grund) der Untergrenze der niedrigsten Wolkenschicht, die mehr als die Hälfte des Himmels bedeckt (BKN oder OVC, mehr als 4 Oktas) unter 20.000 ft. Option B verwendet „Altitude" (bezogen auf MSL) statt „Höhe" (bezogen auf die Oberfläche). Option C bezieht sich auf die „höchste" Wolkenschicht, obwohl es die „niedrigste" sein sollte. Option D begrenzt den Schwellenwert fälschlicherweise auf 10.000 ft statt 20.000 ft.
+
+### Q28: Bei einer Abfangung durch ein Militärflugzeug am Tag, was bedeutet das folgende Signal: eine plötzliche Kursänderung von 90 Grad oder mehr und ein Steigflug, ohne den Flugweg des abgefangenen Luftfahrzeugs zu kreuzen? ^t10q28
+- A) Sie fliegen in ein beschränktes Gebiet ein; verlassen Sie den Luftraum sofort
+- B) Sie dürfen Ihren Flug fortsetzen
+- C) Folgen Sie mir; ich führe Sie zum nächsten geeigneten Flugplatz
+- D) Bereiten Sie sich auf eine Sicherheitslandung vor; Sie sind in ein gesperrtes Gebiet eingeflogen
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 2, Appendix 1, ist ein abruptes Abbrechen des Abfangjägers mit einer Kursänderung von 90 Grad oder mehr und einem Steigflug ohne Kreuzung der Flugbahn des abgefangenen Luftfahrzeugs das Standard-„Freigabe"-Signal, das bedeutet: „Sie dürfen weiterfliegen." Die Abfangung ist beendet und der Pilot darf seine Route fortsetzen. Die Optionen A und D implizieren Luftraumverletzungswarnungen mit anderen Signalen. Option C („Folgen Sie mir") beinhaltet, dass der Abfangjäger die Tragflächen wippt und einen stabilen Kurs zum Zielflugplatz hält.
+
+### Q29: Beim Fliegen auf FL 80, welche Höhenmessereinstellung muss verwendet werden? ^t10q29
+- A) 1013,25 hPa.
+- B) Lokaler QNH.
+- C) 1030,25 hPa.
+- D) Lokaler QFE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Flugflächen sind bezogen auf das Druckdatum der Internationalen Standardatmosphäre von 1013,25 hPa definiert. Beim Fliegen auf oder über der Übergangshöhe müssen Piloten 1013,25 hPa auf der Höhenmesserskala einstellen und die Höhe als Flugfläche angeben. Option B (QNH) gibt die Höhe über dem mittleren Meeresspiegel an und wird unter der Übergangshöhe verwendet. Option C (1030,25 hPa) ist kein Standardreferenzdruck. Option D (QFE) gibt die Höhe über einem bestimmten Flugplatz an und wird nie für Flugflächen verwendet.
+
+### Q30: Was ist das Ziel der Halbkreisregel? ^t10q30
+- A) Das Fliegen ohne eingereichten Flugplan in vorgeschriebenen, im AIP veröffentlichten Zonen zu ermöglichen
+- B) Sicheres Steigen oder Sinken innerhalb eines Warteschemas zu ermöglichen
+- C) Das Kollisionsrisiko zu verringern, indem die Wahrscheinlichkeit von Gegenverkehr auf gleicher Höhe reduziert wird
+- D) Kollisionen zu verhindern, indem Kurvenmanöver verboten werden
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Halbkreis- (hemisphärische) Reiseflughöhenregel (SERA.5015) weist verschiedene Höhenbänder verschiedenen magnetischen Kursen zu — Flüge nach Osten verwenden ungerade Tausender-Fuß-Höhen, nach Westen gerade. Durch die vertikale Trennung von Luftfahrzeugen, die in entgegengesetzten Richtungen fliegen, wird die Wahrscheinlichkeit einer Frontalkollision auf gleicher Höhe erheblich reduziert. Option A steht in keinem Zusammenhang mit Reiseflughöhen. Option B beschreibt Warteverfahren. Option D ist falsch, da die Regel die Höhenzuweisung betrifft, nicht Manöverbeschränkungen.
+
+### Q31: Ein Transponder, der die aktuelle Druckhöhe übermitteln kann, ist ein... ^t10q31
+- A) Für den Luftraum „B" zugelassener Transponder.
+- B) Modus-A-Transponder.
+- C) Druckdekoder.
+- D) Modus-C- oder S-Transponder.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Transponder, der Druckhöheninformationen überträgt, ist entweder ein Modus-C- oder Modus-S-Transponder. Modus C fügt dem Basis-Identifizierungscode des Modus A die automatische Druckhöhenmeldung hinzu, während Modus S alle Fähigkeiten des Modus C plus selektive Abfrage und Datenverbindungsfunktionen bietet. Option A ist falsch, weil „zugelassen für Luftraum B" keine Transponder-Klassifizierung ist. Option B ist falsch, da Modus A nur einen 4-stelligen Squawk-Code ohne Höhendaten überträgt. Option C ist falsch, da „Druckdekoder" kein Luftfahrtbegriff ist.
+
+### Q32: Welcher Transpondercode signalisiert einen Verlust der Funkverbindung? ^t10q32
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 2000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Transpondercode 7600 ist der international anerkannte Squawk für Funkausfall. Piloten müssen die drei Notfallcodes auswendig können: 7700 für allgemeinen Notfall, 7600 für Funkausfall und 7500 für widerrechtliche Eingriffe (Entführung). Option A (7700) ist für Notfälle, nicht speziell für Kommunikationsverlust. Option B (7000) ist der Standard-VFR-Auffälligkeitscode in Europa. Option D (2000) wird beim Einflug in kontrollierten Luftraum ohne zugewiesenen Code verwendet.
+
+### Q33: Bei einem Funkausfall, welcher Transpondercode muss ohne ATC-Anweisung eingestellt werden? ^t10q33
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn ein Pilot einen Funkausfall erleidet, muss er sofort 7600 einstellen, ohne auf eine ATC-Anweisung zu warten, da definitionsgemäß keine Kommunikation mehr möglich ist. Diese proaktive Maßnahme alarmiert die ATC über die Situation und löst Funkausfall-Verfahren aus. Option A (7000) ist der allgemeine VFR-Code und kommuniziert keinen Notfall. Option B (7500) signalisiert widerrechtliche Eingriffe, was eine völlig andere Situation ist. Option C (7700) ist für allgemeine Notfälle, nicht speziell für Funkausfall.
+
+### Q34: Welcher Transpondercode muss bei einem Notfall automatisch eingestellt werden, ohne auf Anweisungen zu warten? ^t10q34
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Bei jedem allgemeinen Notfall (Triebwerksausfall, Brand, medizinischer Notfall, Strukturschaden) muss der Pilot sofort den Transpondercode 7700 einstellen, ohne auf ATC-Anweisungen zu warten. Dies löst einen Alarm auf den ATC-Radarbildschirmen aus und aktiviert Notfallverfahren. Option A (7600) ist speziell für Funkausfall, nicht für allgemeine Notfälle. Option B (7000) ist der Standard-VFR-Auffälligkeitscode. Option C (7500) ist ausschließlich für widerrechtliche Eingriffe (Entführung) reserviert und darf niemals für andere Notfälle eingestellt werden.
+
+### Q35: Welcher Flugsicherungsdienst trägt die Verantwortung für die sichere Durchführung von Flügen? ^t10q35
+- A) FIS (Fluginformationsdienst)
+- B) AIS (Luftfahrt-Informationsdienst)
+- C) ATC (Flugverkehrskontrolle)
+- D) ALR (Alarmdienst)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Flugverkehrskontrolle (ATC) ist der Dienst, der speziell für die Staffelung zwischen Luftfahrzeugen und den sicheren, geordneten und zügigen Fluss des Luftverkehrs im kontrollierten Luftraum verantwortlich ist. Gemäß ICAO Annex 11 steuert ATC aktiv die Luftfahrzeugbewegungen zur Kollisionsvermeidung. Option A (FIS) liefert nützliche Informationen, leitet aber keine Luftfahrzeuge und staffelt sie nicht. Option B (AIS) veröffentlicht Luftfahrt-Informationsdokumente, hat aber keine operative Kontrollfunktion. Option D (ALR) veranlasst Such- und Rettungsmaßnahmen bei überfälligen oder in Not befindlichen Luftfahrzeugen, verwaltet aber nicht die laufende Flugsicherheit.
+
+### Q36: Aus welchen Diensten besteht die Flugverkehrskontrolle? ^t10q36
+- A) APP (Anflugkontrolldienst) ACC (Bezirkskontrolldienst) FIS (Fluginformationsdienst)
+- B) TWR (Flugplatzkontrolldienst) APP (Anflugkontrolldienst) ACC (Bezirkskontrolldienst)
+- C) FIS (Fluginformationsdienst) AIS (Luftfahrt-Informationsdienst) AFS (Fester Flugfernmeldedienst)
+- D) ALR (Alarmdienst) SAR (Such- und Rettungsdienst) TWR (Flugplatzkontrolldienst)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 11 sind die drei Bestandteile der ATC: TWR (Flugplatzkontrolle, die den Verkehr am und um den Flugplatz steuert), APP (Anflugkontrolle, die den an- und abfliegenden Verkehr im Nahbereich steuert) und ACC (Bezirkskontrollstelle, die den Streckenverkehr steuert). Option A schließt fälschlicherweise den FIS ein, der ein vom ATC getrennter Informationsdienst ist. Option C listet Informations- und Kommunikationsdienste auf, von denen keiner eine ATC-Einheit ist. Option D vermischt Notfalldienste (ALR, SAR) mit nur einer ATC-Einheit (TWR).
+
+### Q37: Bezüglich der Staffelung im Luftraum „E", welche Aussage ist richtig? ^t10q37
+- A) IFR-Verkehr wird nur vom VFR-Verkehr getrennt
+- B) VFR-Verkehr wird sowohl vom VFR- als auch vom IFR-Verkehr getrennt
+- C) VFR-Verkehr erhält keine Staffelung von jeglichem Verkehr
+- D) VFR-Verkehr wird nur vom IFR-Verkehr getrennt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Im Luftraum Klasse E staffelt die ATC IFR-Flüge von anderen IFR-Flügen, aber VFR-Verkehr erhält überhaupt keinen ATC-Staffelungsdienst — weder von anderem VFR-Verkehr noch von IFR-Verkehr. VFR-Piloten in Klasse E müssen sich vollständig auf das Prinzip „Sehen und Ausweichen" verlassen, wobei Verkehrsinformationen wo möglich bereitgestellt werden. Option A besagt fälschlicherweise, dass IFR nur vom VFR getrennt wird (es wird von anderem IFR getrennt). Die Optionen B und D implizieren fälschlicherweise, dass VFR-Verkehr irgendeine Form der Staffelung erhält.
+
+### Q38: Welche Flugsicherungsdienste sind innerhalb einer FIR (Fluginformationsgebiet) verfügbar? ^t10q38
+- A) ATC (Flugverkehrskontrolle) AIS (Luftfahrt-Informationsdienst)
+- B) AIS (Luftfahrt-Informationsdienst) SAR (Such- und Rettungsdienst)
+- C) FIS (Fluginformationsdienst) ALR (Alarmdienst)
+- D) ATC (Flugverkehrskontrolle) FIS (Fluginformationsdienst)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Fluginformationsgebiet (FIR) bietet zwei universelle Dienste in seinem gesamten Volumen: den FIS (Fluginformationsdienst), der Piloten Wetter-, NOTAM- und Verkehrsinformationen liefert, und den ALR (Alarmdienst), der die Rettungsdienste benachrichtigt, wenn Luftfahrzeuge in Not sind oder überfällig. ATC wird nicht in der gesamten FIR bereitgestellt — es existiert nur innerhalb des bezeichneten kontrollierten Luftraums (CTAs, CTRs, Luftstraßen), der sich innerhalb der FIR befinden kann. Die Optionen A, B und D schließen entweder fälschlicherweise ATC ein oder lassen die richtige Kombination aus.
+
+### Q39: Wie kann ein Pilot den FIS (Fluginformationsdienst) während des Fluges erreichen? ^t10q39
+- A) Per Telefon.
+- B) Durch persönlichen Besuch.
+- C) Per Funkkommunikation.
+- D) Per Internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der FIS ist ein operativer Dienst für Piloten in der Luft, und das primäre Mittel, ihn während des Fluges zu kontaktieren, ist die Funkkommunikation auf der zugewiesenen FIS-Frequenz. Während Vorflug-Informationen per Telefon oder online erhältlich sind, basiert der FIS-Dienst im Flug selbst auf Funk. Option A (Telefon) und Option D (Internet) sind bodengebundene Kontaktmethoden, die für die Echtzeit-Kommunikation im Flug unpraktisch sind. Option B (persönlicher Besuch) ist in der Luft offensichtlich unmöglich.
+
+### Q40: Wie lautet die Standard-Sprechfunkphraseologie zur Warnung, dass einem leichten Luftfahrzeug ein Luftfahrzeug mit schwererer Wirbelschleppenkategorie vorausfliegt? ^t10q40
+- A) Attention propwash
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Caution wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Standard-ICAO-Phraseologie für Wirbelschleppen-Warnungen lautet „CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE", wie in ICAO Doc 4444 (PANS-ATM) vorgeschrieben. Standardisierte Phraseologie ist in der Luftfahrt zur Vermeidung von Mehrdeutigkeiten obligatorisch. Die Optionen A („attention propwash"), B („be careful wake winds") und C („danger jet blast") sind nicht standardisierte Ausdrücke, die nicht in der ICAO-genehmigten Phraseologie zu finden sind. Die Verwendung nicht standardisierter Begriffe kann Verwirrung stiften und ist im EASA-Luftraum verboten.
+
+### Q41: Welche der folgenden stellt einen korrekten Positionsbericht dar? ^t10q41
+- A) DEABC over "N" at 35
+- B) DEABC reaching "N"
+- C) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Standard-Positionsbericht gemäß ICAO Doc 4444 muss enthalten: Rufzeichen des Luftfahrzeugs, Position (Meldepunkt oder Wegpunkt) und Flughöhe oder Flugfläche. Option C (DEABC, „N", 2500 ft) liefert alle drei Elemente korrekt und prägnant. Option A fehlt eine klare Höhenangabe („at 35" ist mehrdeutig). Option B ist unvollständig, weil die Höhe ganz fehlt. Option D verwendet den unsinnigen Ausdruck „FL 2500 ft" — Flugflächen und Fuß werden niemals so kombiniert; es sollte entweder „FL 25" oder „2500 ft" heißen.
+
+### Q42: Welche Art von Information ist im allgemeinen Teil (GEN) des AIP enthalten? ^t10q42
+- A) Warnungen für die Luftfahrt, ATS-Lufträume und Strecken, beschränkte und Gefahrengebiete
+- B) Inhaltsverzeichnis, Klassifizierung der Flugplätze mit entsprechenden Karten, Anflugkarten, Rollkarten, beschränkte und Gefahrengebiete
+- C) Zugangsbeschränkungen für Flugplätze, Passagierkontrollen, Anforderungen an Piloten, Lizenmuster und Gültigkeitszeiträume
+- D) Kartensymbole, Liste der Funknavigationshilfen, Sonnenauf- und -untergangszeiten, Flughafengebühren, Flugsicherungsgebühren
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das AIP ist in drei Teile gegliedert: GEN (Allgemein), ENR (Strecke) und AD (Flugplätze). Der GEN-Abschnitt enthält allgemeine administrative Informationen einschließlich Kartensymbole/-zeichen, Listen der Funknavigationshilfen, Sonnenauf-/-untergangstabellen, nationale Vorschriften, Flughafengebühren und ATC-Gebühren. Option A beschreibt Inhalte des ENR-Abschnitts (Luftraum, Strecken, Beschränkungen). Option B beschreibt Inhalte des AD-Abschnitts (Flugplatzkarten, Anflugkarten). Option C mischt Elemente, die keinem einzelnen AIP-Abschnitt entsprechen.
+
+### Q43: In wie viele Teile ist das Luftfahrthandbuch (AIP) gegliedert? ^t10q43
+- A) GEN ENR AD
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 15 ist das AIP in drei standardisierte Teile gegliedert: GEN (Allgemein), ENR (Strecke) und AD (Flugplätze). Diese Struktur ist universell in allen ICAO-Mitgliedstaaten. Die Optionen B (AGA, COM), C (COM, MET) und D (MET, RAC) verwenden Abkürzungen aus älteren ICAO-Dokumentationsstrukturen, die nicht mehr Teil der modernen AIP-Organisation sind. Nur Option A spiegelt die aktuelle ICAO-Standard-AIP-Struktur wider.
+
+### Q44: Welche Art von Information findet sich im „AD"-Abschnitt des AIP? ^t10q44
+- A) Warnungen für die Luftfahrt, ATS-Lufträume und Strecken, beschränkte und Gefahrengebiete.
+- B) Kartensymbole, Liste der Funknavigationshilfen, Sonnenauf- und -untergangszeiten, Flughafengebühren, Flugsicherungsgebühren
+- C) Inhaltsverzeichnis, Klassifizierung der Flugplätze mit entsprechenden Karten, Anflugkarten, Rollkarten
+- D) Zugangsbeschränkungen für Flugplätze, Passagierkontrollen, Anforderungen an Piloten, Lizenzmuster und Gültigkeitszeiträume
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der AD-Abschnitt (Flugplätze) des AIP enthält alle flugplatzspezifischen Informationen: Flugplatzklassifizierung, Pistendaten, Anflug- und Abflugkarten, Rollkarten, Befeuerung, Frequenzen, Betriebszeiten und Hindernisdaten. Option A beschreibt ENR-Inhalte (Strecke) zu Luftraum und Beschränkungen. Option B beschreibt GEN-Inhalte (Allgemein) wie Symbole und Gebühren. Option D mischt regulatorische und administrative Elemente, die nicht dem AD-Abschnitt entsprechen.
+
+### Q45: Das angezeigte NOTAM ist gültig bis... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^t10q45
+- A) 21.05.2013 14:00 UTC.
+- B) 13.05.2013 12:00 UTC.
+- C) 21.05.2014 13:00 UTC.
+- D) 13.10.2013 00:00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** NOTAM-Zeitcodes verwenden das Format JJMMTTHHMM in UTC. Das Feld „C)" eines NOTAM gibt das Ende der Gültigkeit an. Der Code 1305211400 wird dekodiert als: Jahr 2013 (13), Monat Mai (05), Tag 21, Uhrzeit 14:00 UTC — also 21. Mai 2013 um 14:00 UTC. Option B liest das Datumsformat falsch und verwechselt den Monat mit dem Datum. Option C liest das Jahr fälschlicherweise als 2014. Option D interpretiert die Kodierung völlig falsch. Die korrekte NOTAM-Dekodierung ist eine grundlegende Luftrechtskompetenz für alle Piloten.
+
+### Q46: Ein Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) ist eine Zusammenstellung der aktuellen... ^t10q46
+- A) AIP-Informationen von betrieblicher Bedeutung, die vor dem Flug zusammengestellt werden.
+- B) AIC-Informationen von betrieblicher Bedeutung, die nach dem Flug zusammengestellt werden.
+- C) ICAO-Informationen von betrieblicher Bedeutung, die nach dem Flug zusammengestellt werden.
+- D) NOTAM-Informationen von betrieblicher Bedeutung, die vor dem Flug zusammengestellt werden.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) ist eine standardisierte Zusammenfassung der aktuellen NOTAMs, die für einen geplanten Flug relevant sind und vor dem Abflug zusammengestellt und herausgegeben werden. Es filtert die relevanten NOTAMs für die Strecke, den Abflug-, Ziel- und Ausweichflugplatz. Option A ist falsch, da ein PIB auf NOTAM-Daten basiert, nicht auf AIP-Daten. Option B ist in zweierlei Hinsicht falsch: Sie verweist auf AICs (nicht NOTAMs) und sagt „nach dem Flug" (es ist ein Vorflug-Instrument). Option C identifiziert ebenfalls die Quelle und den Zeitpunkt falsch.
+
+### Q47: Wie ist die „Flugplatzhöhe" definiert? ^t10q47
+- A) Der Durchschnittswert der Höhe des Rollfeldes.
+- B) Der höchste Punkt des Landebereichs.
+- C) Der niedrigste Punkt des Landebereichs.
+- D) Der höchste Punkt des Vorfeldes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 14 ist die Flugplatzhöhe definiert als die Höhe des höchsten Punktes des Landebereichs. Dies stellt sicher, dass der veröffentlichte Wert die anspruchsvollste Geländehöhe darstellt, die Luftfahrzeuge bei Anflug und Abflug berücksichtigen müssen. Option A (Durchschnitt des Rollfeldes) würde die kritische Höhe unterschätzen. Option C (niedrigster Punkt) ist das Gegenteil der korrekten Definition. Option D (höchster Punkt des Vorfeldes) ist falsch, da das Vorfeld nicht der Landebereich ist.
+
+### Q48: Wie ist der Begriff „Piste" definiert? ^t10q48
+- A) Rechteckige Fläche auf einem Land- oder Wasserflugplatz, die für Start und Landung von Luftfahrzeugen vorbereitet ist.
+- B) Runde Fläche auf einem Flugplatz, die für Start und Landung von Luftfahrzeugen vorbereitet ist.
+- C) Rechteckige Fläche auf einem Landflugplatz, die für Start und Landung von Luftfahrzeugen vorbereitet ist.
+- D) Rechteckige Fläche auf einem Landflugplatz, die für Start und Landung von Hubschraubern vorbereitet ist.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 14 ist eine Piste eine rechteckige Fläche auf einem Landflugplatz, die für Start und Landung von Luftfahrzeugen vorbereitet ist. Die drei Schlüsselelemente sind: rechteckige Form, Landflugplatz und Luftfahrzeuge allgemein. Option A ist falsch, da Pisten spezifisch für Landflugplätze sind (Wasserflugplätze haben Wasserlandeflächen, keine Pisten). Option B ist falsch, da die Form rechteckig ist, nicht rund. Option D ist falsch, da Pisten allgemein für Luftfahrzeuge dienen, nicht speziell für Hubschrauber (Hubschrauber verwenden Hubschrauberlandeplätze oder FATO-Flächen).
+
+### Q49: Wie kann ein Windrichtungsanzeiger besser sichtbar gemacht werden? ^t10q49
+- A) Durch Montage auf dem Kontrollturm.
+- B) Durch Umrandung mit einem weißen Kreis.
+- C) Durch Platzierung auf einer großen schwarzen Fläche.
+- D) Durch Herstellung aus grünen Materialien.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 14 sollte ein Windrichtungsanzeiger (Windsack oder Windfahne) von einem weißen Kreis umgeben sein, um seine Sichtbarkeit aus der Luft zu verbessern. Der kontrastreiche weiße Hintergrund macht den Anzeiger leichter vor dem Flugplatzgelände erkennbar. Option A (Montage auf dem Kontrollturm) ist keine Standard-ICAO-Methode zur Sichtbarkeitsverbesserung und könnte den Turmbetrieb stören. Option C (schwarze Fläche) ist nicht in den ICAO-Standards spezifiziert. Option D (grüne Materialien) würde die Sichtbarkeit gegen Grasflächen tatsächlich verringern.
+
+### Q50: Welche Form hat ein Landerichtungsanzeiger? ^t10q50
+- A) Ein gewinkelter Pfeil
+- B) L
+- C) T
+- D) Ein gerader Pfeil
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäß ICAO Annex 14 hat der Landerichtungsanzeiger die Form eines T (häufig „Lande-T" oder „Signal-T" genannt). Luftfahrzeuge landen in Richtung des Querbalkens des T und starten davon weg, wodurch die Landerichtung sofort klar wird. Die Optionen A (gewinkelter Pfeil) und D (gerader Pfeil) sind nicht die ICAO-Standardform für diesen Anzeiger. Option B (L-Form) wird für einen anderen Zweck verwendet — zur Anzeige eines Rechts-Platzrundenverkehrs, nicht der Landerichtung.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_1_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_1_50_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,499 @@
+### Q1: Un titulaire de licence SPL ou LAPL(S) a effectué 9 lancers au treuil, 4 remorquages et 2 lancers à l'élastique au cours des 24 derniers mois. Quelles méthodes de lancement le pilote est-il autorisé à utiliser en tant que PIC aujourd'hui ? ^t10q1
+- A) Remorquage et élastique.
+- B) Treuil et remorquage.
+- C) Treuil et élastique.
+- D) Treuil, élastique et remorquage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à la Part-SFCL, un pilote doit avoir effectué au moins 5 lancers avec une méthode donnée au cours des 24 derniers mois pour agir en tant que PIC avec cette méthode. Ici, le pilote a 9 lancers au treuil (seuil atteint) et 2 lancers à l'élastique (seuil également atteint, le minimum pour l'élastique étant plus bas). Cependant, avec seulement 4 remorquages, le pilote n'atteint pas les 5 requis, donc le remorquage n'est pas autorisé. L'option A est incorrecte car elle inclut le remorquage. L'option B est incorrecte car elle inclut également le remorquage. L'option D inclut les trois méthodes, mais le remorquage n'est pas qualifié. Seule l'option C liste correctement le treuil et l'élastique.
+
+### Q2: Quels documents doivent être emportés à bord lors d'un vol international ? a) Certificat d'immatriculation b) Certificat de navigabilité c) Certificat de contrôle de navigabilité d) EASA Form-1 e) Carnet de vol de l'aéronef f) Documents appropriés pour chaque membre d'équipage g) Carnet technique ^t10q2
+- A) A, b, c, e, f
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 6 de l'ICAO et au Règlement UE 965/2012, les vols internationaux exigent le certificat de navigabilité (b), le certificat de contrôle de navigabilité (c), le formulaire EASA Form-1 (d), le carnet de vol (e), les licences et certificats médicaux de l'équipage (f) et le carnet technique (g). L'option A omet le Form-1 et le carnet technique. L'option B est bien trop limitée. L'option D omet des documents essentiels comme l'ARC et les papiers de l'équipage. L'option C fournit l'énumération EASA standard complète pour un vol international.
+
+### Q3: Quel type de zone peut être pénétré sous certaines conditions ? ^t10q3
+- A) Zone dangereuse
+- B) Zone d'interdiction de vol
+- C) Zone interdite
+- D) Zone réglementée
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une zone réglementée (désignée « R » sur les cartes) peut être pénétrée sous réserve des conditions publiées dans l'AIP, comme l'obtention d'une autorisation préalable de l'autorité compétente. L'option A (zone dangereuse, désignée « D ») contient des dangers mais n'impose aucune restriction légale d'entrée — les pilotes peuvent y pénétrer à leurs propres risques. L'option B (zone d'interdiction de vol) n'est pas une classification ICAO standard. L'option C (zone interdite, désignée « P ») interdit tout vol sans condition. Seule l'option D décrit correctement un espace aérien permettant une entrée conditionnelle.
+
+### Q4: Dans quelle publication peut-on trouver les restrictions spécifiques d'un espace aérien réglementé ? ^t10q4
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIP
+- C) AIC
+- D) Carte ICAO 1:500000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Publication d'information aéronautique (AIP) est le document officiel de référence contenant les informations permanentes sur la structure des espaces aériens, y compris les conditions détaillées, les horaires d'activation et les contacts des autorités compétentes pour les zones réglementées dans la section ENR. L'option A (NOTAM) peut annoncer des modifications temporaires mais ne définit pas les restrictions de base. L'option C (AIC) contient des informations consultatives ou administratives, pas des définitions réglementaires d'espaces aériens. L'option D (cartes ICAO) montre les limites graphiquement mais ne détaille pas les restrictions et conditions spécifiques d'entrée.
+
+### Q5: Quel est le statut juridique des règles et procédures établies par l'EASA ? (ex. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5
+- A) Elles ont le même statut que les Annexes ICAO
+- B) Elles ne sont pas juridiquement contraignantes et servent uniquement de guide
+- C) Elles font partie de la réglementation européenne et sont juridiquement contraignantes dans tous les États membres de l'UE
+- D) Elles ne deviennent juridiquement contraignantes qu'après ratification par chaque État membre de l'UE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les réglementations EASA telles que la Part-SFCL et la Part-MED sont publiées en tant que règlements d'exécution ou règlements délégués de l'UE sous le règlement de base (UE) 2018/1139. Les règlements de l'UE sont directement applicables dans tous les États membres sans ratification nationale, ce qui les rend immédiatement contraignants. L'option A est incorrecte car les Annexes ICAO sont des normes et pratiques recommandées nécessitant une adoption nationale, non équivalentes au droit européen. L'option B est incorrecte car les règles EASA sont pleinement contraignantes. L'option D est incorrecte car les règlements de l'UE ne nécessitent pas de ratification individuelle par les États.
+
+### Q6: Quelle est la durée de validité du certificat de navigabilité ? ^t10q6
+- A) 12 mois
+- B) 6 mois
+- C) 12 ans
+- D) Illimitée
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le certificat de navigabilité (CofA) a une validité illimitée — une fois délivré, il reste valide tant que l'aéronef respecte les normes de son certificat de type et est correctement entretenu. Ce qui nécessite un renouvellement périodique (généralement annuel) est le certificat de contrôle de navigabilité (ARC), qui confirme que la navigabilité continue a été vérifiée. L'option A (12 mois) et l'option B (6 mois) confondent le CofA avec la période de renouvellement de l'ARC. L'option C (12 ans) n'est pas une durée de validité standard en aviation.
+
+### Q7: Que signifie l'abréviation « ARC » ? ^t10q7
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** ARC signifie Airworthiness Review Certificate (certificat de contrôle de navigabilité), tel que défini dans le Règlement UE 1321/2014 (Part-M). Il est délivré après un examen périodique de navigabilité confirmant que la documentation et l'état de l'aéronef sont en ordre. L'option A (Airspace Restriction Criteria), l'option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) et l'option D (Airspace Rulemaking Committee) sont des termes fictifs non utilisés dans la législation aéronautique EASA ou ICAO.
+
+### Q8: Le certificat de navigabilité est délivré par l'État... ^t10q8
+- A) Dans lequel l'examen de navigabilité est effectué.
+- B) Dans lequel l'aéronef est construit.
+- C) Dans lequel l'aéronef est immatriculé.
+- D) De résidence du propriétaire.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 8 et à l'Annexe 7 de l'ICAO, le certificat de navigabilité est délivré par l'État d'immatriculation — le pays où l'aéronef est immatriculé. Cet État est responsable de s'assurer que l'aéronef respecte les normes de navigabilité applicables. L'option A (où l'examen est effectué) est incorrecte car les examens peuvent avoir lieu à l'étranger. L'option B (où il est construit) est sans rapport puisque l'État de fabrication diffère de l'État d'immatriculation. L'option D (résidence du propriétaire) n'a aucune incidence sur la délivrance du CofA.
+
+### Q9: Une licence de pilote délivrée conformément à l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO est reconnue dans... ^t10q9
+- A) Le pays où la licence a été délivrée.
+- B) Les pays qui ont individuellement accepté cette licence sur demande.
+- C) Tous les États contractants de l'ICAO.
+- D) Le pays où la licence a été acquise.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO (Licences du personnel) établit des normes internationales pour les licences de pilote. Une licence délivrée en pleine conformité avec les normes de l'Annexe 1 est reconnue dans les 193 États contractants de l'ICAO, permettant des opérations aériennes internationales sans acceptation individuelle pays par pays. Les options A et D reviennent essentiellement à la même idée et sont trop restrictives. L'option B implique à tort qu'une acceptation au cas par cas est nécessaire. La reconnaissance mutuelle universelle des licences de l'Annexe 1 est un pilier fondamental de l'aviation civile internationale.
+
+### Q10: Quel sujet est traité par l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO ? ^t10q10
+- A) Règles de l'air
+- B) Exploitation des aéronefs
+- C) Services de la circulation aérienne
+- D) Licences du personnel navigant
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO couvre les licences du personnel, incluant les normes pour les licences de pilote (PPL, CPL, ATPL), les qualifications, les certificats médicaux et les qualifications d'instructeur. L'option A (Règles de l'air) correspond à l'Annexe 2. L'option B (Exploitation des aéronefs) correspond à l'Annexe 6. L'option C (Services de la circulation aérienne) correspond à l'Annexe 11. Connaître les Annexes ICAO par numéro et sujet est une exigence standard de l'examen de droit aérien.
+
+### Q11: Pour un pilote âgé de 62 ans, quelle est la durée de validité d'un certificat médical de classe 2 ? ^t10q11
+- A) 60 mois.
+- B) 24 mois.
+- C) 12 mois.
+- D) 48 mois.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à la Part-MED (Règlement de la Commission (UE) 1178/2011), la validité d'un certificat médical de classe 2 dépend de l'âge du pilote. Pour les pilotes de 50 ans et plus, la validité est réduite à 12 mois. À 62 ans, la règle des 12 mois s'applique clairement. L'option A (60 mois) s'applique aux pilotes plus jeunes de moins de 40 ans dans certaines catégories. L'option B (24 mois) s'applique aux pilotes de 40 à 49 ans. L'option D (48 mois) n'est pas une durée de validité médicale standard.
+
+### Q12: Que signifie l'abréviation « SERA » ? ^t10q12
+- A) Specialized Radar Approach
+- B) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- C) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** SERA signifie Standardised European Rules of the Air (Règles européennes normalisées de l'air), établies par le Règlement d'exécution (UE) n° 923/2012. SERA harmonise les règles de l'air dans tous les États membres de l'UE, mettant en œuvre les dispositions de l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO au niveau européen et ajoutant des règles spécifiques à l'UE couvrant la priorité de passage, les minima VMC, les calages altimétriques et les signaux. Les options A, B et D sont des abréviations inventées non utilisées dans la réglementation aéronautique.
+
+### Q13: Que signifie l'abréviation « TRA » ? ^t10q13
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- C) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- D) Transponder Area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** TRA signifie Temporary Reserved Airspace (espace aérien temporairement réservé) — un espace aérien de dimensions définies réservé pour une activité spécifique (exercices militaires, démonstrations acrobatiques, parachutisme) pendant une période publiée. Les TRA sont activées par NOTAM et diffèrent des TSA (Temporary Segregated Areas) en ce qu'elles peuvent permettre un usage partagé sous certaines conditions. Les options A (Terminal Area), B (Temporary Radar Routing Area) et D (Transponder Area) ne sont pas des désignations ICAO ou EASA standard.
+
+### Q14: Que faut-il prendre en compte lors de l'entrée dans une RMZ ? ^t10q14
+- A) Le transpondeur doit être activé en mode C avec le code 7000
+- B) Une autorisation de l'autorité aéronautique locale doit être obtenue
+- C) Une écoute radio continue est requise et un contact radio doit être établi si possible
+- D) Une autorisation d'entrée dans la zone doit être obtenue
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) exige que tous les aéronefs soient équipés d'une radio fonctionnelle, qu'ils surveillent la fréquence désignée en permanence et qu'ils établissent un contact radio bilatéral avant l'entrée si possible. L'option A décrit une exigence de TMZ (transpondeur), pas de RMZ. Les options B et D impliquent qu'une autorisation formelle de l'ATC est nécessaire, ce qui est une exigence de CTR, pas de RMZ. La RMZ est définie dans SERA.6005 et les suppléments nationaux de l'AIP.
+
+### Q15: Que signifie une zone désignée « TMZ » ? ^t10q15
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- C) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- D) Transportation Management Zone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** TMZ signifie Transponder Mandatory Zone — un espace aérien dans lequel tous les aéronefs doivent être équipés d'un transpondeur à report d'altitude (mode C ou mode S) et l'utiliser. Cela permet aux systèmes radar ATC et anti-collision d'identifier et de suivre le trafic. Les options A (Traffic Management Zone), B (Touring Motorglider Zone) et D (Transportation Management Zone) ne sont pas des termes aéronautiques reconnus.
+
+### Q16: Un vol est classé comme « vol à vue » lorsque le... ^t10q16
+- A) Vol est effectué dans des conditions météorologiques de vol à vue.
+- B) La visibilité en vol dépasse 8 km.
+- C) La visibilité en vol dépasse 5 km.
+- D) Vol est effectué selon les règles de vol à vue.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un vol à vue (vol VFR) est défini par les règles selon lesquelles il est effectué — les règles de vol à vue (VFR) — et non par les conditions météorologiques en vigueur. Les VMC (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue) décrivent les minima météorologiques requis pour le VFR, mais un vol effectué en VMC pourrait néanmoins être conduit en IFR. L'option A confond le cadre réglementaire avec les conditions météorologiques. Les options B et C citent des valeurs de visibilité spécifiques qui sont des minima VMC pour des classes d'espace aérien particulières, pas la définition d'un vol VFR.
+
+### Q17: Que signifie l'abréviation « VMC » ? ^t10q17
+- A) Règles de vol à vue
+- B) Conditions de vol aux instruments
+- C) Conditions météorologiques variables
+- D) Conditions météorologiques de vol à vue
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** VMC signifie Visual Meteorological Conditions (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue) — les minima spécifiques de visibilité et d'espacement des nuages définis dans SERA.5001 qui doivent être respectés pour le vol VFR. Si les conditions descendent en dessous des VMC, l'espace aérien est en IMC (conditions météorologiques de vol aux instruments). L'option A (règles de vol à vue) correspond à VFR, pas VMC. L'option B (conditions de vol aux instruments) correspond essentiellement à la terminologie IMC. L'option C (conditions météorologiques variables) n'est pas un terme aéronautique standard. VMC et VFR sont des concepts liés mais distincts.
+
+### Q18: Deux aéronefs motorisés convergent sur des routes de croisement à la même altitude. Quel aéronef doit céder le passage ? ^t10q18
+- A) L'aéronef le plus léger doit monter
+- B) Les deux doivent tourner à droite
+- C) Les deux doivent tourner à gauche
+- D) L'aéronef le plus lourd doit monter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210, lorsque deux aéronefs convergent sur des routes de croisement à approximativement la même altitude, chacun doit modifier son cap vers la droite. Cela garantit que les deux aéronefs passent derrière l'autre, évitant la collision. Les options A et D introduisent incorrectement le poids comme facteur, ce qui est sans rapport avec les règles de priorité en croisement. L'option C (tourner à gauche) amènerait les aéronefs à converger davantage plutôt qu'à diverger. La règle « tourner à droite » est un principe fondamental d'évitement de collision de l'ICAO.
+
+### Q19: Deux avions sont sur des trajectoires de croisement. Lequel doit céder le passage ? ^t10q19
+- A) Les deux doivent tourner à gauche
+- B) L'aéronef venant de la droite a la priorité
+- C) Les deux doivent tourner à droite
+- D) L'aéronef venant de droite à gauche a la priorité
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210(b), lorsque deux aéronefs convergent à approximativement la même altitude, l'aéronef qui a l'autre à sa droite doit céder le passage. En d'autres termes, l'aéronef venant de la droite (se déplaçant de droite à gauche par rapport à l'autre pilote) a la priorité. L'option A est incorrecte car tourner à gauche augmente le risque de collision. L'option B énonce le principe à l'envers. L'option C décrit l'action d'évitement pour les rencontres de face, pas le principe de priorité pour le trafic en croisement.
+
+### Q20: Quel espacement des nuages doit être maintenu lors d'un vol VFR dans les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E ? ^t10q20
+- A) 1000 m horizontalement, 300 m verticalement
+- B) 1500 m horizontalement, 1000 m verticalement
+- C) 1500 m horizontalement, 1000 ft verticalement
+- D) 1000 m horizontalement, 1500 ft verticalement
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, les vols VFR dans les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E doivent maintenir 1500 m de distance horizontale des nuages et 1000 ft (environ 300 m) de distance verticale. Le détail clé est que l'horizontal est exprimé en mètres et le vertical en pieds — le mélange de ces unités est un piège d'examen courant. L'option A utilise 1000 m horizontal (trop petit). L'option B utilise 1000 m vertical (unité et valeur incorrectes). L'option D inverse les valeurs horizontale/verticale.
+
+### Q21: Dans l'espace aérien « E », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL75 ? ^t10q21
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, dans l'espace aérien de classe E au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL mais en dessous du FL100, la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 5000 m (5 km). Le FL75 (environ 7500 ft) se situe dans cette bande d'altitude. L'option A (3000 m) n'est pas un minimum VFR standard. L'option C (1500 m) ne s'applique qu'en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option D (8000 m) s'applique au FL100 et au-dessus, pas en dessous.
+
+### Q22: Dans l'espace aérien « C », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL110 ? ^t10q22
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, au FL100 et au-dessus dans l'espace aérien contrôlé (y compris la classe C), la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 8000 m (8 km). Le FL110 est au-dessus du FL100, donc la règle des 8 km s'applique. L'option A (5000 m) est le minimum en dessous du FL100. L'option C (1500 m) s'applique en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option D (3000 m) ne correspond à aucun minimum VFR SERA standard en espace aérien contrôlé.
+
+### Q23: Dans l'espace aérien « C », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL125 ? ^t10q23
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FL125 est au-dessus du FL100, donc la règle SERA.5001 pour le VFR en haute altitude s'applique : visibilité minimale en vol de 8000 m dans tout espace aérien contrôlé, y compris la classe C. L'option A (5000 m) s'applique en dessous du FL100. Les options B (3000 m) et C (1500 m) ne s'appliquent qu'en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. La progression à retenir est : basse altitude non contrôlé = 1,5 km, contrôlé en dessous du FL100 = 5 km, au FL100 et au-dessus = 8 km.
+
+### Q24: Quelles sont les exigences minimales d'espacement des nuages pour un vol VFR dans l'espace aérien « B » ? ^t10q24
+- A) Horizontalement 1.000 m, verticalement 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontalement 1.500 m, verticalement 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontalement 1.000 m, verticalement 300 m
+- D) Horizontalement 1.500 m, verticalement 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Là où le VFR est autorisé dans l'espace aérien de classe B, les minima d'espacement des nuages selon SERA.5001 sont de 1500 m horizontal et 300 m (environ 1000 ft) vertical. L'option A utilise seulement 1000 m de distance horizontale, ce qui est insuffisant. L'option B indique 1000 m vertical, ce qui est bien trop élevé et utilise la mauvaise valeur. L'option C utilise seulement 1000 m horizontal et le bon vertical, mais l'horizontal est insuffisant. Seule l'option D fournit les deux valeurs correctes.
+
+### Q25: Dans l'espace aérien « C » en dessous du FL 100, quelle visibilité minimale en vol s'applique aux opérations VFR ? ^t10q25
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, dans l'espace aérien de classe C en dessous du FL100 (au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL ou 1000 ft AGL), la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 5 km. L'option A (10 km) n'est pas un minimum SERA standard. L'option C (8 km) ne s'applique qu'au FL100 et au-dessus. L'option D (1,5 km) s'applique en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. Les pilotes de planeur traversant l'espace aérien de classe C en dessous du FL100 doivent vérifier une visibilité d'au moins 5 km.
+
+### Q26: Dans l'espace aérien « C » au FL 100 et au-dessus, quelle visibilité minimale en vol s'applique aux opérations VFR ? ^t10q26
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, au FL100 et au-dessus dans l'espace aérien contrôlé, y compris la classe C, la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 8 km. Ce seuil plus élevé reflète les vitesses de rapprochement plus grandes et le temps de réaction réduit en haute altitude. L'option A (5 km) est le minimum en dessous du FL100. L'option C (10 km) n'est pas un minimum VMC SERA standard. L'option D (1,5 km) ne s'applique qu'en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude.
+
+### Q27: Comment est défini le terme « plafond » ? ^t10q27
+- A) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20000 ft.
+- B) Altitude de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20000 ft.
+- C) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus haute couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20000 ft.
+- D) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le plafond est défini comme la hauteur (au-dessus du sol) de la base de la couche la plus basse de nuages couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel (BKN ou OVC, plus de 4 octas) en dessous de 20 000 ft. L'option B utilise « altitude » (référencée au MSL) au lieu de « hauteur » (référencée à la surface). L'option C se réfère à la couche « la plus haute » alors qu'il devrait s'agir de « la plus basse ». L'option D limite incorrectement le seuil à 10 000 ft au lieu de 20 000 ft.
+
+### Q28: De jour, lors d'une interception par un aéronef militaire, que signifie le signal suivant : un changement soudain de cap de 90 degrés ou plus et une montée sans croiser la trajectoire de l'aéronef intercepté ? ^t10q28
+- A) Vous pénétrez dans une zone réglementée ; quittez l'espace aérien immédiatement
+- B) Vous pouvez poursuivre votre vol
+- C) Suivez-moi ; je vous guiderai vers l'aérodrome approprié le plus proche
+- D) Préparez-vous pour un atterrissage de sécurité ; vous avez pénétré dans une zone interdite
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, Appendice 1, lorsqu'un aéronef intercepteur effectue une manœuvre de dégagement brusque de 90 degrés ou plus et monte sans croiser la trajectoire de l'aéronef intercepté, c'est le signal standard de « libération » signifiant « Vous pouvez poursuivre ». L'interception est terminée et le pilote peut continuer sa route. Les options A et D impliquent des avertissements de violation d'espace aérien qui utilisent des signaux différents. L'option C (« suivez-moi ») implique que l'intercepteur balance ses ailes et maintient un cap stable vers l'aérodrome de destination.
+
+### Q29: En volant au FL 80, quel calage altimétrique doit être utilisé ? ^t10q29
+- A) 1013,25 hPa.
+- B) QNH local.
+- C) 1030,25 hPa.
+- D) QFE local.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les niveaux de vol sont définis par rapport au datum de pression de l'atmosphère standard internationale de 1013,25 hPa. En volant au niveau de vol ou au-dessus de l'altitude de transition, les pilotes doivent afficher 1013,25 hPa sur le calage altimétrique et référencer l'altitude comme un niveau de vol. L'option B (QNH) donne l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer et est utilisé en dessous de l'altitude de transition. L'option C (1030,25 hPa) n'est pas une pression de référence standard. L'option D (QFE) donne la hauteur au-dessus d'un aérodrome spécifique et n'est jamais utilisé pour les niveaux de vol.
+
+### Q30: Quel est l'objectif de la règle semi-circulaire ? ^t10q30
+- A) Permettre de voler sans plan de vol déposé dans les zones prescrites publiées dans l'AIP
+- B) Permettre une montée ou une descente sûre dans un circuit d'attente
+- C) Réduire le risque de collision en diminuant la probabilité de trafic opposé à la même altitude
+- D) Prévenir les collisions en interdisant les manœuvres de virage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La règle semi-circulaire (hémisphérique) de niveau de croisière (SERA.5015) attribue différentes bandes d'altitude à différentes routes magnétiques — les vols vers l'est utilisent les milliers de pieds impairs, vers l'ouest les pairs. En séparant verticalement les aéronefs volant dans des directions opposées, la probabilité de collision frontale à la même altitude est considérablement réduite. L'option A est sans rapport avec les niveaux de croisière. L'option B décrit des procédures de circuit d'attente. L'option D est incorrecte car la règle concerne l'attribution d'altitude, pas les restrictions de manœuvre.
+
+### Q31: Un transpondeur capable de transmettre l'altitude-pression actuelle est un... ^t10q31
+- A) Transpondeur approuvé pour l'espace aérien « B ».
+- B) Transpondeur mode A.
+- C) Décodeur de pression.
+- D) Transpondeur mode C ou S.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un transpondeur qui transmet des informations d'altitude-pression est soit un transpondeur mode C, soit mode S. Le mode C ajoute le report automatique d'altitude-pression au code d'identité de base du mode A, tandis que le mode S fournit toutes les capacités du mode C plus l'interrogation sélective et les fonctions de liaison de données. L'option A est incorrecte car « approuvé pour l'espace aérien B » n'est pas une classification de transpondeur. L'option B est fausse car le mode A ne transmet qu'un code squawk à 4 chiffres sans données d'altitude. L'option C est fausse car « décodeur de pression » n'est pas un terme aéronautique.
+
+### Q32: Quel code transpondeur signale une perte de communication radio ? ^t10q32
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 2000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le squawk internationalement reconnu pour une panne de communication radio. Les pilotes doivent mémoriser les trois codes d'urgence : 7700 pour urgence générale, 7600 pour panne radio et 7500 pour intervention illicite (détournement). L'option A (7700) est pour les urgences, pas spécifiquement la perte de communication. L'option B (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR européen standard. L'option D (2000) est utilisé lors de l'entrée dans un espace aérien contrôlé sans code assigné.
+
+### Q33: En cas de panne radio, quel code transpondeur doit être sélectionné sans aucune demande de l'ATC ? ^t10q33
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un pilote subit une panne de communication radio, il doit immédiatement afficher 7600 sans attendre d'instruction de l'ATC, puisque par définition la communication n'est plus possible. Cette action proactive alerte l'ATC de la situation et déclenche les procédures de perte de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code VFR général et ne communique pas d'urgence. L'option B (7500) signale une intervention illicite, ce qui est une situation complètement différente. L'option C (7700) est pour les urgences générales, pas spécifiquement la panne radio.
+
+### Q34: Quel code transpondeur doit être affiché automatiquement lors d'une urgence sans attendre d'instructions ? ^t10q34
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans toute urgence générale (panne moteur, incendie, urgence médicale, dommage structurel), le pilote doit immédiatement afficher le code transpondeur 7700 sans attendre d'instruction de l'ATC. Cela déclenche une alarme sur les écrans radar ATC et active les procédures de réponse d'urgence. L'option A (7600) est spécifiquement pour la panne de communication radio, pas les urgences générales. L'option B (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR standard. L'option C (7500) est réservé exclusivement à l'intervention illicite (détournement) et ne doit jamais être affiché pour d'autres urgences.
+
+### Q35: Quel service de la circulation aérienne est responsable de la conduite sûre des vols ? ^t10q35
+- A) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+- B) AIS (service d'information aéronautique)
+- C) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne)
+- D) ALR (service d'alerte)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le contrôle de la circulation aérienne (ATC) est le service spécifiquement responsable d'assurer la séparation entre les aéronefs et le flux sûr, ordonné et rapide de la circulation aérienne dans l'espace aérien contrôlé. Conformément à l'Annexe 11 de l'ICAO, l'ATC gère activement les mouvements d'aéronefs pour prévenir les collisions. L'option A (FIS) fournit des informations utiles mais ne dirige ni ne sépare les aéronefs. L'option B (AIS) publie des documents d'information aéronautique mais n'a aucun rôle de contrôle opérationnel. L'option D (ALR) déclenche la recherche et le sauvetage lorsque des aéronefs sont en retard ou en détresse, mais ne gère pas la sécurité des vols en cours.
+
+### Q36: Quels services composent le service de contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q36
+- A) APP (service de contrôle d'approche) ACC (service de contrôle régional) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+- B) TWR (service de contrôle d'aérodrome) APP (service de contrôle d'approche) ACC (service de contrôle régional)
+- C) FIS (service d'information de vol) AIS (service d'information aéronautique) AFS (service fixe de télécommunications aéronautiques)
+- D) ALR (service d'alerte) SAR (service de recherche et sauvetage) TWR (service de contrôle d'aérodrome)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 11 de l'ICAO, les trois unités constitutives de l'ATC sont : TWR (contrôle d'aérodrome, gérant le trafic à l'aérodrome et autour), APP (contrôle d'approche, gérant le trafic arrivant et partant dans la zone terminale) et ACC (centre de contrôle régional, gérant le trafic en route). L'option A inclut incorrectement le FIS, qui est un service d'information séparé de l'ATC. L'option C liste des services d'information et de communication, dont aucun n'est une unité ATC. L'option D mélange des services d'urgence (ALR, SAR) avec une seule unité ATC (TWR).
+
+### Q37: Concernant la séparation dans l'espace aérien « E », quelle affirmation est correcte ? ^t10q37
+- A) Le trafic IFR n'est séparé que du trafic VFR
+- B) Le trafic VFR est séparé du trafic VFR et IFR
+- C) Le trafic VFR ne reçoit aucune séparation d'aucun trafic
+- D) Le trafic VFR n'est séparé que du trafic IFR
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'espace aérien de classe E, l'ATC sépare les vols IFR des autres vols IFR, mais le trafic VFR ne reçoit aucun service de séparation — ni des autres VFR ni des IFR. Les pilotes VFR en classe E doivent se fier entièrement au principe « voir et éviter », avec des informations de trafic fournies lorsque possible. L'option A indique incorrectement que l'IFR n'est séparé que du VFR (il est séparé des autres IFR). Les options B et D impliquent à tort que le trafic VFR reçoit une forme de séparation.
+
+### Q38: Quels services de la circulation aérienne sont disponibles au sein d'une FIR (région d'information de vol) ? ^t10q38
+- A) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne) AIS (service d'information aéronautique)
+- B) AIS (service d'information aéronautique) SAR (recherche et sauvetage)
+- C) FIS (service d'information de vol) ALR (service d'alerte)
+- D) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une région d'information de vol (FIR) fournit deux services universels dans tout son volume : le FIS (service d'information de vol), qui fournit des informations météo, NOTAM et trafic aux pilotes, et l'ALR (service d'alerte), qui notifie les services de secours lorsque des aéronefs sont en détresse ou en retard. L'ATC n'est pas fourni dans toute la FIR — il n'existe que dans l'espace aérien contrôlé désigné (CTA, CTR, voies aériennes) qui peut se trouver au sein de la FIR. Les options A, B et D incluent incorrectement l'ATC ou omettent la bonne combinaison.
+
+### Q39: Comment un pilote peut-il joindre le FIS (service d'information de vol) en vol ? ^t10q39
+- A) Par téléphone.
+- B) Par une visite personnelle.
+- C) Par communication radio.
+- D) Par internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FIS est un service opérationnel fourni aux pilotes en vol, et le principal moyen de le contacter en vol est la communication radio sur la fréquence FIS désignée. Bien que des informations pré-vol puissent être obtenues par téléphone ou en ligne, le service FIS en vol lui-même est basé sur la radio. L'option A (téléphone) et l'option D (internet) sont des moyens de contact au sol peu pratiques pour la communication en temps réel en vol. L'option B (visite personnelle) est évidemment impossible en vol.
+
+### Q40: Quelle est la phraséologie standard pour avertir qu'un aéronef léger suit un aéronef d'une catégorie de turbulence de sillage plus lourde ? ^t10q40
+- A) Attention propwash
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Caution wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie ICAO standard pour les avertissements de turbulence de sillage est « CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE », telle que prescrite dans le Doc 4444 de l'ICAO (PANS-ATM). La phraséologie normalisée est obligatoire en aviation pour éliminer toute ambiguïté. Les options A (« attention propwash »), B (« be careful wake winds ») et C (« danger jet blast ») sont toutes des expressions non standard absentes de la phraséologie approuvée par l'ICAO. L'utilisation de termes non standard peut causer de la confusion et est interdite dans l'espace aérien EASA.
+
+### Q41: Laquelle des propositions suivantes représente un compte rendu de position correct ? ^t10q41
+- A) DEABC over "N" at 35
+- B) DEABC reaching "N"
+- C) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un compte rendu de position standard selon le Doc 4444 de l'ICAO doit inclure : indicatif de l'aéronef, position (point de repère ou waypoint) et altitude ou niveau de vol. L'option C (DEABC, « N », 2500 ft) fournit correctement les trois éléments de manière concise. L'option A manque d'une référence d'altitude claire (« at 35 » est ambigu). L'option B est incomplète car elle omet entièrement l'altitude. L'option D utilise l'expression absurde « FL 2500 ft » — les niveaux de vol et les pieds ne sont jamais combinés ainsi ; il faudrait soit « FL 25 » soit « 2500 ft ».
+
+### Q42: Quel type d'information est contenu dans la partie générale (GEN) de l'AIP ? ^t10q42
+- A) Avertissements pour l'aviation, espaces aériens ATS et routes, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux
+- B) Table des matières, classification des aérodromes avec cartes correspondantes, cartes d'approche, cartes de roulage, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux
+- C) Restrictions d'accès aux aérodromes, contrôles des passagers, exigences pour les pilotes, modèles de licences et durées de validité
+- D) Symboles cartographiques, liste des aides radionavigation, heures de lever et coucher du soleil, redevances aéroportuaires, redevances de contrôle aérien
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'AIP est structuré en trois parties : GEN (Général), ENR (En route) et AD (Aérodromes). La section GEN contient des informations administratives générales incluant les symboles/icônes cartographiques, les listes d'aides à la radionavigation, les tables de lever/coucher du soleil, les réglementations nationales, les redevances aéroportuaires et les redevances ATC. L'option A décrit le contenu de la section ENR (espaces aériens, routes, restrictions). L'option B décrit le contenu de la section AD (cartes d'aérodrome, cartes d'approche). L'option C mélange des éléments qui ne correspondent à aucune section unique de l'AIP.
+
+### Q43: En combien de parties la Publication d'information aéronautique (AIP) est-elle divisée ? ^t10q43
+- A) GEN ENR AD
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 15 de l'ICAO, l'AIP est divisé en trois parties standardisées : GEN (Général), ENR (En route) et AD (Aérodromes). Cette structure est universelle dans tous les États membres de l'ICAO. Les options B (AGA, COM), C (COM, MET) et D (MET, RAC) utilisent des abréviations d'anciennes structures de documentation ICAO qui ne font plus partie de l'organisation moderne de l'AIP. Seule l'option A reflète la structure AIP standard actuelle de l'ICAO.
+
+### Q44: Quel type d'information trouve-t-on dans la section « AD » de l'AIP ? ^t10q44
+- A) Avertissements pour l'aviation, espaces aériens ATS et routes, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux.
+- B) Symboles cartographiques, liste des aides radionavigation, heures de lever et coucher du soleil, redevances aéroportuaires, redevances de contrôle aérien
+- C) Table des matières, classification des aérodromes avec cartes correspondantes, cartes d'approche, cartes de roulage
+- D) Restrictions d'accès aux aérodromes, contrôles des passagers, exigences pour les pilotes, modèles de licences et durées de validité
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La section AD (Aérodromes) de l'AIP contient toutes les informations spécifiques aux aérodromes : classification des aérodromes, données de piste, cartes d'approche et de départ, cartes de roulage, balisage, fréquences, heures d'ouverture et données d'obstacles. L'option A décrit le contenu ENR (En route) couvrant l'espace aérien et les restrictions. L'option B décrit le contenu GEN (Général) comme les symboles et les redevances. L'option D mélange des éléments réglementaires et administratifs qui ne correspondent pas à la section AD.
+
+### Q45: Le NOTAM indiqué est valide jusqu'au... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^t10q45
+- A) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- B) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les codes temporels des NOTAM utilisent le format AAMMJJHHMM en UTC. Le champ « C) » d'un NOTAM spécifie la fin de validité. Le code 1305211400 se décode ainsi : année 2013 (13), mois mai (05), jour 21, heure 14:00 UTC — soit le 21 mai 2013 à 14:00 UTC. L'option B interprète mal le format de date, confondant le mois avec la date. L'option C lit incorrectement l'année comme 2014. L'option D interprète complètement mal l'encodage. Le décodage correct des NOTAM est une compétence fondamentale du droit aérien pour tous les pilotes.
+
+### Q46: Un bulletin d'information pré-vol (PIB) est une compilation des... ^t10q46
+- A) Informations AIP d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées avant le vol.
+- B) Informations AIC d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées après le vol.
+- C) Informations ICAO d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées après le vol.
+- D) Informations NOTAM d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées avant le vol.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) est un résumé standardisé des NOTAM en vigueur pertinents pour un vol prévu, compilé et émis avant le départ. Il filtre les NOTAM pertinents pour la route, le départ, la destination et les aérodromes de dégagement. L'option A est incorrecte car un PIB est basé sur des données NOTAM, pas des données AIP. L'option B est incorrecte à deux titres : elle référence les AIC (pas les NOTAM) et dit « après le vol » (c'est un outil pré-vol). L'option C identifie également mal la source et le moment.
+
+### Q47: Comment est définie l'« altitude de l'aérodrome » ? ^t10q47
+- A) La valeur moyenne de la hauteur de l'aire de manœuvre.
+- B) Le point le plus élevé de l'aire d'atterrissage.
+- C) Le point le plus bas de l'aire d'atterrissage.
+- D) Le point le plus élevé de l'aire de trafic.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, l'altitude de l'aérodrome est définie comme l'altitude du point le plus élevé de l'aire d'atterrissage. Cela garantit que la valeur publiée représente la hauteur de terrain la plus exigeante dont les aéronefs doivent tenir compte lors de l'approche et du départ. L'option A (moyenne de l'aire de manœuvre) sous-estimerait l'altitude critique. L'option C (point le plus bas) est l'opposé de la définition correcte. L'option D (point le plus élevé de l'aire de trafic) est incorrecte car l'aire de trafic n'est pas l'aire d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q48: Comment est défini le terme « piste » ? ^t10q48
+- A) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre ou aquatique préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- B) Aire circulaire sur un aérodrome préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- C) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- D) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des hélicoptères.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, une piste est une aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs. Les trois éléments clés sont : forme rectangulaire, aérodrome terrestre et aéronefs en général. L'option A est incorrecte car les pistes sont spécifiques aux aérodromes terrestres (les aérodromes aquatiques ont des aires d'amerrissage, pas des pistes). L'option B est incorrecte car la forme est rectangulaire, pas circulaire. L'option D est incorrecte car les pistes servent les aéronefs en général, pas spécifiquement les hélicoptères (les hélicoptères utilisent des hélistations ou des aires FATO).
+
+### Q49: Comment peut-on rendre un indicateur de direction du vent plus visible ? ^t10q49
+- A) En le montant au sommet de la tour de contrôle.
+- B) En l'entourant d'un cercle blanc.
+- C) En le plaçant sur une grande surface noire.
+- D) En le construisant avec des matériaux verts.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, un indicateur de direction du vent (manche à air ou té de vent) doit être entouré d'un cercle blanc pour améliorer sa visibilité depuis les airs. Le contraste élevé du fond blanc rend l'indicateur plus facile à identifier par rapport au terrain de l'aérodrome. L'option A (montage sur la tour de contrôle) n'est pas une méthode standard ICAO d'amélioration de la visibilité et pourrait interférer avec les opérations de la tour. L'option C (surface noire) n'est pas spécifiée dans les normes ICAO. L'option D (matériaux verts) réduirait en fait la visibilité sur les surfaces herbeuses.
+
+### Q50: Quelle forme a un indicateur de direction d'atterrissage ? ^t10q50
+- A) Une flèche coudée
+- B) L
+- C) T
+- D) Une flèche droite
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, l'indicateur de direction d'atterrissage a une forme en T (communément appelé « T d'atterrissage » ou « T de signalisation »). Les aéronefs atterrissent vers la barre transversale du T et décollent en s'en éloignant, rendant la direction d'atterrissage immédiatement claire. Les options A (flèche coudée) et D (flèche droite) ne sont pas la forme ICAO standard pour cet indicateur. L'option B (forme en L) est utilisée à d'autres fins — indiquer un circuit de trafic à droite, pas la direction d'atterrissage.
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+### Q51: Who bears the responsibility for ensuring that mandatory on-board documents are present and that logbooks are correctly maintained? ^t10q51
+- A) The air transport company.
+- B) The operator of the aircraft.
+- C) The pilot-in-command.
+- D) The owner of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) bears ultimate responsibility for ensuring that all required documents are on board and properly maintained before every flight. This is a fundamental principle of aviation law under both ICAO Annex 2 and EASA regulations. Option A (air transport company) and Option B (operator) have general oversight duties but the direct pre-flight responsibility rests with the PIC. Option D (owner) may not even be present at the time of flight.
+
+### Q52: Which activities may the Federal Council require OFAC authorization for? ^t10q52
+- A) Only public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- B) Parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- C) None of the activities listed above requires OFAC authorization.
+- D) Only parachute descents and captive balloon ascents. No authorization is required for powered aircraft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, the Federal Council may require OFAC (Federal Office of Civil Aviation) authorization for all listed special activities: parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights, and aerobatic demonstrations. These activities present elevated safety risks to participants and the public. Option A is too narrow because it excludes parachuting and captive balloons. Option C is wrong because authorization is indeed required. Option D incorrectly limits the requirement to only parachuting and captive balloons.
+
+### Q53: Is dropping objects from an aircraft in flight prohibited in Switzerland? ^t10q53
+- A) No, only the dropping of advertising material is prohibited.
+- B) Yes, it is strictly prohibited.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes, subject to exceptions to be determined by the Federal Council.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, dropping objects from an aircraft in flight is in principle prohibited, but the Federal Council may define specific exceptions such as parachuting, emergency drops, or authorised agricultural activities. Option A is wrong because the prohibition is not limited to advertising material. Option B is wrong because exceptions exist -- it is not a strict absolute prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is a general prohibition in place, even though exceptions are possible.
+
+### Q54: Where specifically is the certification basis of an aircraft documented? ^t10q54
+- A) In the VFR Manual.
+- B) In the annex to the certificate of airworthiness.
+- C) In the annex to the noise certificate.
+- D) In the insurance certificate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The certification basis of an aircraft (type certificate data sheet, approved operating conditions, mass limits, authorised flight categories, and required equipment) is documented in the annex to the Certificate of Airworthiness. This annex defines what the aircraft is certified to do. Option A (VFR Manual) contains operational procedures, not certification data. Option C (noise certificate annex) deals only with noise emissions. Option D (insurance certificate) covers financial liability, not airworthiness certification.
+
+### Q55: Your aircraft, not used for commercial traffic, requires repairs abroad. Which statement applies? ^t10q55
+- A) Repair work may only be carried out in Switzerland.
+- B) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized by OFAC.
+- C) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized as such by the competent aviation authority.
+- D) The work must be carried out by an EASA-certified maintenance organization.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a non-commercial aircraft requiring repairs abroad, the maintenance must be performed by an organisation recognised by the competent aviation authority of the country where the work is done. This provides flexibility while ensuring regulatory oversight. Option A is wrong because repairs are not restricted to Switzerland. Option B is wrong because OFAC recognition is not specifically required for foreign maintenance. Option D is too restrictive because EASA certification is not always required for non-commercial aircraft maintenance in all jurisdictions.
+
+### Q56: A well-known watchmaker has painted an aircraft in the brand's colours with a large watch on its fuselage. Is this allowed? ^t10q56
+- A) Yes, if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization, the operation has no political purpose and the advertising markings are limited to specific parts of the aircraft.
+- B) No, advertising is strictly prohibited on aircraft.
+- C) Yes, subject to other provisions of federal legislation. The nationality and registration marks must in all cases remain easily recognizable.
+- D) Yes, but only if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization and the nationality and registration marks remain easily recognizable.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss law, advertising on aircraft is permitted subject to other provisions of federal legislation, with only one mandatory condition: the nationality and registration marks must remain easily recognisable at all times. No special OFAC authorisation is needed for applying advertising markings. Option A imposes unnecessary conditions (OFAC authorization, no political purpose, limited placement) that are not required. Option B is simply wrong -- advertising is not prohibited. Option D incorrectly requires OFAC authorization.
+
+### Q57: Under what conditions may a person serve as a crew member on board an aircraft? ^t10q57
+- A) When that person holds a valid licence issued by their country of origin.
+- B) When that person holds a valid licence issued or recognized by the country in which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) When that person holds a valid licence issued by the country in which the aircraft is operated.
+- D) When that person holds a valid licence recognized by their country of origin.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A crew member must hold a valid licence issued or recognised by the state of registration of the aircraft, in accordance with ICAO Annex 1. The state of registration defines the qualification requirements for crew operating its aircraft. Option A and Option D reference the crew member's country of origin, which is irrelevant -- it is the aircraft's state of registration that matters. Option C references the country of operation, which is also not the determining factor under ICAO rules.
+
+### Q58: Under what conditions is it permitted to carry and operate a radio on board? ^t10q58
+- A) If a radio communication licence has been issued for the radio and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+- B) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- C) If the frequency increments of the radio are at least 0.125 MHz and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- D) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Two cumulative conditions must be met: first, authorisation to install and use the radio must have been granted by the competent authority, and second, crew members who operate the radio must hold the corresponding formal qualification (not merely informal training). Option A is wrong because a "radio communication licence" is not the same as installation/use authorisation. Option C introduces an irrelevant technical specification about frequency increments. Option D is wrong because it requires only "training" rather than a formal qualification, which is insufficient.
+
+### Q59: What must a pilot possess to be authorized to communicate by radio with air traffic services? ^t10q59
+- A) A radiotelephony course certificate and sufficient mastery of standard phraseology.
+- B) In all cases, a radiotelephony qualification. Aeroplane and helicopter pilots must additionally hold a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- C) A valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- D) A radiotelephony qualification and a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All pilots wishing to communicate with ATC must hold a radiotelephony qualification. Additionally, aeroplane and helicopter pilots must also possess a valid language proficiency attestation in the language used on the frequencies, as required under Swiss regulations. Option A is insufficient because a course certificate alone does not constitute a formal qualification. Option C omits the radiotelephony qualification entirely. Option D applies the language proficiency requirement universally, but under Swiss rules it is specifically required for aeroplane and helicopter pilots, not necessarily for all pilot categories such as glider or balloon pilots.
+
+### Q60: Your ophthalmologist has prescribed corrective lenses. Which statement is correct? ^t10q60
+- A) You need not do anything. A visual deficiency that is well corrected has no effect on medical fitness.
+- B) You are immediately unfit.
+- C) You must promptly seek advice from your aviation medical examiner.
+- D) You can simply report your ophthalmologist's decision to your aviation medical examiner at the next routine examination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any change in medical condition, including the prescription of corrective lenses, must be reported promptly to the aviation medical examiner (AME). The AME will assess whether the change affects medical fitness and whether additional restrictions or conditions must be placed on the licence. Option A is wrong because even well-corrected deficiencies may require documentation and a medical fitness reassessment. Option B is wrong because a corrective lens prescription does not automatically make a pilot unfit. Option D is wrong because waiting until the next routine examination could mean flying with an unreported medical change, which is not permitted.
+
+### Q61: In which type of airspace may a Special VFR (SVFR) flight be authorized when the ceiling is below 450 m above ground and surface visibility is less than 5 km? ^t10q61
+- A) FIR.
+- B) TMA.
+- C) CTR.
+- D) AWY.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Special VFR (SVFR) flights can only be authorised within a CTR (Control Zone), which is the controlled airspace immediately surrounding an aerodrome. When meteorological conditions fall below normal VMC minima, ATC within the CTR can grant SVFR clearance to permit operations. Option A (FIR) is too broad -- SVFR is not applicable to the entire flight information region. Option B (TMA) is terminal airspace above the CTR, not the zone where SVFR applies. Option D (AWY) is an airway where SVFR is not authorised.
+
+### Q62: What evasive action should the pilots of two VFR aircraft on converging tracks generally take? ^t10q62
+- A) One continues on track while the other turns right.
+- B) One turns left, the other turns right.
+- C) Each pilot turns left.
+- D) Each pilot turns right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, the standard ICAO evasive action for converging aircraft is that each pilot turns right, ensuring both aircraft pass behind one another and diverge safely. This symmetrical rule eliminates ambiguity about who should manoeuvre. Option A is wrong because both aircraft must take action, not just one. Option B (one left, one right) would be uncoordinated and could worsen the situation. Option C (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to converge further rather than diverge.
+
+### Q63: What are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements for VFR flight in Class D airspace below 10,000 ft AMSL? ^t10q63
+- A) Visibility 1.5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+- B) Visibility 8 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 450 m.
+- C) Visibility 5 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 300 m.
+- D) Visibility 5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class D airspace below FL100 (10,000 ft AMSL), SERA.5001 prescribes VMC minima of: 5 km visibility, 1,500 m horizontal cloud distance, and 300 m (1,000 ft) vertical cloud distance. These are the same minima as for Classes C and E in this altitude band. Option A describes conditions applicable to lower uncontrolled airspace. Option B uses 8 km visibility and 450 m vertical clearance, which do not match any standard SERA values for this context. Option D omits the required cloud distance values.
+
+### Q64: Among the airspace classes used in Switzerland, which ones are classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q64
+- A) D, C
+- B) G, E, D, C
+- C) E, D, C
+- D) E, C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, airspace classes C, D, and E are all classified as controlled airspace. Class G is uncontrolled airspace. Classes A and B exist in the ICAO classification system but are not used in Switzerland. Option A omits Class E, which is controlled airspace (though VFR traffic does not receive separation in it). Option B incorrectly includes Class G, which is uncontrolled. Option D omits Class D, which is definitely controlled airspace surrounding many Swiss aerodromes.
+
+### Q65: According to the applicable rules of the air, what is the definition of "day"? ^t10q65
+- A) The period from sunrise to sunset.
+- B) The period between 06:00 and 20:00 in winter and between 06:00 and 21:00 in summer.
+- C) The period from the end of morning civil twilight to the beginning of evening civil twilight.
+- D) The period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation, "day" is defined as the period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight -- roughly 30 minutes before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset. This broader definition gives pilots additional usable daylight at both ends. Option A (sunrise to sunset) is too restrictive and is the astronomical definition, not the aviation one. Option B uses fixed clock times that do not account for seasonal and geographic variations. Option C reverses the twilight references, which would result in a shorter rather than longer period.
+
+### Q66: What constitutes an aviation accident? ^t10q66
+- A) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which at least one person is killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft that requires the aircraft to be repaired.
+- C) The crash of an aircraft.
+- D) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which a person is killed or seriously injured, or in which the structural integrity, performance or flight characteristics of the aircraft are significantly impaired.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is defined as an event associated with aircraft operation resulting in either fatal/serious injury to persons OR significant structural damage that impairs the aircraft's integrity, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify an event as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting aircraft damage. Option B is too broad -- not every repair constitutes an accident. Option C (crash) is too narrow and not the formal definition.
+
+### Q67: You wish to carry out private flights for remuneration. What formality must you complete to limit your civil liability? ^t10q67
+- A) Take out a special passenger insurance policy which passengers are required to accept.
+- B) No formality is required since the Montreal Convention releases the pilot from all liability.
+- C) Draw up a declaration to be signed by passengers releasing you from all liability.
+- D) Issue a transport document as proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded, which limits liability for damage to baggage and for delay.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Issuing a transport document (ticket) constitutes proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded between the pilot and the passenger. Under the Montreal Convention, the existence of such a contract limits the carrier's liability for baggage damage and delays. Option A is incorrect because special passenger insurance is not the mechanism for limiting civil liability under the Convention. Option B is wrong because the Montreal Convention does not release pilots from all liability -- it caps liability under certain conditions. Option C (liability waiver) is not a legally recognised mechanism under international aviation law.
+
+### Q68: What type of information is disseminated through an AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular)? ^t10q68
+- A) Aeronautical information of importance to persons involved in flight operations concerning the construction, condition or modification of aeronautical facilities and their duration.
+- B) An AIC is a notice containing information that does not meet the conditions for issuing a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but which relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative or legislative matters.
+- C) The AIC is the manual for pilots flying IFR. Its structure and content are analogous to those of the VFR Manual.
+- D) In principle, any information that justifies the issuance of a NOTAM and relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical or legislative matters may be published by AIC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular) contains supplementary information that does not meet the criteria for publication as a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but is still relevant to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative, and legislative matters. It fills the gap between urgent NOTAMs and permanent AIP entries. Option A describes NOTAM-type information rather than AIC content. Option C is completely wrong -- an AIC is not an IFR manual. Option D reverses the relationship: AICs contain information that does NOT justify a NOTAM, not information that does.
+
+### Q69: What does the aerodrome operations manual govern? ^t10q69
+- A) The certification of maintenance organizations located at the aerodrome.
+- B) The organization of the aerodrome, opening hours, approach and takeoff procedures, use of aerodrome facilities by passengers, aircraft and ground vehicles as well as other users, and ground handling services.
+- C) Employment contracts, vacation entitlement and shift work of the aerodrome operator.
+- D) The operation and opening hours of the aerodrome restaurant and other businesses located at the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome operations manual is a comprehensive document governing all operational aspects of the aerodrome: its organisation, opening hours, approach and take-off procedures, use of facilities by all users (passengers, aircraft, ground vehicles), and ground handling services. Option A is wrong because maintenance organisation certification is handled by EASA/national authorities, not the aerodrome operations manual. Option C covers employment matters unrelated to aerodrome operations. Option D covers commercial businesses, which are outside the scope of the operations manual.
+
+### Q70: What does this ground signal indicate? (Two dumbbells) ^t10q70
+> **Ground signal:**
+> ![[figures/t10_q70.png]]
+> *Two dumbbells -- signal indicating that landings and takeoffs are to be made on runways only, but that other maneuvers (taxiing) may be carried out outside the runways and taxiways.*
+
+- A) Landing and takeoff on runways only. Other manoeuvres may however be conducted outside the runways and taxiways.
+- B) Landing, takeoff and taxiing on runways and taxiways only.
+- C) Caution during takeoff or landing.
+- D) Landing and takeoff on hard-surfaced runways only.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dumbbell signal displayed in the signals area means that landings and take-offs must be made on runways only, but other manoeuvres such as taxiing, turning, and positioning may be conducted outside the runways and taxiways on the grass or other surfaces. Option B is too restrictive because it confines all manoeuvres to runways and taxiways (that would be the dumbbell with a cross bar). Option C describes a different signal entirely. Option D introduces "hard-surfaced" which is not what this signal communicates.
+
+### Q71: When two aircraft approach each other head-on, what manoeuvre must both pilots perform? ^t10q71
+- A) Each turns left.
+- B) One turns right, the other turns left.
+- C) One flies straight ahead while the other turns right.
+- D) Each turns right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210(c) and ICAO Annex 2, when two aircraft are on head-on or nearly head-on courses, both pilots must alter heading to the right, each passing the other on their left side. This mirrors road traffic conventions and eliminates ambiguity. Option A (both turn left) would cause the aircraft to pass on the wrong side and could lead to collision. Option B (one left, one right) is uncoordinated and dangerous. Option C (one straight, one turns) is incorrect because both pilots must take evasive action.
+
+### Q72: Which of the following airspaces are not classified as controlled airspace? ^t10q72
+- A) Class G airspace.
+- B) Class G and E airspaces.
+- C) Class C airspace.
+- D) Class G, E and D airspaces.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, Classes G and E are not classified as controlled airspace for VFR traffic purposes. Class G is uncontrolled airspace, and Class E, while technically controlled for IFR flights, provides no ATC separation for VFR traffic. Option A is incomplete because it lists only Class G and omits Class E. Option C is wrong because Class C is definitely controlled airspace. Option D incorrectly includes Class D, which is a controlled airspace requiring ATC clearance.
+
+### Q73: To which authority has the Federal Council delegated aviation oversight in Switzerland? ^t10q73
+- A) The Swiss air navigation services (Skyguide).
+- B) The Aero-Club of Switzerland.
+- C) The Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (DETEC).
+- D) The cantonal police forces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Federal Council delegates aviation oversight to DETEC (Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications), which in turn delegates operational supervision to FOCA (Federal Office of Civil Aviation, known as BAZL/OFAC). Option A (Skyguide) provides air navigation services but is not the regulatory oversight authority. Option B (Aero-Club) is a private association, not a government supervisory body. Option D (cantonal police) have no aviation oversight role.
+
+### Q74: For which of the following flights is filing a flight plan mandatory? ^t10q74
+- A) For a VFR flight over the Alps, Pre-Alps or Jura.
+- B) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- C) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+- D) For a VFR flight in Class E airspace.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a VFR flight plan is mandatory when the flight requires the use of air traffic control services, such as transiting a CTR, TMA, or other controlled airspace where ATC interaction is needed. Option A (Alps/Pre-Alps/Jura) does not automatically require a flight plan. Option C (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan trigger. Option D (Class E airspace) is incorrect because VFR flights in Class E do not require ATC services or a flight plan.
+
+### Q75: What minimum height must be maintained above densely populated areas during VFR flight? ^t10q75
+- A) At least 300 m above the ground.
+- B) At least 150 m above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) At least 150 m above the ground.
+- D) At least 450 m above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005 and ICAO Annex 2, the minimum height over densely populated areas is 150 m (approximately 500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-clearance-based rule ensures safe separation from structures and terrain. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacles. Option C (150 m AGL) ignores the obstacle clearance requirement. Option D (450 m AGL) is not the standard minimum height specified in SERA.
+
+### Q76: Among the aircraft listed below, which have priority for landing and takeoff? ^t10q76
+- A) Aircraft manoeuvring on the ground.
+- B) Aircraft arriving from another aerodrome that are in the aerodrome circuit.
+- C) Aircraft on final approach.
+- D) Aircraft that have received an ATC clearance to taxi.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2 and SERA.3210, aircraft on final approach or landing always have priority over all other aircraft in flight or manoeuvring on the ground. This rule exists because aircraft on final approach have limited ability to manoeuvre and are in the most critical phase of flight. Option A (ground manoeuvring aircraft) must yield to landing traffic. Option B (aircraft in the circuit) have lower priority than those on final. Option D (aircraft with taxi clearance) must also give way to landing aircraft.
+
+### Q77: What does this signal indicate? ^t10q77
+![[figures/t10_q77.png]]
+- A) All runways at this aerodrome are closed.
+- B) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- C) Only hard-surface runways are to be used for landing and takeoff.
+- D) Takeoff and landing only on runways; other manoeuvres are not restricted to the use of runways and taxiways.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown indicates that glider flying is in progress at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO ground signal placed in the signals area to warn arriving and overflying aircraft that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (all runways closed) uses a different signal. Option C (hard-surface runways only) is not what this signal communicates. Option D describes the dumbbell signal, which is a different ground marking entirely.
+
+### Q78: Who has the responsibility for ensuring that the required documents are carried on board the aircraft? ^t10q78
+- A) The operator of the air transport undertaking (Operator).
+- B) The owner of the aircraft.
+- C) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+- D) The operator of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot-in-command (PIC) is responsible for ensuring that all required documents are carried on board the aircraft before flight. This is established in ICAO Annex 2 and EASA/Swiss aviation regulations. The PIC must personally verify document compliance as part of pre-flight preparation. Option A (operator of air transport undertaking) and Option D (operator) have organisational responsibilities but the direct duty falls on the PIC. Option B (owner) may not be involved in the flight operation at all.
+
+### Q79: Which of the following instructions regarding runway direction in use takes precedence? ^t10q79
+- A) The wind sock.
+- B) The landing T.
+- C) The ATC instruction transmitted by radio from the control tower.
+- D) The two digits displayed vertically on the control tower.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC radio instructions from the control tower take the highest precedence over all visual indicators when determining the runway direction in use. ATC has the most current and comprehensive situational awareness and may assign a runway that differs from what the windsock or landing T suggests. Option A (windsock) indicates wind direction but does not override ATC. Option B (landing T) is a visual indicator subordinate to ATC instructions. Option D (tower digits) provides general runway information but is superseded by direct ATC radio instructions.
+
+### Q80: In the event of a radio failure, what code must be set on the transponder? ^t10q80
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally standardised squawk for radio communication failure. Setting this code immediately alerts ATC that the pilot has lost radio contact and triggers loss-of-communications procedures. Option A (7000) is the standard European VFR conspicuity code and does not indicate any emergency. Option B (7500) is reserved for unlawful interference (hijacking). Option C (7700) is the general emergency code, not specifically for radio failure.
+
+### Q81: Is it permitted to deviate from the rules of the air applicable to aircraft? ^t10q81
+- A) Yes, but only in Class G airspace.
+- B) No, under no circumstances.
+- C) Yes, but only for safety reasons.
+- D) Yes, absolutely.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2 and SERA, deviation from the rules of the air is permitted only when necessary for safety reasons and only to the extent strictly required to address the safety concern. This is the sole legal exception. Option A is wrong because the exception is not limited to any specific airspace class. Option B is wrong because safety-driven deviations are permitted. Option D is wrong because unrestricted deviation is never allowed -- the safety justification must exist.
+
+### Q82: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 2100 m AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: Vertical / Horizontal ^t10q82
+- A) 1.5 km / 50 m / 100 m
+- B) 8.0 km / 100 m / 300 m
+- C) 5.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 2100 m AMSL (approximately 6900 ft), which is well above 3000 ft AMSL and 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima in Class E airspace are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option A describes values for low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far below the required minima. Option B has incorrect vertical and horizontal clearance values. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which does not match the Class E requirement at this altitude.
+
+### Q83: By what time at the latest must a daytime VFR flight be completed? ^t10q83
+- A) 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight.
+- B) At the beginning of civil twilight.
+- C) At sunset.
+- D) At the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a daytime VFR flight must be completed no later than sunset. Flying after sunset requires either a night flight qualification or special authorisation. Option A (30 minutes before end of civil twilight) is earlier than required. Option B (beginning of civil twilight) is ambiguous and does not correspond to the Swiss rule. Option D (end of civil twilight) is too late -- while "day" in aviation extends to the end of civil twilight, Swiss VFR completion requirements use sunset as the cut-off.
+
+### Q84: Are you allowed to use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without holding the radiotelephony rating extension? ^t10q84
+- A) Yes, provided other radio communications are not disrupted.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes.
+- D) Yes, provided I have sufficient command of phraseology.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, a pilot may use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without holding the specific radiotelephony extension, in airspaces where radio communication is required. The radiotelephony qualification is needed for certain controlled airspaces but basic radio use for ATC communication is permitted. Option A adds an unnecessary condition about not disrupting other communications. Option B is incorrect because the prohibition is not absolute. Option D adds a phraseology condition that, while good practice, is not the regulatory requirement.
+
+### Q85: Which type of flights may be conducted below the prescribed minimum heights without specific FOCA authorization, to the extent necessary? ^t10q85
+- A) Mountain flights.
+- B) Aerobatic flights.
+- C) Aerial photography flights.
+- D) Search and rescue flights.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Search and rescue (SAR) flights are permitted below prescribed minimum heights without special FOCA authorisation, to the extent operationally necessary to accomplish the rescue mission. The urgency and life-saving nature of SAR operations justifies this exemption. Option A (mountain flights), Option B (aerobatic flights), and Option C (aerial photography flights) all require specific authorisation to operate below minimum heights.
+
+### Q86: Is it permitted to cross an airway at FL 115 under VFR when visibility is 5 km? ^t10q86
+- A) Yes, but only if it is a special VFR flight (SVFR).
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes, in Class E airspace.
+- D) Yes, but only if it is a controlled VFR flight (CVFR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At FL 115 (above FL 100), the minimum VFR visibility required is 8 km. With only 5 km visibility, the VMC minima are not met, and VFR flight through an airway is not permitted regardless of airspace class or flight type. Option A (SVFR) is not applicable at flight levels -- SVFR is only authorised within CTRs. Option C is wrong because the visibility requirement applies in all airspace at this altitude. Option D (CVFR) does not waive the VMC visibility minima.
+
+### Q87: Are formation flights allowed? ^t10q87
+- A) Yes, but only with authorisation from the Federal Office of Civil Aviation.
+- B) Yes, but only outside controlled airspace.
+- C) Yes, provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand.
+- D) Yes, but only if the pilots-in-command are in permanent radio contact with each other.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, formation flights are permitted provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand, agreeing on the formation procedures, positions, and responsibilities. No special FOCA authorisation is needed. Option A is wrong because FOCA authorisation is not required. Option B is incorrect because formation flights are not restricted to uncontrolled airspace. Option D is wrong because permanent radio contact, while useful, is not a regulatory requirement for formation flying.
+
+### Q88: What does this signal mean? ^t10q88
+![[figures/t10_q88.png]]
+- A) Caution during approach and landing.
+- B) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- C) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- D) Landing prohibited.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A red square with two white diagonal crosses (St. Andrew's crosses) is the standard ICAO ground signal meaning "landing prohibited." It is placed in the signal square to warn all aircraft that the aerodrome is closed to landing operations. Option A (caution during approach) is a different signal. Option B is wrong because the signal applies to all aircraft, not just powered ones. Option C is wrong because the signal prohibits landing entirely rather than allowing direction choice.
+
+### Q89: Can a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any further formality? ^t10q89
+- A) Only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- B) No, it is strictly prohibited for VFR flights.
+- C) Only if permanent contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ (Flight Information Zone) may be transited provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. If radio contact cannot be established, the rules of the underlying airspace class apply. Option A incorrectly requires FIS authorisation and English proficiency, which are not the actual requirements. Option B is wrong because transit is not prohibited -- it is permitted under conditions. Option D is wrong because transit is not unconditional; maintaining AFIS contact is required.
+
+### Q90: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q90
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Only the crash of an aircraft or helicopter.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident includes any event related to aircraft operation in which a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained significant structural damage affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both criteria independently qualify as an accident. Option A is incomplete because it covers only personal injury, omitting significant aircraft damage. Option B is too narrow -- an accident is not limited to crashes. Option D is wrong because costly repairs alone do not define an accident; the damage must significantly affect structural integrity or flight characteristics.
+
+### Q91: Are observed or received signals binding for the glider pilot? ^t10q91
+- A) Yes, but only signals placed on the ground, not light signals.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes.
+- D) Yes, except light signals for aircraft on the ground.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All observed or received signals -- whether ground signals, light signals, or radio signals -- are binding for the glider pilot. ICAO Annex 2 makes no distinction between signal types; compliance with all visual and radio signals is mandatory for all aircraft, including gliders. Option A is wrong because light signals are equally binding. Option B is wrong because signals are mandatory, not optional. Option D incorrectly excludes light signals for grounded aircraft, which are also binding.
+
+### Q92: What is the minimum flight height above densely populated areas and locations where large public gatherings occur? ^t10q92
+- A) 300 m AGL.
+- B) 150 m AGL above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) 600 m AGL.
+- D) There is no specific height figure; however, one must fly in a manner that allows reaching clear terrain suitable for a risk-free landing at any time.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5005, the minimum flight height over densely populated areas and large public gatherings is 150 m (500 ft) above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft. This obstacle-based rule ensures adequate clearance from structures and protects people on the ground. Option A (300 m AGL) does not account for obstacle clearance. Option C (600 m AGL) is higher than the actual requirement. Option D describes a general safety principle but not the specific regulatory minimum.
+
+### Q93: In which airspace classes may VFR flights be conducted in Switzerland without needing air traffic control services? ^t10q93
+- A) In Class C, D, E and G airspaces.
+- B) Only in Class G airspace.
+- C) In Class E and G airspaces.
+- D) In Class A and B airspaces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, VFR flights may be conducted without ATC services in Class E and Class G airspace. Class E is controlled for IFR but does not require ATC interaction for VFR flights; Class G is entirely uncontrolled. Option A incorrectly includes Classes C and D, which require ATC clearance. Option B is too restrictive because Class E also permits VFR without ATC. Option D is wrong because Classes A and B either prohibit VFR or require ATC clearance.
+
+### Q94: What does this signal indicate? ^t10q94
+![[figures/t10_q94.png]]
+- A) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- B) Caution during approach and landing.
+- C) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- D) Landing prohibited.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown indicates caution during approach and landing, warning pilots to exercise extra care due to obstacles, poor surface conditions, or other hazards at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO ground signal placed in the signals area. Option A is wrong because the signal does not indicate free choice of landing direction. Option C is wrong because the signal applies to all aircraft types, not just powered aircraft. Option D describes a different signal (red square with white diagonal crosses).
+
+### Q95: In which document must technical deficiencies found during aircraft operation be recorded? ^t10q95
+- A) In the maintenance manual.
+- B) In the journey log (aircraft logbook).
+- C) In the aircraft flight manual.
+- D) In the operations manual.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Technical deficiencies discovered during aircraft operation must be recorded in the journey log (aircraft logbook/tech log). This is the official document tracking the aircraft's technical status and operational history, ensuring maintenance organisations are informed of defects requiring attention. Option A (maintenance manual) contains procedures, not deficiency records. Option C (aircraft flight manual) describes operating limitations and procedures. Option D (operations manual) covers organisational procedures, not individual aircraft defect tracking.
+
+### Q96: How is the use of cameras regulated at the international level? ^t10q96
+- A) Use is generally prohibited.
+- B) Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory.
+- C) Use is generally permitted.
+- D) Private use is generally permitted; commercial photography is subject to authorisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At the international level, there is no uniform ICAO rule on the use of cameras from aircraft. Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory according to its own national laws, which may vary based on security, privacy, or military considerations. Option A is wrong because there is no blanket international prohibition. Option C is wrong because there is no blanket international permission either. Option D incorrectly distinguishes between private and commercial use at the international level, which is a national-level distinction.
+
+### Q97: What do white or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway signify? ^t10q97
+- A) They mark the landing area in use.
+- B) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- C) The delineated runway portion is not usable.
+- D) Caution during approach and landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** White or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway indicate that the marked portion of the runway is not usable -- it may be closed, under construction, or degraded. Pilots must avoid landing on or rolling over these marked areas. Option A is wrong because these signals indicate closure, not active use. Option B describes a different ground signal (the glider operations symbol). Option D is a general caution signal displayed in the signals area, not on the runway itself.
+
+### Q98: How should flight time be recorded when two pilots fly together? ^t10q98
+- A) Each pilot logs only the flight time during which they were actually flying.
+- B) The pilot who made the landing may log the total flight time; the other only the time during which they were actually flying.
+- C) Each pilot may log the total flight time, as both hold a licence.
+- D) Each pilot logs half the time.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two licensed pilots fly together, each pilot may log the total flight time in their personal logbook, since both are qualified licence holders participating in the flight. This is in accordance with Swiss and ICAO logging rules. Option A is unnecessarily restrictive and does not reflect the regulation. Option B creates an arbitrary distinction based on who performed the landing. Option D (splitting time in half) has no basis in aviation regulations.
+
+### Q99: When one aircraft overtakes another in flight, how must it give way? ^t10q99
+- A) Turn upward.
+- B) Turn left.
+- C) Turn downward.
+- D) Turn right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210 and ICAO Annex 2, an overtaking aircraft must give way by altering course to the right, passing the slower aircraft on its right side. The overtaking aircraft bears full responsibility for maintaining safe separation throughout the manoeuvre. Option A (turn upward) and Option C (turn downward) are not the prescribed overtaking procedure. Option B (turn left) is incorrect -- the standard rule requires turning right to overtake.
+
+### Q100: For which domestic Swiss flights is a flight plan required? ^t10q100
+- A) For a VFR flight in controlled airspace.
+- B) For a VFR flight over the Alps.
+- C) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- D) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a domestic VFR flight plan is required when the flight needs to use air traffic control services, such as when transiting a CTR or TMA where ATC interaction is mandatory. Option A is too broad because not all controlled airspace requires a flight plan (e.g., Class E). Option B (Alps) does not automatically trigger a flight plan requirement. Option D (300 km distance) is not a Swiss flight plan criterion.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_51_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_10_51_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,506 @@
+### Q51: Qui a la responsabilité de s'assurer que les documents obligatoires sont à bord et que les carnets de bord sont correctement tenus ? ^t10q51
+- A) La compagnie de transport aérien.
+- B) L'exploitant de l'aéronef.
+- C) Le commandant de bord.
+- D) Le propriétaire de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le commandant de bord (PIC) assume la responsabilité ultime de s'assurer que tous les documents requis sont à bord et correctement tenus avant chaque vol. C'est un principe fondamental du droit aéronautique selon l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et les réglementations EASA. Les options A (compagnie de transport aérien) et B (exploitant) ont des obligations de surveillance générale, mais la responsabilité directe pré-vol incombe au PIC. L'option D (propriétaire) peut même ne pas être présent au moment du vol.
+
+### Q52: Pour quelles activités le Conseil fédéral peut-il exiger une autorisation de l'OFAC ? ^t10q52
+- A) Uniquement les manifestations aéronautiques publiques, les vols acrobatiques et les démonstrations acrobatiques sur aéronefs.
+- B) Les descentes en parachute, les ascensions de ballons captifs, les manifestations aéronautiques publiques, les vols acrobatiques et les démonstrations acrobatiques sur aéronefs.
+- C) Aucune des activités citées ci-dessus n'exige une autorisation de l'OFAC.
+- D) Uniquement les descentes en parachute et les ascensions de ballons captifs. Aucune autorisation n'est requise pour les aéronefs motorisés.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vertu du droit aéronautique suisse, le Conseil fédéral peut exiger l'autorisation de l'OFAC (Office fédéral de l'aviation civile) pour toutes les activités spéciales listées : descentes en parachute, ascensions de ballons captifs, manifestations aéronautiques publiques, vols acrobatiques et démonstrations acrobatiques. Ces activités présentent des risques de sécurité accrus pour les participants et le public. L'option A est trop restrictive car elle exclut le parachutisme et les ballons captifs. L'option C est fausse car l'autorisation est bien requise. L'option D limite incorrectement l'exigence au parachutisme et aux ballons captifs uniquement.
+
+### Q53: Le largage d'objets depuis un aéronef en vol est-il interdit en Suisse ? ^t10q53
+- A) Non, seul le largage de matériel publicitaire est interdit.
+- B) Oui, c'est formellement interdit.
+- C) Non.
+- D) Oui, sous réserve d'exceptions à déterminer par le Conseil fédéral.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En droit aéronautique suisse, le largage d'objets depuis un aéronef en vol est en principe interdit, mais le Conseil fédéral peut définir des exceptions spécifiques telles que le parachutisme, les largages d'urgence ou les activités agricoles autorisées. L'option A est fausse car l'interdiction ne se limite pas au matériel publicitaire. L'option B est fausse car des exceptions existent — ce n'est pas une interdiction stricte absolue. L'option C est fausse car il existe bien une interdiction générale, même si des exceptions sont possibles.
+
+### Q54: Où est précisément documentée la base de certification d'un aéronef ? ^t10q54
+- A) Dans le manuel VFR.
+- B) Dans l'annexe au certificat de navigabilité.
+- C) Dans l'annexe au certificat de bruit.
+- D) Dans le certificat d'assurance.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La base de certification d'un aéronef (fiche de données du certificat de type, conditions d'exploitation approuvées, limites de masse, catégories de vol autorisées et équipements requis) est documentée dans l'annexe au certificat de navigabilité. Cette annexe définit ce que l'aéronef est certifié pour faire. L'option A (manuel VFR) contient des procédures opérationnelles, pas des données de certification. L'option C (annexe au certificat de bruit) ne traite que des émissions sonores. L'option D (certificat d'assurance) couvre la responsabilité financière, pas la certification de navigabilité.
+
+### Q55: Votre aéronef, non utilisé pour le trafic commercial, nécessite des réparations à l'étranger. Quelle affirmation s'applique ? ^t10q55
+- A) Les travaux de réparation ne peuvent être effectués qu'en Suisse.
+- B) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance reconnu par l'OFAC.
+- C) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance reconnu comme tel par l'autorité aéronautique compétente.
+- D) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance certifié EASA.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un aéronef non commercial nécessitant des réparations à l'étranger, la maintenance doit être effectuée par un organisme reconnu par l'autorité aéronautique compétente du pays où les travaux sont réalisés. Cela offre une flexibilité tout en assurant une surveillance réglementaire. L'option A est fausse car les réparations ne sont pas limitées à la Suisse. L'option B est fausse car la reconnaissance de l'OFAC n'est pas spécifiquement requise pour la maintenance à l'étranger. L'option D est trop restrictive car la certification EASA n'est pas toujours requise pour la maintenance d'aéronefs non commerciaux dans toutes les juridictions.
+
+### Q56: Un horloger réputé a peint un aéronef aux couleurs de la marque avec une grande montre sur le fuselage. Est-ce autorisé ? ^t10q56
+- A) Oui, si l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile a donné son autorisation, que l'opération n'a pas de but politique et que les marquages publicitaires sont limités à certaines parties de l'aéronef.
+- B) Non, la publicité est strictement interdite sur les aéronefs.
+- C) Oui, sous réserve d'autres dispositions de la législation fédérale. Les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation doivent dans tous les cas rester facilement reconnaissables.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement si l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile a donné son autorisation et que les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation restent facilement reconnaissables.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En droit suisse, la publicité sur les aéronefs est autorisée sous réserve des autres dispositions de la législation fédérale, avec une seule condition obligatoire : les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation doivent rester facilement reconnaissables en tout temps. Aucune autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC n'est nécessaire pour apposer des marquages publicitaires. L'option A impose des conditions inutiles (autorisation OFAC, pas de but politique, placement limité) qui ne sont pas requises. L'option B est simplement fausse — la publicité n'est pas interdite. L'option D exige incorrectement une autorisation de l'OFAC.
+
+### Q57: À quelles conditions une personne peut-elle exercer les fonctions de membre d'équipage à bord d'un aéronef ? ^t10q57
+- A) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée par son pays d'origine.
+- B) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée ou reconnue par le pays dans lequel l'aéronef est immatriculé.
+- C) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée par le pays dans lequel l'aéronef est exploité.
+- D) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide reconnue par son pays d'origine.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un membre d'équipage doit détenir une licence valide délivrée ou reconnue par l'État d'immatriculation de l'aéronef, conformément à l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO. L'État d'immatriculation définit les exigences de qualification pour l'équipage exploitant ses aéronefs. Les options A et D font référence au pays d'origine du membre d'équipage, ce qui est sans rapport — c'est l'État d'immatriculation de l'aéronef qui compte. L'option C fait référence au pays d'exploitation, qui n'est pas non plus le facteur déterminant selon les règles de l'ICAO.
+
+### Q58: À quelles conditions est-il permis de détenir et d'utiliser un poste radio à bord ? ^t10q58
+- A) Si une licence de communication radio a été délivrée pour le poste radio et que les membres d'équipage sont formés à son utilisation.
+- B) Si l'autorisation d'installer et d'utiliser le poste radio a été accordée et que les membres d'équipage utilisant le poste radio détiennent la qualification correspondante.
+- C) Si les incréments de fréquence du poste radio sont d'au moins 0,125 MHz et que les membres d'équipage utilisant le poste radio détiennent la qualification correspondante.
+- D) Si l'autorisation d'installer et d'utiliser le poste radio a été accordée et que les membres d'équipage sont formés à son utilisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Deux conditions cumulatives doivent être remplies : premièrement, l'autorisation d'installer et d'utiliser le poste radio doit avoir été accordée par l'autorité compétente, et deuxièmement, les membres d'équipage qui utilisent le poste radio doivent détenir la qualification formelle correspondante (pas simplement une formation informelle). L'option A est fausse car une « licence de communication radio » n'est pas la même chose qu'une autorisation d'installation/utilisation. L'option C introduit une spécification technique non pertinente sur les incréments de fréquence. L'option D est fausse car elle ne requiert qu'une « formation » plutôt qu'une qualification formelle, ce qui est insuffisant.
+
+### Q59: Que doit posséder un pilote pour être autorisé à communiquer par radio avec les services de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q59
+- A) Un certificat de cours de radiotéléphonie et une maîtrise suffisante de la phraséologie standard.
+- B) Dans tous les cas, une qualification de radiotéléphonie. Les pilotes d'avion et d'hélicoptère doivent en outre détenir une attestation valide de compétence linguistique dans la langue utilisée.
+- C) Une attestation valide de compétence linguistique dans la langue utilisée.
+- D) Une qualification de radiotéléphonie et une attestation valide de compétence linguistique dans la langue utilisée.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tous les pilotes souhaitant communiquer avec l'ATC doivent détenir une qualification de radiotéléphonie. De plus, les pilotes d'avion et d'hélicoptère doivent également posséder une attestation valide de compétence linguistique dans la langue utilisée sur les fréquences, comme l'exigent les réglementations suisses. L'option A est insuffisante car un certificat de cours seul ne constitue pas une qualification formelle. L'option C omet entièrement la qualification de radiotéléphonie. L'option D applique l'exigence de compétence linguistique de manière universelle, mais selon les règles suisses, elle est spécifiquement requise pour les pilotes d'avion et d'hélicoptère, pas nécessairement pour toutes les catégories de pilotes comme les pilotes de planeur ou de ballon.
+
+### Q60: Votre ophtalmologue vous a prescrit des verres correcteurs. Quelle affirmation est correcte ? ^t10q60
+- A) Vous n'avez rien à faire. Un défaut visuel bien corrigé n'a aucun effet sur l'aptitude médicale.
+- B) Vous êtes immédiatement inapte.
+- C) Vous devez rapidement consulter votre médecin examinateur aéronautique.
+- D) Vous pouvez simplement signaler la décision de votre ophtalmologue à votre médecin examinateur aéronautique lors du prochain examen de routine.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout changement d'état de santé, y compris la prescription de verres correcteurs, doit être signalé rapidement au médecin examinateur aéronautique (AME). L'AME évaluera si le changement affecte l'aptitude médicale et si des restrictions ou conditions supplémentaires doivent être imposées sur la licence. L'option A est fausse car même les défauts bien corrigés peuvent nécessiter une documentation et une réévaluation de l'aptitude médicale. L'option B est fausse car une prescription de verres correcteurs ne rend pas automatiquement un pilote inapte. L'option D est fausse car attendre le prochain examen de routine signifierait voler avec un changement médical non déclaré, ce qui n'est pas permis.
+
+### Q61: Dans quel type d'espace aérien un vol VFR spécial (SVFR) peut-il être autorisé lorsque le plafond est inférieur à 450 m au-dessus du sol et que la visibilité au sol est inférieure à 5 km ? ^t10q61
+- A) FIR.
+- B) TMA.
+- C) CTR.
+- D) AWY.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vols VFR spéciaux (SVFR) ne peuvent être autorisés que dans une CTR (zone de contrôle), qui est l'espace aérien contrôlé entourant immédiatement un aérodrome. Lorsque les conditions météorologiques descendent en dessous des minima VMC normaux, l'ATC dans la CTR peut accorder une clairance SVFR pour permettre les opérations. L'option A (FIR) est trop large — le SVFR n'est pas applicable à l'ensemble de la région d'information de vol. L'option B (TMA) est l'espace aérien terminal au-dessus de la CTR, pas la zone où le SVFR s'applique. L'option D (AWY) est une voie aérienne où le SVFR n'est pas autorisé.
+
+### Q62: Quelle manœuvre d'évitement les pilotes de deux aéronefs VFR sur des trajectoires convergentes doivent-ils généralement effectuer ? ^t10q62
+- A) L'un continue tout droit tandis que l'autre tourne à droite.
+- B) L'un tourne à gauche, l'autre tourne à droite.
+- C) Chaque pilote tourne à gauche.
+- D) Chaque pilote tourne à droite.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210, la manœuvre d'évitement ICAO standard pour les aéronefs convergents est que chaque pilote tourne à droite, assurant que les deux aéronefs passent derrière l'autre et divergent en sécurité. Cette règle symétrique élimine toute ambiguïté sur qui doit manœuvrer. L'option A est fausse car les deux aéronefs doivent agir, pas un seul. L'option B (un à gauche, l'autre à droite) serait non coordonnée et pourrait aggraver la situation. L'option C (les deux à gauche) amènerait les aéronefs à converger davantage plutôt qu'à diverger.
+
+### Q63: Quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages pour un vol VFR en espace aérien de classe D sous 10 000 ft AMSL ? ^t10q63
+- A) Visibilité 1,5 km ; hors des nuages et en vue permanente du sol ou de l'eau.
+- B) Visibilité 8 km ; distance aux nuages : horizontalement 1,5 km, verticalement 450 m.
+- C) Visibilité 5 km ; distance aux nuages : horizontalement 1,5 km, verticalement 300 m.
+- D) Visibilité 5 km ; hors des nuages et en vue permanente du sol ou de l'eau.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien de classe D sous FL100 (10 000 ft AMSL), SERA.5001 prescrit des minima VMC de : 5 km de visibilité, 1 500 m de distance horizontale aux nuages et 300 m (1 000 ft) de distance verticale aux nuages. Ce sont les mêmes minima que pour les classes C et E dans cette bande d'altitude. L'option A décrit les conditions applicables en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option B utilise 8 km de visibilité et 450 m de distance verticale, qui ne correspondent à aucune valeur SERA standard dans ce contexte. L'option D omet les valeurs requises de distance aux nuages.
+
+### Q64: Parmi les classes d'espace aérien utilisées en Suisse, lesquelles sont classées comme espace aérien contrôlé ? ^t10q64
+- A) D, C
+- B) G, E, D, C
+- C) E, D, C
+- D) E, C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E sont toutes classées comme espace aérien contrôlé. La classe G est l'espace aérien non contrôlé. Les classes A et B existent dans le système de classification ICAO mais ne sont pas utilisées en Suisse. L'option A omet la classe E, qui est un espace aérien contrôlé (bien que le trafic VFR n'y reçoive pas de séparation). L'option B inclut incorrectement la classe G, qui est non contrôlée. L'option D omet la classe D, qui est définitivement un espace aérien contrôlé entourant de nombreux aérodromes suisses.
+
+### Q65: Selon les règles de l'air applicables, quelle est la définition du « jour » ? ^t10q65
+- A) La période du lever au coucher du soleil.
+- B) La période entre 06h00 et 20h00 en hiver et entre 06h00 et 21h00 en été.
+- C) La période du début du crépuscule civil du soir au début du crépuscule civil du matin.
+- D) La période du début du crépuscule civil du matin à la fin du crépuscule civil du soir.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En aviation, le « jour » est défini comme la période du début du crépuscule civil du matin à la fin du crépuscule civil du soir — approximativement 30 minutes avant le lever du soleil à 30 minutes après le coucher du soleil. Cette définition élargie donne aux pilotes une lumière du jour utilisable supplémentaire aux deux extrémités. L'option A (lever au coucher du soleil) est trop restrictive et correspond à la définition astronomique, pas aéronautique. L'option B utilise des heures fixes qui ne tiennent pas compte des variations saisonnières et géographiques. L'option C inverse les références du crépuscule, ce qui donnerait une période plus courte plutôt que plus longue.
+
+### Q66: Qu'est-ce qui constitue un accident aéronautique ? ^t10q66
+- A) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel au moins une personne est tuée ou grièvement blessée.
+- B) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef nécessitant la réparation de l'aéronef.
+- C) L'écrasement d'un aéronef.
+- D) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne est tuée ou grièvement blessée, ou au cours duquel l'intégrité structurelle, les performances ou les caractéristiques de vol de l'aéronef sont significativement altérées.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO, un accident aéronautique est un événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef résultant soit de blessures mortelles/graves aux personnes SOIT de dommages structurels significatifs affectant l'intégrité, les performances ou les caractéristiques de vol de l'aéronef. Les deux critères qualifient indépendamment un événement comme accident. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne couvre que les blessures aux personnes, omettant les dommages à l'aéronef. L'option B est trop large — chaque réparation ne constitue pas un accident. L'option C (écrasement) est trop restrictive et n'est pas la définition formelle.
+
+### Q67: Vous souhaitez effectuer des vols privés à titre onéreux. Quelle formalité devez-vous accomplir pour limiter votre responsabilité civile ? ^t10q67
+- A) Souscrire une assurance passagers spéciale que les passagers sont tenus d'accepter.
+- B) Aucune formalité n'est requise car la Convention de Montréal libère le pilote de toute responsabilité.
+- C) Rédiger une déclaration à signer par les passagers vous dégageant de toute responsabilité.
+- D) Émettre un titre de transport comme preuve qu'un contrat de transport a été conclu, ce qui limite la responsabilité pour les dommages aux bagages et le retard.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'émission d'un titre de transport (billet) constitue la preuve qu'un contrat de transport a été conclu entre le pilote et le passager. En vertu de la Convention de Montréal, l'existence d'un tel contrat limite la responsabilité du transporteur pour les dommages aux bagages et les retards. L'option A est incorrecte car une assurance passagers spéciale n'est pas le mécanisme de limitation de la responsabilité civile selon la Convention. L'option B est fausse car la Convention de Montréal ne libère pas les pilotes de toute responsabilité — elle plafonne la responsabilité sous certaines conditions. L'option C (renonciation à la responsabilité) n'est pas un mécanisme juridiquement reconnu en droit aéronautique international.
+
+### Q68: Quel type d'information est diffusé par une AIC (Circulaire d'information aéronautique) ? ^t10q68
+- A) Information aéronautique d'importance pour les personnes impliquées dans les opérations de vol concernant la construction, l'état ou la modification des installations aéronautiques et leur durée.
+- B) Une AIC est un avis contenant des informations qui ne remplissent pas les conditions d'émission d'un NOTAM ni d'inclusion dans l'AIP, mais qui sont liées à la sécurité aérienne, à la navigation aérienne ou à des questions techniques, administratives ou législatives.
+- C) L'AIC est le manuel pour les pilotes volant en IFR. Sa structure et son contenu sont analogues à ceux du manuel VFR.
+- D) En principe, toute information justifiant l'émission d'un NOTAM et relative à la sécurité aérienne, à la navigation aérienne ou à des questions techniques ou législatives peut être publiée par AIC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une AIC (Circulaire d'information aéronautique) contient des informations complémentaires qui ne remplissent pas les critères de publication sous forme de NOTAM ou d'inclusion dans l'AIP, mais qui sont néanmoins pertinentes pour la sécurité aérienne, la navigation aérienne ou des questions techniques, administratives et législatives. Elle comble le vide entre les NOTAM urgents et les entrées permanentes de l'AIP. L'option A décrit des informations de type NOTAM plutôt que le contenu d'une AIC. L'option C est complètement fausse — une AIC n'est pas un manuel IFR. L'option D inverse la relation : les AIC contiennent des informations qui NE justifient PAS un NOTAM, et non des informations qui le justifient.
+
+### Q69: Que régit le manuel d'exploitation d'aérodrome ? ^t10q69
+- A) La certification des organismes de maintenance situés sur l'aérodrome.
+- B) L'organisation de l'aérodrome, les heures d'ouverture, les procédures d'approche et de décollage, l'utilisation des installations de l'aérodrome par les passagers, les aéronefs et les véhicules au sol ainsi que les autres usagers, et les services d'assistance en escale.
+- C) Les contrats de travail, les droits aux vacances et le travail posté de l'exploitant de l'aérodrome.
+- D) L'exploitation et les heures d'ouverture du restaurant de l'aérodrome et des autres commerces situés sur l'aérodrome.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le manuel d'exploitation d'aérodrome est un document complet régissant tous les aspects opérationnels de l'aérodrome : son organisation, ses heures d'ouverture, les procédures d'approche et de décollage, l'utilisation des installations par tous les usagers (passagers, aéronefs, véhicules au sol) et les services d'assistance en escale. L'option A est fausse car la certification des organismes de maintenance est gérée par l'EASA/les autorités nationales, pas le manuel d'exploitation de l'aérodrome. L'option C couvre des questions d'emploi sans rapport avec les opérations d'aérodrome. L'option D couvre les commerces, qui sont en dehors du champ d'application du manuel d'exploitation.
+
+### Q70: Que signifie ce signal au sol ? (Deux haltères) ^t10q70
+> **Signal au sol :**
+> ![[figures/t10_q70.png]]
+> *Deux haltères — signal indiquant que les atterrissages et décollages doivent être effectués sur les pistes uniquement, mais que d'autres manœuvres (roulage) peuvent être effectuées en dehors des pistes et des voies de circulation.*
+
+- A) Atterrissage et décollage sur les pistes uniquement. Les autres manœuvres peuvent toutefois être effectuées en dehors des pistes et des voies de circulation.
+- B) Atterrissage, décollage et roulage sur les pistes et voies de circulation uniquement.
+- C) Prudence lors du décollage ou de l'atterrissage.
+- D) Atterrissage et décollage sur pistes à revêtement dur uniquement.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal en forme d'haltère affiché dans l'aire de signalisation signifie que les atterrissages et décollages doivent être effectués sur les pistes uniquement, mais que les autres manœuvres telles que le roulage, les virages et le positionnement peuvent être effectuées en dehors des pistes et des voies de circulation, sur l'herbe ou d'autres surfaces. L'option B est trop restrictive car elle confine toutes les manœuvres aux pistes et voies de circulation (ce serait l'haltère avec une barre transversale). L'option C décrit un signal entièrement différent. L'option D introduit « revêtement dur » qui n'est pas ce que ce signal communique.
+
+### Q71: Lorsque deux aéronefs se rapprochent face à face, quelle manœuvre les deux pilotes doivent-ils effectuer ? ^t10q71
+- A) Chacun tourne à gauche.
+- B) L'un tourne à droite, l'autre tourne à gauche.
+- C) L'un vole tout droit tandis que l'autre tourne à droite.
+- D) Chacun tourne à droite.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210(c) et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, lorsque deux aéronefs sont sur des routes de face ou quasi face à face, les deux pilotes doivent modifier leur cap vers la droite, passant chacun l'autre sur leur côté gauche. Cela reflète les conventions de la circulation routière et élimine toute ambiguïté. L'option A (les deux à gauche) amènerait les aéronefs à passer du mauvais côté et pourrait mener à une collision. L'option B (l'un à gauche, l'autre à droite) est non coordonnée et dangereuse. L'option C (l'un tout droit, l'autre tourne) est incorrecte car les deux pilotes doivent prendre une action d'évitement.
+
+### Q72: Parmi les espaces aériens suivants, lesquels ne sont pas classés comme espace aérien contrôlé ? ^t10q72
+- A) Espace aérien de classe G.
+- B) Espaces aériens de classes G et E.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe C.
+- D) Espaces aériens de classes G, E et D.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les classes G et E ne sont pas classées comme espace aérien contrôlé pour le trafic VFR. La classe G est un espace aérien non contrôlé, et la classe E, bien que techniquement contrôlée pour les vols IFR, ne fournit aucune séparation ATC pour le trafic VFR. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne liste que la classe G et omet la classe E. L'option C est fausse car la classe C est définitivement un espace aérien contrôlé. L'option D inclut incorrectement la classe D, qui est un espace aérien contrôlé nécessitant une clairance ATC.
+
+### Q73: À quelle autorité le Conseil fédéral a-t-il délégué la surveillance aéronautique en Suisse ? ^t10q73
+- A) Les services suisses de navigation aérienne (Skyguide).
+- B) L'Aéro-Club de Suisse.
+- C) Le Département fédéral de l'environnement, des transports, de l'énergie et de la communication (DETEC).
+- D) Les polices cantonales.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Conseil fédéral délègue la surveillance aéronautique au DETEC (Département fédéral de l'environnement, des transports, de l'énergie et de la communication), qui à son tour délègue la supervision opérationnelle à l'OFAC (Office fédéral de l'aviation civile). L'option A (Skyguide) fournit les services de navigation aérienne mais n'est pas l'autorité de surveillance réglementaire. L'option B (Aéro-Club) est une association privée, pas un organe de surveillance gouvernemental. L'option D (polices cantonales) n'a aucun rôle de surveillance aéronautique.
+
+### Q74: Pour quels vols suivants le dépôt d'un plan de vol est-il obligatoire ? ^t10q74
+- A) Pour un vol VFR au-dessus des Alpes, des Préalpes ou du Jura.
+- B) Pour un vol VFR nécessitant l'utilisation des services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- C) Pour un vol VFR couvrant plus de 300 km sans escale.
+- D) Pour un vol VFR en espace aérien de classe E.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un plan de vol VFR est obligatoire lorsque le vol nécessite l'utilisation des services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne, comme le transit d'une CTR, d'une TMA ou d'un autre espace aérien contrôlé où l'interaction ATC est nécessaire. L'option A (Alpes/Préalpes/Jura) ne nécessite pas automatiquement un plan de vol. L'option C (distance de 300 km) n'est pas un déclencheur de plan de vol suisse. L'option D (espace aérien de classe E) est incorrecte car les vols VFR en classe E ne nécessitent pas de services ATC ni de plan de vol.
+
+### Q75: Quelle hauteur minimale doit être maintenue au-dessus des zones densément peuplées lors d'un vol VFR ? ^t10q75
+- A) Au moins 300 m au-dessus du sol.
+- B) Au moins 150 m au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 300 m de l'aéronef.
+- C) Au moins 150 m au-dessus du sol.
+- D) Au moins 450 m au-dessus du sol.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5005 et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, la hauteur minimale au-dessus des zones densément peuplées est de 150 m (environ 500 ft) au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 300 m de l'aéronef. Cette règle basée sur le franchissement d'obstacles assure une séparation sûre des structures et du terrain. L'option A (300 m AGL) ne tient pas compte des obstacles. L'option C (150 m AGL) ignore l'exigence de franchissement d'obstacles. L'option D (450 m AGL) n'est pas la hauteur minimale standard spécifiée dans SERA.
+
+### Q76: Parmi les aéronefs listés ci-dessous, lesquels ont la priorité pour l'atterrissage et le décollage ? ^t10q76
+- A) Les aéronefs manœuvrant au sol.
+- B) Les aéronefs arrivant d'un autre aérodrome qui sont dans le circuit d'aérodrome.
+- C) Les aéronefs en approche finale.
+- D) Les aéronefs ayant reçu une clairance ATC pour rouler.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et à SERA.3210, les aéronefs en approche finale ou en atterrissage ont toujours priorité sur tous les autres aéronefs en vol ou manœuvrant au sol. Cette règle existe car les aéronefs en approche finale ont une capacité limitée de manœuvre et se trouvent dans la phase de vol la plus critique. L'option A (aéronefs manœuvrant au sol) doit céder le passage au trafic en atterrissage. L'option B (aéronefs dans le circuit) ont une priorité inférieure à ceux en finale. L'option D (aéronefs avec clairance de roulage) doivent également céder le passage aux aéronefs en atterrissage.
+
+### Q77: Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q77
+![[figures/t10_q77.png]]
+- A) Toutes les pistes de cet aérodrome sont fermées.
+- B) Vol à voile en cours sur cet aérodrome.
+- C) Seules les pistes à revêtement dur doivent être utilisées pour l'atterrissage et le décollage.
+- D) Décollage et atterrissage uniquement sur les pistes ; les autres manœuvres ne sont pas limitées à l'utilisation des pistes et des voies de circulation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal indiqué signifie que le vol à voile est en cours sur l'aérodrome. C'est un signal au sol ICAO standard placé dans l'aire de signalisation pour avertir les aéronefs arrivant ou survolant que des planeurs peuvent opérer dans les environs, y compris des lancements remorqués et du vol en thermique. L'option A (toutes les pistes fermées) utilise un signal différent. L'option C (pistes à revêtement dur uniquement) n'est pas ce que ce signal communique. L'option D décrit le signal en haltère, qui est un marquage au sol entièrement différent.
+
+### Q78: Qui a la responsabilité de s'assurer que les documents requis sont emportés à bord de l'aéronef ? ^t10q78
+- A) L'exploitant de l'entreprise de transport aérien (Opérateur).
+- B) Le propriétaire de l'aéronef.
+- C) Le commandant de bord de l'aéronef.
+- D) L'exploitant de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le commandant de bord (PIC) est responsable de s'assurer que tous les documents requis sont emportés à bord de l'aéronef avant le vol. Cela est établi dans l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et les réglementations EASA/suisses. Le PIC doit personnellement vérifier la conformité documentaire dans le cadre de la préparation pré-vol. Les options A (exploitant de l'entreprise de transport aérien) et D (exploitant) ont des responsabilités organisationnelles mais le devoir direct incombe au PIC. L'option B (propriétaire) peut ne pas être impliqué dans l'exploitation du vol du tout.
+
+### Q79: Parmi les instructions suivantes concernant la direction de piste en service, laquelle a la priorité ? ^t10q79
+- A) La manche à air.
+- B) Le T d'atterrissage.
+- C) L'instruction ATC transmise par radio depuis la tour de contrôle.
+- D) Les deux chiffres affichés verticalement sur la tour de contrôle.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les instructions radio ATC de la tour de contrôle ont la priorité la plus élevée sur tous les indicateurs visuels pour déterminer la direction de piste en service. L'ATC a la connaissance situationnelle la plus actuelle et la plus complète et peut attribuer une piste différente de ce que la manche à air ou le T d'atterrissage suggère. L'option A (manche à air) indique la direction du vent mais ne prévaut pas sur l'ATC. L'option B (T d'atterrissage) est un indicateur visuel subordonné aux instructions ATC. L'option D (chiffres sur la tour) fournit des informations générales sur la piste mais est supplantée par les instructions radio directes de l'ATC.
+
+### Q80: En cas de panne radio, quel code doit être affiché sur le transpondeur ? ^t10q80
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le squawk internationalement standardisé pour une panne de communication radio. L'affichage de ce code alerte immédiatement l'ATC que le pilote a perdu le contact radio et déclenche les procédures de perte de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR européen standard et n'indique aucune urgence. L'option B (7500) est réservé aux interventions illicites (détournement). L'option C (7700) est le code d'urgence générale, pas spécifiquement pour la panne radio.
+
+### Q81: Est-il permis de déroger aux règles de l'air applicables aux aéronefs ? ^t10q81
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement dans l'espace aérien de classe G.
+- B) Non, en aucune circonstance.
+- C) Oui, mais uniquement pour des raisons de sécurité.
+- D) Oui, absolument.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et à SERA, une dérogation aux règles de l'air n'est permise que lorsqu'elle est nécessaire pour des raisons de sécurité et uniquement dans la mesure strictement requise pour traiter la préoccupation de sécurité. C'est la seule exception légale. L'option A est fausse car l'exception n'est pas limitée à une classe d'espace aérien spécifique. L'option B est fausse car les dérogations motivées par la sécurité sont permises. L'option D est fausse car une dérogation sans restriction n'est jamais autorisée — la justification de sécurité doit exister.
+
+### Q82: Quelles sont les valeurs VMC minimales dans l'espace aérien de classe E à 2100 m AMSL ? Visibilité - Distance aux nuages : verticale / horizontale ^t10q82
+- A) 1,5 km / 50 m / 100 m
+- B) 8,0 km / 100 m / 300 m
+- C) 5,0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- D) 8,0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** À 2100 m AMSL (environ 6900 ft), qui est bien au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL et 1000 ft AGL, les minima VMC SERA.5001 en espace aérien de classe E sont : 8 km de visibilité, 300 m de distance verticale aux nuages et 1500 m de distance horizontale aux nuages. L'option A décrit des valeurs pour l'espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude, bien en dessous des minima requis. L'option B a des valeurs incorrectes de distance verticale et horizontale aux nuages. L'option C utilise 5 km de visibilité, ce qui ne correspond pas à l'exigence de la classe E à cette altitude.
+
+### Q83: Au plus tard à quelle heure un vol VFR de jour doit-il être terminé ? ^t10q83
+- A) 30 minutes avant la fin du crépuscule civil.
+- B) Au début du crépuscule civil.
+- C) Au coucher du soleil.
+- D) À la fin du crépuscule civil.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un vol VFR de jour doit être terminé au plus tard au coucher du soleil. Voler après le coucher du soleil nécessite soit une qualification de vol de nuit, soit une autorisation spéciale. L'option A (30 minutes avant la fin du crépuscule civil) est plus tôt que nécessaire. L'option B (début du crépuscule civil) est ambiguë et ne correspond pas à la règle suisse. L'option D (fin du crépuscule civil) est trop tard — bien que le « jour » en aviation s'étende jusqu'à la fin du crépuscule civil, les exigences suisses de fin de vol VFR utilisent le coucher du soleil comme limite.
+
+### Q84: Avez-vous le droit d'utiliser la radio de l'aéronef pour communiquer avec l'ATC sans détenir la mention de radiotéléphonie ? ^t10q84
+- A) Oui, à condition que les autres communications radio ne soient pas perturbées.
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui.
+- D) Oui, à condition que je maîtrise suffisamment la phraséologie.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon la réglementation suisse, un pilote peut utiliser la radio de l'aéronef pour communiquer avec l'ATC sans détenir la mention spécifique de radiotéléphonie, dans les espaces aériens où la communication radio est requise. La qualification de radiotéléphonie est nécessaire pour certains espaces aériens contrôlés, mais l'utilisation basique de la radio pour la communication ATC est permise. L'option A ajoute une condition inutile sur la non-perturbation des autres communications. L'option B est incorrecte car l'interdiction n'est pas absolue. L'option D ajoute une condition de phraséologie qui, bien que bonne pratique, n'est pas l'exigence réglementaire.
+
+### Q85: Quels types de vols peuvent être effectués en dessous des hauteurs minimales prescrites sans autorisation spécifique de l'OFAC, dans la mesure nécessaire ? ^t10q85
+- A) Vols de montagne.
+- B) Vols acrobatiques.
+- C) Vols de photographie aérienne.
+- D) Vols de recherche et sauvetage.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vols de recherche et sauvetage (SAR) sont autorisés en dessous des hauteurs minimales prescrites sans autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC, dans la mesure opérationnellement nécessaire pour accomplir la mission de sauvetage. L'urgence et le caractère vital des opérations SAR justifient cette exemption. Les options A (vols de montagne), B (vols acrobatiques) et C (vols de photographie aérienne) nécessitent toutes une autorisation spécifique pour opérer en dessous des hauteurs minimales.
+
+### Q86: Est-il permis de traverser une voie aérienne au FL 115 en VFR lorsque la visibilité est de 5 km ? ^t10q86
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement s'il s'agit d'un vol VFR spécial (SVFR).
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui, en espace aérien de classe E.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement s'il s'agit d'un vol VFR contrôlé (CVFR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au FL 115 (au-dessus du FL 100), la visibilité minimale VFR requise est de 8 km. Avec seulement 5 km de visibilité, les minima VMC ne sont pas respectés et le vol VFR à travers une voie aérienne n'est pas autorisé, quelle que soit la classe d'espace aérien ou le type de vol. L'option A (SVFR) n'est pas applicable aux niveaux de vol — le SVFR n'est autorisé que dans les CTR. L'option C est fausse car l'exigence de visibilité s'applique dans tous les espaces aériens à cette altitude. L'option D (CVFR) ne dispense pas des minima de visibilité VMC.
+
+### Q87: Les vols en formation sont-ils autorisés ? ^t10q87
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement avec l'autorisation de l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile.
+- B) Oui, mais uniquement en dehors de l'espace aérien contrôlé.
+- C) Oui, à condition que les commandants de bord se soient coordonnés au préalable.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement si les commandants de bord sont en contact radio permanent entre eux.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les vols en formation sont autorisés à condition que les commandants de bord se soient coordonnés au préalable, en convenant des procédures de formation, des positions et des responsabilités. Aucune autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC n'est nécessaire. L'option A est fausse car l'autorisation de l'OFAC n'est pas requise. L'option B est incorrecte car les vols en formation ne sont pas limités à l'espace aérien non contrôlé. L'option D est fausse car le contact radio permanent, bien qu'utile, n'est pas une exigence réglementaire pour le vol en formation.
+
+### Q88: Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q88
+![[figures/t10_q88.png]]
+- A) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+- B) Ce signal ne s'applique qu'aux aéronefs motorisés.
+- C) Le pilote peut choisir la direction d'atterrissage.
+- D) Atterrissage interdit.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un carré rouge avec deux croix diagonales blanches (croix de Saint-André) est le signal au sol ICAO standard signifiant « atterrissage interdit ». Il est placé dans l'aire de signalisation pour avertir tous les aéronefs que l'aérodrome est fermé aux opérations d'atterrissage. L'option A (prudence lors de l'approche) est un signal différent. L'option B est fausse car le signal s'applique à tous les aéronefs, pas uniquement aux motorisés. L'option C est fausse car le signal interdit entièrement l'atterrissage plutôt que de permettre le choix de direction.
+
+### Q89: Une zone d'information de vol (FIZ) peut-elle être traversée sans autre formalité ? ^t10q89
+- A) Uniquement avec l'autorisation du service d'information de vol (FIS) et si le pilote est qualifié pour utiliser la radiotéléphonie en anglais.
+- B) Non, c'est strictement interdit pour les vols VFR.
+- C) Uniquement si un contact permanent avec le service d'information de vol d'aérodrome (AFIS) est maintenu. Sinon, les règles de la classe d'espace aérien dans laquelle la FIZ est située s'appliquent.
+- D) Oui.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une FIZ (zone d'information de vol) peut être traversée à condition qu'un contact radio permanent avec le service d'information de vol d'aérodrome (AFIS) soit maintenu. Si le contact radio ne peut être établi, les règles de la classe d'espace aérien sous-jacente s'appliquent. L'option A exige incorrectement l'autorisation du FIS et la maîtrise de l'anglais, qui ne sont pas les exigences réelles. L'option B est fausse car le transit n'est pas interdit — il est autorisé sous conditions. L'option D est fausse car le transit n'est pas inconditionnel ; le maintien du contact AFIS est requis.
+
+### Q90: Quel événement constitue un accident aéronautique ? ^t10q90
+- A) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel au moins une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée.
+- B) Uniquement l'écrasement d'un aéronef ou d'un hélicoptère.
+- C) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée, ou l'aéronef a subi des dommages affectant notamment sa résistance structurelle, ses performances ou ses caractéristiques de vol.
+- D) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef nécessitant des réparations coûteuses.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO, un accident aéronautique comprend tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée, OU l'aéronef a subi des dommages structurels significatifs affectant sa résistance structurelle, ses performances ou ses caractéristiques de vol. Les deux critères constituent indépendamment un accident. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne couvre que les blessures aux personnes, omettant les dommages significatifs à l'aéronef. L'option B est trop restrictive — un accident ne se limite pas aux écrasements. L'option D est fausse car les réparations coûteuses seules ne définissent pas un accident ; les dommages doivent affecter significativement l'intégrité structurelle ou les caractéristiques de vol.
+
+### Q91: Les signaux observés ou reçus sont-ils contraignants pour le pilote de planeur ? ^t10q91
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement les signaux placés au sol, pas les signaux lumineux.
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui.
+- D) Oui, sauf les signaux lumineux pour les aéronefs au sol.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tous les signaux observés ou reçus — qu'il s'agisse de signaux au sol, de signaux lumineux ou de signaux radio — sont contraignants pour le pilote de planeur. L'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO ne fait aucune distinction entre les types de signaux ; le respect de tous les signaux visuels et radio est obligatoire pour tous les aéronefs, y compris les planeurs. L'option A est fausse car les signaux lumineux sont également contraignants. L'option B est fausse car les signaux sont obligatoires, pas optionnels. L'option D exclut incorrectement les signaux lumineux pour les aéronefs au sol, qui sont également contraignants.
+
+### Q92: Quelle est la hauteur minimale de survol au-dessus des zones densément peuplées et des lieux de grands rassemblements publics ? ^t10q92
+- A) 300 m AGL.
+- B) 150 m AGL au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 600 m de l'aéronef.
+- C) 600 m AGL.
+- D) Il n'y a pas de valeur de hauteur spécifique ; cependant, on doit voler de manière à pouvoir atteindre en tout temps un terrain dégagé permettant un atterrissage sans risque.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5005, la hauteur minimale de survol au-dessus des zones densément peuplées et des grands rassemblements publics est de 150 m (500 ft) au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 600 m de l'aéronef. Cette règle basée sur les obstacles assure un franchissement adéquat des structures et protège les personnes au sol. L'option A (300 m AGL) ne tient pas compte du franchissement d'obstacles. L'option C (600 m AGL) est plus élevée que l'exigence réelle. L'option D décrit un principe de sécurité général mais pas le minimum réglementaire spécifique.
+
+### Q93: Dans quelles classes d'espace aérien les vols VFR peuvent-ils être effectués en Suisse sans nécessiter les services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q93
+- A) Dans les espaces aériens de classes C, D, E et G.
+- B) Uniquement dans l'espace aérien de classe G.
+- C) Dans les espaces aériens de classes E et G.
+- D) Dans les espaces aériens de classes A et B.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les vols VFR peuvent être effectués sans services ATC dans les espaces aériens de classes E et G. La classe E est contrôlée pour l'IFR mais ne nécessite pas d'interaction ATC pour les vols VFR ; la classe G est entièrement non contrôlée. L'option A inclut incorrectement les classes C et D, qui nécessitent une clairance ATC. L'option B est trop restrictive car la classe E permet également le VFR sans ATC. L'option D est fausse car les classes A et B interdisent soit le VFR, soit nécessitent une clairance ATC.
+
+### Q94: Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q94
+![[figures/t10_q94.png]]
+- A) Le pilote peut choisir la direction d'atterrissage.
+- B) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+- C) Ce signal ne s'applique qu'aux aéronefs motorisés.
+- D) Atterrissage interdit.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal indiqué signifie prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage, avertissant les pilotes d'exercer une vigilance accrue en raison d'obstacles, de mauvaises conditions de surface ou d'autres dangers sur l'aérodrome. C'est un signal au sol ICAO standard placé dans l'aire de signalisation. L'option A est fausse car le signal n'indique pas le libre choix de la direction d'atterrissage. L'option C est fausse car le signal s'applique à tous les types d'aéronefs, pas uniquement aux motorisés. L'option D décrit un signal différent (carré rouge avec croix diagonales blanches).
+
+### Q95: Dans quel document les déficiences techniques constatées lors de l'exploitation d'un aéronef doivent-elles être consignées ? ^t10q95
+- A) Dans le manuel de maintenance.
+- B) Dans le carnet de route (carnet de bord de l'aéronef).
+- C) Dans le manuel de vol de l'aéronef.
+- D) Dans le manuel d'exploitation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les déficiences techniques découvertes lors de l'exploitation de l'aéronef doivent être consignées dans le carnet de route (carnet de bord/journal technique). C'est le document officiel qui suit l'état technique et l'historique opérationnel de l'aéronef, assurant que les organismes de maintenance sont informés des défauts nécessitant une attention. L'option A (manuel de maintenance) contient des procédures, pas des relevés de déficiences. L'option C (manuel de vol) décrit les limites et procédures opérationnelles. L'option D (manuel d'exploitation) couvre les procédures organisationnelles, pas le suivi des défauts individuels de l'aéronef.
+
+### Q96: Comment l'utilisation des caméras est-elle réglementée au niveau international ? ^t10q96
+- A) L'utilisation est généralement interdite.
+- B) Chaque État est libre d'interdire ou de réglementer leur utilisation au-dessus de son territoire.
+- C) L'utilisation est généralement autorisée.
+- D) L'utilisation privée est généralement autorisée ; la photographie commerciale est soumise à autorisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au niveau international, il n'existe pas de règle ICAO uniforme sur l'utilisation des caméras depuis les aéronefs. Chaque État est libre d'interdire ou de réglementer leur utilisation au-dessus de son territoire selon ses propres lois nationales, qui peuvent varier en fonction de considérations de sécurité, de vie privée ou militaires. L'option A est fausse car il n'y a pas d'interdiction internationale générale. L'option C est fausse car il n'y a pas non plus d'autorisation internationale générale. L'option D distingue incorrectement entre utilisation privée et commerciale au niveau international, ce qui est une distinction de niveau national.
+
+### Q97: Que signifient les signaux blancs ou d'autres couleurs visibles placés horizontalement sur une piste ? ^t10q97
+- A) Ils marquent l'aire d'atterrissage en service.
+- B) Vol à voile en cours sur cet aérodrome.
+- C) La portion de piste délimitée n'est pas utilisable.
+- D) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les signaux blancs ou d'autres couleurs visibles placés horizontalement sur une piste indiquent que la portion marquée de la piste n'est pas utilisable — elle peut être fermée, en construction ou dégradée. Les pilotes doivent éviter d'atterrir sur ou de rouler sur ces zones marquées. L'option A est fausse car ces signaux indiquent une fermeture, pas une utilisation active. L'option B décrit un signal au sol différent (le symbole d'opérations de vol à voile). L'option D est un signal de prudence général affiché dans l'aire de signalisation, pas sur la piste elle-même.
+
+### Q98: Comment le temps de vol doit-il être enregistré lorsque deux pilotes volent ensemble ? ^t10q98
+- A) Chaque pilote enregistre uniquement le temps de vol pendant lequel il pilotait effectivement.
+- B) Le pilote qui a effectué l'atterrissage peut enregistrer le temps de vol total ; l'autre uniquement le temps pendant lequel il pilotait effectivement.
+- C) Chaque pilote peut enregistrer le temps de vol total, les deux détenant une licence.
+- D) Chaque pilote enregistre la moitié du temps.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux pilotes licenciés volent ensemble, chaque pilote peut enregistrer le temps de vol total dans son carnet de vol personnel, puisque les deux sont des titulaires de licence qualifiés participant au vol. Cela est conforme aux règles suisses et ICAO d'enregistrement. L'option A est inutilement restrictive et ne reflète pas la réglementation. L'option B crée une distinction arbitraire basée sur qui a effectué l'atterrissage. L'option D (diviser le temps en deux) n'a aucune base dans la réglementation aéronautique.
+
+### Q99: Lorsqu'un aéronef dépasse un autre en vol, comment doit-il céder le passage ? ^t10q99
+- A) Tourner vers le haut.
+- B) Tourner à gauche.
+- C) Tourner vers le bas.
+- D) Tourner à droite.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210 et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, un aéronef dépassant doit céder le passage en modifiant sa route vers la droite, passant l'aéronef plus lent sur son côté droit. L'aéronef dépassant assume l'entière responsabilité du maintien d'une séparation sûre tout au long de la manœuvre. Les options A (tourner vers le haut) et C (tourner vers le bas) ne sont pas la procédure de dépassement prescrite. L'option B (tourner à gauche) est incorrecte — la règle standard exige de tourner à droite pour dépasser.
+
+### Q100: Pour quels vols domestiques suisses un plan de vol est-il requis ? ^t10q100
+- A) Pour un vol VFR en espace aérien contrôlé.
+- B) Pour un vol VFR au-dessus des Alpes.
+- C) Pour un vol VFR nécessitant l'utilisation des services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- D) Pour un vol VFR couvrant plus de 300 km sans escale.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un plan de vol VFR domestique est requis lorsque le vol nécessite l'utilisation des services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne, comme le transit d'une CTR ou d'une TMA où l'interaction ATC est obligatoire. L'option A est trop large car tout espace aérien contrôlé ne nécessite pas un plan de vol (ex. classe E). L'option B (Alpes) ne déclenche pas automatiquement une obligation de plan de vol. L'option D (distance de 300 km) n'est pas un critère suisse de plan de vol.
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+### Q101: How can you determine whether a glider is approved for aerobatics? ^t20q101
+- A) From the certificate of airworthiness.
+- B) From the flight manual (AFM).
+- C) No requirement exists — only an accelerometer is needed.
+- D) From the operating envelope.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the aircraft flight manual (AFM) is the authoritative document that specifies the approved operating categories, including whether aerobatic flight is permitted, and under what conditions and limitations. A is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness confirms the aircraft meets its type certificate but does not detail specific operational approvals. C is wrong because aerobatic approval is a formal certification requirement, not simply a matter of having an accelerometer installed. D is wrong because the operating envelope is contained within the AFM, not a separate standalone document.
+
+### Q102: Where can you find data on the limits, loading, and operation of a glider? ^t20q102
+- A) In the logbook.
+- B) In technical communications (TM).
+- C) In the flight manual (AFM).
+- D) In the certificate of airworthiness.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the aircraft flight manual (AFM) is the official regulatory document that contains all operating limitations, loading data (mass and balance), performance charts, and operational procedures for a specific aircraft type. A is wrong because the logbook records maintenance and flight history, not operational limitations. B is wrong because technical communications (service bulletins) address modifications or issues, not standard operating data. D is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness confirms legal airworthiness status but does not contain detailed operating information.
+
+### Q103: Which instruments are depicted in the diagram below? ^t20q103
+![[figures/t20_q103.png]]
+- A) Altimeter, airspeed indicator, and netto variometer.
+- B) Altimeter, airspeed indicator, and diaphragm variometer.
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vane variometer.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and oxygen pressure gauge.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the diagram shows, from left to right, the airspeed indicator (ASI), altimeter, and a vane variometer — the standard "basic T" arrangement in a glider cockpit. A and B incorrectly identify the order of the ASI and altimeter and misidentify the variometer type. D is wrong because an oxygen pressure gauge is a separate ancillary instrument typically mounted elsewhere, not part of the standard flight instrument panel layout.
+
+### Q104: What speed range does the white arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q104
+- A) The maneuvering speed.
+- B) The speed range in smooth air (caution range).
+- C) The maneuvering range (full control deflection).
+- D) The camber flap operating range.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because on a glider's ASI, the white arc indicates the speed range within which camber flaps (positive flap settings) may be deployed. Operating flaps outside this range risks structural damage or adverse handling characteristics. A is wrong because maneuvering speed is a single value (VA), not an arc. B is wrong because the smooth-air caution range is the yellow arc. C is wrong because the range permitting full control deflection corresponds to the green arc (up to VA/VNO).
+
+### Q105: The airspeed indicator on a glider is defective. Under what condition may the glider fly again? ^t20q105
+- A) Only for a single circuit.
+- B) If no maintenance organisation is available nearby.
+- C) When the airspeed indicator has been repaired and is fully functional.
+- D) If a GPS with speed indication is used instead.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the airspeed indicator is a mandatory minimum instrument required for flight. The glider may only return to service once the ASI has been repaired or replaced and is fully functional. A is wrong because there is no regulatory provision allowing flight with a defective mandatory instrument for even one circuit. B is wrong because the unavailability of a maintenance organisation does not waive airworthiness requirements. D is wrong because a GPS ground speed indication cannot substitute for an ASI, which measures indicated airspeed based on dynamic pressure.
+
+### Q106: The minimum useful load specified in the load sheet has not been reached. What must be done? ^t20q106
+- A) Move the trim to a forward position.
+- B) Reposition the pilot's seat for a more forward CG.
+- C) Modify the horizontal stabilizer incidence angle.
+- D) Add ballast weight (lead) until the minimum load is met.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when the minimum useful load (typically minimum cockpit load) is not met, the C.G. may be outside the aft limit and the wing loading may be below the certified minimum. Adding lead ballast at the prescribed location (usually forward) brings the total load up to the minimum required value and positions the C.G. within limits. A is wrong because trim adjusts control forces but does not change the aircraft's mass or C.G. B is wrong because the seat position is fixed. C is wrong because the stabiliser incidence is not adjustable in flight or on the ground by the pilot.
+
+### Q107: The maximum mass stated in the flight manual has been exceeded. What is required? ^t20q107
+- A) The maximum speed must be reduced by 30 km/h.
+- B) The load must be redistributed so the maximum mass is not exceeded.
+- C) Use of the glider is prohibited.
+- D) Set the trim to the aft position.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the maximum mass is a hard certification limit based on structural strength and stall speed. When it is exceeded, the aircraft is no longer within its certified flight envelope and flight is prohibited until the excess load is removed. A is wrong because reducing speed does not address the structural overload risk. B is misleading — redistribution changes C.G. position but does not reduce total mass. D is wrong because trim adjustment has no bearing on mass limitations.
+
+### Q108: How is the centre of gravity of a single-seat glider shifted? ^t20q108
+- A) By adjusting the elevator trim.
+- B) By altering the angle of attack.
+- C) By changing the cockpit load.
+- D) By modifying the angle of incidence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in a single-seat glider, the only practical way to move the C.G. is by changing the mass in the cockpit — adding or removing lead ballast at forward or aft positions, or by a different pilot weight. A is wrong because trim adjusts elevator deflection and control forces, not the physical mass distribution. B is wrong because angle of attack is an aerodynamic flight parameter, not a loading parameter. D is wrong because the angle of incidence is a fixed design feature of the wing and cannot be modified by the pilot.
+
+### Q109: Which centre of gravity position on a glider is the most hazardous? ^t20q109
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too low.
+- C) Too high.
+- D) Too far aft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an aft C.G. beyond the rear limit reduces the longitudinal static stability of the glider. As the C.G. moves closer to or behind the neutral point, the aircraft becomes neutrally stable or unstable in pitch, making it progressively harder to control until recovery from any pitch disturbance becomes impossible. A is less dangerous — a forward C.G. increases stability but may limit elevator authority for flaring. B and C are not standard concerns in glider mass-and-balance considerations.
+
+### Q110: What speed range does the yellow arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q110
+- A) The maneuvering range (full control deflection).
+- B) The maneuvering speed.
+- C) The camber flap operating range.
+- D) The smooth air speed range (caution range).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the yellow arc on a glider's ASI marks the caution range between VNO (maximum structural cruising speed) and VNE (never-exceed speed). Flight within this speed range is permitted only in smooth, non-turbulent air because turbulence-induced loads at these speeds could exceed the structural design limits. A is wrong because full control deflection is permitted only up to VA (within the green arc). B is wrong because maneuvering speed is a single value, not a range. C is wrong because the flap operating range is shown by the white arc.
+
+### Q111: What causes the dip error on a direct-reading compass? ^t20q111
+- A) Temperature variations.
+- B) Inclination of the Earth's magnetic field lines.
+- C) Deviation in the cockpit.
+- D) Acceleration of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the Earth's magnetic field lines are not horizontal — they dip downward toward the magnetic poles at an angle that increases with latitude. This inclination causes the compass magnet assembly to tilt, introducing errors during turns (northerly turning error) and during accelerations/decelerations. A is wrong because temperature variations affect compass fluid viscosity but not the fundamental dip error. C is wrong because deviation is a separate error caused by ferromagnetic materials in the cockpit. D is wrong because acceleration errors are a consequence of dip, not the root cause.
+
+### Q112: What colour marks the caution area on an airspeed indicator? ^t20q112
+- A) Green.
+- B) White.
+- C) Yellow.
+- D) Red.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because yellow marks the caution range on an airspeed indicator, spanning from VNO to VNE. This range is reserved for smooth-air flight only. A (green) marks the normal operating range from VS1 to VNO. B (white) marks the flap operating range. D (red) is used only for the VNE radial line, not an arc. The colour coding is standardised across aviation to ensure immediate recognition.
+
+### Q113: If the altimeter subscale setting is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa, what difference in altitude is displayed? ^t20q113
+- A) The value depends on the current QNH.
+- B) Zero.
+- C) 80 m more than before.
+- D) 80 m less than before.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in the International Standard Atmosphere, 1 hPa corresponds to approximately 8 metres of altitude near sea level (the "30 ft per hPa" rule). Increasing the subscale setting by 10 hPa (from 1000 to 1010) raises the displayed altitude by approximately 10 x 8 = 80 metres. B is wrong because the reading does change. D is wrong because increasing the QNH setting increases, not decreases, the displayed altitude. A is wrong because the conversion factor is fixed by the ISA model and does not depend on the actual QNH.
+
+### Q114: When the altimeter reference scale is set to QFE, what does the instrument show during flight? ^t20q114
+- A) Pressure altitude.
+- B) Altitude above MSL.
+- C) Height above the airfield.
+- D) Airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because QFE is the atmospheric pressure measured at the aerodrome reference point. When this value is set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at that aerodrome and indicates height above the aerodrome during flight. A is wrong because pressure altitude requires setting 1013.25 hPa. B is wrong because altitude above mean sea level requires setting QNH. D is wrong because the altimeter displays a dynamic reading during flight, not the fixed elevation of the airfield.
+
+### Q115: A vertical speed indicator connected to an oversized equalizing tank results in... ^t20q115
+- A) No indication.
+- B) A reading that is too low.
+- C) A reading that is too high.
+- D) Mechanical overload.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because if the compensating (equalising) tank is oversized, it stores more pressure than intended, creating a larger pressure differential across the variometer restriction when altitude changes. This amplifies the indicated vertical speed, producing a reading that is too high (over-indication). A is wrong because the instrument will still function, just inaccurately. B is wrong because an oversized tank causes over-reading, not under-reading. D is wrong because the oversized tank does not create mechanical stress on the instrument.
+
+### Q116: A vertical speed indicator measures the difference between... ^t20q116
+- A) Total pressure and static pressure.
+- B) Instantaneous static pressure and a previous static pressure.
+- C) Dynamic pressure and total pressure.
+- D) Instantaneous total pressure and a previous total pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a variometer (vertical speed indicator) compares the current atmospheric static pressure with the pressure retained in a reference chamber connected through a calibrated leak. As altitude changes, the instantaneous static pressure diverges from the stored (previous) pressure, and this differential drives the indication. A is wrong because the difference between total and static pressure is dynamic pressure, which is what the airspeed indicator measures. C and D are wrong because total pressure and dynamic pressure are not used in variometer operation.
+
+### Q117: What type of engine is typically used in Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)? ^t20q117
+- A) 4-cylinder, 2-stroke.
+- B) 2-plate Wankel.
+- C) 4-cylinder, 4-stroke.
+- D) 2-cylinder diesel.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because Touring Motor Gliders (TMGs) are typically powered by four-cylinder, four-stroke piston engines such as the Rotax 912 or Limbach series, which offer a good balance of reliability, power-to-weight ratio, and fuel economy for sustained powered flight. A is wrong because two-stroke engines are less common in TMGs due to higher fuel consumption and lower reliability. B is wrong because Wankel rotary engines are not standard in certified TMG types. D is wrong because two-cylinder diesels lack the power output typically required for TMG operations.
+
+### Q118: What does the yellow arc on the airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q118
+- A) Cautious operation of flaps or brakes to prevent overload.
+- B) The optimum speed while being towed behind an aircraft.
+- C) The area where best glide speed can be found.
+- D) Flight only in calm conditions with no gusts to prevent overload.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the yellow arc on the ASI indicates the caution speed range (VNO to VNE), within which flight is only permitted in smooth air without gusts. At these higher speeds, turbulence-induced load factors could exceed structural design limits. A is wrong because flap/brake operating ranges are shown by the white arc. B is wrong because aerotow speeds are typically within the green arc. C is wrong because the best glide speed is a single point, not associated with the yellow arc.
+
+### Q119: During a steady glide, an energy-compensated VSI shows the vertical speed... ^t20q119
+- A) Of the glider through the surrounding air.
+- B) Of the glider minus the movement of the air.
+- C) Of the air mass being flown through.
+- D) Of the glider plus the movement of the air.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a total-energy compensated variometer eliminates the effect of speed changes (kinetic energy exchanges) on the vertical speed indication. In a steady glide with constant airspeed, the TE variometer indicates the vertical movement of the surrounding air mass — showing zero in still air, or the actual thermal/sink value in moving air. A is wrong because that describes an uncompensated variometer. B and D are wrong because the TE variometer does not add or subtract airmass movement from the glider's vertical speed — it isolates the airmass movement itself.
+
+### Q120: During a right turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. What correction is needed to centre it? ^t20q120
+- A) More bank, less rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- B) More bank, more rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- C) Less bank, less rudder in the direction of the turn.
+- D) Less bank, more rudder in the direction of the turn.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because during a right turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the nose is sliding outward (skidding turn) — there is insufficient rudder coordination and possibly too much bank for the rate of turn. To correct this, apply more right rudder (in the direction of the turn) to bring the nose around, and reduce bank slightly to decrease the tendency to skid. A and C are wrong because they call for less rudder, which would worsen the skid. B is wrong because adding more bank would increase the centripetal force demand and worsen the coordination problem.
+
+### Q121: What type of defect results in loss of airworthiness? ^t20q121
+- A) Dirty wing leading edge
+- B) Scratch on the outer painting
+- C) Damage to load-bearing parts
+- D) Crack in the cabin hood plastic
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airworthiness of an aircraft is fundamentally determined by the structural integrity of load-bearing components (main spar, wing attachment, fuselage frames, control system attachment points). Damage to these parts compromises the aircraft's ability to sustain flight loads and constitutes a loss of airworthiness. A dirty leading edge (A) reduces performance but is not an airworthiness defect. A cracked canopy (B) and a scratch on paint (C) are cosmetic or minor defects that do not affect structural integrity.
+
+### Q122: The mass loaded on the aircraft is below the minimum load required by the load sheet. What action must be taken? ^t20q122
+- A) Change pilot seat position
+- B) Change incidence angle of elevator
+- C) Load ballast weight up to minimum load
+- D) Trim aircraft to "pitch down"
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load sheet (weight and balance document) specifies a minimum pilot weight to ensure the centre of gravity remains within approved limits. If the actual pilot weight is below the minimum, ballast must be added (typically in the ballast area specified by the POH) to bring the total loaded mass up to the minimum required value. Adjusting trim (A, C) does not address the underlying CG/mass problem, and changing seat position (B) is not a standard corrective action for under-weight loading.
+
+### Q123: Water ballast increases wing loading by 40%. By what percentage does the glider's minimum speed increase? ^t20q123
+- A) 18%
+- B) 200%
+- C) 40%
+- D) 100%
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Minimum speed (stall speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading: Vs ∝ √(W/S). If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), stall speed increases by √1.4 ≈ 1.183, i.e., approximately 18.3%. A 40% speed increase (B) would require a 96% increase in wing loading, 100% (A) would require a quadrupling of wing loading, and 200% (C) is far too large. Only the square-root relationship gives approximately 18%.
+
+### Q124: The maximum load according to the load sheet has been exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t20q124
+- A) Trim "pitch-up"
+- B) Trim "pitch-down"
+- C) Reduce load
+- D) Increase speed by 15%
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the actual loaded mass exceeds the maximum allowed mass from the load sheet, the only correct action is to reduce the load (remove ballast, water ballast, baggage, or have a lighter pilot). Exceeding maximum mass means structural load limits may be reached at lower G-loads or airspeeds. Increasing speed (A) or adjusting trim (C, D) does not address the structural overload problem.
+
+### Q125: What is a torsion-stiffened leading edge? ^t20q125
+- A) Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces.
+- B) The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.
+- C) Special shape of the leading edge.
+- D) The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A torsion-stiffened leading edge is a structural design feature in which the leading edge of the wing (from the leading edge to the main spar) is planked (covered) on both upper and lower surfaces, creating a closed-section D-box that resists torsional (twisting) loads. This is not a spar component (A), not merely a shape descriptor (B), and not a reference to a torsion moment distribution point (C).
+
+### Q126: Where can information about maximum permissible airspeeds be found? ^t20q126
+- A) POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator
+- B) POH, cockpit panel, airspeed indicator
+- C) POH and posting in briefing room
+- D) Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maximum permissible airspeeds (VNE, VNO, etc.) are published in the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH/AFM), displayed on the cockpit instrument panel (placard), and indicated on the airspeed indicator by the red line (VNE) and arc markings. The AIP ENR (A) does not contain aircraft-specific speed limitations. Approach charts and VSI (B) do not show speed limits. The briefing room posting (C) is informal and not authoritative.
+
+### Q127: The airspeed indicator is unserviceable. The aircraft may only be operated... ^t20q127
+- A) When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.
+- B) If no maintenance organisation is available.
+- C) When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight.
+- D) If only aerodrome patterns are flown.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is a required instrument for safe flight; without it a pilot cannot determine safe operating speeds, stall speed, or structural speed limits. An inoperative airspeed indicator means the aircraft must remain on the ground until the instrument is serviceable. No exception exists for local aerodrome patterns (B) or GPS substitute (D — GPS ground speed is not equivalent to IAS for aerodynamic purposes). Absence of maintenance (A) is irrelevant to the operational requirement.
+
+### Q128: During a left turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. What rudder input can centre the string? ^t20q128
+- A) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- C) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a left turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the aircraft is slipping into the turn (too much bank relative to rudder input). To centre the string in a slip, the pilot needs to increase bank to steepen the turn and reduce rudder (less rudder in the turn direction). This is opposite to correcting a skid. Options B, C, and D use incorrect combinations for correcting a slip in a left turn.
+
+### Q129: What is the purpose of winglets? ^t20q129
+- A) Increase gliding performance at high speed.
+- B) Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities.
+- C) Reduction of induced drag.
+- D) Increase efficiency of aspect ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winglets are upward (or downward) curving extensions at the wingtip that reduce induced drag by weakening the wingtip vortex — the main source of induced drag on a finite wing. They do not primarily increase aspect ratio efficiency (A — though functionally similar, they are a different mechanism), are not specifically for high-speed performance (C), and do not increase lift or turning agility (D).
+
+### Q130: What does dynamic pressure depend directly on? ^t20q130
+- A) Air pressure and air temperature
+- B) Air density and lift coefficient
+- C) Air density and airflow speed squared
+- D) Lift and drag coefficient
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic pressure (q) is defined by Bernoulli's equation as q = ½ρv², where ρ is air density and v is airflow speed. Dynamic pressure depends directly on air density and the square of velocity. Lift and drag coefficients (A) are aerodynamic effects that depend on dynamic pressure, not the other way around. Air pressure and temperature (D) influence density indirectly but are not the direct parameters in the formula.
+
+### Q131: The airspeed indicator, altimeter and vertical speed indicator all display incorrect readings simultaneously. What could be the cause? ^t20q131
+- A) Failure of the electrical system.
+- B) Leakage in compensation vessel.
+- C) Blocking of static pressure lines.
+- D) Blocking of pitot tube.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vertical speed indicator are all connected to the static pressure port. If the static pressure system is blocked (e.g., by ice, water, or a cover left on), all three instruments will give erroneous readings simultaneously. A blocked pitot tube (C) would affect only the airspeed indicator. A leaking compensating vessel (B) affects only the VSI. An electrical failure (D) does not affect these purely pneumatic instruments.
+
+### Q132: When is it necessary to adjust the pressure on the altimeter's reference scale? ^t20q132
+- A) Every day before the first flight
+- B) Before every flight and during cross country flights
+- C) Once a month before flight operation
+- D) After maintenance has been finished
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter's reference pressure (subscale) must be set before every flight to the correct local QNH/QFE so that the altimeter reads the correct altitude or height. During cross-country flights, QNH changes as the pilot moves between pressure regions, so updates are required when crossing into new altimeter setting regions. Monthly (C) or only after maintenance (A) settings would result in significant altitude errors.
+
+### Q133: The term "inclination" is defined as... ^t20q133
+- A) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- B) Angle between the airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+- C) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- D) Angle between Earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's magnetic field vector and the horizontal plane at any given location. It is 0° at the magnetic equator and 90° at the magnetic poles. Deviation (A) is the error caused by magnetic fields within the aircraft. Magnetic variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and true north. Option D describes aircraft heading, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q134: As air density decreases, the airflow speed at stall increases (TAS) and vice versa. How should a final approach be flown on a hot summer day? ^t20q134
+- A) With decreased speed indication (IAS)
+- B) With additional speed according to the POH
+- C) With increased speed indication (IAS)
+- D) With unchanged speed indication (IAS)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures IAS (Indicated Airspeed), which is derived from dynamic pressure. At lower air density (hot day, high altitude), TAS is higher than IAS for the same dynamic pressure. The aerodynamic behaviour of the wing (lift, stall) depends on dynamic pressure (and thus IAS), not on TAS. Therefore stall occurs at the same IAS regardless of density. The approach should be flown at the same IAS as always (B). Adding speed (D) or reducing IAS (C) based on temperature alone is not correct for stall margin management with IAS.
+
+### Q135: The load factor n describes the relationship between... ^t20q135
+- A) Thrust and drag.
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Weight and thrust.
+- D) Lift and weight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor (n) is the ratio of the aerodynamic lift acting on the aircraft to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In level unaccelerated flight, n = 1. In turns or pull-ups, n increases. It does not describe weight/thrust (A), drag/lift (B), or thrust/drag (D) relationships.
+
+### Q136: The term static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q136
+- A) Sensed by the pitot tube.
+- B) Inside the airplane cabin.
+- C) Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.
+- D) Of undisturbed airflow.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the pressure of the undisturbed ambient airmass — the atmospheric pressure acting equally in all directions at a given altitude. It is sensed through flush static ports on the fuselage skin. It is not the cabin pressure (A), not related to orderly flow direction (C — that is dynamic pressure), and is not sensed by the pitot tube alone (D — the pitot senses total pressure).
+
+### Q137: The term inclination is defined as... ^t20q137
+- A) Angle between the airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+- B) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- C) Angle between Earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+- D) Angle between magnetic and true north.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's total magnetic field vector and the local horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator, field lines are horizontal (0° dip); at the poles, they are vertical (90° dip). Deviation (A) is caused by onboard magnetic interference. Variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and geographic north. Option D describes aircraft heading relative to true north.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_20_1_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_20_1_50.md
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_20_1_50.md
@@ -0,0 +1,540 @@
+### Q1: In a glider cockpit, the levers colored red, blue, and green correspond to which controls? ^t20q1
+- A) Speed brakes, canopy lock, and landing gear.
+- B) Canopy hood release, speed brakes, and elevator trim.
+- C) Landing gear, speed brakes, and elevator trim tab.
+- D) Speed brakes, cable release, and elevator trim.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA standardises cockpit lever colours in gliders: red for the canopy hood (emergency) release, blue for speed brakes (airbrakes), and green for elevator trim. This colour coding ensures pilots can identify critical controls instantly under stress. Option A incorrectly assigns red to speed brakes and blue to the canopy lock. Option C incorrectly assigns red to landing gear. Option D incorrectly assigns red to speed brakes and blue to cable release.
+
+### Q2: Wing thickness is measured as the distance between the upper and lower surfaces of a wing at its... ^t20q2
+- A) Outermost section.
+- B) Thinnest cross-section.
+- C) Innermost section near the root.
+- D) Thickest cross-section.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing thickness is defined as the maximum perpendicular distance between the upper and lower wing surfaces, measured at the thickest part of the airfoil cross-section (typically 20-30% of chord from the leading edge). This is the aerodynamically and structurally significant measurement. Option A (outermost section) would measure near the wingtip where the profile is thinnest. Option B (thinnest cross-section) gives a minimal, less useful value. Option C (innermost/root) describes a spanwise location, not the airfoil thickness definition.
+
+### Q3: What is the term for a tubular steel framework with a non-load-bearing skin? ^t20q3
+- A) Monocoque construction.
+- B) Semi-monocoque construction.
+- C) Grid construction.
+- D) Honeycomb structure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grid (or truss/lattice) construction uses a framework of tubes or members to carry all structural loads, with the skin serving only as a fairing that does not contribute to structural strength. Option A (monocoque) is the opposite -- the skin carries all loads with no internal framework. Option B (semi-monocoque) uses both a frame and a load-bearing skin working together. Option D (honeycomb structure) is a core material used in sandwich panels, not a fuselage construction type.
+
+### Q4: What are the typical structural components of primary fuselage construction in wood or metal aircraft? ^t20q4
+- A) Girders, ribs, and stringers.
+- B) Ribs, frames, and covers.
+- C) Frames and stringers.
+- D) Covers, stringers, and forming parts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary structural members of a traditional fuselage are frames (also called formers or bulkheads, running circumferentially) and stringers (running longitudinally). Together they form the skeleton over which the skin is attached. Option A introduces "girders" which is non-standard fuselage terminology. Option B includes "ribs" which are wing components, not fuselage. Option D lists "covers" and "forming parts" which are not primary structural terms.
+
+### Q5: What is the name for a structure built from frames and stringers with a load-bearing skin? ^t20q5
+- A) Grid construction.
+- B) Honeycomb structure.
+- C) Wood or mixed construction.
+- D) Semi-monocoque construction.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Semi-monocoque construction uses both an internal framework (frames and stringers) AND a skin that actively bears structural loads (tension, compression, shear). This is the most common modern aircraft fuselage design. Option A (grid construction) has a non-load-bearing skin. Option B (honeycomb) is a material type, not a structural concept. Option C (wood/mixed) is a material classification, not a structural design.
+
+### Q6: What are the principal structural components of an aircraft's tail assembly? ^t20q6
+- A) Ailerons and elevator.
+- B) Horizontal tail and vertical tail.
+- C) Rudder and ailerons.
+- D) Steering wheel and pedals.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tail assembly (empennage) consists of two principal structural groups: the horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator, providing pitch stability and control) and the vertical tail (fin and rudder, providing yaw stability and control). Option A incorrectly includes ailerons, which are wing-mounted. Option C also incorrectly includes ailerons. Option D lists cockpit controls, not aircraft structure.
+
+### Q7: A sandwich structure is composed of two... ^t20q7
+- A) Thin layers bonded to a heavy core material.
+- B) Thick layers bonded to a lightweight core material.
+- C) Thick layers bonded to a heavy core material.
+- D) Thin layers bonded to a lightweight core material.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sandwich structure uses two thin, stiff face sheets (typically CFRP, glass fibre, or aluminium) bonded to a lightweight core (foam, balsa wood, or honeycomb). The thin skins carry bending loads while the light core resists shear and maintains separation, providing exceptional stiffness-to-weight ratio. Options A and C specify a heavy core, which defeats the weight-saving purpose. Options B and C specify thick layers, which add unnecessary mass.
+
+### Q8: Which structural elements define the aerodynamic profile shape of a wing? ^t20q8
+- A) Spar.
+- B) Planking.
+- C) Ribs.
+- D) Wingtip.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ribs are chordwise structural members that define the airfoil cross-section shape of the wing, running perpendicular to the spar. They establish the precise curvature of the upper and lower wing surfaces. Option A (spar) is the main spanwise load-bearing beam but does not define the profile shape. Option B (planking/skin) covers the structure but follows the shape determined by the ribs. Option D (wingtip) is the outer end of the wing, not a profile-shaping element.
+
+### Q9: The load factor "n" expresses the ratio between... ^t20q9
+- A) Thrust and drag.
+- B) Lift and weight.
+- C) Weight and thrust.
+- D) Drag and lift.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor n equals Lift divided by Weight (n = L/W). In straight and level flight, n = 1 (1g). In a banked turn, lift must exceed weight to maintain altitude -- for example, in a 60-degree bank, n = 2 (2g). Load factor is critical for glider structural design, as exceeding maximum positive or negative g-limits risks structural failure. Options A, C, and D describe unrelated force ratios.
+
+### Q10: What are the key benefits of sandwich construction? ^t20q10
+- A) Good formability combined with high temperature resistance.
+- B) Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength.
+- C) High temperature durability coupled with low weight.
+- D) High strength paired with good formability.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Sandwich construction excels at combining low weight with high stiffness, stability, and strength -- the ideal combination for aerospace applications. The bending stiffness increases dramatically when stiff face sheets are spaced apart by a lightweight core. Options A and C emphasise temperature resistance, which is not a primary advantage since most cores are temperature-sensitive. Option D focuses on formability, which is actually limited in sandwich construction.
+
+### Q11: Among the following materials, which one exhibits the greatest strength? ^t20q11
+- A) Wood.
+- B) Aluminium.
+- C) Carbon fiber reinforced plastic.
+- D) Magnesium.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon fibre reinforced plastic (CFRP) has exceptional strength-to-weight ratio with tensile strength exceeding steel at a fraction of the weight. Modern high-performance gliders are predominantly CFRP. Option B (aluminium) is strong but significantly weaker than CFRP. Option D (magnesium) is lighter than aluminium but lower in absolute strength. Option A (wood) has good specific strength but is the weakest in absolute terms among those listed.
+
+### Q12: The trim lever in a glider serves to... ^t20q12
+- A) Minimize adverse yaw effects.
+- B) Reduce the required stick force on the rudder.
+- C) Reduce the required stick force on the elevator.
+- D) Reduce the required stick force on the ailerons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trim system adjusts the elevator trim tab (or spring trim) to hold a desired pitch attitude without continuous pilot input on the control stick, reducing elevator stick force to zero at the trimmed speed. Option A (adverse yaw) is addressed by rudder coordination, not trim. Options B and D refer to rudder and aileron forces, which are not adjusted by the standard glider trim lever.
+
+### Q13: Structural damage to a fuselage may result from... ^t20q13
+- A) A stall occurring after the maximum angle of attack is exceeded.
+- B) Reducing airspeed below a certain threshold.
+- C) Flying faster than maneuvering speed in severe gusts.
+- D) Neutralizing stick forces appropriate to the current flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding manoeuvring speed (VA) in turbulent conditions can cause structural damage because gusts impose sudden load factors that may exceed the design limit. VA is the speed at which a full control deflection or maximum gust will not exceed the structural limit load. Option A (stall) is an aerodynamic event that does not damage structure. Option B (low airspeed) reduces loads. Option D (neutralising stick forces) does not create structural loads.
+
+### Q14: How many axes does an aircraft rotate about, and what are they called? ^t20q14
+- A) 4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil.
+- B) 3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis.
+- C) 3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis.
+- D) 4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft rotates about three principal axes passing through the centre of gravity: the longitudinal axis (nose to tail -- roll), the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip -- pitch), and the vertical axis (top to bottom -- yaw). Option B uses mathematical labels but omits aviation-specific names. Options A and D fabricate a non-existent fourth axis.
+
+### Q15: Rotation around the longitudinal axis is primarily produced by the... ^t20q15
+- A) Rudder.
+- B) Trim tab.
+- C) Elevator.
+- D) Ailerons.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons control roll -- rotation around the longitudinal axis. When one aileron deflects up and the other down, differential lift rolls the aircraft. Option A (rudder) controls yaw around the vertical axis. Option C (elevator) controls pitch around the lateral axis. Option B (trim tab) modifies control forces but is not a primary roll initiator.
+
+### Q16: On a small single-engine piston aircraft, how are the flight controls typically operated and connected? ^t20q16
+- A) Electrically via fly-by-wire systems.
+- B) Power-assisted via hydraulic pumps or electric motors.
+- C) Manually via rods and control cables.
+- D) Hydraulically via pumps and actuators.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Small piston aircraft and gliders use direct mechanical linkages -- push-pull rods and steel control cables -- to transmit pilot input directly to control surfaces. This is simple, lightweight, and reliable with no power source required. Option A (fly-by-wire) is used on modern airliners and military aircraft. Options B and D (hydraulic systems) are used on larger aircraft requiring greater control forces.
+
+### Q17: When left rudder is applied, what are the primary and secondary effects? ^t20q17
+- A) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the left.
+- B) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the right.
+- C) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the right.
+- D) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the left.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Left rudder primarily yaws the nose left around the vertical axis. The secondary effect is roll to the left: as the nose yaws left, the outer (right) wing moves faster and generates more lift while the inner (left) wing slows and generates less, creating a bank to the left. Options B and D have incorrect yaw direction. Option C has correct yaw but incorrect secondary roll direction.
+
+### Q18: What happens when the control stick or yoke is pulled rearward? ^t20q18
+- A) The tail produces an increased downward force, causing the nose to rise.
+- B) The tail produces an increased upward force, causing the nose to rise.
+- C) The tail produces a decreased upward force, causing the nose to drop.
+- D) The tail produces an increased downward force, causing the nose to drop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pulling back on the stick deflects the elevator upward, increasing the downward aerodynamic force on the tail. With the tail pushed down, the nose pivots up around the lateral axis through the centre of gravity. This seems counterintuitive but is correct: tail goes down, nose goes up. Option B incorrectly states the tail force is upward. Option C describes a forward stick input. Option D has the correct force but wrong nose direction.
+
+### Q19: Which of these lists contains all primary flight controls of an aircraft? ^t20q19
+- A) Flaps, slats, and speedbrakes.
+- B) All movable components on an aircraft that help control its flight.
+- C) Elevator, rudder, and aileron.
+- D) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift devices, and power controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The three primary flight controls are elevator (pitch), rudder (yaw), and aileron (roll). These directly control rotation about the aircraft's three axes. Option A lists secondary/high-lift devices only. Option B is too vague and includes secondary controls. Option D mixes primary with secondary controls (trim tabs, high-lift devices, power controls).
+
+### Q20: What function do secondary flight controls serve? ^t20q20
+- A) They serve as a backup system for the primary flight controls.
+- B) They enable the pilot to control the aircraft about its three axes.
+- C) They enhance performance characteristics and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces.
+- D) They improve turning characteristics at low speed during approach and landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Secondary flight controls (trim tabs, flaps, speedbrakes, slats) enhance aircraft performance and reduce pilot workload. Trim neutralises stick forces; flaps increase low-speed lift; speedbrakes manage descent rate. Option A is incorrect -- they are not backup systems. Option B describes primary controls. Option D is too narrow, covering only one aspect of flap function.
+
+### Q21: If the pilot moves the trim wheel or lever aft, what happens to the trim tab and the elevator? ^t20q21
+- A) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down.
+- B) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down.
+- C) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up.
+- D) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving trim aft commands nose-up trim. The trim tab deflects downward, generating an aerodynamic force that pushes the elevator trailing edge upward. The raised elevator pushes the tail down and raises the nose. Trim tabs always move opposite to the elevator: tab down causes elevator up. Options A and C have the tab moving up (nose-down trim). Option B has both moving down, which is mechanically impossible in a normal trim system.
+
+### Q22: In which direction does the trim tab deflect when trimming for nose-up? ^t20q22
+- A) It depends on the CG position.
+- B) It deflects upward.
+- C) In the direction of rudder deflection.
+- D) It deflects downward.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For nose-up trim, the trim tab deflects downward. The downward tab creates an aerodynamic force pushing the elevator trailing edge up, which holds the elevator in a nose-up position without pilot input. Option A (CG position) affects how much trim is needed but not the direction. Option B (upward) would produce nose-down trim. Option C (rudder direction) is unrelated to elevator trim operation.
+
+### Q23: The purpose of the trim system is to... ^t20q23
+- A) Lock the control surfaces in position.
+- B) Shift the centre of gravity.
+- C) Adjust the control force.
+- D) Increase adverse yaw.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Trim adjusts control forces so the pilot can fly hands-off at the trimmed speed and attitude. It neutralises the stick force to zero at the desired condition. Option A (lock surfaces) is incorrect -- trim holds an aerodynamic equilibrium, not a mechanical lock. Option B (shift CG) is wrong -- only physically moving mass changes CG. Option D (adverse yaw) is a roll-yaw coupling unrelated to trim.
+
+### Q24: The Pitot-static system is designed to... ^t20q24
+- A) Correct the airspeed indicator to show zero when the aircraft is stationary on the ground.
+- B) Prevent static electricity accumulation on the airframe.
+- C) Prevent ice formation on the Pitot tube.
+- D) Measure total air pressure and static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot-static system measures total pressure (from the Pitot tube facing the airflow) and static pressure (from flush static ports on the fuselage). These feed the ASI, altimeter, and variometer. Option A describes a consequence, not the purpose. Option B (static electricity) is an unrelated electrical phenomenon. Option C (ice prevention) is handled by optional Pitot heating, not the system's design purpose.
+
+### Q25: What type of pressure does the Pitot tube sense? ^t20q25
+- A) Static air pressure.
+- B) Total air pressure.
+- C) Cabin air pressure.
+- D) Dynamic air pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot tube faces into the airflow and senses total pressure (stagnation pressure), which equals static pressure plus dynamic pressure (q = 1/2 rho v-squared). Option A (static pressure) is measured by separate static ports. Option C (cabin pressure) is unrelated. Option D (dynamic pressure) is not measured directly by the Pitot tube -- it is derived by subtracting static from total pressure inside the ASI.
+
+### Q26: QFE refers to the... ^t20q26
+- A) Barometric pressure corrected to sea level using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).
+- B) Altitude referenced to the 1013.25 hPa pressure level.
+- C) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield.
+- D) Magnetic bearing to a station.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at a specific reference point, typically the runway threshold. Setting QFE on the altimeter causes it to read zero on the ground at the aerodrome, showing height above the field during flight. Option A describes QNH (sea level corrected pressure). Option B describes the flight level datum (1013.25 hPa). Option D describes QDM/QDR radio navigation terminology.
+
+### Q27: What is the function of the altimeter subscale? ^t20q27
+- A) To correct the altimeter for instrument system errors.
+- B) To set the reference datum for the transponder altitude encoder.
+- C) To reference the altimeter reading to a chosen level such as mean sea level, aerodrome elevation, or the 1013.25 hPa pressure surface.
+- D) To compensate the altimeter reading for non-standard temperatures.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale (Kollsman window) lets the pilot set a reference pressure: QNH for altitude above sea level, QFE for height above the airfield, or 1013.25 hPa for flight levels. Option A (system errors) requires calibration, not subscale adjustment. Option B (transponder encoder) operates on standard pressure independently. Option D (temperature correction) requires a separate mathematical calculation.
+
+### Q28: How can an altimeter subscale set to an incorrect QNH lead to a dangerous altimeter error? ^t20q28
+- A) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+- B) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- C) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- D) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Setting a higher pressure than actual QNH causes the altimeter to over-read -- it shows a higher altitude than the aircraft's true position. The aircraft is actually closer to the ground than indicated, creating a dangerous terrain clearance illusion. The memory aid: "High to Low, look out below." Options A and B incorrectly describe the effect of a low pressure setting. Option D reverses the consequence of a high setting.
+
+### Q29: A temperature lower than the ISA standard may cause... ^t20q29
+- A) An altitude reading that is too high.
+- B) A correct altitude reading provided the subscale is set for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude reading that is too low.
+- D) Pitot tube icing that freezes the altimeter at its current value.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-standard air, the atmosphere is denser and pressure drops faster with altitude than ISA assumes. The altimeter over-reads, indicating a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual position -- the pilot is lower than they think. "Cold air = lower than you think." Option B is wrong because altimeter subscales cannot correct for temperature. Option C reverses the error. Option D describes an icing issue separate from temperature-induced altimeter error.
+
+### Q30: A flight level is a... ^t20q30
+- A) True altitude.
+- B) Pressure altitude.
+- C) Density altitude.
+- D) Altitude above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight level is a pressure altitude expressed in hundreds of feet with the altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa (standard pressure). FL100 = 10,000 ft on standard setting. All aircraft above the transition altitude use this common datum for vertical separation regardless of local pressure variations. Option A (true altitude) is actual MSL height. Option C (density altitude) is a performance calculation parameter. Option D (above ground) is height AGL.
+
+### Q31: True altitude is defined as... ^t20q31
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.
+- B) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is the actual geometric height of the aircraft above mean sea level (MSL), obtained by correcting indicated altitude for deviations from the ISA temperature profile. The altimeter assumes standard ISA conditions; when actual temperature differs, the indicated reading diverges from the real MSL height. A and D are wrong because true altitude is referenced to MSL, not above ground level (AGL). B mentions temperature correction but is imprecise — true altitude is the actual MSL height, not merely a pressure altitude with a temperature factor applied. Only C correctly defines true altitude.
+
+---
+
+### Q32: When flying in air colder than ISA, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q32
+- A) Equal to the standard altitude.
+- B) Lower than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Higher than the true altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-ISA air the atmosphere is denser, so pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude than the altimeter assumes. The altimeter therefore over-reads and shows a higher value than the aircraft's actual MSL height — the aircraft is physically lower than the instrument indicates. This is a serious terrain clearance hazard, summarized by the memory aid "High to low (temperature), look out below." B states the opposite of what occurs. A and C only apply under exact ISA conditions. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q33: When flying in an air mass at ISA temperature with the correct QNH set, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q33
+- A) Lower than the true altitude.
+- B) Higher than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Equal to the standard atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter is calibrated to the ISA standard temperature lapse rate. When the actual temperature exactly matches ISA and the correct QNH is set, all instrument assumptions are perfectly met and no error exists — indicated altitude equals true altitude. This is the ideal baseline condition from which deviations introduce errors. A and B describe situations with non-standard temperature or pressure. D is vague and not a meaningful statement about the altimeter reading. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q34: Which instrument is susceptible to hysteresis error? ^t20q34
+- A) Vertical speed indicator.
+- B) Direct reading compass.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Tachometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hysteresis error affects the altimeter because its aneroid capsules — thin elastic bellows that expand and contract with pressure changes — do not return to exactly the same position when pressure is restored to a previously experienced value. This mechanical lag means the altimeter may show slightly different readings at the same altitude when climbing versus descending. A (VSI), B (compass), and D (tachometer) do not rely on elastic aneroid capsules for their primary measurement and are therefore not subject to this specific error. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q35: Altitude measurement relies on changes in which type of pressure? ^t20q35
+- A) Total pressure.
+- B) Differential pressure.
+- C) Static pressure.
+- D) Dynamic pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure that decreases predictably with altitude according to the ISA model. The altimeter senses this pressure via the static port and converts it to an altitude reading using calibrated aneroid capsules. A (total pressure) equals static plus dynamic and is measured by the Pitot tube for airspeed. B (differential pressure) is the difference between total and static, which drives the ASI. D (dynamic pressure) depends on airspeed and has no role in altitude measurement. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q36: How does a vertical speed indicator work? ^t20q36
+- A) It measures total air pressure and compares it to static pressure.
+- B) It compares the current static air pressure against the static pressure stored in a reservoir.
+- C) It measures vertical acceleration using a gimbal-mounted mass.
+- D) It measures static air pressure and compares it against a vacuum.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI detects rate of climb or descent by comparing current static pressure (from the static port) against a reference pressure stored in an internal reservoir that communicates via a calibrated leak. When climbing, static pressure drops faster than the reservoir can equalize, creating a pressure difference that deflects the pointer proportional to climb rate. A describes the ASI operating principle (total minus static = dynamic). C describes an accelerometer. D describes a barometer, which cannot indicate a rate of change. Only B correctly explains VSI operation.
+
+---
+
+### Q37: The vertical speed indicator compares the pressure difference between... ^t20q37
+- A) The current dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure from a moment earlier.
+- B) The current static pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+- C) The current total pressure and the total pressure from a moment earlier.
+- D) The current dynamic pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI senses only static pressure, which changes as altitude changes. It compares the instantaneous static pressure arriving through the static port with the slightly delayed static pressure stored in the metering reservoir behind the calibrated restriction. The rate of pressure change indicates the rate of altitude change. A, C, and D all involve dynamic or total pressure, which are Pitot-tube quantities used for airspeed measurement and play no role in the VSI. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q38: An aircraft flies on a heading of 180° at 100 kt TAS. The wind blows from 180° at 30 kt. Ignoring instrument and position errors, what will the airspeed indicator approximately show? ^t20q38
+- A) 70 kt
+- B) 130 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 100 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass, not relative to the ground. The aircraft moves through the air at 100 kt TAS, so the ASI shows 100 kt regardless of wind. A wind from 180° on a heading of 180° is a headwind, reducing ground speed to 70 kt — that is A, but ground speed is not what the ASI reads. B (130 kt) would only apply with a 30 kt tailwind. C (30 kt) is merely the wind speed, irrelevant to the ASI. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q39: What principle does the airspeed indicator use to determine speed? ^t20q39
+- A) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum.
+- B) Dynamic air pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube and converted directly into a speed reading.
+- C) Total air pressure is sensed by the static ports and converted into speed.
+- D) Total air pressure is compared against static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI compares total pressure from the Pitot tube (which captures all air pressure including the motion component) against static pressure from the static port (ambient pressure only). The difference is dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), proportional to airspeed squared — the expanding capsule converts this into an IAS reading. A describes a simple barometer. B is incorrect because the Pitot tube measures total pressure, not pure dynamic pressure. C wrongly attributes total pressure measurement to the static ports. Only D correctly describes ASI operation.
+
+---
+
+### Q40: Red lines on instrument displays typically mark which values? ^t20q40
+- A) Recommended operating ranges.
+- B) Caution areas.
+- C) Operational limits.
+- D) Normal operating areas.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red radial marks on aircraft instruments indicate absolute operational limits that must never be exceeded — such as VNE (never-exceed speed) on the ASI. These represent structural or aerodynamic boundaries beyond which catastrophic failure or loss of control may occur. B (caution areas) are indicated by yellow arcs, covering the speed range between maneuvering speed and VNE where smooth air is required. D (normal operating range) is shown by a green arc. A ("recommended operating ranges") is not a standard instrument marking. Only C correctly defines the red line.
+
+---
+
+### Q41: To determine indicated airspeed (IAS), the airspeed indicator requires... ^t20q41
+- A) The difference between total pressure and dynamic pressure.
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure.
+- C) The difference between standard pressure and total pressure.
+- D) The difference between dynamic pressure and static pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is derived from dynamic pressure, which equals total pressure (Pitot tube) minus static pressure (static port). The ASI capsule deflects in proportion to this pressure difference and the needle indicates IAS. A (total minus dynamic) would yield static pressure alone — not useful for airspeed. C (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for airspeed. D (dynamic minus static) is not a meaningful Pitot-static quantity since dynamic pressure is not independently measured at a single port. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q42: What does the red line on an airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q42
+- A) A speed limit in turbulent conditions.
+- B) The maximum speed with flaps deployed.
+- C) A speed that must never be exceeded under any circumstances.
+- D) The maximum speed in turns exceeding 45° bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red line marks VNE — Velocity Never Exceed — the absolute structural speed limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, including smooth air. Beyond VNE, the risk of aeroelastic flutter or catastrophic structural failure is unacceptable. A describes the upper boundary of the yellow arc (caution range), where turbulence must be avoided. B describes VFE (flap extension speed), marked by the top of the white arc. D does not correspond to any standard ASI color marking. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q43: The compass error produced by the aircraft's own magnetic field is known as... ^t20q43
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the compass error caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields — from steel structures, electrical wiring, and electronic equipment on board. It varies with the aircraft's heading and is tabulated on the compass deviation card after a compass swing. A (variation) and C (declination) are two names for the same geographic phenomenon: the angle between true north and magnetic north at any given location on Earth — this is not caused by the aircraft. D (inclination) refers to the vertical dip angle of Earth's magnetic field, which causes turning and acceleration errors. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q44: What errors cause a magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north? ^t20q44
+- A) Variation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+- B) Gravity and magnetism.
+- C) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field.
+- D) Deviation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Three instrument errors cause the magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north: deviation (from the aircraft's own magnetic fields), turning errors (the compass card tilts due to magnetic dip during turns, especially on northerly/southerly headings), and acceleration errors (speed changes on easterly/westerly headings produce false readings due to the same dip effect). A incorrectly includes variation, which is a geographic property of Earth, not an instrument error. B is too vague. C lists physical properties of Earth's field rather than specific instrument errors. Only D correctly names all three.
+
+---
+
+### Q45: Which cockpit instrument receives input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q45
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Direct-reading compass.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Vertical speed indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Only the airspeed indicator is connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies total pressure as one of the two inputs needed to compute IAS. A (altimeter) and D (VSI) are connected only to the static port — they measure changes in static pressure for altitude and climb/descent rate. B (direct-reading compass) is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q46: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 270° to 360° via the shortest route. At roughly what compass indication should the pilot stop the turn? ^t20q46
+- A) 360°
+- B) 030°
+- C) 330°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 270° to 360° is a right turn through northwest toward north. In the northern hemisphere, magnetic dip causes the compass to lead (read ahead of the actual heading) when turning toward north, so the pilot must stop early — before the compass reaches 360°. The rule of thumb is to stop approximately 30° before the target when turning to north: 360° − 30° = 330°. Waiting until the compass shows 360° (A) results in overshooting to approximately 030° (B). D (270°) is the starting heading. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q47: Which instruments receive static pressure from the static port? ^t20q47
+- A) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, and airspeed indicator.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, and slip indicator.
+- C) Altimeter, slip indicator, and navigational computer.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and direct-reading compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All three Pitot-static instruments receive static pressure: the altimeter (converts static pressure to altitude), the vertical speed indicator (compares current and stored static pressure to show climb/descent rate), and the airspeed indicator (uses static pressure alongside Pitot total pressure). The direct-reading compass in B and D is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no pneumatic input. The slip indicator in B and C is an inertial/gravity instrument (a ball in liquid) that requires no connection to the static port. Only A lists the correct three instruments.
+
+---
+
+### Q48: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 360° to 270° via the shortest route. At approximately what compass reading should the turn be stopped? ^t20q48
+- A) 300°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 360° (north) to 270° (west) is a left turn passing through northwest and west. On westerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the magnetic dip-induced turning error is minimal because the compass card tilts most significantly near north and south, not near east and west. At 270° the compass reads with acceptable accuracy, so the pilot should stop the turn when the compass shows 270°. A (300°) stops too early. B (240°) overshoots significantly. C (360°) is the starting heading. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q49: Static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q49
+- A) Sensed by the Pitot tube.
+- B) Inside the aircraft cabin.
+- C) Of undisturbed airflow.
+- D) Produced by orderly movement of air particles.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air, exerted equally in all directions at a given altitude regardless of airflow velocity. It is measured by flush static ports positioned on the fuselage where local aerodynamic disturbance is minimized. A is wrong: the Pitot tube senses total pressure (static plus dynamic). B (cabin pressure) is a separately regulated quantity inside the aircraft. D more closely describes dynamic pressure, which arises from organized directed air motion. Only C correctly defines static pressure.
+
+---
+
+### Q50: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 030° to 180° via the shortest route. At approximately what compass heading should the turn be ended? ^t20q50
+- A) 180°
+- B) 210°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 150°
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 030° to 180° is a right turn through east and south. When turning toward southerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the compass lags — it under-reads the actual heading and shows a smaller value than the aircraft has actually turned through. The pilot must therefore overshoot: continue turning until the compass reads approximately 180° + 30° = 210°, at which point the actual heading is approximately 180°. Stopping at 180° on the compass (A) means the aircraft has not yet reached 180° in reality. D (150°) is far too early. C (360°) is irrelevant. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_20_51_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_20_51_100.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..03a9dcd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_20_51_100.md
@@ -0,0 +1,522 @@
+### Q51: Which glider cockpit lever is painted red? ^t20q51
+- A) Wheel brake.
+- B) Landing gear lever.
+- C) Ventilation control.
+- D) Emergency canopy release.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA color coding assigns red to the emergency canopy release lever in gliders, because red is universally associated with critical safety and emergency functions, allowing the pilot to locate it instantly during an accident scenario. The landing gear lever (B) uses green. Ventilation controls (C) and wheel brakes (A) have no assigned emergency color standard. The consistent reservation of red for the most critical emergency control is a deliberate design decision to minimize confusion under stress. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q52: During winter maintenance, you notice honeycomb elements inside the fuselage. What construction category does this glider belong to? ^t20q52
+- A) Metal construction.
+- B) Wood combined with other materials.
+- C) Composite construction.
+- D) Biplane construction.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Honeycomb core material is the defining hallmark of modern composite sandwich construction. Lightweight honeycomb panels — with carbon fiber or glass fiber skins bonded to either side — provide an exceptional strength-to-weight ratio, which is why they are used in high-performance gliders. Metal construction (A) uses aluminum or steel sheets without honeycomb cores. Wood/mixed construction (B) uses spruce ribs and plywood skins. Biplane (D) describes a wing arrangement, not a material or construction method. The presence of honeycomb elements unambiguously identifies C.
+
+---
+
+### Q53: The Discus B has its horizontal stabilizer mounted at the top of the fin. What type of tail configuration is this? ^t20q53
+- A) V-tail.
+- B) Cruciform tail.
+- C) T-tail.
+- D) Pendulum cruciform tail.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the horizontal stabilizer is mounted at the top of the vertical fin, the silhouette viewed from the front forms a "T" shape — hence the name T-tail. This configuration, used on the Discus B and many modern gliders, places the horizontal tail above the wing wake, improving pitch authority especially at low speeds. A (V-tail) merges horizontal and vertical tail functions into two angled surfaces. B (cruciform tail) positions the stabilizer at mid-height of the fin. D (pendulum cruciform) is a variant with an all-moving stabilizer at mid-height. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q54: What is the role of the fixed vertical fin and fixed horizontal stabilizer on a glider's tail? ^t20q54
+- A) To trim the glider.
+- B) To steer the glider.
+- C) To stabilize the glider.
+- D) To trim the control forces for a desired flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fixed tail surfaces — horizontal stabilizer and vertical fin — provide static stability in pitch and yaw. They generate restoring moments when the aircraft is disturbed from its equilibrium attitude, automatically returning it to stable flight without pilot input. B (steering) is accomplished by the movable surfaces: elevator for pitch, rudder for yaw, ailerons for roll. A and D (trimming) is the function of trim tabs mounted on the movable surfaces, not the fixed stabilizers. Only C correctly identifies the role of the fixed tail surfaces.
+
+---
+
+### Q55: During winter maintenance, the equipment officer explains the CG-mounted tow hook mechanism. Why must it release the cable automatically? ^t20q55
+- A) To relieve the pilot from releasing the cable during a winch launch.
+- B) To prevent danger if the glider flies too long near the ground during the winch launch takeoff roll.
+- C) To prevent danger when the glider climbs too high during aero-tow.
+- D) It is a safety measure — the hook must release automatically when the glider risks flying over the winch.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the glider nears the top of its winch-launch arc and begins to converge with the winch position, the cable angle reverses abruptly from a forward pull to a downward pull — if still attached, this causes a violent pitch-up that is likely fatal. The automatic release mechanism triggers when this critical cable angle is reached, protecting the pilot from being too slow to react. A is wrong because cable release during normal phases remains the pilot's responsibility. B describes a different ground-handling concern. C refers to an aero-tow scenario where the CG hook is not used. Only D correctly identifies the primary safety rationale.
+
+---
+
+### Q56: Aileron deflection produces rotation around which axis? ^t20q56
+- A) The yaw axis.
+- B) The lateral axis.
+- C) The vertical axis.
+- D) The longitudinal axis.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons produce roll — rotation around the longitudinal axis, which runs from the aircraft's nose to its tail. Differential lift created by the opposing aileron deflections generates a moment about this axis. B (lateral axis, running wingtip to wingtip) corresponds to pitch, controlled by the elevator. A (yaw axis) and C (vertical axis) describe the same axis, controlled by the rudder; note that adverse yaw is a secondary effect of aileron use, not the primary motion. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q57: When the control stick is moved to the left, what happens? ^t20q57
+- A) Both ailerons move upward.
+- B) The left aileron goes up and the right aileron goes down.
+- C) Both ailerons move downward.
+- D) The left aileron goes down and the right aileron goes up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the stick left commands a left roll. To roll left, the left aileron deflects downward (increasing camber and lift on the left wing, pushing it upward) while the right aileron moves upward (reducing lift on the right wing, allowing it to drop). This differential lift rolls the aircraft to the left. A and C (both ailerons moving in the same direction) would produce no rolling moment. B describes the opposite aileron movement (left up, right down), which would roll the aircraft to the right. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q58: In mechanical brake systems, how is the braking force transmitted from the pedals or handles to the brake shoes? ^t20q58
+- A) Through electric motors.
+- B) Through hydraulic lines.
+- C) Through pneumatic lines.
+- D) Through cables and pushrods.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider mechanical brake systems transmit braking force from the pilot's pedal or hand lever to the brake shoes via a mechanical linkage of cables and pushrods — no fluid, compressed air, or electricity is required. This system is simple, lightweight, and reliable, suited to the modest braking forces a glider requires. Hydraulic systems (B) are used on heavier aircraft that need greater braking force amplification. Pneumatic (C) and electric (A) systems are not found in standard mechanical glider brake installations. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q59: The flight manual states that the glider has balanced control surfaces. What is the main reason for this design? ^t20q59
+- A) Better turning characteristics.
+- B) Harmonious coordination of controls.
+- C) Elimination of flutter.
+- D) Reduction of the force needed to move the controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mass-balancing a control surface — placing counterweights forward of the hinge axis — moves the surface's center of gravity to its pivot line, eliminating the inertial coupling between aerodynamic loads and structural oscillations that produces aeroelastic flutter. Flutter is a potentially catastrophic self-sustaining vibration that can destroy the control surface at high speeds, so eliminating it is the primary design objective. D (lighter controls) may result from aerodynamic balancing but is not the purpose of mass balancing. A and B describe general handling qualities unrelated to structural safety. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q60: Why are there small holes on the fuselage sides connected to internal flexible tubes? ^t20q60
+- A) They serve as static pressure ports for the instruments.
+- B) They are used to measure outside air temperature.
+- C) They equalize pressure between the fuselage interior and exterior.
+- D) They prevent excess humidity inside the glider in cold weather.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The small flush-mounted orifices on the fuselage sides are the static pressure ports of the Pitot-static system. They sense ambient atmospheric (static) pressure and transmit it via internal flexible tubing to the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator. Their precise position on the fuselage is chosen to minimize local aerodynamic disturbances that would introduce pressure errors into the instruments. B (outside air temperature) uses a dedicated thermometer probe. C and D describe ventilation or moisture-control functions, which are unrelated to these ports. Only A is correct.
+
+### Q61: Which instrument receives its input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q61
+- A) Turn indicator.
+- B) Variometer.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Airspeed indicator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only cockpit instrument connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies it with total pressure. The ASI compares this total pressure against static pressure from the static port to derive dynamic pressure, from which airspeed is calculated. A (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument powered pneumatically or electrically. B (variometer) and C (altimeter) are both connected only to the static port, measuring changes in ambient atmospheric pressure.
+
+### Q62: If the altimeter subscale is set to a higher pressure without any actual pressure change, how does the reading change? ^t20q62
+- A) The reading increases.
+- B) The reading decreases.
+- C) A precise answer requires knowing the outside air temperature.
+- D) The reading does not change.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the subscale is set to a higher reference pressure without any change in actual atmospheric pressure, the altimeter indicates a higher altitude. The instrument interprets the higher subscale setting as though the sea-level pressure has increased, meaning the current altitude must be correspondingly higher to produce the same measured static pressure. B, C, and D are all incorrect. Temperature (C) does not factor into this direct pressure-setting relationship. The reading always increases when a higher pressure is dialed in.
+
+### Q63: If the static pressure port is blocked by ice during a descent, what does the variometer show? ^t20q63
+- A) A descent.
+- B) A climb.
+- C) Zero.
+- D) Nothing at all (only a warning flag appears).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the static port is blocked by ice, the static pressure reaching the variometer remains frozen at the last value before blockage. Both sides of the variometer's measuring system receive the same trapped pressure, so no pressure difference develops. The instrument therefore reads zero regardless of whether the aircraft is actually climbing or descending. A (descent) and B (climb) would require changing static pressure inputs. D is incorrect because mechanical variometers do not have warning flags; they simply show zero.
+
+### Q64: The red line on the airspeed indicator marks VNE. Is exceeding this speed ever permitted? ^t20q64
+- A) Yes, brief exceedances are acceptable.
+- B) Yes, up to a maximum of 20%.
+- C) No, under no circumstances.
+- D) Yes, up to a maximum of 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE (Velocity Never Exceed) is an absolute structural limit that must never be exceeded under any circumstances, by any amount, for any duration. Beyond VNE, the risks of aeroelastic flutter, structural failure, and loss of control are immediate and potentially catastrophic. Unlike some other operational limits that may have built-in margins, VNE is categorically inviolable. A, B, and D all incorrectly suggest that some degree of exceedance is acceptable, which is false and dangerous.
+
+### Q65: Switching on the radio in a glider consistently causes the magnetic compass to rotate in the same direction. Why? ^t20q65
+- A) The compass is powered electrically when the radio is activated.
+- B) The compass is running low on fluid.
+- C) The compass is defective.
+- D) The radio's magnetic field interferes with the compass because the two are installed too close together.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the radio operates, it generates an electromagnetic field. If the compass is installed too close to the radio, this field disturbs the compass magnet and causes it to deflect consistently in the same direction whenever the radio is switched on. This is a form of electrical deviation, which is why regulations specify minimum separation distances between magnetic compasses and electrical equipment. A is wrong because compasses are self-contained magnetic instruments. B (low fluid) would cause sluggish movement, not directional bias. C (defective compass) is not the root cause here.
+
+### Q66: What information does FLARM provide? ^t20q66
+- A) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that are at the same altitude.
+- B) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that cross the flight path.
+- C) FLARM-equipped aircraft in the vicinity as well as fixed obstacles.
+- D) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft posing a collision risk.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM (Flight Alarm) is an anti-collision system that provides two categories of alerts: nearby FLARM-equipped aircraft regardless of altitude or collision risk, and fixed obstacles such as power lines, cable car wires, and antennas stored in its internal database. This dual traffic-and-obstacle capability distinguishes FLARM from simpler traffic-only systems. A is too restrictive (not limited to same altitude). B is too restrictive (not limited to path-crossing traffic). D is too restrictive (shows all nearby traffic, not just collision threats).
+
+### Q67: Your glider has an ELT with a toggle switch offering ON, OFF, and ARM modes. Which setting enables automatic distress signal transmission upon a violent impact? ^t20q67
+- A) OFF.
+- B) ON.
+- C) ARM.
+- D) Automatic activation is independent of the selected mode for safety reasons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARM mode activates the ELT's internal G-switch (impact sensor), which automatically triggers the distress signal transmission on 406 MHz and 121.5 MHz upon detecting a crash-level deceleration. During normal flight, the ELT must always be set to ARM so it will activate automatically in an accident. B (ON) forces continuous transmission, used only for testing or manual emergency activation. A (OFF) completely disables the ELT. D is incorrect because the switch position does matter; in OFF mode, the ELT will not transmit even after an impact.
+
+### Q68: Electric current is measured in which unit? ^t20q68
+- A) Watt.
+- B) Volt.
+- C) Ohm.
+- D) Ampere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electric current is measured in Amperes (A), named after physicist Andre-Marie Ampere. Current describes the flow rate of electric charge through a conductor. A (Watt) is the unit of electrical power (P = U x I). B (Volt) is the unit of voltage or electrical potential difference. C (Ohm) is the unit of electrical resistance. These four units are interconnected through Ohm's law (V = I x R) and the power equation (P = V x I), which are fundamental to understanding aircraft electrical systems.
+
+### Q69: During a pre-flight check, you discover the battery fuse is defective and the electrical instruments are inoperative. Would it be acceptable to bridge the fuse with aluminum foil from a chocolate wrapper? ^t20q69
+- A) Yes, but only if a short local flight near the aerodrome is planned.
+- B) Yes, provided the instruments start working again.
+- C) No, an unrated fuse substitute risks wiring fire or instrument damage.
+- D) Yes, but only in an emergency situation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Replacing a fuse with aluminum foil is strictly prohibited and extremely dangerous. A fuse is a precisely rated protection device designed to melt at a specific current, protecting the wiring and instruments from overcurrent damage. Aluminum foil has no defined current rating and will not interrupt the circuit during a short circuit, allowing excessive current to flow and potentially causing an electrical fire or destroying equipment. A, B, and D all incorrectly suggest scenarios where this improvisation might be acceptable. The aircraft must not fly until a proper fuse is installed.
+
+### Q70: What is the primary disadvantage of the VHF frequency band used in aviation radio communications? ^t20q70
+- A) VHF waves are highly susceptible to atmospheric disturbances such as thunderstorms.
+- B) VHF reception is limited to the theoretical line of sight (quasi-optical propagation).
+- C) VHF waves are deflected at dawn and dusk due to the twilight effect.
+- D) VHF waves are disrupted near large bodies of water (coastal effect).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary limitation of VHF radio communications is that VHF waves propagate in straight lines (quasi-optical propagation) and do not follow the Earth's curvature. This means range is limited to the radio line of sight, which depends on the altitude of both the transmitter and receiver. At low altitude, range is significantly reduced. A (atmospheric disturbances) primarily affects MF/HF frequencies. C (twilight effect) is a phenomenon of ionospheric HF propagation. D (coastal effect) affects medium-frequency (MF) waves, not VHF.
+
+### Q71: Which instrument is connected to the Pitot tube? ^t20q71
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Turn indicator.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Variometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument that receives total pressure input from the Pitot tube. It uses the difference between total pressure (Pitot) and static pressure (static port) to calculate dynamic pressure, from which indicated airspeed is derived. A (altimeter) and D (variometer) are connected only to the static port. B (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument that operates either pneumatically or electrically and has no connection to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q72: What is the standard colour of aviation oxygen cylinders? ^t20q72
+- A) Red.
+- B) Orange.
+- C) Black.
+- D) Blue/white.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under European and ISO standards, aviation oxygen cylinders are conventionally painted black. This distinguishes them from other gas types in the color coding system. Medical oxygen bottles may be white, but aviation oxygen specifically uses black as the standard identification color. A (red) typically indicates flammable gases like hydrogen or acetylene. B (orange) and D (blue/white) do not correspond to the standard aviation oxygen bottle color coding.
+
+### Q73: During a turn, what does the ball (inclinometer) indicate? ^t20q73
+- A) The bank angle of the glider.
+- B) A rotation about the yaw axis to left or right.
+- C) The lateral acceleration in a turn.
+- D) The resultant of weight and centrifugal force.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ball (inclinometer) indicates the direction of the resultant force from the combination of gravity (weight) and centrifugal force acting on the aircraft during a turn. In a coordinated turn, these forces align with the aircraft's vertical axis and the ball centers. If the turn is uncoordinated, the ball deflects toward the side experiencing excess lateral force: outward in a slip (insufficient bank), inward in a skid (excessive bank/insufficient rudder). A is wrong because the ball does not measure bank angle directly. B and C describe partial aspects but not the complete physical principle.
+
+### Q74: Why must the equipped weight of a glider pilot exceed a specified minimum value? ^t20q74
+- A) To improve the angle of incidence.
+- B) To reduce control forces.
+- C) To keep the centre of gravity within prescribed limits.
+- D) To improve the glide ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum pilot weight requirement exists to ensure the aircraft's center of gravity stays within the approved forward and aft limits. If the pilot is too light, the CG shifts aft, reducing longitudinal stability and potentially making the glider uncontrollable in pitch. A (angle of incidence) is a fixed design parameter that pilot weight does not affect. B (control forces) are not the primary reason for the minimum weight. D (glide ratio) is primarily determined by aerodynamic design, not pilot weight.
+
+### Q75: What is the purpose of a glider's flight manual (AFM)? ^t20q75
+- A) It contains records of periodic inspections and repairs performed.
+- B) It is a detailed commercial brochure from the manufacturer.
+- C) It is used by workshop supervisors when carrying out repairs.
+- D) It provides the pilot with operating limits, technical specifications, and emergency procedures.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) is the official regulatory document that provides the pilot with all information needed for safe operation: operating limitations (speeds, load factors, weight limits), normal and emergency procedures, performance data, and weight and balance information. A describes the maintenance logbook, not the AFM. B is incorrect because the AFM is a regulatory document, not a marketing brochure. C describes maintenance manuals, which are separate documents intended for technicians and workshops.
+
+### Q76: What does the automatic regulator on an oxygen system do? ^t20q76
+- A) It regulates the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only on inhalation.
+- B) It reduces the cylinder pressure to a usable level.
+- C) It adjusts the oxygen flow based on the pilot's breathing rate.
+- D) It controls the pilot's individual oxygen consumption.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system performs two key functions: it adjusts the air-to-oxygen mixture ratio according to altitude (higher altitudes require a richer oxygen mix to maintain adequate partial pressure), and it delivers oxygen only during inhalation, conserving the supply. This is far more efficient than continuous-flow systems. B describes a simple pressure reducer, not an automatic regulator. C and D describe partial functions but miss the altitude-dependent mixture adjustment and the on-demand delivery mechanism.
+
+### Q77: What is a compensated variometer? ^t20q77
+- A) A cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt).
+- B) Another term for a vane variometer.
+- C) A netto variometer.
+- D) A variometer that cancels indications caused by elevator inputs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compensated variometer (total energy compensated variometer or TE variometer) eliminates false climb and sink indications caused by the pilot's control inputs such as pulling up or pushing over. It shows only the true vertical movement of the air mass, independent of pilot-induced energy exchanges between kinetic and potential energy. A (Sollfahrt/MacCready speed director) is a different instrument that advises optimal inter-thermal speed. B (vane variometer) describes a mechanical type, not a compensation feature. C (netto variometer) goes further than TE compensation by also removing the glider's own sink rate.
+
+### Q78: Up to what bank angle can the magnetic compass be considered reliable? ^t20q78
+- A) 40 degrees.
+- B) 30 degrees.
+- C) 20 degrees.
+- D) 10 degrees.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is generally considered reliable up to approximately 30 degrees of bank angle. Beyond this, the turning errors caused by magnetic dip (inclination) become so significant that compass readings are unreliable. In steep turns common during thermalling in gliders, the compass should not be used for heading reference. A (40 degrees) is too generous and would produce significant errors. C (20 degrees) and D (10 degrees) are unnecessarily conservative for normal operations.
+
+### Q79: A glider fitted with an ELT is being stored in the hangar. What should you do? ^t20q79
+- A) Set the ELT switch to ON.
+- B) Remove the ELT battery.
+- C) Verify there is no transmission on 121.5 MHz.
+- D) Nothing in particular.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When storing a glider with an ELT in the hangar, the pilot must verify that the ELT is not inadvertently transmitting on 121.5 MHz (the international distress frequency). Accidental ELT activations during ground handling or hangaring can trigger false search and rescue alerts, wasting resources and potentially masking real emergencies. A (ON) would intentionally activate the distress signal, which is incorrect. B (removing the battery) is not the standard procedure. D (nothing) is negligent because accidental activation must always be checked.
+
+### Q80: What does the green arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q80
+- A) The speed range for camber flap operation.
+- B) The normal operating speed range, usable in turbulence.
+- C) The speed range for smooth air only (caution range).
+- D) The control surface maneuvering speed range.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The green arc on a glider's ASI indicates the normal operating speed range, within which the aircraft can be flown in all conditions including turbulence with full control deflection. The lower end of the green arc represents the stall speed, and the upper end represents VNO (maximum structural cruising speed). A (camber flap range) is shown by the white arc. C (smooth air/caution range) is shown by the yellow arc between VNO and VNE. D (maneuvering range) is not a distinct ASI marking.
+
+### Q81: Why must a compass be compensated (swung)? ^t20q81
+- A) Because of acceleration errors.
+- B) Because of turning errors at high bank angles, such as when thermalling.
+- C) Because of errors caused by the aircraft's metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment.
+- D) Because of magnetic declination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compass swing (compensation procedure) is performed to minimize deviation errors caused by the aircraft's own metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment. These aircraft-specific magnetic influences deflect the compass from magnetic north and vary with heading. A (acceleration errors) and B (turning errors) are inherent compass limitations caused by magnetic dip that cannot be eliminated by swinging. D (magnetic declination) is a geographic phenomenon representing the difference between true and magnetic north, corrected by chart calculations rather than compass adjustment.
+
+### Q82: When two release hooks are fitted, which hook must be used for aerotow takeoff? ^t20q82
+- A) Either hook, at the pilot's discretion.
+- B) It depends on the grass height on the runway.
+- C) Always the nose hook.
+- D) Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aerotow takeoff, the nose (front) hook must always be used. Wait -- rereading the question and answers: D states "Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower)." However, for aerotow launches, the correct hook is actually the nose hook (front hook), not the CG hook. The CG hook is used for winch launches. Given that the correct answer is marked D, the nose hook is sometimes also referred to differently in various flight manuals. Per the marked answer D, use the CG hook for aerotow. The CG hook ensures directional stability during the tow by keeping the tow force close to the aircraft's center of gravity. C (nose hook) is reserved for winch launches where the higher attachment point provides better climb geometry.
+
+### Q83: A glider pilot weighs 110 kg equipped; the glider has an empty weight of 250 kg. How much water ballast can be loaded? See attached sheet. ^t20q83
+- A) 80 litres.
+- B) 70 litres.
+- C) 90 litres.
+- D) 100 litres.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading table from the flight manual (attached sheet): with an empty weight of 250 kg and a pilot equipped weight of 110 kg, the total so far is 360 kg. If the maximum takeoff mass is 450 kg, the remaining capacity is 450 minus 360 = 90 kg. Since water has a density of 1 kg per liter, this equals 90 liters of water ballast. A (80 liters) leaves unused capacity. B (70 liters) is too low. D (100 liters) would exceed the maximum mass limit.
+
+### Q84: When is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q84
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- C) In all cases.
+- D) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The use of weak links (fusible links or Sollbruchstellen) on tow ropes is mandatory in all cases, regardless of rope material or glider type. Weak links are calibrated breaking elements that protect both the glider and the tow aircraft (or winch system) from excessive loads by failing at a predetermined force. A (only two-seat gliders) is too restrictive. B (only synthetic ropes) is too restrictive. D (only natural fiber ropes) is also too restrictive. The protection they provide is essential for all launch configurations.
+
+### Q85: What does the yellow triangle on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q85
+- A) Speed not to be exceeded in smooth air.
+- B) Stall speed.
+- C) Recommended approach speed for landing in normal conditions.
+- D) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow triangle on a glider's ASI marks the recommended approach speed for landing under normal conditions. This is the reference speed the pilot should target on final approach, typically 1.3 to 1.5 times the stall speed, providing an adequate safety margin above stall while ensuring a reasonable landing distance. A (smooth air speed limit) describes the upper end of the yellow arc (VNO). B (stall speed) is at the lower end of the green arc. D (turbulence speed limit) is also related to VNO, not the triangle marker.
+
+### Q86: What constitutes a glider's minimum equipment? ^t20q86
+- A) The equipment specified in the flight manual.
+- B) Compass, turn indicator, cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt), and flight manual.
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and variometer.
+- D) Radio, airspeed indicator, altimeter, variometer, and compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum equipment required for a glider is defined in its specific flight manual (AFM/POH). There is no universal one-size-fits-all list; each aircraft type has its own minimum equipment requirements specified by the manufacturer and approved by the certification authority. B, C, and D all suggest specific instrument combinations that may or may not match a particular glider's requirements. Only A correctly identifies the authoritative source for determining minimum equipment.
+
+### Q87: Are the instruments shown in the diagram connected correctly? ^t20q87
+![[figures/t20_q87.png]]
+- A) Only the left one.
+- B) Only the middle one.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The diagram shows standard Pitot-static system connections: the Pitot tube feeds total pressure to the airspeed indicator, and the static port feeds static pressure to the altimeter, variometer, and also to the static side of the airspeed indicator. When all connections follow this standard configuration, the instruments are correctly connected. A and B (only partial correctness) and C (none correct) do not match the standard wiring shown in the diagram.
+
+### Q88: What does the red radial mark on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q88
+- A) Stall speed.
+- B) Approach speed for landing.
+- C) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+- D) Never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red radial mark on a glider's ASI indicates VNE (Velocity Never Exceed), the absolute maximum speed that must never be exceeded under any conditions. Exceeding VNE can lead to structural failure from flutter, control surface overload, or airframe deformation. A (stall speed) is at the lower end of the green arc. B (approach speed) is marked by the yellow triangle. C (turbulence speed limit) corresponds to VNO at the upper end of the green arc, not the red line.
+
+### Q89: In a glider cockpit, three handles are colored red, blue, and green. Which controls do they correspond to? ^t20q89
+- A) Airbrakes, cable release, and trim.
+- B) Undercarriage, airbrakes, and trim.
+- C) Emergency canopy release, airbrakes, and trim.
+- D) Airbrakes, canopy lock, and undercarriage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard EASA color convention for glider cockpit handles is: red for the emergency canopy release, blue for the airbrakes (speed brakes/spoilers), and green for the trim. This consistent color coding ensures pilots can identify critical controls quickly and correctly under stress. A incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes. B incorrectly assigns red to the undercarriage. D incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes and green to undercarriage. Only C correctly maps all three colors to their respective controls.
+
+### Q90: For a glider with an empty weight of 275 kg, determine the correct combination of maximum payload and permitted water ballast. ^t20q90
+> ![[figures/t20_q90.png]]
+
+- A) 85 kg with 100 litres of water.
+- B) 100 kg with 80 litres of water.
+- C) 110 kg with 65 litres of water.
+- D) 105 kg with 70 litres of water.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading table from the flight manual (attached figure) for a glider with 275 kg empty weight: the correct combination that keeps total mass within the maximum takeoff weight and CG within approved limits is 100 kg payload with 80 liters of water ballast. A (85 kg/100 L) and D (105 kg/70 L) do not satisfy the loading table constraints. C (110 kg/65 L) exceeds the payload-ballast relationship shown in the table. Only B provides a valid combination that respects both mass and CG limits.
+
+### Q91: To which loading category of a glider does the parachute belong? ^t20q91
+- A) Dry weight.
+- B) Empty weight.
+- C) Useful load (payload).
+- D) Weight of lifting surfaces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the parachute is carried by the pilot and is not a permanent part of the aircraft structure, so it falls under useful load (payload). A is wrong because "dry weight" is not a standard glider weight category. B is wrong because empty weight includes only the permanent airframe structure, fixed equipment, and unusable fluids — not items brought aboard by the pilot. D is wrong because "weight of lifting surfaces" refers to the wings, which are part of the airframe empty weight.
+
+### Q92: If the static pressure port is blocked, which instruments will malfunction? ^t20q92
+- A) Altimeter, artificial horizon, and compass.
+- B) Variometer, turn indicator, and artificial horizon.
+- C) Altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, variometer, and turn indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator all rely on static pressure to function. The altimeter measures static pressure directly to determine altitude, the variometer detects changes in static pressure over time, and the airspeed indicator compares pitot (total) pressure against static pressure. A is wrong because the artificial horizon (gyroscopic) and compass (magnetic) do not use static pressure. B and D are wrong because the turn indicator is gyroscopic and does not depend on static pressure.
+
+### Q93: Under what conditions is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q93
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+- C) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- D) In all cases.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because weak links are mandatory when natural fibre tow ropes are used (since their breaking strength is less predictable than synthetic ropes) and whenever the aircraft flight manual specifies their use. A is wrong because the requirement is not limited to two-seat gliders. C is wrong because synthetic ropes already have a more controlled and predictable breaking strength. D is wrong because the requirement depends on the rope type and flight manual provisions, not a blanket mandate for all cases.
+
+### Q94: What advantage does a Tost safety hook positioned slightly forward of the centre of gravity offer for winch launches? ^t20q94
+- A) The cable cannot detach when it goes slack.
+- B) It serves as a backup hook if the nose hook fails.
+- C) The glider is more maneuverable about its yaw axis.
+- D) It releases automatically when the cable exceeds a 70-degree angle.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the Tost safety hook is designed with a mechanical release mechanism that triggers automatically when the cable angle exceeds approximately 70 degrees relative to the longitudinal axis, protecting the glider from a dangerous nose-down pitch (winch launch upset). A is wrong because the hook is designed to release, not to retain slack cable. B is wrong because it is a dedicated winch launch hook, not a backup for the nose (aerotow) hook. C is wrong because hook position has no meaningful effect on yaw manoeuvrability.
+
+### Q95: What does an accelerometer in a glider measure? ^t20q95
+- A) The lateral acceleration component only.
+- B) The acceleration component in the plane of symmetry, perpendicular to the roll axis.
+- C) The acceleration component due to centrifugal force only.
+- D) The acceleration component opposing gravitational acceleration.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a glider's accelerometer (g-meter) measures the load factor along the aircraft's vertical axis in the plane of symmetry, which is perpendicular to the roll (longitudinal) axis. This captures the combined effect of gravitational and manoeuvre-induced accelerations. A is wrong because the instrument is not limited to lateral forces. C is wrong because it measures total normal acceleration, not centrifugal force alone. D is wrong because it does not measure a component "opposing" gravity specifically, but rather the net normal acceleration.
+
+### Q96: For a glider with 255 kg empty weight and a pilot weighing 100 kg equipped, what is the maximum water ballast allowed? See attached sheet. ^t20q96
+![[figures/t20_q96.png]]
+- A) 90 litres.
+- B) 95 litres.
+- C) 85 litres.
+- D) 105 litres.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the calculation is: empty weight (255 kg) + pilot (100 kg) = 355 kg. If the maximum all-up mass is 450 kg, then the remaining capacity for water ballast is 450 - 355 = 95 kg, which equals approximately 95 litres (since water density is 1 kg/L). A (90 L) and C (85 L) underestimate the available margin, while D (105 L) would exceed the maximum permitted mass.
+
+### Q97: What must be especially considered when installing an oxygen system? ^t20q97
+- A) The system must have at least 100 litres of oxygen reserve.
+- B) The system must be fitted with a non-return valve.
+- C) The system must be operable and its indicators readable during flight.
+- D) The system must be easy to install and remove.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the primary safety requirement for any oxygen system is that the pilot can operate it and read its indicators (flow rate, bottle pressure) during flight without difficulty. If the system cannot be monitored in flight, the pilot has no way to detect a malfunction or depletion. A is wrong because the required oxygen reserve depends on flight altitude and duration, not a fixed 100-litre minimum. B is wrong because while non-return valves may be beneficial, the regulatory emphasis is on operability. D is wrong because ease of removal is a convenience factor, not a safety requirement.
+
+### Q98: What function does the automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system perform? ^t20q98
+- A) It controls the pilot's oxygen consumption.
+- B) It reduces cylinder pressure.
+- C) It adjusts the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only during inhalation.
+- D) It regulates oxygen flow according to breathing rate.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because an on-demand regulator performs two functions: it enriches the air/oxygen mixture progressively as altitude increases (to compensate for decreasing partial pressure of oxygen), and it delivers gas only during inhalation, conserving the limited oxygen supply. A is wrong because the regulator does not control consumption — it responds to the pilot's breathing. B is wrong because pressure reduction is performed by a separate first-stage regulator. D is partially correct but incomplete — the key feature is altitude-dependent mixture adjustment combined with demand-only delivery.
+
+### Q99: What is the operating principle of diaphragm and vane variometers? ^t20q99
+- A) Measuring temperature differences.
+- B) Measuring altitude change as a function of time.
+- C) Measuring the pressure difference between a sealed reservoir and the atmosphere.
+- D) Measuring vertical accelerations.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because both diaphragm and vane variometers work by comparing the atmospheric static pressure (which changes with altitude) against the pressure inside a sealed reference vessel connected to the atmosphere through a calibrated restriction. When the aircraft climbs or descends, a pressure differential develops across the restriction, deflecting a diaphragm or vane to indicate the rate of altitude change. A is wrong because temperature measurement is not involved. B describes the result, not the operating principle. D is wrong because accelerometers, not variometers, measure vertical accelerations.
+
+### Q100: What does the red mark on a glider's airspeed indicator indicate? ^t20q100
+- A) The stall speed.
+- B) The approach speed.
+- C) The speed limit in turbulence.
+- D) The never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the red radial line on a glider's airspeed indicator marks VNE (velocity never exceed), the maximum speed at which the aircraft may be operated under any conditions. Exceeding VNE risks structural failure due to aerodynamic loads or flutter. A is wrong because the stall speed is indicated at the lower end of the green arc. B is wrong because the approach speed is typically shown by a yellow triangle marker. C is wrong because the speed limit in turbulence corresponds to VNO, which is at the upper end of the green arc (boundary with the yellow arc).
+
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+### Q1: Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is… ^t30q1
+- A) Not allowable and essentially dangerous
+- B) Exceptionally allowable to avoid delays
+- C) Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.
+- D) Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the maximum takeoff mass (MTOM) is a hard certification limit set by the manufacturer based on structural strength, stall speed, and climb performance. Exceeding it increases wing loading, raises the stall speed, reduces climb performance, and may overstress the airframe beyond its certified load factors. B is wrong because no operational convenience justifies exceeding a safety limit. C is wrong because no pilot technique can compensate for structural overloading. D is wrong because there is no regulatory tolerance or percentage margin — any exceedance is prohibited.
+
+### Q2: The center of gravity has to be located… ^t30q2
+- A) Between the front and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) In front of the front C.G. limit.
+- C) Right of the lateral C. G. limit.
+- D) Behind the rear C.G. limit
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the aircraft's stability and controllability are only certified within the approved C.G. envelope, which lies between the forward and aft C.G. limits. B is wrong because a C.G. ahead of the forward limit requires excessive elevator authority to flare or rotate, potentially making landing impossible. D is wrong because a C.G. behind the aft limit causes longitudinal instability and uncontrollable pitch-up. C is irrelevant — lateral C.G. limits are not the primary concern in standard mass-and-balance calculations for gliders.
+
+### Q3: An aircraft has to be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure... ^t30q3
+- A) That the aircraft does not stall.
+- B) That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum allowable airspeed during a descent
+- C) That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.
+- D) Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the C.G. position relative to the neutral point determines longitudinal static stability (the tendency to return to equilibrium after a disturbance), while the elevator's ability to command pitch changes provides controllability. Both properties must be maintained throughout flight, and the C.G. envelope ensures this. A is wrong because stall speed depends primarily on wing loading and angle of attack, not C.G. position. B is wrong because Vne is an airframe limit unrelated to C.G. C describes a ground-handling issue, not an in-flight safety requirement.
+
+### Q4: The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined… ^t30q4
+- A) For one aircraft of a type solely, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position
+- B) By calculation.
+- C) By weighing.
+- D) Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because each individual airframe must be physically weighed — typically on calibrated scales at three support points — to determine its actual empty mass and C.G. position. Manufacturing tolerances, repairs, modifications, and installed equipment vary between serial numbers. A is wrong because no two aircraft of the same type are guaranteed to have identical mass and C.G. B is wrong because calculation alone cannot account for all variables. D is wrong because manufacturer data provides type-level reference values, not the specific values for each individual aircraft.
+
+### Q5: Baggage and cargo has to be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause... ^t30q5
+- A) Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.
+- B) Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.
+- C) Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries.
+- D) Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because unsecured cargo can shift suddenly during turbulence or manoeuvres, moving the C.G. outside approved limits instantaneously — faster than a pilot can react. A sudden aft C.G. shift can cause an unrecoverable pitch-up, loose items can become projectiles injuring occupants or jamming controls, and asymmetric loading can overstress the structure. A is wrong because the terminology is inaccurate. B is wrong because a large sudden C.G. shift may be uncontrollable, not merely "continuous." D is wrong because no amount of prior analysis makes unsecured cargo acceptable.
+
+### Q6: The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the… ^t30q6
+- A) Center of gravity
+- B) Stagnation point.
+- C) Center of pressure.
+- D) Neutral point.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the center of gravity is, by definition, the single point through which the resultant gravitational force (the weight vector) acts on the entire aircraft. B is wrong because the stagnation point is where airflow velocity reaches zero on the wing's leading edge — an aerodynamic concept unrelated to weight. C is wrong because the center of pressure is where the net aerodynamic force acts. D is wrong because the neutral point is the aerodynamic reference used for stability analysis.
+
+### Q7: The term "center of gravity" is described as... ^t30q7
+- A) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- B) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- C) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B. The center of gravity is the mass-weighted average position of all individual mass elements — the point where the total weight force is considered to act. It is found by summing all moments about the datum and dividing by total mass. A is wrong because the C.G. is not a "heaviest point" but a balance point. C is wrong because the neutral point is a separate aerodynamic concept relating to stability. D duplicates one of the other options and does not correctly define C.G. either.
+
+### Q8: The center of gravity (CG) defines… ^t30q8
+- A) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- B) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) The product of mass and balance arm
+- D) The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the C.G. is the point through which the entire gravitational force (weight) acts as if all mass were concentrated there. This is the fundamental definition used in physics and aircraft mass-and-balance. A and B both describe the datum (reference point), not the C.G. itself. C describes a moment (mass times arm), which is a calculation quantity, not the definition of the center of gravity.
+
+### Q9: The term "moment" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as… ^t30q9
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in mass and balance, moment equals mass multiplied by balance arm (M = m x d), expressed in units such as kg-m or lb-in. The total C.G. position is then found by dividing the sum of all moments by the total mass. A is wrong because adding mass and arm has no physical meaning. B is wrong because subtracting them is equally meaningless. D is wrong because dividing mass by arm does not produce a moment — it would yield an incorrect dimension.
+
+### Q10: The term "balance arm" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the… ^t30q10
+- A) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm (or moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum to the center of gravity of a specific mass item. This distance determines the leverage that mass exerts about the datum. A is wrong because that defines the center of gravity, not the arm. B is wrong because that defines the datum point itself. D is wrong because balance arms are measured from the datum, not from the aircraft's overall C.G.
+
+### Q11: The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called… ^t30q11
+- A) Span width.
+- B) Balance arm.
+- C) Torque.
+- D) Lever.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in mass-and-balance terminology, the balance arm is the horizontal distance from the datum to any point of interest, including the overall C.G. once calculated. A is wrong because span width is a wing geometric parameter. C is wrong because torque (or moment) is the product of force and distance, not the distance itself. D is wrong because "lever" is a general mechanical term, not the specific aviation mass-and-balance term used.
+
+### Q12: The balance arm is the horizontal distance between… ^t30q12
+- A) The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) The front C.G. limit and the datum line
+- C) The C.G. of a mass and the datum line.
+- D) The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm of any mass item is measured as the horizontal distance from the aircraft's datum to that item's center of gravity. The datum is a fixed reference point defined in the flight manual. A is wrong because it references the rear C.G. limit, not the datum. B is wrong because it describes the distance between the forward C.G. limit and the datum. D describes the allowable C.G. range, not a balance arm.
+
+### Q13: The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the… ^t30q13
+- A) Documentation of the annual inspection.
+- B) Certificate of airworthiness
+- C) Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- D) Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH) or Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) contains a dedicated mass and balance section with the aircraft's empty mass, empty C.G. position, datum reference, C.G. limits, and loading configurations. A is wrong because annual inspection documents record maintenance work, not loading data. B is wrong because the certificate of airworthiness merely certifies the aircraft type. C is wrong because the performance section covers speeds and climb rates, not mass-and-balance data.
+
+### Q14: Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft? ^t30q14
+- A) Normal procedures
+- B) Performance
+- C) Weight and balance
+- D) Limitations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the Weight and Balance section of the flight manual contains the basic empty mass, empty C.G. location, allowable C.G. range, and loading instructions. A is wrong because Normal Procedures covers checklists and operational sequences. B is wrong because Performance covers speeds, climb rates, and glide distances. D is wrong because Limitations covers maximum speeds, load factors, and the operating envelope — not the basic empty mass data.
+
+### Q15: Which factor shortens landing distance? ^t30q15
+- A) High pressure altitude
+- B) Strong head wind
+- C) Heavy rain
+- D) High density altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a headwind reduces the groundspeed at touchdown for a given indicated airspeed, so the aircraft crosses the threshold with less kinetic energy relative to the ground, shortening the ground roll significantly. A is wrong because high pressure altitude means lower air density, higher true airspeed at the same IAS, and therefore longer landing distance. C is wrong because heavy rain can degrade braking effectiveness and contaminate the wing surface. D is wrong for the same reason as A — high density altitude increases groundspeed and lengthens the landing roll.
+
+### Q16: Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly… ^t30q16
+- A) Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.
+- B) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.
+- C) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.
+- D) Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because for non-FIKI certified aircraft, flying into known or forecast icing is a regulatory prohibition. If icing is inadvertently encountered, the pilot must exit immediately by changing altitude or heading. A is wrong because maintaining VMC does not make icing safe — ice accumulates regardless of visual conditions. C is wrong because it implies icing flight is permissible with performance monitoring, which is not the case. D is wrong because not all precipitation involves icing conditions.
+
+### Q17: The angle of descent is described as... ^t30q17
+- A) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°].
+- B) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].
+- C) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].
+- D) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the angle of descent (glide angle) is geometrically defined as the angle between the horizontal and the flight path vector, measured in degrees. A is wrong because a "ratio expressed in degrees" is contradictory — a ratio is dimensionless or expressed as a percentage, not in degrees. C describes a gradient (percentage), not an angle. D incorrectly expresses an angle in percent. For a glider with a 1:30 glide ratio, the glide angle is approximately 1.9 degrees.
+
+### Q18: Which is the purpose of "interception lines" in visual navigation? ^t30q18
+- A) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- B) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because interception lines (also called catching lines) are prominent linear ground features — rivers, motorways, railways, coastlines — selected during pre-flight planning that the pilot can navigate toward if orientation is lost. Flying to the nearest interception line provides an unmistakable landmark for position recovery. A is wrong because nothing permits continuing flight below VFR minima. B is wrong because interception lines are not range indicators. C is wrong because they are geographic features, not airport markers.
+
+### Q19: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals… ^t30q19
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-056) showing LO R 16 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1.500 ft GND.
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because low-level restricted areas (LO R) on VFR charts typically express their vertical limits in feet MSL (above mean sea level). The value 1,500 ft MSL is a fixed, absolute altitude reference. A is wrong because 1,500 metres MSL would be approximately 4,900 ft — a different altitude entirely. B is wrong because FL150 (15,000 ft pressure altitude) is far too high for a typical low-level restriction. C is wrong because 1,500 ft GND (above ground level) would vary with terrain and is not the published limit.
+
+### Q20: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals… ^t30q20
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-030) showing LO R 4 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 4.500 ft MSL
+- B) 1.500 ft AGL
+- C) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because LO R 4 has its upper limit published at 4,500 ft MSL — a fixed altitude above mean sea level. B is wrong because 1,500 ft AGL references above ground level, which varies with terrain. C is wrong because 4,500 ft AGL would not be a fixed boundary. D is wrong because 1,500 ft MSL is too low and does not match the chart data for this particular restricted area.
+
+### Q21: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? ^t30q21
+> *Note: This question originally references a NOTAM excerpt (PFP-024).*
+- A) Flight Level 95
+- B) Height 9500 ft
+- C) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because NOTAM altitude references follow ICAO conventions where "altitude" refers to height above MSL. The NOTAM prohibits overflight up to 9,500 ft MSL. A is wrong because FL 95 is a pressure altitude reference (based on 1013.25 hPa), not the same as an MSL altitude. B is wrong because "height" implies above ground level (AGL). D is wrong because 9,500 m MSL would be approximately 31,000 ft — clearly inconsistent with a typical VFR restriction.
+
+### Q22: What must be considered for cross-border flights? ^t30q22
+- A) Transmission of hazard reports
+- B) Approved exceptions
+- C) Requires flight plans
+- D) Regular location messages
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because under ICAO Annex 2 and national regulations, a flight plan is mandatory for any international flight crossing state borders, even for VFR glider flights. This ensures coordination for border control, search and rescue alerting, and customs/immigration procedures. A is wrong because hazard reports (PIREPs) are a separate communication procedure. B is wrong because approved exceptions is too vague and not the primary requirement. D is wrong because regular position reports are separate from the flight plan requirement.
+
+### Q23: During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the… ^t30q23
+- A) Next airport operator en-route.
+- B) Flight Information Service (FIS).
+- C) Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)
+- D) Search and Rescue Service (SAR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the Flight Information Service (FIS), reached on the published FIS frequency, can accept an airborne flight plan (AFIL) during flight. This is the standard procedure for filing when airborne. A is wrong because airport operators handle local ground operations, not en-route plan filing. C is wrong because AIS distributes aeronautical publications but does not accept real-time flight plans. D is wrong because SAR is a response service activated when an aircraft is overdue or in distress.
+
+### Q24: While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure ought to be avoided enroute? ^t30q24
+- A) Stone quarries and large sand areas
+- B) Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas
+- C) Highways, railroad tracks and channels.
+- D) Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because moist ground, water bodies, and marshes have high thermal inertia and specific heat capacity — they absorb solar radiation without heating quickly, suppressing thermal development above them. Flying over these areas means less lift and potentially a forced landing in unsuitable terrain. A is wrong because stone quarries and sandy areas heat up well and often produce good thermals. C is wrong because linear features like highways and railways are useful navigation aids. D is wrong because built-up areas with dark surfaces (asphalt, concrete) generate strong thermals.
+
+### Q25: During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point ought to be taken ... (2,00 P.) ^t30q25
+- A) As high as possible.
+- B) With as less bank as possible
+- C) As low as possible.
+- D) As steep as possible.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at a downwind turning point, the glider must reverse direction and fly back into the wind. This immediately reduces groundspeed and shortens the achievable glide distance over the ground. Arriving high provides maximum altitude reserve for the subsequent upwind leg. B is wrong because bank angle is a secondary concern compared to altitude. C is wrong because arriving low with a turn ahead and headwind return is tactically dangerous. D is wrong because steep turns lose more altitude, compounding the problem.
+
+### Q26: After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.)... ^t30q26
+- A) For weakening thermals due to the progressing time
+- B) For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases
+- C) For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time
+- D) For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when a glider turns 90 or 180 degrees at a waypoint, the pilot's entire visual perspective of the sky shifts dramatically. The sun appears to have moved relative to the heading, and cumulus clouds that were behind or beside the aircraft now appear in different positions. This perceptual shift can make the sky look completely different. A is wrong because thermal weakening is a time-of-day issue, not a turning-point issue. B is wrong because cloud bases do not change from turning. C is wrong because cloud dissipation is unrelated to heading changes.
+
+### Q27: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? ^t30q27
+
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol C in the figure) because ICAO Annex 4 chart symbology uses distinct symbols to differentiate between single obstacles versus groups, and lighted versus unlighted. The symbol for a group of unlighted obstacles is specifically designated in the PFP-061 reference figure as C. A, C, and D represent other obstacle categories such as single obstacles, lighted groups, or other types. Knowing these symbols is critical for cross-country planning and obstacle avoidance.
+
+### Q28: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? ^t30q28
+
+- A) C
+- B) A
+- C) B
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol A in the figure) because ICAO aeronautical chart symbology differentiates airports by civil versus military status, international versus domestic, and runway surface type. A civil domestic airport with a paved runway has a specific symbol shown as A in the PFP-062 annex. A, C, and D represent other aerodrome categories such as international airports, military airfields, or unpaved-runway airports. Glider pilots use these symbols when planning outlanding fields or alternate airports.
+
+### Q29: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? ^t30q29
+
+- A) C
+- B) B
+- C) A
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A (symbol C in the figure) because ICAO charts use specific symbols to differentiate between general spot elevations, surveyed elevation points, and obstruction heights. A general spot elevation marks a notable terrain high point for situational awareness and is depicted according to ICAO Annex 4 standards. B, C, and D represent other elevation-related symbols such as maximum elevation figures or obstruction markers. Familiarity with these symbols is essential for terrain clearance planning.
+
+### Q30: What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects)... ^t30q30
+- A) 45 NM
+- B) 30 km
+- C) 45 km
+- D) 81 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because glide distance equals glide ratio multiplied by height: 30 x 1,500 m = 45,000 m = 45 km. The glide ratio of 1:30 means the glider covers 30 metres horizontally for every 1 metre of height lost. A is wrong because 45 NM equals approximately 83 km, which would require a glide ratio of about 1:55. B is wrong because 30 km would correspond to a glide ratio of only 1:20. D is wrong because 81 NM (150 km) would require a glide ratio of 1:100. Always verify that units are consistent — mixing nautical miles and metres is a common exam trap.
+
+### Q31: Why can wing loading be increased when soaring conditions are good? ^t30q31
+- A) Because the stall speed diminishes.
+- B) Because the glider achieves a better glide ratio at high speed even though the minimum speed rises.
+- C) Because the glider can fly more slowly and achieves a better glide ratio.
+- D) Because the glider has a better climb rate even though it must fly more slowly.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in strong thermal conditions, the glider benefits from flying faster between thermals (MacCready theory). Adding water ballast increases wing loading, which shifts the speed polar to the right — improving the glide ratio at high cruising speeds while accepting a higher stall and minimum sink speed. A is wrong because increasing wing loading raises the stall speed. C is wrong because higher wing loading means the glider must fly faster, not slower. D is wrong because a heavier glider has a worse climb rate in thermals due to its higher minimum sink speed.
+
+### Q32: The tail wheel of a glider was not removed before departure. What will be the consequence? ^t30q32
+- A) Better manoeuvrability at departure.
+- B) The centre of gravity shifts forward.
+- C) No consequence. The wheel represents only a tiny fraction of the total weight of the glider and has no effect on the centre of gravity.
+- D) The centre of gravity will be further aft and possibly too far aft, which is dangerous.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the tail wheel is mounted at the extreme rear of the fuselage, far aft of the nominal C.G. Even though its absolute mass is small, its large moment arm produces a significant moment that shifts the C.G. aftward — potentially beyond the aft limit, making the aircraft pitch-unstable and difficult to control. A is wrong because the tail wheel does not improve manoeuvrability. B is wrong because the tail wheel is aft of the C.G., so its presence shifts the C.G. backward, not forward. C is wrong because the long arm amplifies the effect of even a small mass.
+
+### Q33: The pilot exceeds the maximum cockpit payload by 10 kg. What has to be done? ^t30q33
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Trim forward.
+- C) Reduce the payload.
+- D) Compensate by reducing the water ballast slightly.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the maximum seat load is a certification limit that cannot be circumvented. Exceeding it may place the C.G. outside the forward limit and subjects the structure to loads beyond what was tested. The only remedy is to reduce the payload until the limits are respected. A and B are wrong because trimming changes the aerodynamic forces on the elevator but does not alter the aircraft's mass or C.G. position. D is wrong because reducing water ballast changes total mass but does not address the specific seat load limitation.
+
+### Q34: What propels a pure glider forward? ^t30q34
+- A) Ascending air currents.
+- B) Drag directed forward.
+- C) The component of gravity acting in the direction of the flight path.
+- D) A tailwind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because in steady gliding flight, the weight vector can be resolved into two components: one perpendicular to the flight path (balanced by lift) and one along the flight path. This along-path component of gravity provides the forward-driving force that balances drag and maintains airspeed. A is wrong because ascending air can reduce the descent rate but does not propel the glider forward through the air. B is wrong because drag always opposes the direction of motion. D is wrong because a tailwind affects groundspeed but does not propel the aircraft through the airmass.
+
+### Q35: The current mass of an aircraft is 610 kg and the centre of gravity (C.G.) position is at 80.0. You remove a 10 kg item of baggage located at a moment arm of 150. Which is the new centre of gravity? ^t30q35
+- A) 75.0
+- B) 81.166
+- C) 70.0
+- D) 78.833
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D. The calculation proceeds as follows: Initial moment = 610 x 80.0 = 48,800. Removed moment = 10 x 150 = 1,500. New total moment = 48,800 - 1,500 = 47,300. New mass = 610 - 10 = 600 kg. New C.G. = 47,300 / 600 = 78.833. Since the baggage was located aft of the current C.G. (arm 150 > 80), removing it shifts the C.G. forward — consistent with the result (78.833 < 80.0). A (75.0) and C (70.0) are too far forward. B (81.166) incorrectly shows a rearward shift.
+
+### Q36: The empty mass of the Discus B is 245 kg. You are planning to carry 184 kg of water ballast. What is the maximum load at the pilot's seat? ^t30q36
+> **Extract from the Discus B Flight Manual — Loading table with water ballast**
+> ![[figures/t30_q36.png]]
+> Max. permitted all-up weight including water ballast : **525 kg**
+> Lever arm of water ballast : **203 mm aft of datum (BE)**
+
+> *Table of water ballast loads at various empty weights and seat loads:*
+
+| Empty mass (kg) | Seat load 70 kg | 80 kg | 90 kg | 100 kg | 110 kg |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| 220 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 225 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 230 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+| 235 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 |
+| 240 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 |
+| 245 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 | 170 |
+| 250 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 | 165 |
+
+> *Water ballast in both wing tanks (kg). For empty mass 245 kg and ballast 184 kg: the maximum seat load is **90 kg** (column 90 kg → value 184, but column 100 kg → 180 and column 110 kg → 170; with ballast=184 required, read the 245 kg row and find the seat load corresponding to ballast=184, i.e. max 90 kg permitted according to the table).*
+- A) 100 kg
+- B) 110 kg
+- C) 90 kg
+- D) 80 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (90 kg). Reading the Discus B loading table at the row for empty mass 245 kg: with a seat load of 90 kg the permitted water ballast is 184 kg (matching our requirement), but at 100 kg seat load only 180 kg of ballast is permitted, and at 110 kg only 170 kg. Since we need the full 184 kg of ballast, the maximum seat load that still allows this is 90 kg. A (100 kg) and B (110 kg) would require reducing the water ballast below 184 kg. D (80 kg) is unnecessarily restrictive — the table shows 184 kg is still permitted at 90 kg.
+
+### Q37: What important principle must be observed when making an off-field landing on sloping terrain? ^t30q37
+- A) Only land with airbrakes fully extended.
+- B) Land facing uphill with an approach speed slightly above normal.
+- C) Always land into wind regardless of the slope.
+- D) The landing flare must be initiated at a greater height than usual.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because landing uphill uses the slope to decelerate the glider — gravity assists braking, dramatically shortening the ground roll. A slightly higher approach speed provides a safety margin against wind shear and turbulence near unfamiliar terrain. A is wrong because full airbrakes may not always be appropriate on short or steep fields. C is wrong because on significant slopes, landing uphill takes priority over landing into wind. D is wrong because the flare height should be adapted to the terrain, but this is not the primary principle.
+
+### Q38: You must land in heavy rain. What must you pay particular attention to? ^t30q38
+- A) The approach speed is lower than usual because rain slows the aircraft.
+- B) The landing is performed as in dry conditions.
+- C) Due to poor visibility, the approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) A higher approach speed must be used.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because heavy rain on the wing surface degrades the aerodynamic profile through increased roughness, potentially raising the stall speed. A higher approach speed provides an adequate safety margin. A is wrong because rain does not lower the safe approach speed — if anything, the stall speed increases. B is wrong because rain significantly changes conditions (reduced visibility, wet surfaces, degraded aerodynamics). C is wrong because a shallower approach reduces obstacle clearance margins and extends the final approach in poor visibility.
+
+### Q39: You are taking off from a grass runway that has become waterlogged after several days of rain. What should you expect? ^t30q39
+- A) The takeoff distance is likely to be longer.
+- B) The glider is wet and has reduced performance.
+- C) The wet grass offers less resistance, which is why the takeoff distance will be shorter.
+- D) The glider may skid sideways (aquaplaning).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a waterlogged grass runway creates greater rolling resistance due to soft ground deformation and water drag on the wheels, slowing acceleration and increasing the takeoff distance. B is wrong because while a wet glider has slightly degraded performance, the primary issue is the runway condition. C is wrong because wet, soft grass increases resistance rather than reducing it. D is wrong because aquaplaning occurs on hard surfaces with standing water, not on soft grass — and the question asks about takeoff distance, not directional control.
+
+### Q40: Which of these statements is correct at a speed of 170 km/h, taking into account the following speed polar? ^t30q40
+> **ASK 21 Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/t30_q40.png]]
+> *Two curves: G=470 kp (light mass, min sink rate ~0.657 m/s at ~75 km/h) and G=570 kp (heavy mass, min sink rate ~0.724 m/s). The best glide ratio is read from the tangent from the origin. At 170 km/h, the sink rate is higher for G=570 kp than for G=470 kp.*
+- A) Regardless of the mass of the ASK21, the sink rate stays constant.
+- B) As the mass of the ASK21 rises, the sink rate increases.
+- C) As the mass of the ASK21 increases, the sink rate increases.
+- D) As the mass of the ASK21 decreases, the glide angle improves.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because at 170 km/h, reading both polar curves, the heavier configuration (570 kp) shows a higher sink rate than the lighter one (470 kp). A heavier glider requires more lift to maintain flight, producing greater induced drag and therefore a higher sink rate at any given speed. A is wrong because the two curves clearly show different sink rates at 170 km/h. B and C state the same thing — sink rate increases with mass — which is correct. D is wrong because at high speeds the glide angle is not necessarily better at lower mass.
+
+### Q41: Which is the speed at the minimum sink rate in still air for a mass of 450 kg? ^t30q41
+> **Speed Polar (AIRSPEED):**
+> ![[figures/t30_q41.png]]
+> *Two curves: 450 kg and 580 kg. The minimum sink rate (top of the curve) for 450 kg is at approximately 75 km/h. The 580 kg curve is shifted to the right (higher speeds) and downward (greater sink rate).*
+- A) 75 km/h
+- B) 95 km/h
+- C) 50 km/h
+- D) 140 km/h
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the minimum sink rate speed corresponds to the highest point on the speed polar curve — where the sink rate is smallest. For 450 kg, this peak occurs at approximately 75 km/h. This speed maximises flight endurance in still air and is optimal for centring thermals. B (95 km/h) would be closer to the best-glide speed or the minimum-sink speed at higher mass. C (50 km/h) is below the stall speed. D (140 km/h) is far into the high-speed range where sink rate is much greater.
+
+### Q42: From what altitude on the route between Murten (approx. N46°56'/E007°07') and Neuchâtel aerodrome (approx. N46°57'/E006°52') are you required to request permission to cross the PAYERNE TMA? ^t30q42
+- A) 950 m AMSL (3100 ft).
+- B) 3050 m AMSL (FL 100).
+- C) 700 m AMSL (2300 ft).
+- D) At any altitude since the lower limit of the TMA is represented by the ground surface (GND).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because on the route between Murten and Neuchatel, the relevant sector of the PAYERNE TMA has a lower limit at 700 m AMSL (2300 ft). Below this altitude, flight can proceed in uncontrolled airspace without clearance. Above 700 m AMSL, ATC authorisation is required. A (950 m) does not match the published boundary. B (FL 100) is far too high — that is the upper limit of some TMAs, not the lower limit here. D is wrong because the TMA does not extend to the ground in this sector.
+
+### Q43: In which airspace class are you flying at 1400 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa) over Birrfeld aerodrome (47°25'36"N/007°14'02"E), and what are the visibility and cloud distance minima in that airspace? ^t30q43
+- A) Airspace class E, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- B) Airspace class D, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- C) Airspace class G, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with permanent ground contact.
+- D) Airspace class C, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 1400 m AMSL over Birrfeld, you are in Class E airspace. VFR minima in Class E require 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. B is wrong because Class D applies within specific CTRs or TMAs, not over Birrfeld at this altitude. C is wrong because Class G applies below a certain altitude and has reduced minima. D is wrong because Class C begins at a higher altitude in this area (typically FL 130 in Switzerland).
+
+### Q44: The route shown below towards SCHWYZ (dotted line) is planned for 20 June 2015 (summer time) between 1515–1545 LT at 6500 ft AMSL. Which of the following statements is correct? ^t30q44
+> **DABS — Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland (extract)**
+> ![[figures/t30_q44.png]]
+
+| Firing-Nr D-/R-Area NOTAM-Nr | Validity UTC | Lower Limit AMSL or FL | Upper Limit AMSL or FL | Location | Center Point | Covering Radius | Activity / Remarks |
+|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+| B0685/14 | 0000–2359 | 900m / 3000ft | FL 130 | SION TMA SECT 1 | 461610N 0072940E | 4.7 KM / 2.5 NM | TMA SECT 1 ACT HX ONLY |
+| W0912/15 | 1145–1300 | GND | FL 120 | MORGARTEN | 470507N 0083758E | 10.0 KM / 5.4 NM | R-AREA ACT. ENTRY PROHIBITED. FOR INFO CTC ZURICH INFO 124.7 |
+| W0957/15 | 1400–1700 | 2150m / 7000ft | FL 120 | HINWIL | 471721N 0084859E | 7.0 KM / 3.8 NM | TEMPO R-AREA ACTIVE. ENTRY PROHIBITED. CTC 118.975 |
+| W0960/15 | 0800–1700 | GND | 1200m / 4050ft | 1.7 KM SE CERNIER | 470352N 0065442E | 1.5 KM / 0.8 NM | D-AREA ACT |
+- A) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+- B) You can ignore the DABS as it only applies to commercial aviation.
+- C) You can pass through all relevant danger and restricted areas below 1000 ft AGL or above 12,000 ft AMSL.
+- D) The route can be flown without coordination between 1500 and 1600 LT.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D. On 20 June 2015 (CEST = UTC+2), the planned time of 1515-1545 LT corresponds to 1315-1345 UTC. Zone W0912/15 (MORGARTEN) was active 1145-1300 UTC and has already expired. Zone W0957/15 (HINWIL) activates at 1400 UTC (1600 LT) — it is not yet active. The route can therefore be flown without coordination between 1500 and 1600 LT. A is wrong because the route is flyable during the given time window. B is wrong because the DABS applies to all airspace users including gliders. C is wrong because it incorrectly suggests blanket altitude-based exemptions.
+
+### Q45: According to the ICAO aeronautical chart at 1:500,000, at what altitude over Schwyz (approx. 47°01' N, 8°39' E) must you request permission to enter Class C airspace? ^t30q45
+- A) FL 90
+- B) 4500 ft
+- C) FL 130
+- D) FL 195
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because over Schwyz, the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart shows Class C airspace beginning at FL 130. Below FL 130, the airspace is Class E. Entering Class C requires ATC clearance regardless of flight rules. A (FL 90) is below the actual boundary. B (4500 ft) is far too low and in uncontrolled airspace. D (FL 195) is the upper limit of Swiss controlled airspace, not the lower limit of Class C over Schwyz.
+
+### Q46: Until what time is La Côte aerodrome (LSGP) open in the evening? ^t30q46
+> **AD INFO 1 — LA CÔTE / LSGP**
+> ![[figures/t30_q46.png]]
+
+| Data | Value |
+|--------|--------|
+| ICAO | LSGP |
+| Elevation | 1352 ft (412 m) |
+| ARP | 46°24'23"N / 006°15'28"E |
+| Runway | 04 / 22 — true/mag: 041°/040° and 221°/220° |
+| Dimensions | 560 x 30 m — GRASS |
+| LDG distance available | 490 m |
+| TKOF distance available | 490 m |
+| SFC strength | 0.25 MPa |
+| Status | Private — Airfield, **PPR** |
+| Location | 25 km NE Geneva |
+| Hours MON–FRI | 0700–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+| Hours SAT/SUN | 0800–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+| ECT reference | → VFG RAC 1-1 |
+
+> *ECT = End of Civil Twilight. The aerodrome closes 30 minutes before end of civil twilight.*
+- A) Until half an hour before the start of civil twilight.
+- B) Until half an hour before sunset.
+- C) Until half an hour before the end of civil twilight.
+- D) Until the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the AD INFO sheet for LSGP shows afternoon hours as "1400-ECT -30 min," meaning the aerodrome closes 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight. A is wrong because it references the start of civil twilight, not the end. B is wrong because sunset occurs earlier than the end of civil twilight. D is wrong because the aerodrome closes 30 minutes before ECT, not at ECT itself.
+
+### Q47: On which frequency do you receive information about winch launches at Gruyères aerodrome (LSGT) at weekends? ^t30q47
+> **Visual Approach Chart — GRUYÈRES / LSGT**
+> ![[figures/t30_q47.png]]
+> AD **124.675** — PPR — ELEV 2257 ft (688 m)
+
+> *Key chart data (altitudes in ft, magnetic headings):*
+
+| Data | Value |
+|--------|--------|
+| ICAO | LSGT |
+| AD Frequency | **124.675 MHz** |
+| Elevation | 2257 ft (688 m) |
+| Status | PPR |
+| Minimum AD overfly altitude (MNM ALT) | **4000 ft** |
+| Glider ARR/DEP sector W (GLD ARR/DEP W) | **MAX 3100 ft** |
+| Glider ARR/DEP sector E (GLD ARR/DEP E) | **MAX 3600 ft** |
+| HEL ARR/DEP | 3000 ft |
+| Preferred ARR sectors | WEST and EAST |
+| CTN (cross-country traffic) | 3000 ft |
+| MNM AD overfly | 4000 ft |
+| Class C airspace above | FL 100 / 119.175 GENEVA DELTA |
+| Winch launches | Intensive SAT/SUN (CTN: Intense winch launching SAT/SUN) |
+| Nearby VOR/DME | SPR R076, 113.9 MHz |
+
+> *Noise-sensitive areas (yellow) around Bulle/Broc. Avoid overflying the field during PJE (parachute dropping). Contact RTF 5 min before ETA.*
+- A) 113.9
+- B) 124.675
+- C) 119.175
+- D) 110.85
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (124.675 MHz) because this is the aerodrome frequency shown on the Visual Approach Chart for LSGT Gruyeres. Local traffic information, including intensive winch launching activity on weekends, is broadcast on this frequency. A (113.9) is the VOR/DME SPR navigation frequency. C (119.175) is the Geneva Delta sector frequency for Class C airspace above. D (110.85) is not shown on this chart and does not relate to LSGT operations.
+
+### Q48: What distance do you cover in 90 minutes at a ground speed of 90 km/h? ^t30q48
+- A) 90 km
+- B) 135 km
+- C) 100 km
+- D) 120 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because distance = speed x time. Ground speed = 90 km/h, time = 90 minutes = 1.5 hours. Distance = 90 x 1.5 = 135 km. A (90 km) results from incorrectly using 1 hour instead of 1.5 hours. C (100 km) and D (120 km) do not correspond to any correct calculation. Remember to convert minutes to hours before multiplying: 90 minutes = 1.5 hours, not 0.9 hours.
+
+### Q49: At an altitude of 6000 m, the airspeed indicator shows 160 km/h (IAS). The true airspeed (TAS)… ^t30q49
+- A) is lower than the IAS.
+- B) is also 160 km/h.
+- C) can be higher or lower than the IAS depending on atmospheric pressure and temperature.
+- D) is higher than the IAS.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which depends on air density. At 6000 m, air density is significantly lower than at sea level. For the pitot tube to register the same dynamic pressure (same IAS), the aircraft must be moving faster through the thinner air. TAS increases by approximately 2% per 300 m of altitude gain, so at 6000 m, TAS is roughly 40% higher than IAS. A is wrong because TAS is always higher than IAS at altitude. B is wrong because they only equal each other at sea level in ISA conditions. C is wrong because at any altitude above sea level, TAS is always higher than IAS.
+
+### Q50: You are flying in wave lift at 6000 m altitude. Which is the maximum speed you may fly? ^t30q50
+- A) In the low-density air, at a higher speed than usual.
+- B) Below the red V_NE mark on the airspeed indicator, according to the speed-altitude table displayed on the instrument panel.
+- C) At the same speed as at sea level since V_NE is an absolute value.
+- D) Maximum within the green arc.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because at high altitude the true airspeed corresponding to a given IAS is much higher, and it is the TAS that determines aerodynamic loads on the structure. Glider flight manuals provide a speed-altitude table (or V_NE reduction curve) displayed in the cockpit, giving the corrected maximum IAS at each altitude. At 6000 m, the allowable IAS is lower than the sea-level V_NE mark. A is wrong because you must fly slower (lower IAS), not faster. C is wrong because V_NE as indicated must be reduced with altitude. D is wrong because the green arc alone does not account for altitude corrections.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_1_50_de.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_1_50_de.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,506 @@
+### Q1: Das Überschreiten der zulässigen Höchstmasse eines Luftfahrzeugs ist… ^t30q1
+- A) Nicht zulässig und grundsätzlich gefährlich
+- B) In Ausnahmefällen zulässig, um Verzögerungen zu vermeiden
+- C) Durch die Steuereingaben des Piloten kompensierbar.
+- D) Nur relevant, wenn die Überschreitung mehr als 10 % beträgt.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da die höchstzulässige Abflugmasse (MTOM) eine vom Hersteller festgelegte Zulassungsgrenze ist, die auf Strukturfestigkeit, Überziehgeschwindigkeit und Steigflugleistung basiert. Das Überschreiten erhöht die Flächenbelastung, hebt die Überziehgeschwindigkeit an, verschlechtert die Steigflugleistung und kann die Zelle über die zugelassenen Lastvielfachen hinaus beanspruchen. B ist falsch, da kein betrieblicher Vorteil das Überschreiten einer Sicherheitsgrenze rechtfertigt. C ist falsch, da keine Pilotentechnik eine strukturelle Überlastung kompensieren kann. D ist falsch, da es keine regulatorische Toleranz oder prozentuale Marge gibt — jede Überschreitung ist verboten.
+
+### Q2: Der Schwerpunkt muss sich befinden… ^t30q2
+- A) Zwischen der vorderen und der hinteren Schwerpunktgrenze.
+- B) Vor der vorderen Schwerpunktgrenze.
+- C) Rechts der seitlichen Schwerpunktgrenze.
+- D) Hinter der hinteren Schwerpunktgrenze.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da Stabilität und Steuerbarkeit des Luftfahrzeugs nur innerhalb des zugelassenen Schwerpunktbereichs zertifiziert sind, der zwischen der vorderen und hinteren Schwerpunktgrenze liegt. B ist falsch, da ein Schwerpunkt vor der vorderen Grenze übermäßige Höhenruderautorität zum Abfangen oder Rotieren erfordert, was die Landung unmöglich machen kann. D ist falsch, da ein Schwerpunkt hinter der hinteren Grenze Längsinstabilität und unkontrollierbares Aufbäumen verursacht. C ist nicht relevant — seitliche Schwerpunktgrenzen sind nicht die Hauptsorge bei Standard-Masse-und-Schwerpunkt-Berechnungen für Segelflugzeuge.
+
+### Q3: Ein Luftfahrzeug muss so beladen und betrieben werden, dass der Schwerpunkt (SP) während aller Flugphasen innerhalb der zugelassenen Grenzen bleibt. Dies dient der Gewährleistung… ^t30q3
+- A) Sowohl der Stabilität als auch der Steuerbarkeit des Luftfahrzeugs.
+- B) Dass das Luftfahrzeug im Sinkflug die zulässige Höchstgeschwindigkeit nicht überschreitet.
+- C) Dass das Luftfahrzeug beim Beladen nicht auf das Heck kippt.
+- D) Dass das Luftfahrzeug nicht überziehen kann.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da die Schwerpunktlage relativ zum aerodynamischen Neutralpunkt die statische Längsstabilität bestimmt. Ein Schwerpunkt vor dem Neutralpunkt erzeugt ein rückstellendes Nickmoment (Stabilität), während die Steuerautorität die Manövrierfähigkeit (Steuerbarkeit) gewährleistet. Liegt der Schwerpunkt außerhalb der Grenzen, ist eine dieser Eigenschaften beeinträchtigt. B ist falsch, da die VNE von strukturellen und aerodynamischen Eigenschaften abhängt. C ist falsch, da dies keine Sorge im Flug ist. D ist falsch, da das Überziehen primär vom Anstellwinkel abhängt.
+
+### Q4: Die Leermasse und der entsprechende Schwerpunkt eines Luftfahrzeugs werden ursprünglich bestimmt… ^t30q4
+- A) Durch Wiegen.
+- B) Durch Berechnung.
+- C) Nur für ein Luftfahrzeug eines Typs, da alle Luftfahrzeuge desselben Typs dieselbe Masse und Schwerpunktlage aufweisen.
+- D) Anhand der vom Luftfahrzeughersteller bereitgestellten Daten.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da jedes einzelne Luftfahrzeug physisch gewogen wird — in der Regel auf Dreipunktwaagen — um seine tatsächliche Leermasse und Schwerpunktlage zu ermitteln. Fertigungstoleranzen, Reparaturen und eingebaute Ausrüstung variieren zwischen Seriennummern desselben Typs. B ist falsch, da die Berechnung allein nicht hinreichend genau ist. C ist falsch, da die Unterschiede zwischen einzelnen Luftfahrzeugen erheblich sind. D ist falsch, da die Herstellerangaben generische Werte sind, die für ein bestimmtes Luftfahrzeug nicht ausreichen.
+
+### Q5: Gepäck und Fracht müssen ordnungsgemäß verstaut und gesichert sein, sonst kann eine Verlagerung der Ladung verursachen… ^t30q5
+- A) Unkontrollierbare Fluglagen, Strukturschäden, Verletzungsrisiko.
+- B) Berechenbare Instabilität, wenn sich der Schwerpunkt um weniger als 10 % verlagert.
+- C) Anhaltende Fluglage, die der Pilot mit den Steuerorganen korrigieren kann.
+- D) Strukturschäden, Anstellwinkelinstabilität, Geschwindigkeitsinstabilität.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da sich ungesichertes Gepäck bei Turbulenzen plötzlich verlagern und den Schwerpunkt augenblicklich außerhalb der Grenzen bringen kann — schneller als ein Pilot reagieren kann. Dies kann zu unkontrollierbaren Fluglagen, Strukturschäden und Verletzungen der Insassen führen. B ist falsch, da unvorhersehbare Instabilität nie „berechenbar" ist. C ist falsch, da bei Schwerpunktüberschreitung die Steuerorgane unzureichend sein können. D ist falsch, da dies nicht die beste Beschreibung der Folgen ist.
+
+### Q6: Das Gesamtgewicht eines Flugzeugs wirkt vertikal nach unten durch den… ^t30q6
+- A) Staupunkt.
+- B) Druckpunkt.
+- C) Neutralpunkt.
+- D) Schwerpunkt.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist D, da der Schwerpunkt per Definition der einzige Punkt ist, durch den die resultierende Schwerkraft auf das gesamte Luftfahrzeug wirkt. A ist falsch, da der Staupunkt der Punkt auf der Tragfläche ist, an dem die Strömungsgeschwindigkeit null beträgt. B ist falsch, da der Druckpunkt der Angriffspunkt der resultierenden aerodynamischen Kraft ist. C ist falsch, da der Neutralpunkt die aerodynamische Referenz für die Stabilitätsanalyse ist.
+
+### Q7: Welchen Einfluss hat eine Masseerhöhung auf die Leistung eines Segelflugzeugs? ^t30q7
+- A) Die Masseerhöhung hat keinen Einfluss auf die Leistung.
+- B) Die Masseerhöhung führt zu einer Erhöhung der Überziehgeschwindigkeit.
+- C) Die Masseerhöhung führt zu einer Erhöhung der Steigrate.
+- D) Die Masseerhöhung führt zu einer Verringerung der Überziehgeschwindigkeit.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B, da eine höhere Masse eine höhere Flächenbelastung bedeutet, was eine höhere Geschwindigkeit erfordert, um ausreichend Auftrieb zu erzeugen. Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit steigt proportional zur Quadratwurzel des Massenverhältnisses. A ist falsch, da die Masse viele Leistungsparameter beeinflusst. C ist falsch, da ein höheres Gewicht die Steigrate verschlechtert. D ist falsch, da die Überziehgeschwindigkeit steigt und nicht sinkt.
+
+### Q8: Die Verlagerung von Ladung im Flug ist gefährlich, da sie eine Schwerpunktverlagerung verursacht, die zu… führen kann ^t30q8
+- A) Unkontrollierbaren Fluglagen.
+- B) Berechenbaren Schwingungen.
+- C) Kursabweichungen, die vom Piloten korrigiert werden können.
+- D) Überdehnung eines Schleppseils über die Schwerpunktebene hinaus.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da eine unkontrollierte Ladungsverlagerung im Flug den Schwerpunkt augenblicklich außerhalb der zugelassenen Grenzen verschieben kann, was zu Fluglagen führt, die der Pilot mit den verfügbaren Steuerorganen nicht korrigieren kann. B ist falsch, da die resultierenden Schwingungen nicht vorhersehbar sind. C ist falsch, da bei Schwerpunktüberschreitung die Steuerorgane unzureichend sein können. D ist falsch, da dies nicht das Hauptrisiko der Ladungsverlagerung beschreibt.
+
+### Q9: Bei einer Flugmasse von 400 kg, welcher Lastvielfache ergibt sich in einem Kurvenflug mit 60° Schräglage? ^t30q9
+- A) 2,0.
+- B) 1,4.
+- C) 0,5.
+- D) 4,0.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da das Lastvielfache im koordinierten Kurvenflug n = 1/cos(Schrägwinkel) beträgt. Für 60°: n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0,5 = 2,0. Das bedeutet, der Auftrieb muss das Doppelte des Gewichts betragen, um die Höhe im Kurvenflug zu halten. B (1,4) entspräche etwa 45° Schräglage. C (0,5) ist im koordinierten Flug physikalisch unmöglich. D (4,0) entspräche etwa 75° Schräglage.
+
+### Q10: Was ist die untere Grenze des Lastvielfachen für die Nutzungskategorie (Utility)? ^t30q10
+- A) -1,5.
+- B) +2,0.
+- C) -1,0.
+- D) +3,8.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da die Nutzungskategorie (Utility) ein negatives Mindestlastvielfaches von -1,5 g gemäß den Zulassungsvorschriften vorschreibt. Dies definiert die maximale negative Strukturbelastung, die das Luftfahrzeug aushalten muss. B (+2,0) und D (+3,8) sind positive Lastvielfache. C (-1,0) liegt unter der für die Nutzungskategorie erforderlichen Grenze.
+
+### Q11: Welche Faktoren vergrößern die Startstrecke im Flugzeugschlepp? ^t30q11
+- A) Niedrige Temperatur, Gegenwind.
+- B) Graspiste, starker Gegenwind.
+- C) Hoher Luftdruck.
+- D) Hohe Temperatur, Rückenwind.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist D, da hohe Temperatur die Luftdichte verringert, was den bei jeder Bodengeschwindigkeit erzeugten Auftrieb reduziert und eine längere Beschleunigung bis zum Erreichen der Fluggeschwindigkeit erfordert. Rückenwind verringert die Gegenwindkomponente, sodass das Luftfahrzeug eine höhere Bodengeschwindigkeit benötigt, um dieselbe Fluggeschwindigkeit zu erreichen, was die Startstrecke weiter verlängert. A ist falsch, da niedrige Temperatur die Luftdichte erhöht und Gegenwind die Strecke verkürzt. B ist falsch, da starker Gegenwind die Startstrecke verkürzt. C ist falsch, da hoher Luftdruck die Dichte erhöht, was den Start unterstützt.
+
+### Q12: Die gefährlichste Schwerpunktlage für ein Segelflugzeug ist… ^t30q12
+- A) Zu weit vorne.
+- B) Zu tief.
+- C) Zu weit hinten.
+- D) Zu hoch.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist C, da bei zu weit hintenliegendem Schwerpunkt das Segelflugzeug seine statische Längsstabilität verliert — die Nase tendiert zum Aufbäumen ohne in die Gleichgewichtslage zurückzukehren, was zu unkontrollierbaren divergenten Schwingungen oder einem Strömungsabriss/Trudeln führen kann. A (zu weit vorne) ist weniger gefährlich, da das Luftfahrzeug stabil bleibt, obwohl die Höhenruderautorität für die Landung unzureichend sein kann. B und D sind falsch, da die vertikale Schwerpunktverschiebung bei der Standard-Masse-und-Schwerpunkt-Analyse von Segelflugzeugen nicht das Hauptproblem ist.
+
+### Q13: Wie ist die Gesamtmasse des Luftfahrzeugs für die Masse-und-Schwerpunkt-Berechnung vor dem Flug zu ermitteln? ^t30q13
+- A) Aus der letzten Wiegung.
+- B) Aus dem letzten Wartungsbericht.
+- C) Aus dem Datenblatt des Herstellers.
+- D) Durch Schätzung des Piloten.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da der Pilot die Daten der letzten Wiegung (Leermasse und Leerschwerpunktlage) aus der Luftfahrzeugdokumentation verwenden und dann die veränderlichen Lasten (Pilot, Passagier, Kraftstoff, Gepäck) hinzurechnen muss, um die Gesamtmasse und den Flugschwerpunkt zu ermitteln. B ist falsch, da ein Wartungsbericht nicht unbedingt aktuelle Wiegedaten enthält. C ist falsch, da die Herstellerdaten generische Werte sind. D ist falsch, da Schätzung keine akzeptable Methode ist.
+
+### Q14: Welche Elemente muss die Masse-und-Schwerpunkt-Berechnung vor dem Flug enthalten? ^t30q14
+- A) Die Leermasse, den Kraftstoff, die Insassen, das Gepäck und die jeweiligen Hebelarme.
+- B) Nur die Gesamtmasse.
+- C) Nur die Schwerpunktlage und die Gesamtmasse.
+- D) Die Masse des Piloten und die Kraftstoffmasse.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da eine vollständige Masse-und-Schwerpunkt-Berechnung erfordert, jede einzelne Masse (Leermasse des Luftfahrzeugs, Kraftstoff, Insassen, Gepäck) mit den zugehörigen Hebelarmen aufzulisten und dann die Momente zu berechnen, um die Gesamtmasse und die Schwerpunktlage zu ermitteln. B ist falsch, da die Gesamtmasse allein nicht gewährleistet, dass der Schwerpunkt in den Grenzen liegt. C ist falsch, da die Details jeder Komponente bekannt sein müssen. D ist falsch, da mehrere wesentliche Elemente fehlen.
+
+### Q15: Welche Einheiten werden bei einer Masse-und-Schwerpunkt-Berechnung verwendet? ^t30q15
+- A) Die Masse in Kilogramm und die Hebelarme in Metern (oder Zoll).
+- B) Die Masse in Litern und die Hebelarme in Sekunden.
+- C) Die Masse in Newton und die Hebelarme in Fuß.
+- D) Die Masse in Tonnen und die Hebelarme in Kilometern.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da Masse-und-Schwerpunkt-Berechnungen die Masse in Kilogramm (oder Pfund) und die Hebelarme in Metern (oder Zoll) verwenden, was Momente in kg·m (oder lb·in) ergibt. B ist falsch, da Liter eine Volumeneinheit und keine Masseeinheit sind. C ist falsch, da Newton eine Krafteinheit und keine Masseeinheit ist. D ist falsch, da Tonnen und Kilometer nicht die Standardeinheiten in diesem Zusammenhang sind.
+
+### Q16: Ein Segelflugzeug hat eine Leermasse von 300 kg. Der Pilot wiegt 80 kg. Der Hebelarm des Piloten beträgt 0,4 m vor der Bezugsebene. Der Hebelarm der Leermasse beträgt 0,2 m hinter der Bezugsebene. Wo liegt der Schwerpunkt? ^t30q16
+- A) An der Bezugsebene.
+- B) 0,08 m hinter der Bezugsebene.
+- C) 0,12 m vor der Bezugsebene.
+- D) 0,2 m hinter der Bezugsebene.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B, da das Gesamtmoment = (300 × 0,2) + (80 × (−0,4)) = 60 − 32 = 28 kg·m beträgt. Die Gesamtmasse = 380 kg. Der Schwerpunkt = 28/380 = 0,074 m, gerundet auf 0,08 m hinter der Bezugsebene. A ist falsch, da der Schwerpunkt nicht genau an der Bezugsebene liegt. C ist falsch, da der Schwerpunkt nicht vor der Bezugsebene liegt. D ist falsch, da der Wert zu groß ist.
+
+### Q17: Wie beeinflusst der Wind die Flugleistung eines Segelflugzeugs bezogen auf den Boden? ^t30q17
+- A) Gegenwind verbessert die Gleitzahl über Grund.
+- B) Gegenwind verschlechtert die Gleitzahl über Grund.
+- C) Wind hat keinen Einfluss auf die Gleitzahl über Grund.
+- D) Rückenwind verschlechtert die Gleitzahl über Grund.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B, da Gegenwind die Geschwindigkeit über Grund reduziert, während die Sinkrate in der Luftmasse unverändert bleibt. Das Segelflugzeug legt daher weniger horizontale Strecke pro Höheneinheit zurück, was die Gleitzahl über Grund verschlechtert. A ist falsch, da Gegenwind den gegenteiligen Effekt hat. C ist falsch, da Wind die Gleitzahl über Grund erheblich beeinflusst. D ist falsch, da Rückenwind die Gleitzahl über Grund verbessert, indem er die Bodengeschwindigkeit erhöht.
+
+### Q18: Was geschieht, wenn die Flächenbelastung erhöht wird (z. B. mit Wasserballast)? ^t30q18
+- A) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit steigt, aber die maximale Gleitzahl bleibt im Wesentlichen gleich.
+- B) Die maximale Gleitzahl steigt deutlich.
+- C) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit sinkt.
+- D) Die minimale Sinkrate sinkt.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da die Erhöhung der Flächenbelastung die Geschwindigkeitspolare zu höheren Geschwindigkeiten verschiebt. Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit steigt proportional zur Quadratwurzel des Massenverhältnisses, aber die maximale Gleitzahl (L/D-Verhältnis) bleibt im Wesentlichen unverändert (bis auf einen geringfügigen Reynolds-Zahl-Effekt). B ist falsch, da die maximale Gleitzahl sich nicht wesentlich ändert. C ist falsch, da die Überziehgeschwindigkeit mit der Masse steigt. D ist falsch, da die minimale Sinkrate mit der Masse steigt.
+
+### Q19: Nach der MacCready-Theorie, unter welchen Bedingungen ist es vorteilhaft, mit Wasserballast zu fliegen? ^t30q19
+- A) Bei starken und gleichmäßigen Aufwinden.
+- B) Bei schwachen und unregelmäßigen Bedingungen.
+- C) Bei jedem Wetter.
+- D) Nur bei starkem Wind.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da Wasserballast die Flächenbelastung erhöht und es ermöglicht, zwischen den Thermiken schneller mit praktisch gleicher Gleitzahl zu fliegen. Dieser Vorteil lohnt sich nur, wenn die Aufwinde stark genug sind, um die erhöhte Sinkrate und die höhere Überziehgeschwindigkeit zu kompensieren. B ist falsch, da bei schwachen Bedingungen die zusätzliche Masse ein Nachteil ist. C ist falsch, da Ballast nicht immer vorteilhaft ist. D ist falsch, da der Wind allein nicht den Nutzen des Ballasts bestimmt.
+
+### Q20: Welchen Einfluss hat die Höhe auf die wahre Eigengeschwindigkeit (TAS) im Vergleich zur angezeigten Geschwindigkeit (IAS)? ^t30q20
+- A) Die TAS ist in der Höhe größer als die IAS.
+- B) Die TAS ist in der Höhe kleiner als die IAS.
+- C) TAS und IAS sind immer identisch.
+- D) Die TAS nimmt mit der Höhe ab.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da in der Höhe die Luftdichte abnimmt. Bei gleicher IAS ist die TAS höher, da sich das Luftfahrzeug in der dünneren Luft schneller bewegen muss, um denselben Staudruck zu erzeugen. Die Näherungsbeziehung lautet TAS = IAS × √(Dichte auf Meereshöhe / tatsächliche Dichte). B ist falsch, da die TAS immer größer oder gleich der IAS ist. C ist falsch, da sie nur auf Meereshöhe in Standardatmosphäre identisch sind. D ist falsch, da die TAS bei gegebener IAS mit der Höhe zunimmt.
+
+### Q21: Was ist die VNO (Höchstgeschwindigkeit bei turbulenter Luft)? ^t30q21
+- A) Die Höchstgeschwindigkeit für den normalen Betrieb, die bei turbulenter Luft nicht überschritten werden darf.
+- B) Die Höchstgeschwindigkeit in ruhiger Luft.
+- C) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit.
+- D) Die Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da die VNO die höchste Betriebsgeschwindigkeit unter normalen Bedingungen ist, die nur in ruhiger Luft überschritten werden darf. Oberhalb dieser Geschwindigkeit könnten Böen Strukturbelastungen verursachen, die die Auslegungsgrenzen überschreiten. B ist falsch, da die VNE die nie zu überschreitende Geschwindigkeit darstellt. C ist falsch, da die Überziehgeschwindigkeit deutlich niedriger liegt. D ist falsch, da die Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens ein anderes Konzept ist.
+
+### Q22: Wie wird die Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens aus der Geschwindigkeitspolare bestimmt? ^t30q22
+- A) Durch Anlegen der Tangente vom Ursprung an die Polarkurve.
+- B) Durch Finden des tiefsten Punktes der Kurve.
+- C) Durch Finden des am weitesten links liegenden Punktes der Kurve.
+- D) Durch Ziehen einer Horizontalen durch das Minimum der Kurve.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da die Tangente vom Ursprung an die Geschwindigkeitspolare den Punkt des maximalen Verhältnisses von Horizontalgeschwindigkeit zu Sinkrate ergibt, was der besten Gleitzahl entspricht. B ist falsch, da der tiefste Punkt die Geschwindigkeit des minimalen Sinkens (beste Ausdauer) ergibt. C ist falsch, da dies die Überziehgeschwindigkeit ergäbe. D ist falsch, da eine Horizontale nicht das Gleitzahlverhältnis darstellt.
+
+### Q23: Wie verändert sich die Startstrecke im Flugzeugschlepp mit der Platzhöhe? ^t30q23
+- A) Sie nimmt mit der Höhe zu.
+- B) Sie nimmt mit der Höhe ab.
+- C) Sie bleibt konstant.
+- D) Sie hängt nur von der Temperatur ab.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da in der Höhe die Luftdichte abnimmt, was den Auftrieb und die verfügbare Zugkraft bei jeder gegebenen Bodengeschwindigkeit verringert. Das Luftfahrzeug benötigt eine höhere Bodengeschwindigkeit, um dieselbe aerodynamische Geschwindigkeit zu erreichen, was die Startstrecke verlängert. B ist falsch, da die verringerte Dichte die Strecke verlängert. C ist falsch, da die Höhe die Leistung direkt beeinflusst. D ist falsch, da die Temperatur nur einer der Faktoren ist, die Höhe (Druck) ein weiterer.
+
+### Q24: Welchen Einfluss hat eine nasse Graspiste auf die Landestrecke eines Segelflugzeugs? ^t30q24
+- A) Die Landestrecke wird kürzer.
+- B) Die Landestrecke wird länger.
+- C) Das Segelflugzeug riskiert ein Ausbrechen (Ringelpiez).
+- D) Kein Einfluss.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da eine durchnässte Grasoberfläche eine größere Reibung und einen höheren Rollwiderstand am Fahrwerk erzeugt, was das Segelflugzeug schneller abbremst und die Auslaufstrecke verkürzt. B ist falsch, da nasses Gras den Rollwiderstand für ein Segelflugzeug erhöht. C ist falsch, da der Haupteffekt die Verkürzung der Auslaufstrecke ist. D ist falsch, da der Zustand der Oberfläche die Landestrecke immer beeinflusst.
+
+### Q25: Wie verändert sich die Überziehgeschwindigkeit im Kurvenflug? ^t30q25
+- A) Sie steigt mit dem Lastvielfachen.
+- B) Sie sinkt im Kurvenflug.
+- C) Sie bleibt gleich.
+- D) Sie hängt von der Kurvenrichtung ab.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da im koordinierten Kurvenflug das Lastvielfache zunimmt (n = 1/cos φ) und die Überziehgeschwindigkeit proportional zur Quadratwurzel des Lastvielfachen steigt: Vs_Kurve = Vs_Geradeaus × √n. B ist falsch, da das erhöhte Lastvielfache mehr Auftrieb erfordert. C ist falsch, da die Überziehgeschwindigkeit im Kurvenflug nie gleich bleibt. D ist falsch, da die Kurvenrichtung das Lastvielfache nicht beeinflusst.
+
+### Q26: Welcher Zusammenhang besteht zwischen der Geschwindigkeitspolare eines Segelflugzeugs und seiner Flugmasse? ^t30q26
+- A) Die Polare verschiebt sich zu höheren Geschwindigkeiten und größeren Sinkraten, wenn die Masse zunimmt.
+- B) Die Polare ändert sich nicht mit der Masse.
+- C) Die Polare verschiebt sich zu niedrigeren Geschwindigkeiten, wenn die Masse zunimmt.
+- D) Die Polare verschiebt sich nur vertikal, wenn die Masse zunimmt.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da eine Masseerhöhung die Geschwindigkeitspolare nach rechts (höhere Geschwindigkeiten) und nach unten (größere Sinkraten) verschiebt. Für jeden Auftriebsbeiwert steigt die erforderliche Geschwindigkeit proportional zur Quadratwurzel des Massenverhältnisses. B ist falsch, da die Masse einen erheblichen Einfluss auf die Polare hat. C ist falsch, da die Geschwindigkeiten steigen und nicht sinken. D ist falsch, da die Verschiebung sowohl horizontal als auch vertikal erfolgt.
+
+### Q27: Was geschieht mit der maximalen Gleitzahl, wenn die Masse eines Segelflugzeugs zunimmt (unter Vernachlässigung des Reynolds-Zahl-Effekts)? ^t30q27
+- A) Sie steigt.
+- B) Sie sinkt.
+- C) Sie bleibt im Wesentlichen unverändert.
+- D) Sie halbiert sich.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist C, da die maximale Gleitzahl (maximales L/D-Verhältnis) durch die Aerodynamik der Tragfläche bestimmt wird und nicht von der Masse abhängt. Bei Masseerhöhung berührt die Tangente vom Ursprung die Polare im gleichen Winkel, aber bei einer höheren Geschwindigkeit. A ist falsch, da sich die Gleitzahl nicht mit der Masse verbessert. B ist falsch, da sich die Gleitzahl auch nicht verschlechtert. D ist falsch, da keine Halbierung zu erwarten ist.
+
+### Q28: Wie ändert sich die angezeigte VNE mit der Höhe? ^t30q28
+- A) Sie steigt.
+- B) Sie sinkt.
+- C) Sie bleibt gleich; der Fahrtmesser kompensiert dies automatisch.
+- D) Sie nimmt ab.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist C, da der Fahrtmesser den Staudruck misst, der die Luftdichte von Natur aus berücksichtigt. Die VNE-Markierung auf dem Fahrtmesser (roter Strich) stellt einen festen IAS-Wert dar, der der Strukturgrenze entspricht. Jedoch muss die zulässige Höchstgeschwindigkeit als IAS in großer Höhe gemäß der Geschwindigkeits-Höhen-Tabelle des Flughandbuchs reduziert werden. A und B/D sind falsch, da sich die physische Markierung am Instrument nicht bewegt.
+
+### Q29: Welche Geschwindigkeit für das beste Gleiten ergibt sich in ruhiger Luft bei einer Flugmasse von 350 kg? (Siehe beigefügtes Blatt.) ^t30q29
+- A) 75 km/h
+- B) 95 km/h
+- C) 55 km/h
+- D) 65 km/h
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A (75 km/h), da die Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens durch Anlegen der Tangente vom Ursprung an die Polarkurve für 350 kg ermittelt wird. Der Berührungspunkt ergibt die Geschwindigkeit mit dem maximalen Auftrieb/Widerstand-Verhältnis. B (95 km/h) ist zu schnell. C (55 km/h) liegt nahe der Überziehgeschwindigkeit. D (65 km/h) liegt unter der optimalen Geschwindigkeit.
+
+### Q30: Sie möchten vom Flugplatz A (Höhe 500 m) zum 45 km entfernten Flugplatz B fliegen, bei 20 km/h Gegenwind. Die Gleitzahl Ihres Segelflugzeugs beträgt 30. Können Sie Flugplatz B erreichen? ^t30q30
+- A) Ja, Sie kommen mit Reserve an.
+- B) Nein, die erreichbare Strecke reicht nicht aus.
+- C) Ja, gerade so.
+- D) Das hängt von der Temperatur ab.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B, da eine Gleitzahl von 30 in ruhiger Luft eine erreichbare Strecke von 30 × 500 m = 15 km ergibt (diese Frage erfordert die spezifischen Übungsdaten). Mit 20 km/h Gegenwind sinkt die Bodengeschwindigkeit, was die erreichbare Strecke über Grund weiter reduziert. Die Berechnung zeigt, dass die Strecke nicht ausreicht, um B zu erreichen.
+
+### Q31: Mit welcher Geschwindigkeit muss ein Segelflugzeug bei Gegenwind fliegen, um die maximale Strecke über Grund zu erzielen? ^t30q31
+- A) Mit einer höheren Geschwindigkeit als der Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens in ruhiger Luft.
+- B) Mit der Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens in ruhiger Luft.
+- C) Mit der Geschwindigkeit des geringsten Sinkens.
+- D) Mit der Überziehgeschwindigkeit.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da bei Gegenwind der Ursprungspunkt der Tangente auf der Polaren nach rechts (zu höheren Geschwindigkeiten) verschoben wird. Das bedeutet, die optimale Geschwindigkeit für die Gleitzahl über Grund ist höher als in ruhiger Luft. Schnelleres Fliegen kompensiert teilweise den Verlust an Bodengeschwindigkeit durch den Gegenwind. B ist falsch, da diese Geschwindigkeit nur in ruhiger Luft optimal ist. C ist falsch, da die Geschwindigkeit des geringsten Sinkens die Flugdauer maximiert, nicht die Strecke. D ist falsch, da die Überziehgeschwindigkeit eine sehr schlechte Gleitzahl ergibt.
+
+### Q32: Mit welcher Geschwindigkeit muss ein Segelflugzeug bei Rückenwind fliegen, um die maximale Strecke über Grund zu erzielen? ^t30q32
+- A) Mit einer niedrigeren Geschwindigkeit als der Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens in ruhiger Luft.
+- B) Mit der Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens in ruhiger Luft.
+- C) Mit einer höheren Geschwindigkeit als der Geschwindigkeit des besten Gleitens in ruhiger Luft.
+- D) Mit der VNE.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da bei Rückenwind der Ursprungspunkt der Tangente auf der Polaren nach links (zu niedrigeren Geschwindigkeiten) verschoben wird. Die optimale Geschwindigkeit für die Gleitzahl über Grund ist daher niedriger als in ruhiger Luft. B ist falsch, da diese Geschwindigkeit nur in ruhiger Luft optimal ist. C ist falsch, da schnelleres Fliegen bei Rückenwind kontraproduktiv wäre. D ist falsch, da die VNE eine sehr schlechte Gleitzahl ergibt.
+
+### Q33: Wie groß ist das minimale Sinken eines ASK 21 bei 500 kg Flugmasse? (Siehe beigefügte Polare.) ^t30q33
+- A) 0,65 m/s
+- B) 0,80 m/s
+- C) 1,00 m/s
+- D) 1,20 m/s
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B (0,80 m/s), da beim Ablesen der Geschwindigkeitspolare für 500 kg Flugmasse der tiefste Punkt der Kurve (minimale Sinkrate) bei etwa 0,80 m/s liegt. A (0,65 m/s) ist zu niedrig für diese Masse. C (1,00 m/s) ist zu hoch für den Minimalpunkt. D (1,20 m/s) entspricht einer deutlich höheren Geschwindigkeit.
+
+### Q34: Im Luftraum über dem Flugplatz Langenthal (47°10'58''N / 007°44'29''E) auf einer Höhe von 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), in welcher Luftraumklasse befinden Sie sich, und welche Mindestanforderungen für Sicht und Wolkenabstand gelten? ^t30q34
+- A) Luftraum Klasse E, Horizontalsicht 5 km, Wolkenabstand: 1,5 km horizontal, 300 m vertikal.
+- B) Luftraum Klasse G, Horizontalsicht 1,5 km, wolkenfrei mit ständiger Erdsicht.
+- C) Luftraum Klasse D, Horizontalsicht 5 km, Wolkenabstand: 1,5 km horizontal, 300 m vertikal.
+- D) Luftraum Klasse C, Horizontalsicht 5 km, Wolkenabstand: 1,5 km horizontal, 300 m vertikal.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da Sie sich auf 2000 m AMSL über Langenthal im Luftraum der Klasse E befinden. VFR-Flug in Klasse E erfordert 5 km Horizontalsicht, 1500 m horizontalen Wolkenabstand und 300 m vertikalen Wolkenabstand. B ist falsch, da Klasse G mit ihren reduzierten Minima nur in sehr geringer Höhe gilt. C ist falsch, da es an diesem Ort und in dieser Höhe keine TMA der Klasse D gibt. D ist falsch, da Klasse C in dieser Region ab FL 130 beginnt, weit über 2000 m AMSL.
+
+### Q35: Was ist die Flächenbelastung? ^t30q35
+- A) Das Verhältnis zwischen der Masse des Luftfahrzeugs und der Tragflächenfläche.
+- B) Das Gewicht der Tragflächen des Luftfahrzeugs.
+- C) Die maximale Last, die die Tragflächen tragen können.
+- D) Das Verhältnis zwischen Auftrieb und Widerstand.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da die Flächenbelastung als das Verhältnis der Gesamtmasse des Luftfahrzeugs (in kg) zur Tragflächenfläche (in m²) definiert ist, ausgedrückt in kg/m². Sie ist ein grundlegender Parameter, der die Überziehgeschwindigkeit, die Kurvenleistung und das Verhalten bei Turbulenzen beeinflusst. B ist falsch, da es nicht um das Gewicht der Flügel geht. C ist falsch, da das Lastvielfache die maximale Belastung bestimmt. D ist falsch, da das Verhältnis Auftrieb/Widerstand die Gleitzahl ist.
+
+### Q36: Wenn die Flächenbelastung durch Wasserballast um 40 % erhöht wird, um wie viel Prozent steigt die Mindestgeschwindigkeit? ^t30q36
+- A) 18 %.
+- B) 40 %.
+- C) 100 %.
+- D) 0 %.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da die Überziehgeschwindigkeit (und damit die Mindestgeschwindigkeit) proportional zur Quadratwurzel der Flächenbelastung ist. Steigt die Flächenbelastung um 40 % (Faktor 1,4), beträgt die neue Mindestgeschwindigkeit das Ursprüngliche multipliziert mit √1,4 ≈ 1,183 — eine Erhöhung von etwa 18,3 %. B ist falsch, da die Geschwindigkeit nicht linear mit der Flächenbelastung steigt. C ist falsch, da eine Erhöhung um 100 % eine Verdoppelung der Geschwindigkeit bedeuten würde. D ist falsch, da jede Masseerhöhung die Mindestgeschwindigkeit anhebt.
+
+### Q37: Welche Aussage trifft gemäß der folgenden Polare bei einer Geschwindigkeit von 150 km/h zu? (Siehe beigefügtes Blatt.) ^t30q37
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) Die Sinkrate der ASK21 ist unabhängig von ihrer Masse
+- B) Die ASK21 hat bei geringerer Flugmasse eine schlechtere Gleitzahl
+- C) Die ASK21 hat bei höherer Flugmasse eine höhere Sinkrate
+- D) Die ASK21 hat bei geringerer Flugmasse eine bessere Gleitzahl
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da sich bei 150 km/h die beiden Polarkurven für unterschiedliche Massen der ASK21 kreuzen, was bedeutet, dass beide Konfigurationen bei dieser bestimmten Geschwindigkeit die gleiche Sinkrate aufweisen. Dies ist eine aerodynamische Eigenschaft der Polare: Die Kurven schneiden sich bei einer Geschwindigkeit, bei der die Masse keinen Einfluss auf die Sinkrate hat. B ist falsch, da bei 150 km/h die Gleitzahl für beide Massen gleich ist. C ist falsch, da die Sinkraten an diesem Schnittpunkt identisch sind. D ist ebenfalls falsch, da keine Masse bei dieser spezifischen Geschwindigkeit eine bessere Gleitzahl aufweist.
+
+### Q38: Am Flugplatz Amlikon, welche maximale Landestrecke steht in Richtung Osten zur Verfügung? ^t30q38
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780 m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700 m.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B (780 m), da die AIP-Karte des Flugplatzes Amlikon eine maximale verfügbare Landestrecke von 780 Metern in Richtung Osten ausweist. A und C sind falsch, da Landestrecken in der Schweiz in Metern und nicht in Fuß angegeben werden. D (700 m) stimmt nicht mit den veröffentlichten Daten für die Richtung Osten überein.
+
+### Q39: Welchen Einfluss hat Wind auf den Gleitwinkel über Grund, wenn die wahre Eigengeschwindigkeit des Luftfahrzeugs konstant bleibt? ^t30q39
+- A) Bei Rückenwind nimmt der Gleitwinkel zu.
+- B) Bei Gegenwind nimmt der Gleitwinkel ab.
+- C) Wind hat keinen Einfluss auf den Gleitwinkel.
+- D) Bei Gegenwind nimmt der Gleitwinkel zu.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist D, da Gegenwind die Bodengeschwindigkeit verringert, während die Sinkrate in der Luftmasse unverändert bleibt. Da das Segelflugzeug weniger horizontale Strecke pro Höhenverlust zurücklegt, wird der Gleitwinkel über Grund steiler (nimmt zu). A ist falsch, da Rückenwind den Gleitwinkel über Grund verflacht (verringert), indem er die Bodengeschwindigkeit erhöht. B ist falsch, da Gegenwind den Bodengleitwinkel erhöht und nicht verringert. C ist falsch, da Wind den Gleitwinkel über Grund erheblich beeinflusst.
+
+### Q40: Wie verhält sich die angezeigte Geschwindigkeit (IAS) im Vergleich zur wahren Eigengeschwindigkeit (TAS) mit zunehmender Höhe? ^t30q40
+- A) Sie steigt.
+- B) Sie sinkt.
+- C) Sie kann nicht gemessen werden.
+- D) Sie bleibt identisch.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B, da mit zunehmender Höhe die Luftdichte abnimmt. Bei gleicher wahrer Eigengeschwindigkeit misst das Pitotrohr weniger Staudruck, sodass die IAS-Anzeige niedriger als die TAS ist. Umgekehrt muss das Luftfahrzeug eine höhere TAS fliegen, um in der Höhe die gleiche IAS beizubehalten. A ist falsch, da die IAS relativ zur TAS mit der Höhe nicht steigt. C ist falsch, da die IAS immer gemessen werden kann. D ist falsch, da IAS und TAS mit zunehmender Höhe immer stärker auseinandergehen.
+
+### Q41: Was ist bei einer Landung unter starkem Regen besonders zu beachten? ^t30q41
+- A) Die Anfluggeschwindigkeit muss erhöht werden.
+- B) Die Flächenbelastung muss erhöht werden.
+- C) Der Anflugwinkel muss flacher als üblich sein.
+- D) Die Anfluggeschwindigkeit muss niedriger als üblich sein.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da starker Regen auf der Flügeloberfläche die Rauigkeit erhöht und die Grenzschicht verschlechtern kann, was die Überziehgeschwindigkeit erhöhen und den maximalen Auftriebsbeiwert verringern kann. Eine höhere Anfluggeschwindigkeit bietet eine Sicherheitsmarge gegen diese Effekte. B ist falsch, da eine absichtliche Erhöhung der Flächenbelastung bei Regen unpraktisch und kontraproduktiv ist. C ist falsch, da ein flacherer Anflug die Hindernisfreiheit bei schlechter Sicht verringert. D ist falsch, da eine niedrigere Geschwindigkeit die Sicherheitsmarge reduziert.
+
+### Q42: Was muss ein Segelflugpilot am Flugplatz Bex beachten? ^t30q42
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) Die Platzrunde für Piste 33 erfolgt im Uhrzeigersinn.
+- B) Die Platzrunde für Piste 15 erfolgt im Uhrzeigersinn.
+- C) Die Platzrunde für Piste 33 erfolgt gegen den Uhrzeigersinn.
+- D) Je nach Wind kann die Platzrunde für Piste 33 entweder im oder gegen den Uhrzeigersinn erfolgen.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist D, da am Flugplatz Bex die Geländebeschränkungen (das Rhonetal und die umliegenden Berge) bedeuten, dass die Richtung der Platzrunde für Piste 33 von den vorherrschenden Windverhältnissen abhängt. Die Karte zeigt, dass sowohl Links- als auch Rechtsvolten möglich sind. A ist falsch, da dies die Platzrunde auf den Uhrzeigersinn beschränkt. B bezieht sich auf Piste 15, nicht auf 33. C ist falsch, da dies die Platzrunde auf gegen den Uhrzeigersinn beschränkt.
+
+### Q43: Welche maximale Flughöhe ist über dem Flugplatz Biel Kappelen (SE von Biel) möglich, wenn Sie keine Durchflugfreigabe für die TMA BERN 1 anfordern möchten? ^t30q43
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist D, da die Untergrenze der TMA BERN 1 über Biel Kappelen bei 3500 ft AMSL liegt. Wenn Sie unterhalb dieser Höhe bleiben, befinden Sie sich im unkontrollierten Luftraum und benötigen keine Durchflugfreigabe. A (3500 ft AGL) ist falsch, da TMA-Grenzen auf MSL bezogen sind, nicht auf AGL. B (FL 100) liegt weit über der relevanten Grenze. C (FL 35) entspricht in der Standardatmosphäre ungefähr 3500 ft, aber Flugflächen verwenden die Standarddruckeinstellung (1013,25 hPa), nicht den QNH.
+
+### Q44: Welche der folgenden Aussagen ist richtig? ^t30q44
+- A) Neuer Schwerpunkt: 76,7, innerhalb der zugelassenen Grenzen.
+- B) Neuer Schwerpunkt: 78,5, innerhalb der zugelassenen Grenzen.
+- C) Neuer Schwerpunkt: 82,0, außerhalb der zugelassenen Grenzen.
+- D) Neuer Schwerpunkt: 75,5, außerhalb der zugelassenen Grenzen.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da bei Anwendung der Masse-und-Schwerpunkt-Berechnung mit den bereitgestellten Daten (vom beigefügten Blatt) die neue Schwerpunktlage 76,7 ergibt, was innerhalb der zugelassenen vorderen und hinteren Schwerpunktgrenzen liegt. B (78,5) ist ein fehlerhaftes Berechnungsergebnis. C (82,0) liegt zu weit hinten und wäre außerhalb der Grenzen. D (75,5) ist falsch berechnet und würde ebenfalls außerhalb der vorderen Grenze liegen.
+
+### Q45: Am Flugplatz Schänis, welche maximale Landestrecke steht in Richtung NNW zur Verfügung? ^t30q45
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470 m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B (470 m), da die AIP-Karte des Flugplatzes Schänis eine maximale verfügbare Landestrecke von 470 Metern in Richtung NNW ausweist. A (520 m) stimmt nicht mit den veröffentlichten Daten für diese Richtung überein. C und D sind falsch, da Flugplatzdistanzen in der Schweiz in Metern und nicht in Fuß angegeben werden.
+
+### Q46: Die aktuelle Masse eines Luftfahrzeugs beträgt 6400 lbs. Aktueller SP: 80. SP-Grenzen: vorderer SP: 75,2, hinterer SP: 80,5. Welche Masse kann von der aktuellen Position zum Hebelarm 150 verschoben werden, ohne die hintere SP-Grenze zu überschreiten? ^t30q46
+- A) 27,82 lbs.
+- B) 56,63 lbs.
+- C) 39,45 lbs.
+- D) 45,71 lbs.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist D (45,71 lbs). Die Berechnung verwendet die Verschiebungsformel: Wenn eine Masse x von der aktuellen SP-Position (80) zum Hebelarm 150 verschoben wird, wandert der SP nach hinten. Der neue SP darf 80,5 nicht überschreiten. Mit der Formel: ΔSP = (x × ΔArm) / Gesamtmasse ergibt sich: 0,5 = (x × 70) / 6400, also x = (0,5 × 6400) / 70 = 45,71 lbs.
+
+### Q47: Die korrekte Beladung eines Luftfahrzeugs hängt ab von:… ^t30q47
+- A) Nur der Einhaltung der zulässigen Höchstmasse.
+- B) Nur der korrekten Verteilung der Nutzlast.
+- C) Der korrekten Verteilung der Nutzlast und der Einhaltung der zulässigen Höchstmasse.
+- D) Der zulässigen Höchstmasse des Gepäcks im hinteren Bereich des Luftfahrzeugs.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist C, da eine korrekte Beladung die gleichzeitige Erfüllung zweier unabhängiger Bedingungen erfordert: Die Gesamtmasse darf die zulässige Höchstmasse (MTOM) nicht überschreiten, und die Nutzlast muss so verteilt sein, dass der Schwerpunkt innerhalb der zugelassenen Grenzen bleibt. A ist falsch, da die Einhaltung der Massegrenze allein nicht gewährleistet, dass der Schwerpunkt in den Grenzen liegt. B ist falsch, da die korrekte Verteilung allein nicht sicherstellt, dass die Gesamtmasse in den Grenzen liegt. D ist falsch, da nur ein einzelnes Gepäckfach angesprochen wird.
+
+### Q48: Welche Information kann aus dieser Geschwindigkeitspolare abgelesen werden? (Siehe beigefügtes Blatt.) ^t30q48
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) Im Geschwindigkeitsbereich bis 100 km/h reduziert eine Zunahme der Flugmasse die Sinkrate.
+- B) Die Mindestgeschwindigkeit ist unabhängig von der Flugmasse.
+- C) Sowohl Gleitzahl als auch Mindestgeschwindigkeit sind unabhängig von der Flugmasse.
+- D) Nur die maximale Gleitzahl ist unabhängig von der Flugmasse, abgesehen von einem geringfügigen Reynolds-Zahl-Effekt.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist D, da beim Vergleich der Polarkurven für verschiedene Massen die Tangente vom Ursprung jede Kurve im gleichen Winkel berührt, was bedeutet, dass das maximale Auftrieb/Widerstand-Verhältnis (beste Gleitzahl) im Wesentlichen durch die Masse nicht verändert wird, abgesehen von geringfügigen Reynolds-Zahl-Effekten. Die Geschwindigkeit, bei der diese beste Gleitzahl erreicht wird, steigt jedoch mit der Masse. A ist falsch, da eine Masseerhöhung die Sinkrate bei jeder gegebenen Geschwindigkeit immer erhöht. B ist falsch, da die Mindestgeschwindigkeit mit der Masse steigt. C ist falsch, da zwar die Gleitzahl masseunabhängig ist, die Mindestgeschwindigkeit aber nicht.
+
+### Q49: Bei welcher angezeigten Geschwindigkeit führen Sie einen Anflug auf einen Flugplatz auf 1800 m AMSL durch? ^t30q49
+- A) Bei der gleichen Geschwindigkeit wie auf Meereshöhe.
+- B) Bei einer niedrigeren Geschwindigkeit als auf Meereshöhe.
+- C) Bei der Geschwindigkeit des geringsten Sinkens.
+- D) Bei einer höheren Geschwindigkeit als auf Meereshöhe.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist A, da der Fahrtmesser den Staudruck misst, der unabhängig von der Höhe direkt mit den aerodynamischen Kräften zusammenhängt. Auf 1800 m AMSL ist die Luftdichte geringer, daher wird die TAS für die gleiche IAS höher sein — aber die aerodynamischen Kräfte (Auftrieb, Überziehverhalten) hängen von der IAS ab, nicht von der TAS. Die gleiche angezeigte Anfluggeschwindigkeit bietet dieselben Sicherheitsmargen wie auf Meereshöhe. B ist falsch, da eine niedrigere IAS die Überzieh-Sicherheitsmarge verringern würde. D ist falsch, da eine höhere IAS unnötig ist und zu übermäßigem Ausschweben führen würde. C ist falsch, da die Geschwindigkeit des geringsten Sinkens nicht die korrekte Anfluggeschwindigkeit ist.
+
+### Q50: Mit welcher Geschwindigkeit müssen Sie fliegen, um die beste Gleitzahl bei einer Flugmasse von 450 kg zu erzielen? (Siehe beigefügtes Blatt.) ^t30q50
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130 km/h
+- B) 90 km/h
+- C) 70 km/h
+- D) 110 km/h
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die richtige Antwort ist B (90 km/h), da die Geschwindigkeit der besten Gleitzahl an dem Punkt liegt, an dem die Tangente vom Ursprung die Polarkurve für 450 kg berührt. Für diesen Segelflugzeugtyp bei 450 kg liegt dies bei etwa 90 km/h. A (130 km/h) ist zu schnell — bei dieser Geschwindigkeit ist die Gleitzahl deutlich reduziert. C (70 km/h) liegt näher an der Geschwindigkeit des geringsten Sinkens, die die Ausdauer maximiert, aber nicht die Strecke. D (110 km/h) würde eine geringere Gleitzahl als das Optimum ergeben.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_1_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_1_50_fr.md
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+### Q1: Dépasser la masse maximale autorisée d'un aéronef est… ^t30q1
+- A) Interdit et fondamentalement dangereux
+- B) Exceptionnellement autorisé pour éviter des retards
+- C) Compensé par les actions du pilote sur les commandes de vol.
+- D) Pertinent uniquement si l'excès dépasse 10 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la masse maximale au décollage (MTOM) est une limite de certification imposée par le constructeur, basée sur la résistance structurelle, la vitesse de décrochage et les performances en montée. La dépasser augmente la charge alaire, élève la vitesse de décrochage, dégrade les performances en montée et peut surcharger la cellule au-delà des facteurs de charge certifiés. B est faux car aucune commodité opérationnelle ne justifie de dépasser une limite de sécurité. C est faux car aucune technique de pilotage ne peut compenser une surcharge structurelle. D est faux car il n'existe aucune tolérance réglementaire ni marge en pourcentage — tout dépassement est interdit.
+
+### Q2: Le centre de gravité doit être situé… ^t30q2
+- A) Entre la limite avant et la limite arrière du C.G.
+- B) En avant de la limite avant du C.G.
+- C) À droite de la limite latérale du C.G.
+- D) En arrière de la limite arrière du C.G.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la stabilité et la maniabilité de l'aéronef ne sont certifiées que dans l'enveloppe de centrage approuvée, située entre les limites avant et arrière du C.G. B est faux car un C.G. en avant de la limite avant nécessite une autorité excessive de la gouverne de profondeur pour l'arrondi ou la rotation, rendant potentiellement l'atterrissage impossible. D est faux car un C.G. en arrière de la limite arrière provoque une instabilité longitudinale et un cabrage incontrôlable. C n'est pas pertinent — les limites latérales du C.G. ne sont pas la préoccupation principale dans les calculs standard de masse et centrage des planeurs.
+
+### Q3: Un aéronef doit être chargé et exploité de manière à ce que le centre de gravité (CG) reste dans les limites approuvées pendant toutes les phases du vol. Cela est fait pour garantir… ^t30q3
+- A) La stabilité et la maniabilité de l'aéronef.
+- B) Que l'aéronef ne dépasse pas la vitesse maximale admissible lors d'une descente.
+- C) Que l'aéronef ne bascule pas sur sa queue lors du chargement.
+- D) Que l'aéronef ne se mette pas en décrochage.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la position du C.G. par rapport au point neutre aérodynamique détermine la stabilité statique en tangage. Un C.G. en avant du point neutre crée un moment de rappel stabilisateur, tandis que l'autorité de commande assure la maniabilité. Si le C.G. est hors limites, l'une de ces deux propriétés est compromise. B est faux car la VNE dépend des caractéristiques structurelles et aérodynamiques. C est faux car il ne s'agit pas d'une préoccupation en vol. D est faux car le décrochage est principalement lié à l'angle d'incidence, pas directement à la position du C.G.
+
+### Q4: La masse à vide et le centre de gravité (CG) correspondant d'un aéronef sont initialement déterminés… ^t30q4
+- A) Par pesage.
+- B) Par calcul.
+- C) Pour un seul aéronef d'un type, car tous les aéronefs du même type ont la même masse et la même position du CG.
+- D) Par les données fournies par le constructeur de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car chaque aéronef individuel est physiquement pesé — généralement sur des balances à trois points — pour déterminer sa masse à vide réelle et la position de son C.G. Les tolérances de fabrication, réparations et équipements installés varient d'un numéro de série à l'autre du même type. B est faux car le calcul seul n'est pas suffisamment précis. C est faux car les variations entre les aéronefs individuels sont significatives. D est faux car les données du constructeur sont des valeurs génériques, insuffisantes pour un aéronef particulier.
+
+### Q5: Les bagages et le fret doivent être correctement arrimés et fixés, sinon un déplacement du fret peut causer… ^t30q5
+- A) Des attitudes incontrôlables, des dommages structurels, un risque de blessures.
+- B) Une instabilité calculable si le C.G. se déplace de moins de 10 %.
+- C) Des attitudes continues pouvant être corrigées par le pilote au moyen des commandes de vol.
+- D) Des dommages structurels, une instabilité en incidence, une instabilité en vitesse.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car du fret non arrimé peut se déplacer brusquement lors de turbulences, provoquant un déplacement instantané du C.G. hors limites, plus rapidement que le pilote ne peut réagir. Ce déplacement peut entraîner des attitudes de vol incontrôlables, des dommages structurels et des blessures aux occupants. B est faux car une instabilité imprévisible n'est jamais « calculable ». C est faux car un déplacement du C.G. hors limites peut dépasser l'autorité des commandes. D est faux car ce n'est pas la meilleure description des conséquences.
+
+### Q6: Le poids total d'un aéronef agit verticalement vers le bas à travers le… ^t30q6
+- A) Point de stagnation.
+- B) Centre aérodynamique.
+- C) Point neutre.
+- D) Centre de gravité.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car, par définition, le centre de gravité est le point unique à travers lequel la résultante de toutes les forces gravitationnelles agit sur l'aéronef. A est faux car le point de stagnation est le point sur la voilure où la vitesse de l'écoulement est nulle. B est faux car le centre aérodynamique est le point où agit la résultante des forces aérodynamiques. C est faux car le point neutre est la référence aérodynamique pour l'analyse de stabilité.
+
+### Q7: Quel est l'effet d'une augmentation de masse sur les performances d'un planeur ? ^t30q7
+- A) L'augmentation de la masse n'a pas d'effet sur les performances.
+- B) L'augmentation de la masse entraîne un accroissement de la vitesse de décrochage.
+- C) L'augmentation de la masse entraîne une augmentation du taux de montée.
+- D) L'augmentation de la masse entraîne une diminution de la vitesse de décrochage.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car une masse accrue signifie une charge alaire plus élevée, ce qui nécessite une vitesse plus grande pour générer suffisamment de portance. La vitesse de décrochage augmente proportionnellement à la racine carrée du rapport des masses. A est faux car la masse affecte de nombreux paramètres de performances. C est faux car un poids accru dégrade le taux de montée. D est faux car la vitesse de décrochage augmente, elle ne diminue pas.
+
+### Q8: Le déplacement du fret en vol est dangereux car il entraîne un déplacement du centre de gravité pouvant provoquer… ^t30q8
+- A) Des attitudes de vol incontrôlables.
+- B) Des oscillations calculables.
+- C) Des déviations de trajectoire qui peuvent être compensées par le pilote.
+- D) La traction d'un câble de remorquage au-delà du plan de centrage.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car un déplacement non contrôlé du fret en vol peut déplacer instantanément le C.G. hors des limites approuvées, entraînant des attitudes de vol que le pilote ne peut pas corriger avec les commandes disponibles. B est faux car les oscillations résultantes ne sont pas prévisibles. C est faux car si le C.G. dépasse les limites, les commandes peuvent être insuffisantes. D est faux car cela ne décrit pas le risque principal du déplacement du fret.
+
+### Q9: À une masse en vol de 400 kg, quel est le facteur de charge dans un virage à 60° d'inclinaison ? ^t30q9
+- A) 2,0.
+- B) 1,4.
+- C) 0,5.
+- D) 4,0.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le facteur de charge dans un virage coordonné est n = 1/cos(angle d'inclinaison). Pour 60° : n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0,5 = 2,0. Cela signifie que la portance doit être le double du poids pour maintenir l'altitude en virage. B (1,4) correspondrait à environ 45° d'inclinaison. C (0,5) est physiquement impossible en vol coordonné. D (4,0) correspondrait à environ 75° d'inclinaison.
+
+### Q10: Quelle est la limite inférieure du facteur de charge pour la catégorie utilitaire ? ^t30q10
+- A) -1,5.
+- B) +2,0.
+- C) -1,0.
+- D) +3,8.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la catégorie utilitaire impose un facteur de charge négatif minimal de -1,5 g selon les normes de certification. Cela définit la charge structurelle négative maximale que l'aéronef doit supporter. B (+2,0) et D (+3,8) sont des facteurs de charge positifs. C (-1,0) est inférieur à la limite requise pour la catégorie utilitaire.
+
+### Q11: Quels facteurs augmentent la distance de décollage en remorqué ? ^t30q11
+- A) Basse température, vent de face.
+- B) Piste en herbe, vent de face fort.
+- C) Pression atmosphérique élevée.
+- D) Haute température, vent arrière.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car une température élevée réduit la densité de l'air, diminuant la portance générée à toute vitesse sol donnée, ce qui nécessite une plus longue accélération pour atteindre la vitesse de vol. Un vent arrière réduit la composante de vent de face, ce qui signifie que l'aéronef a besoin d'une vitesse sol plus élevée pour atteindre la même vitesse air, allongeant encore la distance de décollage. A est faux car une basse température augmente la densité de l'air et un vent de face raccourcit la distance. B est faux car un vent de face fort raccourcit la distance. C est faux car une pression élevée augmente la densité, ce qui aide au décollage.
+
+### Q12: La position du centre de gravité la plus dangereuse pour un planeur est… ^t30q12
+- A) Trop en avant.
+- B) Trop basse.
+- C) Trop en arrière.
+- D) Trop haute.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque le C.G. est trop en arrière, le planeur perd sa stabilité statique longitudinale — le nez tend à cabrer sans revenir à l'équilibre, pouvant mener à des oscillations divergentes incontrôlables ou à un décrochage/vrille. A (trop en avant) est moins dangereux car l'aéronef reste stable, bien que l'autorité de la gouverne de profondeur puisse être insuffisante pour l'atterrissage. B et D sont faux car le déplacement vertical du C.G. n'est pas la préoccupation principale dans l'analyse standard de masse et centrage des planeurs.
+
+### Q13: Comment la masse totale de l'aéronef doit-elle être déterminée pour le calcul de masse et centrage avant le vol ? ^t30q13
+- A) À partir de la pesée la plus récente.
+- B) À partir du dernier rapport de maintenance.
+- C) À partir de la fiche technique du constructeur.
+- D) Par estimation du pilote.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le pilote doit utiliser les données de la pesée la plus récente (masse à vide et position du C.G. à vide) consignées dans la documentation de l'aéronef, puis y ajouter les charges variables (pilote, passager, carburant, bagages) pour obtenir la masse totale et le C.G. de vol. B est faux car un rapport de maintenance ne contient pas nécessairement les données de pesée actualisées. C est faux car les données constructeur sont génériques. D est faux car l'estimation n'est pas une méthode acceptable.
+
+### Q14: Quels éléments doit contenir le calcul de masse et centrage avant le vol ? ^t30q14
+- A) La masse à vide, le carburant, les occupants, les bagages et leurs bras de levier respectifs.
+- B) Uniquement la masse totale.
+- C) Uniquement la position du C.G. et la masse totale.
+- D) La masse du pilote et la masse du carburant.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car un calcul complet de masse et centrage exige de lister chaque masse individuelle (masse à vide de l'aéronef, carburant, occupants, bagages) avec les bras de levier correspondants, puis de calculer les moments pour déterminer la masse totale et la position du C.G. B est faux car la masse totale seule ne garantit pas que le C.G. est dans les limites. C est faux car il faut connaître les détails de chaque composante. D est faux car cela omet plusieurs éléments essentiels.
+
+### Q15: Quelles sont les unités utilisées dans un calcul de masse et centrage ? ^t30q15
+- A) La masse en kilogrammes et les bras de levier en mètres (ou pouces).
+- B) La masse en litres et les bras de levier en secondes.
+- C) La masse en newtons et les bras de levier en pieds.
+- D) La masse en tonnes et les bras de levier en kilomètres.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car les calculs de masse et centrage utilisent la masse en kilogrammes (ou livres) et les bras de levier en mètres (ou pouces), ce qui donne des moments en kg·m (ou lb·in). B est faux car les litres sont une unité de volume, pas de masse. C est faux car le newton est une unité de force, pas de masse. D est faux car les tonnes et kilomètres ne sont pas les unités standard utilisées dans ce contexte.
+
+### Q16: Un planeur a une masse à vide de 300 kg. Le pilote pèse 80 kg. Le bras de levier du pilote est de 0,4 m en avant du plan de référence. Le bras de levier de la masse à vide est de 0,2 m en arrière du plan de référence. Où se situe le C.G. ? ^t30q16
+- A) Au plan de référence.
+- B) 0,08 m en arrière du plan de référence.
+- C) 0,12 m en avant du plan de référence.
+- D) 0,2 m en arrière du plan de référence.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car le moment total = (300 × 0,2) + (80 × (−0,4)) = 60 − 32 = 28 kg·m. La masse totale = 380 kg. Le C.G. = 28/380 = 0,074 m, arrondi à 0,08 m en arrière du plan de référence. A est faux car le C.G. n'est pas exactement au plan de référence. C est faux car le C.G. ne se trouve pas en avant. D est faux car la valeur est trop grande.
+
+### Q17: Comment le vent affecte-t-il les performances d'un planeur par rapport au sol ? ^t30q17
+- A) Un vent de face améliore la finesse par rapport au sol.
+- B) Un vent de face dégrade la finesse par rapport au sol.
+- C) Le vent n'a aucun effet sur la finesse par rapport au sol.
+- D) Un vent arrière dégrade la finesse par rapport au sol.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car un vent de face réduit la vitesse sol tout en maintenant le même taux de chute dans la masse d'air. Le planeur parcourt donc moins de distance horizontale par unité d'altitude perdue, ce qui dégrade la finesse par rapport au sol. A est faux car un vent de face a l'effet inverse. C est faux car le vent affecte significativement la finesse sol. D est faux car un vent arrière améliore la finesse par rapport au sol en augmentant la vitesse sol.
+
+### Q18: Que se passe-t-il si la charge alaire est augmentée (par exemple avec du ballast d'eau) ? ^t30q18
+- A) La vitesse de décrochage augmente, mais la finesse maximale reste essentiellement la même.
+- B) La finesse maximale augmente significativement.
+- C) La vitesse de décrochage diminue.
+- D) Le taux de chute minimum diminue.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car l'augmentation de la charge alaire déplace la polaire des vitesses vers des vitesses plus élevées. La vitesse de décrochage augmente proportionnellement à la racine carrée du rapport de masse, mais la finesse maximale (rapport L/D) reste essentiellement inchangée (à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près). B est faux car la finesse maximale ne change pas de manière significative. C est faux car la vitesse de décrochage augmente avec la masse. D est faux car le taux de chute minimum augmente avec la masse.
+
+### Q19: Selon la théorie de MacCready, dans quelles conditions est-il avantageux de voler avec du ballast d'eau ? ^t30q19
+- A) Lorsque les ascendances sont fortes et régulières.
+- B) Lorsque les conditions sont faibles et irrégulières.
+- C) Quel que soit le temps.
+- D) Uniquement par vent fort.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le ballast d'eau augmente la charge alaire, permettant de voler plus vite entre les thermiques avec une finesse pratiquement identique. Cet avantage n'est rentable que si les ascendances sont suffisamment fortes pour compenser le taux de chute accru et la vitesse de décrochage plus élevée. B est faux car dans des conditions faibles, la masse supplémentaire est un handicap. C est faux car le ballast n'est pas toujours avantageux. D est faux car le vent seul ne détermine pas l'utilité du ballast.
+
+### Q20: Quel est l'effet de l'altitude sur la vitesse vraie (TAS) par rapport à la vitesse indiquée (IAS) ? ^t30q20
+- A) La TAS est supérieure à l'IAS en altitude.
+- B) La TAS est inférieure à l'IAS en altitude.
+- C) La TAS et l'IAS sont toujours identiques.
+- D) La TAS diminue avec l'altitude.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en altitude, la densité de l'air diminue. Pour une même IAS, la TAS est plus élevée car l'aéronef doit se déplacer plus vite dans l'air raréfié pour produire la même pression dynamique. La relation approximative est TAS = IAS × √(densité au niveau de la mer / densité réelle). B est faux car la TAS est toujours supérieure ou égale à l'IAS. C est faux car elles ne sont identiques qu'au niveau de la mer en atmosphère standard. D est faux car la TAS augmente avec l'altitude pour une IAS donnée.
+
+### Q21: Qu'est-ce que la VNO (vitesse maximale en air turbulent) ? ^t30q21
+- A) La vitesse maximale à ne pas dépasser en conditions normales d'exploitation en air turbulent.
+- B) La vitesse maximale en air calme.
+- C) La vitesse de décrochage.
+- D) La vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la VNO est la vitesse maximale d'exploitation en conditions normales, qui ne doit pas être dépassée sauf en air calme. Au-delà de cette vitesse, les rafales pourraient causer des charges structurelles dépassant les limites de conception. B est faux car c'est la VNE qui constitue la vitesse à ne jamais dépasser. C est faux car la vitesse de décrochage est beaucoup plus basse. D est faux car la vitesse de meilleure finesse est un concept différent.
+
+### Q22: Comment se détermine la vitesse de meilleure finesse à partir de la polaire des vitesses ? ^t30q22
+- A) En traçant la tangente depuis l'origine à la courbe de la polaire.
+- B) En trouvant le point le plus bas de la courbe.
+- C) En trouvant le point le plus à gauche de la courbe.
+- D) En traçant une horizontale passant par le minimum de la courbe.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la tangente tirée depuis l'origine jusqu'à la courbe de la polaire des vitesses donne le point de rapport vitesse horizontale / taux de chute maximal, qui correspond à la meilleure finesse. B est faux car le point le plus bas donne la vitesse de taux de chute minimum (meilleure endurance). C est faux car cela donnerait la vitesse de décrochage. D est faux car une horizontale ne représente pas le rapport finesse.
+
+### Q23: Comment varie la distance de décollage en remorqué avec l'altitude de l'aérodrome ? ^t30q23
+- A) Elle augmente avec l'altitude.
+- B) Elle diminue avec l'altitude.
+- C) Elle reste constante.
+- D) Elle dépend uniquement de la température.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en altitude, la densité de l'air diminue, ce qui réduit la portance et la traction disponibles à toute vitesse sol donnée. L'aéronef a besoin d'une vitesse sol plus élevée pour atteindre la même vitesse aérodynamique, allongeant la distance de décollage. B est faux car la densité réduite allonge la distance. C est faux car l'altitude affecte directement les performances. D est faux car la température n'est qu'un des facteurs, l'altitude (pression) en est un autre.
+
+### Q24: Quel est l'effet d'une piste en herbe mouillée sur la distance d'atterrissage d'un planeur ? ^t30q24
+- A) La distance d'atterrissage est plus courte.
+- B) La distance d'atterrissage est plus longue.
+- C) Le planeur risque de sortir de piste (tête-à-queue).
+- D) Aucun effet.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car une surface herbeuse détrempée crée une friction et une résistance au roulement plus importantes sur le train d'atterrissage, ce qui freine le planeur plus rapidement et réduit la distance d'arrêt. B est faux car l'herbe mouillée augmente la résistance au roulement. C est faux car l'effet principal est le raccourcissement de la distance d'arrêt. D est faux car l'état de la surface affecte toujours la distance d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q25: Comment la vitesse de décrochage varie-t-elle en virage ? ^t30q25
+- A) Elle augmente avec le facteur de charge.
+- B) Elle diminue en virage.
+- C) Elle reste identique.
+- D) Elle dépend de la direction du virage.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en virage coordonné, le facteur de charge augmente (n = 1/cos φ), et la vitesse de décrochage augmente proportionnellement à la racine carrée du facteur de charge : Vs_virage = Vs_palier × √n. B est faux car le facteur de charge accru exige davantage de portance. C est faux car la vitesse de décrochage n'est jamais identique en virage. D est faux car la direction du virage n'affecte pas le facteur de charge.
+
+### Q26: Quelle est la relation entre la polaire des vitesses d'un planeur et sa masse en vol ? ^t30q26
+- A) La polaire se déplace vers des vitesses plus élevées et des taux de chute plus grands lorsque la masse augmente.
+- B) La polaire ne change pas avec la masse.
+- C) La polaire se déplace vers des vitesses plus basses lorsque la masse augmente.
+- D) La polaire se déplace uniquement verticalement lorsque la masse augmente.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car une augmentation de masse déplace la polaire des vitesses vers la droite (vitesses plus élevées) et vers le bas (taux de chute accrus). Pour chaque coefficient de portance, la vitesse requise augmente proportionnellement à la racine carrée du rapport de masse. B est faux car la masse a un effet significatif sur la polaire. C est faux car les vitesses augmentent, elles ne diminuent pas. D est faux car le déplacement est à la fois horizontal et vertical.
+
+### Q27: Qu'arrive-t-il à la finesse maximale lorsque la masse d'un planeur augmente (en négligeant l'effet de Reynolds) ? ^t30q27
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle reste essentiellement inchangée.
+- D) Elle est divisée par deux.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la finesse maximale (rapport L/D maximal) est déterminée par l'aérodynamique de la voilure et ne dépend pas de la masse. En augmentant la masse, la tangente depuis l'origine touche la polaire à un angle identique, mais à une vitesse plus élevée. A est faux car la finesse ne s'améliore pas avec la masse. B est faux car la finesse ne se dégrade pas non plus. D est faux car aucune réduction n'est attendue.
+
+### Q28: Comment la VNE indiquée varie-t-elle avec l'altitude ? ^t30q28
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle reste la même ; le badin compense automatiquement.
+- D) Elle diminue.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le badin mesure la pression dynamique, qui tient intrinsèquement compte de la densité de l'air. Le repère VNE sur le badin (trait rouge) représente une valeur fixe d'IAS correspondant à la limite structurelle. Cependant, la VNE admissible en IAS doit effectivement être réduite en haute altitude selon le tableau vitesse-altitude du manuel de vol. A et B/D sont faux car le repère physique sur l'instrument ne bouge pas.
+
+### Q29: Quelle est la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme pour une masse en vol de 350 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q29
+- A) 75 km/h
+- B) 95 km/h
+- C) 55 km/h
+- D) 65 km/h
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A (75 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve en traçant la tangente depuis l'origine jusqu'à la courbe de la polaire pour 350 kg. Le point de tangence donne la vitesse correspondant au rapport portance/traînée maximal. B (95 km/h) est trop rapide. C (55 km/h) est proche de la vitesse de décrochage. D (65 km/h) est en dessous de la vitesse optimale.
+
+### Q30: Vous souhaitez voler de l'aérodrome A (altitude 500 m) à l'aérodrome B situé à 45 km, avec un vent de face de 20 km/h. La finesse de votre planeur est de 30. Pouvez-vous atteindre l'aérodrome B ? ^t30q30
+- A) Oui, vous arrivez avec de la marge.
+- B) Non, la distance franchissable est insuffisante.
+- C) Oui, exactement.
+- D) Cela dépend de la température.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la finesse de 30 donne une distance franchissable en air calme de 30 × 500 m = 15 km d'altitude × ... (cette question nécessite les données spécifiques de l'exercice). Avec un vent de face de 20 km/h, la vitesse sol diminue, ce qui réduit la distance franchissable par rapport au sol. Le calcul montre que la distance est insuffisante pour atteindre B.
+
+### Q31: À quelle vitesse doit voler un planeur par vent de face pour maximiser la distance franchissable par rapport au sol ? ^t30q31
+- A) À une vitesse supérieure à la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- B) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- C) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimum.
+- D) À la vitesse de décrochage.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car avec un vent de face, le point d'origine de la tangente sur la polaire se déplace vers la droite (vers des vitesses plus élevées). Cela signifie que la vitesse optimale de finesse sol est supérieure à celle en air calme. Voler plus vite compense partiellement la perte de vitesse sol due au vent de face. B est faux car cette vitesse n'est optimale qu'en air calme. C est faux car la vitesse de taux de chute minimum maximise la durée de vol, pas la distance. D est faux car la vitesse de décrochage donne une très mauvaise finesse.
+
+### Q32: À quelle vitesse doit voler un planeur par vent arrière pour maximiser la distance franchissable par rapport au sol ? ^t30q32
+- A) À une vitesse inférieure à la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- B) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- C) À une vitesse supérieure à la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- D) À la VNE.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car avec un vent arrière, le point d'origine de la tangente sur la polaire se déplace vers la gauche (vers des vitesses plus basses). La vitesse optimale de finesse sol est donc inférieure à celle en air calme. B est faux car cette vitesse n'est optimale qu'en air calme. C est faux car voler plus vite serait contre-productif avec un vent arrière. D est faux car la VNE donne une très mauvaise finesse.
+
+### Q33: Quel est le taux de chute minimum d'un planeur ASK 21 à 500 kg de masse en vol ? (Voir polaire annexée.) ^t30q33
+- A) 0,65 m/s
+- B) 0,80 m/s
+- C) 1,00 m/s
+- D) 1,20 m/s
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (0,80 m/s) car en lisant la polaire des vitesses pour une masse de 500 kg, le point le plus bas de la courbe (taux de chute minimum) est situé à environ 0,80 m/s. A (0,65 m/s) est trop bas pour cette masse. C (1,00 m/s) est trop élevé pour le point minimum. D (1,20 m/s) correspond à une vitesse bien supérieure.
+
+### Q34: Dans l'espace aérien au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Langenthal (47°10'58''N / 007°44'29''E) à une altitude de 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), dans quelle classe d'espace aérien êtes-vous, et quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages ? ^t30q34
+- A) Espace aérien de classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- B) Espace aérien de classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, hors des nuages avec vue continue du sol.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe D, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- D) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 2000 m AMSL au-dessus de Langenthal, vous êtes en espace aérien de classe E. Le vol VFR en classe E exige une visibilité horizontale de 5 km, un espacement horizontal aux nuages de 1500 m et un espacement vertical de 300 m. B est faux car la classe G avec ses minima réduits ne s'applique qu'à très basse altitude. C est faux car il n'y a pas de TMA de classe D à cet endroit et à cette altitude. D est faux car la classe C commence au FL 130 dans cette région, bien au-dessus de 2000 m AMSL.
+
+### Q35: Quelle est la charge alaire ? ^t30q35
+- A) Le rapport entre la masse de l'aéronef et la surface alaire.
+- B) Le poids des ailes de l'aéronef.
+- C) La charge maximale que les ailes peuvent supporter.
+- D) Le rapport entre la portance et la traînée.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la charge alaire est définie comme le rapport entre la masse totale de l'aéronef (en kg) et la surface alaire (en m²), exprimée en kg/m². C'est un paramètre fondamental qui influence la vitesse de décrochage, les performances en virage et la réponse aux turbulences. B est faux car il ne s'agit pas du poids des ailes. C est faux car c'est le facteur de charge qui détermine la charge maximale. D est faux car le rapport portance/traînée est la finesse.
+
+### Q36: Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % par du ballast d'eau, de quel pourcentage la vitesse minimale augmente-t-elle ? ^t30q36
+- A) 18 %.
+- B) 40 %.
+- C) 100 %.
+- D) 0 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la vitesse de décrochage (et donc la vitesse minimale) est proportionnelle à la racine carrée de la charge alaire. Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % (facteur 1,4), la nouvelle vitesse minimale est l'originale multipliée par √1,4 ≈ 1,183 — soit une augmentation d'environ 18,3 %. B est faux car la vitesse n'augmente pas linéairement avec la charge alaire. C est faux car une augmentation de 100 % signifierait un doublement de la vitesse. D est faux car toute augmentation de masse élève la vitesse minimale.
+
+### Q37: D'après la polaire ci-dessous, quelle affirmation s'applique à une vitesse de 150 km/h ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q37
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) Le taux de chute de l'ASK21 est indépendant de sa masse
+- B) L'ASK21 a une moins bonne finesse à plus faible masse en vol
+- C) L'ASK21 a un taux de chute plus élevé à plus grande masse en vol
+- D) L'ASK21 a une meilleure finesse à plus faible masse en vol
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 150 km/h, les deux courbes polaires pour différentes masses de l'ASK21 se croisent, ce qui signifie que les deux configurations ont le même taux de chute à cette vitesse particulière. C'est une propriété aérodynamique de la polaire : les courbes se croisent à une vitesse où la masse n'a pas d'effet sur le taux de chute. B est faux car à 150 km/h la finesse est identique pour les deux masses. C est faux car les taux de chute sont identiques à ce point d'intersection. D est également faux car aucune masse n'a une meilleure finesse à cette vitesse précise.
+
+### Q38: À l'aérodrome d'Amlikon, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction de l'Est ? ^t30q38
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780 m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700 m.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (780 m) car la carte AIP de l'aérodrome d'Amlikon indique une distance d'atterrissage disponible maximale de 780 mètres en direction de l'Est. A et C sont faux car les distances d'atterrissage en Suisse sont données en mètres, pas en pieds. D (700 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées pour la direction Est.
+
+### Q39: Quel est l'effet d'un vent arrière sur l'angle de descente par rapport au sol si la vitesse vraie de l'aéronef reste constante ? ^t30q39
+- A) Avec un vent arrière, l'angle de descente augmente.
+- B) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de descente diminue.
+- C) Le vent n'a aucun effet sur l'angle de descente.
+- D) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de descente augmente.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car un vent de face réduit la vitesse sol tandis que le taux de chute dans la masse d'air reste inchangé. Comme le planeur parcourt moins de distance horizontale par unité d'altitude perdue, l'angle de descente par rapport au sol se raidit (augmente). A est faux car un vent arrière diminue (aplatit) l'angle de descente par rapport au sol en augmentant la vitesse sol. B est faux car un vent de face augmente, et non diminue, l'angle de descente sol. C est faux car le vent affecte significativement l'angle de descente par rapport au sol.
+
+### Q40: Comment la vitesse indiquée (IAS) se compare-t-elle à la vitesse vraie (TAS) lorsque l'altitude augmente ? ^t30q40
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle ne peut pas être mesurée.
+- D) Elle reste identique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car lorsque l'altitude augmente, la densité de l'air diminue. Pour une même vitesse vraie, le tube de Pitot mesure moins de pression dynamique, de sorte que l'IAS affichée est inférieure à la TAS. Inversement, pour maintenir la même IAS en altitude, l'aéronef doit voler à une TAS plus élevée. A est faux car l'IAS n'augmente pas par rapport à la TAS avec l'altitude. C est faux car l'IAS peut toujours être mesurée. D est faux car l'IAS et la TAS divergent de plus en plus avec l'altitude.
+
+### Q41: Qu'est-ce qui doit être particulièrement observé lors d'un atterrissage sous forte pluie ? ^t30q41
+- A) La vitesse d'approche doit être augmentée.
+- B) La charge alaire doit être augmentée.
+- C) L'angle d'approche doit être plus faible que d'habitude.
+- D) La vitesse d'approche doit être inférieure à la normale.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la forte pluie sur la surface de l'aile augmente la rugosité et peut dégrader la couche limite, ce qui peut élever la vitesse de décrochage et réduire le coefficient de portance maximal. Une vitesse d'approche plus élevée offre une marge de sécurité contre ces effets. B est faux car augmenter délibérément la charge alaire sous la pluie est impraticable et contre-productif. C est faux car une approche plus plate réduit la marge de franchissement des obstacles en cas de mauvaise visibilité. D est faux car une vitesse plus basse réduit la marge de sécurité.
+
+### Q42: Que doit prendre en compte un pilote de planeur à l'aérodrome de Bex ? ^t30q42
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens horaire.
+- B) Le circuit pour la piste 15 est dans le sens horaire.
+- C) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens antihoraire.
+- D) Selon le vent, le circuit pour la piste 33 peut être soit dans le sens horaire soit dans le sens antihoraire.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à l'aérodrome de Bex, les contraintes du terrain (la vallée du Rhône et les montagnes environnantes) signifient que le sens du circuit pour la piste 33 dépend des conditions de vent. La carte montre qu'un circuit à gauche ou à droite peut être utilisé. A est faux car cela limite le circuit au sens horaire uniquement. B concerne la piste 15, pas la 33. C est faux car cela limite le circuit au sens antihoraire uniquement.
+
+### Q43: Quelle est l'altitude maximale de vol au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Biel Kappelen (SE de Biel) si vous souhaitez éviter de demander une clairance de transit pour la TMA BERN 1 ? ^t30q43
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la limite inférieure de la TMA BERN 1 au-dessus de Biel Kappelen est à 3500 ft AMSL. En restant en dessous de cette altitude, vous demeurez en espace aérien non contrôlé et n'avez pas besoin de clairance de transit. A (3500 ft AGL) est faux car les limites de TMA sont référencées par rapport au MSL, pas à l'AGL. B (FL 100) est bien au-dessus de la limite concernée. C (FL 35) se convertit en environ 3500 ft en atmosphère standard, mais les niveaux de vol utilisent le calage standard (1013,25 hPa), pas le QNH.
+
+### Q44: Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t30q44
+- A) Nouveau C.G. : 76,7, dans les limites approuvées.
+- B) Nouveau C.G. : 78,5, dans les limites approuvées.
+- C) Nouveau C.G. : 82,0, hors des limites approuvées.
+- D) Nouveau C.G. : 75,5, hors des limites approuvées.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en appliquant le calcul de masse et centrage avec les données fournies (de la feuille annexée), la nouvelle position du C.G. se calcule à 76,7, ce qui se situe dans les limites avant et arrière approuvées. B (78,5) est un résultat de calcul incorrect. C (82,0) est trop en arrière et serait hors limites. D (75,5) est un calcul incorrect et serait également hors de la limite avant.
+
+### Q45: À l'aérodrome de Schänis, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction NNO ? ^t30q45
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470 m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (470 m) car la carte AIP de l'aérodrome de Schänis indique une distance d'atterrissage disponible maximale de 470 mètres en direction NNO. A (520 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées pour cette direction. C et D sont faux car les distances d'aérodrome en Suisse sont données en mètres, pas en pieds.
+
+### Q46: La masse actuelle d'un aéronef est de 6400 lbs. CG actuel : 80. Limites CG : CG avant : 75,2, CG arrière : 80,5. Quelle masse peut être déplacée de sa position actuelle au bras de levier 150 sans dépasser la limite arrière du CG ? ^t30q46
+- A) 27,82 lbs.
+- B) 56,63 lbs.
+- C) 39,45 lbs.
+- D) 45,71 lbs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D (45,71 lbs). Le calcul utilise la formule de déplacement : lorsqu'une masse x est déplacée de la position actuelle du C.G. (80) au bras de levier 150, le C.G. se déplace vers l'arrière. Le nouveau C.G. ne doit pas dépasser 80,5. En utilisant la formule : ΔCG = (x × Δbras) / masse totale, on obtient : 0,5 = (x × 70) / 6400, donc x = (0,5 × 6400) / 70 = 45,71 lbs.
+
+### Q47: Le chargement correct d'un aéronef dépend de :… ^t30q47
+- A) Uniquement du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- B) Uniquement de la distribution correcte de la charge utile.
+- C) De la distribution correcte de la charge utile et du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- D) De la masse maximale autorisée des bagages dans la section arrière de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car un chargement correct exige de satisfaire simultanément deux conditions indépendantes : la masse totale ne doit pas dépasser la masse maximale autorisée (MTOM), et la charge utile doit être distribuée de sorte que le C.G. reste dans l'enveloppe approuvée. A est faux car respecter la limite de masse seule ne garantit pas que le C.G. est dans les limites. B est faux car une distribution correcte seule ne garantit pas que la masse totale est dans les limites. D est faux car cela ne traite que d'un compartiment à bagages spécifique.
+
+### Q48: Quelle information peut-on lire sur cette polaire des vitesses ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q48
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) Dans la plage de vitesses jusqu'à 100 km/h, une augmentation de la masse en vol réduit le taux de chute.
+- B) La vitesse minimale est indépendante de la masse en vol.
+- C) Tant la finesse que la vitesse minimale sont indépendantes de la masse en vol.
+- D) Seule la finesse maximale est indépendante de la masse en vol, à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car en comparant les courbes polaires pour différentes masses, la tangente depuis l'origine touche chaque courbe au même angle, ce qui signifie que le rapport portance/traînée maximal (meilleure finesse) est essentiellement inchangé par la masse, à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près. Cependant, la vitesse à laquelle cette meilleure finesse est atteinte augmente avec la masse. A est faux car l'augmentation de la masse augmente toujours le taux de chute à toute vitesse donnée. B est faux car la vitesse minimale augmente avec la masse. C est faux car si la finesse est indépendante de la masse, la vitesse minimale ne l'est pas.
+
+### Q49: À quelle vitesse indiquée effectuez-vous une approche sur un aérodrome situé à 1800 m AMSL ? ^t30q49
+- A) À la même vitesse qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- B) À une vitesse inférieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+- C) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimum.
+- D) À une vitesse supérieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le badin mesure la pression dynamique, qui est directement liée aux forces aérodynamiques, indépendamment de l'altitude. À 1800 m AMSL, la densité de l'air est plus faible, donc la TAS sera plus élevée pour la même IAS — mais les forces aérodynamiques (portance, caractéristiques de décrochage) dépendent de l'IAS, pas de la TAS. La même vitesse d'approche indiquée offre les mêmes marges de sécurité qu'au niveau de la mer. B est faux car une IAS plus basse réduirait la marge de décrochage. D est faux car une IAS plus élevée est inutile et entraînerait un arrondi excessif. C est faux car la vitesse de taux de chute minimum n'est pas la vitesse d'approche correcte.
+
+### Q50: À quelle vitesse devez-vous voler pour obtenir la meilleure finesse pour une masse en vol de 450 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q50
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130 km/h
+- B) 90 km/h
+- C) 70 km/h
+- D) 110 km/h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (90 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve au point où la tangente depuis l'origine touche la courbe polaire pour 450 kg. Pour ce type de planeur à 450 kg, cela se produit à environ 90 km/h. A (130 km/h) est trop rapide — à cette vitesse, la finesse est significativement réduite. C (70 km/h) est plus proche de la vitesse de taux de chute minimum, qui maximise l'endurance mais pas la distance. D (110 km/h) donnerait une finesse réduite par rapport à l'optimum.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_51_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_51_100.md
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_51_100.md
@@ -0,0 +1,515 @@
+### Q51: 1235 lbs (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs):... ^t30q51
+- A) approx. 620 kg.
+- B) approx. 2720 kg.
+- C) approx. 560 kg.
+- D) approx. 2470 kg.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because to convert pounds to kilograms, divide by 2.2: 1235 / 2.2 = 561.4 kg, which rounds to approximately 560 kg. A (620 kg) would correspond to about 1364 lbs. B (2720 kg) results from multiplying instead of dividing. D (2470 kg) is also the result of a multiplication error. The key formula is: mass in kg = weight in lbs / 2.2.
+
+### Q52: What has to be particularly observed when landing on an upsloping field with a tailwind? ^t30q52
+- A) Fly final a little faster than usual.
+- B) Flare higher than usual.
+- C) Fly at the normal approach speed (yellow triangle).
+- D) You must land with all airbrakes fully extended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because on an upsloping field with a tailwind, the competing effects partially cancel each other: the upslope shortens the ground roll while the tailwind lengthens it. The normal approach speed (yellow triangle on the ASI) provides the correct balance of energy management. A is wrong because a faster approach would result in excessive float on the upslope. B is wrong because flaring higher risks ballooning on the slope. D is wrong because full airbrakes may cause an excessively steep descent on short final.
+
+### Q53: In which airspace class are you above Langenthal aerodrome (47 deg 10'58''N / 007 deg 44'29''E) at an altitude of 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^t30q53
+- A) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- B) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- C) Class D airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 2000 m AMSL above Langenthal, you are in Class E airspace. VFR flight in Class E requires 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. B is wrong because Class G with its reduced minima applies only at very low altitudes. C is wrong because there is no Class D TMA at this location and altitude. D is wrong because Class C begins at FL 130 in this region, far above 2000 m AMSL.
+
+### Q54: Which center of gravity position is the most dangerous for a glider? ^t30q54
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too low.
+- C) Too far aft.
+- D) Too high.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when the C.G. is too far aft, the glider loses longitudinal static stability — the nose tends to pitch up without returning to equilibrium, potentially leading to uncontrollable divergent oscillations or a stall/spin. A (too far forward) is less dangerous because the aircraft remains stable, though elevator authority may be insufficient for landing. B and D are wrong because vertical C.G. displacement is not the primary concern in standard glider mass-and-balance analysis.
+
+### Q55: How does the indicated VNE (never-exceed speed) change as altitude increases? ^t30q55
+- A) It rises.
+- B) It decreases.
+- C) It stays the same; the airspeed indicator accounts for this automatically.
+- D) It diminishes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which inherently accounts for air density. The V_NE marking on the ASI (red line) represents a fixed IAS value that corresponds to the structural limit. However, note that the allowable maximum IAS must actually be reduced at high altitude per the flight manual's speed-altitude table — the ASI marking itself does not change, but the pilot must observe a lower limit. A and B/D are wrong because the physical mark on the instrument does not move. The subtlety is that while the ASI reading mechanism inherently accounts for density, glider pilots must consult the altitude-correction table for the actual limit at high altitude.
+
+### Q56: You have covered a distance of 150 km in 1 hour and 15 minutes. Your calculated ground speed is:... ^t30q56
+- A) 125 km/h.
+- B) 115 km/h.
+- C) 120 km/h.
+- D) 110 km/h.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because ground speed = distance / time = 150 km / 1.25 hours = 120 km/h. The key step is converting 1 hour 15 minutes to decimal hours: 15 minutes = 0.25 hours, so total time = 1.25 hours. A (125 km/h) results from dividing by 1.2 hours. B (115 km/h) and D (110 km/h) do not correspond to any correct calculation with these inputs.
+
+### Q57: The following NOTAM was published on 18 August (summer time). Which of the following statements is correct? ^t30q57
+![[figures/t30_q57.png]]
+- A) The extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be strictly avoided every day from 02 to 06 September 2013, between sunrise and sunset.
+- B) An airshow is taking place in the Payerne area from 02 to 06 September 2013. The TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 are active each day during this period between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC as holding areas and airshow demonstration sectors.
+- C) Due to an airshow from 02 to 06 September 2013, the extended CTR/TMA Payerne is active each day between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC. The TMA is used as a holding area, the restricted zone LS-R4 as a demonstration and holding area. The area must be strictly avoided.
+- D) Due to an airshow, a transit clearance for the extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be requested on frequency 135.475 (Payerne TWR) from 02 to 06 September 2013.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the NOTAM establishes that from 2 to 6 September 2013, between 0600 and 1500 UTC, the extended CTR/TMA Payerne is activated as a holding area, while LS-R4 serves as both a demonstration and holding area for an airshow. These areas must be strictly avoided during the active period. A is wrong because the times are 0600-1500 UTC, not sunrise to sunset. B incorrectly states both areas serve as holding and demonstration areas. D is wrong because transit is not permitted — the area must be avoided entirely, not transited with clearance.
+
+### Q58: Which is the best glide speed in calm air for a flying mass of 450 kg? See attached sheet. ^t30q58
+![[figures/t30_q58.png]]
+- A) 95km/h
+- B) 75km/h
+- C) 55km/h
+- D) 135km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (75 km/h) because the best glide speed is found by drawing a tangent from the origin to the speed polar curve for 450 kg. The point where this tangent touches the curve gives the speed for maximum lift-to-drag ratio (best glide). A (95 km/h) is too fast and would correspond to a heavier mass or a different polar. C (55 km/h) is near the stall speed. D (135 km/h) is deep in the high-speed range where the glide ratio is significantly reduced.
+
+### Q59: A VFR flight will follow the route shown on the map below (dotted line) from APPENZELL towards MUOTATHAL. The route is planned for 19 March 2013 (winter time) between 1205 and 1255 LT. Answer using the DABS below. Which of these answers is correct? ^t30q59
+![[figures/t30_q59.png]]
+- A) The DABS can be ignored as it solely applies to military aircraft.
+- B) You may pass through all relevant danger and restricted zones below 1000 ft AGL or above 10,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) The route can be flown without coordination between 1200 and 1300 LT.
+- D) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because checking the DABS for 19 March 2013 (winter time, CET = UTC+1), the planned time of 1205-1255 LT converts to 1105-1155 UTC. During this period, the relevant danger and restricted zones along the route are not active, allowing the route to be flown without coordination. A is wrong because the DABS applies to all airspace users, including gliders. B is wrong because altitude-based exemptions do not automatically apply to all restricted areas. D is wrong because the route is flyable during the specified time window.
+
+### Q60: Wing loading is increased by 40% by water ballast. By what percentage does the glider's minimum speed increase? ^t30q60
+- A) 18%.
+- B) 40%.
+- C) 100%.
+- D) 0%.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because stall speed (and therefore minimum speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading. If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), the new minimum speed is the original multiplied by the square root of 1.4, which equals approximately 1.183 — an increase of about 18.3%. B is wrong because the speed does not increase linearly with wing loading. C is wrong because a 100% increase would mean doubling the speed. D is wrong because any mass increase raises the minimum speed.
+
+### Q61: Based on the polar below, which statement applies at a speed of 150 km/h? See attached sheet... ^t30q61
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) the sink rate of the ASK21 is independent of its mass
+- B) the ASK21 has a worse glide ratio at lower flying mass
+- C) the ASK21 has a higher sink rate at higher flying mass
+- D) the ASK21 has a better glide ratio at lower flying mass
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 150 km/h, the two polar curves for different masses of the ASK21 intersect, meaning both configurations have the same sink rate at this particular speed. This is an aerodynamic property of the polar: the curves cross at one speed where mass has no effect on sink rate. B is wrong because at 150 km/h the glide ratio is equal for both masses. C is wrong because the sink rates are identical at this intersection point. D is also wrong because neither mass has a better glide ratio at this specific speed.
+
+### Q62: At Amlikon aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading East? ^t30q62
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (780 m) because the AIP chart for Amlikon aerodrome shows a maximum landing distance available of 780 metres in the eastward direction. A and C are wrong because landing distances in Switzerland are given in metres, not feet. D (700 m) does not match the published data for the eastward heading. Always verify the unit and the specific runway direction when reading aerodrome charts.
+
+### Q63: From what altitude must you request a transit clearance for the EMMEN TMA between Cham (approx. N47 deg 11' / E008 deg 28') and Hitzkirch (approx. N47 deg 14' / E008 deg 16')? ^t30q63
+![[figures/t30_q63.png]]
+- A) 2400 ft AMSL.
+- B) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 2000ft GND.
+- D) 5000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the EMMEN TMA lower boundary between Cham and Hitzkirch is at 3500 ft AMSL. Below this altitude, you remain in uncontrolled airspace and no clearance is needed. Above 3500 ft AMSL, you enter the TMA and must obtain an ATC clearance. A (2400 ft) is too low and does not correspond to the published limit. C (2000 ft GND) references above ground level, which is not how this TMA boundary is expressed. D (5000 ft) is too high.
+
+### Q64: The maximum permitted payload is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t30q64
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Increase takeoff speed by 10%.
+- C) Trim forward.
+- D) Reduce the payload.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when the maximum permitted payload is exceeded, the only correct action is to reduce the payload until it complies with the limit. The maximum payload is a certification limit based on structural strength and C.G. envelope. A and C are wrong because trimming adjusts aerodynamic forces on the tail but does not change the aircraft's mass or C.G. — it cannot make an overloaded aircraft safe. B is wrong because increasing takeoff speed does not solve an overweight condition and may actually overstress the structure further.
+
+### Q65: Which is the effect of wind on the glide angle over the ground if the aircraft's true airspeed remains constant? ^t30q65
+- A) With a tailwind, the glide angle increases.
+- B) With a headwind, the glide angle decreases.
+- C) Wind has no effect on the glide angle.
+- D) With a headwind, the glide angle rises.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because a headwind reduces groundspeed while the sink rate in the airmass remains unchanged. Since the glider covers less horizontal ground distance per unit of altitude lost, the descent angle relative to the ground steepens (increases). A is wrong because a tailwind decreases (flattens) the glide angle over the ground by increasing groundspeed. B is wrong because a headwind increases, not decreases, the ground glide angle. C is wrong because wind significantly affects the ground track glide angle, even though it does not affect the airmass glide angle.
+
+### Q66: How does indicated airspeed (IAS) compare to true airspeed (TAS) as altitude increases? ^t30q66
+- A) It rises.
+- B) It decreases.
+- C) It cannot be measured.
+- D) It stays identical.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because as altitude increases, air density decreases. For the same true airspeed, the pitot tube measures less dynamic pressure, so the IAS reading is lower than TAS. Conversely, to maintain the same IAS at altitude, the aircraft must fly at a higher TAS. The relationship is approximately TAS = IAS x square root of (sea-level density / actual density). A is wrong because IAS does not rise relative to TAS with altitude. C is wrong because IAS can always be measured. D is wrong because IAS and TAS diverge increasingly with altitude.
+
+### Q67: What has to be particularly observed when landing in heavy rain? ^t30q67
+- A) Approach speed must be increased.
+- B) Wing loading must be increased.
+- C) The approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) Approach speed must be lower than usual.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because heavy rain on the wing surface increases roughness and can degrade the boundary layer, potentially raising the stall speed and reducing maximum lift coefficient. A higher approach speed provides a safety margin against these effects. B is wrong because deliberately increasing wing loading in rain would require adding ballast, which is impractical and counterproductive. C is wrong because a shallower approach reduces obstacle clearance in poor visibility. D is wrong because a lower approach speed reduces the safety margin when aerodynamic degradation is already a risk.
+
+### Q68: What must a glider pilot take into account at Bex aerodrome? ^t30q68
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is clockwise.
+- B) The traffic pattern for runway 15 is clockwise.
+- C) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is counter-clockwise.
+- D) Depending on wind, the traffic pattern for runway 33 may be either clockwise or counter-clockwise.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at Bex aerodrome, terrain constraints (the Rhone valley and surrounding mountains) mean the traffic pattern direction for runway 33 depends on the prevailing wind conditions. The chart shows that either a left or right circuit may be used. A is wrong because it limits the pattern to clockwise only. B relates to runway 15, not 33. C is wrong because it limits the pattern to counter-clockwise only. Pilots must check the local procedures and wind conditions before joining the circuit.
+
+### Q69: What is the maximum flying altitude above Biel Kappelen aerodrome (SE of Biel) if you wish to avoid requesting a transit clearance for TMA BERN 1? ^t30q69
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the lower limit of TMA BERN 1 over Biel Kappelen is 3500 ft AMSL. By staying below this altitude, you remain in uncontrolled airspace and do not need a transit clearance. A (3500 ft AGL) is wrong because TMA boundaries are referenced to MSL, not AGL. B (FL 100) is far above the relevant boundary. C (FL 35) converts to approximately 3500 ft in standard atmosphere, but flight levels use the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa), not QNH, so this is not the correct way to express the limit.
+
+### Q70: Which of these statements is correct? ^t30q70
+- A) New C.G: 76.7, within approved limits.
+- B) New C.G: 78.5, within approved limits.
+- C) New C.G: 82.0, outside approved limits.
+- D) New C.G: 75.5, outside approved limits.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because applying the mass-and-balance calculation with the data provided (from the attached sheet), the new C.G. position computes to 76.7, which falls within the approved forward and aft C.G. limits. B (78.5) is an incorrect calculation result. C (82.0) is too far aft and would be outside limits. D (75.5) is incorrectly calculated and would also fall outside the forward limit. Always verify your calculation by checking whether the result is between the published forward and aft limits.
+
+### Q71: What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on landing? ^t30q71
+- A) Landing distance will be shorter.
+- B) Landing distance will be longer.
+- C) The glider risks running off the runway (groundloop).
+- D) No effect.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a waterlogged grass surface creates greater friction and drag on the landing gear during the ground roll, causing the glider to decelerate faster and stop in a shorter distance. The water acts as a braking medium. B is wrong because wet grass increases, not decreases, rolling resistance for a glider. C is wrong because while directional control may be slightly affected, the primary effect is shortened stopping distance. D is wrong because surface conditions always affect landing distance.
+
+### Q72: At Schänis aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading NNW? ^t30q72
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (470 m) because the AIP chart for Schanis aerodrome shows a maximum landing distance available of 470 metres in the NNW direction. A (520 m) does not match the published data for this heading. C and D are wrong because Swiss aerodrome distances are given in metres, not feet. Always read the correct runway direction and corresponding distance from the aerodrome chart.
+
+### Q73: The current mass of an aircraft is 6400 lbs. Current CG: 80. CG limits: forward CG: 75.2, aft CG: 80.5. What mass can be moved from its current position to arm 150 without exceeding the aft CG limit? ^t30q73
+- A) 27.82 lbs.
+- B) 56.63 lbs.
+- C) 39.45 lbs.
+- D) 45.71 lbs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D (45.71 lbs). The calculation uses the shift formula: when mass x is moved from the current C.G. position (80) to arm 150, the C.G. shifts aft. The new C.G. must not exceed 80.5. Using the formula: delta CG = (x × delta arm) / total mass, we get: 0.5 = (x × 70) / 6400, therefore x = (0.5 × 6400) / 70 = 45.71 lbs. A (27.82), B (56.63), and C (39.45) result from incorrect calculations using wrong distances or mass values.
+
+### Q74: Correct loading of an aircraft depends on:... ^t30q74
+- A) Only compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- B) Only correct payload distribution.
+- C) Correct payload distribution and compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- D) The maximum allowable mass of baggage in the aft section of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because correct loading requires satisfying two independent conditions simultaneously: the total mass must not exceed the maximum allowable mass (MTOM), and the payload must be distributed so that the C.G. remains within the approved envelope. A is wrong because respecting the mass limit alone does not guarantee the C.G. is within limits. B is wrong because correct distribution alone does not ensure the total mass is within limits. D is wrong because it addresses only one specific baggage compartment rather than the complete loading requirements.
+
+### Q75: What information can be read from this speed polar? (See attached sheet.)... ^t30q75
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) in the speed range up to 100 km/h, an increase in flying mass reduces the sink rate.
+- B) minimum speed is independent of flying mass.
+- C) both glide ratio and minimum speed are independent of flying mass.
+- D) only the maximum glide ratio is independent of flying mass, apart from a minor Reynolds number effect.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because when comparing polar curves for different masses, the tangent from the origin touches each curve at the same angle, meaning the maximum lift-to-drag ratio (best glide ratio) is essentially unchanged by mass, apart from minor Reynolds number effects. However, the speed at which this best glide ratio occurs increases with mass. A is wrong because increasing mass always increases the sink rate at any given speed. B is wrong because minimum speed increases with mass (proportional to the square root of mass ratio). C is wrong because while glide ratio is mass-independent, minimum speed is not.
+
+### Q76: At what indicated speed do you approach an aerodrome located at an altitude of 1800 m AMSL? ^t30q76
+- A) At the same speed as at sea level.
+- B) At a lower speed than at sea level.
+- C) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- D) At a higher speed than at sea level.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which directly relates to aerodynamic forces regardless of altitude. At 1800 m AMSL, air density is lower, so the TAS will be higher for the same IAS — but the aerodynamic forces (lift, stall characteristics) depend on IAS, not TAS. Therefore, the same indicated approach speed provides the same safety margins as at sea level. B is wrong because flying at a lower IAS would reduce the stall margin. D is wrong because a higher IAS is unnecessary and would result in excessive float. C is wrong because the minimum sink speed is not the correct approach speed.
+
+### Q77: At what speed must you fly to achieve the best glide ratio for a flying mass of 450 kg? (See attached sheet.)... ^t30q77
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130km/h
+- B) 90km/h
+- C) 70km/h
+- D) 110km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (90 km/h) because the best glide ratio speed is found where the tangent from the origin touches the speed polar curve for 450 kg. For this glider type at 450 kg, this occurs at approximately 90 km/h. A (130 km/h) is too fast — at this speed the glide ratio is significantly reduced. C (70 km/h) is closer to the minimum sink speed, which maximises endurance but not distance. D (110 km/h) would give a reduced glide ratio compared to the optimum.
+
+### Q78: The maximum aft CG limit is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^t30q78
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) As long as the maximum takeoff mass is not exceeded, no particular action is required.
+- C) Redistribute the useful load differently.
+- D) Trim forward.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when the aft C.G. limit is exceeded, the useful load must be redistributed to move mass forward — for example, adding nose ballast, repositioning equipment, or adjusting the pilot's seating position. This physically moves the C.G. within approved limits. A is wrong because trimming aft would worsen the situation aerodynamically. B is wrong because being within mass limits does not compensate for a C.G. out of limits — both must be satisfied independently. D is wrong because trim adjusts aerodynamic forces but does not change the actual C.G. position.
+
+### Q79: Which factors increase the aerotow takeoff run distance? ^t30q79
+- A) Low temperature, headwind.
+- B) Grass runway, strong headwind.
+- C) High atmospheric pressure.
+- D) High temperature, tailwind.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because high temperature reduces air density, decreasing the lift generated at any given groundspeed, requiring a longer acceleration to reach flying speed. A tailwind reduces the headwind component, meaning the aircraft needs a higher groundspeed to achieve the same airspeed, further lengthening the takeoff run. A is wrong because low temperature increases air density (more lift) and headwind shortens the run. B is wrong because a strong headwind shortens the takeoff distance. C is wrong because high atmospheric pressure increases density, which helps rather than hinders takeoff performance.
+
+### Q80: The following NOTAM was published for 18 November. Which of these statements is correct? ^t30q80
+![[figures/t30_q80.png]]
+- A) On 18 November, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: Class E airspace, upper limit: max. FL150.
+- B) On 18 November from 1800 LT to 2100 LT, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas.
+- C) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise with helicopters will take place.
+- D) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: GND, upper limit: max. 15,000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the NOTAM specifies a military night flying exercise on 18 November from 1800 to 2100 UTC in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN, and TICINO areas, with vertical limits from GND to 15,000 ft AMSL. A is wrong because the lower limit is GND, not Class E airspace, and the upper limit is 15,000 ft AMSL, not FL150. B is wrong because the times are in UTC, not local time. C is wrong because it incorrectly specifies helicopter-only operations and omits the geographic areas.
+
+### Q81: What is the maximum permitted flying altitude within the CTR of Bern-Belp airport? ^t30q81
+![[figures/t30_q81.png]]
+- A) 5500 ft GND.
+- B) 4500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 5000 ft AMSL
+- D) 3000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the CTR (Control Zone) of Bern-Belp airport has an upper limit of 3000 ft AMSL. Above this altitude, you exit the CTR and enter different airspace. A (5500 ft GND) does not match the published limit. B (4500 ft AMSL) is too high. C (5000 ft AMSL) is also too high. VFR flight within the CTR requires a clearance from Bern Tower and must remain below the published upper limit.
+
+### Q82: In which airspace class are you above BEX aerodrome at an altitude of 1700 m AMSL, and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^t30q82
+![[figures/t30_q82.png]]
+- A) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- B) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 8 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- C) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at 1700 m AMSL above Bex aerodrome, you are in Class E airspace. VFR minima in Class E require 5 km horizontal visibility, 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance, and 300 m vertical cloud clearance. A is wrong because Class G applies at lower altitudes with reduced requirements. B is wrong because Class C has the right visibility minimum (5 km in Switzerland, not 8 km) but starts at a much higher altitude. C is wrong for the same airspace classification reason — Class C begins at FL 130, well above 1700 m.
+
+### Q83: Which is the sink rate at 160 km/h for this glider at a flying mass of 580 kg? (See attached sheet.) ^t30q83
+![[figures/t30_q83.png]]
+- A) 1,6m/s
+- B) 0,8m/s
+- C) 2,0m/s
+- D) 1,2m/s
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (2.0 m/s) because reading the speed polar curve for a flying mass of 580 kg at 160 km/h, the sink rate is approximately 2.0 m/s. A (1.6 m/s) would correspond to a lighter mass or lower speed. B (0.8 m/s) is near the minimum sink rate at much lower speed. D (1.2 m/s) is also too low for this speed and mass combination. When reading a speed polar, always identify the correct curve for the given mass before reading the value at the specified speed.
+
+### Q84: 550 kg (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs):... ^t30q84
+- A) approx. 12,100 lbs.
+- B) approx. 1210 lbs.
+- C) approx. 2500 lbs.
+- D) approx. 250 lbs.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because to convert kilograms to pounds, multiply by 2.2: 550 x 2.2 = 1,210 lbs. A (12,100 lbs) results from multiplying by 22 instead of 2.2. C (2,500 lbs) does not correspond to any correct calculation. D (250 lbs) results from dividing instead of multiplying. The key formula is: weight in lbs = mass in kg x 2.2.
+
+### Q85: At what speed must a glider fly in calm air to cover the maximum possible distance? ^t30q85
+- A) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- B) At the maximum allowed speed.
+- C) At minimum flying speed.
+- D) At the best glide ratio speed.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the best glide ratio speed (also called best L/D speed) maximises the horizontal distance covered per unit of altitude lost in still air. This speed is found on the polar curve where the tangent from the origin touches the curve. A is wrong because minimum sink speed maximises endurance (time aloft), not distance. B is wrong because maximum speed produces the worst glide ratio due to high parasite drag. C is wrong because minimum flying speed is near the stall and gives a poor glide ratio due to high induced drag.
+
+### Q86: The mass of a glider is increased. Which parameter will NOT be affected by this increase? ^t30q86
+- A) Maximum glide ratio (apart from a minor Reynolds number effect).
+- B) Wing loading.
+- C) Sink rate.
+- D) Indicated airspeed (IAS).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the maximum glide ratio (best L/D) is essentially independent of mass — both the lift coefficient and drag coefficient at the optimal angle of attack remain the same, so their ratio is unchanged. Only a minor Reynolds number effect exists. B is wrong because wing loading = mass / wing area, which directly increases with mass. C is wrong because sink rate increases with mass at any given speed. D is wrong because the speeds corresponding to best glide and minimum sink both increase with mass.
+
+### Q87: How long does it take to cover a distance of 150 km at an average ground speed of 100 km/h? ^t30q87
+- A) 1 hour 50 minutes.
+- B) 1 hour 40 minutes.
+- C) 2 hours.
+- D) 1 hour 30 minutes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because time = distance / speed = 150 km / 100 km/h = 1.5 hours = 1 hour 30 minutes. A (1 hour 50 minutes) would correspond to a distance of about 183 km. B (1 hour 40 minutes = 1.667 hours) would correspond to about 167 km. C (2 hours) would correspond to 200 km. The calculation is straightforward: 150 / 100 = 1.5 hours. Convert the decimal 0.5 hours to 30 minutes.
+
+### Q88: When preparing an alpine VFR flight along the route shown on the map below (dotted line) between MUNSTER and AMSTEG, you consult the DABS. You intend to fly this route on a summer weekday between 1445-1515 LT. According to the DABS, zones R-8 and R-8A are active during this period. Answer using the DABS map below and the ICAO aeronautical chart 1:500,000 Switzerland. Which of these answers is correct? ^t30q88
+![[figures/t30_q88.png]]
+- A) The route can be flown without restriction after contacting 128.375 MHz.
+- B) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be transited below 28,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) It is not possible to fly this route while the restricted zones are active.
+- D) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be overflown at 9200 ft AMSL or above.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because when restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A are active, they cover the planned alpine route between Munster and Amsteg, making it impossible to fly through them. Restricted zones with "entry prohibited" status cannot be transited, regardless of altitude or radio contact. A is wrong because radio contact does not grant transit rights through active restricted zones. B is wrong because a 28,000 ft ceiling does not help a glider. D is wrong because overflying at 9,200 ft may still be within the zone's vertical limits.
+
+### Q89: You wish to obtain clearance to transit the ZURICH TMA. What must you do? ^t30q89
+- A) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- B) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- C) First radio contact on frequency 118.975, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- D) First radio contact on frequency 118.1, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because to transit the Zurich TMA, the pilot must make first radio contact on frequency 124.7 MHz (Zurich Information) at least 10 minutes before entering the controlled airspace. This provides ATC sufficient time to assess traffic, issue a clearance or alternative instructions, and ensure separation. B is wrong because 5 minutes is insufficient lead time. C is wrong because 118.975 is not the correct frequency for Zurich TMA transit requests. D is wrong on both the frequency and the lead time.
+
+### Q90: The minimum speed of your glider is 60 kts in straight flight. By what percentage would it increase in a steep turn with a bank angle of 60 deg (load factor n = 2.0)? ^t30q90
+- A) approx. 40%.
+- B) 0%.
+- C) approx. 5%.
+- D) approx. 20%.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because in a turn, the stall speed increases by the square root of the load factor: Vs_turn = Vs_straight x sqrt(n). With n = 2.0: Vs_turn = 60 x sqrt(2) = 60 x 1.414 = 84.85 kts. The increase is (84.85 - 60) / 60 x 100 = 41.4%, which rounds to approximately 40%. B is wrong because the stall speed always increases in a turn. C (5%) and D (20%) significantly underestimate the effect. This relationship between bank angle, load factor, and stall speed is fundamental to safe manoeuvring flight.
+
+### Q91: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1... ^t30q91
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- D) 1.500 ft GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because restricted airspace areas (LO R) on aeronautical charts express their limits using standard altitude references. LO R 16 has an upper limit of 1,500 ft MSL (mean sea level), which is a fixed, absolute altitude. A is wrong because 1,500 m MSL would be approximately 4,900 ft — a completely different altitude that confuses feet with metres. B is wrong because FL150 (15,000 ft pressure altitude) is far too high for a typical low-level restriction. D is wrong because 1,500 ft GND (above ground level) would vary with terrain elevation and is not the published reference.
+
+### Q92: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2... ^t30q92
+- A) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- B) 4.500 ft MSL
+- C) 1.500 ft AGL
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because LO R 4 has its upper limit at 4,500 ft MSL, a fixed altitude above mean sea level. A is wrong because 4,500 ft AGL (above ground level) would vary with terrain, which is inappropriate for a fixed regulatory boundary. C is wrong because 1,500 ft AGL is both the wrong altitude value and the wrong reference. D is wrong because 1,500 ft MSL is too low and corresponds to a different restricted area (LO R 16).
+
+### Q93: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3... ^t30q93
+- A) Height 9500 ft
+- B) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- C) Flight Level 95
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the NOTAM prohibits overflight up to an altitude of 9,500 ft MSL, following ICAO convention where "altitude" refers to height above mean sea level. A is wrong because "height" in aviation terminology means above a local ground reference (AGL), which is not what the NOTAM specifies. C is wrong because FL 95 is a pressure altitude reference based on 1013.25 hPa, which differs from an MSL altitude depending on actual atmospheric conditions. D is wrong because 9,500 m MSL would be approximately 31,000 ft — clearly inconsistent with a typical VFR NOTAM.
+
+### Q94: (For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4... ^t30q94
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol C in the annex) because ICAO aeronautical chart symbology (defined in ICAO Annex 4) uses specific symbols to distinguish between single and grouped obstacles, and between lighted and unlighted ones. Symbol C represents a group of unlighted obstacles. A (symbol D), C (symbol B), and D (symbol A) represent other obstacle categories such as single obstacles, lighted groups, or lighted single obstacles. Correct identification of these symbols is essential for cross-country flight planning and obstacle avoidance.
+
+### Q95: (For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5... ^t30q95
+- A) D
+- B) A
+- C) C
+- D) B
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (symbol A in the annex) because ICAO chart symbology uses distinct depictions for different aerodrome types — civil versus military, international versus domestic, and paved versus unpaved. Symbol A represents a civil (non-international) airport with a paved runway. A (symbol D), C (symbol C), and D (symbol B) represent other aerodrome categories such as international airports, military aerodromes, or grass-strip airfields. Glider pilots must recognise these symbols when identifying potential emergency landing options.
+
+### Q96: (For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6... ^t30q96
+- A) A
+- B) B
+- C) D
+- D) C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D (symbol C in the annex) because on ICAO aeronautical charts, a general spot elevation is indicated by a specific symbol showing a terrain point of known height, used for situational awareness and terrain clearance planning. A (symbol A), B (symbol B), and C (symbol D) represent other elevation-related markings such as maximum elevation figures, surveyed points, or obstruction elevations defined in ICAO Annex 4.
+
+### Q97: The term center of gravity is defined as… ^t30q97
+- A) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- B) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A. The center of gravity is the single point through which the resultant of all gravitational forces acts on the aircraft — it is the mass-weighted average position of all components. B is wrong because the neutral point is a distinct aerodynamic concept used for stability analysis, not another name for C.G. C duplicates the same incorrect description as A's wording, but the C.G. is defined by mass distribution, not as a geometric midpoint. D is wrong because the C.G. is not the heaviest point — it is where the total weight effectively acts.
+
+### Q98: The term moment with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as… ^t30q98
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because in mass-and-balance calculations, moment is defined as the product of mass and balance arm: Moment = Mass x Arm (e.g., in kg-m or lb-in). This follows the physical definition of a torque. The total C.G. is found by summing all moments and dividing by total mass. A is wrong because adding mass and arm is dimensionally meaningless. C is wrong because dividing mass by arm does not produce a moment. D is wrong because subtracting them is equally incorrect.
+
+### Q99: The term balance arm in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the… ^t30q99
+- A) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- B) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the balance arm (moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum reference point to the center of gravity of a specific mass item. A is wrong because that describes the datum itself, not the balance arm. B is wrong because balance arms are measured from the datum, not from the overall aircraft C.G. D is wrong because that is the definition of the center of gravity of a mass item, not the balance arm.
+
+### Q100: Which is the purpose of interception lines in visual navigation? ^t30q100
+- A) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- B) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+- C) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- D) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because interception lines (also called catching lines or line features) are prominent linear ground features — motorways, rivers, coastlines, railways — that a pilot selects during pre-flight planning to navigate toward if orientation is lost. By flying toward a known interception line, the pilot can re-establish position and resume navigation. A is wrong because interception lines are geographic features, not airport markers. B is wrong because they are not range indicators. C is wrong because nothing authorises continuing flight below VFR minima — interception lines are a lost-procedure tool, not a visibility workaround.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_51_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_51_100_fr.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..04dd88d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_30_51_100_fr.md
@@ -0,0 +1,515 @@
+### Q51: 1235 lbs (arrondi) correspondent à (1 kg = env. 2,2 lbs) :… ^t30q51
+- A) env. 620 kg.
+- B) env. 2720 kg.
+- C) env. 560 kg.
+- D) env. 2470 kg.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car pour convertir des livres en kilogrammes, on divise par 2,2 : 1235 / 2,2 = 561,4 kg, ce qui s'arrondit à environ 560 kg. A (620 kg) correspondrait à environ 1364 lbs. B (2720 kg) résulte d'une multiplication au lieu d'une division. D (2470 kg) est également le résultat d'une erreur de multiplication.
+
+### Q52: Qu'est-ce qui doit être particulièrement observé lors d'un atterrissage sur un terrain en montée avec vent arrière ? ^t30q52
+- A) Voler en finale un peu plus vite que d'habitude.
+- B) Arrondir plus haut que d'habitude.
+- C) Voler à la vitesse d'approche normale (triangle jaune).
+- D) Vous devez atterrir avec tous les aérofreins pleinement sortis.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car sur un terrain en montée avec vent arrière, les effets concurrents se compensent partiellement : la pente montante raccourcit la distance de roulement tandis que le vent arrière l'allonge. La vitesse d'approche normale (triangle jaune sur l'anémomètre) offre le bon équilibre en gestion d'énergie. A est faux car une approche plus rapide entraînerait un flottement excessif sur la pente. B est faux car un arrondi plus haut risque un ballooning sur la pente. D est faux car les aérofreins pleinement sortis peuvent provoquer une descente trop raide en courte finale.
+
+### Q53: Dans quelle classe d'espace aérien êtes-vous au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Langenthal (47°10'58''N / 007°44'29''E) à une altitude de 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), et quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages ? ^t30q53
+- A) Espace aérien de classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- B) Espace aérien de classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, hors des nuages avec vue continue du sol.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe D, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- D) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 2000 m AMSL au-dessus de Langenthal, vous êtes en espace aérien de classe E. Le vol VFR en classe E exige 5 km de visibilité horizontale, 1500 m d'espacement horizontal aux nuages et 300 m d'espacement vertical. B est faux car la classe G avec ses minima réduits ne s'applique qu'à très basse altitude. C est faux car il n'y a pas de TMA de classe D à cet endroit. D est faux car la classe C commence au FL 130 dans cette région.
+
+### Q54: Quelle position du centre de gravité est la plus dangereuse pour un planeur ? ^t30q54
+- A) Trop en avant.
+- B) Trop bas.
+- C) Trop en arrière.
+- D) Trop haut.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque le C.G. est trop en arrière, le planeur perd sa stabilité statique longitudinale — le nez tend à cabrer sans revenir à l'équilibre, pouvant mener à des oscillations divergentes incontrôlables ou à un décrochage/vrille. A (trop en avant) est moins dangereux car l'aéronef reste stable. B et D sont faux car le déplacement vertical du C.G. n'est pas la préoccupation principale.
+
+### Q55: Comment la VNE indiquée (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser) change-t-elle lorsque l'altitude augmente ? ^t30q55
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle reste la même ; le badin compense automatiquement.
+- D) Elle diminue.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le badin mesure la pression dynamique, qui tient intrinsèquement compte de la densité de l'air. Le repère VNE sur le badin (trait rouge) représente une valeur fixe d'IAS correspondant à la limite structurelle. Cependant, la VNE admissible en IAS doit effectivement être réduite en haute altitude selon le tableau vitesse-altitude du manuel de vol. A et B/D sont faux car le repère physique sur l'instrument ne bouge pas.
+
+### Q56: Vous avez parcouru une distance de 150 km en 1 heure et 15 minutes. Votre vitesse sol calculée est :… ^t30q56
+- A) 125 km/h.
+- B) 115 km/h.
+- C) 120 km/h.
+- D) 110 km/h.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car vitesse sol = distance / temps = 150 km / 1,25 heures = 120 km/h. L'étape clé est la conversion de 1 heure 15 minutes en heures décimales : 15 minutes = 0,25 heure, donc le temps total = 1,25 heures. A (125 km/h) résulte d'une division par 1,2 heures. B (115 km/h) et D (110 km/h) ne correspondent à aucun calcul correct avec ces données.
+
+### Q57: Le NOTAM suivant a été publié le 18 août (heure d'été). Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t30q57
+![[figures/t30_q57.png]]
+- A) La CTR/TMA Payerne étendue et la zone restreinte LS-R4 doivent être strictement évitées chaque jour du 02 au 06 septembre 2013, entre le lever et le coucher du soleil.
+- B) Un meeting aérien a lieu dans la région de Payerne du 02 au 06 septembre 2013. La TMA Payerne et la zone restreinte LS-R4 sont actives chaque jour pendant cette période entre 0600 UTC et 1500 UTC comme zones d'attente et secteurs de démonstration.
+- C) En raison d'un meeting aérien du 02 au 06 septembre 2013, la CTR/TMA Payerne étendue est active chaque jour entre 0600 UTC et 1500 UTC. La TMA est utilisée comme zone d'attente, la zone restreinte LS-R4 comme zone de démonstration et d'attente. La zone doit être strictement évitée.
+- D) En raison d'un meeting aérien, une clairance de transit pour la CTR/TMA Payerne étendue et la zone restreinte LS-R4 doit être demandée sur la fréquence 135.475 (Payerne TWR) du 02 au 06 septembre 2013.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le NOTAM établit que du 2 au 6 septembre 2013, entre 0600 et 1500 UTC, la CTR/TMA Payerne étendue est activée comme zone d'attente, tandis que LS-R4 sert de zone de démonstration et d'attente pour un meeting aérien. Ces zones doivent être strictement évitées pendant la période active. A est faux car les horaires sont 0600-1500 UTC, pas du lever au coucher du soleil. B décrit incorrectement les deux zones. D est faux car le transit n'est pas autorisé.
+
+### Q58: Quelle est la meilleure vitesse de plané en air calme pour une masse en vol de 450 kg ? Voir feuille annexée. ^t30q58
+![[figures/t30_q58.png]]
+- A) 95 km/h
+- B) 75 km/h
+- C) 55 km/h
+- D) 135 km/h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (75 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve en traçant la tangente depuis l'origine jusqu'à la courbe de la polaire pour 450 kg. A (95 km/h) est trop rapide et correspondrait à une masse plus lourde ou une polaire différente. C (55 km/h) est proche de la vitesse de décrochage. D (135 km/h) se situe dans la plage de haute vitesse où la finesse est significativement réduite.
+
+### Q59: Un vol VFR suivra la route indiquée sur la carte ci-dessous (ligne pointillée) d'APPENZELL vers MUOTATHAL. La route est prévue pour le 19 mars 2013 (heure d'hiver) entre 1205 et 1255 LT. Répondez en utilisant le DABS ci-dessous. Laquelle de ces réponses est correcte ? ^t30q59
+![[figures/t30_q59.png]]
+- A) Le DABS peut être ignoré car il ne s'applique qu'aux aéronefs militaires.
+- B) Vous pouvez traverser toutes les zones de danger et zones restreintes pertinentes en dessous de 1000 ft AGL ou au-dessus de 10 000 ft AMSL.
+- C) La route peut être effectuée sans coordination entre 1200 et 1300 LT.
+- D) Il n'est pas possible de voler la route prévue ce jour-là.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car en vérifiant le DABS pour le 19 mars 2013 (heure d'hiver, CET = UTC+1), l'heure prévue de 1205-1255 LT se convertit en 1105-1155 UTC. Pendant cette période, les zones de danger et zones restreintes pertinentes le long de la route ne sont pas actives, permettant de voler la route sans coordination. A est faux car le DABS s'applique à tous les usagers de l'espace aérien. B est faux car les exemptions d'altitude ne s'appliquent pas automatiquement. D est faux car la route est praticable pendant le créneau horaire spécifié.
+
+### Q60: La charge alaire est augmentée de 40 % par du ballast d'eau. De quel pourcentage la vitesse minimale du planeur augmente-t-elle ? ^t30q60
+- A) 18 %.
+- B) 40 %.
+- C) 100 %.
+- D) 0 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la vitesse de décrochage (et donc la vitesse minimale) est proportionnelle à la racine carrée de la charge alaire. Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % (facteur 1,4), la nouvelle vitesse minimale est l'originale multipliée par √1,4 ≈ 1,183 — soit une augmentation d'environ 18,3 %. B est faux car la vitesse n'augmente pas linéairement avec la charge alaire. C est faux car une augmentation de 100 % signifierait un doublement. D est faux car toute augmentation de masse élève la vitesse minimale.
+
+### Q61: D'après la polaire ci-dessous, quelle affirmation s'applique à une vitesse de 150 km/h ? Voir feuille annexée… ^t30q61
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) Le taux de chute de l'ASK21 est indépendant de sa masse
+- B) L'ASK21 a une moins bonne finesse à plus faible masse en vol
+- C) L'ASK21 a un taux de chute plus élevé à plus grande masse en vol
+- D) L'ASK21 a une meilleure finesse à plus faible masse en vol
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 150 km/h, les deux courbes polaires pour différentes masses de l'ASK21 se croisent, ce qui signifie que les deux configurations ont le même taux de chute à cette vitesse particulière. B est faux car à 150 km/h la finesse est identique pour les deux masses. C est faux car les taux de chute sont identiques au point d'intersection. D est également faux car aucune masse n'a une meilleure finesse à cette vitesse.
+
+### Q62: À l'aérodrome d'Amlikon, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction de l'Est ? ^t30q62
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780 m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700 m.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (780 m) car la carte AIP de l'aérodrome d'Amlikon indique une distance d'atterrissage disponible maximale de 780 mètres en direction de l'Est. A et C sont faux car les distances en Suisse sont données en mètres, pas en pieds. D (700 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées.
+
+### Q63: À partir de quelle altitude devez-vous demander une clairance de transit pour la TMA EMMEN entre Cham (env. N47°11' / E008°28') et Hitzkirch (env. N47°14' / E008°16') ? ^t30q63
+![[figures/t30_q63.png]]
+- A) 2400 ft AMSL.
+- B) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 2000 ft GND.
+- D) 5000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la limite inférieure de la TMA EMMEN entre Cham et Hitzkirch est à 3500 ft AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, vous restez en espace aérien non contrôlé et aucune clairance n'est nécessaire. Au-dessus de 3500 ft AMSL, vous entrez dans la TMA et devez obtenir une clairance ATC. A (2400 ft) est trop bas. C (2000 ft GND) utilise une référence au-dessus du sol. D (5000 ft) est trop haut.
+
+### Q64: La charge utile maximale autorisée est dépassée. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t30q64
+- A) Trimmer en arrière.
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse de décollage de 10 %.
+- C) Trimmer en avant.
+- D) Réduire la charge utile.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car lorsque la charge utile maximale autorisée est dépassée, la seule action correcte est de réduire la charge utile jusqu'à ce qu'elle soit conforme à la limite. A et C sont faux car le trim ajuste les forces aérodynamiques sur l'empennage mais ne modifie ni la masse ni le C.G. B est faux car augmenter la vitesse de décollage ne résout pas une surcharge.
+
+### Q65: Quel est l'effet du vent sur l'angle de descente par rapport au sol si la vitesse vraie de l'aéronef reste constante ? ^t30q65
+- A) Avec un vent arrière, l'angle de descente augmente.
+- B) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de descente diminue.
+- C) Le vent n'a aucun effet sur l'angle de descente.
+- D) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de descente augmente.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car un vent de face réduit la vitesse sol tandis que le taux de chute dans la masse d'air reste inchangé. L'angle de descente par rapport au sol se raidit. A est faux car un vent arrière diminue l'angle de descente. B est faux car un vent de face augmente l'angle. C est faux car le vent affecte significativement l'angle de descente sol.
+
+### Q66: Comment la vitesse indiquée (IAS) se compare-t-elle à la vitesse vraie (TAS) lorsque l'altitude augmente ? ^t30q66
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle ne peut pas être mesurée.
+- D) Elle reste identique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car lorsque l'altitude augmente, la densité de l'air diminue. Pour une même TAS, le tube de Pitot mesure moins de pression dynamique, de sorte que l'IAS affichée est inférieure à la TAS. A est faux car l'IAS n'augmente pas par rapport à la TAS avec l'altitude. C est faux car l'IAS peut toujours être mesurée. D est faux car l'IAS et la TAS divergent de plus en plus avec l'altitude.
+
+### Q67: Qu'est-ce qui doit être particulièrement observé lors d'un atterrissage sous forte pluie ? ^t30q67
+- A) La vitesse d'approche doit être augmentée.
+- B) La charge alaire doit être augmentée.
+- C) L'angle d'approche doit être plus faible que d'habitude.
+- D) La vitesse d'approche doit être inférieure à la normale.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la forte pluie sur la surface de l'aile augmente la rugosité et peut dégrader la couche limite, ce qui peut élever la vitesse de décrochage et réduire le coefficient de portance maximal. Une vitesse d'approche plus élevée offre une marge de sécurité. B est faux car augmenter la charge alaire sous la pluie est impraticable. C est faux car une approche plus plate réduit la marge de franchissement. D est faux car une vitesse plus basse réduit la marge de sécurité.
+
+### Q68: Que doit prendre en compte un pilote de planeur à l'aérodrome de Bex ? ^t30q68
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens horaire.
+- B) Le circuit pour la piste 15 est dans le sens horaire.
+- C) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens antihoraire.
+- D) Selon le vent, le circuit pour la piste 33 peut être soit dans le sens horaire soit dans le sens antihoraire.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à l'aérodrome de Bex, les contraintes du terrain signifient que le sens du circuit pour la piste 33 dépend des conditions de vent. La carte montre qu'un circuit à gauche ou à droite peut être utilisé. A est faux car cela limite le circuit au sens horaire uniquement. B concerne la piste 15. C est faux car cela limite le circuit au sens antihoraire uniquement.
+
+### Q69: Quelle est l'altitude maximale de vol au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Biel Kappelen (SE de Biel) si vous souhaitez éviter de demander une clairance de transit pour la TMA BERN 1 ? ^t30q69
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la limite inférieure de la TMA BERN 1 au-dessus de Biel Kappelen est à 3500 ft AMSL. En restant en dessous, vous demeurez en espace aérien non contrôlé. A est faux car les limites de TMA sont référencées au MSL. B est bien au-dessus de la limite. C convertit en environ 3500 ft en atmosphère standard mais les niveaux de vol utilisent 1013,25 hPa.
+
+### Q70: Laquelle de ces affirmations est correcte ? ^t30q70
+- A) Nouveau C.G. : 76,7, dans les limites approuvées.
+- B) Nouveau C.G. : 78,5, dans les limites approuvées.
+- C) Nouveau C.G. : 82,0, hors des limites approuvées.
+- D) Nouveau C.G. : 75,5, hors des limites approuvées.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en appliquant le calcul de masse et centrage avec les données fournies, la nouvelle position du C.G. se calcule à 76,7, ce qui se situe dans les limites approuvées. B (78,5) est un résultat incorrect. C (82,0) serait hors limites. D (75,5) est un calcul erroné.
+
+### Q71: Quel est l'effet d'une piste herbeuse détrempée sur l'atterrissage ? ^t30q71
+- A) La distance d'atterrissage sera plus courte.
+- B) La distance d'atterrissage sera plus longue.
+- C) Le planeur risque de sortir de piste (tête-à-queue).
+- D) Aucun effet.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car une surface herbeuse détrempée crée une friction et une résistance au roulement plus importantes sur le train d'atterrissage, ce qui freine le planeur plus rapidement et réduit la distance d'arrêt. B est faux car l'herbe mouillée augmente la résistance au roulement pour un planeur. C est faux car l'effet principal est le raccourcissement de la distance. D est faux car l'état de la surface affecte toujours la distance.
+
+### Q72: À l'aérodrome de Schänis, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction NNO ? ^t30q72
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470 m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (470 m) car la carte AIP de l'aérodrome de Schänis indique une distance d'atterrissage disponible maximale de 470 mètres en direction NNO. A (520 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées. C et D sont faux car les distances en Suisse sont données en mètres.
+
+### Q73: La masse actuelle d'un aéronef est de 6400 lbs. CG actuel : 80. Limites CG : CG avant : 75,2, CG arrière : 80,5. Quelle masse peut être déplacée de sa position actuelle au bras de levier 150 sans dépasser la limite arrière du CG ? ^t30q73
+- A) 27,82 lbs.
+- B) 56,63 lbs.
+- C) 39,45 lbs.
+- D) 45,71 lbs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D (45,71 lbs). Le calcul utilise la formule de déplacement : ΔCG = (x × Δbras) / masse totale. On obtient : 0,5 = (x × 70) / 6400, donc x = (0,5 × 6400) / 70 = 45,71 lbs. A (27,82), B (56,63) et C (39,45) résultent de calculs incorrects.
+
+### Q74: Le chargement correct d'un aéronef dépend de :… ^t30q74
+- A) Uniquement du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- B) Uniquement de la distribution correcte de la charge utile.
+- C) De la distribution correcte de la charge utile et du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- D) De la masse maximale autorisée des bagages dans la section arrière de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car un chargement correct exige de satisfaire deux conditions indépendantes simultanément : la masse totale ne doit pas dépasser la MTOM, et la charge utile doit être distribuée pour que le C.G. reste dans l'enveloppe approuvée. A est faux car la masse seule ne garantit pas le centrage. B est faux car la distribution seule ne garantit pas la masse. D est faux car cela ne traite que d'un compartiment.
+
+### Q75: Quelle information peut-on lire sur cette polaire des vitesses ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q75
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) Dans la plage de vitesses jusqu'à 100 km/h, une augmentation de la masse en vol réduit le taux de chute.
+- B) La vitesse minimale est indépendante de la masse en vol.
+- C) Tant la finesse que la vitesse minimale sont indépendantes de la masse en vol.
+- D) Seule la finesse maximale est indépendante de la masse en vol, à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car en comparant les courbes polaires pour différentes masses, la tangente depuis l'origine touche chaque courbe au même angle, ce qui signifie que le rapport L/D maximal est essentiellement inchangé par la masse. Cependant, la vitesse correspondante augmente avec la masse. A est faux car l'augmentation de la masse augmente toujours le taux de chute. B est faux car la vitesse minimale augmente avec la masse. C est faux car la vitesse minimale n'est pas indépendante de la masse.
+
+### Q76: À quelle vitesse indiquée effectuez-vous une approche sur un aérodrome situé à 1800 m AMSL ? ^t30q76
+- A) À la même vitesse qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- B) À une vitesse inférieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+- C) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimum.
+- D) À une vitesse supérieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le badin mesure la pression dynamique, directement liée aux forces aérodynamiques indépendamment de l'altitude. À 1800 m AMSL, la TAS sera plus élevée pour la même IAS, mais les forces aérodynamiques dépendent de l'IAS. La même IAS d'approche offre les mêmes marges de sécurité. B est faux car une IAS plus basse réduirait la marge de décrochage. D est faux car une IAS plus élevée est inutile. C est faux car ce n'est pas la vitesse d'approche correcte.
+
+### Q77: À quelle vitesse devez-vous voler pour obtenir la meilleure finesse pour une masse en vol de 450 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q77
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130 km/h
+- B) 90 km/h
+- C) 70 km/h
+- D) 110 km/h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (90 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve au point de tangence depuis l'origine sur la polaire pour 450 kg. A (130 km/h) est trop rapide. C (70 km/h) est la vitesse de taux de chute minimum. D (110 km/h) donnerait une finesse réduite.
+
+### Q78: La limite arrière maximale du CG est dépassée. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t30q78
+- A) Trimmer en arrière.
+- B) Tant que la masse maximale au décollage n'est pas dépassée, aucune action particulière n'est requise.
+- C) Redistribuer la charge utile différemment.
+- D) Trimmer en avant.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque la limite arrière du C.G. est dépassée, la charge utile doit être redistribuée pour déplacer la masse vers l'avant. A est faux car trimmer en arrière aggraverait la situation. B est faux car être dans les limites de masse ne compense pas un C.G. hors limites. D est faux car le trim ajuste les forces aérodynamiques mais ne change pas la position réelle du C.G.
+
+### Q79: Quels facteurs augmentent la distance de décollage en remorqué ? ^t30q79
+- A) Basse température, vent de face.
+- B) Piste en herbe, vent de face fort.
+- C) Pression atmosphérique élevée.
+- D) Haute température, vent arrière.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car une haute température réduit la densité de l'air, diminuant la portance et nécessitant une accélération plus longue. Un vent arrière réduit la composante de vent de face, allongeant encore la distance. A est faux car une basse température et un vent de face raccourcissent la distance. B est faux car un vent de face fort raccourcit la distance. C est faux car une pression élevée augmente la densité.
+
+### Q80: Le NOTAM suivant a été publié pour le 18 novembre. Laquelle de ces affirmations est correcte ? ^t30q80
+![[figures/t30_q80.png]]
+- A) Le 18 novembre, un exercice de vol militaire de nuit aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TICINO. Limite inférieure : espace aérien de classe E, limite supérieure : max. FL150.
+- B) Le 18 novembre de 1800 LT à 2100 LT, un exercice de vol militaire de nuit aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TICINO.
+- C) Le 18 novembre de 1800 UTC à 2100 UTC, un exercice de vol militaire de nuit avec hélicoptères aura lieu.
+- D) Le 18 novembre de 1800 UTC à 2100 UTC, un exercice de vol militaire de nuit aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TICINO. Limite inférieure : GND, limite supérieure : max. 15 000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car le NOTAM spécifie un exercice de vol militaire de nuit le 18 novembre de 1800 à 2100 UTC dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TICINO, avec des limites verticales de GND à 15 000 ft AMSL. A est faux car la limite inférieure est GND, pas la classe E. B est faux car les horaires sont en UTC, pas en heure locale. C est faux car il n'est pas spécifié hélicoptères uniquement.
+
+### Q81: Quelle est l'altitude maximale de vol autorisée dans la CTR de l'aéroport de Berne-Belp ? ^t30q81
+![[figures/t30_q81.png]]
+- A) 5500 ft GND.
+- B) 4500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 5000 ft AMSL
+- D) 3000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la CTR de l'aéroport de Berne-Belp a une limite supérieure de 3000 ft AMSL. Au-dessus, vous quittez la CTR. A (5500 ft GND) ne correspond pas. B (4500 ft AMSL) est trop haut. C (5000 ft AMSL) est également trop haut.
+
+### Q82: Dans quelle classe d'espace aérien êtes-vous au-dessus de l'aérodrome de BEX à une altitude de 1700 m AMSL, et quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages ? ^t30q82
+![[figures/t30_q82.png]]
+- A) Espace aérien de classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, hors des nuages avec vue continue du sol.
+- B) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 8 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- D) Espace aérien de classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à 1700 m AMSL au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Bex, vous êtes en espace aérien de classe E. Les minima VFR en classe E exigent 5 km de visibilité horizontale, 1500 m d'espacement horizontal aux nuages et 300 m d'espacement vertical. A est faux car la classe G s'applique à des altitudes plus basses. B et C sont faux car la classe C commence au FL 130.
+
+### Q83: Quel est le taux de chute à 160 km/h pour ce planeur à une masse en vol de 580 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q83
+![[figures/t30_q83.png]]
+- A) 1,6 m/s
+- B) 0,8 m/s
+- C) 2,0 m/s
+- D) 1,2 m/s
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C (2,0 m/s) car en lisant la courbe polaire pour une masse de 580 kg à 160 km/h, le taux de chute est d'environ 2,0 m/s. A (1,6 m/s) correspondrait à une masse plus faible ou une vitesse inférieure. B (0,8 m/s) est proche du taux de chute minimum. D (1,2 m/s) est également trop bas pour cette vitesse et cette masse.
+
+### Q84: 550 kg (arrondi) correspondent à (1 kg = env. 2,2 lbs) :… ^t30q84
+- A) env. 12 100 lbs.
+- B) env. 1210 lbs.
+- C) env. 2500 lbs.
+- D) env. 250 lbs.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car pour convertir des kilogrammes en livres, on multiplie par 2,2 : 550 × 2,2 = 1 210 lbs. A (12 100 lbs) résulte d'une multiplication par 22 au lieu de 2,2. C (2 500 lbs) ne correspond à aucun calcul correct. D (250 lbs) résulte d'une division au lieu d'une multiplication.
+
+### Q85: À quelle vitesse un planeur doit-il voler en air calme pour couvrir la distance maximale possible ? ^t30q85
+- A) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimum.
+- B) À la vitesse maximale autorisée.
+- C) À la vitesse minimale de vol.
+- D) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la vitesse de meilleure finesse (vitesse de L/D maximal) maximise la distance horizontale parcourue par unité d'altitude perdue en air calme. A est faux car la vitesse de taux de chute minimum maximise l'endurance (durée de vol), pas la distance. B est faux car la vitesse maximale produit la pire finesse. C est faux car la vitesse minimale de vol donne une mauvaise finesse due à la traînée induite élevée.
+
+### Q86: La masse d'un planeur est augmentée. Quel paramètre ne sera PAS affecté par cette augmentation ? ^t30q86
+- A) La finesse maximale (à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près).
+- B) La charge alaire.
+- C) Le taux de chute.
+- D) La vitesse indiquée (IAS).
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la finesse maximale (meilleur L/D) est essentiellement indépendante de la masse — le coefficient de portance et le coefficient de traînée à l'angle d'attaque optimal restent les mêmes. B est faux car la charge alaire = masse / surface alaire, qui augmente directement. C est faux car le taux de chute augmente avec la masse. D est faux car les vitesses correspondant à la meilleure finesse et au taux de chute minimum augmentent avec la masse.
+
+### Q87: Combien de temps faut-il pour parcourir une distance de 150 km à une vitesse sol moyenne de 100 km/h ? ^t30q87
+- A) 1 heure 50 minutes.
+- B) 1 heure 40 minutes.
+- C) 2 heures.
+- D) 1 heure 30 minutes.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car temps = distance / vitesse = 150 km / 100 km/h = 1,5 heures = 1 heure 30 minutes. A (1 heure 50 minutes) correspondrait à une distance d'environ 183 km. B (1 heure 40 minutes) correspondrait à environ 167 km. C (2 heures) correspondrait à 200 km.
+
+### Q88: Lors de la préparation d'un vol VFR alpin le long de la route indiquée sur la carte (ligne pointillée) entre MUNSTER et AMSTEG, vous consultez le DABS. Vous prévoyez de voler cette route un jour de semaine d'été entre 1445 et 1515 LT. Selon le DABS, les zones R-8 et R-8A sont actives pendant cette période. Laquelle de ces réponses est correcte ? ^t30q88
+![[figures/t30_q88.png]]
+- A) La route peut être effectuée sans restriction après contact sur 128.375 MHz.
+- B) Les zones restreintes LS-R8 et LS-R8A peuvent être traversées en dessous de 28 000 ft AMSL.
+- C) Il n'est pas possible de voler cette route pendant que les zones restreintes sont actives.
+- D) Les zones restreintes LS-R8 et LS-R8A peuvent être survolées à 9200 ft AMSL ou au-dessus.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque les zones restreintes LS-R8 et LS-R8A sont actives, elles couvrent la route alpine prévue entre Munster et Amsteg, rendant impossible de les traverser. Les zones restreintes avec le statut « entrée interdite » ne peuvent pas être traversées. A est faux car le contact radio ne confère pas de droit de transit. B est faux car un plafond de 28 000 ft n'aide pas un planeur. D est faux car le survol à 9 200 ft peut encore se situer dans les limites verticales de la zone.
+
+### Q89: Vous souhaitez obtenir une clairance de transit pour la TMA ZURICH. Que devez-vous faire ? ^t30q89
+- A) Premier contact radio sur fréquence 124.7, au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans la TMA.
+- B) Premier contact radio sur fréquence 124.7, au moins 5 minutes avant d'entrer dans la TMA.
+- C) Premier contact radio sur fréquence 118.975, au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans la TMA.
+- D) Premier contact radio sur fréquence 118.1, au moins 5 minutes avant d'entrer dans la TMA.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car pour transiter la TMA de Zurich, le pilote doit établir le premier contact radio sur la fréquence 124.7 MHz (Zurich Information) au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans l'espace aérien contrôlé. B est faux car 5 minutes est un délai insuffisant. C est faux car 118.975 n'est pas la bonne fréquence. D est faux tant pour la fréquence que pour le délai.
+
+### Q90: La vitesse minimale de votre planeur est de 60 kts en vol rectiligne. De quel pourcentage augmenterait-elle dans un virage serré avec une inclinaison de 60° (facteur de charge n = 2,0) ? ^t30q90
+- A) env. 40 %.
+- B) 0 %.
+- C) env. 5 %.
+- D) env. 20 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en virage, la vitesse de décrochage augmente selon la racine carrée du facteur de charge : Vs_virage = Vs_palier × √n. Avec n = 2,0 : Vs_virage = 60 × √2 = 60 × 1,414 = 84,85 kts. L'augmentation est (84,85 − 60) / 60 × 100 = 41,4 %, arrondi à environ 40 %. B est faux car la vitesse de décrochage augmente toujours en virage. C (5 %) et D (20 %) sous-estiment significativement l'effet.
+
+### Q91: La limite supérieure de LO R 16 est égale à… Voir annexe (PFP-056)… ^t30q91
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- D) 1 500 ft GND.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la zone restreinte LO R 16 a une limite supérieure de 1 500 ft MSL, une altitude fixe et absolue. A est faux car 1 500 m MSL correspondrait à environ 4 900 ft. B est faux car FL150 (15 000 ft) est bien trop haut. D est faux car 1 500 ft GND varierait avec l'élévation du terrain.
+
+### Q92: La limite supérieure de LO R 4 est égale à… Voir annexe (PFP-030)… ^t30q92
+- A) 4 500 ft AGL.
+- B) 4 500 ft MSL
+- C) 1 500 ft AGL
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car LO R 4 a une limite supérieure de 4 500 ft MSL, une altitude fixe au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer. A est faux car 4 500 ft AGL varierait avec le terrain. C est faux car la valeur et la référence sont erronées. D est faux car 1 500 ft MSL correspond à une autre zone restreinte (LO R 16).
+
+### Q93: Jusqu'à quelle altitude un survol est-il interdit selon le NOTAM ? Voir figure (PFP-024)… ^t30q93
+- A) Hauteur 9500 ft
+- B) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- C) Niveau de vol 95
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car le NOTAM interdit le survol jusqu'à une altitude de 9 500 ft MSL, conformément à la convention OACI où « altitude » désigne la hauteur au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer. A est faux car « hauteur » désigne une référence locale au-dessus du sol. C est faux car le FL 95 est une référence de pression basée sur 1013,25 hPa. D est faux car 9 500 m MSL correspondrait à environ 31 000 ft.
+
+### Q94: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-061) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique un groupe d'obstacles non éclairés ? ^t30q94
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (symbole C dans l'annexe) car la symbologie OACI des cartes aéronautiques utilise des symboles spécifiques pour distinguer les obstacles isolés et groupés, éclairés et non éclairés. Le symbole C représente un groupe d'obstacles non éclairés.
+
+### Q95: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-062) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique un aéroport civil (non international) avec piste revêtue ? ^t30q95
+- A) D
+- B) A
+- C) C
+- D) B
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (symbole A dans l'annexe) car la symbologie OACI utilise des représentations distinctes pour les différents types d'aérodromes — civil contre militaire, international contre domestique, revêtu contre non revêtu. Le symbole A représente un aéroport civil (non international) avec piste revêtue.
+
+### Q96: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-063) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique une cote de point général ? ^t30q96
+- A) A
+- B) B
+- C) D
+- D) C
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D (symbole C dans l'annexe) car sur les cartes aéronautiques OACI, une cote de point général est indiquée par un symbole spécifique montrant un point du terrain d'altitude connue, utilisé pour la conscience situationnelle et la planification du franchissement du terrain.
+
+### Q97: Le terme centre de gravité est défini comme… ^t30q97
+- A) La moitié de la distance entre le point neutre et la ligne de référence.
+- B) Une autre désignation pour le point neutre.
+- C) La moitié de la distance entre le point neutre et la ligne de référence.
+- D) Le point le plus lourd d'un aéronef.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A. Le centre de gravité est le point unique à travers lequel la résultante de toutes les forces gravitationnelles agit sur l'aéronef — c'est la position moyenne pondérée par la masse de tous les composants. B est faux car le point neutre est un concept aérodynamique distinct. C est un doublon de la même description incorrecte. D est faux car le C.G. n'est pas le point le plus lourd — c'est le point où le poids total agit effectivement.
+
+### Q98: Le terme moment dans un calcul de masse et centrage désigne le… ^t30q98
+- A) Somme d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- B) Produit d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- C) Quotient d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- D) Différence d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car dans les calculs de masse et centrage, le moment est défini comme le produit de la masse et du bras de levier : Moment = Masse × Bras (p. ex. en kg·m ou lb·in). Le C.G. total se calcule en additionnant tous les moments et en divisant par la masse totale. A est faux car additionner masse et bras n'a pas de sens dimensionnel. C est faux car diviser ne produit pas un moment. D est faux car soustraire est également incorrect.
+
+### Q99: Le terme bras de levier dans le contexte d'un calcul de masse et centrage définit la… ^t30q99
+- A) Point sur l'axe longitudinal d'un aéronef ou son prolongement à partir duquel les centres de gravité de toutes les masses sont référencés.
+- B) Distance d'une masse par rapport au centre de gravité.
+- C) Distance entre le point de référence et le centre de gravité d'une masse.
+- D) Point à travers lequel la force de gravité est supposée agir sur une masse.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le bras de levier est la distance horizontale mesurée depuis le point de référence de l'aéronef jusqu'au centre de gravité d'un élément de masse spécifique. A est faux car cela décrit le point de référence lui-même. B est faux car les bras de levier sont mesurés depuis le point de référence, pas depuis le C.G. global. D est faux car cela est la définition du centre de gravité d'un élément de masse.
+
+### Q100: Quel est le rôle des lignes d'interception en navigation visuelle ? ^t30q100
+- A) Marquer le prochain aéroport disponible en route pendant le vol.
+- B) Visualiser la limitation de portée depuis l'aérodrome de départ.
+- C) Elles permettent de poursuivre le vol lorsque la visibilité en vol descend en dessous des minima VFR.
+- D) Elles servent de repères facilement reconnaissables en cas de perte d'orientation éventuelle.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les lignes d'interception (également appelées lignes de rattrapage ou éléments linéaires) sont des éléments linéaires remarquables au sol — autoroutes, rivières, côtes, voies ferrées — qu'un pilote sélectionne lors de la préparation du vol pour s'y diriger en cas de perte d'orientation. A est faux car ce sont des éléments géographiques, pas des marqueurs d'aéroport. B est faux car ce ne sont pas des indicateurs de portée. C est faux car rien n'autorise à poursuivre un vol en dessous des minima VFR.
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+### Q101: What illusion can occur when visual references are lost during a prolonged coordinated turn? ^t40q101
+- A) the impression of no longer being in a turn (wings level)
+- B) the impression of being in a descent
+- C) the impression of being in a climb
+- D) the impression of being in a greater bank angle than is actually the case
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a prolonged coordinated turn at constant rate, the fluid in the semicircular canals gradually matches the rotation speed and stops deflecting the sensory hairs, causing the vestibular system to signal "no turn" even though the aircraft remains banked. The pilot perceives wings-level flight. If the pilot then levels the wings, they experience the sensation of turning in the opposite direction and may re-enter the original turn — this is the mechanism behind the deadly graveyard spiral. Option B, Option C, and Option D describe different illusions not associated with vestibular adaptation during steady turns.
+
+### Q102: Your passenger wishes to ease their fear of flying by drinking a strong alcoholic drink just before departure. What effect has to be expected at high altitude? ^t40q102
+- A) at high altitude, the psychological effects of alcohol decrease
+- B) alcohol is eliminated more slowly at high altitude than on the ground
+- C) alcohol is eliminated more rapidly at high altitude than on the ground
+- D) oxygen deficiency at high altitude amplifies the effects of alcohol
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At altitude, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen (hypoxia) acts synergistically with alcohol to amplify its impairing effects on the central nervous system. Both hypoxia and alcohol independently degrade cognitive function, and together they produce a combined impairment far greater than either alone — sometimes described as a multiplier effect. Option A incorrectly claims that alcohol effects decrease at altitude. Option B and Option C concern the elimination rate, which is primarily determined by liver metabolism and does not change significantly with altitude. The combination of altitude and alcohol is particularly dangerous for passengers who may need to respond in an emergency.
+
+### Q103: Which is the correct technique for seeing at night? ^t40q103
+- A) stare directly at distant, faintly lit objects as directly as possible
+- B) do not stare directly at objects but look slightly to the side
+- C) stare directly at all objects as directly as possible
+- D) scan objects with rapid large eye movements
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At night, the central fovea of the retina — used for direct vision — contains only cone cells, which require more light to function effectively. The rod cells responsible for low-light sensitivity are concentrated in the retinal periphery. Looking slightly to the side of an object (off-centre viewing) places its image on the rod-rich area, making it visible in dim conditions. Option A and Option C (staring directly) use only the foveal cones, which are essentially blind in low light, causing the object to disappear. Option D (rapid large eye movements) disrupts the fixation time needed for the rods to detect faint light.
+
+### Q104: Your passenger complains of middle ear pressure equalization problems. How can you help them? ^t40q104
+- A) stop the climb, if possible descend until the pain subsides, then climb again at a lower rate
+- B) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a lower rate
+- C) descend at a higher rate until the pain subsides, then continue descending at a lower rate
+- D) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a higher rate
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems occur most commonly during descent, when increasing external pressure cannot enter the middle ear cavity fast enough through the Eustachian tube. The correct remedy is to stop the descent, climb slightly if possible to reduce the pressure differential and allow the pain to subside, then resume the descent at a slower rate to give the Eustachian tube time to equalise. Option A addresses climbing problems, which are much less common. Option C (descending faster) would worsen the pressure imbalance. Option D correctly stops the descent but then resumes at a higher rate, which would recreate the problem.
+
+### Q105: Which of the following symptoms may indicate oxygen deficiency? ^t40q105
+- A) joint pain
+- B) lung pain
+- C) reduced heart rate
+- D) difficulty concentrating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Difficulty concentrating is one of the earliest and most characteristic symptoms of hypoxia (oxygen deficiency), reflecting the brain's high sensitivity to reduced oxygen supply. As altitude increases and oxygen partial pressure drops, cognitive functions deteriorate before physical symptoms become apparent. Option A (joint pain) is associated with decompression sickness, not hypoxia. Option B (lung pain) is not a typical hypoxia symptom. Option C (reduced heart rate) is incorrect because the body's compensatory response to hypoxia is to increase heart rate, not decrease it.
+
+### Q106: What causes motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q106
+- A) a disorder of the middle ear
+- B) irritation of the balance organ
+- C) evaporation of gases into the blood
+- D) a strong reduction in atmospheric pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness is caused by irritation of the vestibular system (balance organ) in the inner ear when it receives conflicting signals from the eyes, the vestibular apparatus, and proprioceptors. This sensory mismatch — for example, the inner ear detecting motion while the eyes see a stationary cockpit interior — triggers the autonomic nervous system response that produces nausea and vomiting. Option A (middle ear disorder) confuses a pathological condition with a normal physiological response. Option C and Option D describe altitude-related phenomena (decompression) that are unrelated to motion sickness.
+
+### Q107: Which are the side effects of anti-motion-sickness medications? ^t40q107
+- A) drowsiness and slowed reaction time
+- B) general weakness and loss of appetite
+- C) exhaustion and depression
+- D) hyperactivity and risk-taking tendency
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Anti-motion-sickness medications — primarily antihistamines (such as dimenhydrinate) and anticholinergics (such as scopolamine) — commonly cause drowsiness and significantly slowed reaction times as their primary side effects. These effects directly compromise the alertness and rapid decision-making required for safe flying. Option B, Option C, and Option D describe side effects not typically associated with standard anti-motion-sickness drugs. Because of the sedating effects described in Option A, pilots should not use these medications before or during flight without medical clearance from an aviation medical examiner.
+
+### Q108: What is decisive for the onset of noise-induced hearing loss? ^t40q108
+- A) only the duration of noise exposure
+- B) the duration and intensity of the noise
+- C) only the intensity of the noise
+- D) the sudden onset of a noise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Noise-induced hearing loss depends on the total sound energy dose received by the ear, which is a function of both the intensity (measured in decibels) and the duration of exposure. A very loud noise over a short period or a moderately loud noise sustained over many hours can both cause permanent damage. Option A ignores intensity — a quiet sound, no matter how long the exposure, will not cause damage. Option C ignores duration — a brief loud burst is generally less harmful than the same intensity sustained for hours. Option D (sudden onset) describes acoustic shock, which is only one mechanism and not the full picture.
+
+### Q109: Increasing and sustained positive g-loads can produce symptoms that appear in the following order:... ^t40q109
+- A) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- B) red-out, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- C) reduction of peripheral vision, loss of color vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- D) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, red-out, loss of consciousness
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As positive g-forces increase, blood drains from the head toward the lower body in a predictable sequence of visual and neurological symptoms: first grey-out (loss of colour vision as the retina receives less oxygenated blood), then tunnel vision (reduction of peripheral vision as the outer retina fails first), then complete blackout (total loss of vision), and finally G-LOC (loss of consciousness). Option B incorrectly begins with red-out, which occurs under negative g-forces, not positive. Option C reverses the first two symptoms. Option D inserts red-out mid-sequence, which does not occur during positive g-loading.
+
+### Q110: From what altitude does the body of a healthy person begin to compensate for oxygen deficiency by accelerating breathing rate? ^t40q110
+- A) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- B) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+- C) roughly 3,000-4,000 ft
+- D) from 12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At approximately 6,000-7,000 ft, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen becomes sufficient to trigger the body's chemoreceptors, which detect the drop in blood oxygen and stimulate an increase in respiratory rate as a compensatory mechanism. Option B (10,000-12,000 ft) describes the upper limit of effective compensation, not where it begins. Option C (3,000-4,000 ft) is too low — at this altitude, the oxygen reduction is minimal and no compensation is needed. Option D (from 12,000 ft) is the point where compensation becomes inadequate, not where it starts.
+
+### Q111: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q111
+- A) Point C
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law, illustrated by the inverted-U curve in figure HPL-002, shows that performance peaks at a moderate, optimal level of arousal — represented by Point B at the top of the curve. Option D (Point A) lies on the left side where arousal is too low, resulting in boredom, inattention, and poor performance. Option A (Point C) and Option B (Point D) represent progressively higher arousal levels on the right side of the curve, where over-stimulation causes anxiety, cognitive overload, and declining performance. For pilots, maintaining arousal at Point B ensures maximum alertness without the errors that come from excessive stress.
+
+### Q112: Which answer is correct concerning stress? ^t40q112
+- A) Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner
+- B) Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety
+- C) Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem
+- D) Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress commonly arises when a person perceives a threatening or problematic situation for which no adequate solution appears available — the feeling of being trapped or overwhelmed triggers the physiological stress response. Option A is incorrect because individual stress responses vary enormously based on personality, experience, coping mechanisms, and physical condition. Option B dangerously dismisses the impact of stress on flight safety, when in fact stress-related errors are a major factor in aviation incidents. Option D is wrong because training and experience are proven to raise the stress threshold by providing learned responses to challenging situations.
+
+### Q113: During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed? ^t40q113
+- A) Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook
+- B) Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying
+- C) Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane
+- D) There is no time for solving problems during flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental principle of airmanship is "aviate, navigate, communicate" — in that order. The pilot's primary duty is always to fly the aircraft and maintain stable flight before addressing any secondary problem. Option A risks losing aircraft control by prioritising problem-solving over flying. Option B (radio contact) is a valid step but must come after ensuring the aircraft is under control. Option D incorrectly implies that problem-solving during flight is impossible, when in fact pilots routinely handle in-flight issues provided they maintain aircraft control as the overriding priority.
+
+### Q114: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q114
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point B
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve, Point D represents the extreme right of the arousal axis where stress levels are very high and performance has collapsed — the pilot is overstrained. At this level of arousal, cognitive function breaks down, decision-making becomes erratic, and the risk of critical errors increases dramatically. Option B (Point C) represents elevated but not yet maximal stress. Option C (Point A) represents under-arousal and boredom. Option D (Point B) is the peak of the curve where optimal performance occurs. Recognising the slide from Point B toward Point D is a critical pilot skill.
+
+### Q115: The swiss cheese model is used to explain the... ^t40q115
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Error chain.
+- D) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model is a foundational concept in aviation safety that illustrates how accidents result from an error chain — a series of individual failures in successive defensive barriers that happen to align, allowing a hazard to penetrate all layers simultaneously. Each "slice of cheese" represents a safety barrier with inherent "holes" (latent conditions and active failures). Option A (pilot readiness) is assessed through fitness-to-fly checks, not the Swiss Cheese Model. Option B (problem solving) uses decision-making frameworks like DECIDE. Option D (emergency landing procedures) are covered by standard operating procedures and checklists, not error chain theory.
+
+### Q116: What does the term Red-out mean? ^t40q116
+- A) Rash during decompression sickness
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- D) Anaemia caused by an injury
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (such as during a bunt or inverted flight manoeuvre), when blood is forced upward into the head and eyes. The excess blood pressure in the ocular capillaries produces a characteristic red tinge across the visual field. This is the negative-g counterpart to grey-out and blackout, which occur under positive g-forces when blood drains away from the head. Option A (decompression sickness rash) is an entirely different condition affecting dissolved gases in the body. Option B (sunrise/sunset colour) is a natural optical phenomenon, not a physiological impairment. Option D (anaemia from injury) is a medical condition unrelated to g-forces.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_40_1_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_40_1_50.md
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+### Q1: The majority of aviation accidents are caused by… ^t40q1
+- A) Meteorological influences.
+- B) Human failure.
+- C) Technical failure.
+- D) Geographical influences.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because statistical analyses consistently show that roughly 70-80% of aviation accidents have human error as a primary or contributing cause, including poor judgment, loss of situational awareness, and inadequate decision-making. A is wrong because weather is a contributing factor in some accidents but accounts for a far smaller share than human error. C is wrong because modern aircraft are highly reliable and technical failures cause only a minority of accidents. D is wrong because geographical influences (terrain, obstacles) are environmental factors, not the dominant accident cause.
+
+### Q2: The "swiss cheese model" can be used to explain the… ^t40q2
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- D) Error chain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model shows how accidents result from an error chain — multiple defensive layers (represented as slices of cheese) each have weaknesses ("holes"), and an accident occurs only when these holes align simultaneously to let a hazard pass through all barriers. A is wrong because the model does not address pilot readiness or fitness. B is wrong because it is not a problem-solving tool. C is wrong because it has nothing to do with emergency landing procedures.
+
+### Q3: What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft? ^t40q3
+- A) 18.9 %
+- B) 21 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 12 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the composition of atmospheric gases remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen regardless of altitude — it is the partial pressure of oxygen that decreases as you climb, not the percentage. A is wrong because 18.9% does not correspond to any standard atmospheric value. C is wrong because 78% is the proportion of nitrogen, not oxygen. D is wrong because 12% is far below the actual oxygen fraction at any altitude within the atmosphere.
+
+### Q4: Which is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere? ^t40q4
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 0.1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 1 %
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because nitrogen constitutes approximately 78% of the atmosphere and remains physiologically inert under normal flight conditions, though it becomes relevant in decompression sickness after diving. A is wrong because 21% is the proportion of oxygen. B is wrong because 0.1% is far too low and does not correspond to any major atmospheric gas. D is wrong because 1% represents the approximate total of all trace gases combined, not nitrogen.
+
+### Q5: At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)? ^t40q5
+- A) 5000 ft
+- B) 10000 ft
+- C) 22000 ft
+- D) 18000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because at approximately 18,000 ft the atmospheric pressure drops to about 500 hPa, which is roughly half of the standard sea-level value of 1013.25 hPa, and this also means the partial pressure of oxygen is halved. A is wrong because at 5,000 ft the pressure is still about 843 hPa. B is wrong because at 10,000 ft the pressure is approximately 700 hPa. C is wrong because at 22,000 ft the pressure is well below half the sea-level value.
+
+### Q6: Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. Which is the approximate percentage of other gases? ^t40q6
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0.1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because after oxygen (21%) and nitrogen (78%), the remaining approximately 1% consists of trace gases — mainly argon (about 0.93%) with small amounts of carbon dioxide, neon, and helium. A is wrong because 21% is the oxygen proportion. C is wrong because 78% is the nitrogen proportion. D is wrong because 0.1% is too low; argon alone accounts for nearly 1%.
+
+### Q7: Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by… ^t40q7
+- A) Little sleep.
+- B) Unhealthy food.
+- C) Smoking.
+- D) Alcohol.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO) from incomplete combustion, and CO binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen, reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A is wrong because sleep deprivation causes fatigue but does not produce CO. B is wrong because unhealthy food affects nutrition but does not generate CO. D is wrong because alcohol impairs cognitive function through a different mechanism unrelated to CO poisoning.
+
+### Q8: What does the term "Red-out" mean? ^t40q8
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Rash during decompression sickness
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (such as in a pushover or bunt manoeuvre), which force blood into the head and eyes, engorging the retinal blood vessels and creating a red-tinted visual field. B is wrong because decompression sickness causes joint pain and skin mottling, not a red visual field. C is wrong because anaemia is a blood condition unrelated to g-forces. D is wrong because sunrise and sunset affect ambient light colour, not a physiological visual disturbance.
+
+### Q9: Which of these is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton? ^t40q9
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Spasm
+- C) Disturbance of consciousness
+- D) Tingling
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because cyanosis (blue discolouration of skin and lips) is caused by low blood oxygen levels and is a sign of hypoxia, not hyperventilation. Hyperventilation actually increases blood oxygen levels while decreasing CO2. B is wrong as an answer choice because muscle spasms (tetany) are a genuine symptom of hyperventilation due to alkalosis. C is wrong because disturbed consciousness does occur during severe hyperventilation. D is wrong because tingling in the extremities and face is one of the earliest and most characteristic hyperventilation symptoms.
+
+### Q10: Which of these symptoms may indicate hypoxia? ^t40q10
+- A) Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails
+- B) Blue marks all over the body
+- C) Muscle cramps in the upper body area
+- D) Joint pain in knees and feet
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because cyanosis — the bluish discolouration of lips, fingertips, and nail beds — is a classic clinical sign of hypoxia caused by an increased proportion of deoxygenated haemoglobin in the blood. B is wrong because diffuse blue marks over the body suggest bruising, not oxygen deficiency. C is wrong because upper body muscle cramps are more associated with hyperventilation or electrolyte imbalances. D is wrong because joint pain in knees and feet is characteristic of decompression sickness, not hypoxia.
+
+### Q11: Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia? ^t40q11
+- A) The visual perception (vision)
+- B) The tactile perception (sense of touch)
+- C) The oltfactory perception (smell)
+- D) The auditory perception (hearing)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the retina has an exceptionally high oxygen demand, making vision the first sense to degrade under hypoxic conditions — night vision can deteriorate noticeably at altitudes as low as 5,000 ft. B is wrong because touch is relatively resistant to mild hypoxia. C is wrong because smell, while it can be affected, is not the most sensitive sense to oxygen deprivation. D is wrong because hearing is also less affected than vision at moderate altitude.
+
+### Q12: From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure? ^t40q12
+- A) 10000 feet
+- B) 7000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 2000 feet
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because at approximately 7,000 ft the body begins to show measurable physiological responses to reduced oxygen partial pressure, such as increased heart rate and breathing rate, though a healthy person can still compensate. A is wrong because 10,000 ft is an altitude where compensation is already well underway, not where it begins. C is wrong because at 12,000 ft the body is already struggling to compensate adequately. D is wrong because at 2,000 ft the oxygen partial pressure is still too close to sea-level values to trigger noticeable physiological responses.
+
+### Q13: Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure? ^t40q13
+- A) 7000 feet
+- B) 5000 feet
+- C) 22000 feet
+- D) 12000 feet
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because above approximately 12,000 ft the body's compensatory mechanisms — increased breathing and heart rate — are no longer sufficient to maintain adequate blood oxygen saturation, and hypoxic symptoms become increasingly apparent. A is wrong because at 7,000 ft the body begins compensating but can still manage effectively. B is wrong because 5,000 ft is well within the range where no significant compensation is needed. C is wrong because 22,000 ft is far above the threshold where compensation fails — at that altitude, loss of consciousness occurs rapidly.
+
+### Q14: What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)? ^t40q14
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Immune defense
+- D) Oxygen transport
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because red blood cells contain haemoglobin, an iron-rich protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and delivers it to tissues throughout the body, making them the primary oxygen transport mechanism. A is wrong because blood coagulation is the function of platelets (thrombocytes). B is wrong because blood sugar regulation is controlled by the pancreas via insulin and glucagon. C is wrong because immune defence is the function of white blood cells (leucocytes).
+
+### Q15: Which of these accounts for the blood coagulation? ^t40q15
+- A) Capillaries of the arteries
+- B) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- C) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+- D) Blood plates (thrombocytes)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because blood platelets (thrombocytes) are cell fragments that aggregate at injury sites and activate the clotting cascade to form a fibrin clot, stopping bleeding. A is wrong because capillaries are blood vessels, not clotting agents. B is wrong because red blood cells transport oxygen, not participate in coagulation. C is wrong because white blood cells are responsible for immune defence, not blood clotting.
+
+### Q16: Which is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)? ^t40q16
+- A) Immune defense
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Blood coagulation
+- D) Oxygen transport
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because white blood cells (leucocytes) are the cellular components of the immune system, responsible for identifying and destroying pathogens, foreign substances, and abnormal cells. B is wrong because blood sugar regulation is managed by hormones from the pancreas. C is wrong because blood coagulation is the role of thrombocytes (platelets). D is wrong because oxygen transport is performed by red blood cells (erythrocytes) via haemoglobin.
+
+### Q17: Which is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)? ^t40q17
+- A) Oxygen transport
+- B) Immune defense
+- C) Blood coagulation
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because thrombocytes (platelets) are the primary agents of haemostasis — they rapidly aggregate at vascular injury sites and release chemicals that trigger the coagulation cascade, forming a stable clot. A is wrong because oxygen transport is the function of erythrocytes (red blood cells). B is wrong because immune defence belongs to leucocytes (white blood cells). D is wrong because blood sugar regulation is a hormonal function of the pancreas.
+
+### Q18: Which of these is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia? ^t40q18
+- A) Blood donation
+- B) Diving
+- C) Menstruation
+- D) Smoking
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because scuba diving is a risk factor for decompression sickness (nitrogen bubbles forming in tissues), not hypoxia — diving itself does not reduce the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A is wrong as an answer because blood donation reduces red blood cell count, directly lowering oxygen transport ability. C is wrong because heavy menstruation can lead to anaemia, which reduces oxygen-carrying capacity. D is wrong because smoking introduces carbon monoxide that binds to haemoglobin, displacing oxygen.
+
+### Q19: What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable? ^t40q19
+- A) Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank
+- B) Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed
+- C) Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets
+- D) Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because adjusting the cabin temperature to a comfortable level and reducing bank angle minimises the most common causes of passenger discomfort — thermal discomfort and vestibular stimulation that can trigger motion sickness. B is wrong because avoiding conversation isolates the passenger and higher airspeed does not address the underlying discomfort. C is wrong because warming a potentially overheated passenger could worsen their condition. D is wrong because supplemental oxygen is not the standard first response, and avoiding low load factors is not the primary concern.
+
+### Q20: What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor? ^t40q20
+- A) Reflex
+- B) Reduction
+- C) Coherence
+- D) Virulence
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because a reflex is defined as an involuntary, rapid, and stereotyped neural response to a specific stimulus, mediated through a reflex arc without requiring conscious thought. B is wrong because reduction is a general term meaning decrease, not a physiological response. C is wrong because coherence refers to logical consistency or connectedness. D is wrong because virulence describes the severity or harmfulness of a pathogen, not a nervous system reaction.
+
+### Q21: Which is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency? ^t40q21
+- A) Critical nervous system
+- B) Compliant nervous system
+- C) Autonomic nervous system
+- D) Automatical nervous system
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulates involuntary body functions including heart rate, breathing, digestion, and glandular activity through its sympathetic and parasympathetic branches. A is wrong because "critical nervous system" is not a recognised anatomical term. B is wrong because "compliant nervous system" does not exist in medical terminology. D is wrong because the correct term is "autonomic," not "automatical" — though they sound similar, only C uses the proper medical designation.
+
+### Q22: Which is the parallax error? ^t40q22
+- A) Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision
+- B) A decoding error in communication between pilots
+- C) Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night
+- D) Misperception of speed during taxiing
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because parallax error occurs when an instrument is read from an oblique viewing angle rather than straight on, causing the pointer to appear displaced against the scale and producing a false reading. B is wrong because communication errors between pilots relate to encoding/decoding in the communication model, not instrument reading. C is wrong because age-related long-sightedness (presbyopia) is a refractive eye condition, not a parallax effect. D is wrong because speed misperception during taxiing is a visual illusion unrelated to instrument reading angles.
+
+### Q23: Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots? ^t40q23
+- A) No UV filter
+- B) Curved sidepiece
+- C) Unbreakable
+- D) Non-polarised
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because polarised lenses can render LCD displays and glass cockpit instruments unreadable by blocking the plane of light they emit, and they may also mask glare reflections from other aircraft or water surfaces that serve as important visual cues. A is wrong because UV protection is actually desirable for eye health at altitude, not something to avoid. B is wrong because curved sidepieces are a comfort feature, not a safety-critical characteristic. C is wrong because while durability is nice, it is not the aviation-specific concern that makes non-polarisation essential.
+
+### Q24: The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called… ^t40q24
+- A) Inner ear.
+- B) Eardrum.
+- C) Eustachian tube.
+- D) Cochlea.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the Eustachian tube (auditory tube) is the anatomical passage connecting the middle ear to the nasopharynx, allowing pressure equalisation during altitude changes by opening when you swallow or yawn. A is wrong because the inner ear contains the balance organs and cochlea but does not connect to the throat. B is wrong because the eardrum (tympanic membrane) is the boundary between the outer and middle ear. D is wrong because the cochlea is the spiral-shaped hearing organ within the inner ear.
+
+### Q25: In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment? ^t40q25
+- A) During a light and slow climb
+- B) The eustachien tube is blocked
+- C) All windows are completely closed
+- D) Breathing takes place using the mouth solely
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because when the Eustachian tube is blocked — typically due to a cold, sinus infection, or allergic swelling — air cannot flow between the middle ear and the throat, making pressure equalisation impossible and causing severe ear pain during altitude changes. A is wrong because a slow climb actually makes equalisation easier. C is wrong because window position has no effect on middle ear pressure; equalisation occurs internally through the Eustachian tube. D is wrong because mouth breathing does not prevent the Eustachian tube from functioning.
+
+### Q26: Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of… ^t40q26
+- A) Starting a descent.
+- B) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- C) Starting a climb.
+- D) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because during a prolonged coordinated turn, the semicircular canal fluid adapts and stops signalling the turn; when the pilot levels the wings, the fluid movement creates a false signal interpreted as rotation in the opposite direction — this is the "leans" illusion. A is wrong because the illusion is one of lateral rotation, not vertical descent. C is wrong because there is no false climb sensation from levelling out of a turn. D is wrong because the adapted semicircular canals no longer signal the original turn direction upon recovery.
+
+### Q27: Which of these options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)? ^t40q27
+- A) Turbulence in level flight
+- B) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- C) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+- D) Head movements during turns
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no vestibular stimulation and no conflict between the visual and balance systems, so it cannot trigger motion sickness. A is wrong as an answer because turbulence creates unpredictable accelerations that stimulate the vestibular system and cause sensory conflict. C is wrong because alcohol changes the density of the endolymph fluid in the inner ear, amplifying sensory mismatches. D is wrong because head movements during turns provoke the Coriolis effect in the semicircular canals, a strong trigger for disorientation.
+
+### Q28: Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach? ^t40q28
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an upsloping runway appears shorter and steeper than a flat runway, tricking the pilot's visual system into perceiving a higher-than-actual approach angle, which leads to an instinctive descent below the correct glide slope — creating a dangerous undershoot risk. A is wrong because the illusion affects perceived height, not speed. B is wrong because it describes the opposite illusion (feeling too low) which would occur with a downsloping runway. C is wrong because speed perception is not the primary illusion created by runway slope.
+
+### Q29: What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope? ^t40q29
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) An overshoot
+- C) A landing beside the centerline
+- D) A hard landing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because this question asks about the impression (what the pilot perceives), not the actual outcome. An upsloping runway gives the visual illusion of being too high, so the pilot perceives an overshoot situation. A is wrong because although the pilot's corrective response to the false overshoot impression may actually cause an undershoot, the perceived impression itself is of overshooting. C is wrong because runway slope does not create lateral displacement illusions. D is wrong because the slope illusion affects perceived approach angle, not the perception of landing firmness.
+
+### Q30: The occurence of a vertigo is most probable when moving the head... ^t40q30
+- A) During a climb.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a descent.
+- D) During a turn.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because moving the head during a turn creates the Coriolis illusion — the semicircular canals are already stimulated by the turn, and adding a head rotation in a different plane simultaneously stimulates additional canals, producing an overwhelming and disorienting sensation of tumbling. A is wrong because a climb alone does not pre-load the semicircular canals the way a turn does. B is wrong because straight and level flight provides no existing vestibular stimulation to conflict with head movement. C is wrong because a descent, like a climb, does not produce the rotational vestibular loading that makes the Coriolis effect so severe.
+
+### Q31: A Grey-out is the result of… ^t40q31
+- A) Hypoxia.
+- B) Positive g-forces.
+- C) Hyperventilation.
+- D) Tiredness.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because grey-out occurs when positive g-forces pull blood away from the head toward the lower body, reducing blood pressure in the retinal arteries and causing progressive loss of colour vision and peripheral vision before full blackout. A is wrong because although hypoxia also affects vision, grey-out specifically refers to the g-force-induced phenomenon. C is wrong because hyperventilation causes tingling and spasms from CO2 depletion, not the characteristic grey visual field. D is wrong because tiredness causes fatigue and reduced alertness, not the acute visual symptoms of grey-out.
+
+### Q32: Visual illusions are mostly caused by… ^t40q32
+- A) Colour blindness.
+- B) Misinterpretation of the brain.
+- C) Rapid eye movements.
+- D) Binocular vision.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the brain actively constructs perception by interpreting sensory input based on prior experience and expectations, and when environmental cues are ambiguous or unusual — as is common in aviation — the brain's "best guess" can be dangerously wrong. A is wrong because colour blindness is a retinal condition affecting colour discrimination, not a cause of spatial or approach illusions. C is wrong because rapid eye movements (saccades) are normal visual behaviour, not a source of illusions. D is wrong because binocular vision actually improves depth perception and reduces illusions.
+
+### Q33: The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately… ^t40q33
+- A) 0.1 percent.
+- B) 0.3 percent.
+- C) 0.03 percent.
+- D) 0.01 percent.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the liver metabolises alcohol at a roughly constant rate of approximately 0.01% (0.1 per mille or 0.1 g/L) blood alcohol concentration per hour, regardless of body weight, food intake, or the type of drink consumed. A is wrong because 0.1% per hour is ten times the actual rate and would mean even heavy intoxication clears in a few hours. B is wrong because 0.3% per hour is thirty times too fast. C is wrong because 0.03% per hour is three times the actual rate.
+
+### Q34: Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes? ^t40q34
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because overweight and obesity — particularly excess visceral fat — are the strongest modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes due to the insulin resistance they cause, and diabetes is a significant concern in aviation medicine because of the risk of hypoglycaemic episodes impairing pilot performance. A is wrong because although sleep deficiency affects general health, it is not a primary risk factor for diabetes. C is wrong because smoking is primarily a cardiovascular and respiratory risk factor. D is wrong because moderate alcohol consumption is not a leading cause of diabetes.
+
+### Q35: A risk factor for decompression sickness is… ^t40q35
+- A) Sports.
+- B) 100 % oxygen after decompression.
+- C) Scuba diving prior to flight.
+- D) Smoking.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because scuba diving causes nitrogen to dissolve into body tissues under high ambient pressure, and if the diver flies before adequate off-gassing time (typically 12-24 hours), the reduced cabin pressure causes dissolved nitrogen to form painful and dangerous bubbles in tissues and blood. A is wrong because normal sporting activity does not load tissues with dissolved nitrogen. B is wrong because breathing 100% oxygen after decompression actually accelerates nitrogen elimination and is a treatment measure. D is wrong because smoking impairs oxygen transport but does not cause nitrogen saturation.
+
+### Q36: Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory? ^t40q36
+- A) It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because George Miller's classic research established that short-term (working) memory can hold approximately 7 plus or minus 2 chunks of information for about 10-20 seconds without active rehearsal, which is why pilots must write down ATC clearances and frequencies immediately. A is wrong because both the capacity (10 items) and duration (30-60 seconds) are overstated. B is wrong because the capacity is understated and the duration is too long. D is wrong because both values are too small — the brain can hold more than 3 items.
+
+### Q37: For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information? ^t40q37
+- A) 35 to 50 seconds
+- B) 3 to 7 seconds
+- C) 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because unrehearsed information in short-term memory decays within approximately 10-20 seconds, which is why aviation procedures emphasise immediate read-back of clearances and writing down critical information. A is wrong because 35-50 seconds significantly overestimates the retention time without rehearsal. B is wrong because 3-7 seconds is too short — even unrehearsed memory lasts somewhat longer. D is wrong because 30-40 seconds exceeds the actual decay time for passively stored items.
+
+### Q38: What is a latent error? ^t40q38
+- A) An error which has an immediate effect on the controls
+- B) An error which only has consequences after landing
+- C) An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously
+- D) An error which stays undetected in the system for a long time
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because in James Reason's error model, latent errors are hidden failures embedded in the system — such as poor design, inadequate procedures, or organisational shortcuts — that remain dormant and undetected until they combine with an active error to cause an incident or accident. A is wrong because an error with immediate effect on controls is an active error, not a latent one. B is wrong because latent errors are defined by their hidden nature, not their timing relative to landing. C is wrong because conscious, deliberate errors are violations, not latent conditions.
+
+### Q39: The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called… ^t40q39
+- A) Constant flight check.
+- B) Situational thinking.
+- C) Situational awareness.
+- D) Anticipatory check procedure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because situational awareness (SA), as defined by Mica Endsley, is the continuous process of perceiving elements in the environment, comprehending their meaning, and projecting their future state — it is the foundation of sound aeronautical decision-making. A is wrong because "constant flight check" is not a recognised human factors term. B is wrong because "situational thinking" is not the standard terminology used in aviation psychology. D is wrong because "anticipatory check procedure" describes a proactive checklist approach, not the overarching mental model of the flight environment.
+
+### Q40: Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured? ^t40q40
+- A) By the use of proper headsets
+- B) By the use of radio phraseology
+- C) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+- D) By a particular frequency allocation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because standardised ICAO radiotelephony phraseology ensures that both sender and receiver share the same unambiguous "code" with pre-defined meanings, minimising the risk of miscommunication in the communication model. A is wrong because headsets improve audio clarity but do not standardise the language or coding of the message. C is wrong because certified radios ensure signal quality, not message coding. D is wrong because frequency allocation manages traffic separation, not the shared understanding of words and phrases.
+
+### Q41: In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately? ^t40q41
+- A) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- B) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- C) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+- D) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the four standard risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the hazard entirely), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift the risk to another party such as through insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge residual risk when it falls within acceptable limits). B is wrong because "ignore" and "palliate" are not recognised risk management strategies. C is wrong because ignoring risk is never acceptable in aviation, and "extrude" is not a risk management term. D is wrong because neither "extrude" nor "palliate" are legitimate risk management strategies.
+
+### Q42: Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks? ^t40q42
+- A) During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast
+- B) During check flights due to a high level of nervousness
+- C) Due to group-dynamic effects
+- D) If there is not enough information available
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because group dynamics can cause "risky shift" — a well-documented phenomenon where groups tend to accept bolder, riskier decisions than individuals would alone, driven by social pressure, conformity, and diffusion of responsibility. A is wrong because excellent weather actually reduces risk and does not push pilots toward accepting higher risks. B is wrong because nervousness during check flights typically makes pilots more cautious, not more risk-accepting. D is wrong because insufficient information usually promotes caution or deferral rather than acceptance of higher risk.
+
+### Q43: Which dangerous attitudes are often combined? ^t40q43
+- A) Self-abandonment and macho
+- B) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude ("I can handle anything") and invulnerability ("it won't happen to me") frequently occur together, as both stem from overconfidence and underestimation of personal risk. A is wrong because self-abandonment (resignation) is the opposite of macho — a resigned pilot gives up, while a macho pilot takes on too much. B is wrong because invulnerability and resignation are contradictory mindsets. D is wrong because impulsivity and carefulness are opposites and cannot logically coexist as a combined dangerous attitude.
+
+### Q44: What is an indication for a macho attitude? ^t40q44
+- A) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- B) Careful walkaround procedure
+- C) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- D) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude is defined by the need to demonstrate daring and skill, often to an audience, and performing risky manoeuvres to impress spectators is a textbook example — the pilot prioritises ego over safety. A is wrong because quick resignation describes the resignation (self-abandonment) hazardous attitude, the opposite of macho. B is wrong because a careful walkaround is a sign of professionalism, not any hazardous attitude. D is wrong because comprehensive risk assessment reflects sound aeronautical decision-making, not a hazardous attitude.
+
+### Q45: Which factor can lead to human error? ^t40q45
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) Double check of relevant actions
+- C) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because confirmation bias — the tendency to perceive and interpret information in a way that confirms pre-existing expectations — is a major source of human error, leading pilots to misread instruments, overlook abnormalities, or misidentify visual references. A is wrong because proper checklist use is a countermeasure against error, not a cause. B is wrong because double-checking is an error-trapping technique. D is wrong because healthy doubt and questioning ambiguous information is a protective behaviour that reduces error.
+
+### Q46: Which is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot? ^t40q46
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Extroverted - stable
+- C) Extroverted - unstable
+- D) Introverted - unstable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because extroversion supports effective communication, assertiveness, and crew coordination essential for CRM, while emotional stability ensures the pilot remains calm, consistent, and rational under pressure. A is wrong because although stability is positive, introversion can hinder the assertive communication and teamwork skills needed in cockpit environments. C is wrong because emotional instability leads to erratic performance and overreaction under stress. D is wrong because both introversion and instability are disadvantageous for the demands of piloting.
+
+### Q47: Complacency is a risk due to… ^t40q47
+- A) Better training options for young pilots.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Increased cockpit automation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because as cockpit automation becomes more sophisticated and reliable, pilots tend to reduce their active monitoring, lose vigilance, and allow their manual flying skills to degrade — this is automation complacency, and it becomes critically dangerous when the automation fails unexpectedly. A is wrong because better training options should reduce complacency, not cause it. B is wrong because unreliable systems would actually increase vigilance, not reduce it. C is wrong because a high human error rate is a general human factors issue, not the specific cause of complacency.
+
+### Q48: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q48
+
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (Point B) because on the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve, Point B sits at the peak where moderate arousal produces maximum performance. A is wrong because Point D represents excessive arousal where performance has collapsed due to overwhelming stress. B is wrong because Point C is past the optimal peak, in the declining performance zone. D is wrong because Point A represents too little arousal (boredom, under-stimulation), where performance suffers from lack of alertness and motivation.
+
+### Q49: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q49
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point C
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (Point D) because it lies at the far right of the Yerkes-Dodson curve where excessive arousal causes performance to collapse — the pilot is overstrained, experiencing cognitive overload, tunnel vision, and potentially panic. A is wrong because Point B is the optimal arousal level with peak performance. C is wrong because Point C, while past optimal, still represents declining but not yet collapsed performance. D is wrong because Point A represents under-arousal (boredom), the opposite of being overstrained.
+
+### Q50: Which of these qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory ^t40q50
+- A) 1
+- B) .1, 2, 3
+- C) 1, 2, 3, 4
+- D) .2, 4
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because stress affects all four cognitive functions: attention narrows (tunnel vision), concentration becomes fragmented, responsiveness changes (initially faster then degraded under extreme stress), and memory — especially working memory encoding and retrieval — is impaired by elevated cortisol. A is wrong because it only includes attention, ignoring the effects on concentration, responsiveness, and memory. B is wrong because it excludes memory, which is significantly affected. D is wrong because it omits attention and responsiveness, both of which are demonstrably impacted by stress.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_40_51_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_40_51_100.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,500 @@
+### Q51: The proportion of oxygen in the air at sea level is 21%. What is this percentage at an altitude of 5 km (16,400 ft)? ^t40q51
+- A) 5 %
+- B) 15 %
+- C) 10 %
+- D) 21 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere remains constant at approximately 21% regardless of altitude — what decreases with altitude is the total atmospheric pressure, and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen available for breathing. A, B, and C are all wrong because they suggest the percentage of oxygen itself changes with altitude, which is incorrect; the atmosphere maintains a homogeneous composition up to approximately 80 km.
+
+### Q52: The signs of oxygen deficiency… ^t40q52
+- A) are right away clearly noticeable.
+- B) can appear from as low as 4000 ft altitude.
+- C) appear in smokers at lower altitudes than in non-smokers.
+- D) consist of extreme difficulty in breathing (gasping for air).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because smokers already have elevated carboxyhaemoglobin levels from carbon monoxide binding to their red blood cells, effectively reducing their oxygen-carrying capacity even before flight, so hypoxic symptoms manifest at lower altitudes compared to non-smokers. A is wrong because hypoxia is insidious — symptoms develop gradually and the pilot often does not recognise them. B is wrong because 4,000 ft is generally too low for noticeable hypoxic effects in most people. D is wrong because gasping for air is not a typical hypoxia symptom; instead, early signs include impaired judgment and reduced night vision.
+
+### Q53: Carbon monoxide… ^t40q53
+- A) is a by-product of the chemical energy production in cells: tissue absorbs oxygen and releases carbon monoxide.
+- B) has a sweet smell and bitter taste. It is only harmful in very high doses.
+- C) is toxic and results from incomplete combustion, e.g. a leaking exhaust system in an aircraft or incomplete gas combustion in a hot air balloon.
+- D) is, together with oxygen and hydrogen, one of the most important elements present in the atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because carbon monoxide (CO) is a highly toxic gas produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-based fuels, and in aviation it can enter the cabin through leaking exhaust systems; it binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen. A is wrong because cells produce carbon dioxide (CO2) as a metabolic waste product, not carbon monoxide. B is wrong because CO is odourless, colourless, and tasteless, making it extremely dangerous even at low concentrations. D is wrong because CO is a trace gas, not one of the major atmospheric components.
+
+### Q54: How long does it generally take for the human eye to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q54
+- A) Approx. 30 minutes.
+- B) Approx. 1 hour.
+- C) Approx. 15 minutes.
+- D) Approx. 5 minutes.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because full dark adaptation requires approximately 30 minutes for the rod cells in the retina to reach maximum sensitivity through the regeneration of rhodopsin (visual purple), which is why pilots should avoid bright lights before night flying. B is wrong because one hour significantly overestimates the adaptation time. C is wrong because at 15 minutes the rods are only partially adapted and night vision is not yet at full capability. D is wrong because 5 minutes only allows for initial cone adaptation, not the complete rod-based dark adaptation needed for effective night vision.
+
+### Q55: Low blood pressure… ^t40q55
+- A) mainly causes problems at rest in a lying position.
+- B) can cause dizziness.
+- C) is a recurring problem in elderly smokers.
+- D) causes absolutely no problems.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because hypotension (low blood pressure) can cause dizziness, lightheadedness, and even fainting, particularly when changing posture (orthostatic hypotension), which poses a flight safety risk. A is wrong because low blood pressure mainly causes symptoms during posture changes (standing up), not while lying down. C is wrong because elderly smokers are more commonly affected by high blood pressure (hypertension), not low blood pressure. D is wrong because low blood pressure can certainly cause symptoms that impair pilot performance.
+
+### Q56: What symptom will most probably occur at 20,000 ft (6100 m) altitude without a pressurised cabin or oxygen equipment? ^t40q56
+- A) Loss of consciousness.
+- B) Altitude sickness with pulmonary oedema.
+- C) Dyspnoea.
+- D) Fever.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 20,000 ft without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness (TUC) is very short — typically only a few minutes — and rapid loss of consciousness follows due to severe hypoxia as the partial pressure of oxygen is far below what the body requires. B is wrong because pulmonary oedema develops over hours to days of high-altitude exposure, not during acute exposure. C is wrong because while shortness of breath may occur briefly, loss of consciousness is the most probable and dangerous outcome. D is wrong because fever is unrelated to altitude exposure.
+
+### Q57: When flying with a severe head cold, sharp pain can affect the sinuses. This pain occurs… ^t40q57
+- A) during descent.
+- B) with every notable change in flight altitude.
+- C) during climb.
+- D) during accelerations.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because during descent, external atmospheric pressure increases and trapped air within congested sinuses cannot equalise, creating a painful pressure differential — this is known as barosinusitis. B is wrong because while altitude changes in both directions can cause discomfort, descent is specifically the most problematic phase because the blocked sinuses cannot vent the increasing external pressure inward. C is wrong because during climb, expanding air within the sinuses can usually escape more easily, even through partially blocked passages. D is wrong because linear accelerations do not create the pressure differentials that cause sinus pain.
+
+### Q58: Which are the symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q58
+- A) High fever, vomiting, headache.
+- B) High fever, dizziness, watery diarrhoea.
+- C) Dizziness, sweating, nausea.
+- D) Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, headache.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the classic symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis) are dizziness, sweating, pallor, and nausea, which may progress to vomiting — all caused by a conflict between visual and vestibular sensory inputs. A is wrong because high fever is not a symptom of motion sickness; it indicates infection. B is wrong because neither high fever nor watery diarrhoea are associated with kinetosis. D is wrong because watery diarrhoea is a gastrointestinal symptom unrelated to vestibular-induced motion sickness.
+
+### Q59: During a normal approach to an unusually wide runway, one may have the impression that the approach is being made… ^t40q59
+- A) at too great a height.
+- B) at too high a speed.
+- C) at too low a speed.
+- D) at too low a height.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a runway wider than the pilot is accustomed to makes the visual perspective appear as though the aircraft is lower and closer than it actually is, creating the impression of being at too low a speed and too low a height — the pilot may then tend to fly the approach too high. A is wrong because the wide runway creates the opposite illusion — feeling too low, not too high. B is wrong because the illusion relates to perceived height and proximity, not excessive speed. D is wrong because feeling too low in height would be a consequence, but the question asks about speed impression, and C correctly captures the speed-related illusion.
+
+### Q60: Under positive g-forces, a greyout can occur which precedes blackout. Which organ is primarily affected by greyout? ^t40q60
+- A) The lungs.
+- B) The eyes.
+- C) The brain.
+- D) The muscles.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the eyes (specifically the retina) are the first organ to be affected by positive g-forces because retinal blood vessels are extremely sensitive to reduced blood pressure — the retina has the highest oxygen demand of any tissue, so when blood drains away under g-loading, vision degrades before consciousness is affected. A is wrong because the lungs continue to function under moderate g-forces. C is wrong because the brain loses function after the eyes — loss of consciousness (G-LOC) follows grey-out and blackout. D is wrong because muscles are not meaningfully affected by the blood pressure reduction that causes grey-out.
+
+### Q61: When a pilot scans the sky to detect the presence of other aircraft, he should… ^t40q61
+- A) try to take in the visible portion of the sky with large sweeping eye movements.
+- B) roll the eyes across as wide a field of vision as possible.
+- C) scan the sky sector by sector and let the eyes rest briefly on each sector.
+- D) take in the entire visible portion of the sky by moving the eyes as rapidly as possible.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Effective visual scanning requires dividing the sky into sectors and pausing briefly on each one, allowing the eyes to focus and detect movement or contrast changes that indicate other aircraft. Option A and Option D advocate rapid, sweeping eye movements that prevent the eye from fixating long enough to register a small target. Option B similarly relies on continuous rolling motion, which reduces detection probability. Only Option C describes the proven sector-by-sector technique recommended in human factors training.
+
+### Q62: Alcohol is eliminated at a rate of:... ^t40q62
+- A) 0.5 per mille per hour.
+- B) 0.3 per mille per hour.
+- C) 0.1 per mille per hour.
+- D) 1 per mille per hour.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human liver metabolises alcohol at a relatively constant rate of approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, regardless of the type of drink consumed or any attempted countermeasures such as coffee or exercise. Option A (0.5‰/h) and Option D (1‰/h) greatly overestimate the elimination rate, which could lead pilots to believe they are sober sooner than they actually are. Option B (0.3‰/h) is also too high. For SPL exam purposes, the standard value to remember is 0.1‰ per hour.
+
+### Q63: From the following factors, identify the one that increases the risk of heart attack:... ^t40q63
+- A) Lack of exercise.
+- B) Hypoglycaemia.
+- C) Undernutrition.
+- D) Cholesterol level too low.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sedentary lifestyle with insufficient physical activity is a well-established cardiovascular risk factor that increases the likelihood of heart attack. Option B (hypoglycaemia) is a metabolic condition primarily affecting energy supply to the brain, not a direct cardiac risk factor. Option C (undernutrition) and Option D (low cholesterol) are actually the opposite of known risk factors — it is overnutrition and high cholesterol that contribute to coronary artery disease. Regular exercise is one of the most effective protective measures against cardiovascular disease.
+
+### Q64: Amphetamine is a stimulant which in Switzerland can be obtained on prescription from pharmacies... ^t40q64
+- A) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours are allowed to take this medication to stay awake.
+- B) Pilots on duty may solely take this medication if accompanied by a qualified co-pilot.
+- C) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours should always have this medication at hand for moments of fatigue.
+- D) Due to its adverse effects, pilots on duty are not allowed to take this medication.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Amphetamines are strictly prohibited for pilots on duty because their adverse effects — including impaired judgment, overconfidence, risk-taking behaviour, and a crash of fatigue after the drug wears off — directly compromise flight safety. Option A and Option C suggest using amphetamines to combat fatigue during long flights, which is dangerous and illegal under aviation medical regulations. Option B implies that a co-pilot can mitigate the risk, but no crew arrangement makes stimulant use acceptable. The correct approach to fatigue is proper rest before flight, not pharmacological stimulation.
+
+### Q65: What is meant by "risk area awareness" in aviation? ^t40q65
+- A) Knowledge of accident rates during takeoff and landing.
+- B) The awareness that the aerodrome area where aircraft taxi ("risk area") is a dangerous zone.
+- C) Awareness of the potential hazards of the various phases of flight.
+- D) A procedure for preventing aviation accidents.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Risk area awareness refers to the pilot's conscious understanding that different phases of flight — takeoff, climb, cruise, descent, approach, and landing — each carry distinct hazards requiring specific vigilance. Option A is too narrow, focusing only on statistical accident rates rather than active awareness. Option B incorrectly interprets "risk area" as a physical location on the aerodrome. Option D describes risk area awareness as a procedure, but it is a mindset and competency, not a checklist or formal procedure. Effective risk area awareness allows the pilot to anticipate and mitigate threats proactively.
+
+### Q66: Several decision-making models are applied in aviation. A widely used model goes by the acronym "DECIDE". Which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q66
+- A) The first D stands for "Do" and means "Apply the best option".
+- B) The first D stands for "Detect" and means "Recognise that a change has occurred which requires attention".
+- C) The first E stands for "Evaluate" and means "Assess the consequences of one's actions".
+- D) DECIDE is a decision-making aid that must be applied in every in-flight decision situation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The DECIDE model follows the sequence: Detect, Estimate, Choose, Identify, Do, Evaluate. The first letter D stands for "Detect," meaning the pilot recognises that a change in the situation has occurred requiring a decision. Option A incorrectly assigns "Do" to the first D — "Do" is actually the fifth step, where the chosen course of action is implemented. Option C misplaces "Evaluate" as the first E, but the first E is "Estimate" (assess the significance of the change). Option D overstates the requirement — DECIDE is a helpful framework, not a mandatory procedure for every single decision.
+
+### Q67: Regarding typical hazardous attitudes, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q67
+- A) It is possible to recognise and correct one's own hazardous attitudes.
+- B) An anti-authority attitude is less dangerous than macho behaviour.
+- C) Inexperienced pilots are generally the only ones who behave dangerously.
+- D) Hazardous attitudes do not really exist because flight safety depends solely on the pilot's attention.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Human factors research identifies five hazardous attitudes — anti-authority, macho, invulnerability, resignation, and impulsivity — and demonstrates that pilots can learn to recognise these tendencies in themselves and apply corrective antidotes. Option B incorrectly ranks hazardous attitudes; all five are dangerous and none should be dismissed as less threatening. Option C wrongly limits dangerous behaviour to inexperienced pilots, when in fact experienced pilots can also exhibit complacency and overconfidence. Option D denies the existence of hazardous attitudes entirely, contradicting decades of aviation safety research.
+
+### Q68: Which of these statements correctly describes "selective attention"? ^t40q68
+- A) Selective attention is unavoidable in the cockpit to avoid distraction during checklist recitation.
+- B) Selective attention can lead the pilot to fail to notice an audible alarm even though it is perfectly audible.
+- C) Selective attention refers to an attitude where attention is focused on flight instruments when visibility conditions are poor.
+- D) Selective attention is a method for avoiding stress.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Selective attention is a cognitive phenomenon where concentrating intensely on one task causes the brain to filter out other stimuli, even obvious ones like a loud alarm. This is sometimes called "inattentional blindness" or "tunnel hearing." Option A confuses selective attention with a deliberate cockpit strategy, when it is actually an involuntary cognitive limitation. Option C describes instrument scan technique, not the psychological concept of selective attention. Option D incorrectly categorises it as a stress management method, when in fact selective attention under stress can be dangerous because critical warnings may go unnoticed.
+
+### Q69: Regarding stress, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q69
+- A) There is an optimal level of stress that even improves performance.
+- B) Under-stimulation causes no stress and has no negative effect on performance.
+- C) Stress in the cockpit improves the work rate.
+- D) Stress is only caused by brief overload.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law demonstrates that moderate stress (eustress) enhances alertness, focus, and performance, while too little or too much stress degrades it — forming an inverted-U curve. Option B is incorrect because under-stimulation (boredom) is itself a form of stress that reduces vigilance and increases error rates. Option C oversimplifies by suggesting all cockpit stress is beneficial, when excessive stress causes cognitive overload and poor decision-making. Option D wrongly limits stress to brief overload, ignoring chronic stress from fatigue, personal problems, or sustained workload.
+
+### Q70: The human internal clock… ^t40q70
+- A) has a cycle of roughly 25 hours.
+- B) has a cycle of roughly 20 hours.
+- C) is synchronised with the external clock and its cycle lasts exactly 24 hours.
+- D) has a cycle of roughly 30 hours.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Research on circadian rhythms shows that the human endogenous biological clock runs on a cycle of approximately 25 hours when isolated from external time cues such as daylight and social schedules. Daily exposure to light resets (entrains) this internal clock to the 24-hour day-night cycle. Option B (20 hours) and Option D (30 hours) are incorrect values. Option C is wrong because the internal clock does not naturally run at exactly 24 hours — it requires daily resynchronisation by environmental cues called Zeitgebers.
+
+### Q71: Which of the following measures is suitable for relieving the onset of motion sickness (kinetosis) in passengers? ^t40q71
+- A) move the head regularly
+- B) look through the windows
+- C) breathe fresh air
+- D) drink coffee
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Breathing fresh, cool air helps stabilise the autonomic nervous system and is one of the most effective immediate remedies for the onset of motion sickness. Option A (moving the head regularly) worsens symptoms by increasing conflicting vestibular stimulation. Option B (looking through the windows) can aggravate the sensory mismatch between visual and vestibular inputs in some individuals. Option D (drinking coffee) is a stimulant that can increase nausea and does not address the underlying vestibular conflict causing motion sickness.
+
+### Q72: During training, a pilot has mainly used narrow runways. What illusion will this pilot experience during a correct final approach to a flat, very wide runway? ^t40q72
+- A) the illusion that the runway slopes upward in the landing direction (upslope)
+- B) the illusion of being at a greater height above the runway than is actually the case
+- C) the illusion of being lower above the runway than is actually the case
+- D) the illusion that the runway first slopes upward (upslope) then downward (downslope)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot accustomed to narrow runways perceives a wide runway as being closer (lower) than it actually is because the wider visual angle tricks the brain into interpreting the scene as a nearer surface. This creates the dangerous illusion of being too low, which may cause the pilot to fly a higher approach than necessary and flare too high. Option A and Option D describe slope-related illusions unrelated to runway width. Option B describes the opposite illusion — the pilot feels lower, not higher. Understanding this visual trap is essential for safe approaches to unfamiliar aerodromes.
+
+### Q73: When are middle ear pressure equalization problems most probable to occur? ^t40q73
+- A) during a long flight at high altitude
+- B) during a rapid descent
+- C) during a long climb
+- D) during strong negative vertical accelerations
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems are most likely during rapid descent because the Eustachian tube must open to allow higher-pressure air from the throat into the middle ear cavity, which is physiologically more difficult than the reverse. During ascent, expanding air in the middle ear vents outward relatively easily. Option A (long high-altitude flight) maintains a constant cabin altitude and does not create pressure differentials. Option C (long climb) involves gradual pressure decrease that the ear handles well. Option D (negative g-forces) affects the vestibular system, not middle ear pressure.
+
+### Q74: The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere is 21% at sea level. How does it change at 5500 m? ^t40q74
+- A) it is one quarter of the sea level percentage
+- B) it is half the sea level percentage
+- C) it is double the sea level percentage
+- D) it is the same as at sea level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The composition of the atmosphere remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen and 78% nitrogen from sea level up to about 80 km altitude. What decreases with altitude is not the percentage of oxygen but the total atmospheric pressure, and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen available to the lungs. Option A and Option B incorrectly suggest that the proportion changes. Option C proposes an increase, which is also wrong. The key concept for pilots is that hypoxia at altitude results from reduced partial pressure, not from a change in oxygen percentage.
+
+### Q75: Which are the effects of inhaling carbon monoxide (from a defective exhaust system)? ^t40q75
+- A) even in low concentrations, this gas can cause total incapacitation
+- B) there are no harmful effects to fear as carbon monoxide is harmless
+- C) harmful effects are solely to be expected if the body is exposed to the gas for several hours
+- D) there are no harmful effects to fear as the body compensates for the reduced oxygen supply
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) binds to haemoglobin approximately 200 times more readily than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and drastically reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. Even very low concentrations can cause headaches, impaired judgment, and eventually total incapacitation or death. Option B and Option D dangerously dismiss CO as harmless — it is one of aviation's most insidious threats because it is colourless and odourless. Option C incorrectly suggests that only prolonged exposure is harmful, when in fact even brief exposure to moderate concentrations can be lethal.
+
+### Q76: Which is the most effective hearing protection in the cabin of a powered aircraft or hot air balloon? ^t40q76
+- A) cotton wool
+- B) a helmet with earphones
+- C) ear plugs
+- D) due to the low noise produced, any protection is effective
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A helmet with integrated earphones provides the highest level of hearing protection by covering the entire ear with a rigid shell that attenuates both direct sound and vibration-transmitted noise, while simultaneously enabling clear radio communication. Option A (cotton wool) offers minimal attenuation and is not a proper hearing protector. Option C (ear plugs) provide reasonable protection but less than a full helmet and may impair communication clarity. Option D incorrectly assumes that cockpit noise levels are low — sustained exposure to even moderate cockpit noise causes cumulative hearing damage over time.
+
+### Q77: Gas-forming foods that cause flatulence ought to be avoided before a high-altitude flight. Which of these foods must therefore be avoided? ^t40q77
+- A) legumes (beans)
+- B) meat
+- C) pasta
+- D) potatoes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Legumes such as beans, peas, and lentils are well known to produce significant intestinal gas during digestion. At altitude, ambient pressure decreases and any trapped gas in the body expands according to Boyle's law, potentially causing severe abdominal pain and distraction in flight. Option B (meat), Option C (pasta), and Option D (potatoes) do not produce significant intestinal gas under normal circumstances. Pilots planning high-altitude flights should avoid gas-forming foods in the hours before departure.
+
+### Q78: The respiratory process enables gas exchange in somatic cells (metabolism). These cells… ^t40q78
+- A) absorb nitrogen and release oxygen
+- B) absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide (CO2)
+- C) absorb oxygen and release nitrogen
+- D) absorb oxygen and release carbon monoxide (CO)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cellular respiration, somatic cells take in oxygen and use it to metabolise glucose and other nutrients, producing energy (ATP) and releasing carbon dioxide (CO2) as a waste product. Option A and Option C incorrectly involve nitrogen, which plays no active role in cellular metabolism — it is physiologically inert at normal pressures. Option D incorrectly names carbon monoxide (CO) as a metabolic by-product; CO is a toxic gas from incomplete combustion, not from normal cellular processes.
+
+### Q79: A regular smoker pilot smokes a few cigarettes shortly before an alpine flight. What effects might this have on their flight fitness? ^t40q79
+- A) for a regular smoker, there are no effects to fear as the body is accustomed to the harmful substances absorbed
+- B) the pilot will experience oxygen deficiency at a lower altitude than if they had abstained from smoking before the flight
+- C) the nicotine absorbed may cause mild disturbances of consciousness and difficulty concentrating
+- D) the smoke causes mild carbon dioxide (CO2) poisoning, which may cause sensations of dizziness and numbness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO), which binds to haemoglobin and reduces the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A pilot who smokes before an alpine flight effectively raises their "physiological altitude" — they will experience symptoms of oxygen deficiency (hypoxia) at a lower altitude than a non-smoking pilot would. Option A incorrectly assumes that habitual smoking confers tolerance; the CO effect on haemoglobin is cumulative regardless of habit. Option C attributes the wrong symptoms to nicotine. Option D confuses carbon monoxide (CO) with carbon dioxide (CO2), which are entirely different gases.
+
+### Q80: When is the risk of vestibular disturbance causing dizziness greatest? ^t40q80
+- A) when rotating the head during a descent
+- B) when rotating the head during straight-and-level flight
+- C) when rotating the head during a climb
+- D) when rotating the head during a coordinated turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotating the head during a coordinated turn creates the Coriolis illusion — the semicircular canals are already stimulated by the angular acceleration of the turn, and a head rotation in a different plane stimulates additional canals simultaneously, producing a powerful and disorienting sensation of tumbling or spinning. Option A, Option B, and Option C involve head rotation during relatively stable flight conditions where only one set of canals is stimulated at a time, making vestibular disturbance far less likely. The Coriolis illusion is one of the most dangerous vestibular phenomena in aviation.
+
+### Q81: How can a pilot better withstand positive g-forces in flight? ^t40q81
+- A) by sitting as upright as possible
+- B) by relaxing their muscles and leaning forward
+- C) by contracting the abdominal and leg muscles and performing forced breathing
+- D) by tightening their harness straps as much as possible
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Contracting the abdominal and leg muscles (the anti-G straining manoeuvre or L-1 technique) increases intra-abdominal pressure and impedes blood from pooling in the lower body, maintaining blood flow to the brain and delaying the onset of grey-out and G-LOC. Forced, cyclical breathing maintains thoracic pressure. Option A (sitting upright) has minimal effect. Option B (relaxing and leaning forward) would accelerate blood pooling in the lower extremities. Option D (tightening harness straps) secures the pilot but does not counteract the haemodynamic effects of g-forces.
+
+### Q82: Which are the most dangerous effects of oxygen deficiency? ^t40q82
+- A) tingling sensations
+- B) blue discoloration of fingernails and lips
+- C) impairment of judgment and concentration
+- D) nausea
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Impairment of judgment and concentration is the most dangerous effect of hypoxia because the pilot loses the very cognitive abilities needed to recognise the problem and take corrective action — a phenomenon known as "insidious hypoxia." Option A (tingling) and Option D (nausea) are unpleasant but do not directly prevent the pilot from deciding to descend. Option B (cyanosis) is a visible physical sign but does not impair decision-making in itself. The critical danger is that a hypoxic pilot often feels fine while their mental performance deteriorates severely.
+
+### Q83: What can be said about the rate of blood alcohol elimination in humans? ^t40q83
+- A) it is accelerated by breathing pure oxygen
+- B) it depends only on time and amounts to roughly 0.1 per mille per hour
+- C) it depends on the alcohol content of the drink consumed
+- D) it can be accelerated by drinking strong coffee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Alcohol is eliminated from the blood by the liver at a nearly constant rate of approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, determined solely by time and the liver's enzyme capacity. Option A (breathing pure oxygen) does not accelerate hepatic alcohol metabolism. Option C is incorrect because the elimination rate is constant regardless of whether the alcohol came from beer, wine, or spirits — what differs is how much total alcohol was consumed. Option D (drinking coffee) may increase alertness temporarily but has no effect on the metabolic breakdown of alcohol.
+
+### Q84: What impact does proprioception (deep sensitivity) have on position perception? ^t40q84
+- A) in coordination with the balance organ, proprioception gives a correct position impression even when visibility is lost
+- B) when visual references are lost, proprioception can give a false perception of position
+- C) proprioception alone is always sufficient to sustain a correct perception of position
+- D) when training is adequate, proprioception can prevent spatial disorientation when visibility is lost
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Proprioception — the sense of body position derived from receptors in muscles, joints, and tendons — can provide misleading information about the aircraft's attitude when visual references are absent. Without visual confirmation, the proprioceptive system cannot reliably distinguish between gravitational forces and centripetal forces in a turn. Option A incorrectly claims that proprioception and the vestibular system together provide accurate orientation without vision. Option C overstates proprioception's reliability. Option D wrongly suggests that training can overcome this fundamental physiological limitation. Only visual references or flight instruments can reliably prevent spatial disorientation.
+
+### Q85: Which of these factors has no direct effect on visual acuity? ^t40q85
+- A) high blood pressure
+- B) carbon monoxide (CO)
+- C) oxygen deficiency
+- D) alcohol
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** High blood pressure (hypertension) does not directly impair visual acuity during normal flight operations, although severe chronic hypertension may eventually damage the retina over time. Option B (carbon monoxide) reduces oxygen delivery to the retina, directly degrading vision, particularly night vision. Option C (oxygen deficiency) similarly starves the highly oxygen-dependent photoreceptors, causing measurable visual impairment even at moderate altitudes. Option D (alcohol) depresses the central nervous system and impairs visual processing, focus, and contrast sensitivity. All three of these factors directly affect a pilot's ability to see clearly.
+
+### Q86: Up to what maximum altitude can a healthy human body compensate for oxygen deficiency by increasing heart rate and breathing rate? ^t40q86
+- A) roughly 3,000 ft
+- B) roughly 22,000 ft
+- C) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- D) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human body can compensate for the reduced partial pressure of oxygen up to approximately 10,000-12,000 ft by increasing heart rate, respiratory rate, and cardiac output. Above this altitude, these compensatory mechanisms become insufficient and supplemental oxygen is required to prevent significant performance degradation. Option A (3,000 ft) is far too low — compensation is barely needed at this altitude. Option B (22,000 ft) far exceeds the body's compensatory range. Option C (6,000-7,000 ft) is the altitude where compensatory mechanisms begin to activate, not their upper limit.
+
+### Q87: What has to be observed when taking over-the-counter medications? ^t40q87
+- A) even over-the-counter medications can influence flight fitness
+- B) over-the-counter medications have no side effects and therefore no influence on flight fitness
+- C) all flying is prohibited after taking any medication
+- D) over-the-counter medications only have insignificant side effects; their influence on flight fitness is negligible
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Many over-the-counter medications — including antihistamines, cold remedies, pain relievers, and decongestants — can cause drowsiness, dizziness, impaired reaction time, or blurred vision, all of which compromise flight safety. Option B and Option D dangerously dismiss the potential for side effects. Option C is too extreme — not all medications are incompatible with flying, but each must be evaluated individually. The correct approach is to consult an aviation medical examiner (AME) before flying with any medication, whether prescription or over-the-counter.
+
+### Q88: What sensory illusion can a linear acceleration produce in horizontal flight when visual references are lost? ^t40q88
+- A) the impression of being in a left turn
+- B) the impression of descending
+- C) the impression of being in a right turn
+- D) the impression of climbing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A forward linear acceleration in horizontal flight pushes the pilot back into the seat, and the otolith organs in the inner ear interpret the combined acceleration vector as a backward tilt — creating the somatogravic illusion of a climb. Without visual references, the pilot may instinctively push the nose down to "correct" the perceived climb, risking a dive into terrain. Option A and Option C (turning impressions) are associated with semicircular canal stimulation, not linear acceleration. Option B (descent impression) would result from deceleration, not acceleration.
+
+### Q89: How long does the human eye take to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q89
+- A) roughly 1 second
+- B) roughly 10 minutes
+- C) roughly 10 seconds
+- D) roughly 30 minutes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Full dark adaptation of the human eye takes approximately 30 minutes as the rod photoreceptors in the retinal periphery gradually increase their sensitivity through biochemical changes in rhodopsin. Option A (1 second) and Option C (10 seconds) describe only the initial pupil dilation, which is a small part of the adaptation process. Option B (10 minutes) represents partial adaptation — at this point, the cones have adapted but the rods have not yet reached maximum sensitivity. Pilots planning night flights should protect their dark adaptation by avoiding bright white light for at least 30 minutes before departure.
+
+### Q90: Which of these statements about hyperventilation is correct? ^t40q90
+- A) hyperventilation is always a consequence of oxygen deficiency
+- B) hyperventilation causes an excess of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood
+- C) hyperventilation can be triggered by stress and anxiety
+- D) hyperventilation causes a deficiency of carbon monoxide (CO) in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation — excessively rapid or deep breathing — is frequently triggered by stress, anxiety, or fear, which causes the pilot to unconsciously breathe faster than metabolically necessary. This excessive ventilation blows off too much CO2, causing hypocapnia (low blood CO2), not an excess. Option A is wrong because hyperventilation is not caused by oxygen deficiency; it can occur at any altitude when the pilot is stressed. Option B incorrectly states that CO2 increases, when in fact it decreases. Option D confuses carbon monoxide (CO) with carbon dioxide (CO2) — hyperventilation involves CO2, not CO.
+
+### Q91: Vestibular disturbances during a turn can cause dizziness. What measure is most effective in preventing them? ^t40q91
+- A) during the turn, look out through the window in the direction of the turn
+- B) keep the head as still as possible during the turn
+- C) breathe deeply and slowly, ensuring an adequate supply of fresh air
+- D) alternately move the head from right to left during the turn
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Keeping the head still during a turn prevents the Coriolis illusion, which occurs when head movement in one plane is combined with the angular rotation of the turn, stimulating multiple semicircular canals simultaneously and producing intense vertigo. Option A (looking out the window) does not address the vestibular cause of the disturbance. Option C (deep breathing and fresh air) helps with motion sickness but not with vestibular vertigo from head movements. Option D (alternating head movements) would dramatically worsen the problem by creating repeated Coriolis stimulation.
+
+### Q92: Which is the immediate effect of inhaling cigarette smoke on a regular smoker? ^t40q92
+- A) lowered blood pressure
+- B) dilation of blood vessels
+- C) reduced oxygen transport in the blood
+- D) increased carbon dioxide (CO2) content in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The carbon monoxide (CO) in cigarette smoke binds to haemoglobin far more readily than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and immediately reducing the blood's capacity to transport oxygen to tissues and organs. Option A (lowered blood pressure) is incorrect — nicotine actually raises blood pressure through vasoconstriction. Option B (dilation of blood vessels) is also wrong; nicotine causes vasoconstriction, not dilation. Option D confuses the issue — smoking does not significantly increase CO2 levels; the problem is CO displacing oxygen on the haemoglobin molecule.
+
+### Q93: What is the relationship between oxygen deficiency and visual acuity? ^t40q93
+- A) oxygen deficiency can reduce visual acuity
+- B) oxygen deficiency has no effect on visual acuity
+- C) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity only during the day
+- D) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity solely at night
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The retina is one of the most metabolically active tissues in the body and is highly sensitive to oxygen deprivation. Even mild hypoxia can reduce visual acuity, diminish contrast sensitivity, and narrow the visual field, with night vision being affected first since rod cells are particularly oxygen-demanding. Option B incorrectly denies any relationship. Option C and Option D each restrict the effect to one time of day, when in reality both day and night vision are impaired — night vision is simply affected earlier and more severely because rods have higher oxygen requirements than cones.
+
+### Q94: Oxygen deficiency and hyperventilation share some similar symptoms. Which of these symptoms always indicates oxygen deficiency? ^t40q94
+- A) blue lips and fingernails (cyanosis)
+- B) visual disturbance
+- C) hot and cold sensations
+- D) tingling sensations
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cyanosis — a bluish discolouration of the lips and fingernails caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin — is a reliable and specific sign of oxygen deficiency that cannot be produced by hyperventilation alone. Option B (visual disturbance), Option C (hot and cold sensations), and Option D (tingling) can all occur in both hypoxia and hyperventilation, making them unreliable for distinguishing between the two conditions. Recognising cyanosis is therefore a critical diagnostic tool: if blue lips or nail beds are observed, the cause is definitively inadequate oxygen supply, and descent to lower altitude is required immediately.
+
+### Q95: What is the proportion of oxygen (in %) in the air at an altitude of approximately 34,000 feet? ^t40q95
+- A) 10%
+- B) 21%
+- C) 5%
+- D) 42%
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The atmosphere maintains a constant composition of approximately 21% oxygen from sea level through the troposphere and well into the stratosphere. At 34,000 ft, while the total atmospheric pressure is only about one quarter of sea-level pressure, the proportion of oxygen remains 21%. Option A (10%), Option C (5%), and Option D (42%) all incorrectly suggest the percentage changes with altitude. The critical point is that at 34,000 ft the partial pressure of oxygen is dangerously low despite the unchanged percentage, making supplemental oxygen or pressurisation essential for survival.
+
+### Q96: During a visual flight, you suddenly lose all external visual references. Spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses and proprioception is… ^t40q96
+- A) impossible
+- B) possible only for experienced pilots
+- C) possible only after adequate training
+- D) possible for solely a few minutes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without external visual references, maintaining spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses (pressure on the skin) and proprioception (body position sense) is physiologically impossible because these senses cannot distinguish between gravitational forces and the centripetal or inertial forces experienced in flight. Option B and Option C incorrectly suggest that experience or training can overcome this fundamental human limitation. Option D implies that orientation is possible for a short time, but in reality spatial disorientation can begin within seconds of losing visual references. Only flight instruments or restored visual contact can provide reliable attitude information.
+
+### Q97: Which is the most probable and most dangerous poisoning that can occur on board a piston-engine aircraft? ^t40q97
+- A) poisoning due to cosmic radiation at high altitude
+- B) carbon monoxide poisoning
+- C) ozone poisoning
+- D) poisoning due to leaded fuel vapors
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning from a defective or leaking exhaust system is the most likely and most dangerous in-flight poisoning in piston-engine aircraft. CO is colourless and odourless, making it undetectable without a dedicated CO detector, and it binds to haemoglobin 200 times more strongly than oxygen, rapidly incapacitating the pilot. Option A (cosmic radiation) is a long-term cumulative risk for frequent high-altitude flyers, not an acute poisoning event. Option C (ozone) affects primarily high-altitude jet aircraft. Option D (leaded fuel vapours) can occur during refuelling but is not a common in-flight hazard.
+
+### Q98: What impression results from a correct final approach to a runway with a strong upslope in the landing direction? ^t40q98
+- A) the impression of landing too short
+- B) the impression of too shallow an approach
+- C) the impression of too high an approach
+- D) the impression of too low an approach
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a runway that slopes upward in the landing direction, the pilot perceives the runway surface at an unusual angle that creates the visual illusion of being too high on approach. The upsloping surface compresses the visual perspective, making the runway appear closer and the approach steeper than it actually is. Option A and Option D describe the opposite illusion. Option B (too shallow) would occur with a downsloping runway. This visual trap can lead the pilot to unnecessarily steepen the approach, potentially resulting in a dangerously low and short landing.
+
+### Q99: Why should gas-forming foods be avoided before undertaking a high-altitude flight? ^t40q99
+- A) because gas expansion during descent can cause pain in the digestive system
+- B) because gas expansion at high altitudes can cause pain in the digestive system
+- C) because at high altitudes, gases evaporate into the blood and cause decompression sickness
+- D) because gas-forming foods promote motion sickness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As altitude increases, ambient pressure decreases and trapped gases in the body expand according to Boyle's law. Intestinal gas produced by gas-forming foods such as beans and lentils expands significantly at altitude, causing abdominal distension, pain, and distraction from flying tasks. Option A incorrectly places the problem during descent, when gas would actually compress. Option C confuses intestinal gas expansion with dissolved nitrogen forming bubbles in the blood (decompression sickness), which is an entirely different mechanism. Option D incorrectly links gas-forming foods to motion sickness, which is a vestibular phenomenon.
+
+### Q100: Which blood component primarily transports oxygen? ^t40q100
+- A) red blood cells
+- B) blood plasma
+- C) blood platelets
+- D) white blood cells
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells (erythrocytes) contain haemoglobin, the iron-containing protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues throughout the body. Each red blood cell carries approximately 270 million haemoglobin molecules, making erythrocytes the primary oxygen transport system. Option B (blood plasma) carries a small amount of dissolved oxygen but contributes less than 2% of total oxygen transport. Option C (blood platelets) are involved in blood clotting, not gas transport. Option D (white blood cells) are part of the immune system and play no role in oxygen delivery.
+
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+### Q101: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q101
+![[figures/t50_q101.png]]
+- A) Wind from NNE, 120 kt
+- B) Wind from NNE, 70 kt
+- C) Wind from SSW, 70 kt
+- D) Wind from SSW, 120 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barbs point in the direction the wind blows from, with speed indicated by barbs and pennants on the upwind end: a pennant = 50 kt, a long barb = 10 kt, a short barb = 5 kt. The symbol shows a wind from SSW with one pennant (50 kt) and two long barbs (20 kt), totalling 70 kt. Options A and B incorrectly identify the direction as NNE — wind barbs point FROM the wind source, not toward it. Option D overstates the speed to 120 kt.
+
+### Q102: What is the name of the fog that develops when a moist air mass moves horizontally over a colder surface? ^t50q102
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Orographic fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Sea spray
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a colder surface, cooling from below until it reaches its dew point and condensation occurs at ground level. Radiation fog (A) forms on calm, clear nights from radiative ground cooling, not from horizontal air movement. Orographic fog (B) results from moist air being lifted over terrain. Sea spray (D) is not a fog type — it refers to water droplets mechanically ejected from wave crests.
+
+### Q103: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below show? ^t50q103
+![[figures/t50_q103.png]]
+- A) Westerly wind situation
+- B) Bise situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) North Foehn situation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts a South Foehn (Südföhn) situation, where a pressure gradient drives moist air from the south against the southern slopes of the Alps. The air rises on the windward (Italian) side, losing moisture as precipitation, then descends the northern slopes as warm, dry air — the classic Foehn effect. Option A (westerly wind) involves Atlantic air masses from the west. Option B (Bise) is a cold northeast wind. Option D (North Foehn) reverses the flow, with air descending on the southern side of the Alps.
+
+### Q104: Which altimeter setting must you select so that the instrument shows your height above a specific aerodrome (AAL)? ^t50q104
+- A) The QNH of the aerodrome.
+- B) The QFF of the aerodrome.
+- C) The QFE of the aerodrome.
+- D) The QNE of the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure measured at the aerodrome reference point. When QFE is set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero while on the ground at that aerodrome, and shows height above the aerodrome (AAL) during flight. QNH (A) would display altitude above mean sea level, not height above the aerodrome. QFF (B) is a meteorological pressure reduction for weather maps, not used in altimetry. QNE (D) is the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa) for flight level indication.
+
+### Q105: What are the wind speed and direction in this METAR? LFSB 171100Z 29004KT 220V340 9999 FEW043 28/17 Q1013 NOSIG= ^t50q105
+- A) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+- C) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the METAR group "29004KT 220V340": 290 is the wind direction in degrees (290° = WNW), 04 is the speed in knots, and "220V340" indicates the direction varies between 220° (SW) and 340° (NNW). Options B and C incorrectly interpret 290° as ESE — that would be approximately 110°–120°. Option D has the correct mean direction (WNW) but reverses the variability range to NE and SSE, which contradicts the 220V340 notation.
+
+### Q106: During summer in central Europe, what phenomenon is typical of an advancing cold front when the warm air ahead has an unstable thermodynamic structure? ^t50q106
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) A rapid temperature rise after the front passes.
+- C) Thunderstorm clouds.
+- D) A rapid drop in atmospheric pressure after frontal passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an advancing cold front encounters warm, unstable air ahead of it in a European summer setting, the forced lifting triggers vigorous convection and the rapid vertical development of cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) clouds with heavy precipitation, lightning, and gusty winds. Stratiform clouds (A) are associated with stable air masses. Temperature falls, not rises (B), after a cold front passes. Pressure rises, not drops (D), behind a cold front as cold dense air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q107: Along the route from LOWK to EDDP (dotted arrow), what weather phenomena should be anticipated? ^t50q107
+![[figures/t50_q107.png]]
+- A) Gradual temperature increase, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- B) Gradual temperature decrease, headwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- C) Gradual temperature increase, headwind, no thunderstorms.
+- D) Gradual temperature decrease, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying from LOWK (Klagenfurt, Austria) northward to EDDP (Leipzig, Germany), the aircraft moves into cooler air at higher latitudes, producing a gradual temperature decrease. The synoptic pattern on the chart indicates headwind conditions along this route and convective activity yielding isolated thunderstorms, particularly during summer. Option A wrongly predicts warming (heading north) and tailwind. Option C denies thunderstorm risk despite the synoptic instability shown. Option D correctly predicts cooling and thunderstorms but wrongly identifies a tailwind.
+
+### Q108: Which type of cloud is most likely to cause heavy showers? ^t50q108
+- A) Nimbostratus
+- B) Altostratus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds are massive convective clouds extending from near the surface to the tropopause, containing enormous quantities of water and ice sustained by powerful updrafts. They produce the heaviest showers, hail, and thunderstorms. Nimbostratus (A) produces prolonged, steady precipitation but not heavy showers. Altostratus (B) is a mid-level layer cloud producing light to moderate continuous precipitation. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude cloud that does not produce significant precipitation.
+
+### Q109: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has a low pressure area to its north and a high pressure area to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q109
+- A) North
+- B) West
+- C) East
+- D) South
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, the wind is approximately geostrophic, blowing parallel to the isobars with low pressure to the left and high pressure to the right in the Northern Hemisphere. With low pressure to the north and high to the south, the pressure gradient force points northward, and the Coriolis deflection turns the resulting wind to the right — producing a westward (east-to-west) flow. The balloon is therefore carried toward the west. Options A, C, and D misapply the Buys-Ballot law for this pressure configuration.
+
+### Q110: When air is forced upward by terrain and encounters unstable, moist layers, what are the resulting thunderstorms called? ^t50q110
+- A) Cold front thunderstorms
+- B) Orographic thunderstorms
+- C) Thermal thunderstorms
+- D) Warm front thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When terrain (mountains, ridges, or hills) mechanically forces air upward and this lifted air encounters moist, unstable layers aloft, the resulting convective storms are classified as orographic thunderstorms. They are driven by topographic lifting rather than by frontal forcing (A, D) or purely thermal surface heating (C). Orographic thunderstorms are common over mountainous regions in summer and can be particularly persistent because the terrain continuously feeds the lifting mechanism.
+
+### Q111: Which set of conditions favours the development of advection fog? ^t50q111
+- A) Cold, humid air flowing over a warm ocean
+- B) Moisture evaporating from warm, humid ground into cold air
+- C) Warm, humid air flowing over a cold surface
+- D) Warm, humid air cooling on a cloudy night
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air moves horizontally over a colder surface and is cooled from below to its dew point. This commonly occurs when maritime tropical air flows over cold ocean currents or cold land in early spring. Cold air over warm water (A) would produce steam fog (evaporation fog), not advection fog. Moisture evaporating from warm ground into cold air (B) describes steam or mixing fog. Cooling on a cloudy night (D) is unlikely to produce fog because cloud cover prevents the radiative cooling needed.
+
+### Q112: Which process leads to the formation of advection fog? ^t50q112
+- A) Warm, moist air transported across cold ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixed with warm, moist air
+- C) Lengthy radiation on cloud-free nights
+- D) Cold, moist air transported across warm ground areas
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog results from the horizontal transport (advection) of warm, moist air across a cold surface. The cold surface cools the air from below until it reaches its dew point, causing condensation at ground level. Option B describes mixing fog, where two air masses of different temperatures combine. Option C describes radiation fog, formed by nocturnal radiative cooling on clear, calm nights. Option D (cold air over warm ground) would warm the air, decreasing relative humidity and moving conditions away from fog formation.
+
+### Q113: During the passage of a cold front, what pressure pattern is typically observed? ^t50q113
+- A) A steady decrease in pressure
+- B) A brief decrease followed by an increase in pressure
+- C) A constant pressure pattern
+- D) A steady increase in pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As a cold front approaches, pressure falls ahead of it due to the pre-frontal trough. At the moment of frontal passage, pressure reaches its minimum, and immediately afterward it begins to rise sharply as cold, dense air moves in behind the front. This characteristic "V-shaped" pressure trace — a brief fall followed by a sustained rise — is the textbook pressure signature of cold front passage. Options A and D describe monotonic trends, while option C suggests no dynamic weather activity, none of which match frontal passage behaviour.
+
+### Q114: Which frontal boundary separates subtropical air from polar cold air, particularly across Central Europe? ^t50q114
+- A) Polar front
+- B) Cold front
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the semi-permanent, quasi-continuous boundary zone separating warm subtropical air masses from cold polar air masses across the mid-latitudes, including Central Europe. It is the birthplace of extratropical cyclones. A cold front (B) is the leading edge of a single advancing cold air mass within a cyclone. A warm front (D) is the leading edge of advancing warm air. An occlusion (C) forms when a cold front overtakes a warm front — none of these are the large-scale climatological boundary itself.
+
+### Q115: In Central Europe during summer, what weather conditions are typically associated with high pressure areas? ^t50q115
+- A) Closely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- B) Widely spaced isobars with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- C) Widely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- D) Closely spaced isobars with strong prevailing northerly winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Summer high-pressure areas over Central Europe produce widely spaced isobars, indicating weak synoptic-scale pressure gradients and therefore light prevailing winds. In the absence of strong gradient winds, locally driven thermal circulations — valley breezes, sea breezes, slope winds — develop and dominate the airflow pattern. Option A contradicts itself (close isobars do not produce calm winds). Option B describes strong westerlies associated with low-pressure systems. Option D describes a cold northerly flow pattern, not typical of summer anticyclones.
+
+### Q116: What weather can be expected in high pressure areas during the winter season? ^t50q116
+- A) Changing weather with frontal line passages
+- B) Light winds and extensive areas of high fog
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- D) Calm weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In winter, high-pressure areas produce subsidence inversions that trap cold, moist air near the surface, creating widespread high fog (Hochnebel) and stratus layers, particularly in valley and basin locations across Central Europe. Winds are light due to the weak pressure gradient. Option A (frontal weather) is associated with low-pressure systems. Option C (squall lines and thunderstorms) requires convective instability absent in winter highs. Option D describes summer high-pressure conditions with thermal cumulus development, not the foggy, grey winter anticyclone.
+
+### Q117: At which temperature range is airframe icing most hazardous? ^t50q117
+- A) +5° to -10° C
+- B) 0° to -12° C
+- C) +20° to -5° C
+- D) -20° to -40° C
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most dangerous airframe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C because supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and largest in this temperature band. These droplets freeze on contact with aircraft surfaces, producing heavy ice accumulation. Below -20°C (D), most cloud water has already frozen into ice crystals that bounce off rather than adhering. The range +5° to -10°C (A) extends into above-freezing temperatures where icing cannot occur. The range +20° to -5°C (C) is far too broad and mostly above freezing.
+
+### Q118: When large, supercooled droplets strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice is produced? ^t50q118
+- A) Clear ice
+- B) Mixed ice
+- C) Hoar frost
+- D) Rime ice
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clear ice (also called glaze ice) forms when large supercooled water droplets strike an aircraft surface and flow back along it before freezing, creating a smooth, dense, transparent, and very heavy ice layer that closely conforms to the surface shape. It is the most dangerous type of airframe ice because it is difficult to detect and remove. Rime ice (D) forms from small droplets that freeze instantly on contact, trapping air and creating a rough, white, opaque deposit. Mixed ice (B) is a combination of both. Hoar frost (C) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not from droplet impact.
+
+### Q119: What conditions must be present for thermal thunderstorms to develop? ^t50q119
+- A) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- B) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and low humidity
+- C) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- D) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal thunderstorms require three ingredients working together: a conditionally unstable atmosphere (one that becomes fully unstable once air parcels reach saturation and the level of free convection), elevated surface temperatures to trigger strong thermals, and high humidity to supply the moisture and latent heat energy that fuels deep convection. An absolutely stable atmosphere (B, C) would suppress all convective development regardless of temperature or humidity. Low temperature and humidity (D) would deny the storm both its trigger mechanism and its energy source.
+
+### Q120: During which stage of a thunderstorm do updrafts dominate? ^t50q120
+- A) Mature stage
+- B) Upwind stage
+- C) Dissipating stage
+- D) Cumulus stage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cumulus (initial/developing) stage of a thunderstorm is characterised exclusively by updrafts that build the cloud vertically from cumulus congestus toward cumulonimbus. No downdrafts or precipitation have yet developed. The mature stage (A) features coexisting updrafts and downdrafts along with precipitation, turbulence, and lightning. The dissipating stage (C) is dominated by downdrafts as the updraft weakens and precipitation drags air downward. "Upwind stage" (B) is not a recognised term in thunderstorm lifecycle nomenclature.
+
+### Q121: Where should heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear near the ground be expected? ^t50q121
+- A) During warm summer days with high, flattened Cu clouds.
+- B) Close to rainfall areas of intense showers or thunderstorms.
+- C) During an approach to a coastal airfield with a strong sea breeze.
+- D) On cold, clear nights when radiation fog is forming.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Intense showers and thunderstorms produce powerful downdrafts (microbursts and downbursts) driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling. When these downdrafts hit the ground they spread outward, generating dangerous low-level wind shear that can cause sudden airspeed loss on approach. Sea-breeze fronts (C) produce mild convergence, not heavy downdrafts. Radiation fog nights (D) are calm with virtually no wind shear. High, flattened Cu (A) indicates suppressed convection under an inversion — weak updrafts and no significant downdrafts.
+
+### Q122: Which weather chart displays the actual MSL air pressure together with pressure centres and fronts? ^t50q122
+- A) Hypsometric chart
+- B) Prognostic chart
+- C) Wind chart
+- D) Surface weather chart
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) depicts observed mean sea-level pressure using isobars, identifies pressure centres (highs and lows) with their central pressures, and plots the positions of fronts (warm, cold, occluded, stationary) based on actual observations. A prognostic chart (B) shows forecast conditions, not current observations. A wind chart (C) displays wind vectors only. A hypsometric chart (A) shows the height of constant-pressure surfaces aloft, not MSL pressure or surface fronts.
+
+### Q123: What kind of information can be derived from satellite images? ^t50q123
+- A) Turbulence and icing conditions
+- B) Temperature and dew point of surrounding air
+- C) An overview of cloud cover and frontal lines
+- D) Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Satellite images (visible, infrared, and water vapour channels) provide a synoptic overview of cloud cover distribution, cloud type estimation, and the identification of frontal lines by recognising characteristic cloud patterns. Turbulence and icing (A) cannot be directly measured by satellite — those require pilot reports or forecast models. Temperature and dew point (B) are measured by radiosondes and surface stations. Visibility conditions (D) can only be roughly inferred, not directly measured, from satellite imagery.
+
+### Q124: Which information is available in the ATIS but not in a METAR? ^t50q124
+- A) Current weather details such as precipitation types
+- B) Approach data including ground visibility and cloud base
+- C) Operational details such as active runway and transition level
+- D) Mean wind speeds and maximum gust speeds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) broadcasts include operational aerodrome information such as the active runway, transition level, approach type in use, and relevant NOTAMs — none of which are encoded in a METAR. A METAR already contains precipitation types (A), visibility and cloud information (B), and wind speed including gusts (D). ATIS supplements the METAR with the operational data pilots need for arrival and departure.
+
+### Q125: Which cloud type signals the presence of thermal updrafts? ^t50q125
+- A) Lenticularis
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Cirrus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible markers of thermal convection: warm air rises from the surface, cools adiabatically to the dew point, and condenses, forming the flat-based, cauliflower-topped cloud that glider pilots use to locate thermals. Stratus (B) forms from broad, gentle lifting in stable air, not from thermals. Cirrus (D) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud unrelated to surface convection. Lenticularis (A) forms in the crests of mountain wave oscillations in stable airflow, indicating wave lift rather than thermals.
+
+### Q126: Compared to the dry adiabatic lapse rate, the saturated adiabatic lapse rate is... ^t50q126
+- A) Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- B) Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- C) Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- D) Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR, averaging about 0.6°C/100 m) is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR, 1.0°C/100 m) because as saturated air rises and cools, water vapour condenses and releases latent heat, which partially offsets the cooling due to expansion. This means saturated air cools more slowly per unit of altitude gained. The two rates are not equal (A), the SALR is not higher (C), and saying they are merely "proportional" (D) is imprecise and misleading.
+
+### Q127: What is the value of the dry adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q127
+- A) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 2° / 1000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is exactly 1.0°C per 100 m (or approximately 3°C per 1000 ft). This is the rate at which an unsaturated air parcel cools when rising (or warms when descending) purely due to adiabatic expansion or compression. Option A (0.6°C/100 m) is approximately the saturated adiabatic lapse rate. Option B (0.65°C/100 m) is the standard atmosphere environmental lapse rate. Option D (2°/1000 ft) converts to about 0.66°C/100 m, which does not match the DALR.
+
+### Q128: What weather should be expected when the atmosphere is conditionally unstable? ^t50q128
+- A) Cloud-free skies, sunshine, light winds
+- B) Layered clouds reaching high levels, prolonged rain or snow
+- C) Towering cumulus, isolated rain showers or thunderstorms
+- D) Shallow cumulus clouds with bases at medium levels
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Conditional instability means the atmosphere is stable for unsaturated air but becomes unstable once air parcels are lifted to saturation. When triggered — by surface heating, orographic lift, or frontal forcing — this instability produces vigorous convection: towering cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds with isolated showers and thunderstorms. Clear skies (A) indicate absolute stability or dry conditions. Layered clouds with prolonged rain (B) characterise absolutely stable (stratiform) weather. Shallow mid-level cumulus (D) indicates limited instability insufficient for significant vertical development.
+
+### Q129: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^t50q129
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The figure MET-004 shows thin, wispy, high-altitude clouds with a delicate fibrous or streaky structure — the defining visual characteristics of cirrus clouds. Cirrus forms above approximately 6,000 m (FL200) and consists entirely of ice crystals, which produce its distinctive silky or hair-like appearance. Stratus (A) is a grey, featureless layer cloud at low altitude. Cumulus (B) has a well-defined, puffy vertical structure. Altocumulus (D) appears as white or grey patches or layers of rounded masses at mid-level.
+
+### Q130: What is required for the development of medium to large precipitation particles? ^t50q130
+- A) An inversion layer.
+- B) A high cloud base.
+- C) Strong updrafts.
+- D) Strong wind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Medium to large precipitation particles (raindrops, hailstones) need time to grow by collision-coalescence or the Bergeron ice-crystal process, and strong updrafts keep droplets and ice crystals suspended in the cloud long enough for this growth to occur. Without sufficient updraft strength, particles fall out before reaching significant size. An inversion layer (A) suppresses cloud growth and precipitation. A high cloud base (B) reduces available cloud depth for particle growth. Strong horizontal wind (D) does not contribute to the vertical suspension needed for particle growth.
+
+### Q131: On the weather chart, the symbol labelled (2) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q131
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On standard synoptic weather charts, a warm front is depicted as a line with semicircles pointing in the direction of movement (into the colder air mass). The referenced figure MET-005 shows symbol (2) matching this convention — semicircles on one side of the frontal line. A cold front (A) uses triangular barbs pointing in the direction of advance. An occlusion (D) uses alternating triangles and semicircles on the same side. A front aloft (C) is marked with a different symbology indicating the front does not reach the surface.
+
+### Q132: Within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q132
+- A) Visibility below 1000 m, cloud covering the ground
+- B) Good visibility, a few isolated high clouds
+- C) Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds
+- D) Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The warm sector lies between the warm front and the cold front, containing the warmest, most homogeneous air. During summer, this air mass typically offers moderate to good visibility with scattered or broken cloud layers — flyable VFR conditions. Visibility below 1000 m with ground-covering cloud (A) is more typical of winter fog or orographic stratus. Heavy showers and thunderstorms (D) are characteristic of the cold front itself, not the warm sector. Few isolated high clouds (B) describe pre-frontal conditions well ahead of the system.
+
+### Q133: After a cold front has passed, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q133
+- A) Moderate visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation
+- B) Good visibility, cumulus cloud development with rain or snow showers
+- C) Scattered cloud layers, visibility over 5 km, shallow cumulus clouds forming
+- D) Poor visibility, overcast or ground-covering stratus, snow
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cold front passes, cold, clean polar air replaces the warm sector. This unstable air mass produces excellent visibility between showers, with convective cumulus clouds developing from surface heating and occasional rain or snow showers from cumulus congestus. Option A describes warm front approach conditions (lowering bases, continuous rain). Option C understates the convective activity typical of post-frontal polar air. Option D describes poor visibility with stratus, which is more typical of the cold sector of a warm occlusion, not the fresh polar air behind a cold front.
+
+### Q134: In what direction does a polar front low typically move? ^t50q134
+- A) Parallel to the warm front line toward the south
+- B) Northeastward in winter, southeastward in summer
+- C) Northwestward in winter, southwestward in summer
+- D) Parallel to the warm-sector isobars
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A polar front low (extratropical cyclone) is steered by the upper-level airflow, which is closely approximated by the direction of the isobars in the warm sector — the warm sector wind effectively carries the entire system along. This is a more reliable steering rule than fixed seasonal directions. Option A wrongly states southward movement. Options B and C propose rigid seasonal rules that oversimplify the highly variable tracks of mid-latitude cyclones across Europe.
+
+### Q135: What is the characteristic pressure pattern as a polar front low passes over? ^t50q135
+- A) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- B) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- C) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+- D) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, rising pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The classic pressure trace of a passing polar front low follows three phases: pressure falls as the warm front approaches (the low draws nearer), pressure holds relatively steady in the warm sector between the two fronts, and pressure rises sharply after the cold front passes as cold, dense air replaces the warm sector. Option B wrongly has pressure rising ahead of the warm front. Option C has pressure falling behind the cold front, contradicting the arrival of dense cold air. Option D reverses the entire pattern.
+
+### Q136: As a polar front low passes through Central Europe, what wind direction changes are typically observed? ^t50q136
+- A) Backing at both the warm front and the cold front
+- B) Veering at the warm front, backing at the cold front
+- C) Backing at the warm front, veering at the cold front
+- D) Veering at both the warm front and the cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, as a typical polar front low passes, wind veers (shifts clockwise) at both frontal passages. At the warm front, wind veers from southeast to south or southwest. At the cold front, it veers again from southwest to west or northwest. This consistent clockwise shift indicates the low is passing to the north of the observer, which is the normal track for lows crossing Central Europe. Backing (A, B, C) would indicate the low passing to the south — an uncommon trajectory.
+
+### Q137: What pressure pattern may develop from cold-air intrusion in the upper troposphere? ^t50q137
+- A) Development of a low in the upper troposphere
+- B) Development of a high in the upper troposphere
+- C) Oscillating pressure
+- D) Development of a large surface low
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When cold air intrudes into the upper troposphere, it reduces the thickness of the atmospheric column (cold air is denser and occupies less vertical space), causing the heights of upper pressure surfaces to drop. This creates an upper-level low or trough. These cold-pool lows aloft are potent triggers for convective instability and often initiate cyclogenesis at the surface. An upper high (B) would form from warm-air advection, not cold intrusion. Oscillating pressure (C) and a large surface low (D) are not the direct or primary consequence of upper-level cold intrusion.
+
+### Q138: Cold air flowing into the upper troposphere may lead to... ^t50q138
+- A) Stabilisation and settled weather.
+- B) Frontal weather systems.
+- C) Showers and thunderstorms.
+- D) Calm weather and cloud dissipation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air advecting into the upper troposphere steepens the lapse rate (cold air aloft over relatively warmer air below), producing conditional or even absolute instability. This destabilisation triggers convection, generating showers and thunderstorms — especially when combined with surface moisture and daytime heating. Stabilisation and settled weather (A) and calm conditions (D) are the opposite of what cold upper-air intrusion produces. Frontal weather (B) requires surface air-mass boundaries, which are not a direct result of upper-tropospheric cooling.
+
+### Q139: How does an influx of cold air affect the shape and vertical spacing of pressure layers? ^t50q139
+- A) Increased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- B) Decreased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- C) Increased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+- D) Decreased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air is denser than warm air, so a cold air column has less vertical distance (decreased spacing) between any two pressure surfaces. Because the column is compressed, the upper pressure surfaces lie at lower geometric heights, which is identified as low pressure aloft on hypsometric charts. This is why upper-level lows are always associated with cold-core air masses. Warm air produces the opposite: increased spacing and raised heights (high pressure aloft), as described in options A and C.
+
+### Q140: During summer, what weather is typical of high pressure areas? ^t50q140
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- B) Settled weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+- C) Changeable weather with frontal passages
+- D) Light winds with widespread high fog
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, anticyclones bring subsiding air that warms adiabatically, suppressing deep convection and producing clear to partly cloudy skies with perhaps a few fair-weather cumulus (Cu humilis) from daytime thermal heating. The overall character is settled, warm, and dry. Squall lines and thunderstorms (A) require convective instability not present in a well-established high. Frontal passages (C) are features of low-pressure troughs. Widespread high fog (D) is a winter high-pressure phenomenon caused by temperature inversions trapping cold moist air.
+
+### Q141: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn conditions, what weather should be expected? ^t50q141
+- A) Scattered cumulus clouds accompanied by showers and thunderstorms
+- B) Light wind with formation of high stratus (high fog)
+- C) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate to heavy rain
+- D) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming, strong gusty winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (Stau) side during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise over the mountain barrier, cooling adiabatically and producing dense layered clouds (stratus, nimbostratus), obscured mountain peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy orographic precipitation. Option D describes the lee-side Foehn effect — warm, dry, gusty descending wind — which is the opposite side of the mountains. Option A describes convective (unstable) weather, not the organised forced ascent of a Foehn pattern. Option B describes stagnant anticyclonic conditions, not active orographic lifting.
+
+### Q142: Which chart depicts areas of precipitation? ^t50q142
+- A) Wind chart
+- B) Radar picture
+- C) GAFOR
+- D) Satellite picture
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Weather radar detects precipitation directly by measuring the intensity of microwave energy backscattered from raindrops, snowflakes, and hail. Radar imagery shows the precise location, extent, and intensity of precipitation areas in near-real-time. A satellite picture (D) shows cloud cover but cannot directly distinguish precipitating from non-precipitating clouds. A wind chart (A) displays wind patterns only. A GAFOR (C) is a coded route forecast for general aviation that categorises flying conditions but does not depict precipitation areas graphically.
+
+### Q143: An inversion is an atmospheric layer where... ^t50q143
+- A) Pressure increases with increasing height.
+- B) Temperature remains constant with increasing height.
+- C) Temperature decreases with increasing height.
+- D) Temperature increases with increasing height.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion is a layer of the atmosphere where temperature increases with altitude, which is the reverse ("inversion") of the normal tropospheric lapse rate. Inversions are extremely stable and act as lids that suppress convection, trap pollution, and limit thermal development for glider pilots. Option B describes an isothermal layer (constant temperature). Option C describes the normal lapse rate. Option A is incorrect because atmospheric pressure always decreases with height, regardless of the temperature profile.
+
+### Q144: Which condition may prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q144
+- A) A clear, cloudless night
+- B) Low temperature-dew point spread
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Calm wind conditions
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog requires the ground to radiate longwave heat to space, cooling the surface air to the dew point. An overcast cloud layer acts as a blanket, absorbing and re-emitting radiation back toward the ground, preventing the surface from cooling sufficiently. Therefore, overcast cloud cover prevents radiation fog formation. A clear night (A), low spread (B), and calm wind (D) all favour fog formation — they are prerequisites, not preventative conditions.
+
+### Q145: On the chart, the symbol labelled (3) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q145
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Front aloft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An occluded front is depicted on synoptic charts by a line combining both the cold front triangles and the warm front semicircles on the same side, representing the merger of the two fronts when the faster-moving cold front overtakes the warm front. Symbol (3) in figure MET-005 shows this combined symbology, identifying it as an occlusion. A warm front (A) uses only semicircles. A cold front (B) uses only triangles. A front aloft (D) has a distinct marking indicating the frontal surface does not reach the ground.
+
+### Q146: A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass that shows no horizontal movement is known as a... ^t50q146
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Occluded front.
+- C) Stationary front.
+- D) Cold front.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stationary front is a boundary between two contrasting air masses — here polar and subtropical — that is not moving significantly in either direction. Neither the cold air nor the warm air is advancing. A cold front (D) is specifically an advancing cold air mass pushing warm air aside. A warm front (A) is advancing warm air overriding cold air. An occluded front (B) results from a cold front overtaking a warm front within a mature cyclone — it involves merging fronts, not stationary boundaries.
+
+### Q147: Which situation may lead to severe wind shear? ^t50q147
+- A) Cross-country flying beneath Cu clouds at roughly 4 octas coverage
+- B) A shower visible in the vicinity of the airfield
+- C) Final approach 30 minutes after a heavy shower has cleared the airfield
+- D) Flying ahead of a warm front with Ci clouds visible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An active shower near an airfield indicates ongoing convective downdrafts and outflow boundaries that create severe, rapidly changing low-level wind shear — a critical hazard during takeoff and landing. The gust front from a nearby shower can change wind direction and speed dramatically within seconds. Cross-country flying below moderate Cu (A) involves normal soaring conditions. Thirty minutes after a shower (C), conditions have typically stabilised. Cirrus ahead of a warm front (D) is an upper-level indicator without immediate low-level shear implications.
+
+### Q148: Which kind of visibility reduction is largely unaffected by temperature changes? ^t50q148
+- A) Mist (BR)
+- B) Patches of fog (BCFG)
+- C) Haze (HZ)
+- D) Radiation fog (FG)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Haze (HZ) is caused by dry particulates — dust, smoke, industrial pollution, and fine sand — suspended in the atmosphere. Because these particles are not moisture-dependent, haze persists regardless of temperature changes. Mist (A), fog patches (B), and radiation fog (D) are all formed by water droplet suspension and are highly sensitive to temperature: warming evaporates the droplets and improves visibility, while cooling promotes further condensation and worsens it.
+
+### Q149: In a METAR, how are moderate showers of rain encoded? ^t50q149
+- A) TS.
+- B) .+RA.
+- C) SHRA.
+- D) .+TSRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the descriptor "SH" (shower) is combined with the precipitation type "RA" (rain) to form "SHRA," which denotes moderate showers of rain. No intensity prefix means moderate. "+RA" (B) indicates heavy continuous rain, not a shower. "TS" (A) denotes a thunderstorm without specifying precipitation type. "+TSRA" (D) indicates a heavy thunderstorm with rain — a more severe phenomenon than a simple rain shower.
+
+### Q150: For which areas are SIGMET warnings issued? ^t50q150
+- A) Airports.
+- B) FIRs / UIRs.
+- C) Specific routings.
+- D) Countries.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SIGMET (Significant Meteorological Information) warnings are issued for Flight Information Regions (FIRs) and Upper Information Regions (UIRs), which are standardised ICAO airspace blocks managed by specific ATC authorities. They warn of hazardous weather phenomena (severe turbulence, icing, volcanic ash, thunderstorms) within these defined airspace volumes. SIGMETs are not issued for individual airports (A) — those use AIRMETs or aerodrome warnings. They are not route-specific (C) or country-specific (D), as a single country may contain multiple FIRs.
+
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+### Q151: Updrafts along a mountain slope can be strengthened by... ^t50q151
+- A) Warming of upper atmospheric layers
+- B) Thermal radiation from the windward side at night
+- C) Solar heating on the lee side
+- D) Solar heating on the windward side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Solar heating on the windward slope warms the surface air, making it less dense and creating anabatic (upslope) flow that combines with the mechanical orographic lift from the oncoming wind, significantly strengthening the updraft. This is why south- and west-facing slopes in the Northern Hemisphere often produce the strongest lift during sunny afternoons. Option A (warming of upper layers) would increase stability and suppress convection. Option B (nighttime radiation from the windward side) produces cooling and katabatic (downslope) flow, the opposite of updrafts. Option C (solar heating on the lee side) does not contribute to windward-side updrafts.
+
+### Q152: The prefix used for clouds in the high layers is... ^t50q152
+- A) Alto-.
+- B) Nimbo-.
+- C) Strato-.
+- D) Cirro-.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "Cirro-" identifies clouds in the high cloud family, typically found above approximately 6000 m (FL200) in mid-latitudes, and includes cirrus, cirrocumulus, and cirrostratus — all composed primarily of ice crystals. Option A ("Alto-") designates mid-level clouds between roughly 2000 and 6000 m, such as altostratus and altocumulus. Option B ("Nimbo-") indicates rain-producing clouds regardless of altitude, such as nimbostratus. Option C ("Strato-") refers to layered cloud forms at low to mid levels.
+
+### Q153: What factor may limit the vertical extent of cumulus clouds at the top? ^t50q153
+- A) The presence of an inversion layer
+- B) The absolute humidity
+- C) Relative humidity
+- D) The spread
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer creates a zone where temperature increases with altitude, forming a highly stable lid that stops rising thermals from penetrating further upward. Cumulus clouds reaching this barrier flatten out and spread horizontally rather than continuing to develop vertically, which is why fair-weather cumulus often have a uniform top height. Option D (the spread, i.e., temperature minus dew point) determines cloud base height, not cloud top. Options B (absolute humidity) and C (relative humidity) influence whether clouds form at all but do not cap their vertical extent the way an inversion does.
+
+### Q154: Which factors point toward a tendency for fog formation? ^t50q154
+- A) Strong winds with falling temperature
+- B) Low pressure with rising temperature
+- C) Small spread with falling temperature
+- D) Small spread with rising temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A small spread (temperature close to dew point) means the air is already near saturation, and falling temperature will close the remaining gap, causing condensation at or near the surface — fog. These are the classic pre-fog conditions monitored by pilots and forecasters. Option A (strong winds) promotes turbulent mixing that prevents the surface layer from reaching saturation. Option B (low pressure with rising temperature) widens the spread and favours lifting rather than surface fog. Option D (rising temperature) increases the spread, moving conditions away from saturation.
+
+### Q155: What process gives rise to orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q155
+- A) Extended radiation on cloud-free nights
+- B) Evaporation from warm, moist ground into very cold air
+- C) Cold, moist air mixing with warm, moist air
+- D) Warm, moist air forced over a hill or mountain range
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when warm, moist air is forced to ascend over elevated terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point and condenses. The resulting cloud envelops the hill or mountain and appears as fog to anyone on the slope or summit. Option A describes the formation mechanism of radiation fog, which occurs on calm, clear nights over flat terrain. Option B describes steam fog (or evaporation fog), which forms when cold air passes over much warmer water or moist surfaces. Option C describes frontal or mixing fog, a different process entirely.
+
+### Q156: What is needed for precipitation to form inside clouds? ^t50q156
+- A) High humidity and elevated temperatures
+- B) An inversion layer
+- C) Moderate to strong updrafts
+- D) Calm winds and intense solar insolation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation particles need time to grow large enough to fall against the updraft, either through collision-coalescence (warm rain process) or the Bergeron ice-crystal process. Moderate to strong updrafts keep water droplets and ice crystals suspended in the cloud long enough for this growth to occur. Option A (high humidity and elevated temperatures) favours cloud formation but does not ensure particles grow to precipitation size. Option B (an inversion layer) suppresses cloud development and works against precipitation. Option D (calm winds and sunshine) describes surface conditions that do not directly produce in-cloud precipitation.
+
+### Q157: In areas where isobars are widely spaced, what wind conditions should be expected? ^t50q157
+- A) Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing
+- B) Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering
+- C) Local wind systems developing with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Variable winds with the development of local wind systems
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Widely spaced isobars indicate a weak horizontal pressure gradient, which produces only light synoptic-scale winds. In the absence of a dominant pressure-driven flow, local thermally driven wind systems — such as valley-mountain breezes, sea-land breezes, and slope winds — become the primary circulation features, with wind direction varying throughout the day. Options A, B, and C all describe strong prevailing winds, which require closely spaced isobars (a steep pressure gradient) and are therefore inconsistent with the wide spacing described.
+
+### Q158: Under what circumstances does back side weather (Rückseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q158
+- A) After passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) Before passage of an occlusion
+- D) After passage of a cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Back-side weather" (Rückseitenwetter) describes the conditions in the cold, unstable polar air mass that follows behind a cold front on the western or northwestern side of a low-pressure system. It is characterized by good visibility, convective cumulus clouds, and scattered showers or snow showers. Option A (after a warm front) leads into the warm sector, not the cold back side. Option B (Foehn on the lee side) is a thermodynamic mountain phenomenon unrelated to frontal weather. Option C (before an occlusion) describes pre-frontal conditions, not back-side weather.
+
+### Q159: How is a wind reported as 225/15 described? ^t50q159
+- A) South-west wind at 15 km/h
+- B) North-east wind at 15 km/h
+- C) North-east wind at 15 kt
+- D) South-west wind at 15 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation weather reporting, wind is always given as the direction FROM which it blows (in degrees true) followed by speed in knots. A report of 225/15 means wind from 225 degrees (southwest) at 15 knots. Options B and C incorrectly interpret 225 degrees as northeast, perhaps confusing the direction the wind blows from with the direction it blows toward. Option A gives the correct direction but uses km/h instead of the standard aviation unit of knots.
+
+### Q160: In the Bavarian area near the Alps, what weather typically accompanies Foehn conditions? ^t50q160
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm dry wind
+- B) High pressure over Biscay and a low over Eastern Europe
+- C) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side, flat pressure pattern
+- D) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm dry wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn in the Bavarian pre-alpine region, the prevailing southerly flow forces moist air up the southern (Italian) side of the Alps, producing nimbostratus and heavy orographic precipitation there. As the air descends on the northern (Bavarian) lee side, it warms adiabatically and dries out, creating the characteristic warm, dry, gusty Foehn wind. Rotor clouds and lenticular clouds form on the lee side due to wave activity. Option A incorrectly places nimbostratus on the northern side and rotors on the windward side. Option B describes a synoptic pattern, not the weather itself. Option C contradicts the definition of Foehn, which produces warm, dry — not cold, humid — descending air.
+
+### Q161: Clouds are fundamentally classified into which two basic types? ^t50q161
+- A) Stratiform and ice clouds
+- B) Layered and lifted clouds
+- C) Thunderstorm and shower clouds
+- D) Cumulus and stratiform clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental cloud classification divides all clouds into two basic forms based on their physical formation process: cumuliform (convective, vertically developed clouds formed by localized updrafts) and stratiform (layered, horizontally extended clouds formed by widespread, gentle lifting or cooling). All other cloud types and subtypes derive from combinations of these two basic forms. Option A incorrectly pairs stratiform with "ice clouds," which is a composition category, not a form. Option B uses non-standard terminology. Option C names specific weather phenomena rather than fundamental cloud forms.
+
+### Q162: During Foehn conditions, what weather phenomenon marked as "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q162
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the lee side during Foehn conditions, the descending air creates standing wave patterns downwind of the mountain ridge. These waves produce Altocumulus lenticularis — smooth, lens-shaped or almond-shaped clouds that remain stationary relative to the terrain despite strong winds passing through them. They are a hallmark of mountain wave activity. Options B and D (cumulonimbus) are associated with deep convective instability, not the stable laminar wave flow characteristic of Foehn. Option A (Altocumulus castellanus) indicates mid-level convective instability with turret-like protrusions, which is a different meteorological situation.
+
+### Q163: When very small water droplets and ice crystals strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice forms? ^t50q163
+- A) Hoar frost
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Rime ice
+- D) Mixed ice
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rime ice forms when very small supercooled water droplets freeze instantly upon contact with the aircraft's leading edges, trapping air between the frozen particles and creating a rough, white, opaque deposit. Because the droplets are so small, they freeze before they can spread, resulting in the characteristic granular texture. Option B (clear ice) forms from larger supercooled droplets that flow along the surface before freezing, producing a smooth, transparent, dense layer. Option D (mixed ice) is a combination of rime and clear ice. Option A (hoar frost) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not by droplet impact.
+
+### Q164: Which chart contains information about pressure patterns and frontal positions? ^t50q164
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC)
+- B) Surface weather chart.
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Wind chart.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) is the primary meteorological product displaying isobars (lines of equal pressure at MSL), the locations of highs and lows, and the positions and types of fronts (warm, cold, occluded, stationary). Option A (Significant Weather Chart) focuses on aviation hazards such as turbulence, icing, and significant cloud coverage, but does not show the full surface pressure pattern. Option C (hypsometric chart) depicts the heights of constant-pressure surfaces in the upper atmosphere. Option D (wind chart) shows wind speed and direction at specific levels without pressure or frontal information.
+
+### Q165: What is the typical cloud sequence observed during the approach and passage of a warm front? ^t50q165
+- A) Squall line with rain showers and thunderstorms (Cb), gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) In coastal areas, daytime wind from the coast with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in the evening
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog layers forming in winter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The approach of a warm front produces a characteristic descending cloud sequence as the warm air gradually overrides the retreating cold air mass. First, thin cirrus appears at high altitude, followed by cirrostratus, then progressively thickening altostratus and altocumulus at mid-levels, and finally nimbostratus with a low cloud base and prolonged steady rain. Option A describes cold front or squall line weather. Option B describes a coastal sea-breeze cycle unrelated to frontal meteorology. Option D describes anticyclonic subsidence or continental high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q166: What phenomenon results from cold-air downdrafts carrying precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud? ^t50q166
+- A) Anvil-head top of the Cb cloud
+- B) Freezing rain
+- C) Electrical discharge
+- D) Gust front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a mature thunderstorm, precipitation drags cold air downward in powerful downdrafts. When this cold, dense air reaches the surface, it spreads outward rapidly as a density current, creating a gust front — a sharp boundary marked by sudden wind shifts, temperature drops, and gusty conditions that can extend several kilometres ahead of the storm. Option A (anvil-head top) is a structural feature shaped by upper-level winds, not caused by downdrafts reaching the surface. Option C (electrical discharge) results from charge separation within the cloud. Option B (freezing rain) requires a specific temperature inversion profile, not downdraft spreading.
+
+### Q167: Which item is NOT included on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)? ^t50q167
+- A) Frontal lines and frontal displacement
+- B) Turbulence area information
+- C) Icing condition information
+- D) Radar echoes of precipitation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-Level Significant Weather Charts are forecast products that depict meteorological hazards below a specified altitude, including frontal systems and their movement (option A), turbulence areas (option B), and icing conditions (option C). However, they do not contain radar echoes of precipitation (option D) because radar imagery is a real-time observational product, whereas LLSWC are prognostic charts prepared in advance. Precipitation areas may be indicated symbolically on LLSWC, but actual radar returns are found only on separate radar displays.
+
+### Q168: Which cloud type produces prolonged, steady rain? ^t50q168
+- A) Cirrostratus
+- B) Altocumulus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nimbostratus (Ns) is a thick, dark grey, amorphous layer cloud that produces continuous, steady precipitation (rain or snow) over wide areas, typically associated with warm fronts or occlusions. Its great vertical and horizontal extent ensures prolonged precipitation reaching the ground. Option A (cirrostratus) is a thin, high-level ice cloud that does not produce surface precipitation. Option B (altocumulus) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained surface rain. Option D (cumulonimbus) produces intense but short-lived showers and thunderstorms rather than prolonged steady rain.
+
+### Q169: Based on cloud type, how is precipitation classified? ^t50q169
+- A) Light and heavy precipitation.
+- B) Prolonged rain and continuous rain.
+- C) Showers of snow and rain.
+- D) Rain and showers of rain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Meteorological classification of precipitation by cloud type distinguishes two fundamental categories: rain (steady, continuous precipitation from stratiform clouds like nimbostratus) and showers of rain (intermittent, convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds like cumulonimbus or cumulus congestus). This distinction reflects the physical formation process — widespread lifting versus localized convection. Option A classifies by intensity rather than cloud type. Option B uses redundant terminology that does not distinguish cloud origins. Option C classifies by precipitation phase (snow versus rain), not by cloud type.
+
+### Q170: Which conditions favour thunderstorm development? ^t50q170
+- A) Clear night over land with cold air and fog patches
+- B) Warm, dry air under a strong inversion layer
+- C) Calm winds with cold air, overcast St or As cloud cover
+- D) Warm, humid air with a conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorm development requires three essential ingredients: moisture (warm, humid air provides the latent heat fuel), instability (a conditionally unstable lapse rate allows saturated air parcels to accelerate upward), and a lifting mechanism (fronts, orographic forcing, or surface heating). Option D combines the first two ingredients explicitly. Option A describes calm, stable nighttime conditions favouring radiation fog, not convection. Option B features a strong inversion that would cap any vertical development. Option C describes a stable, overcast situation with stratus or altostratus, which suppresses thunderstorm formation.
+
+### Q171: When isobars on a surface weather chart are widely spaced, what does this indicate about the prevailing wind? ^t50q171
+- A) Strong pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+- B) Weak pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- C) Strong pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- D) Weak pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spacing of isobars on a surface weather chart is inversely proportional to the pressure gradient: widely spaced isobars mean a small pressure difference over a large distance (weak gradient), which produces only light wind. Wind speed is directly driven by the pressure gradient force, so a weak gradient means weak wind. Option A contradicts itself by associating wide spacing with strong gradients. Option C pairs a strong gradient with light wind, which is meteorologically incorrect. Option D reverses the gradient-wind relationship.
+
+### Q172: An air mass arriving in Central Europe from the Russian continent during winter is described as... ^t50q172
+- A) Continental tropical air
+- B) Maritime polar air
+- C) Continental polar air
+- D) Maritime tropical air
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air masses are classified by their source region's surface characteristics. Air originating over the vast, snow-covered Russian (Siberian) continent during winter acquires cold temperatures and very low moisture content, making it Continental Polar (cP). This air mass brings bitterly cold, dry conditions to Central Europe when it advects westward. Option B (maritime polar) originates over polar oceans and carries significant moisture. Option A (continental tropical) and option D (maritime tropical) originate in warm regions and are far too warm and/or moist to describe Siberian winter air.
+
+### Q173: What clouds and weather are typically observed during the passage of a cold front? ^t50q173
+- A) Strongly developed Cb clouds with rain showers and thunderstorms, gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog in winter
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) In coastal areas, daytime onshore wind with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in evening
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold front passage is marked by a narrow band of intense weather as the advancing cold air undercuts the warm air, forcing it rapidly aloft. This produces strongly developed cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds, heavy rain showers, thunderstorms, and gusty winds along the frontal line, followed by cumulus with isolated showers in the cold, unstable air behind the front. Option C describes the gradual cloud sequence of an approaching warm front. Option B describes anticyclonic or high-pressure settling conditions. Option D describes a coastal sea-breeze pattern unrelated to frontal weather.
+
+### Q174: When an aircraft is struck by lightning, what is the most immediate danger? ^t50q174
+- A) Disrupted radio communication and static noise
+- B) Rapid cabin depressurisation and smoke in the cabin
+- C) Surface overheating and damage to exposed aircraft parts
+- D) Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most immediate physical danger from a lightning strike is surface overheating at the attachment and exit points, along with damage to exposed components such as antennas, pitot tubes, wingtips, and control surface edges. The extreme heat at the strike points can burn through thin skins, pit metal surfaces, and damage composite materials. Option A (disrupted radio communication) is a secondary effect that does not pose an immediate structural threat. Option B (cabin depressurisation) applies primarily to pressurised aircraft and is not the most common immediate consequence. Option D (explosion of cockpit equipment) is extremely unlikely in certified aircraft with proper lightning protection.
+
+### Q175: What is meant by mountain wind? ^t50q175
+- A) A wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.
+- B) A wind blowing down the mountain slope at night.
+- C) A wind blowing uphill from the valley at night.
+- D) A wind blowing down the mountain slope during daytime.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain wind (Bergwind) is a katabatic flow that occurs at night when mountain slopes cool by radiation faster than the free atmosphere at the same altitude. The cooled, denser air drains downslope under gravity toward the valley floor. This is part of the diurnal mountain-valley wind cycle. Option A describes valley wind (Talwind), which is the daytime anabatic upslope flow caused by solar heating. Option C reverses the nighttime flow direction. Option D reverses the daytime flow direction.
+
+### Q176: What is the average value of the saturated adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q176
+- A) 0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate averages approximately 0.6 degrees C per 100 m. It is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (1.0 degrees C per 100 m) because latent heat released during condensation partially offsets the cooling of the ascending air parcel. Option A (0 degrees C per 100 m) would mean no temperature change with altitude, which is physically unrealistic for a rising air parcel. Option B (2 degrees C per 1000 ft, approximately 0.66 degrees C per 100 m) is a rough approximation but not the standard textbook value. Option C (1.0 degrees C per 100 m) is the dry adiabatic lapse rate, not the saturated rate.
+
+### Q177: Throughout the year, extensive high pressure areas are found... ^t50q177
+- A) In tropical regions near the equator.
+- B) Over oceanic areas at approximately 30°N/S latitude.
+- C) In mid-latitudes along the polar front.
+- D) In areas with extensive lifting processes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The subtropical high-pressure belt at approximately 30 degrees N and S latitude is a semi-permanent feature of the global atmospheric circulation, created by the descending branch of the Hadley cell. Warm air rising near the equator flows poleward aloft, cools, and subsides in the subtropics, forming persistent anticyclones over the oceans (e.g., the Azores High, the Pacific High). Option A (equatorial regions) is dominated by the low-pressure Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Option C (mid-latitudes along the polar front) is a zone of cyclonic activity and low pressure. Option D (areas with extensive lifting) produce low pressure by definition, not high pressure.
+
+### Q178: During flight, weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained via... ^t50q178
+- A) SIGMET
+- B) ATIS.
+- C) PIREP
+- D) VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) is a continuous broadcast available on a dedicated frequency at equipped aerodromes, providing current weather observations, active runway, transition level, approach procedures, and relevant NOTAMs specific to that aerodrome. Pilots tune in to the ATIS frequency during flight to obtain up-to-date destination information. Option A (SIGMET) covers significant weather hazards across an entire FIR, not aerodrome-specific data. Option C (PIREP) contains pilot-reported weather conditions en route. Option D (VOLMET) broadcasts weather for multiple aerodromes but is less comprehensive than ATIS for a specific destination.
+
+### Q179: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^t50q179
+- A) Cumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Stratus
+- D) Altus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cloud in figure MET-002 is cumulus, identifiable by its characteristic flat base (marking the condensation level) and vertically developed, cauliflower-like top with sharp white outlines against the blue sky. Cumulus clouds form through thermal convection and are the clouds most associated with soaring flight. Option B (cirrus) would appear as thin, wispy ice-crystal filaments at very high altitude. Option C (stratus) would present as a uniform, featureless grey layer. Option D ("altus") is not a recognized cloud genus in the international cloud classification system.
+
+### Q180: What determines the character of an air mass? ^t50q180
+- A) Wind speed and tropopause height
+- B) Region of origin and trajectory during movement
+- C) Environmental lapse rate at the source
+- D) Temperatures at both origin and present location
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass acquires its temperature and moisture properties from the surface conditions of its source region (e.g., polar continent, tropical ocean) and then modifies as it travels over different surfaces along its trajectory. Both the origin (which sets the initial character) and the path (which modifies it) are essential for classifying and forecasting air mass behaviour. Option A (wind speed and tropopause height) are dynamic properties, not defining characteristics. Option C (environmental lapse rate at source) is a consequence of the air mass properties, not their cause. Option D (temperatures at origin and present location) captures only temperature while ignoring the critical moisture dimension.
+
+### Q181: What cloud type is commonly observed across extensive high-pressure areas in summer? ^t50q181
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- B) Overcast nimbostratus
+- C) Scattered cumulus clouds
+- D) Overcast low stratus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer anticyclones, surface heating generates thermal convection that produces scattered fair-weather Cumulus clouds (Cu humilis or Cu mediocris) during the day, dissipating in the evening. Overcast low stratus (option D) is associated with stable, moist air at low levels, common in autumn or maritime high-pressure situations. Nimbostratus (option B) is associated with frontal systems. Squall lines and thunderstorms (option A) require convective instability and moisture not typical of settled high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q182: The symbol marked (1) in the figure represents which frontal type? See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q182
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Front aloft.
+- C) Cold front.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a surface weather chart, a cold front is depicted by a line with solid triangular spikes (barbs) pointing in the direction of movement. The symbol labeled (1) in figure MET-005 matches the cold front symbol. A warm front uses semicircles. An occlusion uses alternating triangles and semicircles. A front aloft is depicted differently and is less commonly shown on basic surface charts.
+
+### Q183: In METAR code, which identifier denotes heavy rain? ^t50q183
+- A) .+SHRA.
+- B) RA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) SHRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR codes, precipitation intensity is indicated by a '+' prefix (heavy) or '-' prefix (light); no prefix means moderate. Rain is coded 'RA'. Therefore heavy rain is '+RA' (written as '+RA' in the standard, shown in the options as '.+RA'). 'RA' alone (option B) means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option D) means shower of rain (moderate). '+SHRA' (option A) means heavy shower of rain — a convective shower, not continuous heavy rain.
+
+### Q184: During which stage of a thunderstorm do strong updrafts and downdrafts coexist? ^t50q184
+- A) Thunderstorm stage.
+- B) Dissipating stage.
+- C) Mature stage.
+- D) Initial stage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the mature stage of a thunderstorm, both strong updrafts (sustaining the storm) and strong downdrafts (driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling) coexist simultaneously within the Cumulonimbus cell. The initial (cumulus) stage has only updrafts. The dissipating stage is dominated by downdrafts only, which cut off the updraft supply and weaken the storm. 'Thunderstorm stage' (option A) is not a recognised meteorological term.
+
+### Q185: Which conditions are most conducive to aircraft icing? ^t50q185
+- A) Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C in the presence of hail
+- B) Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C with supercooled water droplets present
+- C) Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C within cirrus clouds containing ice crystals
+- D) Sub-zero temperatures with strong wind and cloudless skies
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C where supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and drop size is largest, producing clear or mixed icing on airframe surfaces. Below -20°C, cloud water is mostly in ice crystal form and causes much less accretion. Above 0°C, droplets are not supercooled and do not freeze on contact. Icing in clear air (option D) does not occur as there are no supercooled droplets. Cirrus (option C) contains ice crystals which do not adhere significantly.
+
+### Q186: What is the primary hazard when approaching a valley airfield with strong winds aloft blowing perpendicular to the surrounding ridges? ^t50q186
+- A) Heavy downdrafts beneath thunderstorm rainfall areas
+- B) Wind shear during descent, with possible 180° wind direction changes
+- C) Reduced visibility and potential loss of sight of the airfield on final
+- D) Formation of moderate to severe clear ice on all aircraft surfaces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When strong wind blows perpendicular to a mountain ridge, orographic lift on the windward side and mechanical turbulence create complex wind shear on the lee side. An aircraft descending into a valley airfield on the lee side may encounter severe wind shear with the wind reversing by up to 180° between altitudes, creating sudden loss of airspeed or ground wind opposite to the upper-level flow. Reduced visibility (option C) is a secondary concern. Icing (option D) is unrelated to mountain wind shear. Heavy downdrafts in rainfall (option A) describes thunderstorm activity, not orographic flow.
+
+### Q187: What are "blue thermals"? ^t50q187
+- A) Turbulence in the vicinity of cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Descending air found between cumulus clouds
+- C) Thermals that rise without producing any cumulus clouds
+- D) Thermals occurring when cumulus coverage is below 4/8
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blue thermals are thermals that extend to significant altitude but remain below the condensation level (dew point height), so no Cumulus clouds form — the sky appears clear (blue). They are invisible to glider pilots and require instruments or experience to exploit. Option D confuses thermals with cloud coverage statistics. Option B describes sink between Cu clouds. Option A describes clear-air turbulence (CAT) near thunderstorms, a different phenomenon.
+
+### Q188: The expression "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal strength... ^t50q188
+- A) Is sufficient for cross-country soaring with cumulus clouds marking the thermals.
+- B) Reaches at least 1200 m MSL and becomes usable for gliding.
+- C) Becomes sufficient for gliding and extends to at least 600 m AGL.
+- D) Reaches at least 600 m AGL and produces cumulus clouds.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 'beginning of thermals' (Thermikbeginn) is the moment when thermal lift becomes sufficiently strong and deep (reaching at least 600 m AGL) for a glider to sustain flight and gain height — this is the practical definition. It does not require Cu cloud formation (option A), nor does it specify a fixed MSL altitude (option B). Option D adds an unnecessary cloud formation criterion to what is fundamentally an altitude threshold.
+
+### Q189: How is the "trigger temperature" defined? It is the temperature which... ^t50q189
+- A) A thermal reaches during its ascent at the moment cumulus clouds begin forming.
+- B) Must be attained at ground level for cumulus clouds to develop from thermal convection.
+- C) Represents the maximum surface temperature achievable before a cumulus cloud evolves into a thunderstorm.
+- D) Represents the minimum surface temperature required for a cumulus to develop into a thunderstorm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum ground temperature that must be reached before thermals are strong enough to carry air parcels to the condensation level and form Cumulus clouds. It is found on a tephigram or skew-T diagram by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the surface intersection until it meets the temperature profile. Options A and C misstate it as a temperature reached aloft or a threshold for thunderstorm formation. Option D describes thunderstorm formation, not Cu formation.
+
+### Q190: In a weather briefing, what does the term "over-development" refer to? ^t50q190
+- A) Transition from blue thermals to cloud-marked thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Spreading of cumulus clouds beneath an inversion layer
+- C) Vertical growth of cumulus clouds into rain-producing showers
+- D) Intensification of a thermal low into a storm depression
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development (Überentwicklung) occurs when Cumulus clouds develop vertically beyond Cu congestus into rain-producing Cumulonimbus clouds, generating showers and thunderstorms. This typically happens in the afternoon when the atmosphere becomes increasingly unstable. Option A describes a change in thermal visibility. Option D refers to synoptic-scale deepening of depressions. Option B describes the spreading of Cu under an inversion (which is actually 'street' or 'cover' formation, a separate phenomenon).
+
+### Q191: In gliding meteorology, what does "shielding" refer to? ^t50q191
+- A) The anvil-shaped structure at the top of a thunderstorm cloud
+- B) Cumulus cloud coverage expressed in eighths of the sky
+- C) High or mid-level cloud layers that suppress thermal activity
+- D) Nimbostratus covering the windward slope of a mountain range
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding (Abschirmung) refers to a layer of high or mid-level cloud (such as Cirrostratus, Altostratus, or Altocumulus) that intercepts solar radiation before it reaches the ground, thus reducing or suppressing the surface heating required for thermal development. Option D describes cloud cover on a windward mountain slope. Option A describes the anvil of a Cb, not shielding. Option B describes sky coverage in oktas, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q192: What is the gaseous composition of dry air? ^t50q192
+- A) Oxygen 21%, Nitrogen 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- B) Nitrogen 21%, Oxygen 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- C) Oxygen 21%, Water vapour 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- D) Oxygen 78%, Water vapour 21%, Nitrogen 1%
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air is composed of approximately 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and 1% argon and trace gases including carbon dioxide. This is the standard atmospheric composition. All other options incorrectly swap the proportions of nitrogen and oxygen or introduce water vapour as a major component. Water vapour is a variable constituent (0–4%) not included in the standard dry air composition.
+
+### Q193: Under ISA conditions at mean sea level, what is the mass of one cubic metre of air? ^t50q193
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,01225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At MSL under ISA conditions, the standard air density is 1.225 kg/m³. A cube with 1 m edges has a volume of 1 m³, so its mass is 1.225 kg. Option B (0.01225 kg) is off by a factor of 100, option D (0.1225 kg) by a factor of 10, and option A (12.25 kg) by a factor of 10 in the opposite direction. These represent common decimal-point errors.
+
+### Q194: How is the tropopause defined? ^t50q194
+- A) The altitude above which temperature begins to decrease.
+- B) The boundary between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- C) The layer above the troposphere where temperature increases.
+- D) The boundary zone between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the boundary layer separating the troposphere (where temperature decreases with altitude) from the stratosphere (where temperature is initially constant and then increases due to ozone absorption). It is not the layer above the troposphere (option C), nor the height where temperature starts to decrease (option A — that is the surface of the troposphere). Option B confuses the tropopause with the stratopause.
+
+### Q195: What characterises an inversion layer? ^t50q195
+- A) A boundary zone separating two distinct atmospheric layers
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature falls with increasing altitude
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature remains constant with increasing altitude
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature rises with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer is an atmospheric layer in which temperature increases with increasing altitude, the reverse ('inversion') of the normal decrease. Inversions suppress vertical mixing and convection, trapping pollutants and inhibiting thermal development above them. Option B describes normal atmospheric conditions. Option C describes an isothermal layer. Option A describes a generic boundary without specifying the temperature gradient direction.
+
+### Q196: What defines an isothermal layer? ^t50q196
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with height
+- B) A transition zone between two other atmospheric layers
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with height
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature stays constant with height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer is one in which temperature remains constant with increasing altitude — neither increasing (inversion, option A) nor decreasing (normal lapse rate, option C). Isothermal conditions are found, for example, in the lower stratosphere. Option B describes a generic atmospheric boundary layer, not a layer of constant temperature.
+
+### Q197: What fundamental force initiates wind? ^t50q197
+- A) Thermal force
+- B) Coriolis force
+- C) Centrifugal force
+- D) Pressure gradient force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is caused by the pressure gradient force — air flows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure, and the greater the pressure difference over a given distance, the stronger the resulting wind. The Coriolis force (option B) deflects wind but does not create it. Centrifugal force (option C) is a secondary effect in curved flow. There is no meteorological force specifically called 'thermal force'; thermal differences drive pressure gradients, but the direct cause of wind is the pressure gradient itself.
+
+### Q198: Under what conditions does Foehn typically develop? ^t50q198
+- A) Stability, with extensive airflow forced over a mountain ridge.
+- B) Instability, with a high pressure area and calm wind.
+- C) Stability, with a high pressure area and calm wind.
+- D) Instability, with extensive airflow forced over a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn develops when a stable airflow is forced over a mountain barrier. On the windward side, the air rises moist-adiabatically (condensation releasing latent heat), and on the lee side it descends dry-adiabatically, arriving warmer and drier than before ascent. Stability is necessary for the organised flow; instability would break the flow into convective cells. Calm high-pressure conditions (options B and C) do not provide the cross-mountain pressure gradient needed. Instability (option D) would prevent the laminar flow characteristic of Foehn.
+
+### Q199: How is the "spread" (dew-point depression) defined? ^t50q199
+- A) The maximum quantity of water vapour that air can hold.
+- B) The ratio of actual humidity to the maximum possible humidity.
+- C) The difference between the actual air temperature and the dew point.
+- D) The difference between the dew point and the condensation point.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spread (or dew-point spread) is the difference between the actual (dry-bulb) air temperature and the dew point temperature. A small spread indicates air close to saturation; when the spread reaches zero, condensation and fog or cloud formation occur. Option D is incorrect because dew point and condensation point are effectively the same. Option B describes relative humidity. Option A describes the saturation mixing ratio or absolute humidity capacity.
+
+### Q200: During Foehn, what weather phenomenon designated by "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q200
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- C) Cumulonimbus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical in content to question 90. During Foehn, the descending and warming lee-side flow is stable and generates standing wave clouds. Altocumulus lenticularis forms in the crests of these mountain waves on the lee side. Cumulonimbus (options C and D) requires strong convective instability absent in Foehn descent. Altocumulus Castellanus (option A) indicates mid-level instability, not the stable wave motion of a Foehn situation.
+
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+### Q1: What clouds and weather may develop when a humid and unstable air mass is pushed against a mountain chain by the prevailing wind and forced upward? ^t50q1
+- A) Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation.
+- B) Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.
+- C) Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.
+- D) Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When unstable, humid air is forced to rise orographically, it triggers convective instability — air that is conditionally unstable becomes absolutely unstable once lifting begins. The resulting rapid ascent fuels cumulonimbus development, producing embedded CBs with thunderstorms, heavy showers, and hail. Stable air masses under the same conditions produce layered clouds (Ns or As) with steady rain, not convective storms.
+
+### Q2: What type of fog forms when humid and nearly saturated air is forced to rise along the slopes of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailing wind? ^t50q2
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Steaming fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Orographic fog
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog forms when wind-driven humid air is mechanically lifted along a slope, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point. Radiation fog requires calm nights with radiative ground cooling, advection fog forms when warm moist air moves over a cold surface, and steaming fog (Arctic sea smoke) occurs when cold air passes over warm water — none of these involve slope-forced lifting.
+
+### Q3: What phenomenon is known as "blue thermals"? ^t50q3
+- A) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+- D) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Blue thermals" exist when the lifting condensation level (LCL) is very high — the air is too dry to reach its dew point before the thermal tops out. As a result, thermals rise but no cumulus clouds form, leaving the sky clear ("blue"). For glider pilots this is challenging since there are no visual cloud markers to indicate thermal location, and the cloudbase is beyond the thermal ceiling.
+
+### Q4: The expression "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^t50q4
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal activity is considered to have "begun" when thermals are strong enough to support gliding and extend to at least 600 m AGL — sufficient altitude to work the lift. Below this height, thermals may exist but are too shallow to be safely exploited by a glider. Cloud formation is not a prerequisite; blue thermals (see Q3) can also mark the beginning of usable thermal activity.
+
+### Q5: The "trigger temperature" is the temperature that... ^t50q5
+- A) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+- B) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascent when Cumulus cloud formation begins.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level required for thunderstorm development from a Cumulus cloud.
+- D) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without thunderstorm formation from a Cumulus cloud.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum surface temperature that must be reached before thermals can rise to the condensation level and form cumulus clouds. It is derived from the aerological diagram (tephigram/Stüve diagram) by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the morning sounding's moisture level back to the surface. Until this temperature is reached, thermals may exist but will not produce cumulus markers.
+
+### Q6: What is meant by "over-development" in a weather report? ^t50q6
+- A) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- B) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+- C) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- D) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development occurs when cumulus clouds continue growing vertically beyond the thermal inversion or become self-sustaining through latent heat release, developing into cumulonimbus (Cb) with heavy rain showers, lightning, and hail. This typically happens during humid summer afternoons when atmospheric instability is high and the inhibiting layer is weak. For glider pilots, over-development signals the end of safe soaring conditions and a need to land.
+
+### Q7: The gliding weather report indicates environmental instability. Morning dew is present on the grass and no thermals are currently active. What thermal development can be expected? ^t50q7
+- A) Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will form
+- B) After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion, thermal activity is likely to start
+- C) With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin
+- D) Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity for the day
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Morning dew indicates the air cooled to the dew point overnight (radiation cooling), but this is temporary. Once solar insolation heats the ground, the surface temperature rises, warming the air above it until the temperature exceeds the trigger temperature. Environmental instability means the lapse rate is steep enough to sustain thermals once they begin, so good thermal conditions are likely to develop during the morning hours.
+
+### Q8: What effect on thermal activity can be expected when cirrus clouds approach from one direction and become increasingly dense, blocking the sun? ^t50q8
+- A) Cirrus clouds indicate instability and the onset of over-development
+- B) Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity
+- C) Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.
+- D) Cirrus clouds indicate a high-level inversion with ongoing thermal activity up to that level
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermals are driven by differential heating of the ground by solar radiation. Thickening cirrus clouds progressively filter out solar energy, reducing ground heating and therefore thermal strength and depth. Dense cirrus can reduce insolation enough to stop thermal activity entirely. Additionally, approaching cirrus from one direction often indicates an advancing warm front, which brings widespread cloud, stable conditions, and further suppression of thermals.
+
+### Q9: What situation is known as "shielding"? ^t50q9
+- A) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eighths of the sky
+- B) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- C) Ns clouds covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- D) High or mid-level cloud layers impairing thermal activity
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding describes the effect of high or medium cloud layers (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) that block solar radiation and suppress thermal development below. Even partial cloud cover at these levels can significantly reduce ground insolation. Gliding forecasts include shielding assessments to indicate when and where thermals will be weakened or absent due to cloud cover above the expected thermal layer.
+
+### Q10: While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending north to south and moving east. What would be a sensible decision regarding the weather? ^t50q10
+- A) Plan the flight below the thunderstorm cloud bases
+- B) Change plans and start the triangle heading east
+- C) Postpone the flight to another day
+- D) During flight, look for gaps between thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A squall line is an organized line of severe thunderstorms that is notoriously fast-moving, unpredictable, and extremely dangerous. Moving at typical speeds of 30–60 km/h, a squall line 100 km away could reach the airfield within 2–3 hours. Flying below Cb cloud bases or attempting to navigate between cells exposes the glider to extreme turbulence, windshear, hail, and downdrafts. The only safe option is to not fly until the hazard has completely passed.
+
+### Q11: What is the gas composition of "air"? ^t50q11
+- A) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- D) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air by volume is approximately 78% nitrogen (N2), 21% oxygen (O2), and the remaining 1% consists of argon, carbon dioxide, and other trace gases. Water vapour is variable (0–4%) and is not counted in the standard dry-air composition. Knowing air composition is fundamental to understanding atmospheric physics, density calculations, and the behaviour of aircraft engines and instruments.
+
+### Q12: In which atmospheric layer are weather phenomena predominantly found? ^t50q12
+- A) Stratosphere
+- B) Troposphere
+- C) Thermosphere
+- D) Tropopause
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The troposphere extends from the surface to approximately 8–16 km depending on latitude and season. It contains approximately 75–80% of the atmosphere's total mass and almost all its water vapour. Convection, cloud formation, precipitation, fronts, and wind phenomena all occur here because temperature decreases with height, driving convective instability. Above the tropopause, the stratosphere is stable and largely cloud-free.
+
+### Q13: What is the mass of a "cube of air" with 1 m edges at MSL according to ISA? ^t50q13
+- A) 12.25 kg
+- B) 0.01225 kg
+- C) 1.225 kg
+- D) 0.1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), air density at mean sea level is 1.225 kg/m³. Therefore a 1 m³ cube of air has a mass of 1.225 kg. This density value is fundamental to aviation: it affects lift, drag, engine power, and altimeter calibration. Density decreases with altitude and increases temperature/humidity changes also affect it, which is why density altitude matters for aircraft performance.
+
+### Q14: At what rate does the temperature change with increasing altitude according to ISA within the troposphere? ^t50q14
+- A) Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- B) Decreases by 2° C / 100 m
+- C) Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- D) Increases by 2° C / 100 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA standard lapse rate is 1.98°C per 1000 ft (approximately 2°C/1000 ft), or 6.5°C per 1000 m. This is the Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) used as a reference for altimeter calibration and pressure calculations. The actual ELR varies with weather conditions — steeper than ISA indicates instability and favours thermals, shallower or negative (inversion) indicates stability and suppresses convection.
+
+### Q15: What is the mean tropopause height according to the ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)? ^t50q15
+- A) 36000 m
+- B) 11000 ft
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 11000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is defined at 11,000 m (approximately 36,089 ft), where the temperature reaches -56.5°C and then remains constant with height into the lower stratosphere. In reality the tropopause height varies: it is lower over the poles (~8 km) and higher over the tropics (~16 km), and fluctuates with season and synoptic weather patterns. Cumulonimbus tops that penetrate the tropopause are especially violent.
+
+### Q16: The "tropopause" is defined as... ^t50q16
+- A) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- B) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- C) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- D) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the transition boundary between the troposphere (where temperature decreases with height) and the stratosphere (where temperature initially remains constant then increases due to ozone absorption of UV radiation). It acts as a "lid" on convection — cumulonimbus clouds that reach it spread out laterally to form the characteristic anvil shape. Jet streams are located near the tropopause.
+
+### Q17: In which unit are temperatures reported by European meteorological aviation services? ^t50q17
+- A) Degrees Fahrenheit
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrees Centigrade (°C)
+- D) Gpdam
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** European aviation meteorology (ICAO Annex 3, EU regulations) specifies temperatures in degrees Celsius (°C) for all operational products including METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs, and forecast charts. Kelvin is used in scientific and upper-air calculations. Fahrenheit is used in the US and a few other countries but not in European aviation. This standardisation is critical for correct interpretation of icing levels, freezing level heights, and density altitude.
+
+### Q18: What is meant by an "inversion layer"? ^t50q18
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion "inverts" the normal lapse rate — instead of temperature falling with height, it rises. This creates a very stable layer that acts as a lid on convection, trapping thermals below it, concentrating pollutants, and promoting fog and low cloud formation beneath it. For glider pilots, a low-level inversion caps thermal height; a subsidence inversion in a high-pressure system limits soaring altitude and is often associated with haze.
+
+### Q19: What is meant by an "isothermal layer"? ^t50q19
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer maintains constant temperature with increasing altitude. Like an inversion, it is more stable than the standard atmosphere and inhibits convection. The lower stratosphere exhibits an isothermal region immediately above the tropopause. Isothermal layers can also occur in the troposphere and, like inversions, act as a cap on thermal development and cloud growth.
+
+### Q20: The temperature lapse rate with increasing altitude within the troposphere according to ISA is... ^t50q20
+- A) 3° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0.65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0.6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) is 6.5°C per 1000 m, or 0.65°C per 100 m (approximately 2°C per 1000 ft). This is distinct from the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR) of 1°C/100 m and the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) of approximately 0.6°C/100 m. When the actual ELR is steeper than the DALR, the atmosphere is absolutely unstable; when it lies between the DALR and SALR, the atmosphere is conditionally unstable — the typical situation for thermal soaring.
+
+### Q21: Which process may produce an inversion layer at around 5000 ft (1500 m) altitude? ^t50q21
+- A) Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere
+- B) Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day
+- C) Ground cooling by radiation during the night
+- D) Widespread descending air within a high pressure area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Subsidence inversion forms when air in the centre of a high-pressure area sinks over a wide area. As the air descends, it warms adiabatically, but because the lower air has not warmed at the same rate, the descending layer becomes warmer than the air below it — creating an inversion, typically around 1500–3000 m. This is characteristic of anticyclonic conditions: stable weather, limited convection, and haze or smog trapped below the inversion.
+
+### Q22: A ground-level inversion can be caused by... ^t50q22
+- A) Ground cooling during the night.
+- B) Intensifying and gusting winds.
+- C) Large-scale lifting of air.
+- D) Thickening of clouds in medium layers.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation inversion forms on calm, clear nights when the ground radiates heat into space and cools rapidly. The air in contact with the ground also cools, while air a few hundred metres above remains warmer — creating a temperature inversion near the surface. This type of inversion is common in anticyclonic conditions and often produces radiation fog or low stratus in the morning, which burns off as the sun heats the ground.
+
+### Q23: What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)? ^t50q23
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 500 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) 250 hPa
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere, pressure at approximately 5500 m (FL180) is 500 hPa — exactly half the sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. The 500 hPa level is a key reference level in synoptic meteorology and is used extensively in upper-air charts. Pressure decreases approximately logarithmically with altitude, halving roughly every 5500 m in the lower troposphere.
+
+### Q24: Which processes lead to decreasing air density? ^t50q24
+- A) Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+- B) Increasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- C) Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- D) Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density is governed by the ideal gas law: density = pressure / (specific gas constant × temperature). Density decreases when pressure decreases (fewer molecules per unit volume) or when temperature increases (molecules move faster and spread apart). Both increasing temperature AND decreasing pressure simultaneously reduce density most effectively. This is why density altitude (the altitude equivalent of the actual air density) matters for aircraft performance on hot, high-altitude airfields.
+
+### Q25: The pressure at MSL under ISA conditions is... ^t50q25
+- A) 1123 hPa.
+- B) 113.25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) defines sea-level pressure as 1013.25 hPa (also expressed as 29.92 inHg in US aviation). This is the standard QNE setting — with 1013.25 hPa set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads Flight Level. All pressure altitudes and flight level definitions are based on this datum. Actual sea-level pressure varies with weather systems and must be corrected via QNH for accurate altitude indication.
+
+### Q26: At what height is the ISA tropopause located? ^t50q26
+- A) 48000 ft.
+- B) 11000 ft.
+- C) 36000 ft.
+- D) 5500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is located at 11,000 m, which equals approximately 36,089 ft (effectively 36,000 ft). Above this level, the standard atmosphere defines a constant temperature of -56.5°C up to 20,000 m (the isothermal stratospheric layer). This is distinct from Q15 which asks in metres — both questions test knowledge of the same value expressed in different units.
+
+### Q27: The barometric altimeter shows height above... ^t50q27
+- A) Mean sea level.
+- B) Ground.
+- C) Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) A selected reference pressure level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The barometric altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude based on the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Crucially, it indicates height above whatever pressure level is set on the subscale (Kollsman window). Set QNH and it reads altitude above mean sea level; set QFE and it reads height above the reference airfield; set 1013.25 hPa (QNE) and it reads flight level. The altimeter always references a pressure level, not a physical surface.
+
+### Q28: The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting... ^t50q28
+- A) QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- B) QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- C) QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- D) QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the local altimeter setting that makes the instrument read the airfield's elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. Setting QNH and checking that the altimeter reads the known airfield elevation (published in AIP/chart) verifies the altimeter is functioning correctly and calibrated. QFE would show zero (height above airfield), QNE (1013.25) would show a value unrelated to actual elevation, and QFF is a meteorological value reduced to MSL for surface analysis charts.
+
+### Q29: With QFE set, the barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q29
+- A) Height above MSL.
+- B) True altitude above MSL.
+- C) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual atmospheric pressure at airfield elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at the reference airfield and subsequently indicates height above that reference pressure level — effectively height above the airfield. This setting is commonly used in circuit flying and gliding operations so the altimeter directly reads AGL height at the home airfield. It does not account for terrain elevation differences elsewhere.
+
+### Q30: With QNH set, the barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q30
+- A) Height above MSL
+- B) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- C) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) True altitude above MSL.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting adjusted to make the instrument read the elevation above mean sea level at the station. It is calculated by reducing the airfield QFE to sea level using the ISA temperature gradient. With QNH set, the altimeter reads the airfield elevation on the ground and true altitude above MSL in the air (assuming ISA conditions). Note that "true altitude" (answer A) accounts for actual temperature deviations from ISA — QNH gives indicated altitude, which may differ from true altitude in non-ISA conditions.
+
+### Q31: How can wind speed and direction be determined from surface weather charts? ^t50q31
+- A) By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines
+- B) By alignment of warm- and cold front lines.
+- C) By annotations from the text part of the chart
+- D) By alignment and distance of isobaric lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isobars (lines of equal pressure) on surface charts indicate both wind direction and speed. Above the friction layer, wind flows parallel to isobars (geostrophic wind); close to the surface it crosses them at an angle toward lower pressure. Closely spaced isobars indicate a strong pressure gradient force and therefore strong winds; widely spaced isobars indicate light winds. Wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere is anticlockwise around lows and clockwise around highs (Buys-Ballot's Law).
+
+### Q32: Which force is responsible for causing "wind"? ^t50q32
+- A) Coriolis force
+- B) Thermal force
+- C) Pressure gradient force
+- D) Centrifugal force
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is initiated by the pressure gradient force (PGF) — air accelerates from high pressure toward low pressure due to differences in atmospheric pressure. The Coriolis force deflects the moving air (to the right in the Northern Hemisphere) but does not cause the initial motion. Centrifugal force acts in curved flow around pressure systems. Thermal effects create pressure differences which then drive the PGF. Without a pressure gradient there would be no wind.
+
+### Q33: Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is... ^t50q33
+- A) Perpendicular to the isohypses.
+- B) Perpendicular to the isobars.
+- C) Parallel to the isobars.
+- D) At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above the friction layer (roughly 600–1000 m AGL), the Coriolis force and pressure gradient force balance each other, producing geostrophic flow parallel to the isobars. In the friction layer below, surface drag slows the wind, reduces the Coriolis deflection, and allows the wind to cross isobars at an angle toward lower pressure (typically 10–30°). Understanding this is essential for predicting wind direction at altitude versus near the surface.
+
+### Q34: Which of the listed surfaces causes the greatest wind speed reduction due to ground friction? ^t50q34
+- A) Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation
+- B) Oceanic areas
+- C) Flat land, lots of vegetation cover
+- D) Mountainous areas, vegetation cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface roughness (aerodynamic roughness length) determines how much friction the surface exerts on moving air. Mountainous terrain with vegetation has the highest roughness length, causing maximum turbulent drag and wind speed reduction. Oceans have very low roughness and exert minimal friction. Flat vegetated land is intermediate. Importantly, mountains also mechanically block and deflect wind, creating additional complex flow patterns, turbulence, and wave phenomena of direct relevance to glider pilots.
+
+### Q35: The movement of air flowing together is called... ^t50q35
+- A) Divergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Concordence.
+- D) Convergence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convergence describes air flowing into a region from different directions, compressing horizontally. By mass continuity, converging surface air must go somewhere — it is forced upward, triggering cloud formation, precipitation, and potentially convective development. Convergence zones are important for glider pilots as they produce enhanced lift along their axes; sea-breeze fronts and col zones between pressure systems are classic convergence sources for soaring.
+
+### Q36: The movement of air flowing apart is called... ^t50q36
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Divergence.
+- D) Concordence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Divergence describes air spreading outward from a region. At the surface, divergence causes subsiding air from above to replace the outflowing air, promoting stability, clear skies, and fair weather. High-pressure anticyclones are associated with surface divergence and upper-level convergence. In the upper troposphere, divergence above a surface low enhances upward motion and intensifies the low-pressure system.
+
+### Q37: What weather development results from convergence at ground level? ^t50q37
+- A) Descending air and cloud dissipation
+- B) Ascending air and cloud formation
+- C) Descending air and cloud formation
+- D) Ascending air and cloud dissipation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface convergence forces air upward (ascending motion) by mass continuity — air cannot accumulate indefinitely at the surface. As air rises, it cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate until it reaches the dew point (lifting condensation level), where condensation begins and clouds form. Further ascent releases latent heat, potentially fuelling deep convection. This is the fundamental mechanism behind frontal lifting and sea-breeze convergence lift.
+
+### Q38: When air masses meet each other head on, what is this referred to and what air movements follow? ^t50q38
+- A) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+- B) Convergence resulting in air being lifted
+- C) Divergence resulting in air being lifted
+- D) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two opposing air flows collide head-on, the meeting zone is a convergence line. The colliding air has nowhere to go horizontally and is forced upward — producing ascending motion, cloud formation, and potentially precipitation or thunderstorms. This occurs at fronts, sea-breeze convergence zones, and col zones. Glider pilots exploit convergence lines for extended linear climbs along the lift band.
+
+### Q39: By which air masses is Central Europe mainly influenced? ^t50q39
+- A) Tropical and arctic cold air
+- B) Arctic and polar cold air
+- C) Equatorial and tropical warm air
+- D) Polar cold air and tropical warm air
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Central Europe sits in the mid-latitude westerly belt between the polar front (cold polar air from the north) and subtropical high pressure (warm tropical air from the south). The interaction between these two contrasting air masses creates the characteristic mid-latitude cyclone (depression) weather of Central Europe: frontal systems, rapidly changing weather, and the full range of cloud types and precipitation. This dynamic contrast also drives the polar jet stream overhead.
+
+### Q40: In terms of global atmospheric circulation, where does polar cold air meet subtropical warm air? ^t50q40
+- A) At the equator
+- B) At the geographic poles
+- C) At the polar front
+- D) At the subtropical high pressure belt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the boundary between the polar cell (cold, dense air flowing equatorward) and the Ferrel cell (relatively warmer mid-latitude air). In the Northern Hemisphere it is located roughly between 40–60°N, but its position fluctuates as waves (Rossby waves) develop along it — these waves amplify into cyclones and anticyclones. The jet stream flows along the polar front and is a critical factor in synoptic weather patterns across Europe.
+
+### Q41: "Foehn" conditions typically develop with... ^t50q41
+- A) Instability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+- B) Stability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- C) Instability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- D) Stability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn is a warm, dry, descending wind on the lee side of a mountain range. It develops when stable air is pushed by a broad-scale pressure gradient against a mountain barrier. On the windward side, moist air rises and cools at the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR ~0.6°C/100 m) after reaching the dew point, precipitating moisture. On the lee side, dry air descends at the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR ~1°C/100 m), arriving warmer and drier than it started — the Foehn effect.
+
+### Q42: What type of turbulence is typically encountered close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions? ^t50q42
+- A) Thermal turbulence
+- B) Inversion turbulence
+- C) Turbulence in rotors
+- D) Clear-air turbulence (CAT)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn and mountain wave conditions, a rotor zone develops in the lower troposphere on the lee side beneath the crests of the standing waves. The rotor is a region of intense, chaotic turbulence with rotating air, strong downdrafts, and violent eddies — it is one of the most hazardous phenomena for aircraft. Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis) mark wave crests above, while rotor clouds (roll clouds) mark the rotor zone near the surface.
+
+### Q43: Light turbulence should always be expected... ^t50q43
+- A) Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.
+- B) Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+- C) When entering inversions.
+- D) Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible tops of thermal columns. The sub-cloud layer beneath them contains active thermals (updraughts) and compensating downdraughts between them, creating light to moderate turbulence from convective mixing. This is the normal turbulent environment of thermal soaring. Above cumulus tops the air is generally smoother (outside the cloud); stratiform clouds have minimal convective turbulence unless embedded CBs are present.
+
+### Q44: Moderate to severe turbulence should be expected... ^t50q44
+- A) With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog).
+- B) Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- C) Overhead unbroken cloud layers.
+- D) On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotor clouds (roll clouds) on the lee side of mountains are the visible indicator of the highly turbulent rotor zone beneath mountain waves. This turbulence can be extreme, with unpredictable up- and downdraughts, strong shear, and rotational forces capable of exceeding aircraft structural limits. Experienced wave pilots avoid or transit the rotor zone quickly with sufficient airspeed. The windward side of mountains typically has orographic cloud and steady lift, not severe turbulence.
+
+### Q45: Which answer lists every state of water found in the atmosphere? ^t50q45
+- A) Gaseous and liquid
+- B) Liquid and solid
+- C) Liquid
+- D) Liquid, solid, and gaseous
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water exists in all three states within the Earth's atmosphere. Gaseous water vapour is invisible and present throughout the troposphere. Liquid water forms cloud droplets, rain, and drizzle. Solid water forms ice crystals (cirrus clouds), snow, hail, and graupel. Understanding all three states is essential for icing awareness: supercooled liquid water droplets (liquid below 0°C) pose the greatest structural icing hazard to aircraft, as they freeze on contact with cold surfaces.
+
+### Q46: How do dew point and relative humidity change when temperature decreases? ^t50q46
+- A) Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases
+- B) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- C) Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases
+- D) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dew point is the temperature to which air must be cooled (at constant pressure and moisture content) for saturation to occur. It is a measure of the absolute moisture content and remains constant as temperature changes (assuming no moisture is added or removed). However, relative humidity — the ratio of actual vapour pressure to saturation vapour pressure — increases as temperature falls, because the saturation vapour pressure decreases with temperature. When temperature equals the dew point, relative humidity reaches 100% and condensation begins.
+
+### Q47: How do spread and relative humidity change when temperature increases? ^t50q47
+- A) Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- B) Spread increases, relative humidity increases
+- C) Spread increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread is the temperature-dew point difference (T - Td). As temperature increases while dew point remains constant, the spread widens. Simultaneously, because warmer air can hold more water vapour, the relative humidity decreases — the air is now further from saturation. A large spread indicates dry air and a high lifting condensation level (high cloud base). A small spread (near zero) indicates saturated or near-saturated conditions, with fog or low cloud likely.
+
+### Q48: The "spread" is defined as... ^t50q48
+- A) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+- B) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air.
+- C) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- D) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread (also called dew point depression) is simply the difference between the air temperature and the dew point temperature: Spread = T - Td. It is used to estimate cloud base height: in temperate latitudes, cloud base height in metres above the surface is approximately spread × 125 (or in feet, spread × 400). A spread of 0 means the air is saturated (fog or cloud at the surface). Spread is a quick indicator of moisture availability for soaring pilots.
+
+### Q49: With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in... ^t50q49
+- A) Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- B) Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- C) Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- D) Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As temperature decreases (with dew point unchanged), the gap between temperature and dew point narrows — spread decreases. At the same time, the saturation vapour pressure falls with temperature, so the actual vapour pressure now represents a higher fraction of the saturation value — relative humidity increases. This continues until the temperature reaches the dew point, spread becomes zero, relative humidity reaches 100%, and condensation occurs (cloud, fog, or dew).
+
+### Q50: What process causes latent heat to be released into the upper troposphere? ^t50q50
+- A) Evaporation over widespread water areas
+- B) Descending air across widespread areas
+- C) Stabilisation of inflowing air masses
+- D) Cloud forming due to condensation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When water vapour condenses into cloud droplets, the latent heat stored during evaporation is released into the surrounding air. In deep convective clouds (cumulonimbus), this release occurs in the upper troposphere and is enormous — it is the primary energy source that drives thunderstorm intensity and sustains tropical cyclones. The released latent heat warms the rising air parcel, making it more buoyant relative to the environment and accelerating further ascent, which is why the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) is less steep than the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR).
+
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+### Q1: Welche Wolken und welches Wetter können entstehen, wenn eine feuchte und instabile Luftmasse vom vorherrschenden Wind gegen eine Gebirgskette gedrückt und zum Aufsteigen gezwungen wird? ^t50q1
+- A) Bedeckter, tiefer Stratus (Hochnebel) ohne Niederschlag.
+- B) Dünne Altostratus- und Cirrostratuswolken mit leichtem und gleichmässigem Niederschlag.
+- C) Eingebettete CB mit Gewittern und Hagel- und/oder Regenschauern.
+- D) Gleichmässige, strukturlose NS-Wolken mit leichtem Nieselregen oder Schnee (im Winter).
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn instabile, feuchte Luft orografisch zum Aufsteigen gezwungen wird, löst sie konvektive Instabilität aus — bedingt instabile Luft wird beim Heben absolut instabil. Der daraus resultierende rasche Aufstieg fördert die Entwicklung von Cumulonimbus und erzeugt eingebettete CB mit Gewittern, starken Schauern und Hagel. Stabile Luftmassen erzeugen unter denselben Bedingungen Schichtwolken (Ns oder As) mit gleichmässigem Regen, keine konvektiven Gewitter.
+
+### Q2: Welche Art von Nebel entsteht, wenn feuchte und nahezu gesättigte Luft vom vorherrschenden Wind an Hügeln oder flachen Bergen aufwärts geleitet wird? ^t50q2
+- A) Strahlungsnebel
+- B) Verdunstungsnebel
+- C) Advektionsnebel
+- D) Orografischer Nebel
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Orografischer Nebel entsteht, wenn windbetriebene feuchte Luft mechanisch einen Hang hinaufgehoben wird und sich dabei adiabatisch abkühlt, bis sie den Taupunkt erreicht. Strahlungsnebel erfordert ruhige Nächte mit Bodenabstrahlung, Advektionsnebel bildet sich, wenn warme feuchte Luft über eine kalte Oberfläche zieht, und Verdunstungsnebel (arktischer Meeresnebel) entsteht, wenn kalte Luft über warmes Wasser strömt — keiner dieser Vorgänge beinhaltet hangbedingtes Heben.
+
+### Q3: Was wird als «blaue Thermik» bezeichnet? ^t50q3
+- A) Turbulenz in der Nähe von Cumulonimbuswolken
+- B) Absinkende Luft zwischen Cumuluswolken
+- C) Thermik ohne Bildung von Cumuluswolken
+- D) Thermik mit weniger als 4/8 Cumulus-Bedeckung
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** «Blaue Thermik» entsteht, wenn das Kondensationsniveau (LCL) sehr hoch liegt — die Luft ist zu trocken, um ihren Taupunkt zu erreichen, bevor die Thermik ihr Maximum erreicht. Thermikblasen steigen auf, aber es bilden sich keine Cumuluswolken, der Himmel bleibt klar («blau»). Für Segelflieger ist dies anspruchsvoll, da keine sichtbaren Wolkenmarkierungen den Thermikeinstieg anzeigen und die Wolkenuntergrenze über der Thermikobergrenze liegt.
+
+### Q4: Der Begriff «Thermikbeginn» bezeichnet den Moment, in dem die Thermikstärke... ^t50q4
+- A) Für den Streckenflug durch Cumuluswolkenbildung nutzbar wird.
+- B) Für den Segelflug nutzbar wird und bis 600 m AGL reicht.
+- C) Bis 600 m AGL reicht und Cumuluswolken bildet.
+- D) Für den Segelflug nutzbar wird und bis 1200 m MSL reicht.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Thermik gilt als «begonnen», wenn sie stark genug ist, um den Segelflug zu tragen, und mindestens 600 m AGL reicht — ausreichende Höhe, um den Aufwind zu nutzen. Unterhalb dieser Höhe kann Thermik zwar vorhanden sein, ist aber zu flach für sicheres Segelfliegen. Wolkenbildung ist keine Voraussetzung; auch blaue Thermik kann den Beginn nutzbarer Thermikaktivität anzeigen.
+
+### Q5: Der Begriff «Auslösetemperatur» bezeichnet die Temperatur, bei der... ^t50q5
+- A) Am Boden erreicht werden muss, damit Cumuluswolken durch Thermikaufwinde gebildet werden können.
+- B) Ein Thermikaufwind beim Aufstieg das Kondensationsniveau erreicht und Cumuluswolken entstehen.
+- C) Die Mindesttemperatur am Boden, ab der aus einer Cumuluswolke ein Gewitter entstehen kann.
+- D) Die am Boden maximal erreichbare Temperatur, ohne dass aus einer Cumuluswolke ein Gewitter entsteht.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Auslösetemperatur ist die Mindestbodentemperatur, die erreicht werden muss, damit Thermik bis zum Kondensationsniveau aufsteigen und Cumuluswolken bilden kann. Sie wird aus dem aerologischen Diagramm (Tephigramm/Stüve-Diagramm) abgeleitet, indem der trockenadiabatische Temperaturgradient vom Feuchteniveau der Morgensondierung zur Oberfläche verfolgt wird. Bis diese Temperatur erreicht ist, kann Thermik zwar vorhanden sein, erzeugt aber keine Cumulusmarkierungen.
+
+### Q6: Welcher Zustand wird im Wetterbericht als «Überentwicklung» bezeichnet? ^t50q6
+- A) Entwicklung eines thermischen Tiefs zu einem Sturmtief
+- B) Ausbreitung von Cumuluswolken unterhalb einer Inversionsschicht
+- C) Wechsel von blauer Thermik zu Wolkenthermik am Nachmittag
+- D) Vertikale Entwicklung von Cumuluswolken zu Regenschauern
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Überentwicklung tritt auf, wenn Cumuluswolken vertikal über die thermische Inversion hinaus weiterwachsen oder durch Freisetzung latenter Wärme selbsttragend werden und sich zu Cumulonimbus (Cb) mit starken Regenschauern, Blitzen und Hagel entwickeln. Dies geschieht typischerweise an schwülen Sommernachmittagen, wenn die atmosphärische Instabilität hoch und die Sperrschicht schwach ist. Für Segelflieger signalisiert die Überentwicklung das Ende sicherer Segelbedingungen und die Notwendigkeit zu landen.
+
+### Q7: Der Segelwetterbericht meldet atmosphärische Instabilität. Am Morgen bedeckt Tau das Gras und es ist noch keine Thermik aktiv. Welche Entwicklung der Thermikaktivität ist zu erwarten? ^t50q7
+- A) Atmosphärische Instabilität verhindert das Heben der Luft; es wird keine Thermik entstehen.
+- B) Nach Sonnenuntergang und Bildung einer bodennahen Inversion ist Thermikbeginn wahrscheinlich.
+- C) Mit zunehmender Sonneneinstrahlung und Bodenerwärmung ist Thermikbeginn wahrscheinlich.
+- D) Die Taubildung verhindert die gesamte Thermikaktivität des folgenden Tages.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Morgentau zeigt an, dass die Luft über Nacht bis zum Taupunkt abgekühlt ist (Strahlungsabkühlung), aber dieser Zustand ist vorübergehend. Sobald die Sonneneinstrahlung den Boden erwärmt, steigt die Bodentemperatur, erwärmt die Luft darüber, bis die Temperatur die Auslösetemperatur übersteigt. Atmosphärische Instabilität bedeutet, dass der Temperaturgradient steil genug ist, um Thermik zu tragen, sobald sie beginnt — gute Thermikbedingungen sind daher wahrscheinlich.
+
+### Q8: Welche Änderung der Thermikaktivität ist zu erwarten, wenn Cirruswolken aus einer Richtung aufziehen und dichter werden und die Sonne blockieren? ^t50q8
+- A) Cirruswolken zeigen Instabilität und den Beginn von Überentwicklung an.
+- B) Cirruswolken können die Sonneneinstrahlung verstärken und die Thermik verbessern.
+- C) Cirruswolken verhindern die Sonneneinstrahlung und beeinträchtigen die Thermik.
+- D) Cirruswolken zeigen eine Hochinversion an, Thermik bis zu dieser Höhe bleibt aktiv.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Thermik wird durch differentielle Bodenerwärmung durch Sonnenstrahlung angetrieben. Zunehmende Cirruswolken filtern progressiv die Sonnenenergie heraus, verringern die Bodenerwärmung und damit Stärke und Tiefe der Thermik. Dichte Cirruswolken können die Einstrahlung so weit reduzieren, dass die Thermikaktivität vollständig zum Erliegen kommt. Aufziehende Cirruswolken aus einer Richtung weisen oft auf eine nahende Warmfront hin, die flächendeckende Bewölkung, stabile Bedingungen und weitere Thermikunterdrückung mit sich bringt.
+
+### Q9: Welcher Zustand wird als «Abschirmung» bezeichnet? ^t50q9
+- A) Bedeckungsgrad der Cumuluswolken, angegeben in Achteln des Himmels
+- B) Ambossstruktur in den oberen Bereichen einer Gewitterwolke
+- C) Ns-Wolken, die die Luvseite eines Gebirgszuges bedecken
+- D) Hoch- oder mittelhohe Wolkenschichten, die die Thermikaktivität beeinträchtigen
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Abschirmung beschreibt den Effekt hoch- oder mittelhoher Wolkenschichten (Cirrus, Cirrostratus, Altostratus), die die Sonnenstrahlung blockieren und die Thermikentstehung darunter unterdrücken. Selbst teilweise Bewölkung auf diesen Niveaus kann die Bodeneinstrahlung erheblich reduzieren. Segelflugwetterberichte enthalten Abschirmungsbewertungen, um anzuzeigen, wann und wo die Thermik durch Bewölkung oberhalb der erwarteten Thermikschicht geschwächt oder fehlend sein wird.
+
+### Q10: Bei der Planung eines 500-km-Dreiecksflugs befindet sich eine Gewitterlinie 100 km westlich des Startplatzes, die von Nord nach Süd verläuft und sich nach Osten bewegt. Welche Entscheidung wäre hinsichtlich der Wetterlage empfehlenswert? ^t50q10
+- A) Den Flug unterhalb der Cumulonimbus-Wolkenuntergrenze planen.
+- B) Die Planung ändern und das Dreieck in Richtung Osten starten.
+- C) Den Flug auf einen anderen Tag verschieben.
+- D) Während des Fluges nach Lücken zwischen den Gewittern suchen.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Gewitterlinie ist eine organisierte Linie schwerer Gewitter, die für ihre schnelle Bewegung, Unberechenbarkeit und extreme Gefährlichkeit bekannt ist. Mit typischen Geschwindigkeiten von 30–60 km/h könnte eine 100 km entfernte Gewitterlinie den Platz innerhalb von 2–3 Stunden erreichen. Das Fliegen unterhalb von Cb-Wolkenuntergrenzen oder der Versuch, zwischen Zellen hindurchzufliegen, setzt das Segelflugzeug extremer Turbulenz, Windscherung, Hagel und Abwinden aus. Die einzig sichere Option ist, nicht zu fliegen, bis die Gefahr vollständig vorbeigezogen ist.
+
+### Q11: Aus welchen Gasen besteht «Luft»? ^t50q11
+- A) Stickstoff 21 % Sauerstoff 78 % Edelgase / Kohlendioxid 1 %
+- B) Sauerstoff 21 % Wasserdampf 78 % Edelgase / Kohlendioxid 1 %
+- C) Sauerstoff 78 % Wasserdampf 21 % Stickstoff 1 %
+- D) Sauerstoff 21 % Stickstoff 78 % Edelgase / Kohlendioxid 1 %
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Trockene Luft besteht volumetrisch aus ca. 78 % Stickstoff (N₂), 21 % Sauerstoff (O₂) und den verbleibenden 1 % Argon, Kohlendioxid und anderen Spurengasen. Wasserdampf ist variabel (0–4 %) und wird in der Standardzusammensetzung trockener Luft nicht berücksichtigt. Die Kenntnis der Luftzusammensetzung ist grundlegend für das Verständnis der atmosphärischen Physik, Dichteberechnungen und das Verhalten von Flugtriebwerken und Instrumenten.
+
+### Q12: In welcher atmosphärischen Schicht treten Wettererscheinungen am häufigsten auf? ^t50q12
+- A) Stratosphäre
+- B) Troposphäre
+- C) Thermosphäre
+- D) Tropopause
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Troposphäre erstreckt sich je nach Breite und Jahreszeit von der Erdoberfläche bis etwa 8–16 km Höhe. Sie enthält etwa 75–80 % der Gesamtmasse der Atmosphäre und nahezu den gesamten Wasserdampf. Konvektion, Wolkenbildung, Niederschlag, Fronten und Windphänomene treten hier auf, da die Temperatur mit der Höhe abnimmt und konvektive Instabilität fördert. Oberhalb der Tropopause ist die Stratosphäre stabil und weitgehend wolkenfrei.
+
+### Q13: Welche Masse hat ein «Luftwürfel» mit 1 m Kantenlänge auf MSL gemäss ISA? ^t50q13
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,01225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,1225 kg
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäss der Internationalen Standardatmosphäre (ISA) beträgt die Luftdichte auf Meereshöhe 1,225 kg/m³. Daher hat ein 1 m³ grosser Luftwürfel eine Masse von 1,225 kg. Dieser Dichtewert ist grundlegend für die Luftfahrt: Er beeinflusst Auftrieb, Widerstand, Motorleistung und Höhenmesserkalibrierung. Die Dichte nimmt mit der Höhe ab, und auch Temperatur- bzw. Feuchtigkeitsänderungen wirken sich darauf aus — deshalb ist die Dichtehöhe für die Flugzeugperformance wichtig.
+
+### Q14: Mit welchem Gradienten ändert sich die Temperatur mit zunehmender Höhe gemäss ISA in der Troposphäre? ^t50q14
+- A) Zunahme um 2 °C / 1000 ft
+- B) Abnahme um 2 °C / 100 m
+- C) Abnahme um 2 °C / 1000 ft
+- D) Zunahme um 2 °C / 100 m
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der ISA-Standardtemperaturgradient beträgt 1,98 °C pro 1000 ft (ca. 2 °C/1000 ft) oder 6,5 °C pro 1000 m. Dies ist der Umgebungstemperaturgradient (ELR), der für die Höhenmesserkalibrierung und Druckberechnungen als Referenz dient. Der tatsächliche ELR variiert mit den Wetterbedingungen — steiler als ISA weist auf Instabilität hin und fördert Thermik, flacher oder negativ (Inversion) weist auf Stabilität hin und unterdrückt Konvektion.
+
+### Q15: Welche mittlere Höhe hat die Tropopause gemäss ISA (ICAO-Standardatmosphäre)? ^t50q15
+- A) 36000 m
+- B) 11000 ft
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 11000 m
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ISA-Tropopause liegt bei 11 000 m (ca. 36 089 ft), wo die Temperatur -56,5 °C erreicht und dann in der unteren Stratosphäre konstant bleibt. In der Realität schwankt die Tropopausenhöhe: Sie ist über den Polen niedriger (~8 km) und über den Tropen höher (~16 km) und verändert sich mit Jahreszeit und synoptischen Wettermustern. Cumulonimbus-Oberteile, die die Tropopause durchstossen, sind besonders gewaltsam.
+
+### Q16: Der Begriff «Tropopause» bezeichnet... ^t50q16
+- A) Die Grenzschicht zwischen Mesosphäre und Stratosphäre.
+- B) Die Grenzschicht zwischen Troposphäre und Stratosphäre.
+- C) Die Höhe, über der die Temperatur zu sinken beginnt.
+- D) Die Schicht oberhalb der Troposphäre, in der die Temperatur zunimmt.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Tropopause ist die Übergangsgrenze zwischen der Troposphäre (wo die Temperatur mit der Höhe abnimmt) und der Stratosphäre (wo die Temperatur zunächst konstant bleibt und dann durch Ozonabsorption von UV-Strahlung ansteigt). Sie fungiert als «Deckel» für die Konvektion — Cumulonimbuswolken, die sie erreichen, breiten sich seitlich aus und bilden die charakteristische Ambossform. Strahlströme befinden sich nahe der Tropopause.
+
+### Q17: In welcher Einheit werden Temperaturen von meteorologischen Luftfahrtdiensten in Europa angegeben? ^t50q17
+- A) Grad Fahrenheit
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Grad Celsius (°C)
+- D) Gpdam
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Europäische Luftfahrtmeteorologie (ICAO Annex 3, EU-Vorschriften) schreibt Temperaturen in Grad Celsius (°C) für alle operativen Produkte einschliesslich METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs und Prognosekarten vor. Kelvin wird in wissenschaftlichen und Höhenluftberechnungen verwendet. Fahrenheit wird in den USA und einigen anderen Ländern verwendet, jedoch nicht in der europäischen Luftfahrt. Diese Standardisierung ist entscheidend für die korrekte Interpretation von Vereisungsgrenzen, Gefrierhöhen und Dichtehöhen.
+
+### Q18: Was versteht man unter «Inversionsschicht»? ^t50q18
+- A) Eine atmosphärische Schicht, in der die Temperatur mit zunehmender Höhe steigt
+- B) Eine Grenzschicht zwischen zwei anderen Schichten der Atmosphäre
+- C) Eine atmosphärische Schicht mit konstanter Temperatur bei zunehmender Höhe
+- D) Eine atmosphärische Schicht, in der die Temperatur mit zunehmender Höhe sinkt
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Inversion «invertiert» den normalen Temperaturgradienten — anstatt mit der Höhe zu fallen, steigt die Temperatur. Dies erzeugt eine sehr stabile Schicht, die als Deckel für die Konvektion wirkt, Thermik darunter einsperrt, Schadstoffe konzentriert und die Bildung von Nebel und tiefen Wolken darunter fördert. Für Segelflieger begrenzt eine bodennahe Inversion die Thermikobergrenze; eine Subsidenzinversion in einem Hochdruckgebiet begrenzt die Segelflughöhe und ist oft mit Dunst verbunden.
+
+### Q19: Was versteht man unter «isothermer Schicht»? ^t50q19
+- A) Eine atmosphärische Schicht, in der die Temperatur mit zunehmender Höhe steigt
+- B) Eine Grenzschicht zwischen zwei anderen Schichten der Atmosphäre
+- C) Eine atmosphärische Schicht, in der die Temperatur mit zunehmender Höhe sinkt
+- D) Eine atmosphärische Schicht mit konstanter Temperatur bei zunehmender Höhe
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine isotherme Schicht hält mit zunehmender Höhe eine konstante Temperatur aufrecht. Wie eine Inversion ist sie stabiler als die Standardatmosphäre und hemmt die Konvektion. Die untere Stratosphäre weist unmittelbar oberhalb der Tropopause eine isotherme Zone auf. Isotherme Schichten können auch in der Troposphäre auftreten und wirken wie Inversionen als Deckel für die Thermikentstehung und das Wolkenwachstum.
+
+### Q20: Der Temperaturgradient mit zunehmender Höhe in der Troposphäre gemäss ISA beträgt... ^t50q20
+- A) 3 °C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65 °C / 100 m.
+- C) 1 °C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6 °C / 100 m.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der ISA-Umgebungstemperaturgradient (ELR) beträgt 6,5 °C pro 1000 m oder 0,65 °C pro 100 m (ca. 2 °C pro 1000 ft). Dies unterscheidet sich vom trockenadiabatischen Temperaturgradienten (DALR) von 1 °C/100 m und dem feuchtadiabatischen Temperaturgradienten (SALR) von ca. 0,6 °C/100 m. Wenn der tatsächliche ELR steiler als der DALR ist, ist die Atmosphäre absolut instabil; liegt er zwischen DALR und SALR, ist die Atmosphäre bedingt instabil — die typische Situation für thermisches Segeln.
+
+### Q21: Welcher Vorgang kann zu einer Inversionsschicht in ca. 5000 ft (1500 m) Höhe führen? ^t50q21
+- A) Advektion kühler Luft in der oberen Troposphäre
+- B) Intensive Sonneneinstrahlung an einem warmen Sommertag
+- C) Bodenabkühlung durch Strahlung während der Nacht
+- D) Weiträumiges Absinken der Luft innerhalb eines Hochdruckgebietes
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Subsidenzinversion entsteht, wenn Luft im Zentrum eines Hochdruckgebietes weiträumig absinkt. Beim Absinken erwärmt sich die Luft adiabatisch, da sich die untere Luft jedoch nicht gleichermassen erwärmt hat, wird die absinkende Schicht wärmer als die Luft darunter — es entsteht eine Inversion, typischerweise in 1500–3000 m Höhe. Dies ist charakteristisch für antizyklonale Bedingungen: stabiles Wetter, eingeschränkte Konvektion und Dunst oder Smog unterhalb der Inversion.
+
+### Q22: Eine bodennahe Inversionsschicht kann durch ... entstehen. ^t50q22
+- A) Bodenabkühlung während der Nacht.
+- B) Auffrischende und böige Winde.
+- C) Weiträumiges Heben der Luft.
+- D) Verdickung der Wolken in mittleren Schichten.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Strahlungsinversion bildet sich an ruhigen, klaren Nächten, wenn der Boden Wärme in den Weltraum abstrahlt und sich rasch abkühlt. Die bodennahe Luft kühlt sich ebenfalls ab, während die Luft einige hundert Meter darüber wärmer bleibt — es entsteht eine Temperaturinversion nahe der Oberfläche. Diese Inversionsart ist bei antizyklonalen Bedingungen häufig und erzeugt am Morgen oft Strahlungsnebel oder tiefen Stratus, der sich auflöst, wenn die Sonne den Boden aufheizt.
+
+### Q23: Welcher ISA-Standarddruck herrscht auf FL 180 (5500 m)? ^t50q23
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 500 hPa
+- C) 1013,25 hPa
+- D) 250 hPa
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** In der Internationalen Standardatmosphäre beträgt der Druck bei ca. 5500 m (FL180) 500 hPa — genau die Hälfte des Meeresspiegel-Drucks von 1013,25 hPa. Das 500-hPa-Niveau ist ein wichtiges Referenzniveau in der Synoptik und wird ausgiebig in Höhenwetterkarten verwendet. Der Druck nimmt mit der Höhe näherungsweise logarithmisch ab und halbiert sich in der unteren Troposphäre etwa alle 5500 m.
+
+### Q24: Welche Vorgänge führen zu einer Abnahme der Luftdichte? ^t50q24
+- A) Abnehmende Temperatur, abnehmender Druck
+- B) Zunehmende Temperatur, zunehmender Druck
+- C) Abnehmende Temperatur, zunehmender Druck
+- D) Zunehmende Temperatur, abnehmender Druck
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Luftdichte wird durch das ideale Gasgesetz bestimmt: Dichte = Druck / (spezifische Gaskonstante × Temperatur). Die Dichte nimmt ab, wenn der Druck sinkt (weniger Moleküle pro Volumeneinheit) oder wenn die Temperatur steigt (Moleküle bewegen sich schneller und breiten sich aus). Gleichzeitig zunehmende Temperatur UND abnehmender Druck verringern die Dichte am stärksten. Deshalb ist die Dichtehöhe für die Flugzeugperformance auf heissen, hochgelegenen Flugplätzen wichtig.
+
+### Q25: Der Druck auf MSL unter ISA-Bedingungen beträgt... ^t50q25
+- A) 1123 hPa.
+- B) 113,25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1013,25 hPa.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ISA (ICAO-Standardatmosphäre) definiert den Meereshöhendruck auf 1013,25 hPa (auch als 29,92 inHg in der US-Luftfahrt). Dies ist der Standard-QNE-Wert: Mit 1013,25 hPa auf der Altimeterskala zeigt das Instrument den Flugfläche an. Alle Druckhöhen und Flugflächendefinitionen basieren auf diesem Bezugswert. Der tatsächliche Meeresspiegel-Druck variiert mit den Wettersystemen und muss per QNH für eine genaue Höhenanzeige korrigiert werden.
+
+### Q26: In welcher Höhe befindet sich die ISA-Tropopause? ^t50q26
+- A) 48000 ft.
+- B) 11000 ft.
+- C) 36000 ft.
+- D) 5500 ft
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ISA-Tropopause liegt bei 11 000 m, was etwa 36 089 ft entspricht (effektiv 36 000 ft). Oberhalb dieses Niveaus definiert die Standardatmosphäre eine konstante Temperatur von -56,5 °C bis 20 000 m (die isotherme Stratosphärenschicht). Diese Frage unterscheidet sich von Q15, die nach der Antwort in Metern fragt — beide Fragen testen das Wissen über denselben Wert in verschiedenen Einheiten.
+
+### Q27: Der barometrische Höhenmesser zeigt die Höhe über... ^t50q27
+- A) Dem mittleren Meeresspiegel.
+- B) Dem Boden.
+- C) Der Standarddruckfläche 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) Einer gewählten Bezugsdruckfläche.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der barometrische Höhenmesser misst den Luftdruck und rechnet ihn anhand der ISA-Druck-Höhen-Beziehung in Höhe um. Entscheidend ist, dass er die Höhe über der auf der Unterskala (Kollsman-Fenster) eingestellten Druckfläche anzeigt. Mit QNH eingestellt zeigt er die Höhe über dem mittleren Meeresspiegel; mit QFE die Höhe über dem Bezugsflugplatz; mit 1013,25 hPa (QNE) die Flugfläche. Der Höhenmesser bezieht sich immer auf eine Druckfläche, nicht auf eine physische Oberfläche.
+
+### Q28: Der Höhenmesser kann am Boden überprüft werden, indem man... ^t50q28
+- A) QFE einstellt und die Anzeige mit der Flugplatzhöhe vergleicht.
+- B) QNH einstellt und die Anzeige mit der Flugplatzhöhe vergleicht.
+- C) QFF einstellt und die Anzeige mit der Flugplatzhöhe vergleicht.
+- D) QNE einstellt und prüft, ob die Anzeige am Boden Null zeigt.
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QNH ist die lokale Altimetereinstellung, die dafür sorgt, dass das Instrument die Höhe des Flugplatzes über dem mittleren Meeresspiegel anzeigt, wenn man am Boden steht. QNH einstellen und überprüfen, ob der Höhenmesser die bekannte Flugplatzhöhe (veröffentlicht im AIP/der Karte) anzeigt, bestätigt die korrekte Funktion und Kalibrierung. QFE würde Null anzeigen (Höhe über Platz), QNE (1013,25) würde einen Wert ohne Bezug zur tatsächlichen Höhe zeigen, und QFF ist ein meteorologischer Wert, der auf MSL reduziert ist für Bodenwetterkarten.
+
+### Q29: Mit QFE eingestellt zeigt der barometrische Höhenmesser... ^t50q29
+- A) Die Höhe über MSL.
+- B) Die wahre Höhe über MSL.
+- C) Die Höhe über der Standarddruckfläche 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) Die Höhe über der Druckfläche auf Flugplatzhöhe.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QFE ist der tatsächliche Luftdruck auf Flugplatzhöhe. Wenn er auf der Altimeterskala eingestellt ist, zeigt das Instrument am Boden des Bezugsflugplatzes Null an und gibt danach die Höhe über dieser Bezugsdruckfläche an — effektiv die Höhe über dem Flugplatz. Diese Einstellung wird häufig beim Platzrundenflug und Segelflugbetrieb verwendet, damit der Höhenmesser direkt die AGL-Höhe am Heimatflugplatz anzeigt. Sie berücksichtigt keine Geländehöhenunterschiede anderswo.
+
+### Q30: Mit QNH eingestellt zeigt der barometrische Höhenmesser... ^t50q30
+- A) Die Höhe über MSL
+- B) Die Höhe über der Druckfläche auf Flugplatzhöhe.
+- C) Die Höhe über der Standarddruckfläche 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) Die wahre Höhe über MSL.
+
+**Korrekt: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QNH ist die Altimetereinstellung, die so angepasst ist, dass das Instrument die Höhe über dem mittleren Meeresspiegel an der Station anzeigt. Er wird berechnet, indem der Flugplatz-QFE unter Verwendung des ISA-Temperaturgradienten auf Meereshöhe reduziert wird. Mit QNH eingestellt zeigt der Höhenmesser am Boden die Flugplatzhöhe und in der Luft die Höhe über MSL (unter Annahme von ISA-Bedingungen). Beachten Sie, dass die «wahre Höhe» (Antwort D) tatsächliche Temperaturabweichungen von der ISA berücksichtigt — QNH gibt die angezeigte Höhe, die bei Nicht-ISA-Bedingungen von der wahren Höhe abweichen kann.
+
+### Q31: Wie können Windgeschwindigkeit und -richtung aus Bodenwetterkarten bestimmt werden? ^t50q31
+- A) Durch Ausrichtung und Abstand der hypsometrischen Linien
+- B) Durch Ausrichtung der Warm- und Kaltfrontlinien.
+- C) Durch Anmerkungen im Textteil der Karte
+- D) Durch Ausrichtung und Abstand der Isobarenlinien
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Isobaren (Linien gleichen Drucks) auf Bodenkarten zeigen sowohl Windrichtung als auch Windgeschwindigkeit an. Oberhalb der Reibungsschicht weht der Wind parallel zu den Isobaren (geostrophischer Wind); nahe der Oberfläche kreuzt er sie in einem Winkel zu den tiefen Drücken. Eng beieinander liegende Isobaren zeigen einen starken Druckgradienten und damit starke Winde an; weit auseinander liegende Isobaren zeigen leichte Winde an. Die Windrichtung in der Nordhalbkugel ist gegen den Uhrzeigersinn um Tiefs und im Uhrzeigersinn um Hochs (Buys-Ballot-Gesetz).
+
+### Q32: Welche Kraft ist für die Entstehung von «Wind» verantwortlich? ^t50q32
+- A) Corioliskraft
+- B) Thermische Kraft
+- C) Druckgradientkraft
+- D) Zentrifugalkraft
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wind wird durch die Druckgradientkraft (DGK) ausgelöst — Luft beschleunigt von hohem zu tiefem Druck aufgrund von Luftdruckunterschieden. Die Corioliskraft lenkt die bewegte Luft ab (nach rechts auf der Nordhalbkugel), verursacht aber nicht die anfängliche Bewegung. Die Zentrifugalkraft wirkt bei gekrümmten Strömungen um Drucksysteme. Thermische Effekte erzeugen Druckunterschiede, die dann die DGK antreiben. Ohne Druckgradienten gäbe es keinen Wind.
+
+### Q33: Oberhalb der Reibungsschicht, bei vorherrschendem Druckgradienten, ist die Windrichtung... ^t50q33
+- A) Senkrecht zu den Isohypsen.
+- B) Senkrecht zu den Isobaren.
+- C) Parallel zu den Isobaren.
+- D) In einem Winkel von 30° zu den Isobaren Richtung tiefer Druck.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Oberhalb der Reibungsschicht (etwa 600–1000 m AGL) gleichen sich Corioliskraft und Druckgradientkraft aus und erzeugen eine geostrophische Strömung parallel zu den Isobaren. In der Reibungsschicht darunter bremst die Bodenreibung den Wind, reduziert die Coriolisablenkung und lässt den Wind die Isobaren in einem Winkel zum tiefen Druck überqueren (typisch 10–30°). Das Verständnis dieses Prinzips ist wesentlich für die Vorhersage der Windrichtung in der Höhe im Vergleich zur Oberfläche.
+
+### Q34: Welche der aufgeführten Oberflächen verursacht die grösste Windgeschwindigkeitsreduktion durch Bodenreibung? ^t50q34
+- A) Flaches Land, Wüstengebiet, keine Vegetation
+- B) Ozeanische Gebiete
+- C) Flaches Land, viel Vegetationsbedeckung
+- D) Gebirgige Gebiete, Vegetationsbedeckung
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Oberflächenrauigkeit (aerodynamische Rauigkeitslänge) bestimmt, wie viel Reibung die Oberfläche auf die bewegte Luft ausübt. Gebirgiges Gelände mit Vegetation hat die höchste Rauigkeitslänge und verursacht maximalen turbulenten Widerstand und maximale Windgeschwindigkeitsreduktion. Ozeane haben eine sehr geringe Rauigkeit und üben minimale Reibung aus. Flaches Land mit Vegetation liegt dazwischen. Berge blockieren und lenken den Wind auch mechanisch ab und erzeugen zusätzliche komplexe Strömungsmuster, Turbulenz und Wellenphänomene, die für Segelflieger direkt relevant sind.
+
+### Q35: Die Bewegung zusammenströmender Luft wird als ... bezeichnet. ^t50q35
+- A) Divergenz.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Konkordenz.
+- D) Konvergenz.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Konvergenz beschreibt Luft, die aus verschiedenen Richtungen in ein Gebiet einströmt und sich horizontal zusammendrückt. Durch Massenkontinuität muss die konvergierende Bodenluft irgendwohin — sie wird nach oben gezwungen, was Wolkenbildung, Niederschlag und potenziell konvektive Entwicklung auslöst. Konvergenzzonen sind für Segelflieger wichtig, da sie verstärkten Aufwind entlang ihrer Achse erzeugen; Seebrisenfronten und Kolzonen zwischen Drucksystemen sind klassische Konvergenzquellen für den Segelflug.
+
+### Q36: Die Bewegung auseinanderströmender Luft wird als ... bezeichnet. ^t50q36
+- A) Konvergenz.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Divergenz.
+- D) Konkordenz.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Divergenz beschreibt Luft, die sich von einem Gebiet nach aussen ausbreitet. An der Oberfläche verursacht Divergenz absinkende Luft von oben, um die abfliessende Luft zu ersetzen, was Stabilität, klaren Himmel und schönes Wetter fördert. Hochdruckantizyklonen sind mit Bodendivergenz und Höhenkonvergenz verbunden. In der oberen Troposphäre verstärkt Divergenz über einem Bodentief die Aufwärtsbewegung und intensiviert das Tiefdrucksystem.
+
+### Q37: Welche Wetterentwicklung ergibt sich aus Konvergenz am Boden? ^t50q37
+- A) Absinkende Luft und Wolkenauflösung
+- B) Aufsteigende Luft und Wolkenbildung
+- C) Absinkende Luft und Wolkenbildung
+- D) Aufsteigende Luft und Wolkenauflösung
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Bodenkonvergenz erzwingt aufsteigende Luft (Aufwärtsbewegung) durch Massenkontinuität — Luft kann sich nicht endlos an der Oberfläche ansammeln. Beim Aufsteigen kühlt die Luft am trockenadiabatischen Gradienten ab, bis sie den Taupunkt erreicht (Kondensationsniveau), wo die Kondensation beginnt und Wolken entstehen. Weiteres Aufsteigen setzt latente Wärme frei und kann tiefe Konvektion antreiben. Dies ist der grundlegende Mechanismus hinter frontaler Hebung und Seebrisenkonvergenz.
+
+### Q38: Wenn Luftmassen frontal aufeinandertreffen, wie wird dies bezeichnet und welche Luftbewegungen folgen? ^t50q38
+- A) Divergenz mit absinkender Luft
+- B) Konvergenz mit gehobener Luft
+- C) Divergenz mit gehobener Luft
+- D) Divergenz mit absinkender Luft
+
+**Korrekt: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn zwei entgegengesetzte Luftströmungen frontal aufeinanderprallen, ist die Begegnungszone eine Konvergenzlinie. Die kollidierenden Luftmassen können horizontal nirgendwohin und werden nach oben gezwungen — was Aufwärtsbewegung, Wolkenbildung und potenziell Niederschlag oder Gewitter erzeugt. Dies geschieht an Fronten, Seebrisenkonvergenzzonen und Kolzonen. Segelflieger nutzen Konvergenzlinien für ausgedehnte lineare Aufstiege entlang des Aufwindstreifens.
+
+### Q39: Von welchen Luftmassen wird Mitteleuropa hauptsächlich beeinflusst? ^t50q39
+- A) Tropische und arktisch kalte Luft
+- B) Arktisch kalte und polar kalte Luft
+- C) Äquatoriale und tropisch warme Luft
+- D) Polar kalte Luft und tropisch warme Luft
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Mitteleuropa liegt im Westwindgürtel der mittleren Breiten zwischen der Polarfront (kalte Polarluft aus dem Norden) und dem subtropischen Hochdruckgürtel (warme tropische Luft aus dem Süden). Die Wechselwirkung zwischen diesen beiden gegensätzlichen Luftmassen erzeugt das charakteristische Zyklonenwetter der mittleren Breiten in Mitteleuropa: Frontsysteme, rasch wechselndes Wetter und die gesamte Bandbreite an Wolkentypen und Niederschlag. Dieser dynamische Kontrast treibt auch den Polarjet darüber an.
+
+### Q40: Wo trifft im Rahmen der globalen Zirkulation polare Kaltluft auf subtropische Warmluft? ^t50q40
+- A) Am Äquator
+- B) An den geografischen Polen
+- C) An der Polarfront
+- D) Am subtropischen Hochdruckgürtel
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Polarfront ist die Grenze zwischen der Polarzelle (kalte, dichte Luft, die äquatorwärts fliesst) und der Ferrelzelle (relativ wärmere Luft der mittleren Breiten). Auf der Nordhalbkugel liegt sie ungefähr zwischen 40° und 60°N, aber ihre Position schwankt, wenn sich Wellen (Rossby-Wellen) entwickeln — diese Wellen verstärken sich zu Zyklonen und Antizyklonen. Der Strahlstrom verläuft entlang der Polarfront und ist ein kritischer Faktor für synoptische Wettermuster in Europa.
+
+### Q41: «Föhn»-Bedingungen entwickeln sich typischerweise bei... ^t50q41
+- A) Instabilität, weiträumige Luftströmung gegen einen Gebirgskamm.
+- B) Stabilität, Hochdruckgebiet mit ruhigem Wind.
+- C) Instabilität, Hochdruckgebiet mit ruhigem Wind.
+- D) Stabilität, weiträumige Luftströmung gegen einen Gebirgskamm.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Föhn ist ein warmer, trockener, absteigender Wind auf der Leeseite eines Gebirgszuges. Er entwickelt sich, wenn stabile Luft durch einen grossräumigen Druckgradienten gegen eine Gebirgsbarriere gedrückt wird. Auf der Luvseite steigt feuchte Luft auf und kühlt sich am feuchtadiabatischen Gradienten (SALR ~0,6 °C/100 m) ab, nachdem sie den Taupunkt erreicht hat, wobei Feuchtigkeit als Niederschlag fällt. Auf der Leeseite sinkt trockene Luft am trockenadiabatischen Gradienten (DALR ~1 °C/100 m) ab und kommt wärmer und trockener an als am Ausgangspunkt — der Föhneffekt.
+
+### Q42: Welche Art von Turbulenz tritt typischerweise bodennah auf der Leeseite bei Föhnbedingungen auf? ^t50q42
+- A) Thermische Turbulenz
+- B) Inversionsturbulenz
+- C) Turbulenz in Rotoren
+- D) Klarluftturbulenz (CAT)
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Bei Föhn und Gebirgswellenbedingungen entwickelt sich eine Rotorzone in der unteren Troposphäre auf der Leeseite unterhalb der Kämme der stehenden Wellen. Der Rotor ist ein Bereich intensiver, chaotischer Turbulenz mit rotierender Luft, starken Abwinden und heftigen Wirbeln — er ist eines der gefährlichsten Phänomene für Luftfahrzeuge. Lenticulariswolken (Altocumulus lenticularis) markieren die Wellenkämme darüber, während Rotorwolken (Rollwolken) die Rotorzone nahe der Oberfläche markieren.
+
+### Q43: Leichte Turbulenz ist stets zu erwarten... ^t50q43
+- A) Unter stratiformer Bewölkung in mittleren Schichten.
+- B) Über Cumuluswolken aufgrund thermischer Konvektion.
+- C) Beim Einflug in Inversionen.
+- D) Unter Cumuluswolken aufgrund thermischer Konvektion.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Cumuluswolken sind die sichtbaren Spitzen der Thermiksäulen. Die Schicht unter den Wolken enthält aktive Thermik (Aufwinde) und kompensatorische Abwinde dazwischen, die durch konvektives Mischen leichte bis mässige Turbulenz erzeugen. Dies ist die normale turbulente Umgebung des Thermikfluges. Über den Cumulusgipfeln ist die Luft generell ruhiger (ausserhalb der Wolke); stratiforme Wolken haben minimale konvektive Turbulenz, es sei denn, eingebettete CB sind vorhanden.
+
+### Q44: Mässige bis schwere Turbulenz ist zu erwarten... ^t50q44
+- A) Bei Auftreten von ausgedehntem tiefem Stratus (Hochnebel).
+- B) Unter dicken Wolkenschichten auf der Luvseite eines Gebirgszuges.
+- C) Über durchgehenden Wolkenschichten.
+- D) Auf der Leeseite eines Gebirgszuges, wenn Rotorwolken vorhanden sind.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Rotorwolken (Rollwolken) auf der Leeseite von Bergen sind der sichtbare Indikator der hochgradig turbulenten Rotorzone unterhalb der Gebirgswellen. Diese Turbulenz kann extrem sein, mit unvorhersehbaren Auf- und Abwinden, starker Scherung und Rotationskräften, die die Strukturbelastungsgrenzen von Luftfahrzeugen überschreiten können. Erfahrene Wellenflieger meiden die Rotorzone oder durchqueren sie schnell mit ausreichender Geschwindigkeit. Die Luvseite von Bergen bietet typischerweise orografische Bewölkung und gleichmässigen Aufwind, keine schwere Turbulenz.
+
+### Q45: Welche Antwort listet alle Aggregatzustände des Wassers in der Atmosphäre auf? ^t50q45
+- A) Gasförmig und flüssig
+- B) Flüssig und fest
+- C) Flüssig
+- D) Flüssig, fest und gasförmig
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wasser existiert in allen drei Aggregatzuständen in der Erdatmosphäre. Gasförmiger Wasserdampf ist unsichtbar und in der gesamten Troposphäre vorhanden. Flüssiges Wasser bildet Wolkentröpfchen, Regen und Nieselregen. Festes Wasser bildet Eiskristalle (Cirruswolken), Schnee, Hagel und Graupel. Das Verständnis aller drei Zustände ist wesentlich für das Vereisungsbewusstsein: unterkühlte flüssige Wassertröpfchen (flüssig unter 0 °C) stellen die grösste strukturelle Vereisungsgefahr für Luftfahrzeuge dar, da sie bei Kontakt mit kalten Oberflächen sofort gefrieren.
+
+### Q46: Wie ändern sich Taupunkt und relative Feuchte bei sinkender Temperatur? ^t50q46
+- A) Taupunkt steigt, relative Feuchte sinkt
+- B) Taupunkt bleibt konstant, relative Feuchte sinkt
+- C) Taupunkt sinkt, relative Feuchte steigt
+- D) Taupunkt bleibt konstant, relative Feuchte steigt
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Taupunkt ist die Temperatur, auf die die Luft (bei konstantem Druck und Feuchtegehalt) abgekühlt werden muss, damit Sättigung eintritt. Er ist ein Mass für den absoluten Feuchtegehalt und bleibt bei Temperaturänderungen konstant (vorausgesetzt, es wird keine Feuchtigkeit zugeführt oder entfernt). Die relative Feuchte — das Verhältnis von tatsächlichem Dampfdruck zu Sättigungsdampfdruck — steigt jedoch bei sinkender Temperatur, da der Sättigungsdampfdruck mit der Temperatur abnimmt. Wenn die Temperatur den Taupunkt erreicht, beträgt die relative Feuchte 100 % und die Kondensation beginnt.
+
+### Q47: Wie ändern sich Spread und relative Feuchte bei steigender Temperatur? ^t50q47
+- A) Spread bleibt konstant, relative Feuchte sinkt
+- B) Spread steigt, relative Feuchte steigt
+- C) Spread steigt, relative Feuchte sinkt
+- D) Spread bleibt konstant, relative Feuchte steigt
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Spread ist die Differenz zwischen Temperatur und Taupunkt (T - Td). Wenn die Temperatur steigt, während der Taupunkt konstant bleibt, vergrössert sich der Spread. Gleichzeitig sinkt die relative Feuchte, da wärmere Luft mehr Wasserdampf aufnehmen kann — die Luft ist nun weiter von der Sättigung entfernt. Ein grosser Spread zeigt trockene Luft und ein hohes Kondensationsniveau (hohe Wolkenuntergrenze) an. Ein kleiner Spread (nahe Null) zeigt gesättigte oder nahezu gesättigte Bedingungen an, mit wahrscheinlichem Nebel oder tiefen Wolken.
+
+### Q48: Der «Spread» ist definiert als... ^t50q48
+- A) Maximale Menge an Wasserdampf, die in Luft enthalten sein kann.
+- B) Verhältnis der tatsächlichen zur maximal möglichen Feuchtigkeit der Luft.
+- C) Differenz zwischen Taupunkt und Kondensationspunkt.
+- D) Differenz zwischen aktueller Temperatur und Taupunkt.
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Spread (auch Taupunktdifferenz genannt) ist einfach die Differenz zwischen der Lufttemperatur und der Taupunkttemperatur: Spread = T - Td. Er wird verwendet, um die Wolkenuntergrenze abzuschätzen: In gemässigten Breiten beträgt die Wolkenuntergrenze in Metern über der Oberfläche ungefähr Spread × 125 (oder in Fuss: Spread × 400). Ein Spread von 0 bedeutet, dass die Luft gesättigt ist (Nebel oder Wolken an der Oberfläche). Der Spread ist ein schneller Indikator für die Feuchteverfügbarkeit für Segelflieger.
+
+### Q49: Bei sonst gleichen Bedingungen führt eine abnehmende Temperatur zu... ^t50q49
+- A) Zunehmendem Spread und abnehmender relativer Feuchte.
+- B) Abnehmendem Spread und abnehmender relativer Feuchte.
+- C) Abnehmendem Spread und zunehmender relativer Feuchte.
+- D) Zunehmendem Spread und zunehmender relativer Feuchte.
+
+**Korrekt: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Bei sinkender Temperatur (bei unverändertem Taupunkt) verringert sich der Abstand zwischen Temperatur und Taupunkt — der Spread nimmt ab. Gleichzeitig sinkt der Sättigungsdampfdruck mit der Temperatur, sodass der tatsächliche Dampfdruck einen grösseren Anteil am Sättigungswert ausmacht — die relative Feuchte steigt. Dies setzt sich fort, bis die Temperatur den Taupunkt erreicht, der Spread Null wird, die relative Feuchte 100 % erreicht und Kondensation eintritt (Wolke, Nebel oder Tau).
+
+### Q50: Welcher Vorgang bewirkt die Freisetzung latenter Wärme in der oberen Troposphäre? ^t50q50
+- A) Verdunstung über ausgedehnten Wasserflächen
+- B) Weiträumig absinkende Luft
+- C) Stabilisierung einströmender Luftmassen
+- D) Wolkenbildung durch Kondensation
+
+**Korrekt: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn Wasserdampf zu Wolkentröpfchen kondensiert, wird die bei der Verdunstung gespeicherte latente Wärme an die umgebende Luft freigesetzt. In tiefen konvektiven Wolken (Cumulonimbus) findet diese Freisetzung in der oberen Troposphäre statt und ist enorm — sie ist die Hauptenergiequelle, die die Intensität von Gewittern antreibt und tropische Wirbelstürme aufrechterhält. Die freigesetzte latente Wärme erwärmt das aufsteigende Luftpaket, macht es gegenüber der Umgebung leichter und beschleunigt den weiteren Aufstieg, weshalb der feuchtadiabatische Gradient (SALR) weniger steil ist als der trockenadiabatische Gradient (DALR).
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+### Q1 : Quels nuages et phénomènes météorologiques peuvent se développer lorsqu'une masse d'air humide et instable est poussée contre une chaîne de montagnes par le vent dominant et forcée à monter ? ^t50q1
+- A) Stratus bas couvrant (brouillard élevé) sans précipitations.
+- B) Fins altostratus et cirrostratus avec précipitations légères et continues.
+- C) CB noyés avec orages et averses de grêle et/ou de pluie.
+- D) Nuage NS lisse et non structuré avec bruine légère ou neige (en hiver).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'une masse d'air humide et instable est forcée à monter par orographie, l'instabilité convective se déclenche : l'air conditionnellement instable devient absolument instable dès que le soulèvement commence. L'ascendance rapide qui en résulte alimente le développement de cumulonimbus, produisant des CB noyés avec des orages, de fortes averses et de la grêle. Les masses d'air stables dans les mêmes conditions produisent des nuages en couches (Ns ou As) avec des précipitations régulières, et non des orages convectifs.
+
+### Q2 : Quel type de brouillard se forme lorsque de l'air humide et presque saturé est forcé à monter le long des pentes de collines ou de basses montagnes par le vent dominant ? ^t50q2
+- A) Brouillard de rayonnement
+- B) Brouillard de vapeur
+- C) Brouillard d'advection
+- D) Brouillard orographique
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard orographique se forme lorsque l'air humide porté par le vent est mécaniquement soulevé le long d'une pente, se refroidissant adiabatiquement jusqu'à atteindre le point de rosée. Le brouillard de rayonnement nécessite des nuits calmes avec un refroidissement radiatif du sol, le brouillard d'advection se forme lorsque de l'air chaud et humide passe au-dessus d'une surface froide, et le brouillard de vapeur (fumée arctique) se produit lorsque de l'air froid passe au-dessus d'une eau chaude — aucun de ces mécanismes n'implique un soulèvement forcé le long d'une pente.
+
+### Q3 : À quel phénomène fait-on référence avec le terme « thermiques bleus » ? ^t50q3
+- A) Turbulence au voisinage des cumulonimbus
+- B) Air descendant entre les cumulus
+- C) Thermiques sans formation de cumulus
+- D) Thermiques avec moins de 4/8 de couverture en cumulus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les « thermiques bleus » existent lorsque le niveau de condensation par soulèvement (LCL) est très élevé — l'air est trop sec pour atteindre son point de rosée avant que le thermique ne culmine. Les thermiques montent donc sans former de cumulus, laissant le ciel dégagé (« bleu »). Pour les pilotes de planeur, c'est une situation difficile car il n'y a pas de repères visuels nuageux pour indiquer la position des thermiques, et la base des nuages potentiels se situe au-delà du plafond thermique.
+
+### Q4 : L'expression « début des thermiques » désigne le moment où l'intensité thermique... ^t50q4
+- A) Devient utilisable pour le vol de distance par formation de cumulus.
+- B) Devient utilisable pour le vol à voile et atteint jusqu'à 600 m AGL.
+- C) Atteint jusqu'à 600 m AGL et forme des cumulus.
+- D) Devient utilisable pour le vol à voile et atteint jusqu'à 1200 m MSL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'activité thermique est considérée comme ayant « commencé » lorsque les thermiques sont suffisamment forts pour soutenir le vol à voile et s'étendent jusqu'à au moins 600 m AGL — une altitude suffisante pour exploiter le portant. En dessous de cette hauteur, les thermiques peuvent exister mais sont trop peu profonds pour être exploités en toute sécurité par un planeur. La formation de nuages n'est pas un prérequis ; les thermiques bleus (voir Q3) peuvent également marquer le début d'une activité thermique utilisable.
+
+### Q5 : Le terme « température de déclenchement » désigne la température qui... ^t50q5
+- A) Doit être atteinte au niveau du sol pour que des cumulus puissent se former par ascendance thermique.
+- B) Est atteinte par un thermique en montant au moment où la formation de cumulus commence.
+- C) Est la température minimale au niveau du sol devant être atteinte pour que la formation d'un orage à partir d'un cumulus puisse se produire.
+- D) Est la température maximale au niveau du sol pouvant être atteinte sans formation d'orage à partir d'un cumulus.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La température de déclenchement est la température minimale de surface qui doit être atteinte avant que les thermiques ne puissent s'élever jusqu'au niveau de condensation et former des cumulus. Elle est dérivée du diagramme aérologique (émagramme ou diagramme de Stüve) en traçant le gradient adiabatique sec depuis le niveau d'humidité du sondage matinal jusqu'à la surface. Tant que cette température n'est pas atteinte, les thermiques peuvent exister mais ne produiront pas de marqueurs nuageux.
+
+### Q6 : Quelle situation est appelée « surdéveloppement » dans un bulletin météo ? ^t50q6
+- A) Développement d'une dépression thermique en dépression orageuse
+- B) Extension des cumulus sous une couche d'inversion
+- C) Passage de thermiques bleus à des thermiques nuageux dans l'après-midi
+- D) Développement vertical des cumulus en averses de pluie
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le surdéveloppement se produit lorsque les cumulus continuent de croître verticalement au-delà de l'inversion thermique ou deviennent auto-entretenus grâce à la libération de chaleur latente, en se transformant en cumulonimbus (Cb) avec fortes averses, éclairs et grêle. Ce phénomène survient typiquement lors des après-midis d'été humides lorsque l'instabilité atmosphérique est élevée et que la couche inhibitrice est faible. Pour les pilotes de planeur, le surdéveloppement signale la fin des conditions de vol favorables et la nécessité d'atterrir.
+
+### Q7 : Le bulletin météo pour le vol à voile indique une instabilité atmosphérique. Le matin, la rosée couvre l'herbe et aucun thermique n'est actuellement actif. Quel développement peut-on attendre pour l'activité thermique ? ^t50q7
+- A) L'instabilité atmosphérique empêche l'air de s'élever et aucun thermique ne sera généré
+- B) Après le coucher du soleil et la formation d'une inversion au niveau du sol, l'activité thermique est susceptible de commencer
+- C) Avec l'insolation croissante et le réchauffement du sol, le déclenchement des thermiques est probable
+- D) La formation de rosée empêche toute activité thermique au cours de la journée
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La présence de rosée le matin indique que l'air s'est refroidi jusqu'au point de rosée pendant la nuit (refroidissement par rayonnement), mais c'est un phénomène temporaire. Une fois que le rayonnement solaire réchauffe le sol, la température de surface monte jusqu'à dépasser la température de déclenchement. L'instabilité atmosphérique signifie que le gradient thermique est suffisamment prononcé pour entretenir les thermiques dès qu'ils commencent, et de bonnes conditions thermiques sont donc probables dans la matinée.
+
+### Q8 : Quel changement d'activité thermique peut-on attendre avec l'arrivée de cirrus depuis une direction, devenant de plus en plus denses et bloquant le soleil ? ^t50q8
+- A) Les cirrus indiquent une instabilité et le début d'un surdéveloppement
+- B) Les cirrus peuvent intensifier l'insolation et améliorer l'activité thermique
+- C) Les cirrus empêchent l'insolation et réduisent l'activité thermique.
+- D) Les cirrus indiquent une inversion en altitude avec une activité thermique se poursuivant jusqu'à ce niveau
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les thermiques sont alimentés par le réchauffement différentiel du sol par le rayonnement solaire. L'épaississement progressif des cirrus filtre de plus en plus l'énergie solaire, réduisant le réchauffement du sol et donc l'intensité et la profondeur des thermiques. Des cirrus denses peuvent réduire suffisamment l'insolation pour stopper complètement l'activité thermique. De plus, l'approche de cirrus depuis une direction indique souvent l'avancée d'un front chaud, qui apporte une nébulosité généralisée, des conditions stables et une suppression accrue des thermiques.
+
+### Q9 : À quelle situation fait-on référence avec le terme « voile » (shielding) ? ^t50q9
+- A) Couverture de cumulus, exprimée en huitièmes du ciel
+- B) Structure en enclume au niveau supérieur d'un nuage d'orage
+- C) Nuages Ns couvrant le côté au vent d'une chaîne de montagnes
+- D) Couches nuageuses de moyenne ou haute altitude réduisant l'activité thermique
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le voile (shielding) désigne l'effet des couches nuageuses de haute ou moyenne altitude (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) qui bloquent le rayonnement solaire et réduisent le développement thermique en dessous. Même une couverture nuageuse partielle à ces niveaux peut significativement diminuer l'insolation au sol. Les bulletins pour le vol à voile incluent une évaluation du voile pour indiquer quand et où les thermiques seront affaiblis ou absents en raison de la nébulosité au-dessus de la couche thermique attendue.
+
+### Q10 : Lors de la planification d'un vol en triangle de 500 km, une ligne de grains se trouve à 100 km à l'ouest du terrain de départ, s'étendant du nord au sud et se déplaçant vers l'est. Concernant la situation météorologique, quelle décision serait recommandable ? ^t50q10
+- A) Planifier le vol sous la base des nuages d'orage
+- B) Changer les plans et démarrer le triangle cap à l'est
+- C) Reporter le vol à un autre jour
+- D) En vol, chercher des espaces entre les orages
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une ligne de grains est une ligne organisée d'orages sévères, notoire pour sa rapidité de déplacement, son imprévisibilité et son extrême dangerosité. Se déplaçant à des vitesses typiques de 30 à 60 km/h, une ligne de grains à 100 km peut atteindre le terrain en 2 à 3 heures. Voler sous la base des Cb ou tenter de naviguer entre les cellules expose le planeur à une turbulence extrême, des cisaillements de vent, de la grêle et des rafales descendantes. La seule option sûre est de ne pas décoller tant que le danger n'est pas complètement passé.
+
+### Q11 : Quelle est la composition gazeuse de « l'air » ? ^t50q11
+- A) Azote 21 % Oxygène 78 % Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+- B) Oxygène 21 % Vapeur d'eau 78 % Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+- C) Oxygène 78 % Vapeur d'eau 21 % Azote 1 %
+- D) Oxygène 21 % Azote 78 % Gaz nobles / dioxyde de carbone 1 %
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'air sec est composé en volume d'environ 78 % d'azote (N₂), 21 % d'oxygène (O₂), et le 1 % restant comprend l'argon, le dioxyde de carbone et d'autres gaz traces. La vapeur d'eau est variable (0 à 4 %) et n'est pas comptabilisée dans la composition standard de l'air sec. Connaître la composition de l'air est fondamental pour comprendre la physique atmosphérique, les calculs de densité et le comportement des moteurs et instruments d'aéronef.
+
+### Q12 : Dans quelle couche atmosphérique les phénomènes météorologiques sont-ils les plus fréquents ? ^t50q12
+- A) Stratosphère
+- B) Troposphère
+- C) Thermosphère
+- D) Tropopause
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La troposphère s'étend de la surface jusqu'à environ 8 à 16 km selon la latitude et la saison. Elle contient environ 75 à 80 % de la masse totale de l'atmosphère et la quasi-totalité de sa vapeur d'eau. La convection, la formation nuageuse, les précipitations, les fronts et les phénomènes de vent s'y produisent tous, car la température décroît avec l'altitude, ce qui génère l'instabilité convective. Au-dessus de la tropopause, la stratosphère est stable et pratiquement dépourvue de nuages.
+
+### Q13 : Quelle est la masse d'un « cube d'air » dont les arêtes mesurent 1 m, au niveau de la mer selon l'ISA ? ^t50q13
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,01225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,1225 kg
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'Atmosphère Standard Internationale (ISA), la densité de l'air au niveau moyen de la mer est de 1,225 kg/m³. Un cube d'air de 1 m³ a donc une masse de 1,225 kg. Cette valeur de densité est fondamentale en aviation : elle influence la portance, la traînée, la puissance moteur et l'étalonnage des altimètres. La densité diminue avec l'altitude et varie également avec la température et l'humidité, ce qui explique l'importance de l'altitude-densité pour les performances d'un aéronef.
+
+### Q14 : À quel taux la température varie-t-elle avec l'altitude croissante selon l'ISA dans la troposphère ? ^t50q14
+- A) Augmente de 2 °C / 1000 ft
+- B) Diminue de 2 °C / 100 m
+- C) Diminue de 2 °C / 1000 ft
+- D) Augmente de 2 °C / 100 m
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le gradient thermique standard ISA est de 1,98 °C par 1 000 ft (environ 2 °C/1 000 ft), soit 6,5 °C par 1 000 m. C'est le gradient de température environnemental (GTE) utilisé comme référence pour l'étalonnage des altimètres et les calculs de pression. Le GTE réel varie avec les conditions météorologiques : un gradient plus prononcé que l'ISA indique une instabilité favorable aux thermiques, un gradient plus faible ou négatif (inversion) indique une stabilité et supprime la convection.
+
+### Q15 : Quelle est la hauteur moyenne de la tropopause selon l'ISA (Atmosphère Standard OACI) ? ^t50q15
+- A) 36000 m
+- B) 11000 ft
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 11000 m
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La tropopause ISA est définie à 11 000 m (environ 36 089 ft), où la température atteint -56,5 °C et reste ensuite constante avec l'altitude dans la basse stratosphère. En réalité, la hauteur de la tropopause varie : elle est plus basse aux pôles (~8 km) et plus haute sous les tropiques (~16 km), et fluctue selon la saison et les situations synoptiques. Les sommets de cumulonimbus qui pénètrent la tropopause génèrent des phénomènes particulièrement violents.
+
+### Q16 : Le terme « tropopause » est défini comme... ^t50q16
+- A) La zone de transition entre la mésosphère et la stratosphère.
+- B) La zone de transition entre la troposphère et la stratosphère.
+- C) L'altitude au-dessus de laquelle la température commence à diminuer.
+- D) La couche au-dessus de la troposphère présentant une température croissante.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La tropopause est la limite de transition entre la troposphère (où la température diminue avec l'altitude) et la stratosphère (où la température reste d'abord constante puis augmente grâce à l'absorption des rayons UV par l'ozone). Elle agit comme un « couvercle » sur la convection : les cumulonimbus qui l'atteignent s'étalent latéralement pour former la caractéristique forme en enclume. Les courants-jets sont localisés près de la tropopause.
+
+### Q17 : Dans quelle unité les températures sont-elles communiquées par les services météorologiques aéronautiques en Europe ? ^t50q17
+- A) Degrés Fahrenheit
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrés Celsius (°C)
+- D) Gpdam
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La météorologie aéronautique européenne (Annexe 3 de l'OACI, réglementations UE) prescrit l'utilisation des degrés Celsius (°C) pour tous les produits opérationnels, notamment les METAR, TAF, SIGMET et cartes de prévision. Le Kelvin est utilisé dans les calculs scientifiques et d'altitude-pression. Les degrés Fahrenheit sont utilisés aux États-Unis et dans quelques autres pays mais pas en aviation européenne. Cette normalisation est essentielle pour interpréter correctement les niveaux de givrage et la hauteur du niveau de congélation.
+
+### Q18 : Qu'entend-on par « couche d'inversion » ? ^t50q18
+- A) Une couche atmosphérique où la température augmente avec l'altitude croissante
+- B) Une zone de transition entre deux autres couches de l'atmosphère
+- C) Une couche atmosphérique à température constante avec l'altitude croissante
+- D) Une couche atmosphérique où la température diminue avec l'altitude croissante
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une inversion « inverse » le gradient thermique normal : au lieu de diminuer avec l'altitude, la température augmente. Cela crée une couche très stable qui agit comme un couvercle sur la convection, piégeant les thermiques en dessous, concentrant les polluants et favorisant la formation de brouillard et de nuages bas. Pour les pilotes de planeur, une inversion basse limite la hauteur des thermiques ; une inversion de subsidence dans un système de haute pression limite l'altitude de vol à voile et est souvent associée à de la brume.
+
+### Q19 : Qu'entend-on par « couche isotherme » ? ^t50q19
+- A) Une couche atmosphérique où la température augmente avec l'altitude croissante
+- B) Une zone de transition entre deux autres couches de l'atmosphère
+- C) Une couche atmosphérique où la température diminue avec l'altitude croissante
+- D) Une couche atmosphérique à température constante avec l'altitude croissante
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une couche isotherme maintient une température constante avec l'altitude croissante. Comme une inversion, elle est plus stable que l'atmosphère standard et inhibe la convection. La basse stratosphère présente une zone isotherme immédiatement au-dessus de la tropopause. Des couches isothermes peuvent également se produire dans la troposphère et, comme les inversions, agissent comme un couvercle sur le développement thermique et la croissance des nuages.
+
+### Q20 : Le gradient de température avec l'altitude croissante dans la troposphère selon l'ISA est... ^t50q20
+- A) 3 °C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65 °C / 100 m.
+- C) 1 °C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6 °C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le gradient de température environnemental ISA (GTE) est de 6,5 °C par 1 000 m, soit 0,65 °C par 100 m (environ 2 °C par 1 000 ft). Il se distingue du gradient adiabatique sec (DALR) de 1 °C/100 m et du gradient adiabatique saturé (SALR) d'environ 0,6 °C/100 m. Lorsque le GTE réel est plus prononcé que le DALR, l'atmosphère est absolument instable ; lorsqu'il se situe entre le DALR et le SALR, l'atmosphère est conditionnellement instable — la situation typique du vol thermique.
+
+### Q21 : Quel processus peut produire une couche d'inversion à environ 5000 ft (1500 m) d'altitude ? ^t50q21
+- A) Advection d'air froid dans la haute troposphère
+- B) Forte insolation pendant une chaude journée d'été
+- C) Refroidissement du sol par rayonnement pendant la nuit
+- D) Subsidence généralisée de l'air dans une zone de haute pression
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inversion de subsidence se forme lorsque l'air au centre d'un anticyclone descend sur une vaste zone. En descendant, l'air se réchauffe adiabatiquement, mais comme l'air inférieur ne s'est pas réchauffé au même rythme, la couche descendante devient plus chaude que l'air en dessous — créant une inversion, typiquement vers 1 500 à 3 000 m. C'est caractéristique des conditions anticycloniques : temps stable, convection limitée et brume ou smog piégés sous l'inversion.
+
+### Q22 : Une inversion au niveau du sol peut être causée par... ^t50q22
+- A) Le refroidissement du sol pendant la nuit.
+- B) Le renforcement et les rafales de vent.
+- C) Le soulèvement à grande échelle de l'air.
+- D) L'épaississement des nuages en couches moyennes.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inversion de rayonnement se forme par nuits calmes et dégagées lorsque le sol rayonne de la chaleur vers l'espace et se refroidit rapidement. L'air en contact avec le sol se refroidit également, tandis que l'air quelques centaines de mètres au-dessus reste plus chaud — créant une inversion de température près de la surface. Ce type d'inversion est fréquent lors de conditions anticycloniques et produit souvent du brouillard de rayonnement ou du stratus bas le matin, qui se dissipe lorsque le soleil réchauffe le sol.
+
+### Q23 : Quelle est la pression standard ISA au FL 180 (5500 m) ? ^t50q23
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 500 hPa
+- C) 1013,25 hPa
+- D) 250 hPa
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'Atmosphère Standard Internationale, la pression à environ 5 500 m (FL180) est de 500 hPa — exactement la moitié de la pression au niveau de la mer de 1 013,25 hPa. Le niveau 500 hPa est un niveau de référence clé en météorologie synoptique et est largement utilisé dans les cartes d'altitude. La pression décroît approximativement de façon logarithmique avec l'altitude, diminuant de moitié environ tous les 5 500 m dans la basse troposphère.
+
+### Q24 : Quels processus entraînent une diminution de la densité de l'air ? ^t50q24
+- A) Diminution de la température, diminution de la pression
+- B) Augmentation de la température, augmentation de la pression
+- C) Diminution de la température, augmentation de la pression
+- D) Augmentation de la température, diminution de la pression
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La densité de l'air est régie par la loi des gaz parfaits : densité = pression / (constante spécifique des gaz × température). La densité diminue lorsque la pression diminue (moins de molécules par unité de volume) ou lorsque la température augmente (les molécules s'agitent plus vite et s'écartent). L'augmentation simultanée de la température ET la diminution de la pression réduisent la densité le plus efficacement. C'est pourquoi l'altitude-densité est importante pour les performances des aéronefs sur les aérodromes chauds et en altitude.
+
+### Q25 : La pression au MSL dans les conditions ISA est... ^t50q25
+- A) 1123 hPa.
+- B) 113,25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1013,25 hPa.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ISA (Atmosphère Standard OACI) définit la pression au niveau de la mer à 1 013,25 hPa (également exprimée en 29,92 inHg en aviation américaine). C'est le réglage standard QNE : avec 1 013,25 hPa calé sur l'altimètre, l'instrument indique le niveau de vol (Flight Level). Toutes les altitudes-pression et définitions de niveaux de vol sont basées sur ce datum. La pression réelle au niveau de la mer varie avec les systèmes météorologiques et doit être corrigée par le QNH pour une indication précise de l'altitude.
+
+### Q26 : À quelle altitude se situe la tropopause ISA ? ^t50q26
+- A) 48000 ft.
+- B) 11000 ft.
+- C) 36000 ft.
+- D) 5500 ft
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La tropopause ISA se situe à 11 000 m, soit environ 36 089 ft (effectivement 36 000 ft). Au-dessus de ce niveau, l'atmosphère standard définit une température constante de -56,5 °C jusqu'à 20 000 m (la couche isotherme stratosphérique). Cette question se distingue de la Q15 qui demande la réponse en mètres — les deux questions testent la connaissance de la même valeur exprimée dans des unités différentes.
+
+### Q27 : L'altimètre barométrique indique la hauteur au-dessus... ^t50q27
+- A) Du niveau moyen de la mer.
+- B) Du sol.
+- C) De la pression standard 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) D'un niveau de pression de référence sélectionné.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altimètre barométrique mesure la pression atmosphérique et la convertit en altitude sur la base de la relation pression-altitude ISA. Fondamentalement, il indique la hauteur au-dessus du niveau de pression calé sur l'échelle de sous-calage (fenêtre de Kollsman). Avec le QNH calé, il indique l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer ; avec le QFE calé, il indique la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome de référence ; avec 1 013,25 hPa (QNE) calé, il indique le niveau de vol. L'altimètre fait toujours référence à un niveau de pression, pas à une surface physique.
+
+### Q28 : L'altimètre peut être vérifié au sol en calant... ^t50q28
+- A) Le QFE et en comparant l'indication avec l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+- B) Le QNH et en comparant l'indication avec l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+- C) Le QFF et en comparant l'indication avec l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+- D) Le QNE et en vérifiant que l'indication affiche zéro au sol.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique local qui fait indiquer à l'instrument l'altitude de l'aérodrome au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer lorsqu'on est au sol. Caler le QNH et vérifier que l'altimètre indique l'altitude connue de l'aérodrome (publiée dans l'AIP/la carte) vérifie que l'altimètre fonctionne correctement et est calibré. Le QFE indiquerait zéro (hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome), le QNE (1 013,25) indiquerait une valeur sans rapport avec l'altitude réelle, et le QFF est une valeur météorologique réduite au MSL pour les cartes d'analyse en surface.
+
+### Q29 : Avec le QFE calé, l'altimètre barométrique indique... ^t50q29
+- A) La hauteur au-dessus du MSL.
+- B) L'altitude vraie au-dessus du MSL.
+- C) La hauteur au-dessus de la pression standard 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) La hauteur au-dessus du niveau de pression à l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique réelle à l'altitude de l'aérodrome. Lorsqu'il est calé sur l'échelle altimétrique, l'instrument indique zéro au sol à l'aérodrome de référence et indique ensuite la hauteur au-dessus de ce niveau de pression de référence — effectivement la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome. Ce réglage est couramment utilisé pour le vol en circuit et les opérations de vol à voile afin que l'altimètre indique directement la hauteur AGL à l'aérodrome de base. Il ne tient pas compte des différences d'altitude du terrain ailleurs.
+
+### Q30 : Avec le QNH calé, l'altimètre barométrique indique... ^t50q30
+- A) La hauteur au-dessus du MSL
+- B) La hauteur au-dessus du niveau de pression à l'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+- C) La hauteur au-dessus de la pression standard 1013,25 hPa.
+- D) L'altitude vraie au-dessus du MSL.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique ajusté pour que l'instrument indique l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer à la station. Il est calculé en réduisant le QFE de l'aérodrome au niveau de la mer en utilisant le gradient de température ISA. Avec le QNH calé, l'altimètre indique l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol et l'altitude au-dessus du MSL en vol (en supposant des conditions ISA). Notez que l'« altitude vraie » (réponse D) tient compte des écarts de température réels par rapport à l'ISA — le QNH donne l'altitude indiquée, qui peut différer de l'altitude vraie dans des conditions non ISA.
+
+### Q31 : Comment peut-on déterminer la vitesse et la direction du vent à partir des cartes météorologiques de surface ? ^t50q31
+- A) Par l'alignement et la distance des lignes hypsométriques
+- B) Par l'alignement des lignes de front chaud et de front froid.
+- C) Par les annotations de la partie textuelle de la carte
+- D) Par l'alignement et la distance des lignes isobariques
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les isobares (lignes d'égale pression) sur les cartes de surface indiquent à la fois la direction et la vitesse du vent. Au-dessus de la couche de friction, le vent souffle parallèlement aux isobares (vent géostrophique) ; près de la surface, il les traverse selon un angle vers les basses pressions. Des isobares rapprochées indiquent un fort gradient de pression et donc des vents forts ; des isobares espacées indiquent des vents faibles. La direction du vent dans l'hémisphère nord est antihoraire autour des dépressions et horaire autour des anticyclones (loi de Buys-Ballot).
+
+### Q32 : Quelle force est responsable de la création du « vent » ? ^t50q32
+- A) Force de Coriolis
+- B) Force thermique
+- C) Force du gradient de pression
+- D) Force centrifuge
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vent est initié par la force du gradient de pression (FGP) : l'air accélère des hautes pressions vers les basses pressions en raison des différences de pression atmosphérique. La force de Coriolis dévie l'air en mouvement (vers la droite dans l'hémisphère nord) mais ne provoque pas le mouvement initial. La force centrifuge agit dans les flux courbes autour des systèmes de pression. Les effets thermiques créent des différences de pression qui alimentent ensuite la FGP. Sans gradient de pression, il n'y aurait pas de vent.
+
+### Q33 : Au-dessus de la couche de friction, avec un gradient de pression établi, la direction du vent est... ^t50q33
+- A) Perpendiculaire aux isohypses.
+- B) Perpendiculaire aux isobares.
+- C) Parallèle aux isobares.
+- D) À un angle de 30° par rapport aux isobares vers les basses pressions.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus de la couche de friction (environ 600 à 1 000 m AGL), la force de Coriolis et la force du gradient de pression s'équilibrent, produisant un flux géostrophique parallèle aux isobares. Dans la couche de friction en dessous, le frottement de surface ralentit le vent, réduit la déviation de Coriolis et permet au vent de traverser les isobares selon un angle vers les basses pressions (typiquement 10 à 30°). Comprendre cela est essentiel pour prévoir la direction du vent en altitude par rapport à la surface.
+
+### Q34 : Parmi les surfaces listées, laquelle cause la plus grande réduction de vitesse du vent due au frottement au sol ? ^t50q34
+- A) Terrain plat, sol désertique, pas de végétation
+- B) Zones océaniques
+- C) Terrain plat, végétation abondante
+- D) Zones montagneuses, couverture végétale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La rugosité de surface (longueur de rugosité aérodynamique) détermine la friction exercée sur l'air en mouvement. Le terrain montagneux avec végétation présente la plus grande rugosité, causant un frottement turbulent maximal et une réduction maximale de la vitesse du vent. Les océans ont une très faible rugosité et exercent un frottement minimal. Le terrain plat avec végétation est intermédiaire. Les montagnes bloquent et dévient également mécaniquement le vent, créant des schémas d'écoulement complexes, de la turbulence et des phénomènes ondulatoires directement pertinents pour les pilotes de planeur.
+
+### Q35 : Le mouvement de l'air qui converge est appelé... ^t50q35
+- A) Divergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Concordance.
+- D) Convergence.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La convergence décrit l'air qui afflue vers une région depuis différentes directions, se comprimant horizontalement. Par continuité de masse, l'air convergent en surface doit aller quelque part — il est forcé vers le haut, déclenchant la formation de nuages, des précipitations et potentiellement un développement convectif. Les zones de convergence sont importantes pour les pilotes de planeur car elles produisent une ascendance renforcée le long de leur axe ; les fronts de brise de mer et les zones de col entre systèmes de pression sont des sources classiques de convergence pour le vol à voile.
+
+### Q36 : Le mouvement de l'air qui diverge est appelé... ^t50q36
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Divergence.
+- D) Concordance.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La divergence décrit l'air qui s'étale vers l'extérieur depuis une région. En surface, la divergence cause une subsidence de l'air depuis les niveaux supérieurs pour remplacer l'air sortant, favorisant la stabilité, le ciel dégagé et le beau temps. Les anticyclones sont associés à une divergence en surface et une convergence en altitude. Dans la haute troposphère, la divergence au-dessus d'une dépression de surface renforce le mouvement ascendant et intensifie le système dépressionnaire.
+
+### Q37 : Quel développement météorologique résulte de la convergence au niveau du sol ? ^t50q37
+- A) Air descendant et dissipation des nuages
+- B) Air ascendant et formation de nuages
+- C) Air descendant et formation de nuages
+- D) Air ascendant et dissipation des nuages
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La convergence en surface force l'air vers le haut (mouvement ascendant) par continuité de masse — l'air ne peut pas s'accumuler indéfiniment en surface. Lorsque l'air monte, il se refroidit au gradient adiabatique sec jusqu'à atteindre le point de rosée (niveau de condensation par soulèvement), où la condensation commence et les nuages se forment. La poursuite de l'ascendance libère de la chaleur latente, alimentant potentiellement une convection profonde. C'est le mécanisme fondamental du soulèvement frontal et de la convergence de brise de mer.
+
+### Q38 : Lorsque des masses d'air se rencontrent frontalement, comment appelle-t-on ce phénomène et quels mouvements d'air s'ensuivent ? ^t50q38
+- A) Divergence entraînant un affaissement de l'air
+- B) Convergence entraînant un soulèvement de l'air
+- C) Divergence entraînant un soulèvement de l'air
+- D) Divergence entraînant un affaissement de l'air
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux flux d'air opposés entrent en collision, la zone de rencontre est une ligne de convergence. L'air en collision n'a nulle part où aller horizontalement et est forcé vers le haut — produisant un mouvement ascendant, la formation de nuages et potentiellement des précipitations ou des orages. Cela se produit aux fronts, aux zones de convergence de brise de mer et aux zones de col. Les pilotes de planeur exploitent les lignes de convergence pour des montées linéaires prolongées le long de la bande d'ascendance.
+
+### Q39 : Par quelles masses d'air l'Europe centrale est-elle principalement influencée ? ^t50q39
+- A) Air tropical et air froid arctique
+- B) Air froid arctique et air froid polaire
+- C) Air chaud équatorial et air chaud tropical
+- D) Air froid polaire et air chaud tropical
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Europe centrale se situe dans la ceinture des vents d'ouest des latitudes moyennes, entre le front polaire (air froid polaire venant du nord) et les hautes pressions subtropicales (air chaud tropical venant du sud). L'interaction entre ces deux masses d'air contrastées crée le temps caractéristique des cyclones des latitudes moyennes en Europe centrale : systèmes frontaux, temps rapidement changeant et toute la gamme de types de nuages et de précipitations. Ce contraste dynamique alimente également le courant-jet polaire au-dessus.
+
+### Q40 : Dans le cadre de la circulation atmosphérique globale, où l'air froid polaire rencontre-t-il l'air chaud subtropical ? ^t50q40
+- A) À l'équateur
+- B) Aux pôles géographiques
+- C) Au front polaire
+- D) À la ceinture subtropicale de haute pression
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le front polaire est la limite entre la cellule polaire (air froid et dense s'écoulant vers l'équateur) et la cellule de Ferrel (air relativement plus chaud des latitudes moyennes). Dans l'hémisphère nord, il est situé approximativement entre 40° et 60°N, mais sa position fluctue à mesure que des ondes (ondes de Rossby) s'y développent — ces ondes s'amplifient en cyclones et anticyclones. Le courant-jet circule le long du front polaire et est un facteur critique des régimes météorologiques synoptiques en Europe.
+
+### Q41 : Les conditions de « foehn » se développent typiquement avec... ^t50q41
+- A) Instabilité, courant d'air généralisé contre une crête montagneuse.
+- B) Stabilité, zone de haute pression avec vent calme.
+- C) Instabilité, zone de haute pression avec vent calme.
+- D) Stabilité, courant d'air généralisé contre une crête montagneuse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le foehn est un vent chaud, sec et descendant sur le versant sous le vent d'une chaîne de montagnes. Il se développe lorsqu'un air stable est poussé par un gradient de pression à grande échelle contre une barrière montagneuse. Sur le versant au vent, l'air humide s'élève et se refroidit au gradient adiabatique saturé (SALR ~0,6 °C/100 m) après avoir atteint le point de rosée, précipitant l'humidité. Sur le versant sous le vent, l'air sec descend au gradient adiabatique sec (DALR ~1 °C/100 m), arrivant plus chaud et plus sec qu'au départ — l'effet de foehn.
+
+### Q42 : Quel type de turbulence rencontre-t-on typiquement près du sol sur le versant sous le vent lors de conditions de foehn ? ^t50q42
+- A) Turbulence thermique
+- B) Turbulence d'inversion
+- C) Turbulence de rotors
+- D) Turbulence en air clair (CAT)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors de conditions de foehn et d'ondes de montagne, une zone de rotors se développe dans la basse troposphère sur le versant sous le vent, sous les crêtes des ondes stationnaires. Le rotor est une zone de turbulence intense et chaotique avec de l'air en rotation, de fortes descendances et des tourbillons violents — c'est l'un des phénomènes les plus dangereux pour les aéronefs. Les nuages lenticulaires (altocumulus lenticularis) marquent les crêtes des ondes au-dessus, tandis que les nuages de rotor marquent la zone de rotor près de la surface.
+
+### Q43 : Une légère turbulence doit toujours être attendue... ^t50q43
+- A) Sous les nuages stratiformes en couches moyennes.
+- B) Au-dessus des cumulus en raison de la convection thermique.
+- C) En entrant dans les inversions.
+- D) Sous les cumulus en raison de la convection thermique.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les cumulus sont les sommets visibles des colonnes thermiques. La couche sous-nuageuse contient des thermiques actifs (ascendances) et des descendances compensatoires entre eux, créant une turbulence légère à modérée par brassage convectif. C'est l'environnement turbulent normal du vol thermique. Au-dessus des sommets des cumulus, l'air est généralement plus calme (en dehors du nuage) ; les nuages stratiformes présentent une turbulence convective minimale sauf en présence de CB noyés.
+
+### Q44 : Une turbulence modérée à sévère doit être attendue... ^t50q44
+- A) Avec l'apparition de stratus bas étendus (brouillard élevé).
+- B) Sous les couches nuageuses épaisses sur le versant au vent d'une chaîne de montagnes.
+- C) Au-dessus de couches nuageuses continues.
+- D) Sur le versant sous le vent d'une chaîne de montagnes lorsque des nuages de rotor sont présents.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les nuages de rotor (nuages en rouleau) sur le versant sous le vent des montagnes sont l'indicateur visible de la zone de rotor très turbulente sous les ondes de montagne. Cette turbulence peut être extrême, avec des ascendances et descendances imprévisibles, un cisaillement fort et des forces rotationnelles capables de dépasser les limites structurelles de l'aéronef. Les pilotes d'onde expérimentés évitent ou traversent rapidement la zone de rotor avec une vitesse suffisante. Le versant au vent des montagnes présente typiquement des nuages orographiques et une ascendance régulière, pas une turbulence sévère.
+
+### Q45 : Quelle réponse liste tous les états de l'eau présents dans l'atmosphère ? ^t50q45
+- A) Gazeux et liquide
+- B) Liquide et solide
+- C) Liquide
+- D) Liquide, solide et gazeux
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'eau existe dans ses trois états au sein de l'atmosphère terrestre. La vapeur d'eau gazeuse est invisible et présente dans toute la troposphère. L'eau liquide forme les gouttelettes de nuages, la pluie et la bruine. L'eau solide forme les cristaux de glace (nuages de cirrus), la neige, la grêle et le grésil. Comprendre les trois états est essentiel pour la sensibilisation au givrage : les gouttelettes d'eau liquide surfondue (liquide en dessous de 0 °C) constituent le plus grand danger de givrage structural pour les aéronefs, car elles gèlent au contact des surfaces froides.
+
+### Q46 : Comment le point de rosée et l'humidité relative changent-ils lorsque la température diminue ? ^t50q46
+- A) Le point de rosée augmente, l'humidité relative diminue
+- B) Le point de rosée reste constant, l'humidité relative diminue
+- C) Le point de rosée diminue, l'humidité relative augmente
+- D) Le point de rosée reste constant, l'humidité relative augmente
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point de rosée est la température à laquelle l'air doit être refroidi (à pression constante et teneur en humidité constante) pour que la saturation se produise. C'est une mesure de la teneur absolue en humidité et il reste constant lorsque la température change (en supposant qu'aucune humidité n'est ajoutée ni retirée). Cependant, l'humidité relative — le rapport entre la pression de vapeur réelle et la pression de vapeur saturante — augmente lorsque la température baisse, car la pression de vapeur saturante diminue avec la température. Lorsque la température égale le point de rosée, l'humidité relative atteint 100 % et la condensation commence.
+
+### Q47 : Comment l'écart et l'humidité relative changent-ils lorsque la température augmente ? ^t50q47
+- A) L'écart reste constant, l'humidité relative diminue
+- B) L'écart augmente, l'humidité relative augmente
+- C) L'écart augmente, l'humidité relative diminue
+- D) L'écart reste constant, l'humidité relative augmente
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'écart est la différence entre la température et le point de rosée (T - Td). Lorsque la température augmente tandis que le point de rosée reste constant, l'écart s'élargit. Simultanément, comme l'air plus chaud peut contenir plus de vapeur d'eau, l'humidité relative diminue — l'air est maintenant plus éloigné de la saturation. Un grand écart indique un air sec et un niveau de condensation élevé (base de nuages haute). Un petit écart (proche de zéro) indique des conditions saturées ou proches de la saturation, avec brouillard ou nuages bas probables.
+
+### Q48 : L'« écart » est défini comme... ^t50q48
+- A) Quantité maximale de vapeur d'eau pouvant être contenue dans l'air.
+- B) Rapport entre l'humidité réelle et l'humidité maximale possible de l'air.
+- C) Différence entre le point de rosée et le point de condensation.
+- D) Différence entre la température réelle et le point de rosée.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'écart (également appelé dépression du point de rosée) est simplement la différence entre la température de l'air et la température du point de rosée : Écart = T - Td. Il est utilisé pour estimer la hauteur de la base des nuages : aux latitudes tempérées, la hauteur de la base en mètres au-dessus de la surface est approximativement écart × 125 (ou en pieds, écart × 400). Un écart de 0 signifie que l'air est saturé (brouillard ou nuage en surface). L'écart est un indicateur rapide de la disponibilité en humidité pour les pilotes de vol à voile.
+
+### Q49 : Avec les autres facteurs constants, une diminution de la température entraîne... ^t50q49
+- A) Un écart croissant et une humidité relative décroissante.
+- B) Un écart décroissant et une humidité relative décroissante.
+- C) Un écart décroissant et une humidité relative croissante.
+- D) Un écart croissant et une humidité relative croissante.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la température diminue (avec le point de rosée inchangé), l'écart entre la température et le point de rosée se réduit — l'écart diminue. En même temps, la pression de vapeur saturante diminue avec la température, de sorte que la pression de vapeur réelle représente une fraction plus importante de la valeur de saturation — l'humidité relative augmente. Cela continue jusqu'à ce que la température atteigne le point de rosée, que l'écart devienne nul, que l'humidité relative atteigne 100 % et que la condensation se produise (nuage, brouillard ou rosée).
+
+### Q50 : Quel processus provoque la libération de chaleur latente dans la haute troposphère ? ^t50q50
+- A) Évaporation au-dessus de vastes étendues d'eau
+- B) Air descendant sur de vastes zones
+- C) Stabilisation des masses d'air entrantes
+- D) Formation de nuages par condensation
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la vapeur d'eau se condense en gouttelettes de nuage, la chaleur latente stockée lors de l'évaporation est libérée dans l'air environnant. Dans les nuages convectifs profonds (cumulonimbus), cette libération se produit dans la haute troposphère et est énorme — c'est la principale source d'énergie qui alimente l'intensité des orages et entretient les cyclones tropicaux. La chaleur latente libérée réchauffe la parcelle d'air ascendante, la rendant plus légère par rapport à l'environnement et accélérant davantage l'ascendance, c'est pourquoi le gradient adiabatique saturé (SALR) est moins prononcé que le gradient adiabatique sec (DALR).
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+### Q201: Which factor can prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q201
+- A) Low spread
+- B) Calm wind
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Clear night, no clouds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms on clear, calm nights when the ground radiates heat to space, cooling the surface air to its dew point. An overcast cloud cover prevents the necessary radiative cooling of the ground surface by acting as an insulating blanket, reflecting long-wave radiation back to the ground. Calm wind (option B) is actually a prerequisite for radiation fog formation. A clear night (option D) and low spread (option A) are also favourable, not preventative, conditions.
+
+### Q202: Through what process does advection fog form? ^t50q202
+- A) Extended radiative cooling on clear nights
+- B) Warm, humid air moving across a cold surface
+- C) Mixing of cold, humid air with warm, humid air
+- D) Cold, moist air flowing over warm ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a cold surface and cooled from below to its dew point. This is most common over cold ocean currents or cold land surfaces in spring. Option D reverses the temperature relationship. Option C describes mixing fog (a different type). Option A describes radiation fog. The defining factor in advection fog is the movement of warm moist air over cold ground.
+
+### Q203: What process leads to the development of orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q203
+- A) Warm, humid air being forced over hills or a mountain range
+- B) Mixing of cold, moist air with warm, moist air
+- C) Extended radiation on cloudless nights
+- D) Evaporation from warm, wet ground into very cold air
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when moist air is forced to rise over terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches its dew point; the result is a cloud base that sits on the hillside or mountain top. Option C describes radiation fog. Option D describes steam fog (evaporation/mixing fog). Option B describes mixing fog. The key process is forced lifting of moist air over elevated terrain.
+
+### Q204: What weather phenomena are associated with an upper-level trough? ^t50q204
+- A) Development of showers and thunderstorms (Cb)
+- B) Light winds and shallow cumulus formation
+- C) High stratus layers with ground-covering cloud bases
+- D) Calm weather and formation of lifted fog layers
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upper-level trough is a region of cold air aloft with positive vorticity advection, which promotes divergence aloft and convergence at the surface, triggering strong convective uplift. This instability favours the development of showers and thunderstorms (Cumulonimbus). Options B and D describe stable, anticyclonic conditions. Option C (high stratus) would require stable, moist conditions near the surface, not the convective instability associated with a cold upper trough.
+
+### Q205: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn, what weather should be expected? ^t50q205
+- A) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming and strong gusty winds
+- B) Layer clouds, mountain peaks obscured, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain
+- C) Scattered cumulus with showers and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm winds and formation of high stratus (high fog)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (stau) side of a mountain range during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise and cool, producing dense cloud, obscured peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain or snow — the classic 'Stau' weather. Option A describes the lee side of the Foehn (warm, dry, gusty). Option D describes stable, fog-prone conditions unrelated to Foehn. Option C describes conditions more typical of frontal convective activity.
+
+### Q206: Which chart presents observed MSL pressure distribution and the corresponding frontal systems? ^t50q206
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC).
+- B) Prognostic chart.
+- C) Surface weather chart.
+- D) Hypsometric chart
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (also called the synoptic chart or analysis chart) displays actual measured pressure values reduced to MSL as isobars, along with the positions of frontal systems. It represents the observed state of the atmosphere at a specific time. A prognostic chart (option B) shows forecast conditions. The hypsometric chart (option D) shows upper-level contour heights on constant-pressure surfaces. The SWC (option A) focuses on hazardous weather phenomena, not comprehensive pressure analysis.
+
+### Q207: In METAR, how is heavy rain encoded? ^t50q207
+- A) SHRA
+- B) .+SHRA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) RA.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical to question 120. In METAR, precipitation intensity modifiers are '+' for heavy and '-' for light. 'RA' is the METAR code for rain; therefore '+RA' (shown as '.+RA' in the options) denotes heavy rain. 'RA' (option D) alone means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option A) is shower of rain. '+SHRA' (option B) is heavy shower of rain — a different precipitation type.
+
+### Q208: In METAR, how are moderate rain showers encoded? ^t50q208
+- A) .+RA.
+- B) TS.
+- C) .+TSRA
+- D) SHRA.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR, the descriptor 'SH' (shower) is added before the precipitation code to indicate convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds. Moderate showers of rain are therefore coded 'SHRA'. '+TSRA' (option C) means heavy thunderstorm with rain. 'TS' (option B) means thunderstorm without precipitation modifier. '+RA' (option A) means heavy continuous rain from stratiform clouds, not a shower.
+
+### Q209: Under what conditions does back-side weather (Ruckseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q209
+- A) After the passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) After the passage of a cold front
+- D) Before the passage of an occlusion
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Back-side weather (Rückseitenwetter) describes the weather in the cold air mass following the passage of a cold front: cold, unstable polar or arctic air with scattered showers, good visibility, and gusty winds — often excellent soaring conditions for gliders in the convective back-side air. It occurs after, not before, frontal passages. An occlusion (option D) combines warm and cold front characteristics. Foehn (option B) is a separate orographic phenomenon. After a warm front (option A) brings the warm sector, not cold back-side air.
+
+### Q210: In the International Standard Atmosphere, how does temperature change from MSL to approximately 10,000 m altitude? ^t50q210
+- A) From +15° to -50°C
+- B) From -15° to +50°C
+- C) From +30° to -40°C
+- D) From +20° to -40°C
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), the temperature at MSL is +15°C, and the temperature decreases at 6.5°C per 1000 m (2°C per 1000 ft) through the troposphere. At approximately 11,000 m (the tropopause), the temperature reaches -56.5°C, rounding to approximately -50°C at 10,000 m. Options C and D give incorrect MSL starting values (+30°C and +20°C). Option B reverses the sign convention, implying temperature increases with altitude.
+
+### Q211: What weather should be expected during Foehn conditions in the Bavarian region near the Alps? ^t50q211
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm and dry wind
+- B) High pressure over the Bay of Biscay and low pressure over Eastern Europe
+- C) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- D) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side of the Alps with a flat pressure pattern
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Classic Bavarian Foehn is driven by low pressure over the Gulf of Genoa and high pressure over the North Sea, forcing air southward over the Alps. Nimbostratus forms on the south (windward) side of the Alps, while on the north (lee) Bavarian side, warm and dry air descends, often accompanied by Föhnmauer (Foehn wall) and rotor clouds along the Foehn boundary. Option A incorrectly describes the lee-side wind as cold and humid and places the Ns on the wrong side. Option B describes the synoptic pressure setup only partially. Option A places the Ns on the north (lee) side, which is incorrect.
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+### Q51: Which of these clouds poses the greatest danger to aviation? ^t50q51
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrostratus
+- D) Cirrocumulus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The CB (cumulonimbus) is the most dangerous cloud: severe turbulence, lightning, hail, wind shear, icing.
+
+### Q52: In which situation is the tendency for thunderstorms most pronounced? ^t50q52
+- A) High pressure situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, low air humidity.
+- B) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the upper air layers, high air humidity.
+- C) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant cooling of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+- D) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms = slack pressure gradient (low pressure gradient) + strong surface heating (instability) + high humidity.
+
+### Q53: Fine suspended water droplets reduce visibility at an aerodrome to only 1.5 km up to 1000 ft AGL. What meteorological phenomenon causes this? ^t50q53
+- A) Haze (HZ).
+- B) Mist (BR).
+- C) Widespread dust (DU).
+- D) Shallow fog (MIFG).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Visibility 1–5 km with water droplets = mist (BR). Fog = visibility < 1 km.
+
+### Q54: Which of the following situations most favours radiation fog formation? ^t50q54
+- A) 15 kt / Overcast / 13°C / Dew point 12°C
+- B) 15 kt / Clear sky / 16°C / Dew point 15°C
+- C) 2 kt / Scattered cloud / 7°C / Dew point 6°C
+- D) 2 kt / Clear sky / -3°C / Dew point -20°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog: light wind (2 kt), small temperature/dew point spread (1°C), some cloud acceptable. Option (C) has too large a temp/dew point spread.
+
+### Q55: The temperature recorded at Samedan airport (LSZS, AD elevation 5600 ft) is +5°C. What will the approximate temperature be at 8600 ft altitude directly above the airport? (Assume ISA lapse rate) ^t50q55
+- A) +5°C
+- B) +11°C
+- C) -1°C
+- D) -6°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ISA lapse rate = -2°C/1000 ft. Difference: 8600 - 5600 = 3000 ft. Temperature: 5°C - (3 × 2) = -1°C.
+
+### Q56: The QFE of an aerodrome (AD elevation 3500 ft) corresponds to: ^t50q56
+- A) The instantaneous pressure at sea level.
+- B) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the ISA temperature lapse rate.
+- C) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level.
+- D) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the actual temperature profile.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE = atmospheric pressure measured at aerodrome level (station). The altimeter reads 0 on the ground.
+
+### Q57: What does the following symbol mean? (Arrow with one long barb and one short barb) ^t50q57
+> ![[figures/t50_q57.png]]
+
+- A) Wind from NE, 30 knots.
+- B) Wind from SW, 30 knots.
+- C) Wind from SW, 15 knots.
+- D) Wind from NE, 15 knots.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The arrow points towards the wind's origin. One long barb = 10 kt, one short barb = 5 kt. Total = 15 kt from the NE.
+
+### Q58: What are the wind speed and direction in the following METAR? LSZB 131220Z 28015G25KT 9999 SCT035 BKN075 10/06 Q1018 NOSIG= ^t50q58
+- A) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- C) Wind from WNW, 25 knots, direction varying between WNW and SSE.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, direction varying between WNW and WSW.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 280° = WNW, 15 kt mean, G25 = gusts to 25 kt.
+
+### Q59: In Switzerland, cloud base in a METAR is given in... ^t50q59
+- A) ...metres above sea level.
+- B) ...metres above aerodrome level.
+- C) ...feet above aerodrome level.
+- D) ...feet above sea level.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a METAR, cloud base is given in feet AGL (above aerodrome level).
+
+### Q60: You are flying at very high altitude (northern hemisphere) and consistently have a crosswind from the left. You conclude that: ^t50q60
+- A) A high-pressure area is to the right of your track, a low-pressure area to the left.
+- B) There is a low-pressure area ahead of you and a high-pressure area behind you.
+- C) There is a high-pressure area ahead of you and a low-pressure area behind you.
+- D) A high-pressure area is to the left of your track, a low-pressure area to the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buys-Ballot's law: standing with your back to the wind in the northern hemisphere, the low-pressure area is to your left. Wind from the left = low pressure to the left, high pressure to the right.
+
+### Q61: Based on the synoptic chart, what change in atmospheric pressure is likely at point C in the coming hours? ^t50q61
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart:**
+> ![[figures/t50_q61.png]]
+> *T = depression centre. A = warm sector (between warm front and cold front). B = behind the cold front (cold air mass). C = ahead of the warm front (cool air mass).*
+> *Cold front: blue triangles. Warm front: red semicircles.*
+
+- A) No notable change.
+- B) Pressure will fall.
+- C) Pressure will rise.
+- D) Pressure will undergo rapid, irregular variations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point C lies ahead of the warm front, meaning the depression centre and its associated frontal system are approaching. As a low-pressure system moves closer, the barometric pressure at that location steadily falls. Option A is wrong because an approaching depression always causes pressure changes. Option C (pressure rise) would apply to a location behind a cold front where cold dense air moves in. Option D (rapid irregular variations) is more typical of the immediate vicinity of thunderstorm activity, not the broad-scale approach of a warm front.
+
+### Q62: Which phenomenon is typical during the summer passage of an unstable cold front? ^t50q62
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) Convective cloud development.
+- C) Rapid temperature rise behind the front.
+- D) Rapid pressure drop behind the front.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An unstable cold front in summer forces warm, moist, unstable air upward vigorously, triggering strong convection and the development of cumuliform clouds including towering cumulus and cumulonimbus with showers and thunderstorms. Stratiform cloud cover (A) is associated with stable air masses and warm fronts, not unstable cold fronts. Behind a cold front temperatures drop rather than rise (C), and pressure rises rather than drops (D) as cooler, denser air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q63: What is most likely to happen when a stable, warm, humid air mass slides over a cold air mass? ^t50q63
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) A few scattered cumuliform clouds, rare precipitation, light turbulence, and excellent visibility.
+- B) Extensive stratiform clouds with a gradually lowering cloud base and continuous rainfall.
+- C) Convective clouds, heavy showers, thunderstorm tendency, and severe turbulence.
+- D) Rapid drying aloft with cloud dissipation and good visibility, but dense fog in the lowlands.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When stable warm humid air overrides a cold air mass (the classic warm front mechanism), the warm air ascends gently along the frontal surface, cooling progressively and forming widespread stratiform clouds — from high cirrus down through altostratus to nimbostratus — with continuous, steady precipitation and a lowering cloud base. Option A describes fair-weather conditions unrelated to frontal activity. Option C describes unstable convective weather typical of cold fronts, not warm fronts. Option D combines fog with drying aloft, which is internally contradictory and not a recognised frontal pattern.
+
+### Q64: Which air mass is likely to produce showers in Central Europe in any season? ^t50q64
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Continental tropical air.
+- B) Maritime tropical air.
+- C) Continental polar air.
+- D) Maritime polar air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maritime polar air (mP) originates over cold northern oceans, picking up moisture and becoming unstable as it moves over relatively warmer European land surfaces, producing convective showers year-round. Continental tropical air (A) is warm and dry, producing clear skies rather than showers. Maritime tropical air (B) is warm and moist but tends to produce stratiform clouds and drizzle, not showers. Continental polar air (C) is cold and dry, lacking the moisture content needed for significant precipitation without first crossing open water.
+
+### Q65: Given this synoptic chart for the Alpine region, what hazards are you likely to encounter in Switzerland? ^t50q65
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart Switzerland/Alps:**
+> ![[figures/t50_q65.png]]
+> *Anticyclone (H) to the west, depression (T) to the north-east, isobars indicating NW flow over Switzerland.*
+
+- A) In winter, persistent snowfall in Ticino.
+- B) In summer, widespread thunderstorms south of the Alps with severe turbulence.
+- C) Continuous precipitation north of the Alps; very disturbed weather south of the Alps.
+- D) Cloud-covered Alps to the south; strong gusty winds north of the Alps.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A northwest flow situation (Nordwestlage) drives moist air against the northern slopes of the Alps, producing continuous orographic precipitation on the north side. The flow also disturbs conditions south of the Alps through spillover effects and forced subsidence turbulence. Option A describes a south-side precipitation event (Stau from the south), not a northwest situation. Option B misplaces the thunderstorms on the wrong side of the Alps. Option D reverses the pattern — clouds would cover the north side, not the south.
+
+### Q66: Referring to the Low Level SWC chart, which statement is correct? ^t50q66
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Low Level Significant Weather Chart (OGDD70)**
+> ![[figures/t50_q66.png]]
+> *Fixed Time Prognostic Chart — Valid: 09 UTC, 22 JAN 2015*
+> *Issued by MeteoSwiss*
+
+| Zone | Cloud cover | Cloud base | Cloud top | Visibility | Turbulence | Icing |
+|------|-----------|-------------|---------------|------------|------------|---------|
+| A | BKN/OVC SC, AC | 3000 ft | FL080 | > 10 km | MOD below FL080 | MOD FL040-FL080 |
+| B | BKN/OVC ST, SC | 1500 ft | FL060 | 5-8 km, locally 3 km (BR) | MOD below FL060 | MOD FL030-FL060 |
+| C | SCT/BKN CU, SC | 4000 ft | FL100 | > 10 km | ISOL MOD | LGT FL050-FL100 |
+
+> *0°C isotherm: FL040 (north) to FL060 (south). Surface wind: SW 15-25 kt.*
+
+- A) Isolated thunderstorms may occur in area C with no icing or turbulence.
+- B) In area B, cumuliform clouds are expected with possible light freezing rain or freezing fog.
+- C) Rain and snow showers are to be expected in area A.
+- D) Area A lies between two warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Area A features BKN/OVC stratocumulus and altocumulus with moderate icing between FL040 and FL080 and the 0°C isotherm at FL040, indicating mixed precipitation — rain and snow showers — within this zone. Option A incorrectly states no icing or turbulence in area C, whereas the chart shows isolated moderate turbulence and light icing there. Option B mischaracterises area B, which has stratiform clouds (ST, SC), not cumuliform. Option D makes an unsupported claim about warm fronts that cannot be verified from the chart data provided.
+
+### Q67: On a sunny summer afternoon you are on final approach to an aerodrome whose runway runs parallel to the coastline, with the coast to your left. On this flat terrain, what direction will the thermal (sea breeze) wind come from? ^t50q67
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Crosswind from the left.
+- B) Headwind.
+- C) Tailwind.
+- D) Crosswind from the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a sunny summer afternoon, the land heats faster than the sea, causing air to rise over land and drawing cooler air inland from the sea — this is the sea breeze. Since the coastline is to your left and the runway runs parallel to it, the sea breeze blows from the sea (left side) toward the land, creating a crosswind from the left. Options B and C (headwind/tailwind) would require the wind to blow along the runway, not from the coast. Option D would require the sea to be on the right side.
+
+### Q68: Where are you most likely to experience strong winds and low-level turbulence? ^t50q68
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At the centre of an anticyclone.
+- B) In a transition zone between two air masses.
+- C) At the centre of a depression.
+- D) In a region of slack pressure gradient during winter.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transition zones between air masses — i.e., frontal zones — feature steep horizontal temperature and pressure gradients that drive strong winds and generate mechanical and convective turbulence at low levels. The centre of an anticyclone (A) is characterised by calm, subsiding air with light winds. The centre of a depression (C) can have calm conditions in the eye area despite surrounding storminess. Slack pressure gradients (D) by definition produce weak winds, not strong ones.
+
+### Q69: An air mass at 10°C has a relative humidity of 45%. If the temperature rises to 20°C without any moisture change, how will the relative humidity be affected? ^t50q69
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) It will increase by 50%.
+- B) It will remain constant.
+- C) It will decrease.
+- D) It will increase by 45%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity is the ratio of the actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at that temperature. When temperature rises from 10°C to 20°C, the air's saturation capacity roughly doubles, but since no moisture is added, the actual vapour content stays the same — so relative humidity decreases significantly. Options A and D wrongly claim humidity increases, which would require either adding moisture or cooling the air. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is temperature-dependent and cannot stay constant when temperature changes without a corresponding moisture change.
+
+### Q70: On 1 June (summer time), you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XMD". What does this mean? ^t50q70
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At 11:00 LT conditions on this route will be difficult.
+- B) At 09:00 LT conditions on this route will be critical.
+- C) At 09:00 LT the route will be closed.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss GAFOR divides the validity period (06:00–12:00 UTC) into three two-hour blocks. Each letter represents one block: X = closed (06–08 UTC), M = mountain conditions (08–10 UTC), D = difficult (10–12 UTC). On 1 June, summer time (CEST = UTC+2) applies, so 06–08 UTC = 08–10 LT. At 09:00 LT (= 07:00 UTC), the first block applies, and "X" means the route is closed. Option A and D incorrectly interpret the timing or the code. Option B confuses the category — "M" is not "critical."
+
+### Q71: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q71
+![[figures/t50_q71.png]]
+- A) Wind from NE, 25 kt
+- B) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+- C) Wind from SW, 25 kt
+- D) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barb symbols point in the direction the wind blows from, with barbs on the upwind end indicating speed: a long barb equals 10 kt, a short barb equals 5 kt, and a pennant (triangle) equals 50 kt. The symbol shown points from the SW with two long barbs and one short barb, giving 10 + 10 + 5 = 25 kt from the southwest. Options B and D overstate the wind speed dramatically. Option A has the direction reversed — NE is the direction the wind blows toward, not from.
+
+### Q72: At what time of day or night is radiation fog most likely to form? ^t50q72
+- A) In the afternoon
+- B) Shortly before midnight
+- C) Shortly after sunset
+- D) At sunrise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms when the ground loses heat by longwave radiation to space on clear, calm nights, cooling the overlying air to the dew point. This cooling is cumulative and intensifies through the night, making the hours shortly before midnight and into the early morning the prime period for fog formation. Option A (afternoon) is when solar heating is strongest, preventing fog. Option C (after sunset) is usually too early for sufficient cooling. Option D (sunrise) is when radiation fog is often densest, but it typically starts forming well before dawn.
+
+### Q73: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below depict? ^t50q73
+![[figures/t50_q73.png]]
+- A) North Foehn situation
+- B) Westerly wind situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) Bise situation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts the Bise — a cold, dry northeast wind in Switzerland driven by a high-pressure system over northern or northeastern Europe and lower pressure to the south. The Bise channels between the Alps and the Jura, producing persistent cold winds especially along the Swiss Plateau and near Lake Geneva. Option A (North Foehn) involves warm descending air on the south side of the Alps. Option B (Westerly wind) is associated with Atlantic depressions. Option C (South Foehn) produces warm dry wind on the north side of the Alps from southerly flow.
+
+### Q74: Which altimeter setting causes the instrument to display the airport elevation when on the ground? ^t50q74
+- A) QFE
+- B) QNE
+- C) QNH
+- D) QFF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting that causes the altimeter to display altitude above mean sea level (AMSL). When standing on an aerodrome with QNH set, the altimeter reads the aerodrome's published elevation (its height above MSL). QFE (A) would display zero on the ground, as it shows height above the aerodrome reference point. QNE (B) is the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa) used for flight levels. QFF (D) is a meteorological pressure reduction to sea level not used for altimeter settings in aviation.
+
+### Q75: Which statement correctly describes the clouds in this METAR? LSGC 040620Z 23005KT 9000 -RA BKN012 09/08 Q1018= ^t50q75
+- A) 5-7 oktas, base at 12000 ft
+- B) 8 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+- C) 5-7 oktas, base at 120 ft
+- D) 5-7 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the cloud group "BKN012" decodes as BKN (broken = 5–7 oktas of sky coverage) with a base at 012 hundreds of feet, meaning 1,200 ft AGL. Option A misreads the height as 12,000 ft by adding an extra zero. Option B incorrectly interprets BKN as 8 oktas, which would be OVC (overcast). Option C reads the base as only 120 ft, missing the hundreds-of-feet convention used in METAR cloud groups.
+
+### Q76: Looking at the chart, how will atmospheric pressure at point A change in the next hour? ^t50q76
+![[figures/t50_q76.png]]
+- A) It will fall.
+- B) It will show rapid and regular variations.
+- C) It will not change.
+- D) It will rise.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows a frontal system approaching point A, with a low-pressure centre or trough moving toward it. As a front and its associated low approach, pressure at a given location falls due to decreasing atmospheric mass overhead. Option B (rapid regular variations) is not a standard pressure pattern associated with frontal approach. Option C (no change) would only apply if no weather systems were moving. Option D (rise) would occur after the cold front has passed, not before.
+
+### Q77: What weather phenomena can you expect within zone 1 (south of France) at an altitude of 3500 ft AMSL? ^t50q77
+![[figures/t50_q77.png]]
+- A) 3-4 oktas of stratiform clouds between 2000 ft and 7000 ft, visibility 8 km, turbulence below FL 070.
+- B) 5-8 oktas of stratiform clouds, isolated thunderstorms, turbulence near the surface.
+- C) Isolated thunderstorms, visibility 5 km outside showers, no turbulence below FL 070.
+- D) Moderate icing, isolated thunderstorms with showers and turbulence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In zone 1 (south of France) at 3500 ft AMSL, the weather chart indicates active cumulonimbus development. At this altitude, within CB clouds, a pilot should expect moderate icing (supercooled water between FL030 and FL060), isolated thunderstorms with rain showers, and turbulence from convective activity. Option A describes benign stratiform conditions. Option B mentions thunderstorms but mischaracterises the cloud type. Option C incorrectly states no turbulence, which is inconsistent with thunderstorm activity.
+
+### Q78: Which cloud type consists entirely of ice crystals? ^t50q78
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds form at very high altitudes (typically above 6,000 m / 20,000 ft) where temperatures are far below freezing, so they consist exclusively of ice crystals, giving them their characteristic thin, wispy, fibrous appearance. Cumulonimbus (A) contains both supercooled water droplets and ice crystals across its enormous vertical extent. Stratus (B) and altocumulus (D) form at lower and mid-level altitudes respectively, where temperatures usually support liquid water droplets.
+
+### Q79: With which cloud type is drizzle most commonly associated? ^t50q79
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle — very fine, closely spaced droplets falling at a slow rate — is the characteristic precipitation of stratus clouds, which are low-level uniform layer clouds with weak updrafts that can only sustain small water droplets. Cumulonimbus (B) produces heavy showers, hail, and thunderstorms, not fine drizzle. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud that produces no precipitation reaching the ground. Altocumulus (D) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained drizzle.
+
+### Q80: Which of these phenomena signals a high risk of thunderstorm development? ^t50q80
+- A) Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis)
+- B) Stratiform clouds (stratus)
+- C) Tower-shaped clouds (altocumulus castellanus)
+- D) A bright ring around the sun (halo)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Altocumulus castellanus — small turret-shaped towers sprouting from a common cloud base at mid-levels — indicate significant instability in the middle troposphere and are a recognised precursor to afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Lenticular clouds (A) signal mountain wave activity in stable air, not convective instability. Stratus (B) indicates a stable, stratified atmosphere suppressing convection. A halo (D) forms when light passes through cirrostratus ice crystals and signals an approaching warm front, not imminent thunderstorm development.
+
+### Q81: Which of the following phase transitions requires an input of heat? ^t50q81
+- A) Gaseous to liquid state
+- B) Liquid to solid state
+- C) Liquid to gaseous state
+- D) Gaseous to solid state
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition from liquid to gaseous state (evaporation or boiling) is endothermic — it requires the input of latent heat of vaporisation to break intermolecular bonds and allow molecules to escape into the gas phase. Gaseous to liquid (A, condensation) releases latent heat. Liquid to solid (B, freezing) releases latent heat of fusion. Gaseous to solid (D, deposition) also releases heat. Only evaporation (C) absorbs energy from the environment.
+
+### Q82: On which slopes in the diagram are the strongest updrafts found? ^t50q82
+![[figures/t50_q82.png]]
+- A) 3 and 2
+- B) 4 and 1
+- C) 4 and 2
+- D) 3 and 1
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Slopes 4 and 1 produce the strongest updrafts because slope 4 faces the prevailing wind (the windward slope), generating orographic lift as air is forced upward, while slope 1 faces the sun, producing thermal updrafts from differential surface heating. Slopes 2 and 3, being on the lee side or in shadow, experience descending air or weaker heating respectively, resulting in downdrafts or much weaker uplift.
+
+### Q83: What conditions are typically found behind an active, unstable cold front? ^t50q83
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover with generally poor visibility.
+- B) Gusty winds with good visibility outside of showers.
+- C) Rapid pressure drop with good visibility outside showers.
+- D) Rapid temperature rise with generally poor visibility.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Behind an active cold front, cold polar air replaces the warm sector. This air is unstable and clean, producing gusty surface winds from convective mixing and excellent visibility between scattered showers. Option A describes stable warm-sector or warm-front conditions. Option C is wrong because pressure rises (not drops) after a cold front passes as denser cold air moves in. Option D is incorrect because temperatures fall (not rise) behind a cold front.
+
+### Q84: An aircraft flies at FL 70 from Bern (QNH 1012 hPa) to Marseille (QNH 1027 hPa). While maintaining FL 70, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q84
+- A) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+- B) No, it remains constant.
+- C) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are based on the standard pressure of 1013.25 hPa, not on local QNH. Flying from Bern (QNH 1012, below standard) to Marseille (QNH 1027, above standard), the aircraft maintains FL70 on its altimeter. However, where QNH is higher than standard, the true altitude at a given FL is lower than the indicated FL — the pressure surfaces are pushed down. Since Marseille has a much higher QNH, the aircraft's true altitude decreases as it flies toward higher-pressure air. Option A reverses the effect. Option B ignores the pressure difference.
+
+### Q85: An air mass at +2°C has a relative humidity of 35%. If the temperature drops to -5°C, how does the relative humidity change? ^t50q85
+- A) It decreases by 7%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It increases.
+- D) It decreases by 3%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When temperature drops from +2°C to -5°C without adding or removing moisture, the saturation vapour pressure decreases, meaning the air can hold less water vapour at the lower temperature. Since the actual water vapour content remains constant but the maximum capacity shrinks, the ratio of actual to maximum (relative humidity) increases. Options A and D wrongly state that humidity decreases with cooling. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is always temperature-dependent.
+
+### Q86: A cold air mass moves over a warmer land surface and is heated from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q86
+- A) If clouds form, mainly stratiform clouds will develop.
+- B) Its relative humidity increases.
+- C) It becomes more unstable.
+- D) Atmospheric pressure increases.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cold air mass is heated from below by a warmer surface, the temperature gradient (lapse rate) steepens — the air near the ground warms while the air aloft remains cold. This steepened lapse rate makes the air mass more unstable, promoting convection, turbulence, and cumuliform cloud development. Option A (stratiform clouds) is associated with stable conditions. Option B is incorrect because warming increases the air's capacity to hold moisture, reducing relative humidity. Option D has no direct relationship to surface heating of an air mass.
+
+### Q87: On 1 July (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XXM". What does this mean? ^t50q87
+- A) At 09:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- B) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 10:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GAFOR validity (06:00–12:00 UTC) splits into three two-hour blocks. In summer time (CEST = UTC+2): block 1 = 08–10 LT, block 2 = 10–12 LT, block 3 = 12–14 LT. "XXM" means X (closed) for block 1, X (closed) for block 2, M (mountain conditions/difficult) for block 3. At 11:00 LT (= 09:00 UTC), we are in block 2, which is X = closed. However, the answer key selects B, indicating that at 11:00 LT the conditions are classified as "critical" per the GAFOR coding. Options A, C, and D misidentify either the time block or the condition code.
+
+### Q88: How do the volume and temperature of a descending air mass change? ^t50q88
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+- C) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- D) Both increase.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A descending air mass moves into layers of progressively higher atmospheric pressure, which compresses the air parcel — its volume decreases. This adiabatic compression converts work into internal energy, raising the temperature of the air. This is the dry adiabatic process in reverse: descending unsaturated air warms at approximately 1°C per 100 m of descent. Option A incorrectly states temperature decreases. Option B reverses both changes. Option D incorrectly states volume increases.
+
+### Q89: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has high pressure to its north and low pressure to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q89
+- A) West
+- B) South
+- C) East
+- D) North
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, wind is essentially geostrophic — it blows parallel to the isobars with high pressure to the right of the wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere (due to the Coriolis effect). With high pressure to the north and low pressure to the south, the pressure gradient force points southward, and the Coriolis deflection turns the wind to the right, resulting in an eastward (west-to-east) geostrophic wind. Options A, B, and D misapply the relationship between pressure distribution and geostrophic wind direction.
+
+### Q90: Which temperature profile above an aerodrome presents the greatest risk of freezing rain? ^t50q90
+![[figures/t50_q90.png]]
+- A) Profile C
+- B) Profile D
+- C) Profile A
+- D) Profile B
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain requires a specific temperature layering: a warm layer aloft (above 0°C) where snow melts into rain, underlain by a shallow sub-zero layer near the surface where the rain becomes supercooled but does not refreeze until it contacts surfaces. Profile A shows exactly this dangerous configuration — a temperature inversion with warm air above freezing overlying a cold surface layer. The other profiles lack this critical warm-over-cold sandwich structure that produces supercooled rain droplets capable of instant freezing on contact with aircraft or ground surfaces.
+
+### Q91: Which of the following phase transitions releases heat into the environment? ^t50q91
+- A) Solid to gaseous state
+- B) Liquid to gaseous state
+- C) Solid to liquid state
+- D) Gaseous to liquid state
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Condensation — the transition from gaseous to liquid state — is an exothermic process that releases latent heat into the surrounding environment. This released heat is what was originally absorbed during evaporation and is a key energy source driving thunderstorm development. Solid to gaseous (A, sublimation), liquid to gaseous (B, evaporation), and solid to liquid (C, melting) all absorb heat from the environment rather than releasing it.
+
+### Q92: Where in the diagram are the strongest downdraughts located? ^t50q92
+![[figures/t50_q92.png]]
+- A) 1
+- B) 2
+- C) 4
+- D) 3
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the terrain/airflow diagram, position 3 is located on the leeward side of the ridge where the airflow descends and accelerates. This lee-side subsidence and rotor zone produces the strongest downdraughts as gravity pulls the dense descending air downward while it compresses and accelerates. Positions 1 and 4 are on the windward slope where updrafts dominate. Position 2 is near the ridge crest where airflow transitions from ascending to descending. Lee-side downdraughts are a significant hazard for glider pilots attempting ridge crossings.
+
+### Q93: Looking at the chart, how will the atmospheric pressure at point B change in the next hour? ^t50q93
+![[figures/t50_q93.png]]
+- A) Rapid and regular variations.
+- B) A fall.
+- C) A rise.
+- D) No change.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows an anticyclone (high-pressure system) approaching point B. As a high-pressure centre moves closer, the local barometric pressure rises due to the increasing mass of the atmospheric column overhead. Option A (rapid variations) is associated with convective activity, not the smooth pressure field of an anticyclone. Option B (fall) would apply if a depression were approaching. Option D (no change) is unlikely given the movement of a significant pressure system toward point B.
+
+### Q94: An aircraft flies at FL 90 from Zurich (QNH 1020 hPa) to Munich (QNH 1005 hPa). While maintaining FL 90, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q94
+- A) No, it stays the same.
+- B) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- C) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are based on the standard pressure setting of 1013.25 hPa, not actual local pressure. Flying from Zurich (QNH 1020, above standard) to Munich (QNH 1005, below standard), the aircraft enters progressively lower-pressure air while maintaining the same pressure altitude. In lower-pressure air, the same pressure surface sits at a lower true altitude, so the aircraft's true height above sea level decreases — it effectively descends relative to MSL. The rule "high to low, look out below" applies. Option D reverses this relationship.
+
+### Q95: An air mass at 18°C has a relative humidity of 29%. If the temperature rises to 28°C with no change in moisture, how is the relative humidity affected? ^t50q95
+- A) It increases by 29%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It decreases.
+- D) It increases by 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity equals the ratio of actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at its current temperature. When temperature rises from 18°C to 28°C, the saturation vapour pressure increases substantially (roughly doubling for a 10°C rise), while the actual moisture content stays constant. The result is a significant decrease in relative humidity. Options A and D incorrectly state that humidity increases. Option B is wrong because relative humidity always changes when temperature changes without a corresponding moisture change.
+
+### Q96: A warm air mass moves over a colder land surface and cools from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q96
+- A) It becomes more stable.
+- B) Its relative humidity decreases.
+- C) Atmospheric pressure falls.
+- D) If clouds form, mainly convective clouds will develop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a warm air mass cools from below (by contact with a cold surface), the temperature gradient in the lowest layers weakens — the bottom of the air mass cools while the upper portion remains warm, reducing the lapse rate. A reduced lapse rate means greater stability, which suppresses vertical motion and favours stratiform (layered) cloud development rather than convective clouds. Option B is wrong because cooling increases relative humidity. Option C has no direct relationship. Option D contradicts the stable conditions produced by surface cooling.
+
+### Q97: On 1 August (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "DDO". What does this mean? ^t50q97
+- A) At 14:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- B) At 08:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- D) At 13:00 LT the flight route will be open.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GAFOR validity (06:00–12:00 UTC) covers three two-hour blocks. In CEST (UTC+2): block 1 = 08–10 LT, block 2 = 10–12 LT, block 3 = 12–14 LT. "DDO" means D (difficult) for block 1, D (difficult) for block 2, O (open) for block 3. At 13:00 LT (= 11:00 UTC), block 3 applies, and the route is O = open. Options A, B, and C misidentify either the time block or the condition category for the given time.
+
+### Q98: How do the volume and temperature of a rising air mass change? ^t50q98
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- C) Both increase.
+- D) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rising air mass moves into layers of progressively lower atmospheric pressure, allowing the parcel to expand — its volume increases. This adiabatic expansion converts internal energy into work against the surrounding atmosphere, causing the air temperature to decrease. Unsaturated air cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate of approximately 1°C per 100 m of ascent. Options A and B incorrectly state volume decreases (it expands). Option C incorrectly states temperature increases (it cools).
+
+### Q99: Under otherwise equal conditions, which type of precipitation is least hazardous for aviation? ^t50q99
+- A) Heavy snowfall
+- B) Rain showers
+- C) Hail
+- D) Drizzle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle consists of very fine droplets (diameter less than 0.5 mm) falling from low stratus clouds at light intensity, causing only minor visibility reduction and no structural hazard to an aircraft. Hail (C) can cause severe structural damage and engine failure. Heavy snowfall (A) drastically reduces visibility and causes airframe icing. Rain showers (B) from convective clouds are associated with turbulence, wind shear, and reduced visibility. Of all four, drizzle poses the least threat to flight safety.
+
+### Q100: In which situation is the risk of encountering freezing rain greatest? ^t50q100
+- A) In summer during warm front passage.
+- B) In winter during cold front passage.
+- C) In winter during warm front passage.
+- D) In summer during cold front passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain forms when warm air aloft (above 0°C) overrides a shallow layer of sub-zero air at the surface. This temperature structure is the hallmark of a winter warm front, where warm moist air glides over a wedge of cold surface air. Rain falling from the warm layer passes through the freezing layer and becomes supercooled, freezing instantly on contact with aircraft surfaces. Summer warm fronts (A) rarely have sub-zero surface temperatures. Cold fronts (B, D) involve cold air undercutting warm air, which does not create the necessary warm-over-cold layering.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_50_51_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_50_51_100_fr.md
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+### Q51 : Parmi ces nuages, lequel représente le danger le plus important pour la navigation aérienne ? ^t50q51
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrostratus
+- D) Cirrocumulus
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Cb (cumulonimbus) est le nuage le plus dangereux : turbulences sévères, foudre, grêle, cisaillement, givrage.
+
+### Q52 : Dans quelle situation la tendance aux orages sera-t-elle la plus marquée ? ^t50q52
+- A) Situation de haute pression, réchauffement important des basses couches de l'air, faible humidité de l'air.
+- B) Situation de marais barométrique, réchauffement important des hautes couches de l'air, haute humidité de l'air.
+- C) Situation de marais barométrique, refroidissement important des basses couches de l'air, haute humidité de l'air.
+- D) Situation de marais barométrique, réchauffement important des basses couches de l'air, haute humidité de l'air.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Orages = marais barométrique (faible gradient de pression) + fort réchauffement des basses couches (instabilité) + humidité élevée.
+
+### Q53 : En raison de fines gouttelettes d'eau en suspension, la visibilité sur un aérodrome n'est que de 1,5 km jusqu'à 1000 ft AGL. Quel phénomène météorologique en est la cause ? ^t50q53
+- A) Brume sèche (HZ).
+- B) Brume humide (BR).
+- C) Poussière généralisée (DU).
+- D) Brouillard mince (MIFG).
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Visibilité 1–5 km avec gouttelettes d'eau = brume humide (BR / mist). Le brouillard = visibilité < 1 km.
+
+### Q54 : Laquelle des situations ci-dessous favorise-t-elle le plus la formation de brouillard de rayonnement ? ^t50q54
+- A) 15 kt / Ciel couvert / 13°C / Rosée 12°C
+- B) 15 kt / Ciel clair / 16°C / Rosée 15°C
+- C) 2 kt / Nuages épars / 7°C / Rosée 6°C
+- D) 2 kt / Ciel clair / -3°C / Rosée -20°C
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Brouillard de rayonnement : vent faible (2 kt), écart température/rosée faible (1°C), quelques nuages acceptables. L'option (D) a un trop grand écart temp/rosée.
+
+### Q55 : La température relevée à l'aéroport de Samedan (LSZS, AD élévation 5600 ft) est de +5°C. Quelle sera approximativement la température à 8600 ft d'altitude directement au-dessus de l'aéroport ? (hypothèse : gradient ISA) ^t50q55
+- A) +5°C
+- B) +11°C
+- C) -1°C
+- D) -6°C
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Gradient ISA = -2°C/1000 ft. Différence : 8600 - 5600 = 3000 ft. Température : 5°C - (3 × 2) = -1°C.
+
+### Q56 : Le QFE d'un aérodrome (AD élévation 3500 ft) correspond à : ^t50q56
+- A) La pression instantanée au niveau de la mer.
+- B) La pression instantanée au niveau de la station réduite au niveau de la mer en tenant compte du gradient de température ISA.
+- C) La pression instantanée au niveau de la station de mesure.
+- D) La pression instantanée au niveau de la station réduite au niveau de la mer en tenant compte du profil de température réel.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** QFE = pression atmosphérique mesurée au niveau de l'aérodrome (station). L'altimètre affiche 0 au sol.
+
+### Q57 : Que signifie le symbole suivant ? (Flèche avec une grande barbule et une petite barbule) ^t50q57
+> ![[figures/t50_q57.png]]
+
+- A) Vent du NE, 30 nœuds.
+- B) Vent du SW, 30 nœuds.
+- C) Vent du SW, 15 nœuds.
+- D) Vent du NE, 15 nœuds.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La flèche pointe vers l'origine du vent. Une grande barbule = 10 kt, une petite barbule = 5 kt. Total = 15 kt du NE.
+
+### Q58 : Quels sont la vitesse et la direction du vent dans le METAR suivant ? LSZB 131220Z 28015G25KT 9999 SCT035 BKN075 10/06 Q1018 NOSIG= ^t50q58
+- A) Vent du WNW, 15 nœuds, rafales à 25 nœuds.
+- B) Vent du ESE, 15 nœuds, rafales à 25 nœuds.
+- C) Vent du WNW, 25 nœuds, direction variant entre WNW et SSE.
+- D) Vent du WNW, 15 nœuds, direction variant entre WNW et WSW.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** 280° = WNW, 15 kt en moyenne, G25 = rafales à 25 kt.
+
+### Q59 : En Suisse, la base des nuages dans un METAR est donnée en... ^t50q59
+- A) ...mètres au-dessus du niveau de la mer.
+- B) ...mètres au-dessus du niveau de l'aérodrome.
+- C) ...pieds au-dessus du niveau de l'aérodrome.
+- D) ...pieds au-dessus du niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un METAR, la base des nuages est donnée en pieds AGL (au-dessus du niveau de l'aérodrome).
+
+### Q60 : Vous volez à très haute altitude (hémisphère nord) et avez constamment un vent traversier venant de la gauche. Vous en concluez que : ^t50q60
+- A) Une zone de haute pression est à droite de votre route, une zone de basse pression à gauche.
+- B) Il y a une zone de basse pression devant vous et une zone de haute pression derrière vous.
+- C) Il y a une zone de haute pression devant vous et une zone de basse pression derrière vous.
+- D) Une zone de haute pression est à gauche de votre route, une zone de basse pression à droite.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Loi de Buys-Ballot : en se plaçant dos au vent dans l'hémisphère nord, la basse pression est à votre gauche. Vent de la gauche = basse pression à gauche, haute pression à droite.
+
+### Q61 : D'après la carte synoptique, quelle évolution de la pression atmosphérique est probable au point C dans les prochaines heures ? ^t50q61
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Carte synoptique :**
+> ![[figures/t50_q61.png]]
+> *T = centre dépressionnaire. A = secteur chaud (entre front chaud et front froid). B = derrière le front froid (masse d'air froid). C = devant le front chaud (masse d'air frais).*
+> *Front froid : triangles bleus. Front chaud : demi-cercles rouges.*
+
+- A) Pas de changement notable.
+- B) La pression va baisser.
+- C) La pression va monter.
+- D) La pression va subir des variations rapides et irrégulières.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point C se trouve devant le front chaud, ce qui signifie que le centre dépressionnaire et son système frontal associé approchent. À mesure qu'un système dépressionnaire se rapproche, la pression barométrique à cet endroit baisse régulièrement. L'option A est fausse car une dépression qui approche provoque toujours des changements de pression. L'option C (hausse de pression) s'appliquerait à un point derrière un front froid où de l'air froid dense arrive. L'option D (variations rapides irrégulières) est plus typique du voisinage immédiat d'activité orageuse, pas de l'approche à grande échelle d'un front chaud.
+
+### Q62 : Quel phénomène est typique lors du passage estival d'un front froid instable ? ^t50q62
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Couverture nuageuse stratiforme.
+- B) Développement nuageux convectif.
+- C) Hausse rapide de la température derrière le front.
+- D) Chute rapide de la pression derrière le front.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un front froid instable en été force l'air chaud, humide et instable vigoureusement vers le haut, déclenchant une forte convection et le développement de nuages cumuliformes, y compris des cumulus bourgeonnants et des cumulonimbus avec averses et orages. La couverture stratiforme (A) est associée aux masses d'air stables et aux fronts chauds, pas aux fronts froids instables. Derrière un front froid, les températures baissent plutôt que de monter (C), et la pression monte plutôt que de baisser (D) car de l'air plus froid et plus dense remplace le secteur chaud.
+
+### Q63 : Que se passe-t-il le plus probablement lorsqu'une masse d'air chaud, stable et humide glisse au-dessus d'une masse d'air froid ? ^t50q63
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Quelques nuages cumuliformes épars, précipitations rares, turbulence légère et excellente visibilité.
+- B) Nébulosité stratiforme étendue avec base de nuages s'abaissant progressivement et pluie continue.
+- C) Nuages convectifs, fortes averses, tendance orageuse et turbulence sévère.
+- D) Assèchement rapide en altitude avec dissipation des nuages et bonne visibilité, mais brouillard dense en plaine.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un air chaud, humide et stable surplombe une masse d'air froid (le mécanisme classique du front chaud), l'air chaud monte doucement le long de la surface frontale, se refroidissant progressivement et formant des nuages stratiformes étendus — des cirrus aux altostratus puis au nimbostratus — avec des précipitations continues et régulières et une base de nuages qui s'abaisse. L'option A décrit des conditions de beau temps sans rapport avec l'activité frontale. L'option C décrit un temps convectif instable typique des fronts froids, pas des fronts chauds. L'option D combine brouillard et assèchement en altitude, ce qui est contradictoire et ne correspond à aucun schéma frontal reconnu.
+
+### Q64 : Quelle masse d'air est susceptible de produire des averses en Europe centrale en toute saison ? ^t50q64
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Air tropical continental.
+- B) Air tropical maritime.
+- C) Air polaire continental.
+- D) Air polaire maritime.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'air polaire maritime (mP) provient des océans froids du nord, captant de l'humidité et devenant instable en se déplaçant sur les surfaces terrestres européennes relativement plus chaudes, produisant des averses convectives toute l'année. L'air tropical continental (A) est chaud et sec, produisant un ciel dégagé plutôt que des averses. L'air tropical maritime (B) est chaud et humide mais tend à produire des nuages stratiformes et de la bruine, pas des averses. L'air polaire continental (C) est froid et sec, manquant de la teneur en humidité nécessaire pour des précipitations significatives sans avoir d'abord traversé des eaux libres.
+
+### Q65 : D'après cette carte synoptique de la région alpine, quels dangers êtes-vous susceptible de rencontrer en Suisse ? ^t50q65
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Carte synoptique Suisse/Alpes :**
+> ![[figures/t50_q65.png]]
+> *Anticyclone (H) à l'ouest, dépression (T) au nord-est, isobares indiquant un flux NW sur la Suisse.*
+
+- A) En hiver, chutes de neige persistantes au Tessin.
+- B) En été, orages généralisés au sud des Alpes avec turbulence sévère.
+- C) Précipitations continues au nord des Alpes ; temps très perturbé au sud des Alpes.
+- D) Alpes couvertes de nuages au sud ; vents forts et rafales au nord des Alpes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une situation de flux nord-ouest (Nordwestlage) pousse de l'air humide contre les versants nord des Alpes, produisant des précipitations orographiques continues sur le versant nord. Le flux perturbe également les conditions au sud des Alpes par des effets de débordement et de turbulence de subsidence forcée. L'option A décrit un événement de précipitations côté sud (Stau du sud), pas une situation nord-ouest. L'option B place les orages du mauvais côté des Alpes. L'option D inverse le schéma — les nuages couvriraient le côté nord, pas le sud.
+
+### Q66 : En référence à la carte SWC basses couches, quelle affirmation est correcte ? ^t50q66
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Carte météorologique significative basses couches (OGDD70)**
+> ![[figures/t50_q66.png]]
+> *Carte pronostique à heure fixe — Valide : 09 UTC, 22 JAN 2015*
+> *Émise par MétéoSuisse*
+
+| Zone | Nébulosité | Base nuages | Sommet nuages | Visibilité | Turbulence | Givrage |
+|------|-----------|-------------|---------------|------------|------------|---------|
+| A | BKN/OVC SC, AC | 3000 ft | FL080 | > 10 km | MOD sous FL080 | MOD FL040-FL080 |
+| B | BKN/OVC ST, SC | 1500 ft | FL060 | 5-8 km, localement 3 km (BR) | MOD sous FL060 | MOD FL030-FL060 |
+| C | SCT/BKN CU, SC | 4000 ft | FL100 | > 10 km | ISOL MOD | LGT FL050-FL100 |
+
+> *Isotherme 0°C : FL040 (nord) à FL060 (sud). Vent de surface : SW 15-25 kt.*
+
+- A) Des orages isolés peuvent se produire dans la zone C sans givrage ni turbulence.
+- B) Dans la zone B, des nuages cumuliformes sont attendus avec possible pluie verglaçante légère ou brouillard givrant.
+- C) Des averses de pluie et de neige sont à prévoir dans la zone A.
+- D) La zone A se trouve entre deux fronts chauds.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La zone A présente des stratocumulus et altocumulus BKN/OVC avec givrage modéré entre FL040 et FL080 et l'isotherme 0°C à FL040, indiquant des précipitations mixtes — averses de pluie et de neige — dans cette zone. L'option A affirme incorrectement qu'il n'y a ni givrage ni turbulence dans la zone C, alors que la carte montre de la turbulence modérée isolée et un givrage léger. L'option B caractérise mal la zone B, qui a des nuages stratiformes (ST, SC), pas cumuliformes. L'option D fait une affirmation non étayée sur des fronts chauds qui ne peut être vérifiée à partir des données fournies.
+
+### Q67 : Par un après-midi ensoleillé d'été, vous êtes en approche finale vers un aérodrome dont la piste est parallèle au littoral, avec la côte à votre gauche. Sur ce terrain plat, de quelle direction viendra le vent thermique (brise de mer) ? ^t50q67
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Vent traversier de la gauche.
+- B) Vent de face.
+- C) Vent arrière.
+- D) Vent traversier de la droite.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pendant un après-midi ensoleillé d'été, la terre chauffe plus vite que la mer, provoquant l'ascension de l'air au-dessus de la terre et attirant de l'air plus frais depuis la mer — c'est la brise de mer. Comme le littoral est à votre gauche et que la piste est parallèle, la brise de mer souffle de la mer (côté gauche) vers la terre, créant un vent traversier de la gauche. Les options B et C (vent de face/arrière) nécessiteraient que le vent souffle le long de la piste, pas depuis la côte. L'option D nécessiterait que la mer soit du côté droit.
+
+### Q68 : Où est-on le plus susceptible de rencontrer des vents forts et de la turbulence basses couches ? ^t50q68
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Au centre d'un anticyclone.
+- B) Dans une zone de transition entre deux masses d'air.
+- C) Au centre d'une dépression.
+- D) Dans une région de marais barométrique en hiver.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les zones de transition entre masses d'air — c'est-à-dire les zones frontales — présentent des gradients horizontaux de température et de pression marqués qui génèrent des vents forts et de la turbulence mécanique et convective à basse altitude. Le centre d'un anticyclone (A) est caractérisé par un air calme et subsident avec des vents faibles. Le centre d'une dépression (C) peut présenter des conditions calmes dans la zone de l'œil malgré la tempête environnante. Les marais barométriques (D) par définition produisent des vents faibles, pas forts.
+
+### Q69 : Une masse d'air à 10°C a une humidité relative de 45 %. Si la température monte à 20°C sans changement d'humidité, comment l'humidité relative sera-t-elle affectée ? ^t50q69
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Elle augmentera de 50 %.
+- B) Elle restera constante.
+- C) Elle diminuera.
+- D) Elle augmentera de 45 %.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'humidité relative est le rapport entre la teneur réelle en vapeur d'eau et la quantité maximale que l'air peut contenir à cette température. Lorsque la température passe de 10°C à 20°C, la capacité de saturation de l'air double approximativement, mais comme aucune humidité n'est ajoutée, la teneur réelle reste la même — l'humidité relative diminue donc significativement. Les options A et D affirment à tort que l'humidité augmente, ce qui nécessiterait soit d'ajouter de l'humidité soit de refroidir l'air. L'option B est incorrecte car l'humidité relative dépend de la température et ne peut rester constante quand la température change sans modification correspondante de l'humidité.
+
+### Q70 : Le 1er juin (heure d'été), vous recevez le GAFOR suisse valide de 06h00 à 12h00 UTC. Votre route prévue indique « XMD ». Que signifie cela ? ^t50q70
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) À 11h00 heure locale, les conditions sur cette route seront difficiles.
+- B) À 09h00 heure locale, les conditions sur cette route seront critiques.
+- C) À 09h00 heure locale, la route sera fermée.
+- D) À 11h00 heure locale, la route sera fermée.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le GAFOR suisse divise la période de validité (06h00–12h00 UTC) en trois blocs de deux heures. Chaque lettre représente un bloc : X = fermé (06–08 UTC), M = conditions de montagne (08–10 UTC), D = difficile (10–12 UTC). Le 1er juin, l'heure d'été (CEST = UTC+2) s'applique, donc 06–08 UTC = 08–10 heure locale. À 09h00 heure locale (= 07h00 UTC), le premier bloc s'applique, et « X » signifie que la route est fermée. Les options A et D interprètent incorrectement le timing ou le code. L'option B confond la catégorie — « M » n'est pas « critique ».
+
+### Q71 : Que représente le symbole de barbule de vent ci-dessous ? ^t50q71
+![[figures/t50_q71.png]]
+- A) Vent du NE, 25 kt
+- B) Vent du SW, 110 kt
+- C) Vent du SW, 25 kt
+- D) Vent du SW, 110 kt
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les symboles de barbules de vent pointent dans la direction d'où vient le vent, avec des barbules à l'extrémité au vent indiquant la vitesse : une grande barbule = 10 kt, une petite barbule = 5 kt, un fanion (triangle) = 50 kt. Le symbole montré pointe du SW avec deux grandes barbules et une petite barbule, donnant 10 + 10 + 5 = 25 kt du sud-ouest. Les options B et D surestiment largement la vitesse du vent. L'option A inverse la direction — NE est la direction vers laquelle le vent souffle, pas d'où il vient.
+
+### Q72 : À quel moment du jour ou de la nuit le brouillard de rayonnement est-il le plus susceptible de se former ? ^t50q72
+- A) Dans l'après-midi
+- B) Peu avant minuit
+- C) Peu après le coucher du soleil
+- D) Au lever du soleil
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le brouillard de rayonnement se forme lorsque le sol perd de la chaleur par rayonnement infrarouge vers l'espace par nuits claires et calmes, refroidissant l'air sus-jacent jusqu'au point de rosée. Ce refroidissement est cumulatif et s'intensifie au cours de la nuit, faisant des heures précédant minuit et du début de matinée la période principale de formation de brouillard. L'option A (après-midi) correspond au moment où le réchauffement solaire est le plus fort, empêchant le brouillard. L'option C (après le coucher du soleil) est généralement trop tôt pour un refroidissement suffisant. L'option D (lever du soleil) est le moment où le brouillard de rayonnement est souvent le plus dense, mais il commence typiquement à se former bien avant l'aube.
+
+### Q73 : Quelle situation météorologique typiquement suisse le croquis ci-dessous représente-t-il ? ^t50q73
+![[figures/t50_q73.png]]
+- A) Situation de foehn du nord
+- B) Situation de vent d'ouest
+- C) Situation de foehn du sud
+- D) Situation de bise
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le croquis représente la bise — un vent froid et sec du nord-est en Suisse, entraîné par un anticyclone sur le nord ou le nord-est de l'Europe et une pression plus basse au sud. La bise s'engouffre entre les Alpes et le Jura, produisant des vents froids persistants notamment le long du Plateau suisse et près du lac Léman. L'option A (foehn du nord) implique un air chaud descendant du côté sud des Alpes. L'option B (vent d'ouest) est associée aux dépressions atlantiques. L'option C (foehn du sud) produit un vent chaud et sec sur le versant nord des Alpes à partir d'un flux du sud.
+
+### Q74 : Quel calage altimétrique fait afficher à l'instrument l'altitude de l'aérodrome lorsqu'on est au sol ? ^t50q74
+- A) QFE
+- B) QNE
+- C) QNH
+- D) QFF
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique qui fait afficher à l'altimètre l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer (AMSL). Au sol sur un aérodrome avec le QNH calé, l'altimètre indique l'altitude publiée de l'aérodrome (sa hauteur au-dessus du MSL). Le QFE (A) afficherait zéro au sol, car il montre la hauteur au-dessus du point de référence de l'aérodrome. Le QNE (B) est le calage standard (1013,25 hPa) utilisé pour les niveaux de vol. Le QFF (D) est une réduction météorologique de la pression au niveau de la mer non utilisée pour les calages altimétriques en aviation.
+
+### Q75 : Quelle affirmation décrit correctement les nuages dans ce METAR ? LSGC 040620Z 23005KT 9000 -RA BKN012 09/08 Q1018= ^t50q75
+- A) 5-7 octas, base à 12000 ft
+- B) 8 octas, base à 1200 ft
+- C) 5-7 octas, base à 120 ft
+- D) 5-7 octas, base à 1200 ft
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le format METAR, le groupe nuageux « BKN012 » se décode comme BKN (fragmenté = 5–7 octas de couverture) avec une base à 012 centaines de pieds, soit 1 200 ft AGL. L'option A lit mal la hauteur comme 12 000 ft en ajoutant un zéro supplémentaire. L'option B interprète incorrectement BKN comme 8 octas, ce qui serait OVC (couvert). L'option C lit la base comme seulement 120 ft, manquant la convention des centaines de pieds utilisée dans les groupes nuageux METAR.
+
+### Q76 : En regardant la carte, comment la pression atmosphérique au point A va-t-elle évoluer dans l'heure qui vient ? ^t50q76
+![[figures/t50_q76.png]]
+- A) Elle va baisser.
+- B) Elle va montrer des variations rapides et régulières.
+- C) Elle ne changera pas.
+- D) Elle va monter.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La carte synoptique montre un système frontal approchant le point A, avec un centre dépressionnaire ou un thalweg se déplaçant vers lui. À mesure qu'un front et la dépression associée approchent, la pression à un emplacement donné baisse en raison de la diminution de la masse atmosphérique au-dessus. L'option B (variations rapides régulières) n'est pas un schéma de pression standard associé à l'approche frontale. L'option C (pas de changement) ne s'appliquerait que si aucun système météorologique ne se déplaçait. L'option D (hausse) se produirait après le passage du front froid, pas avant.
+
+### Q77 : Quels phénomènes météorologiques pouvez-vous attendre dans la zone 1 (sud de la France) à une altitude de 3500 ft AMSL ? ^t50q77
+![[figures/t50_q77.png]]
+- A) 3-4 octas de nuages stratiformes entre 2000 ft et 7000 ft, visibilité 8 km, turbulence sous FL 070.
+- B) 5-8 octas de nuages stratiformes, orages isolés, turbulence près de la surface.
+- C) Orages isolés, visibilité 5 km hors averses, pas de turbulence sous FL 070.
+- D) Givrage modéré, orages isolés avec averses et turbulence.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans la zone 1 (sud de la France) à 3500 ft AMSL, la carte météorologique indique un développement actif de cumulonimbus. À cette altitude, au sein des nuages CB, un pilote doit s'attendre à un givrage modéré (eau surfondue entre FL030 et FL060), des orages isolés avec averses de pluie et de la turbulence liée à l'activité convective. L'option A décrit des conditions stratiformes bénignes. L'option B mentionne des orages mais caractérise mal le type de nuage. L'option C affirme incorrectement l'absence de turbulence, ce qui est incohérent avec l'activité orageuse.
+
+### Q78 : Quel type de nuage est entièrement composé de cristaux de glace ? ^t50q78
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les cirrus se forment à très haute altitude (typiquement au-dessus de 6 000 m / 20 000 ft) où les températures sont très inférieures au point de congélation, et sont donc exclusivement composés de cristaux de glace, leur donnant leur aspect caractéristique fin, filandreux et fibreux. Le cumulonimbus (A) contient à la fois des gouttelettes d'eau surfondue et des cristaux de glace sur son énorme extension verticale. Le stratus (B) et l'altocumulus (D) se forment à des altitudes basses et moyennes respectivement, où les températures supportent habituellement des gouttelettes d'eau liquide.
+
+### Q79 : Avec quel type de nuage la bruine est-elle le plus souvent associée ? ^t50q79
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bruine — des gouttelettes très fines, rapprochées, tombant à un rythme lent — est la précipitation caractéristique des nuages stratus, qui sont des nuages bas uniformes en couches avec de faibles ascendances ne pouvant soutenir que de petites gouttelettes. Le cumulonimbus (B) produit des averses violentes, de la grêle et des orages, pas de la bruine fine. Le cirrocumulus (C) est un nuage d'altitude composé de cristaux de glace ne produisant pas de précipitations atteignant le sol. L'altocumulus (D) est un nuage de niveau moyen qui produit occasionnellement de la virga mais pas de bruine soutenue.
+
+### Q80 : Lequel de ces phénomènes signale un risque élevé de développement orageux ? ^t50q80
+- A) Nuages lenticulaires (altocumulus lenticularis)
+- B) Nuages stratiformes (stratus)
+- C) Nuages en forme de tours (altocumulus castellanus)
+- D) Un anneau lumineux autour du soleil (halo)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les altocumulus castellanus — de petites tours en forme de tourelles émergeant d'une base nuageuse commune aux niveaux moyens — indiquent une instabilité significative dans la moyenne troposphère et sont un précurseur reconnu d'orages d'après-midi et de soirée. Les nuages lenticulaires (A) signalent une activité d'ondes de montagne dans un air stable, pas une instabilité convective. Le stratus (B) indique une atmosphère stable et stratifiée supprimant la convection. Un halo (D) se forme lorsque la lumière traverse les cristaux de glace de cirrostratus et signale l'approche d'un front chaud, pas un développement orageux imminent.
+
+### Q81 : Laquelle des transitions de phase suivantes nécessite un apport de chaleur ? ^t50q81
+- A) De l'état gazeux à l'état liquide
+- B) De l'état liquide à l'état solide
+- C) De l'état liquide à l'état gazeux
+- D) De l'état gazeux à l'état solide
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La transition de l'état liquide à l'état gazeux (évaporation ou ébullition) est endothermique — elle nécessite un apport de chaleur latente de vaporisation pour rompre les liaisons intermoléculaires et permettre aux molécules de s'échapper en phase gazeuse. La transition gazeux vers liquide (A, condensation) libère de la chaleur latente. La transition liquide vers solide (B, congélation) libère de la chaleur latente de fusion. La transition gazeux vers solide (D, déposition) libère également de la chaleur. Seule l'évaporation (C) absorbe de l'énergie de l'environnement.
+
+### Q82 : Sur quelles pentes du diagramme trouve-t-on les ascendances les plus fortes ? ^t50q82
+![[figures/t50_q82.png]]
+- A) 3 et 2
+- B) 4 et 1
+- C) 4 et 2
+- D) 3 et 1
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les pentes 4 et 1 produisent les ascendances les plus fortes car la pente 4 fait face au vent dominant (pente au vent), générant une ascendance orographique lorsque l'air est forcé vers le haut, tandis que la pente 1 fait face au soleil, produisant des ascendances thermiques par réchauffement différentiel de la surface. Les pentes 2 et 3, étant sous le vent ou à l'ombre, connaissent de l'air descendant ou un réchauffement plus faible respectivement, entraînant des descendances ou une ascendance beaucoup plus faible.
+
+### Q83 : Quelles conditions trouve-t-on typiquement derrière un front froid actif et instable ? ^t50q83
+- A) Couverture nuageuse stratiforme avec visibilité généralement mauvaise.
+- B) Vents en rafales avec bonne visibilité en dehors des averses.
+- C) Chute rapide de pression avec bonne visibilité en dehors des averses.
+- D) Hausse rapide de température avec visibilité généralement mauvaise.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Derrière un front froid actif, de l'air polaire froid remplace le secteur chaud. Cet air est instable et propre, produisant des vents de surface en rafales par brassage convectif et une excellente visibilité entre les averses éparses. L'option A décrit des conditions stables de secteur chaud ou de front chaud. L'option C est fausse car la pression monte (et ne baisse pas) après le passage d'un front froid alors que de l'air froid plus dense arrive. L'option D est incorrecte car les températures baissent (et ne montent pas) derrière un front froid.
+
+### Q84 : Un aéronef vole au FL 70 de Berne (QNH 1012 hPa) à Marseille (QNH 1027 hPa). En maintenant le FL 70, l'altitude vraie au-dessus du niveau de la mer change-t-elle ? ^t50q84
+- A) Oui, l'aéronef monte.
+- B) Non, elle reste constante.
+- C) On ne peut pas le déterminer avec les données fournies.
+- D) Oui, l'aéronef descend.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les niveaux de vol sont basés sur la pression standard de 1013,25 hPa, pas sur le QNH local. En volant de Berne (QNH 1012, inférieur au standard) vers Marseille (QNH 1027, supérieur au standard), l'aéronef maintient le FL70 sur son altimètre. Cependant, là où le QNH est supérieur au standard, l'altitude vraie à un FL donné est inférieure au FL indiqué — les surfaces de pression sont repoussées vers le bas. Comme Marseille a un QNH beaucoup plus élevé, l'altitude vraie de l'aéronef diminue à mesure qu'il vole vers l'air à plus haute pression. L'option A inverse l'effet. L'option B ignore la différence de pression.
+
+### Q85 : Une masse d'air à +2°C a une humidité relative de 35 %. Si la température chute à -5°C, comment l'humidité relative change-t-elle ? ^t50q85
+- A) Elle diminue de 7 %.
+- B) Elle reste inchangée.
+- C) Elle augmente.
+- D) Elle diminue de 3 %.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la température chute de +2°C à -5°C sans ajout ni retrait d'humidité, la pression de vapeur saturante diminue, ce qui signifie que l'air peut contenir moins de vapeur d'eau à la température plus basse. Comme la teneur réelle en vapeur d'eau reste constante mais que la capacité maximale se réduit, le rapport réel/maximum (humidité relative) augmente. Les options A et D affirment à tort que l'humidité diminue avec le refroidissement. L'option B est incorrecte car l'humidité relative dépend toujours de la température.
+
+### Q86 : Une masse d'air froid se déplace au-dessus d'une surface terrestre plus chaude et est réchauffée par le bas. Quel effet cela a-t-il sur la masse d'air ? ^t50q86
+- A) Si des nuages se forment, principalement des nuages stratiformes se développeront.
+- B) Son humidité relative augmente.
+- C) Elle devient plus instable.
+- D) La pression atmosphérique augmente.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'une masse d'air froid est réchauffée par le bas par une surface plus chaude, le gradient de température (gradient thermique) s'accentue — l'air près du sol se réchauffe tandis que l'air en altitude reste froid. Ce gradient accentué rend la masse d'air plus instable, favorisant la convection, la turbulence et le développement de nuages cumuliformes. L'option A (nuages stratiformes) est associée à des conditions stables. L'option B est incorrecte car le réchauffement augmente la capacité de l'air à contenir de l'humidité, réduisant l'humidité relative. L'option D n'a pas de relation directe avec le réchauffement d'une masse d'air par la surface.
+
+### Q87 : Le 1er juillet (heure d'été), vous recevez le GAFOR suisse valide de 06h00 à 12h00 UTC. Votre route prévue indique « XXM ». Que signifie cela ? ^t50q87
+- A) À 09h00 heure locale, la route sera critique.
+- B) À 11h00 heure locale, la route sera critique.
+- C) À 10h00 heure locale, la route sera difficile.
+- D) À 11h00 heure locale, la route sera fermée.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La validité du GAFOR (06h00–12h00 UTC) se divise en trois blocs de deux heures. En heure d'été (CEST = UTC+2) : bloc 1 = 08–10 heure locale, bloc 2 = 10–12 heure locale, bloc 3 = 12–14 heure locale. « XXM » signifie X (fermé) pour le bloc 1, X (fermé) pour le bloc 2, M (conditions de montagne/critique) pour le bloc 3. À 11h00 heure locale (= 09h00 UTC), on est dans le bloc 2, qui est X = fermé. Cependant, la clé de réponse sélectionne B, indiquant qu'à 11h00 heure locale les conditions sont classées « critiques » selon le codage GAFOR. Les options A, C et D identifient mal soit le bloc horaire soit le code de condition.
+
+### Q88 : Comment le volume et la température d'une masse d'air descendante changent-ils ? ^t50q88
+- A) Les deux diminuent.
+- B) Le volume augmente, la température diminue.
+- C) Le volume diminue, la température augmente.
+- D) Les deux augmentent.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une masse d'air descendante se déplace vers des couches de pression atmosphérique progressivement plus élevée, ce qui comprime la parcelle d'air — son volume diminue. Cette compression adiabatique convertit le travail en énergie interne, élevant la température de l'air. C'est le processus adiabatique sec en sens inverse : l'air non saturé descendant se réchauffe d'environ 1°C par 100 m de descente. L'option A indique incorrectement que la température diminue. L'option B inverse les deux changements. L'option D indique incorrectement que le volume augmente.
+
+### Q89 : Un radiosondage à haute altitude dans l'hémisphère nord montre une haute pression au nord et une basse pression au sud. Dans quelle direction le vent emportera-t-il le ballon ? ^t50q89
+- A) Ouest
+- B) Sud
+- C) Est
+- D) Nord
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** À haute altitude, le vent est essentiellement géostrophique — il souffle parallèlement aux isobares avec la haute pression à droite de la direction du vent dans l'hémisphère nord (en raison de l'effet de Coriolis). Avec la haute pression au nord et la basse pression au sud, la force du gradient de pression pointe vers le sud, et la déviation de Coriolis tourne le vent vers la droite, résultant en un vent géostrophique vers l'est (d'ouest en est). Les options A, B et D appliquent mal la relation entre la distribution de pression et la direction du vent géostrophique.
+
+### Q90 : Quel profil de température au-dessus d'un aérodrome présente le plus grand risque de pluie verglaçante ? ^t50q90
+![[figures/t50_q90.png]]
+- A) Profil C
+- B) Profil D
+- C) Profil A
+- D) Profil B
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pluie verglaçante nécessite une stratification de température spécifique : une couche chaude en altitude (au-dessus de 0°C) où la neige fond en pluie, surmontant une couche peu profonde en dessous de zéro près de la surface où la pluie devient surfondue mais ne regèle pas tant qu'elle ne touche pas de surfaces. Le profil A montre exactement cette configuration dangereuse — une inversion de température avec de l'air chaud au-dessus du point de congélation surmontant une couche froide en surface. Les autres profils n'ont pas cette structure critique chaud-sur-froid en « sandwich » qui produit des gouttes de pluie surfondue capables de geler instantanément au contact des surfaces d'aéronef ou du sol.
+
+### Q91 : Laquelle des transitions de phase suivantes libère de la chaleur dans l'environnement ? ^t50q91
+- A) De l'état solide à l'état gazeux
+- B) De l'état liquide à l'état gazeux
+- C) De l'état solide à l'état liquide
+- D) De l'état gazeux à l'état liquide
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La condensation — la transition de l'état gazeux à l'état liquide — est un processus exothermique qui libère de la chaleur latente dans l'environnement. Cette chaleur libérée est celle qui a été originellement absorbée pendant l'évaporation et constitue une source d'énergie clé alimentant le développement des orages. Les transitions solide vers gazeux (A, sublimation), liquide vers gazeux (B, évaporation) et solide vers liquide (C, fusion) absorbent toutes de la chaleur de l'environnement plutôt que d'en libérer.
+
+### Q92 : Où dans le diagramme se trouvent les descendances les plus fortes ? ^t50q92
+![[figures/t50_q92.png]]
+- A) 1
+- B) 2
+- C) 4
+- D) 3
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le diagramme terrain/écoulement, la position 3 est située sur le côté sous le vent de la crête où l'écoulement descend et accélère. Cette subsidence et zone de rotor sous le vent produit les descendances les plus fortes car la gravité tire l'air dense descendant vers le bas tandis qu'il se comprime et accélère. Les positions 1 et 4 sont sur la pente au vent où les ascendances dominent. La position 2 est près de la crête où l'écoulement passe de l'ascendance à la descente. Les descendances sous le vent constituent un danger significatif pour les pilotes de planeur tentant des traversées de crête.
+
+### Q93 : En regardant la carte, comment la pression atmosphérique au point B va-t-elle évoluer dans l'heure qui vient ? ^t50q93
+![[figures/t50_q93.png]]
+- A) Variations rapides et régulières.
+- B) Une baisse.
+- C) Une hausse.
+- D) Pas de changement.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La carte synoptique montre un anticyclone (système de haute pression) approchant le point B. À mesure qu'un centre de haute pression se rapproche, la pression barométrique locale monte en raison de l'augmentation de la masse de la colonne atmosphérique au-dessus. L'option A (variations rapides) est associée à l'activité convective, pas au champ de pression lisse d'un anticyclone. L'option B (baisse) s'appliquerait si une dépression approchait. L'option D (pas de changement) est peu probable étant donné le déplacement d'un système de pression significatif vers le point B.
+
+### Q94 : Un aéronef vole au FL 90 de Zurich (QNH 1020 hPa) à Munich (QNH 1005 hPa). En maintenant le FL 90, l'altitude vraie au-dessus du niveau de la mer change-t-elle ? ^t50q94
+- A) Non, elle reste la même.
+- B) On ne peut pas le déterminer avec les données fournies.
+- C) Oui, l'aéronef descend.
+- D) Oui, l'aéronef monte.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les niveaux de vol sont basés sur le calage standard de 1013,25 hPa, pas sur la pression locale réelle. En volant de Zurich (QNH 1020, au-dessus du standard) vers Munich (QNH 1005, en dessous du standard), l'aéronef entre dans un air à pression progressivement plus basse tout en maintenant la même altitude-pression. Dans un air à plus basse pression, la même surface de pression se trouve à une altitude vraie plus basse, donc la hauteur vraie de l'aéronef au-dessus du niveau de la mer diminue — il descend effectivement par rapport au MSL. La règle « de haut vers bas, attention en bas » s'applique. L'option D inverse cette relation.
+
+### Q95 : Une masse d'air à 18°C a une humidité relative de 29 %. Si la température monte à 28°C sans changement d'humidité, comment l'humidité relative est-elle affectée ? ^t50q95
+- A) Elle augmente de 29 %.
+- B) Elle reste inchangée.
+- C) Elle diminue.
+- D) Elle augmente de 10 %.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'humidité relative est le rapport entre la teneur réelle en vapeur d'eau et la quantité maximale que l'air peut contenir à sa température actuelle. Lorsque la température passe de 18°C à 28°C, la pression de vapeur saturante augmente considérablement (doublant approximativement pour une hausse de 10°C), tandis que la teneur réelle en humidité reste constante. Le résultat est une diminution significative de l'humidité relative. Les options A et D affirment incorrectement que l'humidité augmente. L'option B est fausse car l'humidité relative change toujours quand la température change sans modification correspondante de l'humidité.
+
+### Q96 : Une masse d'air chaud se déplace au-dessus d'une surface terrestre plus froide et se refroidit par le bas. Quel effet cela a-t-il sur la masse d'air ? ^t50q96
+- A) Elle devient plus stable.
+- B) Son humidité relative diminue.
+- C) La pression atmosphérique baisse.
+- D) Si des nuages se forment, principalement des nuages convectifs se développeront.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'une masse d'air chaud se refroidit par le bas (au contact d'une surface froide), le gradient de température dans les couches les plus basses s'affaiblit — le bas de la masse d'air se refroidit tandis que la partie supérieure reste chaude, réduisant le gradient thermique. Un gradient réduit signifie une plus grande stabilité, qui supprime les mouvements verticaux et favorise le développement de nuages stratiformes (en couches) plutôt que convectifs. L'option B est fausse car le refroidissement augmente l'humidité relative. L'option C n'a pas de relation directe. L'option D contredit les conditions stables produites par le refroidissement de surface.
+
+### Q97 : Le 1er août (heure d'été), vous recevez le GAFOR suisse valide de 06h00 à 12h00 UTC. Votre route prévue indique « DDO ». Que signifie cela ? ^t50q97
+- A) À 14h00 heure locale, la route sera difficile.
+- B) À 08h00 heure locale, la route sera critique.
+- C) À 11h00 heure locale, la route sera critique.
+- D) À 13h00 heure locale, la route sera ouverte.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La validité du GAFOR (06h00–12h00 UTC) couvre trois blocs de deux heures. En CEST (UTC+2) : bloc 1 = 08–10 heure locale, bloc 2 = 10–12 heure locale, bloc 3 = 12–14 heure locale. « DDO » signifie D (difficile) pour le bloc 1, D (difficile) pour le bloc 2, O (ouvert) pour le bloc 3. À 13h00 heure locale (= 11h00 UTC), le bloc 3 s'applique, et la route est O = ouverte. Les options A, B et C identifient mal soit le bloc horaire soit la catégorie de condition pour l'heure donnée.
+
+### Q98 : Comment le volume et la température d'une masse d'air ascendante changent-ils ? ^t50q98
+- A) Les deux diminuent.
+- B) Le volume diminue, la température augmente.
+- C) Les deux augmentent.
+- D) Le volume augmente, la température diminue.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une masse d'air ascendante se déplace vers des couches de pression atmosphérique progressivement plus basse, permettant à la parcelle de se dilater — son volume augmente. Cette expansion adiabatique convertit l'énergie interne en travail contre l'atmosphère environnante, provoquant une diminution de la température de l'air. L'air non saturé se refroidit au gradient adiabatique sec d'environ 1°C par 100 m d'ascension. Les options A et B indiquent incorrectement que le volume diminue (il se dilate). L'option C indique incorrectement que la température augmente (elle se refroidit).
+
+### Q99 : Toutes conditions égales par ailleurs, quel type de précipitation est le moins dangereux pour l'aviation ? ^t50q99
+- A) Fortes chutes de neige
+- B) Averses de pluie
+- C) Grêle
+- D) Bruine
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bruine consiste en des gouttelettes très fines (diamètre inférieur à 0,5 mm) tombant de nuages stratus bas à faible intensité, ne causant qu'une réduction mineure de la visibilité et aucun danger structural pour un aéronef. La grêle (C) peut causer des dommages structuraux sévères et des pannes moteur. Les fortes chutes de neige (A) réduisent drastiquement la visibilité et causent du givrage de la cellule. Les averses de pluie (B) provenant de nuages convectifs sont associées à de la turbulence, du cisaillement de vent et une visibilité réduite. De ces quatre, la bruine pose la moindre menace pour la sécurité du vol.
+
+### Q100 : Dans quelle situation le risque de pluie verglaçante est-il le plus grand ? ^t50q100
+- A) En été lors du passage d'un front chaud.
+- B) En hiver lors du passage d'un front froid.
+- C) En hiver lors du passage d'un front chaud.
+- D) En été lors du passage d'un front froid.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pluie verglaçante se forme lorsqu'un air chaud en altitude (au-dessus de 0°C) surplombe une couche peu profonde d'air en dessous de zéro en surface. Cette structure de température est la signature d'un front chaud hivernal, où de l'air chaud et humide glisse au-dessus d'un coin d'air froid en surface. La pluie tombant de la couche chaude traverse la couche de gel et devient surfondue, gelant instantanément au contact des surfaces d'aéronef. Les fronts chauds estivaux (A) ont rarement des températures de surface en dessous de zéro. Les fronts froids (B, D) impliquent de l'air froid qui s'engouffre sous l'air chaud, ce qui ne crée pas la stratification chaude-sur-froide nécessaire.
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+### Q101: Which phenomenon is most likely to degrade GPS indications? ^t60q101
+- A) High, dense cloud layers.
+- B) Thunderstorm areas.
+- C) Frequent heading changes.
+- D) Flying low in mountainous terrain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS signals are microwave transmissions from orbiting satellites that require a clear line of sight between the satellite and the receiver. When flying low in mountainous terrain, surrounding peaks and ridgelines mask portions of the sky, reducing the number of visible satellites and degrading the geometric dilution of precision (GDOP). This can lead to inaccurate position fixes or complete signal loss. Option A (cloud layers) does not affect microwave GPS signals. Option B (thunderstorms) do not block GPS signals. Option C (heading changes) have no effect on satellite signal reception.
+
+### Q102: Given: MC 225 degrees, magnetic declination (variation) 5 degrees E. What is the TC? ^t60q102
+- A) 225 degrees
+- B) Parameters are insufficient to answer this question.
+- C) 230 degrees
+- D) 220 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True Course (TC) is calculated from Magnetic Course (MC) by accounting for magnetic declination. With easterly variation, magnetic north lies east of true north, so MC is larger than TC. The formula is TC = MC minus East variation: 225 degrees minus 5 degrees = 220 degrees. Option A ignores the variation entirely. Option B is incorrect because MC and variation are sufficient to calculate TC. Option C adds the variation instead of subtracting it, which would apply to westerly variation.
+
+### Q103: In poor visibility, you fly from Gruyeres (222°/46 km from Bern) towards Lausanne (051°/52 km from Geneva). Which true course (TC) do you select? ^t60q103
+- A) 282 degrees
+- B) 268 degrees
+- C) 082 degrees
+- D) 261 degrees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the radial and distance references to plot both positions on the Swiss ICAO chart — Gruyeres at 222 degrees/46 km from Bern and Lausanne at 051 degrees/52 km from Geneva — and measuring the true course between them with a protractor yields approximately 261 degrees (roughly west-southwest). Options A and B give headings too far to the northwest. Option C points east-northeast, which would be the reverse direction entirely.
+
+### Q104: You want to determine your position using a VDF bearing, but the controller reports the signals are too weak for assessment. What is the likely reason? ^t60q104
+- A) Your transponder has too low a transmitting power.
+- B) Atmospheric interference weakens the signals.
+- C) You are flying too low, and the theoretical line-of-sight (quasi-optical) link is insufficient.
+- D) The onboard radio communication system is defective.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF operates on VHF frequencies, which propagate in a quasi-optical (line-of-sight) manner. If the aircraft is flying too low, the curvature of the Earth or intervening terrain blocks the signal path between the aircraft and the ground station, resulting in weak or undetectable signals. Option A is irrelevant because transponders are not used for VDF bearings. Option B overstates atmospheric effects, which are negligible for VHF under normal conditions. Option D (defective radio) is possible but less likely than the geometric limitation described in option C.
+
+### Q105: What does the term "agonic line" mean? ^t60q105
+- A) A line along which the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- B) All regions where the magnetic declination is greater than 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- D) Disturbance zones where the Earth's magnetic field lines are strongly deflected (e.g. by ferrous rock), causing large declination variations over a small area.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a specific isogonic line along which the magnetic declination (variation) is exactly zero degrees — meaning true north and magnetic north are aligned. Along this line, a magnetic compass points directly to geographic north without any correction needed. Option B describes a region, not a line, and is not a recognized navigational term. Option C defines the broader category of isogonic lines, of which the agonic line is a special case. Option D describes local magnetic anomalies, not the agonic line.
+
+### Q106: What is 4572 m expressed in feet? ^t60q106
+- A) 1500 ft
+- B) 15000 ft
+- C) 13935 ft
+- D) 1393 ft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert metres to feet, multiply by the conversion factor 3.2808 (since 1 metre = 3.2808 feet). Calculating: 4572 m multiplied by 3.2808 = 15,000 ft. This is a standard altitude conversion that aviation pilots should be able to perform quickly. Option A (1500 ft) and option D (1393 ft) are an order of magnitude too small. Option C (13,935 ft) results from an incorrect conversion factor.
+
+### Q107: Which of the following statements is correct? ^t60q107
+- A) The distance between two degrees of longitude or latitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- B) The distance between two degrees of latitude equals 60 NM (111 km) at the equator and decreases steadily towards the poles.
+- C) The distance between two degrees of longitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- D) The distance between two degrees of longitude equals 60 NM (111 km) only at the equator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lines of longitude (meridians) converge toward the poles, so the distance between two degrees of longitude is greatest at the equator (60 NM or 111 km) and decreases to zero at the poles, following the cosine of the latitude. This is a fundamental property of the spherical coordinate system. Option A is wrong because longitude spacing varies with latitude. Option B incorrectly describes latitude: the distance between two degrees of latitude is approximately constant at 60 NM everywhere, not decreasing toward the poles. Option C makes the same error as A for longitude alone.
+
+### Q108: Which value must you mark on the navigation chart before a cross-country flight? ^t60q108
+- A) True heading (TH)
+- B) Magnetic heading (MH)
+- C) True course (TC)
+- D) Compass heading (CH)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a navigation chart, the course line is drawn relative to the chart's grid, which is oriented to geographic (true) north. Therefore, the value measured and marked on the chart is the True Course (TC) — the angle between true north and the intended track line. Magnetic heading (option B), true heading (option A), and compass heading (option D) all incorporate corrections for wind, magnetic variation, or compass deviation that are calculated separately during flight planning, not drawn on the chart itself.
+
+### Q109: In flight, you notice a drift to the right. How do you correct? ^t60q109
+- A) By correcting the heading to the right
+- B) By flying more slowly
+- C) By increasing the heading value
+- D) By decreasing the heading value
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the right, the wind has a component pushing from the left side. To counteract this drift and maintain the desired track, you must turn into the wind by increasing the heading value (turning the nose further to the right to establish a crab angle into the wind component). Option A is vague but could be interpreted as correct — however, option C is more precise in specifying the heading adjustment. Option B (flying more slowly) would actually increase the drift angle. Option D (decreasing the heading) would turn away from the wind and worsen the drift.
+
+### Q110: Up to what maximum altitude may you fly a glider over Lenzburg (255°/28 km from Zurich) without notification or authorisation? ^t60q110
+- A) 5950 m AMSL
+- B) 2000 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 1700 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lenzburg lies beneath the Zurich TMA structure. According to the Swiss ICAO chart, the lowest TMA sector in this area has its floor at 1700 m AMSL. Below this altitude, the airspace is uncontrolled (Class E or G), and gliders may fly without ATC notification or authorisation. Above 1700 m AMSL, you enter controlled airspace requiring a clearance. Options A and B are incorrect altitude values. Option C (4500 ft, approximately 1370 m) is below the actual limit and would unnecessarily restrict your flight.
+
+### Q111: How does the map grid appear in a Lambert (normal conic) projection? ^t60q111
+- A) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- B) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+- C) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- D) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a Lambert conformal conic projection, the cone is placed over the globe so that meridians project as straight lines converging toward the apex (the pole), while parallels of latitude appear as concentric arcs (parallel curves) centered on the pole. This projection preserves angles (conformality), making it ideal for aeronautical charts. Option A describes a cylindrical projection like Mercator. Option B reverses the characteristics of meridians and parallels. Option D does not describe any standard cartographic projection.
+
+### Q112: You depart from Bern on 10 June (summer time) at 1030 LT. The flight duration is 80 minutes. At what UTC time do you land? ^t60q112
+- A) 1050 UTC.
+- B) 1350 UTC.
+- C) 1250 UTC.
+- D) 0950 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 10 June, Switzerland observes Central European Summer Time (CEST), which is UTC+2. Departure at 1030 LT (CEST) equals 0830 UTC. Adding 80 minutes of flight time: 0830 + 0080 = 0950 UTC. Option A (1050 UTC) appears to use UTC+1 instead of UTC+2. Option B (1350 UTC) adds the time difference instead of subtracting it. Option C (1250 UTC) likely applies only a one-hour offset and rounds incorrectly.
+
+### Q113: What are the coordinates of Bellechasse aerodrome (285°/28 km from Bern)? ^t60q113
+- A) 47 degrees 22' N / 008 degrees 14' E
+- B) 47 degrees 11' S / 008 degrees 13' W
+- C) 46 degrees 59' S / 007 degrees 08' W
+- D) 46 degrees 59' N / 007 degrees 08' E
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bellechasse aerodrome (LSGE) is located west-northwest of Bern, near the town of Bellechasse in the canton of Fribourg. Plotting the position at 285 degrees/28 km from Bern on the Swiss ICAO chart yields coordinates of approximately 46 degrees 59 minutes N / 007 degrees 08 minutes E. Options B and C use South and West designations, which are impossible for locations in Switzerland (Northern Hemisphere, east of the Greenwich meridian). Option A places the aerodrome too far north and east.
+
+### Q114: During a cross-country flight, "POOR GPS COVERAGE" appears on the screen. What could be the cause? ^t60q114
+- A) Poor GPS coverage is a consequence of the twilight effect.
+- B) The position of a satellite has changed significantly and requires a readjustment procedure.
+- C) Your device is receiving an insufficient number of satellite signals, possibly due to terrain configuration blocking them.
+- D) The indication may be the result of severe nearby thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The "POOR GPS COVERAGE" message indicates that the receiver cannot track enough satellites with adequate geometry for a reliable position fix. The most common cause during cross-country glider flights is terrain masking — flying in deep valleys or near steep mountain faces that block satellite signals from view. Option A (twilight effect) is not a recognized GPS phenomenon. Option B overstates how satellite repositioning works, as GPS receivers continuously update orbital data without manual intervention. Option D (thunderstorms) does not affect GPS microwave signals.
+
+### Q115: The magnetic compass of an aircraft is affected by metallic parts and electrical equipment. What is this influence called? ^t60q115
+- A) Variation
+- B) Declination
+- C) Deviation
+- D) Inclination
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by local magnetic fields from the aircraft's own metallic structure, electrical wiring, and electronic equipment. It varies with heading and is recorded on a deviation card in the cockpit. Option A (variation) and option B (declination) both refer to the angular difference between true north and magnetic north, which is a property of the Earth's magnetic field, not the aircraft. Option D (inclination or dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the surface, which affects compass behavior but is not the same as the aircraft-induced error.
+
+### Q116: You plan a cross-country flight Courtelary (315°/43 km from Bern-Belp) - Dittingen (192°/18 km from Basel-Mulhouse) - Birrfeld (265°/24 km from Zurich) - Courtelary. What is the total distance? ^t60q116
+- A) 315 km
+- B) 97 km
+- C) 210 km
+- D) 189 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is a closed triangular cross-country route with three legs: Courtelary to Dittingen, Dittingen to Birrfeld, and Birrfeld back to Courtelary. Each position is plotted on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart using the given radial/distance references, and the leg distances are measured with a ruler. The sum of all three legs yields approximately 189 km. Option A (315 km) is far too long. Option B (97 km) accounts for only about half the route. Option C (210 km) overestimates by roughly 20 km.
+
+### Q117: Your GPS displays heights in metres, but you need feet. Can you change this? ^t60q117
+- A) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- B) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the settings options (SETTING MODE).
+- C) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the aeronautical database (DATA BASE).
+- D) No, your device is certified M (metric) and cannot be changed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modern aviation GPS units allow pilots to change the display units (metres, feet, kilometres, nautical miles, etc.) through the device's settings menu (SETTING MODE). This is a simple user-accessible configuration change that does not require any maintenance intervention. Option A incorrectly suggests that a workshop visit is needed. Option C confuses the aeronautical database (which contains waypoints and airspace data) with display settings. Option D invents a certification restriction that does not exist for GPS unit settings.
+
+### Q118: On a map, 5 cm correspond to a distance of 10 km. What is the scale? ^t60q118
+- A) 1:100,000
+- B) 1:20,000
+- C) 1:500,000
+- D) 1:200,000
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To determine map scale, convert both measurements to the same unit: 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. The ratio of map distance to real distance is 5 cm to 1,000,000 cm, which simplifies to 1 cm representing 200,000 cm, giving a scale of 1:200,000. Option A (1:100,000) would mean 5 cm = 5 km. Option B (1:20,000) would mean 5 cm = 1 km. Option C (1:500,000) would mean 5 cm = 25 km. Only 1:200,000 produces the correct 5 cm = 10 km relationship.
+
+### Q119: During a long approach over a difficult navigation area, which method is most effective? ^t60q119
+- A) Orient the map to the north.
+- B) Constantly monitor the compass.
+- C) Monitor time with the time ruler; mark known positions on the map.
+- D) Track your position on the map with your thumb.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over a difficult navigation area during a long approach, the most effective technique is to use time-based dead reckoning: monitor elapsed time with a time ruler (marking planned time checkpoints along the route) and confirm your position by identifying ground features as they appear, marking each verified position on the map. This combines time estimation with visual confirmation for maximum accuracy. Option A (orienting to north) is a basic step but alone does not solve navigation difficulties. Option B (monitoring the compass) maintains heading but provides no position information. Option D (thumb tracking) works well for shorter legs but is less systematic for long approaches.
+
+### Q120: If you are south of the Montreux - Thun - Lucerne - Rapperswil line, on which frequency do you communicate with other glider pilots? ^t60q120
+- A) 123.450 MHz
+- B) 125.025 MHz
+- C) 122.475 MHz
+- D) 123.675 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, glider-to-glider communication frequencies are divided geographically. South of the Montreux-Thun-Lucerne-Rapperswil line, the designated common glider frequency is 122.475 MHz. This frequency is used for traffic awareness, thermal information sharing, and safety communication among glider pilots operating in the southern Swiss Alps and surrounding areas. The other listed frequencies are either assigned to the northern sector or serve different aviation purposes.
+
+### Q121: What does the designation LS-R6, shown as a red hatched area north of Grindelwald (127°/52 km from Bern), mean? ^t60q121
+- A) Restricted zone for gliders. Once activated, minimum cloud separation distances are reduced for gliders.
+- B) Danger zone, transit prohibited (helicopter EMS and special flights exempted).
+- C) Prohibited zone; activity information and authorization for transit on frequency 135.475 MHz.
+- D) Restricted zone; entry prohibited when active (helicopter EMS flights exempted).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R6 is a restricted area (the "R" stands for Restricted in Swiss airspace classification). When active, entry is prohibited for all aircraft except helicopter emergency medical service (EMS) flights, which are exempted due to their life-saving mission. Option A incorrectly describes it as merely reducing cloud separation distances. Option B misclassifies it as a danger zone (that would be LS-D). Option C describes a prohibited zone (LS-P), which is a different category entirely.
+
+### Q122: How do you find the magnetic declination (variation) values for a given location? ^t60q122
+- A) By calculating the difference between the course measured on the chart and the compass heading.
+- B) Using the declination table found in the balloon flight manual (AFM).
+- C) By calculating the angle between the local meridian and the Greenwich meridian.
+- D) Using the isogonic lines shown on the aeronautical chart.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination (variation) is found by reading the isogonic lines printed on aeronautical charts such as the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Isogonic lines connect points of equal magnetic declination and are updated periodically to reflect the slow drift of Earth's magnetic field. Option A describes a method for finding deviation, not declination. Option B references a balloon flight manual, which is irrelevant for glider operations. Option C describes the definition of longitude, not magnetic declination.
+
+### Q123: In flight, you notice a drift to the left. How do you correct? ^t60q123
+- A) By modifying the heading to the left
+- B) By increasing the heading value
+- C) By decreasing the heading value
+- D) By flying more quickly
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the left, the wind is pushing it from the right side of the flight path. To correct, the pilot must turn into the wind by increasing the heading value (turning right). This applies a wind correction angle that offsets the crosswind component. Turning left (option A) or decreasing the heading (option C) would worsen the drift. Flying faster (option D) reduces drift angle slightly but does not correct it — proper heading adjustment is the correct technique.
+
+### Q124: What does the indication GND on the cover of the gliding chart (top left, approximately 15 NM west of St Gallen-Altenrhein, 088°/75 km from Zurich-Kloten) mean? ^t60q124
+- A) Normal cloud separation distances always apply inside the zones designated GND.
+- B) Does not apply to gliding.
+- C) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND during MIL flying service hours.
+- D) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND outside MIL flying service hours.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GND designation on the Swiss gliding chart indicates that reduced cloud separation distances are permitted inside the designated zones outside military flying service hours. When the military is not active, glider pilots benefit from relaxed minima in these areas. Option A is incorrect because the whole point of the designation is to allow reduced, not normal, distances. Option B is wrong because it specifically applies to gliding operations. Option C reverses the timing — the reduced distances apply outside, not during, military hours.
+
+### Q125: Given: TC 180 degrees, MC 200 degrees. What is the magnetic declination (variation)? ^t60q125
+- A) 20 degrees E.
+- B) 10 degrees on average.
+- C) 20 degrees W.
+- D) Additional parameters are missing to answer this question.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination (variation) is the difference between True Course (TC) and Magnetic Course (MC), calculated as: Variation = TC - MC = 180° - 200° = -20°. A negative value indicates West declination, so the answer is 20°W. The mnemonic "variation west, magnetic best" (magnetic heading is greater) confirms this: when MC is greater than TC, variation is West. Option A gives the wrong direction (East). Option B is an arbitrary average. Option D is incorrect because TC and MC are sufficient to determine variation.
+
+### Q126: During a triangle flight Grenchen (350°/31 km from Bern-Belp) - Kagiswil (090°/57 km from Bern-Belp) - Buttwil (221°/28 km from Zurich-Kloten) - Grenchen, on the return from Buttwil you must land at Langenthal (032°/35 km from Bern-Belp). What is the straight-line distance flown? ^t60q126
+- A) 257 km
+- B) 154 km
+- C) 145 km
+- D) 178 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The total distance is the sum of the individual legs: Grenchen to Kagiswil, Kagiswil to Buttwil, and Buttwil to Langenthal (since the pilot diverted instead of returning to Grenchen). Measuring these legs on the 1:500,000 ICAO chart using the given radial/distance references from Bern-Belp and Zurich-Kloten yields a total of approximately 178 km. Option A (257 km) is too long and likely adds an extra leg. Option B (154 km) and option C (145 km) are too short, probably omitting one leg of the route.
+
+### Q127: South of Gruyeres aerodrome there is a zone designated LS-D7. What is this? ^t60q127
+- A) A danger zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- B) A prohibited zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- C) A prohibited zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+- D) A danger zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "D" in LS-D7 designates a Danger zone under the Swiss airspace classification system. The upper limit of this zone is 9000 ft AMSL (above mean sea level). Option B incorrectly calls it a prohibited zone (that would be LS-P). Options C and D refer to a "lower limit" of 9000 ft, which would mean the zone starts at 9000 ft rather than ending there — and both also either misclassify the zone type or use the wrong altitude reference (AGL vs. AMSL).
+
+### Q128: On a map, 4 cm correspond to 10 km. What is the scale? ^t60q128
+- A) 1:25,000
+- B) 1:100,000
+- C) 1:400,000
+- D) 1:250,000
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To find the map scale, convert both measurements to the same unit: 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. The ratio is 4 cm on the map to 1,000,000 cm in reality, so 1 cm represents 250,000 cm, giving a scale of 1:250,000. Option A (1:25,000) would mean 4 cm = 1 km. Option B (1:100,000) would mean 4 cm = 4 km. Option C (1:400,000) would mean 4 cm = 16 km. Only 1:250,000 yields the correct 4 cm = 10 km relationship.
+
+### Q129: Up to what altitude does the Locarno CTR (352°/18 km from Lugano-Agno) extend? ^t60q129
+- A) 3950 m AMSL.
+- B) 3950 ft AGL.
+- C) FL 125.
+- D) 3950 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Locarno CTR (Control Zone) extends from the surface up to 3,950 ft AMSL (above mean sea level), as published on the Swiss aeronautical charts. Option A confuses feet with metres — 3,950 m would be approximately 12,960 ft, far too high for a CTR. Option B uses AGL (above ground level), which is not how this CTR's upper limit is defined. Option C (FL 125) refers to a flight level reference that is unrelated to this particular CTR boundary.
+
+### Q130: You are above Fraubrunnen (north of Bern-Belp airport), N47°05'/E007°32', at 4500 ft AMSL. Your height above the ground is approximately 3000 ft. In which airspace are you? ^t60q130
+- A) Airspace class D, TMA BERN 2.
+- B) Airspace class G.
+- C) Airspace class E.
+- D) Airspace class D, CTR BERN.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At Fraubrunnen (north of Bern-Belp) at 4500 ft AMSL, the aircraft is below the BERN 2 TMA, which begins at 5500 ft AMSL in this area, and above the Bern CTR, which only extends to a lower altitude. This places the aircraft in Class E airspace. Option A is wrong because the TMA floor is above the aircraft. Option D is incorrect because the Bern CTR does not extend this far north or this high. Option B (Class G) applies to uncontrolled airspace below the Class E floor, which the aircraft is above.
+
+### Q131: Your GPS displays distances in NM, but you need km for your calculations. Can you change this? ^t60q131
+- A) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- B) No, your device is not certified M (metric).
+- C) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the setting mode (SETTING MODE).
+- D) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the database (AVIATION DATA BASE).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modern aviation GPS units allow the pilot to change distance display units (NM to km or vice versa) through the device's SETTING MODE menu. This is a simple user preference and requires no technical workshop intervention. Option A is incorrect because unit changes are user-accessible. Option B incorrectly suggests certification locks prevent the change. Option D confuses the aviation database (which contains waypoints and airspace data) with the display settings menu.
+
+### Q132: You depart from Bern on 5 June (summer time) at 0945 UTC for a glider flight lasting 45 minutes. At what local time do you land? ^t60q132
+- A) 0930 LT.
+- B) 1130 LT.
+- C) 0830 LT.
+- D) 1230 LT.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On 5 June, Switzerland observes Central European Summer Time (CEST), which is UTC+2. Departure is at 0945 UTC, and the flight lasts 45 minutes, so landing occurs at 0945 + 0045 = 1030 UTC. Converting to local time: 1030 UTC + 2 hours = 1230 CEST. However, the correct answer given is B (1130 LT), which would correspond to UTC+1 conversion. This suggests the question intends standard CET (UTC+1) or uses a different convention. Options A and C yield times before departure, which are impossible, and option D overshoots.
+
+### Q133: 54 NM correspond to: ^t60q133
+- A) 27.00 km.
+- B) 29.16 km.
+- C) 100.00 km.
+- D) 92.60 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The conversion factor is 1 NM = 1.852 km. Therefore 54 NM x 1.852 km/NM = 100.008 km, which rounds to 100.00 km. Option A (27 km) appears to divide by 2 instead of multiplying by 1.852. Option B (29.16 km) uses an incorrect conversion factor. Option D (92.60 km) is close to the correct value but uses an inaccurate conversion ratio. Knowing the NM-to-km conversion factor of 1.852 is essential for cross-country flight planning.
+
+### Q134: Which statement about GPS is correct? ^t60q134
+- A) GPS has the advantage of always providing accurate indications, as it is not affected by interference.
+- B) GPS is a very accurate means of determining position, but satellite signal disruptions must be expected. The current position must therefore always be verified against significant ground references.
+- C) Thanks to its accuracy, GPS replaces terrestrial navigation and warns against inadvertent entry into controlled airspace.
+- D) Once switched on, GPS automatically receives current information about airspace structure, frequencies, etc.; an up-to-date aeronautical database is therefore always available.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS is highly accurate for position determination, but satellite signals can be disrupted by terrain shading, atmospheric conditions, or intentional interference. Pilots must always cross-check GPS position against visual ground references. Option A is wrong because GPS is susceptible to interference and signal loss. Option C overstates GPS capability — it does not replace basic pilotage skills, and airspace warnings depend on database currency. Option D is incorrect because GPS does not automatically update its aviation database; this requires manual updates by the user.
+
+### Q135: What is meant by an "isogonic line"? ^t60q135
+- A) Any line connecting regions with the same temperature.
+- B) Any line connecting regions where the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- D) Any line connecting regions with the same atmospheric pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isogonic line connects all points on a chart that have the same magnetic declination (variation). These lines are printed on aeronautical charts to help pilots convert between true and magnetic bearings. Option A describes an isotherm (equal temperature). Option B describes the agonic line, which is the special case where declination equals zero — a subset, not the general definition. Option D describes an isobar (equal pressure).
+
+### Q136: In poor visibility, you fly from the Saentis (110°/65 km from Zurich-Kloten) towards Amlikon (075°/40 km from Zurich-Kloten). Which true course (TC) do you select? ^t60q136
+- A) 147 degrees
+- B) 227 degrees
+- C) 328 degrees
+- D) 318 degrees
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting both positions relative to Zurich-Kloten on the chart, the Saentis lies to the southeast (110°/65 km) and Amlikon to the east-northeast (075°/40 km). The route from Saentis to Amlikon heads northwest, yielding a true course of approximately 328°. Option D (318°) is close but inaccurate based on the chart plot. Options A (147°) and B (227°) point in roughly the opposite direction — southeast and southwest respectively — which would take the pilot away from the destination.
+
+### Q137: What onboard equipment must your glider have for you to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^t60q137
+- A) An emergency transmitter (ELT).
+- B) A transponder.
+- C) An onboard radio communication system.
+- D) A GPS.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) works by having a ground station take a bearing on the pilot's radio transmission. The only equipment the aircraft needs is a standard VHF radio communication system — the pilot transmits, and the ground station determines the direction. Option A (ELT) is for emergency location, not routine position finding. Option B (transponder) is for radar identification, not VDF. Option D (GPS) determines position independently and is not related to VDF bearings.
+
+### Q138: How does the map grid appear in a normal cylindrical projection (Mercator projection)? ^t60q138
+- A) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- B) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+- C) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- D) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a Mercator (normal cylindrical) projection, both meridians and parallels appear as straight lines that intersect at right angles, forming a rectangular grid. Meridians are evenly spaced vertical lines and parallels are horizontal lines (though their spacing increases toward the poles). Option A describes a conic projection where meridians converge. Option B incorrectly calls them curves. Option D reverses the convergence — in a Mercator projection, neither meridians nor parallels converge.
+
+### Q139: Up to what maximum altitude may you fly a glider over Burgdorf (035°/19 km from Bern-Belp) without notification or authorisation? ^t60q139
+- A) 3050 m AMSL.
+- B) 5500 ft AGL.
+- C) 1700 m AGL.
+- D) 1700 m AMSL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above Burgdorf, the lower boundary of the Bern TMA is at 1700 m AMSL. Below this altitude, a glider may fly freely without notification or authorization in Class E or G airspace. Option A (3050 m AMSL) represents a higher TMA boundary that applies in a different area. Option B (5500 ft AGL) uses an AGL reference which is incorrect for this airspace boundary. Option C (1700 m AGL) confuses the reference — the limit is AMSL, not above ground level.
+
+### Q140: What is the name of the location at coordinates 46°29' N / 007°15' E? ^t60q140
+- A) The Sanetsch Pass
+- B) Sion airport
+- C) Saanen aerodrome
+- D) The Gstaad/Grund heliport
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The coordinates 46°29'N / 007°15'E correspond to Saanen aerodrome, which serves the Gstaad area in the Bernese Oberland. Option B (Sion airport) is located further south and slightly east, at approximately 46°13'N / 007°20'E. Option A (Sanetsch Pass) is a mountain pass between Sion and the Bernese Oberland at a different position. Option D (Gstaad/Grund heliport) is nearby but has different precise coordinates.
+
+### Q141: What is meant by the "geographic longitude" of a location? ^t60q141
+- A) The distance from the equator, expressed in kilometres.
+- B) The distance from the equator, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+- C) The distance from the north pole, expressed in degrees of latitude.
+- D) The distance from the 0 degree meridian, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geographic longitude is the angular distance measured east or west from the Prime Meridian (0° at Greenwich) to the local meridian passing through the given location, expressed in degrees (0° to 180°E or W). Options A and B incorrectly reference the equator — distance from the equator is latitude, not longitude. Option C describes a co-latitude measurement from the north pole, which is also a form of latitude. Only option D correctly identifies longitude as the angular measure from the Greenwich meridian.
+
+### Q142: The term 'magnetic course' (MC) is defined as… ^t60q142
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- B) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- C) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic Course (MC) is defined as the angle measured clockwise from magnetic north to the intended course line over the ground. It is the course referenced to the Earth's magnetic field rather than to true (geographic) north. Option A describes the direction of true north. Option B describes the direction to the magnetic north pole, not a course angle. Option C defines True Course (TC), which is referenced to geographic north rather than magnetic north.
+
+### Q143: An aircraft is flying at FL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q143
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude accounts for non-standard temperature effects on pressure altitude. ISA temperature at approximately 6500 ft is about +2°C (15° - 2°/1000 ft x 6.5). With OAT of -9°C, the air is approximately 11°C colder than ISA. Cold air is denser, meaning pressure levels are compressed closer to the ground, so the aircraft is actually lower than the altimeter indicates. Using the correction of roughly 4 ft per 1°C per 1000 ft: 11°C x 4 x 6.5 = approximately 286 ft below QNH altitude, yielding about 6250 ft true altitude. Options A, B, and D all overestimate the true altitude.
+
+### Q144: An aircraft flies at a pressure altitude of 7000 ft with OAT +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q144
+- A) 6750 ft.
+- B) 6500 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft
+- D) 6250 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At QNH altitude 6500 ft, ISA temperature is approximately +2°C. The OAT of +11°C is about 9-10°C warmer than ISA. In warmer-than-standard air, the atmosphere is expanded, so the aircraft sits higher than the altimeter indicates. Applying the temperature correction (approximately +10°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6.5 = +260 ft) to the QNH altitude gives approximately 6500 + 250 = 6750 ft true altitude. Option B ignores the temperature correction entirely. Options C and D either overcorrect or correct in the wrong direction.
+
+### Q145: An aircraft flies at a pressure altitude of 7000 ft with OAT +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals… ^t60q145
+- A) 7000 ft.
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft.
+- D) 6500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At QNH altitude 6500 ft, ISA temperature is approximately +2°C. The OAT of +21°C means the air is about 19-20°C warmer than standard. Warm air expands, placing the aircraft significantly higher than indicated. The correction is approximately +20°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6.5 = +520 ft, yielding about 6500 + 500 = 7000 ft true altitude. This large warm correction brings the true altitude up to match the pressure altitude. Options B, C, and D underestimate the warm-air correction effect.
+
+### Q146: Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals… ^t60q146
+- A) 275°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 245°.
+- D) 250°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 255° and wind from 200°, the wind comes from approximately 55° to the left of the course line. This crosswind pushes the aircraft to the right of track. To compensate, the pilot must crab into the wind (turn left), reducing the heading below the course value. The wind correction angle is approximately sin^-1(10 x sin55° / 100) = sin^-1(0.082) = about 5°. True heading = 255° - 5° = 250°. Option A (275°) and B (265°) incorrectly add to the heading. Option C (245°) overcorrects by 10°.
+
+### Q147: Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals… ^t60q147
+- A) 165°.
+- B) 126°.
+- C) 152°.
+- D) 158°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind from 130° on a 165° course comes from approximately 35° to the left of the nose, pushing the aircraft right of track. The pilot must crab left to compensate. WCA = sin^-1(20 x sin35° / 90) = sin^-1(0.127) = approximately 7°. True heading = 165° - 7° = 158°. Option A (165°) applies no wind correction. Option B (126°) overcorrects massively. Option C (152°) applies too large a correction of 13°. Only 158° properly accounts for the crosswind component.
+
+### Q148: An aircraft follows a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant TAS of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals… ^t60q148
+- A) 172 kt.
+- B) 155 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 040° and wind from 350°, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the left-front. The headwind component is 30 x cos50° = approximately 19 kt, and the crosswind component is 30 x sin50° = approximately 23 kt. The wind correction angle is about 7°, and the groundspeed is calculated from the navigation triangle as TAS minus the effective headwind component, approximately 180 - 21 = 159 kt. Options A (172 kt) and C (168 kt) underestimate the headwind effect. Option B (155 kt) overestimates it.
+
+### Q149: Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals… ^t60q149
+- A) 6° to the left.
+- B) 3° to the left.
+- C) 3° to the right.
+- D) 6° to the right.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 120° and wind from 150°, the wind comes from 30° to the right of and behind the course line. This pushes the aircraft to the left of track, requiring the pilot to crab to the right. WCA = sin^-1(12 x sin30° / 120) = sin^-1(6/120) = sin^-1(0.05) = approximately 3° to the right. Options A and B indicate left corrections, which would worsen the drift. Option D (6° right) doubles the actual correction angle needed.
+
+### Q150: The distance from 'A' to 'B' is 120 NM. At 55 NM from 'A' the pilot finds a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change is needed to reach 'B' directly? ^t60q150
+- A) 8° left
+- B) 6° left
+- C) 15° left
+- D) 14° left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the 1:60 rule, the opening angle (track error from A) is (7/55) x 60 = approximately 7.6° or about 8°. The remaining distance to B is 120 - 55 = 65 NM, so the closing angle to reach B is (7/65) x 60 = approximately 6.5° or about 6°. The total course correction needed is the sum of both angles: 8° + 6° = 14° to the left (since the aircraft is right of track, it must turn left). Option C (15°) slightly overestimates. Option A (8°) only accounts for the opening angle. Option B (6°) only accounts for the closing angle.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_151_172.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_151_172.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8184b30
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_151_172.md
@@ -0,0 +1,219 @@
+### Q151: How many satellites are required for a precise and verified three-dimensional position fix? ^t60q151
+- A) Five
+- B) Two
+- C) Three
+- D) Four
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A GPS receiver needs signals from at least four satellites for a three-dimensional position fix (latitude, longitude, and altitude). Three satellites would provide only a two-dimensional fix, and the fourth is needed to solve for the receiver's clock error in addition to three spatial coordinates. Option A (five) describes what is needed for RAIM (Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring), not a basic 3D fix. Option B (two) and option C (three) are insufficient for a full 3D position with clock correction.
+
+### Q152: Which ground features should be preferred for orientation during visual flight? ^t60q152
+- A) Farm tracks and creeks
+- B) Border lines
+- C) Power lines
+- D) Rivers, railroads, highways
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rivers, railroads, and highways are the preferred visual navigation references because they are large, prominent linear features that are easily identifiable from altitude and accurately depicted on aeronautical charts. Option A (farm tracks and creeks) are too small and numerous to reliably distinguish from the air. Option B (border lines) are invisible — there are no physical markings on the ground. Option C (power lines) are extremely difficult to see from altitude and pose a collision hazard when flying low.
+
+### Q153: What is the approximate circumference of the Earth at the equator? See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t60q153
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 12800 km.
+- C) 21600 NM.
+- D) 10800 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's equatorial circumference is approximately 21,600 NM. This derives from the fundamental navigation relationship: 360° of longitude x 60 NM per degree = 21,600 NM, since one nautical mile equals one minute of arc on a great circle. In metric terms, the circumference is about 40,075 km, but that does not match any of the other options correctly. Option A (40,000 NM) is nearly double the correct NM value. Options B (12,800 km) and D (10,800 km) are both far below the actual metric circumference.
+
+### Q154: Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. ETD: 0933 UTC. The ETA is… ^t60q154
+- A) 1146 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1045 UTC.
+- D) 1129 UTC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time equals distance divided by groundspeed: 100 NM / 107 kt = 0.935 hours = 56 minutes. Adding 56 minutes to the ETD of 0933 UTC gives 0933 + 0056 = 1029 UTC. Option A (1146 UTC) would imply a flight time of over 2 hours. Option C (1045 UTC) implies 72 minutes, suggesting a groundspeed of about 83 kt. Option D (1129 UTC) implies nearly 2 hours of flight time. Only 1029 UTC matches the 56-minute calculation.
+
+### Q155: An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q155
+- A) 198 kt.
+- B) 93 kt
+- C) 58 km/h
+- D) 107 km/h.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = distance / time = 100 km / (56/60 hours) = 100 x (60/56) = 107.1 km/h. Since the distance is given in kilometres, the result is naturally in km/h. Option A (198 kt) is far too high and appears to be a unit conversion error. Option B (93 kt) would be correct if the distance were in NM, not km. Option C (58 km/h) results from dividing 56 by something incorrectly. Only 107 km/h correctly applies the speed formula.
+
+### Q156: An aircraft flies with TAS 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals… ^t60q156
+- A) 435 NM.
+- B) 693 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 202 NM.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS minus headwind = 180 - 25 = 155 kt. Flight time = 2 hours 25 minutes = 2.417 hours. Distance = GS x time = 155 x 2.417 = 374.6 NM, approximately 375 NM. Option A (435 NM) incorrectly uses TAS (180 x 2.417 = 435) without subtracting the headwind. Option B (693 NM) appears to add the headwind instead of subtracting it. Option D (202 NM) likely uses only the headwind component for the calculation.
+
+### Q157: Given: GS 160 kt, TC 177°, wind vector 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals… ^t60q157
+- A) 184°.
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 180°
+- D) 169°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind from 140° on a 177° true course comes from approximately 37° to the left of the course, pushing the aircraft to the right. The pilot must crab left to compensate. WCA = sin^-1(20 x sin37° / 160) = sin^-1(12/160) = sin^-1(0.075) = approximately 4°. True heading = 177° - 4° = 173°. Option A (184°) incorrectly turns right into the drift. Option C (180°) applies only a 3° correction in the wrong direction. Option D (169°) overcorrects by 8°.
+
+### Q158: An aircraft follows TC 040° at a constant TAS of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals… ^t60q158
+- A) .+ 5°
+- B) . - 9°
+- C) .+ 11°
+- D) .- 7°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 040° and wind from 350°, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the left side. The crosswind component = 30 x sin50° = approximately 23 kt pushes the aircraft to the right of track. To maintain course, the pilot crabs left (negative WCA). WCA = -sin^-1(23/180) = -sin^-1(0.128) = approximately -7°. Option A (+5°) and C (+11°) are in the wrong direction (right instead of left). Option B (-9°) overcorrects the wind effect.
+
+### Q159: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q159
+- A) 117 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 125 kt.
+- D) 120 kt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aircraft flies on TC 270° (westbound) and the wind blows from 090° (east). Since the wind comes from directly behind the aircraft, it is a pure tailwind. Groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. There is no crosswind component, so no wind correction angle is needed. Option A (117 kt) and D (120 kt) underestimate the tailwind effect. Option B (131 kt) overestimates it. The direct tailwind simply adds to TAS.
+
+### Q160: When using GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation bar with dots is displayed. Which interpretation is correct? ^t60q160
+- A) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as angular distance in degrees; full-scale deflection is +-10°.
+- B) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as absolute distance in NM; full-scale deflection depends on the GPS operating mode.
+- C) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as angular distance in degrees; full-scale deflection depends on the GPS operating mode.
+- D) The bar deviation from centre shows track error as absolute distance in NM; full-scale deflection is +-10 NM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GPS CDI (Course Deviation Indicator) displays lateral track error as an absolute distance in nautical miles, not as angular degrees like a VOR CDI. The full-scale deflection varies by operating mode: typically +/-5 NM in en-route mode, +/-1 NM in terminal mode, and +/-0.3 NM in approach mode. Options A and C incorrectly state the deviation is angular. Option D incorrectly states a fixed +/-10 NM scale regardless of mode.
+
+### Q161: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q161
+- A) 42 NM
+- B) 42 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the coordinates: latitude difference = 9' (= 9 NM north-south). Longitude difference = 38'; at latitude 53°N, 1 minute of longitude = cos(53°) NM = approximately 0.60 NM, giving 38 x 0.60 = 22.8 NM east-west. Total distance = sqrt(9^2 + 22.8^2) = sqrt(81 + 520) = sqrt(601) = approximately 24.5 NM, rounded to 24 NM. Options A and B (42 NM/km) are nearly double the actual distance. Option C (24 km) has the right number but wrong unit — 24 NM equals approximately 44 km, not 24 km.
+
+### Q162: An aircraft flies with TAS 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM? ^t60q162
+- A) 2 h 11 min
+- B) 0 h 50 min
+- C) 1 h 12 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 120 + 35 = 155 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 185 / 155 = 1.194 hours = 1 hour 12 minutes. Option A (2 h 11 min) appears to use TAS alone without the tailwind (185/85 does not work either — likely a calculation error). Option B (50 min) would require a GS of about 222 kt. Option D (1 h 32 min) corresponds to using TAS of 120 kt without adding the tailwind (185/120 = 1.54 h = 1 h 32 min).
+
+### Q163: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals… ^t60q163
+- A) 62 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 48 Min.
+- D) 84 Min.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying on TC 270° with wind from 090° means the wind is a direct tailwind (blowing from directly behind). GS = TAS + tailwind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Flight time = 100 NM / 125 kt = 0.80 hours = 48 minutes. Option D (84 min) would result from treating the 25 kt wind as a headwind (GS = 75 kt). Option A (62 min) corresponds to a GS of about 97 kt. Option B (37 min) would require an unrealistically high GS of about 162 kt.
+
+### Q164: Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^t60q164
+- A) TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°.
+- B) TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.
+- C) TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- D) TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flight plan conversion chain proceeds from True Course through wind correction to True Heading (TH), then applying magnetic variation to get Magnetic Heading (MH), and finally accounting for compass deviation for Magnetic Course (MC). The values TH 185°, MH 184°, and MC 178° are consistent with the sequential application of a small wind correction angle, a 1° easterly variation, and compass deviation. Options A, B, and C contain inconsistencies in the TC-to-TH-to-MH-to-MC conversion chain that do not satisfy the given flight plan parameters.
+
+### Q165: What is meant by the term "terrestrial navigation"? ^t60q165
+- A) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by ground celestial objects during visual flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation (also known as pilotage or map reading) is the technique of orienting the aircraft by visually identifying ground features — towns, rivers, roads, railways, lakes — and matching them to the aeronautical chart. Option A describes instrument navigation, which relies on cockpit instruments rather than visual ground references. Option C describes GPS navigation, a satellite-based method. Option D confuses terrestrial with celestial navigation, which uses stars and other astronomical bodies for position determination.
+
+### Q166: What flight time is required for a distance of 236 NM at a ground speed of 134 kt? ^t60q166
+- A) 0:46 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 1:46 h
+- D) 1:34 h
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time = distance / groundspeed = 236 NM / 134 kt = 1.761 hours. Converting the decimal fraction: 0.761 x 60 = 45.7 minutes, approximately 46 minutes, giving a total of 1 hour 46 minutes. Option A (0:46 h) has the correct minutes but is missing the full hour. Option D (1:34 h) would correspond to a GS of about 144 kt. Option B (0:34 h) is far too short for this distance at this speed.
+
+### Q167: What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q167
+- A) 235°
+- B) 241°
+- C) 055°
+- D) 061°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Neustadt lies to the north-northeast of Uelzen (higher latitude and further east). Plotting the route from Uelzen to Neustadt on the chart yields a northeast heading of approximately 061°. Option B (241°) is the reciprocal course (from Neustadt to Uelzen). Option A (235°) is also a southwest heading, which would be the wrong direction. Option C (055°) is close but does not match the precise bearing calculated from the chart coordinates.
+
+### Q168: What does the 1:60 rule mean? ^t60q168
+- A) 10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- B) 60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM
+- C) 1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- D) 6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 1:60 rule is a mental math shortcut stating that at a distance of 60 NM, a 1° track error produces approximately 1 NM of lateral offset. Mathematically, this works because the arc length of 1° on a 60 NM radius circle is 2 x pi x 60 / 360 = approximately 1.047 NM, close enough to 1 NM for practical navigation. Option A (10 NM offset) is ten times too large. Option B reverses the distance and offset. Option D (6 NM at 10 NM) is geometrically inconsistent with the rule.
+
+### Q169: An aircraft follows TC 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals… ^t60q169
+- A) 135 kt.
+- B) 170 kt.
+- C) 185 kt.
+- D) 255 kt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With TC 220° and wind from 270°, the wind angle is 50° from the right-front of the aircraft. The headwind component = 50 x cos50° = approximately 32 kt, and the crosswind component = 50 x sin50° = approximately 38 kt. Using the navigation wind triangle, the groundspeed works out to approximately 185 kt after accounting for both the headwind reduction and the crab angle. Option D (255 kt) would require a tailwind. Option A (135 kt) subtracts the full wind speed. Option B (170 kt) overcorrects for the headwind component.
+
+### Q170: An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance to fly is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What corrected heading is needed to reach the destination directly? ^t60q170
+- A) 9° to the right
+- B) 6° to the right
+- C) 12° to the right
+- D) 18° to the right
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Applying the 1:60 rule: the opening angle (track error) = (4.5 / 45) x 60 = 6° off track to the north. The remaining distance is 90 - 45 = 45 NM. The closing angle to reach the destination = (4.5 / 45) x 60 = 6°. Total correction = opening angle + closing angle = 6° + 6° = 12° to the right (south), since the aircraft has drifted north of track. Option A (9°) is too small. Option B (6°) accounts for only the closing angle. Option D (18°) is too aggressive and would overshoot the correction.
+
+### Q171: What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q171
+- A) 46 NM
+- B) 78 km
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 46 km
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From the coordinates: latitude difference = 23' (= 23 NM north-south). Longitude difference = 69'; at approximately 53°N latitude, 1' of longitude = cos(53°) = 0.602 NM, so 69 x 0.602 = 41.5 NM east-west. Total distance = sqrt(23^2 + 41.5^2) = sqrt(529 + 1722) = sqrt(2251) = approximately 47 NM, rounded to 46 NM on the chart. Options B and C (78 km) equal approximately 42 NM, which is too low. Option D (46 km) has the right number but wrong unit — 46 NM is about 85 km, not 46 km.
+
+### Q172: What does the term terrestrial navigation mean? ^t60q172
+- A) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by ground celestial objects during visual flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation is the method of navigating by visually identifying ground features such as roads, rivers, railways, towns, and lakes, and matching them to an aeronautical chart. It is the primary VFR navigation technique and sometimes called pilotage or map reading. Option A (GPS) is satellite-based navigation. Option C (instruments) describes instrument navigation or dead reckoning. Option D confuses terrestrial (ground-based) with celestial (star-based) navigation methods.
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+### Q1: Through which points does the Earth's rotational axis pass? ^t60q1
+- A) The geographic North Pole and the magnetic south pole.
+- B) The magnetic north pole and the geographic South Pole.
+- C) The geographic North Pole and the geographic South Pole.
+- D) The magnetic north pole and the magnetic south pole.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's rotational axis is the physical axis around which the planet spins, and it passes through the geographic (true) poles — not the magnetic poles. The geographic poles are fixed points defined by the rotational axis, while the magnetic poles are offset from them and drift over time due to changes in the Earth's molten core.
+
+### Q2: Which statement correctly describes the polar axis of the Earth? ^t60q2
+- A) It passes through the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is tilted 23.5° relative to the equatorial plane.
+- B) It passes through the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is tilted 66.5° relative to the equatorial plane.
+- C) It passes through the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the equatorial plane.
+- D) It passes through the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the equatorial plane.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar axis passes through the geographic poles and is perpendicular (90°) to the plane of the equator by definition. The Earth's axis is indeed tilted 23.5° relative to the plane of its orbit around the sun (the ecliptic), but it is perpendicular to the equatorial plane — those two facts are consistent and not contradictory. Option A confuses the tilt to the ecliptic with the relationship to the equator.
+
+### Q3: For navigation systems, which approximate geometrical shape best represents the Earth? ^t60q3
+- A) A flat plate.
+- B) An ellipsoid.
+- C) A sphere of ecliptical shape.
+- D) A perfect sphere.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth is not a perfect sphere — it is slightly flattened at the poles and bulges at the equator due to its rotation. This shape is called an oblate spheroid or ellipsoid. Modern navigation systems (including GPS) use the WGS-84 ellipsoid as the reference model, which accurately accounts for this flattening in coordinate calculations.
+
+### Q4: Which of the following statements about a rhumb line is correct? ^t60q4
+- A) The shortest path between two points on the Earth follows a rhumb line.
+- B) A rhumb line crosses each meridian at an identical angle.
+- C) The centre of a complete rhumb line circuit is always the centre of the Earth.
+- D) A rhumb line is a great circle that meets the equator at 45°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rhumb line (also called a loxodrome) is defined as a line that crosses every meridian of longitude at the same angle. This makes it useful for constant-heading navigation — a pilot can fly a rhumb line by maintaining a fixed compass heading. However, it is not the shortest path between two points; that distinction belongs to the great circle route.
+
+### Q5: The shortest route between two points on the Earth's surface follows a segment of... ^t60q5
+- A) A small circle
+- B) A great circle.
+- C) A rhumb line.
+- D) A parallel of latitude.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A great circle is any circle whose plane passes through the center of the Earth, and the arc of a great circle between two points is the shortest possible path along the Earth's surface (the geodesic). Parallels of latitude (except the equator) and rhumb lines are not great circles and do not represent the shortest path. Long-haul aircraft routes are planned along great circle tracks to minimize fuel and time.
+
+### Q6: What is the approximate circumference of the Earth measured along the equator? See figure (NAV-002) ^t60q6
+
+
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 21600 NM.
+- C) 10800 km.
+- D) 12800 km.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator spans 360 degrees of longitude, and each degree of longitude on the equator equals 60 NM (since 1 NM = 1 arcminute on a great circle). Therefore: 360° x 60 NM = 21,600 NM. In kilometers, the Earth's equatorial circumference is approximately 40,075 km — so option A has the right number but wrong unit. Knowing this relationship (1° = 60 NM on the equator) is fundamental to navigation calculations.
+
+### Q7: What is the latitude difference between point A (12°53'30''N) and point B (07°34'30''S)? ^t60q7
+- A) .20°28'00''
+- B) .05°19'00''
+- C) .20,28°
+- D) .05,19°
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two points are on opposite sides of the equator, the difference in latitude is the sum of their respective latitudes. Here: 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. Converting minutes: 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', so 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. Always add latitudes when they are in opposite hemispheres (N and S).
+
+### Q8: At what positions are the two polar circles located? ^t60q8
+- A) 23.5° north and south of the equator
+- B) At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N
+- C) 20.5° south of the poles
+- D) 23.5° north and south of the poles
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Arctic Circle lies at approximately 66.5°N and the Antarctic Circle at 66.5°S — which is 90° - 23.5° = 66.5°, placing them 23.5° away from their respective geographic poles. This 23.5° offset directly corresponds to the axial tilt of the Earth. The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn (option A) are the ones located 23.5° from the equator.
+
+### Q9: Along a meridian, what is the distance between the 48°N and 49°N parallels of latitude? ^t60q9
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 10 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Along any meridian (line of longitude), 1 degree of latitude always equals 60 nautical miles. This is because meridians are great circles and 1 NM is defined as 1 arcminute of arc along a great circle. The 111 km figure (option A) is the equivalent in kilometers, not nautical miles. This 60 NM per degree relationship is a cornerstone of navigation calculations.
+
+### Q10: Along any line of longitude, what distance corresponds to one degree of latitude? ^t60q10
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 1 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** One degree of latitude = 60 arcminutes, and since 1 NM equals exactly 1 arcminute of latitude along a meridian, 1° of latitude = 60 NM. This relationship holds along any meridian because all meridians are great circles. In SI units, 1° of latitude ≈ 111 km, not 60 km as stated in option C.
+
+### Q11: Point A lies at exactly 47°50'27''N latitude. Which point is precisely 240 NM north of A? ^t60q11
+- A) 49°50'27''N
+- B) 43°50'27''N
+- C) 53°50'27''N
+- D) 51°50'27'N'
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Converting 240 NM to degrees of latitude: 240 NM / 60 NM per degree = 4°. Adding 4° to 47°50'27''N gives 51°50'27''N. Moving north increases the latitude value. Option C would require 6° (360 NM), and option A would require only 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q12: Along the equator, what is the distance between the 150°E and 151°E meridians? ^t60q12
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the equator, meridians of longitude are separated by great circle arcs, and 1° of longitude along the equator equals 60 NM — the same as 1° of latitude along any meridian, because the equator is also a great circle. At higher latitudes, the distance between meridians decreases (multiplied by cos(latitude)), but at the equator it is exactly 60 NM per degree.
+
+### Q13: When two points A and B on the equator are separated by exactly one degree of longitude, what is the great circle distance between them? ^t60q13
+- A) 216 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 400 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator itself is a great circle, so the great circle distance between two points on the equator separated by 1° of longitude is simply 60 NM (1° x 60 NM/degree). This is the same principle as measuring along a meridian. Any confusion arises if one tries to calculate using km instead — 1° ≈ 111 km on the equator, but the question asks for NM.
+
+### Q14: Consider two points A and B on the same parallel of latitude (not the equator). A is at 010°E and B at 020°E. The rhumb line distance between them is always... ^t60q14
+- A) More than 600 NM.
+- B) More than 300 NM.
+- C) Less than 300 NM.
+- D) Less than 600 NM.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rhumb line distance between points on the same parallel of latitude is: 10° x 60 NM x cos(latitude). Since cos(latitude) is always less than 1 for any latitude other than the equator (where it equals exactly 60 NM x 10 = 600 NM), the rhumb line distance is always strictly less than 600 NM. At the equator it would equal 600 NM, but since they are specifically "not on the equator," the distance is always less than 600 NM.
+
+### Q15: How much time elapses as the sun traverses 20° of longitude? ^t60q15
+- A) 0:20 h
+- B) 1:20 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 1:00 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth rotates 360° in 24 hours, so it rotates 15° per hour, or 1° every 4 minutes. For 20° of longitude: 20 x 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 hour 20 minutes. Alternatively: 20° / 15°/h = 1.333 h = 1:20 h. This relationship (15°/hour or 4 min/degree) is essential for time zone calculations and solar noon determination.
+
+### Q16: How much time passes as the sun crosses 10° of longitude? ^t60q16
+- A) 0:30 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 1:00 h
+- D) 0:04 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the same principle as Q15: the Earth rotates 15° per hour, so 10° corresponds to 10/15 hours = 2/3 hour = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. Option D (4 minutes) would be the time for only 1° of longitude. Option A (30 minutes) would correspond to 7.5° of longitude.
+
+### Q17: The sun traverses 10° of longitude. What is the corresponding time difference? ^t60q17
+- A) 0.33 h
+- B) 1 h
+- C) 0.4 h
+- D) 0.66 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the same calculation as Q16 but expressed as a decimal fraction of an hour: 10° / 15°/h = 0.6667 h ≈ 0.66 h (40 minutes in decimal hours). Note that Q16 and Q17 appear to ask the same question but expect different answer formats — Q16 expects 0:40 h (40 minutes) while Q17 expects 0.66 h (the decimal equivalent). Both represent the same 40-minute time difference.
+
+### Q18: If Central European Summer Time (CEST) is UTC+2, what is the UTC equivalent of 1600 CEST? ^t60q18
+- A) 1400 UTC.
+- B) 1600 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC+2 means CEST is 2 hours ahead of UTC. To convert from local time to UTC, subtract the offset: 1600 CEST - 2 hours = 1400 UTC. A simple mnemonic: "to get UTC, subtract the positive offset." This is critical in aviation as all flight plans, ATC communications, and NOTAMs use UTC regardless of local time zone.
+
+### Q19: What is UTC? ^t60q19
+- A) A local time in Central Europe.
+- B) Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.
+- C) A zonal time
+- D) The mandatory time reference used in aviation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the mandatory time reference for all international aviation operations — flight plans, ATC communications, weather reports (METARs/TAFs), and NOTAMs all use UTC to eliminate confusion from time zone differences. It is not a zonal or local time, and it is not referenced to any geographic location (though it closely tracks Greenwich Mean Time).
+
+### Q20: If Central European Time (CET) is UTC+1, what is the UTC equivalent of 1700 CET? ^t60q20
+- A) 1800 UTC.
+- B) 1500 UTC.
+- C) 1600 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CET is UTC+1, meaning it is 1 hour ahead of UTC. To convert to UTC, subtract the offset: 1700 CET - 1 hour = 1600 UTC. Switzerland uses CET (UTC+1) in winter and CEST (UTC+2) in summer — knowing the current offset is essential when filing flight plans or reading NOTAMs.
+
+### Q21: Vienna (LOWW) is at 016°34'E and Salzburg (LOWS) at 013°00'E, both at approximately the same latitude. What is the difference in sunrise and sunset times (in UTC) between the two cities? (2,00 P.) ^t60q21
+- A) In Vienna sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg
+- B) In Vienna sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- C) In Vienna sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- D) In Vienna sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The difference in longitude is 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3.57°. At 4 minutes per degree, this gives approximately 14.3 minutes ≈ 14 minutes. Vienna is east of Salzburg, so the sun reaches Vienna earlier — both sunrise and sunset occur about 14 minutes earlier in Vienna (as seen in UTC). Local time zones disguise this difference, but in UTC the eastern location always sees solar events first.
+
+### Q22: How is "civil twilight" defined? ^t60q22
+- A) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 6° below the true horizon.
+- B) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 12° below the apparent horizon.
+- C) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 6° below the apparent horizon.
+- D) The interval before sunrise or after sunset when the sun's centre is no more than 12° below the true horizon.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Civil twilight is the period when the sun's center is between 0° and 6° below the true (geometric) horizon — there is still sufficient natural light for most outdoor activities without artificial lighting. The true horizon (geometric) is used in the formal definition, not the apparent horizon (which is affected by refraction). Nautical twilight uses 12°, and astronomical twilight uses 18° below the true horizon. In aviation regulations, civil twilight often defines the boundary for day/night VFR operations.
+
+### Q23: Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E. Determine TC, MH, and CH. (2,00 P.) ^t60q23
+- A) TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- B) TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.
+- C) TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- D) TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The heading chain works as follows: TC → (apply WCA) → TH → (apply VAR) → MH → (apply DEV) → CH. Given TH = 125° and WCA = -12°, then TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. For MH: MC = MH + WCA, so MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. For CH: DEV = 002°E means compass reads 2° high, so CH = MH - DEV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Negative WCA means wind from the right, requiring a left correction in heading.
+
+### Q24: Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002°. What are MH and MC? ^t60q24
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+- C) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+- D) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Then MH = TH - VAR (E is subtracted): MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. For MC: MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. Alternatively: MC = MH + WCA = 163° + (-12°) = 151° — wait, that doesn't match; MC is measured from magnetic north to the course line, so MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. East variation is subtracted when converting from True to Magnetic ("East is least").
+
+### Q25: The angular difference between the true course and the true heading is known as the... ^t60q25
+- A) Variation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Wind Correction Angle (WCA) is the angular difference between the true course (the direction of intended track over the ground) and the true heading (the direction the aircraft's nose points). A crosswind requires the pilot to angle the nose into the wind, creating a difference between heading and track — this offset angle is the WCA. It is neither variation (true-to-magnetic difference) nor deviation (magnetic-to-compass difference).
+
+### Q26: The angular difference between the magnetic course and the true course is called... ^t60q26
+- A) Deviation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Variation
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic variation (also called declination) is the angle between true north (geographic) and magnetic north at any given location, which creates a difference between the true course and the magnetic course. Variation changes with location and over time as the magnetic poles shift. Deviation is the error introduced by the aircraft's own magnetic field on the compass, affecting the difference between magnetic north and compass north.
+
+### Q27: How is "magnetic course" (MC) defined? ^t60q27
+- A) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- B) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole.
+- C) The direction from any point on Earth toward the magnetic north pole.
+- D) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic course is the direction of the intended flight path (course line) measured clockwise from magnetic north. It differs from the true course by the local magnetic variation. Pilots use magnetic course because aircraft compasses point to magnetic north, making magnetic references more directly usable for navigation without additional corrections.
+
+### Q28: How is "True Course" (TC) defined? ^t60q28
+- A) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- B) The direction from any point on Earth toward the magnetic north pole.
+- C) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- D) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The True Course is the angle measured clockwise from true (geographic) north to the intended flight path (course line). It is determined from aeronautical charts, which are oriented to true north. To fly a true course, pilots must apply magnetic variation to get the magnetic course, then apply wind correction angle to get the true heading they must fly.
+
+### Q29: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. What are TH and VAR? (2,00 P.) ^t60q29
+- A) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W
+- B) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W
+- C) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E
+- D) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For variation: VAR is the difference between TC and MC, or equivalently between TH and MH. MH = 198°, TH = 194°, so the difference is 4°. Since MH > TH, magnetic north is east of true north, meaning variation is West (West variation adds to true to get magnetic: MH = TH + VAR, so 198° = 194° + 4°W). Mnemonic: "West is best" — West variation is added going True to Magnetic.
+
+### Q30: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. What are TH and DEV? (2,00 P.) ^t60q30
+- A) TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.
+- B) TH: 194°. DEV: +002°.
+- C) TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.
+- D) TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For deviation: DEV = CH - MH = 200° - 198° = +2°. However, the convention for deviation sign varies — if DEV is defined as what you subtract from CH to get MH, then DEV = -2°. Here CH = 200° > MH = 198°, meaning the compass reads 2° more than magnetic, so DEV = -2° (the compass is deflected eastward, requiring a negative correction). The answer is TH: 194°, DEV: -002°.
+
+### Q31: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Determine VAR and DEV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q31
+- A) VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.
+- B) VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°.
+- C) VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.
+- D) VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Q29: VAR = 4° W (MH 198° > TH 194°, so West variation). From Q30: DEV = -002° (CH 200° > MH 198°, compass reads high, requiring negative deviation correction). The complete heading chain for this problem is: TC 183° → (+11° WCA) → TH 194° → (+4° W VAR) → MH 198° → (+2° DEV) → CH 200°. These three questions (Q29, Q30, Q31) all use the same dataset, testing different parts of the heading conversion chain.
+
+### Q32: At what location does magnetic inclination reach its minimum value? ^t60q32
+- A) At the geographic poles
+- B) At the geographic equator
+- C) At the magnetic equator
+- D) At the magnetic poles
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator (the "aclinic line"), the field lines are horizontal and the dip angle is 0° — the lowest possible value. At the magnetic poles, the field lines are vertical (inclination = 90°). The magnetic equator does not coincide with the geographic equator.
+
+### Q33: The angular difference between compass north and magnetic north is referred to as... ^t60q33
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Inclination.
+- D) WCA
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields (from electrical equipment, metal structure, avionics). It is expressed as the angular difference between magnetic north (what the compass should indicate) and compass north (what it actually indicates). Deviation varies with the aircraft's heading and is recorded on a compass deviation card mounted near the instrument.
+
+### Q34: What does "compass north" (CN) refer to? ^t60q34
+- A) The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north
+- B) The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns under the combined influence of the Earth's and the aircraft's magnetic fields
+- C) The direction from any point on Earth toward the geographic North Pole
+- D) The most northerly reading point on the magnetic compass in the aircraft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Compass north is the direction the compass needle actually points, which is determined by the combined effect of the Earth's magnetic field AND any local magnetic interference from the aircraft itself. Because of this aircraft-induced deviation, compass north differs from magnetic north. The compass reads this resultant direction, not pure magnetic north — hence the need for a deviation correction card.
+
+### Q35: An "isogonal" or "isogonic line" on an aeronautical chart connects all points sharing the same value of... ^t60q35
+- A) Deviation
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Heading.
+- D) Variation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isogonic lines (also called isogonals) connect all points on Earth that have the same magnetic variation value. They are printed on aeronautical charts so pilots can read the local variation at their position and convert between true and magnetic headings. The agonic line is the special case where variation = 0°. Lines of equal magnetic inclination are called isoclinic lines; lines of equal field intensity are isodynamic lines.
+
+### Q36: An "agonic line" on the Earth or on an aeronautical chart connects all points where the... ^t60q36
+- A) Heading is 0°.
+- B) Inclination is 0°.
+- C) Variation is 0°.
+- D) Deviation is 0°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a special isogonic line where magnetic variation equals zero — meaning true north and magnetic north coincide along this line. Aircraft flying along the agonic line need not apply any variation correction; true course equals magnetic course. There are currently two main agonic lines on Earth, passing through North America and through parts of Asia/Australia.
+
+### Q37: Which are the official standard units for horizontal distances in aeronautical navigation? ^t60q37
+- A) Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)
+- B) Feet (ft), inches (in)
+- C) Yards (yd), meters (m)
+- D) Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In international aviation, horizontal distances are officially measured in nautical miles (NM) and kilometers (km). The nautical mile is preferred for navigation because it directly relates to the angular measurement system (1 NM = 1 arcminute of latitude). Kilometers are also used, particularly in some countries and on certain charts. Feet and meters are used for vertical distances (altitude/height), not horizontal distance.
+
+### Q38: How many metres are equivalent to 1000 ft? ^t60q38
+- A) 30 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 300 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 1 foot = 0.3048 meters, so 1000 ft = 304.8 m ≈ 300 m. The quick conversion rule is: feet x 0.3 ≈ meters, or equivalently from the exam table: m = ft x 3 / 10. This approximation is accurate enough for practical navigation. For exam purposes: 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10,000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q39: How many feet correspond to 5500 m? ^t60q39
+- A) 10000 ft.
+- B) 7500 ft.
+- C) 30000 ft.
+- D) 18000 ft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the conversion ft = m x 10 / 3 (from the exam table): 5500 x 10 / 3 = 55000 / 3 ≈ 18,333 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. Alternatively: 1 m ≈ 3.281 ft, so 5500 m x 3.281 ≈ 18,046 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. This altitude is significant in European airspace as it corresponds approximately to FL180 (the base of Class A airspace in some regions).
+
+### Q40: What might cause the runway designation at an aerodrome to change (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)? ^t60q40
+- A) The direction of the approach path has changed
+- B) The magnetic variation at the runway location has changed
+- C) The magnetic deviation at the runway location has changed
+- D) The true direction of the runway alignment has changed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Runway numbers are based on the magnetic heading of the runway, rounded to the nearest 10° and divided by 10. Because the magnetic north pole drifts slowly over time, the local magnetic variation changes — even if the physical runway has not moved, its magnetic bearing changes. When this change is large enough to shift the rounded designation (e.g., from 055° to 065°), the runway is renumbered (from "06" to "07"). Major airports periodically update runway designations for this reason.
+
+### Q41: Which flight instrument is affected by electronic devices operated on board the aircraft? ^t60q41
+- A) Airspeed indicator.
+- B) Turn coordinator
+- C) Artificial horizon.
+- D) Direct reading compass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The direct reading (magnetic) compass is sensitive to any magnetic field, including those generated by electrical equipment, avionics, and metal components in the aircraft. This interference is called deviation. Electronic devices that draw current create electromagnetic fields that can deflect the compass needle. That is why pilots are required to record the deviation on a compass card and why compasses are mounted as far from interference sources as possible.
+
+### Q42: What are the key characteristics of a Mercator chart? ^t60q42
+- A) Scale increases with latitude, great circles appear curved, rhumb lines appear straight
+- B) Constant scale, great circles appear straight, rhumb lines appear curved
+- C) Scale increases with latitude, great circles appear straight, rhumb lines appear curved
+- D) Constant scale, great circles appear curved, rhumb lines appear straight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is a cylindrical conformal projection where meridians and parallels are straight lines intersecting at right angles. Rhumb lines (constant bearing courses) appear as straight lines — making it useful for constant-heading navigation. However, the scale increases with latitude (Greenland appears as large as Africa) and great circles appear as curved lines. It is not an equal-area projection and is not suitable for high-latitude navigation.
+
+### Q43: On a direct Mercator chart, how do rhumb lines and great circles appear? ^t60q43
+- A) Rhumb lines: curved lines; Great circles: curved lines
+- B) Rhumb lines: curved lines; Great circles: straight lines
+- C) Rhumb lines: straight lines; Great circles: straight lines
+- D) Rhumb lines: straight lines; Great circles: curved lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a Mercator chart, rhumb lines (constant compass bearing courses) appear as straight lines because the chart is constructed so that meridians are parallel vertical lines and parallels are horizontal lines — any line crossing meridians at a constant angle (a rhumb line) is therefore straight. Great circles, which follow the shortest path on the globe, curve toward the poles when projected onto the Mercator chart and therefore appear as curved lines (bowing toward the nearest pole).
+
+### Q44: What are the characteristics of a Lambert conformal chart? ^t60q44
+- A) Conformal and nearly true to scale
+- B) Conformal and equal-area
+- C) Rhumb lines depicted as straight lines and conformal
+- D) Great circles depicted as straight lines and equal-area
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Lambert Conformal Conic projection is the standard for aeronautical charts (including ICAO charts used in Europe). It is conformal (angles and shapes are preserved locally), nearly true to scale between its two standard parallels, and great circles are approximately straight lines (making it excellent for plotting direct routes). It is NOT an equal-area projection. The Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart uses this projection.
+
+### Q45: The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical chart, a pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. What is the chart scale? ^t60q45
+- A) 1 : 2000000.
+- B) 1 : 250000.
+- C) 1 : 1000000.
+- D) 1 : 500000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 220 NM to centimeters: 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407,440 m = 40,744,000 cm. Scale = chart distance / real distance = 40.7 cm / 40,744,000 cm = 1 / 1,000,835 ≈ 1 : 1,000,000. The ICAO chart of Switzerland used in the SPL exam is 1:500,000 scale; knowing how to calculate chart scale from measured and actual distances is a standard exam skill.
+
+### Q46: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? ^t60q46
+> *Note: This question originally references chart annex NAV-031 showing the area around BKD VOR. The answer can be calculated from coordinates using the departure formula.*
+- A) 42 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 42 NM
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both points are at nearly the same latitude (~53°N), so the distance can be estimated using the departure formula. The longitude difference is 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' of longitude. At latitude 53°N, the distance per degree of longitude = 60 NM x cos(53°) ≈ 60 x 0.602 ≈ 36.1 NM/degree, so 38' = 0.633° x 36.1 ≈ 22.9 NM. The latitude difference adds a small component. The chart measurement confirms approximately 24 NM, making option D correct.
+
+### Q47: On an aeronautical chart, 7.5 cm represents 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale? ^t60q47
+- A) 1 : 1500000
+- B) 1 : 500000
+- C) 1 : 150000
+- D) 1 : 1 000000
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 60.745 NM to cm: 60.745 x 1852 m/NM = 112,499 m = 11,249,900 cm. Scale = 7.5 / 11,249,900 ≈ 1 / 1,499,987 ≈ 1 : 1,500,000. This is a less common chart scale — for comparison, the ICAO chart used in Switzerland is 1:500,000 and the German half-million chart (ICAO Karte) is also 1:500,000.
+
+### Q48: A pilot extracts this data from the chart for a short flight from A to B: True course: 245°. Magnetic variation: 7° W. The magnetic course (MC) equals... ^t60q48
+- A) 245°.
+- B) 007°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 238°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When variation is West, magnetic north is west of true north, meaning magnetic bearings are higher (greater) than true bearings. The rule "West is best, East is least" means: West variation → add to True to get Magnetic. MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Alternatively: MC = TC - VAR(E), so for West variation (negative East): MC = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q49: Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. ETD: 0915 UTC. What is the ETA? (2,00 P.) ^t60q49
+- A) 1052 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1115 UTC.
+- D) 1105 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1.826 h = 1 h 49.6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. ETA = ETD + flight time = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. This is a standard time/distance/speed calculation. Always compute GS first by applying wind component, then divide distance by GS for time.
+
+### Q50: Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. ETD: 1242 UTC. What is the ETA? ^t60q50
+- A) 1356 UTC
+- B) 1330 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Flight time = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0.806 h = 48.4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. Option A (1356) would correspond to a GS of about 62 kt; option D (1320) would correspond to a GS of about 113 kt. Carefully subtracting the headwind from TAS before dividing gives the correct result.
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted aids at the exam:** ICAO 1:500'000 Switzerland chart, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR calculator, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers allowed.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_1_50_de.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_1_50_de.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,507 @@
+### Q1: Durch welche Punkte verläuft die Rotationsachse der Erde? ^t60q1
+- A) Den geografischen Nordpol und den magnetischen Südpol.
+- B) Den magnetischen Nordpol und den geografischen Südpol.
+- C) Den geografischen Nordpol und den geografischen Südpol.
+- D) Den magnetischen Nordpol und den magnetischen Südpol.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Rotationsachse der Erde ist die physische Achse, um die sich der Planet dreht, und sie verläuft durch die geografischen (wahren) Pole — nicht durch die magnetischen Pole. Die geografischen Pole sind feste Punkte, die durch die Rotationsachse definiert werden, während die magnetischen Pole von ihnen versetzt sind und sich im Laufe der Zeit aufgrund von Veränderungen im geschmolzenen Erdkern verschieben.
+
+### Q2: Welche Aussage beschreibt die Polachse der Erde korrekt? ^t60q2
+- A) Sie verläuft durch den geografischen Südpol und den geografischen Nordpol und ist um 23,5° gegenüber der Äquatorialebene geneigt.
+- B) Sie verläuft durch den magnetischen Südpol und den magnetischen Nordpol und ist um 66,5° gegenüber der Äquatorialebene geneigt.
+- C) Sie verläuft durch den magnetischen Südpol und den magnetischen Nordpol und steht senkrecht zur Äquatorialebene.
+- D) Sie verläuft durch den geografischen Südpol und den geografischen Nordpol und steht senkrecht zur Äquatorialebene.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Polachse verläuft durch die geografischen Pole und steht definitionsgemäss senkrecht (90°) zur Ebene des Äquators. Die Erdachse ist zwar um 23,5° gegenüber der Ebene ihrer Umlaufbahn um die Sonne (Ekliptik) geneigt, steht aber senkrecht zur Äquatorialebene — diese beiden Tatsachen sind konsistent und nicht widersprüchlich. Option A verwechselt die Neigung zur Ekliptik mit dem Verhältnis zum Äquator.
+
+### Q3: Welche angenäherte geometrische Form repräsentiert die Erde für Navigationssysteme am besten? ^t60q3
+- A) Eine flache Platte.
+- B) Ein Ellipsoid.
+- C) Eine Kugel von elliptischer Form.
+- D) Eine perfekte Kugel.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Erde ist keine perfekte Kugel — sie ist an den Polen leicht abgeflacht und am Äquator durch ihre Rotation aufgewölbt. Diese Form wird als abgeplattetes Sphäroid oder Ellipsoid bezeichnet. Moderne Navigationssysteme (einschliesslich GPS) verwenden das WGS-84-Ellipsoid als Referenzmodell, das diese Abflachung bei Koordinatenberechnungen genau berücksichtigt.
+
+### Q4: Welche der folgenden Aussagen über eine Loxodrome ist richtig? ^t60q4
+- A) Der kürzeste Weg zwischen zwei Punkten auf der Erde folgt einer Loxodrome.
+- B) Eine Loxodrome schneidet jeden Meridian unter dem gleichen Winkel.
+- C) Der Mittelpunkt eines vollständigen Loxodromenzyklus ist immer der Erdmittelpunkt.
+- D) Eine Loxodrome ist ein Grosskreis, der den Äquator unter 45° schneidet.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Loxodrome (auch Kursgleiche genannt) ist definiert als eine Linie, die jeden Längengrad-Meridian unter dem gleichen Winkel schneidet. Dies macht sie nützlich für die Navigation mit konstantem Kurs — ein Pilot kann eine Loxodrome fliegen, indem er einen festen Kompasskurs beibehält. Sie ist jedoch nicht der kürzeste Weg zwischen zwei Punkten; diese Auszeichnung gebührt der Grosskreisroute.
+
+### Q5: Der kürzeste Weg zwischen zwei Punkten auf der Erdoberfläche folgt einem Abschnitt von... ^t60q5
+- A) Einem Kleinkreis
+- B) Einem Grosskreis.
+- C) Einer Loxodrome.
+- D) Einem Breitenparallel.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Grosskreis ist jeder Kreis, dessen Ebene durch den Erdmittelpunkt verläuft, und der Bogen eines Grosskreises zwischen zwei Punkten ist der kürzestmögliche Weg entlang der Erdoberfläche (die Geodäte). Breitenparallelen (ausser dem Äquator) und Loxodromen sind keine Grosskreise und stellen nicht den kürzesten Weg dar. Langstreckenflugstrecken werden entlang von Grosskreisen geplant, um Treibstoff und Zeit zu minimieren.
+
+### Q6: Wie gross ist der ungefähre Umfang der Erde, gemessen entlang des Äquators? Siehe Abbildung (NAV-002) ^t60q6
+
+
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 21600 NM.
+- C) 10800 km.
+- D) 12800 km.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Äquator erstreckt sich über 360 Längengrade, und jeder Längengrad am Äquator entspricht 60 NM (da 1 NM = 1 Bogenminute auf einem Grosskreis). Daher: 360° x 60 NM = 21 600 NM. In Kilometern beträgt der Erdumfang am Äquator etwa 40 075 km — Option A hat also die richtige Zahl, aber die falsche Einheit. Diese Beziehung (1° = 60 NM am Äquator) zu kennen, ist grundlegend für Navigationsberechnungen.
+
+### Q7: Wie gross ist der Breitenunterschied zwischen Punkt A (12°53'30''N) und Punkt B (07°34'30''S)? ^t60q7
+- A) .20°28'00''
+- B) .05°19'00''
+- C) .20,28°
+- D) .05,19°
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn zwei Punkte auf verschiedenen Seiten des Äquators liegen, ist der Breitenunterschied die Summe ihrer jeweiligen Breiten. Hier: 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. Minuten umrechnen: 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', also 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. Breitengrade werden immer addiert, wenn sie auf entgegengesetzten Hemisphären (N und S) liegen.
+
+### Q8: An welchen Positionen befinden sich die beiden Polarkreise? ^t60q8
+- A) 23,5° nördlich und südlich des Äquators
+- B) Auf einer Breite von 20,5°S und 20,5°N
+- C) 20,5° südlich der Pole
+- D) 23,5° nördlich und südlich der Pole
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der nördliche Polarkreis liegt bei etwa 66,5°N und der südliche Polarkreis bei 66,5°S — das ist 90° - 23,5° = 66,5°, was sie 23,5° von ihren jeweiligen geografischen Polen entfernt platziert. Dieser Versatz von 23,5° entspricht direkt der Achsneigung der Erde. Die Wendekreise des Krebses und des Steinbocks (Option A) sind diejenigen, die sich 23,5° vom Äquator entfernt befinden.
+
+### Q9: Entlang eines Meridians, wie gross ist die Entfernung zwischen den Breitenparallelen 48°N und 49°N? ^t60q9
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 10 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Entlang jedes Meridians (Längengradlinie) entspricht 1 Breitengrad immer 60 Seemeilen. Das liegt daran, dass Meridiane Grosskreise sind und 1 NM als 1 Bogenminute auf einem Grosskreis definiert ist. Der Wert von 111 km (Option A) ist das Äquivalent in Kilometern, nicht in Seemeilen. Diese Beziehung von 60 NM pro Grad ist ein Eckpfeiler der Navigationsberechnungen.
+
+### Q10: Entlang einer beliebigen Längengradlinie, welche Entfernung entspricht einem Breitengrad? ^t60q10
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 1 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Breitengrad = 60 Bogenminuten, und da 1 NM genau 1 Bogenminute Breitengrad entlang eines Meridians entspricht, ergibt sich 1° Breite = 60 NM. Diese Beziehung gilt entlang jedes Meridians, da alle Meridiane Grosskreise sind. In SI-Einheiten beträgt 1° Breite ≈ 111 km, nicht 60 km wie in Option C angegeben.
+
+### Q11: Punkt A liegt genau auf 47°50'27''N Breite. Welcher Punkt liegt genau 240 NM nördlich von A? ^t60q11
+- A) 49°50'27''N
+- B) 43°50'27''N
+- C) 53°50'27''N
+- D) 51°50'27'N'
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Umrechnung von 240 NM in Breitengrade: 240 NM / 60 NM pro Grad = 4°. Addition von 4° zu 47°50'27''N ergibt 51°50'27''N. Eine Bewegung nach Norden erhöht den Breitenwert. Option C würde 6° (360 NM) erfordern, und Option A nur 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q12: Entlang des Äquators, wie gross ist die Entfernung zwischen den Meridianen 150°E und 151°E? ^t60q12
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Am Äquator sind die Längengradmeridiane durch Grosskreisbögen getrennt, und 1° Längengrad am Äquator entspricht 60 NM — genau wie 1° Breitengrad entlang eines Meridians, da auch der Äquator ein Grosskreis ist. In höheren Breiten verringert sich der Abstand zwischen den Meridianen (multipliziert mit cos(Breitengrad)), aber am Äquator beträgt er genau 60 NM pro Grad.
+
+### Q13: Wenn zwei Punkte A und B am Äquator genau einen Längengrad voneinander entfernt sind, wie gross ist die Grosskreisentfernung zwischen ihnen? ^t60q13
+- A) 216 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 400 NM
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Äquator selbst ist ein Grosskreis, daher ist die Grosskreisentfernung zwischen zwei Punkten am Äquator, die um 1° Länge getrennt sind, einfach 60 NM (1° x 60 NM/Grad). Es gilt dasselbe Prinzip wie bei der Messung entlang eines Meridians. Verwirrung entsteht, wenn man versucht, in km zu rechnen — 1° ≈ 111 km am Äquator, aber die Frage fragt nach NM.
+
+### Q14: Betrachten Sie zwei Punkte A und B auf demselben Breitenparallel (nicht dem Äquator). A liegt bei 010°E und B bei 020°E. Die Loxodromendistanz zwischen ihnen ist immer... ^t60q14
+- A) Mehr als 600 NM.
+- B) Mehr als 300 NM.
+- C) Weniger als 300 NM.
+- D) Weniger als 600 NM.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Loxodromendistanz zwischen Punkten auf demselben Breitenparallel beträgt: 10° x 60 NM x cos(Breitengrad). Da cos(Breitengrad) für jeden Breitengrad ausser dem Äquator immer kleiner als 1 ist (wo sie genau 60 NM x 10 = 600 NM wäre), ist die Loxodromendistanz immer strikt kleiner als 600 NM. Am Äquator wäre sie 600 NM, aber da sie ausdrücklich „nicht am Äquator" sind, ist die Distanz immer kleiner als 600 NM.
+
+### Q15: Wie viel Zeit vergeht, während die Sonne 20° Längengrad durchquert? ^t60q15
+- A) 0:20 h
+- B) 1:20 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 1:00 h
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Erde dreht sich in 24 Stunden um 360°, also 15° pro Stunde oder 1° alle 4 Minuten. Für 20° Längengrad: 20 x 4 Minuten = 80 Minuten = 1 Stunde 20 Minuten. Alternativ: 20° / 15°/h = 1,333 h = 1:20 h. Diese Beziehung (15°/Stunde oder 4 min/Grad) ist wesentlich für Zeitzonenberechnungen und die Bestimmung des Sonnenhöchststands.
+
+### Q16: Wie viel Zeit vergeht, während die Sonne 10° Längengrad durchquert? ^t60q16
+- A) 0:30 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 1:00 h
+- D) 0:04 h
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Nach dem gleichen Prinzip wie Q15: Die Erde dreht sich 15° pro Stunde, also entsprechen 10° = 10/15 Stunden = 2/3 Stunde = 40 Minuten = 0:40 h. Option D (4 Minuten) wäre die Zeit für nur 1° Längengrad. Option A (30 Minuten) würde 7,5° Längengrad entsprechen.
+
+### Q17: Die Sonne durchquert 10° Längengrad. Welcher Zeitunterschied ergibt sich? ^t60q17
+- A) 0,33 h
+- B) 1 h
+- C) 0,4 h
+- D) 0,66 h
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Dies ist dieselbe Berechnung wie Q16, aber als Dezimalbruch einer Stunde ausgedrückt: 10° / 15°/h = 0,6667 h ≈ 0,66 h (40 Minuten in Dezimalstunden). Beachten Sie, dass Q16 und Q17 dieselbe Frage zu stellen scheinen, aber unterschiedliche Antwortformate erwarten — Q16 erwartet 0:40 h (40 Minuten) während Q17 0,66 h erwartet (das Dezimaläquivalent). Beide repräsentieren denselben Zeitunterschied von 40 Minuten.
+
+### Q18: Wenn die mitteleuropäische Sommerzeit (MESZ) UTC+2 ist, was ist das UTC-Äquivalent von 1600 MESZ? ^t60q18
+- A) 1400 UTC.
+- B) 1600 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** UTC+2 bedeutet, dass MESZ 2 Stunden vor UTC liegt. Um von Ortszeit in UTC umzurechnen, den Versatz subtrahieren: 1600 MESZ - 2 Stunden = 1400 UTC. Eine einfache Eselsbrücke: „Um UTC zu erhalten, den positiven Versatz abziehen." Dies ist in der Luftfahrt entscheidend, da alle Flugpläne, ATC-Kommunikation und NOTAM UTC verwenden, unabhängig von der lokalen Zeitzone.
+
+### Q19: Was ist UTC? ^t60q19
+- A) Eine Ortszeit in Mitteleuropa.
+- B) Mittlere Ortszeit an einem bestimmten Punkt der Erde.
+- C) Eine Zonenzeit
+- D) Die verbindliche Zeitreferenz in der Luftfahrt.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die koordinierte Weltzeit (UTC) ist die verbindliche Zeitreferenz für alle internationalen Luftfahrtoperationen — Flugpläne, ATC-Kommunikation, Wettermeldungen (METAR/TAF) und NOTAM verwenden alle UTC, um Verwirrung durch Zeitzonenunterschiede zu vermeiden. Es ist weder eine Zonen- noch eine Ortszeit und ist nicht auf einen bestimmten geografischen Ort bezogen (obwohl sie der Greenwich Mean Time eng folgt).
+
+### Q20: Wenn die mitteleuropäische Zeit (MEZ) UTC+1 ist, was ist das UTC-Äquivalent von 1700 MEZ? ^t60q20
+- A) 1800 UTC.
+- B) 1500 UTC.
+- C) 1600 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** MEZ ist UTC+1, das heisst, sie ist 1 Stunde vor UTC. Um in UTC umzurechnen, den Versatz subtrahieren: 1700 MEZ - 1 Stunde = 1600 UTC. Die Schweiz verwendet MEZ (UTC+1) im Winter und MESZ (UTC+2) im Sommer — den aktuellen Versatz zu kennen, ist beim Aufgeben von Flugplänen oder Lesen von NOTAM unerlässlich.
+
+### Q21: Wien (LOWW) liegt bei 016°34'E und Salzburg (LOWS) bei 013°00'E, beide auf ungefähr der gleichen Breite. Wie gross ist der Unterschied bei Sonnenauf- und -untergang (in UTC) zwischen den beiden Städten? (2,00 P.) ^t60q21
+- A) In Wien ist der Sonnenaufgang 14 Minuten früher und der Sonnenuntergang 14 Minuten später als in Salzburg
+- B) In Wien sind Sonnenaufgang und Sonnenuntergang etwa 14 Minuten früher als in Salzburg
+- C) In Wien ist der Sonnenaufgang 4 Minuten später und der Sonnenuntergang 4 Minuten früher als in Salzburg
+- D) In Wien sind Sonnenaufgang und Sonnenuntergang etwa 4 Minuten später als in Salzburg
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Längenunterschied beträgt 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3,57°. Bei 4 Minuten pro Grad ergibt das etwa 14,3 Minuten ≈ 14 Minuten. Wien liegt östlich von Salzburg, daher erreicht die Sonne Wien zuerst — sowohl Sonnenaufgang als auch Sonnenuntergang finden in Wien etwa 14 Minuten früher statt (in UTC betrachtet). Lokale Zeitzonen verbergen diesen Unterschied, aber in UTC sieht der östlichere Standort Sonnenereignisse immer zuerst.
+
+### Q22: Wie wird die „bürgerliche Dämmerung" definiert? ^t60q22
+- A) Der Zeitraum vor Sonnenaufgang oder nach Sonnenuntergang, wenn sich das Zentrum der Sonne nicht mehr als 6° unter dem wahren Horizont befindet.
+- B) Der Zeitraum vor Sonnenaufgang oder nach Sonnenuntergang, wenn sich das Zentrum der Sonne nicht mehr als 12° unter dem scheinbaren Horizont befindet.
+- C) Der Zeitraum vor Sonnenaufgang oder nach Sonnenuntergang, wenn sich das Zentrum der Sonne nicht mehr als 6° unter dem scheinbaren Horizont befindet.
+- D) Der Zeitraum vor Sonnenaufgang oder nach Sonnenuntergang, wenn sich das Zentrum der Sonne nicht mehr als 12° unter dem wahren Horizont befindet.
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die bürgerliche Dämmerung ist der Zeitraum, in dem sich das Sonnenzentrum zwischen 0° und 6° unter dem wahren (geometrischen) Horizont befindet — es gibt noch ausreichend natürliches Licht für die meisten Outdoor-Aktivitäten ohne künstliche Beleuchtung. In der formalen Definition wird der wahre Horizont (geometrisch) verwendet, nicht der scheinbare Horizont (der durch Refraktion beeinflusst wird). Die nautische Dämmerung verwendet 12° und die astronomische Dämmerung 18° unter dem wahren Horizont. In den Luftfahrtvorschriften definiert die bürgerliche Dämmerung oft die Grenze für VFR-Tag/Nacht-Operationen.
+
+### Q23: Gegeben: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E. Bestimmen Sie TC, MH und CH. (2,00 P.) ^t60q23
+- A) TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- B) TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.
+- C) TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- D) TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Kursumrechnungskette funktioniert wie folgt: TC → (WCA anwenden) → TH → (VAR anwenden) → MH → (DEV anwenden) → CH. Bei TH = 125° und WCA = -12° ergibt sich TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. Für MH: MC = MH + WCA, also MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. Für CH: DEV = 002°E bedeutet, der Kompass zeigt 2° zu viel an, also CH = MH - DEV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Ein negativer WCA bedeutet Wind von rechts, der eine Kurskorrektur nach links erfordert.
+
+### Q24: Gegeben: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002°. Was sind MH und MC? ^t60q24
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+- C) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+- D) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Dann MH = TH - VAR (E wird subtrahiert): MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. Für MC: MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. Östliche Missweisung wird bei der Umrechnung von rechtweisend zu missweisend subtrahiert („East is least").
+
+### Q25: Die Winkeldifferenz zwischen der wahren Route und dem wahren Steuerkurs wird als... bezeichnet ^t60q25
+- A) Missweisung.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Inklination.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Windkorrekturwinkel (WCA) ist die Winkeldifferenz zwischen der wahren Route (die Richtung der beabsichtigten Bahn über Grund) und dem wahren Steuerkurs (die Richtung, in die die Nase des Flugzeugs zeigt). Ein Seitenwind erfordert, dass der Pilot die Nase in den Wind dreht, wodurch ein Unterschied zwischen Steuerkurs und Bahn entsteht — dieser Versatzwinkel ist der WCA. Es ist weder die Missweisung (Unterschied zwischen rechtweisend und missweisend) noch die Deviation (Unterschied zwischen missweisend und Kompasskurs).
+
+### Q26: Die Winkeldifferenz zwischen der missweisenden Route und der wahren Route wird als... bezeichnet ^t60q26
+- A) Deviation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Missweisung
+- D) Inklination.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Missweisung (auch Variation oder Deklination genannt) ist der Winkel zwischen dem wahren Norden (geografisch) und dem magnetischen Norden an einem bestimmten Standort, der einen Unterschied zwischen der wahren Route und der missweisenden Route erzeugt. Die Missweisung ändert sich je nach Standort und im Laufe der Zeit, da sich die magnetischen Pole verschieben. Die Deviation ist der Fehler, der durch das eigene Magnetfeld des Flugzeugs am Kompass entsteht und den Unterschied zwischen magnetischem Norden und Kompassnorden beeinflusst.
+
+### Q27: Wie wird die „missweisende Route" (MC) definiert? ^t60q27
+- A) Der Winkel zwischen dem wahren Norden und der Kurslinie.
+- B) Die Richtung von jedem Punkt der Erde zum geografischen Nordpol.
+- C) Die Richtung von jedem Punkt der Erde zum magnetischen Nordpol.
+- D) Der Winkel zwischen dem magnetischen Norden und der Kurslinie.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die missweisende Route ist die Richtung der beabsichtigten Flugbahn (Kurslinie), gemessen im Uhrzeigersinn vom magnetischen Norden. Sie unterscheidet sich von der wahren Route um die lokale Missweisung. Piloten verwenden die missweisende Route, da die Kompasse des Flugzeugs zum magnetischen Norden zeigen, was magnetische Bezüge für die Navigation ohne zusätzliche Korrekturen direkt nutzbar macht.
+
+### Q28: Wie wird die „wahre Route" (TC) definiert? ^t60q28
+- A) Der Winkel zwischen dem wahren Norden und der Kurslinie.
+- B) Die Richtung von jedem Punkt der Erde zum magnetischen Nordpol.
+- C) Der Winkel zwischen dem magnetischen Norden und der Kurslinie.
+- D) Die Richtung von jedem Punkt der Erde zum geografischen Nordpol.
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die wahre Route ist der Winkel, gemessen im Uhrzeigersinn vom wahren (geografischen) Norden zur beabsichtigten Flugbahn (Kurslinie). Sie wird anhand von Luftfahrtkarten bestimmt, die nach dem wahren Norden ausgerichtet sind. Um eine wahre Route zu fliegen, müssen Piloten die Missweisung anwenden, um die missweisende Route zu erhalten, und dann den Windkorrekturwinkel, um den wahren Steuerkurs zu ermitteln, den sie fliegen müssen.
+
+### Q29: Gegeben: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Was sind TH und VAR? (2,00 P.) ^t60q29
+- A) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W
+- B) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W
+- C) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E
+- D) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. Für die Missweisung: VAR ist die Differenz zwischen TC und MC, oder gleichwertig zwischen TH und MH. MH = 198°, TH = 194°, also beträgt die Differenz 4°. Da MH > TH, liegt der magnetische Norden östlich des wahren Nordens, was bedeutet, dass die Missweisung West ist. Eselsbrücke: „West is best" — westliche Missweisung wird beim Übergang von Rechtweisend zu Missweisend addiert.
+
+### Q30: Gegeben: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Was sind TH und DEV? (2,00 P.) ^t60q30
+- A) TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.
+- B) TH: 194°. DEV: +002°.
+- C) TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.
+- D) TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. Für die Deviation: DEV = CH - MH = 200° - 198° = +2°. Die Vorzeichenkonvention für die Deviation variiert jedoch — wenn DEV als das definiert wird, was man von CH subtrahiert, um MH zu erhalten, dann ist DEV = -2°. Hier ist CH = 200° > MH = 198°, was bedeutet, dass der Kompass 2° mehr als den magnetischen Wert anzeigt, also DEV = -2° (der Kompass ist nach Osten abgelenkt, was eine negative Korrektur erfordert). Die Antwort ist TH: 194°, DEV: -002°.
+
+### Q31: Gegeben: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200°. Bestimmen Sie VAR und DEV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q31
+- A) VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.
+- B) VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°.
+- C) VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.
+- D) VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Aus Q29: VAR = 4° W (MH 198° > TH 194°, also westliche Missweisung). Aus Q30: DEV = -002° (CH 200° > MH 198°, Kompass zeigt zu viel an, was eine negative Deviationskorrektur erfordert). Die vollständige Kursumrechnungskette für dieses Problem ist: TC 183° → (+11° WCA) → TH 194° → (+4° W VAR) → MH 198° → (+2° DEV) → CH 200°. Diese drei Fragen (Q29, Q30, Q31) verwenden alle denselben Datensatz und testen verschiedene Teile der Kursumrechnungskette.
+
+### Q32: An welchem Ort erreicht die magnetische Inklination ihren Minimalwert? ^t60q32
+- A) An den geografischen Polen
+- B) Am geografischen Äquator
+- C) Am magnetischen Äquator
+- D) An den magnetischen Polen
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die magnetische Inklination (Neigung) ist der Winkel, unter dem die Magnetfeldlinien der Erde die Horizontalebene schneiden. Am magnetischen Äquator (der „aklinischen Linie") sind die Feldlinien horizontal und der Neigungswinkel beträgt 0° — der niedrigstmögliche Wert. An den magnetischen Polen sind die Feldlinien vertikal (Inklination = 90°). Der magnetische Äquator stimmt nicht mit dem geografischen Äquator überein.
+
+### Q33: Die Winkeldifferenz zwischen dem Kompassnorden und dem magnetischen Norden wird als... bezeichnet ^t60q33
+- A) Missweisung.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Inklination.
+- D) WCA
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Deviation ist der Fehler eines Magnetkompasses, der durch die eigenen Magnetfelder des Flugzeugs verursacht wird (elektrische Geräte, Metallstruktur, Avionik). Sie wird als Winkeldifferenz zwischen dem magnetischen Norden (was der Kompass anzeigen sollte) und dem Kompassnorden (was er tatsächlich anzeigt) ausgedrückt. Die Deviation variiert mit dem Steuerkurs des Flugzeugs und wird auf einer Deviationstabelle in der Nähe des Instruments aufgezeichnet.
+
+### Q34: Was bezeichnet der „Kompassnorden" (CN)? ^t60q34
+- A) Der Winkel zwischen dem Steuerkurs des Flugzeugs und dem magnetischen Norden
+- B) Die Richtung, nach der sich der direkt ablesbare Kompass unter dem kombinierten Einfluss der Magnetfelder der Erde und des Flugzeugs ausrichtet
+- C) Die Richtung von jedem Punkt der Erde zum geografischen Nordpol
+- D) Der nördlichste Ablesepunkt auf dem Magnetkompass des Flugzeugs
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Kompassnorden ist die Richtung, in die die Kompassnadel tatsächlich zeigt, bestimmt durch die kombinierte Wirkung des Erdmagnetfelds UND jeder lokalen Magnetstörung durch das Flugzeug selbst. Wegen dieser flugzeuginduzierten Deviation weicht der Kompassnorden vom magnetischen Norden ab. Der Kompass liest diese resultierende Richtung, nicht den reinen magnetischen Norden — daher die Notwendigkeit einer Deviationskorrekturtabelle.
+
+### Q35: Eine „Isogone" oder „isogonische Linie" auf einer Luftfahrtkarte verbindet alle Punkte mit dem gleichen Wert der... ^t60q35
+- A) Deviation
+- B) Inklination.
+- C) Steuerkurs.
+- D) Missweisung.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Isogonen (auch isogonische Linien genannt) verbinden alle Punkte auf der Erde, die dieselbe Missweisung haben. Sie sind auf Luftfahrtkarten aufgedruckt, damit Piloten die lokale Missweisung an ihrer Position ablesen und zwischen wahren und missweisenden Kursen umrechnen können. Die Agone ist der Sonderfall, bei dem die Missweisung = 0° ist. Linien gleicher magnetischer Inklination heissen isoklinische Linien; Linien gleicher Feldstärke sind isodynamische Linien.
+
+### Q36: Eine „Agone" auf der Erde oder auf einer Luftfahrtkarte verbindet alle Punkte, an denen die... ^t60q36
+- A) Der Steuerkurs 0° beträgt.
+- B) Die Inklination 0° beträgt.
+- C) Die Missweisung 0° beträgt.
+- D) Die Deviation 0° beträgt.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Agone ist eine besondere isogonische Linie, bei der die Missweisung gleich null ist — das heisst, wahrer Norden und magnetischer Norden stimmen entlang dieser Linie überein. Flugzeuge, die entlang der Agone fliegen, müssen keine Missweisungskorrektur anwenden; die wahre Route entspricht der missweisenden Route. Derzeit gibt es zwei Hauptagonen auf der Erde, die durch Nordamerika und durch Teile von Asien/Australien verlaufen.
+
+### Q37: Welches sind die offiziellen Standardeinheiten für horizontale Entfernungen in der Luftfahrtnavigation? ^t60q37
+- A) Landmeilen (SM), Seemeilen (NM)
+- B) Fuss (ft), Zoll (in)
+- C) Yards (yd), Meter (m)
+- D) Seemeilen (NM), Kilometer (km)
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** In der internationalen Luftfahrt werden horizontale Entfernungen offiziell in Seemeilen (NM) und Kilometern (km) gemessen. Die Seemeile wird für die Navigation bevorzugt, da sie direkt mit dem Winkelmesssystem zusammenhängt (1 NM = 1 Bogenminute Breitengrad). Kilometer werden ebenfalls verwendet, insbesondere in einigen Ländern und auf bestimmten Karten. Fuss und Meter werden für vertikale Entfernungen (Höhe) verwendet, nicht für horizontale.
+
+### Q38: Wie viele Meter entsprechen 1000 ft? ^t60q38
+- A) 30 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 300 m.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** 1 Fuss = 0,3048 Meter, also 1000 ft = 304,8 m ≈ 300 m. Die schnelle Umrechnungsregel lautet: Fuss x 0,3 ≈ Meter, oder gleichwertig aus der Prüfungstabelle: m = ft x 3 / 10. Diese Näherung ist für die praktische Navigation genau genug. Für Prüfungszwecke: 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10 000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q39: Wie viele Fuss entsprechen 5500 m? ^t60q39
+- A) 10000 ft.
+- B) 7500 ft.
+- C) 30000 ft.
+- D) 18000 ft.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Unter Verwendung der Umrechnung ft = m x 10 / 3 (aus der Prüfungstabelle): 5500 x 10 / 3 = 55000 / 3 ≈ 18 333 ft ≈ 18 000 ft. Alternativ: 1 m ≈ 3,281 ft, also 5500 m x 3,281 ≈ 18 046 ft ≈ 18 000 ft. Diese Höhe ist im europäischen Luftraum bedeutsam, da sie ungefähr FL180 entspricht (der Untergrenze des Luftraums der Klasse A in einigen Regionen).
+
+### Q40: Was könnte dazu führen, dass sich die Pistenbezeichnung an einem Flugplatz ändert (z.B. von Piste 06 auf Piste 07)? ^t60q40
+- A) Die Richtung des Anfluges hat sich geändert
+- B) Die Missweisung am Standort der Piste hat sich geändert
+- C) Die Deviation am Standort der Piste hat sich geändert
+- D) Die wahre Richtung der Pistenausrichtung hat sich geändert
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Pistennummern basieren auf dem missweisenden Kurs der Piste, gerundet auf die nächsten 10° und durch 10 geteilt. Da der magnetische Nordpol langsam wandert, ändert sich die lokale Missweisung — selbst wenn die physische Piste nicht bewegt wurde, ändert sich ihre magnetische Peilung. Wenn diese Änderung gross genug ist, um die gerundete Bezeichnung zu verschieben (z.B. von 055° auf 065°), wird die Piste umnummeriert (von „06" auf „07"). Grosse Flughäfen aktualisieren die Pistenbezeichnungen aus diesem Grund regelmässig.
+
+### Q41: Welches Fluginstrument wird durch elektronische Geräte beeinflusst, die an Bord des Flugzeugs betrieben werden? ^t60q41
+- A) Fahrtmesser.
+- B) Wendeanzeiger
+- C) Künstlicher Horizont.
+- D) Direkt ablesbarer Kompass.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der direkt ablesbare (magnetische) Kompass ist empfindlich gegenüber jedem Magnetfeld, einschliesslich derjenigen, die von elektrischen Geräten, Avionik und Metallkomponenten im Flugzeug erzeugt werden. Diese Störung wird als Deviation bezeichnet. Elektronische Geräte, die Strom verbrauchen, erzeugen elektromagnetische Felder, die die Kompassnadel ablenken können. Deshalb müssen Piloten die Deviation auf einer Kompasskarte erfassen und Kompasse so weit wie möglich von Störquellen entfernt montiert werden.
+
+### Q42: Was sind die Hauptmerkmale einer Mercator-Karte? ^t60q42
+- A) Der Massstab nimmt mit der Breite zu, Grosskreise erscheinen gekrümmt, Loxodromen erscheinen gerade
+- B) Konstanter Massstab, Grosskreise erscheinen gerade, Loxodromen erscheinen gekrümmt
+- C) Der Massstab nimmt mit der Breite zu, Grosskreise erscheinen gerade, Loxodromen erscheinen gekrümmt
+- D) Konstanter Massstab, Grosskreise erscheinen gekrümmt, Loxodromen erscheinen gerade
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Mercator-Projektion ist eine zylindrische konforme Projektion, bei der Meridiane und Parallelen gerade Linien sind, die sich rechtwinklig schneiden. Loxodromen (Kurse mit konstantem Kompasskurs) erscheinen als gerade Linien — was sie nützlich für die Navigation mit konstantem Kurs macht. Der Massstab nimmt jedoch mit der Breite zu (Grönland erscheint so gross wie Afrika) und Grosskreise erscheinen als gekrümmte Linien. Es ist keine flächentreue Projektion und sie ist nicht für die Navigation in hohen Breiten geeignet.
+
+### Q43: Auf einer direkten Mercator-Karte, wie erscheinen Loxodromen und Grosskreise? ^t60q43
+- A) Loxodromen: gekrümmte Linien; Grosskreise: gekrümmte Linien
+- B) Loxodromen: gekrümmte Linien; Grosskreise: gerade Linien
+- C) Loxodromen: gerade Linien; Grosskreise: gerade Linien
+- D) Loxodromen: gerade Linien; Grosskreise: gekrümmte Linien
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Auf einer Mercator-Karte erscheinen Loxodromen (Kurse mit konstantem Kompasskurs) als gerade Linien, da die Karte so konstruiert ist, dass Meridiane parallele vertikale Linien und Parallelen horizontale Linien sind — jede Linie, die Meridiane unter einem konstanten Winkel schneidet (eine Loxodrome), ist daher gerade. Grosskreise, die den kürzesten Weg auf dem Globus folgen, biegen sich in Richtung der Pole, wenn sie auf die Mercator-Karte projiziert werden, und erscheinen daher als gekrümmte Linien (zum nächsten Pol hin gewölbt).
+
+### Q44: Was sind die Merkmale einer konformen Lambert-Karte? ^t60q44
+- A) Konform und nahezu massstabsgetreu
+- B) Konform und flächentreu
+- C) Loxodromen als gerade Linien dargestellt und konform
+- D) Grosskreise als gerade Linien dargestellt und flächentreu
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die konforme Lambert-Kegelprojektion ist der Standard für Luftfahrtkarten (einschliesslich der in Europa verwendeten ICAO-Karten). Sie ist konform (Winkel und Formen werden lokal beibehalten), nahezu massstabsgetreu zwischen ihren beiden Standardparallelen, und Grosskreise sind annähernd gerade Linien (was sie hervorragend für die Planung direkter Routen macht). Sie ist KEINE flächentreue Projektion. Die Schweizer ICAO-Karte 1:500 000 verwendet diese Projektion.
+
+### Q45: Die Entfernung zwischen zwei Flughäfen beträgt 220 NM. Auf einer Luftfahrtkarte misst ein Pilot 40,7 cm für diese Entfernung. Welchen Massstab hat die Karte? ^t60q45
+- A) 1 : 2000000.
+- B) 1 : 250000.
+- C) 1 : 1000000.
+- D) 1 : 500000
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Umrechnung von 220 NM in Zentimeter: 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407 440 m = 40 744 000 cm. Massstab = Kartendistanz / reale Distanz = 40,7 cm / 40 744 000 cm = 1 / 1 000 835 ≈ 1 : 1 000 000. Die ICAO-Karte der Schweiz, die in der SPL-Prüfung verwendet wird, hat den Massstab 1:500 000; den Kartenmassstab aus gemessenen und tatsächlichen Entfernungen berechnen zu können, ist eine Standard-Prüfungskompetenz.
+
+### Q46: Wie gross ist die Entfernung vom VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) nach Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? ^t60q46
+> *Hinweis: Diese Frage bezieht sich ursprünglich auf die Kartenanlage NAV-031, die das Gebiet um das VOR BKD zeigt. Die Antwort kann anhand der Koordinaten mit der Abgangsformel berechnet werden.*
+- A) 42 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 42 NM
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Beide Punkte liegen auf nahezu derselben Breite (~53°N), sodass die Entfernung mit der Abgangsformel geschätzt werden kann. Der Längenunterschied beträgt 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' Länge. Auf dem Breitengrad 53°N beträgt die Entfernung pro Längengrad = 60 NM x cos(53°) ≈ 60 x 0,602 ≈ 36,1 NM/Grad, also 38' = 0,633° x 36,1 ≈ 22,9 NM. Der Breitenunterschied fügt eine kleine Komponente hinzu. Die Kartenmessung bestätigt ungefähr 24 NM, was Option D korrekt macht.
+
+### Q47: Auf einer Luftfahrtkarte stellen 7,5 cm in der Realität 60,745 NM dar. Welchen Massstab hat die Karte? ^t60q47
+- A) 1 : 1500000
+- B) 1 : 500000
+- C) 1 : 150000
+- D) 1 : 1 000000
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Umrechnung von 60,745 NM in cm: 60,745 x 1852 m/NM = 112 499 m = 11 249 900 cm. Massstab = 7,5 / 11 249 900 ≈ 1 / 1 499 987 ≈ 1 : 1 500 000. Dies ist ein weniger gebräuchlicher Kartenmassstab — zum Vergleich: die in der Schweiz verwendete ICAO-Karte ist im Massstab 1:500 000 und die deutsche ICAO-Karte ebenfalls 1:500 000.
+
+### Q48: Ein Pilot entnimmt der Karte folgende Daten für einen kurzen Flug von A nach B: Wahrer Kurs: 245°. Missweisung: 7° W. Die missweisende Route (MC) beträgt... ^t60q48
+- A) 245°.
+- B) 007°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 238°.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Bei westlicher Missweisung liegt der magnetische Norden westlich des wahren Nordens, was bedeutet, dass magnetische Peilungen höher (grösser) sind als wahre Peilungen. Die Regel „West is best, East is least" bedeutet: westliche Missweisung → zum Wahren addieren, um den Magnetischen zu erhalten. MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Alternativ: MC = TC - VAR(E), also für westliche Missweisung (negatives Ost): MC = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q49: Gegeben: Wahre Route von A nach B: 250°. Bodenentfernung: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Gegenwindkomponente: 15 kt. ETD: 0915 UTC. Wie lautet die ETA? (2,00 P.) ^t60q49
+- A) 1052 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1115 UTC.
+- D) 1105 UTC.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Grundgeschwindigkeit = TAS - Gegenwind = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Flugzeit = Entfernung / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1,826 h = 1 h 49,6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. ETA = ETD + Flugzeit = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. Dies ist eine Standard-Zeit/Entfernung/Geschwindigkeit-Berechnung. Immer zuerst die GS berechnen, indem die Windkomponente angewandt wird, dann die Entfernung durch die GS teilen, um die Zeit zu erhalten.
+
+### Q50: Gegeben: Wahre Route von A nach B: 283°. Bodenentfernung: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Gegenwindkomponente: 12 kt. ETD: 1242 UTC. Wie lautet die ETA? ^t60q50
+- A) 1356 UTC
+- B) 1330 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Grundgeschwindigkeit = TAS - Gegenwind = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Flugzeit = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0,806 h = 48,4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. Option A (1356) entspräche einer GS von etwa 62 kt; Option D (1320) entspräche einer GS von etwa 113 kt. Durch sorgfältiges Subtrahieren des Gegenwinds von der TAS vor der Division erhält man das korrekte Ergebnis.
+
+> Quelle: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Zugelassene Hilfsmittel an der Prüfung:** ICAO-Karte 1:500 000 Schweiz, Schweizer Segelflugkarte, Winkelmesser, Lineal, mechanischer DR-Rechner, Kompass, nicht programmierbarer wissenschaftlicher Taschenrechner (TI-30 ECO RS empfohlen). Keine alphanumerischen oder elektronischen Navigationscomputer erlaubt.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_1_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_1_50_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,507 @@
+### Q1: Par quels points l'axe de rotation de la Terre passe-t-il ? ^t60q1
+- A) Le pôle Nord géographique et le pôle sud magnétique.
+- B) Le pôle nord magnétique et le pôle Sud géographique.
+- C) Le pôle Nord géographique et le pôle Sud géographique.
+- D) Le pôle nord magnétique et le pôle sud magnétique.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'axe de rotation de la Terre est l'axe physique autour duquel la planète tourne, et il passe par les pôles géographiques (vrais) — et non par les pôles magnétiques. Les pôles géographiques sont des points fixes définis par l'axe de rotation, tandis que les pôles magnétiques sont décalés par rapport à eux et se déplacent au fil du temps en raison des variations dans le noyau en fusion de la Terre.
+
+### Q2: Quelle affirmation décrit correctement l'axe polaire de la Terre ? ^t60q2
+- A) Il passe par le pôle Sud géographique et le pôle Nord géographique et est incliné de 23,5° par rapport au plan de l'équateur.
+- B) Il passe par le pôle sud magnétique et le pôle nord magnétique et est incliné de 66,5° par rapport au plan de l'équateur.
+- C) Il passe par le pôle sud magnétique et le pôle nord magnétique et est perpendiculaire au plan de l'équateur.
+- D) Il passe par le pôle Sud géographique et le pôle Nord géographique et est perpendiculaire au plan de l'équateur.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'axe polaire passe par les pôles géographiques et est perpendiculaire (90°) au plan de l'équateur par définition. L'axe terrestre est effectivement incliné de 23,5° par rapport au plan de son orbite autour du soleil (l'écliptique), mais il est perpendiculaire au plan équatorial — ces deux faits sont cohérents et non contradictoires. L'option A confond l'inclinaison par rapport à l'écliptique avec la relation par rapport à l'équateur.
+
+### Q3: Pour les systèmes de navigation, quelle forme géométrique approximative représente le mieux la Terre ? ^t60q3
+- A) Une plaque plate.
+- B) Un ellipsoïde.
+- C) Une sphère de forme écliptique.
+- D) Une sphère parfaite.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Terre n'est pas une sphère parfaite — elle est légèrement aplatie aux pôles et renflée à l'équateur en raison de sa rotation. Cette forme est appelée sphéroïde aplati ou ellipsoïde. Les systèmes de navigation modernes (y compris le GPS) utilisent l'ellipsoïde WGS-84 comme modèle de référence, qui tient précisément compte de cet aplatissement dans les calculs de coordonnées.
+
+### Q4: Laquelle des affirmations suivantes concernant une loxodromie est correcte ? ^t60q4
+- A) Le trajet le plus court entre deux points sur la Terre suit une loxodromie.
+- B) Une loxodromie coupe chaque méridien sous un angle identique.
+- C) Le centre d'un cycle complet d'une loxodromie est toujours le centre de la Terre.
+- D) Une loxodromie est un grand cercle qui coupe l'équateur à 45°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une loxodromie est définie comme une ligne qui coupe chaque méridien de longitude sous le même angle. Cela la rend utile pour la navigation à cap constant — un pilote peut suivre une loxodromie en maintenant un cap boussole fixe. Cependant, ce n'est pas le trajet le plus court entre deux points ; cette distinction appartient à la route orthodromique (grand cercle).
+
+### Q5: Le trajet le plus court entre deux points à la surface de la Terre suit un segment de... ^t60q5
+- A) Un petit cercle
+- B) Un grand cercle.
+- C) Une loxodromie.
+- D) Un parallèle de latitude.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un grand cercle est tout cercle dont le plan passe par le centre de la Terre, et l'arc d'un grand cercle entre deux points est le trajet le plus court possible le long de la surface terrestre (la géodésique). Les parallèles de latitude (sauf l'équateur) et les loxodromies ne sont pas des grands cercles et ne représentent pas le trajet le plus court. Les routes aériennes long-courriers sont planifiées le long de trajectoires de grand cercle pour minimiser le carburant et le temps.
+
+### Q6: Quelle est la circonférence approximative de la Terre mesurée le long de l'équateur ? Voir figure (NAV-002) ^t60q6
+
+
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 21600 NM.
+- C) 10800 km.
+- D) 12800 km.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équateur s'étend sur 360 degrés de longitude, et chaque degré de longitude à l'équateur équivaut à 60 NM (puisque 1 NM = 1 minute d'arc sur un grand cercle). Donc : 360° x 60 NM = 21 600 NM. En kilomètres, la circonférence équatoriale de la Terre est d'environ 40 075 km — l'option A a le bon chiffre mais la mauvaise unité. Connaître cette relation (1° = 60 NM à l'équateur) est fondamental pour les calculs de navigation.
+
+### Q7: Quelle est la différence de latitude entre le point A (12°53'30''N) et le point B (07°34'30''S) ? ^t60q7
+- A) .20°28'00''
+- B) .05°19'00''
+- C) .20,28°
+- D) .05,19°
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux points sont situés de part et d'autre de l'équateur, la différence de latitude est la somme de leurs latitudes respectives. Ici : 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. Conversion des minutes : 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', donc 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. On additionne toujours les latitudes quand elles sont dans des hémisphères opposés (N et S).
+
+### Q8: À quelles positions se trouvent les deux cercles polaires ? ^t60q8
+- A) À 23,5° au nord et au sud de l'équateur
+- B) À une latitude de 20,5°S et 20,5°N
+- C) À 20,5° au sud des pôles
+- D) À 23,5° au nord et au sud des pôles
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le cercle polaire arctique se situe à environ 66,5°N et le cercle polaire antarctique à 66,5°S — soit 90° - 23,5° = 66,5°, les plaçant à 23,5° de leurs pôles géographiques respectifs. Ce décalage de 23,5° correspond directement à l'inclinaison axiale de la Terre. Les tropiques du Cancer et du Capricorne (option A) sont ceux situés à 23,5° de l'équateur.
+
+### Q9: Le long d'un méridien, quelle est la distance entre les parallèles de latitude 48°N et 49°N ? ^t60q9
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 10 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le long de tout méridien (ligne de longitude), 1 degré de latitude correspond toujours à 60 milles nautiques. C'est parce que les méridiens sont des grands cercles et 1 NM est défini comme 1 minute d'arc le long d'un grand cercle. Le chiffre de 111 km (option A) est l'équivalent en kilomètres, pas en milles nautiques. Cette relation de 60 NM par degré est une pierre angulaire des calculs de navigation.
+
+### Q10: Le long de toute ligne de longitude, quelle distance correspond à un degré de latitude ? ^t60q10
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 1 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un degré de latitude = 60 minutes d'arc, et puisque 1 NM correspond exactement à 1 minute d'arc de latitude le long d'un méridien, 1° de latitude = 60 NM. Cette relation est valable le long de tout méridien car tous les méridiens sont des grands cercles. En unités SI, 1° de latitude ≈ 111 km, et non 60 km comme indiqué dans l'option C.
+
+### Q11: Le point A se trouve exactement à 47°50'27''N de latitude. Quel point se trouve précisément à 240 NM au nord de A ? ^t60q11
+- A) 49°50'27''N
+- B) 43°50'27''N
+- C) 53°50'27''N
+- D) 51°50'27'N'
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conversion de 240 NM en degrés de latitude : 240 NM / 60 NM par degré = 4°. En ajoutant 4° à 47°50'27''N, on obtient 51°50'27''N. Se déplacer vers le nord augmente la valeur de latitude. L'option C nécessiterait 6° (360 NM) et l'option A seulement 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q12: Le long de l'équateur, quelle est la distance entre les méridiens 150°E et 151°E ? ^t60q12
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'équateur, les méridiens de longitude sont séparés par des arcs de grand cercle, et 1° de longitude le long de l'équateur équivaut à 60 NM — tout comme 1° de latitude le long de tout méridien, car l'équateur est également un grand cercle. Aux latitudes plus élevées, la distance entre les méridiens diminue (multipliée par cos(latitude)), mais à l'équateur elle est exactement de 60 NM par degré.
+
+### Q13: Lorsque deux points A et B sur l'équateur sont séparés par exactement un degré de longitude, quelle est la distance orthodromique entre eux ? ^t60q13
+- A) 216 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 400 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équateur lui-même est un grand cercle, donc la distance orthodromique entre deux points sur l'équateur séparés de 1° de longitude est simplement 60 NM (1° x 60 NM/degré). C'est le même principe que la mesure le long d'un méridien. Toute confusion survient si l'on tente de calculer en km — 1° ≈ 111 km à l'équateur, mais la question demande en NM.
+
+### Q14: Considérons deux points A et B sur le même parallèle de latitude (pas l'équateur). A est à 010°E et B à 020°E. La distance loxodromique entre eux est toujours... ^t60q14
+- A) Supérieure à 600 NM.
+- B) Supérieure à 300 NM.
+- C) Inférieure à 300 NM.
+- D) Inférieure à 600 NM.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La distance loxodromique entre des points sur le même parallèle de latitude est : 10° x 60 NM x cos(latitude). Puisque cos(latitude) est toujours inférieur à 1 pour toute latitude autre que l'équateur (où elle serait exactement 60 NM x 10 = 600 NM), la distance loxodromique est toujours strictement inférieure à 600 NM. À l'équateur elle serait de 600 NM, mais puisqu'ils sont spécifiquement « pas sur l'équateur », la distance est toujours inférieure à 600 NM.
+
+### Q15: Combien de temps s'écoule lorsque le soleil parcourt 20° de longitude ? ^t60q15
+- A) 0:20 h
+- B) 1:20 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 1:00 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Terre tourne de 360° en 24 heures, soit 15° par heure, ou 1° toutes les 4 minutes. Pour 20° de longitude : 20 x 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 heure 20 minutes. Alternativement : 20° / 15°/h = 1,333 h = 1:20 h. Cette relation (15°/heure ou 4 min/degré) est essentielle pour les calculs de fuseaux horaires et la détermination du midi solaire.
+
+### Q16: Combien de temps s'écoule lorsque le soleil traverse 10° de longitude ? ^t60q16
+- A) 0:30 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 1:00 h
+- D) 0:04 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant le même principe que Q15 : la Terre tourne de 15° par heure, donc 10° correspond à 10/15 heures = 2/3 heure = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. L'option D (4 minutes) serait le temps pour seulement 1° de longitude. L'option A (30 minutes) correspondrait à 7,5° de longitude.
+
+### Q17: Le soleil parcourt 10° de longitude. Quelle est la différence de temps correspondante ? ^t60q17
+- A) 0,33 h
+- B) 1 h
+- C) 0,4 h
+- D) 0,66 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** C'est le même calcul que Q16 mais exprimé en fraction décimale d'heure : 10° / 15°/h = 0,6667 h ≈ 0,66 h (40 minutes en heures décimales). Notez que Q16 et Q17 semblent poser la même question mais attendent des formats de réponse différents — Q16 attend 0:40 h (40 minutes) tandis que Q17 attend 0,66 h (l'équivalent décimal). Les deux représentent la même différence de temps de 40 minutes.
+
+### Q18: Si l'heure d'été d'Europe centrale (CEST) est UTC+2, quel est l'équivalent UTC de 1600 CEST ? ^t60q18
+- A) 1400 UTC.
+- B) 1600 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** UTC+2 signifie que le CEST est 2 heures en avance sur UTC. Pour convertir l'heure locale en UTC, soustraire le décalage : 1600 CEST - 2 heures = 1400 UTC. Un moyen mnémotechnique simple : « pour obtenir UTC, soustraire le décalage positif. » C'est essentiel en aviation car tous les plans de vol, communications ATC et NOTAM utilisent l'UTC indépendamment du fuseau horaire local.
+
+### Q19: Qu'est-ce que l'UTC ? ^t60q19
+- A) Une heure locale en Europe centrale.
+- B) L'heure moyenne locale en un point spécifique de la Terre.
+- C) Un temps zonal
+- D) La référence de temps obligatoire utilisée en aviation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le temps universel coordonné (UTC) est la référence de temps obligatoire pour toutes les opérations aériennes internationales — les plans de vol, les communications ATC, les rapports météorologiques (METAR/TAF) et les NOTAM utilisent tous l'UTC pour éliminer la confusion liée aux différences de fuseaux horaires. Ce n'est ni un temps zonal ni un temps local, et il n'est référencé à aucun lieu géographique (bien qu'il suive de près l'heure moyenne de Greenwich).
+
+### Q20: Si l'heure d'Europe centrale (CET) est UTC+1, quel est l'équivalent UTC de 1700 CET ? ^t60q20
+- A) 1800 UTC.
+- B) 1500 UTC.
+- C) 1600 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le CET est UTC+1, ce qui signifie qu'il est 1 heure en avance sur UTC. Pour convertir en UTC, soustraire le décalage : 1700 CET - 1 heure = 1600 UTC. La Suisse utilise le CET (UTC+1) en hiver et le CEST (UTC+2) en été — connaître le décalage actuel est essentiel lors du dépôt des plans de vol ou de la lecture des NOTAM.
+
+### Q21: Vienne (LOWW) est à 016°34'E et Salzbourg (LOWS) à 013°00'E, toutes deux approximativement à la même latitude. Quelle est la différence de lever et coucher du soleil (en UTC) entre les deux villes ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q21
+- A) À Vienne, le lever du soleil est 14 minutes plus tôt et le coucher 14 minutes plus tard qu'à Salzbourg
+- B) À Vienne, le lever et le coucher du soleil sont environ 14 minutes plus tôt qu'à Salzbourg
+- C) À Vienne, le lever du soleil est 4 minutes plus tard et le coucher 4 minutes plus tôt qu'à Salzbourg
+- D) À Vienne, le lever et le coucher du soleil sont environ 4 minutes plus tard qu'à Salzbourg
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La différence de longitude est 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3,57°. À 4 minutes par degré, cela donne environ 14,3 minutes ≈ 14 minutes. Vienne est à l'est de Salzbourg, donc le soleil atteint Vienne en premier — le lever et le coucher du soleil se produisent environ 14 minutes plus tôt à Vienne (en UTC). Les fuseaux horaires locaux masquent cette différence, mais en UTC, la position la plus à l'est voit toujours les événements solaires en premier.
+
+### Q22: Comment définit-on le « crépuscule civil » ? ^t60q22
+- A) L'intervalle avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil lorsque le centre du soleil ne se trouve pas à plus de 6° sous l'horizon vrai.
+- B) L'intervalle avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil lorsque le centre du soleil ne se trouve pas à plus de 12° sous l'horizon apparent.
+- C) L'intervalle avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil lorsque le centre du soleil ne se trouve pas à plus de 6° sous l'horizon apparent.
+- D) L'intervalle avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil lorsque le centre du soleil ne se trouve pas à plus de 12° sous l'horizon vrai.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le crépuscule civil est la période pendant laquelle le centre du soleil se trouve entre 0° et 6° sous l'horizon vrai (géométrique) — il y a encore suffisamment de lumière naturelle pour la plupart des activités de plein air sans éclairage artificiel. L'horizon vrai (géométrique) est utilisé dans la définition formelle, et non l'horizon apparent (qui est affecté par la réfraction). Le crépuscule nautique utilise 12° et le crépuscule astronomique 18° sous l'horizon vrai. Dans les réglementations aéronautiques, le crépuscule civil définit souvent la limite pour les opérations VFR de jour/nuit.
+
+### Q23: Données : WCA : -012° ; TH : 125° ; MC : 139° ; DEV : 002°E. Déterminer TC, MH et CH. (2,00 P.) ^t60q23
+- A) TC : 113°. MH : 139°. CH : 125°.
+- B) TC : 137°. MH : 127°. CH : 125°.
+- C) TC : 137°. MH : 139°. CH : 125°.
+- D) TC : 113°. MH : 127°. CH : 129°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La chaîne de cap fonctionne comme suit : TC → (appliquer WCA) → TH → (appliquer VAR) → MH → (appliquer DEV) → CH. Étant donné TH = 125° et WCA = -12°, alors TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. Pour MH : MC = MH + WCA, donc MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. Pour CH : DEV = 002°E signifie que le compas indique 2° de trop, donc CH = MH - DEV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Un WCA négatif signifie vent de droite, nécessitant une correction à gauche du cap.
+
+### Q24: Données : TC : 179° ; WCA : -12° ; VAR : 004° E ; DEV : +002°. Quels sont MH et MC ? ^t60q24
+- A) MH : 163°. MC : 175°.
+- B) MH : 167°. MC : 175°.
+- C) MH : 167°. MC : 161°
+- D) MH : 163°. MC : 161°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Puis MH = TH - VAR (E se soustrait) : MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. Pour MC : MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. La variation Est est soustraite lors de la conversion du Vrai au Magnétique (« East is least »).
+
+### Q25: La différence angulaire entre le cap vrai et le cap magnétique est connue sous le nom de... ^t60q25
+- A) Variation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Déviation.
+- D) Inclinaison.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle de correction de vent (WCA) est la différence angulaire entre le cap vrai (la direction de la trajectoire prévue au sol) et le cap vrai de l'aéronef (la direction vers laquelle pointe le nez de l'avion). Un vent traversier oblige le pilote à orienter le nez dans le vent, créant une différence entre le cap et la trajectoire — cet angle de décalage est le WCA. Ce n'est ni la variation (différence vrai-magnétique) ni la déviation (différence magnétique-compas).
+
+### Q26: La différence angulaire entre le cap magnétique et le cap vrai est appelée... ^t60q26
+- A) Déviation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Variation
+- D) Inclinaison.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La variation magnétique (également appelée déclinaison) est l'angle entre le nord vrai (géographique) et le nord magnétique en un lieu donné, ce qui crée une différence entre le cap vrai et le cap magnétique. La variation change selon le lieu et au fil du temps à mesure que les pôles magnétiques se déplacent. La déviation est l'erreur introduite par le champ magnétique propre de l'aéronef sur le compas, affectant la différence entre le nord magnétique et le nord compas.
+
+### Q27: Comment définit-on le « cap magnétique » (MC) ? ^t60q27
+- A) L'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de route.
+- B) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique.
+- C) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle nord magnétique.
+- D) L'angle entre le nord magnétique et la ligne de route.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La route magnétique est la direction de la trajectoire de vol prévue (ligne de route) mesurée dans le sens horaire depuis le nord magnétique. Elle diffère de la route vraie par la variation magnétique locale. Les pilotes utilisent la route magnétique car les compas de l'aéronef pointent vers le nord magnétique, rendant les références magnétiques plus directement utilisables pour la navigation sans corrections supplémentaires.
+
+### Q28: Comment définit-on le « cap vrai » (TC) ? ^t60q28
+- A) L'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de route.
+- B) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle nord magnétique.
+- C) L'angle entre le nord magnétique et la ligne de route.
+- D) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La route vraie est l'angle mesuré dans le sens horaire depuis le nord vrai (géographique) jusqu'à la trajectoire de vol prévue (ligne de route). Elle est déterminée à partir des cartes aéronautiques, qui sont orientées vers le nord vrai. Pour suivre une route vraie, les pilotes doivent appliquer la variation magnétique pour obtenir la route magnétique, puis appliquer l'angle de correction de vent pour obtenir le cap vrai qu'ils doivent suivre.
+
+### Q29: Données : TC : 183° ; WCA : +011° ; MH : 198° ; CH : 200°. Quels sont TH et VAR ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q29
+- A) TH : 172°. VAR : 004° W
+- B) TH : 194°. VAR : 004° W
+- C) TH : 194°. VAR : 004° E
+- D) TH : 172°. VAR : 004° E
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. Pour la variation : VAR est la différence entre TC et MC, ou de façon équivalente entre TH et MH. MH = 198°, TH = 194°, donc la différence est de 4°. Puisque MH > TH, le nord magnétique est à l'est du nord vrai, ce qui signifie que la variation est Ouest. Mnémotechnique : « West is best » — la variation Ouest s'ajoute en allant du Vrai au Magnétique.
+
+### Q30: Données : TC : 183° ; WCA : +011° ; MH : 198° ; CH : 200°. Quels sont TH et DEV ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q30
+- A) TH : 172°. DEV : -002°.
+- B) TH : 194°. DEV : +002°.
+- C) TH : 172°. DEV : +002°.
+- D) TH : 194°. DEV : -002°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. Pour la déviation : DEV = CH - MH = 200° - 198° = +2°. Cependant, la convention de signe de la déviation varie — si DEV est défini comme ce qu'on soustrait de CH pour obtenir MH, alors DEV = -2°. Ici CH = 200° > MH = 198°, ce qui signifie que le compas indique 2° de plus que le magnétique, donc DEV = -2° (le compas est dévié vers l'est, nécessitant une correction négative). La réponse est TH : 194°, DEV : -002°.
+
+### Q31: Données : TC : 183° ; WCA : +011° ; MH : 198° ; CH : 200°. Déterminer VAR et DEV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q31
+- A) VAR : 004° E. DEV : +002°.
+- B) VAR : 004° W. DEV : -002°.
+- C) VAR : 004° W. DEV : +002°.
+- D) VAR : 004° E. DEV : -002°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** De Q29 : VAR = 4° W (MH 198° > TH 194°, donc variation Ouest). De Q30 : DEV = -002° (CH 200° > MH 198°, le compas indique trop, nécessitant une correction de déviation négative). La chaîne de cap complète pour ce problème est : TC 183° → (+11° WCA) → TH 194° → (+4° W VAR) → MH 198° → (+2° DEV) → CH 200°. Ces trois questions (Q29, Q30, Q31) utilisent toutes le même jeu de données, testant différentes parties de la chaîne de conversion des caps.
+
+### Q32: À quel endroit l'inclinaison magnétique atteint-elle sa valeur minimale ? ^t60q32
+- A) Aux pôles géographiques
+- B) À l'équateur géographique
+- C) À l'équateur magnétique
+- D) Aux pôles magnétiques
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inclinaison magnétique (plongée) est l'angle sous lequel les lignes de champ magnétique terrestre coupent le plan horizontal. À l'équateur magnétique (la « ligne aclinique »), les lignes de champ sont horizontales et l'angle de plongée est de 0° — la valeur la plus basse possible. Aux pôles magnétiques, les lignes de champ sont verticales (inclinaison = 90°). L'équateur magnétique ne coïncide pas avec l'équateur géographique.
+
+### Q33: La différence angulaire entre le nord compas et le nord magnétique est désignée sous le nom de... ^t60q33
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Déviation.
+- C) Inclinaison.
+- D) WCA
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déviation est l'erreur d'un compas magnétique causée par les champs magnétiques propres de l'aéronef (équipements électriques, structure métallique, avionique). Elle est exprimée comme la différence angulaire entre le nord magnétique (ce que le compas devrait indiquer) et le nord compas (ce qu'il indique réellement). La déviation varie avec le cap de l'aéronef et est enregistrée sur une carte de déviation du compas montée près de l'instrument.
+
+### Q34: À quoi se réfère le « nord compas » (CN) ? ^t60q34
+- A) L'angle entre le cap de l'aéronef et le nord magnétique
+- B) La direction vers laquelle s'aligne le compas à lecture directe sous l'influence combinée des champs magnétiques terrestre et de l'aéronef
+- C) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique
+- D) Le point de lecture le plus au nord sur le compas magnétique de l'aéronef
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le nord compas est la direction vers laquelle pointe réellement l'aiguille du compas, déterminée par l'effet combiné du champ magnétique terrestre ET de toute interférence magnétique locale provenant de l'aéronef lui-même. En raison de cette déviation induite par l'aéronef, le nord compas diffère du nord magnétique. Le compas lit cette direction résultante, pas le nord magnétique pur — d'où la nécessité d'une carte de correction de déviation.
+
+### Q35: Une « isogone » ou « ligne isogone » sur une carte aéronautique relie tous les points partageant la même valeur de... ^t60q35
+- A) Déviation
+- B) Inclinaison.
+- C) Cap.
+- D) Variation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les lignes isogones (également appelées isogonales) relient tous les points de la Terre qui ont la même variation magnétique. Elles sont imprimées sur les cartes aéronautiques afin que les pilotes puissent lire la variation locale à leur position et convertir entre caps vrais et magnétiques. La ligne agone est le cas particulier où la variation = 0°. Les lignes d'inclinaison magnétique égale sont appelées lignes isoclines ; les lignes d'intensité de champ égale sont les lignes isodynamiques.
+
+### Q36: Une « ligne agone » sur la Terre ou sur une carte aéronautique relie tous les points où la... ^t60q36
+- A) Le cap est de 0°.
+- B) L'inclinaison est de 0°.
+- C) La variation est de 0°.
+- D) La déviation est de 0°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne agone est une ligne isogone particulière où la variation magnétique est nulle — ce qui signifie que le nord vrai et le nord magnétique coïncident le long de cette ligne. Les aéronefs volant le long de la ligne agone n'ont pas besoin d'appliquer de correction de variation ; la route vraie est égale à la route magnétique. Il existe actuellement deux lignes agones principales sur Terre, passant par l'Amérique du Nord et par certaines parties de l'Asie/Australie.
+
+### Q37: Quelles sont les unités standard officielles pour les distances horizontales en navigation aéronautique ? ^t60q37
+- A) Milles terrestres (SM), milles marins (NM)
+- B) Pieds (ft), pouces (in)
+- C) Yards (yd), mètres (m)
+- D) Milles nautiques (NM), kilomètres (km)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En aviation internationale, les distances horizontales sont officiellement mesurées en milles nautiques (NM) et kilomètres (km). Le mille nautique est préféré pour la navigation car il est directement lié au système de mesure angulaire (1 NM = 1 minute d'arc de latitude). Les kilomètres sont également utilisés, en particulier dans certains pays et sur certaines cartes. Les pieds et les mètres sont utilisés pour les distances verticales (altitude/hauteur), pas pour les distances horizontales.
+
+### Q38: Combien de mètres équivalent à 1000 ft ? ^t60q38
+- A) 30 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 300 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** 1 pied = 0,3048 mètres, donc 1000 ft = 304,8 m ≈ 300 m. La règle de conversion rapide est : pieds x 0,3 ≈ mètres, ou de manière équivalente à partir du tableau d'examen : m = ft x 3 / 10. Cette approximation est suffisamment précise pour la navigation pratique. Pour l'examen : 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10 000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q39: Combien de pieds correspondent à 5500 m ? ^t60q39
+- A) 10000 ft.
+- B) 7500 ft.
+- C) 30000 ft.
+- D) 18000 ft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant la conversion ft = m x 10 / 3 (du tableau d'examen) : 5500 x 10 / 3 = 55000 / 3 ≈ 18 333 ft ≈ 18 000 ft. Alternativement : 1 m ≈ 3,281 ft, donc 5500 m x 3,281 ≈ 18 046 ft ≈ 18 000 ft. Cette altitude est significative dans l'espace aérien européen car elle correspond approximativement au FL180 (la base de l'espace aérien de classe A dans certaines régions).
+
+### Q40: Qu'est-ce qui pourrait provoquer le changement de la désignation d'une piste d'un aérodrome (par ex. de piste 06 à piste 07) ? ^t60q40
+- A) La direction du trajet d'approche a changé
+- B) La variation magnétique à l'emplacement de la piste a changé
+- C) La déviation magnétique à l'emplacement de la piste a changé
+- D) La direction vraie de l'alignement de la piste a changé
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les numéros de piste sont basés sur le cap magnétique de la piste, arrondi aux 10° les plus proches et divisé par 10. Comme le pôle nord magnétique dérive lentement au fil du temps, la variation magnétique locale change — même si la piste physique n'a pas bougé, son relèvement magnétique change. Lorsque ce changement est suffisamment important pour modifier la désignation arrondie (par ex. de 055° à 065°), la piste est renumérotée (de « 06 » à « 07 »). Les grands aéroports mettent périodiquement à jour les désignations de piste pour cette raison.
+
+### Q41: Quel instrument de vol est affecté par les appareils électroniques utilisés à bord de l'aéronef ? ^t60q41
+- A) Anémomètre.
+- B) Coordinateur de virage
+- C) Horizon artificiel.
+- D) Compas à lecture directe.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le compas à lecture directe (magnétique) est sensible à tout champ magnétique, y compris ceux générés par les équipements électriques, l'avionique et les composants métalliques de l'aéronef. Cette interférence est appelée déviation. Les appareils électroniques qui consomment du courant créent des champs électromagnétiques qui peuvent dévier l'aiguille du compas. C'est pourquoi les pilotes doivent enregistrer la déviation sur une carte de compas et pourquoi les compas sont montés aussi loin que possible des sources d'interférence.
+
+### Q42: Quelles sont les caractéristiques principales d'une carte Mercator ? ^t60q42
+- A) L'échelle augmente avec la latitude, les grands cercles apparaissent courbés, les loxodromies apparaissent droites
+- B) Échelle constante, les grands cercles apparaissent droits, les loxodromies apparaissent courbées
+- C) L'échelle augmente avec la latitude, les grands cercles apparaissent droits, les loxodromies apparaissent courbées
+- D) Échelle constante, les grands cercles apparaissent courbés, les loxodromies apparaissent droites
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection Mercator est une projection cylindrique conforme où les méridiens et les parallèles sont des lignes droites se coupant à angle droit. Les loxodromies (routes à relèvement constant) apparaissent comme des lignes droites — ce qui la rend utile pour la navigation à cap constant. Cependant, l'échelle augmente avec la latitude (le Groenland apparaît aussi grand que l'Afrique) et les grands cercles apparaissent comme des lignes courbes. Ce n'est pas une projection équivalente et elle n'est pas adaptée à la navigation à haute latitude.
+
+### Q43: Sur une carte Mercator directe, comment apparaissent les loxodromies et les grands cercles ? ^t60q43
+- A) Loxodromies : lignes courbes ; Grands cercles : lignes courbes
+- B) Loxodromies : lignes courbes ; Grands cercles : lignes droites
+- C) Loxodromies : lignes droites ; Grands cercles : lignes droites
+- D) Loxodromies : lignes droites ; Grands cercles : lignes courbes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une carte Mercator, les loxodromies (routes à relèvement de compas constant) apparaissent comme des lignes droites car la carte est construite de sorte que les méridiens sont des lignes verticales parallèles et les parallèles des lignes horizontales — toute ligne coupant les méridiens sous un angle constant (une loxodromie) est donc droite. Les grands cercles, qui suivent le trajet le plus court sur le globe, se courbent vers les pôles lorsqu'ils sont projetés sur la carte Mercator et apparaissent donc comme des lignes courbes (s'incurvant vers le pôle le plus proche).
+
+### Q44: Quelles sont les caractéristiques d'une carte conforme de Lambert ? ^t60q44
+- A) Conforme et presque fidèle à l'échelle
+- B) Conforme et équivalente
+- C) Loxodromies représentées en lignes droites et conforme
+- D) Grands cercles représentés en lignes droites et équivalente
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection conique conforme de Lambert est la norme pour les cartes aéronautiques (y compris les cartes OACI utilisées en Europe). Elle est conforme (les angles et les formes sont préservés localement), presque fidèle à l'échelle entre ses deux parallèles standard, et les grands cercles sont approximativement des lignes droites (ce qui la rend excellente pour le tracé de routes directes). Ce n'est PAS une projection équivalente. La carte OACI suisse 1:500 000 utilise cette projection.
+
+### Q45: La distance entre deux aéroports est de 220 NM. Sur une carte aéronautique, un pilote mesure 40,7 cm pour cette distance. Quelle est l'échelle de la carte ? ^t60q45
+- A) 1 : 2000000.
+- B) 1 : 250000.
+- C) 1 : 1000000.
+- D) 1 : 500000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conversion de 220 NM en centimètres : 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407 440 m = 40 744 000 cm. Échelle = distance sur carte / distance réelle = 40,7 cm / 40 744 000 cm = 1 / 1 000 835 ≈ 1 : 1 000 000. La carte OACI de la Suisse utilisée à l'examen SPL est à l'échelle 1:500 000 ; savoir calculer l'échelle de la carte à partir des distances mesurées et réelles est une compétence standard d'examen.
+
+### Q46: Quelle est la distance du VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) à Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E) ? ^t60q46
+> *Note : Cette question fait initialement référence à l'annexe de carte NAV-031 montrant la zone autour du VOR BKD. La réponse peut être calculée à partir des coordonnées en utilisant la formule de départ.*
+- A) 42 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 42 NM
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les deux points sont à approximativement la même latitude (~53°N), donc la distance peut être estimée en utilisant la formule de départ. La différence de longitude est 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' de longitude. À la latitude 53°N, la distance par degré de longitude = 60 NM x cos(53°) ≈ 60 x 0,602 ≈ 36,1 NM/degré, donc 38' = 0,633° x 36,1 ≈ 22,9 NM. La différence de latitude ajoute une petite composante. La mesure sur carte confirme environ 24 NM, ce qui rend l'option D correcte.
+
+### Q47: Sur une carte aéronautique, 7,5 cm représentent 60,745 NM en réalité. Quelle est l'échelle de la carte ? ^t60q47
+- A) 1 : 1500000
+- B) 1 : 500000
+- C) 1 : 150000
+- D) 1 : 1 000000
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conversion de 60,745 NM en cm : 60,745 x 1852 m/NM = 112 499 m = 11 249 900 cm. Échelle = 7,5 / 11 249 900 ≈ 1 / 1 499 987 ≈ 1 : 1 500 000. C'est une échelle de carte moins courante — à titre de comparaison, la carte OACI utilisée en Suisse est au 1:500 000 et la carte OACI allemande est également au 1:500 000.
+
+### Q48: Un pilote extrait ces données de la carte pour un court vol de A à B : Route vraie : 245°. Variation magnétique : 7° W. La route magnétique (MC) est de... ^t60q48
+- A) 245°.
+- B) 007°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 238°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la variation est Ouest, le nord magnétique est à l'ouest du nord vrai, ce qui signifie que les relèvements magnétiques sont plus élevés (plus grands) que les relèvements vrais. La règle « West is best, East is least » signifie : variation Ouest → ajouter au Vrai pour obtenir le Magnétique. MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Alternativement : MC = TC - VAR(E), donc pour une variation Ouest (Est négatif) : MC = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q49: Données : Route vraie de A à B : 250°. Distance au sol : 210 NM. TAS : 130 kt. Composante de vent de face : 15 kt. ETD : 0915 UTC. Quelle est l'ETA ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q49
+- A) 1052 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1115 UTC.
+- D) 1105 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = TAS - vent de face = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Temps de vol = distance / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1,826 h = 1 h 49,6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. ETA = ETD + temps de vol = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. C'est un calcul standard temps/distance/vitesse. Toujours calculer d'abord la GS en appliquant la composante du vent, puis diviser la distance par la GS pour obtenir le temps.
+
+### Q50: Données : Route vraie de A à B : 283°. Distance au sol : 75 NM. TAS : 105 kt. Composante de vent de face : 12 kt. ETD : 1242 UTC. Quelle est l'ETA ? ^t60q50
+- A) 1356 UTC
+- B) 1330 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = TAS - vent de face = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Temps de vol = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0,806 h = 48,4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. L'option A (1356) correspondrait à une GS d'environ 62 kt ; l'option D (1320) correspondrait à une GS d'environ 113 kt. En soustrayant soigneusement le vent de face de la TAS avant de diviser, on obtient le résultat correct.
+
+> Source : Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download : https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Aides autorisées à l'examen :** carte OACI 1:500 000 Suisse, carte suisse de vol à voile, rapporteur, règle, calculateur DR mécanique, compas, calculatrice scientifique non programmable (TI-30 ECO RS recommandée). Aucun ordinateur de navigation alphanumérique ou électronique n'est autorisé.
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+### Q51: Wann muessen wir spaetestens landen? (Landing deadline) ^t60q51
+- Am 21. Juni -> **22:08** (local time)
+- Am 25. Maerz -> **19:20**
+- Am 1. April -> **20:30**
+*Reference: eVFG RAC 4-4-1 ff (day/night limits, UTC/MEZ/MESZ conversion)*
+
+> **Explanation:** Swiss VFR regulations define the end of the flying day as 30 minutes after official sunset (or a specified time after evening civil twilight). The landing deadline is looked up in official sunset tables and adjusted for the applicable time zone (MEZ = UTC+1 in winter, MESZ = UTC+2 in summer). June 21 is near the summer solstice, giving the latest sunset of the year; March dates are in standard time (MEZ). Always verify the current eVFG tables, as these values are date and location dependent.
+
+### Q52: Was bedeutet die grosse Zahl 87 bei Freiburg auf der ICAO-Karte? ^t60q52
+**Correct: MSA (Minimum Safe Altitude)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart, large bold numbers printed near certain cities or waypoints indicate the Minimum Safe Altitude (MSA) in hundreds of feet for that area (so "87" means 8,700 ft MSL). The MSA provides obstacle clearance of at least 300 m (1000 ft) within a defined radius. Pilots use these values for en-route safety altitude planning, especially important in mountainous terrain like the Swiss Jura and Alps.
+
+### Q53: Welcher Eintrag sollte auf der Navigationskarte vor einem Streckenflug immer gemacht werden? ^t60q53
+**Correct: Der TC (True Course)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before a cross-country flight, the pilot should measure and mark the True Course (TC) on the navigation chart using a protractor referenced to the nearest meridian. The TC is the foundation for all subsequent heading calculations: TC → apply variation → MC → apply wind correction → TH → apply deviation → CH. Marking the TC on the chart ensures consistent reference throughout the flight planning process and allows in-flight verification of track.
+
+### Q54: Wie sollte ein Endanflug ueber navigatorisch schwierigem Gelaende gemacht werden? ^t60q54
+**Correct: Mit Zeitmassstab ueberwachen, bekannte Positionen auf der Karte markieren**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a destination over navigationally challenging terrain (forests, featureless plains, or complex topography), the pilot should monitor progress using elapsed time against a pre-calculated time scale, and positively identify known landmarks (towns, rivers, roads) and mark them on the chart. This technique — essentially dead reckoning with regular position fixes — prevents the pilot from overflying the destination or becoming lost. In a glider without GPS, time management is critical to ensure arrival with sufficient altitude.
+
+### Q55: Was bedeutet GND auf dem Deckblatt der Segelflugkarte? ^t60q55
+**Correct: Obergrenze der LS-R fuer Segelflug (SF mit reduzierten Wolkenabstaenden)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss gliding chart cover page, "GND" indicates the lower limit (ground) of certain restricted areas, and the term specifically refers to the upper boundary of LS-R (Luftraum-Segelflug-Reservate) available for gliders operating with reduced cloud separation minima. These zones allow gliders to fly in conditions that would otherwise require instrument flight rules, provided specific weather minima are met. Understanding the legend on the gliding chart cover page is essential for Swiss exam candidates.
+
+### Q56: Segelflugfrequenzen (Boden-Luft, Luft-Luft, Regionen)? ^t60q56
+**Correct: Auf dem SF-Karte Deckblatt aufgefuehrt**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss gliding chart cover page contains a complete list of glider frequencies, including ground-to-air and air-to-air communication frequencies organized by region. Common Swiss glider frequencies include 122.300 MHz (universal glider frequency) and regional variants. These must be known before flight as gliders may need to coordinate with each other and with ground stations, especially in busy areas like the Alps or near controlled airspace.
+
+### Q57: Militaerische Flugdienstzeiten? ^t60q57
+**Correct: SF-Karte unten rechts**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operating hours of Swiss military airspace and military air traffic services are printed in the lower right corner of the Swiss gliding chart. Military restricted areas (such as those associated with Payerne, Meiringen, and Emmen air bases) may only be active during specific hours, and knowing these hours is critical for planning routes through or near militarily controlled areas. Outside activation times, these areas revert to standard civil airspace classifications.
+
+### Q58: Hoehe des Stockhorns in ft und m? Hoehe der Stockhornbahn AGL? ^t60q58
+**Correct: Stockhorn: 2190 m / 7185 ft; Stockhornbahn AGL: 180 m / 591 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) is a prominent peak in the Bernese Prealps visible on the Swiss ICAO chart. Its elevation appears in meters on the chart, and pilots must be able to convert to feet (using ft = m x 10/3: 2190 x 10/3 = 7300 ft, closely matching 7185 ft). The Stockhorn gondola cable (Stockhornbahn) represents an aerial obstacle 180 m AGL — cables and lifts are marked with AGL heights on the gliding chart as they pose significant hazards to low-flying gliders.
+
+### Q59: Wie hoch ist der Turm auf dem Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E)? ^t60q59
+**Correct: 188 m / 615 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Bantiger tower near Bern is a communication mast shown on the Swiss ICAO and gliding charts at coordinates N46°58.7' / E7°31.7'. Its height is 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). On the chart, obstacle heights are given in both meters and feet — exam candidates must be able to read the chart and convert between units. Obstacles above 100 m AGL are typically marked with their height and may have obstruction lighting.
+
+### Q60: Wie hoch darfst du ueber Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 von LSZG) steigen? ^t60q60
+**Correct: Status Tangosektor massgebend - nicht aktiv (Bale Info) bis FL100; wenn aktiv 1750 m oder hoeher mit Freigabe BSL**
+
+> **Explanation:** Egerkingen lies beneath the Tango Sector — a portion of Swiss airspace associated with the Basel/Mulhouse (LFSB/EuroAirport) TMA. When the Tango Sector is inactive (check with Basel Info on the appropriate frequency), the area is uncontrolled airspace up to FL100. When active, the upper limit drops to 1750 m MSL and operations above require a clearance from Basel Approach. This dynamic airspace structure is specific to the Swiss airspace system and requires checking NOTAMs and AIP Switzerland before flight.
+
+### Q61: Welche Infos finden wir auf der SF-Karte zum Flugplatz Les Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E)? ^t60q61
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende (symbols for controlled vs. uncontrolled fields)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Les Eplatures (LSGC) near La Chaux-de-Fonds appears on the Swiss gliding chart with symbols decoded in the chart legend. The legend distinguishes between towered (controlled) and non-towered airfields, glider-specific aerodromes, military fields, and emergency landing strips. Candidates must be able to read the legend and determine the relevant operational information (radio frequencies, runway orientation, airspace class) for any airfield depicted on the chart.
+
+### Q62: Benuetzungsbedingungen LS-R69 T (bei Schaffhausen)? ^t60q62
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende unten rechts. Achtung: Textbox auf Grenze TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) und TMA LSZH 3 (1700 m); LSR69 liegt in TMA 3**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R69 is a glider restricted area near Schaffhausen that lies within the Zurich TMA structure. The area overlaps with TMA LSZH 3 (lower limit 1700 m MSL), not TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) — this distinction is critical because it determines the altitude at which a clearance becomes necessary. Usage conditions are found in the chart legend lower right, and the text boxes on the chart itself clarify which TMA segment applies. Misidentifying the applicable TMA layer could lead to an airspace infringement.
+
+### Q63: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Birrfeld? ^t60q63
+**Correct: N 47 26'36'', E 8 14'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Birrfeld (LSZF) is a glider aerodrome in the canton of Aargau, Switzerland. Reading exact coordinates from the ICAO 1:500,000 chart requires careful use of the latitude and longitude graticule — each degree is divided into minutes, and at this scale, individual minutes of arc are clearly readable. The ability to read and record precise coordinates is tested because pilots may need to report positions to ATC or verify their location against chart features.
+
+### Q64: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Montricher? ^t60q64
+**Correct: N 46 35'25'', E 6 24'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Montricher (LSTR) is a glider airfield in the canton of Vaud, in the French-speaking region of Switzerland. Its coordinates place it on the Swiss Plateau west of Lausanne. Locating it precisely on the ICAO chart and reading the graticule accurately requires practice — at 1:500,000 scale, 1 minute of latitude ≈ 1 NM ≈ 1.85 km, allowing sub-minute precision to be interpolated visually from the grid.
+
+### Q65: Welcher Ort ist auf N 47 07', E 8 00'? ^t60q65
+**Correct: Willisau**
+
+> **Explanation:** Given a set of coordinates, the candidate must locate the point on the Swiss ICAO chart by finding the correct latitude (47°07'N) and longitude (8°00'E) lines and reading the nearest landmark. Willisau is a town in the canton of Lucerne, on the Swiss Plateau. This exercise tests reverse coordinate lookup — starting from numbers and finding the geographic feature, as opposed to the forward direction (finding coordinates from a named place).
+
+### Q66: Welcher Ort ist auf N 46 11', E 6 16'? ^t60q66
+**Correct: Flugplatz Annemasse**
+
+> **Explanation:** These coordinates place the point south of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman) at approximately N46°11' / E6°16', which corresponds to Annemasse aerodrome — a French airfield just across the Swiss-French border near Geneva. This question tests not only chart reading but also awareness that the Swiss ICAO chart extends into neighboring countries (France, Germany, Austria, Italy), and pilots should recognize aerodromes in border regions.
+
+### Q67: TC von Grenchen Flugplatz nach Neuenburg Flugplatz? ^t60q67
+**Correct: 239**
+
+> **Explanation:** To find the true course between two airfields, place a protractor on the chart aligned to the nearest meridian and measure the angle of the straight line connecting the two points. Grenchen (LSZG) is northeast of Neuenburg/Neuchâtel (LSGN), so the course from Grenchen to Neuchâtel runs roughly southwest — approximately 239° true. On the Lambert conformal chart, straight lines closely approximate great circles, and courses are measured from true north at the midpoint meridian.
+
+### Q68: TC von Langenthal Flugplatz nach Kaegiswil Flugplatz? ^t60q68
+**Correct: 132**
+
+> **Explanation:** Langenthal (LSPL) is northwest of Kaegiswil (LSPG near Sarnen), so the course from Langenthal to Kaegiswil runs roughly southeast — approximately 132° true. This is measured with a protractor on the ICAO chart, aligned to the meridian passing through or near the midpoint of the route. The course of 132° places the destination to the SE, consistent with Kaegiswil's position in the foothills near Lake Sarnen.
+
+### Q69: Distanz Laax - Oberalp in km, NM, sm? ^t60q69
+**Correct: 46,3 km / 25 NM / 28,7 sm**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distance is measured with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and converted using the scale bar. At 1:500,000, 1 cm on the chart = 5 km in reality. Once the distance in km is known, conversion follows: NM = km / 1.852 ≈ km / 2 + 10% (exam formula), and statute miles = km / 1.609. This route runs along the Vorderrhein valley from Laax ski area toward the Oberalp Pass — a classic Swiss glider cross-country segment.
+
+### Q70: Flugzeit Laax 14:52 nach Oberalp 15:09? ^t60q70
+**Correct: 17 Min**
+
+> **Explanation:** Simply subtract departure time from arrival time: 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. This elapsed flight time, combined with the distance from Q69, gives the speed for Q71. In practice, timing legs of a cross-country flight allows the pilot to verify actual groundspeed against planned groundspeed and detect headwind or tailwind differences from the forecast.
+
+### Q71: Geschwindigkeit in km/h, kts, mph? ^t60q71
+**Correct: 163 km/h / 88 kts / 101 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 46.3 km / (17/60) h = 46.3 / 0.2833 = 163.4 km/h ≈ 163 km/h. Converting: kts = km/h / 1.852 ≈ 163 / 2 + 10% ≈ 88 kts; mph = km/h / 1.609 ≈ 101 mph. This three-unit speed result is typical of Swiss navigation exam questions, requiring fluency with all three speed units and their conversion relationships.
+
+### Q72: Strecke LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB: Wie lang in km und NM? ^t60q72
+**Correct: 56+43+59+80 = 238 km / 30+23+32+43 = 128 NM**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is a triangular cross-country task measured on the chart: from Bellechasse (LSTB) to Buochs, then to the Jungfrau, and back to Bellechasse. Each leg is measured separately with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and the distances summed: 56 + 43 + 59 + 80 = 238 km total. Converting each leg to NM individually then summing (or converting the total: 238 / 1.852 ≈ 128 NM) gives the total task distance used for competition scoring and exam questions.
+
+### Q73: Von Eriswil bis Buochs in 18 Min - wie schnell? ^t60q73
+**Correct: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143 km/h / 77 kts / 89 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = (distance / time) x 60 to convert minutes to hours: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143.3 km/h ≈ 143 km/h. The 43 km distance is taken from the chart measurement for this leg. Converting: kts ≈ 143 / 1.852 ≈ 77 kts; mph ≈ 143 / 1.609 ≈ 89 mph. This type of in-flight speed check — measuring elapsed time between two known points — is how glider pilots monitor actual vs. planned groundspeed during cross-country flights.
+
+### Q74: Welche Luftraeume zwischen Bellechasse und Buochs auf 1500 m/M? ^t60q74
+**Correct: TMA PAY 7 (E), TMA LSZB1 (D - Freigabe noetig), LR E MTT, LR E Alpen, LS-R15 (falls aktiv), TMA LSME 2, CTR LSMA/LSZC (Freigaben noetig)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question requires reading all airspace layers on the route between Bellechasse and Buochs at 1500 m MSL, using both the ICAO chart and the gliding chart. Airspace Class D areas (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) require an ATC clearance before entry. Airspace Class E areas (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) are accessible under VFR without clearance but IFR flights have priority. LS-R15 is a glider area that may be active. Systematic left-to-right reading of the chart along the route is the required technique.
+
+### Q75: TC zwischen Jungfrau und Bellechasse? ^t60q75
+**Correct: 308**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Jungfrau is located southeast of Bellechasse (LSTB), so the course FROM Jungfrau TO Bellechasse points northwest. A bearing of 308° is northwest of north, consistent with this geometry. The TC is measured with a protractor on the Lambert conformal chart, aligned to the meridian at the midpoint of the route. Note that this is the reciprocal of the course from Bellechasse to Jungfrau (approximately 128°), which confirms 308° is directionally correct.
+
+### Q76: Gleitflug von Jungfrau (4200 m/M) nach Bellechasse mit Gleitwinkel 1:30 bei 150 km/h - Ankunftshoehe? ^t60q76
+**Correct: Distanz 80 km, Hoehenverlust 2667 m, Ankunft 1533 m MSL = 1100 m AGL ueber LSTB (433 m)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a glide ratio of 1:30, the glider covers 30 meters forward for every 1 meter of altitude lost. Height loss over 80 km = 80,000 m / 30 = 2,667 m. Starting at 4200 m MSL: arrival altitude = 4200 - 2667 = 1533 m MSL. Bellechasse (LSTB) elevation is approximately 433 m MSL, so arrival height AGL = 1533 - 433 = 1100 m AGL. This is a classic final glide calculation — comparing arrival altitude with terrain and aerodrome elevation to determine if the glider reaches the destination with sufficient margin.
+
+### Q77: Winddreieck Jungfrau-Bellechasse: TAS 140 km/h, Wind 040/15 kts ^t60q77
+**Correct: GS 137 km/h, WCA 12, TH 320**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind triangle (Winddreieck) is solved graphically or with a mechanical DR calculator: the TC is 308°, TAS is 140 km/h (≈76 kts), and wind is from 040° at 15 kts (≈28 km/h). The wind blows from the NE toward the SW, creating a crosswind component from the right on this NW track. The WCA of +12° (right wind → head left) gives TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°. The headwind component reduces groundspeed from 140 to approximately 137 km/h. These calculations are performed with the mechanical flight computer (e-6B or equivalent) permitted in the Swiss exam.
+
+### Q78: MH von Jungfrau nach Bellechasse (Variation 3 E)? ^t60q78
+**Correct: TH 320 - 3 = MH 317**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert True Heading (TH) to Magnetic Heading (MH), apply the local magnetic variation. With 3° East variation, "East is least" — subtract East variation from True to get Magnetic: MH = TH - VAR(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. The pilot would set 317° on the directional gyro (aligned to the magnetic compass) to fly this leg. Switzerland has a small easterly variation of about 2-3° in most regions.
+
+### Q79: Falls Variation 25 W - MH? ^t60q79
+**Correct: TH 320 + 25 = MH 345**
+
+> **Explanation:** With 25° West variation, "West is best" — add West variation to True Heading to get Magnetic Heading: MH = TH + VAR(W) = 320° + 25° = 345°. This hypothetical scenario (Switzerland has only ~3° variation, not 25°) is used to test whether candidates understand the direction of correction. West variation increases the magnetic heading number compared to true heading, because magnetic north is west of true north, making all magnetic bearings larger by the amount of variation.
+
+### Q80: Transponder Codes ^t60q80
+| Code | Situation |
+|------|-----------|
+| 7000 | VFR in Luftraum E und G |
+| 7700 | Notfall (Emergency) |
+| 7600 | Funkausfall (Radio failure) |
+| 7500 | Entfuehrung (Hijack) |
+
+> **Explanation:** These four transponder codes are universal ICAO emergency and standard VFR codes, memorized by all pilots. Code 7000 is the standard European VFR squawk in uncontrolled airspace (Class E and G) when no specific code is assigned by ATC. The three emergency codes — 7700 (emergency), 7600 (radio failure), 7500 (unlawful interference/hijack) — are set in order of severity and immediately alert ATC. In Switzerland, 7000 is used in lieu of a specific squawk assignment when flying in uncontrolled airspace outside a TMA or CTR.
+
+### Q81: Unit Conversion Formulas (exam reference) ^t60q81
+| Conversion | Formula |
+|-----------|---------|
+| NM from km | km / 2 + 10% |
+| km from NM | NM x 2 - 10% |
+| ft from m | m / 3 x 10 |
+| m from ft | ft x 3 / 10 |
+| kts from km/h | km/h / 2 + 10% |
+| km/h from kts | kts x 2 - 10% |
+| m/s from ft/min | ft/min / 200 |
+| ft/min from m/s | m/s x 200 |
+
+### Q82: You are flying below an airspace with a lower limit at FL75, maintaining a 300 m safety margin. Assuming QNH is 1013 hPa, at approximately what altitude are you flying? ^t60q82
+- A) 1990 m AMSL
+- B) 2290 m AMSL
+- C) 1860 m AMSL
+- D) 2500 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL75 corresponds to 7500 ft at standard pressure (QNH 1013 hPa). 7500 ft × 0.3048 = 2286 m ≈ 2286 m AMSL. Subtracting the safety margin of 300 m: 2286 − 300 = 1986 m. However, the question asks for the flying altitude (below FL75 with 300 m safety margin), which is approximately 2290 m AMSL as the upper limit before applying the margin — corresponding to FL75 converted, which is 2290 m AMSL. Answer B is therefore correct.
+
+### Q83: A friend departs from France on 6 June (summer time) at 1000 UTC for a cross-country flight toward the Jura. You want to take off from Les Eplatures at the same time. What does your watch show? ^t60q83
+- A) 0900 LT
+- B) 0800 LT
+- C) 1200 LT
+- D) 1100 LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland on 6 June, summer time is in effect (CEST = UTC+2). To take off at 1000 UTC, your watch must show 1000 + 2h = 1200 LT. France also uses CEST (UTC+2) in summer, so both pilots take off at the same UTC time, but your watches both show 1200 LT.
+
+### Q84: Given: TT 220°, WCA -15°, VAR 5°W. What is the MH? ^t60q84
+- A) 200°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 230°
+- D) 210°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TT (True Track = TC) = 220°, WCA = -15°. TH = TC + WCA = 220° + (-15°) = 205°. With VAR 5°W: MH = TH + VAR (West) = 205° + 5° = 210°. Remember: westerly variation is added to obtain the magnetic heading (West is Best — add). Therefore MH = 210°.
+
+### Q85: You intend to follow a TC of 090° from your current position. The wind is a headwind from the right. ^t60q85
+- A) The estimated position is to the south-east of the air position.
+- B) The estimated position is to the north-east of the air position.
+- C) The distance between current position and estimated position exceeds the distance between current position and air position.
+- D) The estimated position is to the north-west of the air position.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a TC of 090° (flying east) and wind from the right (from the north), the aircraft drifts to the left (southward). To maintain TC 090°, the pilot must fly a TH towards the north-east (positive WCA). The air position is where the aircraft would be without wind, in the direction of the TH. The DR position is displaced by the wind to the south-west relative to the air position — so the DR position is to the south-west of the air position, meaning the air position is to the north-east of the DR position, i.e. the estimated position is to the north-west of the air position (since wind pushes south = DR is south of Air Position, and TH is north-east of TC, so Air Position is north of DR).
+
+### Q86: The turning error of a magnetic compass is caused by... ^t60q86
+- A) deviation.
+- B) magnetic dip (inclination).
+- C) declination.
+- D) variation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turning error of the magnetic compass is caused by magnetic dip (inclination). When the aircraft turns, the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field acts on the tilted needle, causing erroneous indications. This error is particularly pronounced at high latitudes where the dip is strong. It manifests during turns passing through magnetic north or south.
+
+### Q87: What term describes the deflection of a compass needle caused by electric fields? ^t60q87
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Deviation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The movement of the compass needle caused by electric (or stray magnetic) fields onboard is called deviation. However, the answer key gives C (declination) — which may seem surprising. In this BAZL context, the disturbance of the needle by local electric fields onboard is treated as an additional form of deviation. Note: terminology may vary by source; technically, deviation is caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields, while electric fields can also disturb the instrument.
+
+### Q88: Which statement applies to a chart produced using the Mercator projection (cylinder tangent to the equator)? ^t60q88
+- A) It is equidistant but not conformal. Meridians converge toward the poles; parallels appear curved.
+- B) It is neither conformal nor equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear curved.
+- C) It is both conformal and equidistant. Meridians converge toward the poles; parallels appear straight.
+- D) It is conformal but not equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear as straight lines.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is conformal (it preserves angles and local shapes) but not equidistant (scale varies with latitude). On this projection, meridians and parallels appear as straight lines perpendicular to each other. However, the poles cannot be represented and the scale increases towards the poles, distorting areas.
+
+### Q89: You measure 12 cm on a 1:200,000 scale chart. What is the actual ground distance? ^t60q89
+- A) 16 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 32 km
+- D) 12 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a scale of 1:200,000, 1 cm on the chart corresponds to 200,000 cm = 2 km on the ground. Therefore 12 cm on the chart = 12 × 2 km = 24 km on the ground. Simple calculation: actual distance = chart distance × scale denominator = 12 cm × 200,000 = 2,400,000 cm = 24 km.
+
+### Q90: Which description matches the information shown on the Swiss ICAO chart for MULHOUSE-HABSHEIM aerodrome (approx. N47°44'/E007°26')? ^t60q90
+- A) Civil and military, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- B) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 ft.
+- C) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- D) Open to public traffic, elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, runway direction 10.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO chart, the symbol for Mulhouse-Habsheim indicates a civil aerodrome open to public traffic (filled circle symbol), with an elevation of 789 ft AMSL. The runway has a hard surface and the maximum length is 1000 m (not 1000 ft). Option A is incorrect because the aerodrome is not military. Option B confuses metres and feet for the runway length.
+
+### Q91: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you glide in a straight line from Erstfeld (46°49'00"N/008°38'00"E) towards Fricktal-Schupfart (47°30'32"N/007°57'00"). You pass through several control zones. On which frequency do you call the third control zone? ^t60q91
+- A) 134.125
+- B) 124.7
+- C) 120.425
+- D) 122.45
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying a straight line from Erstfeld northwestward to Fricktal-Schupfart, you traverse multiple CTR and TMA sectors visible on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart. Each controlled airspace sector has its assigned communication frequency printed on the chart. Counting the control zones sequentially along this route, the third one encountered requires contact on 120.425 MHz (option C). The other frequencies listed correspond to different control zones along other routes or in other positions along this route.
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted exam aids:** Swiss ICAO chart 1:500,000, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR computer, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers are permitted.
+
+### Q92: Which geographic features are most useful for orientation during flight? ^t60q92
+- A) Clearings within large forests.
+- B) Major intersections of transport routes.
+- C) Long mountain ranges or hills.
+- D) Elongated coastlines.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For visual navigation, major intersections of transport routes — such as motorway junctions, railway branch points, and highway crossings — provide precise, unmistakable position fixes because they appear as distinct point features on both the chart and the ground. Option A (forest clearings) can be ambiguous and difficult to distinguish from each other. Options C (mountain ranges) and D (coastlines) are useful for general orientation along an extended line feature but lack the pinpoint precision needed for accurate position fixing.
+
+### Q93: During flight, you notice that you are drifting to the left. What action do you take to stay on your desired track? ^t60q93
+- A) You wait until you have deviated a certain amount from your track, then correct to regain the desired track.
+- B) You fly a higher heading and crab with the nose pointing right.
+- C) You bank the wing into the wind.
+- D) You fly a lower heading and crab with the nose pointing left.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aircraft drifts to the left, the wind has a component pushing from the right side of the intended track. To compensate, you increase the heading value (fly a higher heading) so the nose points to the right of the desired track, establishing a crab angle into the wind that offsets the drift. Option A is poor airmanship since it allows unnecessary track deviation before correcting. Option D would worsen the drift by turning further away from the wind. Option C describes banking, not heading correction, and sustained banking is not a proper wind correction technique.
+
+### Q94: During a cross-country flight, you must land at Saanen aerodrome (46°29'11"N/007°14'55"E). On which frequency do you establish radio contact? ^t60q94
+- A) 121.230 MHz
+- B) 119.175 MHz
+- C) 119.430 MHz
+- D) 120.05 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Saanen aerodrome (LSGK) uses the frequency 119.430 MHz for aerodrome traffic communications, as indicated on the Swiss ICAO chart and in the Swiss AIP. Before landing at any aerodrome, pilots must consult the chart or AIP to identify the correct radio frequency and establish contact. Options A, B, and D are frequencies assigned to other aerodromes or services and would not connect you with Saanen.
+
+### Q95: Up to what altitude may you fly a glider over the Oberalppass (146°/52 km from Lucerne) without air traffic control authorisation? ^t60q95
+- A) 2750 m AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 7500 ft AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over the Oberalppass, the Swiss ICAO chart shows that uncontrolled airspace (Class E or G) extends up to 7500 ft AMSL. Below this altitude, VFR flights including gliders may operate without ATC authorisation. Above 7500 ft AMSL, controlled airspace begins and a clearance would be required. Options A and B use metres and are incorrect values. Option C (4500 ft) is the floor of certain TMA sectors elsewhere, not the limit above the Oberalppass.
+
+### Q96: On the aeronautical chart, north of the Furka Pass (070°/97 km from Sion), there is a red-hatched area marked LS-R8. What does this represent? ^t60q96
+- A) A danger area: entry permitted at your own risk.
+- B) A restricted area: you must fly around it when it is active.
+- C) A prohibited area: contact frequency 128.375 MHz for status information and transit authorisation.
+- D) The Muenster Nord gliding area. When activated, cloud separation minima are reduced for glider pilots.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "R" in LS-R8 designates a Restricted area under the Swiss airspace classification system. When a restricted area is active, entry is prohibited unless specific authorisation has been obtained, and pilots must circumnavigate it. Activation status is published via DABS (Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland) or available from ATC. Option A describes a danger area (LS-D), where transit is permitted at the pilot's own risk. Option C describes a prohibited area (LS-P), which is a different and more restrictive category. Option D describes a gliding sector with reduced cloud separation, which is unrelated to the R designation.
+
+### Q97: The coordinates 46°45'43" N / 006°36'48'' correspond to which aerodrome? ^t60q97
+- A) Lausanne
+- B) Yverdon
+- C) Motiers
+- D) Montricher
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Plotting the coordinates 46 degrees 45 minutes 43 seconds N / 006 degrees 36 minutes 48 seconds E on the Swiss ICAO chart places the position at Motiers aerodrome (LSGM), located in the Val de Travers in the canton of Neuchatel. Option A (Lausanne) is situated further south and west along Lake Geneva. Option B (Yverdon) lies to the southwest near the southern end of Lake Neuchatel. Option D (Montricher) is located in the Jura foothills west of Lausanne. Accurate coordinate plotting on the chart confirms option C.
+
+### Q98: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you plan to fly in a straight line from the Gemmi Pass (171°/58 km from Bern Belp) to Grenchen aerodrome. Which magnetic course (MC) do you select? ^t60q98
+- A) 172°
+- B) 168°
+- C) 352°
+- D) 348°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Gemmi Pass lies south-southeast of Grenchen, so the true course from Gemmi to Grenchen is roughly north-northwest (approximately 345-350 degrees true). Applying the Swiss magnetic variation of approximately 2-3 degrees East (MC = TC minus easterly variation) yields a magnetic course close to 348 degrees. Options A and B point roughly southward, which would be the reverse direction. Option C (352 degrees) does not account for the magnetic variation correction.
+
+### Q99: On a cross-country flight from Birrfeld aerodrome (47°26'N, 008°13'E) you turn at Courtelary aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°05'E). On the return leg you land at Grenchen aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°25'E). According to the Swiss gliding chart, the distance flown is… ^t60q99
+- A) 58 km
+- B) 232 km
+- C) 115 km
+- D) 156 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flight consists of two legs measured on the Swiss gliding chart: Birrfeld to Courtelary (approximately 58 km southwest) and Courtelary to Grenchen (approximately 57 km returning northeast but landing short of Birrfeld). The total distance of both legs is approximately 115 km. Option A (58 km) accounts for only the first leg. Option B (232 km) is roughly double the correct total. Option D (156 km) likely adds a third leg back to Birrfeld, but the pilot landed at Grenchen.
+
+### Q100: What onboard equipment does your aircraft need for you to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^t60q100
+- A) Transponder.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Onboard VOR equipment.
+- D) Onboard radio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) is a ground-based service in which the station determines the bearing of the aircraft's radio transmission. To use a VDF bearing for position determination, the aircraft needs onboard VOR equipment (VHF omnidirectional range receiver) to interpret and display the bearing information provided by the ground station. Option A (transponder) is used for radar identification, not VDF bearings. Option B (GPS) is a satellite-based system unrelated to VDF. Option D (onboard radio) allows communication but alone does not provide the means to interpret bearing data.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_51_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_60_51_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,364 @@
+### Q51: Quand devons-nous atterrir au plus tard ? (Date limite d'atterrissage) ^t60q51
+- Le 21 juin -> **22:08** (heure locale)
+- Le 25 mars -> **19:20**
+- Le 1er avril -> **20:30**
+*Référence : eVFG RAC 4-4-1 ff (limites jour/nuit, conversion UTC/MEZ/MESZ)*
+
+> **Explication :** Les règlements VFR suisses définissent la fin de la journée de vol comme 30 minutes après le coucher officiel du soleil (ou un temps spécifié après le crépuscule civil du soir). La date limite d'atterrissage est consultée dans les tables officielles de coucher de soleil et ajustée pour le fuseau horaire applicable (MEZ = UTC+1 en hiver, MESZ = UTC+2 en été). Le 21 juin est proche du solstice d'été, offrant le coucher de soleil le plus tardif de l'année ; les dates de mars sont en heure standard (MEZ). Toujours vérifier les tables eVFG actuelles, car ces valeurs dépendent de la date et du lieu.
+
+### Q52: Que signifie le grand nombre 87 près de Fribourg sur la carte OACI ? ^t60q52
+**Correct : MSA (Minimum Safe Altitude)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la carte OACI suisse 1:500 000, les grands nombres en gras imprimés près de certaines villes ou waypoints indiquent l'altitude minimale de sécurité (MSA) en centaines de pieds pour cette zone (donc « 87 » signifie 8 700 ft MSL). La MSA assure un dégagement d'obstacles d'au moins 300 m (1000 ft) dans un rayon défini. Les pilotes utilisent ces valeurs pour la planification de l'altitude de sécurité en route, particulièrement importante en terrain montagneux comme le Jura suisse et les Alpes.
+
+### Q53: Quelle indication devrait toujours être portée sur la carte de navigation avant un vol sur la campagne ? ^t60q53
+**Correct : Le TC (True Course)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avant un vol sur la campagne, le pilote doit mesurer et marquer la route vraie (TC) sur la carte de navigation à l'aide d'un rapporteur référencé au méridien le plus proche. Le TC est la base de tous les calculs de cap ultérieurs : TC → appliquer la variation → MC → appliquer la correction de vent → TH → appliquer la déviation → CH. Marquer le TC sur la carte assure une référence cohérente tout au long du processus de planification de vol et permet une vérification en vol de la trajectoire.
+
+### Q54: Comment devrait être effectuée une approche finale au-dessus d'un terrain navigationnellement difficile ? ^t60q54
+**Correct : Surveiller avec une échelle de temps, marquer les positions connues sur la carte**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'une approche vers une destination au-dessus d'un terrain navigationnellement difficile (forêts, plaines sans relief, ou topographie complexe), le pilote doit surveiller la progression en utilisant le temps écoulé par rapport à une échelle de temps précalculée, et identifier positivement les repères connus (villes, rivières, routes) et les marquer sur la carte. Cette technique — essentiellement de la navigation à l'estime avec des fixations de position régulières — empêche le pilote de dépasser la destination ou de se perdre.
+
+### Q55: Que signifie GND sur la couverture de la carte de vol à voile ? ^t60q55
+**Correct : Limite supérieure des LS-R pour le vol à voile (SF avec distances de nuages réduites)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la page de couverture de la carte de vol à voile suisse, « GND » indique la limite inférieure (sol) de certaines zones restreintes, et le terme se réfère spécifiquement à la limite supérieure des LS-R (réserves d'espace aérien pour planeurs) disponibles pour les planeurs opérant avec des minimums réduits de séparation des nuages. Ces zones permettent aux planeurs de voler dans des conditions qui exigeraient autrement les règles de vol aux instruments, à condition que des minimums météorologiques spécifiques soient respectés.
+
+### Q56: Fréquences de vol à voile (sol-air, air-air, régions) ? ^t60q56
+**Correct : Indiquées sur la couverture de la carte SF**
+
+> **Explication :** La page de couverture de la carte de vol à voile suisse contient une liste complète des fréquences pour planeurs, y compris les fréquences de communication sol-air et air-air organisées par région. Les fréquences communes pour planeurs suisses incluent 122,300 MHz (fréquence universelle pour planeurs) et des variantes régionales. Celles-ci doivent être connues avant le vol car les planeurs peuvent avoir besoin de se coordonner entre eux et avec les stations au sol, surtout dans les zones fréquentées comme les Alpes ou à proximité de l'espace aérien contrôlé.
+
+### Q57: Heures de service du vol militaire ? ^t60q57
+**Correct : Carte SF en bas à droite**
+
+> **Explication :** Les heures d'activité de l'espace aérien militaire suisse et des services de la circulation aérienne militaire sont imprimées dans le coin inférieur droit de la carte de vol à voile suisse. Les zones restreintes militaires (comme celles associées aux bases aériennes de Payerne, Meiringen et Emmen) ne peuvent être actives que pendant des heures spécifiques, et connaître ces heures est essentiel pour planifier des routes à travers ou à proximité de zones contrôlées militairement.
+
+### Q58: Altitude du Stockhorn en ft et m ? Hauteur de la Stockhornbahn AGL ? ^t60q58
+**Correct : Stockhorn : 2190 m / 7185 ft ; Stockhornbahn AGL : 180 m / 591 ft**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) est un sommet proéminent dans les Préalpes bernoises visible sur la carte OACI suisse. Son altitude apparaît en mètres sur la carte, et les pilotes doivent pouvoir convertir en pieds (en utilisant ft = m x 10/3 : 2190 x 10/3 = 7300 ft, proche de 7185 ft). Le téléphérique du Stockhorn (Stockhornbahn) représente un obstacle aérien de 180 m AGL — les câbles et remontées sont marqués avec des hauteurs AGL sur la carte de vol à voile car ils présentent des dangers significatifs pour les planeurs volant à basse altitude.
+
+### Q59: Quelle est la hauteur de la tour sur le Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E) ? ^t60q59
+**Correct : 188 m / 615 ft**
+
+> **Explication :** La tour du Bantiger près de Berne est un mât de communication indiqué sur les cartes OACI et de vol à voile suisses aux coordonnées N46°58,7' / E7°31,7'. Sa hauteur est de 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). Sur la carte, les hauteurs d'obstacles sont données en mètres et en pieds — les candidats à l'examen doivent pouvoir lire la carte et convertir entre unités. Les obstacles de plus de 100 m AGL sont généralement marqués avec leur hauteur et peuvent avoir un balisage lumineux d'obstacle.
+
+### Q60: Jusqu'à quelle altitude pouvez-vous monter au-dessus d'Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 de LSZG) ? ^t60q60
+**Correct : Le statut du secteur Tango est déterminant — non actif (Bale Info) jusqu'au FL100 ; si actif, 1750 m ou plus avec autorisation BSL**
+
+> **Explication :** Egerkingen se trouve sous le secteur Tango — une portion de l'espace aérien suisse associée à la TMA de Bâle/Mulhouse (LFSB/EuroAirport). Lorsque le secteur Tango est inactif (vérifier auprès de Basel Info sur la fréquence appropriée), la zone est un espace aérien non contrôlé jusqu'au FL100. Lorsqu'il est actif, la limite supérieure descend à 1750 m MSL et les opérations au-dessus nécessitent une autorisation de Basel Approach.
+
+### Q61: Quelles informations trouvons-nous sur la carte SF pour l'aérodrome des Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E) ? ^t60q61
+**Correct : Légende de la carte SF (symboles pour les terrains contrôlés et non contrôlés)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les Eplatures (LSGC) près de La Chaux-de-Fonds apparaissent sur la carte de vol à voile suisse avec des symboles décodés dans la légende de la carte. La légende distingue les aérodromes avec tour (contrôlés) et sans tour, les aérodromes spécifiques au vol à voile, les terrains militaires et les pistes d'atterrissage d'urgence. Les candidats doivent pouvoir lire la légende et déterminer les informations opérationnelles pertinentes (fréquences radio, orientation de piste, classe d'espace aérien) pour tout aérodrome représenté sur la carte.
+
+### Q62: Conditions d'utilisation de la LS-R69 T (près de Schaffhouse) ? ^t60q62
+**Correct : Légende de la carte SF en bas à droite. Attention : le texte à la limite de la TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) et de la TMA LSZH 3 (1700 m) ; la LS-R69 se trouve dans la TMA 3**
+
+> **Explication :** La LS-R69 est une zone restreinte pour planeurs près de Schaffhouse qui se trouve dans la structure TMA de Zurich. La zone chevauche la TMA LSZH 3 (limite inférieure 1700 m MSL), pas la TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) — cette distinction est critique car elle détermine l'altitude à laquelle une autorisation devient nécessaire. Les conditions d'utilisation se trouvent dans la légende de la carte en bas à droite, et les encadrés de texte sur la carte elle-même précisent quel segment de TMA s'applique.
+
+### Q63: Coordonnées de l'aérodrome de Birrfeld ? ^t60q63
+**Correct : N 47 26'36'', E 8 14'02''**
+
+> **Explication :** Birrfeld (LSZF) est un aérodrome de vol à voile dans le canton d'Argovie, en Suisse. La lecture de coordonnées exactes sur la carte OACI 1:500 000 nécessite une utilisation soignée du quadrillage de latitude et de longitude — chaque degré est divisé en minutes, et à cette échelle, les minutes d'arc individuelles sont clairement lisibles.
+
+### Q64: Coordonnées de l'aérodrome de Montricher ? ^t60q64
+**Correct : N 46 35'25'', E 6 24'02''**
+
+> **Explication :** Montricher (LSTR) est un aérodrome de vol à voile dans le canton de Vaud, dans la région francophone de la Suisse. Ses coordonnées le placent sur le Plateau suisse à l'ouest de Lausanne. Le localiser précisément sur la carte OACI et lire le quadrillage avec précision nécessite de la pratique — à l'échelle 1:500 000, 1 minute de latitude ≈ 1 NM ≈ 1,85 km, ce qui permet d'interpoler visuellement une précision inférieure à la minute à partir de la grille.
+
+### Q65: Quel lieu se trouve aux coordonnées N 47 07', E 8 00' ? ^t60q65
+**Correct : Willisau**
+
+> **Explication :** Étant donné un ensemble de coordonnées, le candidat doit localiser le point sur la carte OACI suisse en trouvant les lignes de latitude (47°07'N) et de longitude (8°00'E) correctes et en lisant le repère le plus proche. Willisau est une ville du canton de Lucerne, sur le Plateau suisse.
+
+### Q66: Quel lieu se trouve aux coordonnées N 46 11', E 6 16' ? ^t60q66
+**Correct : Aérodrome d'Annemasse**
+
+> **Explication :** Ces coordonnées placent le point au sud du lac Léman à approximativement N46°11' / E6°16', ce qui correspond à l'aérodrome d'Annemasse — un aérodrome français juste de l'autre côté de la frontière franco-suisse près de Genève. Cette question teste non seulement la lecture de carte mais aussi la conscience que la carte OACI suisse s'étend aux pays voisins (France, Allemagne, Autriche, Italie).
+
+### Q67: TC de l'aérodrome de Grenchen à l'aérodrome de Neuchâtel ? ^t60q67
+**Correct : 239**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour trouver la route vraie entre deux aérodromes, placer un rapporteur sur la carte aligné au méridien le plus proche et mesurer l'angle de la ligne droite reliant les deux points. Grenchen (LSZG) est au nord-est de Neuchâtel (LSGN), donc la route de Grenchen à Neuchâtel va approximativement vers le sud-ouest — environ 239° vrai.
+
+### Q68: TC de l'aérodrome de Langenthal à l'aérodrome de Kägiswil ? ^t60q68
+**Correct : 132**
+
+> **Explication :** Langenthal (LSPL) est au nord-ouest de Kägiswil (LSPG près de Sarnen), donc la route de Langenthal à Kägiswil va approximativement vers le sud-est — environ 132° vrai. Ceci est mesuré avec un rapporteur sur la carte OACI, aligné au méridien passant par ou près du point médian de la route.
+
+### Q69: Distance Laax - Oberalp en km, NM, sm ? ^t60q69
+**Correct : 46,3 km / 25 NM / 28,7 sm**
+
+> **Explication :** La distance est mesurée avec une règle sur la carte 1:500 000 et convertie à l'aide de la barre d'échelle. À 1:500 000, 1 cm sur la carte = 5 km en réalité. Une fois la distance en km connue, la conversion suit : NM = km / 1,852 ≈ km / 2 + 10% (formule d'examen), et miles terrestres = km / 1,609. Cette route longe la vallée du Vorderrhein de la station de ski de Laax vers le col de l'Oberalp — un segment classique de vol sur la campagne en planeur suisse.
+
+### Q70: Temps de vol Laax 14:52 à Oberalp 15:09 ? ^t60q70
+**Correct : 17 min**
+
+> **Explication :** Soustraire simplement l'heure de départ de l'heure d'arrivée : 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. Ce temps de vol écoulé, combiné avec la distance de Q69, donne la vitesse pour Q71.
+
+### Q71: Vitesse en km/h, kts, mph ? ^t60q71
+**Correct : 163 km/h / 88 kts / 101 mph**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = distance / temps = 46,3 km / (17/60) h = 46,3 / 0,2833 = 163,4 km/h ≈ 163 km/h. Conversion : kts = km/h / 1,852 ≈ 163 / 2 + 10% ≈ 88 kts ; mph = km/h / 1,609 ≈ 101 mph.
+
+### Q72: Parcours LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB : Quelle longueur en km et NM ? ^t60q72
+**Correct : 56+43+59+80 = 238 km / 30+23+32+43 = 128 NM**
+
+> **Explication :** C'est un parcours triangulaire sur la campagne mesuré sur la carte : de Bellechasse (LSTB) à Buochs, puis à la Jungfrau, et retour à Bellechasse. Chaque branche est mesurée séparément avec une règle sur la carte 1:500 000 et les distances sont additionnées.
+
+### Q73: D'Eriswil à Buochs en 18 min — quelle vitesse ? ^t60q73
+**Correct : (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143 km/h / 77 kts / 89 mph**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = (distance / temps) x 60 pour convertir les minutes en heures : (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143,3 km/h ≈ 143 km/h. La distance de 43 km est tirée de la mesure sur carte pour cette branche. Conversion : kts ≈ 143 / 1,852 ≈ 77 kts ; mph ≈ 143 / 1,609 ≈ 89 mph.
+
+### Q74: Quels espaces aériens entre Bellechasse et Buochs à 1500 m/M ? ^t60q74
+**Correct : TMA PAY 7 (E), TMA LSZB1 (D — autorisation nécessaire), LR E MTT, LR E Alpen, LS-R15 (si actif), TMA LSME 2, CTR LSMA/LSZC (autorisations nécessaires)**
+
+> **Explication :** Cette question nécessite de lire toutes les couches d'espace aérien sur la route entre Bellechasse et Buochs à 1500 m MSL, en utilisant à la fois la carte OACI et la carte de vol à voile. Les zones de classe D (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) nécessitent une autorisation ATC avant l'entrée. Les zones de classe E (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) sont accessibles en VFR sans autorisation mais les vols IFR ont priorité. La LS-R15 est une zone de vol à voile qui peut être active.
+
+### Q75: TC entre la Jungfrau et Bellechasse ? ^t60q75
+**Correct : 308**
+
+> **Explication :** La Jungfrau est située au sud-est de Bellechasse (LSTB), donc la route DE la Jungfrau VERS Bellechasse pointe vers le nord-ouest. Un relèvement de 308° est au nord-ouest du nord, cohérent avec cette géométrie.
+
+### Q76: Vol plané de la Jungfrau (4200 m/M) à Bellechasse avec angle de plané 1:30 à 150 km/h — altitude d'arrivée ? ^t60q76
+**Correct : Distance 80 km, perte d'altitude 2667 m, arrivée 1533 m MSL = 1100 m AGL au-dessus de LSTB (433 m)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un ratio de plané de 1:30, le planeur couvre 30 mètres vers l'avant pour chaque 1 mètre de perte d'altitude. Perte d'altitude sur 80 km = 80 000 m / 30 = 2 667 m. En partant de 4200 m MSL : altitude d'arrivée = 4200 - 2667 = 1533 m MSL. L'altitude de Bellechasse (LSTB) est d'environ 433 m MSL, donc la hauteur d'arrivée AGL = 1533 - 433 = 1100 m AGL.
+
+### Q77: Triangle de vent Jungfrau-Bellechasse : TAS 140 km/h, vent 040/15 kts ^t60q77
+**Correct : GS 137 km/h, WCA 12, TH 320**
+
+> **Explication :** Le triangle de vent est résolu graphiquement ou avec un calculateur DR mécanique : le TC est 308°, la TAS est 140 km/h (≈76 kts), et le vent est du 040° à 15 kts (≈28 km/h). Le vent souffle du NE vers le SW, créant une composante de vent traversier de droite sur cette route NW. Le WCA de +12° (vent de droite → corriger à gauche) donne TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°.
+
+### Q78: MH de la Jungfrau à Bellechasse (Variation 3 E) ? ^t60q78
+**Correct : TH 320 - 3 = MH 317**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour convertir le cap vrai (TH) en cap magnétique (MH), appliquer la variation magnétique locale. Avec une variation de 3° Est, « East is least » — soustraire la variation Est du Vrai pour obtenir le Magnétique : MH = TH - VAR(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. La Suisse a une petite variation est d'environ 2-3° dans la plupart des régions.
+
+### Q79: Si Variation 25 W — MH ? ^t60q79
+**Correct : TH 320 + 25 = MH 345**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec une variation de 25° Ouest, « West is best » — ajouter la variation Ouest au cap vrai pour obtenir le cap magnétique : MH = TH + VAR(W) = 320° + 25° = 345°. Ce scénario hypothétique (la Suisse n'a qu'environ 3° de variation, pas 25°) est utilisé pour tester si les candidats comprennent la direction de la correction.
+
+### Q80: Codes Transpondeur ^t60q80
+| Code | Situation |
+|------|-----------|
+| 7000 | VFR en espace aérien E et G |
+| 7700 | Urgence (Emergency) |
+| 7600 | Panne radio (Radio failure) |
+| 7500 | Détournement (Hijack) |
+
+> **Explication :** Ces quatre codes transpondeur sont des codes universels OACI d'urgence et VFR standard, mémorisés par tous les pilotes. Le code 7000 est le squawk VFR standard européen en espace aérien non contrôlé (classe E et G) lorsqu'aucun code spécifique n'est attribué par l'ATC. Les trois codes d'urgence — 7700 (urgence), 7600 (panne radio), 7500 (interférence illicite/détournement) — sont affichés par ordre de gravité et alertent immédiatement l'ATC.
+
+### Q81: Formules de conversion d'unités (référence examen) ^t60q81
+| Conversion | Formule |
+|-----------|---------|
+| NM à partir de km | km / 2 + 10% |
+| km à partir de NM | NM x 2 - 10% |
+| ft à partir de m | m / 3 x 10 |
+| m à partir de ft | ft x 3 / 10 |
+| kts à partir de km/h | km/h / 2 + 10% |
+| km/h à partir de kts | kts x 2 - 10% |
+| m/s à partir de ft/min | ft/min / 200 |
+| ft/min à partir de m/s | m/s x 200 |
+
+### Q82: Vous volez sous un espace aérien dont la limite inférieure est au FL75, en maintenant une marge de sécurité de 300 m. En supposant un QNH de 1013 hPa, à quelle altitude volez-vous approximativement ? ^t60q82
+- A) 1990 m AMSL
+- B) 2290 m AMSL
+- C) 1860 m AMSL
+- D) 2500 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FL75 correspond à 7500 ft à la pression standard (QNH 1013 hPa). 7500 ft × 0,3048 = 2286 m ≈ 2286 m AMSL. En soustrayant la marge de sécurité de 300 m : 2286 − 300 = 1986 m. Cependant, la question demande l'altitude de vol (sous le FL75 avec marge de sécurité de 300 m), qui est approximativement 2290 m AMSL correspondant au FL75 converti. La réponse B est donc correcte.
+
+### Q83: Un ami part de France le 6 juin (heure d'été) à 1000 UTC pour un vol sur la campagne vers le Jura. Vous voulez décoller des Eplatures en même temps. Qu'indique votre montre ? ^t60q83
+- A) 0900 LT
+- B) 0800 LT
+- C) 1200 LT
+- D) 1100 LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse le 6 juin, l'heure d'été est en vigueur (CEST = UTC+2). Pour décoller à 1000 UTC, votre montre doit indiquer 1000 + 2h = 1200 LT. La France utilise aussi le CEST (UTC+2) en été, donc les deux pilotes décollent au même temps UTC, mais vos montres indiquent toutes les deux 1200 LT.
+
+### Q84: Données : TT 220°, WCA -15°, VAR 5°W. Quel est le MH ? ^t60q84
+- A) 200°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 230°
+- D) 210°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** TT (True Track = TC) = 220°, WCA = -15°. TH = TC + WCA = 220° + (-15°) = 205°. Avec VAR 5°W : MH = TH + VAR (Ouest) = 205° + 5° = 210°. Rappel : la variation ouest est ajoutée pour obtenir le cap magnétique (West is Best — ajouter). Donc MH = 210°.
+
+### Q85: Vous prévoyez de suivre un TC de 090° depuis votre position actuelle. Le vent est un vent de face venant de la droite. ^t60q85
+- A) La position estimée est au sud-est de la position air.
+- B) La position estimée est au nord-est de la position air.
+- C) La distance entre la position actuelle et la position estimée dépasse la distance entre la position actuelle et la position air.
+- D) La position estimée est au nord-ouest de la position air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un TC de 090° (vol vers l'est) et un vent de droite (du nord), l'aéronef dérive vers la gauche (vers le sud). Pour maintenir le TC 090°, le pilote doit voler un TH vers le nord-est (WCA positif). La position air est là où l'aéronef serait sans vent, dans la direction du TH. La position DR est déplacée par le vent vers le sud-ouest par rapport à la position air — donc la position estimée est au nord-ouest de la position air.
+
+### Q86: L'erreur de virage d'un compas magnétique est causée par... ^t60q86
+- A) La déviation.
+- B) L'inclinaison magnétique (plongée).
+- C) La déclinaison.
+- D) La variation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'erreur de virage du compas magnétique est causée par l'inclinaison magnétique (plongée). Lorsque l'aéronef tourne, la composante verticale du champ magnétique terrestre agit sur l'aiguille inclinée, provoquant des indications erronées. Cette erreur est particulièrement prononcée aux hautes latitudes où la plongée est forte.
+
+### Q87: Quel terme décrit la déflexion de l'aiguille du compas causée par les champs électriques ? ^t60q87
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclinaison.
+- C) Déclinaison.
+- D) Déviation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le mouvement de l'aiguille du compas causé par des champs électriques (ou magnétiques parasites) à bord est appelé déclinaison. Cependant, la fiche de correction donne C (déclinaison) — ce qui peut sembler surprenant. Dans ce contexte BAZL, la perturbation de l'aiguille par les champs électriques locaux à bord est traitée comme une forme supplémentaire de déviation.
+
+### Q88: Quelle affirmation s'applique à une carte réalisée avec la projection Mercator (cylindre tangent à l'équateur) ? ^t60q88
+- A) Elle est équidistante mais pas conforme. Les méridiens convergent vers les pôles ; les parallèles apparaissent courbés.
+- B) Elle n'est ni conforme ni équidistante. Les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent courbés.
+- C) Elle est à la fois conforme et équidistante. Les méridiens convergent vers les pôles ; les parallèles apparaissent droits.
+- D) Elle est conforme mais pas équidistante. Les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent comme des lignes droites.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection Mercator est conforme (elle préserve les angles et les formes locales) mais pas équidistante (l'échelle varie avec la latitude). Sur cette projection, les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent comme des lignes droites perpendiculaires les unes aux autres. Cependant, les pôles ne peuvent pas être représentés et l'échelle augmente vers les pôles, déformant les surfaces.
+
+### Q89: Vous mesurez 12 cm sur une carte à l'échelle 1:200 000. Quelle est la distance réelle au sol ? ^t60q89
+- A) 16 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 32 km
+- D) 12 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'échelle 1:200 000, 1 cm sur la carte correspond à 200 000 cm = 2 km au sol. Donc 12 cm sur la carte = 12 × 2 km = 24 km au sol. Calcul simple : distance réelle = distance sur carte × dénominateur d'échelle = 12 cm × 200 000 = 2 400 000 cm = 24 km.
+
+### Q90: Quelle description correspond aux informations indiquées sur la carte OACI suisse pour l'aérodrome de MULHOUSE-HABSHEIM (env. N47°44'/E007°26') ? ^t60q90
+- A) Civil et militaire, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 m.
+- B) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 ft.
+- C) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 m.
+- D) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, direction de piste 10.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la carte OACI suisse, le symbole pour Mulhouse-Habsheim indique un aérodrome civil ouvert au trafic public (symbole de cercle plein), avec une altitude de 789 ft AMSL. La piste a une surface en dur et la longueur maximale est de 1000 m (pas 1000 ft).
+
+### Q91: Après un vol thermique dans les Alpes, vous planez en ligne droite d'Erstfeld (46°49'00"N/008°38'00"E) vers Fricktal-Schupfart (47°30'32"N/007°57'00"). Vous traversez plusieurs zones de contrôle. Sur quelle fréquence appelez-vous la troisième zone de contrôle ? ^t60q91
+- A) 134.125
+- B) 124.7
+- C) 120.425
+- D) 122.45
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En volant en ligne droite d'Erstfeld vers le nord-ouest jusqu'à Fricktal-Schupfart, vous traversez plusieurs secteurs CTR et TMA visibles sur la carte OACI suisse 1:500 000. Chaque secteur d'espace aérien contrôlé a sa fréquence de communication assignée imprimée sur la carte. En comptant les zones de contrôle séquentiellement le long de cette route, la troisième rencontrée nécessite un contact sur 120,425 MHz (option C).
+
+> Source : Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download : https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Aides autorisées à l'examen :** carte OACI suisse 1:500 000, carte suisse de vol à voile, rapporteur, règle, calculateur DR mécanique, compas, calculatrice scientifique non programmable (TI-30 ECO RS recommandée). Aucun ordinateur de navigation alphanumérique ou électronique n'est autorisé.
+
+### Q92: Quels repères géographiques sont les plus utiles pour l'orientation pendant le vol ? ^t60q92
+- A) Les clairières dans les grandes forêts.
+- B) Les grandes intersections de voies de transport.
+- C) Les longues chaînes de montagnes ou collines.
+- D) Les côtes allongées.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour la navigation visuelle, les grandes intersections de voies de transport — comme les échangeurs autoroutiers, les embranchements ferroviaires et les croisements de routes nationales — fournissent des fixations de position précises et sans ambiguïté car elles apparaissent comme des repères ponctuels distincts à la fois sur la carte et au sol.
+
+### Q93: Pendant le vol, vous remarquez que vous dérivez vers la gauche. Quelle action prenez-vous pour rester sur votre trajectoire souhaitée ? ^t60q93
+- A) Vous attendez d'avoir dévié d'une certaine quantité de votre trajectoire, puis corrigez pour regagner la trajectoire souhaitée.
+- B) Vous volez un cap plus élevé et naviguez en crabe avec le nez pointant vers la droite.
+- C) Vous inclinez l'aile dans le vent.
+- D) Vous volez un cap plus bas et naviguez en crabe avec le nez pointant vers la gauche.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'aéronef dérive vers la gauche, le vent a une composante poussant depuis le côté droit de la trajectoire prévue. Pour compenser, vous augmentez la valeur du cap (volez un cap plus élevé) pour que le nez pointe à droite de la trajectoire souhaitée, établissant un angle de crabe dans le vent qui compense la dérive.
+
+### Q94: Pendant un vol sur la campagne, vous devez atterrir à l'aérodrome de Saanen (46°29'11"N/007°14'55"E). Sur quelle fréquence établissez-vous le contact radio ? ^t60q94
+- A) 121,230 MHz
+- B) 119,175 MHz
+- C) 119,430 MHz
+- D) 120,05 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'aérodrome de Saanen (LSGK) utilise la fréquence 119,430 MHz pour les communications de trafic d'aérodrome, comme indiqué sur la carte OACI suisse et dans l'AIP suisse.
+
+### Q95: Jusqu'à quelle altitude pouvez-vous voler en planeur au-dessus du col de l'Oberalp (146°/52 km de Lucerne) sans autorisation du contrôle aérien ? ^t60q95
+- A) 2750 m AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 7500 ft AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus du col de l'Oberalp, la carte OACI suisse montre que l'espace aérien non contrôlé (classe E ou G) s'étend jusqu'à 7500 ft AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, les vols VFR, y compris les planeurs, peuvent opérer sans autorisation ATC.
+
+### Q96: Sur la carte aéronautique, au nord du col de la Furka (070°/97 km de Sion), il y a une zone hachurée rouge marquée LS-R8. Que représente-t-elle ? ^t60q96
+- A) Une zone de danger : entrée autorisée à vos propres risques.
+- B) Une zone restreinte : vous devez la contourner lorsqu'elle est active.
+- C) Une zone interdite : fréquence de contact 128,375 MHz pour informations de statut et autorisation de transit.
+- D) La zone de vol à voile Münster Nord. Une fois activée, les minimums de séparation des nuages sont réduits pour les pilotes de planeurs.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le préfixe « R » dans LS-R8 désigne une zone Restreinte dans le système de classification de l'espace aérien suisse. Lorsqu'une zone restreinte est active, l'entrée est interdite sauf autorisation spécifique obtenue, et les pilotes doivent la contourner.
+
+### Q97: Les coordonnées 46°45'43" N / 006°36'48'' correspondent à quel aérodrome ? ^t60q97
+- A) Lausanne
+- B) Yverdon
+- C) Môtiers
+- D) Montricher
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En reportant les coordonnées 46 degrés 45 minutes 43 secondes N / 006 degrés 36 minutes 48 secondes E sur la carte OACI suisse, on obtient l'aérodrome de Môtiers (LSGM), situé dans le Val-de-Travers dans le canton de Neuchâtel.
+
+### Q98: Après un vol thermique dans les Alpes, vous prévoyez de voler en ligne droite du col de la Gemmi (171°/58 km de Berne-Belp) à l'aérodrome de Grenchen. Quelle route magnétique (MC) choisissez-vous ? ^t60q98
+- A) 172°
+- B) 168°
+- C) 352°
+- D) 348°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le col de la Gemmi se trouve au sud-sud-est de Grenchen, donc la route vraie du Gemmi à Grenchen est approximativement nord-nord-ouest (environ 345-350 degrés vrais). En appliquant la variation magnétique suisse d'environ 2-3 degrés Est (MC = TC moins variation est) on obtient une route magnétique proche de 348 degrés.
+
+### Q99: Lors d'un vol sur la campagne depuis l'aérodrome de Birrfeld (47°26'N, 008°13'E), vous tournez à l'aérodrome de Courtelary (47°10'N, 007°05'E). Sur la branche retour, vous atterrissez à l'aérodrome de Grenchen (47°10'N, 007°25'E). Selon la carte de vol à voile suisse, la distance parcourue est... ^t60q99
+- A) 58 km
+- B) 232 km
+- C) 115 km
+- D) 156 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vol se compose de deux branches mesurées sur la carte de vol à voile suisse : Birrfeld à Courtelary (environ 58 km vers le sud-ouest) et Courtelary à Grenchen (environ 57 km en revenant vers le nord-est mais en atterrissant avant Birrfeld). La distance totale des deux branches est d'environ 115 km.
+
+### Q100: Quel équipement de bord votre aéronef nécessite-t-il pour déterminer votre position à l'aide d'un relèvement VDF ? ^t60q100
+- A) Transpondeur.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Équipement VOR de bord.
+- D) Radio de bord.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VDF (VHF Direction Finding) est un service au sol dans lequel la station détermine le relèvement de la transmission radio de l'aéronef. Pour utiliser un relèvement VDF pour la détermination de position, l'aéronef a besoin d'un équipement VOR de bord (récepteur omnidirectionnel VHF) pour interpréter et afficher les informations de relèvement fournies par la station au sol.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_70_101_128.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_70_101_128.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,279 @@
+### Q101: May changes be made at an accident site where a person has been injured, beyond essential rescue measures? ^t70q101
+- A) Yes, if the aircraft operator has formally issued such an instruction
+- B) No, unless the investigation authority has formally granted authorisation
+- C) Yes, the wreckage must be cleared as soon as possible to prevent interference by third parties
+- D) Yes, if only material damage has occurred
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modifying an accident site is prohibited without formal authorization from the investigation authority, except for essential rescue measures.
+
+### Q102: The pilot loses sight of the tow plane during aerotow. How must he react? ^t70q102
+- A) Extend the airbrakes and wait
+- B) Prepare for a parachute bailout
+- C) Contact the tow pilot by radio and ask for position
+- D) Immediately release the rope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the pilot loses sight of the tow plane, immediately release the rope. Continuing tow flight without seeing the tow plane is extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q103: Is wearing a parachute compulsory in gliders? ^t70q103
+- A) For all flights above 300 m AGL
+- B) Only for aerobatic flights
+- C) Yes, always
+- D) No
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not mandatory for gliders in Switzerland for normal flights. It is recommended but not regulatory.
+
+### Q104: You need to land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you fly the final approach? ^t70q104
+- A) Faster than with a headwind
+- B) Slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than with a headwind
+- C) At best glide speed, slightly higher than with a headwind
+- D) Normally, with a sideslip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With tailwind on a 400 m field: approach slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than with headwind. Tailwind increases ground speed.
+
+### Q105: You see a motor glider with its engine running at the same altitude approaching from your right. How do you react? ^t70q105
+- A) Extend the airbrakes and give way downward
+- B) Maintain your heading, keeping the motor glider in sight
+- C) Give way to the right
+- D) Give way to the left
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A powered motorglider coming from the right has right of way (converging routes rule). You must give way to the right to let it pass.
+
+### Q106: You are flying in a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R). What cloud separation distances must you observe? (vertical/horizontal) ^t70q106
+- A) Clear of clouds with flight visibility
+- B) 100 m vertically, 300 m horizontally
+- C) 300 m vertically, 1500 m horizontally
+- D) 50 m vertically, 100 m horizontally
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R), reduced distances apply: 50 m vertically and 100 m horizontally from clouds (instead of standard distances).
+
+### Q107: What is the correct sequence for abandoning a glider and bailing out by parachute? ^t70q107
+- A) Unfasten harness, release canopy, jump, open parachute
+- B) Release canopy, unfasten harness, jump, open parachute
+- C) Release canopy, unfasten harness, open parachute, jump
+- D) Unfasten harness, pull parachute handle, release canopy, jump
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In case of parachute bailout: 1) Release canopy 2) Unfasten harness 3) Jump 4) Open parachute. Order is crucial for safety.
+
+### Q108: How should a landing on a slope be performed? ^t70q108
+- A) Always facing uphill regardless of wind
+- B) With left wind, across the slope
+- C) Always across the slope
+- D) Downhill into the wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing on a slope: always downhill into the wind. Uphill + tailwind would dangerously extend the landing distance.
+
+### Q109: Which type of terrain is particularly well suited for an off-field landing? ^t70q109
+- A) A large flat field, oriented into the wind, free of obstacles on the approach path
+- B) A field of tall crops that would help brake the glider
+- C) A vast, freshly ploughed field sloping upward
+- D) A field near a road and a telephone
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best field for an off-field landing is a large flat field, oriented into the wind, free of obstacles on the approach axis.
+
+### Q110: An off-field landing ends in a ground loop caused by an obstacle. The fuselage breaks near the rudder. What must be done? ^t70q110
+- A) If it is a minor accident, no report is necessary
+- B) Immediately notify the aviation accident investigation bureau via REGA
+- C) Notify the nearest police station
+- D) Notify FOCA in writing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A fuselage broken near the rudder after a ground loop = serious accident. Immediately notify the accident investigation bureau (via REGA if necessary).
+
+### Q111: A glider pilot must make an off-field landing in mountainous terrain. The only available landing site has a steep incline. How should the landing be executed? ^t70q111
+- A) Approach downhill at increased speed, pushing the elevator to follow the terrain during landing
+- B) Approach at minimum speed with a careful flare upon reaching the landing site
+- C) Approach at increased speed with a quick flare to follow the inclined ground
+- D) Approach parallel to the ridge into the prevailing wind
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an off-field landing on inclined terrain is unavoidable, the correct technique is to approach with increased speed and perform a quick, firm flare to match the glider's pitch attitude to the slope angle at touchdown — this minimises the relative vertical velocity on contact. Landing down a ridge (option A) dramatically increases ground speed and roll-out distance, risking a collision with terrain ahead. Approaching parallel to the ridge (option D) ignores the slope problem. Minimum speed (option B) leaves no energy margin for the flare on sloped ground.
+
+### Q112: On final approach, you realise the landing gear was not extended. How should the landing be performed? ^t70q112
+- A) Retract flaps, extend the gear, and land normally
+- B) Extend the gear immediately and land as usual
+- C) Land gear-up at higher than usual speed
+- D) Land gear-up, touching down carefully at minimum speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear is not extended on final approach and there is insufficient height to safely extend it, the safest action is to complete a gear-up landing at minimum speed, accepting a belly-landing with controlled, gentle touchdown. Extending gear at the last moment (option B) risks an asymmetric or partially extended gear, which is more dangerous. Retracting flaps to buy time (option A) alters the approach profile unpredictably close to the ground. Landing without gear at higher speed (option C) worsens the damage and increases risk of injury.
+
+### Q113: At what height during a winch launch may the maximum pitch attitude be adopted? ^t70q113
+- A) From 150 m or higher, when a straight-ahead landing after cable break is no longer possible
+- B) From about 50 m, while maintaining a safe launch speed
+- C) From 15 m, once a speed of at least 90 km/h is reached
+- D) Immediately after lift-off, provided there is a sufficiently strong headwind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a winch launch, the maximum pitch (steep climb) attitude should not be adopted until approximately 50 m AGL, while maintaining a safe minimum launch speed. Below 50 m, a cable break would not allow a straight-ahead landing if the nose is too high; above 50 m there is sufficient height to recover. 15 m is too low and dangerous. 150 m is overly conservative and wastes the launch energy. Pitching up immediately after liftoff (option D) is extremely hazardous regardless of headwind.
+
+### Q114: What factors must be considered for approach and landing speed? ^t70q114
+- A) Altitude and weight
+- B) Wind speed and altitude
+- C) Aircraft weight and wind speed
+- D) Wind speed and weight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach and landing speed must account for both aircraft weight and wind conditions (including gusts). A heavier aircraft requires a higher approach speed to maintain adequate safety margin above stall. Higher winds — especially gusts — require an additional speed increment to avoid sudden loss of airspeed and lift. Altitude alone does not directly determine approach speed. Options A, B, and D are incomplete; option C correctly names both weight and wind speed.
+
+### Q115: How can you determine wind direction when making an out-landing? ^t70q115
+- A) Recall the wind shown by the windsock at the departure airfield
+- B) Ask other pilots reachable by radio
+- C) Observe smoke, flags, and rippling fields
+- D) Use the wind forecast from the flight weather report
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During an outlanding, visual cues in the environment are the most reliable and immediately available indicators of wind direction and strength: smoke drifting from chimneys, flags, and rippling crops clearly show the current local wind. A weather forecast (option D) may not reflect local conditions precisely at that moment. Radio contact with other pilots (option B) is unreliable and slow. The windsock at the departure airfield (option A) is irrelevant to conditions at the outlanding site.
+
+### Q116: What landing technique is recommended for a downhill grass area? ^t70q116
+- A) Full airbrakes, gear retracted, and stalled
+- B) Generally land uphill
+- C) Diagonal downhill
+- D) Wheel brake applied, no airbrakes
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a downhill grass area, landing uphill means the aircraft is climbing toward the ground, which naturally decelerates the glider and shortens the roll-out — this is the recommended technique. Landing diagonally downhill (option C) risks ground-looping. Using wheel brakes without airbrakes (option D) may be ineffective or cause a nose-over on rough terrain. Landing with gear retracted and stalled (option A) is dangerous and unnecessary.
+
+### Q117: What must be verified before any change of direction during glide? ^t70q117
+- A) That the turn will be flown in coordination
+- B) That loose objects are secured
+- C) That there are thermal clouds in the area
+- D) That the airspace in the intended direction is clear
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before initiating any turn during flight, the pilot must first check that the airspace in the intended direction is clear of other aircraft, obstacles, and restricted areas. A coordinated turn (option A) is always desirable but is secondary to the lookout. Thermal clouds (option C) and loose objects (option B) are not safety priorities before a heading change. Collision avoidance through a proper lookout is the primary concern.
+
+### Q118: Before a winch launch you detect a light tailwind. What must be considered? ^t70q118
+- A) A weaker rated weak link can be used, since the load will be smaller
+- B) The ground roll to lift-off will be longer; watch the airspeed
+- C) Full elevator back-pressure immediately after lift-off to gain extra height
+- D) The ground roll to lift-off will be shorter since the tailwind pushes from behind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A tailwind during winch launch means the aircraft has a lower airspeed relative to the ground at any given ground speed, so more ground roll is needed before reaching flying speed — liftoff takes longer and the pilot must monitor the airspeed carefully. Tailwind does not reduce the required cable tension rating (option A). Tailwind from behind reduces effective airspeed, so the roll is longer, not shorter (option D is incorrect). Pulling back immediately after liftoff in a tailwind is hazardous (option C).
+
+### Q119: During the approach for landing in a strong crosswind, how should the base-to-final turn be flown? ^t70q119
+- A) Maximum 60-degree bank, use rudder to align early with the final track
+- B) Maximum 30-degree bank, use rudder to align early with the final track
+- C) Maximum 60-degree bank, watch speed and yaw string carefully, correct track after any overshoot
+- D) Maximum 30-degree bank, watch speed and yaw string carefully, correct track after any overshoot
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the base-to-final turn, a maximum bank angle of 30° is recommended to keep turn coordination manageable and to avoid the risk of a low-speed stall-spin. The yaw string (slip indicator) and airspeed must be closely monitored because crosswind complicates the turn geometry. If the aircraft overshoots the final track, a gentle track correction is made after the turn — never a steep rudder input to force alignment, as this risks a skidded stall. Options A and C allow up to 60° bank, which is excessive and dangerous near the ground.
+
+### Q120: While thermalling, another sailplane follows closely behind. What should you do to avoid a collision? ^t70q120
+- A) Increase bank to become more visible to the other sailplane
+- B) Reduce bank to widen the turn radius
+- C) Reduce speed to let the other sailplane pass
+- D) Increase speed to move to a position opposite in the circle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two sailplanes are circling in the same thermal in close proximity, the most effective way to create separation is to increase speed, which increases the turn radius and moves the faster aircraft to a position opposite in the circle (180° apart), creating the maximum safe separation. Reducing speed (option C) tightens the radius and closes the gap. Reducing bank (option B) also increases radius but slowly. Increasing bank (option A) makes the glider smaller in profile but does not solve the proximity problem.
+
+### Q121: What altitudes should be planned for the landing pattern phases in a glider? ^t70q121
+- A) 300 m abeam the threshold and 150 m on final approach
+- B) 500 m abeam the threshold and 50 m after the final turn
+- C) 150–200 m abeam the threshold and 100 m after the final turn
+- D) 100 m abeam the threshold and 50 m after the final turn
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard traffic pattern heights for a glider are approximately 150–200 m AGL abeam the threshold (downwind leg) and 100 m AGL after the final turn. These heights give the pilot adequate time and space to plan the approach and use airbrakes effectively for a precise landing. The lower heights in options D and B leave insufficient margin for corrections; the higher values in option A are excessive for unpowered glider operations.
+
+### Q122: How should a glider be secured when strong winds are observed? ^t70q122
+- A) Nose into the wind, extend airbrakes, lock the controls
+- B) Nose into the wind, weigh down and secure the tail
+- C) Downwind wing on the ground, weigh the wing down, lock the controls
+- D) Windward wing on the ground, weigh the wing down, lock the controls
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong winds, the windward (upwind) wing should be placed on the ground to prevent the wind from getting under it and flipping the aircraft. The wing is then weighted down with a sandbag or similar weight, and the control surfaces (rudder) are secured to prevent them from being damaged by aerodynamic buffeting. Pointing the nose into wind (options A and B) presents a large fuselage surface to cross-gusts and does not protect the wings. Placing the downwind wing on the ground (option C) allows the upwind wing to be lifted by the wind.
+
+### Q123: What must be considered when crossing mountain ridges? ^t70q123
+- A) Do not overfly national parks
+- B) Reduce to minimum speed because of turbulence
+- C) Use circling birds to locate thermal cells
+- D) Expect turbulence and increase speed slightly
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain ridges produce significant turbulence on the lee side and in the rotor zone, but turbulence can also occur directly at the ridge crest. Flying slightly faster than normal provides better control authority and reduces the risk of a stall in turbulence. Reducing to minimum speed (option B) is dangerous as turbulence could cause the aircraft to stall. Overflight of national parks (option A) is a regulatory matter, not a primary safety consideration when crossing ridges. Circling birds indicate thermals (option C) but this does not address the turbulence hazard of ridge crossing.
+
+### Q124: What does "buffeting" felt through the elevator stick indicate? ^t70q124
+- A) Centre of gravity too far forward
+- B) Aircraft surface very dirty
+- C) Flying too slowly — wing airflow separating
+- D) Flying too fast — turbulence impacting the ailerons
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting felt through the elevator stick is a classic aerodynamic warning of an approaching stall: separated airflow from the wings passes over the tail surface, causing the elevator to vibrate. This occurs at low airspeed when the angle of attack exceeds the critical angle. A forward CG (option A) makes the aircraft more stable and resistant to stall. A dirty airframe (option B) may affect performance but does not directly cause elevator buffeting. Turbulence at high speed (option D) would be felt as general airframe shaking, not specifically at the elevator.
+
+### Q125: When must a pre-flight check be performed? ^t70q125
+- A) Once a month; for TMGs, once a day
+- B) Before every flight operation and before every single flight
+- C) Before the first flight of the day and after every change of pilot
+- D) After every assembly of the aircraft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pre-flight check (walk-around and cockpit check) must be performed before the first flight of the day and after every change of pilot, because each pilot is responsible for verifying the aircraft's airworthiness before they fly it. A check after every assembly (option D) applies to aircraft that are dismantled between flights (trailer gliders) — this is a separate requirement. Monthly checks (option A) describe maintenance intervals, not pre-flight procedures. Option B ('before every flight') is too broad and would be burdensome; it is the daily first-flight and pilot-change rule that is standard practice.
+
+### Q126: How is the term "flight time" defined? ^t70q126
+- A) The total time from the first take-off to the final landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- B) The interval from engine start for departure until the pilot leaves the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- C) The interval from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown on landing.
+- D) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 defines flight time for aircraft as the total time from the moment an aircraft first moves under its own power for the purpose of taking off until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. For sailplanes (non-motorised), this is interpreted as from first movement (e.g., the start of the winch run or aerotow) until the aircraft comes to rest after landing. Option B describes block time for powered aircraft. Option C is too narrow (only the take-off and landing roll). Option A describes a duty period concept, not a single flight.
+
+### Q127: During approach, the tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the landing be performed? ^t70q127
+- A) Approach at minimum speed, correcting attitude changes with gentle rudder inputs
+- B) Approach at increased speed, avoiding the use of spoilers
+- C) Approach at normal speed, controlling speed with spoilers
+- D) Approach at increased speed, correcting attitude changes with firm rudder inputs
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With strong gusts (here: wind 15 kt, gusts 25 kt — a 10 kt spread), the pilot must add a gust allowance to the normal approach speed to ensure that a sudden drop in airspeed caused by a gust does not reduce speed below the stall speed. Firm rudder inputs are needed to correct attitude changes caused by the gusty conditions. Minimum speed (option A) provides no safety margin in gusts. Normal speed without gust correction (option C) is insufficient. Avoiding spoilers/airbrakes (option B) removes the ability to control the glide path precisely.
+
+### Q128: What does buffeting felt through the elevator stick indicate? ^t70q128
+- A) Aircraft surface very dirty
+- B) Flying too fast — turbulence hitting the ailerons
+- C) Centre of gravity too far forward
+- D) Flying too slowly — wing airflow is separating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting felt through the elevator stick is the tactile warning that the wing has approached its critical angle of attack and airflow is beginning to separate — the pre-stall buffet. This is caused by turbulent separated airflow from the wing reaching the tail and exciting the elevator. Option C (CG too far forward) makes the aircraft pitch-stable and stall-resistant. Option A (dirty airframe) degrades performance but does not specifically cause elevator buffeting. Option B (high speed turbulence) produces general airframe vibration unrelated to stall.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_70_1_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_70_1_50.md
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+### Q1: While flying slowly near stall with the left wing dropping, how can a full stall be avoided? ^t70q1
+- A) Use rudder to the left, push the stick forward slightly, accelerate, then neutralise all controls
+- B) Lower the nose with elevator, maintain wings level using coordinated rudder and aileron
+- C) Deflect aileron to the right, push slightly forward on the stick, build speed, then neutralise controls
+- D) Apply aileron and rudder to the right, gain speed, push the stick forward slightly, then neutralise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct stall recovery technique is to immediately reduce the angle of attack by lowering the nose with the elevator, while using coordinated rudder and aileron to keep the wings level. Option A applies rudder in the wrong direction (toward the dropping wing). Option C uses aileron alone without coordinated rudder, which near the stall can increase adverse yaw and potentially trigger a spin entry. Option D also prioritizes aileron over elevator, missing the critical first step of reducing the angle of attack.
+
+### Q2: How is "flight time" defined? ^t70q2
+- A) The total time from the first take-off until the last landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- B) The time from engine start for take-off purposes until the pilot leaves the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- C) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+- D) The interval from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown on landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations for gliders, flight time is defined as the total time from the aircraft's first movement for the purpose of flight until it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. This includes ground handling and taxiing, not just airborne time. Option A only counts from takeoff to landing, excluding ground movement. Option B applies to powered aircraft with engines, not gliders. Option D is too narrow, covering only the takeoff run to touchdown and missing ground handling phases.
+
+### Q3: What is a wind shear? ^t70q3
+- A) A meteorological downslope wind event typical in alpine regions.
+- B) A gradual increase of wind speed at altitudes above 13000 ft.
+- C) A change in wind speed exceeding 15 kt.
+- D) A vertical or horizontal variation in wind speed and/or direction.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind shear is defined as any change in wind speed and/or direction over a relatively short distance, which can occur in both the vertical and horizontal planes. It is not limited to any particular speed threshold (option C), altitude range (option B), or geographic setting (option A). Wind shear is particularly dangerous during takeoff and landing when the aircraft is close to the ground with limited recovery margins.
+
+### Q4: Which weather phenomenon is most commonly linked to wind shear? ^t70q4
+- A) Stable high-pressure systems.
+- B) Thunderstorms.
+- C) Fog.
+- D) Invernal warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms generate the most severe wind shear through their powerful updrafts, downdrafts, and microburst outflows, which can cause sudden wind reversals exceeding 50 knots within seconds. Stable high-pressure systems (option A) typically produce calm, uniform conditions. Fog (option C) is associated with light winds, not shear. Warm fronts (option D) can produce mild shear, but thunderstorms are by far the most common and dangerous source.
+
+### Q5: Under what conditions should wind shear be expected? ^t70q5
+- A) On a calm summer day with light winds
+- B) In cold weather with calm winds
+- C) During an inversion
+- D) When crossing a warm front
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A temperature inversion creates a stable boundary layer between two air masses that can move at different speeds and directions, producing wind shear at the inversion level. Inversions are common in the early morning and can significantly affect glider operations near the ground, particularly during approach and landing. Option A describes conditions with minimal shear risk. Option B and D can occasionally produce shear but are not the primary conditions associated with it.
+
+### Q6: During approach, an aircraft encounters wind shear with decreasing headwind. Without pilot corrections, what happens to the flight path and indicated airspeed (IAS)? ^t70q6
+- A) Flight path goes higher, IAS rises
+- B) Flight path goes lower, IAS rises
+- C) Flight path goes higher, IAS drops
+- D) Flight path goes lower, IAS drops
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When headwind suddenly decreases, the airflow over the wings drops, causing IAS to decrease and lift to reduce. With less lift, the aircraft sinks below the intended glide path. The aircraft's inertia maintains its groundspeed briefly, but the reduced relative airflow means less aerodynamic force. This is the most dangerous wind shear scenario on approach because both effects — lower path and lower airspeed — combine to reduce safety margins simultaneously.
+
+### Q7: During approach, an aircraft encounters wind shear with increasing headwind. Without corrections, how are the flight path and IAS affected? ^t70q7
+- A) Flight path drops, IAS drops
+- B) Flight path rises, IAS drops
+- C) Flight path drops, IAS rises
+- D) Flight path rises, IAS rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An increasing headwind temporarily increases the relative airflow over the wings, raising both IAS and lift. The additional lift pushes the aircraft above the intended glide path. Although initially this appears favorable, the pilot must be alert — if the headwind later decreases, the aircraft will experience the opposite effect and may sink rapidly below the desired path. Options involving decreased IAS or a lower flight path contradict the aerodynamic response to an increasing headwind.
+
+### Q8: During approach, the aircraft experiences wind shear with a decreasing tailwind. Without corrections, what happens to the flight path and IAS? ^t70q8
+- A) Flight path drops, IAS rises
+- B) Flight path rises, IAS rises
+- C) Flight path drops, IAS drops
+- D) Flight path rises, IAS drops
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a tailwind decreases, the aircraft's forward momentum is maintained while the air mass effectively decelerates around it, increasing the relative airflow over the wings. This raises IAS and lift, pushing the aircraft above the glide path. A decreasing tailwind has the same aerodynamic effect as an increasing headwind. Options with decreased IAS or lower flight path misinterpret the relationship between tailwind changes and relative airflow.
+
+### Q9: What is the best way to avoid encountering wind shear during flight? ^t70q9
+- A) Avoid thermally active areas, especially in summer, or remain below them
+- B) Refrain from taking off and landing when heavy showers or thunderstorms are passing
+- C) Avoid precipitation areas, particularly in winter, and choose low flight altitudes
+- D) Avoid take-offs and landings in mountainous terrain and stay over flat terrain
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe wind shear is associated with thunderstorms and heavy showers, which produce microbursts and gust fronts. Avoiding takeoffs and landings when such weather is passing through eliminates the most dangerous wind shear exposure during the most vulnerable flight phases. Option A addresses thermals, which cause turbulence but not dangerous shear. Option C targets winter precipitation, which is a lesser shear risk. Option D is overly restrictive and does not address the primary cause.
+
+### Q10: During a cross-country flight, visual conditions begin to fall below minima. To maintain minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to... ^t70q10
+- A) Press on using radio navigation aids along the route
+- B) Continue based on sufficiently favourable forecasts
+- C) Request navigational assistance from ATC to continue
+- D) Turn back, since adequate VMC was confirmed along the previous track
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When VFR conditions deteriorate below minima, the safest action is to turn back to the area where adequate visual meteorological conditions (VMC) were confirmed. Continuing into worsening visibility is the leading cause of VFR-into-IMC accidents. Option A is inappropriate because gliders typically lack radio navigation equipment and VFR pilots should not rely on instrument navigation. Option B relies on forecasts rather than actual conditions, which is unsafe. Option C is not appropriate for gliders operating under VFR rules.
+
+### Q11: Two identical aircraft at the same gross weight and configuration fly at different airspeeds. Which one produces stronger wake turbulence? ^t70q11
+- A) The one at higher altitude
+- B) The one flying faster
+- C) The one flying slower
+- D) The one at lower altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wake turbulence intensity is directly related to the strength of wingtip vortices, which are strongest when the wing operates at high lift coefficients — that is, at low speeds and high angles of attack. The slower aircraft generates more intense vortices because it must produce the same lift at a lower speed, requiring a higher angle of attack and greater circulation around the wing. Altitude (options A and D) is not the determining factor. The faster aircraft (option B) produces weaker vortices at its lower lift coefficient.
+
+### Q12: With only a light crosswind, what hazard exists when departing after a heavy aeroplane? ^t70q12
+- A) Wake vortices are amplified and become distorted.
+- B) Wake vortices spin faster and climb higher.
+- C) Wake vortices remain on or near the runway.
+- D) Wake vortices twist across the runway transversely.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In light crosswind conditions, wake vortices from a heavy aircraft tend to remain on or near the runway rather than being blown clear. With a strong crosswind, the vortices drift away from the runway centerline, but a light crosswind is insufficient to displace them, creating a lingering hazard for departing aircraft. Option A incorrectly states vortices are amplified. Option B is wrong because vortices sink, not climb. Option D is incorrect because light crosswinds do not cause significant lateral twisting of vortices across the runway.
+
+### Q13: Which surface is most suitable for an emergency off-field landing? ^t70q13
+- A) A ploughed field
+- B) A harvested cornfield
+- C) A glade with long dry grass
+- D) A village sports ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A harvested cornfield offers a firm, relatively flat surface with short stubble that provides good ground friction without excessive deceleration forces — ideal for an emergency landing. Option A (ploughed field) has soft, uneven furrows that can cause the glider to nose over or ground-loop. Option C (long dry grass) may conceal obstacles such as rocks, ditches, or fences. Option D (sports ground) is typically surrounded by buildings, fences, and spectators, creating collision hazards.
+
+### Q14: What defines a precautionary landing? ^t70q14
+- A) A landing performed without engine power.
+- B) A landing made to preserve flight safety before conditions deteriorate further.
+- C) A landing carried out with flaps retracted.
+- D) A landing forced by circumstances requiring the aircraft to land immediately.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A precautionary landing is a proactive decision to land while options remain available, made to preserve flight safety before the situation worsens. It differs from a forced landing (option D), which is an immediate necessity with no alternative. Option A describes a normal glider landing or engine-out scenario, not specifically a precautionary landing. Option C describes a configuration choice, not a type of landing. The key distinction is that a precautionary landing involves foresight and planning.
+
+### Q15: Which of these landing areas is best suited for an off-field landing? ^t70q15
+- A) A lake with a smooth, undisturbed surface
+- B) A meadow free of livestock
+- C) A light brown field with short crops
+- D) A field with ripe, waving crops
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A light brown field with short crops indicates a harvested or nearly harvested surface that is firm and free of tall obstructions, making it suitable for a safe off-field landing. Option A (a lake) should only be considered as a last resort since water landings carry drowning risk. Option B (meadow without livestock) sounds safe but may have hidden obstacles; and option D (ripe, waving crops) indicates tall vegetation that could obscure hazards and cause the glider to nose over on landing.
+
+### Q16: How does wet grass affect take-off and landing distances? ^t70q16
+- A) Both take-off and landing distances decrease
+- B) Take-off distance increases while landing distance decreases
+- C) Take-off distance decreases while landing distance increases
+- D) Both take-off and landing distances increase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass increases rolling resistance during the takeoff ground roll, requiring a longer distance to reach flying speed. On landing, wet grass reduces wheel braking friction (similar to aquaplaning), resulting in a longer stopping distance. Both phases are adversely affected. Option A reverses both effects. Option B correctly identifies the takeoff increase but incorrectly predicts a shorter landing roll. Option C reverses both effects entirely.
+
+### Q17: What adverse effects can be expected when thermalling above industrial facilities? ^t70q17
+- A) Extensive, strong downwind areas on the lee side of the plant
+- B) Very poor visibility of only a few hundred metres with heavy precipitation
+- C) Health hazards from pollutants, reduced visibility, and turbulence
+- D) Strong electrostatic charging and degraded radio communication
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermalling above industrial facilities exposes the pilot to harmful pollutants (smoke, chemical emissions), significantly reduced visibility from haze and particulates, and turbulence from the uneven heating of industrial structures. Option A describes a lee-side downdraft but not the full hazard picture. Option B exaggerates with "heavy precipitation," which is not caused by industrial plants. Option D describes electrostatic effects that are not typically associated with industrial thermal flying.
+
+### Q18: When is an off-field landing most likely to result in an accident? ^t70q18
+- A) When the approach uses distinct approach segments
+- B) When the decision to land off-field is taken too late
+- C) When the approach is made onto a harvested corn field
+- D) When the decision is made above the minimum safe altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most common cause of off-field landing accidents is delaying the decision too long, leaving insufficient altitude for proper field selection, a stabilized approach, and obstacle avoidance. Late decisions force rushed approaches, poor field choices, and inadequate speed management. Option A (distinct segments) is standard good practice. Option C (harvested cornfield) is actually a good surface choice. Option D (deciding above minimum safe altitude) is the correct time to decide, not a risk factor.
+
+### Q19: How can mid-air collisions be avoided when circling in thermals? ^t70q19
+- A) Enter the updraft quickly and pull back sharply to slow down
+- B) Circle in alternating directions at different altitudes
+- C) Mimic the movements of the glider ahead
+- D) Coordinate turns with other aircraft sharing the same thermal
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When sharing a thermal, all gliders should circle in the same direction and coordinate their turns to maintain consistent spacing and predictable flight paths. This minimizes the risk of convergence. Option A (entering quickly and pulling back sharply) can surprise other pilots and create a collision hazard. Option B (alternating directions) creates head-on crossing situations within the thermal. Option C (mimicking the glider ahead) could lead to following too closely without maintaining safe separation.
+
+### Q20: How can danger be avoided when a glider's altitude nears circuit height during a cross-country flight? ^t70q20
+- A) Seek thermals on the lee side of a chosen landing field
+- B) Regardless of the planned route, commit to an off-field landing
+- C) Maintain radio contact until fully stopped after an off-field landing
+- D) Aim for cumulus clouds visible on the distant horizon and use their thermals
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When altitude drops to circuit height, the pilot must commit to landing — continuing to search for lift at this altitude is dangerous and leaves no margin for error. Option A is hazardous because lee-side air typically contains sink, not thermals. Option C describes a good post-landing practice but does not address the immediate danger of low altitude. Option D risks flying into sink between thermals with no altitude reserve, potentially resulting in a crash rather than a controlled off-field landing.
+
+### Q21: What must a pilot consider before entering a steep turn? ^t70q21
+- A) Reduce speed in accordance with the target bank angle before starting the turn
+- B) Once the bank angle is achieved, push forward to increase speed
+- C) After reaching the bank angle, apply opposite rudder to reduce yaw
+- D) Build up sufficient speed for the intended bank angle before initiating the turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steep turn, the load factor increases (n = 1/cos(bank angle)), which raises the stall speed. The pilot must have adequate speed before entering the turn to maintain a safe margin above the increased stall speed. Option A (reducing speed before a steep turn) would dangerously bring the aircraft closer to stall. Option B (pushing forward during the turn) would cause altitude loss and nose-down pitch. Option C (opposite rudder) is not the primary concern — speed margin is the critical safety factor.
+
+### Q22: A glider is about to stall and pitch down. Which control input prevents a nose-dive and spin? ^t70q22
+- A) Hold ailerons neutral, apply strong rudder toward the lower wing
+- B) Maintain level flight using the rudder pedals
+- C) Pull the stick back slightly, deflect ailerons opposite to the lower wing
+- D) Release back pressure on the elevator, apply rudder opposite to the dropping wing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct response to an incipient stall with wing drop is to release back pressure on the elevator (reducing angle of attack) and apply opposite rudder to prevent the yaw that would develop into a spin. Option A applies rudder toward the dropping wing, which would accelerate spin entry. Option B attempts to maintain level flight with rudder alone, which is ineffective near the stall. Option C pulls back on the elevator, which deepens the stall, and uses ailerons which can worsen the situation near the critical angle of attack.
+
+### Q23: When aerotowing with a side-mounted release hook, the glider tends to... ^t70q23
+- A) Display an increased pitch-up moment.
+- B) Exhibit particularly stable flight characteristics.
+- C) Turn rapidly about its longitudinal axis.
+- D) Yaw toward the side where the hook is mounted.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A side-mounted (belly or CG) release hook creates a tow force that acts below and possibly offset from the aircraft's center of gravity. The cable pull from below the CG generates a nose-up pitching moment, which the pilot must actively counter with forward stick pressure. Option B is incorrect — side-mounted hooks do not improve stability. Option C (rapid roll) is not characteristic of this configuration. Option D describes yaw, which would occur with an asymmetric attachment but is not the primary effect.
+
+### Q24: During aerotow, the glider has climbed excessively high behind the tug. What should the glider pilot do to prevent further danger? ^t70q24
+- A) Initiate a sideslip to lose the excess height
+- B) Push firmly forward to bring the glider back to the normal position
+- C) Pull strongly, then release the cable
+- D) Gently extend the spoilers and steer the glider back to the correct tow position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The safest correction for being too high behind the tug is to gently deploy spoilers to increase drag and lose excess height while steering back to the correct tow position. Option A (sideslip) would create erratic lateral movements that could endanger both aircraft. Option B (pushing firmly forward) could put the tug into a dangerous nose-down attitude by pulling its tail up via the cable. Option C (pulling then releasing) is dangerous — pulling when high compounds the problem, potentially lifting the tug's tail catastrophically.
+
+### Q25: After a cable break during winch launch, what is the correct sequence of actions? ^t70q25
+- A) Hold the stick back, stabilise at minimum speed, and land on the remaining field length
+- B) Push the nose down firmly, release the cable, then decide based on altitude and terrain whether to land ahead or fly a short circuit
+- C) Perform a 180-degree turn and land in the opposite direction, releasing the cable before touchdown
+- D) Release the cable first, then push the nose down; below 150 m AGL land straight ahead at increased speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break during winch launch, the immediate priority is to lower the nose to maintain flying speed (preventing a stall from the steep climb attitude), then release the cable to prevent it from snagging during landing. After establishing safe flight, the pilot decides whether to land straight ahead or fly a modified circuit based on available altitude and terrain. Option A (holding the stick back) risks a stall. Option C (180° turn) is extremely dangerous at low altitude. Option D gets the sequence backward — nose down first, then release.
+
+### Q26: During the initial ground roll of a winch launch, one wing touches the ground. What must the glider pilot do? ^t70q26
+- A) Deflect ailerons in the opposite direction
+- B) Apply opposite rudder
+- C) Release the cable immediately
+- D) Pull back on the elevator
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If a wing touches the ground during the winch launch ground roll, the situation is uncontrollable and the launch must be immediately aborted by releasing the cable. Continuing the launch with a wing on the ground risks a violent ground loop or cartwheel. Option A (opposite aileron) may be insufficient at low speed and could worsen the situation under cable tension. Option B (opposite rudder) cannot correct a wing-down condition. Option D (pulling back) would try to lift off prematurely in an uncontrolled state.
+
+### Q27: During aerotow, the glider exceeds its maximum permissible speed. What should the glider pilot do? ^t70q27
+- A) Pull back on the elevator to reduce speed
+- B) Notify the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Release the towrope immediately
+- D) Deploy the spoilers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider exceeds VNE (never-exceed speed) during aerotow, the pilot must immediately release the towrope to remove the pulling force causing the excessive speed and avoid structural failure. Option A (pulling back) increases the load factor on an already over-stressed airframe. Option B (radio call) wastes critical time during a structural emergency. Option D (deploying spoilers) while still attached to the tow aircraft could cause dangerous pitch and speed oscillations.
+
+### Q28: After a cable break during aerotow, a long section of cable remains attached to the glider. What should the pilot do? ^t70q28
+- A) Fly a low approach and ask the airfield controller to assess the cable length, then release if needed
+- B) Once at a safe height, drop the cable over empty terrain or over the airfield
+- C) Fly a normal approach and release the cable immediately after touchdown
+- D) Release immediately and continue the flight with the coupling unlatched
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A trailing cable is a serious hazard — it can snag on obstacles, trees, or power lines during approach and landing. The safest action is to climb to a safe height and release the cable over empty terrain or the airfield where it can be recovered safely. Option A (low approach for assessment) risks snagging the trailing cable on obstacles. Option C (releasing after touchdown) means flying the entire approach with a dangerous trailing cable. Option D (releasing immediately regardless) may drop the cable in an unsafe location.
+
+### Q29: During aerotow, the tug aircraft disappears from the glider pilot's view. What should the pilot do? ^t70q29
+- A) Deploy the spoilers and return to a normal attitude
+- B) Alternate between pushing and pulling on the elevator
+- C) Release the cable immediately
+- D) Alternate turns left and right to search for the tug
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider pilot loses sight of the tug during aerotow, the cable must be released immediately. Continued towing without visual contact with the tug is extremely dangerous because the glider pilot cannot anticipate the tug's movements, risking a mid-air collision or being pulled into an unexpected attitude. Option A (spoilers) does not address the fundamental problem. Option B (alternating elevator) creates dangerous oscillations. Option D (searching turns) could tangle the cable or fly into the tug's path.
+
+### Q30: During aerotow in a turn, the glider drifts to an outward offset position. How should the glider pilot correct this? ^t70q30
+- A) Use a sideslip so that increased drag pushes the glider back behind the tug
+- B) Steer back using coordinated rudder and aileron inputs, then deploy spoilers to reduce speed
+- C) Return behind the tug by using a tighter radius with strong rudder pedal inputs
+- D) Match the tug's bank angle and use rudder to gently reduce the radius back to the correct position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct technique is to match the tug's bank angle to maintain the same turn radius, then use gentle rudder input to slightly tighten the radius and drift back behind the tug. This is a smooth, controlled correction. Option A (sideslip) creates lateral instability and unpredictable cable tensions. Option B (deploying spoilers) would cause the glider to drop below the tug's level. Option C (strong rudder) risks over-correction and could cause the glider to swing to the opposite side or create dangerous cable loads.
+
+### Q31: During a winch launch, cable tension suddenly disappears just after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q31
+- A) Inform the winch driver by alternating aileron inputs
+- B) Pull on the elevator to restore cable tension
+- C) Push firmly forward and release the cable immediately
+- D) Push slightly and wait for the cable tension to return
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Loss of cable tension during the steep climbing phase means a cable break or winch failure has occurred. The pilot must immediately push forward to lower the nose and prevent a stall (since the glider is at a high pitch angle with rapidly decaying speed), then release the cable. Option A wastes critical time on communication. Option B (pulling) would increase the pitch angle further, guaranteeing a stall. Option D (waiting) is dangerous because speed is decaying rapidly in the climb attitude.
+
+### Q32: Before launching with a parallel-cable winch, the pilot notices the second cable lying close to the glider. What should be done? ^t70q32
+- A) Keep watching the second cable and release after take-off if needed
+- B) Release the cable immediately and inform the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Continue with the normal take-off and inform the controller after landing
+- D) Proceed with the launch using opposite rudder to steer away from the second cable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A second cable lying close to the glider poses a serious entanglement hazard during the ground roll and climb-out. The launch must be aborted immediately by releasing the cable, and the airfield controller must be notified to correct the situation before any further launches. Option A risks snagging the loose cable during takeoff. Option C ignores a clear safety hazard. Option D cannot prevent entanglement with a cable on the ground during the critical ground roll phase.
+
+### Q33: What is the function of the weak link (breaking point) on a winch cable? ^t70q33
+- A) It limits the rate of climb during the winch launch
+- B) It prevents the glider airframe from being overstressed
+- C) It provides automatic cable release after the winch launch
+- D) It protects the winch from being overrun by the glider
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The weak link is calibrated to break before the cable tension exceeds the glider's structural limits, protecting the airframe from being overstressed by excessive winch pull. Its breaking strength is matched to the maximum permitted towing load for the specific glider type. Option A is incorrect — the rate of climb depends on winch power and speed, not the weak link. Option C is wrong because the weak link is a safety device, not a release mechanism. Option D describes a concern unrelated to the weak link's purpose.
+
+### Q34: During the final phase of a winch launch, the pilot keeps pulling back on the elevator. The automatic release trips under high wing loading. What are the consequences? ^t70q34
+- A) Only this sudden jerk ensures the cable releases properly
+- B) This technique compensates for insufficient wind correction
+- C) Extreme structural stress is placed on the glider airframe
+- D) A higher launch altitude can be achieved using this technique
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Continuing to pull back during the final phase of a winch launch places extreme structural stress on the airframe because the combination of cable tension, aerodynamic loads, and the centripetal force from the curved flight path can exceed design limits. The automatic release tripping is a safety mechanism activating because the load factor is dangerously high. Option A mischaracterizes a dangerous overload as normal procedure. Option B has nothing to do with wind correction. Option D prioritizes altitude gain over structural safety.
+
+### Q35: An off-field landing in mountainous terrain is necessary and the only available site is steeply inclined. How should the approach be flown? ^t70q35
+- A) Fly the approach at minimum speed with a careful flare upon reaching the landing site
+- B) Approach with extra speed, then make a quick flare to match the slope gradient
+- C) Approach parallel to the ridge with headwind, according to the prevailing wind
+- D) Approach down the ridge at increased speed, adjusting pitch to follow the ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing uphill on a steep slope requires extra approach speed to account for the rapid deceleration that occurs when the aircraft's momentum encounters the rising terrain. A quick, decisive flare matches the aircraft's flight path to the slope angle, minimizing impact forces. Option A (minimum speed) leaves no energy reserve for the flare on a steep slope. Option C (parallel to ridge) does not utilize the slope for deceleration. Option D (downhill) dramatically increases groundspeed and stopping distance, making it extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q36: At 6000 m MSL, the pilot realises that the oxygen supply will run out within minutes. What should be done? ^t70q36
+- A) After oxygen runs out, remain at this altitude for no more than 30 minutes
+- B) Reduce oxygen consumption by breathing slowly
+- C) Deploy spoilers and descend at the maximum permissible speed
+- D) At the first sign of hypoxia, begin descending at the maximum allowed speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6000 m without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness is very short — hypoxia can impair judgment within minutes. The pilot must descend immediately at maximum permissible speed using spoilers, before oxygen runs out, rather than waiting for symptoms to appear. Option A is extremely dangerous — remaining at 6000 m without oxygen for 30 minutes would cause incapacitation. Option B cannot meaningfully extend oxygen supply. Option D waits for hypoxia symptoms, by which point cognitive function may already be too impaired for safe decision-making.
+
+### Q37: What colour is the emergency canopy release handle? ^t70q37
+- A) Blue
+- B) Yellow
+- C) Red
+- D) Green
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Emergency canopy release handles are standardized as red to ensure immediate recognition in a crisis. Red is the universal color for emergency controls in aviation, including canopy jettison handles, fire extinguisher handles, and fuel shutoff valves. Options A (blue), B (yellow), and D (green) are incorrect — these colors are reserved for other functions such as trim (green), normal canopy latch, or non-emergency systems.
+
+### Q38: Why must trim masses or lead ballast be firmly secured in a glider? ^t70q38
+- A) To ensure the maximum allowed mass is not exceeded
+- B) To prevent them from jamming controls or causing a centre-of-gravity shift
+- C) To guarantee a comfortable seating position for the pilot
+- D) To protect the pilot from injury during turbulent thermal flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Unsecured trim masses or ballast can shift during flight, particularly in turbulence or during maneuvers, potentially jamming control linkages (elevator, rudder, or aileron cables) or causing an unplanned shift in the center of gravity that could make the aircraft uncontrollable. Option A addresses weight limits, which is a separate concern from securing ballast. Option C and D are secondary considerations — the primary danger is control jamming and CG displacement.
+
+### Q39: During a winch launch, the airspeed indicator fails after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q39
+- A) Push the stick forward, release the cable, and fly a short circuit at minimum speed
+- B) Continue the launch to normal altitude, then use the horizon and airstream noise for an immediate circuit and landing
+- C) Continue to normal altitude, then use visual and audio cues to proceed with the planned flight
+- D) Try to restore the ASI by making abrupt speed changes during the launch
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a failed ASI, the pilot should continue the launch to normal release altitude (since the launch is already established and stable), then release and fly an immediate circuit using the horizon for pitch reference and wind noise for approximate speed estimation. An immediate landing minimizes exposure to the instrument failure. Option A (aborting the launch) is unnecessarily risky at climb attitude. Option C (continuing the planned flight) is unsafe without airspeed indication. Option D (abrupt speed changes) could overstress the airframe during the launch.
+
+### Q40: Why is launching with the centre of gravity beyond the aft limit prohibited? ^t70q40
+- A) Because the maximum permissible speed would be significantly reduced
+- B) Because the increased nose-down moment could not be compensated
+- C) Because structural limits might be exceeded
+- D) Because elevator authority may be insufficient to control the flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the CG is too far aft, the moment arm between the CG and the tail becomes too short, reducing the elevator's ability to generate sufficient nose-down pitching moment. This can make the aircraft uncontrollable, particularly during the launch phase when pitch control is critical. Option A is incorrect — aft CG does not directly reduce VNE. Option B is backward — an aft CG reduces the nose-down moment, but the problem is insufficient elevator authority to correct nose-up tendencies. Option C addresses structural limits, which is a separate concern.
+
+### Q41: What effect does ice accumulation on the wings have? ^t70q41
+- A) It reduces friction drag
+- B) It improves slow-flight performance
+- C) It lowers the stall speed
+- D) It raises the stall speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ice accumulation on the wing disrupts the smooth airflow over the aerofoil surface, reducing the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) and increasing drag. Since stall speed is inversely proportional to the square root of CL_max, a lower CL_max means a higher stall speed. The aircraft must fly faster to maintain safe flight. Option A is wrong because ice roughness increases friction drag. Options B and C are incorrect because ice degrades aerodynamic performance in every respect.
+
+### Q42: The landing gear extends but will not lock despite several attempts. How should the landing be performed? ^t70q42
+- A) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at increased speed
+- B) Keep the gear extended but unlocked and land normally
+- C) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at minimum speed
+- D) Hold the gear handle firmly during a normal landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear will not lock, it must be retracted and a belly (gear-up) landing performed at minimum speed to minimize impact forces and structural damage. An unlocked gear (option B) could collapse asymmetrically on touchdown, causing a violent ground loop or cartwheel. Option A (belly landing at increased speed) unnecessarily increases impact energy. Option D (holding the handle) provides no mechanical lock and the gear could still collapse under landing loads.
+
+### Q43: When flying into heavy snowfall, what is the greatest immediate danger? ^t70q43
+- A) Rapid increase in airframe icing
+- B) Sudden blockage of the pitot-static system
+- C) Sudden loss of visibility
+- D) Sudden increase in aircraft mass
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The greatest immediate danger when encountering heavy snowfall is the sudden and complete loss of forward visibility, which can disorient the pilot and make terrain avoidance impossible within seconds. While icing (option A) and pitot blockage (option B) are real concerns, they develop more gradually. Option D (mass increase) is negligible in the short term. Loss of visibility is immediate, disorienting, and can lead to controlled flight into terrain.
+
+### Q44: A tailwind off-field landing is unavoidable. How should it be executed? ^t70q44
+- A) Approach at increased speed without using spoilers
+- B) Normal approach, then extend spoilers and push the nose down upon reaching the landing site
+- C) Approach at reduced speed, expecting shorter flare and ground roll
+- D) Approach at normal speed, expecting a longer flare and ground roll
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the groundspeed is higher than normal for the same indicated airspeed, resulting in a longer flare and longer ground roll. The pilot should maintain normal approach speed (not reduced, which would risk stalling) and prepare for the extended landing distance. Option A (increased speed without spoilers) would make the landing even longer. Option B (pushing the nose down at the field) would cause a hard landing. Option C (reduced speed) risks stalling at the higher groundspeed, and the ground roll will be longer, not shorter.
+
+### Q45: When landing with a tailwind, what must the pilot do? ^t70q45
+- A) Retract the landing gear to shorten the ground roll
+- B) Increase the approach speed
+- C) Approach at normal speed with a shallow angle
+- D) Compensate for the tailwind by sideslipping
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the pilot should maintain normal indicated approach speed (since the wing sees the same airflow regardless of wind) and fly a shallower approach angle to account for the increased groundspeed and reduced obstacle clearance gradient. Option A (retracting gear) would cause a belly landing, not shorten the roll. Option B (increasing speed) would extend the ground roll further. Option D (sideslipping) addresses crosswind, not tailwind, and would not be effective compensation.
+
+### Q46: Tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the approach and landing be conducted? ^t70q46
+- A) Approach at increased speed, but avoid using spoilers
+- B) Approach at normal speed, controlling speed with spoilers
+- C) Approach at minimum speed, making gentle control corrections
+- D) Approach at increased speed with firm control inputs to correct attitude changes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In gusty conditions (10 kt gust factor), the pilot must add speed margin to the approach speed (typically half the gust factor, so about 5 kt extra) and make firm, positive control inputs to maintain attitude through the turbulent air. Option A avoids spoilers, which may be needed for path control. Option B uses normal speed with no gust margin, leaving the aircraft vulnerable to speed drops in gusts. Option C (minimum speed) is extremely dangerous in gusts — a momentary speed loss could cause a stall.
+
+### Q47: A glider pilot encounters strong sink while ridge soaring. What is the recommended action? ^t70q47
+- A) Increase speed and head away from the ridge
+- B) Continue flying, as mountain downdrafts are typically brief
+- C) Increase speed and move closer to the ridge
+- D) Increase speed and land parallel to the ridge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong sink near a ridge, the pilot must increase speed (to improve penetration through the sink) and fly away from the ridge into the valley where conditions may be more benign and landing options exist. Option B is dangerously complacent — mountain downdrafts can be sustained and severe. Option C (moving closer to the ridge) could trap the pilot against the terrain in strong sink. Option D (landing parallel to the ridge) may not be feasible on mountainous terrain and reduces options.
+
+### Q48: A glider flying beneath an expanding cumulus that is developing into a thunderstorm rapidly approaches cloud base. What should the pilot do? ^t70q48
+- A) Slow to minimum speed and exit the thermal area in a gentle turn
+- B) Tighten harness and be prepared for severe gusts while continuing to thermal
+- C) Enter the thunderstorm cloud and continue using instruments
+- D) Deploy spoilers within speed limits and leave the thermal area at maximum permissible speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cumulus develops into a cumulonimbus, the updrafts intensify dramatically and can suck the glider into the cloud against the pilot's wishes. The pilot must deploy full spoilers and fly at maximum permissible speed (VNE or the spoiler-extended limit) to escape the rapidly increasing updraft. Option A (minimum speed) would maximize the time in the updraft and the risk of being drawn in. Option B (continuing to thermal) is extremely dangerous near a thunderstorm. Option C (entering the cloud) violates VFR rules and exposes the aircraft to severe turbulence, hail, and lightning.
+
+### Q49: After landing, you discover that a pen may have fallen into the cockpit. What must be considered? ^t70q49
+- A) Other pilots due to fly the glider should be informed about the missing pen
+- B) A flight without a writing instrument on board is not permitted
+- C) Small, light loose items in the fuselage can be regarded as uncritical
+- D) The cockpit must be thoroughly checked for loose objects before the next flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any loose object in a cockpit — even something as small as a pen — can jam flight controls by lodging in the control linkages, pushrods, or cable runs. The cockpit must be thoroughly inspected before the next flight to locate and remove the object. Option A merely passes the problem along without solving it. Option B is irrelevant — the concern is not having a pen but having a loose object. Option C is dangerously wrong — even small objects can jam critical controls and have caused fatal accidents.
+
+### Q50: Flying near the aerodrome at about 250 m AGL, you encounter strong sink and decide on a safety landing. At what speed should you fly toward the airfield? ^t70q50
+- A) Maximum manoeuvring speed VA
+- B) Best glide speed
+- C) Minimum sink rate speed
+- D) Best glide speed plus allowances for downdrafts and wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When encountering strong sink near the aerodrome, the pilot needs maximum range to reach the field. Best glide speed gives maximum range in still air, but additional speed is needed to compensate for the downdraft (which steepens the glide path) and any headwind component. Option A (VA) may be too fast and waste altitude. Option B (best glide speed alone) does not account for the sink and wind. Option C (minimum sink speed) maximizes time aloft but minimizes distance covered, which is counterproductive when trying to reach the field.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_70_51_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_70_51_100.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aa03485
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_70_51_100.md
@@ -0,0 +1,500 @@
+### Q51: You have just passed the LAPL(S) practical exam. May you carry passengers as soon as the licence is issued? ^t70q51
+- A) Yes, provided the recent experience requirements are fulfilled.
+- B) No, only after completing 10 flight hours or 30 flights as PIC following licence issue.
+- C) Yes, without any restriction.
+- D) No, carrying passengers requires an SPL licence.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations, a newly qualified LAPL(S) holder must accumulate a minimum of 10 hours of flight time or 30 flights as pilot in command after licence issuance before being permitted to carry passengers. This ensures the pilot gains sufficient solo experience before taking responsibility for others. Option A omits the initial experience requirement. Option C is wrong because there is a clear restriction. Option D is incorrect because the LAPL(S) does permit passenger carriage after meeting the experience requirement.
+
+### Q52: On final approach to an out-landing field, you suddenly encounter a strong thermal. How should you react? ^t70q52
+- A) Retract the airbrakes and slow down to minimum sink speed to exploit the thermal.
+- B) Fully extend the airbrakes and lengthen the approach path if necessary.
+- C) Continue the approach unchanged, since a thermal is always followed by a downdraft.
+- D) Retract the airbrakes and circle gently to exit the thermal.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On final approach, the commitment to land has been made. A thermal on final approach will cause the glider to float above the desired glide path, so the pilot must fully extend airbrakes to maintain the correct path and dissipate the extra energy. Option A (retracting brakes to exploit the thermal) abandons the committed approach at a critical phase, which is extremely dangerous at low altitude. Option C assumes thermals always produce compensating sink, which is not reliable. Option D (circling on final) is dangerous at low altitude.
+
+### Q53: You land on a grass runway shortly after a rain shower. What should you expect? ^t70q53
+- A) The glider will veer off the runway due to aquaplaning.
+- B) The glider will brake rapidly on the wet surface without needing the wheel brake.
+- C) The glider will stop noticeably more quickly after touchdown.
+- D) Reduced wheel grip and less effective braking, resulting in a longer ground roll.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass significantly reduces friction between the tire and the surface, resulting in less effective wheel braking and a longer ground roll. The pilot must plan for this extended stopping distance. Option A exaggerates — aquaplaning is primarily a concern on paved runways, not grass. Option B is incorrect because wet surfaces reduce, not improve, natural braking. Option C is wrong because reduced friction means a longer, not shorter, ground roll.
+
+### Q54: When flying late in the day in a valley toward shaded slopes, what difficulty should you expect? ^t70q54
+- A) Severe turbulence.
+- B) Strong downdrafts.
+- C) Difficulty detecting other aircraft in the shaded areas.
+- D) Glare from the low sun on the horizon.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Late in the day, shaded slopes create dark backgrounds against which other aircraft become extremely difficult to spot visually. The contrast between sunlit and shaded areas makes visual detection particularly challenging — an aircraft in shadow can be nearly invisible. Option A and B may occur in certain conditions but are not specifically linked to shaded slopes late in the day. Option D (glare) is a concern when looking toward the sun, not toward shaded slopes.
+
+### Q55: On a cross-country flight with no thermals available, you decide to make an out-landing. Several fields look suitable. By what altitude must your final choice be made? ^t70q55
+- A) When you can positively identify the wind direction.
+- B) Glider at 300 m AGL; motorglider at 400 m AGL.
+- C) Glider at 400 m AGL; motorglider at 300 m AGL.
+- D) Glider at 300 m AGL; motorglider at 200 m AGL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Field selection must be finalized at 300 m AGL for gliders and 400 m AGL for motorgliders to ensure sufficient altitude for a proper circuit, approach, and landing. Below these heights, the pilot should be committed to the chosen field. Option A does not specify a concrete altitude. Option C reverses the altitudes — motorgliders need more height because they may attempt an engine restart. Option D sets the motorglider threshold too low for a safe circuit with potential engine restart attempt.
+
+### Q56: You are thermalling at 1500 m AGL over flat terrain with no other glider nearby. In which direction should you circle? ^t70q56
+- A) Circle to the left.
+- B) There is no rule governing the direction.
+- C) Within 5 km of an aerodrome turn left; otherwise choose freely.
+- D) Use figure-eight patterns to best exploit the thermal.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When thermalling alone with no other aircraft in the thermal, there is no regulation requiring a specific turning direction. The pilot is free to choose whichever direction best centers the thermal or feels most comfortable. Option A imposes a left-turn requirement that does not exist. Option C invents a distance-based rule. Option D (figure-eights) is a technique for locating the thermal core, not a required circling method. The obligation to match another glider's turn direction only applies when sharing a thermal.
+
+### Q57: You are on an aerotow departure in calm conditions. The towrope breaks just below safety height. What do you do? ^t70q57
+- A) Extend airbrakes, push the stick forward, and land straight ahead.
+- B) Push the stick forward, release the rope (twice), and land in the opposite direction.
+- C) Establish a glide, release the rope (twice), and land straight ahead if possible.
+- D) Immediately release the rope once, then establish a glide and land straight ahead.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break below safety height, the priority sequence is: establish a safe glide attitude (to maintain flying speed), release the remaining rope by actuating the release twice (to ensure disconnection), and land straight ahead if terrain permits. Option A deploys airbrakes prematurely when every meter of altitude counts. Option B attempts a 180° turn which is extremely dangerous below safety height. Option D releases before establishing a glide — the glide attitude should be established first to ensure safe flying speed.
+
+### Q58: You are ready to launch in a glider with a strong crosswind from the right. What do you do? ^t70q58
+- A) Hold the wheel brake until the engine reaches full power.
+- B) During the ground roll, pull the stick fully back to lift off as quickly as possible.
+- C) Ask the ground helper to hold the right wing slightly lower during the take-off run.
+- D) Ask the ground helper to run alongside the glider until you have enough speed to control bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a strong crosswind from the right, the wind will tend to lift the right (windward) wing. By holding the right wing slightly lower at the start of the ground roll, the helper compensates for this lifting tendency, keeping the wings level until the aileron becomes effective. Option A refers to engine procedures irrelevant for gliders. Option B (pulling back to lift off quickly) risks a premature liftoff with insufficient airspeed. Option D is impractical and dangerous — the helper cannot keep pace with an accelerating glider.
+
+### Q59: During an aerotow departure, acceleration is clearly insufficient. What should you do when the take-off abort point is reached? ^t70q59
+- A) Push the stick slightly forward to reduce drag.
+- B) Release the towrope.
+- C) Pull the elevator quickly to get the glider airborne.
+- D) Extend the flaps.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If acceleration is insufficient by the abort point, the takeoff must be abandoned by releasing the towrope immediately. Continuing the takeoff with insufficient speed risks failing to clear obstacles or running off the end of the runway. Option A might marginally reduce drag but cannot solve a fundamental performance problem. Option C (forcing the aircraft airborne) at inadequate speed leads to an immediate stall or settling back onto the ground. Option D (flaps) cannot compensate for insufficient tow power.
+
+### Q60: What lateral clearance from a slope must be maintained when flying a glider? ^t70q60
+- A) A sufficient lateral safety distance.
+- B) At least 60 m horizontally.
+- C) At least 150 m horizontally.
+- D) It depends on the thermal conditions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying along a slope, a minimum lateral distance of 60 meters must be maintained horizontally from the terrain. This provides a safety buffer against unexpected turbulence, downdrafts, or control difficulty near the slope face. Option A is vague and non-specific. Option C (150 m) is more conservative than the standard requirement. Option D (depends on thermals) introduces a variable condition that does not define a clear minimum standard.
+
+### Q61: What requires special attention when flying in high mountains? ^t70q61
+- A) FLARM may produce false warnings due to reflections off rock faces.
+- B) GPS signal reception may be lost.
+- C) Radio contact may be interrupted.
+- D) Weather conditions can change far more rapidly than expected (e.g. sudden thunderstorm development).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In high mountain environments, weather can deteriorate with extreme speed — thunderstorms can develop in minutes due to orographic lifting and localized heating effects. This is the most significant hazard requiring special attention. Options A, B, and C describe technical inconveniences that may occasionally occur in mountains, but they are not the primary hazard. Rapid weather changes can trap a pilot in valleys with deteriorating visibility and violent turbulence, making option D the critical safety concern.
+
+### Q62: When installing the oxygen system in a glider for an Alpine flight, what is absolutely essential? ^t70q62
+- A) That the rubber seal is undamaged.
+- B) That all components in contact with oxygen are completely free of grease.
+- C) That the coupling nut is tightened to the correct torque.
+- D) That the cylinder connector is well greased.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Oxygen under pressure can react violently with hydrocarbon-based greases and oils, potentially causing a flash fire or explosion. All components in contact with oxygen must be completely grease-free. Option D is directly dangerous — greasing the connector introduces a combustion risk. Options A and C describe good practices but are not the absolute safety-critical requirement. The oxygen-grease incompatibility is a fundamental rule in aviation oxygen system handling.
+
+### Q63: After a collision, you must bail out at approximately 400 m. When should the parachute be opened? ^t70q63
+- A) After 2 to 3 seconds of freefall.
+- B) When you have stabilised in freefall.
+- C) Just before leaving the glider.
+- D) Immediately after leaving the glider.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At only 400 m above ground, there is no time for any delay — the parachute must be deployed immediately after clearing the aircraft. Freefall at terminal velocity covers roughly 50 m per second, so even 2-3 seconds of delay (option A) would consume 100-150 m of precious altitude. Option B (stabilizing in freefall) wastes critical seconds. Option C (before leaving) would entangle the parachute with the aircraft structure. At 400 m, every second counts for a successful deployment and deceleration.
+
+### Q64: On short final for an out-landing, you realise the field is too short. What do you do? ^t70q64
+- A) Reduce speed to the minimum to shorten the landing distance.
+- B) Continue straight ahead, deploy full airbrakes, and prepare for an emergency stop using all available means.
+- C) Maintain heading and land using full airbrakes to stop as early as possible.
+- D) Attempt to turn and find a longer alternative field.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On short final, the commitment to land has been made — the safest action is to continue straight ahead with full airbrakes and use every available means (wheel brake, ground friction) to stop in the shortest distance possible. Option A (reducing to minimum speed) risks stalling close to the ground. Option C is similar to B but less specific about using all stopping means. Option D (turning to find another field) at this low altitude and close range is extremely dangerous and likely to result in a stall-spin accident.
+
+### Q65: What does FLARM do? ^t70q65
+- A) It shows the precise position of other gliders.
+- B) It warns of other FLARM-equipped aircraft that may pose a collision risk.
+- C) It recommends avoidance manoeuvres when a collision risk exists.
+- D) It shows the exact positions of all aircraft equipped with FLARM or a transponder.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM is a traffic awareness system that calculates collision risk based on the predicted flight paths of nearby FLARM-equipped aircraft and issues warnings when a potential conflict is detected. Option A overstates its precision — it provides approximate positions, not precise ones. Option C is incorrect because FLARM warns but does not recommend specific avoidance maneuvers. Option D is wrong because FLARM only detects other FLARM devices, not transponder-equipped aircraft (that would require a separate ADS-B receiver).
+
+### Q66: During a cross-country flight, you must land at a high-altitude aerodrome with no wind. At what indicated airspeed do you fly the approach? ^t70q66
+- A) About 5 km/h less than at sea level.
+- B) Increase the sea-level speed by 1% for every 100 m of altitude.
+- C) About 5 km/h more than at sea level.
+- D) The same as at sea level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The indicated airspeed (IAS) for the approach should be the same as at sea level because the ASI already accounts for air density — it measures dynamic pressure, which determines aerodynamic forces regardless of altitude. The stall IAS does not change with altitude. However, the true airspeed and groundspeed will be higher at altitude due to lower air density. Options A and C incorrectly adjust IAS, and option B applies a TAS correction to IAS, which is unnecessary.
+
+### Q67: What do you notice when entering the centre of a downdraft? ^t70q67
+- A) One wing rises and the aircraft begins to turn.
+- B) The nose pitches up and you feel a brief increase in g-load.
+- C) The glider accelerates and you feel increased g-load.
+- D) The glider slows and you feel a brief decrease in g-load.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a downdraft, the descending air mass reduces the effective angle of attack on the wings, temporarily decreasing lift. The pilot feels a brief reduction in g-load (a sensation of lightness or being pushed up from the seat) as the aircraft begins to sink with the descending air. The glider's airspeed initially decreases momentarily. Option B describes what happens entering an updraft (nose pitches up, increased g-load). Options A and C do not accurately describe the symmetrical effect of entering a downdraft center.
+
+### Q68: During a cross-country flight over the Jura, you notice cirrus forming to the west. What should you expect? ^t70q68
+- A) Weaker thermals due to reduced solar radiation.
+- B) Increased upper-level instability from moisture, producing stronger thermals.
+- C) A transition from cumulus thermals to blue (dry) thermals.
+- D) Cirrus have no effect on conditions in the thermal layer.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds at high altitude filter incoming solar radiation, reducing the surface heating that drives thermal convection. Less heating means weaker thermals and potentially an earlier end to the soaring day. This is an important warning sign during cross-country flights. Option B is wrong — cirrus does not increase instability at thermal altitudes. Option C describes a shift that may occur but is not the primary effect. Option D underestimates the impact cirrus has on thermal generation through solar radiation reduction.
+
+### Q69: What speed maximises distance covered against a headwind? ^t70q69
+- A) Minimum sink speed.
+- B) Best glide ratio speed.
+- C) A speed higher than best glide ratio speed.
+- D) The speed corresponding to McCready zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To maximize distance in a headwind, the pilot must fly faster than best-glide speed. The headwind reduces groundspeed, so the glider spends more time in the air and descends more before covering the desired ground distance. By increasing speed above best-glide, the pilot accepts a steeper glide angle but gains enough extra groundspeed to more than compensate for the altitude loss. Option A (minimum sink) minimizes descent rate but covers minimal distance. Option B (best glide) is optimal only in still air. Option D (McCready zero) equals best-glide speed.
+
+### Q70: Which of these fields is best for an out-landing? ^t70q70
+- A) A 400 m freshly ploughed field.
+- B) A 300 m maize field with a steady headwind.
+- C) A 250 m country lane with a strong headwind.
+- D) A 200 m meadow that has just been mown.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A freshly mown meadow of 200 m provides a smooth, firm surface free of tall vegetation and hidden obstacles — ideal for a short ground roll in a glider, which can typically stop within 100-200 m. Option A (ploughed field) has soft soil and deep furrows that can nose the glider over. Option B (maize field) has tall crops that obscure hazards and create drag inconsistencies. Option C (country lane) is narrow, potentially lined with trees and power lines, and poses collision risks with vehicles.
+
+### Q71: May you use the on-board radio to communicate with your retrieve crew on the dedicated frequency without holding a radiotelephony extension? ^t70q71
+- A) Only exceptionally
+- B) Yes
+- C) As a general rule, once per flight, shortly before landing
+- D) No
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pilots may use the on-board radio on dedicated glider frequencies to communicate with their retrieve crew without needing a separate radiotelephony extension or rating. These frequencies are designated for glider operations and permit such operational communications. Option A unnecessarily restricts this established practice. Option C invents a frequency limitation that does not exist. Option D incorrectly prohibits a communication that is routinely permitted.
+
+### Q72: At an aerodrome at 1800 m AMSL, how does the ground speed compare to the indicated airspeed on approach? ^t70q72
+- A) It depends on the temperature.
+- B) Ground speed is lower.
+- C) They are the same.
+- D) Ground speed is higher.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 1800 m AMSL, air density is lower than at sea level, so the true airspeed (TAS) is higher than indicated airspeed (IAS) for the same dynamic pressure reading. In nil-wind conditions, groundspeed equals TAS, which exceeds IAS. This means the aircraft approaches the runway at a higher groundspeed than the ASI shows, requiring awareness of a longer ground roll and higher touchdown energy. Options B and C underestimate the density altitude effect. Option A is partially true but the dominant factor is altitude, not temperature.
+
+### Q73: Is wearing a parachute compulsory during glider flights? ^t70q73
+- A) Yes, for all flights above 300 m AGL
+- B) No
+- C) Only when performing aerobatics
+- D) Yes, always
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not compulsory for glider flights under current regulations, although it is strongly recommended and standard practice in the gliding community. The decision is left to the pilot. Option A invents an altitude-based requirement. Option C creates a restriction limited to aerobatics that does not exist in the regulations. Option D overstates the requirement. While practically all glider pilots wear parachutes, it remains a personal safety choice, not a legal obligation.
+
+### Q74: During a winch launch, just after reaching the climbing angle, the cable breaks near the winch. How should you react? ^t70q74
+- A) Extend the airbrakes immediately
+- B) First establish normal flight attitude, then release the cable
+- C) Report the incident by radio
+- D) Release the cable immediately, then establish a normal flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break during the climb phase, the immediate priority is to release the remaining cable (which may still be attached and could snag) and then lower the nose to establish a safe glide. The cable release comes first because a dangling cable is an immediate hazard. Option A (airbrakes first) wastes altitude when every meter counts. Option B reverses the priority — establishing the glide before releasing could allow the cable to become entangled. Option C (radio call) wastes precious seconds during a time-critical emergency.
+
+### Q75: What must be considered during an aerotow departure in strong crosswind? ^t70q75
+- A) The tow plane must lift off before the glider
+- B) After take-off, correct into the wind until the tow plane lifts off
+- C) The take-off distance will be shorter
+- D) Before departure, offset the glider to the upwind side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a strong crosswind aerotow departure, the glider should be positioned upwind of the tow aircraft's centerline to prevent being blown across the tug's path during the ground roll. This offset compensates for the crosswind drift during the critical acceleration phase. Option A states a normal sequence that does not address crosswind specifically. Option B provides a partial technique but does not address the pre-departure setup. Option C is incorrect because crosswinds typically increase takeoff distance slightly.
+
+### Q76: You enter a thermal in the lowlands at 1500 m AGL with no other glider nearby. In which direction do you circle? ^t70q76
+- A) Circle to the right
+- B) There is no regulation on this
+- C) Circle to the left
+- D) First perform a figure-eight to locate the best lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a thermal alone, the recommended technique is to first perform a figure-eight pattern (or S-turns) to identify the strongest part of the thermal before committing to a circling direction. This allows the pilot to center the thermal efficiently. Option A and C prescribe a fixed direction without first locating the core. Option B is technically correct regarding regulations but does not describe the best practice for thermal exploitation. The figure-eight technique optimizes climb rate by finding the thermal center before circling.
+
+### Q77: What lateral distance from a slope must you maintain in a glider? ^t70q77
+- A) It depends on the lift conditions
+- B) 150 m horizontally
+- C) 60 m horizontally
+- D) A sufficient safety distance must be maintained
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying near a slope, the pilot must maintain a sufficient safety distance that accounts for current conditions including wind, turbulence, and terrain features. This is a judgment-based requirement rather than a fixed numeric value. Option A (depends on lift) only considers one factor. Options B (150 m) and C (60 m) specify fixed distances that may be appropriate in some contexts but do not reflect the general guidance, which emphasizes adequate safety margin appropriate to the circumstances.
+
+### Q78: You enter a thermal at 500 m AGL below a cumulus and see another glider circling 50 m above you. In which direction should you turn? ^t70q78
+- A) You are free to choose, since the vertical separation is sufficient
+- B) Circle in the same direction as the glider above you
+- C) Circle in the opposite direction so you can observe the other glider from below
+- D) You cannot use this thermal because the height difference is less than 150 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal occupied by another glider, you must circle in the same direction to maintain a predictable traffic pattern and avoid head-on encounters within the thermal. This is a fundamental rule of shared thermal etiquette. Option A incorrectly dismisses the need for directional coordination. Option C (opposite direction) creates dangerous head-on convergence paths within the confined area of the thermal. Option D invents a non-existent 150 m vertical separation requirement for thermal sharing.
+
+### Q79: During an off-field landing, the glider sustains 70% damage; the pilot is unhurt. What must be done? ^t70q79
+- A) Submit a written report with a sketch to FOCA within 3 days
+- B) Notify the local police within 24 hours
+- C) Immediately notify the investigation bureau via REGA
+- D) Report the damage to the accident investigation bureau within the following week
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a glider sustains major damage (70%) without injuries, the pilot must notify the local police within 24 hours. This is classified as a serious incident with substantial damage. Option A (FOCA report in 3 days) does not meet the urgency required. Option C (immediate notification via REGA) is the procedure for accidents involving injuries or fatalities. Option D (report within a week) is too slow for an incident involving 70% airframe damage, which requires prompt reporting.
+
+### Q80: What requires special attention when taking off on a hard (paved) runway? ^t70q80
+- A) The wingtip helper must run alongside for longer
+- B) Pull back on the stick longer than usual
+- C) Apply moderate wheel brake at the start of the roll
+- D) Expect a longer ground roll than normal
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a hard paved runway, a glider's main wheel has less rolling resistance compared to grass, which means the groundspeed at liftoff may feel similar but the ground roll can be longer because the wheel offers less drag to help the aircraft become airborne. Additionally, on pavement the aircraft may weathervane more easily. Option A is not specific to hard runways. Option B (pulling back longer) could cause the tail to strike the runway. Option C (wheel brake at start) would impede acceleration during the most critical phase.
+
+### Q81: How should a water landing (ditching) be carried out? ^t70q81
+- A) Just before contact, pitch the glider up sharply to touch tail-first
+- B) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation, and land at slightly above normal speed
+- C) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, and land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- D) Perform a sideslip to reduce impact force on the wing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing, the pilot should tighten all harnesses to prevent injury on impact, close ventilation openings to slow water ingress, and approach at slightly above normal speed to maintain control and reduce the descent rate. The gear should be retracted (not extended as in option C) to prevent the aircraft from flipping on water entry. Option A (tail-first) risks a violent pitch-forward on impact. Option D (sideslip) creates an asymmetric water entry that could cartwheel the aircraft.
+
+### Q82: During an off-field landing, how can the wind direction best be determined? ^t70q82
+- A) By observing movement of leaves in the trees
+- B) By watching wave patterns in wheat fields
+- C) By observing the glider's drift during altitude-losing spirals
+- D) By observing the behaviour of grazing livestock
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most reliable method for determining wind direction from the air is to observe the glider's drift during altitude-loss spirals — the direction the aircraft drifts indicates the downwind direction, and the amount of drift indicates wind strength. This works at any altitude and any location. Option A (tree leaves) requires being low enough to see individual leaves. Option B (wheat field patterns) can be misleading and requires specific crop stages. Option D (livestock behavior) is unreliable as a wind indicator.
+
+### Q83: You are flying fast along a ridge and spot a slower glider ahead at about the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q83
+- A) Make a 180-degree turn and return along the slope
+- B) Overtake on the side away from the slope
+- C) Establish radio contact and ask about the other pilot's intentions
+- D) Dive below and clear upward at a safe distance, then continue
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When overtaking a slower glider on a ridge, always pass on the valley side (away from the slope) to maintain safe terrain clearance and avoid trapping the other pilot against the hillside. This gives both aircraft escape room toward the valley. Option A (turning back) is unnecessary and wastes energy. Option C (radio contact) takes too long to arrange at closing speed. Option D (diving below) risks flying into the turbulent rotor zone closer to the terrain.
+
+### Q84: At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. What should you do? ^t70q84
+- A) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- B) Extend the airbrakes
+- C) Release the rope immediately
+- D) Warn the tow pilot by radio
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the slack tow rope, the rope can become entangled with the landing gear, skid, or other structures beneath the aircraft. The immediate action is to release the rope before any entanglement can occur. Option A (braking) does not prevent entanglement and may worsen it. Option B (airbrakes) is irrelevant to the immediate hazard. Option D (radio warning) wastes time during a situation requiring instant action — by the time the call is made, the rope may already be entangled.
+
+### Q85: Are glider flights permitted in Class C airspace? ^t70q85
+- A) Yes, provided the glider's transponder continuously transmits code 7000
+- B) Yes, if the pilot holds the radiotelephony extension, has received ATC authorisation, and maintains a continuous radio watch; exceptions are published on the soaring chart
+- C) Yes, without restrictions, in VMC
+- D) Yes, provided no NOTAM expressly prohibits them
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider flights are permitted in Class C airspace under specific conditions: the pilot must hold the radiotelephony extension, receive ATC authorization before entering, and maintain continuous radio contact. Certain exceptions for gliders may be published on the soaring chart. Option A assumes gliders carry transponders, which most do not. Option C ignores the mandatory ATC clearance and radio requirements for Class C. Option D incorrectly implies that Class C is open by default unless NOTAMs restrict it.
+
+### Q86: You are flying along a slope on your right and spot an oncoming glider at the same altitude. How do you react? ^t70q86
+- A) Extend airbrakes and dive for vertical separation
+- B) Move away on the side opposite to the slope
+- C) Climb away since you have enough speed
+- D) Maintain your heading
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When meeting an oncoming glider while ridge soaring with the slope on your right, the standard rule is to give way by turning away from the slope (toward the valley). The pilot with the slope on the right has right-of-way in ridge soaring (similar to the rule of the road on mountain roads). However, both pilots should take evasive action by moving away from the ridge. Option A (diving) risks terrain collision. Option C (climbing) may not be possible. Option D (maintaining heading) leads directly to a head-on collision.
+
+### Q87: You must land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you fly the final approach? ^t70q87
+- A) At best glide speed and somewhat higher than for a headwind landing
+- B) Normally, using a sideslip
+- C) Slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than for a headwind landing
+- D) Faster than for a headwind landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind on a limited field, the pilot must minimize groundspeed at touchdown to reduce ground roll. This means flying slightly above minimum speed (to maintain a safety margin while being as slow as possible in the air) and approaching at a lower height to steepen the approach angle relative to the ground. Option A (best glide speed) is faster than needed and wastes field length. Option B (sideslip) addresses crosswind, not tailwind. Option D (faster approach) would increase groundspeed and ground roll on an already short field.
+
+### Q88: What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on an aerotow departure? ^t70q88
+- A) The take-off distance is the same as on a dry runway
+- B) The take-off distance will be longer
+- C) None of these answers is correct
+- D) The take-off distance will be shorter because the surface is slippery
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A waterlogged grass runway increases rolling resistance because the wheels sink into the soft, saturated surface, creating drag that slows acceleration. This results in a significantly longer takeoff distance for both the tow aircraft and the glider. Option A ignores the substantial difference between dry and waterlogged surfaces. Option D's logic is flawed — while a slippery surface might reduce friction on a hard runway, waterlogged grass creates suction and drag that impede acceleration. Option C is incorrect because option B is the correct answer.
+
+### Q89: On approach to an off-field landing, you suddenly notice a high-voltage power line across your landing axis. How do you react? ^t70q89
+- A) In all cases, fly over the power line
+- B) Pass under the line if flying over is not possible and no safe escape route exists
+- C) Execute a tight turn near the ground and land parallel to the line
+- D) Pass under the line as close as possible to a pylon
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The preferred action is always to fly over the power line if possible. However, if altitude is insufficient to clear the line and no alternative landing path exists, passing under the line is acceptable as a last resort — but only between the pylons where the cable sag provides maximum clearance, not near a pylon (option D) where cables are at their lowest. Option A (always fly over) is not possible when altitude is insufficient. Option C (tight turn near the ground) risks a stall-spin accident. Option D (near a pylon) is where clearance is minimal.
+
+### Q90: What is the standard spin recovery procedure when the manufacturer has not specified one? ^t70q90
+- A) Push the stick fully forward, apply full opposite rudder, then pull out
+- B) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin, then pull out
+- C) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite rudder, keep ailerons neutral, ease the stick slightly forward, then pull out
+- D) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite ailerons, push the stick fully forward, rudder neutral, then pull out
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard spin recovery procedure is: (1) identify the spin direction, (2) apply full opposite rudder to stop the rotation, (3) keep ailerons neutral (as aileron input during a spin can be counterproductive), (4) ease the stick slightly forward to reduce the angle of attack below the stall angle, and (5) once rotation stops, centralize the rudder and pull out of the resulting dive. Option A omits identifying the spin direction. Option B uses ailerons, which can deepen the spin. Option D uses ailerons instead of rudder as the primary anti-spin control, which is incorrect.
+
+### Q91: Unless ATC instructs otherwise, how should the approach to an aerodrome be carried out in a glider? ^t70q91
+- A) A straight-in approach must be made to minimise disturbance to other traffic
+- B) At least one full circle above the signal area, with all turns to the left, must precede the landing
+- C) The published approach procedures in the VFR guide or any other appropriate method must be followed
+- D) At least a half-circuit, with all turns to the left, must precede the landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach to an aerodrome should follow published VFR guide procedures or any other appropriate method. A mandatory full circuit over the signal area is no longer systematically required.
+
+### Q92: You are flying a fast glider along a slope and spot a slower glider ahead at approximately the same altitude. How do you respond? ^t70q92
+- A) Establish radio contact and inquire about its intentions
+- B) Overtake on the valley side (away from the slope)
+- C) Perform a 180-degree turn and return along the slope
+- D) Dive below, then climb past at a safe distance
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mountain flying, to overtake a slower glider on a slope, pass on the side away from the slope (valley side). This rule is consistent with the right-of-way for climbing gliders.
+
+### Q93: In flight, the rudder jams in the neutral position. How do you react? ^t70q93
+- A) Refer to the flight manual
+- B) Increase speed and continue the flight
+- C) Bail out by parachute immediately
+- D) Control the glider with elevator and ailerons; make shallow turns and land immediately
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the rudder jams in flight, control the glider with elevator and ailerons. Make shallow turns and land immediately.
+
+### Q94: At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. What do you do? ^t70q94
+- A) Extend the airbrakes
+- B) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- C) Immediately release the rope
+- D) Alert the tow pilot by radio
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the tow rope, immediately releasing the rope is the only correct action.
+
+### Q95: The tow rope breaks on the tug's side before reaching safety height. How must the glider pilot react? ^t70q95
+- A) Immediately actuate the release handle twice and land straight ahead in the runway extension
+- B) Pull back on the stick, release the rope, and land with a tailwind
+- C) Make a flat turn and land diagonally
+- D) Actuate the release handle twice and return to land on the aerodrome without exception
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the rope breaks on the tow plane side below safety height: actuate the release handle twice (verification) and land straight ahead in the runway extension. Avoid turning.
+
+### Q96: How do you fly the final approach in a strong crosswind? ^t70q96
+- A) Maintain runway alignment using rudder alone
+- B) Do not fully extend the airbrakes
+- C) Always approach with a sideslip on the side opposite to the wind
+- D) Take a heading into the wind and increase speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong crosswind on final, take a crab angle into the wind and increase speed slightly to maintain control. The sideslip can be used but crab is the primary method.
+
+### Q97: How should a water landing be carried out? ^t70q97
+- A) Just before landing, pitch up to touch down tail first
+- B) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- C) Perform a sideslip to lessen the impact with the wing
+- D) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation, and land at slightly above normal speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing: tighten harnesses, close ventilation to prevent water entry, and land at slightly above normal speed for better control and to avoid nose-over.
+
+### Q98: You enter a thermal with no other glider nearby. In which direction do you circle? ^t70q98
+- A) There is no regulation on this
+- B) Circle to the left
+- C) Circle to the right
+- D) Search for the best lift by first performing a figure-eight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without other gliders in the thermal, there is no prescribed spiraling direction. The pilot chooses freely.
+
+### Q99: In a glider, how is altitude expressed? ^t70q99
+- A) Only in altitude (metres or feet)
+- B) In flight levels
+- C) According to the regulations of the countries overflown
+- D) In height above ground
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider altitude is expressed according to the country overflown (altitude in feet or meters per local rules, or flight levels per airspace). Regulations vary by country.
+
+### Q100: Without manufacturer-specific guidance, what is the standard spin recovery procedure? ^t70q100
+- A) Identify the spin direction, apply ailerons opposite to it, push the stick fully forward, hold rudder neutral, then pull out
+- B) Push the stick fully forward, apply full opposite rudder, then pull out
+- C) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin direction, then pull out
+- D) Identify the spin direction, apply opposite rudder, hold ailerons neutral, push the stick slightly forward, then pull out
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard spin recovery: 1) Identify direction, 2) Opposite rudder, 3) Ailerons neutral, 4) Slight forward stick, 5) Pull out after rotation stops.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_101_150.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_101_150.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,501 @@
+### Q101: A shift of the centre of gravity is caused by: ^t80q101
+- A) Changing the angle of attack
+- B) Moving the load
+- C) Changing the angle of incidence
+- D) Changing the position of the aerodynamic centre
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity (CG) is determined by the distribution of mass within the aircraft, so only physically moving mass — such as shifting ballast, passengers, or baggage — changes it. Option A is wrong because changing angle of attack alters aerodynamic forces, not mass distribution. Option C is incorrect because the angle of incidence is a fixed structural dimension. Option D is wrong because the aerodynamic centre is a property of the wing shape, not of the aircraft's mass distribution.
+
+### Q102: The high-lift device shown in the diagram is a: ^t80q102
+![[figures/t80_q102.png]]
+- A) Plain Flap
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Fowler
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Fowler flap moves rearward and downward, simultaneously increasing both wing area and camber, making it the most effective type of trailing-edge flap. The diagram shows this characteristic rearward extension. A plain flap (A) simply hinges downward without moving aft. A split flap (B) deflects only the lower surface panel. A slotted flap (C) opens a gap but does not significantly increase wing area like the Fowler design.
+
+### Q103: The resultant of all aerodynamic forces on a wing profile acts through the: ^t80q103
+- A) Centre of gravity
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Aerodynamic centre
+- D) Centre of symmetry
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic centre is the point on the aerofoil through which the resultant of all aerodynamic pressure forces (lift and drag combined) is considered to act, and about which the pitching moment coefficient remains approximately constant with changes in angle of attack, located near the quarter-chord point. Option A is wrong because the centre of gravity is where weight acts, not aerodynamic forces. Option B is incorrect because the stagnation point is where airflow velocity is zero at the leading edge. Option D is not a standard aerodynamic term.
+
+### Q104: At approximately what altitude is the air density half of its sea-level value? ^t80q104
+- A) 2,000 ft
+- B) 20,000 metres
+- C) 2,000 metres
+- D) 6,600 metres
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere, air density decreases approximately exponentially with altitude and reaches half its sea-level value at roughly 6,600 m (about 21,600 ft). Option A (2,000 ft) is far too low — density barely changes at that altitude. Option B (20,000 m) is in the stratosphere, where density is far below half. Option C (2,000 m) is also too low — density there is still about 80% of the sea-level value.
+
+### Q105: The airspeed indicator (ASI) reading is based on a measurement of: ^t80q105
+- A) The weathervane effect where pressure decreases
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure
+- C) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- D) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures dynamic pressure, which is the difference between total (pitot) pressure and static pressure: q = p_total - p_static = 0.5 × rho × V². This differential measurement directly indicates airspeed. Option A is nonsensical — a weathervane measures wind direction, not pressure. Option C is wrong because measuring only total pressure without subtracting static pressure gives no speed information. Option D is also incorrect because static pressure alone tells you only about altitude, not airspeed.
+
+### Q106: Roll stability is influenced by: ^t80q106
+- A) The use of leading edge slats
+- B) Rotations around the lateral axis
+- C) The action of the horizontal stabiliser
+- D) Wing sweep and dihedral
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Roll (lateral) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral and wing sweep, both of which create restoring roll moments when the aircraft sideslips after a bank disturbance. Option A is wrong because leading-edge slats are high-lift devices that delay stall, not stability features. Option B describes pitch motion, not roll stability. Option C is incorrect because the horizontal stabiliser provides pitch (longitudinal) stability, not roll stability.
+
+### Q107: The speed range for operating slotted flaps: ^t80q107
+- A) Is without any upper limit
+- B) Is limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed
+- C) Is published in the Flight Manual (AFM)
+- D) Is limited at the lower end by the red radial line on the ASI
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted speed range for flap operation varies between aircraft types and is always specified in the Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM), typically also indicated on the ASI as a white arc. Option A is dangerously wrong — flaps have structural speed limits. Option B is incorrect because the upper flap speed (VFE) is typically different from the manoeuvring speed (VA). Option D is wrong because the red radial line is VNE (never-exceed speed), which has nothing to do with the lower flap speed limit.
+
+### Q108: When the wing's angle of incidence is larger at the root than at the tip, this is called: ^t80q108
+- A) Aspect ratio
+- B) Aerodynamic twist
+- C) Geometric twist (washout)
+- D) Interference compensation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geometric twist (washout) is a physical twist built into the wing so that the angle of incidence progressively decreases from root to tip. This ensures the root stalls first, preserving aileron effectiveness near the tips. Option A (aspect ratio) is the span-to-chord ratio. Option B (aerodynamic twist) achieves a similar stall progression by using different aerofoil profiles along the span rather than physical twist. Option D (interference compensation) is not a standard aerodynamic term for wing twist.
+
+### Q109: Barometric pressure in the Earth's atmosphere has the characteristic of: ^t80q109
+- A) Decreasing linearly with increasing altitude
+- B) Remaining constant
+- C) Decreasing in the troposphere then increasing in the stratosphere
+- D) Decreasing exponentially with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure follows an approximately exponential decay with altitude, as described by the barometric formula. Each equal altitude increment reduces pressure by the same percentage, not the same absolute amount. Option A is wrong because the relationship is exponential, not linear. Option B is obviously false — pressure clearly drops with altitude. Option C is incorrect because pressure continues to decrease in the stratosphere; it is temperature, not pressure, that stabilises or increases in the stratosphere.
+
+### Q110: The simplified continuity equation says the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections at the same instant. Therefore: ^t80q110
+- A) The air speed does not vary
+- B) Air flows at a lower speed through a larger cross-section
+- C) Air flows at a higher speed through a larger cross-section
+- D) Air flows at a lower speed through a smaller cross-section
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation for incompressible flow states A1 × V1 = A2 × V2 (area times velocity is constant). If the cross-section increases, velocity must decrease proportionally to maintain the same mass flow rate. Option A is wrong because velocity does change with cross-section. Option C reverses the relationship — velocity decreases, not increases, with a larger cross-section. Option D also reverses it — velocity increases through a smaller section, not decreases.
+
+### Q111: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 4 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q111
+- A) Stagnation point
+- B) Separation point
+- C) Centre of pressure
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 4 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) marks the separation point, where the boundary layer detaches from the upper wing surface due to an adverse pressure gradient, forming a turbulent wake behind it. Option A is wrong because the stagnation point is at the leading edge (point 1). Option C is incorrect because the centre of pressure is a theoretical force application point, not a boundary layer feature. Option D is wrong because the transition point (laminar to turbulent) occurs further forward on the surface.
+
+### Q112: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 1 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q112
+- A) Transition point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Stagnation point
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) is the stagnation point at the leading edge, where the incoming airflow divides into upper and lower streams, velocity is zero, and static pressure reaches its maximum. Option A is wrong because the transition point occurs further aft where laminar flow becomes turbulent. Option B is incorrect because the centre of pressure is a resultant force point, not a physical flow location on the leading edge.
+
+### Q113: What constructive feature is depicted in the figure? See figure (PFA-006) L: Lift Siehe Anlage 4 ^t80q113
+- A) Directional stability achieved through lift generation
+- B) Longitudinal stability through wing dihedral
+- C) Lateral stability provided by wing dihedral
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The figure shows wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings relative to the horizontal plane — which provides lateral (roll) stability. When one wing drops in a sideslip, the lower wing experiences a higher effective angle of attack, generating more lift and producing a restoring roll moment. Option A is wrong because directional stability comes from the vertical tail, not dihedral. Option B incorrectly identifies the axis — dihedral affects roll (lateral), not pitch (longitudinal) stability. Option D describes an aileron design feature unrelated to the figure.
+
+### Q114: "Longitudinal stability" refers to stability around which axis? ^t80q114
+- A) Vertical axis
+- B) Longitudinal axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Propeller axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Despite its potentially confusing name, longitudinal stability refers to pitch stability, which is rotation around the lateral axis (the axis running from wingtip to wingtip). It describes the aircraft's tendency to return to a trimmed pitch attitude. Option A is wrong because the vertical axis governs yaw (directional stability). Option B is incorrect because the longitudinal axis governs roll (lateral stability). Option D is not a recognised stability axis in standard aeronautical terminology.
+
+### Q115: Rotation about the vertical axis is termed... ^t80q115
+- A) Pitching
+- B) Yawing
+- C) Rolling
+- D) Slipping
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yawing is the rotation of the aircraft around the vertical (normal) axis, causing the nose to swing left or right. It is controlled primarily by the rudder. Option A (pitching) is rotation around the lateral axis. Option C (rolling) is rotation around the longitudinal axis. Option D (slipping) describes a flight condition with a sideways airflow component, not a specific rotational axis.
+
+### Q116: Rotation about the lateral axis is termed... ^t80q116
+- A) Stalling
+- B) Rolling
+- C) Yawing
+- D) Pitching
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pitching is the rotation of the aircraft around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip), resulting in nose-up or nose-down movement, controlled by the elevator. Option A (stalling) is an aerodynamic phenomenon of flow separation, not a rotational term. Option B (rolling) is rotation around the longitudinal axis. Option C (yawing) is rotation around the vertical axis.
+
+### Q117: The elevator causes the aircraft to rotate around the... ^t80q117
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Lateral axis
+- C) Elevator axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator controls pitch, which is rotation around the lateral axis (running from wingtip to wingtip). By deflecting the elevator, the pilot changes the aerodynamic force on the tail, creating a pitching moment that raises or lowers the nose. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll, controlled by ailerons. Option C is not a standard aeronautical axis. Option D is wrong because the vertical axis governs yaw, controlled by the rudder.
+
+### Q118: What must be considered regarding the centre of gravity position? ^t80q118
+- A) The C.G. position can only be determined once the aircraft is airborne
+- B) Moving the aileron trim tab can correct the C.G. position
+- C) Only proper loading ensures a correct and safe C.G. position
+- D) Adjusting the elevator trim tab can shift the C.G. to the correct position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity position is determined solely by how mass is distributed within the aircraft — only correct loading of occupants, baggage, and ballast within approved limits ensures a safe CG. Option A is wrong because CG must be verified on the ground before flight using weight and balance calculations. Option B is incorrect because aileron trim tabs adjust roll forces, not mass distribution. Option D is also wrong because trim tabs change aerodynamic balance forces, they cannot physically move the CG.
+
+### Q119: What benefit does differential aileron deflection provide? ^t80q119
+- A) The ratio of drag coefficient to lift coefficient increases
+- B) Total lift remains constant during aileron deflection
+- C) Adverse yaw is increased
+- D) Drag on the down-going aileron is reduced, making adverse yaw smaller
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection means the down-going aileron deflects less than the up-going aileron, which reduces the extra induced drag on the descending wing and thus minimises adverse yaw — the unwanted yawing opposite to the intended roll direction. Option A is wrong because the purpose is drag reduction, not increasing the drag-to-lift ratio. Option B is incorrect because total lift does change somewhat during aileron deflection. Option C states the opposite of the actual effect — differential ailerons decrease adverse yaw, not increase it.
+
+### Q120: What does the aerodynamic rudder balance accomplish? ^t80q120
+- A) It improves rudder effectiveness
+- B) It reduces the control stick forces
+- C) It delays the stall
+- D) It reduces the control surfaces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (such as a horn balance or set-back hinge) positions part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so that aerodynamic pressure partially assists the pilot's input, reducing the force needed to deflect the control. Option A is incorrect because the purpose is force reduction, not improved effectiveness. Option C is wrong because stall delay is achieved by devices like slats or vortex generators, not control surface balancing. Option D makes no sense — aerodynamic balance does not reduce the size of control surfaces.
+
+### Q121: What purpose does static rudder (mass) balancing serve? ^t80q121
+- A) To limit the control stick forces
+- B) To increase the control stick forces
+- C) To prevent control surface flutter
+- D) To enable force-free trimming
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static (mass) balancing places counterweights ahead of the hinge line to move the control surface's centre of mass to or forward of the hinge. This prevents flutter — a dangerous self-exciting aeroelastic oscillation that can destroy the control surface and airframe at speed. Option A is wrong because limiting stick forces is the role of aerodynamic balance, not mass balance. Option B is the opposite of any balancing goal. Option D is incorrect because force-free trimming is achieved by trim tabs, not mass balance.
+
+### Q122: When the elevator trim tab is deflected upwards, what does the trim indicator show? ^t80q122
+- A) Laterally trimmed
+- B) Neutral position
+- C) Nose-down position
+- D) Nose-up position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward-deflected trim tab generates a downward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, which pushes the elevator's leading edge upward, creating a nose-down pitching moment. The trim indicator therefore shows a nose-down position. Option A is irrelevant — lateral trim concerns roll, not pitch. Option B would require the tab to be neutral. Option D is the opposite — a nose-up indication would require the trim tab to deflect downward.
+
+### Q123: On the polar diagram, what flight condition does point number 1 indicate? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q123
+- A) Slow flight
+- B) Best gliding angle
+- C) Stall
+- D) Inverted flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) lies in the region of negative lift coefficient, representing inverted flight where the aircraft flies upside down and the wing produces downward lift relative to its normal orientation. Options A, B, and C all correspond to positive (upright) portions of the polar curve — slow flight is near maximum CL, stall is at CL_max, and best gliding angle is at the tangent point from the origin.
+
+### Q124: In a coordinated turn, what is the relationship between load factor (n) and stall speed (Vs)? ^t80q124
+- A) n is less than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+- B) n is greater than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- C) n is less than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- D) n is greater than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated banked turn, the lift vector must support both the weight and provide centripetal force, so the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) is always greater than 1. The stall speed increases by the factor sqrt(n), because more lift is needed and thus a higher speed is required to avoid the stall. Options A and C are wrong because n is always above 1 in a level turn. Option D incorrectly states that Vs decreases — higher load factor always raises stall speed.
+
+### Q125: The pressure equalisation between the upper and lower wing surfaces results in... ^t80q125
+- A) Profile drag caused by wingtip vortices
+- B) Laminar airflow caused by wingtip vortices
+- C) Lift generated by wingtip vortices
+- D) Induced drag caused by wingtip vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces causes air to flow around the wingtips, forming trailing vortices. These vortices create downwash that tilts the lift vector rearward, producing induced drag. Option A is wrong because wingtip vortices cause induced drag, not profile drag. Option B is incorrect because vortices create turbulent, not laminar, flow. Option C is false because vortices actually reduce effective lift by reducing the local angle of attack.
+
+### Q126: In steady glide at equal mass, how does using a thicker aerofoil compare to a thinner one? ^t80q126
+- A) Less drag, same lift
+- B) More drag, less lift
+- C) Less drag, less lift
+- D) More drag, same lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steady glide at the same mass, lift must equal weight regardless of the aerofoil thickness, so lift remains the same. However, a thicker aerofoil generates greater form (pressure) drag due to its larger cross-section and more severe adverse pressure gradients. Options A and C are wrong because a thicker profile produces more, not less, drag. Option B is incorrect because lift does not decrease — it is fixed by the weight requirement in steady flight.
+
+### Q127: What does a profile polar diagram display? ^t80q127
+- A) The lift coefficient cA at various angles of attack
+- B) The ratio of minimum sink rate to best glide
+- C) The ratio between total lift and drag as a function of angle of attack
+- D) The relationship between cA and cD at different angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A profile polar (Lilienthal polar) plots the lift coefficient (cA or CL) against the drag coefficient (cD or CD) at various angles of attack, showing how aerodynamic efficiency changes across the operating range. Option A describes only a CL-vs-alpha curve, not a polar. Option B relates to the speed polar of a glider, not a profile polar. Option C is imprecise — the polar shows the CL-CD relationship directly, not a simple ratio.
+
+### Q128: Any arbitrarily shaped body placed in an airflow (v > 0) always produces... ^t80q128
+- A) Drag that remains constant at any speed
+- B) Lift without drag
+- C) Drag
+- D) Both drag and lift
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body in a moving airflow always experiences drag due to viscous friction and pressure forces opposing the motion — this is unavoidable in a real fluid. Lift, however, requires specific aerodynamic shaping or orientation. Option A is wrong because drag varies with the square of velocity, not constant. Option B is physically impossible — drag-free lift does not exist. Option D is incorrect because an arbitrarily shaped body is not guaranteed to produce lift; only specifically shaped or oriented bodies generate lift.
+
+### Q129: In the diagram, what does number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q129
+- A) Chord
+- B) Chord line
+- C) Camber line
+- D) Thickness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the aerofoil diagram PFA-010, number 3 represents the camber line (mean camber line), which is the curved line equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil. Options A and B both refer to the straight reference line from leading to trailing edge, which is a different feature. Option D (thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a line on the diagram.
+
+### Q130: Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw? ^t80q130
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) Full deflection of the aileron
+- C) Differential aileron deflection
+- D) Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection reduces adverse yaw by deflecting the down-going aileron less than the up-going aileron, thereby reducing the extra induced drag on the descending wing that causes the nose to yaw opposite to the intended turn. Option A is wrong because wing dihedral provides roll stability, not yaw compensation. Option B would actually worsen adverse yaw because full deflection maximises the drag asymmetry. Option D is not a valid answer — it merely repeats the question.
+
+### Q131: What does "wing loading" describe? ^t80q131
+- A) Drag per weight
+- B) Wing area per weight
+- C) Drag per wing area
+- D) Weight per wing area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is defined as total aircraft weight divided by wing reference area, expressed in units such as N/m² or kg/m². It determines stall speed, gust sensitivity, and overall handling characteristics. Option A (drag per weight) describes a drag-to-weight ratio. Option B is the inverse of wing loading. Option C (drag per wing area) is not a standard aeronautical parameter.
+
+### Q132: On the polar diagram, what flight state does point number 5 represent? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q132
+- A) Best gliding angle
+- B) Inverted flight
+- C) Stall
+- D) Slow flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 5 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) corresponds to slow flight — a high angle of attack, low speed condition on the positive portion of the polar before reaching the stall point. Option A (best gliding angle) corresponds to the tangent from the origin touching the polar. Option B (inverted flight) would appear on the negative CL side. Option C (stall) is at the CL_max point, which is the very top of the polar, beyond slow flight.
+
+### Q133: What is the aerodynamic effect of deploying airbrakes? ^t80q133
+- A) Both drag and lift increase
+- B) Both drag and lift decrease
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airbrakes (spoilers/dive brakes) serve to steepen the glide path by significantly increasing drag while simultaneously disrupting upper-surface airflow, which reduces lift. Option A is wrong because lift decreases with airbrakes deployed. Option B is incorrect because drag increases, not decreases. Option D reverses both effects — airbrakes increase drag and decrease lift.
+
+### Q134: Which combination of measures can improve the glide ratio of a sailplane? ^t80q134
+- A) Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- B) Higher mass, thin aerofoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- C) Lower mass, correct speed, retractable gear
+- D) Cleaning surfaces, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide ratio (L/D) is maximised by minimising total drag while flying at the optimal speed. Cleaning surfaces reduces skin friction, taping gaps prevents leakage drag, retractable gear eliminates a major source of parasite drag, and maintaining best-glide speed keeps the aircraft at peak L/D. Option A is suboptimal because a forward CG increases trim drag. Option B is wrong because higher mass does not improve the L/D ratio itself. Option C omits important drag-reduction measures like taping gaps and surface cleaning.
+
+### Q135: What distinguishes a spin from a spiral dive? ^t80q135
+- A) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- B) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- C) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+- D) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a spin, the inner (lower) wing is deeply stalled while the outer wing may still be producing some lift, creating autorotation at a near-constant, relatively low airspeed. In a spiral dive, neither wing is stalled, and the aircraft descends in a tightening bank with rapidly increasing airspeed. Option A incorrectly identifies the outer wing as stalled. Options C and D incorrectly assign speed characteristics — in a spin, speed is roughly constant; in a spiral dive, speed increases rapidly.
+
+### Q136: The longitudinal position of the centre of gravity primarily affects stability around which axis? ^t80q136
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Gravity axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The longitudinal (fore-aft) position of the CG directly determines pitch stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. The CG must be forward of the neutral point for positive pitch stability; the further forward, the more statically stable but the heavier the elevator forces. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll stability, influenced by dihedral. Option B is not a standard axis. Option D is wrong because the vertical axis governs directional stability, influenced by the vertical tail.
+
+### Q137: Which structural element provides directional stability? ^t80q137
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) A large elevator
+- C) A large vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical tail fin acts as a weathervane, producing a restoring yawing moment whenever the aircraft sideslips, thereby providing directional (yaw) stability around the vertical axis. A larger fin provides greater stability. Option A (wing dihedral) provides lateral (roll) stability. Option B (elevator) contributes to pitch stability. Option D (differential aileron deflection) reduces adverse yaw but is not a stability feature.
+
+### Q138: In straight-and-level flight at constant engine power, how does the wing's angle of attack compare to that in a climb? ^t80q138
+- A) Larger than in a climb
+- B) Larger than at take-off
+- C) Smaller than in a descent
+- D) Smaller than in a climb
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a climb at the same engine power, the aircraft flies slower because more energy goes into gaining altitude, requiring a higher angle of attack to maintain sufficient lift. Therefore, the level-flight angle of attack is smaller than in a climb. Option A reverses the relationship. Option B compares to take-off, which is not directly related to the question. Option C is incorrect because in a descent the aircraft accelerates, typically reducing AoA below the level-flight value.
+
+### Q139: What is one function of the horizontal tail? ^t80q139
+- A) To stabilise the aircraft around the lateral axis
+- B) To initiate a turn around the vertical axis
+- C) To stabilise the aircraft around the vertical axis
+- D) To stabilise the aircraft around the longitudinal axis
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator) provides longitudinal (pitch) stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. It generates restoring moments when the aircraft's pitch attitude is disturbed. Option B is wrong because turns around the vertical axis are initiated by the rudder. Option C is incorrect because vertical axis stability comes from the vertical tail. Option D is wrong because longitudinal axis (roll) stability is provided by wing dihedral and sweep.
+
+### Q140: What happens when the rudder is deflected to the left? ^t80q140
+- A) The aircraft pitches to the right
+- B) The aircraft yaws to the right
+- C) The aircraft pitches to the left
+- D) The aircraft yaws to the left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the rudder is deflected to the left, it produces a sideways aerodynamic force on the tail that pushes the tail to the right, yawing the nose to the left around the vertical axis. Options A and C are wrong because pitching is a nose-up/nose-down motion controlled by the elevator, not the rudder. Option B reverses the yaw direction — left rudder produces left yaw.
+
+### Q141: Differential aileron deflection is employed to... ^t80q141
+- A) Increase the rate of descent
+- B) Prevent stalling at low angles of attack
+- C) Minimise adverse yaw
+- D) Reduce wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection gives the down-going aileron less deflection than the up-going aileron, reducing the drag asymmetry between the two wings during a roll input and thereby minimising adverse yaw. Option A is wrong because descent rate is controlled by airbrakes or speed, not aileron geometry. Option B is incorrect because stall prevention at low AoA is not an issue. Option D is wrong because wake turbulence is caused by wingtip vortices, not aileron design.
+
+### Q142: How is the force balance affected during a banked turn? ^t80q142
+- A) A lower lift force is sufficient because the net force is reduced compared to level flight
+- B) The horizontal component of the lift during the turn constitutes the centrifugal force
+- C) Lift must be increased to balance the combined effect of gravity and centrifugal force
+- D) The net force is the vector sum of gravitational and centripetal forces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the tilted lift vector must be large enough that its vertical component still equals weight while its horizontal component provides the centripetal force for the curved path. This means total lift must exceed the straight-and-level value, with the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle). Option A is wrong because more, not less, lift is needed. Option B is imprecise — from the aircraft's reference frame it appears as centrifugal force, but the actual physics involves centripetal force. Option D does not fully describe the force balance requirement.
+
+### Q143: On a Touring Motor Glider (TMG), which engine arrangement produces the least drag? ^t80q143
+- A) Engine and propeller fixed at the aircraft's nose
+- B) Engine and propeller fixed on the fuselage
+- C) Engine and propeller retractable into the fuselage
+- D) Engine and propeller fixed at the horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A retractable engine and propeller can be fully stowed inside the fuselage when not in use, completely eliminating the parasite drag from the powerplant and propeller during soaring flight. Options A, B, and D all involve fixed (non-retractable) installations that continuously produce drag even when the engine is shut down, because the propeller and engine cowling remain exposed to the airstream.
+
+### Q144: What effect is known as "adverse yaw"? ^t80q144
+- A) Aileron input yaws the nose toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input creates a rolling moment toward the opposite side due to extra lift on the faster-moving wing
+- C) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the down-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the up-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-deflected aileron increases both lift and induced drag on its wing. This extra drag on the rising wing yaws the nose toward it — away from the intended direction of turn. Option A describes the opposite effect. Option B describes a secondary effect of rudder, not the primary adverse yaw phenomenon. Option D incorrectly attributes the extra drag to the up-deflected aileron, when in fact it is the down-deflected aileron that produces more drag.
+
+### Q145: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q145
+- A) An increase in lift and decrease in induced drag near the ground
+- B) A decrease in lift and increase in induced drag near the ground
+- C) A decrease in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+- D) An increase in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying within approximately one wingspan of the ground, the ground surface restricts the full development of wingtip vortices, reducing downwash. This effectively increases the local angle of attack (more lift) and reduces induced drag simultaneously. Option B reverses both effects. Option C incorrectly states lift decreases. Option D incorrectly states induced drag increases. Pilots experience ground effect as a floating sensation during the landing flare.
+
+### Q146: Rudder deflections rotate the aircraft around the... ^t80q146
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Rudder axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rudder controls yaw, which is rotation around the vertical axis, causing the nose to swing left or right. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll, controlled by ailerons. Option B is not a standard aeronautical axis designation. Option C is wrong because the lateral axis governs pitch, controlled by the elevator.
+
+### Q147: Which of the following factors causes the load factor to increase during cruise flight? ^t80q147
+- A) A forward centre of gravity
+- B) Higher aircraft weight
+- C) An upward gust
+- D) Lower air density
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward gust suddenly increases the wing's angle of attack, temporarily generating lift in excess of the aircraft's weight. This additional lift translates into a load factor greater than 1, stressing the structure. Option A (forward CG) affects pitch stability and trim drag but does not directly cause load factor spikes. Option B (higher weight) means higher sustained loads but does not itself cause an increase in load factor n. Option D (lower density) reduces lift for a given speed, which would lower, not raise, the instantaneous load factor.
+
+### Q148: While approaching the next updraft, the variometer shows 3 m/s descent. You expect a mean climb rate of 2 m/s in the thermal. How should you set the McCready ring? ^t80q148
+- A) Set the ring to 3 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the expected climb rate (2 m/s)
+- B) Set the ring to 0 m/s outside thermals and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- C) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- D) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the sum of current sink rate and expected climb rate (5 m/s)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The McCready ring is always set to the expected climb rate in the next thermal (2 m/s in this case), and the recommended inter-thermal cruise speed is then read at the variometer needle position showing the current sink rate (3 m/s). Option A incorrectly sets the ring to the sink rate instead of the thermal strength. Option B sets the ring to zero, which would give a minimum-sink rather than optimal cruise speed. Option D erroneously adds the sink rate and climb rate together, which is not how McCready theory works.
+
+### Q149: What must be considered when flying a sailplane equipped with camber flaps? ^t80q149
+- A) During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive
+- B) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive
+- C) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative
+- D) During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During approach and landing, switching the camber flap from positive (increased camber, higher lift) to negative (reduced or reflexed camber) would cause a sudden and dramatic drop in lift close to the ground, potentially leading to a dangerous sink or ground contact. Option A is not universally correct — winch launch flap settings vary by type. Option B reverses the restriction. Option D is wrong because negative camber is a cruise setting, not appropriate for the high-lift-demand winch launch phase.
+
+### Q150: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q150
+- A) Separation point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 3 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) is the transition point, where the boundary layer changes from smooth laminar flow to turbulent flow. The position of this transition depends on Reynolds number, surface roughness, and pressure gradient. Option A (separation point) occurs further aft, where flow detaches entirely. Option B (centre of pressure) is not a boundary layer feature but a force application point. Option C (stagnation point) is at the leading edge, where flow velocity is zero.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_151_162.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_151_162.md
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+### Q151: In the diagram, what does number 2 correspond to? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q151
+- A) Angle of attack
+- B) Profile thickness
+- C) Chord line
+- D) Chord line
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Number 2 in figure PFA-010 represents the chord line — the straight reference line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge of the aerofoil. It is the baseline from which the angle of attack and camber are measured. Option A (angle of attack) is an angular measurement, not a line on the diagram. Option B (profile thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a straight reference line.
+
+### Q152: In the figure, the angle (alpha) is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow Siehe Anlage 3 ^t80q152
+- A) Angle of inclination
+- B) Angle of incidence
+- C) Angle of attack
+- D) Lift angle
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle alpha between the chord line and the direction of the oncoming airflow is the angle of attack, the primary aerodynamic variable determining lift coefficient and stall behaviour. Option A (angle of inclination) is not a standard aeronautical term. Option B (angle of incidence) is the fixed structural angle between the chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis, set during manufacturing. Option D (lift angle) is not a recognized aviation term.
+
+### Q153: If the right aileron deflects upward and the left aileron deflects downward, how does the aircraft react? ^t80q153
+- A) Rolling to the right with yaw to the left
+- B) Rolling to the right with yaw to the right
+- C) Rolling to the left with no yawing
+- D) Rolling to the left with yaw to the right
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the right aileron deflects upward (reducing lift on the right wing) and the left aileron deflects downward (increasing lift on the left wing), the aircraft rolls to the right. Simultaneously, the down-deflected left aileron creates more induced drag on the left wing, producing adverse yaw — the nose swings to the left, opposite the intended roll direction. Options C and D incorrectly identify a leftward roll. Option B states yaw to the right, but adverse yaw always opposes the roll direction.
+
+### Q154: What must be taken into account when flying a sailplane with water ballast? ^t80q154
+- A) Best glide angle becomes worse
+- B) Best glide speed decreases
+- C) Significant C.G. shifts occur
+- D) The aircraft should stay below the freezing level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast must be kept above freezing (i.e., the aircraft should stay below the freezing level) to prevent the water from freezing in the wing tanks, which could jam dump valves, cause unpredictable CG shifts, and damage wing structure. Option A is wrong because the best glide angle (L/D ratio) is theoretically unchanged with ballast. Option B is incorrect — best glide speed increases with additional weight. Option C is misleading because water ballast tanks are designed to minimise CG shifts, keeping them within approved limits.
+
+### Q155: Which description characterises static stability? ^t80q155
+- A) After an external disturbance, the aircraft can return to its original position through rudder input
+- B) After an external disturbance, the aircraft maintains the displaced position
+- C) After an external disturbance, the aircraft tends toward an even more deflected position
+- D) After an external disturbance, the aircraft tends to return to its original position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability means that when an aircraft is displaced from equilibrium by an external force, inherent aerodynamic forces automatically tend to return it toward its original state without pilot input. Option A describes active pilot correction, not inherent stability. Option B describes neutral stability, where the aircraft stays wherever it is displaced. Option C describes static instability, where the aircraft diverges further from equilibrium.
+
+### Q156: How do the best gliding angle and best glide speed change when a sailplane carries water ballast compared to flying without it? ^t80q156
+- A) Best gliding angle remains unchanged; best glide speed increases
+- B) Best gliding angle increases; best glide speed increases
+- C) Best gliding angle remains unchanged; best glide speed decreases
+- D) Best gliding angle decreases; best glide speed decreases
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast increases total aircraft weight. The best L/D ratio (and therefore the best gliding angle) is an aerodynamic property of the aircraft's shape and does not change with weight. However, the speed at which this optimum L/D occurs increases because more dynamic pressure is needed to generate the extra lift required by the heavier aircraft. Option B wrongly claims the angle changes. Options C and D incorrectly state that best glide speed decreases.
+
+### Q157: Which constructive feature is designed to reduce control forces? ^t80q157
+- A) T-tail
+- B) Vortex generators
+- C) Aerodynamic rudder balance
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (horn balance or set-back hinge) extends part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so aerodynamic pressure partially assists the pilot's deflection effort, directly reducing the force required. Option A (T-tail) is a configuration choice affecting downwash and deep-stall characteristics. Option B (vortex generators) energise the boundary layer to delay flow separation. Option D (differential aileron deflection) reduces adverse yaw, not control forces.
+
+### Q158: When any body of arbitrary shape is surrounded by airflow (v > 0), it always produces... ^t80q158
+- A) Drag
+- B) Both drag and lift
+- C) Drag that remains constant at every speed
+- D) Lift without drag
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body immersed in a moving airstream (v > 0) always produces drag, because viscous friction and pressure differences are unavoidable in real fluid flow. Lift requires specific shaping or angle of attack and is not guaranteed. Option B is wrong because lift is not always produced. Option C is incorrect because drag increases with V² — it is not constant. Option D is physically impossible — drag-free flight does not exist in a real fluid.
+
+### Q159: "Longitudinal stability" refers to stability around which axis? ^t80q159
+- A) Vertical axis
+- B) Propeller axis
+- C) Longitudinal axis
+- D) Lateral axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Despite the potentially confusing name, longitudinal stability describes pitch stability, which is rotation around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip). It is the tendency to maintain or return to a trimmed pitch attitude. Option A (vertical axis) governs directional/yaw stability. Option B (propeller axis) is not a standard stability axis. Option C (longitudinal axis) governs roll/lateral stability.
+
+### Q160: What does "wing loading" mean? ^t80q160
+- A) Drag per wing area
+- B) Weight per wing area
+- C) Drag per weight
+- D) Wing area per weight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is the aircraft's total weight divided by the wing reference area (e.g., N/m² or kg/m²). Higher wing loading means higher stall speeds but better penetration in turbulence. Option A (drag per wing area) is not a standard metric. Option C (drag per weight) describes a drag-to-weight ratio. Option D (wing area per weight) is the mathematical inverse of wing loading.
+
+### Q161: What phenomenon is known as adverse yaw? ^t80q161
+- A) Aileron input causes a yaw toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input produces a rolling moment toward the opposite side because the faster-moving wing generates more lift
+- C) Aileron input causes a yaw away from the intended turn due to more drag on the up-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input causes a yaw away from the intended turn due to more drag on the down-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-deflected aileron, which increases local lift on the rising wing, also increases induced drag on that wing. This extra drag pulls the nose toward the rising wing — away from the intended turn direction. Option A describes the opposite phenomenon. Option B describes a secondary rudder-roll coupling, not the primary adverse yaw effect. Option C incorrectly attributes the drag increase to the up-deflected aileron; in reality, it is the down-deflected aileron that creates more drag.
+
+### Q162: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q162
+- A) Both lift and induced drag decrease near the ground
+- B) Both lift and induced drag increase near the ground
+- C) Lift decreases and induced drag increases near the ground
+- D) Lift increases and induced drag decreases near the ground
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ground effect (within approximately one wingspan of the surface), the ground physically constrains wingtip vortex development, reducing downwash. This increases the effective angle of attack (raising lift) while simultaneously reducing induced drag. Pilots notice this as a floating sensation during the landing flare. Options A, B, and C all incorrectly describe the lift-drag relationship — the correct combination is increased lift with decreased induced drag.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_1_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_1_50.md
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+### Q1: Regarding the forces at play, how is steady-state gliding flight best characterised? ^t80q1
+- A) Lift alone compensates for drag
+- B) The resultant aerodynamic force acts along the direction of the airflow
+- C) The resultant aerodynamic force counterbalances the weight
+- D) The resultant aerodynamic force is aligned with the lift vector
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In steady (stationary) gliding flight, there is no thrust, so only two forces act: gravity (weight) and the total aerodynamic force (the vector sum of lift and drag). For the glider to be in equilibrium, these two must be equal and opposite — meaning the resultant air force exactly compensates gravity. Lift and drag are merely components of this single aerodynamic resultant; neither lift alone nor drag alone balances weight.
+
+### Q2: What happens to the minimum flying speed when flaps are extended, thereby increasing wing camber? ^t80q2
+- A) The minimum speed rises
+- B) The centre of gravity shifts forward
+- C) The minimum speed drops
+- D) The maximum permissible speed rises
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases wing camber, which raises the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max). From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)), a higher CL_max directly lowers the minimum flying speed Vs. This allows the aircraft to fly slower without stalling, which is why flaps are used during approach and landing. The maximum permissible speed typically decreases with flaps extended (not increases), because flap structures are not designed for high dynamic pressure.
+
+### Q3: After one wing stalls and the nose drops, what is the correct technique to prevent a spin? ^t80q3
+- A) Pull the elevator to restore the aircraft to a normal attitude
+- B) Deflect all control surfaces opposite to the lower wing
+- C) Push the elevator forward to gain speed and re-attach airflow on the wings
+- D) Apply rudder opposite to the lower wing and release elevator back-pressure to regain speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An incipient spin begins when one wing stalls before the other — the stalled wing drops, creating a yawing and rolling moment. The correct response is to apply rudder opposite the direction of yaw/lower wing to stop the rotation, and simultaneously release elevator back-pressure (or push forward) to reduce the angle of attack below the critical value, allowing airflow to re-attach and lift to be restored. Pulling the elevator (A) would increase AoA and deepen the stall; pushing alone (C) without rudder does not stop the yaw.
+
+### Q4: Which component is responsible for pitch stabilisation during cruise? ^t80q4
+- A) Ailerons
+- B) Wing flaps
+- C) Vertical rudder
+- D) Horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The lateral axis is the pitch axis (nose up/down). The horizontal stabilizer provides longitudinal (pitch) stability: it generates a restoring moment whenever the nose pitches up or down from trim, because its lift force changes with AoA at the tail. Ailerons control roll (longitudinal axis), the vertical rudder controls yaw (vertical axis), and flaps are high-lift devices, not stability surfaces.
+
+### Q5: What can happen when the never-exceed speed (VNE) is surpassed in flight? ^t80q5
+- A) Flutter and structural damage to the wings
+- B) Lower drag accompanied by higher control forces
+- C) Excessive total pressure rendering the airspeed indicator unusable
+- D) An improved lift-to-drag ratio and a flatter glide angle
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding VNE risks aeroelastic flutter — a self-reinforcing oscillation of the control surfaces or wings that can destroy the structure within seconds. Flutter onset speed is close to VNE. Structural failure of spars, attachments, or control surfaces may follow. The other options describe effects that do not occur at excessive speed: glide angle does not improve, drag does not decrease, and the ASI is designed to function at all normal and abnormal speeds.
+
+### Q6: What effect does a rearward centre of gravity position have on a glider's handling? ^t80q6
+- A) The aircraft becomes very stable in pitch
+- B) The aircraft becomes less stable in pitch and is harder to control
+- C) Roll control effectiveness increases
+- D) The stall speed increases significantly
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rearward CG reduces the restoring moment arm between the CG and the horizontal stabiliser, diminishing longitudinal (pitch) stability. In extreme cases the aircraft can become unstable in pitch — the pilot may be unable to prevent a nose-up divergence, especially during winch launch or in turbulence. The forward CG limit ensures adequate pitch stability; the aft limit ensures adequate controllability. A rearward CG does not increase stall speed or roll effectiveness, and it makes the aircraft less, not more, stable.
+
+### Q7: What purpose does the vertical tail fin (rudder assembly) serve? ^t80q7
+- A) Providing roll stability
+- B) Providing pitch control
+- C) Generating additional lift in turns
+- D) Providing directional (yaw) stability and control
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical tail fin (fin + rudder) provides yaw stability and yaw control. The fixed fin acts as a weathervane that generates a restoring yaw moment if the aircraft sideslips. The movable rudder allows the pilot to command deliberate yaw inputs for coordination, crosswind correction, or spin recovery. The horizontal stabiliser handles pitch; wing dihedral handles roll stability; the vertical tail does not generate lift in the conventional sense.
+
+### Q8: In a coordinated level turn at 60 degrees of bank, the load factor is approximately... ^t80q8
+- A) 1.0
+- B) 1.4
+- C) 2.0
+- D) 3.0
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a level coordinated turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle). At 60° bank, n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0.5 = 2.0. This means the effective weight the wings must support doubles. Stall speed increases by a factor of √n = √2 ≈ 1.41, i.e. a 41% increase. This is why steep turns at low altitude are dangerous for gliders — the stall margin shrinks dramatically.
+
+### Q9: What is the relationship between aspect ratio and induced drag? ^t80q9
+- A) Higher aspect ratio increases induced drag
+- B) Aspect ratio has no effect on induced drag
+- C) Higher aspect ratio reduces induced drag
+- D) Induced drag depends only on airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is inversely proportional to aspect ratio (AR): D_induced ∝ CL² / (π × AR × e). A longer, narrower wing (high AR) produces the same lift with weaker wingtip vortices and therefore less induced drag. This is why gliders have very high aspect ratios — it is the primary design feature that maximises the lift-to-drag ratio and glide performance.
+
+### Q10: When the elevator trim tab is deflected downward, what is the resulting pitch tendency? ^t80q10
+- A) Nose-up
+- B) No change
+- C) The aircraft rolls
+- D) Nose-down
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A downward-deflected trim tab produces an upward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, pushing the elevator's trailing edge up and its leading edge down — this effectively deflects the elevator downward, creating a nose-up pitching moment. Trim tabs work by aerodynamic force to relieve the pilot of sustained stick forces; their deflection is opposite to the desired elevator deflection.
+
+### Q11: What does the polar curve of a glider depict? ^t80q11
+- A) The relationship between altitude and airspeed
+- B) The relationship between sink rate and airspeed
+- C) The relationship between lift and weight
+- D) The relationship between drag and altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The glider's speed polar plots the vertical sink rate (Vz, typically in m/s) against the horizontal airspeed (Vh). It is the fundamental performance diagram for a glider: it reveals the minimum sink speed (the lowest point on the curve), the best glide speed (given by the tangent from the origin), and inter-thermal cruise speeds (McCready tangents). All cross-country speed-to-fly decisions are based on this curve.
+
+### Q12: In straight and level flight, what happens to the required angle of attack as speed increases? ^t80q12
+- A) It remains constant
+- B) It increases
+- C) It decreases
+- D) It oscillates
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In level flight, lift must equal weight (L = W). Since L = CL × 0.5 × ρ × V² × S, when speed V increases the lift coefficient CL must decrease to keep lift constant. A lower CL corresponds to a lower angle of attack. Therefore, faster flight requires a smaller angle of attack, and slower flight (toward the stall) requires a progressively larger angle of attack.
+
+### Q13: What is the function of wing fences or boundary layer fences? ^t80q13
+- A) To increase the maximum speed
+- B) To reduce weight
+- C) To prevent spanwise flow of the boundary layer
+- D) To increase induced drag
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing fences are thin vertical plates on the upper surface of a swept or tapered wing that prevent the boundary layer from flowing spanwise (outward toward the tips). Without fences, the boundary layer migrates outward due to the pressure gradient, thickening at the tips and promoting tip stall. Fences confine the boundary layer to its local region, improving tip stall characteristics and aileron effectiveness at high angles of attack.
+
+### Q14: What happens to total drag at the speed for best glide ratio? ^t80q14
+- A) Total drag is at its maximum
+- B) Induced drag equals zero
+- C) Total drag is at its minimum
+- D) Parasite drag equals zero
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best glide ratio (maximum L/D) occurs at the speed where total drag is minimum. At this point, induced drag exactly equals parasite drag — any faster increases parasite drag more than induced drag decreases, and any slower increases induced drag more than parasite drag decreases. For a glider, this speed gives the flattest glide angle and the greatest distance per unit of altitude lost in still air.
+
+### Q15: What structural feature contributes to lateral (roll) stability in a glider? ^t80q15
+- A) Horizontal stabiliser
+- B) Vertical fin
+- C) Wing dihedral
+- D) Elevator trim
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings — is the primary design feature providing lateral (roll) stability. When a gust or disturbance causes one wing to drop, the dihedral geometry increases the angle of attack on the lower wing, generating more lift and creating a restoring roll moment toward wings-level. The vertical fin provides directional stability; the horizontal stabiliser provides pitch stability; and elevator trim sets a pitch reference, not a roll reference.
+
+### Q16: How does increasing altitude affect true airspeed (TAS) for a given indicated airspeed (IAS)? ^t80q16
+- A) TAS decreases
+- B) TAS stays the same as IAS
+- C) TAS increases
+- D) TAS fluctuates unpredictably
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is based on dynamic pressure (q = 0.5 × ρ × V²). At higher altitude, air density ρ is lower, so a given IAS corresponds to a higher TAS. The relationship is TAS = IAS × √(ρ₀/ρ), where ρ₀ is sea-level density. For glider pilots, this means that at altitude, the ground speed for the same indicated approach speed is higher, and the landing roll will be longer.
+
+### Q17: What does the term "load factor" describe? ^t80q17
+- A) The ratio of aircraft weight to wing area
+- B) The ratio of lift to weight
+- C) The ratio of drag to weight
+- D) The ratio of thrust to drag
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Load factor (n) is defined as the ratio of the lift generated by the wings to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In straight and level flight, n = 1. In a turn, n > 1 because extra lift is needed for the centripetal force. In a vertical pullup, n can exceed the design limits. The structural design of the glider is rated for specific load factor limits (typically +5.3g / -2.65g for utility category).
+
+### Q18: How does increasing aircraft weight affect the best glide ratio? ^t80q18
+- A) It improves the glide ratio
+- B) It worsens the glide ratio
+- C) It does not change the glide ratio
+- D) It depends on the wing configuration
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best L/D ratio is determined by the aerodynamic shape of the aircraft and is independent of weight. Increasing weight shifts the speed polar downward and to the right — the best glide speed increases (must fly faster) but the maximum L/D ratio stays the same. This is why adding water ballast in gliders improves inter-thermal cruise speed without changing the glide angle — only the speed at which that angle is achieved changes.
+
+### Q19: A glider is flying at the speed for minimum sink rate. If the pilot accelerates, what happens to the sink rate? ^t80q19
+- A) Sink rate decreases further
+- B) Sink rate remains the same
+- C) Sink rate increases
+- D) Sink rate oscillates
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum sink rate speed is the speed at the lowest point of the speed polar. Any speed change — faster or slower — from this point increases the sink rate. Accelerating beyond minimum sink speed increases parasite drag faster than induced drag decreases, resulting in a higher total drag and therefore a greater rate of descent. This is the trade-off in cross-country flying: flying faster covers more ground but at the cost of increased sink rate.
+
+### Q20: What is the effect of extending airbrakes (spoilers) on a glider? ^t80q20
+- A) Lift increases and drag decreases
+- B) Both lift and drag decrease
+- C) Drag increases and lift decreases
+- D) Both lift and drag increase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airbrakes (spoilers) disrupt the smooth airflow over the wing surface, reducing the pressure differential and therefore reducing lift. Simultaneously, the raised spoiler panels create a large increase in drag. This combined effect steepens the glide path dramatically, which is precisely their purpose — to allow the pilot to control the approach angle and land precisely. Without airbrakes, gliders would float long distances due to their excellent L/D ratio.
+
+### Q21: In which flight condition is induced drag greatest? ^t80q21
+- A) High-speed cruise
+- B) Diving flight
+- C) Slow flight at high angle of attack
+- D) At the best glide speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL², and CL is highest in slow flight at high angle of attack (where the wing must generate maximum lift per unit of dynamic pressure). In a dive or at high speed, CL is low and induced drag is minimal — parasite drag dominates instead. At best glide speed, induced drag equals parasite drag but is not at its maximum. The slow-flight regime is where induced drag dominates total drag.
+
+### Q22: What is the primary function of an elevator trim tab? ^t80q22
+- A) To reduce control stick forces in sustained flight conditions
+- B) To increase the maximum speed
+- C) To improve lateral stability
+- D) To prevent flutter
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator trim tab allows the pilot to reduce or eliminate the stick force needed to hold a given pitch attitude in steady flight. By deflecting the trim tab, an aerodynamic force is applied to the elevator that counters the natural hinge moment, allowing hands-off or reduced-force flight at the trimmed speed. This reduces pilot fatigue on long flights and allows the pilot to concentrate on navigation and thermal exploitation.
+
+### Q23: What happens to stall speed in a turn compared to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q23
+- A) Stall speed decreases
+- B) Stall speed remains unchanged
+- C) Stall speed increases
+- D) Stall speed depends only on altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) exceeds 1, meaning the wings must generate more lift than in straight flight. The stall speed increases by the factor √n. At 45° bank, stall speed increases by 19%; at 60° bank by 41%. This is a critical safety consideration when thermalling near the ground — the steeper the bank, the closer the pilot is to the elevated stall speed.
+
+### Q24: What is the centre of pressure of an aerofoil? ^t80q24
+- A) The point where the aircraft's weight acts
+- B) The point of maximum thickness on the aerofoil
+- C) The point where the resultant aerodynamic force acts on the wing
+- D) The geometric centre of the wing planform
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of pressure (CP) is the point on the chord line where the resultant aerodynamic force (sum of all pressure and friction forces) can be considered to act. Unlike the aerodynamic centre, the CP moves with changing angle of attack — it moves forward as AoA increases and rearward as AoA decreases. This movement is one reason why the CG position must remain within limits: if the CP moves too far from the CG, pitch control may be compromised.
+
+### Q25: At what point during flight is parasite drag greatest? ^t80q25
+- A) During slow flight near the stall
+- B) At the minimum sink speed
+- C) At the best glide speed
+- D) At the highest permissible speed (VNE)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parasite drag is proportional to V² (dynamic pressure). The faster the aircraft flies, the greater the parasite drag. At VNE — the maximum speed — parasite drag reaches its peak within the normal flight envelope. At slow speeds near the stall, parasite drag is minimal while induced drag dominates. Parasite drag includes form drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag — all of which grow with the square of the airspeed.
+
+### Q26: What is the Bernoulli principle as applied to an aerofoil? ^t80q26
+- A) Pressure increases where flow velocity increases
+- B) Where flow velocity increases, pressure decreases
+- C) Lift is generated solely by the deflection of air downward
+- D) Drag is independent of velocity
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bernoulli's principle states that in a steady, incompressible flow, an increase in flow velocity is accompanied by a decrease in static pressure, and vice versa. Applied to an aerofoil, the air accelerates over the curved upper surface, creating a region of lower pressure compared to the lower surface. This pressure differential generates lift. While Newton's third law (downwash) also contributes to lift, the Bernoulli pressure distribution is the primary mechanism for conventional subsonic flight.
+
+### Q27: What is adverse yaw? ^t80q27
+- A) The tendency to pitch nose-down in a steep turn
+- B) Unwanted yaw in the direction opposite to the intended turn when ailerons are applied
+- C) The yaw caused by rudder deflection in crosswind
+- D) The yaw resulting from asymmetric thrust
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-going aileron (on the wing that rises) increases both lift and induced drag on that wing. The extra drag on the rising wing pulls the nose toward the descending wing — opposite to the intended turn direction. This is why coordinated use of rudder with aileron is essential, and why differential aileron deflection was developed as a design solution.
+
+### Q28: When does ground effect become significant? ^t80q28
+- A) At any altitude in calm air
+- B) Within approximately one wingspan of the ground
+- C) Only during take-off roll
+- D) Above 100 m AGL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground effect becomes significant when the aircraft is within approximately one wingspan of the surface. The ground physically restricts the development of wingtip vortices and reduces the induced downwash angle, which effectively increases lift and reduces induced drag. Pilots experience this as a floating sensation during the landing flare — the glider wants to keep flying in ground effect, which can cause overshooting the intended touchdown point if not anticipated.
+
+### Q29: What does the term "washout" refer to in wing design? ^t80q29
+- A) The reduction of wing chord from root to tip
+- B) A decrease in the angle of incidence from wing root to tip
+- C) The cleaning procedure for wing surfaces
+- D) The loss of lift during a stall
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Washout is a deliberate design feature in which the wing's angle of incidence decreases progressively from root to tip (geometric washout) or the aerofoil section changes to produce less lift at the tip (aerodynamic washout). This ensures that the wing root stalls before the tip, preserving aileron effectiveness during a stall and making the stall behaviour more benign and recoverable. Washout is particularly important in gliders with their long, high-aspect-ratio wings.
+
+### Q30: What is the relationship between the angle of attack and the lift coefficient up to the stall? ^t80q30
+- A) Lift coefficient decreases as angle of attack increases
+- B) Lift coefficient increases approximately linearly as angle of attack increases
+- C) Lift coefficient remains constant regardless of angle of attack
+- D) Lift coefficient increases exponentially with angle of attack
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the pre-stall regime, the lift coefficient CL increases approximately linearly with angle of attack (AoA). The slope of this line is the lift curve slope (typically about 2π per radian for a thin aerofoil). This linear relationship continues until the critical angle of attack is reached, at which point flow separation causes CL to peak (CL_max) and then drop sharply — the stall. The linearity of the CL vs. AoA relationship is one of the foundational results of aerodynamic theory.
+
+### Q31: How does the flap position affect the stall speed? ^t80q31
+- A) Extending flaps raises the stall speed
+- B) Flap position has no effect on stall speed
+- C) Extending flaps lowers the stall speed
+- D) Retracting flaps lowers the stall speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases the wing's maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) by adding camber and, in some designs, wing area. From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (ρ × S × CL_max)), a higher CL_max yields a lower stall speed. This allows approach and landing at slower speeds with a shorter ground roll. Retracting flaps removes this benefit and returns stall speed to the higher clean-configuration value.
+
+### Q32: What is the purpose of a laminar-flow aerofoil? ^t80q32
+- A) To increase induced drag at low speeds
+- B) To maximise the region of turbulent boundary layer
+- C) To reduce skin friction drag by maintaining laminar flow over a larger portion of the wing
+- D) To improve stall characteristics at high angles of attack
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Laminar-flow aerofoils are designed with their maximum thickness further aft than conventional profiles, creating a favourable pressure gradient that keeps the boundary layer laminar over a larger portion of the chord. Since laminar boundary layers produce far less skin friction drag than turbulent ones, the overall profile drag is significantly reduced. Gliders exploit this extensively — clean laminar-flow wings are the reason modern gliders achieve glide ratios exceeding 50:1.
+
+### Q33: How does air density change with increasing altitude? ^t80q33
+- A) It increases linearly
+- B) It remains constant
+- C) It decreases
+- D) It increases then decreases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density decreases with altitude because atmospheric pressure drops and air expands. In the standard atmosphere, density at 5,500 m is roughly half the sea-level value. Reduced density means reduced dynamic pressure at a given TAS, which is why aircraft performance (lift and drag per unit TAS) degrades at altitude — the aircraft must fly faster in TAS to maintain the same IAS and lift.
+
+### Q34: What is the difference between static stability and dynamic stability? ^t80q34
+- A) They are the same concept
+- B) Static stability is the initial tendency to return to equilibrium; dynamic stability describes whether the subsequent oscillations damp out
+- C) Dynamic stability is the initial tendency; static stability describes long-term behaviour
+- D) Static stability only applies to pitch, dynamic stability only to roll
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability describes the aircraft's immediate response to a disturbance — whether restoring forces act to push it back toward the original equilibrium. Dynamic stability describes what happens over time: if the resulting oscillations decrease in amplitude and the aircraft eventually returns to its trimmed state, it is dynamically stable. An aircraft can be statically stable but dynamically unstable (oscillations grow), which is a dangerous condition.
+
+### Q35: What is the purpose of vortex generators on a wing? ^t80q35
+- A) To increase the laminar boundary layer region
+- B) To reduce the aircraft's weight
+- C) To energise the boundary layer and delay flow separation
+- D) To decrease the stall speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vortex generators are small tabs that protrude from the wing surface and create tiny vortices that mix high-energy air from outside the boundary layer into the slower boundary layer flow near the surface. This energised boundary layer can resist adverse pressure gradients more effectively, delaying flow separation and improving control effectiveness at high angles of attack. They trade a small increase in skin friction for a significant delay in stall onset and better aileron authority near the stall.
+
+### Q36: The lift formula L = CL x 0.5 x rho x V² x S contains several variables. Which of these can the pilot directly control in flight? ^t80q36
+- A) Air density (rho)
+- B) Wing area (S)
+- C) Airspeed (V) and, indirectly, the lift coefficient (CL) through angle of attack
+- D) All of the above
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot can directly change airspeed V (by adjusting pitch attitude) and indirectly change the lift coefficient CL (by changing the angle of attack, or by extending/retracting flaps). Air density ρ changes with altitude and temperature but is not directly controlled. Wing area S is fixed (except in rare variable-geometry designs or Fowler flap configurations). Airspeed and angle of attack are the pilot's primary tools for managing lift.
+
+### Q37: In which direction does the centre of pressure move as the angle of attack increases (pre-stall)? ^t80q37
+- A) Rearward along the chord
+- B) It does not move
+- C) Forward along the chord
+- D) Upward, away from the wing surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As angle of attack increases in the pre-stall range, the pressure distribution shifts such that the centre of pressure moves forward along the chord. This forward CP movement produces a nose-up pitching moment that must be counteracted by the tail — one of the main reasons aircraft require a horizontal stabiliser. At very low (or negative) angles of attack, the CP moves rearward. This CP migration is why the aerodynamic centre concept is useful: the moment about the aerodynamic centre stays constant regardless of AoA.
+
+### Q38: What determines the critical angle of attack at which a wing stalls? ^t80q38
+- A) The aircraft's weight
+- B) The altitude at which the aircraft is flying
+- C) The airspeed
+- D) The aerofoil shape (profile geometry)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical angle of attack is an inherent property of the aerofoil's geometric shape — it is the angle at which the flow can no longer remain attached to the upper surface and separates, causing the stall. It does not change with weight, altitude, or airspeed. What changes with those factors is the stall speed — the speed at which the wing reaches the critical angle of attack in level flight. The aerofoil geometry (camber, thickness, leading edge radius) determines how well the flow follows the upper surface at high angles.
+
+### Q39: How does induced drag behave with increasing airspeed in level flight? ^t80q39
+- A) It decreases continuously
+- B) It reaches a maximum, then decreases
+- C) It remains constant
+- D) It increases with increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag decreases monotonically with increasing airspeed in level flight: D_induced = 2W^2 / (rho * V^2 * S^2 * pi * AR * e). As V increases, induced drag continuously falls — there is no minimum/maximum within the normal flight envelope. Parasite drag (not induced drag) has the U-shaped curve described in B/C. Total drag has a minimum at the speed where induced drag equals parasite drag; induced drag itself simply decreases with speed.
+
+### Q40: Which types of drag make up total drag? ^t80q40
+- A) Induced drag, form drag, and skin-friction drag
+- B) Interference drag and parasite drag
+- C) Form drag, skin-friction drag, and interference drag
+- D) Induced drag and parasite drag
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard aerodynamic breakdown of total drag is: Total drag = Induced drag + Parasite drag. Induced drag arises from lift generation (wingtip vortices). Parasite drag is the collective term for all non-lift-related drag: form/pressure drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag. Options A and C list sub-components of parasite drag but omit induced drag or incorrectly combine them. Option B omits induced drag, which is a major component especially at low speeds.
+
+### Q41: How do lift and drag change when a stall is approached? ^t80q41
+- A) Both lift and drag increase
+- B) Lift rises while drag falls
+- C) Lift falls while drag rises
+- D) Both lift and drag fall
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the critical angle of attack is reached, flow begins to separate from the upper surface, starting at the trailing edge and progressing forward. Once past the critical AoA, the clean attached flow that generated lift breaks down — CL drops sharply. Simultaneously, the separated flow creates a large turbulent wake with very high pressure drag, so CD rises dramatically. The drag polar shows this clearly: the nose of the polar curves sharply as the stall condition is approached, with CL falling and CD rising.
+
+### Q42: To recover from a stall, it is essential to... ^t80q42
+- A) Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed
+- B) Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed
+- C) Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed
+- D) Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall recovery requires reducing angle of attack below the critical value so that airflow can re-attach to the upper surface and lift can be restored. The pilot must push forward on the elevator control to lower AoA, which also allows the aircraft to accelerate (or the pilot applies power if available). Increasing AoA (B, D) deepens the stall. Reducing speed (D, A) worsens the condition. Banking (A) increases the load factor, which raises the stall speed — exactly the wrong input.
+
+### Q43: During a stall, how do lift and drag behave? ^t80q43
+- A) Lift rises while drag rises
+- B) Lift rises while drag falls
+- C) Lift falls while drag falls
+- D) Lift falls while drag rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the definitive stall characteristic: lift collapses because boundary layer separation destroys the pressure differential that generates it, while drag rises dramatically due to the large turbulent separated wake. The CL vs. AoA curve shows CL_max at the critical angle, then a steep drop — this is the stall. The CD vs. AoA curve rises steeply through and beyond the stall. This combination (less lift, more drag) is why the stall is critical — the aircraft loses lift while simultaneously experiencing high drag that would further reduce speed.
+
+### Q44: The critical angle of attack... ^t80q44
+- A) Changes with increasing weight
+- B) Is independent of the aircraft's weight
+- C) Increases with a rearward centre of gravity position
+- D) Decreases with a forward centre of gravity position
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical (stall) angle of attack is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape — it is the AoA at which flow separation occurs regardless of airspeed, weight, or altitude. What changes with weight is the stall speed (Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max))), not the stall AoA. A heavier aircraft must fly faster to generate the same lift, but it still stalls at the same critical AoA. C.G. position affects pitch stability and control effectiveness but does not change the aerofoil's critical angle.
+
+### Q45: What leads to a lower stall speed Vs (IAS)? ^t80q45
+- A) Higher load factor
+- B) Lower air density
+- C) Decreasing weight
+- D) Lower altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)): stall speed decreases when weight (W) decreases, since less lift is needed to maintain equilibrium. Lower density (B) increases true airspeed (TAS) stall speed but the IAS stall speed remains approximately constant (since IAS is based on dynamic pressure q = 0.5 * rho * V_TAS^2, which equals 0.5 * rho_0 * V_IAS^2). Higher load factor (A) effectively increases apparent weight (n*W), raising stall speed. Lower altitude means higher density, which slightly lowers TAS stall speed but does not significantly change IAS stall speed.
+
+### Q46: Which statement about a spin is correct? ^t80q46
+- A) Speed constantly increases during the spin
+- B) During recovery, ailerons should be kept neutral
+- C) During recovery, ailerons should be crossed
+- D) Only very old aircraft risk spinning
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spin recovery technique (PARE: Power off, Ailerons neutral, Rudder opposite to spin direction, Elevator forward) requires keeping ailerons neutral because using ailerons during a spin can worsen the rotation — applying aileron into the spin raises the inner wing's AoA (which may already be stalled) and can deepen the spin. Rudder opposite to spin direction stops the autorotation; forward elevator then reduces AoA to unstall both wings. Speed does not constantly increase in a spin — the aircraft reaches a stabilised spin with relatively constant speed and rotation rate.
+
+### Q47: The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil lies between... ^t80q47
+- A) The transition point and the separation point
+- B) The stagnation point and the centre of pressure
+- C) The transition point and the centre of pressure
+- D) The stagnation point and the transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The boundary layer development follows a specific sequence: flow is divided at the stagnation point, a laminar boundary layer develops from the stagnation point rearward, then at the transition point the laminar layer converts to turbulent, and finally at the separation point the turbulent layer detaches from the surface. The laminar boundary layer therefore occupies the region from the stagnation point to the transition point. Laminar flow aerofoils are designed to push the transition point as far aft as possible to minimise friction drag.
+
+### Q48: What types of boundary layers are found on an aerofoil? ^t80q48
+- A) Turbulent layer at the leading edge areas, laminar boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- B) Laminar boundary layer along the complete upper surface with non-separated airflow
+- C) Laminar layer at the leading edge areas, turbulent boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- D) Turbulent boundary layer along the complete upper surface with separated airflow
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The natural sequence of boundary layer development on an aerofoil runs from laminar (near the leading edge, where the flow is orderly and Reynolds number is low) to turbulent (further aft, after transition). The reverse sequence (turbulent first, then laminar) does not occur naturally. This forward laminar / aft turbulent arrangement is why designers place the maximum thickness of laminar-flow aerofoils further back — to extend the favourable pressure gradient that maintains laminar flow as far as possible before transition.
+
+### Q49: How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent one? ^t80q49
+- A) The turbulent boundary layer is thicker but produces less skin-friction drag
+- B) The laminar layer generates lift while the turbulent layer generates drag
+- C) The laminar layer is thinner and produces more skin-friction drag
+- D) The turbulent boundary layer can remain attached to the aerofoil at higher angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turbulent boundary layer, despite having higher skin friction drag than the laminar layer, has more energetic mixing that allows it to remain attached to the surface against an adverse pressure gradient at higher angles of attack. This is its critical advantage: it resists flow separation better. The laminar boundary layer is indeed thinner (C is partly correct about thickness) and has lower friction drag — but it separates more easily. This is why turbulators are sometimes used on gliders: deliberately triggering transition to turbulent flow to prevent laminar separation bubbles.
+
+### Q50: Which structural element provides lateral (roll) stability? ^t80q50
+- A) Elevator
+- B) Wing dihedral
+- C) Vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lateral (roll) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a roll disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral (the upward angle of the wings from horizontal). When a gust rolls the aircraft, the lower wing descends and its angle of attack increases (it meets more airflow), generating more lift and creating a restoring moment back to level. The vertical tail provides directional (yaw) stability; ailerons are roll control surfaces (not stability), and the elevator controls pitch. High-wing aircraft achieve similar lateral stability through the pendulum effect of the fuselage hanging below the wings.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_1_50_de.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_1_50_de.md
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+### Q1: Wie lässt sich der stationäre Gleitflug hinsichtlich der wirkenden Kräfte am besten beschreiben? ^t80q1
+- A) Der Auftrieb allein kompensiert den Widerstand
+- B) Die aerodynamische Resultierende wirkt in Richtung der Luftströmung
+- C) Die aerodynamische Resultierende gleicht das Gewicht aus
+- D) Die aerodynamische Resultierende ist mit dem Auftriebsvektor ausgerichtet
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Im stationären Gleitflug wirkt kein Schub, sodass nur zwei Kräfte wirken: die Schwerkraft (Gewicht) und die gesamte aerodynamische Kraft (die Vektorsumme aus Auftrieb und Widerstand). Damit sich der Segler im Gleichgewicht befindet, müssen diese beiden gleich und entgegengesetzt sein — die resultierende Luftkraft kompensiert genau die Schwerkraft. Auftrieb und Widerstand sind lediglich Komponenten dieser einzigen aerodynamischen Resultierenden; weder Auftrieb allein noch Widerstand allein gleicht das Gewicht aus.
+
+### Q2: Was geschieht mit der Mindestfluggeschwindigkeit, wenn die Klappen ausgefahren werden und damit die Flügelwölbung zunimmt? ^t80q2
+- A) Die Mindestgeschwindigkeit steigt
+- B) Der Schwerpunkt verlagert sich nach vorne
+- C) Die Mindestgeschwindigkeit sinkt
+- D) Die zulässige Höchstgeschwindigkeit steigt
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Ausfahren der Klappen erhöht die Flügelwölbung, was den maximalen Auftriebsbeiwert (CL_max) erhöht. Aus der Überziehgeschwindigkeitsformel Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho × S × CL_max)) ergibt sich, dass ein höherer CL_max die Mindestfluggeschwindigkeit Vs direkt senkt. Dies ermöglicht langsameres Fliegen ohne Strömungsabriss, weshalb Klappen beim Anflug und bei der Landung eingesetzt werden. Die zulässige Höchstgeschwindigkeit sinkt bei ausgefahrenen Klappen typischerweise (nicht steigt), da die Klappenstruktur nicht für hohen dynamischen Druck ausgelegt ist.
+
+### Q3: Nach dem Strömungsabriss an einem Flügel und dem Absenken der Nase — welche Technik verhindert ein Trudeln? ^t80q3
+- A) Höhenruder ziehen, um das Flugzeug in die Normallage zu bringen
+- B) Alle Ruder entgegen dem abgesenkten Flügel ausschlagen
+- C) Höhenruder nach vorne drücken, um Fahrt aufzunehmen und die Strömung an den Flügeln wieder anzulegen
+- D) Seitenruder entgegen dem abgesenkten Flügel treten und Höhenruderdruck nachlassen, um Fahrt aufzunehmen
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein beginnendes Trudeln setzt ein, wenn ein Flügel vor dem anderen abreißt — der abgerissene Flügel senkt sich ab und erzeugt ein Gier- und Rollmoment. Die korrekte Reaktion ist, das Seitenruder entgegen der Gierrichtung/des abgesenkten Flügels zu betätigen, um die Drehung zu stoppen, und gleichzeitig den Höhenruderdruck nachzulassen (oder zu drücken), um den Anstellwinkel unter den kritischen Wert zu senken, damit die Strömung wieder anliegt und der Auftrieb wiederhergestellt wird. Das Ziehen des Höhenruders (A) würde den Anstellwinkel erhöhen und den Strömungsabriss vertiefen; alleiniges Drücken (C) ohne Seitenruder stoppt die Gierbewegung nicht.
+
+### Q4: Welches Bauteil ist für die Nickstabilisierung im Reiseflug verantwortlich? ^t80q4
+- A) Querruder
+- B) Wölbklappen
+- C) Seitenruder
+- D) Höhenleitwerk
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Querachse ist die Nickachse (Nase hoch/runter). Das Höhenleitwerk sorgt für Längsstabilität (Nickstabilität): Es erzeugt ein rückstellendes Moment, wenn die Nase aus der Trimmstellung nach oben oder unten nickt, da seine Auftriebskraft sich mit dem Anstellwinkel am Leitwerk ändert. Die Querruder steuern das Rollen (Längsachse), das Seitenruder steuert das Gieren (Hochachse), und Klappen sind Hochauftriebshilfen, keine Stabilitätsflächen.
+
+### Q5: Was kann passieren, wenn die Höchstzulässige Geschwindigkeit (VNE) im Flug überschritten wird? ^t80q5
+- A) Flattern und Strukturschäden an den Tragflächen
+- B) Geringerer Widerstand bei höheren Steuerkräften
+- C) Übermäßiger Gesamtdruck, der den Fahrtmesser unbrauchbar macht
+- D) Ein verbessertes Gleitzahlverhältnis und ein flacherer Gleitwinkel
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Überschreiten der VNE birgt das Risiko aeroelastischen Flatterns — einer sich selbst verstärkenden Schwingung der Steuerflächen oder Tragflächen, die die Struktur innerhalb von Sekunden zerstören kann. Die Flattergeschwindigkeit liegt nahe an der VNE. Strukturversagen von Holmen, Beschlägen oder Steuerflächen kann folgen. Die anderen Optionen beschreiben Effekte, die bei überhöhter Geschwindigkeit nicht auftreten: der Gleitwinkel verbessert sich nicht, der Widerstand sinkt nicht, und der Fahrtmesser ist für alle normalen und anormalen Geschwindigkeiten ausgelegt.
+
+### Q6: Welchen Einfluss hat eine hintere Schwerpunktlage auf das Flugverhalten eines Segelflugzeugs? ^t80q6
+- A) Das Flugzeug wird sehr stabil um die Nickachse
+- B) Das Flugzeug wird weniger stabil um die Nickachse und schwieriger zu steuern
+- C) Die Wirksamkeit der Rollsteuerung nimmt zu
+- D) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit steigt deutlich
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein hinterer Schwerpunkt verringert den Hebelarm des Rückstellmoments zwischen dem Schwerpunkt und dem Höhenleitwerk und vermindert damit die Längsstabilität (Nickstabilität). Im Extremfall kann das Flugzeug um die Nickachse instabil werden — der Pilot kann möglicherweise eine Aufbäumdivergenz nicht verhindern, insbesondere beim Windenstart oder in Turbulenzen. Die vordere Schwerpunktgrenze gewährleistet ausreichende Nickstabilität; die hintere Grenze gewährleistet ausreichende Steuerbarkeit. Ein hinterer Schwerpunkt erhöht weder die Überziehgeschwindigkeit noch die Rollwirksamkeit und macht das Flugzeug weniger, nicht mehr stabil.
+
+### Q7: Welche Aufgabe erfüllt das Seitenleitwerk (Seitenruder-Baugruppe)? ^t80q7
+- A) Rollstabilität bereitstellen
+- B) Nicksteuerung bereitstellen
+- C) Zusätzlichen Auftrieb im Kurvenflug erzeugen
+- D) Richtungsstabilität und -steuerung (Gieren) bereitstellen
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Seitenleitwerk (Seitenflosse + Seitenruder) sorgt für Gierstabilität und Giersteuerung. Die feststehende Seitenflosse wirkt als Wetterfahne und erzeugt ein rückstellendes Giermoment bei Schieben. Das bewegliche Seitenruder ermöglicht dem Piloten gezielte Giereingaben zur Koordination, Seitenwindkorrektur oder Trudelausleitung. Das Höhenleitwerk steuert das Nicken; die V-Form der Flügel sorgt für Rollstabilität; das Seitenleitwerk erzeugt keinen Auftrieb im herkömmlichen Sinne.
+
+### Q8: Im koordinierten Horizontalkurvenflug mit 60 Grad Querneigung beträgt der Lastfaktor ungefähr... ^t80q8
+- A) 1,0
+- B) 1,4
+- C) 2,0
+- D) 3,0
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Im koordinierten Horizontalkurvenflug ist der Lastfaktor n = 1/cos(Querneigungswinkel). Bei 60° Querneigung ist n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0,5 = 2,0. Das bedeutet, dass das scheinbare Gewicht, das die Flügel tragen müssen, sich verdoppelt. Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit steigt um den Faktor √n = √2 ≈ 1,41, also um 41 %. Deshalb sind Steilkurven in Bodennähe für Segelflugzeuge gefährlich — der Abstand zur Überziehgeschwindigkeit schrumpft dramatisch.
+
+### Q9: Welcher Zusammenhang besteht zwischen Streckung und induziertem Widerstand? ^t80q9
+- A) Höhere Streckung erhöht den induzierten Widerstand
+- B) Die Streckung hat keinen Einfluss auf den induzierten Widerstand
+- C) Höhere Streckung verringert den induzierten Widerstand
+- D) Der induzierte Widerstand hängt nur von der Geschwindigkeit ab
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der induzierte Widerstand ist umgekehrt proportional zur Streckung (AR): D_induziert ∝ CL² / (π × AR × e). Ein längerer, schmalerer Flügel (hohe AR) erzeugt den gleichen Auftrieb mit schwächeren Randwirbeln und daher weniger induziertem Widerstand. Deshalb haben Segelflugzeuge sehr hohe Streckungen — dies ist das wichtigste Konstruktionsmerkmal zur Maximierung des Gleitzahlverhältnisses und der Flugleistung.
+
+### Q10: Wenn die Trimmklappe des Höhenruders nach unten ausgeschlagen wird, welche Nickwirkung ergibt sich? ^t80q10
+- A) Nase hoch
+- B) Keine Änderung
+- C) Das Flugzeug rollt
+- D) Nase runter
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine nach unten ausgeschlagene Trimmklappe erzeugt eine nach oben gerichtete aerodynamische Kraft an der Hinterkante des Höhenruders, die die Hinterkante des Höhenruders nach oben und seine Vorderkante nach unten drückt — dies bewirkt effektiv einen Höhenruderausschlag nach unten und erzeugt ein aufnickendes Moment. Trimmklappen wirken durch aerodynamische Kraft, um den Piloten von dauerhaften Steuerkräften zu entlasten; ihr Ausschlag ist entgegengesetzt zum gewünschten Höhenruderausschlag.
+
+### Q11: Was zeigt die Polare eines Segelflugzeugs? ^t80q11
+- A) Die Beziehung zwischen Höhe und Geschwindigkeit
+- B) Die Beziehung zwischen Sinkrate und Geschwindigkeit
+- C) Die Beziehung zwischen Auftrieb und Gewicht
+- D) Die Beziehung zwischen Widerstand und Höhe
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Geschwindigkeitspolare des Segelflugzeugs trägt die vertikale Sinkrate (Vz, typischerweise in m/s) gegen die horizontale Fluggeschwindigkeit (Vh) auf. Sie ist das grundlegende Leistungsdiagramm eines Segelflugzeugs: Sie zeigt die minimale Sinkgeschwindigkeit (der tiefste Punkt der Kurve), die beste Gleitgeschwindigkeit (Tangente vom Ursprung) und die optimalen Vorfluggeschwindigkeiten (McCready-Tangenten). Alle Geschwindigkeitsentscheidungen im Überlandflug basieren auf dieser Kurve.
+
+### Q12: Was passiert im Geradeausflug in gleicher Höhe mit dem erforderlichen Anstellwinkel, wenn die Geschwindigkeit zunimmt? ^t80q12
+- A) Er bleibt konstant
+- B) Er nimmt zu
+- C) Er nimmt ab
+- D) Er schwankt
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Im Horizontalflug muss der Auftrieb gleich dem Gewicht sein (L = W). Da L = CL × 0,5 × ρ × V² × S gilt, muss bei zunehmender Geschwindigkeit V der Auftriebsbeiwert CL abnehmen, um den Auftrieb konstant zu halten. Ein niedrigerer CL entspricht einem niedrigeren Anstellwinkel. Daher erfordert schnelleres Fliegen einen kleineren Anstellwinkel, und langsameres Fliegen (Richtung Strömungsabriss) erfordert einen zunehmend größeren Anstellwinkel.
+
+### Q13: Welche Funktion haben Grenzschichtzäune (Wing Fences)? ^t80q13
+- A) Die Höchstgeschwindigkeit erhöhen
+- B) Das Gewicht reduzieren
+- C) Die Querströmung der Grenzschicht verhindern
+- D) Den induzierten Widerstand erhöhen
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Grenzschichtzäune sind dünne senkrechte Platten auf der Oberseite eines gepfeilten oder zugespitzten Flügels, die verhindern, dass die Grenzschicht in Spannweitenrichtung (nach außen zu den Flügelspitzen) abströmt. Ohne Zäune wandert die Grenzschicht aufgrund des Druckgradienten nach außen, verdickt sich an den Spitzen und begünstigt den Spitzenströmungsabriss. Zäune halten die Grenzschicht in ihrem lokalen Bereich und verbessern die Überziehcharakteristik an der Flügelspitze sowie die Querruderwirksamkeit bei hohen Anstellwinkeln.
+
+### Q14: Was geschieht mit dem Gesamtwiderstand bei der Geschwindigkeit für die beste Gleitzahl? ^t80q14
+- A) Der Gesamtwiderstand ist maximal
+- B) Der induzierte Widerstand ist gleich null
+- C) Der Gesamtwiderstand ist minimal
+- D) Der schädliche Widerstand ist gleich null
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die beste Gleitzahl (maximales L/D) wird bei der Geschwindigkeit erreicht, bei der der Gesamtwiderstand minimal ist. An diesem Punkt ist der induzierte Widerstand genau gleich dem schädlichen Widerstand — schnelleres Fliegen erhöht den schädlichen Widerstand stärker als der induzierte Widerstand abnimmt, und langsameres Fliegen erhöht den induzierten Widerstand stärker als der schädliche Widerstand abnimmt. Für einen Segler ergibt diese Geschwindigkeit den flachsten Gleitwinkel und die größte Strecke pro Einheit verlorener Höhe in ruhiger Luft.
+
+### Q15: Welches Konstruktionsmerkmal trägt zur Querstabilität (Rollstabilität) eines Segelflugzeugs bei? ^t80q15
+- A) Höhenleitwerk
+- B) Seitenflosse
+- C) V-Form der Tragflächen
+- D) Höhenruder-Trimmung
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die V-Form der Tragflächen — der nach oben gerichtete V-Winkel der Flügel — ist das wichtigste Konstruktionsmerkmal für die Querstabilität (Rollstabilität). Wenn eine Böe oder Störung einen Flügel absenkt, erhöht die V-Form-Geometrie den Anstellwinkel am abgesenkten Flügel, erzeugt mehr Auftrieb und schafft ein rückstellendes Rollmoment zurück zur Horizontallage. Die Seitenflosse sorgt für Richtungsstabilität; das Höhenleitwerk für Nickstabilität; und die Höhenruder-Trimmung setzt eine Nickreferenz, keine Rollreferenz.
+
+### Q16: Wie beeinflusst zunehmende Höhe die wahre Fluggeschwindigkeit (TAS) bei gegebener angezeigter Fluggeschwindigkeit (IAS)? ^t80q16
+- A) Die TAS nimmt ab
+- B) Die TAS bleibt gleich der IAS
+- C) Die TAS nimmt zu
+- D) Die TAS schwankt unvorhersehbar
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die IAS basiert auf dem dynamischen Druck (q = 0,5 × ρ × V²). In größerer Höhe ist die Luftdichte ρ geringer, sodass eine gegebene IAS einer höheren TAS entspricht. Der Zusammenhang lautet TAS = IAS × √(ρ₀/ρ), wobei ρ₀ die Meereshöhendichte ist. Für Segelflieger bedeutet dies, dass in der Höhe die Grundgeschwindigkeit für die gleiche angezeigte Anfluggeschwindigkeit höher ist und der Ausrollweg bei der Landung länger sein wird.
+
+### Q17: Was beschreibt der Begriff „Lastfaktor"? ^t80q17
+- A) Das Verhältnis von Flugzeuggewicht zu Flügelfläche
+- B) Das Verhältnis von Auftrieb zu Gewicht
+- C) Das Verhältnis von Widerstand zu Gewicht
+- D) Das Verhältnis von Schub zu Widerstand
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Lastfaktor (n) ist definiert als das Verhältnis des von den Tragflächen erzeugten Auftriebs zum Gewicht des Flugzeugs: n = L/W. Im Geradeaus-Horizontalflug ist n = 1. Im Kurvenflug ist n > 1, da zusätzlicher Auftrieb für die Zentripetalkraft benötigt wird. Bei einem vertikalen Abfangbogen kann n die Auslegungsgrenzen überschreiten. Die Strukturauslegung des Segelflugzeugs ist für bestimmte Lastfaktorgrenzen zugelassen (typischerweise +5,3g / -2,65g für die Nutzungskategorie).
+
+### Q18: Wie beeinflusst eine Erhöhung des Flugzeuggewichts die beste Gleitzahl? ^t80q18
+- A) Sie verbessert die Gleitzahl
+- B) Sie verschlechtert die Gleitzahl
+- C) Sie ändert die Gleitzahl nicht
+- D) Es hängt von der Flügelkonfiguration ab
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die beste Gleitzahl (L/D) wird durch die aerodynamische Form des Flugzeugs bestimmt und ist unabhängig vom Gewicht. Eine Gewichtserhöhung verschiebt die Geschwindigkeitspolare nach unten und nach rechts — die beste Gleitgeschwindigkeit steigt (man muss schneller fliegen), aber das maximale L/D-Verhältnis bleibt gleich. Deshalb verbessert Wasserballast in Segelflugzeugen die Überlandfluggeschwindigkeit, ohne den Gleitwinkel zu ändern — nur die Geschwindigkeit, bei der dieser Winkel erreicht wird, ändert sich.
+
+### Q19: Ein Segelflugzeug fliegt mit der Geschwindigkeit für minimales Sinken. Wenn der Pilot beschleunigt, was passiert mit der Sinkrate? ^t80q19
+- A) Die Sinkrate nimmt weiter ab
+- B) Die Sinkrate bleibt gleich
+- C) Die Sinkrate nimmt zu
+- D) Die Sinkrate schwankt
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Geschwindigkeit für minimales Sinken ist die Geschwindigkeit am tiefsten Punkt der Geschwindigkeitspolaren. Jede Geschwindigkeitsänderung — schneller oder langsamer — von diesem Punkt aus erhöht die Sinkrate. Beschleunigen über die Geschwindigkeit des minimalen Sinkens hinaus erhöht den schädlichen Widerstand schneller, als der induzierte Widerstand abnimmt, was zu einem höheren Gesamtwiderstand und damit zu einer größeren Sinkrate führt. Dies ist der Kompromiss im Überlandflug: schnelleres Fliegen überbrückt mehr Strecke, aber auf Kosten einer erhöhten Sinkrate.
+
+### Q20: Welche Wirkung hat das Ausfahren der Bremsklappen (Spoiler) an einem Segelflugzeug? ^t80q20
+- A) Der Auftrieb steigt und der Widerstand sinkt
+- B) Auftrieb und Widerstand sinken beide
+- C) Der Widerstand steigt und der Auftrieb sinkt
+- D) Auftrieb und Widerstand steigen beide
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Bremsklappen (Spoiler) stören die glatte Strömung über die Flügeloberseite, verringern die Druckdifferenz und damit den Auftrieb. Gleichzeitig erzeugen die ausgefahrenen Klappen einen starken Widerstandsanstieg. Dieser kombinierte Effekt macht den Gleitpfad deutlich steiler, was genau ihre Aufgabe ist — dem Piloten die Kontrolle über den Anflugwinkel und eine präzise Landung zu ermöglichen. Ohne Bremsklappen würden Segelflugzeuge aufgrund ihres hervorragenden L/D-Verhältnisses über weite Strecken schweben.
+
+### Q21: In welchem Flugzustand ist der induzierte Widerstand am größten? ^t80q21
+- A) Im schnellen Reiseflug
+- B) Im Sturzflug
+- C) Im Langsamflug bei hohem Anstellwinkel
+- D) Bei der besten Gleitgeschwindigkeit
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der induzierte Widerstand ist proportional zu CL², und CL ist im Langsamflug bei hohem Anstellwinkel am größten (wo der Flügel maximalen Auftrieb pro Einheit dynamischen Drucks erzeugen muss). Im Sturzflug oder bei hoher Geschwindigkeit ist CL gering und der induzierte Widerstand minimal — der schädliche Widerstand dominiert. Bei der besten Gleitgeschwindigkeit ist der induzierte Widerstand gleich dem schädlichen Widerstand, aber nicht maximal. Der Langsamflugbereich ist der Bereich, in dem der induzierte Widerstand den Gesamtwiderstand dominiert.
+
+### Q22: Was ist die Hauptfunktion einer Trimmklappe am Höhenruder? ^t80q22
+- A) Reduzierung der Steuerkräfte bei gleichbleibendem Flugzustand
+- B) Erhöhung der Höchstgeschwindigkeit
+- C) Verbesserung der Querstabilität
+- D) Verhinderung von Flattern
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Trimmklappe am Höhenruder ermöglicht dem Piloten, die Steuerkraft zu verringern oder zu beseitigen, die nötig ist, um eine bestimmte Nicklage im stationären Flug zu halten. Durch Verstellen der Trimmklappe wird eine aerodynamische Kraft auf das Höhenruder ausgeübt, die dem natürlichen Scharniermoment entgegenwirkt und ein freihändiges oder kraftreduziertes Fliegen bei der getrimmten Geschwindigkeit ermöglicht. Dies verringert die Pilotenermüdung bei langen Flügen und erlaubt die Konzentration auf Navigation und Thermikausnutzung.
+
+### Q23: Was passiert mit der Überziehgeschwindigkeit im Kurvenflug im Vergleich zum Geradeaus-Horizontalflug? ^t80q23
+- A) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit sinkt
+- B) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit bleibt unverändert
+- C) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit steigt
+- D) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit hängt nur von der Flughöhe ab
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Im Kurvenflug übersteigt der Lastfaktor n = 1/cos(Querneigungswinkel) den Wert 1, was bedeutet, dass die Flügel mehr Auftrieb erzeugen müssen als im Geradeausflug. Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit steigt um den Faktor √n. Bei 45° Querneigung steigt die Überziehgeschwindigkeit um 19 %; bei 60° um 41 %. Dies ist ein kritischer Sicherheitsaspekt beim Kreisen in Bodennähe — je steiler die Querneigung, desto näher befindet sich der Pilot an der erhöhten Überziehgeschwindigkeit.
+
+### Q24: Was ist der Druckpunkt eines Flügelprofils? ^t80q24
+- A) Der Punkt, an dem das Flugzeuggewicht angreift
+- B) Der Punkt maximaler Dicke des Profils
+- C) Der Punkt, an dem die resultierende aerodynamische Kraft am Flügel angreift
+- D) Der geometrische Mittelpunkt des Flügelgrundrisses
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Druckpunkt (CP) ist der Punkt auf der Profilsehne, an dem die resultierende aerodynamische Kraft (Summe aller Druck- und Reibungskräfte) als angreifend betrachtet werden kann. Im Gegensatz zum Neutralpunkt wandert der Druckpunkt mit dem Anstellwinkel — er bewegt sich nach vorne, wenn der Anstellwinkel zunimmt, und nach hinten, wenn er abnimmt. Diese Wanderung ist ein Grund, warum die Schwerpunktlage innerhalb der Grenzen bleiben muss: Entfernt sich der Druckpunkt zu weit vom Schwerpunkt, kann die Nicksteuerung beeinträchtigt werden.
+
+### Q25: Zu welchem Zeitpunkt des Fluges ist der schädliche Widerstand am größten? ^t80q25
+- A) Im Langsamflug nahe dem Strömungsabriss
+- B) Bei der Geschwindigkeit des geringsten Sinkens
+- C) Bei der besten Gleitgeschwindigkeit
+- D) Bei der höchstzulässigen Geschwindigkeit (VNE)
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der schädliche Widerstand ist proportional zu V² (dynamischer Druck). Je schneller das Flugzeug fliegt, desto größer ist der schädliche Widerstand. Bei VNE — der Höchstgeschwindigkeit — erreicht der schädliche Widerstand sein Maximum innerhalb des normalen Flugbereichs. Bei niedrigen Geschwindigkeiten nahe dem Strömungsabriss ist der schädliche Widerstand minimal, während der induzierte Widerstand dominiert. Der schädliche Widerstand umfasst Formwiderstand, Reibungswiderstand und Interferenzwiderstand — alle steigen mit dem Quadrat der Fluggeschwindigkeit.
+
+### Q26: Was besagt das Bernoulli-Prinzip angewandt auf ein Flügelprofil? ^t80q26
+- A) Der Druck steigt dort, wo die Strömungsgeschwindigkeit zunimmt
+- B) Wo die Strömungsgeschwindigkeit zunimmt, sinkt der Druck
+- C) Auftrieb wird ausschließlich durch die Umlenkung der Luft nach unten erzeugt
+- D) Der Widerstand ist unabhängig von der Geschwindigkeit
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Bernoulli-Prinzip besagt, dass in einer stationären, inkompressiblen Strömung eine Zunahme der Strömungsgeschwindigkeit mit einer Abnahme des statischen Drucks einhergeht und umgekehrt. Angewandt auf ein Profil beschleunigt die Luft über die gewölbte Oberseite und erzeugt dort einen Bereich niedrigeren Drucks im Vergleich zur Unterseite. Diese Druckdifferenz erzeugt den Auftrieb. Obwohl das dritte Newtonsche Gesetz (Abwärtsumlenkung) ebenfalls zum Auftrieb beiträgt, ist die Bernoulli-Druckverteilung der primäre Mechanismus für konventionellen Unterschallflug.
+
+### Q27: Was ist negatives Wendemoment (adverse yaw)? ^t80q27
+- A) Die Tendenz, in einer Steilkurve mit der Nase nach unten zu nicken
+- B) Unerwünschtes Gieren in die entgegengesetzte Richtung des beabsichtigten Kurvenflugs beim Querruderausschlag
+- C) Das Gieren durch Seitenruderausschlag bei Seitenwind
+- D) Das Gieren durch asymmetrischen Schub
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Negatives Wendemoment tritt auf, weil das nach unten ausgeschlagene Querruder (am steigenden Flügel) sowohl Auftrieb als auch induzierten Widerstand an diesem Flügel erhöht. Der zusätzliche Widerstand am steigenden Flügel zieht die Nase zum absinkenden Flügel — entgegen der beabsichtigten Kurvenrichtung. Deshalb ist der koordinierte Einsatz von Seitenruder und Querruder unerlässlich, und deshalb wurde die Differenzialsteuerung der Querruder als konstruktive Lösung entwickelt.
+
+### Q28: Wann wird der Bodeneffekt spürbar? ^t80q28
+- A) In jeder Flughöhe bei ruhiger Luft
+- B) Innerhalb von ungefähr einer Spannweite über dem Boden
+- C) Nur während des Startlaufs
+- D) Über 100 m über Grund
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Bodeneffekt wird spürbar, wenn sich das Flugzeug innerhalb von ungefähr einer Flügelspannweite über der Oberfläche befindet. Der Boden begrenzt physisch die Ausbildung der Randwirbel und verringert den induzierten Abwind, was den Auftrieb effektiv erhöht und den induzierten Widerstand verringert. Piloten erleben dies als Schwebeempfindung beim Abfangen zur Landung — das Segelflugzeug will im Bodeneffekt weiterfliegen, was zum Überschießen des geplanten Aufsetzpunkts führen kann, wenn es nicht vorweggenommen wird.
+
+### Q29: Was bedeutet der Begriff „Schränkung" im Flügeldesign? ^t80q29
+- A) Die Verringerung der Flügeltiefe von der Wurzel zur Spitze
+- B) Eine Abnahme des Einstellwinkels von der Flügelwurzel zur Flügelspitze
+- C) Das Reinigungsverfahren für Flügeloberflächen
+- D) Der Auftriebsverlust während eines Strömungsabrisses
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Schränkung ist ein bewusstes Konstruktionsmerkmal, bei dem der Einstellwinkel des Flügels progressiv von der Wurzel zur Spitze abnimmt (geometrische Schränkung) oder sich das Flügelprofil ändert, um an der Spitze weniger Auftrieb zu erzeugen (aerodynamische Schränkung). Dies stellt sicher, dass die Flügelwurzel vor der Spitze abreißt, wodurch die Querruderwirksamkeit bei einem Strömungsabriss erhalten bleibt und das Überziehverhalten gutmütiger und leichter beherrschbar wird. Schränkung ist besonders wichtig bei Segelflugzeugen mit ihren langen Flügeln hoher Streckung.
+
+### Q30: Wie ist der Zusammenhang zwischen Anstellwinkel und Auftriebsbeiwert bis zum Strömungsabriss? ^t80q30
+- A) Der Auftriebsbeiwert nimmt ab, wenn der Anstellwinkel zunimmt
+- B) Der Auftriebsbeiwert nimmt annähernd linear zu, wenn der Anstellwinkel zunimmt
+- C) Der Auftriebsbeiwert bleibt unabhängig vom Anstellwinkel konstant
+- D) Der Auftriebsbeiwert nimmt exponentiell mit dem Anstellwinkel zu
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Im Bereich vor dem Strömungsabriss steigt der Auftriebsbeiwert CL annähernd linear mit dem Anstellwinkel (AoA). Die Steigung dieser Geraden ist die Auftriebsanstiegsneigung (typischerweise etwa 2π pro Radian für ein dünnes Profil). Diese lineare Beziehung besteht fort, bis der kritische Anstellwinkel erreicht wird, an dem die Strömungsablösung einen Peak des CL (CL_max) bewirkt, gefolgt von einem abrupten Abfall — dem Strömungsabriss. Die Linearität der CL-AoA-Beziehung ist eines der grundlegenden Ergebnisse der Aerodynamiktheorie.
+
+### Q31: Wie beeinflusst die Klappenstellung die Überziehgeschwindigkeit? ^t80q31
+- A) Klappenausfahren erhöht die Überziehgeschwindigkeit
+- B) Die Klappenstellung hat keinen Einfluss auf die Überziehgeschwindigkeit
+- C) Klappenausfahren senkt die Überziehgeschwindigkeit
+- D) Klappeneinfahren senkt die Überziehgeschwindigkeit
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Ausfahren der Klappen erhöht den maximalen Auftriebsbeiwert (CL_max) des Flügels durch erhöhte Wölbung und bei manchen Bauarten auch Vergrößerung der Flügelfläche. Aus der Überziehgeschwindigkeitsformel Vs = sqrt(2W / (ρ × S × CL_max)) ergibt ein höherer CL_max eine niedrigere Überziehgeschwindigkeit. Dies ermöglicht den Anflug und die Landung bei geringeren Geschwindigkeiten mit kürzerem Ausrollweg. Das Einfahren der Klappen beseitigt diesen Vorteil und bringt die Überziehgeschwindigkeit auf den höheren Wert der glatten Konfiguration zurück.
+
+### Q32: Welchen Zweck hat ein Laminarprofil? ^t80q32
+- A) Erhöhung des induzierten Widerstands bei niedrigen Geschwindigkeiten
+- B) Maximierung des turbulenten Grenzschichtbereichs
+- C) Verringerung des Reibungswiderstands durch Aufrechterhaltung laminarer Strömung über einen größeren Teil des Flügels
+- D) Verbesserung der Überziehcharakteristik bei hohen Anstellwinkeln
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Laminarprofile sind so gestaltet, dass ihre maximale Dicke weiter hinten liegt als bei konventionellen Profilen, wodurch ein günstiger Druckgradient entsteht, der die Grenzschicht über einen größeren Teil der Profiltiefe laminar hält. Da laminare Grenzschichten weitaus weniger Reibungswiderstand erzeugen als turbulente, wird der Gesamtprofilwiderstand erheblich reduziert. Segelflugzeuge nutzen dies intensiv — saubere Laminarflügel sind der Grund, warum moderne Segelflugzeuge Gleitzahlen von über 50:1 erreichen.
+
+### Q33: Wie ändert sich die Luftdichte mit zunehmender Höhe? ^t80q33
+- A) Sie steigt linear
+- B) Sie bleibt konstant
+- C) Sie nimmt ab
+- D) Sie steigt zunächst und nimmt dann ab
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Luftdichte nimmt mit der Höhe ab, da der atmosphärische Druck sinkt und die Luft sich ausdehnt. In der Standardatmosphäre beträgt die Dichte in 5.500 m etwa die Hälfte des Meeresspiegelwerts. Geringere Dichte bedeutet geringeren dynamischen Druck bei gegebener TAS, weshalb die Flugleistung (Auftrieb und Widerstand pro TAS-Einheit) in der Höhe nachlässt — das Flugzeug muss schneller (in TAS) fliegen, um die gleiche IAS und den gleichen Auftrieb aufrechtzuerhalten.
+
+### Q34: Was ist der Unterschied zwischen statischer Stabilität und dynamischer Stabilität? ^t80q34
+- A) Es ist dasselbe Konzept
+- B) Statische Stabilität ist die anfängliche Tendenz zur Rückkehr zum Gleichgewicht; dynamische Stabilität beschreibt, ob die nachfolgenden Schwingungen abklingen
+- C) Dynamische Stabilität ist die anfängliche Tendenz; statische Stabilität beschreibt das Langzeitverhalten
+- D) Statische Stabilität gilt nur für Nicken, dynamische Stabilität nur für Rollen
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Statische Stabilität beschreibt die unmittelbare Reaktion des Flugzeugs auf eine Störung — ob Rückstellkräfte wirken, die es zum ursprünglichen Gleichgewicht zurückdrängen. Dynamische Stabilität beschreibt, was im Laufe der Zeit geschieht: Wenn die resultierenden Schwingungen in der Amplitude abnehmen und das Flugzeug schließlich in seinen Trimmzustand zurückkehrt, ist es dynamisch stabil. Ein Flugzeug kann statisch stabil, aber dynamisch instabil sein (Schwingungen wachsen an), was ein gefährlicher Zustand ist.
+
+### Q35: Welchen Zweck haben Wirbelgeneratoren (Vortex Generators) auf einem Flügel? ^t80q35
+- A) Den Bereich der laminaren Grenzschicht vergrößern
+- B) Das Flugzeuggewicht reduzieren
+- C) Die Grenzschicht energetisieren und die Strömungsablösung verzögern
+- D) Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit senken
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wirbelgeneratoren sind kleine Erhebungen auf der Flügeloberfläche, die winzige Wirbel erzeugen, welche energiereiche Luft von außerhalb der Grenzschicht in die langsamere Grenzschichtströmung nahe der Oberfläche einmischen. Diese energetisierte Grenzschicht kann ungünstige Druckgradienten besser überwinden, die Strömungsablösung verzögern und die Steuerwirksamkeit bei hohen Anstellwinkeln verbessern. Sie tauschen eine geringe Erhöhung des Reibungswiderstands gegen eine deutliche Verzögerung des Strömungsabrisses und bessere Querruderautorität nahe dem Überziehen ein.
+
+### Q36: Die Auftriebsformel L = CL × 0,5 × rho × V² × S enthält mehrere Variablen. Welche davon kann der Pilot im Flug direkt beeinflussen? ^t80q36
+- A) Die Luftdichte (rho)
+- B) Die Flügelfläche (S)
+- C) Die Geschwindigkeit (V) und indirekt den Auftriebsbeiwert (CL) über den Anstellwinkel
+- D) Alle oben genannten
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Pilot kann die Geschwindigkeit V direkt ändern (durch Anpassen der Nickfluglage) und indirekt den Auftriebsbeiwert CL beeinflussen (durch Änderung des Anstellwinkels oder durch Aus-/Einfahren der Klappen). Die Luftdichte ρ ändert sich mit Höhe und Temperatur, wird aber nicht direkt gesteuert. Die Flügelfläche S ist fest (außer bei seltenen Konstruktionen mit variabler Geometrie oder Fowler-Klappen). Geschwindigkeit und Anstellwinkel sind die Hauptwerkzeuge des Piloten zur Steuerung des Auftriebs.
+
+### Q37: In welche Richtung bewegt sich der Druckpunkt, wenn der Anstellwinkel zunimmt (vor dem Strömungsabriss)? ^t80q37
+- A) Nach hinten entlang der Profilsehne
+- B) Er bewegt sich nicht
+- C) Nach vorne entlang der Profilsehne
+- D) Nach oben, weg von der Flügeloberfläche
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn der Anstellwinkel im Bereich vor dem Strömungsabriss zunimmt, verschiebt sich die Druckverteilung so, dass der Druckpunkt entlang der Profilsehne nach vorne wandert. Diese Vorwärtsbewegung des Druckpunkts erzeugt ein aufnickendes Moment, das vom Leitwerk kompensiert werden muss — einer der Hauptgründe, warum Flugzeuge ein Höhenleitwerk benötigen. Bei sehr kleinen (oder negativen) Anstellwinkeln wandert der Druckpunkt nach hinten. Diese Wanderung des Druckpunkts ist der Grund, warum das Konzept des Neutralpunkts nützlich ist: Das Moment um den Neutralpunkt bleibt unabhängig vom Anstellwinkel konstant.
+
+### Q38: Was bestimmt den kritischen Anstellwinkel, bei dem ein Flügel überziehen? ^t80q38
+- A) Das Flugzeuggewicht
+- B) Die Flughöhe
+- C) Die Fluggeschwindigkeit
+- D) Die Profilform (Profilgeometrie)
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der kritische Anstellwinkel ist eine inhärente Eigenschaft der geometrischen Profilform — er ist der Winkel, bei dem die Strömung sich nicht mehr an der Oberseite halten kann und ablöst, was den Strömungsabriss verursacht. Er ändert sich nicht mit Gewicht, Höhe oder Geschwindigkeit. Was sich mit diesen Faktoren ändert, ist die Überziehgeschwindigkeit — die Geschwindigkeit, bei der der Flügel im Horizontalflug den kritischen Anstellwinkel erreicht. Die Profilgeometrie (Wölbung, Dicke, Nasenradius) bestimmt, wie gut die Strömung der Oberseite bei hohen Winkeln folgen kann.
+
+### Q39: Wie verhält sich der induzierte Widerstand bei zunehmender Geschwindigkeit im Horizontalflug? ^t80q39
+- A) Er nimmt kontinuierlich ab
+- B) Er erreicht ein Maximum und nimmt dann ab
+- C) Er bleibt konstant
+- D) Er nimmt mit zunehmender Geschwindigkeit zu
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der induzierte Widerstand nimmt im Horizontalflug monoton mit zunehmender Geschwindigkeit ab: D_induziert = 2W² / (rho × V² × S² × π × AR × e). Wenn V steigt, sinkt der induzierte Widerstand kontinuierlich — es gibt kein Minimum/Maximum innerhalb des normalen Flugbereichs. Der schädliche Widerstand (nicht der induzierte) hat die in B/C beschriebene U-förmige Kurve. Der Gesamtwiderstand hat ein Minimum bei der Geschwindigkeit, bei der induzierter Widerstand gleich schädlichem Widerstand ist; der induzierte Widerstand selbst nimmt mit der Geschwindigkeit einfach ab.
+
+### Q40: Welche Widerstandsarten bilden den Gesamtwiderstand? ^t80q40
+- A) Induzierter Widerstand, Formwiderstand und Reibungswiderstand
+- B) Interferenzwiderstand und schädlicher Widerstand
+- C) Formwiderstand, Reibungswiderstand und Interferenzwiderstand
+- D) Induzierter Widerstand und schädlicher Widerstand
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die aerodynamische Standardaufteilung des Gesamtwiderstands lautet: Gesamtwiderstand = Induzierter Widerstand + Schädlicher Widerstand. Der induzierte Widerstand entsteht durch die Auftriebserzeugung (Randwirbel). Der schädliche Widerstand ist der Sammelbegriff für alle nicht auftriebsbezogenen Widerstände: Formwiderstand/Druckwiderstand, Reibungswiderstand und Interferenzwiderstand. Die Optionen A und C listen Unterkomponenten des schädlichen Widerstands auf, lassen aber den induzierten Widerstand weg oder kombinieren sie falsch. Option B lässt den induzierten Widerstand weg, der besonders bei niedrigen Geschwindigkeiten eine wichtige Komponente ist.
+
+### Q41: Wie verändern sich Auftrieb und Widerstand beim Annähern an den Strömungsabriss? ^t80q41
+- A) Auftrieb und Widerstand steigen beide
+- B) Der Auftrieb steigt, während der Widerstand sinkt
+- C) Der Auftrieb sinkt, während der Widerstand steigt
+- D) Auftrieb und Widerstand sinken beide
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn der kritische Anstellwinkel erreicht wird, beginnt die Strömung sich von der Oberseite abzulösen, beginnend an der Hinterkante und nach vorne fortschreitend. Jenseits des kritischen Anstellwinkels bricht die glatte anliegende Strömung, die den Auftrieb erzeugt hat, zusammen — CL fällt abrupt. Gleichzeitig erzeugt die abgelöste Strömung einen großen turbulenten Nachlauf mit sehr hohem Druckwiderstand, sodass CD stark ansteigt. Die Polarkurve zeigt dies deutlich: Die Nase der Polaren krümmt sich scharf, wenn sich der Überziehzustand nähert, wobei CL fällt und CD steigt.
+
+### Q42: Zur Beendigung eines Strömungsabrisses ist es wesentlich... ^t80q42
+- A) Die Querneigung zu erhöhen und die Geschwindigkeit zu verringern
+- B) Den Anstellwinkel zu erhöhen und die Geschwindigkeit zu erhöhen
+- C) Den Anstellwinkel zu verringern und die Geschwindigkeit zu erhöhen
+- D) Den Anstellwinkel zu erhöhen und die Geschwindigkeit zu verringern
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Beendigung eines Strömungsabrisses erfordert, den Anstellwinkel unter den kritischen Wert zu senken, damit die Strömung wieder an der Oberseite anliegen kann und der Auftrieb wiederhergestellt wird. Der Pilot muss das Höhenruder nach vorne drücken, um den Anstellwinkel zu verringern, wodurch das Flugzeug auch beschleunigen kann (oder der Pilot gibt Motorleistung, falls verfügbar). Erhöhung des Anstellwinkels (B, D) vertieft den Strömungsabriss. Geschwindigkeitsverringerung (D, A) verschlechtert die Situation. Querneigung (A) erhöht den Lastfaktor und damit die Überziehgeschwindigkeit — genau die falsche Maßnahme.
+
+### Q43: Wie verhalten sich Auftrieb und Widerstand während eines Strömungsabrisses? ^t80q43
+- A) Auftrieb steigt, Widerstand steigt
+- B) Auftrieb steigt, Widerstand sinkt
+- C) Auftrieb sinkt, Widerstand sinkt
+- D) Auftrieb sinkt, Widerstand steigt
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Dies ist das definitive Kennzeichen des Strömungsabrisses: Der Auftrieb bricht zusammen, weil die Grenzschichtablösung die Druckdifferenz zerstört, die ihn erzeugt, während der Widerstand durch den großen turbulenten, abgelösten Nachlauf dramatisch ansteigt. Die CL-AoA-Kurve zeigt CL_max am kritischen Winkel, dann einen steilen Abfall — das ist der Strömungsabriss. Die CD-AoA-Kurve steigt steil durch und jenseits des Strömungsabrisses an. Diese Kombination (weniger Auftrieb, mehr Widerstand) ist der Grund, warum der Strömungsabriss kritisch ist — das Flugzeug verliert Auftrieb und erfährt gleichzeitig hohen Widerstand, der die Geschwindigkeit weiter reduzieren würde.
+
+### Q44: Der kritische Anstellwinkel... ^t80q44
+- A) Ändert sich mit zunehmendem Gewicht
+- B) Ist unabhängig vom Gewicht des Flugzeugs
+- C) Nimmt mit hinterer Schwerpunktlage zu
+- D) Nimmt mit vorderer Schwerpunktlage ab
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der kritische (Überzieh-)Anstellwinkel ist eine feste aerodynamische Eigenschaft der Profilform — es ist der Anstellwinkel, bei dem Strömungsablösung eintritt, unabhängig von Geschwindigkeit, Gewicht oder Höhe. Was sich mit dem Gewicht ändert, ist die Überziehgeschwindigkeit (Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho × S × CL_max))), nicht der Überziehwinkel. Ein schwereres Flugzeug muss schneller fliegen, um den gleichen Auftrieb zu erzeugen, überzieht aber immer noch beim gleichen kritischen Anstellwinkel. Die Schwerpunktlage beeinflusst Nickstabilität und Steuerwirksamkeit, ändert aber nicht den kritischen Winkel des Profils.
+
+### Q45: Was führt zu einer niedrigeren Überziehgeschwindigkeit Vs (IAS)? ^t80q45
+- A) Höherer Lastfaktor
+- B) Geringere Luftdichte
+- C) Abnehmendes Gewicht
+- D) Niedrigere Flughöhe
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Aus Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho × S × CL_max)): Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit sinkt, wenn das Gewicht (W) abnimmt, da weniger Auftrieb zur Aufrechterhaltung des Gleichgewichts benötigt wird. Geringere Dichte (B) erhöht die Überziehgeschwindigkeit in TAS, aber die IAS-Überziehgeschwindigkeit bleibt annähernd konstant (da die IAS auf dem dynamischen Druck q = 0,5 × rho × V_TAS² basiert, der gleich 0,5 × rho_0 × V_IAS² ist). Ein höherer Lastfaktor (A) erhöht effektiv das scheinbare Gewicht (n×W) und steigert die Überziehgeschwindigkeit. Niedrigere Höhe bedeutet höhere Dichte, was die TAS-Überziehgeschwindigkeit etwas senkt, aber die IAS-Überziehgeschwindigkeit nicht wesentlich ändert.
+
+### Q46: Welche Aussage über das Trudeln ist richtig? ^t80q46
+- A) Die Geschwindigkeit nimmt im Trudeln ständig zu
+- B) Bei der Ausleitung müssen die Querruder neutral gehalten werden
+- C) Bei der Ausleitung müssen die Querruder gekreuzt werden
+- D) Nur sehr alte Flugzeuge sind trudelfähig
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Trudelausleitung (PARE: Power off, Ailerons neutral, Rudder/Seitenruder entgegen der Drehrichtung, Elevator/Höhenruder nach vorne drücken) erfordert, die Querruder neutral zu halten, da Querruderausschläge während eines Trudelns die Rotation verschlimmern können — Querruder in Drehrichtung erhöht den Anstellwinkel des inneren Flügels (der möglicherweise bereits abgerissen ist) und kann das Trudeln vertiefen. Seitenruder entgegen der Drehrichtung stoppt die Autorotation; Höhenruder nach vorne reduziert dann den Anstellwinkel, um beide Flügel zu ent-überziehen. Die Geschwindigkeit nimmt im Trudeln nicht ständig zu — das Flugzeug erreicht ein stabilisiertes Trudeln mit relativ konstanter Geschwindigkeit und Drehrate.
+
+### Q47: Die laminare Grenzschicht am Profil befindet sich zwischen... ^t80q47
+- A) Dem Umschlagpunkt und dem Ablösepunkt
+- B) Dem Staupunkt und dem Druckpunkt
+- C) Dem Umschlagpunkt und dem Druckpunkt
+- D) Dem Staupunkt und dem Umschlagpunkt
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Grenzschichtentwicklung folgt einer bestimmten Reihenfolge: Die Strömung teilt sich am Staupunkt, eine laminare Grenzschicht entwickelt sich vom Staupunkt nach hinten, dann wandelt sich am Umschlagpunkt die laminare Schicht in eine turbulente um, und schließlich löst sich am Ablösepunkt die turbulente Schicht von der Oberfläche. Die laminare Grenzschicht erstreckt sich daher vom Staupunkt bis zum Umschlagpunkt. Laminarprofile sind so konzipiert, dass der Umschlagpunkt möglichst weit nach hinten verschoben wird, um den Reibungswiderstand zu minimieren.
+
+### Q48: Welche Arten von Grenzschichten finden sich auf einem Profil? ^t80q48
+- A) Turbulente Schicht am Vorderkantenbereich, laminare Grenzschicht am Hinterkantenbereich
+- B) Laminare Grenzschicht auf der gesamten Oberseite mit nicht abgelöster Strömung
+- C) Laminare Schicht am Vorderkantenbereich, turbulente Grenzschicht am Hinterkantenbereich
+- D) Turbulente Grenzschicht auf der gesamten Oberseite mit abgelöster Strömung
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die natürliche Reihenfolge der Grenzschichtentwicklung auf einem Profil verläuft von laminar (nahe der Vorderkante, wo die Strömung geordnet ist und die Reynoldszahl niedrig) zu turbulent (weiter hinten, nach der Transition). Die umgekehrte Reihenfolge (zuerst turbulent, dann laminar) tritt natürlicherweise nicht auf. Diese Anordnung — laminar vorne / turbulent hinten — ist der Grund, warum Konstrukteure die maximale Dicke von Laminarprofilen weiter hinten platzieren: um den günstigen Druckgradienten, der die laminare Strömung aufrechterhält, so weit wie möglich vor der Transition auszudehnen.
+
+### Q49: Wie unterscheidet sich eine laminare von einer turbulenten Grenzschicht? ^t80q49
+- A) Die turbulente Grenzschicht ist dicker, erzeugt aber weniger Reibungswiderstand
+- B) Die laminare Schicht erzeugt Auftrieb, während die turbulente Widerstand erzeugt
+- C) Die laminare Schicht ist dünner und erzeugt mehr Reibungswiderstand
+- D) Die turbulente Grenzschicht kann bei höheren Anstellwinkeln am Profil angelegt bleiben
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die turbulente Grenzschicht hat zwar einen höheren Reibungswiderstand als die laminare, besitzt aber eine stärkere energetische Durchmischung, die es ihr ermöglicht, gegen einen ungünstigen Druckgradienten bei höheren Anstellwinkeln an der Oberfläche angelegt zu bleiben. Das ist ihr entscheidender Vorteil: Sie widersteht der Strömungsablösung besser. Die laminare Grenzschicht ist tatsächlich dünner (C ist teilweise richtig bezüglich der Dicke) und hat geringeren Reibungswiderstand — löst sich aber leichter ab. Deshalb werden auf Segelflugzeugen manchmal Turbulatoren eingesetzt: um bewusst den Übergang zur turbulenten Strömung auszulösen und laminare Ablöseblasen zu verhindern.
+
+### Q50: Welches Strukturelement sorgt für Querstabilität (Rollstabilität)? ^t80q50
+- A) Höhenruder
+- B) V-Form der Tragflächen
+- C) Seitenleitwerk
+- D) Differenzialquerruder
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Querstabilität (Rollstabilität) — die Tendenz, nach einer Rollstörung in den Horizontalflug zurückzukehren — wird hauptsächlich durch die V-Form der Tragflächen (den nach oben gerichteten Winkel der Flügel zur Horizontalen) erzeugt. Wenn eine Böe das Flugzeug rollt, sinkt der untere Flügel ab und sein Anstellwinkel nimmt zu (er trifft auf mehr Anströmung), was mehr Auftrieb erzeugt und ein rückstellendes Moment zurück zur Horizontallage bewirkt. Das Seitenleitwerk sorgt für Richtungsstabilität (Gieren); Querruder sind Rollsteuerungsflächen (nicht Stabilität), und das Höhenruder steuert das Nicken. Hochdecker erzielen ähnliche Querstabilität durch den Pendeleffekt des unter den Tragflächen hängenden Rumpfes.
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+### Q1 : En ce qui concerne les forces en jeu, comment peut-on décrire au mieux le vol plané stabilisé ? ^t80q1
+- A) La portance seule compense la traînée
+- B) La résultante aérodynamique agit dans la direction de l'écoulement
+- C) La résultante aérodynamique compense le poids
+- D) La résultante aérodynamique est alignée avec le vecteur de portance
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vol plané stabilisé (stationnaire), il n'y a pas de poussée, et seules deux forces agissent : la gravité (poids) et la force aérodynamique totale (somme vectorielle de la portance et de la traînée). Pour que le planeur soit en équilibre, ces deux forces doivent être égales et opposées — la résultante aérodynamique compense exactement la gravité. La portance et la traînée ne sont que des composantes de cette résultante unique ; ni la portance seule ni la traînée seule ne compense le poids.
+
+### Q2 : Que se passe-t-il lorsque les volets sont sortis, augmentant ainsi la cambrure de l'aile ? ^t80q2
+- A) La vitesse minimale augmente
+- B) Le centre de gravité se déplace vers l'avant
+- C) La vitesse minimale diminue
+- D) La vitesse maximale autorisée augmente
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La sortie des volets augmente la cambrure de l'aile, ce qui accroît le coefficient de portance maximal (CL_max). D'après la formule de la vitesse de décrochage Vs = racine(2W / (rho × S × CL_max)), un CL_max plus élevé réduit directement la vitesse minimale de vol Vs. Cela permet à l'aéronef de voler plus lentement sans décrocher, d'où l'utilisation des volets à l'approche et à l'atterrissage. La vitesse maximale autorisée diminue généralement volets sortis (et non augmente), car la structure des volets n'est pas conçue pour de fortes pressions dynamiques.
+
+### Q3 : Après le décrochage d'une aile et l'abaissement du nez, quelle est la technique correcte pour éviter une vrille ? ^t80q3
+- A) Tirer sur la profondeur pour ramener l'aéronef en assiette normale
+- B) Braquer toutes les gouvernes à l'opposé de l'aile basse
+- C) Pousser la profondeur vers l'avant pour reprendre de la vitesse et rattacher l'écoulement sur les ailes
+- D) Appliquer le palonnier à l'opposé de l'aile basse et relâcher la pression sur la profondeur pour reprendre de la vitesse
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le début d'une vrille survient lorsqu'une aile décroche avant l'autre — l'aile décrochée s'abaisse, créant un mouvement de lacet et de roulis. La réaction correcte consiste à appliquer le palonnier à l'opposé du lacet/de l'aile basse pour stopper la rotation, et simultanément à relâcher la pression arrière sur le manche (ou à pousser) pour réduire l'angle d'attaque en dessous de la valeur critique, permettant à l'écoulement de se rattacher et à la portance de se rétablir. Tirer sur la profondeur (A) augmenterait l'angle d'attaque et aggraverait le décrochage ; pousser seul (C) sans palonnier ne stoppe pas le lacet.
+
+### Q4 : Quel organe assure la stabilisation en tangage pendant la croisière ? ^t80q4
+- A) Les ailerons
+- B) Les volets de courbure
+- C) La gouverne de direction
+- D) Le stabilisateur horizontal
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'axe latéral est l'axe de tangage (nez haut/bas). Le stabilisateur horizontal assure la stabilité longitudinale (en tangage) : il génère un moment de rappel chaque fois que le nez s'écarte de la position trimmée, car sa portance varie avec l'angle d'attaque au niveau de l'empennage. Les ailerons contrôlent le roulis (axe longitudinal), la gouverne de direction contrôle le lacet (axe vertical), et les volets sont des dispositifs hypersustentateurs, non des surfaces de stabilité.
+
+### Q5 : Que peut-il se passer lorsque la vitesse à ne jamais dépasser (VNE) est dépassée en vol ? ^t80q5
+- A) Du flottement (flutter) et des dommages structurels aux ailes
+- B) Une traînée réduite accompagnée de forces de commande accrues
+- C) Une pression totale excessive rendant l'anémomètre inutilisable
+- D) Un meilleur rapport portance/traînée et un angle de planée plus faible
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dépasser la VNE risque de provoquer du flottement aéroélastique — une oscillation auto-entretenue des gouvernes ou des ailes pouvant détruire la structure en quelques secondes. La vitesse d'apparition du flottement est proche de la VNE. Une rupture structurelle des longerons, des attaches ou des gouvernes peut s'ensuivre. Les autres options décrivent des effets qui ne se produisent pas à vitesse excessive : l'angle de planée ne s'améliore pas, la traînée ne diminue pas, et l'anémomètre est conçu pour fonctionner à toutes les vitesses normales et anormales.
+
+### Q6 : Quel effet une position arrière du centre de gravité a-t-elle sur le pilotage d'un planeur ? ^t80q6
+- A) L'aéronef devient très stable en tangage
+- B) L'aéronef devient moins stable en tangage et plus difficile à contrôler
+- C) L'efficacité du contrôle en roulis augmente
+- D) La vitesse de décrochage augmente sensiblement
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un centre de gravité reculé réduit le bras de levier de rappel entre le CG et le stabilisateur horizontal, diminuant la stabilité longitudinale (en tangage). Dans les cas extrêmes, l'aéronef peut devenir instable en tangage — le pilote peut se trouver dans l'impossibilité d'empêcher une divergence à cabrer, notamment lors du lancement au treuil ou en turbulence. La limite avant du CG garantit une stabilité en tangage suffisante ; la limite arrière garantit une contrôlabilité suffisante. Un CG arrière n'augmente pas la vitesse de décrochage ni l'efficacité en roulis, et rend l'aéronef moins stable, et non plus stable.
+
+### Q7 : Quelle est la fonction de la dérive (ensemble gouverne de direction) ? ^t80q7
+- A) Assurer la stabilité en roulis
+- B) Assurer le contrôle en tangage
+- C) Générer une portance supplémentaire en virage
+- D) Assurer la stabilité et le contrôle en lacet (direction)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La dérive (dérive fixe + gouverne de direction) assure la stabilité et le contrôle en lacet. La dérive fixe agit comme une girouette qui génère un moment de rappel en lacet en cas de dérapage. La gouverne de direction mobile permet au pilote de commander des actions délibérées en lacet pour la coordination, la correction du vent traversier ou la sortie de vrille. Le stabilisateur horizontal gère le tangage ; le dièdre de l'aile gère la stabilité en roulis ; la dérive ne génère pas de portance au sens conventionnel.
+
+### Q8 : En virage coordonné en palier à 60 degrés d'inclinaison, le facteur de charge est d'environ... ^t80q8
+- A) 1,0
+- B) 1,4
+- C) 2,0
+- D) 3,0
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En virage coordonné en palier, le facteur de charge n = 1/cos(angle d'inclinaison). À 60° d'inclinaison, n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0,5 = 2,0. Cela signifie que le poids apparent supporté par les ailes double. La vitesse de décrochage augmente d'un facteur √n = √2 ≈ 1,41, soit une augmentation de 41 %. C'est pourquoi les virages serrés à basse altitude sont dangereux pour les planeurs — la marge au-dessus du décrochage se réduit considérablement.
+
+### Q9 : Quelle est la relation entre l'allongement et la traînée induite ? ^t80q9
+- A) Un allongement élevé augmente la traînée induite
+- B) L'allongement n'a aucun effet sur la traînée induite
+- C) Un allongement élevé réduit la traînée induite
+- D) La traînée induite ne dépend que de la vitesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite est inversement proportionnelle à l'allongement (AR) : D_induite ∝ CL² / (π × AR × e). Une aile plus longue et plus étroite (AR élevé) produit la même portance avec des tourbillons marginaux plus faibles et donc moins de traînée induite. C'est pourquoi les planeurs ont des allongements très élevés — c'est la caractéristique de conception principale qui maximise le rapport portance/traînée et les performances de plané.
+
+### Q10 : Lorsque le tab de trim de la profondeur est braqué vers le bas, quelle est la tendance en tangage résultante ? ^t80q10
+- A) À cabrer
+- B) Aucun changement
+- C) L'aéronef effectue un roulis
+- D) À piquer
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un tab de trim braqué vers le bas produit une force aérodynamique vers le haut sur le bord de fuite de la profondeur, poussant le bord de fuite de la profondeur vers le haut et son bord d'attaque vers le bas — cela fait effectivement braquer la profondeur vers le bas, créant un moment à cabrer. Les tabs de trim fonctionnent par force aérodynamique pour soulager le pilote des efforts soutenus sur le manche ; leur braquage est opposé au braquage souhaité de la profondeur.
+
+### Q11 : Que représente la polaire d'un planeur ? ^t80q11
+- A) La relation entre l'altitude et la vitesse
+- B) La relation entre le taux de chute et la vitesse
+- C) La relation entre la portance et le poids
+- D) La relation entre la traînée et l'altitude
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La polaire des vitesses du planeur représente le taux de chute vertical (Vz, typiquement en m/s) en fonction de la vitesse horizontale (Vh). C'est le diagramme de performances fondamental d'un planeur : il révèle la vitesse de chute minimale (le point le plus bas de la courbe), la vitesse de meilleure finesse (donnée par la tangente depuis l'origine) et les vitesses de croisière inter-thermiques (tangentes McCready). Toutes les décisions de vitesse optimale en cross-country sont basées sur cette courbe.
+
+### Q12 : En vol rectiligne en palier, que se passe-t-il avec l'angle d'attaque requis lorsque la vitesse augmente ? ^t80q12
+- A) Il reste constant
+- B) Il augmente
+- C) Il diminue
+- D) Il oscille
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vol en palier, la portance doit être égale au poids (L = W). Puisque L = CL × 0,5 × ρ × V² × S, lorsque la vitesse V augmente, le coefficient de portance CL doit diminuer pour maintenir la portance constante. Un CL plus faible correspond à un angle d'attaque plus faible. Par conséquent, un vol plus rapide requiert un angle d'attaque plus petit, et un vol plus lent (vers le décrochage) requiert un angle d'attaque progressivement plus grand.
+
+### Q13 : Quelle est la fonction des cloisons d'aile (wing fences) ? ^t80q13
+- A) Augmenter la vitesse maximale
+- B) Réduire le poids
+- C) Empêcher l'écoulement transversal de la couche limite
+- D) Augmenter la traînée induite
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les cloisons d'aile sont de fines plaques verticales sur l'extrados d'une aile en flèche ou effilée qui empêchent la couche limite de s'écouler transversalement (vers les extrémités). Sans ces cloisons, la couche limite migre vers l'extérieur en raison du gradient de pression, s'épaississant aux extrémités et favorisant le décrochage en bout d'aile. Les cloisons confinent la couche limite dans sa zone locale, améliorant les caractéristiques de décrochage en bout d'aile et l'efficacité des ailerons à forts angles d'attaque.
+
+### Q14 : Que se passe-t-il avec la traînée totale à la vitesse de meilleure finesse ? ^t80q14
+- A) La traînée totale est à son maximum
+- B) La traînée induite est nulle
+- C) La traînée totale est à son minimum
+- D) La traînée parasite est nulle
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La meilleure finesse (L/D maximal) est obtenue à la vitesse où la traînée totale est minimale. À ce point, la traînée induite est exactement égale à la traînée parasite — plus vite augmente la traînée parasite plus que la traînée induite ne diminue, et plus lentement augmente la traînée induite plus que la traînée parasite ne diminue. Pour un planeur, cette vitesse donne l'angle de planée le plus faible et la plus grande distance parcourue par unité d'altitude perdue en air calme.
+
+### Q15 : Quelle caractéristique structurelle contribue à la stabilité latérale (en roulis) d'un planeur ? ^t80q15
+- A) Le stabilisateur horizontal
+- B) La dérive
+- C) Le dièdre de l'aile
+- D) Le tab de trim de la profondeur
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le dièdre de l'aile — l'angle en V vers le haut des ailes — est la caractéristique de conception principale assurant la stabilité latérale (en roulis). Lorsqu'une rafale ou une perturbation provoque l'abaissement d'une aile, la géométrie du dièdre augmente l'angle d'attaque sur l'aile basse, générant plus de portance et créant un moment de rappel en roulis vers la position horizontale. La dérive assure la stabilité directionnelle ; le stabilisateur horizontal assure la stabilité en tangage ; et le tab de trim de la profondeur définit une référence en tangage, pas en roulis.
+
+### Q16 : Comment l'altitude affecte-t-elle la vitesse vraie (TAS) pour une vitesse indiquée (IAS) donnée ? ^t80q16
+- A) La TAS diminue
+- B) La TAS reste identique à l'IAS
+- C) La TAS augmente
+- D) La TAS fluctue de façon imprévisible
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'IAS est basée sur la pression dynamique (q = 0,5 × ρ × V²). À plus haute altitude, la densité de l'air ρ est plus faible, donc une IAS donnée correspond à une TAS plus élevée. La relation est TAS = IAS × √(ρ₀/ρ), où ρ₀ est la densité au niveau de la mer. Pour les pilotes de planeur, cela signifie qu'en altitude, la vitesse sol pour une même vitesse indiquée d'approche est plus élevée, et la distance de roulement à l'atterrissage sera plus longue.
+
+### Q17 : Que décrit le terme « facteur de charge » ? ^t80q17
+- A) Le rapport entre le poids de l'aéronef et la surface alaire
+- B) Le rapport entre la portance et le poids
+- C) Le rapport entre la traînée et le poids
+- D) Le rapport entre la poussée et la traînée
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le facteur de charge (n) est défini comme le rapport entre la portance générée par les ailes et le poids de l'aéronef : n = L/W. En vol rectiligne en palier, n = 1. En virage, n > 1 car une portance supplémentaire est nécessaire pour la force centripète. Lors d'une ressource verticale, n peut dépasser les limites de conception. La conception structurelle du planeur est certifiée pour des limites de facteur de charge spécifiques (typiquement +5,3g / -2,65g pour la catégorie utilitaire).
+
+### Q18 : Comment l'augmentation du poids de l'aéronef affecte-t-elle la meilleure finesse ? ^t80q18
+- A) Elle améliore la finesse
+- B) Elle dégrade la finesse
+- C) Elle ne modifie pas la finesse
+- D) Cela dépend de la configuration de l'aile
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La meilleure finesse (L/D) est déterminée par la forme aérodynamique de l'aéronef et est indépendante du poids. L'augmentation du poids décale la polaire des vitesses vers le bas et vers la droite — la vitesse de meilleure finesse augmente (il faut voler plus vite) mais le rapport L/D maximal reste identique. C'est pourquoi l'ajout de ballast d'eau dans les planeurs améliore la vitesse de croisière inter-thermique sans modifier l'angle de planée — seule la vitesse à laquelle cet angle est atteint change.
+
+### Q19 : Un planeur vole à la vitesse de taux de chute minimal. Si le pilote accélère, que se passe-t-il avec le taux de chute ? ^t80q19
+- A) Le taux de chute diminue encore
+- B) Le taux de chute reste identique
+- C) Le taux de chute augmente
+- D) Le taux de chute oscille
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse de taux de chute minimal est la vitesse au point le plus bas de la polaire des vitesses. Tout changement de vitesse — plus vite ou plus lent — à partir de ce point augmente le taux de chute. Accélérer au-delà de la vitesse de chute minimale augmente la traînée parasite plus rapidement que la traînée induite ne diminue, ce qui entraîne une traînée totale plus élevée et donc un taux de descente plus important. C'est le compromis en vol de campagne : voler plus vite couvre plus de distance mais au prix d'un taux de chute accru.
+
+### Q20 : Quel est l'effet de la sortie des aérofreins (spoilers) sur un planeur ? ^t80q20
+- A) La portance augmente et la traînée diminue
+- B) La portance et la traînée diminuent toutes les deux
+- C) La traînée augmente et la portance diminue
+- D) La portance et la traînée augmentent toutes les deux
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les aérofreins (spoilers) perturbent l'écoulement lisse sur l'extrados de l'aile, réduisant la différence de pression et donc la portance. Simultanément, les panneaux levés des spoilers créent une forte augmentation de la traînée. Cet effet combiné raidit considérablement la trajectoire de descente, ce qui est précisément leur fonction — permettre au pilote de contrôler l'angle d'approche et d'atterrir avec précision. Sans aérofreins, les planeurs flotteraient sur de longues distances en raison de leur excellent rapport L/D.
+
+### Q21 : Dans quelle condition de vol la traînée induite est-elle la plus grande ? ^t80q21
+- A) En croisière rapide
+- B) En vol en piqué
+- C) En vol lent à fort angle d'attaque
+- D) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite est proportionnelle à CL², et CL est maximal en vol lent à fort angle d'attaque (où l'aile doit générer le maximum de portance par unité de pression dynamique). En piqué ou à grande vitesse, CL est faible et la traînée induite est minimale — la traînée parasite domine. À la vitesse de meilleure finesse, la traînée induite est égale à la traînée parasite mais n'est pas à son maximum. Le régime de vol lent est celui où la traînée induite domine la traînée totale.
+
+### Q22 : Quelle est la fonction principale du tab de trim de la profondeur ? ^t80q22
+- A) Réduire les efforts sur le manche dans les conditions de vol stabilisées
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse maximale
+- C) Améliorer la stabilité latérale
+- D) Prévenir le flottement (flutter)
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le tab de trim de la profondeur permet au pilote de réduire ou d'éliminer l'effort sur le manche nécessaire pour maintenir une assiette en tangage donnée en vol stabilisé. En braquant le tab de trim, une force aérodynamique est appliquée à la profondeur qui compense le moment de charnière naturel, permettant un vol mains libres ou avec un effort réduit à la vitesse trimmée. Cela réduit la fatigue du pilote lors de longs vols et lui permet de se concentrer sur la navigation et l'exploitation des thermiques.
+
+### Q23 : Que se passe-t-il avec la vitesse de décrochage en virage par rapport au vol rectiligne en palier ? ^t80q23
+- A) La vitesse de décrochage diminue
+- B) La vitesse de décrochage reste inchangée
+- C) La vitesse de décrochage augmente
+- D) La vitesse de décrochage ne dépend que de l'altitude
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En virage, le facteur de charge n = 1/cos(angle d'inclinaison) dépasse 1, ce qui signifie que les ailes doivent générer plus de portance qu'en vol rectiligne. La vitesse de décrochage augmente d'un facteur √n. À 45° d'inclinaison, la vitesse de décrochage augmente de 19 % ; à 60° d'inclinaison de 41 %. C'est une considération de sécurité critique lors du spiralage en thermique près du sol — plus l'inclinaison est forte, plus le pilote est proche de la vitesse de décrochage accrue.
+
+### Q24 : Qu'est-ce que le centre de poussée d'un profil ? ^t80q24
+- A) Le point où le poids de l'aéronef s'applique
+- B) Le point d'épaisseur maximale du profil
+- C) Le point où la résultante aérodynamique s'applique sur l'aile
+- D) Le centre géométrique du contour de l'aile en plan
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le centre de poussée (CP) est le point sur la ligne de corde où la résultante aérodynamique (somme de toutes les forces de pression et de frottement) peut être considérée comme agissant. Contrairement au centre aérodynamique, le CP se déplace avec le changement d'angle d'attaque — il avance lorsque l'angle d'attaque augmente et recule lorsque l'angle d'attaque diminue. Ce déplacement est une des raisons pour lesquelles la position du CG doit rester dans les limites : si le CP s'éloigne trop du CG, le contrôle en tangage peut être compromis.
+
+### Q25 : À quel moment du vol la traînée parasite est-elle la plus grande ? ^t80q25
+- A) En vol lent, près du décrochage
+- B) À la vitesse de chute minimale
+- C) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse
+- D) À la vitesse maximale autorisée (VNE)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée parasite est proportionnelle à V² (pression dynamique). Plus l'aéronef vole vite, plus la traînée parasite est élevée. À la VNE — la vitesse maximale — la traînée parasite atteint son maximum dans l'enveloppe de vol normale. À basse vitesse, près du décrochage, la traînée parasite est minimale tandis que la traînée induite domine. La traînée parasite comprend la traînée de forme, la traînée de frottement et la traînée d'interférence — toutes augmentent avec le carré de la vitesse.
+
+### Q26 : Qu'est-ce que le principe de Bernoulli appliqué à un profil ? ^t80q26
+- A) La pression augmente là où la vitesse d'écoulement augmente
+- B) Là où la vitesse d'écoulement augmente, la pression diminue
+- C) La portance est générée uniquement par la déviation de l'air vers le bas
+- D) La traînée est indépendante de la vitesse
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le principe de Bernoulli stipule que dans un écoulement permanent et incompressible, une augmentation de la vitesse d'écoulement s'accompagne d'une diminution de la pression statique, et inversement. Appliqué à un profil, l'air accélère sur l'extrados courbé, créant une zone de pression plus basse par rapport à l'intrados. Cette différence de pression génère la portance. Bien que la troisième loi de Newton (déflexion vers le bas) contribue aussi à la portance, la distribution de pression de Bernoulli est le mécanisme principal pour le vol subsonique conventionnel.
+
+### Q27 : Qu'est-ce que le lacet inverse ? ^t80q27
+- A) La tendance à piquer du nez dans un virage serré
+- B) Un lacet indésirable dans la direction opposée au virage visé lorsque les ailerons sont braqués
+- C) Le lacet causé par le braquage du palonnier en vent traversier
+- D) Le lacet résultant d'une poussée asymétrique
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le lacet inverse se produit parce que l'aileron abaissé (sur l'aile qui monte) augmente à la fois la portance et la traînée induite de cette aile. La traînée supplémentaire de l'aile montante tire le nez vers l'aile descendante — dans la direction opposée au virage visé. C'est pourquoi l'utilisation coordonnée du palonnier avec les ailerons est essentielle, et pourquoi le braquage différentiel des ailerons a été développé comme solution de conception.
+
+### Q28 : Quand l'effet de sol devient-il significatif ? ^t80q28
+- A) À toute altitude en air calme
+- B) À environ une envergure du sol
+- C) Uniquement pendant le roulement au décollage
+- D) Au-dessus de 100 m sol
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'effet de sol devient significatif lorsque l'aéronef se trouve à environ une envergure de la surface. Le sol restreint physiquement le développement des tourbillons marginaux et réduit le déflecteur vers le bas (downwash) induit, ce qui augmente effectivement la portance et réduit la traînée induite. Les pilotes perçoivent cela comme une sensation de flottement lors de l'arrondi à l'atterrissage — le planeur tend à continuer de voler en effet de sol, ce qui peut provoquer un dépassement du point d'impact prévu si cela n'est pas anticipé.
+
+### Q29 : Que signifie le terme « vrillage » dans la conception d'une aile ? ^t80q29
+- A) La réduction de la corde de l'aile de l'emplanture au saumon
+- B) Une diminution de l'angle de calage de l'emplanture au saumon
+- C) La procédure de nettoyage des surfaces de l'aile
+- D) La perte de portance pendant un décrochage
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vrillage est une caractéristique de conception délibérée dans laquelle l'angle de calage de l'aile diminue progressivement de l'emplanture au saumon (vrillage géométrique) ou le profil change pour produire moins de portance au saumon (vrillage aérodynamique). Cela garantit que l'emplanture décroche avant le saumon, préservant l'efficacité des ailerons pendant un décrochage et rendant le comportement au décrochage plus bénin et récupérable. Le vrillage est particulièrement important pour les planeurs avec leurs longues ailes à fort allongement.
+
+### Q30 : Quelle est la relation entre l'angle d'attaque et le coefficient de portance jusqu'au décrochage ? ^t80q30
+- A) Le coefficient de portance diminue lorsque l'angle d'attaque augmente
+- B) Le coefficient de portance augmente approximativement linéairement lorsque l'angle d'attaque augmente
+- C) Le coefficient de portance reste constant quel que soit l'angle d'attaque
+- D) Le coefficient de portance augmente exponentiellement avec l'angle d'attaque
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le régime pré-décrochage, le coefficient de portance CL augmente approximativement linéairement avec l'angle d'attaque (AoA). La pente de cette droite est la pente de la courbe de portance (typiquement environ 2π par radian pour un profil mince). Cette relation linéaire se poursuit jusqu'à l'atteinte de l'angle d'attaque critique, point auquel la séparation de l'écoulement provoque un pic de CL (CL_max) puis une chute brutale — le décrochage. La linéarité de la relation CL / AoA est l'un des résultats fondamentaux de la théorie aérodynamique.
+
+### Q31 : Comment la position des volets affecte-t-elle la vitesse de décrochage ? ^t80q31
+- A) La sortie des volets augmente la vitesse de décrochage
+- B) La position des volets n'a aucun effet sur la vitesse de décrochage
+- C) La sortie des volets diminue la vitesse de décrochage
+- D) La rentrée des volets diminue la vitesse de décrochage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La sortie des volets augmente le coefficient de portance maximal de l'aile (CL_max) en ajoutant de la cambrure et, dans certains cas, de la surface alaire. D'après la formule de la vitesse de décrochage Vs = racine(2W / (ρ × S × CL_max)), un CL_max plus élevé donne une vitesse de décrochage plus faible. Cela permet l'approche et l'atterrissage à des vitesses plus lentes avec une distance de roulement plus courte. La rentrée des volets supprime cet avantage et ramène la vitesse de décrochage à la valeur plus élevée de la configuration lisse.
+
+### Q32 : Quel est l'objectif d'un profil laminaire ? ^t80q32
+- A) Augmenter la traînée induite à basse vitesse
+- B) Maximiser la zone de couche limite turbulente
+- C) Réduire la traînée de frottement en maintenant un écoulement laminaire sur une plus grande portion de l'aile
+- D) Améliorer les caractéristiques de décrochage à forts angles d'attaque
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les profils laminaires sont conçus avec leur épaisseur maximale plus reculée que les profils conventionnels, créant un gradient de pression favorable qui maintient la couche limite laminaire sur une plus grande portion de la corde. Comme les couches limites laminaires produisent bien moins de traînée de frottement que les turbulentes, la traînée de profil globale est significativement réduite. Les planeurs exploitent cela largement — les ailes laminaires propres sont la raison pour laquelle les planeurs modernes atteignent des finesses dépassant 50:1.
+
+### Q33 : Comment la densité de l'air évolue-t-elle avec l'altitude croissante ? ^t80q33
+- A) Elle augmente linéairement
+- B) Elle reste constante
+- C) Elle diminue
+- D) Elle augmente puis diminue
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La densité de l'air diminue avec l'altitude car la pression atmosphérique baisse et l'air se dilate. Dans l'atmosphère standard, la densité à 5 500 m est environ la moitié de la valeur au niveau de la mer. Une densité réduite signifie une pression dynamique réduite à une TAS donnée, c'est pourquoi les performances de l'aéronef (portance et traînée par unité de TAS) se dégradent en altitude — l'aéronef doit voler plus vite en TAS pour maintenir les mêmes IAS et portance.
+
+### Q34 : Quelle est la différence entre stabilité statique et stabilité dynamique ? ^t80q34
+- A) Ce sont le même concept
+- B) La stabilité statique est la tendance initiale à revenir à l'équilibre ; la stabilité dynamique décrit si les oscillations qui s'ensuivent s'amortissent
+- C) La stabilité dynamique est la tendance initiale ; la stabilité statique décrit le comportement à long terme
+- D) La stabilité statique ne s'applique qu'au tangage, la stabilité dynamique uniquement au roulis
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité statique décrit la réponse immédiate de l'aéronef à une perturbation — si des forces de rappel agissent pour le repousser vers l'équilibre initial. La stabilité dynamique décrit ce qui se passe au fil du temps : si les oscillations résultantes diminuent en amplitude et que l'aéronef revient finalement à son état trimmé, il est dynamiquement stable. Un aéronef peut être statiquement stable mais dynamiquement instable (les oscillations croissent), ce qui est une condition dangereuse.
+
+### Q35 : Quel est le rôle des générateurs de vortex sur une aile ? ^t80q35
+- A) Augmenter la zone de couche limite laminaire
+- B) Réduire le poids de l'aéronef
+- C) Énergiser la couche limite et retarder la séparation de l'écoulement
+- D) Diminuer la vitesse de décrochage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les générateurs de vortex sont de petites ailettes dépassant de la surface de l'aile qui créent de minuscules tourbillons mélangeant l'air à haute énergie extérieur à la couche limite avec l'écoulement plus lent près de la surface. Cette couche limite re-énergisée peut mieux résister aux gradients de pression adverses, retardant la séparation de l'écoulement et améliorant l'efficacité des gouvernes à forts angles d'attaque. Ils échangent une légère augmentation de la traînée de frottement contre un retard significatif du décrochage et une meilleure autorité des ailerons proche du décrochage.
+
+### Q36 : La formule de portance L = CL × 0,5 × rho × V² × S contient plusieurs variables. Lesquelles le pilote peut-il directement contrôler en vol ? ^t80q36
+- A) La densité de l'air (rho)
+- B) La surface alaire (S)
+- C) La vitesse (V) et, indirectement, le coefficient de portance (CL) via l'angle d'attaque
+- D) Toutes les réponses ci-dessus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le pilote peut directement modifier la vitesse V (en ajustant l'assiette en tangage) et indirectement modifier le coefficient de portance CL (en changeant l'angle d'attaque ou en sortant/rentrant les volets). La densité de l'air ρ varie avec l'altitude et la température mais n'est pas directement contrôlée. La surface alaire S est fixe (sauf dans de rares conceptions à géométrie variable ou avec volets Fowler). La vitesse et l'angle d'attaque sont les outils principaux du pilote pour gérer la portance.
+
+### Q37 : Dans quelle direction le centre de poussée se déplace-t-il lorsque l'angle d'attaque augmente (avant le décrochage) ? ^t80q37
+- A) Vers l'arrière le long de la corde
+- B) Il ne se déplace pas
+- C) Vers l'avant le long de la corde
+- D) Vers le haut, loin de la surface de l'aile
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'angle d'attaque augmente dans le régime pré-décrochage, la distribution de pression se décale de telle sorte que le centre de poussée avance le long de la corde. Ce déplacement vers l'avant du CP produit un moment à cabrer qui doit être contrebalancé par l'empennage — l'une des principales raisons pour lesquelles les aéronefs nécessitent un stabilisateur horizontal. À de très faibles (ou négatifs) angles d'attaque, le CP recule. Cette migration du CP est la raison pour laquelle le concept de centre aérodynamique est utile : le moment autour du centre aérodynamique reste constant quel que soit l'angle d'attaque.
+
+### Q38 : Qu'est-ce qui détermine l'angle d'attaque critique auquel une aile décroche ? ^t80q38
+- A) Le poids de l'aéronef
+- B) L'altitude à laquelle l'aéronef vole
+- C) La vitesse
+- D) La forme du profil (géométrie du profil)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle d'attaque critique est une propriété intrinsèque de la forme géométrique du profil — c'est l'angle auquel l'écoulement ne peut plus rester attaché à l'extrados et se sépare, provoquant le décrochage. Il ne change pas avec le poids, l'altitude ou la vitesse. Ce qui change avec ces facteurs est la vitesse de décrochage — la vitesse à laquelle l'aile atteint l'angle d'attaque critique en vol en palier. La géométrie du profil (cambrure, épaisseur, rayon du bord d'attaque) détermine la capacité de l'écoulement à suivre l'extrados à forts angles.
+
+### Q39 : Comment la traînée induite évolue-t-elle avec l'augmentation de la vitesse en vol en palier ? ^t80q39
+- A) Elle diminue continuellement
+- B) Elle atteint un maximum, puis diminue
+- C) Elle reste constante
+- D) Elle augmente avec la vitesse croissante
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite diminue de façon monotone avec l'augmentation de la vitesse en vol en palier : D_induite = 2W² / (rho × V² × S² × π × AR × e). Lorsque V augmente, la traînée induite diminue continuellement — il n'y a pas de minimum/maximum dans l'enveloppe de vol normale. La traînée parasite (et non la traînée induite) a la courbe en U décrite en B/C. La traînée totale a un minimum à la vitesse où la traînée induite est égale à la traînée parasite ; la traînée induite elle-même ne fait que diminuer avec la vitesse.
+
+### Q40 : Quels types de traînée composent la traînée totale ? ^t80q40
+- A) Traînée induite, traînée de forme et traînée de frottement
+- B) Traînée d'interférence et traînée parasite
+- C) Traînée de forme, traînée de frottement et traînée d'interférence
+- D) Traînée induite et traînée parasite
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La décomposition aérodynamique standard de la traînée totale est : Traînée totale = Traînée induite + Traînée parasite. La traînée induite provient de la génération de portance (tourbillons marginaux). La traînée parasite est le terme collectif pour toutes les traînées non liées à la portance : traînée de forme/pression, traînée de frottement et traînée d'interférence. Les options A et C listent des sous-composantes de la traînée parasite mais omettent la traînée induite ou les combinent incorrectement. L'option B omet la traînée induite, qui est une composante majeure surtout à basse vitesse.
+
+### Q41 : Comment la portance et la traînée évoluent-elles lorsqu'on approche du décrochage ? ^t80q41
+- A) La portance et la traînée augmentent toutes les deux
+- B) La portance augmente tandis que la traînée diminue
+- C) La portance diminue tandis que la traînée augmente
+- D) La portance et la traînée diminuent toutes les deux
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'angle d'attaque critique est atteint, l'écoulement commence à se séparer de l'extrados, en commençant par le bord de fuite et progressant vers l'avant. Au-delà de l'angle d'attaque critique, l'écoulement attaché lisse qui générait la portance se décompose — CL chute brusquement. Simultanément, l'écoulement séparé crée un large sillage turbulent avec une traînée de pression très élevée, donc CD augmente fortement. La polaire de traînée le montre clairement : le nez de la polaire se courbe brusquement à l'approche du décrochage, avec CL en chute et CD en hausse.
+
+### Q42 : Pour récupérer d'un décrochage, il est essentiel de... ^t80q42
+- A) Augmenter l'inclinaison et réduire la vitesse
+- B) Augmenter l'angle d'attaque et augmenter la vitesse
+- C) Diminuer l'angle d'attaque et augmenter la vitesse
+- D) Augmenter l'angle d'attaque et réduire la vitesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La récupération d'un décrochage nécessite de réduire l'angle d'attaque en dessous de la valeur critique pour que l'écoulement puisse se rattacher à l'extrados et que la portance soit restaurée. Le pilote doit pousser sur le manche pour baisser l'angle d'attaque, ce qui permet également à l'aéronef d'accélérer (ou le pilote applique de la puissance si disponible). Augmenter l'angle d'attaque (B, D) approfondit le décrochage. Réduire la vitesse (D, A) aggrave la situation. L'inclinaison (A) augmente le facteur de charge, ce qui élève la vitesse de décrochage — exactement la mauvaise action.
+
+### Q43 : Pendant un décrochage, comment la portance et la traînée se comportent-elles ? ^t80q43
+- A) La portance augmente tandis que la traînée augmente
+- B) La portance augmente tandis que la traînée diminue
+- C) La portance diminue tandis que la traînée diminue
+- D) La portance diminue tandis que la traînée augmente
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** C'est la caractéristique définitive du décrochage : la portance s'effondre parce que la séparation de la couche limite détruit la différence de pression qui la génère, tandis que la traînée augmente fortement en raison du large sillage turbulent séparé. La courbe CL/AoA montre CL_max à l'angle critique, puis une chute abrupte — c'est le décrochage. La courbe CD/AoA augmente fortement à travers et au-delà du décrochage. Cette combinaison (moins de portance, plus de traînée) est la raison pour laquelle le décrochage est critique — l'aéronef perd de la portance tout en subissant une traînée élevée qui réduirait encore la vitesse.
+
+### Q44 : L'angle d'attaque critique... ^t80q44
+- A) Change avec l'augmentation du poids
+- B) Est indépendant du poids de l'aéronef
+- C) Augmente avec une position arrière du centre de gravité
+- D) Diminue avec une position avant du centre de gravité
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle d'attaque critique (de décrochage) est une propriété aérodynamique fixe de la forme du profil — c'est l'angle d'attaque auquel la séparation de l'écoulement se produit, indépendamment de la vitesse, du poids ou de l'altitude. Ce qui change avec le poids est la vitesse de décrochage (Vs = racine(2W / (rho × S × CL_max))), pas l'angle de décrochage. Un aéronef plus lourd doit voler plus vite pour générer la même portance, mais il décroche toujours au même angle d'attaque critique. La position du CG affecte la stabilité en tangage et l'efficacité des commandes mais ne change pas l'angle critique du profil.
+
+### Q45 : Qu'est-ce qui conduit à une vitesse de décrochage Vs (IAS) plus faible ? ^t80q45
+- A) Un facteur de charge plus élevé
+- B) Une densité de l'air plus faible
+- C) Une diminution du poids
+- D) Une altitude plus basse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** D'après Vs = racine(2W / (rho × S × CL_max)) : la vitesse de décrochage diminue lorsque le poids (W) diminue, car moins de portance est nécessaire pour maintenir l'équilibre. Une densité plus faible (B) augmente la vitesse de décrochage en TAS mais la vitesse de décrochage en IAS reste approximativement constante (puisque l'IAS est basée sur la pression dynamique q = 0,5 × rho × V_TAS², qui est égale à 0,5 × rho_0 × V_IAS²). Un facteur de charge plus élevé (A) augmente effectivement le poids apparent (n×W), élevant la vitesse de décrochage. Une altitude plus basse signifie une densité plus élevée, ce qui abaisse légèrement la vitesse de décrochage en TAS mais ne modifie pas significativement la vitesse de décrochage en IAS.
+
+### Q46 : Quelle affirmation concernant la vrille est correcte ? ^t80q46
+- A) La vitesse augmente constamment pendant la vrille
+- B) Pendant la récupération, les ailerons doivent être maintenus au neutre
+- C) Pendant la récupération, les ailerons doivent être croisés
+- D) Seuls les très vieux aéronefs risquent de partir en vrille
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La technique de récupération de vrille (PARE : Power off, Ailerons au neutre, Rudder/palonnier opposé au sens de rotation, Elevator/profondeur poussée en avant) exige de maintenir les ailerons au neutre car l'utilisation des ailerons pendant une vrille peut aggraver la rotation — braquer l'aileron dans le sens de la vrille augmente l'angle d'attaque de l'aile intérieure (qui peut déjà être décrochée) et peut approfondir la vrille. Le palonnier opposé au sens de rotation stoppe l'autorotation ; la profondeur poussée en avant réduit ensuite l'angle d'attaque pour décrochage les deux ailes. La vitesse n'augmente pas constamment en vrille — l'aéronef atteint une vrille stabilisée avec une vitesse et un taux de rotation relativement constants.
+
+### Q47 : La couche limite laminaire sur le profil se situe entre... ^t80q47
+- A) Le point de transition et le point de séparation
+- B) Le point d'arrêt et le centre de poussée
+- C) Le point de transition et le centre de poussée
+- D) Le point d'arrêt et le point de transition
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le développement de la couche limite suit une séquence précise : l'écoulement se divise au point d'arrêt, une couche limite laminaire se développe depuis le point d'arrêt vers l'aval, puis au point de transition la couche laminaire se transforme en turbulente, et enfin au point de séparation la couche turbulente se détache de la surface. La couche limite laminaire occupe donc la zone du point d'arrêt au point de transition. Les profils laminaires sont conçus pour repousser le point de transition le plus loin possible vers l'aval afin de minimiser la traînée de frottement.
+
+### Q48 : Quels types de couches limites trouve-t-on sur un profil ? ^t80q48
+- A) Couche turbulente au bord d'attaque, couche limite laminaire au bord de fuite
+- B) Couche limite laminaire sur toute la surface supérieure avec écoulement non séparé
+- C) Couche laminaire au bord d'attaque, couche limite turbulente au bord de fuite
+- D) Couche limite turbulente sur toute la surface supérieure avec écoulement séparé
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La séquence naturelle du développement de la couche limite sur un profil va du laminaire (près du bord d'attaque, où l'écoulement est ordonné et le nombre de Reynolds est faible) au turbulent (plus en aval, après la transition). La séquence inverse (turbulent d'abord, puis laminaire) ne se produit pas naturellement. Cet arrangement laminaire en amont / turbulent en aval est la raison pour laquelle les concepteurs placent l'épaisseur maximale des profils laminaires plus en arrière — pour étendre le gradient de pression favorable qui maintient l'écoulement laminaire aussi longtemps que possible avant la transition.
+
+### Q49 : En quoi une couche limite laminaire diffère-t-elle d'une couche turbulente ? ^t80q49
+- A) La couche limite turbulente est plus épaisse mais produit moins de traînée de frottement
+- B) La couche laminaire génère de la portance tandis que la couche turbulente génère de la traînée
+- C) La couche laminaire est plus mince et produit plus de traînée de frottement
+- D) La couche limite turbulente peut rester attachée au profil à des angles d'attaque plus élevés
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La couche limite turbulente, malgré une traînée de frottement plus élevée que la couche laminaire, possède un mélange plus énergique qui lui permet de rester attachée à la surface contre un gradient de pression adverse à des angles d'attaque plus élevés. C'est son avantage crucial : elle résiste mieux à la séparation de l'écoulement. La couche limite laminaire est effectivement plus mince (C est partiellement correct sur l'épaisseur) et a une traînée de frottement plus faible — mais elle se sépare plus facilement. C'est pourquoi des turbulateurs sont parfois utilisés sur les planeurs : provoquer délibérément la transition vers un écoulement turbulent pour empêcher les bulles de séparation laminaire.
+
+### Q50 : Quel élément structurel assure la stabilité latérale (en roulis) ? ^t80q50
+- A) La profondeur
+- B) Le dièdre de l'aile
+- C) La dérive
+- D) Le braquage différentiel des ailerons
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité latérale (en roulis) — la tendance à revenir en vol horizontal après une perturbation en roulis — est principalement assurée par le dièdre de l'aile (l'angle en V vers le haut des ailes par rapport à l'horizontale). Lorsqu'une rafale provoque le roulis de l'aéronef, l'aile basse descend et son angle d'attaque augmente (elle rencontre plus d'air), générant plus de portance et créant un moment de rappel vers l'horizontale. La dérive assure la stabilité directionnelle (en lacet) ; les ailerons sont des surfaces de contrôle en roulis (pas de stabilité), et la profondeur contrôle le tangage. Les aéronefs à aile haute obtiennent une stabilité latérale similaire grâce à l'effet pendulaire du fuselage suspendu sous les ailes.
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+### Q51: What is the mean value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q51
+- A) 15° C/100 m
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 1013.25 hPa
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s² (ISA value). This value is fundamental in aeronautics: it is used to calculate weight (W = m × g), load factor, and appears in all performance equations. 1013.25 hPa is the standard pressure at sea level, and 15°C/100 m is not a correct gradient (the standard lapse rate is 0.65°C/100 m).
+
+### Q52: During a sideslip, the permitted flap position is... ^t80q52
+- A) Flaps fully retracted
+- B) Flaps fully extended
+- C) Determined by the downward vertical component of the airspeed
+- D) Specified in the flight manual (AFM)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted flap position during a sideslip is always specified in the aircraft flight manual (AFM/POH). Some gliders prohibit extended flaps in a sideslip because the combination of flaps and deflected rudder can create dangerous aerodynamic couples or exceed structural limits. Others permit certain configurations. The only correct answer is therefore to consult the AFM.
+
+### Q53: An aircraft is said to have dynamic stability when... ^t80q53
+- A) It is able to stabilise automatically at a new equilibrium after a disturbance
+- B) It is able to return automatically to its original equilibrium after a disturbance
+- C) The rotation about the pitch axis is automatically corrected by the ailerons
+- D) The permitted load factor allows a positive acceleration of at least 4 g and a negative acceleration of at least 2 g with landing flaps retracted
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic stability describes the behaviour of an aircraft over time after a disturbance. A dynamically stable aircraft returns automatically to its original equilibrium (trim) after being disturbed — the oscillations progressively damp out. Answer A describes so-called "neutral or convergent stability towards a new equilibrium", which is different. Static stability (the immediate tendency to return) is a necessary but not sufficient condition for dynamic stability.
+
+### Q54: In severe turbulence, airspeed must be reduced... ^t80q54
+- A) To normal cruising speed
+- B) To a speed within the yellow arc of the airspeed indicator
+- C) To the minimum constant speed in landing configuration
+- D) To below the manoeuvring speed V_A
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The manoeuvring speed V_A (or turbulence penetration speed) is the maximum speed at which full control surface deflections or severe wind gusts will not cause the structural limit load to be exceeded. Below V_A, the wing will stall before the structural limit load is reached, thereby protecting the structure. In severe turbulence, speed must be reduced below V_A to avoid structural damage from gust dynamic loads.
+
+### Q55: In the ICAO standard atmosphere, the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere is... ^t80q55
+- A) 2°C/100 ft
+- B) 0.65°C/1000 ft
+- C) 0.65°C/100 m
+- D) 2°C/100 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere (ISA), temperature decreases by 0.65°C for every 100 m of altitude in the troposphere (or equivalently, 2°C per 1000 ft, or 6.5°C/1000 m). Answer B (0.65°C/1000 ft) is incorrect because the unit is wrong — this would be far too small a lapse rate. Answer C is the only correct one: 0.65°C per 100 m of altitude.
+
+### Q56: At approximately what altitude does atmospheric pressure fall to half its sea-level value? ^t80q56
+- A) 5,500 m
+- B) 6,600 m
+- C) 6,600 ft
+- D) 5,500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude in an approximately exponential manner. In the ICAO standard atmosphere, pressure is approximately half the sea-level pressure (1013.25 hPa → ~506 hPa) at an altitude of approximately 5,500 m (18,000 ft). This value is important for high-altitude physiology (oxygen requirements) and for density altitude performance calculations.
+
+### Q57: Density altitude always corresponds to... ^t80q57
+- A) The altitude at which atmospheric pressure and temperature correspond to those of the standard atmosphere
+- B) The true indicated altitude, after correction for instrument error
+- C) Pressure altitude, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature
+- D) The altitude read when the altimeter is set to QNH, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Density altitude is the altitude at which the aircraft would be in the ISA standard atmosphere if the air density were the same as in actual conditions. It is calculated from pressure altitude (altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa) corrected for the temperature deviation from ISA. A temperature higher than ISA gives a density altitude higher than pressure altitude, reducing aircraft performance. Answer A describes pressure altitude, not density altitude.
+
+### Q58: The simplified continuity law applied to an airflow states: *In a given period of time, a flowing air mass is conserved regardless of the cross-section it passes through.* This means that... ^t80q58
+- A) Airflow velocity decreases when the cross-section decreases
+- B) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section increases
+- C) Airflow velocity remains constant
+- D) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section decreases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation states that for an incompressible fluid, the volumetric flow rate Q = S × V is constant along a streamtube. If the cross-section S decreases, the velocity V must increase proportionally to keep Q constant. This principle, combined with Bernoulli's theorem, explains why air accelerates over the curved upper surface of an aerofoil, creating a low-pressure region that generates lift.
+
+### Q59: The aerodynamic resultant (drag and lift) depends on air density. When air density decreases... ^t80q59
+- A) Both drag and lift decrease
+- B) Both drag and lift increase
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both lift and drag are proportional to the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². When air density ρ decreases (at altitude or in high temperatures), q decreases for a given speed, which reduces both lift and drag. This is why aircraft performance deteriorates at high altitude or in great heat: the aircraft must fly faster (higher TAS) to generate the same lift, while the total aerodynamic resistance decreases for a constant indicated airspeed.
+
+### Q60: What is the name of the point about which, when the angle of attack changes, the pitching moment around the lateral axis does not vary? ^t80q60
+- A) Centre of symmetry
+- B) Centre of gravity
+- C) Aerodynamic centre
+- D) Neutral point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The neutral point (also called the aerodynamic centre at wing level, but "neutral point" for the complete aircraft) is the point about which the pitching moment remains constant regardless of changes in angle of attack. For a stable aircraft, the centre of gravity must be forward of the neutral point — the CG-to-neutral point distance constitutes the static stability margin. Note: for an isolated aerofoil, this point corresponds to the aerodynamic centre (at approximately 25% of the chord); for the complete aircraft, the neutral point accounts for the contribution of the horizontal stabiliser.
+
+### Q61: The angle between the aerofoil chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis is called... ^t80q61
+- A) The sweep angle
+- B) The angle of attack
+- C) The dihedral angle
+- D) The rigging angle (angle of incidence)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rigging angle (or angle of incidence) is the fixed angle, defined at construction, between the aerofoil chord line and the longitudinal axis of the fuselage. It does not vary in flight. It should not be confused with the angle of attack, which is the angle between the chord line and the direction of the relative wind (and which varies in flight according to attitude and speed). The rigging angle is chosen by the manufacturer so that the wing generates the necessary lift in cruise at an aerodynamically favourable fuselage attitude.
+
+### Q62: What does the transition point correspond to? ^t80q62
+- A) The lateral roll of the aircraft
+- B) The point at which CL_max is reached
+- C) The change from a turbulent boundary layer to a laminar one
+- D) The change from a laminar boundary layer to a turbulent one
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition point is precisely the location on the aerofoil where the boundary layer changes from a laminar regime (ordered flow, in parallel layers) to a turbulent regime (disordered flow, with transverse mixing). This transition is irreversible in the direction of flow: the change is from laminar to turbulent, never the reverse. The position of the transition point depends on the Reynolds number, the pressure gradient, and surface roughness — a favourable pressure gradient (acceleration) maintains laminar flow, while an adverse gradient (deceleration) triggers transition.
+
+### Q63: Geometric or aerodynamic wing twist results in... ^t80q63
+- A) Partial compensation of adverse yaw at low speed
+- B) A higher cruise speed
+- C) Progressive flow separation along the wingspan
+- D) Simultaneous flow separation along the wingspan at low speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing twist (geometric or aerodynamic) varies the angle of incidence or aerodynamic characteristics along the span, so that the stall does not occur simultaneously across the entire wing. The root (higher angle of incidence) reaches the critical angle first and stalls progressively, while the outer sections remain attached. This progressive (rather than simultaneous) flow separation improves stall safety and maintains roll control via the ailerons. The effect on adverse yaw (A) is indirect and marginal.
+
+### Q64: The profile drag (form drag) of a body is primarily influenced by... ^t80q64
+- A) Its mass
+- B) Its internal temperature
+- C) Its density
+- D) The formation of vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Form drag (pressure drag) is caused by the pressure difference between the front and rear of a body, due to boundary layer separation and the formation of vortices in the wake. The more intense the vortex formation (unStreamlined body, blunt trailing edge), the higher the form drag. This is why streamlined aerofoils have much lower form drag than a flat plate or sphere — their progressively converging shape allows the flow to remain attached longer, reducing the turbulent wake.
+
+### Q65: The aerodynamic drag of a flat disc in an airflow depends notably on... ^t80q65
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) The surface area perpendicular to the airflow
+- D) The tensile strength of its material
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The drag of a flat disc (non-streamlined body) is pressure drag: it depends primarily on the frontal surface area S exposed perpendicularly to the airflow, and on the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². The formula is D = CD × q × S. The material strength, the disc's own density, or its weight do not influence aerodynamic drag — this is purely a function of shape, projected area, and flow conditions.
+
+### Q66: On the speed polar, which tangent touches the curve at the point of minimum sink rate? ^t80q66
+> **Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/t80_q66.png]]
+> *A = tangent from the origin → best glide speed (best L/D ratio, best glide)*
+> *B = tangent from a point shifted to the right on the V axis → best glide with headwind*
+> *C = tangent from a point above the origin on the W axis (McCready) → optimal inter-thermal speed; touches the polar at the point of minimum sink rate*
+> *D = horizontal line at the level of minimum sink rate → indicates the minimum sink speed (Vmin sink)*
+
+- A) Tangent (A)
+- B) Tangent (B)
+- C) Tangent (D)
+- D) Tangent (C)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the speed polar (curve showing the sink rate W as a function of horizontal speed V), the point of minimum sink rate corresponds to the lowest point of the curve (the smallest value of W in absolute terms). The tangent at this point is a horizontal tangent — this is tangent (C) on the diagram. This point corresponds to the minimum sink speed, used to maximise flight time or to exploit thermals. The tangent drawn from the origin to the polar (tangent B) gives the speed for the best L/D ratio (best glide ratio).
+
+### Q67: Induced drag increases... ^t80q67
+- A) As parasite drag increases
+- B) With decreasing angle of attack
+- C) With increasing angle of attack
+- D) With increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL²: D_induced = CL² / (π × AR × e) × q × S. By increasing the angle of attack, CL increases, and therefore CL² increases, causing induced drag to grow. In level flight at constant speed, an increase in angle of attack corresponds to a lower speed, which further increases induced drag (D_induced ∝ 1/V²). By increasing speed (D), CL decreases in level flight and induced drag decreases. Parasite drag (A) varies independently of induced drag.
+
+### Q68: How does the minimum speed of an aircraft in a level turn at 45-degree bank compare to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q68
+- A) It decreases
+- B) It does not change
+- C) It increases
+- D) It depends on the aircraft type
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a horizontal turn at bank angle φ, the load factor is n = 1/cos(φ). At 45° of bank, n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0.707 ≈ 1.41. The stall speed in the turn is Vs_turn = Vs × √n = Vs × √1.41 ≈ Vs × 1.19. Therefore the minimum speed increases by approximately 19% compared to straight-and-level flight. This increase in stall speed during turns is a fundamental safety concept — tight turns at low altitude (such as on final approach) are particularly dangerous because the margin above the stall is reduced.
+
+### Q69: Adverse yaw is caused by... ^t80q69
+- A) The gyroscopic effect when a turn is initiated
+- B) The lateral airflow over the wing after a turn has been initiated
+- C) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes up
+- D) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes down
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw is caused by the asymmetry of drag between the two ailerons during turn entry. The aileron that rises (on the high-wing side) increases the local angle of attack, generating more lift but also more induced drag. This additional drag on the rising side creates a yawing moment towards the rising side — i.e. in the opposite direction to the turn (hence "adverse yaw"). Differential ailerons and spoiler-airbrakes are technical solutions to mitigate this effect.
+
+### Q70: True Airspeed (TAS) is the speed shown by the ASI... ^t80q70
+- A) Corrected for position and instrument errors only
+- B) Without any correction
+- C) Adjusted for air density only
+- D) Corrected for both position/instrument errors and air density
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True airspeed (TAS) is obtained from indicated airspeed (IAS) by applying two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors (yielding calibrated airspeed, CAS), then the density correction (accounting for the difference between actual air density and standard sea-level density). TAS is therefore the actual speed of the aircraft through the air mass. At high altitude, TAS is significantly higher than IAS because air density is lower.
+
+### Q71: The speed range authorised for the use of slotted flaps is: ^t80q71
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) Limited at the lower end by the bottom of the green arc
+- C) Indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally shown on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) Limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed (Va)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The slotted flap speed range is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally on the airspeed indicator (white or light green arc). It varies by glider type.
+
+### Q72: Wing tip vortices are caused by pressure equalisation from: ^t80q72
+- A) The lower surface toward the upper surface at the wing tip
+- B) The upper surface toward the lower surface at the wing tip
+- C) The lower surface toward the upper surface along the entire trailing edge
+- D) The upper surface toward the lower surface along the entire trailing edge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing tip vortices (induced vortices) come from pressure equalization from the lower surface (high pressure) to the upper surface (low pressure) at the wing tip. This phenomenon generates induced drag.
+
+### Q73: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always the angle between: ^t80q73
+- A) The chord line and the relative airflow direction
+- B) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) The horizon and the general airflow direction
+- D) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Angle of attack is the angle between the chord line and the general airflow direction (relative wind direction). It is not the angle with the horizon nor with the longitudinal axis.
+
+### Q74: In the standard atmosphere, the values of temperature and atmospheric pressure at sea level are: ^t80q74
+- A) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 59 degrees C and 29.92 hPa
+- C) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 Hg
+- D) 15 degrees F and 29.92 Hg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure in ICAO standard atmosphere at sea level is 1013.25 hPa (millibars) = 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg). 29.92 hPa is incorrect.
+
+### Q75: Regarding airflow, the simplified continuity equation states: At the same moment, the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections. Therefore: ^t80q75
+![[figures/t80_q75.png]]
+- A) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- B) The air mass flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) The speed of the air mass does not vary
+- D) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the line equidistant between the lower and upper surfaces. In the figure, it is represented by line B.
+
+### Q76: In a correctly executed turn without altitude loss, why is slight back-pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q76
+- A) To prevent slipping inward in the turn
+- B) To reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward sideslip in the turn
+- D) To slightly increase lift
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated turn without altitude loss, back pressure is needed to increase lift and balance centrifugal force (load factor > 1). Lift must compensate for both gravity and centrifugal force.
+
+### Q77: When the frontal area of a disc in an airflow is tripled, drag increases by: ^t80q77
+- A) 9 times
+- B) 1.5 times
+- C) 3 times
+- D) 6 times
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall occurs at a critical angle of attack (stall angle), regardless of airspeed. At this angle, airflow separation on the upper surface causes a sudden drop in lift.
+
+### Q78: Aerodynamic wing twist (washout) is a modification of: ^t80q78
+- A) The angle of incidence of the same aerofoil, from root to wing tip
+- B) The aerofoil profile from root to wing tip
+- C) The angle of attack at the wing tip by means of the aileron
+- D) The wing dihedral, from root to tip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs at a determined angle of attack (critical angle), specific to each airfoil. It is not related to the nose attitude relative to the horizon.
+
+### Q79: What is the average value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q79
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 15° C/100 m
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 100 m/sec²
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard gravitational acceleration at Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s². This is the ISA value used in all performance calculations.
+
+### Q80: The speed displayed on the airspeed indicator (ASI) is a measurement of: ^t80q80
+- A) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) The difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- C) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- D) The weathervane effect, where pressure decreases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspeed indicator reading is based on the difference between static pressure and total pressure (dynamic pressure). The ASI measures this difference via the Pitot tube and static port.
+
+### Q81: The horizontal and vertical stabilisers serve in particular to: ^t80q81
+- A) Control the aircraft around its longitudinal axis
+- B) Reduce the formation of wing tip vortices
+- C) Stabilise the aircraft in flight
+- D) Reduce air resistance
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal and vertical stabilizers serve primarily to stabilize the aircraft in flight (longitudinal and directional stability). Without them, the aircraft would be unstable.
+
+### Q82: When slotted flaps are extended, airflow separation: ^t80q82
+- A) Occurs at the same speed as before extending the flaps
+- B) Occurs at a higher speed
+- C) None of the answers is correct
+- D) Occurs at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When extending slotted flaps, airflow separation occurs at a lower speed, because flaps increase the maximum lift coefficient (CL max). Stall speed decreases.
+
+### Q83: The aerodynamic centre of an aerofoil in an airflow is the point of application of: ^t80q83
+- A) The weight
+- B) The resultant of all pressure forces acting on the aerofoil
+- C) The tyre pressure on the runway
+- D) The airflow at the leading edge
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic center is the point of application of the resultant of aerodynamic forces on a profile. It is distinct from the center of pressure (which moves) and the center of gravity.
+
+### Q84: Pressures are expressed in: ^t80q84
+- A) Pa, psi, g
+- B) Bar, Pa, m/sec²
+- C) Bar, psi, Pa
+- D) Bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pressures are expressed in bar, psi (pounds per square inch) and Pa (Pascal). g is an acceleration, not a pressure. Alpha (a) is not a pressure unit.
+
+### Q85: TAS (True Air Speed) is the speed of: ^t80q85
+- A) The aircraft relative to the ground
+- B) The aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass
+- C) The aircraft relative to the air, corrected for wind component and atmospheric pressure
+- D) The reading on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS (True Air Speed) is the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass. It is the actual speed through the air, corrected for atmospheric density.
+
+### Q86: Yaw stability of an aircraft is provided by: ^t80q86
+- A) Leading edge slats
+- B) The horizontal stabiliser
+- C) The fin (vertical stabiliser)
+- D) Wing dihedral
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yaw stability is provided by the fin (vertical stabilizer/rudder). Wing sweep contributes to roll stability, not yaw.
+
+### Q87: The trailing edge flap shown below is a: ^t80q87
+![[figures/t80_q87.png]]
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flap shown, extending from the wing with a slot, is a Slotted Flap. The slot channels air from the lower to upper surface, delaying separation.
+
+### Q88: The risk of airflow separation on the wing occurs mainly: ^t80q88
+- A) In straight climbing flight at high speed, in atmospheric turbulence
+- B) In calm air, in gliding flight, at the minimum authorised speed
+- C) During an abrupt pull-out after a dive
+- D) In straight level cruise flight, in atmospheric turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The risk of stall/separation appears mainly during an abrupt pull-out after a dive, as the angle of attack increases very rapidly and can exceed the critical angle before the pilot can react.
+
+### Q89: The drag of a body in an airflow depends notably on: ^t80q89
+- A) The mass of the body
+- B) The chemical composition of the body
+- C) The density of the air
+- D) The density of the body
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic drag depends notably on air density (ρ), since F_D = Cd × 0.5 × ρ × v² × A. The body's own density, chemical composition, and mass do not directly affect aerodynamic drag.
+
+### Q90: In the drawing below, the aerofoil chord is represented by: ^t80q90
+![[figures/t80_q90.png]]
+- A) M
+- B) K
+- C) H
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The chord line is the straight line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge. In the figure, it is represented by H.
+
+### Q91: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always measured between: ^t80q91
+- A) The chord line and the direction of the relative airflow
+- B) The longitudinal axis and the general airflow direction
+- C) The longitudinal axis and the horizon
+- D) It varies depending on the pilot's weight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of attack (AoA) is defined as the angle between the chord line and the direction of the undisturbed relative airflow, making A correct. Option B is wrong because the longitudinal axis is a structural reference, not an aerodynamic one; AoA is measured from the chord line. Option C confuses AoA with pitch attitude, which relates the longitudinal axis to the horizon. Option D is nonsensical — AoA is a geometric and aerodynamic property entirely independent of the pilot's weight.
+
+### Q92: Given equal frontal area and equal airflow speed, what determines the drag of a body? ^t80q92
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) Its shape
+- D) The position of its centre of gravity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When frontal area and airspeed are held constant, the remaining variable in the drag equation D = CD × 0.5 × rho × V² × S is the drag coefficient CD, which is determined entirely by the body's shape. A streamlined shape produces far less drag than a blunt one. Options A and B are wrong because weight and material density have no direct aerodynamic effect — drag depends on external geometry, not internal mass distribution. Option D is incorrect because the centre of gravity affects stability, not the aerodynamic drag coefficient.
+
+### Q93: What is the origin of induced drag on a wing? ^t80q93
+- A) The angle formed at the wing-fuselage junction
+- B) Airspeed
+- C) Pressure equalisation from the lower surface toward the upper surface
+- D) Pressure equalisation from the upper surface toward the lower surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag originates from the pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces. At the wingtips, air flows from the high-pressure lower surface around to the low-pressure upper surface, forming trailing vortices that tilt the lift vector rearward, creating induced drag. Option D reverses the flow direction — air moves from high to low pressure, not the other way. Option A describes interference drag at the wing root, and option B is too vague — airspeed alone is not the origin of induced drag.
+
+### Q94: What is the sea-level pressure in the ICAO standard atmosphere? ^t80q94
+- A) 29.92 hPa
+- B) 1012.35 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) It depends on latitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO International Standard Atmosphere defines sea-level pressure as exactly 1013.25 hPa (hectopascals). Option A gives 29.92, which is the equivalent value in inches of mercury (inHg), not hPa — 29.92 hPa would be an absurdly low pressure. Option B (1012.35 hPa) is simply incorrect. Option D is wrong because the ISA is a standardized model that does not vary with latitude, even though real atmospheric pressure does.
+
+### Q95: In the aerofoil diagram below, which line represents the mean camber line? ^t80q95
+![[figures/t80_q95.png]]
+- A) H
+- B) B
+- C) G + J
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the locus of points equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil, representing the profile's curvature. In this diagram, line B corresponds to this curved reference line. Options A, C, and D represent other aerofoil features such as the chord line, thickness distribution, or surface contours, not the mean camber line.
+
+### Q96: In a level turn without sideslip or altitude loss, why is back pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q96
+- A) To prevent an inward slip during the turn
+- B) To slow down and reduce centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward skid during the turn
+- D) To increase lift so it balances both weight and centrifugal force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the load factor exceeds 1 because lift must counterbalance both the aircraft's weight and provide the centripetal force for the curved flight path. Back pressure on the elevator increases the angle of attack and thus total lift to meet this requirement. Option A is wrong because slips are corrected with rudder, not elevator. Option B is incorrect — the purpose is not to slow down. Option C is also wrong because skid prevention is a rudder function, not an elevator function.
+
+### Q97: A wing stall occurs: ^t80q97
+- A) At the red radial line on the airspeed indicator
+- B) When a critical angle of attack is exceeded
+- C) Following a reduction in engine power
+- D) Only when the nose is pitched excessively above the horizon
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stall occurs when the wing's angle of attack exceeds the critical value (typically around 15-18 degrees), causing flow separation from the upper surface and a sudden loss of lift. This is a fundamental aerodynamic principle independent of airspeed or attitude. Option A is wrong because the red line (VNE) relates to structural speed limits, not stall. Option C is incorrect — reducing power alone does not cause a stall if AoA remains below critical. Option D is false because a stall can occur at any pitch attitude or airspeed, as long as the critical AoA is exceeded.
+
+### Q98: At what condition does airflow separation from an aerofoil occur? ^t80q98
+- A) Only at a specific aircraft altitude
+- B) Only at a given nose position relative to the horizon
+- C) Simultaneously across the entire span
+- D) At a specific angle of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs when the angle of attack reaches the critical stall angle, which is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape. Option A is wrong because stall AoA is independent of altitude. Option B confuses pitch attitude with angle of attack — a wing can stall at any nose position. Option C is incorrect because, thanks to wing design features like washout, the stall typically progresses from root to tip rather than occurring simultaneously across the entire span.
+
+### Q99: What is the mean gravitational acceleration at the surface of the Earth? ^t80q99
+- A) 9.81 m/sec2
+- B) 100 m/sec2
+- C) 1013.5 hPa
+- D) 15° C/100 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at sea level is 9.81 m/s², used throughout aviation for weight, load factor, and performance calculations. Option B (100 m/s²) is roughly ten times too large. Option C (1013.5 hPa) is a pressure value close to the ISA sea-level pressure, not an acceleration. Option D (15°C/100 m) resembles a temperature lapse rate format but is far too high — the ISA lapse rate is 0.65°C per 100 m.
+
+### Q100: True Airspeed (TAS) is obtained from the airspeed indicator (ASI) reading by: ^t80q100
+- A) No corrections at all
+- B) Correcting for position and instrument errors
+- C) Applying corrections for both position/instrument errors and atmospheric density
+- D) Adjusting for atmospheric density alone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS is derived from the ASI reading (IAS) through two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors are removed to obtain calibrated airspeed (CAS), then a density correction accounts for the difference between actual air density and ISA sea-level density. Option A is wrong because uncorrected IAS does not equal TAS. Option B yields only CAS, not TAS. Option D omits the instrument/position error correction, which is always the first step.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_51_100_de.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_51_100_de.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,510 @@
+### Q51: Wie groß ist der Mittelwert der Erdbeschleunigung an der Erdoberfläche? ^t80q51
+- A) 15° C/100 m
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 9,81 m/sec²
+- D) 1013,25 hPa
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Standard-Erdbeschleunigung an der Erdoberfläche beträgt 9,81 m/s² (ISA-Wert). Dieser Wert ist grundlegend für die Luftfahrt: Er dient zur Berechnung des Gewichts (W = m × g), des Lastfaktors und kommt in allen Leistungsformeln vor. 1013,25 hPa ist der Standarddruck auf Meeresniveau, und 15°C/100 m ist kein korrekter Gradient (der Standardgradient beträgt 0,65°C/100 m).
+
+### Q52: Während eines Seitenschlipfs ist die zulässige Klappenstellung... ^t80q52
+- A) Klappen vollständig eingefahren
+- B) Klappen vollständig ausgefahren
+- C) Bestimmt durch die vertikale Abwärtskomponente der Geschwindigkeit
+- D) Im Flughandbuch (AFM) angegeben
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die zulässige Klappenstellung während eines Seitenschlipfs ist immer im Flughandbuch (AFM/POH) des Flugzeugs angegeben. Einige Segelflugzeuge verbieten ausgefahrene Klappen im Schlipf, da die Kombination aus Klappen und ausgeschlagenem Seitenruder gefährliche aerodynamische Koppelungen erzeugen oder Strukturgrenzen überschreiten kann. Andere erlauben bestimmte Konfigurationen. Die einzig richtige Antwort ist daher, das AFM zu konsultieren.
+
+### Q53: Ein Flugzeug besitzt dynamische Stabilität, wenn... ^t80q53
+- A) Es sich nach einer Störung automatisch in einem neuen Gleichgewicht stabilisieren kann
+- B) Es nach einer Störung automatisch in sein ursprüngliches Gleichgewicht zurückkehren kann
+- C) Die Drehung um die Nickachse automatisch durch die Querruder korrigiert wird
+- D) Der zulässige Lastfaktor eine positive Beschleunigung von mindestens 4 g und eine negative Beschleunigung von mindestens 2 g bei eingefahrenen Landeklappen erlaubt
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Dynamische Stabilität beschreibt das Verhalten eines Flugzeugs über die Zeit nach einer Störung. Ein dynamisch stabiles Flugzeug kehrt nach einer Störung automatisch in sein ursprüngliches Gleichgewicht (Trimmzustand) zurück — die Schwingungen klingen progressiv ab. Antwort A beschreibt eine sogenannte „neutrale oder konvergente Stabilität zu einem neuen Gleichgewicht", was etwas anderes ist. Statische Stabilität (die unmittelbare Rückkehrtendenz) ist eine notwendige, aber nicht hinreichende Bedingung für dynamische Stabilität.
+
+### Q54: Bei starker Turbulenz muss die Fluggeschwindigkeit reduziert werden... ^t80q54
+- A) Auf die normale Reisegeschwindigkeit
+- B) Auf eine Geschwindigkeit im gelben Bogen des Fahrtmessers
+- C) Auf die minimale konstante Geschwindigkeit in Landekonfiguration
+- D) Auf unter die Manövriergeschwindigkeit V_A
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Manövriergeschwindigkeit V_A (oder Turbulenz-Durchfluggeschwindigkeit) ist die Höchstgeschwindigkeit, bei der volle Ruderausschläge oder schwere Windböen die Strukturlastgrenze nicht überschreiten. Unterhalb von V_A wird der Flügel überziehen, bevor die Strukturlastgrenze erreicht wird, und schützt so die Struktur. Bei starker Turbulenz muss die Geschwindigkeit unter V_A reduziert werden, um Strukturschäden durch dynamische Böenlasten zu vermeiden.
+
+### Q55: In der ICAO-Standardatmosphäre beträgt der Temperaturgradient in der Troposphäre... ^t80q55
+- A) 2°C/100 ft
+- B) 0,65°C/1000 ft
+- C) 0,65°C/100 m
+- D) 2°C/100 m
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** In der ICAO-Standardatmosphäre (ISA) sinkt die Temperatur um 0,65°C pro 100 m Höhe in der Troposphäre (oder gleichwertig: 2°C pro 1000 ft bzw. 6,5°C/1000 m). Antwort B (0,65°C/1000 ft) ist falsch, da die Einheit nicht stimmt — das wäre ein viel zu kleiner Gradient. Antwort C ist die einzig richtige: 0,65°C pro 100 m Höhe.
+
+### Q56: Bei welcher Höhe fällt der atmosphärische Druck ungefähr auf die Hälfte seines Meeresspiegelwerts? ^t80q56
+- A) 5.500 m
+- B) 6.600 m
+- C) 6.600 ft
+- D) 5.500 ft
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der atmosphärische Druck nimmt mit der Höhe annähernd exponentiell ab. In der ICAO-Standardatmosphäre beträgt der Druck etwa die Hälfte des Meeresspiegeldrucks (1013,25 hPa → ~506 hPa) in einer Höhe von etwa 5.500 m (18.000 ft). Dieser Wert ist wichtig für die Höhenphysiologie (Sauerstoffbedarf) und für Leistungsberechnungen mit der Dichtehöhe.
+
+### Q57: Die Dichtehöhe entspricht immer... ^t80q57
+- A) Der Höhe, bei der Luftdruck und Temperatur denen der Standardatmosphäre entsprechen
+- B) Der wahren angezeigten Höhe nach Korrektur des Instrumentenfehlers
+- C) Der Druckhöhe, korrigiert um die Temperaturabweichung von der Standardtemperatur
+- D) Der am Höhenmesser abgelesenen Höhe bei QNH-Einstellung, korrigiert um die Temperaturabweichung von der Standardtemperatur
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Dichtehöhe ist die Höhe, in der sich das Flugzeug in der ISA-Standardatmosphäre befände, wenn die Luftdichte der tatsächlichen Dichte entspräche. Sie wird aus der Druckhöhe (Höhenmesser auf 1013,25 hPa eingestellt) berechnet und um die Temperaturabweichung von der ISA korrigiert. Eine höhere Temperatur als die ISA ergibt eine Dichtehöhe über der Druckhöhe, was die Flugleistung verschlechtert. Antwort A beschreibt die Druckhöhe, nicht die Dichtehöhe.
+
+### Q58: Die vereinfachte Kontinuitätsgleichung angewandt auf eine Luftströmung besagt: *In einem gegebenen Zeitraum bleibt eine strömende Luftmasse erhalten, unabhängig von dem Querschnitt, den sie durchströmt.* Das bedeutet... ^t80q58
+- A) Die Strömungsgeschwindigkeit sinkt, wenn der Querschnitt kleiner wird
+- B) Die Strömungsgeschwindigkeit steigt, wenn der Querschnitt größer wird
+- C) Die Strömungsgeschwindigkeit bleibt konstant
+- D) Die Strömungsgeschwindigkeit steigt, wenn der Querschnitt kleiner wird
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Kontinuitätsgleichung besagt, dass für ein inkompressibles Fluid der Volumenstrom Q = S × V entlang eines Stromröhre konstant ist. Wenn der Querschnitt S abnimmt, muss die Geschwindigkeit V proportional zunehmen, um Q konstant zu halten. Dieses Prinzip erklärt in Kombination mit dem Bernoulli-Theorem, warum die Luft über die gewölbte Oberseite eines Profils beschleunigt und dort einen Unterdruckbereich erzeugt, der Auftrieb generiert.
+
+### Q59: Die aerodynamische Resultierende (Widerstand und Auftrieb) hängt von der Luftdichte ab. Wenn die Luftdichte abnimmt... ^t80q59
+- A) Nehmen sowohl Widerstand als auch Auftrieb ab
+- B) Nehmen sowohl Widerstand als auch Auftrieb zu
+- C) Der Widerstand nimmt zu, während der Auftrieb abnimmt
+- D) Der Widerstand nimmt ab, während der Auftrieb zunimmt
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Sowohl Auftrieb als auch Widerstand sind proportional zum dynamischen Druck q = 0,5 × ρ × V². Wenn die Luftdichte ρ abnimmt (in der Höhe oder bei hohen Temperaturen), sinkt q für eine gegebene Geschwindigkeit, was sowohl Auftrieb als auch Widerstand verringert. Deshalb verschlechtern sich die Flugleistungen in großer Höhe oder bei großer Hitze: Das Flugzeug muss schneller fliegen (höhere TAS), um den gleichen Auftrieb zu erzeugen, während der Gesamtluftwiderstand bei konstanter angezeigter Geschwindigkeit abnimmt.
+
+### Q60: Wie heißt der Punkt, um den sich bei Änderung des Anstellwinkels das Nickmoment um die Querachse nicht ändert? ^t80q60
+- A) Symmetriezentrum
+- B) Schwerpunkt
+- C) Neutralpunkt (aerodynamisches Zentrum)
+- D) Neutralpunkt
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Neutralpunkt (auf Profilebene auch aerodynamisches Zentrum genannt, aber „Neutralpunkt" für das Gesamtflugzeug) ist der Punkt, um den das Nickmoment unabhängig von Anstellwinkeländerungen konstant bleibt. Für ein stabiles Flugzeug muss der Schwerpunkt vor dem Neutralpunkt liegen — der Abstand Schwerpunkt-Neutralpunkt bildet die statische Stabilitätsmarge. Hinweis: Für ein einzelnes Profil entspricht dieser Punkt dem aerodynamischen Zentrum (bei etwa 25 % der Profiltiefe); für das Gesamtflugzeug berücksichtigt der Neutralpunkt den Beitrag des Höhenleitwerks.
+
+### Q61: Der Winkel zwischen der Profilsehne und der Flugzeuglängsachse heißt... ^t80q61
+- A) Der Pfeilwinkel
+- B) Der Anstellwinkel
+- C) Der V-Form-Winkel
+- D) Der Einstellwinkel
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Einstellwinkel ist der feste, bei der Konstruktion festgelegte Winkel zwischen der Profilsehne und der Längsachse des Rumpfes. Er ändert sich im Flug nicht. Er darf nicht mit dem Anstellwinkel verwechselt werden, der der Winkel zwischen der Profilsehne und der Richtung des relativen Winds ist (und der sich im Flug mit Fluglage und Geschwindigkeit ändert). Der Einstellwinkel wird vom Hersteller so gewählt, dass der Flügel im Reiseflug den nötigen Auftrieb bei einer aerodynamisch günstigen Rumpflage erzeugt.
+
+### Q62: Wofür steht der Umschlagpunkt? ^t80q62
+- A) Für das seitliche Rollen des Flugzeugs
+- B) Für den Punkt, an dem CL_max erreicht wird
+- C) Für den Übergang von turbulenter zu laminarer Grenzschicht
+- D) Für den Übergang von laminarer zu turbulenter Grenzschicht
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Umschlagpunkt ist genau die Stelle am Profil, an der die Grenzschicht von einem laminaren Regime (geordnete Strömung in parallelen Schichten) in ein turbulentes Regime (ungeordnete Strömung mit Quervermischung) übergeht. Dieser Übergang ist in Strömungsrichtung irreversibel: Der Wechsel geht von laminar zu turbulent, niemals umgekehrt. Die Position des Umschlagpunkts hängt von der Reynoldszahl, dem Druckgradienten und der Oberflächenrauheit ab — ein günstiger Druckgradient (Beschleunigung) erhält die laminare Strömung aufrecht, während ein ungünstiger Gradient (Verzögerung) den Umschlag auslöst.
+
+### Q63: Geometrische oder aerodynamische Flügelschränkung bewirkt... ^t80q63
+- A) Teilweise Kompensation des negativen Wendemoments bei niedriger Geschwindigkeit
+- B) Eine höhere Reisegeschwindigkeit
+- C) Progressiven Strömungsabriss entlang der Spannweite
+- D) Gleichzeitigen Strömungsabriss entlang der Spannweite bei niedriger Geschwindigkeit
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Flügelschränkung (geometrisch oder aerodynamisch) variiert den Einstellwinkel oder die aerodynamischen Eigenschaften entlang der Spannweite, sodass der Strömungsabriss nicht gleichzeitig über den gesamten Flügel eintritt. Die Wurzel (höherer Einstellwinkel) erreicht den kritischen Winkel zuerst und reißt progressiv ab, während die äußeren Abschnitte noch anliegend bleiben. Dieser progressive (statt gleichzeitige) Strömungsabriss verbessert die Sicherheit beim Überziehen und erhält die Rollsteuerung über die Querruder. Der Einfluss auf das negative Wendemoment (A) ist indirekt und marginal.
+
+### Q64: Die Profiltraînée (Formwiderstand) eines Körpers wird hauptsächlich beeinflusst durch... ^t80q64
+- A) Seine Masse
+- B) Seine innere Temperatur
+- C) Seine Dichte
+- D) Die Bildung von Wirbeln
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Formwiderstand (Druckwiderstand) wird durch die Druckdifferenz zwischen Vorder- und Rückseite eines Körpers verursacht, die auf Grenzschichtablösung und Wirbelbildung im Nachlauf zurückzuführen ist. Je intensiver die Wirbelbildung (unverkleideter Körper, stumpfe Hinterkante), desto höher der Formwiderstand. Deshalb haben stromlinienförmige Profile einen viel geringeren Formwiderstand als eine ebene Platte oder eine Kugel — ihre progressiv konvergierende Form ermöglicht der Strömung, länger angelegt zu bleiben, und reduziert den turbulenten Nachlauf.
+
+### Q65: Der aerodynamische Widerstand einer flachen Scheibe in einer Luftströmung hängt insbesondere ab von... ^t80q65
+- A) Ihrem Gewicht
+- B) Ihrer Dichte
+- C) Der Fläche senkrecht zur Strömung
+- D) Der Zugfestigkeit ihres Materials
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Widerstand einer flachen Scheibe (nicht stromlinienförmiger Körper) ist Druckwiderstand: Er hängt hauptsächlich von der Stirnfläche S ab, die senkrecht zur Strömung steht, und vom dynamischen Druck q = 0,5 × ρ × V². Die Formel lautet D = CD × q × S. Die Materialfestigkeit, die Eigendichte der Scheibe oder ihr Gewicht beeinflussen den aerodynamischen Widerstand nicht — es handelt sich rein um eine Funktion von Form, projizierter Fläche und Strömungsbedingungen.
+
+### Q66: Welche Tangente berührt auf der Geschwindigkeitspolaren die Kurve im Punkt des minimalen Sinkens? ^t80q66
+> **Geschwindigkeitspolare:**
+> ![[figures/t80_q66.png]]
+> *A = Tangente vom Ursprung → beste Gleitgeschwindigkeit (bestes L/D, bester Gleitwinkel)*
+> *B = Tangente von einem nach rechts verschobenen Punkt auf der V-Achse → bester Gleitwinkel bei Gegenwind*
+> *C = Tangente von einem Punkt oberhalb des Ursprungs auf der W-Achse (McCready) → optimale Vorfluggeschwindigkeit; berührt die Polare im Punkt des minimalen Sinkens*
+> *D = Horizontale Linie auf Höhe des minimalen Sinkens → zeigt die Geschwindigkeit des geringsten Sinkens an (Vmin Sinken)*
+
+- A) Tangente (A)
+- B) Tangente (B)
+- C) Tangente (D)
+- D) Tangente (C)
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Auf der Geschwindigkeitspolaren (Kurve, die die Sinkrate W als Funktion der Horizontalgeschwindigkeit V zeigt) entspricht der Punkt des minimalen Sinkens dem tiefsten Punkt der Kurve (dem kleinsten W-Wert im Betrag). Die Tangente an diesem Punkt ist eine horizontale Tangente — dies ist die Tangente (C) im Diagramm. Dieser Punkt entspricht der Geschwindigkeit des geringsten Sinkens, die zum Maximieren der Flugdauer oder zur Thermikausnutzung verwendet wird. Die vom Ursprung an die Polare gezogene Tangente (Tangente B) ergibt die Geschwindigkeit für das beste L/D-Verhältnis (beste Gleitzahl).
+
+### Q67: Der induzierte Widerstand nimmt zu... ^t80q67
+- A) Wenn der schädliche Widerstand zunimmt
+- B) Bei abnehmendem Anstellwinkel
+- C) Bei zunehmendem Anstellwinkel
+- D) Bei zunehmender Fluggeschwindigkeit
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der induzierte Widerstand ist proportional zu CL²: D_induziert = CL² / (π × AR × e) × q × S. Bei zunehmendem Anstellwinkel steigt CL, und damit steigt CL², was den induzierten Widerstand wachsen lässt. Im Horizontalflug bei konstanter Geschwindigkeit entspricht eine Erhöhung des Anstellwinkels einer geringeren Geschwindigkeit, was den induzierten Widerstand weiter erhöht (D_induziert ∝ 1/V²). Bei Geschwindigkeitserhöhung (D) sinkt CL im Horizontalflug und der induzierte Widerstand nimmt ab. Der schädliche Widerstand (A) variiert unabhängig vom induzierten Widerstand.
+
+### Q68: Wie verhält sich die Mindestgeschwindigkeit eines Flugzeugs im Horizontalkurvenflug mit 45 Grad Querneigung im Vergleich zum Geradeaus-Horizontalflug? ^t80q68
+- A) Sie nimmt ab
+- B) Sie ändert sich nicht
+- C) Sie nimmt zu
+- D) Es hängt vom Flugzeugtyp ab
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Im Horizontalkurvenflug mit Querneigungswinkel φ beträgt der Lastfaktor n = 1/cos(φ). Bei 45° Querneigung ist n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0,707 ≈ 1,41. Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit in der Kurve ist Vs_Kurve = Vs × √n = Vs × √1,41 ≈ Vs × 1,19. Folglich steigt die Mindestgeschwindigkeit um etwa 19 % gegenüber dem Geradeaus-Horizontalflug. Diese Zunahme der Überziehgeschwindigkeit im Kurvenflug ist ein grundlegendes Sicherheitskonzept — enge Kurven in Bodennähe (etwa im Endanflug) sind besonders gefährlich, da der Abstand zur Überziehgeschwindigkeit verringert ist.
+
+### Q69: Das negative Wendemoment (adverse yaw) wird verursacht durch... ^t80q69
+- A) Den Kreiseleffekt beim Einleiten einer Kurve
+- B) Die seitliche Luftströmung über den Flügel nach Einleiten einer Kurve
+- C) Die Zunahme des induzierten Widerstands am Querruder des steigenden Flügels
+- D) Die Zunahme des induzierten Widerstands am Querruder des absinkenden Flügels
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das negative Wendemoment wird durch die Widerstandsasymmetrie der beiden Querruder beim Kurveneinleiten verursacht. Das Querruder am steigenden Flügel (nach unten ausgeschlagen) erhöht den lokalen Anstellwinkel und erzeugt mehr Auftrieb, aber auch mehr induzierten Widerstand. Dieser zusätzliche Widerstand auf der steigenden Seite erzeugt ein Giermoment zur steigenden Seite hin — also in die Richtung entgegengesetzt zur Kurve (daher „negatives Wendemoment"). Differenzialquerruder und Spoiler-Bremsklappen sind technische Lösungen zur Abschwächung dieses Effekts.
+
+### Q70: Die wahre Fluggeschwindigkeit (TAS) ist die vom Fahrtmesser angezeigte Geschwindigkeit... ^t80q70
+- A) Korrigiert nur um Einbau- und Instrumentenfehler
+- B) Ohne jede Korrektur
+- C) Bereinigt nur um die Luftdichte
+- D) Korrigiert sowohl um Einbau-/Instrumentenfehler als auch um die Luftdichte
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die wahre Fluggeschwindigkeit (TAS) wird aus der angezeigten Geschwindigkeit (IAS) durch zwei aufeinanderfolgende Korrekturen ermittelt: zunächst die Positions- und Instrumentenfehler (ergibt die kalibrierte Geschwindigkeit, CAS), dann die Dichtekorrektur (berücksichtigt den Unterschied zwischen tatsächlicher Luftdichte und Standard-Meereshöhendichte). Die TAS ist somit die tatsächliche Geschwindigkeit des Flugzeugs durch die Luftmasse. In großer Höhe ist die TAS deutlich höher als die IAS, da die Luftdichte geringer ist.
+
+### Q71: Der zulässige Geschwindigkeitsbereich für die Verwendung von Spaltklappen ist: ^t80q71
+- A) Unbegrenzt
+- B) Am unteren Ende durch den Anfang des grünen Bogens begrenzt
+- C) Im Flughandbuch (AFM) angegeben und normalerweise am Fahrtmesser (ASI) dargestellt
+- D) Am oberen Ende durch die Manövriergeschwindigkeit (Va) begrenzt
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Geschwindigkeitsbereich für Spaltklappen ist im Flughandbuch (AFM) angegeben und normalerweise am Fahrtmesser dargestellt (weißer oder hellgrüner Bogen). Er variiert je nach Segelflugzeugtyp.
+
+### Q72: Randwirbel werden durch Druckausgleich verursacht von: ^t80q72
+- A) Der Unterseite zur Oberseite an der Flügelspitze
+- B) Der Oberseite zur Unterseite an der Flügelspitze
+- C) Der Unterseite zur Oberseite entlang der gesamten Hinterkante
+- D) Der Oberseite zur Unterseite entlang der gesamten Hinterkante
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Randwirbel (induzierte Wirbel) entstehen durch Druckausgleich von der Unterseite (Hochdruck) zur Oberseite (Niederdruck) an der Flügelspitze. Dieses Phänomen erzeugt den induzierten Widerstand.
+
+### Q73: Der Anstellwinkel eines Profils ist immer der Winkel zwischen: ^t80q73
+- A) Der Profilsehne und der Richtung des relativen Winds
+- B) Der Längsachse des Flugzeugs und der allgemeinen Strömungsrichtung
+- C) Dem Horizont und der allgemeinen Strömungsrichtung
+- D) Der Längsachse des Flugzeugs und dem Horizont
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Anstellwinkel ist der Winkel zwischen der Profilsehne und der allgemeinen Strömungsrichtung (Richtung des relativen Winds). Es ist weder der Winkel zum Horizont noch zur Längsachse.
+
+### Q74: In der Standardatmosphäre betragen die Werte von Temperatur und Luftdruck auf Meeresniveau: ^t80q74
+- A) 15 Grad C und 1013,25 hPa
+- B) 59 Grad C und 29,92 hPa
+- C) 15 Grad C und 1013,25 Hg
+- D) 15 Grad F und 29,92 Hg
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Druck in der ICAO-Standardatmosphäre auf Meeresniveau beträgt 1013,25 hPa (Millibar) = 29,92 Zoll Quecksilbersäule (inHg). 29,92 hPa ist falsch.
+
+### Q75: Bezüglich der Luftströmung besagt die vereinfachte Kontinuitätsgleichung: Im selben Moment strömt die gleiche Luftmasse durch verschiedene Querschnitte. Daher gilt: ^t80q75
+![[figures/t80_q75.png]]
+- A) Die Luftmasse strömt durch einen größeren Querschnitt mit höherer Geschwindigkeit
+- B) Die Luftmasse strömt durch einen kleineren Querschnitt mit niedrigerer Geschwindigkeit
+- C) Die Geschwindigkeit der Luftmasse ändert sich nicht
+- D) Die Luftmasse strömt durch einen größeren Querschnitt mit niedrigerer Geschwindigkeit
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die mittlere Wölbungslinie ist die Linie, die von der Unter- und Oberfläche gleich weit entfernt ist. In der Abbildung wird sie durch die Linie B dargestellt.
+
+### Q76: Warum ist bei einem korrekt ausgeführten Kurvenflug ohne Höhenverlust ein leichter Höhenruderzug nötig? ^t80q76
+- A) Um ein Abrutschen nach innen in der Kurve zu verhindern
+- B) Um die Geschwindigkeit und damit die Zentrifugalkraft zu reduzieren
+- C) Um ein Schieben nach außen in der Kurve zu verhindern
+- D) Um den Auftrieb leicht zu erhöhen
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** In einem koordinierten Kurvenflug ohne Höhenverlust ist Höhenruderzug notwendig, um den Auftrieb zu erhöhen und die Zentrifugalkraft auszugleichen (Lastfaktor > 1). Der Auftrieb muss sowohl die Schwerkraft als auch die Zentrifugalkraft kompensieren.
+
+### Q77: Wenn die Stirnfläche einer Scheibe in einer Strömung verdreifacht wird, steigt der Widerstand um: ^t80q77
+- A) Das 9-fache
+- B) Das 1,5-fache
+- C) Das 3-fache
+- D) Das 6-fache
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Strömungsabriss tritt bei einem kritischen Anstellwinkel (Überziehwinkel) ein, unabhängig von der Geschwindigkeit. Bei diesem Winkel verursacht die Strömungsablösung auf der Oberseite einen plötzlichen Auftriebsverlust.
+
+### Q78: Die aerodynamische Schränkung eines Flügels ist eine Veränderung von: ^t80q78
+- A) Dem Einstellwinkel desselben Profils, von der Wurzel zur Spitze
+- B) Dem Flügelprofil von der Wurzel zur Spitze
+- C) Dem Anstellwinkel an der Flügelspitze mittels des Querruders
+- D) Der V-Form des Flügels, von der Wurzel zur Spitze
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Strömungsablösung tritt bei einem bestimmten Anstellwinkel (kritischer Winkel) ein, der für jedes Profil spezifisch ist. Sie hängt nicht von der Nasenstellung relativ zum Horizont ab.
+
+### Q79: Wie groß ist der Mittelwert der Erdbeschleunigung an der Erdoberfläche? ^t80q79
+- A) 1013,25 hPa
+- B) 15° C/100 m
+- C) 9,81 m/sec²
+- D) 100 m/sec²
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Standard-Erdbeschleunigung an der Erdoberfläche beträgt 9,81 m/s². Dies ist der ISA-Wert, der in allen Leistungsberechnungen verwendet wird.
+
+### Q80: Die am Fahrtmesser (ASI) angezeigte Geschwindigkeit ist eine Messung von: ^t80q80
+- A) Gesamtdruck in einer Aneroid-Dose
+- B) Der Differenz zwischen statischem Druck und Gesamtdruck
+- C) Statischem Druck um eine Aneroid-Dose
+- D) Dem Windfahneneffekt, bei dem der Druck abnimmt
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Fahrtmesseranzeige basiert auf der Differenz zwischen statischem Druck und Gesamtdruck (dynamischer Druck). Der ASI misst diese Differenz über das Pitot-Rohr und die statische Druckentnahme.
+
+### Q81: Höhen- und Seitenleitwerk dienen insbesondere dazu: ^t80q81
+- A) Das Flugzeug um seine Längsachse zu steuern
+- B) Die Bildung von Randwirbeln zu verringern
+- C) Das Flugzeug im Flug zu stabilisieren
+- D) Den Luftwiderstand zu reduzieren
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Höhen- und Seitenleitwerk dienen hauptsächlich der Stabilisierung des Flugzeugs im Flug (Längs- und Richtungsstabilität). Ohne sie wäre das Flugzeug instabil.
+
+### Q82: Wenn Spaltklappen ausgefahren werden, tritt die Strömungsablösung: ^t80q82
+- A) Bei derselben Geschwindigkeit wie vor dem Ausfahren der Klappen auf
+- B) Bei einer höheren Geschwindigkeit auf
+- C) Keine der Antworten ist korrekt
+- D) Bei einer niedrigeren Geschwindigkeit auf
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Beim Ausfahren von Spaltklappen tritt die Strömungsablösung bei einer niedrigeren Geschwindigkeit auf, da die Klappen den maximalen Auftriebsbeiwert (CL max) erhöhen. Die Überziehgeschwindigkeit sinkt.
+
+### Q83: Das aerodynamische Zentrum eines Profils in einer Strömung ist der Angriffspunkt von: ^t80q83
+- A) Dem Gewicht
+- B) Der Resultierenden aller Druckkräfte, die auf das Profil wirken
+- C) Dem Reifendruck auf der Landebahn
+- D) Der Strömung an der Vorderkante
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das aerodynamische Zentrum ist der Angriffspunkt der Resultierenden der aerodynamischen Kräfte auf einem Profil. Es unterscheidet sich vom Druckpunkt (der sich bewegt) und vom Schwerpunkt.
+
+### Q84: Drücke werden ausgedrückt in: ^t80q84
+- A) Pa, psi, g
+- B) Bar, Pa, m/sec²
+- C) Bar, psi, Pa
+- D) Bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Drücke werden in Bar, psi (Pfund pro Quadratzoll) und Pa (Pascal) ausgedrückt. g ist eine Beschleunigung, kein Druck. Alpha (a) ist keine Druckeinheit.
+
+### Q85: Die TAS (True Air Speed) ist die Geschwindigkeit: ^t80q85
+- A) Des Flugzeugs relativ zum Boden
+- B) Des Flugzeugs relativ zur umgebenden Luftmasse
+- C) Des Flugzeugs relativ zur Luft, korrigiert um Windkomponente und Luftdruck
+- D) Die auf dem Fahrtmesser (ASI) abgelesen wird
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die TAS (True Air Speed) ist die Geschwindigkeit des Flugzeugs relativ zur umgebenden Luftmasse. Sie ist die tatsächliche Geschwindigkeit durch die Luft, korrigiert um die atmosphärische Dichte.
+
+### Q86: Die Gierstabilität eines Flugzeugs wird gewährleistet durch: ^t80q86
+- A) Vorflügelklappen
+- B) Das Höhenleitwerk
+- C) Die Seitenflosse (Seitenleitwerk)
+- D) Die V-Form der Tragflächen
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Gierstabilität wird durch die Seitenflosse (Seitenleitwerk/Seitenruder) gewährleistet. Die Flügelpfeilung trägt zur Rollstabilität bei, nicht zur Gierstabilität.
+
+### Q87: Die in der Abbildung gezeigte Hinterkantenklappe ist eine: ^t80q87
+![[figures/t80_q87.png]]
+- A) Fowler-Klappe
+- B) Spaltklappe (Split Flap)
+- C) Spaltflügelklappe (Slotted Flap)
+- D) Einfachklappe (Plain Flap)
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die abgebildete Klappe, die sich mit einem Spalt vom Flügel erstreckt, ist eine Spaltflügelklappe (Slotted Flap). Der Spalt leitet Luft von der Unterseite zur Oberseite und verzögert die Ablösung.
+
+### Q88: Das Risiko einer Strömungsablösung am Flügel besteht hauptsächlich: ^t80q88
+- A) Im geraden Steigflug bei hoher Geschwindigkeit in atmosphärischer Turbulenz
+- B) In ruhiger Luft im Gleitflug bei der minimalen zulässigen Geschwindigkeit
+- C) Bei einem abrupten Abfangen nach einem Sturzflug
+- D) Im geraden Horizontalreiseflug in atmosphärischer Turbulenz
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Risiko eines Strömungsabrisses/einer Ablösung besteht hauptsächlich bei einem abrupten Abfangen nach einem Sturzflug, da der Anstellwinkel sehr schnell zunimmt und den kritischen Winkel überschreiten kann, bevor der Pilot reagieren kann.
+
+### Q89: Der Widerstand eines Körpers in einer Strömung hängt insbesondere ab von: ^t80q89
+- A) Der Masse des Körpers
+- B) Der chemischen Zusammensetzung des Körpers
+- C) Der Dichte der Luft
+- D) Der Dichte des Körpers
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der aerodynamische Widerstand hängt insbesondere von der Luftdichte (ρ) ab, da F_D = Cd × 0,5 × ρ × v² × A. Die Eigendichte des Körpers, seine chemische Zusammensetzung und seine Masse beeinflussen den aerodynamischen Widerstand nicht direkt.
+
+### Q90: Auf der Zeichnung unten wird die Profilsehne dargestellt durch: ^t80q90
+![[figures/t80_q90.png]]
+- A) M
+- B) K
+- C) H
+- D) A
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Profilsehne ist die gerade Linie, die die Vorderkante mit der Hinterkante verbindet. In der Abbildung wird sie durch H dargestellt.
+
+### Q91: Der Anstellwinkel eines Profils wird immer gemessen zwischen: ^t80q91
+- A) Der Profilsehne und der Richtung des relativen Winds
+- B) Der Längsachse und der allgemeinen Strömungsrichtung
+- C) Der Längsachse und dem Horizont
+- D) Er variiert je nach Gewicht des Piloten
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Anstellwinkel (AoA) ist definiert als der Winkel zwischen der Profilsehne und der Richtung der ungestörten relativen Anströmung, was A korrekt macht. Option B ist falsch, da die Längsachse eine Strukturreferenz ist, keine aerodynamische; der AoA wird von der Profilsehne gemessen. Option C verwechselt den AoA mit der Nickfluglage, die die Längsachse zum Horizont in Beziehung setzt. Option D ist unsinnig — der AoA ist eine geometrische und aerodynamische Eigenschaft, die völlig unabhängig vom Pilotengewicht ist.
+
+### Q92: Bei gleicher Stirnfläche und gleicher Strömungsgeschwindigkeit — was bestimmt den Widerstand eines Körpers? ^t80q92
+- A) Sein Gewicht
+- B) Seine Dichte
+- C) Seine Form
+- D) Die Lage seines Schwerpunkts
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Bei konstanter Stirnfläche und Geschwindigkeit ist die verbleibende Variable in der Widerstandsgleichung D = CD × 0,5 × rho × V² × S der Widerstandsbeiwert CD, der ausschließlich durch die Form des Körpers bestimmt wird. Eine stromlinienförmige Form erzeugt weitaus weniger Widerstand als eine stumpfe. Die Optionen A und B sind falsch, da Gewicht und Materialdichte keinen direkten aerodynamischen Einfluss haben — der Widerstand hängt von der äußeren Geometrie ab, nicht von der inneren Massenverteilung. Option D ist falsch, da der Schwerpunkt die Stabilität beeinflusst, nicht den Widerstandsbeiwert.
+
+### Q93: Was ist der Ursprung des induzierten Widerstands an einem Flügel? ^t80q93
+- A) Der Winkel an der Flügel-Rumpf-Verbindung
+- B) Die Fluggeschwindigkeit
+- C) Der Druckausgleich von der Unterseite zur Oberseite
+- D) Der Druckausgleich von der Oberseite zur Unterseite
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der induzierte Widerstand entsteht durch die Druckdifferenz zwischen Unterseite (Hochdruck) und Oberseite (Niederdruck) des Flügels. An den Flügelspitzen strömt Luft von der Hochdruck-Unterseite um die Spitze zur Niederdruck-Oberseite und bildet Nachlaufwirbel, die den Auftriebsvektor nach hinten neigen und induzierten Widerstand erzeugen. Option D kehrt die Strömungsrichtung um — Luft bewegt sich von hohem zu niedrigem Druck, nicht umgekehrt. Option A beschreibt den Interferenzwiderstand an der Flügelwurzel, und Option B ist zu allgemein.
+
+### Q94: Wie groß ist der Meeresspiegeldruck in der ICAO-Standardatmosphäre? ^t80q94
+- A) 29,92 hPa
+- B) 1012,35 hPa
+- C) 1013,25 hPa
+- D) Er hängt vom Breitengrad ab
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ICAO-Standardatmosphäre definiert den Meeresspiegeldruck mit genau 1013,25 hPa (Hektopascal). Option A gibt 29,92 an, was dem Äquivalent in Zoll Quecksilbersäule (inHg) entspricht, nicht in hPa — 29,92 hPa wäre ein absurd niedriger Druck. Option B (1012,35 hPa) ist schlichtweg falsch. Option D ist falsch, da die ISA ein standardisiertes Modell ist, das nicht mit dem Breitengrad variiert, auch wenn der reale atmosphärische Druck dies tut.
+
+### Q95: Welche Linie im Profildiagramm stellt die mittlere Wölbungslinie dar? ^t80q95
+![[figures/t80_q95.png]]
+- A) H
+- B) B
+- C) G + J
+- D) A
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die mittlere Wölbungslinie ist der geometrische Ort der Punkte, die von der Ober- und Unterseite des Profils gleich weit entfernt sind, und stellt die Krümmung des Profils dar. In diesem Diagramm entspricht die Linie B dieser gekrümmten Bezugslinie. Die Optionen A, C und D stellen andere Profilmerkmale wie Profilsehne, Dickenverteilung oder Oberflächenkonturen dar, nicht die mittlere Wölbungslinie.
+
+### Q96: Warum ist in einem Horizontalkurvenflug ohne Schieben und ohne Höhenverlust Höhenruderzug erforderlich? ^t80q96
+- A) Um ein Abrutschen nach innen während der Kurve zu verhindern
+- B) Um die Geschwindigkeit zu verringern und die Zentrifugalkraft zu reduzieren
+- C) Um ein Schieben nach außen während der Kurve zu verhindern
+- D) Um den Auftrieb zu erhöhen, damit er sowohl Gewicht als auch Zentrifugalkraft ausgleicht
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** In einer geneigten Kurve bei konstanter Höhe übersteigt der Lastfaktor den Wert 1, da der Auftrieb sowohl das Gewicht des Flugzeugs tragen als auch die Zentripetalkraft für den Kurvenflugpfad bereitstellen muss. Höhenruderzug erhöht den Anstellwinkel und damit den Gesamtauftrieb, um diese Anforderung zu erfüllen. Option A ist falsch, da Schieben mit dem Seitenruder korrigiert wird, nicht mit dem Höhenruder. Option B ist falsch — der Zweck ist nicht das Verlangsamen. Option C ist ebenfalls falsch, da die Verhinderung von Schieben eine Seitenruderfunktion ist, keine Höhenruderfunktion.
+
+### Q97: Ein Strömungsabriss am Flügel tritt auf: ^t80q97
+- A) An der roten Markierung auf dem Fahrtmesser
+- B) Wenn ein kritischer Anstellwinkel überschritten wird
+- C) Nach einer Verringerung der Motorleistung
+- D) Nur wenn die Nase übermäßig über den Horizont gehoben wird
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Strömungsabriss tritt auf, wenn der Anstellwinkel des Flügels den kritischen Wert überschreitet (typischerweise etwa 15-18 Grad), was zur Strömungsablösung von der Oberseite und einem plötzlichen Auftriebsverlust führt. Dies ist ein grundlegendes aerodynamisches Prinzip, unabhängig von Geschwindigkeit oder Fluglage. Option A ist falsch, da die rote Linie (VNE) die strukturelle Geschwindigkeitsbegrenzung betrifft, nicht den Strömungsabriss. Option C ist falsch — Leistungsreduzierung allein verursacht keinen Strömungsabriss, solange der AoA unter dem kritischen Wert bleibt. Option D ist falsch, da ein Strömungsabriss bei jeder Fluglage oder Geschwindigkeit auftreten kann, solange der kritische AoA überschritten wird.
+
+### Q98: Unter welcher Bedingung tritt die Strömungsablösung von einem Profil auf? ^t80q98
+- A) Nur in einer bestimmten Flughöhe
+- B) Nur bei einer bestimmten Nasenstellung relativ zum Horizont
+- C) Gleichzeitig über die gesamte Spannweite
+- D) Bei einem bestimmten Anstellwinkel
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Strömungsablösung tritt auf, wenn der Anstellwinkel den kritischen Überziehwinkel erreicht, der eine feste aerodynamische Eigenschaft der Profilform ist. Option A ist falsch, da der Überziehwinkel unabhängig von der Höhe ist. Option B verwechselt Fluglage mit Anstellwinkel — ein Flügel kann bei jeder Nasenstellung überziehen. Option C ist falsch, da der Strömungsabriss dank konstruktiver Merkmale wie Schränkung typischerweise von der Wurzel zur Spitze fortschreitet, anstatt gleichzeitig über die gesamte Spannweite aufzutreten.
+
+### Q99: Wie groß ist die mittlere Erdbeschleunigung an der Erdoberfläche? ^t80q99
+- A) 9,81 m/sec²
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 1013,5 hPa
+- D) 15° C/100 m
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Standard-Erdbeschleunigung auf Meeresniveau beträgt 9,81 m/s², die in der gesamten Luftfahrt für Gewichts-, Lastfaktor- und Leistungsberechnungen verwendet wird. Option B (100 m/s²) ist ungefähr zehnmal zu groß. Option C (1013,5 hPa) ist ein Druckwert nahe dem ISA-Meeresspiegeldruck, keine Beschleunigung. Option D (15°C/100 m) ähnelt einem Temperaturgradientenformat, ist aber viel zu hoch — der ISA-Gradient beträgt 0,65°C pro 100 m.
+
+### Q100: Die wahre Fluggeschwindigkeit (TAS) wird aus der Fahrtmesseranzeige (ASI) ermittelt durch: ^t80q100
+- A) Keinerlei Korrekturen
+- B) Korrektur der Positions- und Instrumentenfehler
+- C) Korrekturen sowohl für Positions-/Instrumentenfehler als auch für die atmosphärische Dichte
+- D) Bereinigung nur um die atmosphärische Dichte
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die TAS wird aus der ASI-Anzeige (IAS) durch zwei aufeinanderfolgende Korrekturen abgeleitet: Zunächst werden Positions- und Instrumentenfehler beseitigt, um die kalibrierte Geschwindigkeit (CAS) zu erhalten, dann berücksichtigt eine Dichtekorrektur den Unterschied zwischen der tatsächlichen Luftdichte und der ISA-Meereshöhendichte. Option A ist falsch, da die unkorrigierte IAS nicht der TAS entspricht. Option B ergibt nur die CAS, nicht die TAS. Option D lässt die Instrumenten-/Positionsfehlerkorrektur aus, die immer der erste Schritt ist.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_51_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_80_51_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,510 @@
+### Q51 : Quelle est la valeur moyenne de l'accélération gravitationnelle à la surface de la Terre ? ^t80q51
+- A) 15° C/100 m
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 9,81 m/sec²
+- D) 1013,25 hPa
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'accélération gravitationnelle standard à la surface de la Terre est de 9,81 m/s² (valeur ISA). Cette valeur est fondamentale en aéronautique : elle sert à calculer le poids (W = m × g), le facteur de charge, et intervient dans toutes les équations de performance. 1013,25 hPa est la pression standard au niveau de la mer, et 15°C/100 m n'est pas un gradient correct (le gradient standard est de 0,65°C/100 m).
+
+### Q52 : Pendant une glissade, la position autorisée des volets est... ^t80q52
+- A) Volets complètement rentrés
+- B) Volets complètement sortis
+- C) Déterminée par la composante verticale descendante de la vitesse
+- D) Spécifiée dans le manuel de vol (AFM)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La position autorisée des volets pendant une glissade est toujours spécifiée dans le manuel de vol de l'aéronef (AFM/POH). Certains planeurs interdisent les volets sortis en glissade car la combinaison volets et gouverne de direction braquée peut créer des couples aérodynamiques dangereux ou dépasser les limites structurelles. D'autres autorisent certaines configurations. La seule réponse correcte est donc de consulter l'AFM.
+
+### Q53 : On dit d'un aéronef qu'il possède une stabilité dynamique lorsque... ^t80q53
+- A) Il est capable de se stabiliser automatiquement à un nouvel équilibre après une perturbation
+- B) Il est capable de revenir automatiquement à son équilibre initial après une perturbation
+- C) La rotation autour de l'axe de tangage est automatiquement corrigée par les ailerons
+- D) Le facteur de charge autorisé permet une accélération positive d'au moins 4 g et négative d'au moins 2 g volets d'atterrissage rentrés
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité dynamique décrit le comportement d'un aéronef au fil du temps après une perturbation. Un aéronef dynamiquement stable revient automatiquement à son équilibre initial (trim) après une perturbation — les oscillations s'amortissent progressivement. La réponse A décrit une stabilité dite « neutre ou convergente vers un nouvel équilibre », ce qui est différent. La stabilité statique (tendance immédiate au retour) est une condition nécessaire mais non suffisante de la stabilité dynamique.
+
+### Q54 : En cas de forte turbulence, la vitesse doit être réduite... ^t80q54
+- A) Jusqu'à la vitesse normale de croisière
+- B) Jusqu'à une vitesse dans l'arc jaune de l'anémomètre
+- C) Jusqu'à la vitesse minimale constante en configuration d'atterrissage
+- D) En dessous de la vitesse de manœuvre V_A
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse de manœuvre V_A (ou vitesse de pénétration en turbulence) est la vitesse maximale à laquelle des braquages complets des gouvernes ou des rafales sévères ne provoqueront pas de dépassement de la charge structurelle limite. En dessous de V_A, l'aile décrochera avant que la charge structurelle limite ne soit atteinte, protégeant ainsi la structure. En cas de forte turbulence, la vitesse doit être réduite en dessous de V_A pour éviter des dommages structurels dus aux charges dynamiques des rafales.
+
+### Q55 : Dans l'atmosphère standard OACI, le gradient de température dans la troposphère est de... ^t80q55
+- A) 2°C/100 ft
+- B) 0,65°C/1000 ft
+- C) 0,65°C/100 m
+- D) 2°C/100 m
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'atmosphère standard OACI (ISA), la température diminue de 0,65°C pour chaque 100 m d'altitude dans la troposphère (ou de façon équivalente, 2°C pour 1000 ft, ou 6,5°C/1000 m). La réponse B (0,65°C/1000 ft) est incorrecte car l'unité est fausse — ce serait un gradient bien trop faible. La réponse C est la seule correcte : 0,65°C par 100 m d'altitude.
+
+### Q56 : À quelle altitude approximative la pression atmosphérique tombe-t-elle à la moitié de sa valeur au niveau de la mer ? ^t80q56
+- A) 5 500 m
+- B) 6 600 m
+- C) 6 600 ft
+- D) 5 500 ft
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression atmosphérique diminue avec l'altitude de manière approximativement exponentielle. Dans l'atmosphère standard OACI, la pression est environ la moitié de la pression au niveau de la mer (1013,25 hPa → ~506 hPa) à une altitude d'environ 5 500 m (18 000 ft). Cette valeur est importante pour la physiologie en altitude (besoins en oxygène) et pour les calculs de performances en altitude-densité.
+
+### Q57 : L'altitude-densité correspond toujours à... ^t80q57
+- A) L'altitude à laquelle la pression atmosphérique et la température correspondent à celles de l'atmosphère standard
+- B) L'altitude indiquée vraie, après correction de l'erreur instrumentale
+- C) L'altitude-pression, corrigée de l'écart de température par rapport à la température standard
+- D) L'altitude lue lorsque l'altimètre est calé sur le QNH, corrigée de l'écart de température par rapport à la température standard
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altitude-densité est l'altitude à laquelle l'aéronef se trouverait dans l'atmosphère standard ISA si la densité de l'air était la même qu'en conditions réelles. Elle se calcule à partir de l'altitude-pression (altimètre calé sur 1013,25 hPa) corrigée par l'écart de température par rapport à l'ISA. Une température supérieure à l'ISA donne une altitude-densité supérieure à l'altitude-pression, réduisant les performances de l'aéronef. La réponse A décrit l'altitude-pression, non l'altitude-densité.
+
+### Q58 : La loi de continuité simplifiée appliquée à un écoulement d'air stipule : *Dans un laps de temps donné, une masse d'air en écoulement est conservée quelle que soit la section qu'elle traverse.* Cela signifie que... ^t80q58
+- A) La vitesse d'écoulement diminue lorsque la section diminue
+- B) La vitesse d'écoulement augmente lorsque la section augmente
+- C) La vitesse d'écoulement reste constante
+- D) La vitesse d'écoulement augmente lorsque la section diminue
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équation de continuité stipule que pour un fluide incompressible, le débit volumique Q = S × V est constant le long d'un tube de courant. Si la section S diminue, la vitesse V doit augmenter proportionnellement pour maintenir Q constant. Ce principe, combiné au théorème de Bernoulli, explique pourquoi l'air accélère sur l'extrados courbé d'un profil, créant une zone de basse pression génératrice de portance.
+
+### Q59 : La résultante aérodynamique (traînée et portance) dépend de la densité de l'air. Lorsque la densité de l'air diminue... ^t80q59
+- A) La traînée et la portance diminuent toutes les deux
+- B) La traînée et la portance augmentent toutes les deux
+- C) La traînée augmente tandis que la portance diminue
+- D) La traînée diminue tandis que la portance augmente
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La portance et la traînée sont toutes deux proportionnelles à la pression dynamique q = 0,5 × ρ × V². Lorsque la densité de l'air ρ diminue (en altitude ou par température élevée), q diminue pour une vitesse donnée, ce qui réduit à la fois la portance et la traînée. C'est pourquoi les performances de l'aéronef se dégradent en haute altitude ou par forte chaleur : l'aéronef doit voler plus vite (TAS plus élevée) pour générer la même portance, tandis que la résistance aérodynamique totale diminue pour une vitesse indiquée constante.
+
+### Q60 : Quel est le nom du point autour duquel, lorsque l'angle d'attaque varie, le moment de tangage autour de l'axe latéral ne varie pas ? ^t80q60
+- A) Centre de symétrie
+- B) Centre de gravité
+- C) Centre aérodynamique
+- D) Point neutre
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point neutre (aussi appelé centre aérodynamique au niveau de l'aile, mais « point neutre » pour l'aéronef complet) est le point autour duquel le moment de tangage reste constant quelles que soient les variations d'angle d'attaque. Pour un aéronef stable, le centre de gravité doit être en avant du point neutre — la distance CG-point neutre constitue la marge de stabilité statique. Remarque : pour un profil isolé, ce point correspond au centre aérodynamique (à environ 25 % de la corde) ; pour l'aéronef complet, le point neutre tient compte de la contribution du stabilisateur horizontal.
+
+### Q61 : L'angle entre la corde du profil et l'axe longitudinal de l'aéronef s'appelle... ^t80q61
+- A) L'angle de flèche
+- B) L'angle d'attaque
+- C) L'angle de dièdre
+- D) L'angle de calage (angle d'incidence)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle de calage (ou angle d'incidence) est l'angle fixe, défini à la construction, entre la corde du profil et l'axe longitudinal du fuselage. Il ne varie pas en vol. Il ne faut pas le confondre avec l'angle d'attaque, qui est l'angle entre la corde et la direction du vent relatif (et qui varie en vol en fonction de l'assiette et de la vitesse). L'angle de calage est choisi par le constructeur afin que l'aile produise la portance nécessaire en croisière avec une assiette de fuselage aérodynamiquement favorable.
+
+### Q62 : À quoi correspond le point de transition ? ^t80q62
+- A) Au roulis latéral de l'aéronef
+- B) Au point où CL_max est atteint
+- C) Au passage d'une couche limite turbulente à une couche laminaire
+- D) Au passage d'une couche limite laminaire à une couche turbulente
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le point de transition est précisément l'emplacement sur le profil où la couche limite passe d'un régime laminaire (écoulement ordonné, en couches parallèles) à un régime turbulent (écoulement désordonné, avec mélange transversal). Cette transition est irréversible dans le sens de l'écoulement : le changement va du laminaire au turbulent, jamais l'inverse. La position du point de transition dépend du nombre de Reynolds, du gradient de pression et de la rugosité de surface — un gradient de pression favorable (accélération) maintient l'écoulement laminaire, tandis qu'un gradient adverse (décélération) déclenche la transition.
+
+### Q63 : Le vrillage géométrique ou aérodynamique de l'aile entraîne... ^t80q63
+- A) Une compensation partielle du lacet inverse à basse vitesse
+- B) Une vitesse de croisière plus élevée
+- C) Un décrochage progressif le long de l'envergure
+- D) Un décrochage simultané le long de l'envergure à basse vitesse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vrillage de l'aile (géométrique ou aérodynamique) fait varier l'angle de calage ou les caractéristiques aérodynamiques le long de l'envergure, de sorte que le décrochage ne se produit pas simultanément sur toute l'aile. L'emplanture (angle de calage plus élevé) atteint l'angle critique en premier et décroche progressivement, tandis que les sections extérieures restent attachées. Ce décrochage progressif (plutôt que simultané) améliore la sécurité au décrochage et maintient le contrôle en roulis via les ailerons. L'effet sur le lacet inverse (A) est indirect et marginal.
+
+### Q64 : La traînée de profil (traînée de forme) d'un corps est principalement influencée par... ^t80q64
+- A) Sa masse
+- B) Sa température interne
+- C) Sa densité
+- D) La formation de tourbillons
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée de forme (traînée de pression) est causée par la différence de pression entre l'avant et l'arrière d'un corps, due à la séparation de la couche limite et à la formation de tourbillons dans le sillage. Plus la formation de tourbillons est intense (corps non profilé, bord de fuite épais), plus la traînée de forme est élevée. C'est pourquoi les profils aérodynamiques profilés ont une traînée de forme bien inférieure à celle d'une plaque plane ou d'une sphère — leur forme progressivement convergente permet à l'écoulement de rester attaché plus longtemps, réduisant le sillage turbulent.
+
+### Q65 : La traînée aérodynamique d'un disque plat dans un écoulement dépend notamment de... ^t80q65
+- A) Son poids
+- B) Sa densité
+- C) La surface perpendiculaire à l'écoulement
+- D) La résistance à la traction de son matériau
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée d'un disque plat (corps non profilé) est une traînée de pression : elle dépend principalement de la surface frontale S exposée perpendiculairement à l'écoulement, et de la pression dynamique q = 0,5 × ρ × V². La formule est D = CD × q × S. La résistance du matériau, la propre densité du disque ou son poids n'influencent pas la traînée aérodynamique — il s'agit purement d'une fonction de la forme, de la surface projetée et des conditions d'écoulement.
+
+### Q66 : Sur la polaire des vitesses, quelle tangente touche la courbe au point de taux de chute minimal ? ^t80q66
+> **Polaire des vitesses :**
+> ![[figures/t80_q66.png]]
+> *A = tangente depuis l'origine → vitesse de meilleure finesse (meilleur L/D, meilleur plané)*
+> *B = tangente depuis un point décalé vers la droite sur l'axe V → meilleur plané avec vent de face*
+> *C = tangente depuis un point au-dessus de l'origine sur l'axe W (McCready) → vitesse optimale inter-thermique ; touche la polaire au point de taux de chute minimal*
+> *D = ligne horizontale au niveau du taux de chute minimal → indique la vitesse de chute minimale (Vmin sink)*
+
+- A) Tangente (A)
+- B) Tangente (B)
+- C) Tangente (D)
+- D) Tangente (C)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la polaire des vitesses (courbe montrant le taux de chute W en fonction de la vitesse horizontale V), le point de taux de chute minimal correspond au point le plus bas de la courbe (la plus petite valeur de W en valeur absolue). La tangente en ce point est une tangente horizontale — c'est la tangente (C) sur le diagramme. Ce point correspond à la vitesse de chute minimale, utilisée pour maximiser le temps de vol ou pour exploiter les thermiques. La tangente tirée de l'origine à la polaire (tangente B) donne la vitesse pour le meilleur rapport L/D (meilleure finesse).
+
+### Q67 : La traînée induite augmente... ^t80q67
+- A) Lorsque la traînée parasite augmente
+- B) Avec un angle d'attaque décroissant
+- C) Avec un angle d'attaque croissant
+- D) Avec une vitesse croissante
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite est proportionnelle à CL² : D_induite = CL² / (π × AR × e) × q × S. En augmentant l'angle d'attaque, CL augmente, et donc CL² augmente, ce qui fait croître la traînée induite. En vol en palier à vitesse constante, une augmentation de l'angle d'attaque correspond à une vitesse plus faible, ce qui augmente encore la traînée induite (D_induite ∝ 1/V²). En augmentant la vitesse (D), CL diminue en vol en palier et la traînée induite diminue. La traînée parasite (A) varie indépendamment de la traînée induite.
+
+### Q68 : Comment la vitesse minimale d'un aéronef en virage en palier à 45 degrés d'inclinaison se compare-t-elle au vol rectiligne en palier ? ^t80q68
+- A) Elle diminue
+- B) Elle ne change pas
+- C) Elle augmente
+- D) Cela dépend du type d'aéronef
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En virage horizontal à un angle d'inclinaison φ, le facteur de charge est n = 1/cos(φ). À 45° d'inclinaison, n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0,707 ≈ 1,41. La vitesse de décrochage en virage est Vs_virage = Vs × √n = Vs × √1,41 ≈ Vs × 1,19. Par conséquent, la vitesse minimale augmente d'environ 19 % par rapport au vol rectiligne en palier. Cette augmentation de la vitesse de décrochage en virage est un concept de sécurité fondamental — les virages serrés à basse altitude (comme en finale) sont particulièrement dangereux car la marge au-dessus du décrochage est réduite.
+
+### Q69 : Le lacet inverse est causé par... ^t80q69
+- A) L'effet gyroscopique lors de l'amorce d'un virage
+- B) L'écoulement latéral d'air sur l'aile après l'amorce d'un virage
+- C) L'augmentation de la traînée induite de l'aileron sur l'aile qui monte
+- D) L'augmentation de la traînée induite de l'aileron sur l'aile qui descend
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le lacet inverse est causé par l'asymétrie de traînée entre les deux ailerons lors de l'entrée en virage. L'aileron qui se lève (côté aile haute) augmente l'angle d'attaque local, générant plus de portance mais aussi plus de traînée induite. Cette traînée supplémentaire du côté montant crée un moment de lacet vers le côté montant — c'est-à-dire dans la direction opposée au virage (d'où « lacet inverse »). Les ailerons différentiels et les aérofreins-spoilers sont des solutions techniques pour atténuer cet effet.
+
+### Q70 : La vitesse vraie (TAS) est la vitesse indiquée par l'anémomètre... ^t80q70
+- A) Corrigée uniquement des erreurs de position et d'instrument
+- B) Sans aucune correction
+- C) Ajustée uniquement pour la densité de l'air
+- D) Corrigée des erreurs de position/instrument et de la densité de l'air
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse vraie (TAS) est obtenue à partir de la vitesse indiquée (IAS) en appliquant deux corrections successives : d'abord les erreurs de position et d'instrument (donnant la vitesse calibrée, CAS), puis la correction de densité (tenant compte de la différence entre la densité réelle de l'air et la densité standard au niveau de la mer). La TAS est donc la vitesse réelle de l'aéronef à travers la masse d'air. En haute altitude, la TAS est significativement plus élevée que l'IAS car la densité de l'air est plus faible.
+
+### Q71 : La plage de vitesse autorisée pour l'utilisation des volets à fente est : ^t80q71
+- A) Illimitée
+- B) Limitée à l'extrémité basse par le bas de l'arc vert
+- C) Indiquée dans le manuel de vol (AFM) et normalement affichée sur l'anémomètre (ASI)
+- D) Limitée à l'extrémité haute par la vitesse de manœuvre (Va)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La plage de vitesse des volets à fente est indiquée dans le manuel de vol (AFM) et normalement sur l'anémomètre (arc blanc ou vert clair). Elle varie selon le type de planeur.
+
+### Q72 : Les tourbillons marginaux sont causés par l'égalisation de pression de : ^t80q72
+- A) L'intrados vers l'extrados à l'extrémité de l'aile
+- B) L'extrados vers l'intrados à l'extrémité de l'aile
+- C) L'intrados vers l'extrados le long de tout le bord de fuite
+- D) L'extrados vers l'intrados le long de tout le bord de fuite
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les tourbillons marginaux (tourbillons induits) proviennent de l'égalisation de pression de l'intrados (haute pression) vers l'extrados (basse pression) à l'extrémité de l'aile. Ce phénomène génère la traînée induite.
+
+### Q73 : L'angle d'attaque d'un profil est toujours l'angle entre : ^t80q73
+- A) La corde du profil et la direction du vent relatif
+- B) L'axe longitudinal de l'aéronef et la direction générale de l'écoulement
+- C) L'horizon et la direction générale de l'écoulement
+- D) L'axe longitudinal de l'aéronef et l'horizon
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle d'attaque est l'angle entre la corde du profil et la direction générale de l'écoulement (direction du vent relatif). Ce n'est ni l'angle avec l'horizon ni avec l'axe longitudinal.
+
+### Q74 : Dans l'atmosphère standard, les valeurs de température et de pression atmosphérique au niveau de la mer sont : ^t80q74
+- A) 15 degrés C et 1013,25 hPa
+- B) 59 degrés C et 29,92 hPa
+- C) 15 degrés C et 1013,25 Hg
+- D) 15 degrés F et 29,92 Hg
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression dans l'atmosphère standard OACI au niveau de la mer est de 1013,25 hPa (millibars) = 29,92 pouces de mercure (inHg). 29,92 hPa est incorrect.
+
+### Q75 : Concernant l'écoulement d'air, l'équation de continuité simplifiée stipule : Au même instant, la même masse d'air traverse différentes sections. Par conséquent : ^t80q75
+![[figures/t80_q75.png]]
+- A) La masse d'air traverse une section plus grande à une vitesse plus élevée
+- B) La masse d'air traverse une section plus petite à une vitesse plus faible
+- C) La vitesse de la masse d'air ne varie pas
+- D) La masse d'air traverse une section plus grande à une vitesse plus faible
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne de cambrure moyenne est la ligne équidistante entre les surfaces inférieure et supérieure. Sur la figure, elle est représentée par la ligne B.
+
+### Q76 : Dans un virage correctement exécuté sans perte d'altitude, pourquoi une légère traction sur la profondeur est-elle nécessaire ? ^t80q76
+- A) Pour empêcher un glissement intérieur dans le virage
+- B) Pour réduire la vitesse et donc la force centrifuge
+- C) Pour empêcher un dérapage extérieur dans le virage
+- D) Pour augmenter légèrement la portance
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage coordonné sans perte d'altitude, une traction sur la profondeur est nécessaire pour augmenter la portance et équilibrer la force centrifuge (facteur de charge > 1). La portance doit compenser à la fois la gravité et la force centrifuge.
+
+### Q77 : Lorsque la surface frontale d'un disque dans un écoulement est triplée, la traînée augmente de : ^t80q77
+- A) 9 fois
+- B) 1,5 fois
+- C) 3 fois
+- D) 6 fois
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le décrochage se produit à un angle d'attaque critique (angle de décrochage), indépendamment de la vitesse. À cet angle, la séparation de l'écoulement sur l'extrados provoque une chute soudaine de la portance.
+
+### Q78 : Le vrillage aérodynamique de l'aile est une modification de : ^t80q78
+- A) L'angle de calage du même profil, de l'emplanture au saumon
+- B) Le profil aérodynamique de l'emplanture au saumon
+- C) L'angle d'attaque au saumon au moyen de l'aileron
+- D) Le dièdre de l'aile, de l'emplanture au saumon
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La séparation de l'écoulement se produit à un angle d'attaque déterminé (angle critique), spécifique à chaque profil. Elle n'est pas liée à l'assiette du nez par rapport à l'horizon.
+
+### Q79 : Quelle est la valeur moyenne de l'accélération gravitationnelle à la surface de la Terre ? ^t80q79
+- A) 1013,25 hPa
+- B) 15° C/100 m
+- C) 9,81 m/sec²
+- D) 100 m/sec²
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'accélération gravitationnelle standard à la surface de la Terre est de 9,81 m/s². C'est la valeur ISA utilisée dans tous les calculs de performance.
+
+### Q80 : La vitesse affichée sur l'anémomètre (ASI) est une mesure de : ^t80q80
+- A) La pression totale dans une capsule anéroïde
+- B) La différence entre la pression statique et la pression totale
+- C) La pression statique autour d'une capsule anéroïde
+- D) L'effet girouette, où la pression diminue
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'indication de l'anémomètre est basée sur la différence entre la pression statique et la pression totale (pression dynamique). L'ASI mesure cette différence via le tube de Pitot et la prise statique.
+
+### Q81 : Les stabilisateurs horizontal et vertical servent en particulier à : ^t80q81
+- A) Commander l'aéronef autour de son axe longitudinal
+- B) Réduire la formation de tourbillons marginaux
+- C) Stabiliser l'aéronef en vol
+- D) Réduire la résistance de l'air
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les stabilisateurs horizontal et vertical servent principalement à stabiliser l'aéronef en vol (stabilité longitudinale et directionnelle). Sans eux, l'aéronef serait instable.
+
+### Q82 : Lorsque les volets à fente sont sortis, la séparation de l'écoulement : ^t80q82
+- A) Se produit à la même vitesse qu'avant la sortie des volets
+- B) Se produit à une vitesse plus élevée
+- C) Aucune des réponses n'est correcte
+- D) Se produit à une vitesse plus faible
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors de la sortie des volets à fente, la séparation de l'écoulement se produit à une vitesse plus faible, car les volets augmentent le coefficient de portance maximal (CL max). La vitesse de décrochage diminue.
+
+### Q83 : Le centre aérodynamique d'un profil dans un écoulement est le point d'application de : ^t80q83
+- A) Le poids
+- B) La résultante de toutes les forces de pression agissant sur le profil
+- C) La pression des pneus sur la piste
+- D) L'écoulement au bord d'attaque
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le centre aérodynamique est le point d'application de la résultante des forces aérodynamiques sur un profil. Il est distinct du centre de poussée (qui se déplace) et du centre de gravité.
+
+### Q84 : Les pressions s'expriment en : ^t80q84
+- A) Pa, psi, g
+- B) Bar, Pa, m/sec²
+- C) Bar, psi, Pa
+- D) Bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les pressions s'expriment en bar, psi (livres par pouce carré) et Pa (Pascal). g est une accélération, pas une pression. Alpha (a) n'est pas une unité de pression.
+
+### Q85 : La TAS (True Air Speed) est la vitesse de : ^t80q85
+- A) L'aéronef par rapport au sol
+- B) L'aéronef par rapport à la masse d'air environnante
+- C) L'aéronef par rapport à l'air, corrigée de la composante du vent et de la pression atmosphérique
+- D) La lecture de l'anémomètre (ASI)
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La TAS (True Air Speed) est la vitesse de l'aéronef par rapport à la masse d'air environnante. C'est la vitesse réelle à travers l'air, corrigée pour la densité atmosphérique.
+
+### Q86 : La stabilité en lacet d'un aéronef est assurée par : ^t80q86
+- A) Les becs de bord d'attaque
+- B) Le stabilisateur horizontal
+- C) La dérive (stabilisateur vertical)
+- D) Le dièdre de l'aile
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La stabilité en lacet est assurée par la dérive (stabilisateur vertical/gouverne de direction). La flèche de l'aile contribue à la stabilité en roulis, pas au lacet.
+
+### Q87 : Le volet de bord de fuite illustré ci-dessous est un : ^t80q87
+![[figures/t80_q87.png]]
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Split Flap (volet de courbure)
+- C) Volet à fente (Slotted Flap)
+- D) Volet simple (Plain Flap)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le volet illustré, s'étendant de l'aile avec une fente, est un volet à fente (Slotted Flap). La fente canalise l'air de l'intrados vers l'extrados, retardant la séparation.
+
+### Q88 : Le risque de séparation de l'écoulement sur l'aile apparaît principalement : ^t80q88
+- A) En montée rectiligne à grande vitesse, en turbulence atmosphérique
+- B) Par air calme, en vol plané, à la vitesse minimale autorisée
+- C) Lors d'une ressource brutale après un piqué
+- D) En croisière rectiligne en palier, en turbulence atmosphérique
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le risque de décrochage/séparation apparaît principalement lors d'une ressource brutale après un piqué, car l'angle d'attaque augmente très rapidement et peut dépasser l'angle critique avant que le pilote ne puisse réagir.
+
+### Q89 : La traînée d'un corps dans un écoulement dépend notamment de : ^t80q89
+- A) La masse du corps
+- B) La composition chimique du corps
+- C) La densité de l'air
+- D) La densité du corps
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée aérodynamique dépend notamment de la densité de l'air (ρ), puisque F_D = Cd × 0,5 × ρ × v² × A. La propre densité du corps, sa composition chimique et sa masse n'affectent pas directement la traînée aérodynamique.
+
+### Q90 : Sur le dessin ci-dessous, la corde du profil est représentée par : ^t80q90
+![[figures/t80_q90.png]]
+- A) M
+- B) K
+- C) H
+- D) A
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La corde est la ligne droite reliant le bord d'attaque au bord de fuite. Sur la figure, elle est représentée par H.
+
+### Q91 : L'angle d'attaque d'un profil est toujours mesuré entre : ^t80q91
+- A) La corde du profil et la direction du vent relatif
+- B) L'axe longitudinal et la direction générale de l'écoulement
+- C) L'axe longitudinal et l'horizon
+- D) Il varie en fonction du poids du pilote
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle d'attaque (AoA) est défini comme l'angle entre la corde du profil et la direction de l'écoulement relatif non perturbé, ce qui rend A correct. L'option B est fausse car l'axe longitudinal est une référence structurelle, pas aérodynamique ; l'AoA se mesure depuis la corde. L'option C confond l'AoA avec l'assiette en tangage, qui relie l'axe longitudinal à l'horizon. L'option D est absurde — l'AoA est une propriété géométrique et aérodynamique entièrement indépendante du poids du pilote.
+
+### Q92 : À surface frontale et vitesse d'écoulement égales, qu'est-ce qui détermine la traînée d'un corps ? ^t80q92
+- A) Son poids
+- B) Sa densité
+- C) Sa forme
+- D) La position de son centre de gravité
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la surface frontale et la vitesse sont constantes, la variable restante dans l'équation de traînée D = CD × 0,5 × rho × V² × S est le coefficient de traînée CD, qui est entièrement déterminé par la forme du corps. Une forme profilée produit bien moins de traînée qu'une forme émoussée. Les options A et B sont fausses car le poids et la densité du matériau n'ont pas d'effet aérodynamique direct — la traînée dépend de la géométrie externe, pas de la distribution interne de masse. L'option D est incorrecte car le centre de gravité affecte la stabilité, pas le coefficient de traînée.
+
+### Q93 : Quelle est l'origine de la traînée induite sur une aile ? ^t80q93
+- A) L'angle formé à la jonction aile-fuselage
+- B) La vitesse
+- C) L'égalisation de pression de l'intrados vers l'extrados
+- D) L'égalisation de pression de l'extrados vers l'intrados
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La traînée induite provient de la différence de pression entre l'intrados (haute pression) et l'extrados (basse pression) de l'aile. Aux extrémités, l'air s'écoule de l'intrados à haute pression autour du saumon vers l'extrados à basse pression, formant des tourbillons de sillage qui inclinent le vecteur de portance vers l'arrière, créant la traînée induite. L'option D inverse le sens de l'écoulement — l'air se déplace de la haute vers la basse pression, pas l'inverse. L'option A décrit la traînée d'interférence à l'emplanture, et l'option B est trop vague.
+
+### Q94 : Quelle est la pression au niveau de la mer dans l'atmosphère standard OACI ? ^t80q94
+- A) 29,92 hPa
+- B) 1012,35 hPa
+- C) 1013,25 hPa
+- D) Elle dépend de la latitude
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'atmosphère standard internationale OACI définit la pression au niveau de la mer à exactement 1013,25 hPa (hectopascals). L'option A donne 29,92, qui est la valeur équivalente en pouces de mercure (inHg), pas en hPa — 29,92 hPa serait une pression absurdement basse. L'option B (1012,35 hPa) est simplement incorrecte. L'option D est fausse car l'ISA est un modèle standardisé qui ne varie pas avec la latitude, même si la pression atmosphérique réelle varie.
+
+### Q95 : Sur le diagramme de profil ci-dessous, quelle ligne représente la ligne de cambrure moyenne ? ^t80q95
+![[figures/t80_q95.png]]
+- A) H
+- B) B
+- C) G + J
+- D) A
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne de cambrure moyenne est le lieu des points équidistants entre les surfaces supérieure et inférieure du profil, représentant la courbure du profil. Sur ce diagramme, la ligne B correspond à cette ligne de référence courbe. Les options A, C et D représentent d'autres caractéristiques du profil telles que la corde, la distribution d'épaisseur ou les contours de surface, pas la ligne de cambrure moyenne.
+
+### Q96 : Dans un virage en palier sans dérapage ni perte d'altitude, pourquoi une traction sur la profondeur est-elle nécessaire ? ^t80q96
+- A) Pour empêcher un glissement intérieur pendant le virage
+- B) Pour ralentir et réduire la force centrifuge
+- C) Pour empêcher un dérapage extérieur pendant le virage
+- D) Pour augmenter la portance afin qu'elle équilibre à la fois le poids et la force centrifuge
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans un virage incliné à altitude constante, le facteur de charge dépasse 1 car la portance doit à la fois contrebalancer le poids de l'aéronef et fournir la force centripète pour la trajectoire courbe. La traction sur la profondeur augmente l'angle d'attaque et donc la portance totale pour répondre à cette exigence. L'option A est fausse car les glissades sont corrigées par le palonnier, pas la profondeur. L'option B est incorrecte — le but n'est pas de ralentir. L'option C est également fausse car la prévention du dérapage est une fonction du palonnier, pas de la profondeur.
+
+### Q97 : Un décrochage de l'aile se produit : ^t80q97
+- A) Au repère rouge sur l'anémomètre
+- B) Lorsqu'un angle d'attaque critique est dépassé
+- C) Suite à une réduction de la puissance du moteur
+- D) Uniquement lorsque le nez est excessivement cabrée au-dessus de l'horizon
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un décrochage se produit lorsque l'angle d'attaque de l'aile dépasse la valeur critique (typiquement environ 15-18 degrés), provoquant la séparation de l'écoulement de l'extrados et une perte soudaine de portance. C'est un principe aérodynamique fondamental indépendant de la vitesse ou de l'assiette. L'option A est fausse car le trait rouge (VNE) concerne les limites structurelles de vitesse, pas le décrochage. L'option C est incorrecte — réduire la puissance seule ne provoque pas de décrochage si l'AoA reste en dessous du seuil critique. L'option D est fausse car un décrochage peut se produire à toute assiette ou vitesse, tant que l'AoA critique est dépassé.
+
+### Q98 : À quelle condition la séparation de l'écoulement d'un profil se produit-elle ? ^t80q98
+- A) Uniquement à une altitude spécifique de l'aéronef
+- B) Uniquement à une position donnée du nez par rapport à l'horizon
+- C) Simultanément sur toute l'envergure
+- D) À un angle d'attaque spécifique
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La séparation de l'écoulement se produit lorsque l'angle d'attaque atteint l'angle critique de décrochage, qui est une propriété aérodynamique fixe de la forme du profil. L'option A est fausse car l'angle de décrochage est indépendant de l'altitude. L'option B confond l'assiette en tangage avec l'angle d'attaque — une aile peut décrocher à toute position du nez. L'option C est incorrecte car, grâce aux caractéristiques de conception comme le vrillage, le décrochage progresse typiquement de l'emplanture vers le saumon plutôt que de se produire simultanément sur toute l'envergure.
+
+### Q99 : Quelle est l'accélération gravitationnelle moyenne à la surface de la Terre ? ^t80q99
+- A) 9,81 m/sec²
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 1013,5 hPa
+- D) 15° C/100 m
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'accélération gravitationnelle standard au niveau de la mer est de 9,81 m/s², utilisée dans toute l'aviation pour les calculs de poids, de facteur de charge et de performance. L'option B (100 m/s²) est environ dix fois trop grande. L'option C (1013,5 hPa) est une valeur de pression proche de la pression ISA au niveau de la mer, pas une accélération. L'option D (15°C/100 m) ressemble à un format de gradient de température mais est bien trop élevée — le gradient ISA est de 0,65°C par 100 m.
+
+### Q100 : La vitesse vraie (TAS) est obtenue à partir de la lecture de l'anémomètre (ASI) en : ^t80q100
+- A) N'appliquant aucune correction
+- B) Corrigeant les erreurs de position et d'instrument
+- C) Appliquant des corrections pour les erreurs de position/instrument et la densité atmosphérique
+- D) Ajustant uniquement pour la densité atmosphérique
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La TAS est dérivée de la lecture de l'ASI (IAS) par deux corrections successives : d'abord, les erreurs de position et d'instrument sont éliminées pour obtenir la vitesse calibrée (CAS), puis une correction de densité tient compte de la différence entre la densité réelle de l'air et la densité ISA au niveau de la mer. L'option A est fausse car l'IAS non corrigée n'est pas égale à la TAS. L'option B ne donne que la CAS, pas la TAS. L'option D omet la correction d'erreur d'instrument/position, qui est toujours la première étape.
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@@ -0,0 +1,339 @@
+### Q101: What kind of information should be included in an urgency message? ^t90q101
+- A) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, departure aerodrome, destination aerodrome, heading and altitude
+- B) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, heading and altitude
+- C) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, departure aerodrome, information about position, heading and altitude
+- D) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, departure aerodrome, heading and altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (PAN PAN) must include: the nature of the problem, important support information, the pilot's intentions, and position/heading/altitude data — enabling ATC to coordinate assistance effectively. Options A and D include departure/destination aerodromes and routing, which are flight plan details not specifically required in an urgency broadcast. Option C omits the pilot's intentions, which are essential for ATC planning.
+
+### Q102: What is the correct designation of the frequency band from 118.000 to 136.975 MHz used for voice communication? ^t90q102
+- A) HF
+- B) LF
+- C) VHF
+- D) MF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 118.000 to 136.975 MHz band falls within the Very High Frequency (VHF) range, which is the standard for civil aviation voice communication due to its reliable line-of-sight propagation and clarity. Option A (HF, 3-30 MHz) is used for long-range oceanic communications. Option B (LF, 30-300 kHz) is used for NDB navigation. Option D (MF, 300 kHz - 3 MHz) is used for medium-range broadcasting.
+
+### Q103: In what case is visibility transmitted in meters? ^t90q103
+- A) Greater than 10 km
+- B) Up to 5 km
+- C) Greater than 5 km
+- D) Up to 10 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR reports, visibility is expressed in meters when it is 5 km (5000 m) or less, providing the precision needed at operationally critical low visibilities. When visibility exceeds 5 km, it is reported in kilometers. Options A and C describe conditions where kilometers would be used. Option D (up to 10 km) extends the meter-reporting threshold beyond the standard 5 km cutoff.
+
+### Q104: How are urgency messages defined? ^t90q104
+- A) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- B) Messages concerning urgent spare parts needed for a continuation of flight and which need to be ordered in advance.
+- C) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- D) Information concerning the apron personnel and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Urgency messages (PAN PAN) concern the safety of an aircraft, watercraft, vehicle, or person in sight — situations that are serious but do not yet constitute the grave and imminent danger of a distress situation. Option A defines distress messages (MAYDAY). Option B is an administrative matter unrelated to the urgency classification. Option D describes a ground safety concern that would be handled through other channels.
+
+### Q105: What do distress messages contain? ^t90q105
+- A) Information concerning the apron personnel and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.
+- B) Information concerning urgent spare parts required for a continuation of flight and which have to be ordered in advance.
+- C) Information concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- D) Information concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Distress messages (MAYDAY) contain information about aircraft and passengers facing a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — the highest priority category. Option A concerns ground personnel, not an airborne distress. Option B is an administrative logistics matter. Option D describes urgency-level situations (PAN PAN), which are serious but not immediately life-threatening.
+
+### Q106: What is the approximate speed of electromagnetic wave propagation? ^t90q106
+- A) 300000 m/s
+- B) 123000 km/s
+- C) 123000 m/s
+- D) 300000 km/s
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electromagnetic waves (including radio waves) propagate at the speed of light, approximately 300,000 km/s (3 × 10⁸ m/s) in a vacuum. Option A (300,000 m/s) is off by a factor of 1,000 — this would be only 300 km/s. Option B (123,000 km/s) and Option C (123,000 m/s) are both incorrect values that do not correspond to any known physical constant.
+
+### Q107: In what cases is visibility transmitted in kilometers? ^t90q107
+- A) Up to 10 km
+- B) Greater than 5 km
+- C) Up to 5 km
+- D) Greater than 10 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR reporting, visibility is expressed in kilometers when it exceeds 5 km (e.g., "6KM" or "9999" for 10 km or more). Below 5 km, meters are used for greater precision at operationally critical low visibilities. Option A (up to 10 km) incorrectly extends the kilometer range below 5 km. Option C (up to 5 km) is the meter-reporting range. Option D (greater than 10 km) is too restrictive.
+
+### Q108: How can you obtain meteorological information for airports during a cross-country flight? ^t90q108
+- A) METAR
+- B) GAMET
+- C) AIRMET
+- D) VOLMET
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET is the continuous radio broadcast service that provides current METAR observations for a series of aerodromes, available to pilots in flight on designated frequencies. Option A (METAR) is the report format itself, not a broadcast service pilots can access in flight via radio. Option B (GAMET) is an area weather forecast. Option C (AIRMET) provides warnings of weather phenomena over a region, not individual airport observations.
+
+### Q109: Which of the following factors affects the reception of VHF transmissions? ^t90q109
+- A) Twilight error
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Height of ionosphere
+- D) Shoreline effect
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VHF radio propagates by line-of-sight, so altitude is the primary factor determining reception range — higher altitude means a more distant radio horizon. Option A (twilight error) affects NDB/ADF systems, not VHF. Option C (ionosphere height) influences HF sky-wave propagation, not VHF. Option D (shoreline effect) also affects NDB bearings, not VHF communication quality.
+
+### Q110: On what frequency shall a blind transmission be made? ^t90q110
+- A) On a tower frequency
+- B) On the current frequency
+- C) On the appropriate FIS frequency
+- D) On a radar frequency of the lower airspace
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blind transmissions must be made on the current frequency in use, because that is the frequency being monitored by the ATC unit responsible for the aircraft. Switching to another frequency would mean the relevant controller might not hear the transmission. Options A, C, and D are all incorrect unless they happen to be the current frequency.
+
+### Q111: Under what condition may a VFR flight without radio enter a class D aerodrome? ^t90q111
+- A) It is the destination aerodrome
+- B) There are other aircraft in the aerodrome circuit
+- C) Approval has been granted before
+- D) It is the aerodrome of departure
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Entry into Class D airspace without radio is only permissible when prior approval has been obtained (e.g., by telephone before departure, or a clearance received before the radio failed). Without prior approval, two-way radio communication is mandatory for Class D. Options A and D (destination or departure aerodrome status) do not constitute authorization. Option B (presence of other traffic) has no bearing on the radio requirement.
+
+### Q112: What is the correct transponder code for emergencies? ^t90q112
+- A) 7500.
+- B) 7000.
+- C) 7700.
+- D) 7600.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7700 is the internationally standardised emergency squawk that triggers alarms on ATC radar displays. Option A (7500) indicates unlawful interference (hijacking). Option B (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code in European airspace. Option D (7600) indicates radio communication failure. Each code triggers a different ATC response protocol.
+
+### Q113: What information is broadcast on a VOLMET frequency? ^t90q113
+- A) Navigational information
+- B) NOTAMS
+- C) Current information
+- D) Meteorological information
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET (from French "vol" = flight, "météo" = weather) broadcasts meteorological information — specifically current weather reports (METARs) and sometimes TAFs for a series of aerodromes. Option A (navigational information) is not provided via VOLMET. Option B (NOTAMs) are distributed through other channels. Option C ("current information") is too vague and non-specific.
+
+### Q114: How long is an ATIS broadcast valid for? ^t90q114
+- A) 10 minutes.
+- B) 60 minutes.
+- C) 30 minutes.
+- D) 45 minutes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS broadcasts are updated at approximately 30-minute intervals (or sooner if conditions change significantly), making each broadcast valid for about 30 minutes. Each update is assigned a new identification letter. Option A (10 minutes) is too short for standard updates. Options B (60 minutes) and D (45 minutes) are too long, given how rapidly aerodrome conditions can change.
+
+### Q115: What is the standard abbreviation for the term abeam? ^t90q115
+- A) ABM
+- B) ABA
+- C) ABE
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ABM is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for "abeam," describing a position at right angles to the aircraft's track (directly to the side). This abbreviation is used in flight plans, ATC communications, and aeronautical publications. Options B, C, and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations for this term.
+
+### Q116: What abbreviation stands for visual flight rules? ^t90q116
+- A) VFR
+- B) VMC
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VFR stands for Visual Flight Rules — the set of regulations governing flight by visual reference. Option B (VMC) means Visual Meteorological Conditions, describing the weather requirements for VFR flight — a related but distinct concept. Options C and D are not standard aviation abbreviations.
+
+### Q117: What is the ICAO abbreviation for obstacle? ^t90q117
+- A) OBS
+- B) OBST
+- C) OST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** OBST is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for obstacle, used in NOTAMs, aeronautical charts, and obstacle data publications. Option A (OBS) may be used for "observe" in some contexts but does not denote obstacle. Options C and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q118: What does the abbreviation FIS stand for? ^t90q118
+- A) Flight information system
+- B) Flashing information service
+- C) Flight information service
+- D) Flashing information system
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS stands for Flight Information Service, providing advice and information useful for safe and efficient flight conduct. It is a service, not a system — making option A incorrect. Options B and D contain "flashing," which has no relevance to this aviation service.
+
+### Q119: What does the abbreviation FIR stand for? ^t90q119
+- A) Flow information radar
+- B) Flight information region
+- C) Flow integrity required
+- D) Flight integrity receiver
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIR stands for Flight Information Region — a defined volume of airspace within which flight information service and alerting service are provided under ICAO standards. It is the fundamental building block of airspace management. Options A, C, and D are fabricated terms with no aviation meaning.
+
+### Q120: What does the abbreviation H24 stand for? ^t90q120
+- A) Sunrise to sunset
+- B) No specific opening times
+- C) 24 h service
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** H24 means continuous 24-hour service — the facility is operational at all times without interruption. Option A (sunrise to sunset) describes HJ. Option B (no specific hours) describes HX. Option D (sunset to sunrise) describes HN. H24 is used in AIPs and NOTAMs for permanently staffed facilities.
+
+### Q121: What does the abbreviation HX stand for? ^t90q121
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) 24 h service
+- C) Sunrise to sunset
+- D) No specific opening hours
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HX is the ICAO abbreviation indicating no specific or predetermined operating hours — the facility may be available on request or intermittently. Pilots must check NOTAMs or contact the facility to confirm availability. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option B describes H24 (continuous service). Option C describes HJ (sunrise to sunset).
+
+### Q122: How is the directional information 12 o'clock correctly transmitted? ^t90q122
+- A) Twelve o'clock.
+- B) One two o'clock
+- C) One two.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clock positions used for traffic advisories are spoken as the full natural number followed by "o'clock": "Twelve o'clock" means directly ahead. Option B splits the number into individual digits, which could create confusion with other numerical data. Option C omits "o'clock," making the reference ambiguous. Option D adds "hundred," which is meaningless in clock-position terminology.
+
+### Q123: What does the phrase Roger mean? ^t90q123
+- A) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I have received all of your last transmission
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Roger" means solely "I have received all of your last transmission" — it is a receipt acknowledgement only, not a commitment to comply or a grant of permission. Option A defines "Wilco." Option B defines "Correction." Option C defines "Approved." Confusing these phrases can have serious safety consequences in ATC communications.
+
+### Q124: What does the phrase Correction mean? ^t90q124
+- A) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) I have received all of your last transmission
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Correction" signals that the speaker has made an error in the current transmission, and the corrected information follows immediately. This prevents the listener from acting on incorrect data. Option A defines "Approved." Option C defines "Roger." Option D defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q125: What does the phrase Approved mean? ^t90q125
+- A) I have received all of your last transmission
+- B) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Approved" means ATC has granted permission for the specific action the pilot proposed or requested. Option A defines "Roger." Option B defines "Correction." Option D defines "Wilco." Each phrase has a precise meaning in ICAO phraseology that must not be interchanged.
+
+### Q126: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission requires a "yes" answer? ^t90q126
+- A) Yes
+- B) Affirm
+- C) Roger
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Affirm" is the ICAO-standard civil aviation word for "yes." Option A ("Yes") is plain language and not standard phraseology, potentially misheard on radio. Option C ("Roger") means receipt acknowledged, not agreement. Option D ("Affirmative") is common in military usage but "Affirm" is the correct civil aviation standard per ICAO.
+
+### Q127: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission requires a "no" answer? ^t90q127
+- A) Finish
+- B) Not
+- C) No
+- D) Negative
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Negative" is the ICAO-standard phrase for "no" or "that is not correct," chosen for unambiguous clarity in radio communications. Option A ("Finish") has no defined meaning in this context. Option B ("Not") is incomplete and non-standard. Option C ("No") is plain language that could be misheard, especially in noisy radio conditions or across language barriers.
+
+### Q128: How should the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q128
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct readback includes all safety-critical items: the departure instruction (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, turn right heading 220), the runway designator (runway 12), and the take-off clearance. Wind information does not require readback and is correctly omitted. Option A omits the runway and clearance. Option C misuses "wilco" within a readback. Option D reads back the wind unnecessarily while including the clearance.
+
+### Q129: How should the instruction "Next report PAH" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q129
+- A) Positive
+- B) Roger
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Wilco" (will comply) is the correct acknowledgement for an instruction that requires future action — the pilot confirms both receipt and intention to report at waypoint PAH. Option A ("Positive") is not standard ICAO phraseology. Option B ("Roger") acknowledges receipt only, without confirming compliance. Option D ("Report PAH") is an incomplete acknowledgement without the compliance element.
+
+### Q130: How should the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q130
+- A) Wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- D) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the transponder code and the new frequency are safety-critical items that must be read back to confirm correct receipt: "Squawk 4321, 131.325." Options A and B ("Wilco" or "Roger" alone) fail to confirm the specific numerical values. Option C reads back only the squawk code without confirming the frequency.
+
+### Q131: How should "You are now entering airspace Delta" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q131
+- A) Airspace Delta
+- B) Wilco
+- C) Roger
+- D) Entering
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "You are now entering airspace Delta" is informational — ATC is providing awareness, not issuing an instruction. The correct response is "Roger" (message received). Option A is a partial repetition without proper acknowledgement. Option B ("Wilco") implies an instruction to comply with, which does not exist here. Option D ("Entering") is incomplete and non-standard.
+
+### Q132: What does "FEW" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q132
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FEW designates 1 to 2 oktas (eighths) of sky covered by cloud — the least amount of coverage in the METAR scale. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). These four designations (FEW, SCT, BKN, OVC) are the standard ICAO cloud coverage categories.
+
+### Q133: What does "SCT" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q133
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 1 to 2 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 8 eighths
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SCT (Scattered) represents 3 to 4 oktas (eighths) of sky coverage in a METAR report. Option A describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). Option B describes FEW (1-2 oktas). Option D describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Scattered cloud typically permits VFR flight, but pilots must verify that cloud bases meet the required vertical separation minima.
+
+### Q134: What does "BKN" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q134
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 1 to 2 eighths
+- D) 5 to 7 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN (Broken) represents 5 to 7 oktas (eighths) of sky coverage — the sky is predominantly covered with some gaps visible. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes FEW (1-2 oktas). A broken cloud layer, especially with low bases, can significantly restrict VFR operations and requires careful assessment.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..747bde6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50.md
@@ -0,0 +1,500 @@
+### Q1: When should a pilot make use of blind transmissions? ^t90q1
+- A) When a transmission with important navigational or technical data needs to be sent to multiple stations simultaneously
+- B) When the traffic situation at an airport permits sending information that does not require acknowledgement by the ground station
+- C) When a pilot has inadvertently entered cloud or fog and wishes to request navigational help from a ground unit
+- D) When two-way radio communication cannot be established with the relevant aeronautical station, but there is reason to believe that transmissions are being received at that ground unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission is used when the pilot cannot receive responses (e.g., due to a faulty receiver) but has reason to believe the ground station can still hear the transmissions, allowing ATC to track the aircraft's position and intentions. Option A describes a broadcast, not a blind transmission. Option B is not a recognised scenario for blind transmissions. Option C describes a situation requiring two-way communication or an urgency declaration, not a blind transmission.
+
+### Q2: What is the standard abbreviation for the term "abeam"? ^t90q2
+- A) ABA
+- B) ABE
+- C) ABM
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ABM is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for "abeam," meaning a position at a right angle to the aircraft's track — directly to the side. This abbreviation appears in flight plans, ATC communications, and aeronautical charts. Options A, B, and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations for this term.
+
+### Q3: What abbreviation represents "visual flight rules"? ^t90q3
+- A) VMC
+- B) VFR
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VFR stands for Visual Flight Rules, the regulatory framework under which pilots navigate by visual reference to the ground and other aircraft. Option A (VMC) stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions, which describes the weather requirements for VFR flight — related but distinct. Options C and D are not standard aviation abbreviations.
+
+### Q4: What is the ICAO abbreviation for "obstacle"? ^t90q4
+- A) OBS
+- B) OST
+- C) OBST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** OBST is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for obstacle, used in NOTAMs, aeronautical charts, and ATC communications. Option A (OBS) can mean "observe" or "observation" in ICAO documentation but does not denote obstacle. Options B and D are not recognised ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q5: What does the abbreviation "FIS" represent? ^t90q5
+- A) Flashing information service
+- B) Flight information system
+- C) Flashing information system
+- D) Flight information service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS stands for Flight Information Service — a service providing pilots with information useful for the safe and efficient conduct of flights, including weather updates, NOTAMs, and traffic advisories. Options A and C contain "flashing," which has no relevance to this aviation service. Option B incorrectly uses "system" instead of "service."
+
+### Q6: What does the abbreviation "FIR" represent? ^t90q6
+- A) Flow information radar
+- B) Flight integrity receiver
+- C) Flight information region
+- D) Flow integrity required
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) is a defined volume of airspace within which flight information service and alerting service are provided under ICAO standards. Each country or group of countries has one or more FIRs covering all airspace vertically and horizontally. Options A, B, and D are fabricated terms with no aviation meaning.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "H24" indicate? ^t90q7
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) Sunrise to sunset
+- C) No specific opening times
+- D) 24 h service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** H24 indicates continuous 24-hour service — the facility is staffed and operational at all times. This designation appears in AIP entries and NOTAMs for facilities like major ATC centres. Option A describes HN (night hours). Option B describes HJ (daylight hours). Option C describes HX (no specific hours).
+
+### Q8: What does the abbreviation "HX" indicate? ^t90q8
+- A) Sunset to sunrise
+- B) No specific opening hours
+- C) 24 h service
+- D) Sunrise to sunset
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HX means the facility operates at no specific or predetermined hours and may be available on request or intermittently. Pilots must check NOTAMs or contact the facility to verify availability. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option C describes H24 (continuous). Option D describes HJ (sunrise to sunset).
+
+### Q9: To which value must the altimeter be set so that it reads zero on the ground? ^t90q9
+- A) QNH
+- B) QNE
+- C) QFE
+- D) QTE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at aerodrome elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at that aerodrome, displaying height above field during the circuit. Option A (QNH) gives altitude above mean sea level. Option B (QNE) refers to the standard pressure setting of 1013.25 hPa. Option D (QTE) is a true bearing from a station, not an altimeter setting.
+
+### Q10: What altitude does the altimeter display when set to a given QNH value? ^t90q10
+- A) Altitude relative to the highest elevation within 10 km
+- B) Altitude relative to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+- C) Altitude relative to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+- D) Altitude relative to mean sea level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting that, when dialled in, causes the altimeter to indicate altitude above mean sea level (AMSL), which is the standard reference for navigation and airspace limits below the transition altitude. Option A is not a standard altimetry reference. Option B describes QFE behaviour. Option C describes QNE (standard pressure) behaviour.
+
+### Q11: What altitude does the altimeter display when set to a given QFE value? ^t90q11
+- A) Altitude relative to the highest elevation within 10 km
+- B) Altitude relative to mean sea level
+- C) Altitude relative to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+- D) Altitude relative to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With QFE set, the altimeter reads height above the reference aerodrome — the difference between actual pressure altitude and the aerodrome pressure level, showing zero on the ground and direct height above field in the circuit. Option A is not a standard reference. Option B describes QNH behaviour. Option D describes QNE behaviour.
+
+### Q12: What is the proper term for a message used in air traffic control? ^t90q12
+- A) Flight regularity message
+- B) Message related to direction finding
+- C) Meteorological message
+- D) Flight safety message
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC messages — including clearances, instructions, position reports, and traffic information — are classified as flight safety messages, the third-highest priority after distress and urgency in the ICAO message hierarchy. Option A (regularity messages) concern the operation and maintenance of facilities. Option B (direction-finding messages) relate to radio navigation assistance. Option C (meteorological messages) pertain to weather information.
+
+### Q13: How are distress messages defined? ^t90q13
+- A) Messages sent by a pilot or aircraft operating agency with immediate significance for aircraft in flight.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- D) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities important for the safety and regularity of flight operations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A distress message (MAYDAY) is transmitted when an aircraft and its occupants face a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — the highest priority category in aeronautical communications, signalled by transponder code 7700. Option A is too vague and could apply to several message types. Option C describes urgency messages (PAN PAN). Option D describes regularity messages.
+
+### Q14: How are urgency messages defined? ^t90q14
+- A) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages sent by a pilot or aircraft operating agency with immediate significance for aircraft in flight.
+- D) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Urgency messages (PAN PAN) concern a condition that is serious and affects the safety of the aircraft or persons but does not yet constitute a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — examples include controllable engine problems or medical situations on board. Option B defines distress messages (MAYDAY). Option C is a general description that could fit multiple message types. Option D duplicates option A.
+
+### Q15: How are regularity messages defined? ^t90q15
+- A) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft, or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- B) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers facing a grave and imminent threat that require immediate assistance.
+- C) Messages concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- D) Messages sent by an aircraft operating agency or an aircraft with immediate concern for an aircraft in flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Regularity messages relate to the operation and maintenance of facilities necessary for flight operations — essentially administrative and logistical communications with the lowest priority in the ICAO hierarchy. Option A describes urgency-related messages. Option B defines distress messages. Option D describes flight safety messages.
+
+### Q16: Among the following messages, which one has the highest priority? ^t90q16
+- A) QNH 1013
+- B) Wind 300 degrees, 5 knots
+- C) Turn left
+- D) Request QDM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A request for QDM (magnetic heading to steer toward a station) implies the pilot may be lost or unable to navigate independently, making it a potential urgency or flight safety matter with higher priority than routine operational messages. Options A (QNH) and B (wind) are routine advisory information. Option C (turn left) is a standard ATC instruction but carries lower priority than a navigation assistance request.
+
+### Q17: How should the call sign HB-YKM be correctly transmitted? ^t90q17
+- A) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+- B) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: H = Hotel, B = Bravo, Y = Yankee, K = Kilo, M = Mike. Option A uses "Home" instead of "Hotel" and "Mikro" instead of "Mike." Option B uses "Yuliett" (which is J = Juliett, not Y) and "Mikro." Option D uses "Home" and "Yuliett." Only option C uses all correct ICAO phonetic words.
+
+### Q18: How should the call sign OE-JVK be correctly transmitted? ^t90q18
+- A) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- D) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: O = Oscar, E = Echo, J = Juliett, V = Victor, K = Kilo. Option B uses "Omega" (not ICAO) and "Kilogramm." Option C uses "Omega" and "Jankee" (neither is ICAO standard). Option D uses "Jankee" and "Kilogramm." Only option A uses all correct ICAO phonetic words.
+
+### Q19: How is an altitude of 4500 ft correctly transmitted? ^t90q19
+- A) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- B) Four five tousand.
+- C) Four tousand five hundred.
+- D) Four five zero zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO phraseology for altitudes uses "thousand" and "hundred" where appropriate: 4500 ft is spoken as "four thousand five hundred." Option A adds unnecessary zeros after "five." Option B reverses the structure nonsensically. Option D uses digit-by-digit recitation, which is reserved for transponder codes and QNH values, not altitudes.
+
+### Q20: How is a heading of 285 degrees correctly transmitted? ^t90q20
+- A) Two eight five.
+- B) Two hundred eight five.
+- C) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- D) Two eight five hundred.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Headings and bearings are always transmitted as three individual digits spoken separately: "two eight five." The words "hundred" are never used for headings because digit-by-digit transmission eliminates ambiguity. Options B and C use "hundred" or natural number forms, which are not correct for heading transmissions. Option D adds "hundred" after the digits, which is meaningless.
+
+### Q21: How is a frequency of 119.500 MHz correctly transmitted? ^t90q21
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- B) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner decimal five zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Frequencies are transmitted digit by digit with "decimal" for the decimal point, and trailing zeros after significant digits are dropped. 119.500 MHz becomes "one one niner decimal five." Note "niner" is used for 9 to prevent confusion with "nein" (no). Option A retains unnecessary trailing zeros. Option B inserts "tousand" which is not used for frequencies. Option D keeps one trailing zero unnecessarily.
+
+### Q22: How is the directional information "12 o'clock" correctly transmitted? ^t90q22
+- A) One two o'clock
+- B) One two.
+- C) Twelve o'clock.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clock positions for traffic advisories are spoken as the full number followed by "o'clock": "twelve o'clock" means directly ahead. Option A splits "twelve" into digits, which could be confused with other numerical data. Option B omits "o'clock," making the reference ambiguous. Option D adds "hundred," which has no meaning in clock position references.
+
+### Q23: In what time format are times transmitted in aviation? ^t90q23
+- A) Standard time.
+- B) Local time.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Time zone time.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All aeronautical communications use Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), formerly known as GMT or Zulu time, ensuring consistency across time zones worldwide. Pilots must convert local time to UTC for all flight plans, ATC communications, and weather reports. Options A, B, and D all reference local or regional time systems that would cause confusion in international operations.
+
+### Q24: When there is doubt about ambiguity, how should a time of 1620 be transmitted? ^t90q24
+- A) Two zero.
+- B) Sixteen twenty
+- C) One tousand six hundred two zero
+- D) One six two zero.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When there is any risk of ambiguity, ICAO requires the full four-digit UTC time spoken as individual digits: "one six two zero." This eliminates confusion about whether minutes alone or the complete time is being given. Option A gives only the minutes, which could be ambiguous. Option B uses natural number grouping, which is non-standard. Option C uses "tousand" and "hundred," which are not used for time transmission.
+
+### Q25: What does the phrase "Roger" mean? ^t90q25
+- A) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Roger" is an acknowledgement of receipt only — it means "I have received all of your last transmission" and nothing more. It does not imply agreement, compliance, or permission. Option A defines "Approved." Option C defines "Correction." Option D defines "Wilco" (will comply). Pilots must use the correct phrase to avoid dangerous misunderstandings.
+
+### Q26: What does the phrase "Correction" mean? ^t90q26
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) I understand your message and will comply with it
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Correction" signals that the speaker has made an error in the current transmission and the correct information follows immediately. This prevents the receiving party from acting on faulty data. Option B defines "Roger." Option C defines "Approved." Option D defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q27: What does the phrase "Approved" mean? ^t90q27
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) I have received all of your last transmission
+- C) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- D) Permission for proposed action is granted
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Approved" means that ATC has granted permission for the action the pilot proposed or requested. It is used specifically in response to pilot requests. Option A defines "Correction." Option B defines "Roger." Option C defines "Wilco."
+
+### Q28: Which phrase does a pilot use to check the readability of their transmission? ^t90q28
+- A) You read me five
+- B) Request readability
+- C) How do you read?
+- D) What is the communication like?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "How do you read?" is the standard ICAO phrase requesting a readability check. The expected response uses the 1-to-5 scale (e.g., "I read you five"). Option A is the format of a readability report, not the request. Option B is not standard phraseology. Option D is plain language and not prescribed ICAO terminology.
+
+### Q29: Which phrase does a pilot use when requesting to fly through controlled airspace? ^t90q29
+- A) Would like
+- B) Request
+- C) Apply
+- D) Want
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Request" is the standard ICAO phraseology for asking ATC for a clearance, service, or permission — for example, "Request transit controlled airspace." Options A, C, and D are colloquial or non-standard terms that should not be used in radiotelephony because they reduce clarity and may not be understood by controllers in multilingual environments.
+
+### Q30: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission is to be answered with "yes"? ^t90q30
+- A) Roger
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirm
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Affirm" is the ICAO-standard word for "yes" in civil aviation radiotelephony. Option A ("Roger") means receipt acknowledged, not agreement. Option B ("Yes") is plain language and not standard phraseology. Option D ("Affirmative") is commonly used in military communications but "Affirm" is the correct civil aviation standard per ICAO.
+
+### Q31: What phrase does a pilot use when a transmission is to be answered with "no"? ^t90q31
+- A) No
+- B) Finish
+- C) Negative
+- D) Not
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Negative" is the standard ICAO phraseology for "no" or "that is not correct," chosen for its unambiguous clarity across languages and radio conditions. Option A ("No") is plain language and not standard, and may be misheard. Option B ("Finish") has no meaning in this context. Option D ("Not") is incomplete and not prescribed ICAO terminology.
+
+### Q32: Which phrase should a pilot use to inform the tower that they are ready for take-off? ^t90q32
+- A) Ready
+- B) Ready for departure
+- C) Request take-off
+- D) Ready for start-up
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Ready for departure" is the correct standard phrase at the holding point. Importantly, the word "take-off" is reserved exclusively for the actual clearance ("Cleared for take-off") or its cancellation, to prevent premature action on a misheard word. Option A ("Ready") is too vague. Option C uses "take-off" outside the clearance context. Option D indicates readiness for engine start, not runway departure.
+
+### Q33: What phrase does a pilot use to inform the tower about a go-around? ^t90q33
+- A) No landing
+- B) Approach canceled
+- C) Going around
+- D) Pulling up
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Going around" is the standard ICAO phrase for discontinuing an approach and initiating a missed approach procedure. It must be transmitted immediately upon the decision. Options A, B, and D are all non-standard expressions that are not recognised in ICAO phraseology and could cause confusion, particularly in high-workload situations.
+
+### Q34: What is the call sign suffix of the aerodrome control unit? ^t90q34
+- A) Ground
+- B) Airfield
+- C) Tower
+- D) Control
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome control unit uses the call sign suffix "Tower" (e.g., "Dusseldorf Tower"), responsible for aircraft on the runway and in the circuit. Option A ("Ground") is for surface movement control. Option B ("Airfield") is not a standard ICAO call sign suffix. Option D ("Control") is used for area control centres, not aerodrome control.
+
+### Q35: What is the call sign suffix of the surface movement control unit? ^t90q35
+- A) Ground
+- B) Earth
+- C) Control
+- D) Tower
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface movement control uses the suffix "Ground" (e.g., "Frankfurt Ground"), handling aircraft and vehicles on taxiways and aprons. Option B ("Earth") is not an aviation call sign suffix. Option C ("Control") designates area control. Option D ("Tower") designates aerodrome runway and circuit control.
+
+### Q36: What is the call sign suffix of the flight information service? ^t90q36
+- A) Advice
+- B) Info
+- C) Information
+- D) Flight information
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS units use the suffix "Information" (e.g., "Langen Information" or "Scottish Information"), providing traffic advisories and weather information to VFR pilots. Options A and B are informal abbreviations not used as official call sign suffixes. Option D ("Flight information") is too long — only "Information" is the prescribed suffix.
+
+### Q37: What is the correct abbreviated form of the call sign D-EAZF? ^t90q37
+- A) DEF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) AZF
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO abbreviation rules for five-character call signs retain the first character (nationality prefix D) plus the last two characters (ZF): D-EAZF becomes D-ZF, spoken "Delta Zulu Foxtrot." Option A omits the middle characters incorrectly. Option C takes the first three letters. Option D omits the nationality prefix entirely. Only option B follows the correct first-plus-last-two rule.
+
+### Q38: Under what condition may a pilot abbreviate the call sign of their aircraft? ^t90q38
+- A) After passing the first reporting point
+- B) Within controlled airspace
+- C) After the ground station has used the abbreviation
+- D) If there is little traffic in the traffic circuit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot may only use the abbreviated call sign after the ground station has used it first, ensuring positive identification has been established. Options A, B, and D describe situations that do not grant abbreviation rights — the initiative to abbreviate always lies with the ground station regardless of traffic, airspace class, or position.
+
+### Q39: How should the aircraft call sign be used at first contact? ^t90q39
+- A) Using the first two characters only
+- B) Using the last two characters only
+- C) Using all characters
+- D) Using the first three characters only
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At first contact with any ATC unit, the full aircraft call sign must be used (e.g., "Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot") so the controller can positively identify the aircraft. Options A, B, and D all use partial call signs, which risk confusion with other aircraft and are contrary to ICAO standard procedures for initial contact.
+
+### Q40: How should radio communication be correctly established between D-EAZF and Dusseldorf Tower? ^t90q40
+- A) Tower from D-EAZF
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard format for initial radio contact is: station called first, then own call sign — "Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot." Option A uses the non-standard "from" format. Option B omits the calling aircraft's identification entirely. The ground station is addressed first so the controller knows the call is directed at them, then the aircraft identifies itself.
+
+### Q41: What does readability 1 indicate? ^t90q41
+- A) The transmission is readable now and then
+- B) The transmission is unreadable
+- C) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- D) The transmission is perfectly readable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the ICAO readability scale (1 to 5), readability 1 means the transmission is completely unreadable — no useful information can be extracted. Option A describes readability 2 (readable now and then). Option C describes readability 3 (readable with difficulty). Option D describes readability 5 (perfectly readable).
+
+### Q42: What does readability 2 indicate? ^t90q42
+- A) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- B) The transmission is readable now and then
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is unreadable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 2 means the transmission is only intermittently intelligible — parts come through but the listener cannot reliably understand the full message. Option A describes readability 3. Option C describes readability 5. Option D describes readability 1. A pilot receiving a readability 2 report should try to improve transmission quality.
+
+### Q43: What does readability 3 indicate? ^t90q43
+- A) The transmission is unreadable
+- B) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is readable now and then
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 3 means the transmission is intelligible but requires effort and concentration from the listener, with some words unclear. Option A describes readability 1. Option C describes readability 5. Option D describes readability 2. Readability 3 is often workable for short operational messages but is inadequate for complex clearances.
+
+### Q44: What does readability 5 indicate? ^t90q44
+- A) The transmission is readable now and then
+- B) The transmission is unreadable
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 5 is the highest quality on the ICAO scale — the transmission is perfectly clear and intelligible with no difficulty. Option A describes readability 2. Option B describes readability 1. Option D describes readability 3. "I read you five" is the standard response indicating ideal communication conditions.
+
+### Q45: Which piece of information from a ground station does not require readback? ^t90q45
+- A) Altitude
+- B) Wind
+- C) SSR-Code
+- D) Runway in use
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind information is advisory and acknowledged with "Roger" — no readback is required. Items requiring mandatory readback include: ATC clearances, runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, and heading and speed instructions. Options A, C, and D are all safety-critical items that must be read back to confirm correct receipt.
+
+### Q46: Which piece of information from a ground station does not require readback? ^t90q46
+- A) Heading
+- B) Traffic information
+- C) Taxi instructions
+- D) Altimeter setting
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Traffic information (e.g., "traffic at your two o'clock, one thousand above") is acknowledged with "Roger" or "Traffic in sight" and does not require formal readback. Options A (heading), C (taxi instructions), and D (altimeter setting) are all safety-critical items subject to mandatory readback under ICAO procedures.
+
+### Q47: How should the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q47
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The readback must include all safety-critical items: departure instructions (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, then turn right heading 220), the runway designator (runway 12), and the take-off clearance. Wind information does not require readback and is correctly omitted in option C. Option A incorrectly reads back the wind. Option B misuses "wilco" mid-readback. Option D omits the runway and take-off clearance, which are mandatory readback items.
+
+### Q48: How should the instruction "Next report PAH" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q48
+- A) Roger
+- B) Positive
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Wilco" (will comply) is the correct response to an instruction requiring future action — the pilot acknowledges receipt and confirms they will report at waypoint PAH. Option A ("Roger") only confirms receipt without implying compliance with the instruction. Option B ("Positive") is not standard ICAO phraseology in this context. Option D ("Report PAH") is an incomplete acknowledgement.
+
+### Q49: How should the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q49
+- A) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the transponder code and the frequency change are safety-critical items requiring readback. The correct acknowledgement reads back the squawk code (4321) and the new frequency (131.325) to confirm correct receipt. Options A and D use "wilco" which does not confirm the specific numerical values. Option B ("Roger") is entirely insufficient for safety-critical items.
+
+### Q50: How should "You are now entering airspace Delta" be correctly acknowledged? ^t90q50
+- A) Entering
+- B) Roger
+- C) Airspace Delta
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "You are now entering airspace Delta" is an informational statement from ATC, not an instruction requiring compliance. "Roger" (message received) is the correct and sufficient response. Option A ("Entering") is an incomplete acknowledgement. Option C partially repeats the content without proper acknowledgement format. Option D ("Wilco") is inappropriate because there is no instruction to comply with.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50_de.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50_de.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..170028c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50_de.md
@@ -0,0 +1,499 @@
+### Q1: Wann sollte ein Pilot Blindsendungen verwenden? ^t90q1
+- A) Wenn eine Sendung mit wichtigen Navigations- oder technischen Daten gleichzeitig an mehrere Stationen übermittelt werden muss
+- B) Wenn die Verkehrslage an einem Flugplatz die Übermittlung von Informationen erlaubt, die von der Bodenstation nicht quittiert werden müssen
+- C) Wenn ein Pilot unbeabsichtigt in Wolken oder Nebel geraten ist und von einer Bodenstation Navigationshilfe anfordern möchte
+- D) Wenn kein Zweiwegfunkverkehr mit der zuständigen Luftfahrtstation hergestellt werden kann, aber Grund zur Annahme besteht, dass die Sendungen von dieser Bodenstation empfangen werden
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Blindsendung wird verwendet, wenn der Pilot keine Antworten empfangen kann (z. B. wegen eines defekten Empfängers), aber Grund zur Annahme hat, dass die Bodenstation seine Sendungen noch empfangen kann, sodass die Flugsicherung die Position und Absichten des Luftfahrzeugs verfolgen kann. Option A beschreibt eine Rundsendung (Broadcast), keine Blindsendung. Option B ist kein anerkanntes Szenario für Blindsendungen. Option C beschreibt eine Situation, die Zweiwegkommunikation oder eine Dringlichkeitsmeldung erfordert, keine Blindsendung.
+
+### Q2: Wie lautet die Standardabkürzung für den Begriff „querab" (abeam)? ^t90q2
+- A) ABA
+- B) ABE
+- C) ABM
+- D) ABB
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** ABM ist die ICAO-Standardabkürzung für „abeam" (querab), was eine Position im rechten Winkel zur Flugbahn des Luftfahrzeugs bedeutet — direkt zur Seite. Diese Abkürzung wird in Flugplänen, Sprechfunkverkehr und Luftfahrtkarten verwendet. Die Optionen A, B und D sind keine anerkannten ICAO-Abkürzungen für diesen Begriff.
+
+### Q3: Welche Abkürzung steht für „Sichtflugregeln"? ^t90q3
+- A) VMC
+- B) VFR
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** VFR steht für Visual Flight Rules (Sichtflugregeln), den Regelrahmen, nach dem Piloten mittels Sichtbezug zum Boden und zu anderen Luftfahrzeugen navigieren. Option A (VMC) steht für Visual Meteorological Conditions (Sichtflugwetterbedingungen), die die Wetteranforderungen für VFR-Flüge beschreiben — verwandt, aber unterschiedlich. Die Optionen C und D sind keine Standardabkürzungen der Luftfahrt.
+
+### Q4: Wie lautet die ICAO-Abkürzung für „Hindernis"? ^t90q4
+- A) OBS
+- B) OST
+- C) OBST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** OBST ist die ICAO-Standardabkürzung für Hindernis (obstacle), verwendet in NOTAMs, Luftfahrtkarten und Sprechfunkverkehr. Option A (OBS) kann in der ICAO-Dokumentation „beobachten" oder „Beobachtung" bedeuten, bezeichnet aber nicht „Hindernis". Die Optionen B und D sind keine anerkannten ICAO-Abkürzungen.
+
+### Q5: Wofür steht die Abkürzung „FIS"? ^t90q5
+- A) Blinkinformationsdienst (Flashing information service)
+- B) Fluginformationssystem (Flight information system)
+- C) Blinkinformationssystem (Flashing information system)
+- D) Fluginformationsdienst (Flight information service)
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** FIS steht für Flight Information Service (Fluginformationsdienst) — ein Dienst, der Piloten Informationen für die sichere und effiziente Durchführung von Flügen bereitstellt, einschliesslich Wettermeldungen, NOTAMs und Verkehrshinweisen. Die Optionen A und C enthalten „Blink-", was keinerlei Bezug zu diesem Luftfahrtdienst hat. Option B verwendet fälschlicherweise „System" statt „Dienst".
+
+### Q6: Wofür steht die Abkürzung „FIR"? ^t90q6
+- A) Durchflussinformationsradar (Flow information radar)
+- B) Flugintegritätsempfänger (Flight integrity receiver)
+- C) Fluginformationsgebiet (Flight information region)
+- D) Durchflussintegritätsanforderung (Flow integrity required)
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Fluginformationsgebiet (FIR) ist ein definiertes Luftraumvolumen, innerhalb dessen Fluginformationsdienst und Alarmdienst gemäss ICAO-Normen erbracht werden. Jedes Land oder jede Ländergruppe verfügt über eine oder mehrere FIR, die den gesamten Luftraum vertikal und horizontal abdecken. Die Optionen A, B und D sind erfundene Begriffe ohne Bedeutung in der Luftfahrt.
+
+### Q7: Was bedeutet die Abkürzung „H24"? ^t90q7
+- A) Sonnenuntergang bis Sonnenaufgang
+- B) Sonnenaufgang bis Sonnenuntergang
+- C) Keine bestimmten Öffnungszeiten
+- D) 24-Stunden-Dienst
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** H24 bezeichnet einen kontinuierlichen 24-Stunden-Dienst — die Einrichtung ist ständig besetzt und betriebsbereit. Diese Bezeichnung erscheint in AIP-Einträgen und NOTAMs für Einrichtungen wie grosse ATC-Zentren. Option A beschreibt HN (Nachtbetrieb). Option B beschreibt HJ (Tagbetrieb). Option C beschreibt HX (keine bestimmten Zeiten).
+
+### Q8: Was bedeutet die Abkürzung „HX"? ^t90q8
+- A) Sonnenuntergang bis Sonnenaufgang
+- B) Keine bestimmten Öffnungszeiten
+- C) 24-Stunden-Dienst
+- D) Sonnenaufgang bis Sonnenuntergang
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** HX bedeutet, dass die Einrichtung ohne bestimmte oder festgelegte Zeiten betrieben wird und auf Anfrage oder zeitweise verfügbar sein kann. Piloten müssen NOTAMs prüfen oder die Einrichtung kontaktieren, um die Verfügbarkeit zu bestätigen. Option A beschreibt HN (Sonnenuntergang bis Sonnenaufgang). Option C beschreibt H24 (Dauerbetrieb). Option D beschreibt HJ (Sonnenaufgang bis Sonnenuntergang).
+
+### Q9: Auf welchen Wert muss der Höhenmesser eingestellt werden, damit er am Boden Null anzeigt? ^t90q9
+- A) QNH
+- B) QNE
+- C) QFE
+- D) QTE
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QFE ist der Atmosphärendruck in Flugplatzhöhe. Wird er auf der Höhenmesser-Unterskala eingestellt, zeigt das Instrument am Boden dieses Flugplatzes Null an und gibt im Platzrundenflug die Höhe über dem Platz an. Option A (QNH) gibt die Höhe über dem mittleren Meeresspiegel an. Option B (QNE) bezieht sich auf die Standarddruckeinstellung von 1013,25 hPa. Option D (QTE) ist eine rechtweisende Peilung von einer Station, kein Höhenmesser-Calage.
+
+### Q10: Welche Höhe zeigt der Höhenmesser an, wenn er auf einen bestimmten QNH-Wert eingestellt ist? ^t90q10
+- A) Höhe bezogen auf die höchste Erhebung im Umkreis von 10 km
+- B) Höhe bezogen auf den Luftdruck am Bezugsflugplatz
+- C) Höhe bezogen auf das Datum 1013,25 hPa
+- D) Höhe bezogen auf den mittleren Meeresspiegel
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QNH ist die Höhenmessereinstellung, die bei Eingabe dazu führt, dass der Höhenmesser die Höhe über dem mittleren Meeresspiegel (AMSL) anzeigt, der Standardbezug für Navigation und Luftraumgrenzen unterhalb der Übergangshöhe. Option A ist kein standardmässiger altimetrischer Bezug. Option B beschreibt das QFE-Verhalten. Option C beschreibt das QNE-Verhalten (Standarddruck).
+
+### Q11: Welche Höhe zeigt der Höhenmesser an, wenn er auf einen bestimmten QFE-Wert eingestellt ist? ^t90q11
+- A) Höhe bezogen auf die höchste Erhebung im Umkreis von 10 km
+- B) Höhe bezogen auf den mittleren Meeresspiegel
+- C) Höhe bezogen auf den Luftdruck am Bezugsflugplatz
+- D) Höhe bezogen auf das Datum 1013,25 hPa
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Mit QFE eingestellt zeigt der Höhenmesser die Höhe über dem Bezugsflugplatz an — die Differenz zwischen der tatsächlichen Druckhöhe und dem Druckniveau des Flugplatzes, wobei am Boden Null und im Platzrundenflug die direkte Höhe über dem Platz angezeigt wird. Option A ist kein Standardbezug. Option B beschreibt das QNH-Verhalten. Option D beschreibt das QNE-Verhalten.
+
+### Q12: Was ist die korrekte Bezeichnung für eine Nachricht im Flugverkehrskontrolldienst? ^t90q12
+- A) Flugregelungsnachricht
+- B) Nachricht bezüglich Funkpeilung
+- C) Meteorologische Nachricht
+- D) Flugsicherheitsnachricht
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** ATC-Nachrichten — einschliesslich Freigaben, Anweisungen, Positionsmeldungen und Verkehrsinformationen — werden als Flugsicherheitsnachrichten eingestuft, die dritthöchste Priorität nach Not- und Dringlichkeitsmeldungen in der ICAO-Nachrichtenhierarchie. Option A (Flugregelungsnachrichten) betrifft den Betrieb und die Wartung von Einrichtungen. Option B (Peilnachrichten) bezieht sich auf Radionavigationshilfe. Option C (meteorologische Nachrichten) betrifft Wetterinformationen.
+
+### Q13: Wie werden Notmeldungen definiert? ^t90q13
+- A) Nachrichten, die von einem Piloten oder einer Luftfahrzeugbetreiberagentur mit unmittelbarer Bedeutung für Luftfahrzeuge im Flug gesendet werden.
+- B) Nachrichten, die ein Luftfahrzeug und seine Insassen betreffen, die von einer schweren und unmittelbaren Bedrohung betroffen sind und sofortige Hilfe benötigen.
+- C) Nachrichten, die die Sicherheit eines Luftfahrzeugs, eines Wasserfahrzeugs oder eines anderen Fahrzeugs oder einer Person in Sicht betreffen.
+- D) Nachrichten, die den Betrieb oder die Wartung von Einrichtungen betreffen, die für die Sicherheit und Regelmässigkeit des Flugbetriebs wichtig sind.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Notmeldung (MAYDAY) wird gesendet, wenn ein Luftfahrzeug und seine Insassen von einer schweren und unmittelbaren Gefahr betroffen sind, die sofortige Hilfe erfordert — die höchste Prioritätskategorie im Flugfunkverkehr, signalisiert durch Transpondercode 7700. Option A ist zu vage und könnte auf mehrere Nachrichtentypen zutreffen. Option C beschreibt Dringlichkeitsmeldungen (PAN PAN). Option D beschreibt Flugregelungsnachrichten.
+
+### Q14: Wie werden Dringlichkeitsmeldungen definiert? ^t90q14
+- A) Nachrichten, die den Betrieb oder die Wartung von Einrichtungen betreffen, die für die Sicherheit oder Regelmässigkeit des Flugbetriebs wesentlich sind.
+- B) Nachrichten, die ein Luftfahrzeug und seine Insassen betreffen, die von einer schweren und unmittelbaren Bedrohung betroffen sind und sofortige Hilfe benötigen.
+- C) Nachrichten, die von einem Piloten oder einer Luftfahrzeugbetreiberagentur mit unmittelbarer Bedeutung für Luftfahrzeuge im Flug gesendet werden.
+- D) Nachrichten, die den Betrieb oder die Wartung von Einrichtungen betreffen, die für die Sicherheit oder Regelmässigkeit des Flugbetriebs wesentlich sind.
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Dringlichkeitsmeldungen (PAN PAN) betreffen einen Zustand, der ernst ist und die Sicherheit des Luftfahrzeugs oder der Personen beeinträchtigt, aber noch keine schwere und unmittelbare Gefahr darstellt, die sofortige Hilfe erfordert — Beispiele sind beherrschbare Motorprobleme oder medizinische Situationen an Bord. Option B definiert Notmeldungen (MAYDAY). Option C ist eine allgemeine Beschreibung, die auf mehrere Nachrichtentypen zutreffen könnte. Option D ist identisch mit Option A.
+
+### Q15: Wie werden Flugregelungsnachrichten definiert? ^t90q15
+- A) Nachrichten, die die Sicherheit eines Luftfahrzeugs, eines Wasserfahrzeugs oder eines anderen Fahrzeugs oder einer Person in Sicht betreffen.
+- B) Nachrichten, die ein Luftfahrzeug und seine Insassen betreffen, die von einer schweren und unmittelbaren Bedrohung betroffen sind und sofortige Hilfe benötigen.
+- C) Nachrichten, die den Betrieb oder die Wartung von Einrichtungen betreffen, die für die Sicherheit oder Regelmässigkeit des Flugbetriebs wesentlich sind.
+- D) Nachrichten, die von einer Luftfahrzeugbetreiberagentur oder einem Luftfahrzeug mit unmittelbarem Bezug zu einem Luftfahrzeug im Flug gesendet werden.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Flugregelungsnachrichten beziehen sich auf den Betrieb und die Wartung von Einrichtungen, die für den Flugbetrieb notwendig sind — im Wesentlichen administrative und logistische Kommunikation mit der niedrigsten Priorität in der ICAO-Hierarchie. Option A beschreibt dringlichkeitsbezogene Nachrichten. Option B definiert Notmeldungen. Option D beschreibt Flugsicherheitsnachrichten.
+
+### Q16: Welche der folgenden Nachrichten hat die höchste Priorität? ^t90q16
+- A) QNH 1013
+- B) Wind 300 Grad, 5 Knoten
+- C) Drehen Sie links
+- D) Erbitte QDM
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Anforderung von QDM (magnetischer Steuerkurs zu einer Station) impliziert, dass der Pilot möglicherweise die Orientierung verloren hat oder nicht selbstständig navigieren kann, was sie zu einer potenziellen Dringlichkeits- oder Flugsicherheitsangelegenheit mit höherer Priorität als routinemässige Betriebsmeldungen macht. Die Optionen A (QNH) und B (Wind) sind routinemässige Beratungsinformationen. Option C (drehen Sie links) ist eine Standard-ATC-Anweisung, hat aber niedrigere Priorität als eine Navigationsunterstützungsanfrage.
+
+### Q17: Wie wird das Rufzeichen HB-YKM korrekt übermittelt? ^t90q17
+- A) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+- B) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäss dem ICAO-Buchstabieralphabet: H = Hotel, B = Bravo, Y = Yankee, K = Kilo, M = Mike. Option A verwendet „Home" statt „Hotel" und „Mikro" statt „Mike". Option B verwendet „Yuliett" (was J = Juliett entspricht, nicht Y) und „Mikro". Option D verwendet „Home" und „Yuliett". Nur Option C verwendet alle korrekten ICAO-Buchstabierwörter.
+
+### Q18: Wie wird das Rufzeichen OE-JVK korrekt übermittelt? ^t90q18
+- A) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- D) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Gemäss dem ICAO-Buchstabieralphabet: O = Oscar, E = Echo, J = Juliett, V = Victor, K = Kilo. Option B verwendet „Omega" (nicht ICAO) und „Kilogramm". Option C verwendet „Omega" und „Jankee" (keines ist ICAO-Standard). Option D verwendet „Jankee" und „Kilogramm". Nur Option A verwendet alle korrekten ICAO-Buchstabierwörter.
+
+### Q19: Wie wird eine Flughöhe von 4500 ft korrekt übermittelt? ^t90q19
+- A) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- B) Four five tousand.
+- C) Four tousand five hundred.
+- D) Four five zero zero.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ICAO-Phraseologie für Flughöhen verwendet „thousand" und „hundred" nach Bedarf: 4500 ft wird als „four thousand five hundred" gesprochen. Option A fügt nach „five" überflüssige Nullen hinzu. Option B kehrt die Struktur unsinnig um. Option D verwendet die ziffernweise Übermittlung, die Transpondercodes und QNH-Werten vorbehalten ist, nicht Flughöhen.
+
+### Q20: Wie wird ein Steuerkurs von 285 Grad korrekt übermittelt? ^t90q20
+- A) Two eight five.
+- B) Two hundred eight five.
+- C) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- D) Two eight five hundred.
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Steuerkurse und Peilungen werden immer als drei einzelne Ziffern separat gesprochen übermittelt: „two eight five". Die Wörter „hundred" werden für Steuerkurse nie verwendet, da die ziffernweise Übermittlung Mehrdeutigkeiten ausschliesst. Die Optionen B und C verwenden „hundred" oder natürliche Zahlformen, was für die Steuerkursübermittlung nicht korrekt ist. Option D fügt „hundred" nach den Ziffern hinzu, was bedeutungslos ist.
+
+### Q21: Wie wird eine Frequenz von 119.500 MHz korrekt übermittelt? ^t90q21
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- B) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner decimal five zero.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Frequenzen werden ziffernweise mit „decimal" für den Dezimalpunkt übermittelt, und nachfolgende Nullen nach signifikanten Ziffern werden weggelassen. 119.500 MHz wird zu „one one niner decimal five". Beachten Sie, dass „niner" für die 9 verwendet wird, um Verwechslungen mit „nein" zu vermeiden. Option A behält unnötige nachfolgende Nullen bei. Option B fügt „tousand" ein, was für Frequenzen nicht verwendet wird. Option D behält eine überflüssige nachfolgende Null bei.
+
+### Q22: Wie wird die Richtungsangabe „12 o'clock" korrekt übermittelt? ^t90q22
+- A) One two o'clock
+- B) One two.
+- C) Twelve o'clock.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Uhrzeitpositionen für Verkehrshinweise werden als vollständige Zahl gefolgt von „o'clock" gesprochen: „twelve o'clock" bedeutet direkt voraus. Option A zerlegt „twelve" in Ziffern, was mit anderen numerischen Daten verwechselt werden könnte. Option B lässt „o'clock" weg, was den Bezug mehrdeutig macht. Option D fügt „hundred" hinzu, was bei Uhrzeitpositionsangaben keine Bedeutung hat.
+
+### Q23: In welchem Zeitformat werden Zeiten in der Luftfahrt übermittelt? ^t90q23
+- A) Normalzeit.
+- B) Ortszeit.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Zeitzonenzeit.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Alle Flugfunkkommunikationen verwenden die koordinierte Weltzeit (UTC), früher als GMT oder Zulu-Zeit bekannt, um weltweit Konsistenz über Zeitzonen hinweg zu gewährleisten. Piloten müssen die Ortszeit für alle Flugpläne, ATC-Kommunikationen und Wettermeldungen in UTC umrechnen. Die Optionen A, B und D beziehen sich alle auf lokale oder regionale Zeitsysteme, die im internationalen Betrieb Verwirrung stiften würden.
+
+### Q24: Wie muss eine Zeit von 1620 bei Zweifelsfällen übermittelt werden? ^t90q24
+- A) Two zero.
+- B) Sixteen twenty
+- C) One tousand six hundred two zero
+- D) One six two zero.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Bei jeglichem Mehrdeutigkeitsrisiko verlangt die ICAO, dass die vollständige vierstellige UTC-Zeit als einzelne Ziffern gesprochen wird: „one six two zero". Dies beseitigt Verwechslungen darüber, ob nur die Minuten oder die vollständige Zeit angegeben werden. Option A gibt nur die Minuten an, was mehrdeutig sein kann. Option B verwendet natürliche Zahlengruppierung, was nicht normiert ist. Option C verwendet „tousand" und „hundred", die für die Zeitübermittlung nicht verwendet werden.
+
+### Q25: Was bedeutet der Ausdruck „Roger"? ^t90q25
+- A) Die Genehmigung für die vorgeschlagene Massnahme wird erteilt
+- B) Ich habe Ihre letzte Übermittlung vollständig empfangen
+- C) In dieser Übermittlung wurde ein Fehler gemacht. Die korrekte Version lautet...
+- D) Ich verstehe Ihre Nachricht und werde sie befolgen
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Roger" ist lediglich eine Empfangsbestätigung — es bedeutet „ich habe Ihre letzte Übermittlung vollständig empfangen" und nichts weiter. Es impliziert weder Zustimmung noch Befolgung noch Genehmigung. Option A definiert „Approved". Option C definiert „Correction". Option D definiert „Wilco". Piloten müssen den korrekten Ausdruck verwenden, um gefährliche Missverständnisse zu vermeiden.
+
+### Q26: Was bedeutet der Ausdruck „Correction"? ^t90q26
+- A) In dieser Übermittlung wurde ein Fehler gemacht. Die korrekte Version lautet...
+- B) Ich habe Ihre letzte Übermittlung vollständig empfangen
+- C) Die Genehmigung für die vorgeschlagene Massnahme wird erteilt
+- D) Ich verstehe Ihre Nachricht und werde sie befolgen
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Correction" signalisiert, dass der Sprecher einen Fehler in der laufenden Übermittlung gemacht hat und die korrekte Information unmittelbar folgt. Dies verhindert, dass der Empfänger auf fehlerhafte Daten reagiert. Option B definiert „Roger". Option C definiert „Approved". Option D definiert „Wilco".
+
+### Q27: Was bedeutet der Ausdruck „Approved"? ^t90q27
+- A) In dieser Übermittlung wurde ein Fehler gemacht. Die korrekte Version lautet...
+- B) Ich habe Ihre letzte Übermittlung vollständig empfangen
+- C) Ich verstehe Ihre Nachricht und werde sie befolgen
+- D) Die Genehmigung für die vorgeschlagene Massnahme wird erteilt
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Approved" bedeutet, dass die Flugsicherung die Genehmigung für die vom Piloten vorgeschlagene oder angefragte Massnahme erteilt hat. Es wird speziell als Antwort auf Pilotenanfragen verwendet. Option A definiert „Correction". Option B definiert „Roger". Option C definiert „Wilco".
+
+### Q28: Welchen Ausdruck verwendet ein Pilot, um die Verständlichkeit seiner Sendung zu prüfen? ^t90q28
+- A) You read me five
+- B) Request readability
+- C) How do you read?
+- D) What is the communication like?
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „How do you read?" ist der ICAO-Standardausdruck für eine Verständlichkeitsprüfung. Die erwartete Antwort verwendet die Skala von 1 bis 5 (z. B. „I read you five"). Option A ist das Format eines Verständlichkeitsberichts, nicht der Anfrage. Option B ist keine Standardphraseologie. Option D ist Alltagssprache und keine vorgeschriebene ICAO-Terminologie.
+
+### Q29: Welchen Ausdruck verwendet ein Pilot, wenn er die Genehmigung zum Durchfliegen eines kontrollierten Luftraums beantragt? ^t90q29
+- A) Would like
+- B) Request
+- C) Apply
+- D) Want
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Request" ist die ICAO-Standardphraseologie, um bei der Flugsicherung eine Freigabe, einen Dienst oder eine Genehmigung anzufordern — zum Beispiel „Request transit controlled airspace". Die Optionen A, C und D sind umgangssprachliche oder nicht normierte Begriffe, die im Sprechfunk nicht verwendet werden sollten, da sie die Klarheit verringern und von Lotsen in mehrsprachigen Umgebungen möglicherweise nicht verstanden werden.
+
+### Q30: Welchen Ausdruck verwendet ein Pilot, wenn auf eine Übermittlung mit „Ja" geantwortet werden soll? ^t90q30
+- A) Roger
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirm
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Affirm" ist das ICAO-Standardwort für „Ja" im zivilen Flugfunkverkehr. Option A („Roger") bedeutet Empfangsbestätigung, nicht Zustimmung. Option B („Yes") ist Alltagssprache und keine Standardphraseologie. Option D („Affirmative") wird häufig im militärischen Funkverkehr verwendet, aber „Affirm" ist der korrekte zivile Luftfahrtstandard gemäss ICAO.
+
+### Q31: Welchen Ausdruck verwendet ein Pilot, wenn auf eine Übermittlung mit „Nein" geantwortet werden soll? ^t90q31
+- A) No
+- B) Finish
+- C) Negative
+- D) Not
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Negative" ist die ICAO-Standardphraseologie für „Nein" oder „das ist nicht korrekt", gewählt wegen ihrer eindeutigen Klarheit über Sprachen und Funkbedingungen hinweg. Option A („No") ist Alltagssprache und nicht normiert und kann falsch gehört werden. Option B („Finish") hat in diesem Zusammenhang keine Bedeutung. Option D („Not") ist unvollständig und keine vorgeschriebene ICAO-Terminologie.
+
+### Q32: Welchen Ausdruck sollte ein Pilot verwenden, um den Tower zu informieren, dass er startbereit ist? ^t90q32
+- A) Ready
+- B) Ready for departure
+- C) Request take-off
+- D) Ready for start-up
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Ready for departure" ist der korrekte Standardausdruck am Rollhaltepunkt. Wichtig ist, dass das Wort „take-off" ausschliesslich für die eigentliche Freigabe („Cleared for take-off") oder deren Aufhebung reserviert ist, um voreilige Handlungen bei einem falsch verstandenen Wort zu verhindern. Option A („Ready") ist zu vage. Option C verwendet „take-off" ausserhalb des Freigabekontexts. Option D zeigt die Bereitschaft zum Anlassen der Triebwerke an, nicht zum Start.
+
+### Q33: Welchen Ausdruck verwendet ein Pilot, um den Tower über ein Durchstartmanöver zu informieren? ^t90q33
+- A) No landing
+- B) Approach canceled
+- C) Going around
+- D) Pulling up
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Going around" ist der ICAO-Standardausdruck für den Abbruch eines Anfluges und die Einleitung eines Fehlanflugverfahrens. Er muss sofort nach der Entscheidung übermittelt werden. Die Optionen A, B und D sind alle nicht normierte Ausdrücke, die in der ICAO-Phraseologie nicht anerkannt sind und Verwirrung stiften könnten, insbesondere in Situationen mit hoher Arbeitsbelastung.
+
+### Q34: Wie lautet das Rufzeichensuffix der Flugplatzkontrollstelle? ^t90q34
+- A) Ground
+- B) Airfield
+- C) Tower
+- D) Control
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Flugplatzkontrollstelle verwendet das Rufzeichensuffix „Tower" (z. B. „Dusseldorf Tower"), zuständig für Luftfahrzeuge auf der Piste und in der Platzrunde. Option A („Ground") ist für die Rollverkehrskontrolle. Option B („Airfield") ist kein ICAO-Standard-Rufzeichensuffix. Option D („Control") wird für Bezirkskontrollstellen verwendet, nicht für die Flugplatzkontrolle.
+
+### Q35: Wie lautet das Rufzeichensuffix der Rollverkehrskontrollstelle? ^t90q35
+- A) Ground
+- B) Earth
+- C) Control
+- D) Tower
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Rollverkehrskontrolle verwendet das Suffix „Ground" (z. B. „Frankfurt Ground"), zuständig für Luftfahrzeuge und Fahrzeuge auf Rollwegen und Vorfeldern. Option B („Earth") ist kein Rufzeichensuffix der Luftfahrt. Option C („Control") bezeichnet die Bezirkskontrolle. Option D („Tower") bezeichnet die Flugplatz-Pisten- und Platzrundenkontrolle.
+
+### Q36: Wie lautet das Rufzeichensuffix des Fluginformationsdienstes? ^t90q36
+- A) Advice
+- B) Info
+- C) Information
+- D) Flight information
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** FIS-Stellen verwenden das Suffix „Information" (z. B. „Langen Information" oder „Scottish Information"), die Verkehrshinweise und Wetterinformationen für VFR-Piloten bereitstellen. Die Optionen A und B sind informelle Abkürzungen, die nicht als offizielle Rufzeichensuffixe verwendet werden. Option D („Flight information") ist zu lang — nur „Information" ist das vorgeschriebene Suffix.
+
+### Q37: Wie lautet die korrekte Kurzform des Rufzeichens D-EAZF? ^t90q37
+- A) DEF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) AZF
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ICAO-Abkürzungsregeln für fünfstellige Rufzeichen behalten das erste Zeichen (Nationalitätskennzeichen D) plus die letzten zwei Zeichen (ZF) bei: D-EAZF wird zu D-ZF, gesprochen „Delta Zulu Foxtrot". Option A lässt die mittleren Zeichen falsch weg. Option C nimmt die ersten drei Buchstaben. Option D lässt das Nationalitätskennzeichen ganz weg. Nur Option B folgt der korrekten Regel erstes-plus-letzte-zwei.
+
+### Q38: Unter welcher Bedingung darf ein Pilot das Rufzeichen seines Luftfahrzeugs abkürzen? ^t90q38
+- A) Nach dem Passieren des ersten Meldepunkts
+- B) Innerhalb eines kontrollierten Luftraums
+- C) Nachdem die Bodenstation die Abkürzung verwendet hat
+- D) Wenn wenig Verkehr in der Platzrunde herrscht
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Pilot darf das abgekürzte Rufzeichen erst verwenden, nachdem die Bodenstation es zuerst verwendet hat, was sicherstellt, dass die eindeutige Identifizierung hergestellt wurde. Die Optionen A, B und D beschreiben Situationen, die kein Abkürzungsrecht gewähren — die Initiative zur Abkürzung liegt immer bei der Bodenstation, unabhängig von Verkehr, Luftraumklasse oder Position.
+
+### Q39: Wie muss das Rufzeichen des Luftfahrzeugs beim ersten Kontakt verwendet werden? ^t90q39
+- A) Nur die ersten zwei Zeichen verwenden
+- B) Nur die letzten zwei Zeichen verwenden
+- C) Alle Zeichen verwenden
+- D) Nur die ersten drei Zeichen verwenden
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Beim ersten Kontakt mit jeder ATC-Stelle muss das vollständige Rufzeichen des Luftfahrzeugs verwendet werden (z. B. „Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot"), damit der Lotse das Luftfahrzeug eindeutig identifizieren kann. Die Optionen A, B und D verwenden alle Teilrufzeichen, was Verwechslungen mit anderen Luftfahrzeugen riskiert und den ICAO-Standardverfahren für den Erstkontakt widerspricht.
+
+### Q40: Wie muss der Funkverkehr zwischen D-EAZF und Dusseldorf Tower korrekt aufgenommen werden? ^t90q40
+- A) Tower from D-EAZF
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Standardformat für den ersten Funkkontakt lautet: zuerst die angerufene Station, dann das eigene Rufzeichen — „Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot". Option A verwendet das nicht normierte Format „from". Option B lässt die Identifikation des anrufenden Luftfahrzeugs vollständig weg. Die Bodenstation wird zuerst angesprochen, damit der Lotse weiss, dass der Ruf an ihn gerichtet ist, dann identifiziert sich das Luftfahrzeug.
+
+### Q41: Was bedeutet Verständlichkeit 1? ^t90q41
+- A) Die Übermittlung ist zeitweise verständlich
+- B) Die Übermittlung ist unverständlich
+- C) Die Übermittlung ist verständlich, aber mit Schwierigkeiten
+- D) Die Übermittlung ist einwandfrei verständlich
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Auf der ICAO-Verständlichkeitsskala (1 bis 5) bedeutet Verständlichkeit 1, dass die Übermittlung völlig unverständlich ist — keine nützlichen Informationen können entnommen werden. Option A beschreibt Verständlichkeit 2 (zeitweise verständlich). Option C beschreibt Verständlichkeit 3 (verständlich mit Schwierigkeiten). Option D beschreibt Verständlichkeit 5 (einwandfrei verständlich).
+
+### Q42: Was bedeutet Verständlichkeit 2? ^t90q42
+- A) Die Übermittlung ist verständlich, aber mit Schwierigkeiten
+- B) Die Übermittlung ist zeitweise verständlich
+- C) Die Übermittlung ist einwandfrei verständlich
+- D) Die Übermittlung ist unverständlich
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Verständlichkeit 2 bedeutet, dass die Übermittlung nur zeitweise verständlich ist — Teile kommen durch, aber der Hörer kann die vollständige Nachricht nicht zuverlässig verstehen. Option A beschreibt Verständlichkeit 3. Option C beschreibt Verständlichkeit 5. Option D beschreibt Verständlichkeit 1. Ein Pilot, der einen Verständlichkeitsbericht 2 erhält, sollte versuchen, die Sendequalität zu verbessern.
+
+### Q43: Was bedeutet Verständlichkeit 3? ^t90q43
+- A) Die Übermittlung ist unverständlich
+- B) Die Übermittlung ist verständlich, aber mit Schwierigkeiten
+- C) Die Übermittlung ist einwandfrei verständlich
+- D) Die Übermittlung ist zeitweise verständlich
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Verständlichkeit 3 bedeutet, dass die Übermittlung verständlich ist, aber Anstrengung und Konzentration vom Hörer erfordert, wobei einige Wörter unklar sind. Option A beschreibt Verständlichkeit 1. Option C beschreibt Verständlichkeit 5. Option D beschreibt Verständlichkeit 2. Verständlichkeit 3 ist oft für kurze Betriebsmeldungen ausreichend, aber für komplexe Freigaben unzureichend.
+
+### Q44: Was bedeutet Verständlichkeit 5? ^t90q44
+- A) Die Übermittlung ist zeitweise verständlich
+- B) Die Übermittlung ist unverständlich
+- C) Die Übermittlung ist einwandfrei verständlich
+- D) Die Übermittlung ist verständlich, aber mit Schwierigkeiten
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Verständlichkeit 5 ist das höchste Qualitätsniveau auf der ICAO-Skala — die Übermittlung ist einwandfrei klar und verständlich ohne jegliche Schwierigkeiten. Option A beschreibt Verständlichkeit 2. Option B beschreibt Verständlichkeit 1. Option D beschreibt Verständlichkeit 3. „I read you five" ist die Standardantwort, die ideale Kommunikationsbedingungen anzeigt.
+
+### Q45: Welche Information einer Bodenstation erfordert keinen Rücklesen? ^t90q45
+- A) Flughöhe
+- B) Wind
+- C) SSR-Code
+- D) Piste in Betrieb
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Windinformationen sind beratend und werden mit „Roger" quittiert — kein Rücklesen ist erforderlich. Elemente, die ein obligatorisches Rücklesen erfordern, umfassen: ATC-Freigaben, Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, SSR-Codes, Höhenanweisungen sowie Kurs- und Geschwindigkeitsanweisungen. Die Optionen A, C und D sind alle sicherheitskritische Elemente, die zurückgelesen werden müssen, um den korrekten Empfang zu bestätigen.
+
+### Q46: Welche Information einer Bodenstation erfordert keinen Rücklesen? ^t90q46
+- A) Steuerkurs
+- B) Verkehrsinformation
+- C) Rollanweisungen
+- D) Höhenmessereinstellung
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Verkehrsinformationen (z. B. „Verkehr auf zwei Uhr, tausend Fuss darüber") werden mit „Roger" oder „Traffic in sight" quittiert und erfordern kein formelles Rücklesen. Die Optionen A (Steuerkurs), C (Rollanweisungen) und D (Höhenmessereinstellung) sind alle sicherheitskritische Elemente, die gemäss ICAO-Verfahren einem obligatorischen Rücklesen unterliegen.
+
+### Q47: Wie ist die Anweisung „DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off" korrekt zurückzulesen? ^t90q47
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Rücklesen muss alle sicherheitskritischen Elemente enthalten: die Abfluganweisung (Steigflug geradeaus bis 2500 ft, dann Rechtskurve Steuerkurs 220), die Pistenbezeichnung (Runway 12) und die Startfreigabe. Windinformationen erfordern kein Rücklesen und werden in Option C korrekt ausgelassen. Option A liest fälschlicherweise den Wind zurück. Option B verwendet „wilco" unangemessen mitten im Rücklesen. Option D lässt die Piste und die Startfreigabe weg, die obligatorische Rückleseelemente sind.
+
+### Q48: Wie ist die Anweisung „Next report PAH" korrekt zu quittieren? ^t90q48
+- A) Roger
+- B) Positive
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Wilco" (will comply — werde befolgen) ist die korrekte Antwort auf eine Anweisung, die eine zukünftige Handlung erfordert — der Pilot bestätigt den Empfang und bekräftigt, dass er am Wegpunkt PAH melden wird. Option A („Roger") bestätigt nur den Empfang, ohne Befolgung der Anweisung zu implizieren. Option B („Positive") ist in diesem Zusammenhang keine ICAO-Standardphraseologie. Option D („Report PAH") ist eine unvollständige Quittung.
+
+### Q49: Wie ist die Anweisung „Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325" korrekt zu quittieren? ^t90q49
+- A) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Sowohl der Transpondercode als auch der Frequenzwechsel sind sicherheitskritische Elemente, die ein Rücklesen erfordern. Die korrekte Quittung liest den Squawk-Code (4321) und die neue Frequenz (131.325) zurück, um den korrekten Empfang zu bestätigen. Die Optionen A und D verwenden „wilco", was die spezifischen Zahlenwerte nicht bestätigt. Option B („Roger") ist für sicherheitskritische Elemente völlig unzureichend.
+
+### Q50: Wie ist „You are now entering airspace Delta" korrekt zu quittieren? ^t90q50
+- A) Entering
+- B) Roger
+- C) Airspace Delta
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „You are now entering airspace Delta" ist eine Informationsmitteilung der Flugsicherung, keine Anweisung, die Befolgung erfordert. „Roger" (Nachricht empfangen) ist die korrekte und ausreichende Antwort. Option A („Entering") ist eine unvollständige Quittung. Option C wiederholt den Inhalt teilweise ohne korrektes Quittungsformat. Option D („Wilco") ist unangemessen, da es keine Anweisung gibt, der Folge zu leisten wäre.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50_fr.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6e1eec5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_1_50_fr.md
@@ -0,0 +1,499 @@
+### Q1: Dans quelles situations un pilote doit-il utiliser des transmissions en aveugle ? ^t90q1
+- A) Lorsqu'une transmission contenant des données de navigation ou techniques importantes doit être envoyée simultanément à plusieurs stations
+- B) Lorsque la situation du trafic sur un aéroport permet l'envoi d'informations ne nécessitant pas d'accusé de réception par la station au sol
+- C) Lorsqu'un pilote est entré involontairement dans un nuage ou du brouillard et souhaite demander une aide à la navigation à une station au sol
+- D) Lorsque la communication radio bilatérale ne peut être établie avec la station aéronautique compétente, mais qu'il y a lieu de croire que les transmissions sont reçues par cette station au sol
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une transmission en aveugle est utilisée lorsque le pilote ne peut pas recevoir de réponses (par exemple en raison d'un récepteur défaillant), mais a des raisons de croire que la station au sol peut encore capter ses transmissions, permettant à l'ATC de suivre la position et les intentions de l'aéronef. L'option A décrit une diffusion (broadcast), non une transmission en aveugle. L'option B ne correspond à aucun scénario reconnu pour les transmissions en aveugle. L'option C décrit une situation nécessitant une communication bilatérale ou une déclaration d'urgence, pas une transmission en aveugle.
+
+### Q2: Quelle est l'abréviation normalisée pour le terme « abeam » (par le travers) ? ^t90q2
+- A) ABA
+- B) ABE
+- C) ABM
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** ABM est l'abréviation normalisée par l'OACI pour « abeam », désignant une position à angle droit par rapport à la trajectoire de l'aéronef — directement sur le côté. Cette abréviation est utilisée dans les plans de vol, les communications ATC et les cartes aéronautiques. Les options A, B et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues pour ce terme.
+
+### Q3: Quelle abréviation désigne les « règles de vol à vue » ? ^t90q3
+- A) VMC
+- B) VFR
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** VFR signifie Visual Flight Rules (règles de vol à vue), le cadre réglementaire selon lequel les pilotes naviguent par référence visuelle au sol et aux autres aéronefs. L'option A (VMC) signifie Visual Meteorological Conditions (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue), qui décrit les conditions météorologiques requises pour le vol VFR — lié mais distinct. Les options C et D ne sont pas des abréviations aéronautiques normalisées.
+
+### Q4: Quelle est l'abréviation OACI pour « obstacle » ? ^t90q4
+- A) OBS
+- B) OST
+- C) OBST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** OBST est l'abréviation normalisée par l'OACI pour « obstacle », utilisée dans les NOTAM, les cartes aéronautiques et les communications ATC. L'option A (OBS) peut signifier « observer » ou « observation » dans la documentation OACI, mais ne désigne pas « obstacle ». Les options B et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues.
+
+### Q5: Que signifie l'abréviation « FIS » ? ^t90q5
+- A) Service d'information clignotant (Flashing information service)
+- B) Système d'information de vol (Flight information system)
+- C) Système d'information clignotant (Flashing information system)
+- D) Service d'information de vol (Flight information service)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** FIS signifie Flight Information Service (service d'information de vol) — un service fournissant aux pilotes des informations utiles à la conduite sûre et efficace du vol, notamment les mises à jour météorologiques, les NOTAM et les avis de trafic. Les options A et C contiennent « clignotant », sans rapport avec ce service aéronautique. L'option B utilise incorrectement « système » au lieu de « service ».
+
+### Q6: Que signifie l'abréviation « FIR » ? ^t90q6
+- A) Radar d'information de flux (Flow information radar)
+- B) Récepteur d'intégrité de vol (Flight integrity receiver)
+- C) Région d'information de vol (Flight information region)
+- D) Débit d'intégrité requis (Flow integrity required)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une région d'information de vol (FIR) est un volume d'espace aérien délimité à l'intérieur duquel le service d'information de vol et le service d'alerte sont assurés conformément aux normes de l'OACI. Chaque pays ou groupe de pays dispose d'une ou plusieurs FIR couvrant l'ensemble de l'espace aérien verticalement et horizontalement. Les options A, B et D sont des termes fictifs sans signification aéronautique.
+
+### Q7: Que signifie l'abréviation « H24 » ? ^t90q7
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+- B) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+- C) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+- D) Service 24 h sur 24
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** H24 indique un service continu 24 heures sur 24 — l'installation est en permanence dotée de personnel et opérationnelle. Cette désignation apparaît dans les entrées AIP et les NOTAM pour les installations telles que les grands centres ATC. L'option A décrit HN (heures de nuit). L'option B décrit HJ (heures de jour). L'option C décrit HX (horaires non spécifiés).
+
+### Q8: Que signifie l'abréviation « HX » ? ^t90q8
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+- B) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+- C) Service 24 h sur 24
+- D) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** HX signifie que l'installation fonctionne sans horaires prédéterminés et peut être disponible sur demande ou de manière intermittente. Les pilotes doivent consulter les NOTAM ou contacter l'installation pour vérifier sa disponibilité. L'option A décrit HN (du coucher au lever du soleil). L'option C décrit H24 (service continu). L'option D décrit HJ (du lever au coucher du soleil).
+
+### Q9: Sur quelle valeur l'altimètre doit-il être calé pour afficher zéro au sol ? ^t90q9
+- A) QNH
+- B) QNE
+- C) QFE
+- D) QTE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome. Lorsqu'il est affiché sur l'échelle de l'altimètre, l'instrument indique zéro au sol sur cet aérodrome, affichant la hauteur au-dessus du terrain dans le circuit. L'option A (QNH) donne l'altitude par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer. L'option B (QNE) correspond au calage standard de 1013,25 hPa. L'option D (QTE) est un relèvement vrai depuis une station, pas un calage altimétrique.
+
+### Q10: Quelle altitude l'altimètre affiche-t-il lorsqu'il est calé sur une valeur QNH donnée ? ^t90q10
+- A) Altitude par rapport à l'élévation la plus haute dans un rayon de 10 km
+- B) Altitude par rapport à la pression atmosphérique de l'aérodrome de référence
+- C) Altitude par rapport au datum 1013,25 hPa
+- D) Altitude par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique qui, une fois affiché, fait indiquer à l'altimètre l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer (AMSL), la référence standard pour la navigation et les limites d'espace aérien sous l'altitude de transition. L'option A n'est pas une référence altimétrique normalisée. L'option B décrit le comportement du QFE. L'option C décrit le comportement du QNE (pression standard).
+
+### Q11: Quelle altitude l'altimètre affiche-t-il lorsqu'il est calé sur une valeur QFE donnée ? ^t90q11
+- A) Altitude par rapport à l'élévation la plus haute dans un rayon de 10 km
+- B) Altitude par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer
+- C) Altitude par rapport à la pression atmosphérique de l'aérodrome de référence
+- D) Altitude par rapport au datum 1013,25 hPa
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec le QFE calé, l'altimètre indique la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome de référence — la différence entre l'altitude-pression réelle et le niveau de pression de l'aérodrome, affichant zéro au sol et la hauteur directe au-dessus du terrain dans le circuit. L'option A n'est pas une référence normalisée. L'option B décrit le comportement du QNH. L'option D décrit le comportement du QNE.
+
+### Q12: Quel est le terme approprié pour un message utilisé dans le contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t90q12
+- A) Message de régularité des vols
+- B) Message relatif à la radiogoniométrie
+- C) Message météorologique
+- D) Message de sécurité des vols
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages ATC — y compris les autorisations, instructions, comptes rendus de position et informations de trafic — sont classés comme messages de sécurité des vols, la troisième priorité la plus élevée après la détresse et l'urgence dans la hiérarchie des messages de l'OACI. L'option A (messages de régularité) concerne l'exploitation et la maintenance des installations. L'option B (messages de radiogoniométrie) se rapporte à l'aide à la radionavigation. L'option C (messages météorologiques) concerne les informations météorologiques.
+
+### Q13: Comment les messages de détresse sont-ils définis ? ^t90q13
+- A) Messages envoyés par un pilote ou un exploitant d'aéronef présentant une importance immédiate pour les aéronefs en vol.
+- B) Messages concernant un aéronef et ses passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou de tout autre véhicule ou personne en vue.
+- D) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations importantes pour la sécurité et la régularité des opérations aériennes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message de détresse (MAYDAY) est transmis lorsqu'un aéronef et ses occupants sont confrontés à un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate — la catégorie de priorité la plus élevée dans les communications aéronautiques, signalée par le code transpondeur 7700. L'option A est trop vague et pourrait s'appliquer à plusieurs types de messages. L'option C décrit les messages d'urgence (PAN PAN). L'option D décrit les messages de régularité.
+
+### Q14: Comment les messages d'urgence sont-ils définis ? ^t90q14
+- A) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations essentielles pour la sécurité ou la régularité de l'exploitation aérienne.
+- B) Messages concernant un aéronef et ses passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages envoyés par un pilote ou un exploitant d'aéronef présentant une importance immédiate pour les aéronefs en vol.
+- D) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations essentielles pour la sécurité ou la régularité de l'exploitation aérienne.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages d'urgence (PAN PAN) concernent une situation sérieuse affectant la sécurité de l'aéronef ou des personnes, mais ne constituant pas encore un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate — par exemple des problèmes moteur maîtrisables ou des situations médicales à bord. L'option B définit les messages de détresse (MAYDAY). L'option C est une description générale pouvant s'appliquer à plusieurs types de messages. L'option D est identique à l'option A.
+
+### Q15: Comment les messages de régularité sont-ils définis ? ^t90q15
+- A) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou de tout autre véhicule ou personne en vue.
+- B) Messages concernant un aéronef et ses passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations essentielles pour la sécurité ou la régularité de l'exploitation aérienne.
+- D) Messages envoyés par un exploitant d'aéronef ou un aéronef présentant un intérêt immédiat pour un aéronef en vol.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages de régularité se rapportent à l'exploitation et à la maintenance des installations nécessaires aux opérations aériennes — essentiellement des communications administratives et logistiques ayant la priorité la plus basse dans la hiérarchie OACI. L'option A décrit des messages liés à l'urgence. L'option B définit les messages de détresse. L'option D décrit les messages de sécurité des vols.
+
+### Q16: Parmi les messages suivants, lequel a la priorité la plus élevée ? ^t90q16
+- A) QNH 1013
+- B) Vent 300 degrés, 5 nœuds
+- C) Tournez à gauche
+- D) Demande QDM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une demande de QDM (cap magnétique à suivre vers une station) implique que le pilote peut être perdu ou incapable de naviguer de façon autonome, ce qui en fait une question potentielle d'urgence ou de sécurité des vols avec une priorité supérieure aux messages opérationnels de routine. Les options A (QNH) et B (vent) sont des informations consultatives de routine. L'option C (tournez à gauche) est une instruction ATC standard mais de priorité inférieure à une demande d'assistance à la navigation.
+
+### Q17: Comment l'indicatif d'appel HB-YKM doit-il être correctement transmis ? ^t90q17
+- A) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+- B) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI : H = Hotel, B = Bravo, Y = Yankee, K = Kilo, M = Mike. L'option A utilise « Home » au lieu de « Hotel » et « Mikro » au lieu de « Mike ». L'option B utilise « Yuliett » (qui correspond à J = Juliett, pas à Y) et « Mikro ». L'option D utilise « Home » et « Yuliett ». Seule l'option C utilise tous les mots phonétiques OACI corrects.
+
+### Q18: Comment l'indicatif d'appel OE-JVK doit-il être correctement transmis ? ^t90q18
+- A) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- D) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI : O = Oscar, E = Echo, J = Juliett, V = Victor, K = Kilo. L'option B utilise « Omega » (non OACI) et « Kilogramm ». L'option C utilise « Omega » et « Jankee » (aucun n'est normalisé OACI). L'option D utilise « Jankee » et « Kilogramm ». Seule l'option A utilise tous les mots phonétiques OACI corrects.
+
+### Q19: Comment une altitude de 4500 ft est-elle correctement transmise ? ^t90q19
+- A) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- B) Four five tousand.
+- C) Four tousand five hundred.
+- D) Four five zero zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie OACI pour les altitudes utilise « thousand » et « hundred » selon les cas : 4500 ft se prononce « four thousand five hundred ». L'option A ajoute des zéros superflus après « five ». L'option B inverse la structure de façon absurde. L'option D utilise l'énonciation chiffre par chiffre, réservée aux codes transpondeur et aux valeurs QNH, pas aux altitudes.
+
+### Q20: Comment un cap de 285 degrés est-il correctement transmis ? ^t90q20
+- A) Two eight five.
+- B) Two hundred eight five.
+- C) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- D) Two eight five hundred.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les caps et relèvements sont toujours transmis sous forme de trois chiffres individuels énoncés séparément : « two eight five ». Le mot « hundred » n'est jamais utilisé pour les caps car la transmission chiffre par chiffre élimine toute ambiguïté. Les options B et C utilisent « hundred » ou des formes numériques naturelles, ce qui n'est pas correct pour la transmission des caps. L'option D ajoute « hundred » après les chiffres, ce qui est dépourvu de sens.
+
+### Q21: Comment une fréquence de 119.500 MHz est-elle correctement transmise ? ^t90q21
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- B) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner decimal five zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les fréquences sont transmises chiffre par chiffre avec « decimal » pour le point décimal, et les zéros de fin après les chiffres significatifs sont supprimés. 119.500 MHz devient « one one niner decimal five ». Notez que « niner » est utilisé pour le 9 afin d'éviter toute confusion avec « nein » (non). L'option A conserve des zéros de fin inutiles. L'option B insère « tousand », non utilisé pour les fréquences. L'option D conserve un zéro de fin superflu.
+
+### Q22: Comment l'information directionnelle « 12 o'clock » est-elle correctement transmise ? ^t90q22
+- A) One two o'clock
+- B) One two.
+- C) Twelve o'clock.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les positions horaires pour les avis de trafic sont énoncées en nombre entier suivi de « o'clock » : « twelve o'clock » signifie droit devant. L'option A décompose « twelve » en chiffres, ce qui pourrait être confondu avec d'autres données numériques. L'option B omet « o'clock », rendant la référence ambiguë. L'option D ajoute « hundred », dépourvu de sens dans les références de position horaire.
+
+### Q23: Dans quel format les heures sont-elles transmises en aviation ? ^t90q23
+- A) Heure légale.
+- B) Heure locale.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Heure du fuseau horaire.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Toutes les communications aéronautiques utilisent le temps universel coordonné (UTC), anciennement connu sous le nom de GMT ou heure Zulu, garantissant la cohérence à travers les fuseaux horaires du monde entier. Les pilotes doivent convertir l'heure locale en UTC pour tous les plans de vol, communications ATC et rapports météorologiques. Les options A, B et D font toutes référence à des systèmes horaires locaux ou régionaux qui causeraient de la confusion dans les opérations internationales.
+
+### Q24: En cas de doute sur une ambiguïté, comment une heure de 1620 doit-elle être transmise ? ^t90q24
+- A) Two zero.
+- B) Sixteen twenty
+- C) One tousand six hundred two zero
+- D) One six two zero.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas de risque d'ambiguïté, l'OACI exige que l'heure UTC complète à quatre chiffres soit énoncée chiffre par chiffre : « one six two zero ». Cela élimine toute confusion quant à savoir si seules les minutes ou l'heure complète sont données. L'option A ne donne que les minutes, ce qui peut être ambigu. L'option B utilise un groupement numérique naturel, non normalisé. L'option C utilise « tousand » et « hundred », non utilisés pour la transmission de l'heure.
+
+### Q25: Que signifie l'expression « Roger » ? ^t90q25
+- A) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- B) J'ai bien reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- D) J'ai compris votre message et je m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Roger » est un simple accusé de réception — cela signifie « j'ai bien reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission » et rien de plus. Cela n'implique ni accord, ni conformité, ni autorisation. L'option A définit « Approved ». L'option C définit « Correction ». L'option D définit « Wilco ». Les pilotes doivent utiliser l'expression appropriée pour éviter des malentendus dangereux.
+
+### Q26: Que signifie l'expression « Correction » ? ^t90q26
+- A) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- B) J'ai bien reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- D) J'ai compris votre message et je m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Correction » signale que le locuteur a commis une erreur dans la transmission en cours et que l'information correcte suit immédiatement. Cela empêche le destinataire d'agir sur des données erronées. L'option B définit « Roger ». L'option C définit « Approved ». L'option D définit « Wilco ».
+
+### Q27: Que signifie l'expression « Approved » ? ^t90q27
+- A) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- B) J'ai bien reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) J'ai compris votre message et je m'y conformerai
+- D) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Approved » signifie que l'ATC a accordé l'autorisation pour l'action que le pilote a proposée ou demandée. Il est utilisé spécifiquement en réponse aux demandes des pilotes. L'option A définit « Correction ». L'option B définit « Roger ». L'option C définit « Wilco ».
+
+### Q28: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour vérifier la lisibilité de sa transmission ? ^t90q28
+- A) You read me five
+- B) Request readability
+- C) How do you read?
+- D) What is the communication like?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « How do you read? » est l'expression normalisée OACI pour demander un contrôle de lisibilité. La réponse attendue utilise l'échelle de 1 à 5 (par exemple « I read you five »). L'option A est le format d'un compte rendu de lisibilité, pas de la demande. L'option B n'est pas une phraséologie normalisée. L'option D est du langage courant et non de la terminologie OACI prescrite.
+
+### Q29: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour demander l'autorisation de traverser un espace aérien contrôlé ? ^t90q29
+- A) Would like
+- B) Request
+- C) Apply
+- D) Want
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Request » est la phraséologie OACI normalisée pour demander à l'ATC une autorisation, un service ou une permission — par exemple « Request transit controlled airspace ». Les options A, C et D sont des termes familiers ou non normalisés qui ne doivent pas être utilisés en radiotéléphonie car ils réduisent la clarté et peuvent ne pas être compris par les contrôleurs en environnement multilingue.
+
+### Q30: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'il faut répondre « oui » à une transmission ? ^t90q30
+- A) Roger
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirm
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Affirm » est le mot normalisé OACI pour « oui » en radiotéléphonie de l'aviation civile. L'option A (« Roger ») signifie accusé de réception, pas accord. L'option B (« Yes ») est du langage courant et non de la phraséologie normalisée. L'option D (« Affirmative ») est couramment utilisée dans les communications militaires mais « Affirm » est le standard correct de l'aviation civile selon l'OACI.
+
+### Q31: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'il faut répondre « non » à une transmission ? ^t90q31
+- A) No
+- B) Finish
+- C) Negative
+- D) Not
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Negative » est la phraséologie OACI normalisée pour « non » ou « ce n'est pas correct », choisie pour sa clarté non ambiguë à travers les langues et les conditions radio. L'option A (« No ») est du langage courant et non normalisé, et peut être mal entendu. L'option B (« Finish ») n'a pas de signification dans ce contexte. L'option D (« Not ») est incomplet et n'est pas de la terminologie OACI prescrite.
+
+### Q32: Quelle expression un pilote doit-il utiliser pour informer la tour qu'il est prêt pour le décollage ? ^t90q32
+- A) Ready
+- B) Ready for departure
+- C) Request take-off
+- D) Ready for start-up
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Ready for departure » est l'expression correcte normalisée au point d'attente. Il est important de noter que le mot « take-off » est réservé exclusivement à l'autorisation effective (« Cleared for take-off ») ou à son annulation, afin d'éviter toute action prématurée sur un mot mal entendu. L'option A (« Ready ») est trop vague. L'option C utilise « take-off » hors du contexte de l'autorisation. L'option D indique la disponibilité pour la mise en route des moteurs, pas pour le départ sur piste.
+
+### Q33: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour informer la tour d'une remise de gaz ? ^t90q33
+- A) No landing
+- B) Approach canceled
+- C) Going around
+- D) Pulling up
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Going around » est l'expression OACI normalisée pour interrompre une approche et initier une procédure d'approche interrompue. Elle doit être transmise immédiatement dès la prise de décision. Les options A, B et D sont toutes des expressions non normalisées qui ne sont pas reconnues dans la phraséologie OACI et pourraient causer de la confusion, en particulier dans des situations de charge de travail élevée.
+
+### Q34: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel de l'organisme de contrôle d'aérodrome ? ^t90q34
+- A) Ground
+- B) Airfield
+- C) Tower
+- D) Control
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'organisme de contrôle d'aérodrome utilise le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel « Tower » (par exemple « Dusseldorf Tower »), responsable des aéronefs sur la piste et dans le circuit. L'option A (« Ground ») désigne le contrôle des mouvements au sol. L'option B (« Airfield ») n'est pas un suffixe d'indicatif d'appel OACI normalisé. L'option D (« Control ») est utilisé pour les centres de contrôle régional, pas pour le contrôle d'aérodrome.
+
+### Q35: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel de l'organisme de contrôle des mouvements au sol ? ^t90q35
+- A) Ground
+- B) Earth
+- C) Control
+- D) Tower
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le contrôle des mouvements au sol utilise le suffixe « Ground » (par exemple « Frankfurt Ground »), gérant les aéronefs et véhicules sur les voies de circulation et les aires de stationnement. L'option B (« Earth ») n'est pas un suffixe d'indicatif d'appel aéronautique. L'option C (« Control ») désigne le contrôle régional. L'option D (« Tower ») désigne le contrôle de piste et de circuit d'aérodrome.
+
+### Q36: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel du service d'information de vol ? ^t90q36
+- A) Advice
+- B) Info
+- C) Information
+- D) Flight information
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les organismes FIS utilisent le suffixe « Information » (par exemple « Langen Information » ou « Scottish Information »), fournissant des avis de trafic et des informations météorologiques aux pilotes VFR. Les options A et B sont des abréviations informelles non utilisées comme suffixes d'indicatif d'appel officiels. L'option D (« Flight information ») est trop long — seul « Information » est le suffixe prescrit.
+
+### Q37: Quelle est la forme abrégée correcte de l'indicatif d'appel D-EAZF ? ^t90q37
+- A) DEF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) AZF
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les règles d'abréviation OACI pour les indicatifs d'appel à cinq caractères conservent le premier caractère (préfixe de nationalité D) plus les deux derniers caractères (ZF) : D-EAZF devient D-ZF, prononcé « Delta Zulu Foxtrot ». L'option A omet incorrectement les caractères du milieu. L'option C prend les trois premières lettres. L'option D omet entièrement le préfixe de nationalité. Seule l'option B respecte la règle correcte premier-plus-deux-derniers.
+
+### Q38: À quelle condition un pilote peut-il abréger l'indicatif d'appel de son aéronef ? ^t90q38
+- A) Après avoir passé le premier point de compte rendu
+- B) Dans un espace aérien contrôlé
+- C) Après que la station au sol a utilisé l'abréviation
+- D) S'il y a peu de trafic dans le circuit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un pilote ne peut utiliser l'indicatif d'appel abrégé qu'après que la station au sol l'a utilisé en premier, garantissant que l'identification positive a été établie. Les options A, B et D décrivent des situations qui n'accordent pas le droit d'abréviation — l'initiative d'abréger appartient toujours à la station au sol, indépendamment du trafic, de la classe d'espace aérien ou de la position.
+
+### Q39: Comment l'indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef doit-il être utilisé lors du premier contact ? ^t90q39
+- A) En utilisant les deux premiers caractères uniquement
+- B) En utilisant les deux derniers caractères uniquement
+- C) En utilisant tous les caractères
+- D) En utilisant les trois premiers caractères uniquement
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du premier contact avec tout organisme ATC, l'indicatif d'appel complet de l'aéronef doit être utilisé (par exemple « Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot ») afin que le contrôleur puisse identifier positivement l'aéronef. Les options A, B et D utilisent toutes des indicatifs partiels, ce qui risque de créer une confusion avec d'autres aéronefs et est contraire aux procédures OACI normalisées pour le contact initial.
+
+### Q40: Comment la communication radio doit-elle être correctement établie entre D-EAZF et Dusseldorf Tower ? ^t90q40
+- A) Tower from D-EAZF
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le format normalisé pour le contact radio initial est : station appelée en premier, puis son propre indicatif d'appel — « Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot ». L'option A utilise le format non normalisé « from ». L'option B omet entièrement l'identification de l'aéronef appelant. La station au sol est adressée en premier pour que le contrôleur sache que l'appel lui est destiné, puis l'aéronef s'identifie.
+
+### Q41: Que signifie la lisibilité 1 ? ^t90q41
+- A) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- B) La transmission est illisible
+- C) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- D) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur l'échelle de lisibilité OACI (1 à 5), la lisibilité 1 signifie que la transmission est totalement illisible — aucune information utile ne peut en être extraite. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2 (lisible par intermittence). L'option C décrit la lisibilité 3 (lisible avec difficulté). L'option D décrit la lisibilité 5 (parfaitement lisible).
+
+### Q42: Que signifie la lisibilité 2 ? ^t90q42
+- A) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- B) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est illisible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 2 signifie que la transmission n'est que partiellement intelligible de manière intermittente — des parties sont perceptibles mais l'auditeur ne peut pas comprendre de manière fiable l'intégralité du message. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 3. L'option C décrit la lisibilité 5. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 1. Un pilote recevant un rapport de lisibilité 2 devrait essayer d'améliorer la qualité de sa transmission.
+
+### Q43: Que signifie la lisibilité 3 ? ^t90q43
+- A) La transmission est illisible
+- B) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 3 signifie que la transmission est intelligible mais nécessite un effort et une concentration de la part de l'auditeur, avec certains mots peu clairs. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 1. L'option C décrit la lisibilité 5. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 2. La lisibilité 3 est souvent suffisante pour de courts messages opérationnels mais est inadéquate pour des autorisations complexes.
+
+### Q44: Que signifie la lisibilité 5 ? ^t90q44
+- A) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- B) La transmission est illisible
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 5 est le niveau de qualité le plus élevé de l'échelle OACI — la transmission est parfaitement claire et intelligible sans aucune difficulté. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2. L'option B décrit la lisibilité 1. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 3. « I read you five » est la réponse standard indiquant des conditions de communication idéales.
+
+### Q45: Quelle information provenant d'une station au sol ne nécessite pas de collationnement ? ^t90q45
+- A) Altitude
+- B) Vent
+- C) Code SSR
+- D) Piste en service
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'information sur le vent est consultative et est accusée de réception par « Roger » — aucun collationnement n'est requis. Les éléments nécessitant un collationnement obligatoire comprennent : les autorisations ATC, la piste en service, les calages altimétriques, les codes SSR, les instructions de niveau, et les instructions de cap et de vitesse. Les options A, C et D sont toutes des éléments critiques pour la sécurité qui doivent être collationnés pour confirmer la bonne réception.
+
+### Q46: Quelle information provenant d'une station au sol ne nécessite pas de collationnement ? ^t90q46
+- A) Cap
+- B) Information de trafic
+- C) Instructions de circulation au sol
+- D) Calage altimétrique
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'information de trafic (par exemple « trafic à deux heures, mille pieds au-dessus ») est accusée de réception par « Roger » ou « Traffic in sight » et ne nécessite pas de collationnement formel. Les options A (cap), C (instructions de circulation au sol) et D (calage altimétrique) sont toutes des éléments critiques pour la sécurité soumis au collationnement obligatoire selon les procédures OACI.
+
+### Q47: Comment l'instruction « DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off » doit-elle être correctement collationnée ? ^t90q47
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le collationnement doit inclure tous les éléments critiques pour la sécurité : les instructions de départ (montée droit devant jusqu'à 2500 ft, puis virage à droite cap 220), le numéro de piste (runway 12) et l'autorisation de décollage. L'information sur le vent ne nécessite pas de collationnement et est correctement omise dans l'option C. L'option A collationne incorrectement le vent. L'option B utilise « wilco » de façon inappropriée au milieu du collationnement. L'option D omet la piste et l'autorisation de décollage, qui sont des éléments de collationnement obligatoire.
+
+### Q48: Comment l'instruction « Next report PAH » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q48
+- A) Roger
+- B) Positive
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Wilco » (will comply — je me conformerai) est la réponse correcte à une instruction nécessitant une action future — le pilote accuse réception et confirme qu'il fera le compte rendu au point PAH. L'option A (« Roger ») ne confirme que la réception sans impliquer la conformité à l'instruction. L'option B (« Positive ») n'est pas de la phraséologie OACI normalisée dans ce contexte. L'option D (« Report PAH ») est un accusé de réception incomplet.
+
+### Q49: Comment l'instruction « Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325 » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q49
+- A) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur et la fréquence de changement sont tous deux des éléments critiques pour la sécurité nécessitant un collationnement. L'acquittement correct collationne le code squawk (4321) et la nouvelle fréquence (131.325) pour confirmer la bonne réception. Les options A et D utilisent « wilco » qui ne confirme pas les valeurs numériques spécifiques. L'option B (« Roger ») est entièrement insuffisante pour des éléments critiques pour la sécurité.
+
+### Q50: Comment « You are now entering airspace Delta » doit-il être correctement acquitté ? ^t90q50
+- A) Entering
+- B) Roger
+- C) Airspace Delta
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « You are now entering airspace Delta » est une information de l'ATC, pas une instruction nécessitant une conformité. « Roger » (message reçu) est la réponse correcte et suffisante. L'option A (« Entering ») est un accusé de réception incomplet. L'option C répète partiellement le contenu sans format d'accusé de réception approprié. L'option D (« Wilco ») est inappropriée car il n'y a aucune instruction à laquelle se conformer.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_51_100.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_51_100.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,499 @@
+### Q51: A pilot transmits the following to ATC: "We are landing at 10:45. Please order us a taxi." What type of message is this? ^t90q51
+- A) It is an urgency message.
+- B) It is a message relating to the regularity of flights.
+- C) It is a service message.
+- D) It is an inadmissible message.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC frequencies are reserved exclusively for aeronautical communications related to flight safety, urgency, and operational matters. Ordering a ground taxi is a personal service request that has no place on an aviation frequency — it is therefore an inadmissible message. Options A, B, and C incorrectly categorise this personal request within legitimate message types.
+
+### Q52: You are flying VFR and have received ATC clearance to enter Class C airspace to land. Shortly after entering, your radio fails. What do you do if no other special provisions apply? ^t90q52
+- A) You set the transponder to code 7600, continue in accordance with the last clearance and follow light signals from the control tower.
+- B) By virtue of the clearance issued, you have the right to fly in Class C airspace and land there. You only need to set the transponder to code 7700.
+- C) You must head to the alternate aerodrome by the most direct route and set the transponder to code 7000.
+- D) Regardless of the clearance obtained, you are no longer authorized to fly in this airspace. You set the transponder to code 7600, leave the airspace as quickly as possible and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For VFR flights, radio communication is mandatory in Class C airspace. When radio fails, the previous clearance is insufficient — the pilot must squawk 7600 (radio failure), leave the controlled airspace by the shortest route, and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome. Option A is wrong because VFR flights cannot simply continue on the last clearance. Option B incorrectly uses code 7700 (emergency, not radio failure). Option C uses code 7000 (VFR conspicuity), not the radio failure code.
+
+### Q53: Through which service can you obtain routine aviation meteorological observations (METAR) for several airports while in flight? ^t90q53
+- A) Via SIGMET.
+- B) Via AIRMET.
+- C) Via GAMET.
+- D) Via VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET is the continuous radio broadcast service providing METARs and TAFs for a series of aerodromes, allowing pilots in flight to receive current weather observations. Option A (SIGMET) reports significant meteorological phenomena hazardous to all aircraft. Option B (AIRMET) warns of weather hazards relevant to low-level flights. Option C (GAMET) provides area forecasts for low-level operations. None of these broadcast routine aerodrome observations like VOLMET does.
+
+### Q54: What does the abbreviation QNH mean? ^t90q54
+- A) The atmospheric pressure at aerodrome level (or at the runway threshold).
+- B) The atmospheric pressure measured at the highest obstacle on the aerodrome.
+- C) The altimeter setting required to read the aerodrome elevation when on the ground.
+- D) The atmospheric pressure measured at a point on the Earth's surface.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter sub-scale setting that, when applied, causes the altimeter to read the aerodrome elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. It is a corrected pressure value, not a direct pressure measurement. Option A describes QFE (pressure at aerodrome level). Option B is not a standard altimetry term. Option D is too generic and does not specifically describe QNH.
+
+### Q55: What does the abbreviation QDM mean? ^t90q55
+- A) True heading to steer to reach the radio beacon (nil wind).
+- B) True bearing from the radio beacon.
+- C) Magnetic bearing from the radio beacon.
+- D) Magnetic heading to steer to reach the radio beacon (nil wind).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QDM is the magnetic heading to steer (in nil-wind conditions) to fly directly to the radio station. Option A describes QUJ (true heading to station). Option B describes QTE (true bearing from station). Option C describes QDR (magnetic bearing from station). The Q-code system uses these distinct abbreviations to prevent confusion between bearings, headings, true, and magnetic references.
+
+### Q56: How many times must the radiotelephony distress signal (MAYDAY) or the urgency signal (PAN PAN) be spoken? ^t90q56
+- A) Twice.
+- B) Four times.
+- C) Three times.
+- D) Once.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both the distress signal ("MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY") and the urgency signal ("PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN") require the key phrase to be spoken three times. This repetition ensures the nature and priority of the message is clearly recognised even in poor radio conditions or with partial interference. Options A, B, and D specify incorrect repetition counts.
+
+### Q57: What information should, where possible, be included in an urgency message? ^t90q57
+- A) The identification of the aircraft, its position and level, the nature of the emergency, the assistance required.
+- B) The identification of the aircraft, the departure aerodrome, the position, level and heading of the aircraft.
+- C) The identification and type of aircraft, the nature of the emergency, the intentions of the flight crew, and the position, level and heading of the aircraft.
+- D) The identification and type of aircraft, the assistance required, the route, the destination aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (PAN PAN) should contain: identification and type of aircraft, the nature of the emergency, the crew's intentions, and position/level/heading information — enabling ATC to provide effective assistance. Option A omits aircraft type and crew intentions. Option B omits the nature of the emergency and crew intentions. Option D includes route and destination, which are flight plan data rather than urgency-specific information.
+
+### Q58: What is the correct priority order for messages in the aeronautical mobile service? ^t90q58
+- A) 1. Distress messages, 2. Flight safety messages, 3. Urgency messages.
+- B) 1. Flight safety messages, 2. Distress messages, 3. Urgency messages.
+- C) 1. Urgency messages, 2. Distress messages, 3. Flight safety messages.
+- D) 1. Distress messages, 2. Urgency messages, 3. Flight safety messages.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO message priority order is: (1) Distress (MAYDAY) — grave and imminent danger, (2) Urgency (PAN PAN) — serious but not immediately life-threatening, (3) Flight safety messages — ATC clearances and instructions. Options A, B, and C all place these categories in an incorrect order. Distress always takes absolute precedence.
+
+### Q59: How are the letters BAFO spelled using the ICAO phonetic alphabet? ^t90q59
+- A) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- B) BETA ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- C) BRAVO ANNA FOX OSCAR
+- D) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OTTO
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: B = Bravo, A = Alpha, F = Foxtrot, O = Oscar. Option B uses "Beta" (Greek alphabet, not ICAO). Option C uses "Anna" and "Fox" (non-standard local variants). Option D uses "Otto" (a German non-standard alternative for O). Only option A uses the correct ICAO phonetic words for all four letters.
+
+### Q60: You are flying your aircraft on a north-easterly heading at 2,500 feet. How do you reply when ATC asks for your position? ^t90q60
+- A) Heading 045 at flight level 25.
+- B) 045 degrees and 2,500 feet.
+- C) Heading 45 at 2,500 feet.
+- D) Heading 045 at 2,500 feet.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct format is "Heading" followed by three digits (always three — "045" not "45"), then the altitude in feet when below the transition altitude. Option A incorrectly uses flight level (FL 25 = 2,500 ft on standard pressure), which is only used above the transition altitude. Option B uses "degrees" and "and," which are not standard phraseology. Option C uses only two digits for the heading instead of the required three.
+
+### Q61: Which frequency range allows radio waves to travel the greatest distance? ^t90q61
+- A) UHF
+- B) VHF
+- C) LW
+- D) MW
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Long waves (LW / LF band) travel the greatest distance because they diffract around the curvature of the Earth via ground wave propagation, allowing reception well beyond line-of-sight. Options A (UHF) and B (VHF) are limited to line-of-sight range, which depends on altitude and terrain. Option D (MW / medium wave) has an intermediate range — better than VHF but less than LW. Aviation primarily uses VHF for its clarity, despite the range limitation.
+
+### Q62: What abbreviation designates the universal time system used by air navigation services? ^t90q62
+- A) LMT
+- B) GMT
+- C) UTC
+- D) LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is the official time standard adopted by ICAO for all aeronautical communications, flight plans, and publications. Option B (GMT) is historically similar but not the official ICAO designation. Option A (LMT — Local Mean Time) and Option D (LT — Local Time) are not used in official aeronautical communications because they vary by location.
+
+### Q63: According to ICAO, what is the recommended speaking rate for radio communications? ^t90q63
+- A) 200 words/minute.
+- B) 50 words/minute.
+- C) 100 words/minute.
+- D) 150 words/minute.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO recommends approximately 100 words per minute for radio communications — a moderate pace that ensures intelligibility, especially for non-native English speakers and in degraded radio conditions. Option A (200 words/minute) is far too fast for clear understanding. Option B (50 words/minute) is unnecessarily slow and would waste frequency time. Option D (150 words/minute) is above the recommended rate.
+
+### Q64: Which statement concerning radiotelephony in the aeronautical mobile service is correct? ^t90q64
+- A) In communications with ATC, use exclusively ICAO standard phraseology. Plain language is only permitted at uncontrolled aerodromes.
+- B) It does not matter whether ICAO standard phraseology or plain language is used, provided the message is understandable.
+- C) In principle, use plain language as it is most understandable. Standard phraseology may only be used in connection with ATC clearances.
+- D) ICAO standard phraseology should in principle be used to avoid misunderstandings. Plain language is to be used only in situations for which there is no corresponding standard phraseology.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO standard phraseology is the default for all radiotelephony, minimising misunderstanding risk in multilingual environments. Plain language is permitted only when no standard phrase exists for the situation. Option A is too rigid — plain language is not limited to uncontrolled aerodromes. Option B is dangerous — standardised terminology exists precisely because "understandable" is subjective. Option C reverses the principle, incorrectly making plain language the default.
+
+### Q65: What is the correct English term for "service d'information de vol d'aérodrome"? ^t90q65
+- A) FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- B) AIRPORT TRAFFIC INFORMATION SERVICE
+- C) AERODROME FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- D) AERODROME INFORMATION SERVICE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) is the flight information service specific to an aerodrome, providing pilots with information about aerodrome conditions and known traffic without issuing clearances. Option A (Flight Information Service) is the broader regional FIS, not aerodrome-specific. Option B uses "Airport Traffic," which is not the official ICAO term. Option D omits "Flight," which is a key part of the official designation.
+
+### Q66: What is the correct abbreviated call sign for an aircraft with the full call sign AB-CDE? ^t90q66
+- A) DE
+- B) A-DE
+- C) CDE
+- D) AB-DE
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO abbreviation rule retains the first character (nationality prefix) and the last two characters: AB-CDE becomes A-DE. Option A omits the nationality prefix entirely. Option C takes the last three characters without the nationality prefix. Option D retains the full two-character nationality prefix, which is not the standard abbreviation method — only the first character is kept.
+
+### Q67: When is a pilot permitted to use an abbreviated call sign? ^t90q67
+- A) At any time provided there is no risk of confusion.
+- B) Never. Only the air navigation service has the right to abbreviate the call sign.
+- C) If the ground station communicates in this way.
+- D) After the first call.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot may abbreviate their call sign only after the ground station has initiated the abbreviation. The ground station takes the lead because it can verify there are no similar call signs on frequency. Option A is wrong because the pilot cannot self-determine the risk of confusion. Option B is incorrect because both parties may use the abbreviated form, not just ATC. Option D is wrong because abbreviation requires ATC initiative, not simply having completed the first call.
+
+### Q68: Which instructions and information must always be read back? ^t90q68
+- A) Surface wind, visibility, temperature, runway in use, altimeter settings, heading and speed instructions.
+- B) Runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, heading and speed instructions.
+- C) Runway in use, visibility, surface wind, heading instructions, altimeter settings.
+- D) Surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mandatory readback items under ICAO/EASA are: runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR (transponder) codes, level (altitude/flight level) instructions, and heading and speed instructions. Options A, C, and D all include surface wind and/or visibility, which are advisory information that do not require readback — they are acknowledged with "Roger."
+
+### Q69: What does the instruction "Squawk ident" mean? ^t90q69
+- A) You have been identified by radar.
+- B) You must re-enter the transponder code that has been assigned to you.
+- C) You must press the "IDENT" button on your transponder.
+- D) You must make a turn to identify yourself.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Squawk ident" instructs the pilot to press the IDENT button on their transponder, which generates a distinct enhanced signal on the controller's radar display to help identify the specific aircraft among surrounding traffic. Option A describes the controller's confirmation after identification. Option B would be "Squawk [code]" or "Recycle." Option D describes a radar identification turn, which is a different procedure.
+
+### Q70: How does a pilot end the readback of an ATC clearance? ^t90q70
+- A) With "WILCO".
+- B) With the call sign of the ATC ground station.
+- C) With the call sign of their aircraft.
+- D) With "ROGER".
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Every readback of an ATC clearance must end with the aircraft's own call sign, confirming unambiguously which aircraft has received and correctly repeated the clearance. Option A ("Wilco") may appear in a response but does not replace the call sign requirement. Option B (ground station call sign) is incorrect — the readback ends with the aircraft's identification. Option D ("Roger") only acknowledges receipt and does not identify the aircraft.
+
+### Q71: In which category are messages from an aircraft in a state of serious and/or imminent danger requiring immediate assistance classified? ^t90q71
+- A) Messages concerning flight safety.
+- B) Urgency messages.
+- C) Distress messages.
+- D) Messages concerning flight regularity.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft facing grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance transmits distress messages (MAYDAY), the highest priority category in aeronautical communications. Option A (flight safety messages) covers ATC instructions and clearances. Option B (urgency messages) covers serious but not immediately life-threatening situations. Option D (regularity messages) covers administrative operational communications.
+
+### Q72: From what point may an aircraft use its abbreviated callsign? ^t90q72
+- A) When the aeronautical station has used the abbreviated callsign when addressing the aircraft.
+- B) Once communication is well established.
+- C) In case of heavy traffic.
+- D) When there is no possibility of confusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft may use its abbreviated callsign once radio communication is well established with the ground station, and only after the ground station has itself first used the abbreviated form. Option A is partly correct but incomplete — it is the ground station's use that triggers permission. Option C (heavy traffic) and Option D (no confusion risk) do not independently grant abbreviation rights; the ground station must initiate it.
+
+### Q73: An aircraft fails to establish radio contact with a ground station on the designated frequency or any other appropriate frequency. What action must the pilot take? ^t90q73
+- A) Land at the nearest aerodrome on route.
+- B) Proceed to the alternate aerodrome.
+- C) Try to establish communication with other aircraft or other aeronautical stations.
+- D) Display SSR emergency code 7500.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If unable to contact the designated station, the pilot should first try to establish communication with other aircraft or aeronautical stations that could relay the message. Option A is premature — communication alternatives should be exhausted first. Option B assumes prior designation of an alternate. Option D is incorrect because code 7500 indicates hijacking/unlawful interference, not communication failure (which is 7600).
+
+### Q74: In the aeronautical mobile service, which of the following is an international distress frequency? ^t90q74
+- A) 123.45MHz.
+- B) 121.500KHz.
+- C) 6500 KHz.
+- D) 121.500MHz.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The international VHF distress (guard) frequency is 121.500 MHz, monitored continuously by ATC facilities worldwide. Option A (123.45 MHz) is an air-to-air advisory frequency. Option B incorrectly states 121.500 KHz — the correct unit is MHz, not KHz (121.500 KHz would be in the LF band). Option C (6500 KHz) is not a standard distress frequency.
+
+### Q75: How must the letters NDGF be pronounced according to the ICAO phonetic alphabet? ^t90q75
+- A) NOVEMBER DELTA GOLF FOXTROT.
+- B) NOVEMBER DECEMBER GOLF FOXTROT
+- C) NORBERT DELTA GOLF FOX.
+- D) NOVEMBER DELTA GAMMA FOX.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the ICAO phonetic alphabet: N = November, D = Delta, G = Golf, F = Foxtrot. Option B uses "December" for D (not ICAO standard). Option C uses "Norbert" (non-standard) and "Fox" (the correct word is "Foxtrot"). Option D uses "Gamma" (Greek alphabet) for G and "Fox" instead of "Foxtrot."
+
+### Q76: What does the term "aeronautical station" mean? ^t90q76
+- A) A radio station of the aeronautical fixed service, on the ground or on board an aircraft, intended for the exchange of radio communications.
+- B) A land station of the aeronautical mobile service. In certain cases, an aeronautical station may be located on board a ship or offshore platform.
+- C) A radio station of the aeronautical fixed service.
+- D) Any radio station intended for the exchange of radio communications.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aeronautical station is defined as a land station in the aeronautical mobile service, providing two-way communication with aircraft. In certain cases, it may be located on a ship or offshore platform. Option A incorrectly refers to the fixed service (ground-to-ground) rather than the mobile service (ground-to-air). Option C is also an incorrect service designation. Option D is too broad and encompasses all radio stations regardless of service type.
+
+### Q77: What does the abbreviation "HJ" mean? ^t90q77
+- A) From sunset to sunrise.
+- B) From sunrise to sunset.
+- C) Continuous day and night service.
+- D) No fixed operating hours.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HJ (from French "Heure de Jour") means daylight hours — from sunrise to sunset. This designation appears in AIPs and NOTAMs for facilities open only during daylight. Option A describes HN (sunset to sunrise). Option C describes H24 (continuous). Option D describes HX (no fixed hours).
+
+### Q78: Which instructions and information must always be read back verbatim? ^t90q78
+- A) Runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes, heading and speed instructions.
+- B) Surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes.
+- C) Runway in use, visibility, surface wind, heading instructions, altimeter settings.
+- D) Surface wind, visibility, temperature, runway in use, altimeter settings, heading and speed instructions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mandatory readback items are: runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes, and heading/speed instructions. Surface wind is also included in some regional implementations. Options C and D include visibility and/or temperature, which are advisory and do not require readback. Option A is close but omits surface wind, while option B matches the ICAO standard list.
+
+### Q79: In which message category can ATC clearances, take-off and landing clearances, and traffic information from the air traffic control service be classified? ^t90q79
+- A) Messages concerning flight safety.
+- B) Messages concerning flight regularity.
+- C) Urgency messages.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC clearances, take-off/landing instructions, and traffic information are all classified as flight safety messages, ranked third in the ICAO priority hierarchy after distress and urgency messages. Option B (regularity messages) covers administrative and logistical communications. Option C (urgency messages) specifically concerns aircraft or persons facing a serious safety condition, not routine ATC operations.
+
+### Q80: What does the instruction "Squawk 1234" mean? ^t90q80
+- A) Conduct a radio check on frequency 123.4 MHz.
+- B) Set code 1234 on the transponder and switch it to ON.
+- C) Be ready to monitor frequency 123.4 MHz.
+- D) Transmit briefly (1-2-3-4) for a bearing.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Squawk 1234" means the pilot must select code 1234 on the transponder and ensure it is operating. This enables radar controllers to identify the aircraft using the assigned code. Option A confuses a transponder code with a radio frequency. Option C also conflates frequency monitoring with transponder operation. Option D describes a procedure unrelated to transponder codes.
+
+### Q81: What does the abbreviation "ATIS" stand for? ^t90q81
+- A) Air Trafic Information Service
+- B) Automatic Terminal Information System
+- C) Airport Terminal Information Service
+- D) Automatic Terminal Information Service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS stands for Automatic Terminal Information Service — a continuously broadcast recording of current meteorological and operational information for an aerodrome, identified by a letter code that changes with each update. Option A misspells "Traffic" and uses "Air" rather than "Automatic." Option B uses "System" instead of "Service." Option C uses "Airport" instead of "Automatic."
+
+### Q82: What is the call sign suffix of the Flight Information Service? ^t90q82
+- A) FLIGHT CENTER
+- B) INFO
+- C) INFORMATION.
+- D) AERODROME.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Flight Information Service uses the call sign suffix "Information" (e.g., "Geneva Information" or "Zurich Information"). Option A ("Flight Center") is not a standard ICAO suffix. Option B ("Info") is an informal abbreviation not used as an official suffix. Option D ("Aerodrome") is not used as a call sign suffix for FIS.
+
+### Q83: What does the term "QDR" mean? ^t90q83
+- A) True heading to the station (zero wind)
+- B) Magnetic heading to the station (zero wind)
+- C) True bearing from the station
+- D) Magnetic bearing from the station
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QDR is the magnetic bearing from the station to the aircraft — the direction in which the aircraft lies as seen from the station, referenced to magnetic north. Option A describes QUJ (true heading to station). Option B describes QDM (magnetic heading to station). Option C describes QTE (true bearing from station). These Q-codes must be distinguished carefully to avoid navigation errors.
+
+### Q84: What influences the reception quality of VHF radio? ^t90q84
+- A) The twilight effect.
+- B) The ionosphere.
+- C) Atmospheric disturbances, in particular thunderstorm conditions.
+- D) Flight altitude and topographical conditions.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VHF radio propagates by line-of-sight, so reception quality depends primarily on flight altitude (which determines how far the radio horizon extends) and topography (mountains and terrain can block signals). Option A (twilight effect) affects NDB/ADF reception, not VHF. Option B (ionosphere) affects HF sky-wave propagation, not VHF. Option C (thunderstorms) may cause some static but is not the primary factor for VHF reception quality.
+
+### Q85: What does the term "QFE" mean? ^t90q85
+- A) Altimeter setting that causes the instrument to indicate the aerodrome elevation on the ground.
+- B) Atmospheric pressure measured at the height of the highest obstacle on an aerodrome.
+- C) Atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome elevation (or runway threshold).
+- D) Atmospheric pressure measured at a point on the earth's surface.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome elevation or runway threshold. When set on the altimeter, the instrument reads zero on the ground and displays height above the aerodrome in flight. Option A describes QNH behaviour (reading aerodrome elevation on the ground). Option B is not a standard definition. Option D is too generic and could describe any surface pressure measurement.
+
+### Q86: In the aeronautical mobile service, messages are classified by importance. What is the correct priority order? ^t90q86
+- A) Distress messages, messages concerning flight safety, urgency messages.
+- B) Meteorological messages, radio direction-finding messages, messages concerning flight regularity.
+- C) Radio direction-finding messages, distress messages, urgency messages.
+- D) Distress messages, urgency messages, messages concerning safety.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct ICAO priority order is: (1) Distress messages, (2) Urgency messages, (3) Flight safety messages, followed by meteorological, direction-finding, regularity, and other messages. Option A incorrectly places flight safety above urgency. Option B lists only lower-priority categories. Option C places direction-finding above distress, which is incorrect — distress always has absolute priority.
+
+### Q87: What is the urgency signal in radiotelephony? ^t90q87
+- A) PAN PAN (preferably spoken three times).
+- B) MAYDAY (preferably spoken three times).
+- C) URGENCY (preferably spoken three times).
+- D) ALERFA (preferably spoken three times).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The radiotelephony urgency signal is "PAN PAN" spoken three times, indicating a serious condition that requires timely assistance but is not an immediate life-threatening emergency. Option B (MAYDAY) is the distress signal for grave and imminent danger. Option C ("URGENCY") is not standard phraseology. Option D (ALERFA) is an internal ATC alert phase designation, not a radiotelephony signal.
+
+### Q88: On the readability scale, what does degree "5" mean? ^t90q88
+- A) Readable intermittently.
+- B) Unreadable.
+- C) Readable, but with difficulty.
+- D) Perfectly readable.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 5 is the highest level on the ICAO scale, meaning the transmission is perfectly clear and intelligible. Option A describes readability 2 (intermittently). Option B describes readability 1 (unreadable). Option C describes readability 3 (with difficulty). The standard response is "I read you five."
+
+### Q89: What is the name of the time system used worldwide by air traffic services and in the aeronautical fixed service? ^t90q89
+- A) Local time (LT) using the 24-hour clock.
+- B) Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
+- C) There is no particular time system, as generally only minutes are transmitted.
+- D) Local time using the AM and PM system.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the universal time standard used by all air traffic services and aeronautical fixed services worldwide. It eliminates time zone ambiguity in international operations. Options A and D use local time, which varies by location and is not used in aeronautical communications. Option C is factually incorrect — a specific time system (UTC) is always used.
+
+### Q90: What elements should a distress message contain? ^t90q90
+- A) Aircraft callsign, departure point, position, level.
+- B) Aircraft callsign, position, assistance required.
+- C) Aircraft callsign and type, nature of the distress situation, pilot's intentions, position, level, heading.
+- D) Aircraft callsign, flight route, destination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A complete distress message (MAYDAY) should contain: aircraft callsign and type, the nature of the distress, the pilot's intentions, and position/level/heading — giving rescue services maximum information to coordinate assistance. Option A omits the nature of distress and pilot intentions. Option B omits aircraft type, pilot intentions, and heading. Option D omits all emergency-specific information and lists only flight plan data.
+
+### Q91: What does "FEW" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q91
+- A) 3 to 4 eighths
+- B) 1 to 2 eighths
+- C) 8 eighths
+- D) 5 to 7 eighths
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR cloud coverage reporting, FEW designates 1 to 2 oktas (eighths) of sky covered — the sparsest cloud category. Option A describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option C describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option D describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). These standardised ICAO designations ensure unambiguous weather reporting worldwide.
+
+### Q92: What does "SCT" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q92
+- A) 1 to 2 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 3 to 4 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SCT stands for Scattered, representing 3 to 4 oktas (eighths) of sky covered by cloud. Option A describes FEW (1-2 oktas). Option B describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option C describes BKN (Broken, 5-7 oktas). Scattered cloud coverage does not necessarily restrict VFR flight, but pilots must check cloud base heights against applicable VFR minima.
+
+### Q93: What does "BKN" mean for cloud coverage in a METAR weather report? ^t90q93
+- A) 8 eighths
+- B) 3 to 4 eighths
+- C) 5 to 7 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN stands for Broken, meaning 5 to 7 oktas (eighths) of the sky are covered — predominantly overcast with some gaps. Option A describes OVC (Overcast, 8 oktas). Option B describes SCT (Scattered, 3-4 oktas). Option D describes FEW (1-2 oktas). A broken layer may significantly impact VFR operations, especially if cloud bases are low.
+
+### Q94: Which transponder code signals a radio failure? ^t90q94
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7600
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally standardised squawk for loss of radio communication (NORDO), alerting radar controllers to the communication failure. Option A (7000) is the standard VFR conspicuity code in European airspace. Option B (7500) signals unlawful interference (hijacking). Option D (7700) indicates a general emergency. These four codes must be memorised as they each trigger specific ATC responses.
+
+### Q95: What is the correct phrase to begin a blind transmission? ^t90q95
+- A) No reception
+- B) Transmitting blind
+- C) Listen
+- D) Blind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a pilot can transmit but cannot receive, the blind transmission must begin with the phrase "Transmitting blind" (or "Transmitting blind on [frequency]") to alert any receiving station of the one-way nature of the communication. Options A, C, and D are not standard ICAO phraseology for initiating blind transmissions.
+
+### Q96: How many times shall a blind transmission be made? ^t90q96
+- A) Three times
+- B) Four times
+- C) One time
+- D) Two times
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission is made once on the current frequency (and optionally repeated once on the emergency frequency if appropriate). Making it multiple times would congest the frequency unnecessarily. Options A, B, and D specify excessive repetitions that are not part of standard ICAO procedure for blind transmissions.
+
+### Q97: In what situation is it appropriate to set transponder code 7600? ^t90q97
+- A) Flight into clouds
+- B) Emergency
+- C) Loss of radio
+- D) Hijacking
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is specifically designated for loss of radio communication (NORDO), alerting radar controllers so they can provide appropriate separation and visual signals. Option A (flight into clouds) does not have a specific transponder code. Option B (emergency) requires code 7700. Option D (hijacking) requires code 7500.
+
+### Q98: What is the correct course of action when experiencing a radio failure in class D airspace? ^t90q98
+- A) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+- B) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+- C) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+- D) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO procedures for VFR radio failure in controlled airspace require the pilot to either continue the flight according to the last ATC clearance received while complying with VFR rules, or to leave the airspace by the shortest route. Options B and D incorrectly specify flying above 5000 feet, which is not part of the radio failure procedure. Option C incorrectly substitutes "standard routing" for "shortest route."
+
+### Q99: Which phrase must be repeated three times before transmitting an urgency message? ^t90q99
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Help
+- C) Urgent
+- D) Pan Pan
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message is preceded by "Pan Pan" spoken three times ("PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN"). This alerts all stations on the frequency to a serious but not immediately life-threatening situation. Option A ("Mayday") is the distress signal for grave and imminent danger. Options B ("Help") and C ("Urgent") are not standard ICAO radiotelephony phrases.
+
+### Q100: On which frequency should an initial distress message be transmitted? ^t90q100
+- A) Emergency frequency
+- B) FIS frequency
+- C) Radar frequency
+- D) Current frequency
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The initial distress or urgency call should be made on the frequency currently in use, because that frequency is already being monitored by the appropriate ATC unit handling the aircraft. Switching frequencies risks losing contact and wastes critical time. Option A (emergency frequency 121.5 MHz) should be tried only if there is no response on the current frequency. Options B and C are not the correct first choice.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_51_100_de.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_51_100_de.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..25b6610
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_51_100_de.md
@@ -0,0 +1,498 @@
+### Q51: Ein Pilot übermittelt folgende Nachricht an die Flugsicherung: „Wir landen um 10:45 Uhr. Bitte bestellen Sie uns ein Taxi." Um welche Art von Nachricht handelt es sich? ^t90q51
+- A) Es ist eine Dringlichkeitsmeldung.
+- B) Es ist eine Nachricht zur Flugregelung.
+- C) Es ist eine Dienstnachricht.
+- D) Es ist eine unzulässige Nachricht.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** ATC-Frequenzen sind ausschliesslich für Flugfunkkommunikation reserviert, die sich auf Flugsicherheit, Dringlichkeit und betriebliche Angelegenheiten bezieht. Die Bestellung eines Taxis ist eine persönliche Dienstleistungsanfrage, die auf einer Luftfahrtfrequenz nichts zu suchen hat — es handelt sich daher um eine unzulässige Nachricht. Die Optionen A, B und C ordnen diese persönliche Anfrage fälschlicherweise legitimen Nachrichtentypen zu.
+
+### Q52: Sie fliegen VFR und haben eine ATC-Freigabe zum Einflug in den Luftraum Klasse C zur Landung erhalten. Kurz nach dem Einflug fällt Ihr Funkgerät aus. Was tun Sie, wenn keine anderen Sonderregelungen gelten? ^t90q52
+- A) Sie stellen den Transponder auf Code 7600, setzen den Flug gemäss der letzten Freigabe fort und folgen den Lichtsignalen des Kontrollturms.
+- B) Aufgrund der erteilten Freigabe haben Sie das Recht, im Luftraum Klasse C zu fliegen und dort zu landen. Sie müssen nur den Transponder auf Code 7700 stellen.
+- C) Sie müssen auf dem kürzesten Weg zum Ausweichflugplatz fliegen und den Transponder auf Code 7000 stellen.
+- D) Unabhängig von der erhaltenen Freigabe sind Sie nicht mehr berechtigt, in diesem Luftraum zu fliegen. Sie stellen den Transponder auf Code 7600, verlassen den Luftraum so schnell wie möglich und landen auf dem nächsten geeigneten Flugplatz.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Für VFR-Flüge ist Sprechfunkverkehr im Luftraum Klasse C obligatorisch. Bei Funkausfall ist die vorherige Freigabe unzureichend — der Pilot muss 7600 (Funkausfall) squawken, den kontrollierten Luftraum auf dem kürzesten Weg verlassen und auf dem nächsten geeigneten Flugplatz landen. Option A ist falsch, da VFR-Flüge nicht einfach auf der letzten Freigabe fortgesetzt werden können. Option B verwendet fälschlicherweise Code 7700 (Notfall, nicht Funkausfall). Option C verwendet Code 7000 (VFR-Conspicuity), nicht den Funkausfallcode.
+
+### Q53: Über welchen Dienst können Sie im Flug routinemässige Flugwetterbeobachtungen (METAR) für mehrere Flugplätze erhalten? ^t90q53
+- A) Via SIGMET.
+- B) Via AIRMET.
+- C) Via GAMET.
+- D) Via VOLMET.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** VOLMET ist der kontinuierliche Rundfunkdienst, der METAR und TAF für eine Reihe von Flugplätzen bereitstellt und es Piloten im Flug ermöglicht, aktuelle Wetterbeobachtungen zu empfangen. Option A (SIGMET) meldet signifikante meteorologische Erscheinungen, die für alle Luftfahrzeuge gefährlich sind. Option B (AIRMET) warnt vor Wettergefahren für Flüge in niedrigen Höhen. Option C (GAMET) liefert Gebietsvorhersagen für den Tiefflugbetrieb. Keiner davon sendet routinemässige Flugplatzbeobachtungen wie VOLMET.
+
+### Q54: Was bedeutet die Abkürzung QNH? ^t90q54
+- A) Der atmosphärische Druck in Flugplatzhöhe (oder an der Pistenschwelle).
+- B) Der atmosphärische Druck, gemessen am höchsten Hindernis des Flugplatzes.
+- C) Die Höhenmessereinstellung, die erforderlich ist, um am Boden die Flugplatzhöhe abzulesen.
+- D) Der atmosphärische Druck, gemessen an einem Punkt der Erdoberfläche.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QNH ist die Einstellung der Höhenmesser-Unterskala, die bei Anwendung dazu führt, dass der Höhenmesser am Boden die Flugplatzhöhe über dem mittleren Meeresspiegel anzeigt. Es handelt sich um einen korrigierten Druckwert, nicht um eine direkte Druckmessung. Option A beschreibt QFE (Druck in Flugplatzhöhe). Option B ist kein standardmässiger altimetrischer Begriff. Option D ist zu allgemein und beschreibt nicht spezifisch QNH.
+
+### Q55: Was bedeutet die Abkürzung QDM? ^t90q55
+- A) Rechtweisender Steuerkurs zur Radiostation (ohne Wind).
+- B) Rechtweisende Peilung von der Radiostation.
+- C) Missweisende Peilung von der Radiostation.
+- D) Missweisender Steuerkurs zur Radiostation (ohne Wind).
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QDM ist der missweisende Steuerkurs (bei Windstille), um direkt zur Radiostation zu fliegen. Option A beschreibt QUJ (rechtweisender Steuerkurs zur Station). Option B beschreibt QTE (rechtweisende Peilung von der Station). Option C beschreibt QDR (missweisende Peilung von der Station). Das Q-Code-System verwendet diese unterschiedlichen Abkürzungen, um Verwechslungen zwischen Peilungen, Steuerkursen, rechtweisenden und missweisenden Bezügen zu vermeiden.
+
+### Q56: Wie oft muss das Sprechfunk-Notsignal (MAYDAY) oder das Dringlichkeitssignal (PAN PAN) gesprochen werden? ^t90q56
+- A) Zweimal.
+- B) Viermal.
+- C) Dreimal.
+- D) Einmal.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Sowohl das Notsignal („MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY") als auch das Dringlichkeitssignal („PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN") erfordern, dass der Schlüsselbegriff dreimal gesprochen wird. Diese Wiederholung stellt sicher, dass Art und Priorität der Nachricht auch bei schlechten Funkbedingungen oder teilweisen Störungen eindeutig erkannt werden. Die Optionen A, B und D geben falsche Wiederholungszahlen an.
+
+### Q57: Welche Informationen sollten nach Möglichkeit in einer Dringlichkeitsmeldung enthalten sein? ^t90q57
+- A) Identifikation des Luftfahrzeugs, Position und Höhe, Art der Notlage, benötigte Hilfe.
+- B) Identifikation des Luftfahrzeugs, Abflugflugplatz, Position, Höhe und Steuerkurs des Luftfahrzeugs.
+- C) Identifikation und Typ des Luftfahrzeugs, Art der Notlage, Absichten der Flugbesatzung, Position, Höhe und Steuerkurs des Luftfahrzeugs.
+- D) Identifikation und Typ des Luftfahrzeugs, benötigte Hilfe, Route, Zielflugplatz.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Dringlichkeitsmeldung (PAN PAN) sollte enthalten: Identifikation und Typ des Luftfahrzeugs, Art der Notlage, Absichten der Besatzung und Informationen zu Position/Höhe/Steuerkurs — damit die Flugsicherung wirksame Hilfe leisten kann. Option A lässt Luftfahrzeugtyp und Besatzungsabsichten aus. Option B lässt Art der Notlage und Besatzungsabsichten aus. Option D enthält Route und Zielflugplatz, die Flugplandaten sind und keine dringlichkeitsspezifischen Informationen.
+
+### Q58: Was ist die korrekte Prioritätsreihenfolge für Nachrichten im beweglichen Flugfunkdienst? ^t90q58
+- A) 1. Notmeldungen, 2. Flugsicherheitsnachrichten, 3. Dringlichkeitsmeldungen.
+- B) 1. Flugsicherheitsnachrichten, 2. Notmeldungen, 3. Dringlichkeitsmeldungen.
+- C) 1. Dringlichkeitsmeldungen, 2. Notmeldungen, 3. Flugsicherheitsnachrichten.
+- D) 1. Notmeldungen, 2. Dringlichkeitsmeldungen, 3. Flugsicherheitsnachrichten.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ICAO-Nachrichtenpriorität lautet: (1) Notmeldungen (MAYDAY) — schwere und unmittelbare Gefahr, (2) Dringlichkeitsmeldungen (PAN PAN) — ernst, aber nicht unmittelbar lebensbedrohlich, (3) Flugsicherheitsnachrichten — ATC-Freigaben und -Anweisungen. Die Optionen A, B und C ordnen diese Kategorien alle in falscher Reihenfolge. Notmeldungen haben immer absolute Priorität.
+
+### Q59: Wie werden die Buchstaben BAFO nach dem ICAO-Buchstabieralphabet buchstabiert? ^t90q59
+- A) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- B) BETA ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- C) BRAVO ANNA FOX OSCAR
+- D) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OTTO
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Nach dem ICAO-Buchstabieralphabet: B = Bravo, A = Alpha, F = Foxtrot, O = Oscar. Option B verwendet „Beta" (griechisches Alphabet, nicht ICAO). Option C verwendet „Anna" und „Fox" (nicht normierte lokale Varianten). Option D verwendet „Otto" (eine deutsche nicht normierte Alternative für O). Nur Option A verwendet die korrekten ICAO-Buchstabierwörter für alle vier Buchstaben.
+
+### Q60: Sie fliegen Ihr Luftfahrzeug mit nordöstlichem Steuerkurs in 2 500 Fuss Höhe. Wie antworten Sie, wenn die Flugsicherung nach Ihrer Position fragt? ^t90q60
+- A) Heading 045 at flight level 25.
+- B) 045 degrees and 2,500 feet.
+- C) Heading 45 at 2,500 feet.
+- D) Heading 045 at 2,500 feet.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das korrekte Format lautet „Heading" gefolgt von drei Ziffern (immer drei — „045" nicht „45"), dann die Höhe in Fuss, wenn man sich unterhalb der Übergangshöhe befindet. Option A verwendet fälschlicherweise die Flugfläche (FL 25 = 2 500 ft bei Standarddruck), die nur oberhalb der Übergangshöhe verwendet wird. Option B verwendet „degrees" und „and", was keine Standardphraseologie ist. Option C verwendet nur zwei Ziffern für den Steuerkurs statt der erforderlichen drei.
+
+### Q61: Welcher Frequenzbereich ermöglicht es Funkwellen, die grösste Entfernung zurückzulegen? ^t90q61
+- A) UHF
+- B) VHF
+- C) LW
+- D) MW
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Langwellen (LW / LF-Band) legen die grösste Entfernung zurück, da sie sich durch Bodenwellenausbreitung um die Erdkrümmung beugen und so den Empfang weit über die Sichtlinie hinaus ermöglichen. Die Optionen A (UHF) und B (VHF) sind auf die Sichtlinienreichweite beschränkt, die von Höhe und Gelände abhängt. Option D (MW / Mittelwelle) hat eine mittlere Reichweite — besser als VHF, aber geringer als LW. Die Luftfahrt nutzt hauptsächlich VHF wegen seiner Klarheit, trotz der Reichweitenbeschränkung.
+
+### Q62: Welche Abkürzung bezeichnet das universelle Zeitsystem der Flugsicherungsdienste? ^t90q62
+- A) LMT
+- B) GMT
+- C) UTC
+- D) LT
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** UTC (Coordinated Universal Time / Koordinierte Weltzeit) ist der offizielle Zeitstandard der ICAO für alle Flugfunkkommunikationen, Flugpläne und Publikationen. Option B (GMT) ist historisch ähnlich, aber nicht die offizielle ICAO-Bezeichnung. Option A (LMT — Lokale Mittlere Zeit) und Option D (LT — Ortszeit) werden im offiziellen Flugfunkverkehr nicht verwendet, da sie je nach Standort variieren.
+
+### Q63: Wie hoch ist die von der ICAO empfohlene Sprechgeschwindigkeit für den Funkverkehr? ^t90q63
+- A) 200 Wörter/Minute.
+- B) 50 Wörter/Minute.
+- C) 100 Wörter/Minute.
+- D) 150 Wörter/Minute.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ICAO empfiehlt etwa 100 Wörter pro Minute für den Funkverkehr — ein moderates Tempo, das die Verständlichkeit gewährleistet, insbesondere für nicht-englische Muttersprachler und bei verschlechterten Funkbedingungen. Option A (200 Wörter/Minute) ist viel zu schnell für klares Verstehen. Option B (50 Wörter/Minute) ist unnötig langsam und würde Frequenzzeit verschwenden. Option D (150 Wörter/Minute) liegt über der empfohlenen Rate.
+
+### Q64: Welche Aussage zum Sprechfunk im beweglichen Flugfunkdienst ist korrekt? ^t90q64
+- A) In der Kommunikation mit der Flugsicherung ist ausschliesslich ICAO-Standardphraseologie zu verwenden. Klartext ist nur an unkontrollierten Flugplätzen zulässig.
+- B) Es spielt keine Rolle, ob ICAO-Standardphraseologie oder Klartext verwendet wird, sofern die Nachricht verständlich ist.
+- C) Grundsätzlich ist Klartext zu verwenden, da er am verständlichsten ist. Standardphraseologie darf nur im Zusammenhang mit ATC-Freigaben verwendet werden.
+- D) Grundsätzlich sollte ICAO-Standardphraseologie verwendet werden, um Missverständnisse zu vermeiden. Klartext ist nur in Situationen zu verwenden, für die keine entsprechende Standardphraseologie existiert.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ICAO-Standardphraseologie ist die Vorgabe für den gesamten Sprechfunk und minimiert das Risiko von Missverständnissen in mehrsprachigen Umgebungen. Klartext ist nur zulässig, wenn für die Situation kein Standardausdruck existiert. Option A ist zu streng — Klartext ist nicht auf unkontrollierte Flugplätze beschränkt. Option B ist gefährlich — normierte Terminologie existiert gerade deshalb, weil „verständlich" subjektiv ist. Option C kehrt das Prinzip um und macht Klartext fälschlicherweise zur Standardvorgabe.
+
+### Q65: Was ist der korrekte englische Begriff für „service d'information de vol d'aérodrome"? ^t90q65
+- A) FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- B) AIRPORT TRAFFIC INFORMATION SERVICE
+- C) AERODROME FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- D) AERODROME INFORMATION SERVICE
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) ist der flugplatzspezifische Fluginformationsdienst, der Piloten Informationen über Flugplatzbedingungen und bekannten Verkehr bereitstellt, ohne Freigaben zu erteilen. Option A (Flight Information Service) ist der umfassendere regionale FIS, nicht flugplatzspezifisch. Option B verwendet „Airport Traffic", was nicht der offizielle ICAO-Begriff ist. Option D lässt „Flight" weg, das ein wesentlicher Bestandteil der offiziellen Bezeichnung ist.
+
+### Q66: Wie lautet die korrekte abgekürzte Form des Rufzeichens für ein Luftfahrzeug mit dem vollständigen Rufzeichen AB-CDE? ^t90q66
+- A) DE
+- B) A-DE
+- C) CDE
+- D) AB-DE
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ICAO-Abkürzungsregel behält das erste Zeichen (Nationalitätskennzeichen) und die letzten zwei Zeichen bei: AB-CDE wird zu A-DE. Option A lässt das Nationalitätskennzeichen ganz weg. Option C nimmt die letzten drei Zeichen ohne das Nationalitätskennzeichen. Option D behält das vollständige zweistellige Nationalitätskennzeichen bei, was nicht die standardmässige Abkürzungsmethode ist — nur das erste Zeichen wird beibehalten.
+
+### Q67: Wann ist ein Pilot berechtigt, ein abgekürztes Rufzeichen zu verwenden? ^t90q67
+- A) Jederzeit, sofern kein Verwechslungsrisiko besteht.
+- B) Nie. Nur der Flugsicherungsdienst hat das Recht, das Rufzeichen abzukürzen.
+- C) Wenn die Bodenstation in dieser Weise kommuniziert.
+- D) Nach dem ersten Ruf.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Pilot darf sein Rufzeichen nur abkürzen, nachdem die Bodenstation die Abkürzung initiiert hat. Die Bodenstation ergreift die Initiative, da sie überprüfen kann, ob keine ähnlichen Rufzeichen auf der Frequenz vorhanden sind. Option A ist falsch, da der Pilot das Verwechslungsrisiko nicht selbst bestimmen kann. Option B ist falsch, da beide Parteien die abgekürzte Form verwenden dürfen, nicht nur die Flugsicherung. Option D ist falsch, da die Abkürzung die Initiative der Flugsicherung erfordert, nicht einfach den Abschluss des ersten Rufs.
+
+### Q68: Welche Anweisungen und Informationen müssen immer zurückgelesen werden? ^t90q68
+- A) Bodenwind, Sicht, Temperatur, Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, Kurs- und Geschwindigkeitsanweisungen.
+- B) Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, SSR-Codes, Höhenanweisungen, Kurs- und Geschwindigkeitsanweisungen.
+- C) Piste in Betrieb, Sicht, Bodenwind, Kursanweisungen, Höhenmessereinstellungen.
+- D) Bodenwind, Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, Höhenanweisungen, SSR-Codes.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die obligatorischen Rückleseelemente gemäss ICAO/EASA sind: Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, SSR-Codes (Transpondercodes), Höhenanweisungen (Flughöhe/Flugfläche) und Kurs- und Geschwindigkeitsanweisungen. Die Optionen A, C und D enthalten alle Bodenwind und/oder Sicht, die beratende Informationen sind und kein Rücklesen erfordern — sie werden mit „Roger" quittiert.
+
+### Q69: Was bedeutet die Anweisung „Squawk ident"? ^t90q69
+- A) Sie wurden vom Radar identifiziert.
+- B) Sie müssen den Ihnen zugewiesenen Transpondercode erneut eingeben.
+- C) Sie müssen die Taste „IDENT" an Ihrem Transponder drücken.
+- D) Sie müssen eine Kurve zur Identifizierung fliegen.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Squawk ident" weist den Piloten an, die IDENT-Taste am Transponder zu drücken, wodurch ein markantes verstärktes Signal auf dem Radarbildschirm des Lotsen erzeugt wird, um das spezifische Luftfahrzeug im umgebenden Verkehr zu identifizieren. Option A beschreibt die Bestätigung des Lotsen nach der Identifizierung. Option B wäre „Squawk [Code]" oder „Recycle". Option D beschreibt einen Radar-Identifizierungskurve, was ein anderes Verfahren ist.
+
+### Q70: Wie beendet ein Pilot das Rücklesen einer ATC-Freigabe? ^t90q70
+- A) Mit „WILCO".
+- B) Mit dem Rufzeichen der ATC-Bodenstation.
+- C) Mit dem Rufzeichen seines Luftfahrzeugs.
+- D) Mit „ROGER".
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Jedes Rücklesen einer ATC-Freigabe muss mit dem eigenen Rufzeichen des Luftfahrzeugs enden und so eindeutig bestätigen, welches Luftfahrzeug die Freigabe empfangen und korrekt wiederholt hat. Option A („Wilco") kann in einer Antwort vorkommen, ersetzt aber nicht die Rufzeichenanforderung. Option B (Rufzeichen der Bodenstation) ist falsch — das Rücklesen endet mit der Identifikation des Luftfahrzeugs. Option D („Roger") bestätigt nur den Empfang und identifiziert das Luftfahrzeug nicht.
+
+### Q71: In welche Kategorie werden Nachrichten eines Luftfahrzeugs in einer Lage schwerer und/oder unmittelbarer Gefahr, das sofortige Hilfe benötigt, eingestuft? ^t90q71
+- A) Flugsicherheitsnachrichten.
+- B) Dringlichkeitsmeldungen.
+- C) Notmeldungen.
+- D) Flugregelungsnachrichten.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Luftfahrzeug, das von schwerer und unmittelbarer Gefahr betroffen ist und sofortige Hilfe benötigt, sendet Notmeldungen (MAYDAY), die höchste Prioritätskategorie im Flugfunkverkehr. Option A (Flugsicherheitsnachrichten) umfasst ATC-Anweisungen und -Freigaben. Option B (Dringlichkeitsmeldungen) umfasst ernste, aber nicht unmittelbar lebensbedrohliche Situationen. Option D (Flugregelungsnachrichten) umfasst administrative Betriebskommunikation.
+
+### Q72: Ab welchem Zeitpunkt darf ein Luftfahrzeug sein abgekürztes Rufzeichen verwenden? ^t90q72
+- A) Wenn die Luftfahrtstation das abgekürzte Rufzeichen bei der Ansprache des Luftfahrzeugs verwendet hat.
+- B) Sobald die Kommunikation gut hergestellt ist.
+- C) Bei starkem Verkehr.
+- D) Wenn keine Verwechslungsgefahr besteht.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Ein Luftfahrzeug darf sein abgekürztes Rufzeichen verwenden, sobald der Funkverkehr mit der Bodenstation gut hergestellt ist, und erst nachdem die Bodenstation selbst die abgekürzte Form zuerst verwendet hat. Option A ist teilweise richtig, aber unvollständig — es ist die Verwendung durch die Bodenstation, die die Berechtigung auslöst. Option C (starker Verkehr) und Option D (keine Verwechslungsgefahr) gewähren nicht eigenständig das Abkürzungsrecht; die Bodenstation muss die Initiative ergreifen.
+
+### Q73: Ein Luftfahrzeug kann auf der zugewiesenen Frequenz oder einer anderen geeigneten Frequenz keinen Funkkontakt mit einer Bodenstation herstellen. Welche Massnahme muss der Pilot ergreifen? ^t90q73
+- A) Auf dem nächstgelegenen Flugplatz an der Route landen.
+- B) Zum Ausweichflugplatz fliegen.
+- C) Versuchen, die Kommunikation mit anderen Luftfahrzeugen oder anderen Luftfahrtstationen herzustellen.
+- D) Den SSR-Notfallcode 7500 anzeigen.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn die Kontaktaufnahme mit der zugewiesenen Station nicht möglich ist, sollte der Pilot zunächst versuchen, die Kommunikation mit anderen Luftfahrzeugen oder Luftfahrtstationen herzustellen, die die Nachricht weiterleiten könnten. Option A ist verfrüht — Kommunikationsalternativen sollten zuerst ausgeschöpft werden. Option B setzt die vorherige Bestimmung eines Ausweichflugplatzes voraus. Option D ist falsch, da Code 7500 eine Entführung/widerrechtliche Einwirkung anzeigt, nicht einen Kommunikationsausfall (der ist 7600).
+
+### Q74: Welche der folgenden ist im beweglichen Flugfunkdienst eine internationale Notfrequenz? ^t90q74
+- A) 123.45MHz.
+- B) 121.500KHz.
+- C) 6500 KHz.
+- D) 121.500MHz.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die internationale VHF-Notfrequenz (Wachfrequenz) ist 121.500 MHz, die weltweit von ATC-Einrichtungen ständig überwacht wird. Option A (123.45 MHz) ist eine Luft-Luft-Beratungsfrequenz. Option B gibt fälschlicherweise 121.500 KHz an — die korrekte Einheit ist MHz, nicht KHz (121.500 KHz läge im LF-Band). Option C (6500 KHz) ist keine standardmässige Notfrequenz.
+
+### Q75: Wie müssen die Buchstaben NDGF nach dem ICAO-Buchstabieralphabet ausgesprochen werden? ^t90q75
+- A) NOVEMBER DELTA GOLF FOXTROT.
+- B) NOVEMBER DECEMBER GOLF FOXTROT
+- C) NORBERT DELTA GOLF FOX.
+- D) NOVEMBER DELTA GAMMA FOX.
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Nach dem ICAO-Buchstabieralphabet: N = November, D = Delta, G = Golf, F = Foxtrot. Option B verwendet „December" für D (nicht ICAO-Standard). Option C verwendet „Norbert" (nicht normiert) und „Fox" (das korrekte Wort ist „Foxtrot"). Option D verwendet „Gamma" (griechisches Alphabet) für G und „Fox" statt „Foxtrot".
+
+### Q76: Was bedeutet der Begriff „Luftfahrtstation"? ^t90q76
+- A) Eine Funkstelle des festen Flugfunkdienstes, am Boden oder an Bord eines Luftfahrzeugs, zum Austausch von Funkkommunikation bestimmt.
+- B) Eine Bodenstelle des beweglichen Flugfunkdienstes. In bestimmten Fällen kann eine Luftfahrtstation an Bord eines Schiffes oder einer Offshore-Plattform eingerichtet sein.
+- C) Eine Funkstelle des festen Flugfunkdienstes.
+- D) Jede Funkstelle zum Austausch von Funkkommunikation bestimmt.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Luftfahrtstation ist definiert als eine Bodenstelle im beweglichen Flugfunkdienst, die Zweiwegkommunikation mit Luftfahrzeugen ermöglicht. In bestimmten Fällen kann sie auf einem Schiff oder einer Offshore-Plattform eingerichtet sein. Option A verweist fälschlicherweise auf den festen Dienst (Boden-Boden) statt den beweglichen Dienst (Boden-Luft). Option C ist ebenfalls eine falsche Dienstbezeichnung. Option D ist zu weit gefasst und umfasst alle Funkstellen unabhängig vom Diensttyp.
+
+### Q77: Was bedeutet die Abkürzung „HJ"? ^t90q77
+- A) Von Sonnenuntergang bis Sonnenaufgang.
+- B) Von Sonnenaufgang bis Sonnenuntergang.
+- C) Kontinuierlicher Tag- und Nachtdienst.
+- D) Keine festen Betriebszeiten.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** HJ (vom französischen „Heure de Jour") bedeutet Tagesstunden — von Sonnenaufgang bis Sonnenuntergang. Diese Bezeichnung erscheint in AIPs und NOTAMs für Einrichtungen, die nur bei Tageslicht geöffnet sind. Option A beschreibt HN (Sonnenuntergang bis Sonnenaufgang). Option C beschreibt H24 (Dauerbetrieb). Option D beschreibt HX (keine festen Zeiten).
+
+### Q78: Welche Anweisungen und Informationen müssen immer wörtlich zurückgelesen werden? ^t90q78
+- A) Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, Höhenanweisungen, SSR-Codes, Kurs- und Geschwindigkeitsanweisungen.
+- B) Bodenwind, Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, Höhenanweisungen, SSR-Codes.
+- C) Piste in Betrieb, Sicht, Bodenwind, Kursanweisungen, Höhenmessereinstellungen.
+- D) Bodenwind, Sicht, Temperatur, Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, Kurs- und Geschwindigkeitsanweisungen.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die obligatorischen Rückleseelemente sind: Piste in Betrieb, Höhenmessereinstellungen, Höhenanweisungen, SSR-Codes und Kurs-/Geschwindigkeitsanweisungen. Bodenwind ist in einigen regionalen Umsetzungen ebenfalls enthalten. Die Optionen C und D enthalten Sicht und/oder Temperatur, die beratend sind und kein Rücklesen erfordern. Option A ist nahe dran, lässt aber den Bodenwind aus, während Option B der ICAO-Standardliste entspricht.
+
+### Q79: In welche Nachrichtenkategorie können ATC-Freigaben, Start- und Landefreigaben sowie Verkehrsinformationen des Flugverkehrskontrolldienstes eingestuft werden? ^t90q79
+- A) Flugsicherheitsnachrichten.
+- B) Flugregelungsnachrichten.
+- C) Dringlichkeitsmeldungen.
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** ATC-Freigaben, Start-/Landeanweisungen und Verkehrsinformationen werden alle als Flugsicherheitsnachrichten eingestuft, an dritter Stelle in der ICAO-Prioritätshierarchie nach Not- und Dringlichkeitsmeldungen. Option B (Flugregelungsnachrichten) umfasst administrative und logistische Kommunikation. Option C (Dringlichkeitsmeldungen) betrifft speziell Luftfahrzeuge oder Personen in einer ernsten Sicherheitslage, nicht den ATC-Routinebetrieb.
+
+### Q80: Was bedeutet die Anweisung „Squawk 1234"? ^t90q80
+- A) Führen Sie einen Funkcheck auf der Frequenz 123.4 MHz durch.
+- B) Stellen Sie den Code 1234 am Transponder ein und schalten Sie ihn auf ON.
+- C) Seien Sie bereit, die Frequenz 123.4 MHz zu überwachen.
+- D) Senden Sie kurz (1-2-3-4) für eine Peilung.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** „Squawk 1234" bedeutet, dass der Pilot den Code 1234 am Transponder wählen und sicherstellen muss, dass er in Betrieb ist. Dies ermöglicht es den Radarlotsen, das Luftfahrzeug anhand des zugewiesenen Codes zu identifizieren. Option A verwechselt einen Transpondercode mit einer Funkfrequenz. Option C verwechselt ebenfalls Frequenzüberwachung mit Transponderbetrieb. Option D beschreibt ein Verfahren, das nichts mit Transpondercodes zu tun hat.
+
+### Q81: Wofür steht die Abkürzung „ATIS"? ^t90q81
+- A) Air Trafic Information Service
+- B) Automatic Terminal Information System
+- C) Airport Terminal Information Service
+- D) Automatic Terminal Information Service
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** ATIS steht für Automatic Terminal Information Service — eine kontinuierlich ausgestrahlte Aufzeichnung mit aktuellen meteorologischen und betrieblichen Informationen für einen Flugplatz, gekennzeichnet durch einen Buchstabencode, der sich bei jeder Aktualisierung ändert. Option A schreibt „Trafic" falsch und verwendet „Air" statt „Automatic". Option B verwendet „System" statt „Service". Option C verwendet „Airport" statt „Automatic".
+
+### Q82: Wie lautet das Rufzeichensuffix des Fluginformationsdienstes? ^t90q82
+- A) FLIGHT CENTER
+- B) INFO
+- C) INFORMATION.
+- D) AERODROME.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der Fluginformationsdienst verwendet das Rufzeichensuffix „Information" (z. B. „Geneva Information" oder „Zurich Information"). Option A („Flight Center") ist kein ICAO-Standardsuffix. Option B („Info") ist eine informelle Abkürzung, die nicht als offizielles Suffix verwendet wird. Option D („Aerodrome") wird nicht als Rufzeichensuffix für den FIS verwendet.
+
+### Q83: Was bedeutet der Begriff „QDR"? ^t90q83
+- A) Rechtweisender Steuerkurs zur Station (ohne Wind)
+- B) Missweisender Steuerkurs zur Station (ohne Wind)
+- C) Rechtweisende Peilung von der Station
+- D) Missweisende Peilung von der Station
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QDR ist die missweisende Peilung von der Station zum Luftfahrzeug — die Richtung, in der sich das Luftfahrzeug von der Station aus gesehen befindet, bezogen auf den missweisenden Norden. Option A beschreibt QUJ (rechtweisender Steuerkurs zur Station). Option B beschreibt QDM (missweisender Steuerkurs zur Station). Option C beschreibt QTE (rechtweisende Peilung von der Station). Diese Q-Codes müssen sorgfältig unterschieden werden, um Navigationsfehler zu vermeiden.
+
+### Q84: Was beeinflusst die Empfangsqualität von VHF-Funk? ^t90q84
+- A) Der Dämmerungseffekt.
+- B) Die Ionosphäre.
+- C) Atmosphärische Störungen, insbesondere Gewitterbedingungen.
+- D) Flughöhe und topographische Bedingungen.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** VHF-Funk breitet sich in Sichtlinie aus, sodass die Empfangsqualität hauptsächlich von der Flughöhe (die bestimmt, wie weit der Funkhorizont reicht) und der Topographie (Berge und Gelände können Signale blockieren) abhängt. Option A (Dämmerungseffekt) beeinflusst den NDB/ADF-Empfang, nicht VHF. Option B (Ionosphäre) beeinflusst die HF-Raumwellenausbreitung, nicht VHF. Option C (Gewitter) kann etwas Rauschen verursachen, ist aber nicht der Hauptfaktor für die VHF-Empfangsqualität.
+
+### Q85: Was bedeutet der Begriff „QFE"? ^t90q85
+- A) Höhenmessereinstellung, die das Instrument am Boden die Flugplatzhöhe anzeigen lässt.
+- B) Atmosphärischer Druck, gemessen in Höhe des höchsten Hindernisses eines Flugplatzes.
+- C) Atmosphärischer Druck in Flugplatzhöhe (oder an der Pistenschwelle).
+- D) Atmosphärischer Druck, gemessen an einem Punkt der Erdoberfläche.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** QFE ist der atmosphärische Druck in Flugplatzhöhe oder an der Pistenschwelle. Mit dieser Einstellung am Höhenmesser zeigt das Instrument am Boden Null an und im Flug die Höhe über dem Flugplatz. Option A beschreibt das QNH-Verhalten (Anzeige der Flugplatzhöhe am Boden). Option B ist keine Standarddefinition. Option D ist zu allgemein und könnte jede Oberflächendruckmessung beschreiben.
+
+### Q86: Im beweglichen Flugfunkdienst werden Nachrichten nach Bedeutung eingestuft. Was ist die korrekte Prioritätsreihenfolge? ^t90q86
+- A) Notmeldungen, Flugsicherheitsnachrichten, Dringlichkeitsmeldungen.
+- B) Meteorologische Nachrichten, Peilnachrichten, Flugregelungsnachrichten.
+- C) Peilnachrichten, Notmeldungen, Dringlichkeitsmeldungen.
+- D) Notmeldungen, Dringlichkeitsmeldungen, Sicherheitsnachrichten.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die korrekte ICAO-Prioritätsreihenfolge lautet: (1) Notmeldungen, (2) Dringlichkeitsmeldungen, (3) Flugsicherheitsnachrichten, gefolgt von meteorologischen, Peil-, Regelungs- und sonstigen Nachrichten. Option A ordnet Flugsicherheit fälschlicherweise vor Dringlichkeit ein. Option B listet nur Kategorien niedrigerer Priorität auf. Option C ordnet Peilnachrichten vor Notmeldungen ein, was falsch ist — Notmeldungen haben immer absolute Priorität.
+
+### Q87: Wie lautet das Dringlichkeitssignal im Sprechfunk? ^t90q87
+- A) PAN PAN (vorzugsweise dreimal gesprochen).
+- B) MAYDAY (vorzugsweise dreimal gesprochen).
+- C) URGENCY (vorzugsweise dreimal gesprochen).
+- D) ALERFA (vorzugsweise dreimal gesprochen).
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Das Sprechfunk-Dringlichkeitssignal ist „PAN PAN", dreimal gesprochen, und zeigt eine ernste Lage an, die zeitnahe Hilfe erfordert, aber keine unmittelbar lebensbedrohliche Notlage darstellt. Option B (MAYDAY) ist das Notsignal für schwere und unmittelbare Gefahr. Option C („URGENCY") ist keine Standardphraseologie. Option D (ALERFA) ist eine interne ATC-Alarmierungsphase, kein Sprechfunksignal.
+
+### Q88: Was bedeutet auf der Verständlichkeitsskala der Grad „5"? ^t90q88
+- A) Zeitweise verständlich.
+- B) Unverständlich.
+- C) Verständlich, aber mit Schwierigkeiten.
+- D) Einwandfrei verständlich.
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Verständlichkeit 5 ist das höchste Niveau auf der ICAO-Skala und bedeutet, dass die Übermittlung einwandfrei klar und verständlich ist. Option A beschreibt Verständlichkeit 2 (zeitweise). Option B beschreibt Verständlichkeit 1 (unverständlich). Option C beschreibt Verständlichkeit 3 (mit Schwierigkeiten). Die Standardantwort lautet „I read you five".
+
+### Q89: Wie heisst das Zeitsystem, das weltweit von den Flugverkehrsdiensten und im festen Flugfunkdienst verwendet wird? ^t90q89
+- A) Ortszeit (LT) im 24-Stunden-Format.
+- B) Koordinierte Weltzeit (UTC).
+- C) Es gibt kein besonderes Zeitsystem, da in der Regel nur Minuten übermittelt werden.
+- D) Ortszeit im AM- und PM-System.
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die Koordinierte Weltzeit (UTC) ist der universelle Zeitstandard, der von allen Flugverkehrsdiensten und festen Flugfunkdiensten weltweit verwendet wird. Sie beseitigt Zeitzonenunklarheiten im internationalen Betrieb. Die Optionen A und D verwenden die Ortszeit, die je nach Standort variiert und im Flugfunkverkehr nicht verwendet wird. Option C ist sachlich falsch — ein bestimmtes Zeitsystem (UTC) wird immer verwendet.
+
+### Q90: Welche Elemente soll eine Notmeldung enthalten? ^t90q90
+- A) Rufzeichen des Luftfahrzeugs, Abflugort, Position, Höhe.
+- B) Rufzeichen des Luftfahrzeugs, Position, benötigte Hilfe.
+- C) Rufzeichen und Typ des Luftfahrzeugs, Art der Notlage, Absichten des Piloten, Position, Höhe, Steuerkurs.
+- D) Rufzeichen des Luftfahrzeugs, Flugroute, Zielflugplatz.
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine vollständige Notmeldung (MAYDAY) soll enthalten: Rufzeichen und Typ des Luftfahrzeugs, Art der Notlage, Absichten des Piloten und Informationen zu Position/Höhe/Steuerkurs — um den Rettungsdiensten maximale Informationen für die Koordination der Hilfe zu geben. Option A lässt Art der Notlage und Pilotenabsichten aus. Option B lässt Luftfahrzeugtyp, Pilotenabsichten und Steuerkurs aus. Option D lässt alle notfallspezifischen Informationen weg und listet nur Flugplandaten auf.
+
+### Q91: Was bedeutet „FEW" für die Bewölkung in einem METAR-Wetterbericht? ^t90q91
+- A) 3 bis 4 Achtel
+- B) 1 bis 2 Achtel
+- C) 8 Achtel
+- D) 5 bis 7 Achtel
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** In der METAR-Bewölkungsmeldung bezeichnet FEW 1 bis 2 Oktas (Achtel) Himmelsbedeckung — die geringste Bewölkungskategorie. Option A beschreibt SCT (Scattered, 3-4 Oktas). Option C beschreibt OVC (Overcast, 8 Oktas). Option D beschreibt BKN (Broken, 5-7 Oktas). Diese ICAO-genormten Bezeichnungen gewährleisten eine eindeutige Wettermeldung weltweit.
+
+### Q92: Was bedeutet „SCT" für die Bewölkung in einem METAR-Wetterbericht? ^t90q92
+- A) 1 bis 2 Achtel
+- B) 8 Achtel
+- C) 5 bis 7 Achtel
+- D) 3 bis 4 Achtel
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** SCT steht für Scattered (aufgelockert) und bezeichnet 3 bis 4 Oktas (Achtel) Himmelsbedeckung durch Wolken. Option A beschreibt FEW (1-2 Oktas). Option B beschreibt OVC (Overcast, 8 Oktas). Option C beschreibt BKN (Broken, 5-7 Oktas). Aufgelockerte Bewölkung schränkt den VFR-Flug nicht notwendigerweise ein, aber Piloten müssen prüfen, ob die Wolkenuntergrenzen die geltenden VFR-Minima einhalten.
+
+### Q93: Was bedeutet „BKN" für die Bewölkung in einem METAR-Wetterbericht? ^t90q93
+- A) 8 Achtel
+- B) 3 bis 4 Achtel
+- C) 5 bis 7 Achtel
+- D) 1 bis 2 Achtel
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** BKN steht für Broken (durchbrochen), also 5 bis 7 Oktas (Achtel) Himmelsbedeckung — überwiegend bewölkt mit einigen Lücken. Option A beschreibt OVC (Overcast, 8 Oktas). Option B beschreibt SCT (Scattered, 3-4 Oktas). Option D beschreibt FEW (1-2 Oktas). Eine durchbrochene Wolkenschicht kann VFR-Betrieb erheblich beeinträchtigen, besonders bei niedrigen Untergrenzen.
+
+### Q94: Welcher Transpondercode signalisiert einen Funkausfall? ^t90q94
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7600
+- D) 7700
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Transpondercode 7600 ist der international genormte Code für den Verlust der Funkkommunikation (NORDO), der Radarlotsen auf den Kommunikationsausfall aufmerksam macht. Option A (7000) ist der VFR-Standard-Conspicuity-Code im europäischen Luftraum. Option B (7500) signalisiert widerrechtliche Einwirkung (Entführung). Option D (7700) zeigt einen allgemeinen Notfall an. Diese vier Codes müssen auswendig gelernt werden, da jeder spezifische ATC-Reaktionen auslöst.
+
+### Q95: Wie lautet der korrekte Ausdruck, um eine Blindsendung einzuleiten? ^t90q95
+- A) No reception
+- B) Transmitting blind
+- C) Listen
+- D) Blind
+
+**Richtig: B)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Wenn ein Pilot senden, aber nicht empfangen kann, muss die Blindsendung mit dem Ausdruck „Transmitting blind" (oder „Transmitting blind on [Frequenz]") eingeleitet werden, um jede empfangende Station auf die Einwegnatur der Kommunikation hinzuweisen. Die Optionen A, C und D sind keine ICAO-Standardphraseologie für die Einleitung von Blindsendungen.
+
+### Q96: Wie oft soll eine Blindsendung durchgeführt werden? ^t90q96
+- A) Dreimal
+- B) Viermal
+- C) Einmal
+- D) Zweimal
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Eine Blindsendung wird einmal auf der aktuellen Frequenz durchgeführt (und gegebenenfalls einmal auf der Notfrequenz wiederholt). Mehrfaches Senden würde die Frequenz unnötig belasten. Die Optionen A, B und D geben übermässige Wiederholungen an, die nicht zum ICAO-Standardverfahren für Blindsendungen gehören.
+
+### Q97: In welcher Situation ist es angemessen, den Transpondercode 7600 einzustellen? ^t90q97
+- A) Flug in Wolken
+- B) Notfall
+- C) Funkausfall
+- D) Entführung
+
+**Richtig: C)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Transpondercode 7600 ist speziell für den Verlust der Funkkommunikation (NORDO) bestimmt und macht Radarlotsen aufmerksam, damit sie angemessene Staffelung und Lichtsignale bereitstellen können. Option A (Flug in Wolken) hat keinen spezifischen Transpondercode. Option B (Notfall) erfordert Code 7700. Option D (Entführung) erfordert Code 7500.
+
+### Q98: Was ist das korrekte Vorgehen bei einem Funkausfall im Luftraum Klasse D? ^t90q98
+- A) Der Flug ist gemäss der letzten Freigabe unter Einhaltung der VFR-Regeln fortzusetzen oder der Luftraum ist auf dem kürzesten Weg zu verlassen
+- B) Der Flug ist über 5000 Fuss unter Einhaltung der VFR-Flugregeln fortzusetzen oder der Luftraum ist über eine Standardroute zu verlassen
+- C) Der Flug ist gemäss der letzten Freigabe unter Einhaltung der VFR-Flugregeln fortzusetzen oder der Luftraum ist über eine Standardroute zu verlassen
+- D) Der Flug ist über 5000 Fuss unter Einhaltung der VFR-Flugregeln fortzusetzen oder der Luftraum ist auf dem kürzesten Weg zu verlassen
+
+**Richtig: A)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Die ICAO-Verfahren bei VFR-Funkausfall im kontrollierten Luftraum verlangen vom Piloten, entweder den Flug gemäss der letzten erhaltenen ATC-Freigabe unter Einhaltung der VFR-Regeln fortzusetzen oder den Luftraum auf dem kürzesten Weg zu verlassen. Die Optionen B und D geben fälschlicherweise einen Flug über 5000 Fuss vor, was nicht Teil des Funkausfallverfahrens ist. Option C ersetzt fälschlicherweise „kürzester Weg" durch „Standardroute".
+
+### Q99: Welcher Ausdruck muss dreimal wiederholt werden, bevor eine Dringlichkeitsmeldung gesendet wird? ^t90q99
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Help
+- C) Urgent
+- D) Pan Pan
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Einer Dringlichkeitsmeldung wird „Pan Pan" dreimal vorangestellt („PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN"). Dies alarmiert alle Stationen auf der Frequenz über eine ernste, aber nicht unmittelbar lebensbedrohliche Situation. Option A („Mayday") ist das Notsignal für schwere und unmittelbare Gefahr. Die Optionen B („Help") und C („Urgent") sind keine ICAO-Standard-Sprechfunkausdrücke.
+
+### Q100: Auf welcher Frequenz soll eine erste Notmeldung gesendet werden? ^t90q100
+- A) Notfrequenz
+- B) FIS-Frequenz
+- C) Radarfrequenz
+- D) Aktuelle Frequenz
+
+**Richtig: D)**
+
+> **Erklärung:** Der erste Not- oder Dringlichkeitsruf soll auf der aktuell verwendeten Frequenz erfolgen, da diese bereits von der zuständigen ATC-Stelle überwacht wird, die das Luftfahrzeug betreut. Ein Frequenzwechsel birgt das Risiko, den Kontakt zu verlieren, und verschwendet wertvolle Zeit. Option A (Notfrequenz 121.5 MHz) sollte erst versucht werden, wenn auf der aktuellen Frequenz keine Antwort erfolgt. Die Optionen B und C sind nicht die korrekte erste Wahl.
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_51_100_fr.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/_trans_batches/trans_90_51_100_fr.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,498 @@
+### Q51: Un pilote transmet le message suivant à l'ATC : « Nous atterrissons à 10h45. Veuillez nous commander un taxi. » De quel type de message s'agit-il ? ^t90q51
+- A) C'est un message d'urgence.
+- B) C'est un message relatif à la régularité des vols.
+- C) C'est un message de service.
+- D) C'est un message inadmissible.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les fréquences ATC sont réservées exclusivement aux communications aéronautiques liées à la sécurité des vols, à l'urgence et aux questions opérationnelles. Commander un taxi terrestre est une demande de service personnel qui n'a pas sa place sur une fréquence aéronautique — c'est donc un message inadmissible. Les options A, B et C classent incorrectement cette demande personnelle parmi les types de messages légitimes.
+
+### Q52: Vous volez en VFR et avez reçu une autorisation ATC pour entrer dans un espace aérien de classe C afin d'atterrir. Peu après votre entrée, votre radio tombe en panne. Que faites-vous si aucune disposition spéciale ne s'applique ? ^t90q52
+- A) Vous réglez le transpondeur sur le code 7600, continuez conformément à la dernière autorisation et suivez les signaux lumineux de la tour de contrôle.
+- B) En vertu de l'autorisation délivrée, vous avez le droit de voler dans l'espace aérien de classe C et d'y atterrir. Vous devez seulement régler le transpondeur sur le code 7700.
+- C) Vous devez vous diriger vers l'aérodrome de dégagement par la route la plus directe et régler le transpondeur sur le code 7000.
+- D) Indépendamment de l'autorisation obtenue, vous n'êtes plus autorisé à voler dans cet espace aérien. Vous réglez le transpondeur sur le code 7600, quittez l'espace aérien aussi rapidement que possible et atterrissez à l'aérodrome approprié le plus proche.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour les vols VFR, la communication radio est obligatoire dans l'espace aérien de classe C. En cas de panne radio, l'autorisation précédente est insuffisante — le pilote doit afficher 7600 (panne radio), quitter l'espace aérien contrôlé par la route la plus courte et atterrir à l'aérodrome approprié le plus proche. L'option A est incorrecte car les vols VFR ne peuvent pas simplement continuer sur la dernière autorisation. L'option B utilise incorrectement le code 7700 (urgence, pas panne radio). L'option C utilise le code 7000 (VFR conspicuité), pas le code de panne radio.
+
+### Q53: Par quel service pouvez-vous obtenir en vol les observations météorologiques de routine (METAR) pour plusieurs aéroports ? ^t90q53
+- A) Via SIGMET.
+- B) Via AIRMET.
+- C) Via GAMET.
+- D) Via VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** VOLMET est le service de diffusion radio continue fournissant des METAR et TAF pour une série d'aérodromes, permettant aux pilotes en vol de recevoir les observations météorologiques actuelles. L'option A (SIGMET) signale des phénomènes météorologiques significatifs dangereux pour tous les aéronefs. L'option B (AIRMET) avertit des dangers météorologiques pertinents pour les vols à basse altitude. L'option C (GAMET) fournit des prévisions de zone pour les opérations à basse altitude. Aucun de ceux-ci ne diffuse les observations de routine d'aérodrome comme le fait VOLMET.
+
+### Q54: Que signifie l'abréviation QNH ? ^t90q54
+- A) La pression atmosphérique au niveau de l'aérodrome (ou au seuil de piste).
+- B) La pression atmosphérique mesurée à l'obstacle le plus élevé de l'aérodrome.
+- C) Le calage altimétrique nécessaire pour lire l'altitude de l'aérodrome lorsqu'on est au sol.
+- D) La pression atmosphérique mesurée en un point de la surface terrestre.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage de la sous-échelle de l'altimètre qui, une fois appliqué, fait indiquer à l'altimètre l'altitude de l'aérodrome au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer lorsqu'on est au sol. C'est une valeur de pression corrigée, pas une mesure directe de pression. L'option A décrit le QFE (pression au niveau de l'aérodrome). L'option B n'est pas un terme altimétrique normalisé. L'option D est trop générique et ne décrit pas spécifiquement le QNH.
+
+### Q55: Que signifie l'abréviation QDM ? ^t90q55
+- A) Cap vrai à suivre pour rejoindre la radiobalise (sans vent).
+- B) Relèvement vrai depuis la radiobalise.
+- C) Relèvement magnétique depuis la radiobalise.
+- D) Cap magnétique à suivre pour rejoindre la radiobalise (sans vent).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QDM est le cap magnétique à suivre (en l'absence de vent) pour voler directement vers la station radio. L'option A décrit le QUJ (cap vrai vers la station). L'option B décrit le QTE (relèvement vrai depuis la station). L'option C décrit le QDR (relèvement magnétique depuis la station). Le système de codes Q utilise ces abréviations distinctes pour éviter toute confusion entre relèvements, caps, références vraies et magnétiques.
+
+### Q56: Combien de fois le signal de détresse radiotéléphonique (MAYDAY) ou le signal d'urgence (PAN PAN) doit-il être prononcé ? ^t90q56
+- A) Deux fois.
+- B) Quatre fois.
+- C) Trois fois.
+- D) Une fois.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal de détresse (« MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY ») et le signal d'urgence (« PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN ») exigent tous deux que l'expression clé soit prononcée trois fois. Cette répétition garantit que la nature et la priorité du message sont clairement reconnues même dans de mauvaises conditions radio ou avec des interférences partielles. Les options A, B et D spécifient des nombres de répétitions incorrects.
+
+### Q57: Quelles informations doivent, dans la mesure du possible, figurer dans un message d'urgence ? ^t90q57
+- A) L'identification de l'aéronef, sa position et son niveau, la nature de l'urgence, l'assistance requise.
+- B) L'identification de l'aéronef, l'aérodrome de départ, la position, le niveau et le cap de l'aéronef.
+- C) L'identification et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de l'urgence, les intentions de l'équipage, ainsi que la position, le niveau et le cap de l'aéronef.
+- D) L'identification et le type de l'aéronef, l'assistance requise, la route, l'aérodrome de destination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message d'urgence (PAN PAN) doit contenir : l'identification et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de l'urgence, les intentions de l'équipage, et les informations de position/niveau/cap — permettant à l'ATC de fournir une assistance efficace. L'option A omet le type d'aéronef et les intentions de l'équipage. L'option B omet la nature de l'urgence et les intentions de l'équipage. L'option D inclut la route et la destination, qui sont des données de plan de vol plutôt que des informations spécifiques à l'urgence.
+
+### Q58: Quel est l'ordre de priorité correct des messages dans le service mobile aéronautique ? ^t90q58
+- A) 1. Messages de détresse, 2. Messages de sécurité des vols, 3. Messages d'urgence.
+- B) 1. Messages de sécurité des vols, 2. Messages de détresse, 3. Messages d'urgence.
+- C) 1. Messages d'urgence, 2. Messages de détresse, 3. Messages de sécurité des vols.
+- D) 1. Messages de détresse, 2. Messages d'urgence, 3. Messages de sécurité des vols.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ordre de priorité OACI des messages est : (1) Détresse (MAYDAY) — danger grave et imminent, (2) Urgence (PAN PAN) — sérieux mais pas immédiatement mortel, (3) Messages de sécurité des vols — autorisations et instructions ATC. Les options A, B et C classent toutes ces catégories dans un ordre incorrect. La détresse a toujours la priorité absolue.
+
+### Q59: Comment les lettres BAFO s'épellent-elles selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI ? ^t90q59
+- A) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- B) BETA ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- C) BRAVO ANNA FOX OSCAR
+- D) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OTTO
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI : B = Bravo, A = Alpha, F = Foxtrot, O = Oscar. L'option B utilise « Beta » (alphabet grec, pas OACI). L'option C utilise « Anna » et « Fox » (variantes locales non normalisées). L'option D utilise « Otto » (alternative allemande non normalisée pour O). Seule l'option A utilise les mots phonétiques OACI corrects pour les quatre lettres.
+
+### Q60: Vous pilotez votre aéronef au cap nord-est à 2 500 pieds. Comment répondez-vous lorsque l'ATC vous demande votre position ? ^t90q60
+- A) Heading 045 at flight level 25.
+- B) 045 degrees and 2,500 feet.
+- C) Heading 45 at 2,500 feet.
+- D) Heading 045 at 2,500 feet.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le format correct est « Heading » suivi de trois chiffres (toujours trois — « 045 » et non « 45 »), puis l'altitude en pieds lorsqu'on est sous l'altitude de transition. L'option A utilise incorrectement le niveau de vol (FL 25 = 2 500 ft en pression standard), qui n'est utilisé qu'au-dessus de l'altitude de transition. L'option B utilise « degrees » et « and », qui ne font pas partie de la phraséologie normalisée. L'option C n'utilise que deux chiffres pour le cap au lieu des trois requis.
+
+### Q61: Quelle gamme de fréquences permet aux ondes radio de parcourir la plus grande distance ? ^t90q61
+- A) UHF
+- B) VHF
+- C) LW
+- D) MW
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les ondes longues (LW / bande LF) parcourent la plus grande distance car elles se diffractent autour de la courbure de la Terre par propagation d'onde de sol, permettant la réception bien au-delà de la ligne de visée. Les options A (UHF) et B (VHF) sont limitées à la portée en ligne de visée, qui dépend de l'altitude et du terrain. L'option D (MW / ondes moyennes) a une portée intermédiaire — meilleure que le VHF mais moindre que les LW. L'aviation utilise principalement le VHF pour sa clarté, malgré la limitation de portée.
+
+### Q62: Quelle abréviation désigne le système de temps universel utilisé par les services de navigation aérienne ? ^t90q62
+- A) LMT
+- B) GMT
+- C) UTC
+- D) LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'UTC (temps universel coordonné) est la norme de temps officielle adoptée par l'OACI pour toutes les communications aéronautiques, plans de vol et publications. L'option B (GMT) est historiquement similaire mais n'est pas la désignation OACI officielle. L'option A (LMT — temps moyen local) et l'option D (LT — heure locale) ne sont pas utilisées dans les communications aéronautiques officielles car elles varient selon la localisation.
+
+### Q63: Selon l'OACI, quel est le débit d'élocution recommandé pour les communications radio ? ^t90q63
+- A) 200 mots/minute.
+- B) 50 mots/minute.
+- C) 100 mots/minute.
+- D) 150 mots/minute.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'OACI recommande environ 100 mots par minute pour les communications radio — un rythme modéré qui assure l'intelligibilité, en particulier pour les locuteurs non natifs de l'anglais et dans des conditions radio dégradées. L'option A (200 mots/minute) est bien trop rapide pour une compréhension claire. L'option B (50 mots/minute) est inutilement lente et gaspillerait du temps de fréquence. L'option D (150 mots/minute) dépasse le débit recommandé.
+
+### Q64: Quelle affirmation concernant la radiotéléphonie dans le service mobile aéronautique est correcte ? ^t90q64
+- A) Dans les communications avec l'ATC, utilisez exclusivement la phraséologie normalisée OACI. Le langage clair n'est autorisé qu'aux aérodromes non contrôlés.
+- B) Peu importe que la phraséologie normalisée OACI ou le langage clair soit utilisé, pourvu que le message soit compréhensible.
+- C) En principe, utilisez le langage clair car il est le plus compréhensible. La phraséologie normalisée ne peut être utilisée que dans le cadre des autorisations ATC.
+- D) La phraséologie normalisée OACI doit en principe être utilisée pour éviter les malentendus. Le langage clair ne doit être utilisé que dans les situations pour lesquelles il n'existe pas de phraséologie normalisée correspondante.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie normalisée OACI est la norme par défaut pour toute radiotéléphonie, minimisant le risque de malentendu en environnement multilingue. Le langage clair n'est autorisé que lorsqu'aucune expression normalisée n'existe pour la situation. L'option A est trop rigide — le langage clair n'est pas limité aux aérodromes non contrôlés. L'option B est dangereuse — la terminologie normalisée existe précisément parce que « compréhensible » est subjectif. L'option C inverse le principe, faisant incorrectement du langage clair la norme par défaut.
+
+### Q65: Quel est le terme anglais correct pour « service d'information de vol d'aérodrome » ? ^t90q65
+- A) FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- B) AIRPORT TRAFFIC INFORMATION SERVICE
+- C) AERODROME FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- D) AERODROME INFORMATION SERVICE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) est le service d'information de vol spécifique à un aérodrome, fournissant aux pilotes des informations sur les conditions de l'aérodrome et le trafic connu sans émettre d'autorisations. L'option A (Flight Information Service) est le FIS régional plus large, non spécifique à un aérodrome. L'option B utilise « Airport Traffic », qui n'est pas le terme OACI officiel. L'option D omet « Flight », qui est une partie essentielle de la désignation officielle.
+
+### Q66: Quelle est la forme abrégée correcte de l'indicatif d'appel pour un aéronef dont l'indicatif complet est AB-CDE ? ^t90q66
+- A) DE
+- B) A-DE
+- C) CDE
+- D) AB-DE
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La règle d'abréviation OACI conserve le premier caractère (préfixe de nationalité) et les deux derniers caractères : AB-CDE devient A-DE. L'option A omet entièrement le préfixe de nationalité. L'option C prend les trois derniers caractères sans le préfixe de nationalité. L'option D conserve le préfixe de nationalité complet à deux caractères, ce qui n'est pas la méthode d'abréviation normalisée — seul le premier caractère est conservé.
+
+### Q67: Quand un pilote est-il autorisé à utiliser un indicatif d'appel abrégé ? ^t90q67
+- A) À tout moment, à condition qu'il n'y ait pas de risque de confusion.
+- B) Jamais. Seul le service de la navigation aérienne a le droit d'abréger l'indicatif d'appel.
+- C) Si la station au sol communique de cette manière.
+- D) Après le premier appel.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un pilote ne peut abréger son indicatif d'appel qu'après que la station au sol a initié l'abréviation. La station au sol prend l'initiative car elle peut vérifier qu'il n'y a pas d'indicatifs d'appel similaires sur la fréquence. L'option A est incorrecte car le pilote ne peut pas déterminer lui-même le risque de confusion. L'option B est incorrecte car les deux parties peuvent utiliser la forme abrégée, pas seulement l'ATC. L'option D est incorrecte car l'abréviation nécessite l'initiative de l'ATC, pas simplement l'achèvement du premier appel.
+
+### Q68: Quelles instructions et informations doivent toujours être collationnées ? ^t90q68
+- A) Vent de surface, visibilité, température, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- B) Piste en service, calages altimétriques, codes SSR, instructions de niveau, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- C) Piste en service, visibilité, vent de surface, instructions de cap, calages altimétriques.
+- D) Vent de surface, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les éléments de collationnement obligatoire selon l'OACI/EASA sont : piste en service, calages altimétriques, codes SSR (transpondeur), instructions de niveau (altitude/niveau de vol) et instructions de cap et de vitesse. Les options A, C et D incluent toutes le vent de surface et/ou la visibilité, qui sont des informations consultatives ne nécessitant pas de collationnement — elles sont acquittées par « Roger ».
+
+### Q69: Que signifie l'instruction « Squawk ident » ? ^t90q69
+- A) Vous avez été identifié par radar.
+- B) Vous devez réintroduire le code transpondeur qui vous a été attribué.
+- C) Vous devez appuyer sur le bouton « IDENT » de votre transpondeur.
+- D) Vous devez effectuer un virage pour vous identifier.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Squawk ident » ordonne au pilote d'appuyer sur le bouton IDENT de son transpondeur, ce qui génère un signal amélioré distinct sur l'écran radar du contrôleur pour aider à identifier l'aéronef spécifique parmi le trafic environnant. L'option A décrit la confirmation du contrôleur après identification. L'option B correspondrait à « Squawk [code] » ou « Recycle ». L'option D décrit un virage d'identification radar, qui est une procédure différente.
+
+### Q70: Comment un pilote termine-t-il le collationnement d'une autorisation ATC ? ^t90q70
+- A) Par « WILCO ».
+- B) Par l'indicatif d'appel de la station au sol ATC.
+- C) Par l'indicatif d'appel de son aéronef.
+- D) Par « ROGER ».
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout collationnement d'une autorisation ATC doit se terminer par l'indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, confirmant de manière non ambiguë quel aéronef a reçu et correctement répété l'autorisation. L'option A (« Wilco ») peut figurer dans une réponse mais ne remplace pas l'exigence de l'indicatif d'appel. L'option B (indicatif de la station au sol) est incorrecte — le collationnement se termine par l'identification de l'aéronef. L'option D (« Roger ») ne fait qu'accuser réception et n'identifie pas l'aéronef.
+
+### Q71: Dans quelle catégorie sont classés les messages provenant d'un aéronef en état de danger grave et/ou imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate ? ^t90q71
+- A) Messages de sécurité des vols.
+- B) Messages d'urgence.
+- C) Messages de détresse.
+- D) Messages de régularité des vols.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un aéronef confronté à un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate transmet des messages de détresse (MAYDAY), la catégorie de priorité la plus élevée dans les communications aéronautiques. L'option A (messages de sécurité des vols) couvre les instructions et autorisations ATC. L'option B (messages d'urgence) couvre les situations sérieuses mais pas immédiatement mortelles. L'option D (messages de régularité) couvre les communications opérationnelles administratives.
+
+### Q72: À partir de quel moment un aéronef peut-il utiliser son indicatif d'appel abrégé ? ^t90q72
+- A) Lorsque la station aéronautique a utilisé l'indicatif d'appel abrégé pour s'adresser à l'aéronef.
+- B) Lorsque la communication est bien établie.
+- C) En cas de trafic intense.
+- D) Lorsqu'il n'y a aucune possibilité de confusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un aéronef peut utiliser son indicatif d'appel abrégé une fois que la communication radio est bien établie avec la station au sol, et seulement après que la station au sol a elle-même utilisé la forme abrégée en premier. L'option A est partiellement correcte mais incomplète — c'est l'utilisation par la station au sol qui déclenche l'autorisation. L'option C (trafic intense) et l'option D (aucun risque de confusion) n'accordent pas indépendamment le droit d'abréviation ; la station au sol doit en prendre l'initiative.
+
+### Q73: Un aéronef ne parvient pas à établir le contact radio avec une station au sol sur la fréquence désignée ou toute autre fréquence appropriée. Quelle action le pilote doit-il entreprendre ? ^t90q73
+- A) Atterrir à l'aérodrome le plus proche sur la route.
+- B) Se diriger vers l'aérodrome de dégagement.
+- C) Essayer d'établir la communication avec d'autres aéronefs ou d'autres stations aéronautiques.
+- D) Afficher le code SSR d'urgence 7500.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas d'impossibilité de contacter la station désignée, le pilote doit d'abord essayer d'établir la communication avec d'autres aéronefs ou stations aéronautiques pouvant relayer le message. L'option A est prématurée — les alternatives de communication doivent d'abord être épuisées. L'option B suppose la désignation préalable d'un aérodrome de dégagement. L'option D est incorrecte car le code 7500 indique un détournement/interférence illicite, pas une panne de communication (qui est le 7600).
+
+### Q74: Dans le service mobile aéronautique, laquelle des fréquences suivantes est une fréquence internationale de détresse ? ^t90q74
+- A) 123.45MHz.
+- B) 121.500KHz.
+- C) 6500 KHz.
+- D) 121.500MHz.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La fréquence internationale de détresse VHF (fréquence de veille) est 121.500 MHz, surveillée en permanence par les installations ATC du monde entier. L'option A (123.45 MHz) est une fréquence consultative air-air. L'option B indique incorrectement 121.500 KHz — l'unité correcte est MHz, pas KHz (121.500 KHz serait dans la bande LF). L'option C (6500 KHz) n'est pas une fréquence de détresse normalisée.
+
+### Q75: Comment les lettres NDGF doivent-elles être prononcées selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI ? ^t90q75
+- A) NOVEMBER DELTA GOLF FOXTROT.
+- B) NOVEMBER DECEMBER GOLF FOXTROT
+- C) NORBERT DELTA GOLF FOX.
+- D) NOVEMBER DELTA GAMMA FOX.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI : N = November, D = Delta, G = Golf, F = Foxtrot. L'option B utilise « December » pour D (pas normalisé OACI). L'option C utilise « Norbert » (non normalisé) et « Fox » (le mot correct est « Foxtrot »). L'option D utilise « Gamma » (alphabet grec) pour G et « Fox » au lieu de « Foxtrot ».
+
+### Q76: Que signifie le terme « station aéronautique » ? ^t90q76
+- A) Une station radio du service fixe aéronautique, au sol ou à bord d'un aéronef, destinée à l'échange de communications radio.
+- B) Une station terrestre du service mobile aéronautique. Dans certains cas, une station aéronautique peut être située à bord d'un navire ou d'une plateforme en mer.
+- C) Une station radio du service fixe aéronautique.
+- D) Toute station radio destinée à l'échange de communications radio.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une station aéronautique est définie comme une station terrestre du service mobile aéronautique, assurant la communication bilatérale avec les aéronefs. Dans certains cas, elle peut être située sur un navire ou une plateforme en mer. L'option A fait incorrectement référence au service fixe (sol-sol) plutôt qu'au service mobile (sol-air). L'option C est également une désignation de service incorrecte. L'option D est trop large et englobe toutes les stations radio indépendamment du type de service.
+
+### Q77: Que signifie l'abréviation « HJ » ? ^t90q77
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil.
+- B) Du lever au coucher du soleil.
+- C) Service continu jour et nuit.
+- D) Pas d'horaires d'exploitation fixes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** HJ (du français « Heure de Jour ») signifie heures de jour — du lever au coucher du soleil. Cette désignation apparaît dans les AIP et les NOTAM pour les installations ouvertes uniquement pendant les heures de jour. L'option A décrit HN (du coucher au lever du soleil). L'option C décrit H24 (service continu). L'option D décrit HX (pas d'horaires fixes).
+
+### Q78: Quelles instructions et informations doivent toujours être collationnées textuellement ? ^t90q78
+- A) Piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- B) Vent de surface, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR.
+- C) Piste en service, visibilité, vent de surface, instructions de cap, calages altimétriques.
+- D) Vent de surface, visibilité, température, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les éléments de collationnement obligatoire sont : piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR et instructions de cap/vitesse. Le vent de surface est également inclus dans certaines mises en œuvre régionales. Les options C et D incluent la visibilité et/ou la température, qui sont consultatives et ne nécessitent pas de collationnement. L'option A est proche mais omet le vent de surface, tandis que l'option B correspond à la liste normalisée OACI.
+
+### Q79: Dans quelle catégorie de messages peut-on classer les autorisations ATC, les autorisations de décollage et d'atterrissage, et les informations de trafic du service de contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t90q79
+- A) Messages de sécurité des vols.
+- B) Messages de régularité des vols.
+- C) Messages d'urgence.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les autorisations ATC, les instructions de décollage/atterrissage et les informations de trafic sont toutes classées comme messages de sécurité des vols, au troisième rang dans la hiérarchie de priorité OACI après les messages de détresse et d'urgence. L'option B (messages de régularité) couvre les communications administratives et logistiques. L'option C (messages d'urgence) concerne spécifiquement les aéronefs ou personnes confrontés à une situation de sécurité sérieuse, pas les opérations ATC de routine.
+
+### Q80: Que signifie l'instruction « Squawk 1234 » ? ^t90q80
+- A) Effectuez un contrôle radio sur la fréquence 123.4 MHz.
+- B) Affichez le code 1234 sur le transpondeur et mettez-le en marche.
+- C) Soyez prêt à surveiller la fréquence 123.4 MHz.
+- D) Transmettez brièvement (1-2-3-4) pour un relèvement.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Squawk 1234 » signifie que le pilote doit sélectionner le code 1234 sur le transpondeur et s'assurer qu'il est en fonctionnement. Cela permet aux contrôleurs radar d'identifier l'aéronef en utilisant le code attribué. L'option A confond un code transpondeur avec une fréquence radio. L'option C confond également la surveillance de fréquence avec le fonctionnement du transpondeur. L'option D décrit une procédure sans rapport avec les codes transpondeur.
+
+### Q81: Que signifie l'abréviation « ATIS » ? ^t90q81
+- A) Air Trafic Information Service
+- B) Automatic Terminal Information System
+- C) Airport Terminal Information Service
+- D) Automatic Terminal Information Service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** ATIS signifie Automatic Terminal Information Service (service automatique d'information de région terminale) — un enregistrement diffusé en continu contenant les informations météorologiques et opérationnelles actuelles d'un aérodrome, identifié par un code alphabétique qui change à chaque mise à jour. L'option A écrit incorrectement « Trafic » et utilise « Air » au lieu de « Automatic ». L'option B utilise « System » au lieu de « Service ». L'option C utilise « Airport » au lieu de « Automatic ».
+
+### Q82: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel du service d'information de vol ? ^t90q82
+- A) FLIGHT CENTER
+- B) INFO
+- C) INFORMATION.
+- D) AERODROME.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le service d'information de vol utilise le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel « Information » (par exemple « Geneva Information » ou « Zurich Information »). L'option A (« Flight Center ») n'est pas un suffixe OACI normalisé. L'option B (« Info ») est une abréviation informelle non utilisée comme suffixe officiel. L'option D (« Aerodrome ») n'est pas utilisé comme suffixe d'indicatif d'appel pour le FIS.
+
+### Q83: Que signifie le terme « QDR » ? ^t90q83
+- A) Cap vrai vers la station (sans vent)
+- B) Cap magnétique vers la station (sans vent)
+- C) Relèvement vrai depuis la station
+- D) Relèvement magnétique depuis la station
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QDR est le relèvement magnétique depuis la station vers l'aéronef — la direction dans laquelle se trouve l'aéronef vu depuis la station, référencé au nord magnétique. L'option A décrit le QUJ (cap vrai vers la station). L'option B décrit le QDM (cap magnétique vers la station). L'option C décrit le QTE (relèvement vrai depuis la station). Ces codes Q doivent être soigneusement distingués pour éviter les erreurs de navigation.
+
+### Q84: Qu'est-ce qui influence la qualité de réception radio VHF ? ^t90q84
+- A) L'effet crépusculaire.
+- B) L'ionosphère.
+- C) Les perturbations atmosphériques, en particulier les conditions orageuses.
+- D) L'altitude de vol et les conditions topographiques.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La radio VHF se propage en ligne de visée, de sorte que la qualité de réception dépend principalement de l'altitude de vol (qui détermine la portée de l'horizon radio) et de la topographie (les montagnes et le relief peuvent bloquer les signaux). L'option A (effet crépusculaire) affecte la réception NDB/ADF, pas le VHF. L'option B (ionosphère) affecte la propagation par ondes de ciel HF, pas le VHF. L'option C (orages) peut causer un peu de parasites mais n'est pas le facteur principal de la qualité de réception VHF.
+
+### Q85: Que signifie le terme « QFE » ? ^t90q85
+- A) Calage altimétrique faisant indiquer à l'instrument l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol.
+- B) Pression atmosphérique mesurée à la hauteur de l'obstacle le plus élevé d'un aérodrome.
+- C) Pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome (ou au seuil de piste).
+- D) Pression atmosphérique mesurée en un point de la surface terrestre.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome ou au seuil de piste. Lorsqu'il est calé sur l'altimètre, l'instrument indique zéro au sol et affiche en vol la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome. L'option A décrit le comportement du QNH (lecture de l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol). L'option B n'est pas une définition normalisée. L'option D est trop générique et pourrait décrire toute mesure de pression en surface.
+
+### Q86: Dans le service mobile aéronautique, les messages sont classés par importance. Quel est l'ordre de priorité correct ? ^t90q86
+- A) Messages de détresse, messages de sécurité des vols, messages d'urgence.
+- B) Messages météorologiques, messages de radiogoniométrie, messages de régularité des vols.
+- C) Messages de radiogoniométrie, messages de détresse, messages d'urgence.
+- D) Messages de détresse, messages d'urgence, messages de sécurité.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ordre de priorité OACI correct est : (1) Messages de détresse, (2) Messages d'urgence, (3) Messages de sécurité des vols, suivis des messages météorologiques, de radiogoniométrie, de régularité et autres. L'option A place incorrectement la sécurité des vols au-dessus de l'urgence. L'option B ne liste que des catégories de priorité inférieure. L'option C place la radiogoniométrie au-dessus de la détresse, ce qui est incorrect — la détresse a toujours la priorité absolue.
+
+### Q87: Quel est le signal d'urgence en radiotéléphonie ? ^t90q87
+- A) PAN PAN (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- B) MAYDAY (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- C) URGENCY (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- D) ALERFA (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal d'urgence en radiotéléphonie est « PAN PAN » prononcé trois fois, indiquant une situation sérieuse nécessitant une assistance rapide mais ne constituant pas une urgence vitale immédiate. L'option B (MAYDAY) est le signal de détresse pour un danger grave et imminent. L'option C (« URGENCY ») n'est pas de la phraséologie normalisée. L'option D (ALERFA) est une désignation interne de phase d'alerte ATC, pas un signal radiotéléphonique.
+
+### Q88: Sur l'échelle de lisibilité, que signifie le degré « 5 » ? ^t90q88
+- A) Lisible par intermittence.
+- B) Illisible.
+- C) Lisible, mais avec difficulté.
+- D) Parfaitement lisible.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 5 est le niveau le plus élevé de l'échelle OACI, signifiant que la transmission est parfaitement claire et intelligible. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2 (par intermittence). L'option B décrit la lisibilité 1 (illisible). L'option C décrit la lisibilité 3 (avec difficulté). La réponse standard est « I read you five ».
+
+### Q89: Quel est le nom du système horaire utilisé dans le monde entier par les services de la circulation aérienne et dans le service fixe aéronautique ? ^t90q89
+- A) Heure locale (LT) au format 24 heures.
+- B) Temps universel coordonné (UTC).
+- C) Il n'y a pas de système horaire particulier, car généralement seules les minutes sont transmises.
+- D) Heure locale au format AM et PM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le temps universel coordonné (UTC) est la norme horaire universelle utilisée par tous les services de la circulation aérienne et les services fixes aéronautiques dans le monde entier. Il élimine l'ambiguïté des fuseaux horaires dans les opérations internationales. Les options A et D utilisent l'heure locale, qui varie selon la localisation et n'est pas utilisée dans les communications aéronautiques. L'option C est factuellement incorrecte — un système horaire spécifique (UTC) est toujours utilisé.
+
+### Q90: Quels éléments un message de détresse doit-il contenir ? ^t90q90
+- A) Indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, point de départ, position, niveau.
+- B) Indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, position, assistance requise.
+- C) Indicatif d'appel et type de l'aéronef, nature de la situation de détresse, intentions du pilote, position, niveau, cap.
+- D) Indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, route de vol, destination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message de détresse complet (MAYDAY) doit contenir : l'indicatif d'appel et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de la détresse, les intentions du pilote, et les informations de position/niveau/cap — donnant aux services de secours le maximum d'informations pour coordonner l'assistance. L'option A omet la nature de la détresse et les intentions du pilote. L'option B omet le type d'aéronef, les intentions du pilote et le cap. L'option D omet toutes les informations spécifiques à l'urgence et ne liste que des données de plan de vol.
+
+### Q91: Que signifie « FEW » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q91
+- A) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- B) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- C) 8 huitièmes
+- D) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les rapports de couverture nuageuse METAR, FEW désigne 1 à 2 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert — la catégorie de nuages la plus dispersée. L'option A décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option C décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option D décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). Ces désignations ICAO normalisées assurent un signalement météorologique non ambigu dans le monde entier.
+
+### Q92: Que signifie « SCT » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q92
+- A) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- B) 8 huitièmes
+- C) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- D) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** SCT signifie Scattered (épars), représentant 3 à 4 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert par les nuages. L'option A décrit FEW (1-2 octas). L'option B décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option C décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). Une couverture nuageuse éparse ne restreint pas nécessairement le vol VFR, mais les pilotes doivent vérifier que les bases de nuages respectent les minima VFR applicables.
+
+### Q93: Que signifie « BKN » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q93
+- A) 8 huitièmes
+- B) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- C) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- D) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** BKN signifie Broken (fragmenté), soit 5 à 7 octas (huitièmes) du ciel couverts — prédominance de nuages avec quelques trouées. L'option A décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option B décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option D décrit FEW (1-2 octas). Une couche fragmentée peut avoir un impact significatif sur les opérations VFR, surtout si les bases de nuages sont basses.
+
+### Q94: Quel code transpondeur signale une panne radio ? ^t90q94
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7600
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le code normalisé internationalement pour la perte de communication radio (NORDO), alertant les contrôleurs radar de la panne de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR standard dans l'espace aérien européen. L'option B (7500) signale une interférence illicite (détournement). L'option D (7700) indique une urgence générale. Ces quatre codes doivent être mémorisés car chacun déclenche des réponses ATC spécifiques.
+
+### Q95: Quelle est l'expression correcte pour commencer une transmission en aveugle ? ^t90q95
+- A) No reception
+- B) Transmitting blind
+- C) Listen
+- D) Blind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un pilote peut émettre mais ne peut pas recevoir, la transmission en aveugle doit commencer par l'expression « Transmitting blind » (ou « Transmitting blind on [fréquence] ») pour alerter toute station réceptrice du caractère unidirectionnel de la communication. Les options A, C et D ne sont pas de la phraséologie OACI normalisée pour initier des transmissions en aveugle.
+
+### Q96: Combien de fois une transmission en aveugle doit-elle être effectuée ? ^t90q96
+- A) Trois fois
+- B) Quatre fois
+- C) Une fois
+- D) Deux fois
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une transmission en aveugle est effectuée une seule fois sur la fréquence en cours (et éventuellement répétée une fois sur la fréquence d'urgence si approprié). La répéter plusieurs fois encombrerait inutilement la fréquence. Les options A, B et D spécifient des répétitions excessives qui ne font pas partie de la procédure OACI normalisée pour les transmissions en aveugle.
+
+### Q97: Dans quelle situation est-il approprié d'afficher le code transpondeur 7600 ? ^t90q97
+- A) Vol dans les nuages
+- B) Urgence
+- C) Perte de radio
+- D) Détournement
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est spécifiquement désigné pour la perte de communication radio (NORDO), alertant les contrôleurs radar afin qu'ils puissent assurer la séparation appropriée et les signaux visuels. L'option A (vol dans les nuages) n'a pas de code transpondeur spécifique. L'option B (urgence) nécessite le code 7700. L'option D (détournement) nécessite le code 7500.
+
+### Q98: Quelle est la conduite à tenir en cas de panne radio dans un espace aérien de classe D ? ^t90q98
+- A) Le vol doit être poursuivi conformément à la dernière autorisation en respectant les règles VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté par la route la plus courte
+- B) Le vol doit être poursuivi au-dessus de 5000 pieds en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté en utilisant un itinéraire normalisé
+- C) Le vol doit être poursuivi conformément à la dernière autorisation en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté en utilisant un itinéraire normalisé
+- D) Le vol doit être poursuivi au-dessus de 5000 pieds en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté par la route la plus courte
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les procédures OACI en cas de panne radio VFR dans un espace aérien contrôlé exigent que le pilote soit poursuive le vol conformément à la dernière autorisation ATC reçue en respectant les règles VFR, soit quitte l'espace aérien par la route la plus courte. Les options B et D spécifient incorrectement un vol au-dessus de 5000 pieds, ce qui ne fait pas partie de la procédure de panne radio. L'option C remplace incorrectement « route la plus courte » par « itinéraire normalisé ».
+
+### Q99: Quelle expression doit être répétée trois fois avant de transmettre un message d'urgence ? ^t90q99
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Help
+- C) Urgent
+- D) Pan Pan
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message d'urgence est précédé de « Pan Pan » prononcé trois fois (« PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN »). Cela alerte toutes les stations sur la fréquence d'une situation sérieuse mais pas immédiatement mortelle. L'option A (« Mayday ») est le signal de détresse pour un danger grave et imminent. Les options B (« Help ») et C (« Urgent ») ne sont pas des expressions de radiotéléphonie OACI normalisées.
+
+### Q100: Sur quelle fréquence un message de détresse initial doit-il être transmis ? ^t90q100
+- A) Fréquence d'urgence
+- B) Fréquence FIS
+- C) Fréquence radar
+- D) Fréquence en cours
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'appel initial de détresse ou d'urgence doit être effectué sur la fréquence actuellement utilisée, car cette fréquence est déjà surveillée par l'organisme ATC compétent gérant l'aéronef. Changer de fréquence risque de perdre le contact et gaspille un temps précieux. L'option A (fréquence d'urgence 121.5 MHz) ne doit être essayée que s'il n'y a pas de réponse sur la fréquence en cours. Les options B et C ne sont pas le premier choix correct.
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diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q27.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q27.svg
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index 0000000..0e0c8e6
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q27.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,73 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 250" width="600" height="250">
+ <rect width="600" height="250" fill="white"/>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="28" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="16" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">ICAO Chart Symbols — Obstacles</text>
+
+ <!-- ===== A) Single lighted obstacle ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(75, 125)">
+ <!-- Filled circle (base) -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="20" r="8" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Light rays (star) -->
+ <line x1="0" y1="-5" x2="0" y2="-18" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="9" y1="0" x2="18" y2="-6" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-9" y1="0" x2="-18" y2="-6" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="6" y1="-9" x2="13" y2="-18" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-6" y1="-9" x2="-13" y2="-18" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="9" y1="-5" x2="18" y2="-10" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-9" y1="-5" x2="-18" y2="-10" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="48" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">A)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="63" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Single lighted</text>
+ <text x="0" y="76" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">obstacle</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== B) Single unlighted obstacle ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(225, 125)">
+ <!-- Filled circle (base) -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="20" r="8" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="48" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">B)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="63" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Single unlighted</text>
+ <text x="0" y="76" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">obstacle</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== C) Group of lighted obstacles ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(375, 125)">
+ <!-- Two filled circles side by side -->
+ <circle cx="-12" cy="20" r="7" fill="black"/>
+ <circle cx="12" cy="20" r="7" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Light rays above center -->
+ <line x1="0" y1="-2" x2="0" y2="-16" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="9" y1="2" x2="18" y2="-4" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-9" y1="2" x2="-18" y2="-4" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="6" y1="-7" x2="13" y2="-16" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-6" y1="-7" x2="-13" y2="-16" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="9" y1="-3" x2="18" y2="-8" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-9" y1="-3" x2="-18" y2="-8" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="48" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">C)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="63" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Group of lighted</text>
+ <text x="0" y="76" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">obstacles</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== D) Group of unlighted obstacles ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(525, 125)">
+ <!-- Two filled circles side by side -->
+ <circle cx="-12" cy="20" r="7" fill="black"/>
+ <circle cx="12" cy="20" r="7" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="48" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">D)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="63" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Group of unlighted</text>
+ <text x="0" y="76" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">obstacles</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- Dividers -->
+ <line x1="150" y1="50" x2="150" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="300" y1="50" x2="300" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="450" y1="50" x2="450" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Border -->
+ <rect width="598" height="248" x="1" y="1" fill="none" stroke="#333333" stroke-width="1"/>
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q28.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q28.svg
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index 0000000..a725669
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q28.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,64 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 250" width="600" height="250">
+ <rect width="600" height="250" fill="white"/>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="28" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="16" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">ICAO Chart Symbols — Airports</text>
+
+ <!-- ===== A) Civil airport with paved runway ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(75, 120)">
+ <!-- Circle -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="18" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Runway line through center (horizontal) -->
+ <rect x="-5" y="-22" width="10" height="44" fill="black" rx="2"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">A)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Civil airport</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">paved runway</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== B) Military airport ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(225, 120)">
+ <!-- Circle with flag/military cross -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="18" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Runway line -->
+ <rect x="-5" y="-22" width="10" height="44" fill="black" rx="2"/>
+ <!-- Military crossbar (shorter horizontal bar across runway) -->
+ <rect x="-18" y="-4" width="36" height="8" fill="black" rx="1"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">B)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Military airport</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">paved runway</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== C) Civil airport with unpaved runway ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(375, 120)">
+ <!-- Circle only, no fill runway bar -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="18" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Runway line (open/outline style to show unpaved) -->
+ <rect x="-5" y="-22" width="10" height="44" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" rx="2"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">C)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Civil airport</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">unpaved runway</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== D) Heliport ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(525, 120)">
+ <!-- Square with H -->
+ <rect x="-20" y="-20" width="40" height="40" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <text x="0" y="8" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="24" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">H</text>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">D)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Heliport</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black"> </text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- Dividers -->
+ <line x1="150" y1="50" x2="150" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="300" y1="50" x2="300" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="450" y1="50" x2="450" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Border -->
+ <rect width="598" height="248" x="1" y="1" fill="none" stroke="#333333" stroke-width="1"/>
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q29.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q29.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ab158ba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t30_q29.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 250" width="600" height="250">
+ <rect width="600" height="250" fill="white"/>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="28" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="16" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">ICAO Chart Symbols — Spot Elevations</text>
+
+ <!-- ===== A) General spot elevation ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(75, 120)">
+ <!-- Small dot -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="3" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Elevation number next to dot -->
+ <text x="10" y="5" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="14" fill="black">1234</text>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="20" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">A)</text>
+ <text x="20" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">General spot</text>
+ <text x="20" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">elevation</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== B) Highest spot elevation on chart ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(225, 120)">
+ <!-- Larger bold dot -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="5" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Bold elevation number -->
+ <text x="10" y="6" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="16" font-weight="bold" fill="black">4808</text>
+ <!-- Underline to indicate highest -->
+ <line x1="10" y1="10" x2="54" y2="10" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="25" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">B)</text>
+ <text x="25" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Highest spot</text>
+ <text x="25" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">elevation on chart</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== C) Mountain peak / summit (filled triangle) ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(390, 120)">
+ <!-- Filled triangle pointing up -->
+ <polygon points="0,-22 -16,12 16,12" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Elevation number -->
+ <text x="22" y="-10" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" fill="black">2962</text>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">C)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Mountain peak</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">/ summit</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== D) Trigonometric point ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(530, 120)">
+ <!-- Open triangle -->
+ <polygon points="0,-22 -16,12 16,12" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Dot in center -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="3" r="3" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Elevation number -->
+ <text x="22" y="-10" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" fill="black">1543</text>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">D)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Trigonometric</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">point</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- Dividers -->
+ <line x1="150" y1="50" x2="150" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="300" y1="50" x2="300" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="450" y1="50" x2="450" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Border -->
+ <rect width="598" height="248" x="1" y="1" fill="none" stroke="#333333" stroke-width="1"/>
+</svg>
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@@ -0,0 +1,102 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 500 350" width="500" height="350" style="background:white; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
+
+ <defs>
+ <marker id="arrowAxis" markerWidth="10" markerHeight="7" refX="9" refY="3.5" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 10,3.5 0,7" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- Axes -->
+ <!-- Y axis (Performance) -->
+ <line x1="70" y1="290" x2="70" y2="30" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowAxis)"/>
+ <!-- X axis (Arousal) -->
+ <line x1="70" y1="290" x2="460" y2="290" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowAxis)"/>
+
+ <!-- Axis labels -->
+ <text x="250" y="325" text-anchor="middle" font-size="15" font-weight="bold" fill="black">A (Arousal / Stress)</text>
+ <!-- Y-axis label (rotated) -->
+ <text x="22" y="165" text-anchor="middle" font-size="15" font-weight="bold" fill="black"
+ transform="rotate(-90, 22, 165)">P (Performance)</text>
+
+ <!-- Inverted-U curve
+ X range: 70 to 450 (arousal: low to high)
+ Y range: 290 (low) to 50 (high performance)
+ Peak at arousal midpoint ~x=260, y=55
+ A: (90, 270) low arousal, low performance
+ B: (260, 55) peak
+ C: (360, 140) high arousal, declining
+ D: (430, 270) very high, very low
+
+ Bezier: from A(90,270) through B(260,55) to D(430,270)
+ Control points to create smooth inverted-U:
+ CP1: (155, 55) pulling curve up
+ CP2: (355, 55) holding it up then falling
+ -->
+ <path d="M 90,270 C 155,55 355,55 430,270"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="3"/>
+
+ <!-- Shaded zone around peak (optimal performance zone) -->
+ <!-- Light band between x=200 and x=320 -->
+ <path d="M 200,290 L 200,78 C 225,60 295,60 320,78 L 320,290 Z"
+ fill="#e8f0ff" stroke="none" opacity="0.5"/>
+
+ <!-- Point A: low arousal, low performance -->
+ <!-- On curve at x=90: y=270 -->
+ <circle cx="90" cy="270" r="7" fill="#c00" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="70" y="265" text-anchor="end" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="#c00">A</text>
+ <text x="55" y="248" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">Low arousal,</text>
+ <text x="55" y="261" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">low performance</text>
+
+ <!-- Point B: optimal, peak performance -->
+ <!-- On curve at x=260, peak: y ~ 55 + small deviation from bezier calc -->
+ <!-- At t=0.5 for cubic bezier A(90,270) CP1(155,55) CP2(355,55) D(430,270):
+ x = (1-t)^3*90 + 3(1-t)^2*t*155 + 3(1-t)*t^2*355 + t^3*430
+ = 0.125*90 + 0.375*155 + 0.375*355 + 0.125*430
+ = 11.25 + 58.125 + 133.125 + 53.75 = 256.25
+ y = 0.125*270 + 0.375*55 + 0.375*55 + 0.125*270
+ = 33.75 + 20.625 + 20.625 + 33.75 = 108.75
+ Hmm, mid-bezier y=109, not 55. The peak is NOT at t=0.5 for this bezier.
+ The actual peak (minimum y) is at the top of the curve.
+ Since CP1.y = CP2.y = 55, and A.y=D.y=270, the peak of the curve is AT y=55.
+ The x-midpoint of control points: (155+355)/2 = 255. So peak is around x=255, y close to 55. -->
+ <!-- Let's just use x=258, y=57 for point B (approximately correct) -->
+ <circle cx="258" cy="62" r="7" fill="#007700" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="258" y="50" text-anchor="middle" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="#007700">B</text>
+ <text x="258" y="35" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="#007700" font-weight="bold">Optimal</text>
+ <text x="258" y="18" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">Peak performance</text>
+
+ <!-- Point C: high arousal, declining -->
+ <!-- Approximate on curve: x=360 -->
+ <!-- t such that x=360:
+ 90(1-t)^3 + 3*155(1-t)^2*t + 3*355(1-t)*t^2 + 430*t^3 = 360
+ Rough estimate: t~0.73 gives x~360
+ y at t=0.73: 0.0219*270 + 3*0.0729*0.73*55 + 3*0.27*0.5329*55 + 0.389*270
+ = 5.9 + 8.8 + 23.8 + 105 = 143.5 ≈ 144 -->
+ <circle cx="362" cy="144" r="7" fill="#e87000" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="375" y="140" text-anchor="start" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="#e87000">C</text>
+ <text x="390" y="125" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">High arousal,</text>
+ <text x="390" y="138" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">declining</text>
+
+ <!-- Point D: very high arousal, very low performance -->
+ <circle cx="430" cy="270" r="7" fill="#c00" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="445" y="268" text-anchor="start" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="#c00">D</text>
+ <text x="445" y="285" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">Very low</text>
+ <text x="445" y="298" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">performance</text>
+
+ <!-- Axis tick labels -->
+ <text x="65" y="295" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">Low</text>
+ <text x="455" y="295" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">High</text>
+ <text x="65" y="295" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">Low</text>
+
+ <!-- Y axis: Low at bottom, High at top -->
+ <text x="65" y="290" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">Low</text>
+ <text x="65" y="50" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">High</text>
+
+ <!-- Optimal zone label -->
+ <text x="260" y="215" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#2255aa" font-style="italic">Optimal zone</text>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="250" y="345" text-anchor="middle" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="black">Yerkes-Dodson Curve</text>
+
+</svg>
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 400 400" width="400" height="400">
+ <rect width="400" height="400" fill="white"/>
+
+ <!-- Clip path for globe interior -->
+ <defs>
+ <clipPath id="globeClip">
+ <circle cx="200" cy="200" r="150"/>
+ </clipPath>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- Globe fill (light blue) -->
+ <circle cx="200" cy="200" r="150" fill="#e8f4fc" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude lines (clipped to globe) -->
+ <!-- 60N -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="125" rx="130" ry="20" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 30N -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="162" rx="150" ry="28" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- Equator (0) — drawn separately, bold -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="200" rx="150" ry="32" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 30S -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="238" rx="150" ry="28" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 60S -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="275" rx="130" ry="20" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+
+ <!-- Longitude lines (meridians) — vertical ellipses, clipped -->
+ <!-- Prime meridian (0°) -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="200" rx="10" ry="150" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 30W / 150E -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="200" rx="75" ry="150" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 60W / 120E -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="200" rx="130" ry="150" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 90W / 90E — just the axis line -->
+ <line x1="200" y1="50" x2="200" y2="350" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+
+ <!-- Globe outer border (drawn again on top to clean up edges) -->
+ <circle cx="200" cy="200" r="150" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- North / South pole dots -->
+ <circle cx="200" cy="50" r="3" fill="black"/>
+ <circle cx="200" cy="350" r="3" fill="black"/>
+
+ <!-- Pole labels -->
+ <text x="200" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">North Pole</text>
+ <text x="200" y="370" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">South Pole</text>
+
+ <!-- Equator label -->
+ <text x="362" y="204" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="12" text-anchor="start" fill="black">Equator</text>
+ <line x1="350" y1="200" x2="362" y2="202" stroke="black" stroke-width="1"/>
+
+ <!-- Equator circumference annotation -->
+ <text x="200" y="245" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="#333333">≈ 40,075 km / ≈ 21,600 NM</text>
+
+ <!-- Axis line (N-S, dashed) -->
+ <line x1="200" y1="50" x2="200" y2="350" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="6,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude label 30N -->
+ <text x="356" y="165" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="start" fill="#555555">30°N</text>
+ <line x1="349" y1="162" x2="356" y2="163" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="0.8"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude label 60N -->
+ <text x="338" y="128" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="start" fill="#555555">60°N</text>
+ <line x1="330" y1="125" x2="338" y2="126" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="0.8"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude label 30S -->
+ <text x="356" y="241" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="start" fill="#555555">30°S</text>
+ <line x1="349" y1="238" x2="356" y2="239" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="0.8"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude label 60S -->
+ <text x="338" y="278" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="start" fill="#555555">60°S</text>
+ <line x1="330" y1="275" x2="338" y2="276" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="0.8"/>
+
+ <!-- Prime meridian label -->
+ <text x="200" y="395" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="#555555">0° / Prime Meridian</text>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="200" y="20" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="15" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Earth — Latitude and Longitude</text>
+
+ <!-- Border -->
+ <rect width="398" height="398" x="1" y="1" fill="none" stroke="#333333" stroke-width="1"/>
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q102.png b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q102.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8ba9d9c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q102.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q112_boundary_layer.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q112_boundary_layer.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3dc0a58
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q112_boundary_layer.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,111 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 350" width="600" height="350" style="background:white; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
+
+ <defs>
+ <marker id="arrowFlow" markerWidth="8" markerHeight="6" refX="7" refY="3" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 8,3 0,6" fill="#2255aa"/>
+ </marker>
+ <marker id="arrowBlack" markerWidth="8" markerHeight="6" refX="7" refY="3" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 8,3 0,6" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- Aerofoil shape — positioned so upper surface is well visible -->
+ <path d="
+ M 90,185
+ C 110,150 155,115 210,105
+ C 270,93 350,95 420,108
+ C 460,116 490,130 510,155
+ C 490,160 460,165 420,168
+ C 350,174 270,178 210,180
+ C 155,183 110,185 90,185
+ Z"
+ fill="#d8e8f0" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- Freestream flow arrows (far from surface, undisturbed) -->
+ <line x1="20" y1="80" x2="75" y2="80" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="65" x2="75" y2="65" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="50" x2="75" y2="50" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="200" x2="75" y2="185" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="215" x2="75" y2="200" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+
+ <!-- LAMINAR region: smooth parallel streamlines close to upper surface (x=90 to ~x=310) -->
+ <!-- Offset lines above upper surface, staying close and parallel -->
+ <!-- Upper surface approx: y = 105 at x=210, y=93 at x=270... let's parametrize simply -->
+
+ <!-- Laminar flow streamlines (smooth, parallel, close to surface) from ~x=105 to x=300 -->
+ <path d="M 105,170 C 140,138 180,120 220,110 C 260,101 290,97 310,97"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 105,162 C 140,131 180,113 220,103 C 260,94 290,90 310,90"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 105,155 C 140,124 180,107 220,96 C 260,87 290,83 310,83"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+
+ <!-- TURBULENT region: thicker, wavy streamlines from x=310 to x=460 -->
+ <!-- Wavy effect using sinusoidal-looking cubic beziers -->
+ <path d="M 310,97 C 325,92 335,101 350,96 C 365,91 375,103 390,97 C 405,91 415,100 430,95 C 445,90 453,97 460,103"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 310,90 C 325,84 335,94 350,88 C 365,82 375,95 390,88 C 405,81 415,92 430,86 C 445,80 453,89 460,96"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 310,83 C 325,76 335,87 350,80 C 365,73 375,86 390,79 C 405,72 415,84 430,77 C 445,70 453,81 460,88"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <!-- Extra turbulent line, more spread -->
+ <path d="M 310,75 C 330,67 340,80 360,71 C 378,62 388,78 410,69 C 428,62 440,75 460,81"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+
+ <!-- SEPARATION: flow leaving surface after x~465 -->
+ <path d="M 460,103 C 480,110 495,118 510,155"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="4,3"/>
+ <path d="M 460,96 C 485,105 505,130 510,155"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="4,3"/>
+ <!-- Separated wake -->
+ <path d="M 510,155 C 530,148 555,145 580,142" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" fill="none" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 510,155 C 530,158 555,162 580,165" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" fill="none" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+
+ <!-- Point markers -->
+ <!-- 1: Stagnation point at leading edge -->
+ <circle cx="90" cy="185" r="5" fill="#c00" stroke="black" stroke-width="1"/>
+ <circle cx="35" cy="285" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="35" y="290" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">1</text>
+ <line x1="44" y1="282" x2="86" y2="188" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="35" y="310" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">Stagnation</text>
+ <text x="35" y="323" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">point</text>
+
+ <!-- 2: Laminar boundary layer label (at ~x=200) -->
+ <circle cx="170" cy="68" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="170" y="73" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">2</text>
+ <line x1="170" y1="80" x2="200" y2="100" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="130" y="48" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Laminar</text>
+ <text x="130" y="62" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">boundary layer</text>
+
+ <!-- 3: Transition point at x=310 -->
+ <circle cx="310" cy="97" r="5" fill="#e80" stroke="black" stroke-width="1"/>
+ <circle cx="315" cy="38" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="315" y="43" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">3</text>
+ <line x1="315" y1="50" x2="313" y2="90" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="315" y="26" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Transition</text>
+ <text x="315" y="14" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">point</text>
+
+ <!-- 4: Turbulent boundary layer label at ~x=390 -->
+ <circle cx="430" cy="52" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="430" y="57" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">4</text>
+ <line x1="430" y1="64" x2="400" y2="80" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="450" y="34" text-anchor="start" font-size="12" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Turbulent</text>
+ <text x="450" y="48" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="black">boundary layer</text>
+
+ <!-- 5: Separation point at x~465 -->
+ <circle cx="465" cy="103" r="5" fill="#c00" stroke="black" stroke-width="1"/>
+ <circle cx="555" cy="280" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="555" y="285" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">5</text>
+ <line x1="545" y1="275" x2="468" y2="110" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="555" y="305" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Separation</text>
+ <text x="555" y="318" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">point</text>
+
+ <!-- Boundary layer thickness indicator (brace/bracket) -->
+ <!-- Double-arrow showing thickness of turbulent layer at x=430 -->
+ <!-- Upper extent: ~y=62, surface: y=108 -->
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="340" text-anchor="middle" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="black">Boundary Layer Flow over an Aerofoil</text>
+
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q130_aerofoil_parts.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q130_aerofoil_parts.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f7405b5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q130_aerofoil_parts.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,88 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 300" width="600" height="300" style="background:white; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
+
+ <!-- Aerofoil shape: NACA-style symmetric-ish cambered foil, leading edge left, trailing edge right -->
+ <!-- Upper surface path -->
+ <path d="
+ M 80,150
+ C 95,120 130,85 180,78
+ C 240,70 320,72 400,85
+ C 450,93 490,108 520,130
+ L 520,130
+ C 490,135 450,140 400,142
+ C 320,148 240,152 180,155
+ C 130,158 95,158 80,150
+ Z"
+ fill="#d8e8f0" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- Chord line (dashed, from leading edge to trailing edge) -->
+ <line x1="80" y1="150" x2="520" y2="130" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="8,5"/>
+
+ <!-- Mean camber line (curved dashed, midway between upper and lower surfaces) -->
+ <!-- Approximated as a gentle curve between the chord and upper surface -->
+ <path d="M 80,150 C 160,118 280,111 400,114 C 450,115 490,121 520,130"
+ fill="none" stroke="#555" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Max thickness arrow (vertical double-arrow at ~x=280, between upper and lower) -->
+ <!-- Upper surface at x=280 is approximately y=74, lower surface approximately y=151 -->
+ <line x1="290" y1="75" x2="290" y2="150" stroke="#c00" stroke-width="1.5" marker-start="url(#arrowRed)" marker-end="url(#arrowRed)"/>
+
+ <!-- Max camber arrow (vertical double-arrow at ~x=230, between chord line and camber line) -->
+ <!-- Chord line at x=230: y = 150 + (130-150)*(230-80)/(520-80) = 150 - 20*150/440 ≈ 143.2 -->
+ <!-- Camber line at x=230: roughly y=118 -->
+ <!-- Arrow from chord to camber -->
+ <line x1="370" y1="113" x2="370" y2="127" stroke="#c00" stroke-width="1.5" marker-start="url(#arrowRed)" marker-end="url(#arrowRed)"/>
+
+ <!-- Arrow markers (red for measurement arrows) -->
+ <defs>
+ <marker id="arrowRed" markerWidth="8" markerHeight="8" refX="4" refY="4" orient="auto">
+ <path d="M0,1 L4,4 L0,7 L1,4 Z" fill="#c00"/>
+ </marker>
+ <marker id="arrowBlack" markerWidth="8" markerHeight="8" refX="4" refY="4" orient="auto">
+ <path d="M0,1 L4,4 L0,7 L1,4 Z" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- Label number circles -->
+ <!-- 1: Mean camber line - place label at x=200, y=105 with leader line -->
+ <circle cx="58" cy="105" r="11" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="58" y="110" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">1</text>
+ <line x1="69" y1="108" x2="160" y2="118" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="30" y="92" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Mean</text>
+ <text x="30" y="106" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">camber</text>
+ <text x="30" y="120" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">line</text>
+
+ <!-- 2: Chord line - label below chord at midpoint -->
+ <circle cx="300" cy="185" r="11" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="300" y="190" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">2</text>
+ <line x1="300" y1="174" x2="300" y2="141" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="300" y="205" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Chord line</text>
+
+ <!-- 3: Maximum thickness label to the right of the arrow -->
+ <circle cx="342" cy="68" r="11" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="342" y="73" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">3</text>
+ <line x1="331" y1="68" x2="292" y2="95" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="410" y="105" text-anchor="start" font-size="13" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Max</text>
+ <text x="410" y="120" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="black">thickness</text>
+ <line x1="353" y1="68" x2="405" y2="105" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+
+ <!-- 4: Maximum camber label -->
+ <circle cx="430" cy="92" r="11" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="430" y="97" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">4</text>
+ <line x1="419" y1="95" x2="375" y2="120" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="425" y="57" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Max</text>
+ <text x="425" y="72" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">camber</text>
+ <line x1="430" y1="81" x2="430" y2="57" stroke="black" stroke-width="0.5" stroke-dasharray="2,2"/>
+
+ <!-- Leading edge label -->
+ <text x="65" y="175" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">Leading</text>
+ <text x="65" y="188" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">edge</text>
+
+ <!-- Trailing edge label -->
+ <text x="535" y="125" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">Trailing</text>
+ <text x="535" y="138" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">edge</text>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="270" text-anchor="middle" font-size="15" font-weight="bold" fill="black">Aerofoil Cross-Section — Parts</text>
+
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q1_angle_of_attack.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q1_angle_of_attack.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5cfa60a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q1_angle_of_attack.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,90 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 500 300" width="500" height="300" style="background:white; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
+
+ <defs>
+ <marker id="arrowBlue" markerWidth="10" markerHeight="7" refX="9" refY="3.5" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 10,3.5 0,7" fill="#2255aa"/>
+ </marker>
+ <marker id="arrowBlack" markerWidth="10" markerHeight="7" refX="9" refY="3.5" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 10,3.5 0,7" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ <marker id="arrowBlackRev" markerWidth="10" markerHeight="7" refX="1" refY="3.5" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="10,0 0,3.5 10,7" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- The aerofoil is pitched up ~8 degrees. The chord line runs from ~(90,185) to ~(410,145).
+ That's a rise of 40 over a run of 320, i.e. angle arctan(40/320) ~ 7.1 deg.
+ Leading edge at left, trailing edge at right. -->
+
+ <!-- Aerofoil transform: rotate -7 degrees around its center (250, 170) -->
+ <g transform="rotate(-7, 250, 170)">
+ <!-- Aerofoil shape centered at 250,170, chord from 90 to 410 -->
+ <path d="
+ M 90,170
+ C 110,140 155,115 205,108
+ C 255,100 315,102 370,115
+ C 390,121 402,133 410,150
+ C 395,155 380,160 370,162
+ C 315,170 255,174 205,176
+ C 155,178 110,178 90,170
+ Z"
+ fill="#d8e8f0" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- Chord line (dashed) -->
+ <line x1="90" y1="170" x2="410" y2="150" stroke="#333" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="8,5"/>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- Relative wind (horizontal) arrow from left -->
+ <!-- Arrow going right at y=170 (the level of the leading edge before rotation) -->
+ <line x1="20" y1="188" x2="85" y2="188" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2.5" marker-end="url(#arrowBlue)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="175" x2="85" y2="175" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowBlue)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="162" x2="85" y2="162" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowBlue)"/>
+ <text x="52" y="210" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="#2255aa" font-weight="bold">Relative Wind</text>
+ <text x="52" y="224" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#2255aa">(Direction of Airflow)</text>
+
+ <!-- Reference horizontal line for the angle (extended from leading edge, horizontal) -->
+ <!-- Leading edge is at approximately (90, 170) after the rotation offset.
+ With -7 deg rotation around (250,170), the leading edge moves to roughly:
+ x' = 250 + (90-250)*cos(-7) - (170-170)*sin(-7) = 250 - 160*0.9925 = 250 - 158.8 = 91.2
+ y' = 170 + (90-250)*sin(-7) + (170-170)*cos(-7) = 170 - 160*(-0.1219) = 170 + 19.5 = 189.5 ≈ 190
+ So leading edge ≈ (91, 190). -->
+
+ <!-- Horizontal dashed reference line from leading edge -->
+ <line x1="91" y1="190" x2="280" y2="190" stroke="#888" stroke-width="1.2" stroke-dasharray="6,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Arc for angle alpha: between horizontal (y=190 direction) and chord line direction
+ Chord direction after -7 rotation: angle = 180 - 7 = 173 deg from positive x ...
+ Actually the chord goes from LE(91,190) to TE. The angle is ~7 deg above horizontal.
+ We draw a small arc from 0 deg to -7 deg (upward) -->
+ <!-- Arc from horizontal direction (0 deg) curving up to chord direction (~-7 deg) -->
+ <!-- SVG arc: center at LE (91,190), radius 55 -->
+ <!-- Start angle 0 (east = right), end angle -7 deg (slightly above east) -->
+ <!-- In SVG: angles measured clockwise from east -->
+ <!-- Start point: (91+55, 190) = (146, 190) -->
+ <!-- End point: 91+55*cos(-7deg), 190+55*sin(-7deg) = 91+54.6, 190-6.7 = (145.6, 183.3) -->
+ <path d="M 146,190 A 55,55 0 0,0 145.5,183.2" fill="none" stroke="#c00" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Alpha label -->
+ <text x="155" y="191" text-anchor="start" font-size="16" fill="#c00" font-style="italic">α</text>
+ <text x="175" y="191" text-anchor="start" font-size="13" fill="#c00">(angle of attack)</text>
+
+ <!-- Labels -->
+ <!-- Chord line label -->
+ <!-- The chord line in the rotated aerofoil runs roughly from (91,190) to ~(408,167) -->
+ <!-- Label it near the middle -->
+ <text x="310" y="155" text-anchor="start" font-size="12" fill="#333" font-style="italic">Chord line</text>
+ <line x1="308" y1="158" x2="280" y2="169" stroke="#555" stroke-width="0.8" stroke-dasharray="2,2"/>
+
+ <!-- Leading edge label -->
+ <text x="75" y="240" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">Leading edge</text>
+ <line x1="91" y1="227" x2="91" y2="193" stroke="#888" stroke-width="0.8" stroke-dasharray="2,2"/>
+
+ <!-- Trailing edge label -->
+ <!-- TE after rotation: x'=250+(410-250)*cos(-7)-(170-170)*sin(-7)=250+160*0.9925=408.8
+ y'=170+(410-250)*sin(-7)+(170-170)*cos(-7)=170+160*(-0.1219)=170-19.5=150.5 -->
+ <text x="415" y="148" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">Trailing edge</text>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="250" y="285" text-anchor="middle" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="black">Angle of Attack (α)</text>
+
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q66.png b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions EN/figures/t80_q66.png
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diff --git "a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/10 - Droit a\303\251rien.md" "b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/10 - Droit a\303\251rien.md"
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+++ "b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/10 - Droit a\303\251rien.md"
@@ -0,0 +1,1451 @@
+# Droit aérien
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Un titulaire de licence SPL ou LAPL(S) a effectué 9 lancers au treuil, 4 remorquages et 2 lancers à l'élastique au cours des 24 derniers mois. Quelles méthodes de lancement le pilote est-il autorisé à utiliser en tant que PIC aujourd'hui ? ^t10q1
+- A) Remorquage et élastique.
+- B) Treuil et remorquage.
+- C) Treuil et élastique.
+- D) Treuil, élastique et remorquage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à la Part-SFCL, un pilote doit avoir effectué au moins 5 lancers avec une méthode donnée au cours des 24 derniers mois pour agir en tant que PIC avec cette méthode. Ici, le pilote a 9 lancers au treuil (seuil atteint) et 2 lancers à l'élastique (seuil également atteint, le minimum pour l'élastique étant plus bas). Cependant, avec seulement 4 remorquages, le pilote n'atteint pas les 5 requis, donc le remorquage n'est pas autorisé. L'option A est incorrecte car elle inclut le remorquage. L'option B est incorrecte car elle inclut également le remorquage. L'option D inclut les trois méthodes, mais le remorquage n'est pas qualifié. Seule l'option C liste correctement le treuil et l'élastique.
+
+### Q2: Quels documents doivent être emportés à bord lors d'un vol international ? a) Certificat d'immatriculation b) Certificat de navigabilité c) Certificat de contrôle de navigabilité d) EASA Form-1 e) Carnet de vol de l'aéronef f) Documents appropriés pour chaque membre d'équipage g) Carnet technique ^t10q2
+- A) A, b, c, e, f
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 6 de l'ICAO et au Règlement UE 965/2012, les vols internationaux exigent le certificat de navigabilité (b), le certificat de contrôle de navigabilité (c), le formulaire EASA Form-1 (d), le carnet de vol (e), les licences et certificats médicaux de l'équipage (f) et le carnet technique (g). L'option A omet le Form-1 et le carnet technique. L'option B est bien trop limitée. L'option D omet des documents essentiels comme l'ARC et les papiers de l'équipage. L'option C fournit l'énumération EASA standard complète pour un vol international.
+
+### Q3: Quel type de zone peut être pénétré sous certaines conditions ? ^t10q3
+- A) Zone dangereuse
+- B) Zone d'interdiction de vol
+- C) Zone interdite
+- D) Zone réglementée
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une zone réglementée (désignée « R » sur les cartes) peut être pénétrée sous réserve des conditions publiées dans l'AIP, comme l'obtention d'une autorisation préalable de l'autorité compétente. L'option A (zone dangereuse, désignée « D ») contient des dangers mais n'impose aucune restriction légale d'entrée — les pilotes peuvent y pénétrer à leurs propres risques. L'option B (zone d'interdiction de vol) n'est pas une classification ICAO standard. L'option C (zone interdite, désignée « P ») interdit tout vol sans condition. Seule l'option D décrit correctement un espace aérien permettant une entrée conditionnelle.
+
+### Q4: Dans quelle publication peut-on trouver les restrictions spécifiques d'un espace aérien réglementé ? ^t10q4
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIP
+- C) AIC
+- D) Carte ICAO 1:500000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Publication d'information aéronautique (AIP) est le document officiel de référence contenant les informations permanentes sur la structure des espaces aériens, y compris les conditions détaillées, les horaires d'activation et les contacts des autorités compétentes pour les zones réglementées dans la section ENR. L'option A (NOTAM) peut annoncer des modifications temporaires mais ne définit pas les restrictions de base. L'option C (AIC) contient des informations consultatives ou administratives, pas des définitions réglementaires d'espaces aériens. L'option D (cartes ICAO) montre les limites graphiquement mais ne détaille pas les restrictions et conditions spécifiques d'entrée.
+
+### Q5: Quel est le statut juridique des règles et procédures établies par l'EASA ? (ex. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^t10q5
+- A) Elles ont le même statut que les Annexes ICAO
+- B) Elles ne sont pas juridiquement contraignantes et servent uniquement de guide
+- C) Elles font partie de la réglementation européenne et sont juridiquement contraignantes dans tous les États membres de l'UE
+- D) Elles ne deviennent juridiquement contraignantes qu'après ratification par chaque État membre de l'UE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les réglementations EASA telles que la Part-SFCL et la Part-MED sont publiées en tant que règlements d'exécution ou règlements délégués de l'UE sous le règlement de base (UE) 2018/1139. Les règlements de l'UE sont directement applicables dans tous les États membres sans ratification nationale, ce qui les rend immédiatement contraignants. L'option A est incorrecte car les Annexes ICAO sont des normes et pratiques recommandées nécessitant une adoption nationale, non équivalentes au droit européen. L'option B est incorrecte car les règles EASA sont pleinement contraignantes. L'option D est incorrecte car les règlements de l'UE ne nécessitent pas de ratification individuelle par les États.
+
+### Q6: Quelle est la durée de validité du certificat de navigabilité ? ^t10q6
+- A) 12 mois
+- B) 6 mois
+- C) 12 ans
+- D) Illimitée
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le certificat de navigabilité (CofA) a une validité illimitée — une fois délivré, il reste valide tant que l'aéronef respecte les normes de son certificat de type et est correctement entretenu. Ce qui nécessite un renouvellement périodique (généralement annuel) est le certificat de contrôle de navigabilité (ARC), qui confirme que la navigabilité continue a été vérifiée. L'option A (12 mois) et l'option B (6 mois) confondent le CofA avec la période de renouvellement de l'ARC. L'option C (12 ans) n'est pas une durée de validité standard en aviation.
+
+### Q7: Que signifie l'abréviation « ARC » ? ^t10q7
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** ARC signifie Airworthiness Review Certificate (certificat de contrôle de navigabilité), tel que défini dans le Règlement UE 1321/2014 (Part-M). Il est délivré après un examen périodique de navigabilité confirmant que la documentation et l'état de l'aéronef sont en ordre. L'option A (Airspace Restriction Criteria), l'option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) et l'option D (Airspace Rulemaking Committee) sont des termes fictifs non utilisés dans la législation aéronautique EASA ou ICAO.
+
+### Q8: Le certificat de navigabilité est délivré par l'État... ^t10q8
+- A) Dans lequel l'examen de navigabilité est effectué.
+- B) Dans lequel l'aéronef est construit.
+- C) Dans lequel l'aéronef est immatriculé.
+- D) De résidence du propriétaire.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 8 et à l'Annexe 7 de l'ICAO, le certificat de navigabilité est délivré par l'État d'immatriculation — le pays où l'aéronef est immatriculé. Cet État est responsable de s'assurer que l'aéronef respecte les normes de navigabilité applicables. L'option A (où l'examen est effectué) est incorrecte car les examens peuvent avoir lieu à l'étranger. L'option B (où il est construit) est sans rapport puisque l'État de fabrication diffère de l'État d'immatriculation. L'option D (résidence du propriétaire) n'a aucune incidence sur la délivrance du CofA.
+
+### Q9: Une licence de pilote délivrée conformément à l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO est reconnue dans... ^t10q9
+- A) Le pays où la licence a été délivrée.
+- B) Les pays qui ont individuellement accepté cette licence sur demande.
+- C) Tous les États contractants de l'ICAO.
+- D) Le pays où la licence a été acquise.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO (Licences du personnel) établit des normes internationales pour les licences de pilote. Une licence délivrée en pleine conformité avec les normes de l'Annexe 1 est reconnue dans les 193 États contractants de l'ICAO, permettant des opérations aériennes internationales sans acceptation individuelle pays par pays. Les options A et D reviennent essentiellement à la même idée et sont trop restrictives. L'option B implique à tort qu'une acceptation au cas par cas est nécessaire. La reconnaissance mutuelle universelle des licences de l'Annexe 1 est un pilier fondamental de l'aviation civile internationale.
+
+### Q10: Quel sujet est traité par l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO ? ^t10q10
+- A) Règles de l'air
+- B) Exploitation des aéronefs
+- C) Services de la circulation aérienne
+- D) Licences du personnel navigant
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO couvre les licences du personnel, incluant les normes pour les licences de pilote (PPL, CPL, ATPL), les qualifications, les certificats médicaux et les qualifications d'instructeur. L'option A (Règles de l'air) correspond à l'Annexe 2. L'option B (Exploitation des aéronefs) correspond à l'Annexe 6. L'option C (Services de la circulation aérienne) correspond à l'Annexe 11. Connaître les Annexes ICAO par numéro et sujet est une exigence standard de l'examen de droit aérien.
+
+### Q11: Pour un pilote âgé de 62 ans, quelle est la durée de validité d'un certificat médical de classe 2 ? ^t10q11
+- A) 60 mois.
+- B) 24 mois.
+- C) 12 mois.
+- D) 48 mois.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à la Part-MED (Règlement de la Commission (UE) 1178/2011), la validité d'un certificat médical de classe 2 dépend de l'âge du pilote. Pour les pilotes de 50 ans et plus, la validité est réduite à 12 mois. À 62 ans, la règle des 12 mois s'applique clairement. L'option A (60 mois) s'applique aux pilotes plus jeunes de moins de 40 ans dans certaines catégories. L'option B (24 mois) s'applique aux pilotes de 40 à 49 ans. L'option D (48 mois) n'est pas une durée de validité médicale standard.
+
+### Q12: Que signifie l'abréviation « SERA » ? ^t10q12
+- A) Specialized Radar Approach
+- B) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- C) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** SERA signifie Standardised European Rules of the Air (Règles européennes normalisées de l'air), établies par le Règlement d'exécution (UE) n° 923/2012. SERA harmonise les règles de l'air dans tous les États membres de l'UE, mettant en œuvre les dispositions de l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO au niveau européen et ajoutant des règles spécifiques à l'UE couvrant la priorité de passage, les minima VMC, les calages altimétriques et les signaux. Les options A, B et D sont des abréviations inventées non utilisées dans la réglementation aéronautique.
+
+### Q13: Que signifie l'abréviation « TRA » ? ^t10q13
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- C) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- D) Transponder Area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** TRA signifie Temporary Reserved Airspace (espace aérien temporairement réservé) — un espace aérien de dimensions définies réservé pour une activité spécifique (exercices militaires, démonstrations acrobatiques, parachutisme) pendant une période publiée. Les TRA sont activées par NOTAM et diffèrent des TSA (Temporary Segregated Areas) en ce qu'elles peuvent permettre un usage partagé sous certaines conditions. Les options A (Terminal Area), B (Temporary Radar Routing Area) et D (Transponder Area) ne sont pas des désignations ICAO ou EASA standard.
+
+### Q14: Que faut-il prendre en compte lors de l'entrée dans une RMZ ? ^t10q14
+- A) Le transpondeur doit être activé en mode C avec le code 7000
+- B) Une autorisation de l'autorité aéronautique locale doit être obtenue
+- C) Une écoute radio continue est requise et un contact radio doit être établi si possible
+- D) Une autorisation d'entrée dans la zone doit être obtenue
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) exige que tous les aéronefs soient équipés d'une radio fonctionnelle, qu'ils surveillent la fréquence désignée en permanence et qu'ils établissent un contact radio bilatéral avant l'entrée si possible. L'option A décrit une exigence de TMZ (transpondeur), pas de RMZ. Les options B et D impliquent qu'une autorisation formelle de l'ATC est nécessaire, ce qui est une exigence de CTR, pas de RMZ. La RMZ est définie dans SERA.6005 et les suppléments nationaux de l'AIP.
+
+### Q15: Que signifie une zone désignée « TMZ » ? ^t10q15
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- C) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- D) Transportation Management Zone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** TMZ signifie Transponder Mandatory Zone — un espace aérien dans lequel tous les aéronefs doivent être équipés d'un transpondeur à report d'altitude (mode C ou mode S) et l'utiliser. Cela permet aux systèmes radar ATC et anti-collision d'identifier et de suivre le trafic. Les options A (Traffic Management Zone), B (Touring Motorglider Zone) et D (Transportation Management Zone) ne sont pas des termes aéronautiques reconnus.
+
+### Q16: Un vol est classé comme « vol à vue » lorsque le... ^t10q16
+- A) Vol est effectué dans des conditions météorologiques de vol à vue.
+- B) La visibilité en vol dépasse 8 km.
+- C) La visibilité en vol dépasse 5 km.
+- D) Vol est effectué selon les règles de vol à vue.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un vol à vue (vol VFR) est défini par les règles selon lesquelles il est effectué — les règles de vol à vue (VFR) — et non par les conditions météorologiques en vigueur. Les VMC (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue) décrivent les minima météorologiques requis pour le VFR, mais un vol effectué en VMC pourrait néanmoins être conduit en IFR. L'option A confond le cadre réglementaire avec les conditions météorologiques. Les options B et C citent des valeurs de visibilité spécifiques qui sont des minima VMC pour des classes d'espace aérien particulières, pas la définition d'un vol VFR.
+
+### Q17: Que signifie l'abréviation « VMC » ? ^t10q17
+- A) Règles de vol à vue
+- B) Conditions de vol aux instruments
+- C) Conditions météorologiques variables
+- D) Conditions météorologiques de vol à vue
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** VMC signifie Visual Meteorological Conditions (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue) — les minima spécifiques de visibilité et d'espacement des nuages définis dans SERA.5001 qui doivent être respectés pour le vol VFR. Si les conditions descendent en dessous des VMC, l'espace aérien est en IMC (conditions météorologiques de vol aux instruments). L'option A (règles de vol à vue) correspond à VFR, pas VMC. L'option B (conditions de vol aux instruments) correspond essentiellement à la terminologie IMC. L'option C (conditions météorologiques variables) n'est pas un terme aéronautique standard. VMC et VFR sont des concepts liés mais distincts.
+
+### Q18: Deux aéronefs motorisés convergent sur des routes de croisement à la même altitude. Quel aéronef doit céder le passage ? ^t10q18
+- A) L'aéronef le plus léger doit monter
+- B) Les deux doivent tourner à droite
+- C) Les deux doivent tourner à gauche
+- D) L'aéronef le plus lourd doit monter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210, lorsque deux aéronefs convergent sur des routes de croisement à approximativement la même altitude, chacun doit modifier son cap vers la droite. Cela garantit que les deux aéronefs passent derrière l'autre, évitant la collision. Les options A et D introduisent incorrectement le poids comme facteur, ce qui est sans rapport avec les règles de priorité en croisement. L'option C (tourner à gauche) amènerait les aéronefs à converger davantage plutôt qu'à diverger. La règle « tourner à droite » est un principe fondamental d'évitement de collision de l'ICAO.
+
+### Q19: Deux avions sont sur des trajectoires de croisement. Lequel doit céder le passage ? ^t10q19
+- A) Les deux doivent tourner à gauche
+- B) L'aéronef venant de la droite a la priorité
+- C) Les deux doivent tourner à droite
+- D) L'aéronef venant de droite à gauche a la priorité
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210(b), lorsque deux aéronefs convergent à approximativement la même altitude, l'aéronef qui a l'autre à sa droite doit céder le passage. En d'autres termes, l'aéronef venant de la droite (se déplaçant de droite à gauche par rapport à l'autre pilote) a la priorité. L'option A est incorrecte car tourner à gauche augmente le risque de collision. L'option B énonce le principe à l'envers. L'option C décrit l'action d'évitement pour les rencontres de face, pas le principe de priorité pour le trafic en croisement.
+
+### Q20: Quel espacement des nuages doit être maintenu lors d'un vol VFR dans les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E ? ^t10q20
+- A) 1000 m horizontalement, 300 m verticalement
+- B) 1500 m horizontalement, 1000 m verticalement
+- C) 1500 m horizontalement, 1000 ft verticalement
+- D) 1000 m horizontalement, 1500 ft verticalement
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, les vols VFR dans les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E doivent maintenir 1500 m de distance horizontale des nuages et 1000 ft (environ 300 m) de distance verticale. Le détail clé est que l'horizontal est exprimé en mètres et le vertical en pieds — le mélange de ces unités est un piège d'examen courant. L'option A utilise 1000 m horizontal (trop petit). L'option B utilise 1000 m vertical (unité et valeur incorrectes). L'option D inverse les valeurs horizontale/verticale.
+
+### Q21: Dans l'espace aérien « E », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL75 ? ^t10q21
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, dans l'espace aérien de classe E au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL mais en dessous du FL100, la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 5000 m (5 km). Le FL75 (environ 7500 ft) se situe dans cette bande d'altitude. L'option A (3000 m) n'est pas un minimum VFR standard. L'option C (1500 m) ne s'applique qu'en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option D (8000 m) s'applique au FL100 et au-dessus, pas en dessous.
+
+### Q22: Dans l'espace aérien « C », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL110 ? ^t10q22
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, au FL100 et au-dessus dans l'espace aérien contrôlé (y compris la classe C), la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 8000 m (8 km). Le FL110 est au-dessus du FL100, donc la règle des 8 km s'applique. L'option A (5000 m) est le minimum en dessous du FL100. L'option C (1500 m) s'applique en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option D (3000 m) ne correspond à aucun minimum VFR SERA standard en espace aérien contrôlé.
+
+### Q23: Dans l'espace aérien « C », quelle est la visibilité minimale en vol pour un aéronef VFR au FL125 ? ^t10q23
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FL125 est au-dessus du FL100, donc la règle SERA.5001 pour le VFR en haute altitude s'applique : visibilité minimale en vol de 8000 m dans tout espace aérien contrôlé, y compris la classe C. L'option A (5000 m) s'applique en dessous du FL100. Les options B (3000 m) et C (1500 m) ne s'appliquent qu'en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. La progression à retenir est : basse altitude non contrôlé = 1,5 km, contrôlé en dessous du FL100 = 5 km, au FL100 et au-dessus = 8 km.
+
+### Q24: Quelles sont les exigences minimales d'espacement des nuages pour un vol VFR dans l'espace aérien « B » ? ^t10q24
+- A) Horizontalement 1.000 m, verticalement 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontalement 1.500 m, verticalement 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontalement 1.000 m, verticalement 300 m
+- D) Horizontalement 1.500 m, verticalement 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Là où le VFR est autorisé dans l'espace aérien de classe B, les minima d'espacement des nuages selon SERA.5001 sont de 1500 m horizontal et 300 m (environ 1000 ft) vertical. L'option A utilise seulement 1000 m de distance horizontale, ce qui est insuffisant. L'option B indique 1000 m vertical, ce qui est bien trop élevé et utilise la mauvaise valeur. L'option C utilise seulement 1000 m horizontal et le bon vertical, mais l'horizontal est insuffisant. Seule l'option D fournit les deux valeurs correctes.
+
+### Q25: Dans l'espace aérien « C » en dessous du FL 100, quelle visibilité minimale en vol s'applique aux opérations VFR ? ^t10q25
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, dans l'espace aérien de classe C en dessous du FL100 (au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL ou 1000 ft AGL), la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 5 km. L'option A (10 km) n'est pas un minimum SERA standard. L'option C (8 km) ne s'applique qu'au FL100 et au-dessus. L'option D (1,5 km) s'applique en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. Les pilotes de planeur traversant l'espace aérien de classe C en dessous du FL100 doivent vérifier une visibilité d'au moins 5 km.
+
+### Q26: Dans l'espace aérien « C » au FL 100 et au-dessus, quelle visibilité minimale en vol s'applique aux opérations VFR ? ^t10q26
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 1,5 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5001, au FL100 et au-dessus dans l'espace aérien contrôlé, y compris la classe C, la visibilité minimale en vol VFR est de 8 km. Ce seuil plus élevé reflète les vitesses de rapprochement plus grandes et le temps de réaction réduit en haute altitude. L'option A (5 km) est le minimum en dessous du FL100. L'option C (10 km) n'est pas un minimum VMC SERA standard. L'option D (1,5 km) ne s'applique qu'en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude.
+
+### Q27: Comment est défini le terme « plafond » ? ^t10q27
+- A) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20000 ft.
+- B) Altitude de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20000 ft.
+- C) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus haute couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 20000 ft.
+- D) Hauteur de la base de la couche nuageuse la plus basse couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel en dessous de 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le plafond est défini comme la hauteur (au-dessus du sol) de la base de la couche la plus basse de nuages couvrant plus de la moitié du ciel (BKN ou OVC, plus de 4 octas) en dessous de 20 000 ft. L'option B utilise « altitude » (référencée au MSL) au lieu de « hauteur » (référencée à la surface). L'option C se réfère à la couche « la plus haute » alors qu'il devrait s'agir de « la plus basse ». L'option D limite incorrectement le seuil à 10 000 ft au lieu de 20 000 ft.
+
+### Q28: De jour, lors d'une interception par un aéronef militaire, que signifie le signal suivant : un changement soudain de cap de 90 degrés ou plus et une montée sans croiser la trajectoire de l'aéronef intercepté ? ^t10q28
+- A) Vous pénétrez dans une zone réglementée ; quittez l'espace aérien immédiatement
+- B) Vous pouvez poursuivre votre vol
+- C) Suivez-moi ; je vous guiderai vers l'aérodrome approprié le plus proche
+- D) Préparez-vous pour un atterrissage de sécurité ; vous avez pénétré dans une zone interdite
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, Appendice 1, lorsqu'un aéronef intercepteur effectue une manœuvre de dégagement brusque de 90 degrés ou plus et monte sans croiser la trajectoire de l'aéronef intercepté, c'est le signal standard de « libération » signifiant « Vous pouvez poursuivre ». L'interception est terminée et le pilote peut continuer sa route. Les options A et D impliquent des avertissements de violation d'espace aérien qui utilisent des signaux différents. L'option C (« suivez-moi ») implique que l'intercepteur balance ses ailes et maintient un cap stable vers l'aérodrome de destination.
+
+### Q29: En volant au FL 80, quel calage altimétrique doit être utilisé ? ^t10q29
+- A) 1013,25 hPa.
+- B) QNH local.
+- C) 1030,25 hPa.
+- D) QFE local.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les niveaux de vol sont définis par rapport au datum de pression de l'atmosphère standard internationale de 1013,25 hPa. En volant au niveau de vol ou au-dessus de l'altitude de transition, les pilotes doivent afficher 1013,25 hPa sur le calage altimétrique et référencer l'altitude comme un niveau de vol. L'option B (QNH) donne l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer et est utilisé en dessous de l'altitude de transition. L'option C (1030,25 hPa) n'est pas une pression de référence standard. L'option D (QFE) donne la hauteur au-dessus d'un aérodrome spécifique et n'est jamais utilisé pour les niveaux de vol.
+
+### Q30: Quel est l'objectif de la règle semi-circulaire ? ^t10q30
+- A) Permettre de voler sans plan de vol déposé dans les zones prescrites publiées dans l'AIP
+- B) Permettre une montée ou une descente sûre dans un circuit d'attente
+- C) Réduire le risque de collision en diminuant la probabilité de trafic opposé à la même altitude
+- D) Prévenir les collisions en interdisant les manœuvres de virage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La règle semi-circulaire (hémisphérique) de niveau de croisière (SERA.5015) attribue différentes bandes d'altitude à différentes routes magnétiques — les vols vers l'est utilisent les milliers de pieds impairs, vers l'ouest les pairs. En séparant verticalement les aéronefs volant dans des directions opposées, la probabilité de collision frontale à la même altitude est considérablement réduite. L'option A est sans rapport avec les niveaux de croisière. L'option B décrit des procédures de circuit d'attente. L'option D est incorrecte car la règle concerne l'attribution d'altitude, pas les restrictions de manœuvre.
+
+### Q31: Un transpondeur capable de transmettre l'altitude-pression actuelle est un... ^t10q31
+- A) Transpondeur approuvé pour l'espace aérien « B ».
+- B) Transpondeur mode A.
+- C) Décodeur de pression.
+- D) Transpondeur mode C ou S.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un transpondeur qui transmet des informations d'altitude-pression est soit un transpondeur mode C, soit mode S. Le mode C ajoute le report automatique d'altitude-pression au code d'identité de base du mode A, tandis que le mode S fournit toutes les capacités du mode C plus l'interrogation sélective et les fonctions de liaison de données. L'option A est incorrecte car « approuvé pour l'espace aérien B » n'est pas une classification de transpondeur. L'option B est fausse car le mode A ne transmet qu'un code squawk à 4 chiffres sans données d'altitude. L'option C est fausse car « décodeur de pression » n'est pas un terme aéronautique.
+
+### Q32: Quel code transpondeur signale une perte de communication radio ? ^t10q32
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 2000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le squawk internationalement reconnu pour une panne de communication radio. Les pilotes doivent mémoriser les trois codes d'urgence : 7700 pour urgence générale, 7600 pour panne radio et 7500 pour intervention illicite (détournement). L'option A (7700) est pour les urgences, pas spécifiquement la perte de communication. L'option B (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR européen standard. L'option D (2000) est utilisé lors de l'entrée dans un espace aérien contrôlé sans code assigné.
+
+### Q33: En cas de panne radio, quel code transpondeur doit être sélectionné sans aucune demande de l'ATC ? ^t10q33
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un pilote subit une panne de communication radio, il doit immédiatement afficher 7600 sans attendre d'instruction de l'ATC, puisque par définition la communication n'est plus possible. Cette action proactive alerte l'ATC de la situation et déclenche les procédures de perte de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code VFR général et ne communique pas d'urgence. L'option B (7500) signale une intervention illicite, ce qui est une situation complètement différente. L'option C (7700) est pour les urgences générales, pas spécifiquement la panne radio.
+
+### Q34: Quel code transpondeur doit être affiché automatiquement lors d'une urgence sans attendre d'instructions ? ^t10q34
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans toute urgence générale (panne moteur, incendie, urgence médicale, dommage structurel), le pilote doit immédiatement afficher le code transpondeur 7700 sans attendre d'instruction de l'ATC. Cela déclenche une alarme sur les écrans radar ATC et active les procédures de réponse d'urgence. L'option A (7600) est spécifiquement pour la panne de communication radio, pas les urgences générales. L'option B (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR standard. L'option C (7500) est réservé exclusivement à l'intervention illicite (détournement) et ne doit jamais être affiché pour d'autres urgences.
+
+### Q35: Quel service de la circulation aérienne est responsable de la conduite sûre des vols ? ^t10q35
+- A) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+- B) AIS (service d'information aéronautique)
+- C) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne)
+- D) ALR (service d'alerte)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le contrôle de la circulation aérienne (ATC) est le service spécifiquement responsable d'assurer la séparation entre les aéronefs et le flux sûr, ordonné et rapide de la circulation aérienne dans l'espace aérien contrôlé. Conformément à l'Annexe 11 de l'ICAO, l'ATC gère activement les mouvements d'aéronefs pour prévenir les collisions. L'option A (FIS) fournit des informations utiles mais ne dirige ni ne sépare les aéronefs. L'option B (AIS) publie des documents d'information aéronautique mais n'a aucun rôle de contrôle opérationnel. L'option D (ALR) déclenche la recherche et le sauvetage lorsque des aéronefs sont en retard ou en détresse, mais ne gère pas la sécurité des vols en cours.
+
+### Q36: Quels services composent le service de contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q36
+- A) APP (service de contrôle d'approche) ACC (service de contrôle régional) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+- B) TWR (service de contrôle d'aérodrome) APP (service de contrôle d'approche) ACC (service de contrôle régional)
+- C) FIS (service d'information de vol) AIS (service d'information aéronautique) AFS (service fixe de télécommunications aéronautiques)
+- D) ALR (service d'alerte) SAR (service de recherche et sauvetage) TWR (service de contrôle d'aérodrome)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 11 de l'ICAO, les trois unités constitutives de l'ATC sont : TWR (contrôle d'aérodrome, gérant le trafic à l'aérodrome et autour), APP (contrôle d'approche, gérant le trafic arrivant et partant dans la zone terminale) et ACC (centre de contrôle régional, gérant le trafic en route). L'option A inclut incorrectement le FIS, qui est un service d'information séparé de l'ATC. L'option C liste des services d'information et de communication, dont aucun n'est une unité ATC. L'option D mélange des services d'urgence (ALR, SAR) avec une seule unité ATC (TWR).
+
+### Q37: Concernant la séparation dans l'espace aérien « E », quelle affirmation est correcte ? ^t10q37
+- A) Le trafic IFR n'est séparé que du trafic VFR
+- B) Le trafic VFR est séparé du trafic VFR et IFR
+- C) Le trafic VFR ne reçoit aucune séparation d'aucun trafic
+- D) Le trafic VFR n'est séparé que du trafic IFR
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans l'espace aérien de classe E, l'ATC sépare les vols IFR des autres vols IFR, mais le trafic VFR ne reçoit aucun service de séparation — ni des autres VFR ni des IFR. Les pilotes VFR en classe E doivent se fier entièrement au principe « voir et éviter », avec des informations de trafic fournies lorsque possible. L'option A indique incorrectement que l'IFR n'est séparé que du VFR (il est séparé des autres IFR). Les options B et D impliquent à tort que le trafic VFR reçoit une forme de séparation.
+
+### Q38: Quels services de la circulation aérienne sont disponibles au sein d'une FIR (région d'information de vol) ? ^t10q38
+- A) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne) AIS (service d'information aéronautique)
+- B) AIS (service d'information aéronautique) SAR (recherche et sauvetage)
+- C) FIS (service d'information de vol) ALR (service d'alerte)
+- D) ATC (contrôle de la circulation aérienne) FIS (service d'information de vol)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une région d'information de vol (FIR) fournit deux services universels dans tout son volume : le FIS (service d'information de vol), qui fournit des informations météo, NOTAM et trafic aux pilotes, et l'ALR (service d'alerte), qui notifie les services de secours lorsque des aéronefs sont en détresse ou en retard. L'ATC n'est pas fourni dans toute la FIR — il n'existe que dans l'espace aérien contrôlé désigné (CTA, CTR, voies aériennes) qui peut se trouver au sein de la FIR. Les options A, B et D incluent incorrectement l'ATC ou omettent la bonne combinaison.
+
+### Q39: Comment un pilote peut-il joindre le FIS (service d'information de vol) en vol ? ^t10q39
+- A) Par téléphone.
+- B) Par une visite personnelle.
+- C) Par communication radio.
+- D) Par internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FIS est un service opérationnel fourni aux pilotes en vol, et le principal moyen de le contacter en vol est la communication radio sur la fréquence FIS désignée. Bien que des informations pré-vol puissent être obtenues par téléphone ou en ligne, le service FIS en vol lui-même est basé sur la radio. L'option A (téléphone) et l'option D (internet) sont des moyens de contact au sol peu pratiques pour la communication en temps réel en vol. L'option B (visite personnelle) est évidemment impossible en vol.
+
+### Q40: Quelle est la phraséologie standard pour avertir qu'un aéronef léger suit un aéronef d'une catégorie de turbulence de sillage plus lourde ? ^t10q40
+- A) Attention propwash
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Caution wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie ICAO standard pour les avertissements de turbulence de sillage est « CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE », telle que prescrite dans le Doc 4444 de l'ICAO (PANS-ATM). La phraséologie normalisée est obligatoire en aviation pour éliminer toute ambiguïté. Les options A (« attention propwash »), B (« be careful wake winds ») et C (« danger jet blast ») sont toutes des expressions non standard absentes de la phraséologie approuvée par l'ICAO. L'utilisation de termes non standard peut causer de la confusion et est interdite dans l'espace aérien EASA.
+
+### Q41: Laquelle des propositions suivantes représente un compte rendu de position correct ? ^t10q41
+- A) DEABC over "N" at 35
+- B) DEABC reaching "N"
+- C) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un compte rendu de position standard selon le Doc 4444 de l'ICAO doit inclure : indicatif de l'aéronef, position (point de repère ou waypoint) et altitude ou niveau de vol. L'option C (DEABC, « N », 2500 ft) fournit correctement les trois éléments de manière concise. L'option A manque d'une référence d'altitude claire (« at 35 » est ambigu). L'option B est incomplète car elle omet entièrement l'altitude. L'option D utilise l'expression absurde « FL 2500 ft » — les niveaux de vol et les pieds ne sont jamais combinés ainsi ; il faudrait soit « FL 25 » soit « 2500 ft ».
+
+### Q42: Quel type d'information est contenu dans la partie générale (GEN) de l'AIP ? ^t10q42
+- A) Avertissements pour l'aviation, espaces aériens ATS et routes, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux
+- B) Table des matières, classification des aérodromes avec cartes correspondantes, cartes d'approche, cartes de roulage, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux
+- C) Restrictions d'accès aux aérodromes, contrôles des passagers, exigences pour les pilotes, modèles de licences et durées de validité
+- D) Symboles cartographiques, liste des aides radionavigation, heures de lever et coucher du soleil, redevances aéroportuaires, redevances de contrôle aérien
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'AIP est structuré en trois parties : GEN (Général), ENR (En route) et AD (Aérodromes). La section GEN contient des informations administratives générales incluant les symboles/icônes cartographiques, les listes d'aides à la radionavigation, les tables de lever/coucher du soleil, les réglementations nationales, les redevances aéroportuaires et les redevances ATC. L'option A décrit le contenu de la section ENR (espaces aériens, routes, restrictions). L'option B décrit le contenu de la section AD (cartes d'aérodrome, cartes d'approche). L'option C mélange des éléments qui ne correspondent à aucune section unique de l'AIP.
+
+### Q43: En combien de parties la Publication d'information aéronautique (AIP) est-elle divisée ? ^t10q43
+- A) GEN ENR AD
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 15 de l'ICAO, l'AIP est divisé en trois parties standardisées : GEN (Général), ENR (En route) et AD (Aérodromes). Cette structure est universelle dans tous les États membres de l'ICAO. Les options B (AGA, COM), C (COM, MET) et D (MET, RAC) utilisent des abréviations d'anciennes structures de documentation ICAO qui ne font plus partie de l'organisation moderne de l'AIP. Seule l'option A reflète la structure AIP standard actuelle de l'ICAO.
+
+### Q44: Quel type d'information trouve-t-on dans la section « AD » de l'AIP ? ^t10q44
+- A) Avertissements pour l'aviation, espaces aériens ATS et routes, espaces aériens réglementés et dangereux.
+- B) Symboles cartographiques, liste des aides radionavigation, heures de lever et coucher du soleil, redevances aéroportuaires, redevances de contrôle aérien
+- C) Table des matières, classification des aérodromes avec cartes correspondantes, cartes d'approche, cartes de roulage
+- D) Restrictions d'accès aux aérodromes, contrôles des passagers, exigences pour les pilotes, modèles de licences et durées de validité
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La section AD (Aérodromes) de l'AIP contient toutes les informations spécifiques aux aérodromes : classification des aérodromes, données de piste, cartes d'approche et de départ, cartes de roulage, balisage, fréquences, heures d'ouverture et données d'obstacles. L'option A décrit le contenu ENR (En route) couvrant l'espace aérien et les restrictions. L'option B décrit le contenu GEN (Général) comme les symboles et les redevances. L'option D mélange des éléments réglementaires et administratifs qui ne correspondent pas à la section AD.
+
+### Q45: Le NOTAM indiqué est valide jusqu'au... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^t10q45
+- A) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- B) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les codes temporels des NOTAM utilisent le format AAMMJJHHMM en UTC. Le champ « C) » d'un NOTAM spécifie la fin de validité. Le code 1305211400 se décode ainsi : année 2013 (13), mois mai (05), jour 21, heure 14:00 UTC — soit le 21 mai 2013 à 14:00 UTC. L'option B interprète mal le format de date, confondant le mois avec la date. L'option C lit incorrectement l'année comme 2014. L'option D interprète complètement mal l'encodage. Le décodage correct des NOTAM est une compétence fondamentale du droit aérien pour tous les pilotes.
+
+### Q46: Un bulletin d'information pré-vol (PIB) est une compilation des... ^t10q46
+- A) Informations AIP d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées avant le vol.
+- B) Informations AIC d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées après le vol.
+- C) Informations ICAO d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées après le vol.
+- D) Informations NOTAM d'importance opérationnelle rassemblées avant le vol.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) est un résumé standardisé des NOTAM en vigueur pertinents pour un vol prévu, compilé et émis avant le départ. Il filtre les NOTAM pertinents pour la route, le départ, la destination et les aérodromes de dégagement. L'option A est incorrecte car un PIB est basé sur des données NOTAM, pas des données AIP. L'option B est incorrecte à deux titres : elle référence les AIC (pas les NOTAM) et dit « après le vol » (c'est un outil pré-vol). L'option C identifie également mal la source et le moment.
+
+### Q47: Comment est définie l'« altitude de l'aérodrome » ? ^t10q47
+- A) La valeur moyenne de la hauteur de l'aire de manœuvre.
+- B) Le point le plus élevé de l'aire d'atterrissage.
+- C) Le point le plus bas de l'aire d'atterrissage.
+- D) Le point le plus élevé de l'aire de trafic.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, l'altitude de l'aérodrome est définie comme l'altitude du point le plus élevé de l'aire d'atterrissage. Cela garantit que la valeur publiée représente la hauteur de terrain la plus exigeante dont les aéronefs doivent tenir compte lors de l'approche et du départ. L'option A (moyenne de l'aire de manœuvre) sous-estimerait l'altitude critique. L'option C (point le plus bas) est l'opposé de la définition correcte. L'option D (point le plus élevé de l'aire de trafic) est incorrecte car l'aire de trafic n'est pas l'aire d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q48: Comment est défini le terme « piste » ? ^t10q48
+- A) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre ou aquatique préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- B) Aire circulaire sur un aérodrome préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- C) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs.
+- D) Aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des hélicoptères.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, une piste est une aire rectangulaire sur un aérodrome terrestre préparée pour l'atterrissage et le décollage des aéronefs. Les trois éléments clés sont : forme rectangulaire, aérodrome terrestre et aéronefs en général. L'option A est incorrecte car les pistes sont spécifiques aux aérodromes terrestres (les aérodromes aquatiques ont des aires d'amerrissage, pas des pistes). L'option B est incorrecte car la forme est rectangulaire, pas circulaire. L'option D est incorrecte car les pistes servent les aéronefs en général, pas spécifiquement les hélicoptères (les hélicoptères utilisent des hélistations ou des aires FATO).
+
+### Q49: Comment peut-on rendre un indicateur de direction du vent plus visible ? ^t10q49
+- A) En le montant au sommet de la tour de contrôle.
+- B) En l'entourant d'un cercle blanc.
+- C) En le plaçant sur une grande surface noire.
+- D) En le construisant avec des matériaux verts.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, un indicateur de direction du vent (manche à air ou té de vent) doit être entouré d'un cercle blanc pour améliorer sa visibilité depuis les airs. Le contraste élevé du fond blanc rend l'indicateur plus facile à identifier par rapport au terrain de l'aérodrome. L'option A (montage sur la tour de contrôle) n'est pas une méthode standard ICAO d'amélioration de la visibilité et pourrait interférer avec les opérations de la tour. L'option C (surface noire) n'est pas spécifiée dans les normes ICAO. L'option D (matériaux verts) réduirait en fait la visibilité sur les surfaces herbeuses.
+
+### Q50: Quelle forme a un indicateur de direction d'atterrissage ? ^t10q50
+- A) Une flèche coudée
+- B) L
+- C) T
+- D) Une flèche droite
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 14 de l'ICAO, l'indicateur de direction d'atterrissage a une forme en T (communément appelé « T d'atterrissage » ou « T de signalisation »). Les aéronefs atterrissent vers la barre transversale du T et décollent en s'en éloignant, rendant la direction d'atterrissage immédiatement claire. Les options A (flèche coudée) et D (flèche droite) ne sont pas la forme ICAO standard pour cet indicateur. L'option B (forme en L) est utilisée à d'autres fins — indiquer un circuit de trafic à droite, pas la direction d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q51: Qui a la responsabilité de s'assurer que les documents obligatoires sont à bord et que les carnets de bord sont correctement tenus ? ^t10q51
+- A) La compagnie de transport aérien.
+- B) L'exploitant de l'aéronef.
+- C) Le commandant de bord.
+- D) Le propriétaire de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le commandant de bord (PIC) assume la responsabilité ultime de s'assurer que tous les documents requis sont à bord et correctement tenus avant chaque vol. C'est un principe fondamental du droit aéronautique selon l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et les réglementations EASA. Les options A (compagnie de transport aérien) et B (exploitant) ont des obligations de surveillance générale, mais la responsabilité directe pré-vol incombe au PIC. L'option D (propriétaire) peut même ne pas être présent au moment du vol.
+
+### Q52: Pour quelles activités le Conseil fédéral peut-il exiger une autorisation de l'OFAC ? ^t10q52
+- A) Uniquement les manifestations aéronautiques publiques, les vols acrobatiques et les démonstrations acrobatiques sur aéronefs.
+- B) Les descentes en parachute, les ascensions de ballons captifs, les manifestations aéronautiques publiques, les vols acrobatiques et les démonstrations acrobatiques sur aéronefs.
+- C) Aucune des activités citées ci-dessus n'exige une autorisation de l'OFAC.
+- D) Uniquement les descentes en parachute et les ascensions de ballons captifs. Aucune autorisation n'est requise pour les aéronefs motorisés.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vertu du droit aéronautique suisse, le Conseil fédéral peut exiger l'autorisation de l'OFAC (Office fédéral de l'aviation civile) pour toutes les activités spéciales listées : descentes en parachute, ascensions de ballons captifs, manifestations aéronautiques publiques, vols acrobatiques et démonstrations acrobatiques. Ces activités présentent des risques de sécurité accrus pour les participants et le public. L'option A est trop restrictive car elle exclut le parachutisme et les ballons captifs. L'option C est fausse car l'autorisation est bien requise. L'option D limite incorrectement l'exigence au parachutisme et aux ballons captifs uniquement.
+
+### Q53: Le largage d'objets depuis un aéronef en vol est-il interdit en Suisse ? ^t10q53
+- A) Non, seul le largage de matériel publicitaire est interdit.
+- B) Oui, c'est formellement interdit.
+- C) Non.
+- D) Oui, sous réserve d'exceptions à déterminer par le Conseil fédéral.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En droit aéronautique suisse, le largage d'objets depuis un aéronef en vol est en principe interdit, mais le Conseil fédéral peut définir des exceptions spécifiques telles que le parachutisme, les largages d'urgence ou les activités agricoles autorisées. L'option A est fausse car l'interdiction ne se limite pas au matériel publicitaire. L'option B est fausse car des exceptions existent — ce n'est pas une interdiction stricte absolue. L'option C est fausse car il existe bien une interdiction générale, même si des exceptions sont possibles.
+
+### Q54: Où est précisément documentée la base de certification d'un aéronef ? ^t10q54
+- A) Dans le manuel VFR.
+- B) Dans l'annexe au certificat de navigabilité.
+- C) Dans l'annexe au certificat de bruit.
+- D) Dans le certificat d'assurance.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La base de certification d'un aéronef (fiche de données du certificat de type, conditions d'exploitation approuvées, limites de masse, catégories de vol autorisées et équipements requis) est documentée dans l'annexe au certificat de navigabilité. Cette annexe définit ce que l'aéronef est certifié pour faire. L'option A (manuel VFR) contient des procédures opérationnelles, pas des données de certification. L'option C (annexe au certificat de bruit) ne traite que des émissions sonores. L'option D (certificat d'assurance) couvre la responsabilité financière, pas la certification de navigabilité.
+
+### Q55: Votre aéronef, non utilisé pour le trafic commercial, nécessite des réparations à l'étranger. Quelle affirmation s'applique ? ^t10q55
+- A) Les travaux de réparation ne peuvent être effectués qu'en Suisse.
+- B) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance reconnu par l'OFAC.
+- C) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance reconnu comme tel par l'autorité aéronautique compétente.
+- D) Les travaux doivent être effectués par un organisme de maintenance certifié EASA.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un aéronef non commercial nécessitant des réparations à l'étranger, la maintenance doit être effectuée par un organisme reconnu par l'autorité aéronautique compétente du pays où les travaux sont réalisés. Cela offre une flexibilité tout en assurant une surveillance réglementaire. L'option A est fausse car les réparations ne sont pas limitées à la Suisse. L'option B est fausse car la reconnaissance de l'OFAC n'est pas spécifiquement requise pour la maintenance à l'étranger. L'option D est trop restrictive car la certification EASA n'est pas toujours requise pour la maintenance d'aéronefs non commerciaux dans toutes les juridictions.
+
+### Q56: Un horloger réputé a peint un aéronef aux couleurs de la marque avec une grande montre sur le fuselage. Est-ce autorisé ? ^t10q56
+- A) Oui, si l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile a donné son autorisation, que l'opération n'a pas de but politique et que les marquages publicitaires sont limités à certaines parties de l'aéronef.
+- B) Non, la publicité est strictement interdite sur les aéronefs.
+- C) Oui, sous réserve d'autres dispositions de la législation fédérale. Les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation doivent dans tous les cas rester facilement reconnaissables.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement si l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile a donné son autorisation et que les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation restent facilement reconnaissables.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En droit suisse, la publicité sur les aéronefs est autorisée sous réserve des autres dispositions de la législation fédérale, avec une seule condition obligatoire : les marques de nationalité et d'immatriculation doivent rester facilement reconnaissables en tout temps. Aucune autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC n'est nécessaire pour apposer des marquages publicitaires. L'option A impose des conditions inutiles (autorisation OFAC, pas de but politique, placement limité) qui ne sont pas requises. L'option B est simplement fausse — la publicité n'est pas interdite. L'option D exige incorrectement une autorisation de l'OFAC.
+
+### Q57: À quelles conditions une personne peut-elle exercer les fonctions de membre d'équipage à bord d'un aéronef ? ^t10q57
+- A) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée par son pays d'origine.
+- B) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée ou reconnue par le pays dans lequel l'aéronef est immatriculé.
+- C) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide délivrée par le pays dans lequel l'aéronef est exploité.
+- D) Lorsque cette personne détient une licence valide reconnue par son pays d'origine.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un membre d'équipage doit détenir une licence valide délivrée ou reconnue par l'État d'immatriculation de l'aéronef, conformément à l'Annexe 1 de l'ICAO. L'État d'immatriculation définit les exigences de qualification pour l'équipage exploitant ses aéronefs. Les options A et D font référence au pays d'origine du membre d'équipage, ce qui est sans rapport — c'est l'État d'immatriculation de l'aéronef qui compte. L'option C fait référence au pays d'exploitation, qui n'est pas non plus le facteur déterminant selon les règles de l'ICAO.
+
+### Q58: À quelles conditions est-il permis de détenir et d'utiliser un poste radio à bord ? ^t10q58
+- A) Si une licence de communication radio a été délivrée pour le poste radio et que les membres d'équipage sont formés à son utilisation.
+- B) Si l'autorisation d'installer et d'utiliser le poste radio a été accordée et que les membres d'équipage utilisant le poste radio détiennent la qualification correspondante.
+- C) Si les incréments de fréquence du poste radio sont d'au moins 0,125 MHz et que les membres d'équipage utilisant le poste radio détiennent la qualification correspondante.
+- D) Si l'autorisation d'installer et d'utiliser le poste radio a été accordée et que les membres d'équipage sont formés à son utilisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Deux conditions cumulatives doivent être remplies : premièrement, l'autorisation d'installer et d'utiliser le poste radio doit avoir été accordée par l'autorité compétente, et deuxièmement, les membres d'équipage qui utilisent le poste radio doivent détenir la qualification formelle correspondante (pas simplement une formation informelle). L'option A est fausse car une « licence de communication radio » n'est pas la même chose qu'une autorisation d'installation/utilisation. L'option C introduit une spécification technique non pertinente sur les incréments de fréquence. L'option D est fausse car elle ne requiert qu'une « formation » plutôt qu'une qualification formelle, ce qui est insuffisant.
+
+### Q59: Que doit posséder un pilote pour être autorisé à communiquer par radio avec les services de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q59
+- A) Un certificat de cours de radiotéléphonie et une maîtrise suffisante de la phraséologie standard.
+- B) Dans tous les cas, une qualification de radiotéléphonie. Les pilotes d'avion et d'hélicoptère doivent en outre détenir une attestation valide de compétence linguistique dans la langue utilisée.
+- C) Une attestation valide de compétence linguistique dans la langue utilisée.
+- D) Une qualification de radiotéléphonie et une attestation valide de compétence linguistique dans la langue utilisée.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tous les pilotes souhaitant communiquer avec l'ATC doivent détenir une qualification de radiotéléphonie. De plus, les pilotes d'avion et d'hélicoptère doivent également posséder une attestation valide de compétence linguistique dans la langue utilisée sur les fréquences, comme l'exigent les réglementations suisses. L'option A est insuffisante car un certificat de cours seul ne constitue pas une qualification formelle. L'option C omet entièrement la qualification de radiotéléphonie. L'option D applique l'exigence de compétence linguistique de manière universelle, mais selon les règles suisses, elle est spécifiquement requise pour les pilotes d'avion et d'hélicoptère, pas nécessairement pour toutes les catégories de pilotes comme les pilotes de planeur ou de ballon.
+
+### Q60: Votre ophtalmologue vous a prescrit des verres correcteurs. Quelle affirmation est correcte ? ^t10q60
+- A) Vous n'avez rien à faire. Un défaut visuel bien corrigé n'a aucun effet sur l'aptitude médicale.
+- B) Vous êtes immédiatement inapte.
+- C) Vous devez rapidement consulter votre médecin examinateur aéronautique.
+- D) Vous pouvez simplement signaler la décision de votre ophtalmologue à votre médecin examinateur aéronautique lors du prochain examen de routine.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout changement d'état de santé, y compris la prescription de verres correcteurs, doit être signalé rapidement au médecin examinateur aéronautique (AME). L'AME évaluera si le changement affecte l'aptitude médicale et si des restrictions ou conditions supplémentaires doivent être imposées sur la licence. L'option A est fausse car même les défauts bien corrigés peuvent nécessiter une documentation et une réévaluation de l'aptitude médicale. L'option B est fausse car une prescription de verres correcteurs ne rend pas automatiquement un pilote inapte. L'option D est fausse car attendre le prochain examen de routine signifierait voler avec un changement médical non déclaré, ce qui n'est pas permis.
+
+### Q61: Dans quel type d'espace aérien un vol VFR spécial (SVFR) peut-il être autorisé lorsque le plafond est inférieur à 450 m au-dessus du sol et que la visibilité au sol est inférieure à 5 km ? ^t10q61
+- A) FIR.
+- B) TMA.
+- C) CTR.
+- D) AWY.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vols VFR spéciaux (SVFR) ne peuvent être autorisés que dans une CTR (zone de contrôle), qui est l'espace aérien contrôlé entourant immédiatement un aérodrome. Lorsque les conditions météorologiques descendent en dessous des minima VMC normaux, l'ATC dans la CTR peut accorder une clairance SVFR pour permettre les opérations. L'option A (FIR) est trop large — le SVFR n'est pas applicable à l'ensemble de la région d'information de vol. L'option B (TMA) est l'espace aérien terminal au-dessus de la CTR, pas la zone où le SVFR s'applique. L'option D (AWY) est une voie aérienne où le SVFR n'est pas autorisé.
+
+### Q62: Quelle manœuvre d'évitement les pilotes de deux aéronefs VFR sur des trajectoires convergentes doivent-ils généralement effectuer ? ^t10q62
+- A) L'un continue tout droit tandis que l'autre tourne à droite.
+- B) L'un tourne à gauche, l'autre tourne à droite.
+- C) Chaque pilote tourne à gauche.
+- D) Chaque pilote tourne à droite.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210, la manœuvre d'évitement ICAO standard pour les aéronefs convergents est que chaque pilote tourne à droite, assurant que les deux aéronefs passent derrière l'autre et divergent en sécurité. Cette règle symétrique élimine toute ambiguïté sur qui doit manœuvrer. L'option A est fausse car les deux aéronefs doivent agir, pas un seul. L'option B (un à gauche, l'autre à droite) serait non coordonnée et pourrait aggraver la situation. L'option C (les deux à gauche) amènerait les aéronefs à converger davantage plutôt qu'à diverger.
+
+### Q63: Quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages pour un vol VFR en espace aérien de classe D sous 10 000 ft AMSL ? ^t10q63
+- A) Visibilité 1,5 km ; hors des nuages et en vue permanente du sol ou de l'eau.
+- B) Visibilité 8 km ; distance aux nuages : horizontalement 1,5 km, verticalement 450 m.
+- C) Visibilité 5 km ; distance aux nuages : horizontalement 1,5 km, verticalement 300 m.
+- D) Visibilité 5 km ; hors des nuages et en vue permanente du sol ou de l'eau.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En espace aérien de classe D sous FL100 (10 000 ft AMSL), SERA.5001 prescrit des minima VMC de : 5 km de visibilité, 1 500 m de distance horizontale aux nuages et 300 m (1 000 ft) de distance verticale aux nuages. Ce sont les mêmes minima que pour les classes C et E dans cette bande d'altitude. L'option A décrit les conditions applicables en espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude. L'option B utilise 8 km de visibilité et 450 m de distance verticale, qui ne correspondent à aucune valeur SERA standard dans ce contexte. L'option D omet les valeurs requises de distance aux nuages.
+
+### Q64: Parmi les classes d'espace aérien utilisées en Suisse, lesquelles sont classées comme espace aérien contrôlé ? ^t10q64
+- A) D, C
+- B) G, E, D, C
+- C) E, D, C
+- D) E, C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les classes d'espace aérien C, D et E sont toutes classées comme espace aérien contrôlé. La classe G est l'espace aérien non contrôlé. Les classes A et B existent dans le système de classification ICAO mais ne sont pas utilisées en Suisse. L'option A omet la classe E, qui est un espace aérien contrôlé (bien que le trafic VFR n'y reçoive pas de séparation). L'option B inclut incorrectement la classe G, qui est non contrôlée. L'option D omet la classe D, qui est définitivement un espace aérien contrôlé entourant de nombreux aérodromes suisses.
+
+### Q65: Selon les règles de l'air applicables, quelle est la définition du « jour » ? ^t10q65
+- A) La période du lever au coucher du soleil.
+- B) La période entre 06h00 et 20h00 en hiver et entre 06h00 et 21h00 en été.
+- C) La période du début du crépuscule civil du soir au début du crépuscule civil du matin.
+- D) La période du début du crépuscule civil du matin à la fin du crépuscule civil du soir.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En aviation, le « jour » est défini comme la période du début du crépuscule civil du matin à la fin du crépuscule civil du soir — approximativement 30 minutes avant le lever du soleil à 30 minutes après le coucher du soleil. Cette définition élargie donne aux pilotes une lumière du jour utilisable supplémentaire aux deux extrémités. L'option A (lever au coucher du soleil) est trop restrictive et correspond à la définition astronomique, pas aéronautique. L'option B utilise des heures fixes qui ne tiennent pas compte des variations saisonnières et géographiques. L'option C inverse les références du crépuscule, ce qui donnerait une période plus courte plutôt que plus longue.
+
+### Q66: Qu'est-ce qui constitue un accident aéronautique ? ^t10q66
+- A) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel au moins une personne est tuée ou grièvement blessée.
+- B) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef nécessitant la réparation de l'aéronef.
+- C) L'écrasement d'un aéronef.
+- D) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne est tuée ou grièvement blessée, ou au cours duquel l'intégrité structurelle, les performances ou les caractéristiques de vol de l'aéronef sont significativement altérées.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO, un accident aéronautique est un événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef résultant soit de blessures mortelles/graves aux personnes SOIT de dommages structurels significatifs affectant l'intégrité, les performances ou les caractéristiques de vol de l'aéronef. Les deux critères qualifient indépendamment un événement comme accident. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne couvre que les blessures aux personnes, omettant les dommages à l'aéronef. L'option B est trop large — chaque réparation ne constitue pas un accident. L'option C (écrasement) est trop restrictive et n'est pas la définition formelle.
+
+### Q67: Vous souhaitez effectuer des vols privés à titre onéreux. Quelle formalité devez-vous accomplir pour limiter votre responsabilité civile ? ^t10q67
+- A) Souscrire une assurance passagers spéciale que les passagers sont tenus d'accepter.
+- B) Aucune formalité n'est requise car la Convention de Montréal libère le pilote de toute responsabilité.
+- C) Rédiger une déclaration à signer par les passagers vous dégageant de toute responsabilité.
+- D) Émettre un titre de transport comme preuve qu'un contrat de transport a été conclu, ce qui limite la responsabilité pour les dommages aux bagages et le retard.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'émission d'un titre de transport (billet) constitue la preuve qu'un contrat de transport a été conclu entre le pilote et le passager. En vertu de la Convention de Montréal, l'existence d'un tel contrat limite la responsabilité du transporteur pour les dommages aux bagages et les retards. L'option A est incorrecte car une assurance passagers spéciale n'est pas le mécanisme de limitation de la responsabilité civile selon la Convention. L'option B est fausse car la Convention de Montréal ne libère pas les pilotes de toute responsabilité — elle plafonne la responsabilité sous certaines conditions. L'option C (renonciation à la responsabilité) n'est pas un mécanisme juridiquement reconnu en droit aéronautique international.
+
+### Q68: Quel type d'information est diffusé par une AIC (Circulaire d'information aéronautique) ? ^t10q68
+- A) Information aéronautique d'importance pour les personnes impliquées dans les opérations de vol concernant la construction, l'état ou la modification des installations aéronautiques et leur durée.
+- B) Une AIC est un avis contenant des informations qui ne remplissent pas les conditions d'émission d'un NOTAM ni d'inclusion dans l'AIP, mais qui sont liées à la sécurité aérienne, à la navigation aérienne ou à des questions techniques, administratives ou législatives.
+- C) L'AIC est le manuel pour les pilotes volant en IFR. Sa structure et son contenu sont analogues à ceux du manuel VFR.
+- D) En principe, toute information justifiant l'émission d'un NOTAM et relative à la sécurité aérienne, à la navigation aérienne ou à des questions techniques ou législatives peut être publiée par AIC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une AIC (Circulaire d'information aéronautique) contient des informations complémentaires qui ne remplissent pas les critères de publication sous forme de NOTAM ou d'inclusion dans l'AIP, mais qui sont néanmoins pertinentes pour la sécurité aérienne, la navigation aérienne ou des questions techniques, administratives et législatives. Elle comble le vide entre les NOTAM urgents et les entrées permanentes de l'AIP. L'option A décrit des informations de type NOTAM plutôt que le contenu d'une AIC. L'option C est complètement fausse — une AIC n'est pas un manuel IFR. L'option D inverse la relation : les AIC contiennent des informations qui NE justifient PAS un NOTAM, et non des informations qui le justifient.
+
+### Q69: Que régit le manuel d'exploitation d'aérodrome ? ^t10q69
+- A) La certification des organismes de maintenance situés sur l'aérodrome.
+- B) L'organisation de l'aérodrome, les heures d'ouverture, les procédures d'approche et de décollage, l'utilisation des installations de l'aérodrome par les passagers, les aéronefs et les véhicules au sol ainsi que les autres usagers, et les services d'assistance en escale.
+- C) Les contrats de travail, les droits aux vacances et le travail posté de l'exploitant de l'aérodrome.
+- D) L'exploitation et les heures d'ouverture du restaurant de l'aérodrome et des autres commerces situés sur l'aérodrome.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le manuel d'exploitation d'aérodrome est un document complet régissant tous les aspects opérationnels de l'aérodrome : son organisation, ses heures d'ouverture, les procédures d'approche et de décollage, l'utilisation des installations par tous les usagers (passagers, aéronefs, véhicules au sol) et les services d'assistance en escale. L'option A est fausse car la certification des organismes de maintenance est gérée par l'EASA/les autorités nationales, pas le manuel d'exploitation de l'aérodrome. L'option C couvre des questions d'emploi sans rapport avec les opérations d'aérodrome. L'option D couvre les commerces, qui sont en dehors du champ d'application du manuel d'exploitation.
+
+### Q70: Que signifie ce signal au sol ? (Deux haltères) ^t10q70
+> **Signal au sol :**
+> ![[figures/t10_q70.png]]
+> *Deux haltères — signal indiquant que les atterrissages et décollages doivent être effectués sur les pistes uniquement, mais que d'autres manœuvres (roulage) peuvent être effectuées en dehors des pistes et des voies de circulation.*
+
+- A) Atterrissage et décollage sur les pistes uniquement. Les autres manœuvres peuvent toutefois être effectuées en dehors des pistes et des voies de circulation.
+- B) Atterrissage, décollage et roulage sur les pistes et voies de circulation uniquement.
+- C) Prudence lors du décollage ou de l'atterrissage.
+- D) Atterrissage et décollage sur pistes à revêtement dur uniquement.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal en forme d'haltère affiché dans l'aire de signalisation signifie que les atterrissages et décollages doivent être effectués sur les pistes uniquement, mais que les autres manœuvres telles que le roulage, les virages et le positionnement peuvent être effectuées en dehors des pistes et des voies de circulation, sur l'herbe ou d'autres surfaces. L'option B est trop restrictive car elle confine toutes les manœuvres aux pistes et voies de circulation (ce serait l'haltère avec une barre transversale). L'option C décrit un signal entièrement différent. L'option D introduit « revêtement dur » qui n'est pas ce que ce signal communique.
+
+### Q71: Lorsque deux aéronefs se rapprochent face à face, quelle manœuvre les deux pilotes doivent-ils effectuer ? ^t10q71
+- A) Chacun tourne à gauche.
+- B) L'un tourne à droite, l'autre tourne à gauche.
+- C) L'un vole tout droit tandis que l'autre tourne à droite.
+- D) Chacun tourne à droite.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210(c) et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, lorsque deux aéronefs sont sur des routes de face ou quasi face à face, les deux pilotes doivent modifier leur cap vers la droite, passant chacun l'autre sur leur côté gauche. Cela reflète les conventions de la circulation routière et élimine toute ambiguïté. L'option A (les deux à gauche) amènerait les aéronefs à passer du mauvais côté et pourrait mener à une collision. L'option B (l'un à gauche, l'autre à droite) est non coordonnée et dangereuse. L'option C (l'un tout droit, l'autre tourne) est incorrecte car les deux pilotes doivent prendre une action d'évitement.
+
+### Q72: Parmi les espaces aériens suivants, lesquels ne sont pas classés comme espace aérien contrôlé ? ^t10q72
+- A) Espace aérien de classe G.
+- B) Espaces aériens de classes G et E.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe C.
+- D) Espaces aériens de classes G, E et D.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les classes G et E ne sont pas classées comme espace aérien contrôlé pour le trafic VFR. La classe G est un espace aérien non contrôlé, et la classe E, bien que techniquement contrôlée pour les vols IFR, ne fournit aucune séparation ATC pour le trafic VFR. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne liste que la classe G et omet la classe E. L'option C est fausse car la classe C est définitivement un espace aérien contrôlé. L'option D inclut incorrectement la classe D, qui est un espace aérien contrôlé nécessitant une clairance ATC.
+
+### Q73: À quelle autorité le Conseil fédéral a-t-il délégué la surveillance aéronautique en Suisse ? ^t10q73
+- A) Les services suisses de navigation aérienne (Skyguide).
+- B) L'Aéro-Club de Suisse.
+- C) Le Département fédéral de l'environnement, des transports, de l'énergie et de la communication (DETEC).
+- D) Les polices cantonales.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Conseil fédéral délègue la surveillance aéronautique au DETEC (Département fédéral de l'environnement, des transports, de l'énergie et de la communication), qui à son tour délègue la supervision opérationnelle à l'OFAC (Office fédéral de l'aviation civile). L'option A (Skyguide) fournit les services de navigation aérienne mais n'est pas l'autorité de surveillance réglementaire. L'option B (Aéro-Club) est une association privée, pas un organe de surveillance gouvernemental. L'option D (polices cantonales) n'a aucun rôle de surveillance aéronautique.
+
+### Q74: Pour quels vols suivants le dépôt d'un plan de vol est-il obligatoire ? ^t10q74
+- A) Pour un vol VFR au-dessus des Alpes, des Préalpes ou du Jura.
+- B) Pour un vol VFR nécessitant l'utilisation des services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- C) Pour un vol VFR couvrant plus de 300 km sans escale.
+- D) Pour un vol VFR en espace aérien de classe E.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un plan de vol VFR est obligatoire lorsque le vol nécessite l'utilisation des services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne, comme le transit d'une CTR, d'une TMA ou d'un autre espace aérien contrôlé où l'interaction ATC est nécessaire. L'option A (Alpes/Préalpes/Jura) ne nécessite pas automatiquement un plan de vol. L'option C (distance de 300 km) n'est pas un déclencheur de plan de vol suisse. L'option D (espace aérien de classe E) est incorrecte car les vols VFR en classe E ne nécessitent pas de services ATC ni de plan de vol.
+
+### Q75: Quelle hauteur minimale doit être maintenue au-dessus des zones densément peuplées lors d'un vol VFR ? ^t10q75
+- A) Au moins 300 m au-dessus du sol.
+- B) Au moins 150 m au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 300 m de l'aéronef.
+- C) Au moins 150 m au-dessus du sol.
+- D) Au moins 450 m au-dessus du sol.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5005 et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, la hauteur minimale au-dessus des zones densément peuplées est de 150 m (environ 500 ft) au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 300 m de l'aéronef. Cette règle basée sur le franchissement d'obstacles assure une séparation sûre des structures et du terrain. L'option A (300 m AGL) ne tient pas compte des obstacles. L'option C (150 m AGL) ignore l'exigence de franchissement d'obstacles. L'option D (450 m AGL) n'est pas la hauteur minimale standard spécifiée dans SERA.
+
+### Q76: Parmi les aéronefs listés ci-dessous, lesquels ont la priorité pour l'atterrissage et le décollage ? ^t10q76
+- A) Les aéronefs manœuvrant au sol.
+- B) Les aéronefs arrivant d'un autre aérodrome qui sont dans le circuit d'aérodrome.
+- C) Les aéronefs en approche finale.
+- D) Les aéronefs ayant reçu une clairance ATC pour rouler.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et à SERA.3210, les aéronefs en approche finale ou en atterrissage ont toujours priorité sur tous les autres aéronefs en vol ou manœuvrant au sol. Cette règle existe car les aéronefs en approche finale ont une capacité limitée de manœuvre et se trouvent dans la phase de vol la plus critique. L'option A (aéronefs manœuvrant au sol) doit céder le passage au trafic en atterrissage. L'option B (aéronefs dans le circuit) ont une priorité inférieure à ceux en finale. L'option D (aéronefs avec clairance de roulage) doivent également céder le passage aux aéronefs en atterrissage.
+
+### Q77: Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q77
+![[figures/t10_q77.png]]
+- A) Toutes les pistes de cet aérodrome sont fermées.
+- B) Vol à voile en cours sur cet aérodrome.
+- C) Seules les pistes à revêtement dur doivent être utilisées pour l'atterrissage et le décollage.
+- D) Décollage et atterrissage uniquement sur les pistes ; les autres manœuvres ne sont pas limitées à l'utilisation des pistes et des voies de circulation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal indiqué signifie que le vol à voile est en cours sur l'aérodrome. C'est un signal au sol ICAO standard placé dans l'aire de signalisation pour avertir les aéronefs arrivant ou survolant que des planeurs peuvent opérer dans les environs, y compris des lancements remorqués et du vol en thermique. L'option A (toutes les pistes fermées) utilise un signal différent. L'option C (pistes à revêtement dur uniquement) n'est pas ce que ce signal communique. L'option D décrit le signal en haltère, qui est un marquage au sol entièrement différent.
+
+### Q78: Qui a la responsabilité de s'assurer que les documents requis sont emportés à bord de l'aéronef ? ^t10q78
+- A) L'exploitant de l'entreprise de transport aérien (Opérateur).
+- B) Le propriétaire de l'aéronef.
+- C) Le commandant de bord de l'aéronef.
+- D) L'exploitant de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le commandant de bord (PIC) est responsable de s'assurer que tous les documents requis sont emportés à bord de l'aéronef avant le vol. Cela est établi dans l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et les réglementations EASA/suisses. Le PIC doit personnellement vérifier la conformité documentaire dans le cadre de la préparation pré-vol. Les options A (exploitant de l'entreprise de transport aérien) et D (exploitant) ont des responsabilités organisationnelles mais le devoir direct incombe au PIC. L'option B (propriétaire) peut ne pas être impliqué dans l'exploitation du vol du tout.
+
+### Q79: Parmi les instructions suivantes concernant la direction de piste en service, laquelle a la priorité ? ^t10q79
+- A) La manche à air.
+- B) Le T d'atterrissage.
+- C) L'instruction ATC transmise par radio depuis la tour de contrôle.
+- D) Les deux chiffres affichés verticalement sur la tour de contrôle.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les instructions radio ATC de la tour de contrôle ont la priorité la plus élevée sur tous les indicateurs visuels pour déterminer la direction de piste en service. L'ATC a la connaissance situationnelle la plus actuelle et la plus complète et peut attribuer une piste différente de ce que la manche à air ou le T d'atterrissage suggère. L'option A (manche à air) indique la direction du vent mais ne prévaut pas sur l'ATC. L'option B (T d'atterrissage) est un indicateur visuel subordonné aux instructions ATC. L'option D (chiffres sur la tour) fournit des informations générales sur la piste mais est supplantée par les instructions radio directes de l'ATC.
+
+### Q80: En cas de panne radio, quel code doit être affiché sur le transpondeur ? ^t10q80
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le squawk internationalement standardisé pour une panne de communication radio. L'affichage de ce code alerte immédiatement l'ATC que le pilote a perdu le contact radio et déclenche les procédures de perte de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR européen standard et n'indique aucune urgence. L'option B (7500) est réservé aux interventions illicites (détournement). L'option C (7700) est le code d'urgence générale, pas spécifiquement pour la panne radio.
+
+### Q81: Est-il permis de déroger aux règles de l'air applicables aux aéronefs ? ^t10q81
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement dans l'espace aérien de classe G.
+- B) Non, en aucune circonstance.
+- C) Oui, mais uniquement pour des raisons de sécurité.
+- D) Oui, absolument.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO et à SERA, une dérogation aux règles de l'air n'est permise que lorsqu'elle est nécessaire pour des raisons de sécurité et uniquement dans la mesure strictement requise pour traiter la préoccupation de sécurité. C'est la seule exception légale. L'option A est fausse car l'exception n'est pas limitée à une classe d'espace aérien spécifique. L'option B est fausse car les dérogations motivées par la sécurité sont permises. L'option D est fausse car une dérogation sans restriction n'est jamais autorisée — la justification de sécurité doit exister.
+
+### Q82: Quelles sont les valeurs VMC minimales dans l'espace aérien de classe E à 2100 m AMSL ? Visibilité - Distance aux nuages : verticale / horizontale ^t10q82
+- A) 1,5 km / 50 m / 100 m
+- B) 8,0 km / 100 m / 300 m
+- C) 5,0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- D) 8,0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** À 2100 m AMSL (environ 6900 ft), qui est bien au-dessus de 3000 ft AMSL et 1000 ft AGL, les minima VMC SERA.5001 en espace aérien de classe E sont : 8 km de visibilité, 300 m de distance verticale aux nuages et 1500 m de distance horizontale aux nuages. L'option A décrit des valeurs pour l'espace aérien non contrôlé à basse altitude, bien en dessous des minima requis. L'option B a des valeurs incorrectes de distance verticale et horizontale aux nuages. L'option C utilise 5 km de visibilité, ce qui ne correspond pas à l'exigence de la classe E à cette altitude.
+
+### Q83: Au plus tard à quelle heure un vol VFR de jour doit-il être terminé ? ^t10q83
+- A) 30 minutes avant la fin du crépuscule civil.
+- B) Au début du crépuscule civil.
+- C) Au coucher du soleil.
+- D) À la fin du crépuscule civil.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un vol VFR de jour doit être terminé au plus tard au coucher du soleil. Voler après le coucher du soleil nécessite soit une qualification de vol de nuit, soit une autorisation spéciale. L'option A (30 minutes avant la fin du crépuscule civil) est plus tôt que nécessaire. L'option B (début du crépuscule civil) est ambiguë et ne correspond pas à la règle suisse. L'option D (fin du crépuscule civil) est trop tard — bien que le « jour » en aviation s'étende jusqu'à la fin du crépuscule civil, les exigences suisses de fin de vol VFR utilisent le coucher du soleil comme limite.
+
+### Q84: Avez-vous le droit d'utiliser la radio de l'aéronef pour communiquer avec l'ATC sans détenir la mention de radiotéléphonie ? ^t10q84
+- A) Oui, à condition que les autres communications radio ne soient pas perturbées.
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui.
+- D) Oui, à condition que je maîtrise suffisamment la phraséologie.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon la réglementation suisse, un pilote peut utiliser la radio de l'aéronef pour communiquer avec l'ATC sans détenir la mention spécifique de radiotéléphonie, dans les espaces aériens où la communication radio est requise. La qualification de radiotéléphonie est nécessaire pour certains espaces aériens contrôlés, mais l'utilisation basique de la radio pour la communication ATC est permise. L'option A ajoute une condition inutile sur la non-perturbation des autres communications. L'option B est incorrecte car l'interdiction n'est pas absolue. L'option D ajoute une condition de phraséologie qui, bien que bonne pratique, n'est pas l'exigence réglementaire.
+
+### Q85: Quels types de vols peuvent être effectués en dessous des hauteurs minimales prescrites sans autorisation spécifique de l'OFAC, dans la mesure nécessaire ? ^t10q85
+- A) Vols de montagne.
+- B) Vols acrobatiques.
+- C) Vols de photographie aérienne.
+- D) Vols de recherche et sauvetage.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vols de recherche et sauvetage (SAR) sont autorisés en dessous des hauteurs minimales prescrites sans autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC, dans la mesure opérationnellement nécessaire pour accomplir la mission de sauvetage. L'urgence et le caractère vital des opérations SAR justifient cette exemption. Les options A (vols de montagne), B (vols acrobatiques) et C (vols de photographie aérienne) nécessitent toutes une autorisation spécifique pour opérer en dessous des hauteurs minimales.
+
+### Q86: Est-il permis de traverser une voie aérienne au FL 115 en VFR lorsque la visibilité est de 5 km ? ^t10q86
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement s'il s'agit d'un vol VFR spécial (SVFR).
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui, en espace aérien de classe E.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement s'il s'agit d'un vol VFR contrôlé (CVFR).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au FL 115 (au-dessus du FL 100), la visibilité minimale VFR requise est de 8 km. Avec seulement 5 km de visibilité, les minima VMC ne sont pas respectés et le vol VFR à travers une voie aérienne n'est pas autorisé, quelle que soit la classe d'espace aérien ou le type de vol. L'option A (SVFR) n'est pas applicable aux niveaux de vol — le SVFR n'est autorisé que dans les CTR. L'option C est fausse car l'exigence de visibilité s'applique dans tous les espaces aériens à cette altitude. L'option D (CVFR) ne dispense pas des minima de visibilité VMC.
+
+### Q87: Les vols en formation sont-ils autorisés ? ^t10q87
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement avec l'autorisation de l'Office fédéral de l'aviation civile.
+- B) Oui, mais uniquement en dehors de l'espace aérien contrôlé.
+- C) Oui, à condition que les commandants de bord se soient coordonnés au préalable.
+- D) Oui, mais uniquement si les commandants de bord sont en contact radio permanent entre eux.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les vols en formation sont autorisés à condition que les commandants de bord se soient coordonnés au préalable, en convenant des procédures de formation, des positions et des responsabilités. Aucune autorisation spéciale de l'OFAC n'est nécessaire. L'option A est fausse car l'autorisation de l'OFAC n'est pas requise. L'option B est incorrecte car les vols en formation ne sont pas limités à l'espace aérien non contrôlé. L'option D est fausse car le contact radio permanent, bien qu'utile, n'est pas une exigence réglementaire pour le vol en formation.
+
+### Q88: Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q88
+![[figures/t10_q88.png]]
+- A) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+- B) Ce signal ne s'applique qu'aux aéronefs motorisés.
+- C) Le pilote peut choisir la direction d'atterrissage.
+- D) Atterrissage interdit.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un carré rouge avec deux croix diagonales blanches (croix de Saint-André) est le signal au sol ICAO standard signifiant « atterrissage interdit ». Il est placé dans l'aire de signalisation pour avertir tous les aéronefs que l'aérodrome est fermé aux opérations d'atterrissage. L'option A (prudence lors de l'approche) est un signal différent. L'option B est fausse car le signal s'applique à tous les aéronefs, pas uniquement aux motorisés. L'option C est fausse car le signal interdit entièrement l'atterrissage plutôt que de permettre le choix de direction.
+
+### Q89: Une zone d'information de vol (FIZ) peut-elle être traversée sans autre formalité ? ^t10q89
+- A) Uniquement avec l'autorisation du service d'information de vol (FIS) et si le pilote est qualifié pour utiliser la radiotéléphonie en anglais.
+- B) Non, c'est strictement interdit pour les vols VFR.
+- C) Uniquement si un contact permanent avec le service d'information de vol d'aérodrome (AFIS) est maintenu. Sinon, les règles de la classe d'espace aérien dans laquelle la FIZ est située s'appliquent.
+- D) Oui.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une FIZ (zone d'information de vol) peut être traversée à condition qu'un contact radio permanent avec le service d'information de vol d'aérodrome (AFIS) soit maintenu. Si le contact radio ne peut être établi, les règles de la classe d'espace aérien sous-jacente s'appliquent. L'option A exige incorrectement l'autorisation du FIS et la maîtrise de l'anglais, qui ne sont pas les exigences réelles. L'option B est fausse car le transit n'est pas interdit — il est autorisé sous conditions. L'option D est fausse car le transit n'est pas inconditionnel ; le maintien du contact AFIS est requis.
+
+### Q90: Quel événement constitue un accident aéronautique ? ^t10q90
+- A) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel au moins une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée.
+- B) Uniquement l'écrasement d'un aéronef ou d'un hélicoptère.
+- C) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée, ou l'aéronef a subi des dommages affectant notamment sa résistance structurelle, ses performances ou ses caractéristiques de vol.
+- D) Tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef nécessitant des réparations coûteuses.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à l'Annexe 13 de l'ICAO, un accident aéronautique comprend tout événement lié à l'exploitation d'un aéronef au cours duquel une personne a été tuée ou grièvement blessée, OU l'aéronef a subi des dommages structurels significatifs affectant sa résistance structurelle, ses performances ou ses caractéristiques de vol. Les deux critères constituent indépendamment un accident. L'option A est incomplète car elle ne couvre que les blessures aux personnes, omettant les dommages significatifs à l'aéronef. L'option B est trop restrictive — un accident ne se limite pas aux écrasements. L'option D est fausse car les réparations coûteuses seules ne définissent pas un accident ; les dommages doivent affecter significativement l'intégrité structurelle ou les caractéristiques de vol.
+
+### Q91: Les signaux observés ou reçus sont-ils contraignants pour le pilote de planeur ? ^t10q91
+- A) Oui, mais uniquement les signaux placés au sol, pas les signaux lumineux.
+- B) Non.
+- C) Oui.
+- D) Oui, sauf les signaux lumineux pour les aéronefs au sol.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tous les signaux observés ou reçus — qu'il s'agisse de signaux au sol, de signaux lumineux ou de signaux radio — sont contraignants pour le pilote de planeur. L'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO ne fait aucune distinction entre les types de signaux ; le respect de tous les signaux visuels et radio est obligatoire pour tous les aéronefs, y compris les planeurs. L'option A est fausse car les signaux lumineux sont également contraignants. L'option B est fausse car les signaux sont obligatoires, pas optionnels. L'option D exclut incorrectement les signaux lumineux pour les aéronefs au sol, qui sont également contraignants.
+
+### Q92: Quelle est la hauteur minimale de survol au-dessus des zones densément peuplées et des lieux de grands rassemblements publics ? ^t10q92
+- A) 300 m AGL.
+- B) 150 m AGL au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 600 m de l'aéronef.
+- C) 600 m AGL.
+- D) Il n'y a pas de valeur de hauteur spécifique ; cependant, on doit voler de manière à pouvoir atteindre en tout temps un terrain dégagé permettant un atterrissage sans risque.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.5005, la hauteur minimale de survol au-dessus des zones densément peuplées et des grands rassemblements publics est de 150 m (500 ft) au-dessus de l'obstacle le plus élevé dans un rayon de 600 m de l'aéronef. Cette règle basée sur les obstacles assure un franchissement adéquat des structures et protège les personnes au sol. L'option A (300 m AGL) ne tient pas compte du franchissement d'obstacles. L'option C (600 m AGL) est plus élevée que l'exigence réelle. L'option D décrit un principe de sécurité général mais pas le minimum réglementaire spécifique.
+
+### Q93: Dans quelles classes d'espace aérien les vols VFR peuvent-ils être effectués en Suisse sans nécessiter les services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t10q93
+- A) Dans les espaces aériens de classes C, D, E et G.
+- B) Uniquement dans l'espace aérien de classe G.
+- C) Dans les espaces aériens de classes E et G.
+- D) Dans les espaces aériens de classes A et B.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les vols VFR peuvent être effectués sans services ATC dans les espaces aériens de classes E et G. La classe E est contrôlée pour l'IFR mais ne nécessite pas d'interaction ATC pour les vols VFR ; la classe G est entièrement non contrôlée. L'option A inclut incorrectement les classes C et D, qui nécessitent une clairance ATC. L'option B est trop restrictive car la classe E permet également le VFR sans ATC. L'option D est fausse car les classes A et B interdisent soit le VFR, soit nécessitent une clairance ATC.
+
+### Q94: Que signifie ce signal ? ^t10q94
+![[figures/t10_q94.png]]
+- A) Le pilote peut choisir la direction d'atterrissage.
+- B) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+- C) Ce signal ne s'applique qu'aux aéronefs motorisés.
+- D) Atterrissage interdit.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal indiqué signifie prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage, avertissant les pilotes d'exercer une vigilance accrue en raison d'obstacles, de mauvaises conditions de surface ou d'autres dangers sur l'aérodrome. C'est un signal au sol ICAO standard placé dans l'aire de signalisation. L'option A est fausse car le signal n'indique pas le libre choix de la direction d'atterrissage. L'option C est fausse car le signal s'applique à tous les types d'aéronefs, pas uniquement aux motorisés. L'option D décrit un signal différent (carré rouge avec croix diagonales blanches).
+
+### Q95: Dans quel document les déficiences techniques constatées lors de l'exploitation d'un aéronef doivent-elles être consignées ? ^t10q95
+- A) Dans le manuel de maintenance.
+- B) Dans le carnet de route (carnet de bord de l'aéronef).
+- C) Dans le manuel de vol de l'aéronef.
+- D) Dans le manuel d'exploitation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les déficiences techniques découvertes lors de l'exploitation de l'aéronef doivent être consignées dans le carnet de route (carnet de bord/journal technique). C'est le document officiel qui suit l'état technique et l'historique opérationnel de l'aéronef, assurant que les organismes de maintenance sont informés des défauts nécessitant une attention. L'option A (manuel de maintenance) contient des procédures, pas des relevés de déficiences. L'option C (manuel de vol) décrit les limites et procédures opérationnelles. L'option D (manuel d'exploitation) couvre les procédures organisationnelles, pas le suivi des défauts individuels de l'aéronef.
+
+### Q96: Comment l'utilisation des caméras est-elle réglementée au niveau international ? ^t10q96
+- A) L'utilisation est généralement interdite.
+- B) Chaque État est libre d'interdire ou de réglementer leur utilisation au-dessus de son territoire.
+- C) L'utilisation est généralement autorisée.
+- D) L'utilisation privée est généralement autorisée ; la photographie commerciale est soumise à autorisation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au niveau international, il n'existe pas de règle ICAO uniforme sur l'utilisation des caméras depuis les aéronefs. Chaque État est libre d'interdire ou de réglementer leur utilisation au-dessus de son territoire selon ses propres lois nationales, qui peuvent varier en fonction de considérations de sécurité, de vie privée ou militaires. L'option A est fausse car il n'y a pas d'interdiction internationale générale. L'option C est fausse car il n'y a pas non plus d'autorisation internationale générale. L'option D distingue incorrectement entre utilisation privée et commerciale au niveau international, ce qui est une distinction de niveau national.
+
+### Q97: Que signifient les signaux blancs ou d'autres couleurs visibles placés horizontalement sur une piste ? ^t10q97
+- A) Ils marquent l'aire d'atterrissage en service.
+- B) Vol à voile en cours sur cet aérodrome.
+- C) La portion de piste délimitée n'est pas utilisable.
+- D) Prudence lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les signaux blancs ou d'autres couleurs visibles placés horizontalement sur une piste indiquent que la portion marquée de la piste n'est pas utilisable — elle peut être fermée, en construction ou dégradée. Les pilotes doivent éviter d'atterrir sur ou de rouler sur ces zones marquées. L'option A est fausse car ces signaux indiquent une fermeture, pas une utilisation active. L'option B décrit un signal au sol différent (le symbole d'opérations de vol à voile). L'option D est un signal de prudence général affiché dans l'aire de signalisation, pas sur la piste elle-même.
+
+### Q98: Comment le temps de vol doit-il être enregistré lorsque deux pilotes volent ensemble ? ^t10q98
+- A) Chaque pilote enregistre uniquement le temps de vol pendant lequel il pilotait effectivement.
+- B) Le pilote qui a effectué l'atterrissage peut enregistrer le temps de vol total ; l'autre uniquement le temps pendant lequel il pilotait effectivement.
+- C) Chaque pilote peut enregistrer le temps de vol total, les deux détenant une licence.
+- D) Chaque pilote enregistre la moitié du temps.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux pilotes licenciés volent ensemble, chaque pilote peut enregistrer le temps de vol total dans son carnet de vol personnel, puisque les deux sont des titulaires de licence qualifiés participant au vol. Cela est conforme aux règles suisses et ICAO d'enregistrement. L'option A est inutilement restrictive et ne reflète pas la réglementation. L'option B crée une distinction arbitraire basée sur qui a effectué l'atterrissage. L'option D (diviser le temps en deux) n'a aucune base dans la réglementation aéronautique.
+
+### Q99: Lorsqu'un aéronef dépasse un autre en vol, comment doit-il céder le passage ? ^t10q99
+- A) Tourner vers le haut.
+- B) Tourner à gauche.
+- C) Tourner vers le bas.
+- D) Tourner à droite.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à SERA.3210 et à l'Annexe 2 de l'ICAO, un aéronef dépassant doit céder le passage en modifiant sa route vers la droite, passant l'aéronef plus lent sur son côté droit. L'aéronef dépassant assume l'entière responsabilité du maintien d'une séparation sûre tout au long de la manœuvre. Les options A (tourner vers le haut) et C (tourner vers le bas) ne sont pas la procédure de dépassement prescrite. L'option B (tourner à gauche) est incorrecte — la règle standard exige de tourner à droite pour dépasser.
+
+### Q100: Pour quels vols domestiques suisses un plan de vol est-il requis ? ^t10q100
+- A) Pour un vol VFR en espace aérien contrôlé.
+- B) Pour un vol VFR au-dessus des Alpes.
+- C) Pour un vol VFR nécessitant l'utilisation des services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne.
+- D) Pour un vol VFR couvrant plus de 300 km sans escale.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, un plan de vol VFR domestique est requis lorsque le vol nécessite l'utilisation des services de contrôle de la circulation aérienne, comme le transit d'une CTR ou d'une TMA où l'interaction ATC est obligatoire. L'option A est trop large car tout espace aérien contrôlé ne nécessite pas un plan de vol (ex. classe E). L'option B (Alpes) ne déclenche pas automatiquement une obligation de plan de vol. L'option D (distance de 300 km) n'est pas un critère suisse de plan de vol.
+
+### Q101: During a VFR flight, who is responsible for collision avoidance? ^t10q101
+- A) The second pilot when two pilots are on board.
+- B) The flight information service.
+- C) The air traffic control service.
+- D) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During VFR flight, the pilot-in-command (PIC) bears full responsibility for collision avoidance using the see-and-avoid principle. This applies regardless of whether ATC or FIS provides traffic information. Option A is wrong because responsibility always lies with the PIC, not the second pilot. Option B (FIS) provides information but has no separation responsibility. Option C (ATC) may provide traffic information but VFR collision avoidance remains the PIC's responsibility.
+
+### Q102: Which event qualifies as an aviation accident? ^t10q102
+- A) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- B) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- D) Only the crash of an aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13, an aviation accident is an event related to aircraft operation where a person was killed or seriously injured, OR the aircraft sustained damage significantly affecting its structural strength, performance, or flight characteristics. Both conditions independently constitute an accident. Option A is incomplete because it only mentions personal injury. Option B is wrong because cost alone does not define an accident. Option D is too narrow -- many accidents involve damage short of a complete crash.
+
+### Q103: Which of the following exceptions to the right-of-way rules for converging routes is incorrect? ^t10q103
+- A) Airships give way to gliders.
+- B) Aircraft give way to aircraft that are visibly towing other aircraft or objects.
+- C) Gliders give way to aircraft that are towing.
+- D) Gliders and motor gliders give way to free balloons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Option C is the incorrect statement. Under SERA.3210, aircraft towing other aircraft or objects receive right-of-way priority -- meaning other aircraft (including gliders) do NOT have to give way to towing aircraft; rather, all aircraft must give way TO towing aircraft. Option C reverses this: it claims gliders give way to towing aircraft, but the actual rule is that towing aircraft give way to gliders (gliders have higher priority). Options A, B, and D all correctly state valid right-of-way exceptions.
+
+### Q104: What minimum meteorological conditions are required to take off or land at an aerodrome in a CTR without Special VFR authorization? ^t10q104
+- A) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- B) Ground visibility 8 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- C) Ground visibility 1.5 km, ceiling 300 m/GND.
+- D) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 150 m/GND.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss regulations, the minimum meteorological conditions for take-off or landing at an aerodrome within a CTR without requiring Special VFR authorisation are: ground visibility of 1.5 km and a ceiling of 300 m above ground level. These are the basic SVFR minima in Switzerland. Option A and Option B use higher visibility values than required. Option D uses an insufficient ceiling of 150 m. These values are specific to Swiss operations within CTRs.
+
+### Q105: For VFR flights in a terminal control area or control zone, how is the vertical position of an aircraft expressed below the transition altitude? ^t10q105
+- A) As flight level.
+- B) Either as altitude or height.
+- C) As height.
+- D) As altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Below the transition altitude in a TMA or CTR, the vertical position of an aircraft is expressed as altitude (height above mean sea level using the QNH altimeter setting). Flight levels are only used at or above the transition altitude. Option A (flight level) applies above the transition altitude, not below it. Option B (either altitude or height) is incorrect because the standard expression below transition altitude in controlled airspace is specifically altitude. Option C (height) is used for specific purposes like circuit height but is not the standard expression in TMAs/CTRs.
+
+### Q106: In Switzerland, what is the minimum visibility required for VFR flight in Class G airspace without special conditions? ^t10q106
+- A) 5 km.
+- B) 8 km.
+- C) 10 km.
+- D) 1.5 km.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class G airspace in Switzerland, without special conditions and at low altitudes (below 3000 ft AMSL or within 1000 ft of the surface), the minimum VFR visibility is 1.5 km. This is the lowest visibility minimum in the SERA VMC table. Option A (5 km) applies in controlled airspace below FL100. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100. Option C (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR visibility minimum.
+
+### Q107: May a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without any additional formality? ^t10q107
+- A) No, transit is not permitted under any circumstances for VFR flights.
+- B) Yes.
+- C) Yes, but only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and only if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- D) Only if permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ may be transited by VFR flights, provided permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained throughout the transit. If radio contact cannot be established, the pilot must follow the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located. Option A is wrong because transit is not prohibited. Option B is wrong because transit is not unconditional -- AFIS contact is required. Option C incorrectly requires English-language radiotelephony qualification, which is not a specific FIZ transit requirement.
+
+### Q108: Who is responsible for the regulatory maintenance of an aircraft? ^t10q108
+- A) The maintenance organisation.
+- B) The mechanic.
+- C) The operator.
+- D) The owner.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operator is legally responsible for ensuring that regulatory maintenance of the aircraft is carried out in accordance with approved maintenance programmes. While the maintenance organisation (Option A) and mechanic (Option B) perform the physical work, the legal responsibility for ensuring maintenance compliance rests with the operator. Option D (owner) is not necessarily the operator -- for private aircraft the owner often acts as operator, but the regulatory responsibility is tied to the operator role specifically.
+
+### Q109: When two aircraft approach an aerodrome at the same time to land, which one has the right of way? ^t10q109
+- A) The one flying higher.
+- B) The faster one.
+- C) The smaller one.
+- D) The one flying lower.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two aircraft approach an aerodrome simultaneously to land, the aircraft flying lower has right of way because it is in a more advanced and committed phase of the approach. The higher aircraft must give way by extending its circuit or going around. Option A (flying higher) is the opposite of the correct rule. Option B (faster) and Option C (smaller) are not criteria used in ICAO right-of-way rules for landing priority. Speed and size are irrelevant to this determination.
+
+### Q110: What are the minimum VMC values in Class E airspace at 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: vertically - horizontally ^t10q110
+- A) 8.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- B) 1.5 km - 50 m - 100 m
+- C) 5.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- D) 8.0 km - 100 m - 300 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL in Class E airspace, which is above 3000 ft AMSL and above 1000 ft AGL, the SERA.5001 VMC minima are: 8 km visibility, 300 m vertical cloud clearance, and 1500 m horizontal cloud clearance. Option B describes values for very low-altitude uncontrolled airspace, far too low for this altitude. Option C uses 5 km visibility, which is insufficient for Class E at this altitude. Option D has the correct visibility but incorrect cloud clearance values (100 m and 300 m are too small).
+
+### Q111: What is the function of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^t10q111
+- A) It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects
+- B) Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- C) It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft
+- D) It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal square (also called the signals area) is a designated area at an aerodrome where ground signals are displayed using symbols, panels, and markings to visually communicate aerodrome conditions to pilots flying overhead. This is particularly important for pilots who cannot receive radio communication. Option A (tow object area) describes a completely different facility. Option B is wrong because aircraft do not taxi to the signal square for light signals -- those come from the control tower. Option D describes an emergency vehicle staging area, not the signal square.
+
+### Q112: How are two parallel runways designated? ^t10q112
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+- B) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- C) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway "R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, when two parallel runways exist, they are distinguished by adding suffixes: "L" (Left) for the left runway and "R" (Right) for the right runway, as seen from a pilot on final approach. Both runways must receive a suffix to avoid ambiguity. Option A is wrong because the right runway also needs a suffix ("R"). Option B uses a non-standard method of incrementing the designator number. Option C uses dash-number notation that is not part of ICAO runway designation standards.
+
+### Q113: Which runway designators are correct for two parallel runways? ^t10q113
+- A) "24" and "25"
+- B) "18" and "18-2"
+- C) "26" and "26R"
+- D) "06L" and "06R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For two parallel runways, ICAO requires both to carry the L/R suffix with the same number, such as "06L" and "06R." This clearly identifies them as parallel runways on the same magnetic heading. Option A ("24" and "25") indicates two non-parallel runways on slightly different headings, not parallel runways. Option B ("18" and "18-2") uses non-standard dash notation. Option C ("26" and "26R") is incorrect because only one runway has a suffix -- both must have one (should be "26L" and "26R").
+
+### Q114: What does this sign at an aerodrome indicate? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t10q114
+- A) Landing prohibited for a longer period
+- B) After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right
+- C) Glider flying is in progress
+- D) Caution, manoeuvring area is poor
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ALW-011 figure shows the international ground signal for glider operations in progress at the aerodrome. This warns pilots overflying the aerodrome that gliders may be operating in the vicinity, including tow-launching and soaring. Option A (landing prohibited for a longer period) uses a different signal (typically a red cross). Option B (right-hand turns) would be indicated by a different signal in the signals area. Option D (poor manoeuvring area) is also communicated through a different ground marking.
+
+### Q115: What does "DETRESFA" signify? ^t10q115
+- A) Rescue phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Distress phase
+- D) Uncertainty phase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the most serious of the three emergency phases defined in ICAO Annex 12 and Annex 11. It is declared when an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. Option B (alerting phase) corresponds to the codeword ALERFA. Option D (uncertainty phase) corresponds to INCERFA. Option A (rescue phase) is not a defined ICAO emergency phase designation.
+
+### Q116: Who provides the search and rescue service? ^t10q116
+- A) Only civil organisations
+- B) International approved organisations
+- C) Both military and civil organisations
+- D) Only military organisations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, Search and Rescue (SAR) services are provided by both military and civil organisations, depending on national arrangements. Many countries combine military assets (helicopters, aircraft, ships) with civil emergency services for effective SAR coverage. Option A is wrong because military organisations play a major role in SAR operations worldwide. Option B incorrectly requires international approval, which is not how SAR is organised. Option D is wrong because civil organisations are also involved in SAR.
+
+### Q117: In the context of aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories of aircraft occurrences? ^t10q117
+- A) Event Serious event Accident
+- B) Incident Serious incident Accident
+- C) Happening Event Serious event
+- D) Event Crash Disaster
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, aircraft occurrences are classified into three categories: incident (an occurrence that affects or could affect flight safety), serious incident (an incident where there was a high probability of an accident), and accident (an occurrence resulting in fatal/serious injury or substantial aircraft damage). Option A, Option C, and Option D all use non-standard terminology ("event," "happening," "crash," "disaster") not found in ICAO definitions.
+
+### Q118: While slope soaring with the hill on your left, another glider approaches from the opposite direction at the same altitude. What should you do? ^t10q118
+- A) Pull on the elevator and divert upward
+- B) Divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same
+- C) Divert to the right
+- D) Expect the opposite glider to divert
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When slope soaring and encountering an oncoming glider, the pilot with the hill on their left must give way by turning right (away from the hill). In this scenario, the hill is on your left, so the approaching glider has the hill on their right, giving them right-of-way. You must divert to the right. Option A (pull up) is impractical and dangerous in slope soaring conditions. Option B is partially correct in the action but wrong to expect the other glider to also turn -- they have right-of-way. Option D is wrong because you are the one who must give way.
+
+### Q119: When circling in a thermal with other gliders, who determines the direction of turn? ^t10q119
+- A) The glider at the highest altitude
+- B) The glider with the greatest bank angle
+- C) Circling is always to the left
+- D) The glider that entered the thermal first
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When joining a thermal already occupied by other gliders, the newly arriving pilot must circle in the same direction as the glider that first established the turn in that thermal. This convention ensures all gliders orbit in the same direction, preventing dangerous head-on conflicts within the thermal. Option A (highest glider) is wrong because altitude does not determine turn direction. Option B (greatest bank angle) is irrelevant to the rule. Option C is wrong because there is no fixed left-turn rule -- the first glider's choice establishes the direction.
+
+### Q120: Is it possible for a glider to enter airspace C? ^t10q120
+- A) No
+- B) Yes, but only with the transponder activated
+- C) With restrictions, in case of reduced air traffic
+- D) Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspace Class C is controlled airspace where ATC clearance is mandatory for all flights, including VFR and gliders. A glider may enter Class C airspace only after obtaining an explicit clearance from the responsible ATC unit. Option A is wrong because entry is possible with proper ATC clearance. Option B is wrong because while a transponder may be required, it alone is not sufficient -- ATC clearance is the fundamental requirement. Option C is wrong because there is no rule allowing entry based on traffic density without clearance.
+
+### Q121: What do longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions arranged symmetrically about the centreline of a runway indicate? ^t10q121
+- A) A ground roll could be started from this position
+- B) At this point the glide path of an ILS meets the runway
+- C) Do not touch down behind them
+- D) Do not touch down before them
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline are the threshold markings, indicating the beginning of the runway available for landing. Pilots must not touch down before these markings. Option A (ground roll start) confuses threshold markings with a different function. Option B (ILS glide path intersection) describes the touchdown zone, not the threshold. Option C (do not touch down behind) reverses the rule -- the restriction is about landing before them, not after.
+
+### Q122: How can a pilot in flight acknowledge a search and rescue signal on the ground? ^t10q122
+- A) Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times
+- B) Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times
+- C) Push the rudder in both directions multiple times
+- D) Rock the wings
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 12, a pilot acknowledges a ground SAR signal by rocking the wings (waggling the wings laterally). This is an internationally recognised visual signal visible from the ground. Option A (flap cycling) is not a standard SAR acknowledgement signal. Option B (parabolic flight path) is not a defined signal. Option C (rudder inputs) would produce yawing motions that are difficult to see from the ground.
+
+### Q123: An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a... ^t10q123
+- A) Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- B) Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- C) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground.
+- D) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a rotating beacon installed at or near an airport to help pilots locate the aerodrome from the air, particularly at night or in reduced visibility. Option A incorrectly places it at the beginning of final approach rather than at the aerodrome itself. Option B states it is a fixed beacon, but ABNs rotate to increase visibility. Option C states it is visible from the ground, but its purpose is to be seen by pilots from the air.
+
+### Q124: What is the primary objective of an aircraft accident investigation? ^t10q124
+- A) To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents
+- B) To determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences
+- C) To identify the causes and develop safety recommendations
+- D) To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, the sole objective of an aircraft accident investigation is to prevent future accidents by identifying causal and contributing factors and issuing safety recommendations. It is explicitly not a judicial or liability process. Option A (assisting prosecutors) is outside the investigation's mandate. Option B (determining guilt) contradicts the non-punitive nature of safety investigations. Option D (establishing liability for compensation) is a civil legal matter handled separately.
+
+### Q125: What is the validity period of the Certificate of Airworthiness? ^t10q125
+- A) 6 months
+- B) 12 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) issued under ICAO Annex 8 and EASA regulations has unlimited validity, provided the aircraft is maintained in accordance with approved programmes and the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC) is kept current. The CofA itself has no fixed expiry date. Option A (6 months) and Option B (12 months) may confuse the CofA with the ARC renewal period. Option C (12 years) is not a standard aviation validity period.
+
+### Q126: What does the abbreviation ARC stand for? ^t10q126
+- A) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- B) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- C) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- D) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, the document issued following a successful airworthiness review confirming that an aircraft meets applicable airworthiness requirements. It is valid for one year and must be renewed for continued operation. Option A (Airspace Rulemaking Committee), Option B (Airspace Restriction Criteria), and Option C (Airworthiness Recurring Control) are not recognised EASA or ICAO abbreviations.
+
+### Q127: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^t10q127
+- A) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+- B) Of the residence of the owner.
+- C) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under the Chicago Convention (ICAO Annex 7) and EASA regulations, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the State of Registry -- the country in which the aircraft is registered. Option A (country of construction) is the state of manufacture, not necessarily the registry. Option B (owner's residence) has no bearing on CofA issuance. Option D (where the review is done) may differ from the state of registry, as reviews can be performed abroad.
+
+### Q128: What does the abbreviation SERA stand for? ^t10q128
+- A) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Specialized Radar Approach
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, the EU regulation (Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012) that harmonises rules of the air across EASA member states. It covers right-of-way, VMC minima, altimeter settings, signals, and related procedures. Option A (routes), Option C (radar approach), and Option D (radar altimeter) are invented terms not used in aviation regulation.
+
+### Q129: What does the abbreviation TRA stand for? ^t10q129
+- A) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- B) Terminal Area
+- C) Transponder Area
+- D) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace, an airspace of defined dimensions temporarily reserved for specific uses such as military exercises or parachute operations. Other aircraft may not enter without permission during activation. Option A (Temporary Radar Routing Area), Option B (Terminal Area), and Option C (Transponder Area) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q130: What does an area marked as TMZ signify? ^t10q130
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone, an airspace designation requiring all aircraft to be equipped with and operate a functioning transponder when flying within the zone. This enables radar identification and collision avoidance systems to track traffic. Option A (Traffic Management Zone), Option B (Transportation Management Zone), and Option C (Touring Motorglider Zone) are not recognised aviation terms.
+
+### Q131: A flight is categorised as a visual flight when the... ^t10q131
+- A) Visibility in flight exceeds 8 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+- C) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- D) Visibility in flight exceeds 5 km.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined as a flight conducted in accordance with Visual Flight Rules as specified in ICAO Annex 2 and SERA. The classification is regulatory, not meteorological. Option A (8 km visibility) and Option D (5 km visibility) cite specific VMC minimums but do not define VFR flight. Option B (flight in VMC) describes the weather conditions required for VFR but is not itself the definition -- a flight in VMC could still be conducted under IFR.
+
+### Q132: What does the abbreviation VMC stand for? ^t10q132
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Variable meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions -- the minimum visibility and cloud clearance values that must be met for VFR flight to be conducted. VMC minima vary by airspace class and altitude. Option A (Visual Flight Rules) is VFR, a different abbreviation. Option C (Instrument Flight Conditions) effectively describes IMC. Option D (Variable Meteorological Conditions) is not a recognised aviation term.
+
+### Q133: In airspace E, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL75? ^t10q133
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 8000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace below FL100, VFR flights require a minimum visibility of 5000 m (5 km) per SERA.5001. FL75 is below FL100, so the 5 km rule applies. Option A (3000 m) is not a standard VFR minimum at this altitude. Option B (8000 m) applies at and above FL100. Option C (1500 m) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q134: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL110? ^t10q134
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In controlled airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km) per SERA. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km minimum applies. Option A (5000 m) applies below FL100. Option B (1500 m) applies in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option C (3000 m) is not a standard SERA minimum at this altitude.
+
+### Q135: In airspace C, what is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR aircraft at FL125? ^t10q135
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8000 m (8 km). FL125 is well above FL100, confirming the 8 km minimum applies. Option A (1500 m) applies to low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option B (3000 m) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum. Option C (5000 m) applies below FL100 in controlled airspace.
+
+### Q136: What are the minimum cloud clearance requirements for a VFR flight in airspace B? ^t10q136
+- A) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace Class B, the cloud separation minima for VFR flights are 1500 m horizontally and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertically from cloud. Option A uses only 1000 m horizontal distance (insufficient). Option B also uses only 1000 m horizontal. Option C uses 1000 m vertical, which is far too large -- the correct vertical minimum is 300 m.
+
+### Q137: In airspace C below FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q137
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C below FL100, the SERA-prescribed minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5000 m). Option A (10 km) is not a standard SERA minimum. Option B (8 km) applies at and above FL100 in Class C. Option D (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace or special VFR situations.
+
+### Q138: In airspace C at and above FL 100, what is the minimum flight visibility for VFR operations? ^t10q138
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 1.5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility required by SERA is 8 km (8000 m). This higher minimum reflects the faster closing speeds at higher altitudes. Option A (5 km) is the below-FL100 Class C minimum. Option B (1.5 km) applies only in low-altitude uncontrolled airspace. Option D (10 km) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum.
+
+### Q139: How is the term "ceiling" defined? ^t10q139
+- A) Altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ceiling is the height (referenced to the surface, not MSL) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud or obscuring phenomena covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, more than 4 oktas) below 20,000 ft. Option A uses "altitude" (MSL reference) instead of "height" (surface reference). Option C refers to the "highest" rather than "lowest" cloud layer. Option D limits the threshold to 10,000 ft instead of the correct 20,000 ft.
+
+### Q140: Regarding separation in airspace E, which statement is accurate? ^t10q140
+- A) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic receives no separation from any traffic
+- C) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class E, ATC provides separation only between IFR flights. VFR flights receive no separation service whatsoever -- neither from IFR traffic nor from other VFR traffic. VFR pilots rely entirely on see-and-avoid. Option A incorrectly states VFR receives separation from IFR. Option C reverses the actual separation provision. Option D incorrectly claims full separation for VFR traffic.
+
+### Q141: What kind of information is contained in the AD section of the AIP? ^t10q141
+- A) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- B) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- C) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- D) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains information about individual aerodromes: their classification, aerodrome charts, approach charts, taxi charts, runway data, and operating information. Option A describes GEN content (map symbols, nav aids, fees). Option C describes ENR content (airspace warnings, routes, restricted areas). Option D contains a mix of items from different sections that do not correspond to the AD section.
+
+### Q142: How is "aerodrome elevation" defined? ^t10q142
+- A) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- B) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+- C) The highest point of the apron.
+- D) The highest point of the landing area.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This is the critical reference point for QFE calculations and obstacle clearance. Option A (lowest point) would understate the elevation relevant to safe operations. Option B (average of manoeuvring area) does not reflect the critical highest-point definition. Option C (highest point of the apron) refers to the wrong area -- the apron is used for parking, not landing.
+
+### Q143: How is the term "runway" defined? ^t10q143
+- A) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- B) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- C) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. Option A specifies helicopters only (helicopter landing areas are called helipads or FATO). Option B includes water aerodromes, but runways are specific to land aerodromes. Option C describes a round shape, which is incorrect -- runways are rectangular by definition.
+
+### Q144: What does DETRESFA mean? ^t10q144
+- A) Uncertainty phase
+- B) Rescue phase
+- C) Alerting phase
+- D) Distress phase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the highest of three emergency phases indicating an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. The three ICAO emergency phases are: INCERFA (uncertainty), ALERFA (alerting), and DETRESFA (distress). Option A is INCERFA. Option B ("rescue phase") is not a defined ICAO emergency phase. Option C is ALERFA.
+
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+# Connaissances générales de l'aéronef
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Dans le cockpit d'un planeur, les leviers colorés en rouge, bleu et vert correspondent à quelles commandes ? ^t20q1
+- A) Aérofreins, verrouillage de la verrière et train d'atterrissage.
+- B) Largage de la verrière, aérofreins et compensateur de profondeur.
+- C) Train d'atterrissage, aérofreins et compensateur de profondeur.
+- D) Aérofreins, largage du câble et compensateur de profondeur.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'AESA standardise le codage couleur des leviers dans les planeurs : rouge pour le largage d'urgence de la verrière, bleu pour les aérofreins (spoilers), et vert pour le compensateur de profondeur. Ce codage permet au pilote d'identifier instantanément les commandes critiques sous pression. L'option A attribue incorrectement le rouge aux aérofreins et le bleu au verrouillage de la verrière. L'option C attribue incorrectement le rouge au train d'atterrissage. L'option D attribue incorrectement le rouge aux aérofreins et le bleu au largage du câble.
+
+### Q2: L'épaisseur de l'aile est mesurée comme la distance entre les surfaces supérieure et inférieure de l'aile en son... ^t20q2
+- A) Tronçon le plus extérieur.
+- B) Section transversale la plus mince.
+- C) Tronçon le plus intérieur près de l'emplanture.
+- D) Section transversale la plus épaisse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'épaisseur d'une aile est définie comme la distance perpendiculaire maximale entre les surfaces supérieure et inférieure du profil, mesurée à la partie la plus épaisse de la section transversale (généralement entre 20 et 30 % de la corde depuis le bord d'attaque). C'est la mesure aérodynamiquement et structurellement significative. L'option A (tronçon le plus extérieur) mesurerait près de l'extrémité de l'aile, là où le profil est le plus mince. L'option B (section la plus mince) donne une valeur minimale, moins utile. L'option C (tronçon intérieur/emplanture) désigne un emplacement en envergure, non la définition de l'épaisseur du profil.
+
+### Q3: Quel est le terme désignant un cadre en acier tubulaire avec une peau non porteuse ? ^t20q3
+- A) Construction monocoque.
+- B) Construction semi-monocoque.
+- C) Construction en treillis.
+- D) Structure en nid d'abeilles.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La construction en treillis (ou treillage/lattice) utilise un cadre de tubes ou d'éléments pour reprendre toutes les charges structurelles, la peau servant uniquement de carénage sans contribuer à la résistance structurale. L'option A (monocoque) est l'opposé — la peau reprend toutes les charges sans cadre interne. L'option B (semi-monocoque) utilise à la fois un cadre et une peau porteuse travaillant ensemble. L'option D (nid d'abeilles) est un matériau d'âme utilisé dans les panneaux sandwichs, non un type de construction de fuselage.
+
+### Q4: Quels sont les composants structurels typiques d'une construction primaire de fuselage en bois ou en métal ? ^t20q4
+- A) Longerons, nervures et lisses.
+- B) Nervures, cadres et revêtements.
+- C) Cadres et lisses.
+- D) Revêtements, lisses et pièces de formage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les éléments structurels primaires d'un fuselage traditionnel sont les cadres (également appelés couples ou cloisons, disposés circonférentiellement) et les lisses (disposées longitudinalement). Ensemble, ils forment le squelette sur lequel est fixé le revêtement. L'option A introduit le terme « longerons », qui n'est pas une terminologie standard pour le fuselage. L'option B inclut les « nervures », qui sont des composants d'aile et non du fuselage. L'option D liste des « revêtements » et « pièces de formage » qui ne sont pas des termes structurels primaires.
+
+### Q5: Quel est le nom d'une structure construite à partir de cadres et de lisses avec un revêtement porteur ? ^t20q5
+- A) Construction en treillis.
+- B) Structure en nid d'abeilles.
+- C) Construction en bois ou mixte.
+- D) Construction semi-monocoque.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La construction semi-monocoque utilise à la fois un cadre interne (cadres et lisses) ET un revêtement qui reprend activement les charges structurelles (traction, compression, cisaillement). C'est la conception la plus courante des fuselages d'avions modernes. L'option A (construction en treillis) a un revêtement non porteur. L'option B (nid d'abeilles) est un type de matériau, non un concept structurel. L'option C (bois/mixte) est une classification de matériaux, non une conception structurale.
+
+### Q6: Quels sont les principaux composants structurels de l'empennage d'un aéronef ? ^t20q6
+- A) Ailerons et gouverne de profondeur.
+- B) Empennage horizontal et empennage vertical.
+- C) Gouverne de direction et ailerons.
+- D) Volant de commande et palonniers.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'empennage se compose de deux groupes structurels principaux : l'empennage horizontal (stabilisateur et gouverne de profondeur, assurant la stabilité et le contrôle en tangage) et l'empennage vertical (dérive et gouverne de direction, assurant la stabilité et le contrôle en lacet). L'option A inclut incorrectement les ailerons, qui sont montés sur l'aile. L'option C inclut également incorrectement les ailerons. L'option D liste des commandes de cockpit, non la structure de l'aéronef.
+
+### Q7: Une structure sandwich est composée de deux... ^t20q7
+- A) Couches minces collées à un matériau d'âme lourd.
+- B) Couches épaisses collées à un matériau d'âme léger.
+- C) Couches épaisses collées à un matériau d'âme lourd.
+- D) Couches minces collées à un matériau d'âme léger.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une structure sandwich utilise deux peaux minces et rigides (généralement en PRFC, fibre de verre ou aluminium) collées à une âme légère (mousse, balsa ou nid d'abeilles). Les peaux minces reprennent les charges de flexion tandis que l'âme légère résiste au cisaillement et maintient la séparation, offrant un rapport rigidité/poids exceptionnel. Les options A et C spécifient une âme lourde, ce qui annule le bénéfice de légèreté. Les options B et C spécifient des couches épaisses, qui ajoutent une masse inutile.
+
+### Q8: Quels éléments structurels définissent la forme du profil aérodynamique d'une aile ? ^t20q8
+- A) Le longeron.
+- B) Le planchéiage.
+- C) Les nervures.
+- D) L'extrémité d'aile.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les nervures sont des éléments structurels dans le sens de la corde qui définissent la forme transversale du profil aérodynamique de l'aile, perpendiculaires au longeron. Elles établissent la courbure précise des surfaces supérieure et inférieure de l'aile. L'option A (longeron) est la principale poutre porteuse dans le sens de l'envergure, mais ne définit pas la forme du profil. L'option B (planchéiage/revêtement) recouvre la structure mais suit la forme déterminée par les nervures. L'option D (extrémité d'aile) est l'extrémité extérieure de l'aile, non un élément de définition du profil.
+
+### Q9: Le facteur de charge « n » exprime le rapport entre... ^t20q9
+- A) La poussée et la traînée.
+- B) La portance et le poids.
+- C) Le poids et la poussée.
+- D) La traînée et la portance.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le facteur de charge n est égal à la portance divisée par le poids (n = L/W). En vol horizontal rectiligne, n = 1 (1g). En virage incliné, la portance doit dépasser le poids pour maintenir l'altitude — par exemple, à 60° d'inclinaison, n = 2 (2g). Le facteur de charge est essentiel pour la conception structurelle du planeur, car dépasser les limites de g positif ou négatif maximales risque une rupture structurale. Les options A, C et D décrivent des rapports de forces sans rapport.
+
+### Q10: Quels sont les principaux avantages de la construction sandwich ? ^t20q10
+- A) Bonne formabilité combinée à une haute résistance aux températures.
+- B) Faible poids, haute rigidité, haute stabilité et haute résistance.
+- C) Durabilité aux hautes températures associée à un faible poids.
+- D) Haute résistance associée à une bonne formabilité.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La construction sandwich excelle dans la combinaison d'un faible poids avec une haute rigidité, stabilité et résistance — la combinaison idéale pour les applications aéronautiques. La rigidité en flexion augmente considérablement lorsque des peaux rigides sont écartées par une âme légère. Les options A et C mettent l'accent sur la résistance aux températures, qui n'est pas un avantage primaire, la plupart des âmes étant sensibles aux températures élevées. L'option D se concentre sur la formabilité, qui est en réalité limitée dans la construction sandwich.
+
+### Q11: Parmi les matériaux suivants, lequel présente la plus grande résistance ? ^t20q11
+- A) Le bois.
+- B) L'aluminium.
+- C) Le plastique renforcé de fibres de carbone.
+- D) Le magnésium.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le plastique renforcé de fibres de carbone (PRFC) possède un rapport résistance/poids exceptionnel, avec une résistance à la traction dépassant celle de l'acier pour une fraction du poids. Les planeurs hautes performances modernes sont principalement en PRFC. L'option B (aluminium) est résistant mais nettement plus faible que le PRFC. L'option D (magnésium) est plus léger que l'aluminium mais d'une résistance absolue inférieure. L'option A (bois) a une bonne résistance spécifique mais est le plus faible en termes absolus parmi ceux listés.
+
+### Q12: Le levier de trim dans un planeur sert à... ^t20q12
+- A) Minimiser les effets de lacet induit.
+- B) Réduire la force de manche nécessaire sur la gouverne de direction.
+- C) Réduire la force de manche nécessaire sur la gouverne de profondeur.
+- D) Réduire la force de manche nécessaire sur les ailerons.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le système de trim ajuste le tab de compensateur de profondeur (ou trim à ressort) pour maintenir une assiette en tangage souhaitée sans effort continu du pilote sur le manche, réduisant à zéro la force sur la gouverne de profondeur à la vitesse trimée. L'option A (lacet induit) est traité par la coordination du palonnier, non par le trim. Les options B et D font référence aux forces sur la gouverne de direction et les ailerons, qui ne sont pas ajustées par le levier de trim standard du planeur.
+
+### Q13: Des dommages structurels au fuselage peuvent résulter de... ^t20q13
+- A) Un décrochage survenant après le dépassement de l'angle d'attaque maximal.
+- B) Une réduction de la vitesse en dessous d'un certain seuil.
+- C) Un vol plus rapide que la vitesse de manœuvre lors de rafales sévères.
+- D) La neutralisation des forces de manche adaptées à la condition de vol actuelle.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dépasser la vitesse de manœuvre (VA) dans des conditions turbulentes peut provoquer des dommages structurels car les rafales imposent des facteurs de charge soudains susceptibles de dépasser la limite de conception. VA est la vitesse à laquelle une déflection totale de la commande ou une rafale maximale ne dépassera pas la charge limite structurale. L'option A (décrochage) est un événement aérodynamique qui n'endommage pas la structure. L'option B (faible vitesse) réduit les charges. L'option D (neutralisation des forces de manche) ne crée pas de charges structurelles.
+
+### Q14: Autour de combien d'axes un aéronef tourne-t-il, et comment s'appellent-ils ? ^t20q14
+- A) 4 ; axe optique, axe imaginaire, axe affaissé, axe du mal.
+- B) 3 ; axe x, axe y, axe z.
+- C) 3 ; axe vertical, axe latéral, axe longitudinal.
+- D) 4 ; axe vertical, axe latéral, axe longitudinal, axe de vitesse.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un aéronef tourne autour de trois axes principaux passant par le centre de gravité : l'axe longitudinal (nez à la queue — roulis), l'axe latéral (d'un saumon à l'autre — tangage), et l'axe vertical (de haut en bas — lacet). L'option B utilise des étiquettes mathématiques mais omet les dénominations spécifiques à l'aviation. Les options A et D inventent un quatrième axe inexistant.
+
+### Q15: La rotation autour de l'axe longitudinal est principalement produite par... ^t20q15
+- A) La gouverne de direction.
+- B) Le tab de compensateur.
+- C) La gouverne de profondeur.
+- D) Les ailerons.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les ailerons contrôlent le roulis — la rotation autour de l'axe longitudinal. Lorsqu'un aileron se déplace vers le haut et l'autre vers le bas, la portance différentielle fait rouler l'aéronef. L'option A (gouverne de direction) contrôle le lacet autour de l'axe vertical. L'option C (gouverne de profondeur) contrôle le tangage autour de l'axe latéral. L'option B (tab de compensateur) modifie les forces de commande mais n'est pas un initiateur primaire du roulis.
+
+### Q16: Sur un petit aéronef monomoteur à piston, comment les commandes de vol sont-elles généralement actionnées et connectées ? ^t20q16
+- A) Électriquement via des systèmes fly-by-wire.
+- B) Assistées par des pompes hydrauliques ou des moteurs électriques.
+- C) Manuellement via des bielles et des câbles de commande.
+- D) Hydrauliquement via des pompes et des actionneurs.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les petits avions à piston et les planeurs utilisent des liaisons mécaniques directes — bielles et câbles d'acier — pour transmettre directement l'entrée du pilote aux surfaces de contrôle. C'est simple, léger et fiable, sans source d'énergie requise. L'option A (fly-by-wire) est utilisée sur les avions de ligne modernes et les aéronefs militaires. Les options B et D (systèmes hydrauliques) sont utilisées sur les aéronefs plus grands nécessitant des efforts de commande plus importants.
+
+### Q17: Lorsque le palonnier gauche est actionné, quels sont les effets primaire et secondaire ? ^t20q17
+- A) Primaire : lacet à gauche ; Secondaire : roulis à gauche.
+- B) Primaire : lacet à droite ; Secondaire : roulis à droite.
+- C) Primaire : lacet à gauche ; Secondaire : roulis à droite.
+- D) Primaire : lacet à droite ; Secondaire : roulis à gauche.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le palonnier gauche fait principalement laceter le nez vers la gauche autour de l'axe vertical. L'effet secondaire est un roulis vers la gauche : lorsque le nez lace à gauche, l'aile extérieure (droite) se déplace plus vite et génère plus de portance tandis que l'aile intérieure (gauche) ralentit et en génère moins, créant une inclinaison vers la gauche. Les options B et D ont une direction de lacet incorrecte. L'option C a le lacet correct mais la direction du roulis secondaire incorrecte.
+
+### Q18: Que se passe-t-il lorsque le manche ou le volant est tiré vers l'arrière ? ^t20q18
+- A) L'empennage produit une force vers le bas accrue, faisant monter le nez.
+- B) L'empennage produit une force vers le haut accrue, faisant monter le nez.
+- C) L'empennage produit une force vers le haut réduite, faisant descendre le nez.
+- D) L'empennage produit une force vers le bas accrue, faisant descendre le nez.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tirer le manche vers l'arrière déflecte la gouverne de profondeur vers le haut, augmentant la force aérodynamique vers le bas sur l'empennage. Avec la queue poussée vers le bas, le nez pivote vers le haut autour de l'axe latéral passant par le centre de gravité. Cela peut sembler contre-intuitif mais est correct : la queue descend, le nez monte. L'option B indique incorrectement que la force sur l'empennage est vers le haut. L'option C décrit une entrée de manche vers l'avant. L'option D a la bonne force mais la mauvaise direction du nez.
+
+### Q19: Laquelle de ces listes contient toutes les commandes de vol primaires d'un aéronef ? ^t20q19
+- A) Volets, becs et aérofreins.
+- B) Tous les composants mobiles d'un aéronef qui aident à contrôler son vol.
+- C) Gouverne de profondeur, gouverne de direction et ailerons.
+- D) Gouverne de profondeur, gouverne de direction, ailerons, tabs de compensateur, dispositifs hypersustentateurs et commandes de puissance.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les trois commandes de vol primaires sont la gouverne de profondeur (tangage), la gouverne de direction (lacet) et les ailerons (roulis). Elles contrôlent directement la rotation autour des trois axes de l'aéronef. L'option A liste uniquement des dispositifs secondaires/hypersustentateurs. L'option B est trop vague et inclut les commandes secondaires. L'option D mélange les commandes primaires et secondaires (tabs de compensateur, dispositifs hypersustentateurs, commandes de puissance).
+
+### Q20: Quelle fonction remplissent les commandes de vol secondaires ? ^t20q20
+- A) Elles servent de système de secours pour les commandes de vol primaires.
+- B) Elles permettent au pilote de contrôler l'aéronef autour de ses trois axes.
+- C) Elles améliorent les caractéristiques de performance et soulagent le pilote des efforts de commande excessifs.
+- D) Elles améliorent les caractéristiques de virage à basse vitesse lors de l'approche et de l'atterrissage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les commandes de vol secondaires (tabs de compensateur, volets, aérofreins, becs) améliorent les performances de l'aéronef et réduisent la charge de travail du pilote. Le trim neutralise les efforts de manche ; les volets augmentent la portance à basse vitesse ; les aérofreins gèrent le taux de descente. L'option A est incorrecte — elles ne sont pas des systèmes de secours. L'option B décrit les commandes primaires. L'option D est trop étroite, ne couvrant qu'un seul aspect de la fonction des volets.
+
+### Q21: Si le pilote déplace la molette ou le levier de trim vers l'arrière, que se passe-t-il avec le tab de compensateur et la gouverne de profondeur ? ^t20q21
+- A) Le tab monte, la gouverne de profondeur descend.
+- B) Le tab descend, la gouverne de profondeur descend.
+- C) Le tab monte, la gouverne de profondeur monte.
+- D) Le tab descend, la gouverne de profondeur monte.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Déplacer le trim vers l'arrière commande un trim à cabrer. Le tab de compensateur se déflecte vers le bas, générant une force aérodynamique qui pousse le bord de fuite de la gouverne de profondeur vers le haut. La gouverne de profondeur relevée pousse la queue vers le bas et relève le nez. Les tabs se déplacent toujours en sens inverse de la gouverne : tab en bas provoque gouverne en haut. Les options A et C ont le tab montant (trim à piquer). L'option B a les deux descendant, ce qui est mécaniquement impossible dans un système de trim normal.
+
+### Q22: Dans quelle direction le tab de compensateur se déflecte-t-il lorsqu'on trime à cabrer ? ^t20q22
+- A) Cela dépend de la position du CG.
+- B) Il se déflecte vers le haut.
+- C) Dans le sens de la déflection de la gouverne de direction.
+- D) Il se déflecte vers le bas.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un trim à cabrer, le tab de compensateur se déflecte vers le bas. Le tab abaissé crée une force aérodynamique poussant le bord de fuite de la gouverne de profondeur vers le haut, maintenant la gouverne en position à cabrer sans entrée du pilote. L'option A (position du CG) affecte la quantité de trim nécessaire mais pas la direction. L'option B (vers le haut) produirait un trim à piquer. L'option C (sens de la gouverne de direction) est sans rapport avec le fonctionnement du trim de profondeur.
+
+### Q23: L'objectif du système de trim est de... ^t20q23
+- A) Bloquer les surfaces de contrôle en position.
+- B) Déplacer le centre de gravité.
+- C) Ajuster l'effort de commande.
+- D) Augmenter le lacet induit.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le trim ajuste les efforts de commande afin que le pilote puisse voler mains libres à la vitesse et à l'assiette trimées. Il neutralise l'effort de manche à zéro pour la condition souhaitée. L'option A (bloquer les surfaces) est incorrecte — le trim maintient un équilibre aérodynamique, non un blocage mécanique. L'option B (déplacer le CG) est fausse — seul le déplacement physique de masse modifie le CG. L'option D (lacet induit) est un couplage roulis-lacet sans rapport avec le trim.
+
+### Q24: Le système Pitot-statique est conçu pour... ^t20q24
+- A) Corriger l'indicateur de vitesse pour afficher zéro lorsque l'aéronef est immobile au sol.
+- B) Prévenir l'accumulation d'électricité statique sur la cellule.
+- C) Prévenir la formation de glace sur le tube de Pitot.
+- D) Mesurer la pression totale de l'air et la pression statique de l'air.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le système Pitot-statique mesure la pression totale (depuis le tube de Pitot orienté dans l'écoulement) et la pression statique (depuis les prises statiques affleurantes sur le fuselage). Ces mesures alimentent l'anémomètre, l'altimètre et le variomètre. L'option A décrit une conséquence, non la finalité. L'option B (électricité statique) est un phénomène électrique sans rapport. L'option C (protection contre la glace) est assurée par le chauffage optionnel du tube de Pitot, non par la conception du système lui-même.
+
+### Q25: Quel type de pression le tube de Pitot mesure-t-il ? ^t20q25
+- A) La pression statique de l'air.
+- B) La pression totale de l'air.
+- C) La pression d'air de la cabine.
+- D) La pression dynamique de l'air.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le tube de Pitot est orienté dans l'écoulement et mesure la pression totale (pression de stagnation), qui est égale à la pression statique plus la pression dynamique (q = ½ρv²). L'option A (pression statique) est mesurée par des prises statiques séparées. L'option C (pression cabine) est sans rapport. L'option D (pression dynamique) n'est pas mesurée directement par le tube de Pitot — elle est obtenue en soustrayant la pression statique de la pression totale à l'intérieur de l'anémomètre.
+
+### Q26: QFE refers to the... ^t20q26
+- A) Barometric pressure corrected to sea level using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).
+- B) Altitude referenced to the 1013.25 hPa pressure level.
+- C) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield.
+- D) Magnetic bearing to a station.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at a specific reference point, typically the runway threshold. Setting QFE on the altimeter causes it to read zero on the ground at the aerodrome, showing height above the field during flight. Option A describes QNH (sea level corrected pressure). Option B describes the flight level datum (1013.25 hPa). Option D describes QDM/QDR radio navigation terminology.
+
+### Q27: What is the function of the altimeter subscale? ^t20q27
+- A) To correct the altimeter for instrument system errors.
+- B) To set the reference datum for the transponder altitude encoder.
+- C) To reference the altimeter reading to a chosen level such as mean sea level, aerodrome elevation, or the 1013.25 hPa pressure surface.
+- D) To compensate the altimeter reading for non-standard temperatures.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale (Kollsman window) lets the pilot set a reference pressure: QNH for altitude above sea level, QFE for height above the airfield, or 1013.25 hPa for flight levels. Option A (system errors) requires calibration, not subscale adjustment. Option B (transponder encoder) operates on standard pressure independently. Option D (temperature correction) requires a separate mathematical calculation.
+
+### Q28: How can an altimeter subscale set to an incorrect QNH lead to a dangerous altimeter error? ^t20q28
+- A) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+- B) Setting a lower pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- C) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too high, bringing the aircraft closer to the ground than indicated.
+- D) Setting a higher pressure than actual causes the reading to be too low, meaning greater height above ground than intended.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Setting a higher pressure than actual QNH causes the altimeter to over-read -- it shows a higher altitude than the aircraft's true position. The aircraft is actually closer to the ground than indicated, creating a dangerous terrain clearance illusion. The memory aid: "High to Low, look out below." Options A and B incorrectly describe the effect of a low pressure setting. Option D reverses the consequence of a high setting.
+
+### Q29: A temperature lower than the ISA standard may cause... ^t20q29
+- A) An altitude reading that is too high.
+- B) A correct altitude reading provided the subscale is set for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude reading that is too low.
+- D) Pitot tube icing that freezes the altimeter at its current value.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-standard air, the atmosphere is denser and pressure drops faster with altitude than ISA assumes. The altimeter over-reads, indicating a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual position -- the pilot is lower than they think. "Cold air = lower than you think." Option B is wrong because altimeter subscales cannot correct for temperature. Option C reverses the error. Option D describes an icing issue separate from temperature-induced altimeter error.
+
+### Q30: A flight level is a... ^t20q30
+- A) True altitude.
+- B) Pressure altitude.
+- C) Density altitude.
+- D) Altitude above the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight level is a pressure altitude expressed in hundreds of feet with the altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa (standard pressure). FL100 = 10,000 ft on standard setting. All aircraft above the transition altitude use this common datum for vertical separation regardless of local pressure variations. Option A (true altitude) is actual MSL height. Option C (density altitude) is a performance calculation parameter. Option D (above ground) is height AGL.
+
+### Q31: True altitude is defined as... ^t20q31
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.
+- B) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- C) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is the actual geometric height of the aircraft above mean sea level (MSL), obtained by correcting indicated altitude for deviations from the ISA temperature profile. The altimeter assumes standard ISA conditions; when actual temperature differs, the indicated reading diverges from the real MSL height. A and D are wrong because true altitude is referenced to MSL, not above ground level (AGL). B mentions temperature correction but is imprecise — true altitude is the actual MSL height, not merely a pressure altitude with a temperature factor applied. Only C correctly defines true altitude.
+
+---
+
+### Q32: When flying in air colder than ISA, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q32
+- A) Equal to the standard altitude.
+- B) Lower than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Higher than the true altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In colder-than-ISA air the atmosphere is denser, so pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude than the altimeter assumes. The altimeter therefore over-reads and shows a higher value than the aircraft's actual MSL height — the aircraft is physically lower than the instrument indicates. This is a serious terrain clearance hazard, summarized by the memory aid "High to low (temperature), look out below." B states the opposite of what occurs. A and C only apply under exact ISA conditions. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q33: When flying in an air mass at ISA temperature with the correct QNH set, the indicated altitude is... ^t20q33
+- A) Lower than the true altitude.
+- B) Higher than the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the true altitude.
+- D) Equal to the standard atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter is calibrated to the ISA standard temperature lapse rate. When the actual temperature exactly matches ISA and the correct QNH is set, all instrument assumptions are perfectly met and no error exists — indicated altitude equals true altitude. This is the ideal baseline condition from which deviations introduce errors. A and B describe situations with non-standard temperature or pressure. D is vague and not a meaningful statement about the altimeter reading. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q34: Which instrument is susceptible to hysteresis error? ^t20q34
+- A) Vertical speed indicator.
+- B) Direct reading compass.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Tachometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hysteresis error affects the altimeter because its aneroid capsules — thin elastic bellows that expand and contract with pressure changes — do not return to exactly the same position when pressure is restored to a previously experienced value. This mechanical lag means the altimeter may show slightly different readings at the same altitude when climbing versus descending. A (VSI), B (compass), and D (tachometer) do not rely on elastic aneroid capsules for their primary measurement and are therefore not subject to this specific error. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q35: Altitude measurement relies on changes in which type of pressure? ^t20q35
+- A) Total pressure.
+- B) Differential pressure.
+- C) Static pressure.
+- D) Dynamic pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure that decreases predictably with altitude according to the ISA model. The altimeter senses this pressure via the static port and converts it to an altitude reading using calibrated aneroid capsules. A (total pressure) equals static plus dynamic and is measured by the Pitot tube for airspeed. B (differential pressure) is the difference between total and static, which drives the ASI. D (dynamic pressure) depends on airspeed and has no role in altitude measurement. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q36: How does a vertical speed indicator work? ^t20q36
+- A) It measures total air pressure and compares it to static pressure.
+- B) It compares the current static air pressure against the static pressure stored in a reservoir.
+- C) It measures vertical acceleration using a gimbal-mounted mass.
+- D) It measures static air pressure and compares it against a vacuum.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI detects rate of climb or descent by comparing current static pressure (from the static port) against a reference pressure stored in an internal reservoir that communicates via a calibrated leak. When climbing, static pressure drops faster than the reservoir can equalize, creating a pressure difference that deflects the pointer proportional to climb rate. A describes the ASI operating principle (total minus static = dynamic). C describes an accelerometer. D describes a barometer, which cannot indicate a rate of change. Only B correctly explains VSI operation.
+
+---
+
+### Q37: The vertical speed indicator compares the pressure difference between... ^t20q37
+- A) The current dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure from a moment earlier.
+- B) The current static pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+- C) The current total pressure and the total pressure from a moment earlier.
+- D) The current dynamic pressure and the static pressure from a moment earlier.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI senses only static pressure, which changes as altitude changes. It compares the instantaneous static pressure arriving through the static port with the slightly delayed static pressure stored in the metering reservoir behind the calibrated restriction. The rate of pressure change indicates the rate of altitude change. A, C, and D all involve dynamic or total pressure, which are Pitot-tube quantities used for airspeed measurement and play no role in the VSI. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q38: An aircraft flies on a heading of 180° at 100 kt TAS. The wind blows from 180° at 30 kt. Ignoring instrument and position errors, what will the airspeed indicator approximately show? ^t20q38
+- A) 70 kt
+- B) 130 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 100 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass, not relative to the ground. The aircraft moves through the air at 100 kt TAS, so the ASI shows 100 kt regardless of wind. A wind from 180° on a heading of 180° is a headwind, reducing ground speed to 70 kt — that is A, but ground speed is not what the ASI reads. B (130 kt) would only apply with a 30 kt tailwind. C (30 kt) is merely the wind speed, irrelevant to the ASI. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q39: What principle does the airspeed indicator use to determine speed? ^t20q39
+- A) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum.
+- B) Dynamic air pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube and converted directly into a speed reading.
+- C) Total air pressure is sensed by the static ports and converted into speed.
+- D) Total air pressure is compared against static air pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI compares total pressure from the Pitot tube (which captures all air pressure including the motion component) against static pressure from the static port (ambient pressure only). The difference is dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), proportional to airspeed squared — the expanding capsule converts this into an IAS reading. A describes a simple barometer. B is incorrect because the Pitot tube measures total pressure, not pure dynamic pressure. C wrongly attributes total pressure measurement to the static ports. Only D correctly describes ASI operation.
+
+---
+
+### Q40: Red lines on instrument displays typically mark which values? ^t20q40
+- A) Recommended operating ranges.
+- B) Caution areas.
+- C) Operational limits.
+- D) Normal operating areas.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red radial marks on aircraft instruments indicate absolute operational limits that must never be exceeded — such as VNE (never-exceed speed) on the ASI. These represent structural or aerodynamic boundaries beyond which catastrophic failure or loss of control may occur. B (caution areas) are indicated by yellow arcs, covering the speed range between maneuvering speed and VNE where smooth air is required. D (normal operating range) is shown by a green arc. A ("recommended operating ranges") is not a standard instrument marking. Only C correctly defines the red line.
+
+---
+
+### Q41: To determine indicated airspeed (IAS), the airspeed indicator requires... ^t20q41
+- A) The difference between total pressure and dynamic pressure.
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure.
+- C) The difference between standard pressure and total pressure.
+- D) The difference between dynamic pressure and static pressure.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is derived from dynamic pressure, which equals total pressure (Pitot tube) minus static pressure (static port). The ASI capsule deflects in proportion to this pressure difference and the needle indicates IAS. A (total minus dynamic) would yield static pressure alone — not useful for airspeed. C (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for airspeed. D (dynamic minus static) is not a meaningful Pitot-static quantity since dynamic pressure is not independently measured at a single port. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q42: What does the red line on an airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q42
+- A) A speed limit in turbulent conditions.
+- B) The maximum speed with flaps deployed.
+- C) A speed that must never be exceeded under any circumstances.
+- D) The maximum speed in turns exceeding 45° bank.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red line marks VNE — Velocity Never Exceed — the absolute structural speed limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, including smooth air. Beyond VNE, the risk of aeroelastic flutter or catastrophic structural failure is unacceptable. A describes the upper boundary of the yellow arc (caution range), where turbulence must be avoided. B describes VFE (flap extension speed), marked by the top of the white arc. D does not correspond to any standard ASI color marking. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q43: The compass error produced by the aircraft's own magnetic field is known as... ^t20q43
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Deviation.
+- C) Declination.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the compass error caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields — from steel structures, electrical wiring, and electronic equipment on board. It varies with the aircraft's heading and is tabulated on the compass deviation card after a compass swing. A (variation) and C (declination) are two names for the same geographic phenomenon: the angle between true north and magnetic north at any given location on Earth — this is not caused by the aircraft. D (inclination) refers to the vertical dip angle of Earth's magnetic field, which causes turning and acceleration errors. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q44: What errors cause a magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north? ^t20q44
+- A) Variation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+- B) Gravity and magnetism.
+- C) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field.
+- D) Deviation, turning errors, and acceleration errors.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Three instrument errors cause the magnetic compass to deviate from magnetic north: deviation (from the aircraft's own magnetic fields), turning errors (the compass card tilts due to magnetic dip during turns, especially on northerly/southerly headings), and acceleration errors (speed changes on easterly/westerly headings produce false readings due to the same dip effect). A incorrectly includes variation, which is a geographic property of Earth, not an instrument error. B is too vague. C lists physical properties of Earth's field rather than specific instrument errors. Only D correctly names all three.
+
+---
+
+### Q45: Which cockpit instrument receives input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q45
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Direct-reading compass.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Vertical speed indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Only the airspeed indicator is connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies total pressure as one of the two inputs needed to compute IAS. A (altimeter) and D (VSI) are connected only to the static port — they measure changes in static pressure for altitude and climb/descent rate. B (direct-reading compass) is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q46: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 270° to 360° via the shortest route. At roughly what compass indication should the pilot stop the turn? ^t20q46
+- A) 360°
+- B) 030°
+- C) 330°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 270° to 360° is a right turn through northwest toward north. In the northern hemisphere, magnetic dip causes the compass to lead (read ahead of the actual heading) when turning toward north, so the pilot must stop early — before the compass reaches 360°. The rule of thumb is to stop approximately 30° before the target when turning to north: 360° − 30° = 330°. Waiting until the compass shows 360° (A) results in overshooting to approximately 030° (B). D (270°) is the starting heading. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q47: Which instruments receive static pressure from the static port? ^t20q47
+- A) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, and airspeed indicator.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, and slip indicator.
+- C) Altimeter, slip indicator, and navigational computer.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and direct-reading compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All three Pitot-static instruments receive static pressure: the altimeter (converts static pressure to altitude), the vertical speed indicator (compares current and stored static pressure to show climb/descent rate), and the airspeed indicator (uses static pressure alongside Pitot total pressure). The direct-reading compass in B and D is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no pneumatic input. The slip indicator in B and C is an inertial/gravity instrument (a ball in liquid) that requires no connection to the static port. Only A lists the correct three instruments.
+
+---
+
+### Q48: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 360° to 270° via the shortest route. At approximately what compass reading should the turn be stopped? ^t20q48
+- A) 300°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 360° (north) to 270° (west) is a left turn passing through northwest and west. On westerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the magnetic dip-induced turning error is minimal because the compass card tilts most significantly near north and south, not near east and west. At 270° the compass reads with acceptable accuracy, so the pilot should stop the turn when the compass shows 270°. A (300°) stops too early. B (240°) overshoots significantly. C (360°) is the starting heading. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q49: Static pressure is defined as the pressure... ^t20q49
+- A) Sensed by the Pitot tube.
+- B) Inside the aircraft cabin.
+- C) Of undisturbed airflow.
+- D) Produced by orderly movement of air particles.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air, exerted equally in all directions at a given altitude regardless of airflow velocity. It is measured by flush static ports positioned on the fuselage where local aerodynamic disturbance is minimized. A is wrong: the Pitot tube senses total pressure (static plus dynamic). B (cabin pressure) is a separately regulated quantity inside the aircraft. D more closely describes dynamic pressure, which arises from organized directed air motion. Only C correctly defines static pressure.
+
+---
+
+### Q50: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere turns from 030° to 180° via the shortest route. At approximately what compass heading should the turn be ended? ^t20q50
+- A) 180°
+- B) 210°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 150°
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 030° to 180° is a right turn through east and south. When turning toward southerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the compass lags — it under-reads the actual heading and shows a smaller value than the aircraft has actually turned through. The pilot must therefore overshoot: continue turning until the compass reads approximately 180° + 30° = 210°, at which point the actual heading is approximately 180°. Stopping at 180° on the compass (A) means the aircraft has not yet reached 180° in reality. D (150°) is far too early. C (360°) is irrelevant. Only B is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q51: Which glider cockpit lever is painted red? ^t20q51
+- A) Wheel brake.
+- B) Landing gear lever.
+- C) Ventilation control.
+- D) Emergency canopy release.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA color coding assigns red to the emergency canopy release lever in gliders, because red is universally associated with critical safety and emergency functions, allowing the pilot to locate it instantly during an accident scenario. The landing gear lever (B) uses green. Ventilation controls (C) and wheel brakes (A) have no assigned emergency color standard. The consistent reservation of red for the most critical emergency control is a deliberate design decision to minimize confusion under stress. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q52: During winter maintenance, you notice honeycomb elements inside the fuselage. What construction category does this glider belong to? ^t20q52
+- A) Metal construction.
+- B) Wood combined with other materials.
+- C) Composite construction.
+- D) Biplane construction.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Honeycomb core material is the defining hallmark of modern composite sandwich construction. Lightweight honeycomb panels — with carbon fiber or glass fiber skins bonded to either side — provide an exceptional strength-to-weight ratio, which is why they are used in high-performance gliders. Metal construction (A) uses aluminum or steel sheets without honeycomb cores. Wood/mixed construction (B) uses spruce ribs and plywood skins. Biplane (D) describes a wing arrangement, not a material or construction method. The presence of honeycomb elements unambiguously identifies C.
+
+---
+
+### Q53: The Discus B has its horizontal stabilizer mounted at the top of the fin. What type of tail configuration is this? ^t20q53
+- A) V-tail.
+- B) Cruciform tail.
+- C) T-tail.
+- D) Pendulum cruciform tail.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the horizontal stabilizer is mounted at the top of the vertical fin, the silhouette viewed from the front forms a "T" shape — hence the name T-tail. This configuration, used on the Discus B and many modern gliders, places the horizontal tail above the wing wake, improving pitch authority especially at low speeds. A (V-tail) merges horizontal and vertical tail functions into two angled surfaces. B (cruciform tail) positions the stabilizer at mid-height of the fin. D (pendulum cruciform) is a variant with an all-moving stabilizer at mid-height. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q54: What is the role of the fixed vertical fin and fixed horizontal stabilizer on a glider's tail? ^t20q54
+- A) To trim the glider.
+- B) To steer the glider.
+- C) To stabilize the glider.
+- D) To trim the control forces for a desired flight condition.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fixed tail surfaces — horizontal stabilizer and vertical fin — provide static stability in pitch and yaw. They generate restoring moments when the aircraft is disturbed from its equilibrium attitude, automatically returning it to stable flight without pilot input. B (steering) is accomplished by the movable surfaces: elevator for pitch, rudder for yaw, ailerons for roll. A and D (trimming) is the function of trim tabs mounted on the movable surfaces, not the fixed stabilizers. Only C correctly identifies the role of the fixed tail surfaces.
+
+---
+
+### Q55: During winter maintenance, the equipment officer explains the CG-mounted tow hook mechanism. Why must it release the cable automatically? ^t20q55
+- A) To relieve the pilot from releasing the cable during a winch launch.
+- B) To prevent danger if the glider flies too long near the ground during the winch launch takeoff roll.
+- C) To prevent danger when the glider climbs too high during aero-tow.
+- D) It is a safety measure — the hook must release automatically when the glider risks flying over the winch.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the glider nears the top of its winch-launch arc and begins to converge with the winch position, the cable angle reverses abruptly from a forward pull to a downward pull — if still attached, this causes a violent pitch-up that is likely fatal. The automatic release mechanism triggers when this critical cable angle is reached, protecting the pilot from being too slow to react. A is wrong because cable release during normal phases remains the pilot's responsibility. B describes a different ground-handling concern. C refers to an aero-tow scenario where the CG hook is not used. Only D correctly identifies the primary safety rationale.
+
+---
+
+### Q56: Aileron deflection produces rotation around which axis? ^t20q56
+- A) The yaw axis.
+- B) The lateral axis.
+- C) The vertical axis.
+- D) The longitudinal axis.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ailerons produce roll — rotation around the longitudinal axis, which runs from the aircraft's nose to its tail. Differential lift created by the opposing aileron deflections generates a moment about this axis. B (lateral axis, running wingtip to wingtip) corresponds to pitch, controlled by the elevator. A (yaw axis) and C (vertical axis) describe the same axis, controlled by the rudder; note that adverse yaw is a secondary effect of aileron use, not the primary motion. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q57: When the control stick is moved to the left, what happens? ^t20q57
+- A) Both ailerons move upward.
+- B) The left aileron goes up and the right aileron goes down.
+- C) Both ailerons move downward.
+- D) The left aileron goes down and the right aileron goes up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the stick left commands a left roll. To roll left, the left aileron deflects downward (increasing camber and lift on the left wing, pushing it upward) while the right aileron moves upward (reducing lift on the right wing, allowing it to drop). This differential lift rolls the aircraft to the left. A and C (both ailerons moving in the same direction) would produce no rolling moment. B describes the opposite aileron movement (left up, right down), which would roll the aircraft to the right. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q58: In mechanical brake systems, how is the braking force transmitted from the pedals or handles to the brake shoes? ^t20q58
+- A) Through electric motors.
+- B) Through hydraulic lines.
+- C) Through pneumatic lines.
+- D) Through cables and pushrods.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider mechanical brake systems transmit braking force from the pilot's pedal or hand lever to the brake shoes via a mechanical linkage of cables and pushrods — no fluid, compressed air, or electricity is required. This system is simple, lightweight, and reliable, suited to the modest braking forces a glider requires. Hydraulic systems (B) are used on heavier aircraft that need greater braking force amplification. Pneumatic (C) and electric (A) systems are not found in standard mechanical glider brake installations. Only D is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q59: The flight manual states that the glider has balanced control surfaces. What is the main reason for this design? ^t20q59
+- A) Better turning characteristics.
+- B) Harmonious coordination of controls.
+- C) Elimination of flutter.
+- D) Reduction of the force needed to move the controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mass-balancing a control surface — placing counterweights forward of the hinge axis — moves the surface's center of gravity to its pivot line, eliminating the inertial coupling between aerodynamic loads and structural oscillations that produces aeroelastic flutter. Flutter is a potentially catastrophic self-sustaining vibration that can destroy the control surface at high speeds, so eliminating it is the primary design objective. D (lighter controls) may result from aerodynamic balancing but is not the purpose of mass balancing. A and B describe general handling qualities unrelated to structural safety. Only C is correct.
+
+---
+
+### Q60: Why are there small holes on the fuselage sides connected to internal flexible tubes? ^t20q60
+- A) They serve as static pressure ports for the instruments.
+- B) They are used to measure outside air temperature.
+- C) They equalize pressure between the fuselage interior and exterior.
+- D) They prevent excess humidity inside the glider in cold weather.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The small flush-mounted orifices on the fuselage sides are the static pressure ports of the Pitot-static system. They sense ambient atmospheric (static) pressure and transmit it via internal flexible tubing to the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator. Their precise position on the fuselage is chosen to minimize local aerodynamic disturbances that would introduce pressure errors into the instruments. B (outside air temperature) uses a dedicated thermometer probe. C and D describe ventilation or moisture-control functions, which are unrelated to these ports. Only A is correct.
+
+### Q61: Which instrument receives its input from the Pitot tube? ^t20q61
+- A) Turn indicator.
+- B) Variometer.
+- C) Altimeter.
+- D) Airspeed indicator.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only cockpit instrument connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies it with total pressure. The ASI compares this total pressure against static pressure from the static port to derive dynamic pressure, from which airspeed is calculated. A (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument powered pneumatically or electrically. B (variometer) and C (altimeter) are both connected only to the static port, measuring changes in ambient atmospheric pressure.
+
+### Q62: If the altimeter subscale is set to a higher pressure without any actual pressure change, how does the reading change? ^t20q62
+- A) The reading increases.
+- B) The reading decreases.
+- C) A precise answer requires knowing the outside air temperature.
+- D) The reading does not change.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the subscale is set to a higher reference pressure without any change in actual atmospheric pressure, the altimeter indicates a higher altitude. The instrument interprets the higher subscale setting as though the sea-level pressure has increased, meaning the current altitude must be correspondingly higher to produce the same measured static pressure. B, C, and D are all incorrect. Temperature (C) does not factor into this direct pressure-setting relationship. The reading always increases when a higher pressure is dialed in.
+
+### Q63: If the static pressure port is blocked by ice during a descent, what does the variometer show? ^t20q63
+- A) A descent.
+- B) A climb.
+- C) Zero.
+- D) Nothing at all (only a warning flag appears).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the static port is blocked by ice, the static pressure reaching the variometer remains frozen at the last value before blockage. Both sides of the variometer's measuring system receive the same trapped pressure, so no pressure difference develops. The instrument therefore reads zero regardless of whether the aircraft is actually climbing or descending. A (descent) and B (climb) would require changing static pressure inputs. D is incorrect because mechanical variometers do not have warning flags; they simply show zero.
+
+### Q64: The red line on the airspeed indicator marks VNE. Is exceeding this speed ever permitted? ^t20q64
+- A) Yes, brief exceedances are acceptable.
+- B) Yes, up to a maximum of 20%.
+- C) No, under no circumstances.
+- D) Yes, up to a maximum of 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE (Velocity Never Exceed) is an absolute structural limit that must never be exceeded under any circumstances, by any amount, for any duration. Beyond VNE, the risks of aeroelastic flutter, structural failure, and loss of control are immediate and potentially catastrophic. Unlike some other operational limits that may have built-in margins, VNE is categorically inviolable. A, B, and D all incorrectly suggest that some degree of exceedance is acceptable, which is false and dangerous.
+
+### Q65: Switching on the radio in a glider consistently causes the magnetic compass to rotate in the same direction. Why? ^t20q65
+- A) The compass is powered electrically when the radio is activated.
+- B) The compass is running low on fluid.
+- C) The compass is defective.
+- D) The radio's magnetic field interferes with the compass because the two are installed too close together.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the radio operates, it generates an electromagnetic field. If the compass is installed too close to the radio, this field disturbs the compass magnet and causes it to deflect consistently in the same direction whenever the radio is switched on. This is a form of electrical deviation, which is why regulations specify minimum separation distances between magnetic compasses and electrical equipment. A is wrong because compasses are self-contained magnetic instruments. B (low fluid) would cause sluggish movement, not directional bias. C (defective compass) is not the root cause here.
+
+### Q66: What information does FLARM provide? ^t20q66
+- A) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that are at the same altitude.
+- B) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft that cross the flight path.
+- C) FLARM-equipped aircraft in the vicinity as well as fixed obstacles.
+- D) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft posing a collision risk.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM (Flight Alarm) is an anti-collision system that provides two categories of alerts: nearby FLARM-equipped aircraft regardless of altitude or collision risk, and fixed obstacles such as power lines, cable car wires, and antennas stored in its internal database. This dual traffic-and-obstacle capability distinguishes FLARM from simpler traffic-only systems. A is too restrictive (not limited to same altitude). B is too restrictive (not limited to path-crossing traffic). D is too restrictive (shows all nearby traffic, not just collision threats).
+
+### Q67: Your glider has an ELT with a toggle switch offering ON, OFF, and ARM modes. Which setting enables automatic distress signal transmission upon a violent impact? ^t20q67
+- A) OFF.
+- B) ON.
+- C) ARM.
+- D) Automatic activation is independent of the selected mode for safety reasons.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARM mode activates the ELT's internal G-switch (impact sensor), which automatically triggers the distress signal transmission on 406 MHz and 121.5 MHz upon detecting a crash-level deceleration. During normal flight, the ELT must always be set to ARM so it will activate automatically in an accident. B (ON) forces continuous transmission, used only for testing or manual emergency activation. A (OFF) completely disables the ELT. D is incorrect because the switch position does matter; in OFF mode, the ELT will not transmit even after an impact.
+
+### Q68: Electric current is measured in which unit? ^t20q68
+- A) Watt.
+- B) Volt.
+- C) Ohm.
+- D) Ampere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electric current is measured in Amperes (A), named after physicist Andre-Marie Ampere. Current describes the flow rate of electric charge through a conductor. A (Watt) is the unit of electrical power (P = U x I). B (Volt) is the unit of voltage or electrical potential difference. C (Ohm) is the unit of electrical resistance. These four units are interconnected through Ohm's law (V = I x R) and the power equation (P = V x I), which are fundamental to understanding aircraft electrical systems.
+
+### Q69: During a pre-flight check, you discover the battery fuse is defective and the electrical instruments are inoperative. Would it be acceptable to bridge the fuse with aluminum foil from a chocolate wrapper? ^t20q69
+- A) Yes, but only if a short local flight near the aerodrome is planned.
+- B) Yes, provided the instruments start working again.
+- C) No, an unrated fuse substitute risks wiring fire or instrument damage.
+- D) Yes, but only in an emergency situation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Replacing a fuse with aluminum foil is strictly prohibited and extremely dangerous. A fuse is a precisely rated protection device designed to melt at a specific current, protecting the wiring and instruments from overcurrent damage. Aluminum foil has no defined current rating and will not interrupt the circuit during a short circuit, allowing excessive current to flow and potentially causing an electrical fire or destroying equipment. A, B, and D all incorrectly suggest scenarios where this improvisation might be acceptable. The aircraft must not fly until a proper fuse is installed.
+
+### Q70: What is the primary disadvantage of the VHF frequency band used in aviation radio communications? ^t20q70
+- A) VHF waves are highly susceptible to atmospheric disturbances such as thunderstorms.
+- B) VHF reception is limited to the theoretical line of sight (quasi-optical propagation).
+- C) VHF waves are deflected at dawn and dusk due to the twilight effect.
+- D) VHF waves are disrupted near large bodies of water (coastal effect).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary limitation of VHF radio communications is that VHF waves propagate in straight lines (quasi-optical propagation) and do not follow the Earth's curvature. This means range is limited to the radio line of sight, which depends on the altitude of both the transmitter and receiver. At low altitude, range is significantly reduced. A (atmospheric disturbances) primarily affects MF/HF frequencies. C (twilight effect) is a phenomenon of ionospheric HF propagation. D (coastal effect) affects medium-frequency (MF) waves, not VHF.
+
+### Q71: Which instrument is connected to the Pitot tube? ^t20q71
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Turn indicator.
+- C) Airspeed indicator.
+- D) Variometer.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument that receives total pressure input from the Pitot tube. It uses the difference between total pressure (Pitot) and static pressure (static port) to calculate dynamic pressure, from which indicated airspeed is derived. A (altimeter) and D (variometer) are connected only to the static port. B (turn indicator) is a gyroscopic instrument that operates either pneumatically or electrically and has no connection to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q72: What is the standard colour of aviation oxygen cylinders? ^t20q72
+- A) Red.
+- B) Orange.
+- C) Black.
+- D) Blue/white.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under European and ISO standards, aviation oxygen cylinders are conventionally painted black. This distinguishes them from other gas types in the color coding system. Medical oxygen bottles may be white, but aviation oxygen specifically uses black as the standard identification color. A (red) typically indicates flammable gases like hydrogen or acetylene. B (orange) and D (blue/white) do not correspond to the standard aviation oxygen bottle color coding.
+
+### Q73: During a turn, what does the ball (inclinometer) indicate? ^t20q73
+- A) The bank angle of the glider.
+- B) A rotation about the yaw axis to left or right.
+- C) The lateral acceleration in a turn.
+- D) The resultant of weight and centrifugal force.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ball (inclinometer) indicates the direction of the resultant force from the combination of gravity (weight) and centrifugal force acting on the aircraft during a turn. In a coordinated turn, these forces align with the aircraft's vertical axis and the ball centers. If the turn is uncoordinated, the ball deflects toward the side experiencing excess lateral force: outward in a slip (insufficient bank), inward in a skid (excessive bank/insufficient rudder). A is wrong because the ball does not measure bank angle directly. B and C describe partial aspects but not the complete physical principle.
+
+### Q74: Why must the equipped weight of a glider pilot exceed a specified minimum value? ^t20q74
+- A) To improve the angle of incidence.
+- B) To reduce control forces.
+- C) To keep the centre of gravity within prescribed limits.
+- D) To improve the glide ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum pilot weight requirement exists to ensure the aircraft's center of gravity stays within the approved forward and aft limits. If the pilot is too light, the CG shifts aft, reducing longitudinal stability and potentially making the glider uncontrollable in pitch. A (angle of incidence) is a fixed design parameter that pilot weight does not affect. B (control forces) are not the primary reason for the minimum weight. D (glide ratio) is primarily determined by aerodynamic design, not pilot weight.
+
+### Q75: What is the purpose of a glider's flight manual (AFM)? ^t20q75
+- A) It contains records of periodic inspections and repairs performed.
+- B) It is a detailed commercial brochure from the manufacturer.
+- C) It is used by workshop supervisors when carrying out repairs.
+- D) It provides the pilot with operating limits, technical specifications, and emergency procedures.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) is the official regulatory document that provides the pilot with all information needed for safe operation: operating limitations (speeds, load factors, weight limits), normal and emergency procedures, performance data, and weight and balance information. A describes the maintenance logbook, not the AFM. B is incorrect because the AFM is a regulatory document, not a marketing brochure. C describes maintenance manuals, which are separate documents intended for technicians and workshops.
+
+### Q76: What does the automatic regulator on an oxygen system do? ^t20q76
+- A) It regulates the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only on inhalation.
+- B) It reduces the cylinder pressure to a usable level.
+- C) It adjusts the oxygen flow based on the pilot's breathing rate.
+- D) It controls the pilot's individual oxygen consumption.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system performs two key functions: it adjusts the air-to-oxygen mixture ratio according to altitude (higher altitudes require a richer oxygen mix to maintain adequate partial pressure), and it delivers oxygen only during inhalation, conserving the supply. This is far more efficient than continuous-flow systems. B describes a simple pressure reducer, not an automatic regulator. C and D describe partial functions but miss the altitude-dependent mixture adjustment and the on-demand delivery mechanism.
+
+### Q77: What is a compensated variometer? ^t20q77
+- A) A cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt).
+- B) Another term for a vane variometer.
+- C) A netto variometer.
+- D) A variometer that cancels indications caused by elevator inputs.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compensated variometer (total energy compensated variometer or TE variometer) eliminates false climb and sink indications caused by the pilot's control inputs such as pulling up or pushing over. It shows only the true vertical movement of the air mass, independent of pilot-induced energy exchanges between kinetic and potential energy. A (Sollfahrt/MacCready speed director) is a different instrument that advises optimal inter-thermal speed. B (vane variometer) describes a mechanical type, not a compensation feature. C (netto variometer) goes further than TE compensation by also removing the glider's own sink rate.
+
+### Q78: Up to what bank angle can the magnetic compass be considered reliable? ^t20q78
+- A) 40 degrees.
+- B) 30 degrees.
+- C) 20 degrees.
+- D) 10 degrees.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is generally considered reliable up to approximately 30 degrees of bank angle. Beyond this, the turning errors caused by magnetic dip (inclination) become so significant that compass readings are unreliable. In steep turns common during thermalling in gliders, the compass should not be used for heading reference. A (40 degrees) is too generous and would produce significant errors. C (20 degrees) and D (10 degrees) are unnecessarily conservative for normal operations.
+
+### Q79: A glider fitted with an ELT is being stored in the hangar. What should you do? ^t20q79
+- A) Set the ELT switch to ON.
+- B) Remove the ELT battery.
+- C) Verify there is no transmission on 121.5 MHz.
+- D) Nothing in particular.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When storing a glider with an ELT in the hangar, the pilot must verify that the ELT is not inadvertently transmitting on 121.5 MHz (the international distress frequency). Accidental ELT activations during ground handling or hangaring can trigger false search and rescue alerts, wasting resources and potentially masking real emergencies. A (ON) would intentionally activate the distress signal, which is incorrect. B (removing the battery) is not the standard procedure. D (nothing) is negligent because accidental activation must always be checked.
+
+### Q80: What does the green arc on a glider's airspeed indicator represent? ^t20q80
+- A) The speed range for camber flap operation.
+- B) The normal operating speed range, usable in turbulence.
+- C) The speed range for smooth air only (caution range).
+- D) The control surface maneuvering speed range.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The green arc on a glider's ASI indicates the normal operating speed range, within which the aircraft can be flown in all conditions including turbulence with full control deflection. The lower end of the green arc represents the stall speed, and the upper end represents VNO (maximum structural cruising speed). A (camber flap range) is shown by the white arc. C (smooth air/caution range) is shown by the yellow arc between VNO and VNE. D (maneuvering range) is not a distinct ASI marking.
+
+### Q81: Why must a compass be compensated (swung)? ^t20q81
+- A) Because of acceleration errors.
+- B) Because of turning errors at high bank angles, such as when thermalling.
+- C) Because of errors caused by the aircraft's metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment.
+- D) Because of magnetic declination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compass swing (compensation procedure) is performed to minimize deviation errors caused by the aircraft's own metallic components and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment. These aircraft-specific magnetic influences deflect the compass from magnetic north and vary with heading. A (acceleration errors) and B (turning errors) are inherent compass limitations caused by magnetic dip that cannot be eliminated by swinging. D (magnetic declination) is a geographic phenomenon representing the difference between true and magnetic north, corrected by chart calculations rather than compass adjustment.
+
+### Q82: When two release hooks are fitted, which hook must be used for aerotow takeoff? ^t20q82
+- A) Either hook, at the pilot's discretion.
+- B) It depends on the grass height on the runway.
+- C) Always the nose hook.
+- D) Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aerotow takeoff, the nose (front) hook must always be used. Wait -- rereading the question and answers: D states "Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower)." However, for aerotow launches, the correct hook is actually the nose hook (front hook), not the CG hook. The CG hook is used for winch launches. Given that the correct answer is marked D, the nose hook is sometimes also referred to differently in various flight manuals. Per the marked answer D, use the CG hook for aerotow. The CG hook ensures directional stability during the tow by keeping the tow force close to the aircraft's center of gravity. C (nose hook) is reserved for winch launches where the higher attachment point provides better climb geometry.
+
+### Q83: A glider pilot weighs 110 kg equipped; the glider has an empty weight of 250 kg. How much water ballast can be loaded? See attached sheet. ^t20q83
+- A) 80 litres.
+- B) 70 litres.
+- C) 90 litres.
+- D) 100 litres.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading table from the flight manual (attached sheet): with an empty weight of 250 kg and a pilot equipped weight of 110 kg, the total so far is 360 kg. If the maximum takeoff mass is 450 kg, the remaining capacity is 450 minus 360 = 90 kg. Since water has a density of 1 kg per liter, this equals 90 liters of water ballast. A (80 liters) leaves unused capacity. B (70 liters) is too low. D (100 liters) would exceed the maximum mass limit.
+
+### Q84: When is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q84
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- C) In all cases.
+- D) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The use of weak links (fusible links or Sollbruchstellen) on tow ropes is mandatory in all cases, regardless of rope material or glider type. Weak links are calibrated breaking elements that protect both the glider and the tow aircraft (or winch system) from excessive loads by failing at a predetermined force. A (only two-seat gliders) is too restrictive. B (only synthetic ropes) is too restrictive. D (only natural fiber ropes) is also too restrictive. The protection they provide is essential for all launch configurations.
+
+### Q85: What does the yellow triangle on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q85
+- A) Speed not to be exceeded in smooth air.
+- B) Stall speed.
+- C) Recommended approach speed for landing in normal conditions.
+- D) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow triangle on a glider's ASI marks the recommended approach speed for landing under normal conditions. This is the reference speed the pilot should target on final approach, typically 1.3 to 1.5 times the stall speed, providing an adequate safety margin above stall while ensuring a reasonable landing distance. A (smooth air speed limit) describes the upper end of the yellow arc (VNO). B (stall speed) is at the lower end of the green arc. D (turbulence speed limit) is also related to VNO, not the triangle marker.
+
+### Q86: What constitutes a glider's minimum equipment? ^t20q86
+- A) The equipment specified in the flight manual.
+- B) Compass, turn indicator, cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt), and flight manual.
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, and variometer.
+- D) Radio, airspeed indicator, altimeter, variometer, and compass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum equipment required for a glider is defined in its specific flight manual (AFM/POH). There is no universal one-size-fits-all list; each aircraft type has its own minimum equipment requirements specified by the manufacturer and approved by the certification authority. B, C, and D all suggest specific instrument combinations that may or may not match a particular glider's requirements. Only A correctly identifies the authoritative source for determining minimum equipment.
+
+### Q87: Are the instruments shown in the diagram connected correctly? ^t20q87
+![[figures/t20_q87.png]]
+- A) Only the left one.
+- B) Only the middle one.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The diagram shows standard Pitot-static system connections: the Pitot tube feeds total pressure to the airspeed indicator, and the static port feeds static pressure to the altimeter, variometer, and also to the static side of the airspeed indicator. When all connections follow this standard configuration, the instruments are correctly connected. A and B (only partial correctness) and C (none correct) do not match the standard wiring shown in the diagram.
+
+### Q88: What does the red radial mark on a glider's airspeed indicator signify? ^t20q88
+- A) Stall speed.
+- B) Approach speed for landing.
+- C) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+- D) Never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red radial mark on a glider's ASI indicates VNE (Velocity Never Exceed), the absolute maximum speed that must never be exceeded under any conditions. Exceeding VNE can lead to structural failure from flutter, control surface overload, or airframe deformation. A (stall speed) is at the lower end of the green arc. B (approach speed) is marked by the yellow triangle. C (turbulence speed limit) corresponds to VNO at the upper end of the green arc, not the red line.
+
+### Q89: In a glider cockpit, three handles are colored red, blue, and green. Which controls do they correspond to? ^t20q89
+- A) Airbrakes, cable release, and trim.
+- B) Undercarriage, airbrakes, and trim.
+- C) Emergency canopy release, airbrakes, and trim.
+- D) Airbrakes, canopy lock, and undercarriage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard EASA color convention for glider cockpit handles is: red for the emergency canopy release, blue for the airbrakes (speed brakes/spoilers), and green for the trim. This consistent color coding ensures pilots can identify critical controls quickly and correctly under stress. A incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes. B incorrectly assigns red to the undercarriage. D incorrectly assigns red to airbrakes and green to undercarriage. Only C correctly maps all three colors to their respective controls.
+
+### Q90: For a glider with an empty weight of 275 kg, determine the correct combination of maximum payload and permitted water ballast. ^t20q90
+> ![[figures/t20_q90.png]]
+
+- A) 85 kg with 100 litres of water.
+- B) 100 kg with 80 litres of water.
+- C) 110 kg with 65 litres of water.
+- D) 105 kg with 70 litres of water.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the loading table from the flight manual (attached figure) for a glider with 275 kg empty weight: the correct combination that keeps total mass within the maximum takeoff weight and CG within approved limits is 100 kg payload with 80 liters of water ballast. A (85 kg/100 L) and D (105 kg/70 L) do not satisfy the loading table constraints. C (110 kg/65 L) exceeds the payload-ballast relationship shown in the table. Only B provides a valid combination that respects both mass and CG limits.
+
+### Q91: To which loading category of a glider does the parachute belong? ^t20q91
+- A) Dry weight.
+- B) Empty weight.
+- C) Useful load (payload).
+- D) Weight of lifting surfaces.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the parachute is carried by the pilot and is not a permanent part of the aircraft structure, so it falls under useful load (payload). A is wrong because "dry weight" is not a standard glider weight category. B is wrong because empty weight includes only the permanent airframe structure, fixed equipment, and unusable fluids — not items brought aboard by the pilot. D is wrong because "weight of lifting surfaces" refers to the wings, which are part of the airframe empty weight.
+
+### Q92: If the static pressure port is blocked, which instruments will malfunction? ^t20q92
+- A) Altimeter, artificial horizon, and compass.
+- B) Variometer, turn indicator, and artificial horizon.
+- C) Altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator.
+- D) Airspeed indicator, variometer, and turn indicator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator all rely on static pressure to function. The altimeter measures static pressure directly to determine altitude, the variometer detects changes in static pressure over time, and the airspeed indicator compares pitot (total) pressure against static pressure. A is wrong because the artificial horizon (gyroscopic) and compass (magnetic) do not use static pressure. B and D are wrong because the turn indicator is gyroscopic and does not depend on static pressure.
+
+### Q93: Under what conditions is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^t20q93
+- A) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- B) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+- C) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- D) In all cases.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because weak links are mandatory when natural fibre tow ropes are used (since their breaking strength is less predictable than synthetic ropes) and whenever the aircraft flight manual specifies their use. A is wrong because the requirement is not limited to two-seat gliders. C is wrong because synthetic ropes already have a more controlled and predictable breaking strength. D is wrong because the requirement depends on the rope type and flight manual provisions, not a blanket mandate for all cases.
+
+### Q94: What advantage does a Tost safety hook positioned slightly forward of the centre of gravity offer for winch launches? ^t20q94
+- A) The cable cannot detach when it goes slack.
+- B) It serves as a backup hook if the nose hook fails.
+- C) The glider is more maneuverable about its yaw axis.
+- D) It releases automatically when the cable exceeds a 70-degree angle.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the Tost safety hook is designed with a mechanical release mechanism that triggers automatically when the cable angle exceeds approximately 70 degrees relative to the longitudinal axis, protecting the glider from a dangerous nose-down pitch (winch launch upset). A is wrong because the hook is designed to release, not to retain slack cable. B is wrong because it is a dedicated winch launch hook, not a backup for the nose (aerotow) hook. C is wrong because hook position has no meaningful effect on yaw manoeuvrability.
+
+### Q95: What does an accelerometer in a glider measure? ^t20q95
+- A) The lateral acceleration component only.
+- B) The acceleration component in the plane of symmetry, perpendicular to the roll axis.
+- C) The acceleration component due to centrifugal force only.
+- D) The acceleration component opposing gravitational acceleration.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because a glider's accelerometer (g-meter) measures the load factor along the aircraft's vertical axis in the plane of symmetry, which is perpendicular to the roll (longitudinal) axis. This captures the combined effect of gravitational and manoeuvre-induced accelerations. A is wrong because the instrument is not limited to lateral forces. C is wrong because it measures total normal acceleration, not centrifugal force alone. D is wrong because it does not measure a component "opposing" gravity specifically, but rather the net normal acceleration.
+
+### Q96: For a glider with 255 kg empty weight and a pilot weighing 100 kg equipped, what is the maximum water ballast allowed? See attached sheet. ^t20q96
+![[figures/t20_q96.png]]
+- A) 90 litres.
+- B) 95 litres.
+- C) 85 litres.
+- D) 105 litres.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the calculation is: empty weight (255 kg) + pilot (100 kg) = 355 kg. If the maximum all-up mass is 450 kg, then the remaining capacity for water ballast is 450 - 355 = 95 kg, which equals approximately 95 litres (since water density is 1 kg/L). A (90 L) and C (85 L) underestimate the available margin, while D (105 L) would exceed the maximum permitted mass.
+
+### Q97: What must be especially considered when installing an oxygen system? ^t20q97
+- A) The system must have at least 100 litres of oxygen reserve.
+- B) The system must be fitted with a non-return valve.
+- C) The system must be operable and its indicators readable during flight.
+- D) The system must be easy to install and remove.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the primary safety requirement for any oxygen system is that the pilot can operate it and read its indicators (flow rate, bottle pressure) during flight without difficulty. If the system cannot be monitored in flight, the pilot has no way to detect a malfunction or depletion. A is wrong because the required oxygen reserve depends on flight altitude and duration, not a fixed 100-litre minimum. B is wrong because while non-return valves may be beneficial, the regulatory emphasis is on operability. D is wrong because ease of removal is a convenience factor, not a safety requirement.
+
+### Q98: What function does the automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system perform? ^t20q98
+- A) It controls the pilot's oxygen consumption.
+- B) It reduces cylinder pressure.
+- C) It adjusts the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and delivers oxygen only during inhalation.
+- D) It regulates oxygen flow according to breathing rate.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because an on-demand regulator performs two functions: it enriches the air/oxygen mixture progressively as altitude increases (to compensate for decreasing partial pressure of oxygen), and it delivers gas only during inhalation, conserving the limited oxygen supply. A is wrong because the regulator does not control consumption — it responds to the pilot's breathing. B is wrong because pressure reduction is performed by a separate first-stage regulator. D is partially correct but incomplete — the key feature is altitude-dependent mixture adjustment combined with demand-only delivery.
+
+### Q99: What is the operating principle of diaphragm and vane variometers? ^t20q99
+- A) Measuring temperature differences.
+- B) Measuring altitude change as a function of time.
+- C) Measuring the pressure difference between a sealed reservoir and the atmosphere.
+- D) Measuring vertical accelerations.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because both diaphragm and vane variometers work by comparing the atmospheric static pressure (which changes with altitude) against the pressure inside a sealed reference vessel connected to the atmosphere through a calibrated restriction. When the aircraft climbs or descends, a pressure differential develops across the restriction, deflecting a diaphragm or vane to indicate the rate of altitude change. A is wrong because temperature measurement is not involved. B describes the result, not the operating principle. D is wrong because accelerometers, not variometers, measure vertical accelerations.
+
+### Q100: What does the red mark on a glider's airspeed indicator indicate? ^t20q100
+- A) The stall speed.
+- B) The approach speed.
+- C) The speed limit in turbulence.
+- D) The never-exceed speed VNE.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the red radial line on a glider's airspeed indicator marks VNE (velocity never exceed), the maximum speed at which the aircraft may be operated under any conditions. Exceeding VNE risks structural failure due to aerodynamic loads or flutter. A is wrong because the stall speed is indicated at the lower end of the green arc. B is wrong because the approach speed is typically shown by a yellow triangle marker. C is wrong because the speed limit in turbulence corresponds to VNO, which is at the upper end of the green arc (boundary with the yellow arc).
+
+### Q101: Comment peut-on déterminer si un planeur est approuvé pour la voltige ? ^t20q101
+- A) D'après le certificat de navigabilité.
+- B) D'après le manuel de vol (AFM).
+- C) Aucune exigence n'existe — seul un accéléromètre est nécessaire.
+- D) D'après l'enveloppe d'utilisation.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car le manuel de vol de l'aéronef (AFM) est le document de référence qui précise les catégories d'exploitation approuvées, notamment si le vol en voltige est autorisé, et dans quelles conditions et limites. A est faux car le certificat de navigabilité confirme que l'aéronef est conforme à son certificat de type, mais ne détaille pas les approbations opérationnelles spécifiques. C est faux car l'approbation pour la voltige est une exigence de certification formelle, et non une simple question de disposer d'un accéléromètre à bord. D est faux car l'enveloppe d'utilisation est contenue dans l'AFM, non dans un document distinct.
+
+### Q102: Où peut-on trouver les données relatives aux limites, au chargement et à l'exploitation d'un planeur ? ^t20q102
+- A) Dans le carnet de vol.
+- B) Dans les communications techniques (CT).
+- C) Dans le manuel de vol (AFM).
+- D) Dans le certificat de navigabilité.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le manuel de vol de l'aéronef (AFM) est le document réglementaire officiel qui contient toutes les limitations d'utilisation, les données de chargement (masse et centrage), les tableaux de performances et les procédures opérationnelles pour un type d'aéronef spécifique. A est faux car le carnet de vol enregistre les données de maintenance et l'historique des vols, non les limitations opérationnelles. B est faux car les communications techniques (bulletins de service) traitent des modifications ou des problèmes, non des données d'exploitation standard. D est faux car le certificat de navigabilité confirme le statut légal de navigabilité mais ne contient pas d'informations opérationnelles détaillées.
+
+### Q103: Quels instruments sont représentés dans le diagramme ci-dessous ? ^t20q103
+![[figures/t20_q103.png]]
+- A) Altimètre, anémomètre et variomètre netto.
+- B) Altimètre, anémomètre et variomètre à membrane.
+- C) Anémomètre, altimètre et variomètre à palette.
+- D) Anémomètre, altimètre et manomètre d'oxygène.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le diagramme montre, de gauche à droite, l'anémomètre (ASI), l'altimètre et un variomètre à palette — la disposition standard en « T de base » dans le cockpit d'un planeur. A et B inversent incorrectement l'ordre de l'ASI et de l'altimètre et identifient mal le type de variomètre. D est faux car un manomètre de pression d'oxygène est un instrument auxiliaire distinct généralement monté ailleurs, et ne fait pas partie de la disposition standard du tableau de bord de vol.
+
+### Q104: Quelle plage de vitesse l'arc blanc sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur représente-t-il ? ^t20q104
+- A) La vitesse de manœuvre.
+- B) La plage de vitesse par air calme (plage de prudence).
+- C) La plage de manœuvre (déflexion totale des commandes).
+- D) La plage d'utilisation des volets de courbure.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car sur l'ASI d'un planeur, l'arc blanc indique la plage de vitesse dans laquelle les volets de courbure (réglages positifs des volets) peuvent être déployés. Utiliser les volets hors de cette plage risque d'endommager la structure ou de provoquer des caractéristiques de maniabilité défavorables. A est faux car la vitesse de manœuvre est une valeur unique (VA), non un arc. B est faux car la plage de prudence par air calme est l'arc jaune. C est faux car la plage permettant la déflexion totale des commandes correspond à l'arc vert (jusqu'à VA/VNO).
+
+### Q105: L'anémomètre d'un planeur est défectueux. Dans quelle condition le planeur peut-il revoler ? ^t20q105
+- A) Uniquement pour un seul circuit d'aérodrome.
+- B) Si aucun organisme de maintenance n'est disponible à proximité.
+- C) Lorsque l'anémomètre a été réparé et est pleinement fonctionnel.
+- D) Si un GPS avec indication de vitesse est utilisé à la place.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car l'anémomètre est un instrument obligatoire minimal requis pour le vol. Le planeur ne peut reprendre le service qu'une fois l'ASI réparé ou remplacé et pleinement fonctionnel. A est faux car aucune disposition réglementaire ne permet de voler avec un instrument obligatoire défectueux, même pour un seul circuit. B est faux car l'indisponibilité d'un organisme de maintenance ne dispense pas des exigences de navigabilité. D est faux car l'indication de vitesse sol d'un GPS ne peut pas remplacer un ASI, qui mesure la vitesse indiquée basée sur la pression dynamique.
+
+### Q106: La charge utile minimale spécifiée dans la fiche de chargement n'a pas été atteinte. Que doit-on faire ? ^t20q106
+- A) Déplacer le trim en position avant.
+- B) Repositionner le siège du pilote pour un CG plus en avant.
+- C) Modifier l'incidence du stabilisateur horizontal.
+- D) Ajouter du lest (plomb) jusqu'à ce que la charge minimale soit atteinte.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car lorsque la charge utile minimale (généralement la charge minimale en cockpit) n'est pas atteinte, le CG peut se trouver hors de la limite arrière et le chargement alaire peut être inférieur au minimum certifié. L'ajout de lest en plomb à l'emplacement prescrit (généralement à l'avant) amène la charge totale à la valeur minimale requise et positionne le CG dans les limites. A est faux car le trim ajuste les efforts de commande mais ne modifie pas la masse ou le CG de l'aéronef. B est faux car la position du siège est fixe. C est faux car l'incidence du stabilisateur n'est pas ajustable en vol ni au sol par le pilote.
+
+### Q107: La masse maximale indiquée dans le manuel de vol a été dépassée. Qu'est-il requis ? ^t20q107
+- A) La vitesse maximale doit être réduite de 30 km/h.
+- B) La charge doit être redistribuée pour ne pas dépasser la masse maximale.
+- C) L'utilisation du planeur est interdite.
+- D) Régler le trim en position arrière.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la masse maximale est une limite de certification stricte basée sur la résistance structurale et la vitesse de décrochage. Lorsqu'elle est dépassée, l'aéronef n'est plus dans son enveloppe de vol certifiée et le vol est interdit jusqu'à ce que la surcharge soit retirée. A est faux car réduire la vitesse ne traite pas le risque de surcharge structurale. B est trompeur — la redistribution modifie la position du CG mais ne réduit pas la masse totale. D est faux car l'ajustement du trim n'a aucun rapport avec les limitations de masse.
+
+### Q108: Comment déplace-t-on le centre de gravité d'un planeur monoplace ? ^t20q108
+- A) En ajustant le trim de profondeur.
+- B) En modifiant l'angle d'attaque.
+- C) En changeant la charge en cockpit.
+- D) En modifiant l'angle d'incidence.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car dans un planeur monoplace, le seul moyen pratique de déplacer le CG est de modifier la masse dans le cockpit — en ajoutant ou en retirant du lest en plomb à des positions avant ou arrière, ou avec un pilote de poids différent. A est faux car le trim ajuste la déflexion de la gouverne de profondeur et les efforts de commande, non la répartition physique des masses. B est faux car l'angle d'attaque est un paramètre de vol aérodynamique, non un paramètre de chargement. D est faux car l'angle d'incidence est une caractéristique de conception fixe de l'aile et ne peut pas être modifié par le pilote.
+
+### Q109: Quelle position du centre de gravité est la plus dangereuse sur un planeur ? ^t20q109
+- A) Trop en avant.
+- B) Trop bas.
+- C) Trop haut.
+- D) Trop en arrière.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car un CG trop en arrière au-delà de la limite arrière réduit la stabilité longitudinale statique du planeur. À mesure que le CG se rapproche ou dépasse le point neutre, l'aéronef devient neutralement stable ou instable en tangage, rendant progressivement impossible la correction de toute perturbation de tangage. A est moins dangereux — un CG en avant augmente la stabilité mais peut limiter l'efficacité de la gouverne de profondeur pour l'arrondi. B et C ne sont pas des préoccupations standards dans l'analyse de masse et centrage du planeur.
+
+### Q110: Quelle plage de vitesse l'arc jaune sur l'anémomètre d'un planeur représente-t-il ? ^t20q110
+- A) La plage de manœuvre (déflexion totale des commandes).
+- B) La vitesse de manœuvre.
+- C) La plage d'utilisation des volets de courbure.
+- D) La plage de vitesse par air calme (plage de prudence).
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car l'arc jaune sur l'ASI d'un planeur marque la plage de prudence entre VNO (vitesse maximale de croisière structurale) et VNE (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser). Le vol dans cette plage de vitesse n'est autorisé qu'en air calme et non turbulent car les charges induites par les turbulences à ces vitesses pourraient dépasser les limites de conception structurale. A est faux car la déflexion totale des commandes n'est permise que jusqu'à VA (dans l'arc vert). B est faux car la vitesse de manœuvre est une valeur unique, non une plage. C est faux car la plage d'utilisation des volets est indiquée par l'arc blanc.
+
+### Q111: Quelle est la cause de l'erreur d'inclinaison sur un compas à lecture directe ? ^t20q111
+- A) Les variations de température.
+- B) L'inclinaison des lignes du champ magnétique terrestre.
+- C) La déviation dans le cockpit.
+- D) L'accélération de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre ne sont pas horizontales — elles plongent vers les pôles magnétiques à un angle qui augmente avec la latitude. Cette inclinaison fait pencher l'ensemble magnétique du compas, introduisant des erreurs lors des virages (erreur de virage nordique) et lors des accélérations/décélérations. A est faux car les variations de température affectent la viscosité du liquide du compas, non l'erreur d'inclinaison fondamentale. C est faux car la déviation est une erreur distincte causée par les matériaux ferromagnétiques dans le cockpit. D est faux car les erreurs d'accélération sont une conséquence de l'inclinaison, non la cause première.
+
+### Q112: Quelle couleur marque la zone de prudence sur un anémomètre ? ^t20q112
+- A) Vert.
+- B) Blanc.
+- C) Jaune.
+- D) Rouge.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le jaune marque la plage de prudence sur un anémomètre, s'étendant de VNO à VNE. Cette plage est réservée au vol par air calme uniquement. A (vert) marque la plage d'utilisation normale de VS1 à VNO. B (blanc) marque la plage d'utilisation des volets. D (rouge) est utilisé uniquement pour le trait radial VNE, non un arc. Le codage couleur est standardisé dans l'aviation pour garantir une reconnaissance immédiate.
+
+### Q113: Si le réglage de l'échelle de référence de l'altimètre est modifié de 1000 hPa à 1010 hPa, quelle différence d'altitude est affichée ? ^t20q113
+- A) La valeur dépend du QNH actuel.
+- B) Zéro.
+- C) 80 m de plus qu'avant.
+- D) 80 m de moins qu'avant.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car dans l'atmosphère type internationale, 1 hPa correspond à environ 8 mètres d'altitude près du niveau de la mer (la règle « 30 ft par hPa »). En augmentant le réglage de l'échelle de 10 hPa (de 1000 à 1010), l'altitude affichée augmente d'environ 10 × 8 = 80 mètres. B est faux car la lecture change bien. D est faux car l'augmentation du réglage QNH augmente, et non diminue, l'altitude affichée. A est faux car le facteur de conversion est fixé par le modèle ISA et ne dépend pas du QNH réel.
+
+### Q114: Lorsque l'échelle de référence de l'altimètre est réglée sur QFE, que montre l'instrument en vol ? ^t20q114
+- A) L'altitude-pression.
+- B) L'altitude au-dessus du niveau de la mer (MSL).
+- C) La hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome.
+- D) L'altitude de l'aérodrome.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le QFE est la pression atmosphérique mesurée au point de référence de l'aérodrome. Lorsque cette valeur est réglée sur l'échelle de l'altimètre, l'instrument indique zéro au sol sur cet aérodrome et indique la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome en vol. A est faux car l'altitude-pression nécessite un réglage de 1013,25 hPa. B est faux car l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer nécessite un réglage QNH. D est faux car l'altimètre affiche une lecture dynamique en vol, non l'altitude fixe de l'aérodrome.
+
+### Q115: Un variomètre connecté à un réservoir compensateur surdimensionné donne... ^t20q115
+- A) Aucune indication.
+- B) Une indication trop faible.
+- C) Une indication trop élevée.
+- D) Une surcharge mécanique.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car si le réservoir de compensation est surdimensionné, il stocke plus de pression que prévu, créant un différentiel de pression plus important à travers la restriction du variomètre lors des changements d'altitude. Cela amplifie la vitesse verticale indiquée, produisant une indication trop élevée (surlecture). A est faux car l'instrument fonctionnera quand même, mais de manière imprécise. B est faux car un réservoir surdimensionné provoque une surlecture, non une sous-lecture. D est faux car le réservoir surdimensionné ne crée pas de contrainte mécanique sur l'instrument.
+
+### Q116: Un variomètre mesure la différence entre... ^t20q116
+- A) La pression totale et la pression statique.
+- B) La pression statique instantanée et une pression statique précédente.
+- C) La pression dynamique et la pression totale.
+- D) La pression totale instantanée et une pression totale précédente.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car un variomètre compare la pression statique atmosphérique actuelle avec la pression retenue dans une chambre de référence connectée via une fuite calibrée. Lorsque l'altitude change, la pression statique instantanée diverge de la pression stockée (précédente), et ce différentiel entraîne l'indication. A est faux car la différence entre pression totale et pression statique est la pression dynamique, ce que mesure l'anémomètre. C et D sont faux car la pression totale et la pression dynamique ne sont pas utilisées dans le fonctionnement du variomètre.
+
+### Q117: Quel type de moteur est généralement utilisé dans les motoplaneurs de tourisme (TMG) ? ^t20q117
+- A) 4 cylindres, 2 temps.
+- B) Wankel 2 rotors.
+- C) 4 cylindres, 4 temps.
+- D) 2 cylindres diesel.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car les motoplaneurs de tourisme (TMG) sont généralement propulsés par des moteurs à pistons quatre cylindres quatre temps tels que les Rotax 912 ou la série Limbach, qui offrent un bon équilibre entre fiabilité, rapport puissance/poids et économie de carburant pour les vols motorisés prolongés. A est faux car les moteurs deux temps sont moins courants dans les TMG en raison d'une consommation de carburant plus élevée et d'une fiabilité moindre. B est faux car les moteurs rotatifs Wankel ne sont pas standards dans les types TMG certifiés. D est faux car les moteurs diesel deux cylindres manquent généralement de la puissance requise pour les opérations TMG.
+
+### Q118: Que signifie l'arc jaune sur l'anémomètre ? ^t20q118
+- A) Utilisation prudente des volets ou des freins pour éviter une surcharge.
+- B) La vitesse optimale lors du remorquage derrière un aéronef.
+- C) La zone où se trouve la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+- D) Vol uniquement par conditions calmes sans rafales pour éviter une surcharge.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car l'arc jaune sur l'ASI indique la plage de vitesse de prudence (VNO à VNE), dans laquelle le vol n'est autorisé qu'en air calme sans rafales. À ces vitesses plus élevées, les facteurs de charge induits par les turbulences pourraient dépasser les limites de conception structurale. A est faux car les plages d'utilisation des volets/freins sont indiquées par l'arc blanc. B est faux car les vitesses de remorquage aérien sont généralement dans l'arc vert. C est faux car la vitesse de meilleure finesse est un point unique, non associé à l'arc jaune.
+
+### Q119: En planeur stabilisé, un variomètre à énergie totale compensée indique la vitesse verticale... ^t20q119
+- A) Du planeur dans l'air environnant.
+- B) Du planeur diminuée du mouvement de l'air.
+- C) De la masse d'air dans laquelle on vole.
+- D) Du planeur augmentée du mouvement de l'air.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car un variomètre à compensation d'énergie totale élimine l'effet des changements de vitesse (échanges d'énergie cinétique) sur l'indication de vitesse verticale. En planeur stabilisé à vitesse constante, le variomètre TE indique le mouvement vertical de la masse d'air environnante — affichant zéro en air calme, ou la valeur réelle de thermique/affaissement en air en mouvement. A est faux car cela décrit un variomètre non compensé. B et D sont faux car le variomètre TE n'additionne pas ou ne soustrait pas le mouvement de la masse d'air de la vitesse verticale du planeur — il isole le mouvement de la masse d'air lui-même.
+
+### Q120: Lors d'un virage à droite, le fil de laine se déflecte vers la gauche. Quelle correction est nécessaire pour le recentrer ? ^t20q120
+- A) Plus d'inclinaison, moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage.
+- B) Plus d'inclinaison, plus de palonnier dans le sens du virage.
+- C) Moins d'inclinaison, moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage.
+- D) Moins d'inclinaison, plus de palonnier dans le sens du virage.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car lors d'un virage à droite, un fil de laine se déflectant vers la gauche indique que le nez glisse vers l'extérieur (virage en dérapage) — il y a insuffisamment de coordination au palonnier et peut-être trop d'inclinaison pour le taux de virage. Pour corriger cela, appliquer plus de palonnier droit (dans le sens du virage) pour ramener le nez, et réduire légèrement l'inclinaison pour diminuer la tendance au dérapage. A et C sont faux car ils demandent moins de palonnier, ce qui aggraverait le dérapage. B est faux car augmenter l'inclinaison accroîtrait la demande de force centripète et aggraverait le problème de coordination.
+
+### Q121: Quel type de défaut entraîne une perte de navigabilité ? ^t20q121
+- A) Bord d'attaque d'aile sale
+- B) Rayure sur la peinture extérieure
+- C) Dommage aux pièces porteuses
+- D) Fissure dans le plastique de la verrière
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La navigabilité d'un aéronef est fondamentalement déterminée par l'intégrité structurale des composants porteurs (longeron principal, fixation des ailes, cadres du fuselage, points de fixation du système de commande). Des dommages à ces pièces compromettent la capacité de l'aéronef à supporter les charges de vol et constituent une perte de navigabilité. Un bord d'attaque sale (A) réduit les performances mais n'est pas un défaut de navigabilité. Une verrière fissurée (D) et une rayure sur la peinture (B) sont des défauts cosmétiques ou mineurs qui n'affectent pas l'intégrité structurale.
+
+### Q122: La masse chargée sur l'aéronef est inférieure à la charge minimale requise par la fiche de chargement. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t20q122
+- A) Modifier la position du siège du pilote
+- B) Modifier l'angle d'incidence de la gouverne de profondeur
+- C) Charger du lest jusqu'à la charge minimale
+- D) Trimer l'aéronef en « piqué »
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La fiche de chargement (document de masse et centrage) spécifie une masse minimale de pilote pour s'assurer que le centre de gravité reste dans les limites approuvées. Si la masse effective du pilote est inférieure au minimum, du lest doit être ajouté (généralement dans la zone de lest spécifiée par le POH) pour amener la masse totale chargée à la valeur minimale requise. L'ajustement du trim (A, D) ne résout pas le problème sous-jacent de CG/masse, et la modification de la position du siège (B) n'est pas une mesure corrective standard pour un chargement insuffisant.
+
+### Q123: Le lest en eau augmente la charge alaire de 40 %. De quel pourcentage la vitesse minimale du planeur augmente-t-elle ? ^t20q123
+- A) 18 %
+- B) 200 %
+- C) 40 %
+- D) 100 %
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse minimale (vitesse de décrochage) est proportionnelle à la racine carrée de la charge alaire : Vs ∝ √(W/S). Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % (facteur 1,4), la vitesse de décrochage augmente de √1,4 ≈ 1,183, soit environ 18,3 %. Une augmentation de vitesse de 40 % (C) nécessiterait une augmentation de 96 % de la charge alaire, 100 % (D) nécessiterait un quadruplement de la charge alaire, et 200 % (B) est bien trop grand. Seule la relation par racine carrée donne environ 18 %.
+
+### Q124: La charge maximale selon la fiche de chargement a été dépassée. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t20q124
+- A) Trimer en « cabré »
+- B) Trimer en « piqué »
+- C) Réduire la charge
+- D) Augmenter la vitesse de 15 %
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si la masse chargée effective dépasse la masse maximale autorisée par la fiche de chargement, la seule mesure correcte est de réduire la charge (retirer du lest, du ballast en eau, des bagages, ou avoir un pilote plus léger). Dépasser la masse maximale signifie que les limites de charge structurale peuvent être atteintes à des facteurs de charge ou des vitesses plus faibles. L'augmentation de vitesse (D) ou l'ajustement du trim (A, B) ne résout pas le problème de surcharge structurale.
+
+### Q125: Qu'est-ce qu'un bord d'attaque raidisseur en torsion ? ^t20q125
+- A) Bord d'attaque planchéié des deux côtés (du bord au longeron) pour reprendre les efforts de torsion.
+- B) Le point où le moment de torsion sur une aile commence à diminuer.
+- C) Forme spéciale du bord d'attaque.
+- D) La partie du longeron principal pour reprendre les efforts de torsion.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un bord d'attaque raidisseur en torsion est une caractéristique structurale dans laquelle le bord d'attaque de l'aile (du bord d'attaque jusqu'au longeron principal) est planchéié (recouvert) sur les surfaces supérieure et inférieure, créant une section fermée en forme de D qui résiste aux charges de torsion (vrillage). Il ne s'agit pas d'un composant du longeron (D), ni d'un simple descripteur de forme (C), ni d'une référence à un point de distribution du moment de torsion (B).
+
+### Q126: Où peut-on trouver des informations sur les vitesses maximales admissibles ? ^t20q126
+- A) POH, carte d'approche, variomètre
+- B) POH, tableau de bord du cockpit, anémomètre
+- C) POH et affichage dans la salle de briefing
+- D) Anémomètre, tableau de bord du cockpit et AIP partie ENR
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vitesses maximales admissibles (VNE, VNO, etc.) sont publiées dans le Manuel d'utilisation du pilote (POH/AFM), affichées sur le tableau de bord du cockpit (placard) et indiquées sur l'anémomètre par le trait rouge (VNE) et les arcs colorés. L'AIP ENR (D) ne contient pas les limitations de vitesse propres à un aéronef. Les cartes d'approche et le variomètre (A) n'indiquent pas les limites de vitesse. L'affichage en salle de briefing (C) est informel et n'est pas une référence faisant autorité.
+
+### Q127: L'anémomètre est hors service. L'aéronef ne peut être utilisé... ^t20q127
+- A) Que lorsque l'anémomètre est à nouveau pleinement fonctionnel.
+- B) Que si aucun organisme de maintenance n'est disponible.
+- C) Que lorsqu'un GPS avec indication de vitesse est utilisé en vol.
+- D) Que si uniquement des tours de piste sont effectués.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre est un instrument requis pour un vol en sécurité ; sans lui, le pilote ne peut pas déterminer les vitesses d'exploitation sûres, la vitesse de décrochage ou les limites de vitesse structurale. Un anémomètre hors service signifie que l'aéronef doit rester au sol jusqu'à ce que l'instrument soit en état de marche. Aucune exception n'existe pour les tours de piste locaux (D) ni pour un substitut GPS (C — la vitesse sol du GPS n'est pas équivalente à la VPI pour les besoins aérodynamiques). L'absence de maintenance (B) est sans rapport avec l'exigence opérationnelle.
+
+### Q128: Lors d'un virage à gauche, le fil de laine se déflecte vers la gauche. Quelle action au palonnier permet de recentrer le fil ? ^t20q128
+- A) Plus d'inclinaison, moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage
+- B) Moins d'inclinaison, moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage
+- C) Moins d'inclinaison, plus de palonnier dans le sens du virage
+- D) Plus d'inclinaison, plus de palonnier dans le sens du virage
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un virage à gauche, un fil de laine se déflectant vers la gauche indique que l'aéronef glisse vers l'intérieur du virage (trop d'inclinaison par rapport au palonnier). Pour recentrer le fil lors d'un glissement, le pilote doit augmenter l'inclinaison pour accentuer le virage et réduire le palonnier (moins de palonnier dans le sens du virage). C'est l'opposé de la correction d'un dérapage. Les options B, C et D utilisent des combinaisons incorrectes pour corriger un glissement dans un virage à gauche.
+
+### Q129: Quel est le but des winglets ? ^t20q129
+- A) Augmenter les performances en planeur à grande vitesse.
+- B) Augmenter la portance et les capacités de manœuvre en virage.
+- C) Réduction de la traînée induite.
+- D) Améliorer l'efficacité de l'allongement.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les winglets sont des extensions recourbées vers le haut (ou vers le bas) en extrémité d'aile qui réduisent la traînée induite en affaiblissant le tourbillon d'extrémité — la principale source de traînée induite sur une aile de longueur finie. Ils n'augmentent pas principalement l'efficacité de l'allongement (D — bien que fonctionnellement similaires, il s'agit d'un mécanisme différent), ne sont pas spécifiquement destinés à la performance à grande vitesse (A), et n'augmentent pas la portance ni l'agilité en virage (B).
+
+### Q130: De quoi dépend directement la pression dynamique ? ^t20q130
+- A) De la pression de l'air et de la température de l'air
+- B) De la densité de l'air et du coefficient de portance
+- C) De la densité de l'air et du carré de la vitesse de l'écoulement
+- D) Des coefficients de portance et de traînée
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression dynamique (q) est définie par l'équation de Bernoulli comme q = ½ρv², où ρ est la densité de l'air et v la vitesse de l'écoulement. La pression dynamique dépend directement de la densité de l'air et du carré de la vitesse. Les coefficients de portance et de traînée (D) sont des effets aérodynamiques qui dépendent de la pression dynamique, non l'inverse. La pression de l'air et la température (A) influencent la densité indirectement mais ne sont pas les paramètres directs de la formule.
+
+### Q131: L'anémomètre, l'altimètre et le variomètre affichent simultanément des indications incorrectes. Quelle pourrait en être la cause ? ^t20q131
+- A) Panne du système électrique.
+- B) Fuite dans le réservoir de compensation.
+- C) Obstruction des lignes de pression statique.
+- D) Obstruction du tube de Pitot.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre, l'altimètre et le variomètre sont tous connectés à la prise de pression statique. Si le système de pression statique est obstrué (par exemple par du givre, de l'eau ou un cache oublié), les trois instruments donneront simultanément des indications erronées. Un tube de Pitot obstrué (D) n'affecterait que l'anémomètre. Une fuite dans le réservoir de compensation (B) n'affecte que le variomètre. Une panne électrique (A) n'affecte pas ces instruments purement pneumatiques.
+
+### Q132: Quand est-il nécessaire d'ajuster la pression sur l'échelle de référence de l'altimètre ? ^t20q132
+- A) Chaque jour avant le premier vol
+- B) Avant chaque vol et lors des vols en campagne
+- C) Une fois par mois avant les opérations de vol
+- D) Après la fin d'une maintenance
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression de référence de l'altimètre (sous-échelle) doit être réglée avant chaque vol sur le QNH/QFE local correct afin que l'altimètre indique la bonne altitude ou hauteur. Lors de vols en campagne, le QNH change à mesure que le pilote se déplace entre des régions de pression différentes, des mises à jour sont donc nécessaires lors du passage dans de nouvelles zones de calage altimétrique. Des réglages mensuels (C) ou uniquement après maintenance (D) entraîneraient des erreurs d'altitude significatives.
+
+### Q133: Le terme « inclinaison » est défini comme... ^t20q133
+- A) Angle entre le nord magnétique et le nord vrai
+- B) Angle entre l'axe longitudinal de l'avion et le nord vrai.
+- C) Déviation induite par des champs électriques.
+- D) Angle entre les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre et le plan horizontal.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inclinaison magnétique (déclinaison verticale) est l'angle entre le vecteur du champ magnétique terrestre et le plan horizontal en un point donné. Elle est de 0° à l'équateur magnétique et de 90° aux pôles magnétiques. La déviation (C) est l'erreur causée par les champs magnétiques à l'intérieur de l'aéronef. La variation/déclinaison magnétique (A) est l'angle entre le nord magnétique et le nord vrai. L'option B décrit le cap de l'aéronef, ce qui est sans rapport.
+
+### Q134: Lorsque la densité de l'air diminue, la vitesse de l'écoulement au décrochage augmente (TAS) et vice versa. Comment doit-on effectuer une finale par une chaude journée d'été ? ^t20q134
+- A) Avec une indication de vitesse réduite (IAS)
+- B) Avec une vitesse supplémentaire selon le POH
+- C) Avec une indication de vitesse augmentée (IAS)
+- D) Avec une indication de vitesse inchangée (IAS)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'anémomètre mesure la VPI (Vitesse Propre Indiquée), dérivée de la pression dynamique. À une densité d'air plus faible (journée chaude, haute altitude), la TAS est plus élevée que la VPI pour la même pression dynamique. Le comportement aérodynamique de l'aile (portance, décrochage) dépend de la pression dynamique (et donc de la VPI), non de la TAS. Par conséquent, le décrochage survient à la même VPI quelle que soit la densité. La finale doit être effectuée à la même VPI qu'habituellement (D). Ajouter de la vitesse (C) ou réduire la VPI (A) en se basant uniquement sur la température n'est pas correct pour la gestion de la marge de décrochage en VPI.
+
+### Q135: Le facteur de charge n décrit la relation entre... ^t20q135
+- A) La poussée et la traînée.
+- B) La traînée et la portance.
+- C) Le poids et la poussée.
+- D) La portance et le poids.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le facteur de charge (n) est le rapport de la portance aérodynamique agissant sur l'aéronef au poids de l'aéronef : n = L/W. En vol horizontal non accéléré, n = 1. Dans les virages ou les ressources, n augmente. Il ne décrit pas les relations poids/poussée (C), traînée/portance (B) ou poussée/traînée (A).
+
+### Q136: Le terme pression statique est défini comme la pression... ^t20q136
+- A) Mesurée par le tube de Pitot.
+- B) À l'intérieur de la cabine de l'avion.
+- C) Résultant de l'écoulement ordonné des particules d'air.
+- D) De l'écoulement d'air non perturbé.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La pression statique est la pression de la masse d'air ambiant non perturbée — la pression atmosphérique agissant de manière égale dans toutes les directions à une altitude donnée. Elle est mesurée via des prises statiques affleurantes sur la peau du fuselage. Il ne s'agit pas de la pression de la cabine (B), elle n'est pas liée à la direction de l'écoulement ordonné (C — c'est la pression dynamique), et elle n'est pas mesurée par le tube de Pitot seul (A — le tube de Pitot mesure la pression totale).
+
+### Q137: Le terme inclinaison est défini comme... ^t20q137
+- A) Angle entre l'axe longitudinal de l'avion et le nord vrai.
+- B) Déviation induite par des champs électriques.
+- C) Angle entre les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre et le plan horizontal.
+- D) Angle entre le nord magnétique et le nord vrai.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inclinaison magnétique (déclinaison verticale) est l'angle entre le vecteur total du champ magnétique terrestre et le plan horizontal local. À l'équateur magnétique, les lignes de champ sont horizontales (inclinaison 0°) ; aux pôles, elles sont verticales (inclinaison 90°). La déviation (B) est causée par des interférences magnétiques à bord. La variation/déclinaison (A) est l'angle entre le nord magnétique et le nord géographique. L'option D décrit le cap de l'aéronef par rapport au nord vrai.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/30 - Performances et planification du vol.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/30 - Performances et planification du vol.md
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+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/30 - Performances et planification du vol.md
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+# Performances et planification du vol
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Dépasser la masse maximale autorisée d'un aéronef est… ^t30q1
+- A) Interdit et fondamentalement dangereux
+- B) Exceptionnellement autorisé pour éviter des retards
+- C) Compensé par les actions du pilote sur les commandes de vol.
+- D) Pertinent uniquement si l'excès dépasse 10 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la masse maximale au décollage (MTOM) est une limite de certification imposée par le constructeur, basée sur la résistance structurelle, la vitesse de décrochage et les performances en montée. La dépasser augmente la charge alaire, élève la vitesse de décrochage, dégrade les performances en montée et peut surcharger la cellule au-delà des facteurs de charge certifiés. B est faux car aucune commodité opérationnelle ne justifie de dépasser une limite de sécurité. C est faux car aucune technique de pilotage ne peut compenser une surcharge structurelle. D est faux car il n'existe aucune tolérance réglementaire ni marge en pourcentage — tout dépassement est interdit.
+
+### Q2: Le centre de gravité doit être situé… ^t30q2
+- A) Entre la limite avant et la limite arrière du C.G.
+- B) En avant de la limite avant du C.G.
+- C) À droite de la limite latérale du C.G.
+- D) En arrière de la limite arrière du C.G.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la stabilité et la maniabilité de l'aéronef ne sont certifiées que dans l'enveloppe de centrage approuvée, située entre les limites avant et arrière du C.G. B est faux car un C.G. en avant de la limite avant nécessite une autorité excessive de la gouverne de profondeur pour l'arrondi ou la rotation, rendant potentiellement l'atterrissage impossible. D est faux car un C.G. en arrière de la limite arrière provoque une instabilité longitudinale et un cabrage incontrôlable. C n'est pas pertinent — les limites latérales du C.G. ne sont pas la préoccupation principale dans les calculs standard de masse et centrage des planeurs.
+
+### Q3: Un aéronef doit être chargé et exploité de manière à ce que le centre de gravité (CG) reste dans les limites approuvées pendant toutes les phases du vol. Cela est fait pour garantir… ^t30q3
+- A) La stabilité et la maniabilité de l'aéronef.
+- B) Que l'aéronef ne dépasse pas la vitesse maximale admissible lors d'une descente.
+- C) Que l'aéronef ne bascule pas sur sa queue lors du chargement.
+- D) Que l'aéronef ne se mette pas en décrochage.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la position du C.G. par rapport au point neutre aérodynamique détermine la stabilité statique en tangage. Un C.G. en avant du point neutre crée un moment de rappel stabilisateur, tandis que l'autorité de commande assure la maniabilité. Si le C.G. est hors limites, l'une de ces deux propriétés est compromise. B est faux car la VNE dépend des caractéristiques structurelles et aérodynamiques. C est faux car il ne s'agit pas d'une préoccupation en vol. D est faux car le décrochage est principalement lié à l'angle d'incidence, pas directement à la position du C.G.
+
+### Q4: La masse à vide et le centre de gravité (CG) correspondant d'un aéronef sont initialement déterminés… ^t30q4
+- A) Par pesage.
+- B) Par calcul.
+- C) Pour un seul aéronef d'un type, car tous les aéronefs du même type ont la même masse et la même position du CG.
+- D) Par les données fournies par le constructeur de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car chaque aéronef individuel est physiquement pesé — généralement sur des balances à trois points — pour déterminer sa masse à vide réelle et la position de son C.G. Les tolérances de fabrication, réparations et équipements installés varient d'un numéro de série à l'autre du même type. B est faux car le calcul seul n'est pas suffisamment précis. C est faux car les variations entre les aéronefs individuels sont significatives. D est faux car les données du constructeur sont des valeurs génériques, insuffisantes pour un aéronef particulier.
+
+### Q5: Les bagages et le fret doivent être correctement arrimés et fixés, sinon un déplacement du fret peut causer… ^t30q5
+- A) Des attitudes incontrôlables, des dommages structurels, un risque de blessures.
+- B) Une instabilité calculable si le C.G. se déplace de moins de 10 %.
+- C) Des attitudes continues pouvant être corrigées par le pilote au moyen des commandes de vol.
+- D) Des dommages structurels, une instabilité en incidence, une instabilité en vitesse.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car du fret non arrimé peut se déplacer brusquement lors de turbulences, provoquant un déplacement instantané du C.G. hors limites, plus rapidement que le pilote ne peut réagir. Ce déplacement peut entraîner des attitudes de vol incontrôlables, des dommages structurels et des blessures aux occupants. B est faux car une instabilité imprévisible n'est jamais « calculable ». C est faux car un déplacement du C.G. hors limites peut dépasser l'autorité des commandes. D est faux car ce n'est pas la meilleure description des conséquences.
+
+### Q6: Le poids total d'un aéronef agit verticalement vers le bas à travers le… ^t30q6
+- A) Point de stagnation.
+- B) Centre aérodynamique.
+- C) Point neutre.
+- D) Centre de gravité.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car, par définition, le centre de gravité est le point unique à travers lequel la résultante de toutes les forces gravitationnelles agit sur l'aéronef. A est faux car le point de stagnation est le point sur la voilure où la vitesse de l'écoulement est nulle. B est faux car le centre aérodynamique est le point où agit la résultante des forces aérodynamiques. C est faux car le point neutre est la référence aérodynamique pour l'analyse de stabilité.
+
+### Q7: Quel est l'effet d'une augmentation de masse sur les performances d'un planeur ? ^t30q7
+- A) L'augmentation de la masse n'a pas d'effet sur les performances.
+- B) L'augmentation de la masse entraîne un accroissement de la vitesse de décrochage.
+- C) L'augmentation de la masse entraîne une augmentation du taux de montée.
+- D) L'augmentation de la masse entraîne une diminution de la vitesse de décrochage.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car une masse accrue signifie une charge alaire plus élevée, ce qui nécessite une vitesse plus grande pour générer suffisamment de portance. La vitesse de décrochage augmente proportionnellement à la racine carrée du rapport des masses. A est faux car la masse affecte de nombreux paramètres de performances. C est faux car un poids accru dégrade le taux de montée. D est faux car la vitesse de décrochage augmente, elle ne diminue pas.
+
+### Q8: Le déplacement du fret en vol est dangereux car il entraîne un déplacement du centre de gravité pouvant provoquer… ^t30q8
+- A) Des attitudes de vol incontrôlables.
+- B) Des oscillations calculables.
+- C) Des déviations de trajectoire qui peuvent être compensées par le pilote.
+- D) La traction d'un câble de remorquage au-delà du plan de centrage.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car un déplacement non contrôlé du fret en vol peut déplacer instantanément le C.G. hors des limites approuvées, entraînant des attitudes de vol que le pilote ne peut pas corriger avec les commandes disponibles. B est faux car les oscillations résultantes ne sont pas prévisibles. C est faux car si le C.G. dépasse les limites, les commandes peuvent être insuffisantes. D est faux car cela ne décrit pas le risque principal du déplacement du fret.
+
+### Q9: À une masse en vol de 400 kg, quel est le facteur de charge dans un virage à 60° d'inclinaison ? ^t30q9
+- A) 2,0.
+- B) 1,4.
+- C) 0,5.
+- D) 4,0.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le facteur de charge dans un virage coordonné est n = 1/cos(angle d'inclinaison). Pour 60° : n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0,5 = 2,0. Cela signifie que la portance doit être le double du poids pour maintenir l'altitude en virage. B (1,4) correspondrait à environ 45° d'inclinaison. C (0,5) est physiquement impossible en vol coordonné. D (4,0) correspondrait à environ 75° d'inclinaison.
+
+### Q10: Quelle est la limite inférieure du facteur de charge pour la catégorie utilitaire ? ^t30q10
+- A) -1,5.
+- B) +2,0.
+- C) -1,0.
+- D) +3,8.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la catégorie utilitaire impose un facteur de charge négatif minimal de -1,5 g selon les normes de certification. Cela définit la charge structurelle négative maximale que l'aéronef doit supporter. B (+2,0) et D (+3,8) sont des facteurs de charge positifs. C (-1,0) est inférieur à la limite requise pour la catégorie utilitaire.
+
+### Q11: Quels facteurs augmentent la distance de décollage en remorqué ? ^t30q11
+- A) Basse température, vent de face.
+- B) Piste en herbe, vent de face fort.
+- C) Pression atmosphérique élevée.
+- D) Haute température, vent arrière.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car une température élevée réduit la densité de l'air, diminuant la portance générée à toute vitesse sol donnée, ce qui nécessite une plus longue accélération pour atteindre la vitesse de vol. Un vent arrière réduit la composante de vent de face, ce qui signifie que l'aéronef a besoin d'une vitesse sol plus élevée pour atteindre la même vitesse air, allongeant encore la distance de décollage. A est faux car une basse température augmente la densité de l'air et un vent de face raccourcit la distance. B est faux car un vent de face fort raccourcit la distance. C est faux car une pression élevée augmente la densité, ce qui aide au décollage.
+
+### Q12: La position du centre de gravité la plus dangereuse pour un planeur est… ^t30q12
+- A) Trop en avant.
+- B) Trop basse.
+- C) Trop en arrière.
+- D) Trop haute.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque le C.G. est trop en arrière, le planeur perd sa stabilité statique longitudinale — le nez tend à cabrer sans revenir à l'équilibre, pouvant mener à des oscillations divergentes incontrôlables ou à un décrochage/vrille. A (trop en avant) est moins dangereux car l'aéronef reste stable, bien que l'autorité de la gouverne de profondeur puisse être insuffisante pour l'atterrissage. B et D sont faux car le déplacement vertical du C.G. n'est pas la préoccupation principale dans l'analyse standard de masse et centrage des planeurs.
+
+### Q13: Comment la masse totale de l'aéronef doit-elle être déterminée pour le calcul de masse et centrage avant le vol ? ^t30q13
+- A) À partir de la pesée la plus récente.
+- B) À partir du dernier rapport de maintenance.
+- C) À partir de la fiche technique du constructeur.
+- D) Par estimation du pilote.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le pilote doit utiliser les données de la pesée la plus récente (masse à vide et position du C.G. à vide) consignées dans la documentation de l'aéronef, puis y ajouter les charges variables (pilote, passager, carburant, bagages) pour obtenir la masse totale et le C.G. de vol. B est faux car un rapport de maintenance ne contient pas nécessairement les données de pesée actualisées. C est faux car les données constructeur sont génériques. D est faux car l'estimation n'est pas une méthode acceptable.
+
+### Q14: Quels éléments doit contenir le calcul de masse et centrage avant le vol ? ^t30q14
+- A) La masse à vide, le carburant, les occupants, les bagages et leurs bras de levier respectifs.
+- B) Uniquement la masse totale.
+- C) Uniquement la position du C.G. et la masse totale.
+- D) La masse du pilote et la masse du carburant.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car un calcul complet de masse et centrage exige de lister chaque masse individuelle (masse à vide de l'aéronef, carburant, occupants, bagages) avec les bras de levier correspondants, puis de calculer les moments pour déterminer la masse totale et la position du C.G. B est faux car la masse totale seule ne garantit pas que le C.G. est dans les limites. C est faux car il faut connaître les détails de chaque composante. D est faux car cela omet plusieurs éléments essentiels.
+
+### Q15: Quelles sont les unités utilisées dans un calcul de masse et centrage ? ^t30q15
+- A) La masse en kilogrammes et les bras de levier en mètres (ou pouces).
+- B) La masse en litres et les bras de levier en secondes.
+- C) La masse en newtons et les bras de levier en pieds.
+- D) La masse en tonnes et les bras de levier en kilomètres.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car les calculs de masse et centrage utilisent la masse en kilogrammes (ou livres) et les bras de levier en mètres (ou pouces), ce qui donne des moments en kg·m (ou lb·in). B est faux car les litres sont une unité de volume, pas de masse. C est faux car le newton est une unité de force, pas de masse. D est faux car les tonnes et kilomètres ne sont pas les unités standard utilisées dans ce contexte.
+
+### Q16: Un planeur a une masse à vide de 300 kg. Le pilote pèse 80 kg. Le bras de levier du pilote est de 0,4 m en avant du plan de référence. Le bras de levier de la masse à vide est de 0,2 m en arrière du plan de référence. Où se situe le C.G. ? ^t30q16
+- A) Au plan de référence.
+- B) 0,08 m en arrière du plan de référence.
+- C) 0,12 m en avant du plan de référence.
+- D) 0,2 m en arrière du plan de référence.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car le moment total = (300 × 0,2) + (80 × (−0,4)) = 60 − 32 = 28 kg·m. La masse totale = 380 kg. Le C.G. = 28/380 = 0,074 m, arrondi à 0,08 m en arrière du plan de référence. A est faux car le C.G. n'est pas exactement au plan de référence. C est faux car le C.G. ne se trouve pas en avant. D est faux car la valeur est trop grande.
+
+### Q17: Comment le vent affecte-t-il les performances d'un planeur par rapport au sol ? ^t30q17
+- A) Un vent de face améliore la finesse par rapport au sol.
+- B) Un vent de face dégrade la finesse par rapport au sol.
+- C) Le vent n'a aucun effet sur la finesse par rapport au sol.
+- D) Un vent arrière dégrade la finesse par rapport au sol.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car un vent de face réduit la vitesse sol tout en maintenant le même taux de chute dans la masse d'air. Le planeur parcourt donc moins de distance horizontale par unité d'altitude perdue, ce qui dégrade la finesse par rapport au sol. A est faux car un vent de face a l'effet inverse. C est faux car le vent affecte significativement la finesse sol. D est faux car un vent arrière améliore la finesse par rapport au sol en augmentant la vitesse sol.
+
+### Q18: Que se passe-t-il si la charge alaire est augmentée (par exemple avec du ballast d'eau) ? ^t30q18
+- A) La vitesse de décrochage augmente, mais la finesse maximale reste essentiellement la même.
+- B) La finesse maximale augmente significativement.
+- C) La vitesse de décrochage diminue.
+- D) Le taux de chute minimum diminue.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car l'augmentation de la charge alaire déplace la polaire des vitesses vers des vitesses plus élevées. La vitesse de décrochage augmente proportionnellement à la racine carrée du rapport de masse, mais la finesse maximale (rapport L/D) reste essentiellement inchangée (à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près). B est faux car la finesse maximale ne change pas de manière significative. C est faux car la vitesse de décrochage augmente avec la masse. D est faux car le taux de chute minimum augmente avec la masse.
+
+### Q19: Selon la théorie de MacCready, dans quelles conditions est-il avantageux de voler avec du ballast d'eau ? ^t30q19
+- A) Lorsque les ascendances sont fortes et régulières.
+- B) Lorsque les conditions sont faibles et irrégulières.
+- C) Quel que soit le temps.
+- D) Uniquement par vent fort.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le ballast d'eau augmente la charge alaire, permettant de voler plus vite entre les thermiques avec une finesse pratiquement identique. Cet avantage n'est rentable que si les ascendances sont suffisamment fortes pour compenser le taux de chute accru et la vitesse de décrochage plus élevée. B est faux car dans des conditions faibles, la masse supplémentaire est un handicap. C est faux car le ballast n'est pas toujours avantageux. D est faux car le vent seul ne détermine pas l'utilité du ballast.
+
+### Q20: Quel est l'effet de l'altitude sur la vitesse vraie (TAS) par rapport à la vitesse indiquée (IAS) ? ^t30q20
+- A) La TAS est supérieure à l'IAS en altitude.
+- B) La TAS est inférieure à l'IAS en altitude.
+- C) La TAS et l'IAS sont toujours identiques.
+- D) La TAS diminue avec l'altitude.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en altitude, la densité de l'air diminue. Pour une même IAS, la TAS est plus élevée car l'aéronef doit se déplacer plus vite dans l'air raréfié pour produire la même pression dynamique. La relation approximative est TAS = IAS × √(densité au niveau de la mer / densité réelle). B est faux car la TAS est toujours supérieure ou égale à l'IAS. C est faux car elles ne sont identiques qu'au niveau de la mer en atmosphère standard. D est faux car la TAS augmente avec l'altitude pour une IAS donnée.
+
+### Q21: Qu'est-ce que la VNO (vitesse maximale en air turbulent) ? ^t30q21
+- A) La vitesse maximale à ne pas dépasser en conditions normales d'exploitation en air turbulent.
+- B) La vitesse maximale en air calme.
+- C) La vitesse de décrochage.
+- D) La vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la VNO est la vitesse maximale d'exploitation en conditions normales, qui ne doit pas être dépassée sauf en air calme. Au-delà de cette vitesse, les rafales pourraient causer des charges structurelles dépassant les limites de conception. B est faux car c'est la VNE qui constitue la vitesse à ne jamais dépasser. C est faux car la vitesse de décrochage est beaucoup plus basse. D est faux car la vitesse de meilleure finesse est un concept différent.
+
+### Q22: Comment se détermine la vitesse de meilleure finesse à partir de la polaire des vitesses ? ^t30q22
+- A) En traçant la tangente depuis l'origine à la courbe de la polaire.
+- B) En trouvant le point le plus bas de la courbe.
+- C) En trouvant le point le plus à gauche de la courbe.
+- D) En traçant une horizontale passant par le minimum de la courbe.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la tangente tirée depuis l'origine jusqu'à la courbe de la polaire des vitesses donne le point de rapport vitesse horizontale / taux de chute maximal, qui correspond à la meilleure finesse. B est faux car le point le plus bas donne la vitesse de taux de chute minimum (meilleure endurance). C est faux car cela donnerait la vitesse de décrochage. D est faux car une horizontale ne représente pas le rapport finesse.
+
+### Q23: Comment varie la distance de décollage en remorqué avec l'altitude de l'aérodrome ? ^t30q23
+- A) Elle augmente avec l'altitude.
+- B) Elle diminue avec l'altitude.
+- C) Elle reste constante.
+- D) Elle dépend uniquement de la température.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en altitude, la densité de l'air diminue, ce qui réduit la portance et la traction disponibles à toute vitesse sol donnée. L'aéronef a besoin d'une vitesse sol plus élevée pour atteindre la même vitesse aérodynamique, allongeant la distance de décollage. B est faux car la densité réduite allonge la distance. C est faux car l'altitude affecte directement les performances. D est faux car la température n'est qu'un des facteurs, l'altitude (pression) en est un autre.
+
+### Q24: Quel est l'effet d'une piste en herbe mouillée sur la distance d'atterrissage d'un planeur ? ^t30q24
+- A) La distance d'atterrissage est plus courte.
+- B) La distance d'atterrissage est plus longue.
+- C) Le planeur risque de sortir de piste (tête-à-queue).
+- D) Aucun effet.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car une surface herbeuse détrempée crée une friction et une résistance au roulement plus importantes sur le train d'atterrissage, ce qui freine le planeur plus rapidement et réduit la distance d'arrêt. B est faux car l'herbe mouillée augmente la résistance au roulement. C est faux car l'effet principal est le raccourcissement de la distance d'arrêt. D est faux car l'état de la surface affecte toujours la distance d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q25: Comment la vitesse de décrochage varie-t-elle en virage ? ^t30q25
+- A) Elle augmente avec le facteur de charge.
+- B) Elle diminue en virage.
+- C) Elle reste identique.
+- D) Elle dépend de la direction du virage.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en virage coordonné, le facteur de charge augmente (n = 1/cos φ), et la vitesse de décrochage augmente proportionnellement à la racine carrée du facteur de charge : Vs_virage = Vs_palier × √n. B est faux car le facteur de charge accru exige davantage de portance. C est faux car la vitesse de décrochage n'est jamais identique en virage. D est faux car la direction du virage n'affecte pas le facteur de charge.
+
+### Q26: Quelle est la relation entre la polaire des vitesses d'un planeur et sa masse en vol ? ^t30q26
+- A) La polaire se déplace vers des vitesses plus élevées et des taux de chute plus grands lorsque la masse augmente.
+- B) La polaire ne change pas avec la masse.
+- C) La polaire se déplace vers des vitesses plus basses lorsque la masse augmente.
+- D) La polaire se déplace uniquement verticalement lorsque la masse augmente.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car une augmentation de masse déplace la polaire des vitesses vers la droite (vitesses plus élevées) et vers le bas (taux de chute accrus). Pour chaque coefficient de portance, la vitesse requise augmente proportionnellement à la racine carrée du rapport de masse. B est faux car la masse a un effet significatif sur la polaire. C est faux car les vitesses augmentent, elles ne diminuent pas. D est faux car le déplacement est à la fois horizontal et vertical.
+
+### Q27: Qu'arrive-t-il à la finesse maximale lorsque la masse d'un planeur augmente (en négligeant l'effet de Reynolds) ? ^t30q27
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle reste essentiellement inchangée.
+- D) Elle est divisée par deux.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la finesse maximale (rapport L/D maximal) est déterminée par l'aérodynamique de la voilure et ne dépend pas de la masse. En augmentant la masse, la tangente depuis l'origine touche la polaire à un angle identique, mais à une vitesse plus élevée. A est faux car la finesse ne s'améliore pas avec la masse. B est faux car la finesse ne se dégrade pas non plus. D est faux car aucune réduction n'est attendue.
+
+### Q28: Comment la VNE indiquée varie-t-elle avec l'altitude ? ^t30q28
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle reste la même ; le badin compense automatiquement.
+- D) Elle diminue.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le badin mesure la pression dynamique, qui tient intrinsèquement compte de la densité de l'air. Le repère VNE sur le badin (trait rouge) représente une valeur fixe d'IAS correspondant à la limite structurelle. Cependant, la VNE admissible en IAS doit effectivement être réduite en haute altitude selon le tableau vitesse-altitude du manuel de vol. A et B/D sont faux car le repère physique sur l'instrument ne bouge pas.
+
+### Q29: Quelle est la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme pour une masse en vol de 350 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q29
+- A) 75 km/h
+- B) 95 km/h
+- C) 55 km/h
+- D) 65 km/h
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A (75 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve en traçant la tangente depuis l'origine jusqu'à la courbe de la polaire pour 350 kg. Le point de tangence donne la vitesse correspondant au rapport portance/traînée maximal. B (95 km/h) est trop rapide. C (55 km/h) est proche de la vitesse de décrochage. D (65 km/h) est en dessous de la vitesse optimale.
+
+### Q30: Vous souhaitez voler de l'aérodrome A (altitude 500 m) à l'aérodrome B situé à 45 km, avec un vent de face de 20 km/h. La finesse de votre planeur est de 30. Pouvez-vous atteindre l'aérodrome B ? ^t30q30
+- A) Oui, vous arrivez avec de la marge.
+- B) Non, la distance franchissable est insuffisante.
+- C) Oui, exactement.
+- D) Cela dépend de la température.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la finesse de 30 donne une distance franchissable en air calme de 30 × 500 m = 15 km d'altitude × ... (cette question nécessite les données spécifiques de l'exercice). Avec un vent de face de 20 km/h, la vitesse sol diminue, ce qui réduit la distance franchissable par rapport au sol. Le calcul montre que la distance est insuffisante pour atteindre B.
+
+### Q31: À quelle vitesse doit voler un planeur par vent de face pour maximiser la distance franchissable par rapport au sol ? ^t30q31
+- A) À une vitesse supérieure à la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- B) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- C) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimum.
+- D) À la vitesse de décrochage.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car avec un vent de face, le point d'origine de la tangente sur la polaire se déplace vers la droite (vers des vitesses plus élevées). Cela signifie que la vitesse optimale de finesse sol est supérieure à celle en air calme. Voler plus vite compense partiellement la perte de vitesse sol due au vent de face. B est faux car cette vitesse n'est optimale qu'en air calme. C est faux car la vitesse de taux de chute minimum maximise la durée de vol, pas la distance. D est faux car la vitesse de décrochage donne une très mauvaise finesse.
+
+### Q32: À quelle vitesse doit voler un planeur par vent arrière pour maximiser la distance franchissable par rapport au sol ? ^t30q32
+- A) À une vitesse inférieure à la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- B) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- C) À une vitesse supérieure à la vitesse de meilleure finesse en air calme.
+- D) À la VNE.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car avec un vent arrière, le point d'origine de la tangente sur la polaire se déplace vers la gauche (vers des vitesses plus basses). La vitesse optimale de finesse sol est donc inférieure à celle en air calme. B est faux car cette vitesse n'est optimale qu'en air calme. C est faux car voler plus vite serait contre-productif avec un vent arrière. D est faux car la VNE donne une très mauvaise finesse.
+
+### Q33: Quel est le taux de chute minimum d'un planeur ASK 21 à 500 kg de masse en vol ? (Voir polaire annexée.) ^t30q33
+- A) 0,65 m/s
+- B) 0,80 m/s
+- C) 1,00 m/s
+- D) 1,20 m/s
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (0,80 m/s) car en lisant la polaire des vitesses pour une masse de 500 kg, le point le plus bas de la courbe (taux de chute minimum) est situé à environ 0,80 m/s. A (0,65 m/s) est trop bas pour cette masse. C (1,00 m/s) est trop élevé pour le point minimum. D (1,20 m/s) correspond à une vitesse bien supérieure.
+
+### Q34: Dans l'espace aérien au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Langenthal (47°10'58''N / 007°44'29''E) à une altitude de 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), dans quelle classe d'espace aérien êtes-vous, et quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages ? ^t30q34
+- A) Espace aérien de classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- B) Espace aérien de classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, hors des nuages avec vue continue du sol.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe D, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- D) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 2000 m AMSL au-dessus de Langenthal, vous êtes en espace aérien de classe E. Le vol VFR en classe E exige une visibilité horizontale de 5 km, un espacement horizontal aux nuages de 1500 m et un espacement vertical de 300 m. B est faux car la classe G avec ses minima réduits ne s'applique qu'à très basse altitude. C est faux car il n'y a pas de TMA de classe D à cet endroit et à cette altitude. D est faux car la classe C commence au FL 130 dans cette région, bien au-dessus de 2000 m AMSL.
+
+### Q35: Quelle est la charge alaire ? ^t30q35
+- A) Le rapport entre la masse de l'aéronef et la surface alaire.
+- B) Le poids des ailes de l'aéronef.
+- C) La charge maximale que les ailes peuvent supporter.
+- D) Le rapport entre la portance et la traînée.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la charge alaire est définie comme le rapport entre la masse totale de l'aéronef (en kg) et la surface alaire (en m²), exprimée en kg/m². C'est un paramètre fondamental qui influence la vitesse de décrochage, les performances en virage et la réponse aux turbulences. B est faux car il ne s'agit pas du poids des ailes. C est faux car c'est le facteur de charge qui détermine la charge maximale. D est faux car le rapport portance/traînée est la finesse.
+
+### Q36: Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % par du ballast d'eau, de quel pourcentage la vitesse minimale augmente-t-elle ? ^t30q36
+- A) 18 %.
+- B) 40 %.
+- C) 100 %.
+- D) 0 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la vitesse de décrochage (et donc la vitesse minimale) est proportionnelle à la racine carrée de la charge alaire. Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % (facteur 1,4), la nouvelle vitesse minimale est l'originale multipliée par √1,4 ≈ 1,183 — soit une augmentation d'environ 18,3 %. B est faux car la vitesse n'augmente pas linéairement avec la charge alaire. C est faux car une augmentation de 100 % signifierait un doublement de la vitesse. D est faux car toute augmentation de masse élève la vitesse minimale.
+
+### Q37: D'après la polaire ci-dessous, quelle affirmation s'applique à une vitesse de 150 km/h ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q37
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) Le taux de chute de l'ASK21 est indépendant de sa masse
+- B) L'ASK21 a une moins bonne finesse à plus faible masse en vol
+- C) L'ASK21 a un taux de chute plus élevé à plus grande masse en vol
+- D) L'ASK21 a une meilleure finesse à plus faible masse en vol
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 150 km/h, les deux courbes polaires pour différentes masses de l'ASK21 se croisent, ce qui signifie que les deux configurations ont le même taux de chute à cette vitesse particulière. C'est une propriété aérodynamique de la polaire : les courbes se croisent à une vitesse où la masse n'a pas d'effet sur le taux de chute. B est faux car à 150 km/h la finesse est identique pour les deux masses. C est faux car les taux de chute sont identiques à ce point d'intersection. D est également faux car aucune masse n'a une meilleure finesse à cette vitesse précise.
+
+### Q38: À l'aérodrome d'Amlikon, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction de l'Est ? ^t30q38
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780 m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700 m.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (780 m) car la carte AIP de l'aérodrome d'Amlikon indique une distance d'atterrissage disponible maximale de 780 mètres en direction de l'Est. A et C sont faux car les distances d'atterrissage en Suisse sont données en mètres, pas en pieds. D (700 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées pour la direction Est.
+
+### Q39: Quel est l'effet d'un vent arrière sur l'angle de descente par rapport au sol si la vitesse vraie de l'aéronef reste constante ? ^t30q39
+- A) Avec un vent arrière, l'angle de descente augmente.
+- B) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de descente diminue.
+- C) Le vent n'a aucun effet sur l'angle de descente.
+- D) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de descente augmente.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car un vent de face réduit la vitesse sol tandis que le taux de chute dans la masse d'air reste inchangé. Comme le planeur parcourt moins de distance horizontale par unité d'altitude perdue, l'angle de descente par rapport au sol se raidit (augmente). A est faux car un vent arrière diminue (aplatit) l'angle de descente par rapport au sol en augmentant la vitesse sol. B est faux car un vent de face augmente, et non diminue, l'angle de descente sol. C est faux car le vent affecte significativement l'angle de descente par rapport au sol.
+
+### Q40: Comment la vitesse indiquée (IAS) se compare-t-elle à la vitesse vraie (TAS) lorsque l'altitude augmente ? ^t30q40
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle ne peut pas être mesurée.
+- D) Elle reste identique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car lorsque l'altitude augmente, la densité de l'air diminue. Pour une même vitesse vraie, le tube de Pitot mesure moins de pression dynamique, de sorte que l'IAS affichée est inférieure à la TAS. Inversement, pour maintenir la même IAS en altitude, l'aéronef doit voler à une TAS plus élevée. A est faux car l'IAS n'augmente pas par rapport à la TAS avec l'altitude. C est faux car l'IAS peut toujours être mesurée. D est faux car l'IAS et la TAS divergent de plus en plus avec l'altitude.
+
+### Q41: Qu'est-ce qui doit être particulièrement observé lors d'un atterrissage sous forte pluie ? ^t30q41
+- A) La vitesse d'approche doit être augmentée.
+- B) La charge alaire doit être augmentée.
+- C) L'angle d'approche doit être plus faible que d'habitude.
+- D) La vitesse d'approche doit être inférieure à la normale.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la forte pluie sur la surface de l'aile augmente la rugosité et peut dégrader la couche limite, ce qui peut élever la vitesse de décrochage et réduire le coefficient de portance maximal. Une vitesse d'approche plus élevée offre une marge de sécurité contre ces effets. B est faux car augmenter délibérément la charge alaire sous la pluie est impraticable et contre-productif. C est faux car une approche plus plate réduit la marge de franchissement des obstacles en cas de mauvaise visibilité. D est faux car une vitesse plus basse réduit la marge de sécurité.
+
+### Q42: Que doit prendre en compte un pilote de planeur à l'aérodrome de Bex ? ^t30q42
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens horaire.
+- B) Le circuit pour la piste 15 est dans le sens horaire.
+- C) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens antihoraire.
+- D) Selon le vent, le circuit pour la piste 33 peut être soit dans le sens horaire soit dans le sens antihoraire.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à l'aérodrome de Bex, les contraintes du terrain (la vallée du Rhône et les montagnes environnantes) signifient que le sens du circuit pour la piste 33 dépend des conditions de vent. La carte montre qu'un circuit à gauche ou à droite peut être utilisé. A est faux car cela limite le circuit au sens horaire uniquement. B concerne la piste 15, pas la 33. C est faux car cela limite le circuit au sens antihoraire uniquement.
+
+### Q43: Quelle est l'altitude maximale de vol au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Biel Kappelen (SE de Biel) si vous souhaitez éviter de demander une clairance de transit pour la TMA BERN 1 ? ^t30q43
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la limite inférieure de la TMA BERN 1 au-dessus de Biel Kappelen est à 3500 ft AMSL. En restant en dessous de cette altitude, vous demeurez en espace aérien non contrôlé et n'avez pas besoin de clairance de transit. A (3500 ft AGL) est faux car les limites de TMA sont référencées par rapport au MSL, pas à l'AGL. B (FL 100) est bien au-dessus de la limite concernée. C (FL 35) se convertit en environ 3500 ft en atmosphère standard, mais les niveaux de vol utilisent le calage standard (1013,25 hPa), pas le QNH.
+
+### Q44: Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t30q44
+- A) Nouveau C.G. : 76,7, dans les limites approuvées.
+- B) Nouveau C.G. : 78,5, dans les limites approuvées.
+- C) Nouveau C.G. : 82,0, hors des limites approuvées.
+- D) Nouveau C.G. : 75,5, hors des limites approuvées.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en appliquant le calcul de masse et centrage avec les données fournies (de la feuille annexée), la nouvelle position du C.G. se calcule à 76,7, ce qui se situe dans les limites avant et arrière approuvées. B (78,5) est un résultat de calcul incorrect. C (82,0) est trop en arrière et serait hors limites. D (75,5) est un calcul incorrect et serait également hors de la limite avant.
+
+### Q45: À l'aérodrome de Schänis, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction NNO ? ^t30q45
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470 m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (470 m) car la carte AIP de l'aérodrome de Schänis indique une distance d'atterrissage disponible maximale de 470 mètres en direction NNO. A (520 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées pour cette direction. C et D sont faux car les distances d'aérodrome en Suisse sont données en mètres, pas en pieds.
+
+### Q46: La masse actuelle d'un aéronef est de 6400 lbs. CG actuel : 80. Limites CG : CG avant : 75,2, CG arrière : 80,5. Quelle masse peut être déplacée de sa position actuelle au bras de levier 150 sans dépasser la limite arrière du CG ? ^t30q46
+- A) 27,82 lbs.
+- B) 56,63 lbs.
+- C) 39,45 lbs.
+- D) 45,71 lbs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D (45,71 lbs). Le calcul utilise la formule de déplacement : lorsqu'une masse x est déplacée de la position actuelle du C.G. (80) au bras de levier 150, le C.G. se déplace vers l'arrière. Le nouveau C.G. ne doit pas dépasser 80,5. En utilisant la formule : ΔCG = (x × Δbras) / masse totale, on obtient : 0,5 = (x × 70) / 6400, donc x = (0,5 × 6400) / 70 = 45,71 lbs.
+
+### Q47: Le chargement correct d'un aéronef dépend de :… ^t30q47
+- A) Uniquement du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- B) Uniquement de la distribution correcte de la charge utile.
+- C) De la distribution correcte de la charge utile et du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- D) De la masse maximale autorisée des bagages dans la section arrière de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car un chargement correct exige de satisfaire simultanément deux conditions indépendantes : la masse totale ne doit pas dépasser la masse maximale autorisée (MTOM), et la charge utile doit être distribuée de sorte que le C.G. reste dans l'enveloppe approuvée. A est faux car respecter la limite de masse seule ne garantit pas que le C.G. est dans les limites. B est faux car une distribution correcte seule ne garantit pas que la masse totale est dans les limites. D est faux car cela ne traite que d'un compartiment à bagages spécifique.
+
+### Q48: Quelle information peut-on lire sur cette polaire des vitesses ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q48
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) Dans la plage de vitesses jusqu'à 100 km/h, une augmentation de la masse en vol réduit le taux de chute.
+- B) La vitesse minimale est indépendante de la masse en vol.
+- C) Tant la finesse que la vitesse minimale sont indépendantes de la masse en vol.
+- D) Seule la finesse maximale est indépendante de la masse en vol, à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car en comparant les courbes polaires pour différentes masses, la tangente depuis l'origine touche chaque courbe au même angle, ce qui signifie que le rapport portance/traînée maximal (meilleure finesse) est essentiellement inchangé par la masse, à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près. Cependant, la vitesse à laquelle cette meilleure finesse est atteinte augmente avec la masse. A est faux car l'augmentation de la masse augmente toujours le taux de chute à toute vitesse donnée. B est faux car la vitesse minimale augmente avec la masse. C est faux car si la finesse est indépendante de la masse, la vitesse minimale ne l'est pas.
+
+### Q49: À quelle vitesse indiquée effectuez-vous une approche sur un aérodrome situé à 1800 m AMSL ? ^t30q49
+- A) À la même vitesse qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- B) À une vitesse inférieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+- C) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimum.
+- D) À une vitesse supérieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le badin mesure la pression dynamique, qui est directement liée aux forces aérodynamiques, indépendamment de l'altitude. À 1800 m AMSL, la densité de l'air est plus faible, donc la TAS sera plus élevée pour la même IAS — mais les forces aérodynamiques (portance, caractéristiques de décrochage) dépendent de l'IAS, pas de la TAS. La même vitesse d'approche indiquée offre les mêmes marges de sécurité qu'au niveau de la mer. B est faux car une IAS plus basse réduirait la marge de décrochage. D est faux car une IAS plus élevée est inutile et entraînerait un arrondi excessif. C est faux car la vitesse de taux de chute minimum n'est pas la vitesse d'approche correcte.
+
+### Q50: À quelle vitesse devez-vous voler pour obtenir la meilleure finesse pour une masse en vol de 450 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q50
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130 km/h
+- B) 90 km/h
+- C) 70 km/h
+- D) 110 km/h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (90 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve au point où la tangente depuis l'origine touche la courbe polaire pour 450 kg. Pour ce type de planeur à 450 kg, cela se produit à environ 90 km/h. A (130 km/h) est trop rapide — à cette vitesse, la finesse est significativement réduite. C (70 km/h) est plus proche de la vitesse de taux de chute minimum, qui maximise l'endurance mais pas la distance. D (110 km/h) donnerait une finesse réduite par rapport à l'optimum.
+
+### Q51: 1235 lbs (arrondi) correspondent à (1 kg = env. 2,2 lbs) :… ^t30q51
+- A) env. 620 kg.
+- B) env. 2720 kg.
+- C) env. 560 kg.
+- D) env. 2470 kg.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car pour convertir des livres en kilogrammes, on divise par 2,2 : 1235 / 2,2 = 561,4 kg, ce qui s'arrondit à environ 560 kg. A (620 kg) correspondrait à environ 1364 lbs. B (2720 kg) résulte d'une multiplication au lieu d'une division. D (2470 kg) est également le résultat d'une erreur de multiplication.
+
+### Q52: Qu'est-ce qui doit être particulièrement observé lors d'un atterrissage sur un terrain en montée avec vent arrière ? ^t30q52
+- A) Voler en finale un peu plus vite que d'habitude.
+- B) Arrondir plus haut que d'habitude.
+- C) Voler à la vitesse d'approche normale (triangle jaune).
+- D) Vous devez atterrir avec tous les aérofreins pleinement sortis.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car sur un terrain en montée avec vent arrière, les effets concurrents se compensent partiellement : la pente montante raccourcit la distance de roulement tandis que le vent arrière l'allonge. La vitesse d'approche normale (triangle jaune sur l'anémomètre) offre le bon équilibre en gestion d'énergie. A est faux car une approche plus rapide entraînerait un flottement excessif sur la pente. B est faux car un arrondi plus haut risque un ballooning sur la pente. D est faux car les aérofreins pleinement sortis peuvent provoquer une descente trop raide en courte finale.
+
+### Q53: Dans quelle classe d'espace aérien êtes-vous au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Langenthal (47°10'58''N / 007°44'29''E) à une altitude de 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), et quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages ? ^t30q53
+- A) Espace aérien de classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- B) Espace aérien de classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, hors des nuages avec vue continue du sol.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe D, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- D) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages : 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 2000 m AMSL au-dessus de Langenthal, vous êtes en espace aérien de classe E. Le vol VFR en classe E exige 5 km de visibilité horizontale, 1500 m d'espacement horizontal aux nuages et 300 m d'espacement vertical. B est faux car la classe G avec ses minima réduits ne s'applique qu'à très basse altitude. C est faux car il n'y a pas de TMA de classe D à cet endroit. D est faux car la classe C commence au FL 130 dans cette région.
+
+### Q54: Quelle position du centre de gravité est la plus dangereuse pour un planeur ? ^t30q54
+- A) Trop en avant.
+- B) Trop bas.
+- C) Trop en arrière.
+- D) Trop haut.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque le C.G. est trop en arrière, le planeur perd sa stabilité statique longitudinale — le nez tend à cabrer sans revenir à l'équilibre, pouvant mener à des oscillations divergentes incontrôlables ou à un décrochage/vrille. A (trop en avant) est moins dangereux car l'aéronef reste stable. B et D sont faux car le déplacement vertical du C.G. n'est pas la préoccupation principale.
+
+### Q55: Comment la VNE indiquée (vitesse à ne jamais dépasser) change-t-elle lorsque l'altitude augmente ? ^t30q55
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle reste la même ; le badin compense automatiquement.
+- D) Elle diminue.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le badin mesure la pression dynamique, qui tient intrinsèquement compte de la densité de l'air. Le repère VNE sur le badin (trait rouge) représente une valeur fixe d'IAS correspondant à la limite structurelle. Cependant, la VNE admissible en IAS doit effectivement être réduite en haute altitude selon le tableau vitesse-altitude du manuel de vol. A et B/D sont faux car le repère physique sur l'instrument ne bouge pas.
+
+### Q56: Vous avez parcouru une distance de 150 km en 1 heure et 15 minutes. Votre vitesse sol calculée est :… ^t30q56
+- A) 125 km/h.
+- B) 115 km/h.
+- C) 120 km/h.
+- D) 110 km/h.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car vitesse sol = distance / temps = 150 km / 1,25 heures = 120 km/h. L'étape clé est la conversion de 1 heure 15 minutes en heures décimales : 15 minutes = 0,25 heure, donc le temps total = 1,25 heures. A (125 km/h) résulte d'une division par 1,2 heures. B (115 km/h) et D (110 km/h) ne correspondent à aucun calcul correct avec ces données.
+
+### Q57: Le NOTAM suivant a été publié le 18 août (heure d'été). Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t30q57
+![[figures/t30_q57.png]]
+- A) La CTR/TMA Payerne étendue et la zone restreinte LS-R4 doivent être strictement évitées chaque jour du 02 au 06 septembre 2013, entre le lever et le coucher du soleil.
+- B) Un meeting aérien a lieu dans la région de Payerne du 02 au 06 septembre 2013. La TMA Payerne et la zone restreinte LS-R4 sont actives chaque jour pendant cette période entre 0600 UTC et 1500 UTC comme zones d'attente et secteurs de démonstration.
+- C) En raison d'un meeting aérien du 02 au 06 septembre 2013, la CTR/TMA Payerne étendue est active chaque jour entre 0600 UTC et 1500 UTC. La TMA est utilisée comme zone d'attente, la zone restreinte LS-R4 comme zone de démonstration et d'attente. La zone doit être strictement évitée.
+- D) En raison d'un meeting aérien, une clairance de transit pour la CTR/TMA Payerne étendue et la zone restreinte LS-R4 doit être demandée sur la fréquence 135.475 (Payerne TWR) du 02 au 06 septembre 2013.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le NOTAM établit que du 2 au 6 septembre 2013, entre 0600 et 1500 UTC, la CTR/TMA Payerne étendue est activée comme zone d'attente, tandis que LS-R4 sert de zone de démonstration et d'attente pour un meeting aérien. Ces zones doivent être strictement évitées pendant la période active. A est faux car les horaires sont 0600-1500 UTC, pas du lever au coucher du soleil. B décrit incorrectement les deux zones. D est faux car le transit n'est pas autorisé.
+
+### Q58: Quelle est la meilleure vitesse de plané en air calme pour une masse en vol de 450 kg ? Voir feuille annexée. ^t30q58
+![[figures/t30_q58.png]]
+- A) 95 km/h
+- B) 75 km/h
+- C) 55 km/h
+- D) 135 km/h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (75 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve en traçant la tangente depuis l'origine jusqu'à la courbe de la polaire pour 450 kg. A (95 km/h) est trop rapide et correspondrait à une masse plus lourde ou une polaire différente. C (55 km/h) est proche de la vitesse de décrochage. D (135 km/h) se situe dans la plage de haute vitesse où la finesse est significativement réduite.
+
+### Q59: Un vol VFR suivra la route indiquée sur la carte ci-dessous (ligne pointillée) d'APPENZELL vers MUOTATHAL. La route est prévue pour le 19 mars 2013 (heure d'hiver) entre 1205 et 1255 LT. Répondez en utilisant le DABS ci-dessous. Laquelle de ces réponses est correcte ? ^t30q59
+![[figures/t30_q59.png]]
+- A) Le DABS peut être ignoré car il ne s'applique qu'aux aéronefs militaires.
+- B) Vous pouvez traverser toutes les zones de danger et zones restreintes pertinentes en dessous de 1000 ft AGL ou au-dessus de 10 000 ft AMSL.
+- C) La route peut être effectuée sans coordination entre 1200 et 1300 LT.
+- D) Il n'est pas possible de voler la route prévue ce jour-là.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car en vérifiant le DABS pour le 19 mars 2013 (heure d'hiver, CET = UTC+1), l'heure prévue de 1205-1255 LT se convertit en 1105-1155 UTC. Pendant cette période, les zones de danger et zones restreintes pertinentes le long de la route ne sont pas actives, permettant de voler la route sans coordination. A est faux car le DABS s'applique à tous les usagers de l'espace aérien. B est faux car les exemptions d'altitude ne s'appliquent pas automatiquement. D est faux car la route est praticable pendant le créneau horaire spécifié.
+
+### Q60: La charge alaire est augmentée de 40 % par du ballast d'eau. De quel pourcentage la vitesse minimale du planeur augmente-t-elle ? ^t30q60
+- A) 18 %.
+- B) 40 %.
+- C) 100 %.
+- D) 0 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la vitesse de décrochage (et donc la vitesse minimale) est proportionnelle à la racine carrée de la charge alaire. Si la charge alaire augmente de 40 % (facteur 1,4), la nouvelle vitesse minimale est l'originale multipliée par √1,4 ≈ 1,183 — soit une augmentation d'environ 18,3 %. B est faux car la vitesse n'augmente pas linéairement avec la charge alaire. C est faux car une augmentation de 100 % signifierait un doublement. D est faux car toute augmentation de masse élève la vitesse minimale.
+
+### Q61: D'après la polaire ci-dessous, quelle affirmation s'applique à une vitesse de 150 km/h ? Voir feuille annexée… ^t30q61
+![[figures/t30_q61.png]]
+- A) Le taux de chute de l'ASK21 est indépendant de sa masse
+- B) L'ASK21 a une moins bonne finesse à plus faible masse en vol
+- C) L'ASK21 a un taux de chute plus élevé à plus grande masse en vol
+- D) L'ASK21 a une meilleure finesse à plus faible masse en vol
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car à 150 km/h, les deux courbes polaires pour différentes masses de l'ASK21 se croisent, ce qui signifie que les deux configurations ont le même taux de chute à cette vitesse particulière. B est faux car à 150 km/h la finesse est identique pour les deux masses. C est faux car les taux de chute sont identiques au point d'intersection. D est également faux car aucune masse n'a une meilleure finesse à cette vitesse.
+
+### Q62: À l'aérodrome d'Amlikon, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction de l'Est ? ^t30q62
+![[figures/t30_q62.png]]
+- A) 700 ft.
+- B) 780 m.
+- C) 780 ft
+- D) 700 m.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (780 m) car la carte AIP de l'aérodrome d'Amlikon indique une distance d'atterrissage disponible maximale de 780 mètres en direction de l'Est. A et C sont faux car les distances en Suisse sont données en mètres, pas en pieds. D (700 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées.
+
+### Q63: À partir de quelle altitude devez-vous demander une clairance de transit pour la TMA EMMEN entre Cham (env. N47°11' / E008°28') et Hitzkirch (env. N47°14' / E008°16') ? ^t30q63
+![[figures/t30_q63.png]]
+- A) 2400 ft AMSL.
+- B) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 2000 ft GND.
+- D) 5000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la limite inférieure de la TMA EMMEN entre Cham et Hitzkirch est à 3500 ft AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, vous restez en espace aérien non contrôlé et aucune clairance n'est nécessaire. Au-dessus de 3500 ft AMSL, vous entrez dans la TMA et devez obtenir une clairance ATC. A (2400 ft) est trop bas. C (2000 ft GND) utilise une référence au-dessus du sol. D (5000 ft) est trop haut.
+
+### Q64: La charge utile maximale autorisée est dépassée. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t30q64
+- A) Trimmer en arrière.
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse de décollage de 10 %.
+- C) Trimmer en avant.
+- D) Réduire la charge utile.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car lorsque la charge utile maximale autorisée est dépassée, la seule action correcte est de réduire la charge utile jusqu'à ce qu'elle soit conforme à la limite. A et C sont faux car le trim ajuste les forces aérodynamiques sur l'empennage mais ne modifie ni la masse ni le C.G. B est faux car augmenter la vitesse de décollage ne résout pas une surcharge.
+
+### Q65: Quel est l'effet du vent sur l'angle de descente par rapport au sol si la vitesse vraie de l'aéronef reste constante ? ^t30q65
+- A) Avec un vent arrière, l'angle de descente augmente.
+- B) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de descente diminue.
+- C) Le vent n'a aucun effet sur l'angle de descente.
+- D) Avec un vent de face, l'angle de descente augmente.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car un vent de face réduit la vitesse sol tandis que le taux de chute dans la masse d'air reste inchangé. L'angle de descente par rapport au sol se raidit. A est faux car un vent arrière diminue l'angle de descente. B est faux car un vent de face augmente l'angle. C est faux car le vent affecte significativement l'angle de descente sol.
+
+### Q66: Comment la vitesse indiquée (IAS) se compare-t-elle à la vitesse vraie (TAS) lorsque l'altitude augmente ? ^t30q66
+- A) Elle augmente.
+- B) Elle diminue.
+- C) Elle ne peut pas être mesurée.
+- D) Elle reste identique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car lorsque l'altitude augmente, la densité de l'air diminue. Pour une même TAS, le tube de Pitot mesure moins de pression dynamique, de sorte que l'IAS affichée est inférieure à la TAS. A est faux car l'IAS n'augmente pas par rapport à la TAS avec l'altitude. C est faux car l'IAS peut toujours être mesurée. D est faux car l'IAS et la TAS divergent de plus en plus avec l'altitude.
+
+### Q67: Qu'est-ce qui doit être particulièrement observé lors d'un atterrissage sous forte pluie ? ^t30q67
+- A) La vitesse d'approche doit être augmentée.
+- B) La charge alaire doit être augmentée.
+- C) L'angle d'approche doit être plus faible que d'habitude.
+- D) La vitesse d'approche doit être inférieure à la normale.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la forte pluie sur la surface de l'aile augmente la rugosité et peut dégrader la couche limite, ce qui peut élever la vitesse de décrochage et réduire le coefficient de portance maximal. Une vitesse d'approche plus élevée offre une marge de sécurité. B est faux car augmenter la charge alaire sous la pluie est impraticable. C est faux car une approche plus plate réduit la marge de franchissement. D est faux car une vitesse plus basse réduit la marge de sécurité.
+
+### Q68: Que doit prendre en compte un pilote de planeur à l'aérodrome de Bex ? ^t30q68
+![[figures/t30_q68.png]]
+- A) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens horaire.
+- B) Le circuit pour la piste 15 est dans le sens horaire.
+- C) Le circuit pour la piste 33 est dans le sens antihoraire.
+- D) Selon le vent, le circuit pour la piste 33 peut être soit dans le sens horaire soit dans le sens antihoraire.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à l'aérodrome de Bex, les contraintes du terrain signifient que le sens du circuit pour la piste 33 dépend des conditions de vent. La carte montre qu'un circuit à gauche ou à droite peut être utilisé. A est faux car cela limite le circuit au sens horaire uniquement. B concerne la piste 15. C est faux car cela limite le circuit au sens antihoraire uniquement.
+
+### Q69: Quelle est l'altitude maximale de vol au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Biel Kappelen (SE de Biel) si vous souhaitez éviter de demander une clairance de transit pour la TMA BERN 1 ? ^t30q69
+![[figures/t30_q69.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AGL.
+- B) FL 100.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) 3500 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la limite inférieure de la TMA BERN 1 au-dessus de Biel Kappelen est à 3500 ft AMSL. En restant en dessous, vous demeurez en espace aérien non contrôlé. A est faux car les limites de TMA sont référencées au MSL. B est bien au-dessus de la limite. C convertit en environ 3500 ft en atmosphère standard mais les niveaux de vol utilisent 1013,25 hPa.
+
+### Q70: Laquelle de ces affirmations est correcte ? ^t30q70
+- A) Nouveau C.G. : 76,7, dans les limites approuvées.
+- B) Nouveau C.G. : 78,5, dans les limites approuvées.
+- C) Nouveau C.G. : 82,0, hors des limites approuvées.
+- D) Nouveau C.G. : 75,5, hors des limites approuvées.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en appliquant le calcul de masse et centrage avec les données fournies, la nouvelle position du C.G. se calcule à 76,7, ce qui se situe dans les limites approuvées. B (78,5) est un résultat incorrect. C (82,0) serait hors limites. D (75,5) est un calcul erroné.
+
+### Q71: Quel est l'effet d'une piste herbeuse détrempée sur l'atterrissage ? ^t30q71
+- A) La distance d'atterrissage sera plus courte.
+- B) La distance d'atterrissage sera plus longue.
+- C) Le planeur risque de sortir de piste (tête-à-queue).
+- D) Aucun effet.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car une surface herbeuse détrempée crée une friction et une résistance au roulement plus importantes sur le train d'atterrissage, ce qui freine le planeur plus rapidement et réduit la distance d'arrêt. B est faux car l'herbe mouillée augmente la résistance au roulement pour un planeur. C est faux car l'effet principal est le raccourcissement de la distance. D est faux car l'état de la surface affecte toujours la distance.
+
+### Q72: À l'aérodrome de Schänis, quelle est la distance d'atterrissage maximale disponible en direction NNO ? ^t30q72
+![[figures/t30_q72.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470 m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (470 m) car la carte AIP de l'aérodrome de Schänis indique une distance d'atterrissage disponible maximale de 470 mètres en direction NNO. A (520 m) ne correspond pas aux données publiées. C et D sont faux car les distances en Suisse sont données en mètres.
+
+### Q73: La masse actuelle d'un aéronef est de 6400 lbs. CG actuel : 80. Limites CG : CG avant : 75,2, CG arrière : 80,5. Quelle masse peut être déplacée de sa position actuelle au bras de levier 150 sans dépasser la limite arrière du CG ? ^t30q73
+- A) 27,82 lbs.
+- B) 56,63 lbs.
+- C) 39,45 lbs.
+- D) 45,71 lbs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D (45,71 lbs). Le calcul utilise la formule de déplacement : ΔCG = (x × Δbras) / masse totale. On obtient : 0,5 = (x × 70) / 6400, donc x = (0,5 × 6400) / 70 = 45,71 lbs. A (27,82), B (56,63) et C (39,45) résultent de calculs incorrects.
+
+### Q74: Le chargement correct d'un aéronef dépend de :… ^t30q74
+- A) Uniquement du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- B) Uniquement de la distribution correcte de la charge utile.
+- C) De la distribution correcte de la charge utile et du respect de la masse maximale autorisée.
+- D) De la masse maximale autorisée des bagages dans la section arrière de l'aéronef.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car un chargement correct exige de satisfaire deux conditions indépendantes simultanément : la masse totale ne doit pas dépasser la MTOM, et la charge utile doit être distribuée pour que le C.G. reste dans l'enveloppe approuvée. A est faux car la masse seule ne garantit pas le centrage. B est faux car la distribution seule ne garantit pas la masse. D est faux car cela ne traite que d'un compartiment.
+
+### Q75: Quelle information peut-on lire sur cette polaire des vitesses ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q75
+![[figures/t30_q75.png]]
+- A) Dans la plage de vitesses jusqu'à 100 km/h, une augmentation de la masse en vol réduit le taux de chute.
+- B) La vitesse minimale est indépendante de la masse en vol.
+- C) Tant la finesse que la vitesse minimale sont indépendantes de la masse en vol.
+- D) Seule la finesse maximale est indépendante de la masse en vol, à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car en comparant les courbes polaires pour différentes masses, la tangente depuis l'origine touche chaque courbe au même angle, ce qui signifie que le rapport L/D maximal est essentiellement inchangé par la masse. Cependant, la vitesse correspondante augmente avec la masse. A est faux car l'augmentation de la masse augmente toujours le taux de chute. B est faux car la vitesse minimale augmente avec la masse. C est faux car la vitesse minimale n'est pas indépendante de la masse.
+
+### Q76: À quelle vitesse indiquée effectuez-vous une approche sur un aérodrome situé à 1800 m AMSL ? ^t30q76
+- A) À la même vitesse qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- B) À une vitesse inférieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+- C) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimum.
+- D) À une vitesse supérieure à celle au niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le badin mesure la pression dynamique, directement liée aux forces aérodynamiques indépendamment de l'altitude. À 1800 m AMSL, la TAS sera plus élevée pour la même IAS, mais les forces aérodynamiques dépendent de l'IAS. La même IAS d'approche offre les mêmes marges de sécurité. B est faux car une IAS plus basse réduirait la marge de décrochage. D est faux car une IAS plus élevée est inutile. C est faux car ce n'est pas la vitesse d'approche correcte.
+
+### Q77: À quelle vitesse devez-vous voler pour obtenir la meilleure finesse pour une masse en vol de 450 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q77
+![[figures/t30_q77.png]]
+- A) 130 km/h
+- B) 90 km/h
+- C) 70 km/h
+- D) 110 km/h
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (90 km/h) car la vitesse de meilleure finesse se trouve au point de tangence depuis l'origine sur la polaire pour 450 kg. A (130 km/h) est trop rapide. C (70 km/h) est la vitesse de taux de chute minimum. D (110 km/h) donnerait une finesse réduite.
+
+### Q78: La limite arrière maximale du CG est dépassée. Quelle mesure doit être prise ? ^t30q78
+- A) Trimmer en arrière.
+- B) Tant que la masse maximale au décollage n'est pas dépassée, aucune action particulière n'est requise.
+- C) Redistribuer la charge utile différemment.
+- D) Trimmer en avant.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque la limite arrière du C.G. est dépassée, la charge utile doit être redistribuée pour déplacer la masse vers l'avant. A est faux car trimmer en arrière aggraverait la situation. B est faux car être dans les limites de masse ne compense pas un C.G. hors limites. D est faux car le trim ajuste les forces aérodynamiques mais ne change pas la position réelle du C.G.
+
+### Q79: Quels facteurs augmentent la distance de décollage en remorqué ? ^t30q79
+- A) Basse température, vent de face.
+- B) Piste en herbe, vent de face fort.
+- C) Pression atmosphérique élevée.
+- D) Haute température, vent arrière.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car une haute température réduit la densité de l'air, diminuant la portance et nécessitant une accélération plus longue. Un vent arrière réduit la composante de vent de face, allongeant encore la distance. A est faux car une basse température et un vent de face raccourcissent la distance. B est faux car un vent de face fort raccourcit la distance. C est faux car une pression élevée augmente la densité.
+
+### Q80: Le NOTAM suivant a été publié pour le 18 novembre. Laquelle de ces affirmations est correcte ? ^t30q80
+![[figures/t30_q80.png]]
+- A) Le 18 novembre, un exercice de vol militaire de nuit aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TICINO. Limite inférieure : espace aérien de classe E, limite supérieure : max. FL150.
+- B) Le 18 novembre de 1800 LT à 2100 LT, un exercice de vol militaire de nuit aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TICINO.
+- C) Le 18 novembre de 1800 UTC à 2100 UTC, un exercice de vol militaire de nuit avec hélicoptères aura lieu.
+- D) Le 18 novembre de 1800 UTC à 2100 UTC, un exercice de vol militaire de nuit aura lieu dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TICINO. Limite inférieure : GND, limite supérieure : max. 15 000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car le NOTAM spécifie un exercice de vol militaire de nuit le 18 novembre de 1800 à 2100 UTC dans les zones ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN et TICINO, avec des limites verticales de GND à 15 000 ft AMSL. A est faux car la limite inférieure est GND, pas la classe E. B est faux car les horaires sont en UTC, pas en heure locale. C est faux car il n'est pas spécifié hélicoptères uniquement.
+
+### Q81: Quelle est l'altitude maximale de vol autorisée dans la CTR de l'aéroport de Berne-Belp ? ^t30q81
+![[figures/t30_q81.png]]
+- A) 5500 ft GND.
+- B) 4500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 5000 ft AMSL
+- D) 3000 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la CTR de l'aéroport de Berne-Belp a une limite supérieure de 3000 ft AMSL. Au-dessus, vous quittez la CTR. A (5500 ft GND) ne correspond pas. B (4500 ft AMSL) est trop haut. C (5000 ft AMSL) est également trop haut.
+
+### Q82: Dans quelle classe d'espace aérien êtes-vous au-dessus de l'aérodrome de BEX à une altitude de 1700 m AMSL, et quelles sont les exigences minimales de visibilité et de distance aux nuages ? ^t30q82
+![[figures/t30_q82.png]]
+- A) Espace aérien de classe G, visibilité horizontale 1,5 km, hors des nuages avec vue continue du sol.
+- B) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 8 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- C) Espace aérien de classe C, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+- D) Espace aérien de classe E, visibilité horizontale 5 km, distance aux nuages 1,5 km horizontalement, 300 m verticalement.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à 1700 m AMSL au-dessus de l'aérodrome de Bex, vous êtes en espace aérien de classe E. Les minima VFR en classe E exigent 5 km de visibilité horizontale, 1500 m d'espacement horizontal aux nuages et 300 m d'espacement vertical. A est faux car la classe G s'applique à des altitudes plus basses. B et C sont faux car la classe C commence au FL 130.
+
+### Q83: Quel est le taux de chute à 160 km/h pour ce planeur à une masse en vol de 580 kg ? (Voir feuille annexée.) ^t30q83
+![[figures/t30_q83.png]]
+- A) 1,6 m/s
+- B) 0,8 m/s
+- C) 2,0 m/s
+- D) 1,2 m/s
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C (2,0 m/s) car en lisant la courbe polaire pour une masse de 580 kg à 160 km/h, le taux de chute est d'environ 2,0 m/s. A (1,6 m/s) correspondrait à une masse plus faible ou une vitesse inférieure. B (0,8 m/s) est proche du taux de chute minimum. D (1,2 m/s) est également trop bas pour cette vitesse et cette masse.
+
+### Q84: 550 kg (arrondi) correspondent à (1 kg = env. 2,2 lbs) :… ^t30q84
+- A) env. 12 100 lbs.
+- B) env. 1210 lbs.
+- C) env. 2500 lbs.
+- D) env. 250 lbs.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car pour convertir des kilogrammes en livres, on multiplie par 2,2 : 550 × 2,2 = 1 210 lbs. A (12 100 lbs) résulte d'une multiplication par 22 au lieu de 2,2. C (2 500 lbs) ne correspond à aucun calcul correct. D (250 lbs) résulte d'une division au lieu d'une multiplication.
+
+### Q85: À quelle vitesse un planeur doit-il voler en air calme pour couvrir la distance maximale possible ? ^t30q85
+- A) À la vitesse de taux de chute minimum.
+- B) À la vitesse maximale autorisée.
+- C) À la vitesse minimale de vol.
+- D) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car la vitesse de meilleure finesse (vitesse de L/D maximal) maximise la distance horizontale parcourue par unité d'altitude perdue en air calme. A est faux car la vitesse de taux de chute minimum maximise l'endurance (durée de vol), pas la distance. B est faux car la vitesse maximale produit la pire finesse. C est faux car la vitesse minimale de vol donne une mauvaise finesse due à la traînée induite élevée.
+
+### Q86: La masse d'un planeur est augmentée. Quel paramètre ne sera PAS affecté par cette augmentation ? ^t30q86
+- A) La finesse maximale (à un léger effet de nombre de Reynolds près).
+- B) La charge alaire.
+- C) Le taux de chute.
+- D) La vitesse indiquée (IAS).
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la finesse maximale (meilleur L/D) est essentiellement indépendante de la masse — le coefficient de portance et le coefficient de traînée à l'angle d'attaque optimal restent les mêmes. B est faux car la charge alaire = masse / surface alaire, qui augmente directement. C est faux car le taux de chute augmente avec la masse. D est faux car les vitesses correspondant à la meilleure finesse et au taux de chute minimum augmentent avec la masse.
+
+### Q87: Combien de temps faut-il pour parcourir une distance de 150 km à une vitesse sol moyenne de 100 km/h ? ^t30q87
+- A) 1 heure 50 minutes.
+- B) 1 heure 40 minutes.
+- C) 2 heures.
+- D) 1 heure 30 minutes.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car temps = distance / vitesse = 150 km / 100 km/h = 1,5 heures = 1 heure 30 minutes. A (1 heure 50 minutes) correspondrait à une distance d'environ 183 km. B (1 heure 40 minutes) correspondrait à environ 167 km. C (2 heures) correspondrait à 200 km.
+
+### Q88: Lors de la préparation d'un vol VFR alpin le long de la route indiquée sur la carte (ligne pointillée) entre MUNSTER et AMSTEG, vous consultez le DABS. Vous prévoyez de voler cette route un jour de semaine d'été entre 1445 et 1515 LT. Selon le DABS, les zones R-8 et R-8A sont actives pendant cette période. Laquelle de ces réponses est correcte ? ^t30q88
+![[figures/t30_q88.png]]
+- A) La route peut être effectuée sans restriction après contact sur 128.375 MHz.
+- B) Les zones restreintes LS-R8 et LS-R8A peuvent être traversées en dessous de 28 000 ft AMSL.
+- C) Il n'est pas possible de voler cette route pendant que les zones restreintes sont actives.
+- D) Les zones restreintes LS-R8 et LS-R8A peuvent être survolées à 9200 ft AMSL ou au-dessus.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car lorsque les zones restreintes LS-R8 et LS-R8A sont actives, elles couvrent la route alpine prévue entre Munster et Amsteg, rendant impossible de les traverser. Les zones restreintes avec le statut « entrée interdite » ne peuvent pas être traversées. A est faux car le contact radio ne confère pas de droit de transit. B est faux car un plafond de 28 000 ft n'aide pas un planeur. D est faux car le survol à 9 200 ft peut encore se situer dans les limites verticales de la zone.
+
+### Q89: Vous souhaitez obtenir une clairance de transit pour la TMA ZURICH. Que devez-vous faire ? ^t30q89
+- A) Premier contact radio sur fréquence 124.7, au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans la TMA.
+- B) Premier contact radio sur fréquence 124.7, au moins 5 minutes avant d'entrer dans la TMA.
+- C) Premier contact radio sur fréquence 118.975, au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans la TMA.
+- D) Premier contact radio sur fréquence 118.1, au moins 5 minutes avant d'entrer dans la TMA.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car pour transiter la TMA de Zurich, le pilote doit établir le premier contact radio sur la fréquence 124.7 MHz (Zurich Information) au moins 10 minutes avant d'entrer dans l'espace aérien contrôlé. B est faux car 5 minutes est un délai insuffisant. C est faux car 118.975 n'est pas la bonne fréquence. D est faux tant pour la fréquence que pour le délai.
+
+### Q90: La vitesse minimale de votre planeur est de 60 kts en vol rectiligne. De quel pourcentage augmenterait-elle dans un virage serré avec une inclinaison de 60° (facteur de charge n = 2,0) ? ^t30q90
+- A) env. 40 %.
+- B) 0 %.
+- C) env. 5 %.
+- D) env. 20 %.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car en virage, la vitesse de décrochage augmente selon la racine carrée du facteur de charge : Vs_virage = Vs_palier × √n. Avec n = 2,0 : Vs_virage = 60 × √2 = 60 × 1,414 = 84,85 kts. L'augmentation est (84,85 − 60) / 60 × 100 = 41,4 %, arrondi à environ 40 %. B est faux car la vitesse de décrochage augmente toujours en virage. C (5 %) et D (20 %) sous-estiment significativement l'effet.
+
+### Q91: La limite supérieure de LO R 16 est égale à… Voir annexe (PFP-056)… ^t30q91
+- A) 1 500 m MSL.
+- B) FL150.
+- C) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- D) 1 500 ft GND.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la zone restreinte LO R 16 a une limite supérieure de 1 500 ft MSL, une altitude fixe et absolue. A est faux car 1 500 m MSL correspondrait à environ 4 900 ft. B est faux car FL150 (15 000 ft) est bien trop haut. D est faux car 1 500 ft GND varierait avec l'élévation du terrain.
+
+### Q92: La limite supérieure de LO R 4 est égale à… Voir annexe (PFP-030)… ^t30q92
+- A) 4 500 ft AGL.
+- B) 4 500 ft MSL
+- C) 1 500 ft AGL
+- D) 1 500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car LO R 4 a une limite supérieure de 4 500 ft MSL, une altitude fixe au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer. A est faux car 4 500 ft AGL varierait avec le terrain. C est faux car la valeur et la référence sont erronées. D est faux car 1 500 ft MSL correspond à une autre zone restreinte (LO R 16).
+
+### Q93: Jusqu'à quelle altitude un survol est-il interdit selon le NOTAM ? Voir figure (PFP-024)… ^t30q93
+- A) Hauteur 9500 ft
+- B) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- C) Niveau de vol 95
+- D) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car le NOTAM interdit le survol jusqu'à une altitude de 9 500 ft MSL, conformément à la convention OACI où « altitude » désigne la hauteur au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer. A est faux car « hauteur » désigne une référence locale au-dessus du sol. C est faux car le FL 95 est une référence de pression basée sur 1013,25 hPa. D est faux car 9 500 m MSL correspondrait à environ 31 000 ft.
+
+### Q94: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-061) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique un groupe d'obstacles non éclairés ? ^t30q94
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (symbole C dans l'annexe) car la symbologie OACI des cartes aéronautiques utilise des symboles spécifiques pour distinguer les obstacles isolés et groupés, éclairés et non éclairés. Le symbole C représente un groupe d'obstacles non éclairés.
+
+### Q95: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-062) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique un aéroport civil (non international) avec piste revêtue ? ^t30q95
+- A) D
+- B) A
+- C) C
+- D) B
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B (symbole A dans l'annexe) car la symbologie OACI utilise des représentations distinctes pour les différents types d'aérodromes — civil contre militaire, international contre domestique, revêtu contre non revêtu. Le symbole A représente un aéroport civil (non international) avec piste revêtue.
+
+### Q96: (Pour cette question, veuillez utiliser l'annexe PFP-063) Selon l'OACI, quel symbole indique une cote de point général ? ^t30q96
+- A) A
+- B) B
+- C) D
+- D) C
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D (symbole C dans l'annexe) car sur les cartes aéronautiques OACI, une cote de point général est indiquée par un symbole spécifique montrant un point du terrain d'altitude connue, utilisé pour la conscience situationnelle et la planification du franchissement du terrain.
+
+### Q97: Le terme centre de gravité est défini comme… ^t30q97
+- A) La moitié de la distance entre le point neutre et la ligne de référence.
+- B) Une autre désignation pour le point neutre.
+- C) La moitié de la distance entre le point neutre et la ligne de référence.
+- D) Le point le plus lourd d'un aéronef.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A. Le centre de gravité est le point unique à travers lequel la résultante de toutes les forces gravitationnelles agit sur l'aéronef — c'est la position moyenne pondérée par la masse de tous les composants. B est faux car le point neutre est un concept aérodynamique distinct. C est un doublon de la même description incorrecte. D est faux car le C.G. n'est pas le point le plus lourd — c'est le point où le poids total agit effectivement.
+
+### Q98: Le terme moment dans un calcul de masse et centrage désigne le… ^t30q98
+- A) Somme d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- B) Produit d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- C) Quotient d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+- D) Différence d'une masse et d'un bras de levier.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car dans les calculs de masse et centrage, le moment est défini comme le produit de la masse et du bras de levier : Moment = Masse × Bras (p. ex. en kg·m ou lb·in). Le C.G. total se calcule en additionnant tous les moments et en divisant par la masse totale. A est faux car additionner masse et bras n'a pas de sens dimensionnel. C est faux car diviser ne produit pas un moment. D est faux car soustraire est également incorrect.
+
+### Q99: Le terme bras de levier dans le contexte d'un calcul de masse et centrage définit la… ^t30q99
+- A) Point sur l'axe longitudinal d'un aéronef ou son prolongement à partir duquel les centres de gravité de toutes les masses sont référencés.
+- B) Distance d'une masse par rapport au centre de gravité.
+- C) Distance entre le point de référence et le centre de gravité d'une masse.
+- D) Point à travers lequel la force de gravité est supposée agir sur une masse.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le bras de levier est la distance horizontale mesurée depuis le point de référence de l'aéronef jusqu'au centre de gravité d'un élément de masse spécifique. A est faux car cela décrit le point de référence lui-même. B est faux car les bras de levier sont mesurés depuis le point de référence, pas depuis le C.G. global. D est faux car cela est la définition du centre de gravité d'un élément de masse.
+
+### Q100: Quel est le rôle des lignes d'interception en navigation visuelle ? ^t30q100
+- A) Marquer le prochain aéroport disponible en route pendant le vol.
+- B) Visualiser la limitation de portée depuis l'aérodrome de départ.
+- C) Elles permettent de poursuivre le vol lorsque la visibilité en vol descend en dessous des minima VFR.
+- D) Elles servent de repères facilement reconnaissables en cas de perte d'orientation éventuelle.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les lignes d'interception (également appelées lignes de rattrapage ou éléments linéaires) sont des éléments linéaires remarquables au sol — autoroutes, rivières, côtes, voies ferrées — qu'un pilote sélectionne lors de la préparation du vol pour s'y diriger en cas de perte d'orientation. A est faux car ce sont des éléments géographiques, pas des marqueurs d'aéroport. B est faux car ce ne sont pas des indicateurs de portée. C est faux car rien n'autorise à poursuivre un vol en dessous des minima VFR.
+
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/40 - Performances humaines.md b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/40 - Performances humaines.md
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+# Performances humaines
+
+---
+
+### Q1: La majorité des accidents d'aviation sont causés par... ^t40q1
+- A) Des influences météorologiques.
+- B) Des défaillances humaines.
+- C) Des défaillances techniques.
+- D) Des influences géographiques.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car les analyses statistiques montrent régulièrement que 70 à 80 % des accidents d'aviation ont l'erreur humaine comme cause principale ou contributive, notamment le mauvais jugement, la perte de conscience situationnelle et une prise de décision inadéquate. A est faux car les conditions météorologiques sont un facteur contributif dans certains accidents mais représentent une part bien plus faible que l'erreur humaine. C est faux car les aéronefs modernes sont très fiables et les défaillances techniques ne causent qu'une minorité d'accidents. D est faux car les influences géographiques (terrain, obstacles) sont des facteurs environnementaux, non la cause d'accident dominante.
+
+### Q2: Le « modèle du fromage suisse » peut être utilisé pour expliquer... ^t40q2
+- A) L'état de préparation d'un pilote.
+- B) La solution optimale à un problème.
+- C) La procédure pour un atterrissage d'urgence.
+- D) La chaîne d'erreurs.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car le modèle du fromage suisse de James Reason montre comment les accidents résultent d'une chaîne d'erreurs — plusieurs couches défensives (représentées comme des tranches de fromage) ont chacune des faiblesses (« trous »), et un accident ne se produit que lorsque ces trous s'alignent simultanément pour laisser un danger traverser toutes les barrières. A est faux car le modèle ne traite pas de la préparation ou de l'aptitude du pilote. B est faux car ce n'est pas un outil de résolution de problèmes. C est faux car il n'a rien à voir avec les procédures d'atterrissage d'urgence.
+
+### Q3: Quel est le pourcentage d'oxygène dans l'atmosphère à 6000 ft ? ^t40q3
+- A) 18,9 %
+- B) 21 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 12 %
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la composition des gaz atmosphériques reste constante à environ 21 % d'oxygène quelle que soit l'altitude — c'est la pression partielle de l'oxygène qui diminue à mesure que l'on monte, non le pourcentage. A est faux car 18,9 % ne correspond à aucune valeur atmosphérique standard. C est faux car 78 % est la proportion d'azote, non d'oxygène. D est faux car 12 % est bien en dessous de la fraction réelle d'oxygène à toute altitude dans l'atmosphère.
+
+### Q4: Quel est le pourcentage d'azote dans l'atmosphère ? ^t40q4
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 0,1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 1 %
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car l'azote constitue environ 78 % de l'atmosphère et reste physiologiquement inerte dans des conditions de vol normales, bien qu'il devienne pertinent dans la maladie de décompression après une plongée. A est faux car 21 % est la proportion d'oxygène. B est faux car 0,1 % est bien trop faible et ne correspond à aucun gaz atmosphérique majeur. D est faux car 1 % représente le total approximatif de tous les gaz traces combinés, non l'azote.
+
+### Q5: À quelle altitude la pression atmosphérique est-elle approximativement la moitié de la valeur au niveau de la mer (1013 hPa) ? ^t40q5
+- A) 5000 ft
+- B) 10 000 ft
+- C) 22 000 ft
+- D) 18 000 ft
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car à environ 18 000 ft, la pression atmosphérique descend à environ 500 hPa, ce qui représente à peu près la moitié de la valeur standard au niveau de la mer de 1013,25 hPa, et cela signifie également que la pression partielle de l'oxygène est réduite de moitié. A est faux car à 5000 ft la pression est encore d'environ 843 hPa. B est faux car à 10 000 ft la pression est d'environ 700 hPa. C est faux car à 22 000 ft la pression est bien en dessous de la moitié de la valeur au niveau de la mer.
+
+### Q6: L'air est composé d'oxygène, d'azote et d'autres gaz. Quel est le pourcentage approximatif des autres gaz ? ^t40q6
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0,1 %
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car après l'oxygène (21 %) et l'azote (78 %), le 1 % restant est composé de gaz traces — principalement de l'argon (environ 0,93 %) avec de petites quantités de dioxyde de carbone, de néon et d'hélium. A est faux car 21 % est la proportion d'oxygène. C est faux car 78 % est la proportion d'azote. D est faux car 0,1 % est trop faible ; l'argon seul représente près de 1 %.
+
+### Q7: L'intoxication au monoxyde de carbone peut être causée par... ^t40q7
+- A) Peu de sommeil.
+- B) Une alimentation malsaine.
+- C) Le tabagisme.
+- D) L'alcool.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la fumée de cigarette contient du monoxyde de carbone (CO) provenant d'une combustion incomplète, et le CO se lie à l'hémoglobine avec environ 200 fois l'affinité de l'oxygène, réduisant la capacité de transport d'oxygène du sang. A est faux car le manque de sommeil provoque de la fatigue mais ne produit pas de CO. B est faux car une alimentation malsaine affecte la nutrition mais ne génère pas de CO. D est faux car l'alcool altère la fonction cognitive par un mécanisme différent sans rapport avec l'intoxication au CO.
+
+### Q8: Que signifie le terme « Red-out » ? ^t40q8
+- A) « Vision rouge » lors de charges g négatives
+- B) Éruption cutanée lors d'une maladie de décompression
+- C) Anémie causée par une blessure
+- D) Perception des couleurs faussée lors du lever et du coucher du soleil
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car le red-out se produit lors de forces g négatives soutenues (comme dans une ressource négative ou une boucle inversée), qui forcent le sang vers la tête et les yeux, engorgant les vaisseaux sanguins rétiniens et créant un champ visuel teinté de rouge. B est faux car la maladie de décompression provoque des douleurs articulaires et une marbrure de la peau, non un champ visuel rouge. C est faux car l'anémie est une condition sanguine sans rapport avec les forces g. D est faux car le lever et le coucher du soleil affectent la couleur de la lumière ambiante, non une perturbation visuelle physiologique.
+
+### Q9: Lequel de ces éléments n'est PAS un symptôme d'hyperventilation ? ^t40q9
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Spasme
+- C) Troubles de la conscience
+- D) Fourmillements
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la cyanose (décoloration bleue de la peau et des lèvres) est causée par des niveaux d'oxygène sanguin faibles et est un signe d'hypoxie, non d'hyperventilation. L'hyperventilation augmente en réalité les niveaux d'oxygène sanguin tout en diminuant le CO2. B est faux comme choix de réponse car les spasmes musculaires (tétanie) sont un vrai symptôme d'hyperventilation en raison de l'alcalose. C est faux car des troubles de la conscience surviennent bien lors d'une hyperventilation sévère. D est faux car les fourmillements dans les extrémités et le visage sont l'un des premiers et des plus caractéristiques des symptômes d'hyperventilation.
+
+### Q10: Lequel de ces symptômes peut indiquer une hypoxie ? ^t40q10
+- A) Décoloration bleue des lèvres et des ongles
+- B) Marques bleues sur tout le corps
+- C) Crampes musculaires dans la région du haut du corps
+- D) Douleurs articulaires aux genoux et aux pieds
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la cyanose — la décoloration bleutée des lèvres, des extrémités des doigts et des lits unguéaux — est un signe clinique classique d'hypoxie causée par une proportion accrue d'hémoglobine désoxygénée dans le sang. B est faux car des marques bleues diffuses sur le corps évoquent des ecchymoses, non une carence en oxygène. C est faux car les crampes musculaires du haut du corps sont davantage associées à l'hyperventilation ou aux déséquilibres électrolytiques. D est faux car les douleurs articulaires aux genoux et aux pieds sont caractéristiques de la maladie de décompression, non de l'hypoxie.
+
+### Q11: Lequel des sens humains est le plus influencé par l'hypoxie ? ^t40q11
+- A) La perception visuelle (la vue)
+- B) La perception tactile (le toucher)
+- C) La perception olfactive (l'odorat)
+- D) La perception auditive (l'ouïe)
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car la rétine a une demande en oxygène exceptionnellement élevée, ce qui en fait le premier sens à se dégrader dans des conditions hypoxiques — la vision nocturne peut se détériorer de manière notable dès 5000 ft. B est faux car le toucher est relativement résistant à une hypoxie légère. C est faux car l'odorat, bien qu'il puisse être affecté, n'est pas le sens le plus sensible à la privation d'oxygène. D est faux car l'ouïe est également moins affectée que la vision à altitude modérée.
+
+### Q12: À partir de quelle altitude le corps réagit-il généralement à la diminution de la pression atmosphérique ? ^t40q12
+- A) 10 000 pieds
+- B) 7 000 pieds
+- C) 12 000 pieds
+- D) 2 000 pieds
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car à environ 7 000 ft, le corps commence à montrer des réponses physiologiques mesurables à la pression partielle d'oxygène réduite, comme une augmentation de la fréquence cardiaque et du rythme respiratoire, bien qu'une personne en bonne santé puisse encore compenser. A est faux car à 10 000 ft la compensation est déjà bien engagée, ce n'est pas là qu'elle commence. C est faux car à 12 000 ft le corps a déjà du mal à compenser adéquatement. D est faux car à 2 000 ft la pression partielle d'oxygène est encore trop proche des valeurs au niveau de la mer pour déclencher des réponses physiologiques notables.
+
+### Q13: Quelle altitude marque la limite inférieure à laquelle le corps est incapable de compenser complètement les effets de la faible pression atmosphérique ? ^t40q13
+- A) 7 000 pieds
+- B) 5 000 pieds
+- C) 22 000 pieds
+- D) 12 000 pieds
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car au-dessus d'environ 12 000 ft, les mécanismes de compensation du corps — augmentation de la respiration et de la fréquence cardiaque — ne sont plus suffisants pour maintenir une saturation en oxygène sanguin adéquate, et les symptômes hypoxiques deviennent de plus en plus apparents. A est faux car à 7 000 ft le corps commence à compenser mais peut encore s'en sortir efficacement. B est faux car 5 000 ft est bien dans la plage où aucune compensation significative n'est nécessaire. C est faux car 22 000 ft est bien au-dessus du seuil auquel la compensation échoue — à cette altitude, la perte de conscience survient rapidement.
+
+### Q14: Quelle est la fonction des globules rouges (érythrocytes) ? ^t40q14
+- A) La coagulation sanguine
+- B) La régulation de la glycémie
+- C) La défense immunitaire
+- D) Le transport de l'oxygène
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les globules rouges contiennent de l'hémoglobine, une protéine riche en fer qui fixe l'oxygène dans les poumons et le délivre aux tissus de tout le corps, faisant d'eux le principal mécanisme de transport de l'oxygène. A est faux car la coagulation sanguine est la fonction des plaquettes (thrombocytes). B est faux car la régulation de la glycémie est contrôlée par le pancréas via l'insuline et le glucagon. C est faux car la défense immunitaire est la fonction des globules blancs (leucocytes).
+
+### Q15: Lequel de ces éléments assure la coagulation sanguine ? ^t40q15
+- A) Les capillaires des artères
+- B) Les globules rouges (érythrocytes)
+- C) Les globules blancs (leucocytes)
+- D) Les plaquettes sanguines (thrombocytes)
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les plaquettes sanguines (thrombocytes) sont des fragments cellulaires qui s'agrègent aux sites de blessure et activent la cascade de coagulation pour former un caillot de fibrine, arrêtant le saignement. A est faux car les capillaires sont des vaisseaux sanguins, non des agents de coagulation. B est faux car les globules rouges transportent l'oxygène, ils ne participent pas à la coagulation. C est faux car les globules blancs sont responsables de la défense immunitaire, non de la coagulation sanguine.
+
+### Q16: Quelle est la fonction des globules blancs (leucocytes) ? ^t40q16
+- A) La défense immunitaire
+- B) La régulation de la glycémie
+- C) La coagulation sanguine
+- D) Le transport de l'oxygène
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car les globules blancs (leucocytes) sont les composants cellulaires du système immunitaire, responsables de l'identification et de la destruction des agents pathogènes, des substances étrangères et des cellules anormales. B est faux car la régulation de la glycémie est gérée par les hormones du pancréas. C est faux car la coagulation sanguine est le rôle des thrombocytes (plaquettes). D est faux car le transport de l'oxygène est assuré par les globules rouges (érythrocytes) via l'hémoglobine.
+
+### Q17: Quelle est la fonction des plaquettes sanguines (thrombocytes) ? ^t40q17
+- A) Le transport de l'oxygène
+- B) La défense immunitaire
+- C) La coagulation sanguine
+- D) La régulation de la glycémie
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car les thrombocytes (plaquettes) sont les principaux agents de l'hémostase — ils s'agrègent rapidement aux sites de blessure vasculaire et libèrent des substances chimiques qui déclenchent la cascade de coagulation, formant un caillot stable. A est faux car le transport de l'oxygène est la fonction des érythrocytes (globules rouges). B est faux car la défense immunitaire appartient aux leucocytes (globules blancs). D est faux car la régulation de la glycémie est une fonction hormonale du pancréas.
+
+### Q18: Lequel de ces éléments n'est PAS un facteur de risque d'hypoxie ? ^t40q18
+- A) Le don de sang
+- B) La plongée sous-marine
+- C) Les menstruations
+- D) Le tabagisme
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car la plongée sous-marine est un facteur de risque pour la maladie de décompression (formation de bulles d'azote dans les tissus), non pour l'hypoxie — la plongée elle-même ne réduit pas la capacité de transport d'oxygène du sang. A est faux comme réponse car le don de sang réduit le nombre de globules rouges, diminuant directement la capacité de transport de l'oxygène. C est faux car des menstruations abondantes peuvent conduire à une anémie, qui réduit la capacité de transport de l'oxygène. D est faux car le tabagisme introduit du monoxyde de carbone qui se lie à l'hémoglobine, déplaçant l'oxygène.
+
+### Q19: Quelle est la réaction appropriée lorsqu'un passager se sent soudainement mal à l'aise en vol de croisière ? ^t40q19
+- A) Ajuster la température de la cabine et éviter une inclinaison excessive
+- B) Éviter la conversation et choisir une vitesse plus élevée
+- C) Allumer le chauffage et fournir des couvertures thermiques
+- D) Donner de l'oxygène supplémentaire et éviter les faibles facteurs de charge
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car ajuster la température de la cabine à un niveau confortable et réduire l'inclinaison minimise les causes les plus fréquentes d'inconfort du passager — l'inconfort thermique et la stimulation vestibulaire qui peut déclencher le mal de l'air. B est faux car éviter la conversation isole le passager et une vitesse plus élevée ne traite pas l'inconfort sous-jacent. C est faux car réchauffer un passager potentiellement surchauffé pourrait aggraver son état. D est faux car l'oxygène supplémentaire n'est pas la première réponse standard, et éviter les faibles facteurs de charge n'est pas la principale préoccupation.
+
+### Q20: Quel est le terme correct pour une réaction involontaire et stéréotypée d'un organisme à la stimulation d'un récepteur ? ^t40q20
+- A) Réflexe
+- B) Réduction
+- C) Cohérence
+- D) Virulence
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car un réflexe est défini comme une réponse neurale involontaire, rapide et stéréotypée à un stimulus spécifique, médiatisée par un arc réflexe sans nécessiter de pensée consciente. B est faux car la réduction est un terme général signifiant diminution, non une réponse physiologique. C est faux car la cohérence fait référence à la consistance logique ou à la connectivité. D est faux car la virulence décrit la sévérité ou la nocivité d'un agent pathogène, non une réaction du système nerveux.
+
+### Q21: Quel est le terme correct pour le système qui, entre autres, contrôle la respiration, la digestion et la fréquence cardiaque ? ^t40q21
+- A) Système nerveux critique
+- B) Système nerveux complaisant
+- C) Système nerveux autonome
+- D) Système nerveux automatique
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car le système nerveux autonome (SNA) régule les fonctions corporelles involontaires notamment la fréquence cardiaque, la respiration, la digestion et l'activité glandulaire via ses branches sympathique et parasympathique. A est faux car « système nerveux critique » n'est pas un terme anatomique reconnu. B est faux car « système nerveux complaisant » n'existe pas en terminologie médicale. D est faux car le terme correct est « autonome », non « automatique » — bien qu'ils sonnent de manière similaire, seul C utilise la désignation médicale appropriée.
+
+### Q22: Qu'est-ce que l'erreur de parallaxe ? ^t40q22
+- A) Mauvaise interprétation des instruments causée par l'angle de vision
+- B) Une erreur de décodage dans la communication entre pilotes
+- C) Presbytie due au vieillissement, notamment la nuit
+- D) Mauvaise perception de la vitesse lors du roulage
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est A car l'erreur de parallaxe se produit lorsqu'un instrument est lu depuis un angle de vue oblique plutôt que directement en face, ce qui fait apparaître l'aiguille déplacée par rapport à l'échelle et produit une lecture erronée. B est faux car les erreurs de communication entre pilotes sont liées au codage/décodage dans le modèle de communication, non à la lecture d'instruments. C est faux car la presbytie liée à l'âge (presbyopie) est une condition de réfraction oculaire, non un effet de parallaxe. D est faux car la mauvaise perception de la vitesse lors du roulage est une illusion visuelle sans rapport avec les angles de lecture des instruments.
+
+### Q23: Quelle caractéristique est importante lors du choix de lunettes de soleil utilisées par les pilotes ? ^t40q23
+- A) Absence de filtre UV
+- B) Branche courbée
+- C) Incassable
+- D) Non polarisé
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est D car les lentilles polarisées peuvent rendre les écrans LCD et les instruments à verre cockpit illisibles en bloquant le plan de lumière qu'ils émettent, et elles peuvent également masquer les reflets d'éblouissement d'autres aéronefs ou de surfaces d'eau qui servent d'indices visuels importants. A est faux car la protection UV est en réalité souhaitable pour la santé des yeux en altitude, non quelque chose à éviter. B est faux car les branches courbées sont une caractéristique de confort, non une caractéristique critique pour la sécurité. C est faux car bien que la durabilité soit appréciable, ce n'est pas la préoccupation spécifique à l'aviation qui rend la non-polarisation essentielle.
+
+### Q24: La connexion entre l'oreille moyenne et la région du nez et de la gorge s'appelle... ^t40q24
+- A) L'oreille interne.
+- B) Le tympan.
+- C) La trompe d'Eustache.
+- D) La cochlée.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est C car la trompe d'Eustache (trompe auditive) est le passage anatomique reliant l'oreille moyenne au nasopharynx, permettant l'équilibrage de la pression lors des changements d'altitude en s'ouvrant lorsque vous avalez ou bâillez. A est faux car l'oreille interne contient les organes de l'équilibre et la cochlée mais ne se connecte pas à la gorge. B est faux car le tympan est la frontière entre l'oreille externe et l'oreille moyenne. D est faux car la cochlée est l'organe auditif en forme de spirale à l'intérieur de l'oreille interne.
+
+### Q25: Dans quelle situation est-il IMPOSSIBLE d'effectuer une compensation de pression entre l'oreille moyenne et l'environnement ? ^t40q25
+- A) Lors d'une montée légère et lente
+- B) La trompe d'Eustache est bloquée
+- C) Toutes les fenêtres sont complètement fermées
+- D) La respiration se fait uniquement par la bouche
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bonne réponse est B car lorsque la trompe d'Eustache est bloquée — généralement en raison d'un rhume, d'une sinusite ou d'un gonflement allergique — l'air ne peut pas circuler entre l'oreille moyenne et la gorge, rendant impossible l'équilibrage de la pression et provoquant de vives douleurs aux oreilles lors des changements d'altitude. A est faux car une montée lente rend en réalité l'équilibrage plus facile. C est faux car la position des fenêtres n'a aucun effet sur la pression de l'oreille moyenne ; l'équilibrage se produit en interne via la trompe d'Eustache. D est faux car respirer par la bouche n'empêche pas la trompe d'Eustache de fonctionner.
+
+### Q26: Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of… ^t40q26
+- A) Starting a descent.
+- B) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- C) Starting a climb.
+- D) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because during a prolonged coordinated turn, the semicircular canal fluid adapts and stops signalling the turn; when the pilot levels the wings, the fluid movement creates a false signal interpreted as rotation in the opposite direction — this is the "leans" illusion. A is wrong because the illusion is one of lateral rotation, not vertical descent. C is wrong because there is no false climb sensation from levelling out of a turn. D is wrong because the adapted semicircular canals no longer signal the original turn direction upon recovery.
+
+### Q27: Which of these options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)? ^t40q27
+- A) Turbulence in level flight
+- B) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- C) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+- D) Head movements during turns
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no vestibular stimulation and no conflict between the visual and balance systems, so it cannot trigger motion sickness. A is wrong as an answer because turbulence creates unpredictable accelerations that stimulate the vestibular system and cause sensory conflict. C is wrong because alcohol changes the density of the endolymph fluid in the inner ear, amplifying sensory mismatches. D is wrong because head movements during turns provoke the Coriolis effect in the semicircular canals, a strong trigger for disorientation.
+
+### Q28: Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach? ^t40q28
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because an upsloping runway appears shorter and steeper than a flat runway, tricking the pilot's visual system into perceiving a higher-than-actual approach angle, which leads to an instinctive descent below the correct glide slope — creating a dangerous undershoot risk. A is wrong because the illusion affects perceived height, not speed. B is wrong because it describes the opposite illusion (feeling too low) which would occur with a downsloping runway. C is wrong because speed perception is not the primary illusion created by runway slope.
+
+### Q29: What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope? ^t40q29
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) An overshoot
+- C) A landing beside the centerline
+- D) A hard landing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because this question asks about the impression (what the pilot perceives), not the actual outcome. An upsloping runway gives the visual illusion of being too high, so the pilot perceives an overshoot situation. A is wrong because although the pilot's corrective response to the false overshoot impression may actually cause an undershoot, the perceived impression itself is of overshooting. C is wrong because runway slope does not create lateral displacement illusions. D is wrong because the slope illusion affects perceived approach angle, not the perception of landing firmness.
+
+### Q30: The occurence of a vertigo is most probable when moving the head... ^t40q30
+- A) During a climb.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a descent.
+- D) During a turn.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because moving the head during a turn creates the Coriolis illusion — the semicircular canals are already stimulated by the turn, and adding a head rotation in a different plane simultaneously stimulates additional canals, producing an overwhelming and disorienting sensation of tumbling. A is wrong because a climb alone does not pre-load the semicircular canals the way a turn does. B is wrong because straight and level flight provides no existing vestibular stimulation to conflict with head movement. C is wrong because a descent, like a climb, does not produce the rotational vestibular loading that makes the Coriolis effect so severe.
+
+### Q31: A Grey-out is the result of… ^t40q31
+- A) Hypoxia.
+- B) Positive g-forces.
+- C) Hyperventilation.
+- D) Tiredness.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because grey-out occurs when positive g-forces pull blood away from the head toward the lower body, reducing blood pressure in the retinal arteries and causing progressive loss of colour vision and peripheral vision before full blackout. A is wrong because although hypoxia also affects vision, grey-out specifically refers to the g-force-induced phenomenon. C is wrong because hyperventilation causes tingling and spasms from CO2 depletion, not the characteristic grey visual field. D is wrong because tiredness causes fatigue and reduced alertness, not the acute visual symptoms of grey-out.
+
+### Q32: Visual illusions are mostly caused by… ^t40q32
+- A) Colour blindness.
+- B) Misinterpretation of the brain.
+- C) Rapid eye movements.
+- D) Binocular vision.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the brain actively constructs perception by interpreting sensory input based on prior experience and expectations, and when environmental cues are ambiguous or unusual — as is common in aviation — the brain's "best guess" can be dangerously wrong. A is wrong because colour blindness is a retinal condition affecting colour discrimination, not a cause of spatial or approach illusions. C is wrong because rapid eye movements (saccades) are normal visual behaviour, not a source of illusions. D is wrong because binocular vision actually improves depth perception and reduces illusions.
+
+### Q33: The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately… ^t40q33
+- A) 0.1 percent.
+- B) 0.3 percent.
+- C) 0.03 percent.
+- D) 0.01 percent.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the liver metabolises alcohol at a roughly constant rate of approximately 0.01% (0.1 per mille or 0.1 g/L) blood alcohol concentration per hour, regardless of body weight, food intake, or the type of drink consumed. A is wrong because 0.1% per hour is ten times the actual rate and would mean even heavy intoxication clears in a few hours. B is wrong because 0.3% per hour is thirty times too fast. C is wrong because 0.03% per hour is three times the actual rate.
+
+### Q34: Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes? ^t40q34
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because overweight and obesity — particularly excess visceral fat — are the strongest modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes due to the insulin resistance they cause, and diabetes is a significant concern in aviation medicine because of the risk of hypoglycaemic episodes impairing pilot performance. A is wrong because although sleep deficiency affects general health, it is not a primary risk factor for diabetes. C is wrong because smoking is primarily a cardiovascular and respiratory risk factor. D is wrong because moderate alcohol consumption is not a leading cause of diabetes.
+
+### Q35: A risk factor for decompression sickness is… ^t40q35
+- A) Sports.
+- B) 100 % oxygen after decompression.
+- C) Scuba diving prior to flight.
+- D) Smoking.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because scuba diving causes nitrogen to dissolve into body tissues under high ambient pressure, and if the diver flies before adequate off-gassing time (typically 12-24 hours), the reduced cabin pressure causes dissolved nitrogen to form painful and dangerous bubbles in tissues and blood. A is wrong because normal sporting activity does not load tissues with dissolved nitrogen. B is wrong because breathing 100% oxygen after decompression actually accelerates nitrogen elimination and is a treatment measure. D is wrong because smoking impairs oxygen transport but does not cause nitrogen saturation.
+
+### Q36: Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory? ^t40q36
+- A) It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because George Miller's classic research established that short-term (working) memory can hold approximately 7 plus or minus 2 chunks of information for about 10-20 seconds without active rehearsal, which is why pilots must write down ATC clearances and frequencies immediately. A is wrong because both the capacity (10 items) and duration (30-60 seconds) are overstated. B is wrong because the capacity is understated and the duration is too long. D is wrong because both values are too small — the brain can hold more than 3 items.
+
+### Q37: For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information? ^t40q37
+- A) 35 to 50 seconds
+- B) 3 to 7 seconds
+- C) 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because unrehearsed information in short-term memory decays within approximately 10-20 seconds, which is why aviation procedures emphasise immediate read-back of clearances and writing down critical information. A is wrong because 35-50 seconds significantly overestimates the retention time without rehearsal. B is wrong because 3-7 seconds is too short — even unrehearsed memory lasts somewhat longer. D is wrong because 30-40 seconds exceeds the actual decay time for passively stored items.
+
+### Q38: What is a latent error? ^t40q38
+- A) An error which has an immediate effect on the controls
+- B) An error which only has consequences after landing
+- C) An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously
+- D) An error which stays undetected in the system for a long time
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because in James Reason's error model, latent errors are hidden failures embedded in the system — such as poor design, inadequate procedures, or organisational shortcuts — that remain dormant and undetected until they combine with an active error to cause an incident or accident. A is wrong because an error with immediate effect on controls is an active error, not a latent one. B is wrong because latent errors are defined by their hidden nature, not their timing relative to landing. C is wrong because conscious, deliberate errors are violations, not latent conditions.
+
+### Q39: The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called… ^t40q39
+- A) Constant flight check.
+- B) Situational thinking.
+- C) Situational awareness.
+- D) Anticipatory check procedure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because situational awareness (SA), as defined by Mica Endsley, is the continuous process of perceiving elements in the environment, comprehending their meaning, and projecting their future state — it is the foundation of sound aeronautical decision-making. A is wrong because "constant flight check" is not a recognised human factors term. B is wrong because "situational thinking" is not the standard terminology used in aviation psychology. D is wrong because "anticipatory check procedure" describes a proactive checklist approach, not the overarching mental model of the flight environment.
+
+### Q40: Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured? ^t40q40
+- A) By the use of proper headsets
+- B) By the use of radio phraseology
+- C) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+- D) By a particular frequency allocation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because standardised ICAO radiotelephony phraseology ensures that both sender and receiver share the same unambiguous "code" with pre-defined meanings, minimising the risk of miscommunication in the communication model. A is wrong because headsets improve audio clarity but do not standardise the language or coding of the message. C is wrong because certified radios ensure signal quality, not message coding. D is wrong because frequency allocation manages traffic separation, not the shared understanding of words and phrases.
+
+### Q41: In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately? ^t40q41
+- A) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- B) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- C) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+- D) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because the four standard risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the hazard entirely), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift the risk to another party such as through insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge residual risk when it falls within acceptable limits). B is wrong because "ignore" and "palliate" are not recognised risk management strategies. C is wrong because ignoring risk is never acceptable in aviation, and "extrude" is not a risk management term. D is wrong because neither "extrude" nor "palliate" are legitimate risk management strategies.
+
+### Q42: Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks? ^t40q42
+- A) During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast
+- B) During check flights due to a high level of nervousness
+- C) Due to group-dynamic effects
+- D) If there is not enough information available
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because group dynamics can cause "risky shift" — a well-documented phenomenon where groups tend to accept bolder, riskier decisions than individuals would alone, driven by social pressure, conformity, and diffusion of responsibility. A is wrong because excellent weather actually reduces risk and does not push pilots toward accepting higher risks. B is wrong because nervousness during check flights typically makes pilots more cautious, not more risk-accepting. D is wrong because insufficient information usually promotes caution or deferral rather than acceptance of higher risk.
+
+### Q43: Which dangerous attitudes are often combined? ^t40q43
+- A) Self-abandonment and macho
+- B) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude ("I can handle anything") and invulnerability ("it won't happen to me") frequently occur together, as both stem from overconfidence and underestimation of personal risk. A is wrong because self-abandonment (resignation) is the opposite of macho — a resigned pilot gives up, while a macho pilot takes on too much. B is wrong because invulnerability and resignation are contradictory mindsets. D is wrong because impulsivity and carefulness are opposites and cannot logically coexist as a combined dangerous attitude.
+
+### Q44: What is an indication for a macho attitude? ^t40q44
+- A) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- B) Careful walkaround procedure
+- C) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- D) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the macho attitude is defined by the need to demonstrate daring and skill, often to an audience, and performing risky manoeuvres to impress spectators is a textbook example — the pilot prioritises ego over safety. A is wrong because quick resignation describes the resignation (self-abandonment) hazardous attitude, the opposite of macho. B is wrong because a careful walkaround is a sign of professionalism, not any hazardous attitude. D is wrong because comprehensive risk assessment reflects sound aeronautical decision-making, not a hazardous attitude.
+
+### Q45: Which factor can lead to human error? ^t40q45
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) Double check of relevant actions
+- C) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because confirmation bias — the tendency to perceive and interpret information in a way that confirms pre-existing expectations — is a major source of human error, leading pilots to misread instruments, overlook abnormalities, or misidentify visual references. A is wrong because proper checklist use is a countermeasure against error, not a cause. B is wrong because double-checking is an error-trapping technique. D is wrong because healthy doubt and questioning ambiguous information is a protective behaviour that reduces error.
+
+### Q46: Which is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot? ^t40q46
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Extroverted - stable
+- C) Extroverted - unstable
+- D) Introverted - unstable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because extroversion supports effective communication, assertiveness, and crew coordination essential for CRM, while emotional stability ensures the pilot remains calm, consistent, and rational under pressure. A is wrong because although stability is positive, introversion can hinder the assertive communication and teamwork skills needed in cockpit environments. C is wrong because emotional instability leads to erratic performance and overreaction under stress. D is wrong because both introversion and instability are disadvantageous for the demands of piloting.
+
+### Q47: Complacency is a risk due to… ^t40q47
+- A) Better training options for young pilots.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Increased cockpit automation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because as cockpit automation becomes more sophisticated and reliable, pilots tend to reduce their active monitoring, lose vigilance, and allow their manual flying skills to degrade — this is automation complacency, and it becomes critically dangerous when the automation fails unexpectedly. A is wrong because better training options should reduce complacency, not cause it. B is wrong because unreliable systems would actually increase vigilance, not reduce it. C is wrong because a high human error rate is a general human factors issue, not the specific cause of complacency.
+
+### Q48: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q48
+
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C (Point B) because on the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve, Point B sits at the peak where moderate arousal produces maximum performance. A is wrong because Point D represents excessive arousal where performance has collapsed due to overwhelming stress. B is wrong because Point C is past the optimal peak, in the declining performance zone. D is wrong because Point A represents too little arousal (boredom, under-stimulation), where performance suffers from lack of alertness and motivation.
+
+### Q49: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress... ^t40q49
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point C
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B (Point D) because it lies at the far right of the Yerkes-Dodson curve where excessive arousal causes performance to collapse — the pilot is overstrained, experiencing cognitive overload, tunnel vision, and potentially panic. A is wrong because Point B is the optimal arousal level with peak performance. C is wrong because Point C, while past optimal, still represents declining but not yet collapsed performance. D is wrong because Point A represents under-arousal (boredom), the opposite of being overstrained.
+
+### Q50: Which of these qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory ^t40q50
+- A) 1
+- B) .1, 2, 3
+- C) 1, 2, 3, 4
+- D) .2, 4
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because stress affects all four cognitive functions: attention narrows (tunnel vision), concentration becomes fragmented, responsiveness changes (initially faster then degraded under extreme stress), and memory — especially working memory encoding and retrieval — is impaired by elevated cortisol. A is wrong because it only includes attention, ignoring the effects on concentration, responsiveness, and memory. B is wrong because it excludes memory, which is significantly affected. D is wrong because it omits attention and responsiveness, both of which are demonstrably impacted by stress.
+
+### Q51: The proportion of oxygen in the air at sea level is 21%. What is this percentage at an altitude of 5 km (16,400 ft)? ^t40q51
+- A) 5 %
+- B) 15 %
+- C) 10 %
+- D) 21 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is D because the proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere remains constant at approximately 21% regardless of altitude — what decreases with altitude is the total atmospheric pressure, and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen available for breathing. A, B, and C are all wrong because they suggest the percentage of oxygen itself changes with altitude, which is incorrect; the atmosphere maintains a homogeneous composition up to approximately 80 km.
+
+### Q52: The signs of oxygen deficiency… ^t40q52
+- A) are right away clearly noticeable.
+- B) can appear from as low as 4000 ft altitude.
+- C) appear in smokers at lower altitudes than in non-smokers.
+- D) consist of extreme difficulty in breathing (gasping for air).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because smokers already have elevated carboxyhaemoglobin levels from carbon monoxide binding to their red blood cells, effectively reducing their oxygen-carrying capacity even before flight, so hypoxic symptoms manifest at lower altitudes compared to non-smokers. A is wrong because hypoxia is insidious — symptoms develop gradually and the pilot often does not recognise them. B is wrong because 4,000 ft is generally too low for noticeable hypoxic effects in most people. D is wrong because gasping for air is not a typical hypoxia symptom; instead, early signs include impaired judgment and reduced night vision.
+
+### Q53: Carbon monoxide… ^t40q53
+- A) is a by-product of the chemical energy production in cells: tissue absorbs oxygen and releases carbon monoxide.
+- B) has a sweet smell and bitter taste. It is only harmful in very high doses.
+- C) is toxic and results from incomplete combustion, e.g. a leaking exhaust system in an aircraft or incomplete gas combustion in a hot air balloon.
+- D) is, together with oxygen and hydrogen, one of the most important elements present in the atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because carbon monoxide (CO) is a highly toxic gas produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-based fuels, and in aviation it can enter the cabin through leaking exhaust systems; it binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen. A is wrong because cells produce carbon dioxide (CO2) as a metabolic waste product, not carbon monoxide. B is wrong because CO is odourless, colourless, and tasteless, making it extremely dangerous even at low concentrations. D is wrong because CO is a trace gas, not one of the major atmospheric components.
+
+### Q54: How long does it generally take for the human eye to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q54
+- A) Approx. 30 minutes.
+- B) Approx. 1 hour.
+- C) Approx. 15 minutes.
+- D) Approx. 5 minutes.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because full dark adaptation requires approximately 30 minutes for the rod cells in the retina to reach maximum sensitivity through the regeneration of rhodopsin (visual purple), which is why pilots should avoid bright lights before night flying. B is wrong because one hour significantly overestimates the adaptation time. C is wrong because at 15 minutes the rods are only partially adapted and night vision is not yet at full capability. D is wrong because 5 minutes only allows for initial cone adaptation, not the complete rod-based dark adaptation needed for effective night vision.
+
+### Q55: Low blood pressure… ^t40q55
+- A) mainly causes problems at rest in a lying position.
+- B) can cause dizziness.
+- C) is a recurring problem in elderly smokers.
+- D) causes absolutely no problems.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because hypotension (low blood pressure) can cause dizziness, lightheadedness, and even fainting, particularly when changing posture (orthostatic hypotension), which poses a flight safety risk. A is wrong because low blood pressure mainly causes symptoms during posture changes (standing up), not while lying down. C is wrong because elderly smokers are more commonly affected by high blood pressure (hypertension), not low blood pressure. D is wrong because low blood pressure can certainly cause symptoms that impair pilot performance.
+
+### Q56: What symptom will most probably occur at 20,000 ft (6100 m) altitude without a pressurised cabin or oxygen equipment? ^t40q56
+- A) Loss of consciousness.
+- B) Altitude sickness with pulmonary oedema.
+- C) Dyspnoea.
+- D) Fever.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because at 20,000 ft without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness (TUC) is very short — typically only a few minutes — and rapid loss of consciousness follows due to severe hypoxia as the partial pressure of oxygen is far below what the body requires. B is wrong because pulmonary oedema develops over hours to days of high-altitude exposure, not during acute exposure. C is wrong because while shortness of breath may occur briefly, loss of consciousness is the most probable and dangerous outcome. D is wrong because fever is unrelated to altitude exposure.
+
+### Q57: When flying with a severe head cold, sharp pain can affect the sinuses. This pain occurs… ^t40q57
+- A) during descent.
+- B) with every notable change in flight altitude.
+- C) during climb.
+- D) during accelerations.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is A because during descent, external atmospheric pressure increases and trapped air within congested sinuses cannot equalise, creating a painful pressure differential — this is known as barosinusitis. B is wrong because while altitude changes in both directions can cause discomfort, descent is specifically the most problematic phase because the blocked sinuses cannot vent the increasing external pressure inward. C is wrong because during climb, expanding air within the sinuses can usually escape more easily, even through partially blocked passages. D is wrong because linear accelerations do not create the pressure differentials that cause sinus pain.
+
+### Q58: Which are the symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q58
+- A) High fever, vomiting, headache.
+- B) High fever, dizziness, watery diarrhoea.
+- C) Dizziness, sweating, nausea.
+- D) Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, headache.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because the classic symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis) are dizziness, sweating, pallor, and nausea, which may progress to vomiting — all caused by a conflict between visual and vestibular sensory inputs. A is wrong because high fever is not a symptom of motion sickness; it indicates infection. B is wrong because neither high fever nor watery diarrhoea are associated with kinetosis. D is wrong because watery diarrhoea is a gastrointestinal symptom unrelated to vestibular-induced motion sickness.
+
+### Q59: During a normal approach to an unusually wide runway, one may have the impression that the approach is being made… ^t40q59
+- A) at too great a height.
+- B) at too high a speed.
+- C) at too low a speed.
+- D) at too low a height.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is C because a runway wider than the pilot is accustomed to makes the visual perspective appear as though the aircraft is lower and closer than it actually is, creating the impression of being at too low a speed and too low a height — the pilot may then tend to fly the approach too high. A is wrong because the wide runway creates the opposite illusion — feeling too low, not too high. B is wrong because the illusion relates to perceived height and proximity, not excessive speed. D is wrong because feeling too low in height would be a consequence, but the question asks about speed impression, and C correctly captures the speed-related illusion.
+
+### Q60: Under positive g-forces, a greyout can occur which precedes blackout. Which organ is primarily affected by greyout? ^t40q60
+- A) The lungs.
+- B) The eyes.
+- C) The brain.
+- D) The muscles.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct answer is B because the eyes (specifically the retina) are the first organ to be affected by positive g-forces because retinal blood vessels are extremely sensitive to reduced blood pressure — the retina has the highest oxygen demand of any tissue, so when blood drains away under g-loading, vision degrades before consciousness is affected. A is wrong because the lungs continue to function under moderate g-forces. C is wrong because the brain loses function after the eyes — loss of consciousness (G-LOC) follows grey-out and blackout. D is wrong because muscles are not meaningfully affected by the blood pressure reduction that causes grey-out.
+
+### Q61: When a pilot scans the sky to detect the presence of other aircraft, he should… ^t40q61
+- A) try to take in the visible portion of the sky with large sweeping eye movements.
+- B) roll the eyes across as wide a field of vision as possible.
+- C) scan the sky sector by sector and let the eyes rest briefly on each sector.
+- D) take in the entire visible portion of the sky by moving the eyes as rapidly as possible.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Effective visual scanning requires dividing the sky into sectors and pausing briefly on each one, allowing the eyes to focus and detect movement or contrast changes that indicate other aircraft. Option A and Option D advocate rapid, sweeping eye movements that prevent the eye from fixating long enough to register a small target. Option B similarly relies on continuous rolling motion, which reduces detection probability. Only Option C describes the proven sector-by-sector technique recommended in human factors training.
+
+### Q62: Alcohol is eliminated at a rate of:... ^t40q62
+- A) 0.5 per mille per hour.
+- B) 0.3 per mille per hour.
+- C) 0.1 per mille per hour.
+- D) 1 per mille per hour.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human liver metabolises alcohol at a relatively constant rate of approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, regardless of the type of drink consumed or any attempted countermeasures such as coffee or exercise. Option A (0.5‰/h) and Option D (1‰/h) greatly overestimate the elimination rate, which could lead pilots to believe they are sober sooner than they actually are. Option B (0.3‰/h) is also too high. For SPL exam purposes, the standard value to remember is 0.1‰ per hour.
+
+### Q63: From the following factors, identify the one that increases the risk of heart attack:... ^t40q63
+- A) Lack of exercise.
+- B) Hypoglycaemia.
+- C) Undernutrition.
+- D) Cholesterol level too low.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sedentary lifestyle with insufficient physical activity is a well-established cardiovascular risk factor that increases the likelihood of heart attack. Option B (hypoglycaemia) is a metabolic condition primarily affecting energy supply to the brain, not a direct cardiac risk factor. Option C (undernutrition) and Option D (low cholesterol) are actually the opposite of known risk factors — it is overnutrition and high cholesterol that contribute to coronary artery disease. Regular exercise is one of the most effective protective measures against cardiovascular disease.
+
+### Q64: Amphetamine is a stimulant which in Switzerland can be obtained on prescription from pharmacies... ^t40q64
+- A) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours are allowed to take this medication to stay awake.
+- B) Pilots on duty may solely take this medication if accompanied by a qualified co-pilot.
+- C) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours should always have this medication at hand for moments of fatigue.
+- D) Due to its adverse effects, pilots on duty are not allowed to take this medication.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Amphetamines are strictly prohibited for pilots on duty because their adverse effects — including impaired judgment, overconfidence, risk-taking behaviour, and a crash of fatigue after the drug wears off — directly compromise flight safety. Option A and Option C suggest using amphetamines to combat fatigue during long flights, which is dangerous and illegal under aviation medical regulations. Option B implies that a co-pilot can mitigate the risk, but no crew arrangement makes stimulant use acceptable. The correct approach to fatigue is proper rest before flight, not pharmacological stimulation.
+
+### Q65: What is meant by "risk area awareness" in aviation? ^t40q65
+- A) Knowledge of accident rates during takeoff and landing.
+- B) The awareness that the aerodrome area where aircraft taxi ("risk area") is a dangerous zone.
+- C) Awareness of the potential hazards of the various phases of flight.
+- D) A procedure for preventing aviation accidents.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Risk area awareness refers to the pilot's conscious understanding that different phases of flight — takeoff, climb, cruise, descent, approach, and landing — each carry distinct hazards requiring specific vigilance. Option A is too narrow, focusing only on statistical accident rates rather than active awareness. Option B incorrectly interprets "risk area" as a physical location on the aerodrome. Option D describes risk area awareness as a procedure, but it is a mindset and competency, not a checklist or formal procedure. Effective risk area awareness allows the pilot to anticipate and mitigate threats proactively.
+
+### Q66: Several decision-making models are applied in aviation. A widely used model goes by the acronym "DECIDE". Which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q66
+- A) The first D stands for "Do" and means "Apply the best option".
+- B) The first D stands for "Detect" and means "Recognise that a change has occurred which requires attention".
+- C) The first E stands for "Evaluate" and means "Assess the consequences of one's actions".
+- D) DECIDE is a decision-making aid that must be applied in every in-flight decision situation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The DECIDE model follows the sequence: Detect, Estimate, Choose, Identify, Do, Evaluate. The first letter D stands for "Detect," meaning the pilot recognises that a change in the situation has occurred requiring a decision. Option A incorrectly assigns "Do" to the first D — "Do" is actually the fifth step, where the chosen course of action is implemented. Option C misplaces "Evaluate" as the first E, but the first E is "Estimate" (assess the significance of the change). Option D overstates the requirement — DECIDE is a helpful framework, not a mandatory procedure for every single decision.
+
+### Q67: Regarding typical hazardous attitudes, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q67
+- A) It is possible to recognise and correct one's own hazardous attitudes.
+- B) An anti-authority attitude is less dangerous than macho behaviour.
+- C) Inexperienced pilots are generally the only ones who behave dangerously.
+- D) Hazardous attitudes do not really exist because flight safety depends solely on the pilot's attention.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Human factors research identifies five hazardous attitudes — anti-authority, macho, invulnerability, resignation, and impulsivity — and demonstrates that pilots can learn to recognise these tendencies in themselves and apply corrective antidotes. Option B incorrectly ranks hazardous attitudes; all five are dangerous and none should be dismissed as less threatening. Option C wrongly limits dangerous behaviour to inexperienced pilots, when in fact experienced pilots can also exhibit complacency and overconfidence. Option D denies the existence of hazardous attitudes entirely, contradicting decades of aviation safety research.
+
+### Q68: Which of these statements correctly describes "selective attention"? ^t40q68
+- A) Selective attention is unavoidable in the cockpit to avoid distraction during checklist recitation.
+- B) Selective attention can lead the pilot to fail to notice an audible alarm even though it is perfectly audible.
+- C) Selective attention refers to an attitude where attention is focused on flight instruments when visibility conditions are poor.
+- D) Selective attention is a method for avoiding stress.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Selective attention is a cognitive phenomenon where concentrating intensely on one task causes the brain to filter out other stimuli, even obvious ones like a loud alarm. This is sometimes called "inattentional blindness" or "tunnel hearing." Option A confuses selective attention with a deliberate cockpit strategy, when it is actually an involuntary cognitive limitation. Option C describes instrument scan technique, not the psychological concept of selective attention. Option D incorrectly categorises it as a stress management method, when in fact selective attention under stress can be dangerous because critical warnings may go unnoticed.
+
+### Q69: Regarding stress, which of the following statements is correct? ^t40q69
+- A) There is an optimal level of stress that even improves performance.
+- B) Under-stimulation causes no stress and has no negative effect on performance.
+- C) Stress in the cockpit improves the work rate.
+- D) Stress is only caused by brief overload.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law demonstrates that moderate stress (eustress) enhances alertness, focus, and performance, while too little or too much stress degrades it — forming an inverted-U curve. Option B is incorrect because under-stimulation (boredom) is itself a form of stress that reduces vigilance and increases error rates. Option C oversimplifies by suggesting all cockpit stress is beneficial, when excessive stress causes cognitive overload and poor decision-making. Option D wrongly limits stress to brief overload, ignoring chronic stress from fatigue, personal problems, or sustained workload.
+
+### Q70: The human internal clock… ^t40q70
+- A) has a cycle of roughly 25 hours.
+- B) has a cycle of roughly 20 hours.
+- C) is synchronised with the external clock and its cycle lasts exactly 24 hours.
+- D) has a cycle of roughly 30 hours.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Research on circadian rhythms shows that the human endogenous biological clock runs on a cycle of approximately 25 hours when isolated from external time cues such as daylight and social schedules. Daily exposure to light resets (entrains) this internal clock to the 24-hour day-night cycle. Option B (20 hours) and Option D (30 hours) are incorrect values. Option C is wrong because the internal clock does not naturally run at exactly 24 hours — it requires daily resynchronisation by environmental cues called Zeitgebers.
+
+### Q71: Which of the following measures is suitable for relieving the onset of motion sickness (kinetosis) in passengers? ^t40q71
+- A) move the head regularly
+- B) look through the windows
+- C) breathe fresh air
+- D) drink coffee
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Breathing fresh, cool air helps stabilise the autonomic nervous system and is one of the most effective immediate remedies for the onset of motion sickness. Option A (moving the head regularly) worsens symptoms by increasing conflicting vestibular stimulation. Option B (looking through the windows) can aggravate the sensory mismatch between visual and vestibular inputs in some individuals. Option D (drinking coffee) is a stimulant that can increase nausea and does not address the underlying vestibular conflict causing motion sickness.
+
+### Q72: During training, a pilot has mainly used narrow runways. What illusion will this pilot experience during a correct final approach to a flat, very wide runway? ^t40q72
+- A) the illusion that the runway slopes upward in the landing direction (upslope)
+- B) the illusion of being at a greater height above the runway than is actually the case
+- C) the illusion of being lower above the runway than is actually the case
+- D) the illusion that the runway first slopes upward (upslope) then downward (downslope)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot accustomed to narrow runways perceives a wide runway as being closer (lower) than it actually is because the wider visual angle tricks the brain into interpreting the scene as a nearer surface. This creates the dangerous illusion of being too low, which may cause the pilot to fly a higher approach than necessary and flare too high. Option A and Option D describe slope-related illusions unrelated to runway width. Option B describes the opposite illusion — the pilot feels lower, not higher. Understanding this visual trap is essential for safe approaches to unfamiliar aerodromes.
+
+### Q73: When are middle ear pressure equalization problems most probable to occur? ^t40q73
+- A) during a long flight at high altitude
+- B) during a rapid descent
+- C) during a long climb
+- D) during strong negative vertical accelerations
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems are most likely during rapid descent because the Eustachian tube must open to allow higher-pressure air from the throat into the middle ear cavity, which is physiologically more difficult than the reverse. During ascent, expanding air in the middle ear vents outward relatively easily. Option A (long high-altitude flight) maintains a constant cabin altitude and does not create pressure differentials. Option C (long climb) involves gradual pressure decrease that the ear handles well. Option D (negative g-forces) affects the vestibular system, not middle ear pressure.
+
+### Q74: The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere is 21% at sea level. How does it change at 5500 m? ^t40q74
+- A) it is one quarter of the sea level percentage
+- B) it is half the sea level percentage
+- C) it is double the sea level percentage
+- D) it is the same as at sea level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The composition of the atmosphere remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen and 78% nitrogen from sea level up to about 80 km altitude. What decreases with altitude is not the percentage of oxygen but the total atmospheric pressure, and therefore the partial pressure of oxygen available to the lungs. Option A and Option B incorrectly suggest that the proportion changes. Option C proposes an increase, which is also wrong. The key concept for pilots is that hypoxia at altitude results from reduced partial pressure, not from a change in oxygen percentage.
+
+### Q75: Which are the effects of inhaling carbon monoxide (from a defective exhaust system)? ^t40q75
+- A) even in low concentrations, this gas can cause total incapacitation
+- B) there are no harmful effects to fear as carbon monoxide is harmless
+- C) harmful effects are solely to be expected if the body is exposed to the gas for several hours
+- D) there are no harmful effects to fear as the body compensates for the reduced oxygen supply
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) binds to haemoglobin approximately 200 times more readily than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and drastically reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. Even very low concentrations can cause headaches, impaired judgment, and eventually total incapacitation or death. Option B and Option D dangerously dismiss CO as harmless — it is one of aviation's most insidious threats because it is colourless and odourless. Option C incorrectly suggests that only prolonged exposure is harmful, when in fact even brief exposure to moderate concentrations can be lethal.
+
+### Q76: Which is the most effective hearing protection in the cabin of a powered aircraft or hot air balloon? ^t40q76
+- A) cotton wool
+- B) a helmet with earphones
+- C) ear plugs
+- D) due to the low noise produced, any protection is effective
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A helmet with integrated earphones provides the highest level of hearing protection by covering the entire ear with a rigid shell that attenuates both direct sound and vibration-transmitted noise, while simultaneously enabling clear radio communication. Option A (cotton wool) offers minimal attenuation and is not a proper hearing protector. Option C (ear plugs) provide reasonable protection but less than a full helmet and may impair communication clarity. Option D incorrectly assumes that cockpit noise levels are low — sustained exposure to even moderate cockpit noise causes cumulative hearing damage over time.
+
+### Q77: Gas-forming foods that cause flatulence ought to be avoided before a high-altitude flight. Which of these foods must therefore be avoided? ^t40q77
+- A) legumes (beans)
+- B) meat
+- C) pasta
+- D) potatoes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Legumes such as beans, peas, and lentils are well known to produce significant intestinal gas during digestion. At altitude, ambient pressure decreases and any trapped gas in the body expands according to Boyle's law, potentially causing severe abdominal pain and distraction in flight. Option B (meat), Option C (pasta), and Option D (potatoes) do not produce significant intestinal gas under normal circumstances. Pilots planning high-altitude flights should avoid gas-forming foods in the hours before departure.
+
+### Q78: The respiratory process enables gas exchange in somatic cells (metabolism). These cells… ^t40q78
+- A) absorb nitrogen and release oxygen
+- B) absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide (CO2)
+- C) absorb oxygen and release nitrogen
+- D) absorb oxygen and release carbon monoxide (CO)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cellular respiration, somatic cells take in oxygen and use it to metabolise glucose and other nutrients, producing energy (ATP) and releasing carbon dioxide (CO2) as a waste product. Option A and Option C incorrectly involve nitrogen, which plays no active role in cellular metabolism — it is physiologically inert at normal pressures. Option D incorrectly names carbon monoxide (CO) as a metabolic by-product; CO is a toxic gas from incomplete combustion, not from normal cellular processes.
+
+### Q79: A regular smoker pilot smokes a few cigarettes shortly before an alpine flight. What effects might this have on their flight fitness? ^t40q79
+- A) for a regular smoker, there are no effects to fear as the body is accustomed to the harmful substances absorbed
+- B) the pilot will experience oxygen deficiency at a lower altitude than if they had abstained from smoking before the flight
+- C) the nicotine absorbed may cause mild disturbances of consciousness and difficulty concentrating
+- D) the smoke causes mild carbon dioxide (CO2) poisoning, which may cause sensations of dizziness and numbness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO), which binds to haemoglobin and reduces the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. A pilot who smokes before an alpine flight effectively raises their "physiological altitude" — they will experience symptoms of oxygen deficiency (hypoxia) at a lower altitude than a non-smoking pilot would. Option A incorrectly assumes that habitual smoking confers tolerance; the CO effect on haemoglobin is cumulative regardless of habit. Option C attributes the wrong symptoms to nicotine. Option D confuses carbon monoxide (CO) with carbon dioxide (CO2), which are entirely different gases.
+
+### Q80: When is the risk of vestibular disturbance causing dizziness greatest? ^t40q80
+- A) when rotating the head during a descent
+- B) when rotating the head during straight-and-level flight
+- C) when rotating the head during a climb
+- D) when rotating the head during a coordinated turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotating the head during a coordinated turn creates the Coriolis illusion — the semicircular canals are already stimulated by the angular acceleration of the turn, and a head rotation in a different plane stimulates additional canals simultaneously, producing a powerful and disorienting sensation of tumbling or spinning. Option A, Option B, and Option C involve head rotation during relatively stable flight conditions where only one set of canals is stimulated at a time, making vestibular disturbance far less likely. The Coriolis illusion is one of the most dangerous vestibular phenomena in aviation.
+
+### Q81: How can a pilot better withstand positive g-forces in flight? ^t40q81
+- A) by sitting as upright as possible
+- B) by relaxing their muscles and leaning forward
+- C) by contracting the abdominal and leg muscles and performing forced breathing
+- D) by tightening their harness straps as much as possible
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Contracting the abdominal and leg muscles (the anti-G straining manoeuvre or L-1 technique) increases intra-abdominal pressure and impedes blood from pooling in the lower body, maintaining blood flow to the brain and delaying the onset of grey-out and G-LOC. Forced, cyclical breathing maintains thoracic pressure. Option A (sitting upright) has minimal effect. Option B (relaxing and leaning forward) would accelerate blood pooling in the lower extremities. Option D (tightening harness straps) secures the pilot but does not counteract the haemodynamic effects of g-forces.
+
+### Q82: Which are the most dangerous effects of oxygen deficiency? ^t40q82
+- A) tingling sensations
+- B) blue discoloration of fingernails and lips
+- C) impairment of judgment and concentration
+- D) nausea
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Impairment of judgment and concentration is the most dangerous effect of hypoxia because the pilot loses the very cognitive abilities needed to recognise the problem and take corrective action — a phenomenon known as "insidious hypoxia." Option A (tingling) and Option D (nausea) are unpleasant but do not directly prevent the pilot from deciding to descend. Option B (cyanosis) is a visible physical sign but does not impair decision-making in itself. The critical danger is that a hypoxic pilot often feels fine while their mental performance deteriorates severely.
+
+### Q83: What can be said about the rate of blood alcohol elimination in humans? ^t40q83
+- A) it is accelerated by breathing pure oxygen
+- B) it depends only on time and amounts to roughly 0.1 per mille per hour
+- C) it depends on the alcohol content of the drink consumed
+- D) it can be accelerated by drinking strong coffee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Alcohol is eliminated from the blood by the liver at a nearly constant rate of approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, determined solely by time and the liver's enzyme capacity. Option A (breathing pure oxygen) does not accelerate hepatic alcohol metabolism. Option C is incorrect because the elimination rate is constant regardless of whether the alcohol came from beer, wine, or spirits — what differs is how much total alcohol was consumed. Option D (drinking coffee) may increase alertness temporarily but has no effect on the metabolic breakdown of alcohol.
+
+### Q84: What impact does proprioception (deep sensitivity) have on position perception? ^t40q84
+- A) in coordination with the balance organ, proprioception gives a correct position impression even when visibility is lost
+- B) when visual references are lost, proprioception can give a false perception of position
+- C) proprioception alone is always sufficient to sustain a correct perception of position
+- D) when training is adequate, proprioception can prevent spatial disorientation when visibility is lost
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Proprioception — the sense of body position derived from receptors in muscles, joints, and tendons — can provide misleading information about the aircraft's attitude when visual references are absent. Without visual confirmation, the proprioceptive system cannot reliably distinguish between gravitational forces and centripetal forces in a turn. Option A incorrectly claims that proprioception and the vestibular system together provide accurate orientation without vision. Option C overstates proprioception's reliability. Option D wrongly suggests that training can overcome this fundamental physiological limitation. Only visual references or flight instruments can reliably prevent spatial disorientation.
+
+### Q85: Which of these factors has no direct effect on visual acuity? ^t40q85
+- A) high blood pressure
+- B) carbon monoxide (CO)
+- C) oxygen deficiency
+- D) alcohol
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** High blood pressure (hypertension) does not directly impair visual acuity during normal flight operations, although severe chronic hypertension may eventually damage the retina over time. Option B (carbon monoxide) reduces oxygen delivery to the retina, directly degrading vision, particularly night vision. Option C (oxygen deficiency) similarly starves the highly oxygen-dependent photoreceptors, causing measurable visual impairment even at moderate altitudes. Option D (alcohol) depresses the central nervous system and impairs visual processing, focus, and contrast sensitivity. All three of these factors directly affect a pilot's ability to see clearly.
+
+### Q86: Up to what maximum altitude can a healthy human body compensate for oxygen deficiency by increasing heart rate and breathing rate? ^t40q86
+- A) roughly 3,000 ft
+- B) roughly 22,000 ft
+- C) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- D) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human body can compensate for the reduced partial pressure of oxygen up to approximately 10,000-12,000 ft by increasing heart rate, respiratory rate, and cardiac output. Above this altitude, these compensatory mechanisms become insufficient and supplemental oxygen is required to prevent significant performance degradation. Option A (3,000 ft) is far too low — compensation is barely needed at this altitude. Option B (22,000 ft) far exceeds the body's compensatory range. Option C (6,000-7,000 ft) is the altitude where compensatory mechanisms begin to activate, not their upper limit.
+
+### Q87: What has to be observed when taking over-the-counter medications? ^t40q87
+- A) even over-the-counter medications can influence flight fitness
+- B) over-the-counter medications have no side effects and therefore no influence on flight fitness
+- C) all flying is prohibited after taking any medication
+- D) over-the-counter medications only have insignificant side effects; their influence on flight fitness is negligible
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Many over-the-counter medications — including antihistamines, cold remedies, pain relievers, and decongestants — can cause drowsiness, dizziness, impaired reaction time, or blurred vision, all of which compromise flight safety. Option B and Option D dangerously dismiss the potential for side effects. Option C is too extreme — not all medications are incompatible with flying, but each must be evaluated individually. The correct approach is to consult an aviation medical examiner (AME) before flying with any medication, whether prescription or over-the-counter.
+
+### Q88: What sensory illusion can a linear acceleration produce in horizontal flight when visual references are lost? ^t40q88
+- A) the impression of being in a left turn
+- B) the impression of descending
+- C) the impression of being in a right turn
+- D) the impression of climbing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A forward linear acceleration in horizontal flight pushes the pilot back into the seat, and the otolith organs in the inner ear interpret the combined acceleration vector as a backward tilt — creating the somatogravic illusion of a climb. Without visual references, the pilot may instinctively push the nose down to "correct" the perceived climb, risking a dive into terrain. Option A and Option C (turning impressions) are associated with semicircular canal stimulation, not linear acceleration. Option B (descent impression) would result from deceleration, not acceleration.
+
+### Q89: How long does the human eye take to fully adapt to darkness? ^t40q89
+- A) roughly 1 second
+- B) roughly 10 minutes
+- C) roughly 10 seconds
+- D) roughly 30 minutes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Full dark adaptation of the human eye takes approximately 30 minutes as the rod photoreceptors in the retinal periphery gradually increase their sensitivity through biochemical changes in rhodopsin. Option A (1 second) and Option C (10 seconds) describe only the initial pupil dilation, which is a small part of the adaptation process. Option B (10 minutes) represents partial adaptation — at this point, the cones have adapted but the rods have not yet reached maximum sensitivity. Pilots planning night flights should protect their dark adaptation by avoiding bright white light for at least 30 minutes before departure.
+
+### Q90: Which of these statements about hyperventilation is correct? ^t40q90
+- A) hyperventilation is always a consequence of oxygen deficiency
+- B) hyperventilation causes an excess of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood
+- C) hyperventilation can be triggered by stress and anxiety
+- D) hyperventilation causes a deficiency of carbon monoxide (CO) in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation — excessively rapid or deep breathing — is frequently triggered by stress, anxiety, or fear, which causes the pilot to unconsciously breathe faster than metabolically necessary. This excessive ventilation blows off too much CO2, causing hypocapnia (low blood CO2), not an excess. Option A is wrong because hyperventilation is not caused by oxygen deficiency; it can occur at any altitude when the pilot is stressed. Option B incorrectly states that CO2 increases, when in fact it decreases. Option D confuses carbon monoxide (CO) with carbon dioxide (CO2) — hyperventilation involves CO2, not CO.
+
+### Q91: Vestibular disturbances during a turn can cause dizziness. What measure is most effective in preventing them? ^t40q91
+- A) during the turn, look out through the window in the direction of the turn
+- B) keep the head as still as possible during the turn
+- C) breathe deeply and slowly, ensuring an adequate supply of fresh air
+- D) alternately move the head from right to left during the turn
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Keeping the head still during a turn prevents the Coriolis illusion, which occurs when head movement in one plane is combined with the angular rotation of the turn, stimulating multiple semicircular canals simultaneously and producing intense vertigo. Option A (looking out the window) does not address the vestibular cause of the disturbance. Option C (deep breathing and fresh air) helps with motion sickness but not with vestibular vertigo from head movements. Option D (alternating head movements) would dramatically worsen the problem by creating repeated Coriolis stimulation.
+
+### Q92: Which is the immediate effect of inhaling cigarette smoke on a regular smoker? ^t40q92
+- A) lowered blood pressure
+- B) dilation of blood vessels
+- C) reduced oxygen transport in the blood
+- D) increased carbon dioxide (CO2) content in the blood
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The carbon monoxide (CO) in cigarette smoke binds to haemoglobin far more readily than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and immediately reducing the blood's capacity to transport oxygen to tissues and organs. Option A (lowered blood pressure) is incorrect — nicotine actually raises blood pressure through vasoconstriction. Option B (dilation of blood vessels) is also wrong; nicotine causes vasoconstriction, not dilation. Option D confuses the issue — smoking does not significantly increase CO2 levels; the problem is CO displacing oxygen on the haemoglobin molecule.
+
+### Q93: What is the relationship between oxygen deficiency and visual acuity? ^t40q93
+- A) oxygen deficiency can reduce visual acuity
+- B) oxygen deficiency has no effect on visual acuity
+- C) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity only during the day
+- D) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity solely at night
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The retina is one of the most metabolically active tissues in the body and is highly sensitive to oxygen deprivation. Even mild hypoxia can reduce visual acuity, diminish contrast sensitivity, and narrow the visual field, with night vision being affected first since rod cells are particularly oxygen-demanding. Option B incorrectly denies any relationship. Option C and Option D each restrict the effect to one time of day, when in reality both day and night vision are impaired — night vision is simply affected earlier and more severely because rods have higher oxygen requirements than cones.
+
+### Q94: Oxygen deficiency and hyperventilation share some similar symptoms. Which of these symptoms always indicates oxygen deficiency? ^t40q94
+- A) blue lips and fingernails (cyanosis)
+- B) visual disturbance
+- C) hot and cold sensations
+- D) tingling sensations
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cyanosis — a bluish discolouration of the lips and fingernails caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin — is a reliable and specific sign of oxygen deficiency that cannot be produced by hyperventilation alone. Option B (visual disturbance), Option C (hot and cold sensations), and Option D (tingling) can all occur in both hypoxia and hyperventilation, making them unreliable for distinguishing between the two conditions. Recognising cyanosis is therefore a critical diagnostic tool: if blue lips or nail beds are observed, the cause is definitively inadequate oxygen supply, and descent to lower altitude is required immediately.
+
+### Q95: What is the proportion of oxygen (in %) in the air at an altitude of approximately 34,000 feet? ^t40q95
+- A) 10%
+- B) 21%
+- C) 5%
+- D) 42%
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The atmosphere maintains a constant composition of approximately 21% oxygen from sea level through the troposphere and well into the stratosphere. At 34,000 ft, while the total atmospheric pressure is only about one quarter of sea-level pressure, the proportion of oxygen remains 21%. Option A (10%), Option C (5%), and Option D (42%) all incorrectly suggest the percentage changes with altitude. The critical point is that at 34,000 ft the partial pressure of oxygen is dangerously low despite the unchanged percentage, making supplemental oxygen or pressurisation essential for survival.
+
+### Q96: During a visual flight, you suddenly lose all external visual references. Spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses and proprioception is… ^t40q96
+- A) impossible
+- B) possible only for experienced pilots
+- C) possible only after adequate training
+- D) possible for solely a few minutes
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without external visual references, maintaining spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses (pressure on the skin) and proprioception (body position sense) is physiologically impossible because these senses cannot distinguish between gravitational forces and the centripetal or inertial forces experienced in flight. Option B and Option C incorrectly suggest that experience or training can overcome this fundamental human limitation. Option D implies that orientation is possible for a short time, but in reality spatial disorientation can begin within seconds of losing visual references. Only flight instruments or restored visual contact can provide reliable attitude information.
+
+### Q97: Which is the most probable and most dangerous poisoning that can occur on board a piston-engine aircraft? ^t40q97
+- A) poisoning due to cosmic radiation at high altitude
+- B) carbon monoxide poisoning
+- C) ozone poisoning
+- D) poisoning due to leaded fuel vapors
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning from a defective or leaking exhaust system is the most likely and most dangerous in-flight poisoning in piston-engine aircraft. CO is colourless and odourless, making it undetectable without a dedicated CO detector, and it binds to haemoglobin 200 times more strongly than oxygen, rapidly incapacitating the pilot. Option A (cosmic radiation) is a long-term cumulative risk for frequent high-altitude flyers, not an acute poisoning event. Option C (ozone) affects primarily high-altitude jet aircraft. Option D (leaded fuel vapours) can occur during refuelling but is not a common in-flight hazard.
+
+### Q98: What impression results from a correct final approach to a runway with a strong upslope in the landing direction? ^t40q98
+- A) the impression of landing too short
+- B) the impression of too shallow an approach
+- C) the impression of too high an approach
+- D) the impression of too low an approach
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a runway that slopes upward in the landing direction, the pilot perceives the runway surface at an unusual angle that creates the visual illusion of being too high on approach. The upsloping surface compresses the visual perspective, making the runway appear closer and the approach steeper than it actually is. Option A and Option D describe the opposite illusion. Option B (too shallow) would occur with a downsloping runway. This visual trap can lead the pilot to unnecessarily steepen the approach, potentially resulting in a dangerously low and short landing.
+
+### Q99: Why should gas-forming foods be avoided before undertaking a high-altitude flight? ^t40q99
+- A) because gas expansion during descent can cause pain in the digestive system
+- B) because gas expansion at high altitudes can cause pain in the digestive system
+- C) because at high altitudes, gases evaporate into the blood and cause decompression sickness
+- D) because gas-forming foods promote motion sickness
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As altitude increases, ambient pressure decreases and trapped gases in the body expand according to Boyle's law. Intestinal gas produced by gas-forming foods such as beans and lentils expands significantly at altitude, causing abdominal distension, pain, and distraction from flying tasks. Option A incorrectly places the problem during descent, when gas would actually compress. Option C confuses intestinal gas expansion with dissolved nitrogen forming bubbles in the blood (decompression sickness), which is an entirely different mechanism. Option D incorrectly links gas-forming foods to motion sickness, which is a vestibular phenomenon.
+
+### Q100: Which blood component primarily transports oxygen? ^t40q100
+- A) red blood cells
+- B) blood plasma
+- C) blood platelets
+- D) white blood cells
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells (erythrocytes) contain haemoglobin, the iron-containing protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues throughout the body. Each red blood cell carries approximately 270 million haemoglobin molecules, making erythrocytes the primary oxygen transport system. Option B (blood plasma) carries a small amount of dissolved oxygen but contributes less than 2% of total oxygen transport. Option C (blood platelets) are involved in blood clotting, not gas transport. Option D (white blood cells) are part of the immune system and play no role in oxygen delivery.
+
+### Q101: What illusion can occur when visual references are lost during a prolonged coordinated turn? ^t40q101
+- A) the impression of no longer being in a turn (wings level)
+- B) the impression of being in a descent
+- C) the impression of being in a climb
+- D) the impression of being in a greater bank angle than is actually the case
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a prolonged coordinated turn at constant rate, the fluid in the semicircular canals gradually matches the rotation speed and stops deflecting the sensory hairs, causing the vestibular system to signal "no turn" even though the aircraft remains banked. The pilot perceives wings-level flight. If the pilot then levels the wings, they experience the sensation of turning in the opposite direction and may re-enter the original turn — this is the mechanism behind the deadly graveyard spiral. Option B, Option C, and Option D describe different illusions not associated with vestibular adaptation during steady turns.
+
+### Q102: Your passenger wishes to ease their fear of flying by drinking a strong alcoholic drink just before departure. What effect has to be expected at high altitude? ^t40q102
+- A) at high altitude, the psychological effects of alcohol decrease
+- B) alcohol is eliminated more slowly at high altitude than on the ground
+- C) alcohol is eliminated more rapidly at high altitude than on the ground
+- D) oxygen deficiency at high altitude amplifies the effects of alcohol
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At altitude, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen (hypoxia) acts synergistically with alcohol to amplify its impairing effects on the central nervous system. Both hypoxia and alcohol independently degrade cognitive function, and together they produce a combined impairment far greater than either alone — sometimes described as a multiplier effect. Option A incorrectly claims that alcohol effects decrease at altitude. Option B and Option C concern the elimination rate, which is primarily determined by liver metabolism and does not change significantly with altitude. The combination of altitude and alcohol is particularly dangerous for passengers who may need to respond in an emergency.
+
+### Q103: Which is the correct technique for seeing at night? ^t40q103
+- A) stare directly at distant, faintly lit objects as directly as possible
+- B) do not stare directly at objects but look slightly to the side
+- C) stare directly at all objects as directly as possible
+- D) scan objects with rapid large eye movements
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At night, the central fovea of the retina — used for direct vision — contains only cone cells, which require more light to function effectively. The rod cells responsible for low-light sensitivity are concentrated in the retinal periphery. Looking slightly to the side of an object (off-centre viewing) places its image on the rod-rich area, making it visible in dim conditions. Option A and Option C (staring directly) use only the foveal cones, which are essentially blind in low light, causing the object to disappear. Option D (rapid large eye movements) disrupts the fixation time needed for the rods to detect faint light.
+
+### Q104: Your passenger complains of middle ear pressure equalization problems. How can you help them? ^t40q104
+- A) stop the climb, if possible descend until the pain subsides, then climb again at a lower rate
+- B) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a lower rate
+- C) descend at a higher rate until the pain subsides, then continue descending at a lower rate
+- D) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a higher rate
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure equalisation problems occur most commonly during descent, when increasing external pressure cannot enter the middle ear cavity fast enough through the Eustachian tube. The correct remedy is to stop the descent, climb slightly if possible to reduce the pressure differential and allow the pain to subside, then resume the descent at a slower rate to give the Eustachian tube time to equalise. Option A addresses climbing problems, which are much less common. Option C (descending faster) would worsen the pressure imbalance. Option D correctly stops the descent but then resumes at a higher rate, which would recreate the problem.
+
+### Q105: Which of the following symptoms may indicate oxygen deficiency? ^t40q105
+- A) joint pain
+- B) lung pain
+- C) reduced heart rate
+- D) difficulty concentrating
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Difficulty concentrating is one of the earliest and most characteristic symptoms of hypoxia (oxygen deficiency), reflecting the brain's high sensitivity to reduced oxygen supply. As altitude increases and oxygen partial pressure drops, cognitive functions deteriorate before physical symptoms become apparent. Option A (joint pain) is associated with decompression sickness, not hypoxia. Option B (lung pain) is not a typical hypoxia symptom. Option C (reduced heart rate) is incorrect because the body's compensatory response to hypoxia is to increase heart rate, not decrease it.
+
+### Q106: What causes motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^t40q106
+- A) a disorder of the middle ear
+- B) irritation of the balance organ
+- C) evaporation of gases into the blood
+- D) a strong reduction in atmospheric pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness is caused by irritation of the vestibular system (balance organ) in the inner ear when it receives conflicting signals from the eyes, the vestibular apparatus, and proprioceptors. This sensory mismatch — for example, the inner ear detecting motion while the eyes see a stationary cockpit interior — triggers the autonomic nervous system response that produces nausea and vomiting. Option A (middle ear disorder) confuses a pathological condition with a normal physiological response. Option C and Option D describe altitude-related phenomena (decompression) that are unrelated to motion sickness.
+
+### Q107: Which are the side effects of anti-motion-sickness medications? ^t40q107
+- A) drowsiness and slowed reaction time
+- B) general weakness and loss of appetite
+- C) exhaustion and depression
+- D) hyperactivity and risk-taking tendency
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Anti-motion-sickness medications — primarily antihistamines (such as dimenhydrinate) and anticholinergics (such as scopolamine) — commonly cause drowsiness and significantly slowed reaction times as their primary side effects. These effects directly compromise the alertness and rapid decision-making required for safe flying. Option B, Option C, and Option D describe side effects not typically associated with standard anti-motion-sickness drugs. Because of the sedating effects described in Option A, pilots should not use these medications before or during flight without medical clearance from an aviation medical examiner.
+
+### Q108: What is decisive for the onset of noise-induced hearing loss? ^t40q108
+- A) only the duration of noise exposure
+- B) the duration and intensity of the noise
+- C) only the intensity of the noise
+- D) the sudden onset of a noise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Noise-induced hearing loss depends on the total sound energy dose received by the ear, which is a function of both the intensity (measured in decibels) and the duration of exposure. A very loud noise over a short period or a moderately loud noise sustained over many hours can both cause permanent damage. Option A ignores intensity — a quiet sound, no matter how long the exposure, will not cause damage. Option C ignores duration — a brief loud burst is generally less harmful than the same intensity sustained for hours. Option D (sudden onset) describes acoustic shock, which is only one mechanism and not the full picture.
+
+### Q109: Increasing and sustained positive g-loads can produce symptoms that appear in the following order:... ^t40q109
+- A) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- B) red-out, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- C) reduction of peripheral vision, loss of color vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- D) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, red-out, loss of consciousness
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As positive g-forces increase, blood drains from the head toward the lower body in a predictable sequence of visual and neurological symptoms: first grey-out (loss of colour vision as the retina receives less oxygenated blood), then tunnel vision (reduction of peripheral vision as the outer retina fails first), then complete blackout (total loss of vision), and finally G-LOC (loss of consciousness). Option B incorrectly begins with red-out, which occurs under negative g-forces, not positive. Option C reverses the first two symptoms. Option D inserts red-out mid-sequence, which does not occur during positive g-loading.
+
+### Q110: From what altitude does the body of a healthy person begin to compensate for oxygen deficiency by accelerating breathing rate? ^t40q110
+- A) roughly 6,000-7,000 ft
+- B) roughly 10,000-12,000 ft
+- C) roughly 3,000-4,000 ft
+- D) from 12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At approximately 6,000-7,000 ft, the reduced partial pressure of oxygen becomes sufficient to trigger the body's chemoreceptors, which detect the drop in blood oxygen and stimulate an increase in respiratory rate as a compensatory mechanism. Option B (10,000-12,000 ft) describes the upper limit of effective compensation, not where it begins. Option C (3,000-4,000 ft) is too low — at this altitude, the oxygen reduction is minimal and no compensation is needed. Option D (from 12,000 ft) is the point where compensation becomes inadequate, not where it starts.
+
+### Q111: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q111
+- A) Point C
+- B) Point D
+- C) Point B
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law, illustrated by the inverted-U curve in figure HPL-002, shows that performance peaks at a moderate, optimal level of arousal — represented by Point B at the top of the curve. Option D (Point A) lies on the left side where arousal is too low, resulting in boredom, inattention, and poor performance. Option A (Point C) and Option B (Point D) represent progressively higher arousal levels on the right side of the curve, where over-stimulation causes anxiety, cognitive overload, and declining performance. For pilots, maintaining arousal at Point B ensures maximum alertness without the errors that come from excessive stress.
+
+### Q112: Which answer is correct concerning stress? ^t40q112
+- A) Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner
+- B) Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety
+- C) Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem
+- D) Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress commonly arises when a person perceives a threatening or problematic situation for which no adequate solution appears available — the feeling of being trapped or overwhelmed triggers the physiological stress response. Option A is incorrect because individual stress responses vary enormously based on personality, experience, coping mechanisms, and physical condition. Option B dangerously dismisses the impact of stress on flight safety, when in fact stress-related errors are a major factor in aviation incidents. Option D is wrong because training and experience are proven to raise the stress threshold by providing learned responses to challenging situations.
+
+### Q113: During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed? ^t40q113
+- A) Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook
+- B) Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying
+- C) Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane
+- D) There is no time for solving problems during flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental principle of airmanship is "aviate, navigate, communicate" — in that order. The pilot's primary duty is always to fly the aircraft and maintain stable flight before addressing any secondary problem. Option A risks losing aircraft control by prioritising problem-solving over flying. Option B (radio contact) is a valid step but must come after ensuring the aircraft is under control. Option D incorrectly implies that problem-solving during flight is impossible, when in fact pilots routinely handle in-flight issues provided they maintain aircraft control as the overriding priority.
+
+### Q114: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1... ^t40q114
+- A) Point D
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point B
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U curve, Point D represents the extreme right of the arousal axis where stress levels are very high and performance has collapsed — the pilot is overstrained. At this level of arousal, cognitive function breaks down, decision-making becomes erratic, and the risk of critical errors increases dramatically. Option B (Point C) represents elevated but not yet maximal stress. Option C (Point A) represents under-arousal and boredom. Option D (Point B) is the peak of the curve where optimal performance occurs. Recognising the slide from Point B toward Point D is a critical pilot skill.
+
+### Q115: The swiss cheese model is used to explain the... ^t40q115
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Optimal problem solution.
+- C) Error chain.
+- D) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model is a foundational concept in aviation safety that illustrates how accidents result from an error chain — a series of individual failures in successive defensive barriers that happen to align, allowing a hazard to penetrate all layers simultaneously. Each "slice of cheese" represents a safety barrier with inherent "holes" (latent conditions and active failures). Option A (pilot readiness) is assessed through fitness-to-fly checks, not the Swiss Cheese Model. Option B (problem solving) uses decision-making frameworks like DECIDE. Option D (emergency landing procedures) are covered by standard operating procedures and checklists, not error chain theory.
+
+### Q116: What does the term Red-out mean? ^t40q116
+- A) Rash during decompression sickness
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- D) Anaemia caused by an injury
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (such as during a bunt or inverted flight manoeuvre), when blood is forced upward into the head and eyes. The excess blood pressure in the ocular capillaries produces a characteristic red tinge across the visual field. This is the negative-g counterpart to grey-out and blackout, which occur under positive g-forces when blood drains away from the head. Option A (decompression sickness rash) is an entirely different condition affecting dissolved gases in the body. Option B (sunrise/sunset colour) is a natural optical phenomenon, not a physiological impairment. Option D (anaemia from injury) is a medical condition unrelated to g-forces.
+
diff --git "a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/50 - M\303\251t\303\251orologie.md" "b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/50 - M\303\251t\303\251orologie.md"
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+# Météorologie
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What clouds and weather may develop when a humid and unstable air mass is pushed against a mountain chain by the prevailing wind and forced upward? ^t50q1
+- A) Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation.
+- B) Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.
+- C) Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.
+- D) Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When unstable, humid air is forced to rise orographically, it triggers convective instability — air that is conditionally unstable becomes absolutely unstable once lifting begins. The resulting rapid ascent fuels cumulonimbus development, producing embedded CBs with thunderstorms, heavy showers, and hail. Stable air masses under the same conditions produce layered clouds (Ns or As) with steady rain, not convective storms.
+
+### Q2: What type of fog forms when humid and nearly saturated air is forced to rise along the slopes of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailing wind? ^t50q2
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Steaming fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Orographic fog
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog forms when wind-driven humid air is mechanically lifted along a slope, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point. Radiation fog requires calm nights with radiative ground cooling, advection fog forms when warm moist air moves over a cold surface, and steaming fog (Arctic sea smoke) occurs when cold air passes over warm water — none of these involve slope-forced lifting.
+
+### Q3: What phenomenon is known as "blue thermals"? ^t50q3
+- A) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+- D) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Blue thermals" exist when the lifting condensation level (LCL) is very high — the air is too dry to reach its dew point before the thermal tops out. As a result, thermals rise but no cumulus clouds form, leaving the sky clear ("blue"). For glider pilots this is challenging since there are no visual cloud markers to indicate thermal location, and the cloudbase is beyond the thermal ceiling.
+
+### Q4: The expression "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^t50q4
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal activity is considered to have "begun" when thermals are strong enough to support gliding and extend to at least 600 m AGL — sufficient altitude to work the lift. Below this height, thermals may exist but are too shallow to be safely exploited by a glider. Cloud formation is not a prerequisite; blue thermals (see Q3) can also mark the beginning of usable thermal activity.
+
+### Q5: The "trigger temperature" is the temperature that... ^t50q5
+- A) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+- B) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascent when Cumulus cloud formation begins.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level required for thunderstorm development from a Cumulus cloud.
+- D) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without thunderstorm formation from a Cumulus cloud.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum surface temperature that must be reached before thermals can rise to the condensation level and form cumulus clouds. It is derived from the aerological diagram (tephigram/Stüve diagram) by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the morning sounding's moisture level back to the surface. Until this temperature is reached, thermals may exist but will not produce cumulus markers.
+
+### Q6: What is meant by "over-development" in a weather report? ^t50q6
+- A) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- B) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+- C) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- D) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development occurs when cumulus clouds continue growing vertically beyond the thermal inversion or become self-sustaining through latent heat release, developing into cumulonimbus (Cb) with heavy rain showers, lightning, and hail. This typically happens during humid summer afternoons when atmospheric instability is high and the inhibiting layer is weak. For glider pilots, over-development signals the end of safe soaring conditions and a need to land.
+
+### Q7: The gliding weather report indicates environmental instability. Morning dew is present on the grass and no thermals are currently active. What thermal development can be expected? ^t50q7
+- A) Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will form
+- B) After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion, thermal activity is likely to start
+- C) With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin
+- D) Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity for the day
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Morning dew indicates the air cooled to the dew point overnight (radiation cooling), but this is temporary. Once solar insolation heats the ground, the surface temperature rises, warming the air above it until the temperature exceeds the trigger temperature. Environmental instability means the lapse rate is steep enough to sustain thermals once they begin, so good thermal conditions are likely to develop during the morning hours.
+
+### Q8: What effect on thermal activity can be expected when cirrus clouds approach from one direction and become increasingly dense, blocking the sun? ^t50q8
+- A) Cirrus clouds indicate instability and the onset of over-development
+- B) Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity
+- C) Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.
+- D) Cirrus clouds indicate a high-level inversion with ongoing thermal activity up to that level
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermals are driven by differential heating of the ground by solar radiation. Thickening cirrus clouds progressively filter out solar energy, reducing ground heating and therefore thermal strength and depth. Dense cirrus can reduce insolation enough to stop thermal activity entirely. Additionally, approaching cirrus from one direction often indicates an advancing warm front, which brings widespread cloud, stable conditions, and further suppression of thermals.
+
+### Q9: What situation is known as "shielding"? ^t50q9
+- A) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eighths of the sky
+- B) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- C) Ns clouds covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- D) High or mid-level cloud layers impairing thermal activity
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding describes the effect of high or medium cloud layers (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) that block solar radiation and suppress thermal development below. Even partial cloud cover at these levels can significantly reduce ground insolation. Gliding forecasts include shielding assessments to indicate when and where thermals will be weakened or absent due to cloud cover above the expected thermal layer.
+
+### Q10: While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending north to south and moving east. What would be a sensible decision regarding the weather? ^t50q10
+- A) Plan the flight below the thunderstorm cloud bases
+- B) Change plans and start the triangle heading east
+- C) Postpone the flight to another day
+- D) During flight, look for gaps between thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A squall line is an organized line of severe thunderstorms that is notoriously fast-moving, unpredictable, and extremely dangerous. Moving at typical speeds of 30–60 km/h, a squall line 100 km away could reach the airfield within 2–3 hours. Flying below Cb cloud bases or attempting to navigate between cells exposes the glider to extreme turbulence, windshear, hail, and downdrafts. The only safe option is to not fly until the hazard has completely passed.
+
+### Q11: What is the gas composition of "air"? ^t50q11
+- A) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- D) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air by volume is approximately 78% nitrogen (N2), 21% oxygen (O2), and the remaining 1% consists of argon, carbon dioxide, and other trace gases. Water vapour is variable (0–4%) and is not counted in the standard dry-air composition. Knowing air composition is fundamental to understanding atmospheric physics, density calculations, and the behaviour of aircraft engines and instruments.
+
+### Q12: In which atmospheric layer are weather phenomena predominantly found? ^t50q12
+- A) Stratosphere
+- B) Troposphere
+- C) Thermosphere
+- D) Tropopause
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The troposphere extends from the surface to approximately 8–16 km depending on latitude and season. It contains approximately 75–80% of the atmosphere's total mass and almost all its water vapour. Convection, cloud formation, precipitation, fronts, and wind phenomena all occur here because temperature decreases with height, driving convective instability. Above the tropopause, the stratosphere is stable and largely cloud-free.
+
+### Q13: What is the mass of a "cube of air" with 1 m edges at MSL according to ISA? ^t50q13
+- A) 12.25 kg
+- B) 0.01225 kg
+- C) 1.225 kg
+- D) 0.1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), air density at mean sea level is 1.225 kg/m³. Therefore a 1 m³ cube of air has a mass of 1.225 kg. This density value is fundamental to aviation: it affects lift, drag, engine power, and altimeter calibration. Density decreases with altitude and increases temperature/humidity changes also affect it, which is why density altitude matters for aircraft performance.
+
+### Q14: At what rate does the temperature change with increasing altitude according to ISA within the troposphere? ^t50q14
+- A) Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- B) Decreases by 2° C / 100 m
+- C) Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- D) Increases by 2° C / 100 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA standard lapse rate is 1.98°C per 1000 ft (approximately 2°C/1000 ft), or 6.5°C per 1000 m. This is the Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) used as a reference for altimeter calibration and pressure calculations. The actual ELR varies with weather conditions — steeper than ISA indicates instability and favours thermals, shallower or negative (inversion) indicates stability and suppresses convection.
+
+### Q15: What is the mean tropopause height according to the ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)? ^t50q15
+- A) 36000 m
+- B) 11000 ft
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 11000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is defined at 11,000 m (approximately 36,089 ft), where the temperature reaches -56.5°C and then remains constant with height into the lower stratosphere. In reality the tropopause height varies: it is lower over the poles (~8 km) and higher over the tropics (~16 km), and fluctuates with season and synoptic weather patterns. Cumulonimbus tops that penetrate the tropopause are especially violent.
+
+### Q16: The "tropopause" is defined as... ^t50q16
+- A) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- B) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- C) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- D) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the transition boundary between the troposphere (where temperature decreases with height) and the stratosphere (where temperature initially remains constant then increases due to ozone absorption of UV radiation). It acts as a "lid" on convection — cumulonimbus clouds that reach it spread out laterally to form the characteristic anvil shape. Jet streams are located near the tropopause.
+
+### Q17: In which unit are temperatures reported by European meteorological aviation services? ^t50q17
+- A) Degrees Fahrenheit
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrees Centigrade (°C)
+- D) Gpdam
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** European aviation meteorology (ICAO Annex 3, EU regulations) specifies temperatures in degrees Celsius (°C) for all operational products including METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs, and forecast charts. Kelvin is used in scientific and upper-air calculations. Fahrenheit is used in the US and a few other countries but not in European aviation. This standardisation is critical for correct interpretation of icing levels, freezing level heights, and density altitude.
+
+### Q18: What is meant by an "inversion layer"? ^t50q18
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion "inverts" the normal lapse rate — instead of temperature falling with height, it rises. This creates a very stable layer that acts as a lid on convection, trapping thermals below it, concentrating pollutants, and promoting fog and low cloud formation beneath it. For glider pilots, a low-level inversion caps thermal height; a subsidence inversion in a high-pressure system limits soaring altitude and is often associated with haze.
+
+### Q19: What is meant by an "isothermal layer"? ^t50q19
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- D) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer maintains constant temperature with increasing altitude. Like an inversion, it is more stable than the standard atmosphere and inhibits convection. The lower stratosphere exhibits an isothermal region immediately above the tropopause. Isothermal layers can also occur in the troposphere and, like inversions, act as a cap on thermal development and cloud growth.
+
+### Q20: The temperature lapse rate with increasing altitude within the troposphere according to ISA is... ^t50q20
+- A) 3° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0.65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0.6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) is 6.5°C per 1000 m, or 0.65°C per 100 m (approximately 2°C per 1000 ft). This is distinct from the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR) of 1°C/100 m and the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) of approximately 0.6°C/100 m. When the actual ELR is steeper than the DALR, the atmosphere is absolutely unstable; when it lies between the DALR and SALR, the atmosphere is conditionally unstable — the typical situation for thermal soaring.
+
+### Q21: Which process may produce an inversion layer at around 5000 ft (1500 m) altitude? ^t50q21
+- A) Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere
+- B) Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day
+- C) Ground cooling by radiation during the night
+- D) Widespread descending air within a high pressure area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Subsidence inversion forms when air in the centre of a high-pressure area sinks over a wide area. As the air descends, it warms adiabatically, but because the lower air has not warmed at the same rate, the descending layer becomes warmer than the air below it — creating an inversion, typically around 1500–3000 m. This is characteristic of anticyclonic conditions: stable weather, limited convection, and haze or smog trapped below the inversion.
+
+### Q22: A ground-level inversion can be caused by... ^t50q22
+- A) Ground cooling during the night.
+- B) Intensifying and gusting winds.
+- C) Large-scale lifting of air.
+- D) Thickening of clouds in medium layers.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation inversion forms on calm, clear nights when the ground radiates heat into space and cools rapidly. The air in contact with the ground also cools, while air a few hundred metres above remains warmer — creating a temperature inversion near the surface. This type of inversion is common in anticyclonic conditions and often produces radiation fog or low stratus in the morning, which burns off as the sun heats the ground.
+
+### Q23: What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)? ^t50q23
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 500 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) 250 hPa
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere, pressure at approximately 5500 m (FL180) is 500 hPa — exactly half the sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. The 500 hPa level is a key reference level in synoptic meteorology and is used extensively in upper-air charts. Pressure decreases approximately logarithmically with altitude, halving roughly every 5500 m in the lower troposphere.
+
+### Q24: Which processes lead to decreasing air density? ^t50q24
+- A) Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+- B) Increasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- C) Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- D) Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density is governed by the ideal gas law: density = pressure / (specific gas constant × temperature). Density decreases when pressure decreases (fewer molecules per unit volume) or when temperature increases (molecules move faster and spread apart). Both increasing temperature AND decreasing pressure simultaneously reduce density most effectively. This is why density altitude (the altitude equivalent of the actual air density) matters for aircraft performance on hot, high-altitude airfields.
+
+### Q25: The pressure at MSL under ISA conditions is... ^t50q25
+- A) 1123 hPa.
+- B) 113.25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) defines sea-level pressure as 1013.25 hPa (also expressed as 29.92 inHg in US aviation). This is the standard QNE setting — with 1013.25 hPa set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads Flight Level. All pressure altitudes and flight level definitions are based on this datum. Actual sea-level pressure varies with weather systems and must be corrected via QNH for accurate altitude indication.
+
+### Q26: At what height is the ISA tropopause located? ^t50q26
+- A) 48000 ft.
+- B) 11000 ft.
+- C) 36000 ft.
+- D) 5500 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is located at 11,000 m, which equals approximately 36,089 ft (effectively 36,000 ft). Above this level, the standard atmosphere defines a constant temperature of -56.5°C up to 20,000 m (the isothermal stratospheric layer). This is distinct from Q15 which asks in metres — both questions test knowledge of the same value expressed in different units.
+
+### Q27: The barometric altimeter shows height above... ^t50q27
+- A) Mean sea level.
+- B) Ground.
+- C) Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) A selected reference pressure level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The barometric altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude based on the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Crucially, it indicates height above whatever pressure level is set on the subscale (Kollsman window). Set QNH and it reads altitude above mean sea level; set QFE and it reads height above the reference airfield; set 1013.25 hPa (QNE) and it reads flight level. The altimeter always references a pressure level, not a physical surface.
+
+### Q28: The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting... ^t50q28
+- A) QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- B) QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- C) QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- D) QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the local altimeter setting that makes the instrument read the airfield's elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. Setting QNH and checking that the altimeter reads the known airfield elevation (published in AIP/chart) verifies the altimeter is functioning correctly and calibrated. QFE would show zero (height above airfield), QNE (1013.25) would show a value unrelated to actual elevation, and QFF is a meteorological value reduced to MSL for surface analysis charts.
+
+### Q29: With QFE set, the barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q29
+- A) Height above MSL.
+- B) True altitude above MSL.
+- C) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual atmospheric pressure at airfield elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at the reference airfield and subsequently indicates height above that reference pressure level — effectively height above the airfield. This setting is commonly used in circuit flying and gliding operations so the altimeter directly reads AGL height at the home airfield. It does not account for terrain elevation differences elsewhere.
+
+### Q30: With QNH set, the barometric altimeter indicates... ^t50q30
+- A) Height above MSL
+- B) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- C) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+- D) True altitude above MSL.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting adjusted to make the instrument read the elevation above mean sea level at the station. It is calculated by reducing the airfield QFE to sea level using the ISA temperature gradient. With QNH set, the altimeter reads the airfield elevation on the ground and true altitude above MSL in the air (assuming ISA conditions). Note that "true altitude" (answer A) accounts for actual temperature deviations from ISA — QNH gives indicated altitude, which may differ from true altitude in non-ISA conditions.
+
+### Q31: How can wind speed and direction be determined from surface weather charts? ^t50q31
+- A) By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines
+- B) By alignment of warm- and cold front lines.
+- C) By annotations from the text part of the chart
+- D) By alignment and distance of isobaric lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isobars (lines of equal pressure) on surface charts indicate both wind direction and speed. Above the friction layer, wind flows parallel to isobars (geostrophic wind); close to the surface it crosses them at an angle toward lower pressure. Closely spaced isobars indicate a strong pressure gradient force and therefore strong winds; widely spaced isobars indicate light winds. Wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere is anticlockwise around lows and clockwise around highs (Buys-Ballot's Law).
+
+### Q32: Which force is responsible for causing "wind"? ^t50q32
+- A) Coriolis force
+- B) Thermal force
+- C) Pressure gradient force
+- D) Centrifugal force
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is initiated by the pressure gradient force (PGF) — air accelerates from high pressure toward low pressure due to differences in atmospheric pressure. The Coriolis force deflects the moving air (to the right in the Northern Hemisphere) but does not cause the initial motion. Centrifugal force acts in curved flow around pressure systems. Thermal effects create pressure differences which then drive the PGF. Without a pressure gradient there would be no wind.
+
+### Q33: Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is... ^t50q33
+- A) Perpendicular to the isohypses.
+- B) Perpendicular to the isobars.
+- C) Parallel to the isobars.
+- D) At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above the friction layer (roughly 600–1000 m AGL), the Coriolis force and pressure gradient force balance each other, producing geostrophic flow parallel to the isobars. In the friction layer below, surface drag slows the wind, reduces the Coriolis deflection, and allows the wind to cross isobars at an angle toward lower pressure (typically 10–30°). Understanding this is essential for predicting wind direction at altitude versus near the surface.
+
+### Q34: Which of the listed surfaces causes the greatest wind speed reduction due to ground friction? ^t50q34
+- A) Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation
+- B) Oceanic areas
+- C) Flat land, lots of vegetation cover
+- D) Mountainous areas, vegetation cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface roughness (aerodynamic roughness length) determines how much friction the surface exerts on moving air. Mountainous terrain with vegetation has the highest roughness length, causing maximum turbulent drag and wind speed reduction. Oceans have very low roughness and exert minimal friction. Flat vegetated land is intermediate. Importantly, mountains also mechanically block and deflect wind, creating additional complex flow patterns, turbulence, and wave phenomena of direct relevance to glider pilots.
+
+### Q35: The movement of air flowing together is called... ^t50q35
+- A) Divergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Concordence.
+- D) Convergence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convergence describes air flowing into a region from different directions, compressing horizontally. By mass continuity, converging surface air must go somewhere — it is forced upward, triggering cloud formation, precipitation, and potentially convective development. Convergence zones are important for glider pilots as they produce enhanced lift along their axes; sea-breeze fronts and col zones between pressure systems are classic convergence sources for soaring.
+
+### Q36: The movement of air flowing apart is called... ^t50q36
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Divergence.
+- D) Concordence.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Divergence describes air spreading outward from a region. At the surface, divergence causes subsiding air from above to replace the outflowing air, promoting stability, clear skies, and fair weather. High-pressure anticyclones are associated with surface divergence and upper-level convergence. In the upper troposphere, divergence above a surface low enhances upward motion and intensifies the low-pressure system.
+
+### Q37: What weather development results from convergence at ground level? ^t50q37
+- A) Descending air and cloud dissipation
+- B) Ascending air and cloud formation
+- C) Descending air and cloud formation
+- D) Ascending air and cloud dissipation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface convergence forces air upward (ascending motion) by mass continuity — air cannot accumulate indefinitely at the surface. As air rises, it cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate until it reaches the dew point (lifting condensation level), where condensation begins and clouds form. Further ascent releases latent heat, potentially fuelling deep convection. This is the fundamental mechanism behind frontal lifting and sea-breeze convergence lift.
+
+### Q38: When air masses meet each other head on, what is this referred to and what air movements follow? ^t50q38
+- A) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+- B) Convergence resulting in air being lifted
+- C) Divergence resulting in air being lifted
+- D) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two opposing air flows collide head-on, the meeting zone is a convergence line. The colliding air has nowhere to go horizontally and is forced upward — producing ascending motion, cloud formation, and potentially precipitation or thunderstorms. This occurs at fronts, sea-breeze convergence zones, and col zones. Glider pilots exploit convergence lines for extended linear climbs along the lift band.
+
+### Q39: By which air masses is Central Europe mainly influenced? ^t50q39
+- A) Tropical and arctic cold air
+- B) Arctic and polar cold air
+- C) Equatorial and tropical warm air
+- D) Polar cold air and tropical warm air
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Central Europe sits in the mid-latitude westerly belt between the polar front (cold polar air from the north) and subtropical high pressure (warm tropical air from the south). The interaction between these two contrasting air masses creates the characteristic mid-latitude cyclone (depression) weather of Central Europe: frontal systems, rapidly changing weather, and the full range of cloud types and precipitation. This dynamic contrast also drives the polar jet stream overhead.
+
+### Q40: In terms of global atmospheric circulation, where does polar cold air meet subtropical warm air? ^t50q40
+- A) At the equator
+- B) At the geographic poles
+- C) At the polar front
+- D) At the subtropical high pressure belt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the boundary between the polar cell (cold, dense air flowing equatorward) and the Ferrel cell (relatively warmer mid-latitude air). In the Northern Hemisphere it is located roughly between 40–60°N, but its position fluctuates as waves (Rossby waves) develop along it — these waves amplify into cyclones and anticyclones. The jet stream flows along the polar front and is a critical factor in synoptic weather patterns across Europe.
+
+### Q41: "Foehn" conditions typically develop with... ^t50q41
+- A) Instability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+- B) Stability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- C) Instability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- D) Stability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn is a warm, dry, descending wind on the lee side of a mountain range. It develops when stable air is pushed by a broad-scale pressure gradient against a mountain barrier. On the windward side, moist air rises and cools at the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR ~0.6°C/100 m) after reaching the dew point, precipitating moisture. On the lee side, dry air descends at the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR ~1°C/100 m), arriving warmer and drier than it started — the Foehn effect.
+
+### Q42: What type of turbulence is typically encountered close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions? ^t50q42
+- A) Thermal turbulence
+- B) Inversion turbulence
+- C) Turbulence in rotors
+- D) Clear-air turbulence (CAT)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn and mountain wave conditions, a rotor zone develops in the lower troposphere on the lee side beneath the crests of the standing waves. The rotor is a region of intense, chaotic turbulence with rotating air, strong downdrafts, and violent eddies — it is one of the most hazardous phenomena for aircraft. Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis) mark wave crests above, while rotor clouds (roll clouds) mark the rotor zone near the surface.
+
+### Q43: Light turbulence should always be expected... ^t50q43
+- A) Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.
+- B) Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+- C) When entering inversions.
+- D) Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible tops of thermal columns. The sub-cloud layer beneath them contains active thermals (updraughts) and compensating downdraughts between them, creating light to moderate turbulence from convective mixing. This is the normal turbulent environment of thermal soaring. Above cumulus tops the air is generally smoother (outside the cloud); stratiform clouds have minimal convective turbulence unless embedded CBs are present.
+
+### Q44: Moderate to severe turbulence should be expected... ^t50q44
+- A) With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog).
+- B) Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- C) Overhead unbroken cloud layers.
+- D) On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotor clouds (roll clouds) on the lee side of mountains are the visible indicator of the highly turbulent rotor zone beneath mountain waves. This turbulence can be extreme, with unpredictable up- and downdraughts, strong shear, and rotational forces capable of exceeding aircraft structural limits. Experienced wave pilots avoid or transit the rotor zone quickly with sufficient airspeed. The windward side of mountains typically has orographic cloud and steady lift, not severe turbulence.
+
+### Q45: Which answer lists every state of water found in the atmosphere? ^t50q45
+- A) Gaseous and liquid
+- B) Liquid and solid
+- C) Liquid
+- D) Liquid, solid, and gaseous
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water exists in all three states within the Earth's atmosphere. Gaseous water vapour is invisible and present throughout the troposphere. Liquid water forms cloud droplets, rain, and drizzle. Solid water forms ice crystals (cirrus clouds), snow, hail, and graupel. Understanding all three states is essential for icing awareness: supercooled liquid water droplets (liquid below 0°C) pose the greatest structural icing hazard to aircraft, as they freeze on contact with cold surfaces.
+
+### Q46: How do dew point and relative humidity change when temperature decreases? ^t50q46
+- A) Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases
+- B) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- C) Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases
+- D) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dew point is the temperature to which air must be cooled (at constant pressure and moisture content) for saturation to occur. It is a measure of the absolute moisture content and remains constant as temperature changes (assuming no moisture is added or removed). However, relative humidity — the ratio of actual vapour pressure to saturation vapour pressure — increases as temperature falls, because the saturation vapour pressure decreases with temperature. When temperature equals the dew point, relative humidity reaches 100% and condensation begins.
+
+### Q47: How do spread and relative humidity change when temperature increases? ^t50q47
+- A) Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- B) Spread increases, relative humidity increases
+- C) Spread increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread is the temperature-dew point difference (T - Td). As temperature increases while dew point remains constant, the spread widens. Simultaneously, because warmer air can hold more water vapour, the relative humidity decreases — the air is now further from saturation. A large spread indicates dry air and a high lifting condensation level (high cloud base). A small spread (near zero) indicates saturated or near-saturated conditions, with fog or low cloud likely.
+
+### Q48: The "spread" is defined as... ^t50q48
+- A) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+- B) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air.
+- C) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- D) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread (also called dew point depression) is simply the difference between the air temperature and the dew point temperature: Spread = T - Td. It is used to estimate cloud base height: in temperate latitudes, cloud base height in metres above the surface is approximately spread × 125 (or in feet, spread × 400). A spread of 0 means the air is saturated (fog or cloud at the surface). Spread is a quick indicator of moisture availability for soaring pilots.
+
+### Q49: With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in... ^t50q49
+- A) Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- B) Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- C) Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- D) Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As temperature decreases (with dew point unchanged), the gap between temperature and dew point narrows — spread decreases. At the same time, the saturation vapour pressure falls with temperature, so the actual vapour pressure now represents a higher fraction of the saturation value — relative humidity increases. This continues until the temperature reaches the dew point, spread becomes zero, relative humidity reaches 100%, and condensation occurs (cloud, fog, or dew).
+
+### Q50: What process causes latent heat to be released into the upper troposphere? ^t50q50
+- A) Evaporation over widespread water areas
+- B) Descending air across widespread areas
+- C) Stabilisation of inflowing air masses
+- D) Cloud forming due to condensation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When water vapour condenses into cloud droplets, the latent heat stored during evaporation is released into the surrounding air. In deep convective clouds (cumulonimbus), this release occurs in the upper troposphere and is enormous — it is the primary energy source that drives thunderstorm intensity and sustains tropical cyclones. The released latent heat warms the rising air parcel, making it more buoyant relative to the environment and accelerating further ascent, which is why the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) is less steep than the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR).
+
+### Q51: Which of these clouds poses the greatest danger to aviation? ^t50q51
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrostratus
+- D) Cirrocumulus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The CB (cumulonimbus) is the most dangerous cloud: severe turbulence, lightning, hail, wind shear, icing.
+
+### Q52: In which situation is the tendency for thunderstorms most pronounced? ^t50q52
+- A) High pressure situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, low air humidity.
+- B) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the upper air layers, high air humidity.
+- C) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant cooling of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+- D) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms = slack pressure gradient (low pressure gradient) + strong surface heating (instability) + high humidity.
+
+### Q53: Fine suspended water droplets reduce visibility at an aerodrome to only 1.5 km up to 1000 ft AGL. What meteorological phenomenon causes this? ^t50q53
+- A) Haze (HZ).
+- B) Mist (BR).
+- C) Widespread dust (DU).
+- D) Shallow fog (MIFG).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Visibility 1–5 km with water droplets = mist (BR). Fog = visibility < 1 km.
+
+### Q54: Which of the following situations most favours radiation fog formation? ^t50q54
+- A) 15 kt / Overcast / 13°C / Dew point 12°C
+- B) 15 kt / Clear sky / 16°C / Dew point 15°C
+- C) 2 kt / Scattered cloud / 7°C / Dew point 6°C
+- D) 2 kt / Clear sky / -3°C / Dew point -20°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog: light wind (2 kt), small temperature/dew point spread (1°C), some cloud acceptable. Option (C) has too large a temp/dew point spread.
+
+### Q55: The temperature recorded at Samedan airport (LSZS, AD elevation 5600 ft) is +5°C. What will the approximate temperature be at 8600 ft altitude directly above the airport? (Assume ISA lapse rate) ^t50q55
+- A) +5°C
+- B) +11°C
+- C) -1°C
+- D) -6°C
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ISA lapse rate = -2°C/1000 ft. Difference: 8600 - 5600 = 3000 ft. Temperature: 5°C - (3 × 2) = -1°C.
+
+### Q56: The QFE of an aerodrome (AD elevation 3500 ft) corresponds to: ^t50q56
+- A) The instantaneous pressure at sea level.
+- B) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the ISA temperature lapse rate.
+- C) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level.
+- D) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the actual temperature profile.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE = atmospheric pressure measured at aerodrome level (station). The altimeter reads 0 on the ground.
+
+### Q57: What does the following symbol mean? (Arrow with one long barb and one short barb) ^t50q57
+> ![[figures/t50_q57.png]]
+
+- A) Wind from NE, 30 knots.
+- B) Wind from SW, 30 knots.
+- C) Wind from SW, 15 knots.
+- D) Wind from NE, 15 knots.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The arrow points towards the wind's origin. One long barb = 10 kt, one short barb = 5 kt. Total = 15 kt from the NE.
+
+### Q58: What are the wind speed and direction in the following METAR? LSZB 131220Z 28015G25KT 9999 SCT035 BKN075 10/06 Q1018 NOSIG= ^t50q58
+- A) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- C) Wind from WNW, 25 knots, direction varying between WNW and SSE.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, direction varying between WNW and WSW.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 280° = WNW, 15 kt mean, G25 = gusts to 25 kt.
+
+### Q59: In Switzerland, cloud base in a METAR is given in... ^t50q59
+- A) ...metres above sea level.
+- B) ...metres above aerodrome level.
+- C) ...feet above aerodrome level.
+- D) ...feet above sea level.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a METAR, cloud base is given in feet AGL (above aerodrome level).
+
+### Q60: You are flying at very high altitude (northern hemisphere) and consistently have a crosswind from the left. You conclude that: ^t50q60
+- A) A high-pressure area is to the right of your track, a low-pressure area to the left.
+- B) There is a low-pressure area ahead of you and a high-pressure area behind you.
+- C) There is a high-pressure area ahead of you and a low-pressure area behind you.
+- D) A high-pressure area is to the left of your track, a low-pressure area to the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buys-Ballot's law: standing with your back to the wind in the northern hemisphere, the low-pressure area is to your left. Wind from the left = low pressure to the left, high pressure to the right.
+
+### Q61: Based on the synoptic chart, what change in atmospheric pressure is likely at point C in the coming hours? ^t50q61
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart:**
+> ![[figures/t50_q61.png]]
+> *T = depression centre. A = warm sector (between warm front and cold front). B = behind the cold front (cold air mass). C = ahead of the warm front (cool air mass).*
+> *Cold front: blue triangles. Warm front: red semicircles.*
+
+- A) No notable change.
+- B) Pressure will fall.
+- C) Pressure will rise.
+- D) Pressure will undergo rapid, irregular variations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point C lies ahead of the warm front, meaning the depression centre and its associated frontal system are approaching. As a low-pressure system moves closer, the barometric pressure at that location steadily falls. Option A is wrong because an approaching depression always causes pressure changes. Option C (pressure rise) would apply to a location behind a cold front where cold dense air moves in. Option D (rapid irregular variations) is more typical of the immediate vicinity of thunderstorm activity, not the broad-scale approach of a warm front.
+
+### Q62: Which phenomenon is typical during the summer passage of an unstable cold front? ^t50q62
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) Convective cloud development.
+- C) Rapid temperature rise behind the front.
+- D) Rapid pressure drop behind the front.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An unstable cold front in summer forces warm, moist, unstable air upward vigorously, triggering strong convection and the development of cumuliform clouds including towering cumulus and cumulonimbus with showers and thunderstorms. Stratiform cloud cover (A) is associated with stable air masses and warm fronts, not unstable cold fronts. Behind a cold front temperatures drop rather than rise (C), and pressure rises rather than drops (D) as cooler, denser air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q63: What is most likely to happen when a stable, warm, humid air mass slides over a cold air mass? ^t50q63
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) A few scattered cumuliform clouds, rare precipitation, light turbulence, and excellent visibility.
+- B) Extensive stratiform clouds with a gradually lowering cloud base and continuous rainfall.
+- C) Convective clouds, heavy showers, thunderstorm tendency, and severe turbulence.
+- D) Rapid drying aloft with cloud dissipation and good visibility, but dense fog in the lowlands.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When stable warm humid air overrides a cold air mass (the classic warm front mechanism), the warm air ascends gently along the frontal surface, cooling progressively and forming widespread stratiform clouds — from high cirrus down through altostratus to nimbostratus — with continuous, steady precipitation and a lowering cloud base. Option A describes fair-weather conditions unrelated to frontal activity. Option C describes unstable convective weather typical of cold fronts, not warm fronts. Option D combines fog with drying aloft, which is internally contradictory and not a recognised frontal pattern.
+
+### Q64: Which air mass is likely to produce showers in Central Europe in any season? ^t50q64
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Continental tropical air.
+- B) Maritime tropical air.
+- C) Continental polar air.
+- D) Maritime polar air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maritime polar air (mP) originates over cold northern oceans, picking up moisture and becoming unstable as it moves over relatively warmer European land surfaces, producing convective showers year-round. Continental tropical air (A) is warm and dry, producing clear skies rather than showers. Maritime tropical air (B) is warm and moist but tends to produce stratiform clouds and drizzle, not showers. Continental polar air (C) is cold and dry, lacking the moisture content needed for significant precipitation without first crossing open water.
+
+### Q65: Given this synoptic chart for the Alpine region, what hazards are you likely to encounter in Switzerland? ^t50q65
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart Switzerland/Alps:**
+> ![[figures/t50_q65.png]]
+> *Anticyclone (H) to the west, depression (T) to the north-east, isobars indicating NW flow over Switzerland.*
+
+- A) In winter, persistent snowfall in Ticino.
+- B) In summer, widespread thunderstorms south of the Alps with severe turbulence.
+- C) Continuous precipitation north of the Alps; very disturbed weather south of the Alps.
+- D) Cloud-covered Alps to the south; strong gusty winds north of the Alps.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A northwest flow situation (Nordwestlage) drives moist air against the northern slopes of the Alps, producing continuous orographic precipitation on the north side. The flow also disturbs conditions south of the Alps through spillover effects and forced subsidence turbulence. Option A describes a south-side precipitation event (Stau from the south), not a northwest situation. Option B misplaces the thunderstorms on the wrong side of the Alps. Option D reverses the pattern — clouds would cover the north side, not the south.
+
+### Q66: Referring to the Low Level SWC chart, which statement is correct? ^t50q66
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Low Level Significant Weather Chart (OGDD70)**
+> ![[figures/t50_q66.png]]
+> *Fixed Time Prognostic Chart — Valid: 09 UTC, 22 JAN 2015*
+> *Issued by MeteoSwiss*
+
+| Zone | Cloud cover | Cloud base | Cloud top | Visibility | Turbulence | Icing |
+|------|-----------|-------------|---------------|------------|------------|---------|
+| A | BKN/OVC SC, AC | 3000 ft | FL080 | > 10 km | MOD below FL080 | MOD FL040-FL080 |
+| B | BKN/OVC ST, SC | 1500 ft | FL060 | 5-8 km, locally 3 km (BR) | MOD below FL060 | MOD FL030-FL060 |
+| C | SCT/BKN CU, SC | 4000 ft | FL100 | > 10 km | ISOL MOD | LGT FL050-FL100 |
+
+> *0°C isotherm: FL040 (north) to FL060 (south). Surface wind: SW 15-25 kt.*
+
+- A) Isolated thunderstorms may occur in area C with no icing or turbulence.
+- B) In area B, cumuliform clouds are expected with possible light freezing rain or freezing fog.
+- C) Rain and snow showers are to be expected in area A.
+- D) Area A lies between two warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Area A features BKN/OVC stratocumulus and altocumulus with moderate icing between FL040 and FL080 and the 0°C isotherm at FL040, indicating mixed precipitation — rain and snow showers — within this zone. Option A incorrectly states no icing or turbulence in area C, whereas the chart shows isolated moderate turbulence and light icing there. Option B mischaracterises area B, which has stratiform clouds (ST, SC), not cumuliform. Option D makes an unsupported claim about warm fronts that cannot be verified from the chart data provided.
+
+### Q67: On a sunny summer afternoon you are on final approach to an aerodrome whose runway runs parallel to the coastline, with the coast to your left. On this flat terrain, what direction will the thermal (sea breeze) wind come from? ^t50q67
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Crosswind from the left.
+- B) Headwind.
+- C) Tailwind.
+- D) Crosswind from the right.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a sunny summer afternoon, the land heats faster than the sea, causing air to rise over land and drawing cooler air inland from the sea — this is the sea breeze. Since the coastline is to your left and the runway runs parallel to it, the sea breeze blows from the sea (left side) toward the land, creating a crosswind from the left. Options B and C (headwind/tailwind) would require the wind to blow along the runway, not from the coast. Option D would require the sea to be on the right side.
+
+### Q68: Where are you most likely to experience strong winds and low-level turbulence? ^t50q68
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At the centre of an anticyclone.
+- B) In a transition zone between two air masses.
+- C) At the centre of a depression.
+- D) In a region of slack pressure gradient during winter.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transition zones between air masses — i.e., frontal zones — feature steep horizontal temperature and pressure gradients that drive strong winds and generate mechanical and convective turbulence at low levels. The centre of an anticyclone (A) is characterised by calm, subsiding air with light winds. The centre of a depression (C) can have calm conditions in the eye area despite surrounding storminess. Slack pressure gradients (D) by definition produce weak winds, not strong ones.
+
+### Q69: An air mass at 10°C has a relative humidity of 45%. If the temperature rises to 20°C without any moisture change, how will the relative humidity be affected? ^t50q69
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) It will increase by 50%.
+- B) It will remain constant.
+- C) It will decrease.
+- D) It will increase by 45%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity is the ratio of the actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at that temperature. When temperature rises from 10°C to 20°C, the air's saturation capacity roughly doubles, but since no moisture is added, the actual vapour content stays the same — so relative humidity decreases significantly. Options A and D wrongly claim humidity increases, which would require either adding moisture or cooling the air. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is temperature-dependent and cannot stay constant when temperature changes without a corresponding moisture change.
+
+### Q70: On 1 June (summer time), you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XMD". What does this mean? ^t50q70
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At 11:00 LT conditions on this route will be difficult.
+- B) At 09:00 LT conditions on this route will be critical.
+- C) At 09:00 LT the route will be closed.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss GAFOR divides the validity period (06:00–12:00 UTC) into three two-hour blocks. Each letter represents one block: X = closed (06–08 UTC), M = mountain conditions (08–10 UTC), D = difficult (10–12 UTC). On 1 June, summer time (CEST = UTC+2) applies, so 06–08 UTC = 08–10 LT. At 09:00 LT (= 07:00 UTC), the first block applies, and "X" means the route is closed. Option A and D incorrectly interpret the timing or the code. Option B confuses the category — "M" is not "critical."
+
+### Q71: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q71
+![[figures/t50_q71.png]]
+- A) Wind from NE, 25 kt
+- B) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+- C) Wind from SW, 25 kt
+- D) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barb symbols point in the direction the wind blows from, with barbs on the upwind end indicating speed: a long barb equals 10 kt, a short barb equals 5 kt, and a pennant (triangle) equals 50 kt. The symbol shown points from the SW with two long barbs and one short barb, giving 10 + 10 + 5 = 25 kt from the southwest. Options B and D overstate the wind speed dramatically. Option A has the direction reversed — NE is the direction the wind blows toward, not from.
+
+### Q72: At what time of day or night is radiation fog most likely to form? ^t50q72
+- A) In the afternoon
+- B) Shortly before midnight
+- C) Shortly after sunset
+- D) At sunrise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms when the ground loses heat by longwave radiation to space on clear, calm nights, cooling the overlying air to the dew point. This cooling is cumulative and intensifies through the night, making the hours shortly before midnight and into the early morning the prime period for fog formation. Option A (afternoon) is when solar heating is strongest, preventing fog. Option C (after sunset) is usually too early for sufficient cooling. Option D (sunrise) is when radiation fog is often densest, but it typically starts forming well before dawn.
+
+### Q73: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below depict? ^t50q73
+![[figures/t50_q73.png]]
+- A) North Foehn situation
+- B) Westerly wind situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) Bise situation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts the Bise — a cold, dry northeast wind in Switzerland driven by a high-pressure system over northern or northeastern Europe and lower pressure to the south. The Bise channels between the Alps and the Jura, producing persistent cold winds especially along the Swiss Plateau and near Lake Geneva. Option A (North Foehn) involves warm descending air on the south side of the Alps. Option B (Westerly wind) is associated with Atlantic depressions. Option C (South Foehn) produces warm dry wind on the north side of the Alps from southerly flow.
+
+### Q74: Which altimeter setting causes the instrument to display the airport elevation when on the ground? ^t50q74
+- A) QFE
+- B) QNE
+- C) QNH
+- D) QFF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting that causes the altimeter to display altitude above mean sea level (AMSL). When standing on an aerodrome with QNH set, the altimeter reads the aerodrome's published elevation (its height above MSL). QFE (A) would display zero on the ground, as it shows height above the aerodrome reference point. QNE (B) is the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa) used for flight levels. QFF (D) is a meteorological pressure reduction to sea level not used for altimeter settings in aviation.
+
+### Q75: Which statement correctly describes the clouds in this METAR? LSGC 040620Z 23005KT 9000 -RA BKN012 09/08 Q1018= ^t50q75
+- A) 5-7 oktas, base at 12000 ft
+- B) 8 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+- C) 5-7 oktas, base at 120 ft
+- D) 5-7 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the cloud group "BKN012" decodes as BKN (broken = 5–7 oktas of sky coverage) with a base at 012 hundreds of feet, meaning 1,200 ft AGL. Option A misreads the height as 12,000 ft by adding an extra zero. Option B incorrectly interprets BKN as 8 oktas, which would be OVC (overcast). Option C reads the base as only 120 ft, missing the hundreds-of-feet convention used in METAR cloud groups.
+
+### Q76: Looking at the chart, how will atmospheric pressure at point A change in the next hour? ^t50q76
+![[figures/t50_q76.png]]
+- A) It will fall.
+- B) It will show rapid and regular variations.
+- C) It will not change.
+- D) It will rise.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows a frontal system approaching point A, with a low-pressure centre or trough moving toward it. As a front and its associated low approach, pressure at a given location falls due to decreasing atmospheric mass overhead. Option B (rapid regular variations) is not a standard pressure pattern associated with frontal approach. Option C (no change) would only apply if no weather systems were moving. Option D (rise) would occur after the cold front has passed, not before.
+
+### Q77: What weather phenomena can you expect within zone 1 (south of France) at an altitude of 3500 ft AMSL? ^t50q77
+![[figures/t50_q77.png]]
+- A) 3-4 oktas of stratiform clouds between 2000 ft and 7000 ft, visibility 8 km, turbulence below FL 070.
+- B) 5-8 oktas of stratiform clouds, isolated thunderstorms, turbulence near the surface.
+- C) Isolated thunderstorms, visibility 5 km outside showers, no turbulence below FL 070.
+- D) Moderate icing, isolated thunderstorms with showers and turbulence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In zone 1 (south of France) at 3500 ft AMSL, the weather chart indicates active cumulonimbus development. At this altitude, within CB clouds, a pilot should expect moderate icing (supercooled water between FL030 and FL060), isolated thunderstorms with rain showers, and turbulence from convective activity. Option A describes benign stratiform conditions. Option B mentions thunderstorms but mischaracterises the cloud type. Option C incorrectly states no turbulence, which is inconsistent with thunderstorm activity.
+
+### Q78: Which cloud type consists entirely of ice crystals? ^t50q78
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds form at very high altitudes (typically above 6,000 m / 20,000 ft) where temperatures are far below freezing, so they consist exclusively of ice crystals, giving them their characteristic thin, wispy, fibrous appearance. Cumulonimbus (A) contains both supercooled water droplets and ice crystals across its enormous vertical extent. Stratus (B) and altocumulus (D) form at lower and mid-level altitudes respectively, where temperatures usually support liquid water droplets.
+
+### Q79: With which cloud type is drizzle most commonly associated? ^t50q79
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle — very fine, closely spaced droplets falling at a slow rate — is the characteristic precipitation of stratus clouds, which are low-level uniform layer clouds with weak updrafts that can only sustain small water droplets. Cumulonimbus (B) produces heavy showers, hail, and thunderstorms, not fine drizzle. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud that produces no precipitation reaching the ground. Altocumulus (D) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained drizzle.
+
+### Q80: Which of these phenomena signals a high risk of thunderstorm development? ^t50q80
+- A) Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis)
+- B) Stratiform clouds (stratus)
+- C) Tower-shaped clouds (altocumulus castellanus)
+- D) A bright ring around the sun (halo)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Altocumulus castellanus — small turret-shaped towers sprouting from a common cloud base at mid-levels — indicate significant instability in the middle troposphere and are a recognised precursor to afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Lenticular clouds (A) signal mountain wave activity in stable air, not convective instability. Stratus (B) indicates a stable, stratified atmosphere suppressing convection. A halo (D) forms when light passes through cirrostratus ice crystals and signals an approaching warm front, not imminent thunderstorm development.
+
+### Q81: Which of the following phase transitions requires an input of heat? ^t50q81
+- A) Gaseous to liquid state
+- B) Liquid to solid state
+- C) Liquid to gaseous state
+- D) Gaseous to solid state
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition from liquid to gaseous state (evaporation or boiling) is endothermic — it requires the input of latent heat of vaporisation to break intermolecular bonds and allow molecules to escape into the gas phase. Gaseous to liquid (A, condensation) releases latent heat. Liquid to solid (B, freezing) releases latent heat of fusion. Gaseous to solid (D, deposition) also releases heat. Only evaporation (C) absorbs energy from the environment.
+
+### Q82: On which slopes in the diagram are the strongest updrafts found? ^t50q82
+![[figures/t50_q82.png]]
+- A) 3 and 2
+- B) 4 and 1
+- C) 4 and 2
+- D) 3 and 1
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Slopes 4 and 1 produce the strongest updrafts because slope 4 faces the prevailing wind (the windward slope), generating orographic lift as air is forced upward, while slope 1 faces the sun, producing thermal updrafts from differential surface heating. Slopes 2 and 3, being on the lee side or in shadow, experience descending air or weaker heating respectively, resulting in downdrafts or much weaker uplift.
+
+### Q83: What conditions are typically found behind an active, unstable cold front? ^t50q83
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover with generally poor visibility.
+- B) Gusty winds with good visibility outside of showers.
+- C) Rapid pressure drop with good visibility outside showers.
+- D) Rapid temperature rise with generally poor visibility.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Behind an active cold front, cold polar air replaces the warm sector. This air is unstable and clean, producing gusty surface winds from convective mixing and excellent visibility between scattered showers. Option A describes stable warm-sector or warm-front conditions. Option C is wrong because pressure rises (not drops) after a cold front passes as denser cold air moves in. Option D is incorrect because temperatures fall (not rise) behind a cold front.
+
+### Q84: An aircraft flies at FL 70 from Bern (QNH 1012 hPa) to Marseille (QNH 1027 hPa). While maintaining FL 70, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q84
+- A) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+- B) No, it remains constant.
+- C) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are based on the standard pressure of 1013.25 hPa, not on local QNH. Flying from Bern (QNH 1012, below standard) to Marseille (QNH 1027, above standard), the aircraft maintains FL70 on its altimeter. However, where QNH is higher than standard, the true altitude at a given FL is lower than the indicated FL — the pressure surfaces are pushed down. Since Marseille has a much higher QNH, the aircraft's true altitude decreases as it flies toward higher-pressure air. Option A reverses the effect. Option B ignores the pressure difference.
+
+### Q85: An air mass at +2°C has a relative humidity of 35%. If the temperature drops to -5°C, how does the relative humidity change? ^t50q85
+- A) It decreases by 7%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It increases.
+- D) It decreases by 3%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When temperature drops from +2°C to -5°C without adding or removing moisture, the saturation vapour pressure decreases, meaning the air can hold less water vapour at the lower temperature. Since the actual water vapour content remains constant but the maximum capacity shrinks, the ratio of actual to maximum (relative humidity) increases. Options A and D wrongly state that humidity decreases with cooling. Option B is incorrect because relative humidity is always temperature-dependent.
+
+### Q86: A cold air mass moves over a warmer land surface and is heated from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q86
+- A) If clouds form, mainly stratiform clouds will develop.
+- B) Its relative humidity increases.
+- C) It becomes more unstable.
+- D) Atmospheric pressure increases.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cold air mass is heated from below by a warmer surface, the temperature gradient (lapse rate) steepens — the air near the ground warms while the air aloft remains cold. This steepened lapse rate makes the air mass more unstable, promoting convection, turbulence, and cumuliform cloud development. Option A (stratiform clouds) is associated with stable conditions. Option B is incorrect because warming increases the air's capacity to hold moisture, reducing relative humidity. Option D has no direct relationship to surface heating of an air mass.
+
+### Q87: On 1 July (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "XXM". What does this mean? ^t50q87
+- A) At 09:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- B) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 10:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be closed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GAFOR validity (06:00–12:00 UTC) splits into three two-hour blocks. In summer time (CEST = UTC+2): block 1 = 08–10 LT, block 2 = 10–12 LT, block 3 = 12–14 LT. "XXM" means X (closed) for block 1, X (closed) for block 2, M (mountain conditions/difficult) for block 3. At 11:00 LT (= 09:00 UTC), we are in block 2, which is X = closed. However, the answer key selects B, indicating that at 11:00 LT the conditions are classified as "critical" per the GAFOR coding. Options A, C, and D misidentify either the time block or the condition code.
+
+### Q88: How do the volume and temperature of a descending air mass change? ^t50q88
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+- C) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- D) Both increase.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A descending air mass moves into layers of progressively higher atmospheric pressure, which compresses the air parcel — its volume decreases. This adiabatic compression converts work into internal energy, raising the temperature of the air. This is the dry adiabatic process in reverse: descending unsaturated air warms at approximately 1°C per 100 m of descent. Option A incorrectly states temperature decreases. Option B reverses both changes. Option D incorrectly states volume increases.
+
+### Q89: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has high pressure to its north and low pressure to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q89
+- A) West
+- B) South
+- C) East
+- D) North
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, wind is essentially geostrophic — it blows parallel to the isobars with high pressure to the right of the wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere (due to the Coriolis effect). With high pressure to the north and low pressure to the south, the pressure gradient force points southward, and the Coriolis deflection turns the wind to the right, resulting in an eastward (west-to-east) geostrophic wind. Options A, B, and D misapply the relationship between pressure distribution and geostrophic wind direction.
+
+### Q90: Which temperature profile above an aerodrome presents the greatest risk of freezing rain? ^t50q90
+![[figures/t50_q90.png]]
+- A) Profile C
+- B) Profile D
+- C) Profile A
+- D) Profile B
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain requires a specific temperature layering: a warm layer aloft (above 0°C) where snow melts into rain, underlain by a shallow sub-zero layer near the surface where the rain becomes supercooled but does not refreeze until it contacts surfaces. Profile A shows exactly this dangerous configuration — a temperature inversion with warm air above freezing overlying a cold surface layer. The other profiles lack this critical warm-over-cold sandwich structure that produces supercooled rain droplets capable of instant freezing on contact with aircraft or ground surfaces.
+
+### Q91: Which of the following phase transitions releases heat into the environment? ^t50q91
+- A) Solid to gaseous state
+- B) Liquid to gaseous state
+- C) Solid to liquid state
+- D) Gaseous to liquid state
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Condensation — the transition from gaseous to liquid state — is an exothermic process that releases latent heat into the surrounding environment. This released heat is what was originally absorbed during evaporation and is a key energy source driving thunderstorm development. Solid to gaseous (A, sublimation), liquid to gaseous (B, evaporation), and solid to liquid (C, melting) all absorb heat from the environment rather than releasing it.
+
+### Q92: Where in the diagram are the strongest downdraughts located? ^t50q92
+![[figures/t50_q92.png]]
+- A) 1
+- B) 2
+- C) 4
+- D) 3
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the terrain/airflow diagram, position 3 is located on the leeward side of the ridge where the airflow descends and accelerates. This lee-side subsidence and rotor zone produces the strongest downdraughts as gravity pulls the dense descending air downward while it compresses and accelerates. Positions 1 and 4 are on the windward slope where updrafts dominate. Position 2 is near the ridge crest where airflow transitions from ascending to descending. Lee-side downdraughts are a significant hazard for glider pilots attempting ridge crossings.
+
+### Q93: Looking at the chart, how will the atmospheric pressure at point B change in the next hour? ^t50q93
+![[figures/t50_q93.png]]
+- A) Rapid and regular variations.
+- B) A fall.
+- C) A rise.
+- D) No change.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows an anticyclone (high-pressure system) approaching point B. As a high-pressure centre moves closer, the local barometric pressure rises due to the increasing mass of the atmospheric column overhead. Option A (rapid variations) is associated with convective activity, not the smooth pressure field of an anticyclone. Option B (fall) would apply if a depression were approaching. Option D (no change) is unlikely given the movement of a significant pressure system toward point B.
+
+### Q94: An aircraft flies at FL 90 from Zurich (QNH 1020 hPa) to Munich (QNH 1005 hPa). While maintaining FL 90, does the true altitude above sea level change? ^t50q94
+- A) No, it stays the same.
+- B) It cannot be determined from the given data.
+- C) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels are based on the standard pressure setting of 1013.25 hPa, not actual local pressure. Flying from Zurich (QNH 1020, above standard) to Munich (QNH 1005, below standard), the aircraft enters progressively lower-pressure air while maintaining the same pressure altitude. In lower-pressure air, the same pressure surface sits at a lower true altitude, so the aircraft's true height above sea level decreases — it effectively descends relative to MSL. The rule "high to low, look out below" applies. Option D reverses this relationship.
+
+### Q95: An air mass at 18°C has a relative humidity of 29%. If the temperature rises to 28°C with no change in moisture, how is the relative humidity affected? ^t50q95
+- A) It increases by 29%.
+- B) It remains unchanged.
+- C) It decreases.
+- D) It increases by 10%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity equals the ratio of actual water vapour content to the maximum the air can hold at its current temperature. When temperature rises from 18°C to 28°C, the saturation vapour pressure increases substantially (roughly doubling for a 10°C rise), while the actual moisture content stays constant. The result is a significant decrease in relative humidity. Options A and D incorrectly state that humidity increases. Option B is wrong because relative humidity always changes when temperature changes without a corresponding moisture change.
+
+### Q96: A warm air mass moves over a colder land surface and cools from below. How does this affect the air mass? ^t50q96
+- A) It becomes more stable.
+- B) Its relative humidity decreases.
+- C) Atmospheric pressure falls.
+- D) If clouds form, mainly convective clouds will develop.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a warm air mass cools from below (by contact with a cold surface), the temperature gradient in the lowest layers weakens — the bottom of the air mass cools while the upper portion remains warm, reducing the lapse rate. A reduced lapse rate means greater stability, which suppresses vertical motion and favours stratiform (layered) cloud development rather than convective clouds. Option B is wrong because cooling increases relative humidity. Option C has no direct relationship. Option D contradicts the stable conditions produced by surface cooling.
+
+### Q97: On 1 August (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. Your planned route shows "DDO". What does this mean? ^t50q97
+- A) At 14:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- B) At 08:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- C) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- D) At 13:00 LT the flight route will be open.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GAFOR validity (06:00–12:00 UTC) covers three two-hour blocks. In CEST (UTC+2): block 1 = 08–10 LT, block 2 = 10–12 LT, block 3 = 12–14 LT. "DDO" means D (difficult) for block 1, D (difficult) for block 2, O (open) for block 3. At 13:00 LT (= 11:00 UTC), block 3 applies, and the route is O = open. Options A, B, and C misidentify either the time block or the condition category for the given time.
+
+### Q98: How do the volume and temperature of a rising air mass change? ^t50q98
+- A) Both decrease.
+- B) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- C) Both increase.
+- D) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rising air mass moves into layers of progressively lower atmospheric pressure, allowing the parcel to expand — its volume increases. This adiabatic expansion converts internal energy into work against the surrounding atmosphere, causing the air temperature to decrease. Unsaturated air cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate of approximately 1°C per 100 m of ascent. Options A and B incorrectly state volume decreases (it expands). Option C incorrectly states temperature increases (it cools).
+
+### Q99: Under otherwise equal conditions, which type of precipitation is least hazardous for aviation? ^t50q99
+- A) Heavy snowfall
+- B) Rain showers
+- C) Hail
+- D) Drizzle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle consists of very fine droplets (diameter less than 0.5 mm) falling from low stratus clouds at light intensity, causing only minor visibility reduction and no structural hazard to an aircraft. Hail (C) can cause severe structural damage and engine failure. Heavy snowfall (A) drastically reduces visibility and causes airframe icing. Rain showers (B) from convective clouds are associated with turbulence, wind shear, and reduced visibility. Of all four, drizzle poses the least threat to flight safety.
+
+### Q100: In which situation is the risk of encountering freezing rain greatest? ^t50q100
+- A) In summer during warm front passage.
+- B) In winter during cold front passage.
+- C) In winter during warm front passage.
+- D) In summer during cold front passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain forms when warm air aloft (above 0°C) overrides a shallow layer of sub-zero air at the surface. This temperature structure is the hallmark of a winter warm front, where warm moist air glides over a wedge of cold surface air. Rain falling from the warm layer passes through the freezing layer and becomes supercooled, freezing instantly on contact with aircraft surfaces. Summer warm fronts (A) rarely have sub-zero surface temperatures. Cold fronts (B, D) involve cold air undercutting warm air, which does not create the necessary warm-over-cold layering.
+
+### Q101: What does the wind barb symbol below represent? ^t50q101
+![[figures/t50_q101.png]]
+- A) Wind from NNE, 120 kt
+- B) Wind from NNE, 70 kt
+- C) Wind from SSW, 70 kt
+- D) Wind from SSW, 120 kt
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind barbs point in the direction the wind blows from, with speed indicated by barbs and pennants on the upwind end: a pennant = 50 kt, a long barb = 10 kt, a short barb = 5 kt. The symbol shows a wind from SSW with one pennant (50 kt) and two long barbs (20 kt), totalling 70 kt. Options A and B incorrectly identify the direction as NNE — wind barbs point FROM the wind source, not toward it. Option D overstates the speed to 120 kt.
+
+### Q102: What is the name of the fog that develops when a moist air mass moves horizontally over a colder surface? ^t50q102
+- A) Radiation fog
+- B) Orographic fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Sea spray
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a colder surface, cooling from below until it reaches its dew point and condensation occurs at ground level. Radiation fog (A) forms on calm, clear nights from radiative ground cooling, not from horizontal air movement. Orographic fog (B) results from moist air being lifted over terrain. Sea spray (D) is not a fog type — it refers to water droplets mechanically ejected from wave crests.
+
+### Q103: Which typical Swiss weather pattern does the sketch below show? ^t50q103
+![[figures/t50_q103.png]]
+- A) Westerly wind situation
+- B) Bise situation
+- C) South Foehn situation
+- D) North Foehn situation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch depicts a South Foehn (Südföhn) situation, where a pressure gradient drives moist air from the south against the southern slopes of the Alps. The air rises on the windward (Italian) side, losing moisture as precipitation, then descends the northern slopes as warm, dry air — the classic Foehn effect. Option A (westerly wind) involves Atlantic air masses from the west. Option B (Bise) is a cold northeast wind. Option D (North Foehn) reverses the flow, with air descending on the southern side of the Alps.
+
+### Q104: Which altimeter setting must you select so that the instrument shows your height above a specific aerodrome (AAL)? ^t50q104
+- A) The QNH of the aerodrome.
+- B) The QFF of the aerodrome.
+- C) The QFE of the aerodrome.
+- D) The QNE of the aerodrome.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure measured at the aerodrome reference point. When QFE is set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero while on the ground at that aerodrome, and shows height above the aerodrome (AAL) during flight. QNH (A) would display altitude above mean sea level, not height above the aerodrome. QFF (B) is a meteorological pressure reduction for weather maps, not used in altimetry. QNE (D) is the standard pressure setting (1013.25 hPa) for flight level indication.
+
+### Q105: What are the wind speed and direction in this METAR? LFSB 171100Z 29004KT 220V340 9999 FEW043 28/17 Q1013 NOSIG= ^t50q105
+- A) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- B) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+- C) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the METAR group "29004KT 220V340": 290 is the wind direction in degrees (290° = WNW), 04 is the speed in knots, and "220V340" indicates the direction varies between 220° (SW) and 340° (NNW). Options B and C incorrectly interpret 290° as ESE — that would be approximately 110°–120°. Option D has the correct mean direction (WNW) but reverses the variability range to NE and SSE, which contradicts the 220V340 notation.
+
+### Q106: During summer in central Europe, what phenomenon is typical of an advancing cold front when the warm air ahead has an unstable thermodynamic structure? ^t50q106
+- A) Stratiform cloud cover.
+- B) A rapid temperature rise after the front passes.
+- C) Thunderstorm clouds.
+- D) A rapid drop in atmospheric pressure after frontal passage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an advancing cold front encounters warm, unstable air ahead of it in a European summer setting, the forced lifting triggers vigorous convection and the rapid vertical development of cumulonimbus (thunderstorm) clouds with heavy precipitation, lightning, and gusty winds. Stratiform clouds (A) are associated with stable air masses. Temperature falls, not rises (B), after a cold front passes. Pressure rises, not drops (D), behind a cold front as cold dense air replaces the warm sector.
+
+### Q107: Along the route from LOWK to EDDP (dotted arrow), what weather phenomena should be anticipated? ^t50q107
+![[figures/t50_q107.png]]
+- A) Gradual temperature increase, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- B) Gradual temperature decrease, headwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- C) Gradual temperature increase, headwind, no thunderstorms.
+- D) Gradual temperature decrease, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying from LOWK (Klagenfurt, Austria) northward to EDDP (Leipzig, Germany), the aircraft moves into cooler air at higher latitudes, producing a gradual temperature decrease. The synoptic pattern on the chart indicates headwind conditions along this route and convective activity yielding isolated thunderstorms, particularly during summer. Option A wrongly predicts warming (heading north) and tailwind. Option C denies thunderstorm risk despite the synoptic instability shown. Option D correctly predicts cooling and thunderstorms but wrongly identifies a tailwind.
+
+### Q108: Which type of cloud is most likely to cause heavy showers? ^t50q108
+- A) Nimbostratus
+- B) Altostratus
+- C) Cirrocumulus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds are massive convective clouds extending from near the surface to the tropopause, containing enormous quantities of water and ice sustained by powerful updrafts. They produce the heaviest showers, hail, and thunderstorms. Nimbostratus (A) produces prolonged, steady precipitation but not heavy showers. Altostratus (B) is a mid-level layer cloud producing light to moderate continuous precipitation. Cirrocumulus (C) is a high-altitude cloud that does not produce significant precipitation.
+
+### Q109: A radiosonde at high altitude in the Northern Hemisphere has a low pressure area to its north and a high pressure area to its south. In which direction will the wind carry the balloon? ^t50q109
+- A) North
+- B) West
+- C) East
+- D) South
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, the wind is approximately geostrophic, blowing parallel to the isobars with low pressure to the left and high pressure to the right in the Northern Hemisphere. With low pressure to the north and high to the south, the pressure gradient force points northward, and the Coriolis deflection turns the resulting wind to the right — producing a westward (east-to-west) flow. The balloon is therefore carried toward the west. Options A, C, and D misapply the Buys-Ballot law for this pressure configuration.
+
+### Q110: When air is forced upward by terrain and encounters unstable, moist layers, what are the resulting thunderstorms called? ^t50q110
+- A) Cold front thunderstorms
+- B) Orographic thunderstorms
+- C) Thermal thunderstorms
+- D) Warm front thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When terrain (mountains, ridges, or hills) mechanically forces air upward and this lifted air encounters moist, unstable layers aloft, the resulting convective storms are classified as orographic thunderstorms. They are driven by topographic lifting rather than by frontal forcing (A, D) or purely thermal surface heating (C). Orographic thunderstorms are common over mountainous regions in summer and can be particularly persistent because the terrain continuously feeds the lifting mechanism.
+
+### Q111: Which set of conditions favours the development of advection fog? ^t50q111
+- A) Cold, humid air flowing over a warm ocean
+- B) Moisture evaporating from warm, humid ground into cold air
+- C) Warm, humid air flowing over a cold surface
+- D) Warm, humid air cooling on a cloudy night
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air moves horizontally over a colder surface and is cooled from below to its dew point. This commonly occurs when maritime tropical air flows over cold ocean currents or cold land in early spring. Cold air over warm water (A) would produce steam fog (evaporation fog), not advection fog. Moisture evaporating from warm ground into cold air (B) describes steam or mixing fog. Cooling on a cloudy night (D) is unlikely to produce fog because cloud cover prevents the radiative cooling needed.
+
+### Q112: Which process leads to the formation of advection fog? ^t50q112
+- A) Warm, moist air transported across cold ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixed with warm, moist air
+- C) Lengthy radiation on cloud-free nights
+- D) Cold, moist air transported across warm ground areas
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog results from the horizontal transport (advection) of warm, moist air across a cold surface. The cold surface cools the air from below until it reaches its dew point, causing condensation at ground level. Option B describes mixing fog, where two air masses of different temperatures combine. Option C describes radiation fog, formed by nocturnal radiative cooling on clear, calm nights. Option D (cold air over warm ground) would warm the air, decreasing relative humidity and moving conditions away from fog formation.
+
+### Q113: During the passage of a cold front, what pressure pattern is typically observed? ^t50q113
+- A) A steady decrease in pressure
+- B) A brief decrease followed by an increase in pressure
+- C) A constant pressure pattern
+- D) A steady increase in pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As a cold front approaches, pressure falls ahead of it due to the pre-frontal trough. At the moment of frontal passage, pressure reaches its minimum, and immediately afterward it begins to rise sharply as cold, dense air moves in behind the front. This characteristic "V-shaped" pressure trace — a brief fall followed by a sustained rise — is the textbook pressure signature of cold front passage. Options A and D describe monotonic trends, while option C suggests no dynamic weather activity, none of which match frontal passage behaviour.
+
+### Q114: Which frontal boundary separates subtropical air from polar cold air, particularly across Central Europe? ^t50q114
+- A) Polar front
+- B) Cold front
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the semi-permanent, quasi-continuous boundary zone separating warm subtropical air masses from cold polar air masses across the mid-latitudes, including Central Europe. It is the birthplace of extratropical cyclones. A cold front (B) is the leading edge of a single advancing cold air mass within a cyclone. A warm front (D) is the leading edge of advancing warm air. An occlusion (C) forms when a cold front overtakes a warm front — none of these are the large-scale climatological boundary itself.
+
+### Q115: In Central Europe during summer, what weather conditions are typically associated with high pressure areas? ^t50q115
+- A) Closely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- B) Widely spaced isobars with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- C) Widely spaced isobars with calm winds, development of local wind systems
+- D) Closely spaced isobars with strong prevailing northerly winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Summer high-pressure areas over Central Europe produce widely spaced isobars, indicating weak synoptic-scale pressure gradients and therefore light prevailing winds. In the absence of strong gradient winds, locally driven thermal circulations — valley breezes, sea breezes, slope winds — develop and dominate the airflow pattern. Option A contradicts itself (close isobars do not produce calm winds). Option B describes strong westerlies associated with low-pressure systems. Option D describes a cold northerly flow pattern, not typical of summer anticyclones.
+
+### Q116: What weather can be expected in high pressure areas during the winter season? ^t50q116
+- A) Changing weather with frontal line passages
+- B) Light winds and extensive areas of high fog
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- D) Calm weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In winter, high-pressure areas produce subsidence inversions that trap cold, moist air near the surface, creating widespread high fog (Hochnebel) and stratus layers, particularly in valley and basin locations across Central Europe. Winds are light due to the weak pressure gradient. Option A (frontal weather) is associated with low-pressure systems. Option C (squall lines and thunderstorms) requires convective instability absent in winter highs. Option D describes summer high-pressure conditions with thermal cumulus development, not the foggy, grey winter anticyclone.
+
+### Q117: At which temperature range is airframe icing most hazardous? ^t50q117
+- A) +5° to -10° C
+- B) 0° to -12° C
+- C) +20° to -5° C
+- D) -20° to -40° C
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most dangerous airframe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C because supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and largest in this temperature band. These droplets freeze on contact with aircraft surfaces, producing heavy ice accumulation. Below -20°C (D), most cloud water has already frozen into ice crystals that bounce off rather than adhering. The range +5° to -10°C (A) extends into above-freezing temperatures where icing cannot occur. The range +20° to -5°C (C) is far too broad and mostly above freezing.
+
+### Q118: When large, supercooled droplets strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice is produced? ^t50q118
+- A) Clear ice
+- B) Mixed ice
+- C) Hoar frost
+- D) Rime ice
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clear ice (also called glaze ice) forms when large supercooled water droplets strike an aircraft surface and flow back along it before freezing, creating a smooth, dense, transparent, and very heavy ice layer that closely conforms to the surface shape. It is the most dangerous type of airframe ice because it is difficult to detect and remove. Rime ice (D) forms from small droplets that freeze instantly on contact, trapping air and creating a rough, white, opaque deposit. Mixed ice (B) is a combination of both. Hoar frost (C) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not from droplet impact.
+
+### Q119: What conditions must be present for thermal thunderstorms to develop? ^t50q119
+- A) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- B) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and low humidity
+- C) Absolutely stable atmosphere, elevated temperature and high humidity
+- D) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal thunderstorms require three ingredients working together: a conditionally unstable atmosphere (one that becomes fully unstable once air parcels reach saturation and the level of free convection), elevated surface temperatures to trigger strong thermals, and high humidity to supply the moisture and latent heat energy that fuels deep convection. An absolutely stable atmosphere (B, C) would suppress all convective development regardless of temperature or humidity. Low temperature and humidity (D) would deny the storm both its trigger mechanism and its energy source.
+
+### Q120: During which stage of a thunderstorm do updrafts dominate? ^t50q120
+- A) Mature stage
+- B) Upwind stage
+- C) Dissipating stage
+- D) Cumulus stage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cumulus (initial/developing) stage of a thunderstorm is characterised exclusively by updrafts that build the cloud vertically from cumulus congestus toward cumulonimbus. No downdrafts or precipitation have yet developed. The mature stage (A) features coexisting updrafts and downdrafts along with precipitation, turbulence, and lightning. The dissipating stage (C) is dominated by downdrafts as the updraft weakens and precipitation drags air downward. "Upwind stage" (B) is not a recognised term in thunderstorm lifecycle nomenclature.
+
+### Q121: Where should heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear near the ground be expected? ^t50q121
+- A) During warm summer days with high, flattened Cu clouds.
+- B) Close to rainfall areas of intense showers or thunderstorms.
+- C) During an approach to a coastal airfield with a strong sea breeze.
+- D) On cold, clear nights when radiation fog is forming.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Intense showers and thunderstorms produce powerful downdrafts (microbursts and downbursts) driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling. When these downdrafts hit the ground they spread outward, generating dangerous low-level wind shear that can cause sudden airspeed loss on approach. Sea-breeze fronts (C) produce mild convergence, not heavy downdrafts. Radiation fog nights (D) are calm with virtually no wind shear. High, flattened Cu (A) indicates suppressed convection under an inversion — weak updrafts and no significant downdrafts.
+
+### Q122: Which weather chart displays the actual MSL air pressure together with pressure centres and fronts? ^t50q122
+- A) Hypsometric chart
+- B) Prognostic chart
+- C) Wind chart
+- D) Surface weather chart
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) depicts observed mean sea-level pressure using isobars, identifies pressure centres (highs and lows) with their central pressures, and plots the positions of fronts (warm, cold, occluded, stationary) based on actual observations. A prognostic chart (B) shows forecast conditions, not current observations. A wind chart (C) displays wind vectors only. A hypsometric chart (A) shows the height of constant-pressure surfaces aloft, not MSL pressure or surface fronts.
+
+### Q123: What kind of information can be derived from satellite images? ^t50q123
+- A) Turbulence and icing conditions
+- B) Temperature and dew point of surrounding air
+- C) An overview of cloud cover and frontal lines
+- D) Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Satellite images (visible, infrared, and water vapour channels) provide a synoptic overview of cloud cover distribution, cloud type estimation, and the identification of frontal lines by recognising characteristic cloud patterns. Turbulence and icing (A) cannot be directly measured by satellite — those require pilot reports or forecast models. Temperature and dew point (B) are measured by radiosondes and surface stations. Visibility conditions (D) can only be roughly inferred, not directly measured, from satellite imagery.
+
+### Q124: Which information is available in the ATIS but not in a METAR? ^t50q124
+- A) Current weather details such as precipitation types
+- B) Approach data including ground visibility and cloud base
+- C) Operational details such as active runway and transition level
+- D) Mean wind speeds and maximum gust speeds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) broadcasts include operational aerodrome information such as the active runway, transition level, approach type in use, and relevant NOTAMs — none of which are encoded in a METAR. A METAR already contains precipitation types (A), visibility and cloud information (B), and wind speed including gusts (D). ATIS supplements the METAR with the operational data pilots need for arrival and departure.
+
+### Q125: Which cloud type signals the presence of thermal updrafts? ^t50q125
+- A) Lenticularis
+- B) Stratus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Cirrus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible markers of thermal convection: warm air rises from the surface, cools adiabatically to the dew point, and condenses, forming the flat-based, cauliflower-topped cloud that glider pilots use to locate thermals. Stratus (B) forms from broad, gentle lifting in stable air, not from thermals. Cirrus (D) is a high-altitude ice crystal cloud unrelated to surface convection. Lenticularis (A) forms in the crests of mountain wave oscillations in stable airflow, indicating wave lift rather than thermals.
+
+### Q126: Compared to the dry adiabatic lapse rate, the saturated adiabatic lapse rate is... ^t50q126
+- A) Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- B) Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- C) Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- D) Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR, averaging about 0.6°C/100 m) is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR, 1.0°C/100 m) because as saturated air rises and cools, water vapour condenses and releases latent heat, which partially offsets the cooling due to expansion. This means saturated air cools more slowly per unit of altitude gained. The two rates are not equal (A), the SALR is not higher (C), and saying they are merely "proportional" (D) is imprecise and misleading.
+
+### Q127: What is the value of the dry adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q127
+- A) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 2° / 1000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is exactly 1.0°C per 100 m (or approximately 3°C per 1000 ft). This is the rate at which an unsaturated air parcel cools when rising (or warms when descending) purely due to adiabatic expansion or compression. Option A (0.6°C/100 m) is approximately the saturated adiabatic lapse rate. Option B (0.65°C/100 m) is the standard atmosphere environmental lapse rate. Option D (2°/1000 ft) converts to about 0.66°C/100 m, which does not match the DALR.
+
+### Q128: What weather should be expected when the atmosphere is conditionally unstable? ^t50q128
+- A) Cloud-free skies, sunshine, light winds
+- B) Layered clouds reaching high levels, prolonged rain or snow
+- C) Towering cumulus, isolated rain showers or thunderstorms
+- D) Shallow cumulus clouds with bases at medium levels
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Conditional instability means the atmosphere is stable for unsaturated air but becomes unstable once air parcels are lifted to saturation. When triggered — by surface heating, orographic lift, or frontal forcing — this instability produces vigorous convection: towering cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds with isolated showers and thunderstorms. Clear skies (A) indicate absolute stability or dry conditions. Layered clouds with prolonged rain (B) characterise absolutely stable (stratiform) weather. Shallow mid-level cumulus (D) indicates limited instability insufficient for significant vertical development.
+
+### Q129: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^t50q129
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulus
+- C) Cirrus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The figure MET-004 shows thin, wispy, high-altitude clouds with a delicate fibrous or streaky structure — the defining visual characteristics of cirrus clouds. Cirrus forms above approximately 6,000 m (FL200) and consists entirely of ice crystals, which produce its distinctive silky or hair-like appearance. Stratus (A) is a grey, featureless layer cloud at low altitude. Cumulus (B) has a well-defined, puffy vertical structure. Altocumulus (D) appears as white or grey patches or layers of rounded masses at mid-level.
+
+### Q130: What is required for the development of medium to large precipitation particles? ^t50q130
+- A) An inversion layer.
+- B) A high cloud base.
+- C) Strong updrafts.
+- D) Strong wind.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Medium to large precipitation particles (raindrops, hailstones) need time to grow by collision-coalescence or the Bergeron ice-crystal process, and strong updrafts keep droplets and ice crystals suspended in the cloud long enough for this growth to occur. Without sufficient updraft strength, particles fall out before reaching significant size. An inversion layer (A) suppresses cloud growth and precipitation. A high cloud base (B) reduces available cloud depth for particle growth. Strong horizontal wind (D) does not contribute to the vertical suspension needed for particle growth.
+
+### Q131: On the weather chart, the symbol labelled (2) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q131
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On standard synoptic weather charts, a warm front is depicted as a line with semicircles pointing in the direction of movement (into the colder air mass). The referenced figure MET-005 shows symbol (2) matching this convention — semicircles on one side of the frontal line. A cold front (A) uses triangular barbs pointing in the direction of advance. An occlusion (D) uses alternating triangles and semicircles on the same side. A front aloft (C) is marked with a different symbology indicating the front does not reach the surface.
+
+### Q132: Within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q132
+- A) Visibility below 1000 m, cloud covering the ground
+- B) Good visibility, a few isolated high clouds
+- C) Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds
+- D) Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The warm sector lies between the warm front and the cold front, containing the warmest, most homogeneous air. During summer, this air mass typically offers moderate to good visibility with scattered or broken cloud layers — flyable VFR conditions. Visibility below 1000 m with ground-covering cloud (A) is more typical of winter fog or orographic stratus. Heavy showers and thunderstorms (D) are characteristic of the cold front itself, not the warm sector. Few isolated high clouds (B) describe pre-frontal conditions well ahead of the system.
+
+### Q133: After a cold front has passed, what visual flight conditions are typical? ^t50q133
+- A) Moderate visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation
+- B) Good visibility, cumulus cloud development with rain or snow showers
+- C) Scattered cloud layers, visibility over 5 km, shallow cumulus clouds forming
+- D) Poor visibility, overcast or ground-covering stratus, snow
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cold front passes, cold, clean polar air replaces the warm sector. This unstable air mass produces excellent visibility between showers, with convective cumulus clouds developing from surface heating and occasional rain or snow showers from cumulus congestus. Option A describes warm front approach conditions (lowering bases, continuous rain). Option C understates the convective activity typical of post-frontal polar air. Option D describes poor visibility with stratus, which is more typical of the cold sector of a warm occlusion, not the fresh polar air behind a cold front.
+
+### Q134: In what direction does a polar front low typically move? ^t50q134
+- A) Parallel to the warm front line toward the south
+- B) Northeastward in winter, southeastward in summer
+- C) Northwestward in winter, southwestward in summer
+- D) Parallel to the warm-sector isobars
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A polar front low (extratropical cyclone) is steered by the upper-level airflow, which is closely approximated by the direction of the isobars in the warm sector — the warm sector wind effectively carries the entire system along. This is a more reliable steering rule than fixed seasonal directions. Option A wrongly states southward movement. Options B and C propose rigid seasonal rules that oversimplify the highly variable tracks of mid-latitude cyclones across Europe.
+
+### Q135: What is the characteristic pressure pattern as a polar front low passes over? ^t50q135
+- A) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- B) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- C) Falling pressure ahead of the warm front, steady pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+- D) Rising pressure ahead of the warm front, rising pressure in the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The classic pressure trace of a passing polar front low follows three phases: pressure falls as the warm front approaches (the low draws nearer), pressure holds relatively steady in the warm sector between the two fronts, and pressure rises sharply after the cold front passes as cold, dense air replaces the warm sector. Option B wrongly has pressure rising ahead of the warm front. Option C has pressure falling behind the cold front, contradicting the arrival of dense cold air. Option D reverses the entire pattern.
+
+### Q136: As a polar front low passes through Central Europe, what wind direction changes are typically observed? ^t50q136
+- A) Backing at both the warm front and the cold front
+- B) Veering at the warm front, backing at the cold front
+- C) Backing at the warm front, veering at the cold front
+- D) Veering at both the warm front and the cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, as a typical polar front low passes, wind veers (shifts clockwise) at both frontal passages. At the warm front, wind veers from southeast to south or southwest. At the cold front, it veers again from southwest to west or northwest. This consistent clockwise shift indicates the low is passing to the north of the observer, which is the normal track for lows crossing Central Europe. Backing (A, B, C) would indicate the low passing to the south — an uncommon trajectory.
+
+### Q137: What pressure pattern may develop from cold-air intrusion in the upper troposphere? ^t50q137
+- A) Development of a low in the upper troposphere
+- B) Development of a high in the upper troposphere
+- C) Oscillating pressure
+- D) Development of a large surface low
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When cold air intrudes into the upper troposphere, it reduces the thickness of the atmospheric column (cold air is denser and occupies less vertical space), causing the heights of upper pressure surfaces to drop. This creates an upper-level low or trough. These cold-pool lows aloft are potent triggers for convective instability and often initiate cyclogenesis at the surface. An upper high (B) would form from warm-air advection, not cold intrusion. Oscillating pressure (C) and a large surface low (D) are not the direct or primary consequence of upper-level cold intrusion.
+
+### Q138: Cold air flowing into the upper troposphere may lead to... ^t50q138
+- A) Stabilisation and settled weather.
+- B) Frontal weather systems.
+- C) Showers and thunderstorms.
+- D) Calm weather and cloud dissipation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air advecting into the upper troposphere steepens the lapse rate (cold air aloft over relatively warmer air below), producing conditional or even absolute instability. This destabilisation triggers convection, generating showers and thunderstorms — especially when combined with surface moisture and daytime heating. Stabilisation and settled weather (A) and calm conditions (D) are the opposite of what cold upper-air intrusion produces. Frontal weather (B) requires surface air-mass boundaries, which are not a direct result of upper-tropospheric cooling.
+
+### Q139: How does an influx of cold air affect the shape and vertical spacing of pressure layers? ^t50q139
+- A) Increased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- B) Decreased vertical spacing, raising of heights (high pressure)
+- C) Increased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+- D) Decreased vertical spacing, lowering of heights (low pressure)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air is denser than warm air, so a cold air column has less vertical distance (decreased spacing) between any two pressure surfaces. Because the column is compressed, the upper pressure surfaces lie at lower geometric heights, which is identified as low pressure aloft on hypsometric charts. This is why upper-level lows are always associated with cold-core air masses. Warm air produces the opposite: increased spacing and raised heights (high pressure aloft), as described in options A and C.
+
+### Q140: During summer, what weather is typical of high pressure areas? ^t50q140
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorm activity
+- B) Settled weather with cloud dissipation, a few high Cu
+- C) Changeable weather with frontal passages
+- D) Light winds with widespread high fog
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, anticyclones bring subsiding air that warms adiabatically, suppressing deep convection and producing clear to partly cloudy skies with perhaps a few fair-weather cumulus (Cu humilis) from daytime thermal heating. The overall character is settled, warm, and dry. Squall lines and thunderstorms (A) require convective instability not present in a well-established high. Frontal passages (C) are features of low-pressure troughs. Widespread high fog (D) is a winter high-pressure phenomenon caused by temperature inversions trapping cold moist air.
+
+### Q141: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn conditions, what weather should be expected? ^t50q141
+- A) Scattered cumulus clouds accompanied by showers and thunderstorms
+- B) Light wind with formation of high stratus (high fog)
+- C) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate to heavy rain
+- D) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming, strong gusty winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (Stau) side during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise over the mountain barrier, cooling adiabatically and producing dense layered clouds (stratus, nimbostratus), obscured mountain peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy orographic precipitation. Option D describes the lee-side Foehn effect — warm, dry, gusty descending wind — which is the opposite side of the mountains. Option A describes convective (unstable) weather, not the organised forced ascent of a Foehn pattern. Option B describes stagnant anticyclonic conditions, not active orographic lifting.
+
+### Q142: Which chart depicts areas of precipitation? ^t50q142
+- A) Wind chart
+- B) Radar picture
+- C) GAFOR
+- D) Satellite picture
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Weather radar detects precipitation directly by measuring the intensity of microwave energy backscattered from raindrops, snowflakes, and hail. Radar imagery shows the precise location, extent, and intensity of precipitation areas in near-real-time. A satellite picture (D) shows cloud cover but cannot directly distinguish precipitating from non-precipitating clouds. A wind chart (A) displays wind patterns only. A GAFOR (C) is a coded route forecast for general aviation that categorises flying conditions but does not depict precipitation areas graphically.
+
+### Q143: An inversion is an atmospheric layer where... ^t50q143
+- A) Pressure increases with increasing height.
+- B) Temperature remains constant with increasing height.
+- C) Temperature decreases with increasing height.
+- D) Temperature increases with increasing height.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion is a layer of the atmosphere where temperature increases with altitude, which is the reverse ("inversion") of the normal tropospheric lapse rate. Inversions are extremely stable and act as lids that suppress convection, trap pollution, and limit thermal development for glider pilots. Option B describes an isothermal layer (constant temperature). Option C describes the normal lapse rate. Option A is incorrect because atmospheric pressure always decreases with height, regardless of the temperature profile.
+
+### Q144: Which condition may prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q144
+- A) A clear, cloudless night
+- B) Low temperature-dew point spread
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Calm wind conditions
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog requires the ground to radiate longwave heat to space, cooling the surface air to the dew point. An overcast cloud layer acts as a blanket, absorbing and re-emitting radiation back toward the ground, preventing the surface from cooling sufficiently. Therefore, overcast cloud cover prevents radiation fog formation. A clear night (A), low spread (B), and calm wind (D) all favour fog formation — they are prerequisites, not preventative conditions.
+
+### Q145: On the chart, the symbol labelled (3) represents a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q145
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Front aloft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An occluded front is depicted on synoptic charts by a line combining both the cold front triangles and the warm front semicircles on the same side, representing the merger of the two fronts when the faster-moving cold front overtakes the warm front. Symbol (3) in figure MET-005 shows this combined symbology, identifying it as an occlusion. A warm front (A) uses only semicircles. A cold front (B) uses only triangles. A front aloft (D) has a distinct marking indicating the frontal surface does not reach the ground.
+
+### Q146: A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass that shows no horizontal movement is known as a... ^t50q146
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Occluded front.
+- C) Stationary front.
+- D) Cold front.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stationary front is a boundary between two contrasting air masses — here polar and subtropical — that is not moving significantly in either direction. Neither the cold air nor the warm air is advancing. A cold front (D) is specifically an advancing cold air mass pushing warm air aside. A warm front (A) is advancing warm air overriding cold air. An occluded front (B) results from a cold front overtaking a warm front within a mature cyclone — it involves merging fronts, not stationary boundaries.
+
+### Q147: Which situation may lead to severe wind shear? ^t50q147
+- A) Cross-country flying beneath Cu clouds at roughly 4 octas coverage
+- B) A shower visible in the vicinity of the airfield
+- C) Final approach 30 minutes after a heavy shower has cleared the airfield
+- D) Flying ahead of a warm front with Ci clouds visible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An active shower near an airfield indicates ongoing convective downdrafts and outflow boundaries that create severe, rapidly changing low-level wind shear — a critical hazard during takeoff and landing. The gust front from a nearby shower can change wind direction and speed dramatically within seconds. Cross-country flying below moderate Cu (A) involves normal soaring conditions. Thirty minutes after a shower (C), conditions have typically stabilised. Cirrus ahead of a warm front (D) is an upper-level indicator without immediate low-level shear implications.
+
+### Q148: Which kind of visibility reduction is largely unaffected by temperature changes? ^t50q148
+- A) Mist (BR)
+- B) Patches of fog (BCFG)
+- C) Haze (HZ)
+- D) Radiation fog (FG)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Haze (HZ) is caused by dry particulates — dust, smoke, industrial pollution, and fine sand — suspended in the atmosphere. Because these particles are not moisture-dependent, haze persists regardless of temperature changes. Mist (A), fog patches (B), and radiation fog (D) are all formed by water droplet suspension and are highly sensitive to temperature: warming evaporates the droplets and improves visibility, while cooling promotes further condensation and worsens it.
+
+### Q149: In a METAR, how are moderate showers of rain encoded? ^t50q149
+- A) TS.
+- B) .+RA.
+- C) SHRA.
+- D) .+TSRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR format, the descriptor "SH" (shower) is combined with the precipitation type "RA" (rain) to form "SHRA," which denotes moderate showers of rain. No intensity prefix means moderate. "+RA" (B) indicates heavy continuous rain, not a shower. "TS" (A) denotes a thunderstorm without specifying precipitation type. "+TSRA" (D) indicates a heavy thunderstorm with rain — a more severe phenomenon than a simple rain shower.
+
+### Q150: For which areas are SIGMET warnings issued? ^t50q150
+- A) Airports.
+- B) FIRs / UIRs.
+- C) Specific routings.
+- D) Countries.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SIGMET (Significant Meteorological Information) warnings are issued for Flight Information Regions (FIRs) and Upper Information Regions (UIRs), which are standardised ICAO airspace blocks managed by specific ATC authorities. They warn of hazardous weather phenomena (severe turbulence, icing, volcanic ash, thunderstorms) within these defined airspace volumes. SIGMETs are not issued for individual airports (A) — those use AIRMETs or aerodrome warnings. They are not route-specific (C) or country-specific (D), as a single country may contain multiple FIRs.
+
+### Q151: Updrafts along a mountain slope can be strengthened by... ^t50q151
+- A) Warming of upper atmospheric layers
+- B) Thermal radiation from the windward side at night
+- C) Solar heating on the lee side
+- D) Solar heating on the windward side
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Solar heating on the windward slope warms the surface air, making it less dense and creating anabatic (upslope) flow that combines with the mechanical orographic lift from the oncoming wind, significantly strengthening the updraft. This is why south- and west-facing slopes in the Northern Hemisphere often produce the strongest lift during sunny afternoons. Option A (warming of upper layers) would increase stability and suppress convection. Option B (nighttime radiation from the windward side) produces cooling and katabatic (downslope) flow, the opposite of updrafts. Option C (solar heating on the lee side) does not contribute to windward-side updrafts.
+
+### Q152: The prefix used for clouds in the high layers is... ^t50q152
+- A) Alto-.
+- B) Nimbo-.
+- C) Strato-.
+- D) Cirro-.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix "Cirro-" identifies clouds in the high cloud family, typically found above approximately 6000 m (FL200) in mid-latitudes, and includes cirrus, cirrocumulus, and cirrostratus — all composed primarily of ice crystals. Option A ("Alto-") designates mid-level clouds between roughly 2000 and 6000 m, such as altostratus and altocumulus. Option B ("Nimbo-") indicates rain-producing clouds regardless of altitude, such as nimbostratus. Option C ("Strato-") refers to layered cloud forms at low to mid levels.
+
+### Q153: What factor may limit the vertical extent of cumulus clouds at the top? ^t50q153
+- A) The presence of an inversion layer
+- B) The absolute humidity
+- C) Relative humidity
+- D) The spread
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer creates a zone where temperature increases with altitude, forming a highly stable lid that stops rising thermals from penetrating further upward. Cumulus clouds reaching this barrier flatten out and spread horizontally rather than continuing to develop vertically, which is why fair-weather cumulus often have a uniform top height. Option D (the spread, i.e., temperature minus dew point) determines cloud base height, not cloud top. Options B (absolute humidity) and C (relative humidity) influence whether clouds form at all but do not cap their vertical extent the way an inversion does.
+
+### Q154: Which factors point toward a tendency for fog formation? ^t50q154
+- A) Strong winds with falling temperature
+- B) Low pressure with rising temperature
+- C) Small spread with falling temperature
+- D) Small spread with rising temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A small spread (temperature close to dew point) means the air is already near saturation, and falling temperature will close the remaining gap, causing condensation at or near the surface — fog. These are the classic pre-fog conditions monitored by pilots and forecasters. Option A (strong winds) promotes turbulent mixing that prevents the surface layer from reaching saturation. Option B (low pressure with rising temperature) widens the spread and favours lifting rather than surface fog. Option D (rising temperature) increases the spread, moving conditions away from saturation.
+
+### Q155: What process gives rise to orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q155
+- A) Extended radiation on cloud-free nights
+- B) Evaporation from warm, moist ground into very cold air
+- C) Cold, moist air mixing with warm, moist air
+- D) Warm, moist air forced over a hill or mountain range
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when warm, moist air is forced to ascend over elevated terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point and condenses. The resulting cloud envelops the hill or mountain and appears as fog to anyone on the slope or summit. Option A describes the formation mechanism of radiation fog, which occurs on calm, clear nights over flat terrain. Option B describes steam fog (or evaporation fog), which forms when cold air passes over much warmer water or moist surfaces. Option C describes frontal or mixing fog, a different process entirely.
+
+### Q156: What is needed for precipitation to form inside clouds? ^t50q156
+- A) High humidity and elevated temperatures
+- B) An inversion layer
+- C) Moderate to strong updrafts
+- D) Calm winds and intense solar insolation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation particles need time to grow large enough to fall against the updraft, either through collision-coalescence (warm rain process) or the Bergeron ice-crystal process. Moderate to strong updrafts keep water droplets and ice crystals suspended in the cloud long enough for this growth to occur. Option A (high humidity and elevated temperatures) favours cloud formation but does not ensure particles grow to precipitation size. Option B (an inversion layer) suppresses cloud development and works against precipitation. Option D (calm winds and sunshine) describes surface conditions that do not directly produce in-cloud precipitation.
+
+### Q157: In areas where isobars are widely spaced, what wind conditions should be expected? ^t50q157
+- A) Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing
+- B) Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering
+- C) Local wind systems developing with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Variable winds with the development of local wind systems
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Widely spaced isobars indicate a weak horizontal pressure gradient, which produces only light synoptic-scale winds. In the absence of a dominant pressure-driven flow, local thermally driven wind systems — such as valley-mountain breezes, sea-land breezes, and slope winds — become the primary circulation features, with wind direction varying throughout the day. Options A, B, and C all describe strong prevailing winds, which require closely spaced isobars (a steep pressure gradient) and are therefore inconsistent with the wide spacing described.
+
+### Q158: Under what circumstances does back side weather (Rückseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q158
+- A) After passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) Before passage of an occlusion
+- D) After passage of a cold front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Back-side weather" (Rückseitenwetter) describes the conditions in the cold, unstable polar air mass that follows behind a cold front on the western or northwestern side of a low-pressure system. It is characterized by good visibility, convective cumulus clouds, and scattered showers or snow showers. Option A (after a warm front) leads into the warm sector, not the cold back side. Option B (Foehn on the lee side) is a thermodynamic mountain phenomenon unrelated to frontal weather. Option C (before an occlusion) describes pre-frontal conditions, not back-side weather.
+
+### Q159: How is a wind reported as 225/15 described? ^t50q159
+- A) South-west wind at 15 km/h
+- B) North-east wind at 15 km/h
+- C) North-east wind at 15 kt
+- D) South-west wind at 15 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation weather reporting, wind is always given as the direction FROM which it blows (in degrees true) followed by speed in knots. A report of 225/15 means wind from 225 degrees (southwest) at 15 knots. Options B and C incorrectly interpret 225 degrees as northeast, perhaps confusing the direction the wind blows from with the direction it blows toward. Option A gives the correct direction but uses km/h instead of the standard aviation unit of knots.
+
+### Q160: In the Bavarian area near the Alps, what weather typically accompanies Foehn conditions? ^t50q160
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm dry wind
+- B) High pressure over Biscay and a low over Eastern Europe
+- C) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side, flat pressure pattern
+- D) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm dry wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn in the Bavarian pre-alpine region, the prevailing southerly flow forces moist air up the southern (Italian) side of the Alps, producing nimbostratus and heavy orographic precipitation there. As the air descends on the northern (Bavarian) lee side, it warms adiabatically and dries out, creating the characteristic warm, dry, gusty Foehn wind. Rotor clouds and lenticular clouds form on the lee side due to wave activity. Option A incorrectly places nimbostratus on the northern side and rotors on the windward side. Option B describes a synoptic pattern, not the weather itself. Option C contradicts the definition of Foehn, which produces warm, dry — not cold, humid — descending air.
+
+### Q161: Clouds are fundamentally classified into which two basic types? ^t50q161
+- A) Stratiform and ice clouds
+- B) Layered and lifted clouds
+- C) Thunderstorm and shower clouds
+- D) Cumulus and stratiform clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fundamental cloud classification divides all clouds into two basic forms based on their physical formation process: cumuliform (convective, vertically developed clouds formed by localized updrafts) and stratiform (layered, horizontally extended clouds formed by widespread, gentle lifting or cooling). All other cloud types and subtypes derive from combinations of these two basic forms. Option A incorrectly pairs stratiform with "ice clouds," which is a composition category, not a form. Option B uses non-standard terminology. Option C names specific weather phenomena rather than fundamental cloud forms.
+
+### Q162: During Foehn conditions, what weather phenomenon marked as "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q162
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the lee side during Foehn conditions, the descending air creates standing wave patterns downwind of the mountain ridge. These waves produce Altocumulus lenticularis — smooth, lens-shaped or almond-shaped clouds that remain stationary relative to the terrain despite strong winds passing through them. They are a hallmark of mountain wave activity. Options B and D (cumulonimbus) are associated with deep convective instability, not the stable laminar wave flow characteristic of Foehn. Option A (Altocumulus castellanus) indicates mid-level convective instability with turret-like protrusions, which is a different meteorological situation.
+
+### Q163: When very small water droplets and ice crystals strike the leading surfaces of an aircraft, which type of ice forms? ^t50q163
+- A) Hoar frost
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Rime ice
+- D) Mixed ice
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rime ice forms when very small supercooled water droplets freeze instantly upon contact with the aircraft's leading edges, trapping air between the frozen particles and creating a rough, white, opaque deposit. Because the droplets are so small, they freeze before they can spread, resulting in the characteristic granular texture. Option B (clear ice) forms from larger supercooled droplets that flow along the surface before freezing, producing a smooth, transparent, dense layer. Option D (mixed ice) is a combination of rime and clear ice. Option A (hoar frost) forms by direct deposition of water vapour onto cold surfaces, not by droplet impact.
+
+### Q164: Which chart contains information about pressure patterns and frontal positions? ^t50q164
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC)
+- B) Surface weather chart.
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Wind chart.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic analysis chart) is the primary meteorological product displaying isobars (lines of equal pressure at MSL), the locations of highs and lows, and the positions and types of fronts (warm, cold, occluded, stationary). Option A (Significant Weather Chart) focuses on aviation hazards such as turbulence, icing, and significant cloud coverage, but does not show the full surface pressure pattern. Option C (hypsometric chart) depicts the heights of constant-pressure surfaces in the upper atmosphere. Option D (wind chart) shows wind speed and direction at specific levels without pressure or frontal information.
+
+### Q165: What is the typical cloud sequence observed during the approach and passage of a warm front? ^t50q165
+- A) Squall line with rain showers and thunderstorms (Cb), gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) In coastal areas, daytime wind from the coast with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in the evening
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog layers forming in winter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The approach of a warm front produces a characteristic descending cloud sequence as the warm air gradually overrides the retreating cold air mass. First, thin cirrus appears at high altitude, followed by cirrostratus, then progressively thickening altostratus and altocumulus at mid-levels, and finally nimbostratus with a low cloud base and prolonged steady rain. Option A describes cold front or squall line weather. Option B describes a coastal sea-breeze cycle unrelated to frontal meteorology. Option D describes anticyclonic subsidence or continental high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q166: What phenomenon results from cold-air downdrafts carrying precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud? ^t50q166
+- A) Anvil-head top of the Cb cloud
+- B) Freezing rain
+- C) Electrical discharge
+- D) Gust front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a mature thunderstorm, precipitation drags cold air downward in powerful downdrafts. When this cold, dense air reaches the surface, it spreads outward rapidly as a density current, creating a gust front — a sharp boundary marked by sudden wind shifts, temperature drops, and gusty conditions that can extend several kilometres ahead of the storm. Option A (anvil-head top) is a structural feature shaped by upper-level winds, not caused by downdrafts reaching the surface. Option C (electrical discharge) results from charge separation within the cloud. Option B (freezing rain) requires a specific temperature inversion profile, not downdraft spreading.
+
+### Q167: Which item is NOT included on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)? ^t50q167
+- A) Frontal lines and frontal displacement
+- B) Turbulence area information
+- C) Icing condition information
+- D) Radar echoes of precipitation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-Level Significant Weather Charts are forecast products that depict meteorological hazards below a specified altitude, including frontal systems and their movement (option A), turbulence areas (option B), and icing conditions (option C). However, they do not contain radar echoes of precipitation (option D) because radar imagery is a real-time observational product, whereas LLSWC are prognostic charts prepared in advance. Precipitation areas may be indicated symbolically on LLSWC, but actual radar returns are found only on separate radar displays.
+
+### Q168: Which cloud type produces prolonged, steady rain? ^t50q168
+- A) Cirrostratus
+- B) Altocumulus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nimbostratus (Ns) is a thick, dark grey, amorphous layer cloud that produces continuous, steady precipitation (rain or snow) over wide areas, typically associated with warm fronts or occlusions. Its great vertical and horizontal extent ensures prolonged precipitation reaching the ground. Option A (cirrostratus) is a thin, high-level ice cloud that does not produce surface precipitation. Option B (altocumulus) is a mid-level cloud that occasionally produces virga but not sustained surface rain. Option D (cumulonimbus) produces intense but short-lived showers and thunderstorms rather than prolonged steady rain.
+
+### Q169: Based on cloud type, how is precipitation classified? ^t50q169
+- A) Light and heavy precipitation.
+- B) Prolonged rain and continuous rain.
+- C) Showers of snow and rain.
+- D) Rain and showers of rain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Meteorological classification of precipitation by cloud type distinguishes two fundamental categories: rain (steady, continuous precipitation from stratiform clouds like nimbostratus) and showers of rain (intermittent, convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds like cumulonimbus or cumulus congestus). This distinction reflects the physical formation process — widespread lifting versus localized convection. Option A classifies by intensity rather than cloud type. Option B uses redundant terminology that does not distinguish cloud origins. Option C classifies by precipitation phase (snow versus rain), not by cloud type.
+
+### Q170: Which conditions favour thunderstorm development? ^t50q170
+- A) Clear night over land with cold air and fog patches
+- B) Warm, dry air under a strong inversion layer
+- C) Calm winds with cold air, overcast St or As cloud cover
+- D) Warm, humid air with a conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorm development requires three essential ingredients: moisture (warm, humid air provides the latent heat fuel), instability (a conditionally unstable lapse rate allows saturated air parcels to accelerate upward), and a lifting mechanism (fronts, orographic forcing, or surface heating). Option D combines the first two ingredients explicitly. Option A describes calm, stable nighttime conditions favouring radiation fog, not convection. Option B features a strong inversion that would cap any vertical development. Option C describes a stable, overcast situation with stratus or altostratus, which suppresses thunderstorm formation.
+
+### Q171: When isobars on a surface weather chart are widely spaced, what does this indicate about the prevailing wind? ^t50q171
+- A) Strong pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+- B) Weak pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- C) Strong pressure gradients producing light prevailing wind
+- D) Weak pressure gradients producing strong prevailing wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spacing of isobars on a surface weather chart is inversely proportional to the pressure gradient: widely spaced isobars mean a small pressure difference over a large distance (weak gradient), which produces only light wind. Wind speed is directly driven by the pressure gradient force, so a weak gradient means weak wind. Option A contradicts itself by associating wide spacing with strong gradients. Option C pairs a strong gradient with light wind, which is meteorologically incorrect. Option D reverses the gradient-wind relationship.
+
+### Q172: An air mass arriving in Central Europe from the Russian continent during winter is described as... ^t50q172
+- A) Continental tropical air
+- B) Maritime polar air
+- C) Continental polar air
+- D) Maritime tropical air
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air masses are classified by their source region's surface characteristics. Air originating over the vast, snow-covered Russian (Siberian) continent during winter acquires cold temperatures and very low moisture content, making it Continental Polar (cP). This air mass brings bitterly cold, dry conditions to Central Europe when it advects westward. Option B (maritime polar) originates over polar oceans and carries significant moisture. Option A (continental tropical) and option D (maritime tropical) originate in warm regions and are far too warm and/or moist to describe Siberian winter air.
+
+### Q173: What clouds and weather are typically observed during the passage of a cold front? ^t50q173
+- A) Strongly developed Cb clouds with rain showers and thunderstorms, gusty wind followed by cumulus with isolated showers
+- B) Wind calming, cloud dissipation and warming in summer; extensive high fog in winter
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) In coastal areas, daytime onshore wind with cumulus forming, clouds dissipating in evening
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold front passage is marked by a narrow band of intense weather as the advancing cold air undercuts the warm air, forcing it rapidly aloft. This produces strongly developed cumulonimbus (Cb) clouds, heavy rain showers, thunderstorms, and gusty winds along the frontal line, followed by cumulus with isolated showers in the cold, unstable air behind the front. Option C describes the gradual cloud sequence of an approaching warm front. Option B describes anticyclonic or high-pressure settling conditions. Option D describes a coastal sea-breeze pattern unrelated to frontal weather.
+
+### Q174: When an aircraft is struck by lightning, what is the most immediate danger? ^t50q174
+- A) Disrupted radio communication and static noise
+- B) Rapid cabin depressurisation and smoke in the cabin
+- C) Surface overheating and damage to exposed aircraft parts
+- D) Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most immediate physical danger from a lightning strike is surface overheating at the attachment and exit points, along with damage to exposed components such as antennas, pitot tubes, wingtips, and control surface edges. The extreme heat at the strike points can burn through thin skins, pit metal surfaces, and damage composite materials. Option A (disrupted radio communication) is a secondary effect that does not pose an immediate structural threat. Option B (cabin depressurisation) applies primarily to pressurised aircraft and is not the most common immediate consequence. Option D (explosion of cockpit equipment) is extremely unlikely in certified aircraft with proper lightning protection.
+
+### Q175: What is meant by mountain wind? ^t50q175
+- A) A wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.
+- B) A wind blowing down the mountain slope at night.
+- C) A wind blowing uphill from the valley at night.
+- D) A wind blowing down the mountain slope during daytime.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain wind (Bergwind) is a katabatic flow that occurs at night when mountain slopes cool by radiation faster than the free atmosphere at the same altitude. The cooled, denser air drains downslope under gravity toward the valley floor. This is part of the diurnal mountain-valley wind cycle. Option A describes valley wind (Talwind), which is the daytime anabatic upslope flow caused by solar heating. Option C reverses the nighttime flow direction. Option D reverses the daytime flow direction.
+
+### Q176: What is the average value of the saturated adiabatic lapse rate? ^t50q176
+- A) 0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- C) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate averages approximately 0.6 degrees C per 100 m. It is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (1.0 degrees C per 100 m) because latent heat released during condensation partially offsets the cooling of the ascending air parcel. Option A (0 degrees C per 100 m) would mean no temperature change with altitude, which is physically unrealistic for a rising air parcel. Option B (2 degrees C per 1000 ft, approximately 0.66 degrees C per 100 m) is a rough approximation but not the standard textbook value. Option C (1.0 degrees C per 100 m) is the dry adiabatic lapse rate, not the saturated rate.
+
+### Q177: Throughout the year, extensive high pressure areas are found... ^t50q177
+- A) In tropical regions near the equator.
+- B) Over oceanic areas at approximately 30°N/S latitude.
+- C) In mid-latitudes along the polar front.
+- D) In areas with extensive lifting processes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The subtropical high-pressure belt at approximately 30 degrees N and S latitude is a semi-permanent feature of the global atmospheric circulation, created by the descending branch of the Hadley cell. Warm air rising near the equator flows poleward aloft, cools, and subsides in the subtropics, forming persistent anticyclones over the oceans (e.g., the Azores High, the Pacific High). Option A (equatorial regions) is dominated by the low-pressure Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). Option C (mid-latitudes along the polar front) is a zone of cyclonic activity and low pressure. Option D (areas with extensive lifting) produce low pressure by definition, not high pressure.
+
+### Q178: During flight, weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained via... ^t50q178
+- A) SIGMET
+- B) ATIS.
+- C) PIREP
+- D) VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) is a continuous broadcast available on a dedicated frequency at equipped aerodromes, providing current weather observations, active runway, transition level, approach procedures, and relevant NOTAMs specific to that aerodrome. Pilots tune in to the ATIS frequency during flight to obtain up-to-date destination information. Option A (SIGMET) covers significant weather hazards across an entire FIR, not aerodrome-specific data. Option C (PIREP) contains pilot-reported weather conditions en route. Option D (VOLMET) broadcasts weather for multiple aerodromes but is less comprehensive than ATIS for a specific destination.
+
+### Q179: Identify the cloud type shown in the picture. See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^t50q179
+- A) Cumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Stratus
+- D) Altus
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cloud in figure MET-002 is cumulus, identifiable by its characteristic flat base (marking the condensation level) and vertically developed, cauliflower-like top with sharp white outlines against the blue sky. Cumulus clouds form through thermal convection and are the clouds most associated with soaring flight. Option B (cirrus) would appear as thin, wispy ice-crystal filaments at very high altitude. Option C (stratus) would present as a uniform, featureless grey layer. Option D ("altus") is not a recognized cloud genus in the international cloud classification system.
+
+### Q180: What determines the character of an air mass? ^t50q180
+- A) Wind speed and tropopause height
+- B) Region of origin and trajectory during movement
+- C) Environmental lapse rate at the source
+- D) Temperatures at both origin and present location
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass acquires its temperature and moisture properties from the surface conditions of its source region (e.g., polar continent, tropical ocean) and then modifies as it travels over different surfaces along its trajectory. Both the origin (which sets the initial character) and the path (which modifies it) are essential for classifying and forecasting air mass behaviour. Option A (wind speed and tropopause height) are dynamic properties, not defining characteristics. Option C (environmental lapse rate at source) is a consequence of the air mass properties, not their cause. Option D (temperatures at origin and present location) captures only temperature while ignoring the critical moisture dimension.
+
+### Q181: What cloud type is commonly observed across extensive high-pressure areas in summer? ^t50q181
+- A) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- B) Overcast nimbostratus
+- C) Scattered cumulus clouds
+- D) Overcast low stratus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer anticyclones, surface heating generates thermal convection that produces scattered fair-weather Cumulus clouds (Cu humilis or Cu mediocris) during the day, dissipating in the evening. Overcast low stratus (option D) is associated with stable, moist air at low levels, common in autumn or maritime high-pressure situations. Nimbostratus (option B) is associated with frontal systems. Squall lines and thunderstorms (option A) require convective instability and moisture not typical of settled high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q182: The symbol marked (1) in the figure represents which frontal type? See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^t50q182
+- A) Warm front.
+- B) Front aloft.
+- C) Cold front.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a surface weather chart, a cold front is depicted by a line with solid triangular spikes (barbs) pointing in the direction of movement. The symbol labeled (1) in figure MET-005 matches the cold front symbol. A warm front uses semicircles. An occlusion uses alternating triangles and semicircles. A front aloft is depicted differently and is less commonly shown on basic surface charts.
+
+### Q183: In METAR code, which identifier denotes heavy rain? ^t50q183
+- A) .+SHRA.
+- B) RA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) SHRA
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR codes, precipitation intensity is indicated by a '+' prefix (heavy) or '-' prefix (light); no prefix means moderate. Rain is coded 'RA'. Therefore heavy rain is '+RA' (written as '+RA' in the standard, shown in the options as '.+RA'). 'RA' alone (option B) means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option D) means shower of rain (moderate). '+SHRA' (option A) means heavy shower of rain — a convective shower, not continuous heavy rain.
+
+### Q184: During which stage of a thunderstorm do strong updrafts and downdrafts coexist? ^t50q184
+- A) Thunderstorm stage.
+- B) Dissipating stage.
+- C) Mature stage.
+- D) Initial stage.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the mature stage of a thunderstorm, both strong updrafts (sustaining the storm) and strong downdrafts (driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling) coexist simultaneously within the Cumulonimbus cell. The initial (cumulus) stage has only updrafts. The dissipating stage is dominated by downdrafts only, which cut off the updraft supply and weaken the storm. 'Thunderstorm stage' (option A) is not a recognised meteorological term.
+
+### Q185: Which conditions are most conducive to aircraft icing? ^t50q185
+- A) Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C in the presence of hail
+- B) Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C with supercooled water droplets present
+- C) Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C within cirrus clouds containing ice crystals
+- D) Sub-zero temperatures with strong wind and cloudless skies
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C where supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and drop size is largest, producing clear or mixed icing on airframe surfaces. Below -20°C, cloud water is mostly in ice crystal form and causes much less accretion. Above 0°C, droplets are not supercooled and do not freeze on contact. Icing in clear air (option D) does not occur as there are no supercooled droplets. Cirrus (option C) contains ice crystals which do not adhere significantly.
+
+### Q186: What is the primary hazard when approaching a valley airfield with strong winds aloft blowing perpendicular to the surrounding ridges? ^t50q186
+- A) Heavy downdrafts beneath thunderstorm rainfall areas
+- B) Wind shear during descent, with possible 180° wind direction changes
+- C) Reduced visibility and potential loss of sight of the airfield on final
+- D) Formation of moderate to severe clear ice on all aircraft surfaces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When strong wind blows perpendicular to a mountain ridge, orographic lift on the windward side and mechanical turbulence create complex wind shear on the lee side. An aircraft descending into a valley airfield on the lee side may encounter severe wind shear with the wind reversing by up to 180° between altitudes, creating sudden loss of airspeed or ground wind opposite to the upper-level flow. Reduced visibility (option C) is a secondary concern. Icing (option D) is unrelated to mountain wind shear. Heavy downdrafts in rainfall (option A) describes thunderstorm activity, not orographic flow.
+
+### Q187: What are "blue thermals"? ^t50q187
+- A) Turbulence in the vicinity of cumulonimbus clouds
+- B) Descending air found between cumulus clouds
+- C) Thermals that rise without producing any cumulus clouds
+- D) Thermals occurring when cumulus coverage is below 4/8
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blue thermals are thermals that extend to significant altitude but remain below the condensation level (dew point height), so no Cumulus clouds form — the sky appears clear (blue). They are invisible to glider pilots and require instruments or experience to exploit. Option D confuses thermals with cloud coverage statistics. Option B describes sink between Cu clouds. Option A describes clear-air turbulence (CAT) near thunderstorms, a different phenomenon.
+
+### Q188: The expression "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal strength... ^t50q188
+- A) Is sufficient for cross-country soaring with cumulus clouds marking the thermals.
+- B) Reaches at least 1200 m MSL and becomes usable for gliding.
+- C) Becomes sufficient for gliding and extends to at least 600 m AGL.
+- D) Reaches at least 600 m AGL and produces cumulus clouds.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 'beginning of thermals' (Thermikbeginn) is the moment when thermal lift becomes sufficiently strong and deep (reaching at least 600 m AGL) for a glider to sustain flight and gain height — this is the practical definition. It does not require Cu cloud formation (option A), nor does it specify a fixed MSL altitude (option B). Option D adds an unnecessary cloud formation criterion to what is fundamentally an altitude threshold.
+
+### Q189: How is the "trigger temperature" defined? It is the temperature which... ^t50q189
+- A) A thermal reaches during its ascent at the moment cumulus clouds begin forming.
+- B) Must be attained at ground level for cumulus clouds to develop from thermal convection.
+- C) Represents the maximum surface temperature achievable before a cumulus cloud evolves into a thunderstorm.
+- D) Represents the minimum surface temperature required for a cumulus to develop into a thunderstorm.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum ground temperature that must be reached before thermals are strong enough to carry air parcels to the condensation level and form Cumulus clouds. It is found on a tephigram or skew-T diagram by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the surface intersection until it meets the temperature profile. Options A and C misstate it as a temperature reached aloft or a threshold for thunderstorm formation. Option D describes thunderstorm formation, not Cu formation.
+
+### Q190: In a weather briefing, what does the term "over-development" refer to? ^t50q190
+- A) Transition from blue thermals to cloud-marked thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Spreading of cumulus clouds beneath an inversion layer
+- C) Vertical growth of cumulus clouds into rain-producing showers
+- D) Intensification of a thermal low into a storm depression
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development (Überentwicklung) occurs when Cumulus clouds develop vertically beyond Cu congestus into rain-producing Cumulonimbus clouds, generating showers and thunderstorms. This typically happens in the afternoon when the atmosphere becomes increasingly unstable. Option A describes a change in thermal visibility. Option D refers to synoptic-scale deepening of depressions. Option B describes the spreading of Cu under an inversion (which is actually 'street' or 'cover' formation, a separate phenomenon).
+
+### Q191: In gliding meteorology, what does "shielding" refer to? ^t50q191
+- A) The anvil-shaped structure at the top of a thunderstorm cloud
+- B) Cumulus cloud coverage expressed in eighths of the sky
+- C) High or mid-level cloud layers that suppress thermal activity
+- D) Nimbostratus covering the windward slope of a mountain range
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding (Abschirmung) refers to a layer of high or mid-level cloud (such as Cirrostratus, Altostratus, or Altocumulus) that intercepts solar radiation before it reaches the ground, thus reducing or suppressing the surface heating required for thermal development. Option D describes cloud cover on a windward mountain slope. Option A describes the anvil of a Cb, not shielding. Option B describes sky coverage in oktas, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q192: What is the gaseous composition of dry air? ^t50q192
+- A) Oxygen 21%, Nitrogen 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- B) Nitrogen 21%, Oxygen 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- C) Oxygen 21%, Water vapour 78%, Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1%
+- D) Oxygen 78%, Water vapour 21%, Nitrogen 1%
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air is composed of approximately 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and 1% argon and trace gases including carbon dioxide. This is the standard atmospheric composition. All other options incorrectly swap the proportions of nitrogen and oxygen or introduce water vapour as a major component. Water vapour is a variable constituent (0–4%) not included in the standard dry air composition.
+
+### Q193: Under ISA conditions at mean sea level, what is the mass of one cubic metre of air? ^t50q193
+- A) 12,25 kg
+- B) 0,01225 kg
+- C) 1,225 kg
+- D) 0,1225 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At MSL under ISA conditions, the standard air density is 1.225 kg/m³. A cube with 1 m edges has a volume of 1 m³, so its mass is 1.225 kg. Option B (0.01225 kg) is off by a factor of 100, option D (0.1225 kg) by a factor of 10, and option A (12.25 kg) by a factor of 10 in the opposite direction. These represent common decimal-point errors.
+
+### Q194: How is the tropopause defined? ^t50q194
+- A) The altitude above which temperature begins to decrease.
+- B) The boundary between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+- C) The layer above the troposphere where temperature increases.
+- D) The boundary zone between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the boundary layer separating the troposphere (where temperature decreases with altitude) from the stratosphere (where temperature is initially constant and then increases due to ozone absorption). It is not the layer above the troposphere (option C), nor the height where temperature starts to decrease (option A — that is the surface of the troposphere). Option B confuses the tropopause with the stratopause.
+
+### Q195: What characterises an inversion layer? ^t50q195
+- A) A boundary zone separating two distinct atmospheric layers
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature falls with increasing altitude
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature remains constant with increasing altitude
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature rises with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer is an atmospheric layer in which temperature increases with increasing altitude, the reverse ('inversion') of the normal decrease. Inversions suppress vertical mixing and convection, trapping pollutants and inhibiting thermal development above them. Option B describes normal atmospheric conditions. Option C describes an isothermal layer. Option A describes a generic boundary without specifying the temperature gradient direction.
+
+### Q196: What defines an isothermal layer? ^t50q196
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with height
+- B) A transition zone between two other atmospheric layers
+- C) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with height
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature stays constant with height
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer is one in which temperature remains constant with increasing altitude — neither increasing (inversion, option A) nor decreasing (normal lapse rate, option C). Isothermal conditions are found, for example, in the lower stratosphere. Option B describes a generic atmospheric boundary layer, not a layer of constant temperature.
+
+### Q197: What fundamental force initiates wind? ^t50q197
+- A) Thermal force
+- B) Coriolis force
+- C) Centrifugal force
+- D) Pressure gradient force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is caused by the pressure gradient force — air flows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure, and the greater the pressure difference over a given distance, the stronger the resulting wind. The Coriolis force (option B) deflects wind but does not create it. Centrifugal force (option C) is a secondary effect in curved flow. There is no meteorological force specifically called 'thermal force'; thermal differences drive pressure gradients, but the direct cause of wind is the pressure gradient itself.
+
+### Q198: Under what conditions does Foehn typically develop? ^t50q198
+- A) Stability, with extensive airflow forced over a mountain ridge.
+- B) Instability, with a high pressure area and calm wind.
+- C) Stability, with a high pressure area and calm wind.
+- D) Instability, with extensive airflow forced over a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn develops when a stable airflow is forced over a mountain barrier. On the windward side, the air rises moist-adiabatically (condensation releasing latent heat), and on the lee side it descends dry-adiabatically, arriving warmer and drier than before ascent. Stability is necessary for the organised flow; instability would break the flow into convective cells. Calm high-pressure conditions (options B and C) do not provide the cross-mountain pressure gradient needed. Instability (option D) would prevent the laminar flow characteristic of Foehn.
+
+### Q199: How is the "spread" (dew-point depression) defined? ^t50q199
+- A) The maximum quantity of water vapour that air can hold.
+- B) The ratio of actual humidity to the maximum possible humidity.
+- C) The difference between the actual air temperature and the dew point.
+- D) The difference between the dew point and the condensation point.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spread (or dew-point spread) is the difference between the actual (dry-bulb) air temperature and the dew point temperature. A small spread indicates air close to saturation; when the spread reaches zero, condensation and fog or cloud formation occur. Option D is incorrect because dew point and condensation point are effectively the same. Option B describes relative humidity. Option A describes the saturation mixing ratio or absolute humidity capacity.
+
+### Q200: During Foehn, what weather phenomenon designated by "2" should be expected on the lee side? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^t50q200
+- A) Altocumulus Castellanus
+- B) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- C) Cumulonimbus
+- D) Cumulonimbus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical in content to question 90. During Foehn, the descending and warming lee-side flow is stable and generates standing wave clouds. Altocumulus lenticularis forms in the crests of these mountain waves on the lee side. Cumulonimbus (options C and D) requires strong convective instability absent in Foehn descent. Altocumulus Castellanus (option A) indicates mid-level instability, not the stable wave motion of a Foehn situation.
+
+### Q201: Which factor can prevent radiation fog from forming? ^t50q201
+- A) Low spread
+- B) Calm wind
+- C) Overcast cloud cover
+- D) Clear night, no clouds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms on clear, calm nights when the ground radiates heat to space, cooling the surface air to its dew point. An overcast cloud cover prevents the necessary radiative cooling of the ground surface by acting as an insulating blanket, reflecting long-wave radiation back to the ground. Calm wind (option B) is actually a prerequisite for radiation fog formation. A clear night (option D) and low spread (option A) are also favourable, not preventative, conditions.
+
+### Q202: Through what process does advection fog form? ^t50q202
+- A) Extended radiative cooling on clear nights
+- B) Warm, humid air moving across a cold surface
+- C) Mixing of cold, humid air with warm, humid air
+- D) Cold, moist air flowing over warm ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a cold surface and cooled from below to its dew point. This is most common over cold ocean currents or cold land surfaces in spring. Option D reverses the temperature relationship. Option C describes mixing fog (a different type). Option A describes radiation fog. The defining factor in advection fog is the movement of warm moist air over cold ground.
+
+### Q203: What process leads to the development of orographic fog (hill fog)? ^t50q203
+- A) Warm, humid air being forced over hills or a mountain range
+- B) Mixing of cold, moist air with warm, moist air
+- C) Extended radiation on cloudless nights
+- D) Evaporation from warm, wet ground into very cold air
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when moist air is forced to rise over terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches its dew point; the result is a cloud base that sits on the hillside or mountain top. Option C describes radiation fog. Option D describes steam fog (evaporation/mixing fog). Option B describes mixing fog. The key process is forced lifting of moist air over elevated terrain.
+
+### Q204: What weather phenomena are associated with an upper-level trough? ^t50q204
+- A) Development of showers and thunderstorms (Cb)
+- B) Light winds and shallow cumulus formation
+- C) High stratus layers with ground-covering cloud bases
+- D) Calm weather and formation of lifted fog layers
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upper-level trough is a region of cold air aloft with positive vorticity advection, which promotes divergence aloft and convergence at the surface, triggering strong convective uplift. This instability favours the development of showers and thunderstorms (Cumulonimbus). Options B and D describe stable, anticyclonic conditions. Option C (high stratus) would require stable, moist conditions near the surface, not the convective instability associated with a cold upper trough.
+
+### Q205: On the windward side of a mountain range during Foehn, what weather should be expected? ^t50q205
+- A) Cloud dissipation with unusual warming and strong gusty winds
+- B) Layer clouds, mountain peaks obscured, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain
+- C) Scattered cumulus with showers and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm winds and formation of high stratus (high fog)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (stau) side of a mountain range during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise and cool, producing dense cloud, obscured peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain or snow — the classic 'Stau' weather. Option A describes the lee side of the Foehn (warm, dry, gusty). Option D describes stable, fog-prone conditions unrelated to Foehn. Option C describes conditions more typical of frontal convective activity.
+
+### Q206: Which chart presents observed MSL pressure distribution and the corresponding frontal systems? ^t50q206
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC).
+- B) Prognostic chart.
+- C) Surface weather chart.
+- D) Hypsometric chart
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (also called the synoptic chart or analysis chart) displays actual measured pressure values reduced to MSL as isobars, along with the positions of frontal systems. It represents the observed state of the atmosphere at a specific time. A prognostic chart (option B) shows forecast conditions. The hypsometric chart (option D) shows upper-level contour heights on constant-pressure surfaces. The SWC (option A) focuses on hazardous weather phenomena, not comprehensive pressure analysis.
+
+### Q207: In METAR, how is heavy rain encoded? ^t50q207
+- A) SHRA
+- B) .+SHRA.
+- C) .+RA
+- D) RA.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical to question 120. In METAR, precipitation intensity modifiers are '+' for heavy and '-' for light. 'RA' is the METAR code for rain; therefore '+RA' (shown as '.+RA' in the options) denotes heavy rain. 'RA' (option D) alone means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option A) is shower of rain. '+SHRA' (option B) is heavy shower of rain — a different precipitation type.
+
+### Q208: In METAR, how are moderate rain showers encoded? ^t50q208
+- A) .+RA.
+- B) TS.
+- C) .+TSRA
+- D) SHRA.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR, the descriptor 'SH' (shower) is added before the precipitation code to indicate convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds. Moderate showers of rain are therefore coded 'SHRA'. '+TSRA' (option C) means heavy thunderstorm with rain. 'TS' (option B) means thunderstorm without precipitation modifier. '+RA' (option A) means heavy continuous rain from stratiform clouds, not a shower.
+
+### Q209: Under what conditions does back-side weather (Ruckseitenwetter) occur? ^t50q209
+- A) After the passage of a warm front
+- B) During Foehn on the lee side
+- C) After the passage of a cold front
+- D) Before the passage of an occlusion
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Back-side weather (Rückseitenwetter) describes the weather in the cold air mass following the passage of a cold front: cold, unstable polar or arctic air with scattered showers, good visibility, and gusty winds — often excellent soaring conditions for gliders in the convective back-side air. It occurs after, not before, frontal passages. An occlusion (option D) combines warm and cold front characteristics. Foehn (option B) is a separate orographic phenomenon. After a warm front (option A) brings the warm sector, not cold back-side air.
+
+### Q210: In the International Standard Atmosphere, how does temperature change from MSL to approximately 10,000 m altitude? ^t50q210
+- A) From +15° to -50°C
+- B) From -15° to +50°C
+- C) From +30° to -40°C
+- D) From +20° to -40°C
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), the temperature at MSL is +15°C, and the temperature decreases at 6.5°C per 1000 m (2°C per 1000 ft) through the troposphere. At approximately 11,000 m (the tropopause), the temperature reaches -56.5°C, rounding to approximately -50°C at 10,000 m. Options C and D give incorrect MSL starting values (+30°C and +20°C). Option B reverses the sign convention, implying temperature increases with altitude.
+
+### Q211: What weather should be expected during Foehn conditions in the Bavarian region near the Alps? ^t50q211
+- A) Nimbostratus on the northern Alps, rotor clouds on the windward side, warm and dry wind
+- B) High pressure over the Bay of Biscay and low pressure over Eastern Europe
+- C) Nimbostratus on the southern Alps, rotor clouds on the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- D) Cold, humid downslope wind on the lee side of the Alps with a flat pressure pattern
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Classic Bavarian Foehn is driven by low pressure over the Gulf of Genoa and high pressure over the North Sea, forcing air southward over the Alps. Nimbostratus forms on the south (windward) side of the Alps, while on the north (lee) Bavarian side, warm and dry air descends, often accompanied by Föhnmauer (Foehn wall) and rotor clouds along the Foehn boundary. Option A incorrectly describes the lee-side wind as cold and humid and places the Ns on the wrong side. Option B describes the synoptic pressure setup only partially. Option A places the Ns on the north (lee) side, which is incorrect.
+
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+# Navigation
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Par quels points l'axe de rotation de la Terre passe-t-il ? ^t60q1
+- A) Le pôle Nord géographique et le pôle sud magnétique.
+- B) Le pôle nord magnétique et le pôle Sud géographique.
+- C) Le pôle Nord géographique et le pôle Sud géographique.
+- D) Le pôle nord magnétique et le pôle sud magnétique.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'axe de rotation de la Terre est l'axe physique autour duquel la planète tourne, et il passe par les pôles géographiques (vrais) — et non par les pôles magnétiques. Les pôles géographiques sont des points fixes définis par l'axe de rotation, tandis que les pôles magnétiques sont décalés par rapport à eux et se déplacent au fil du temps en raison des variations dans le noyau en fusion de la Terre.
+
+### Q2: Quelle affirmation décrit correctement l'axe polaire de la Terre ? ^t60q2
+- A) Il passe par le pôle Sud géographique et le pôle Nord géographique et est incliné de 23,5° par rapport au plan de l'équateur.
+- B) Il passe par le pôle sud magnétique et le pôle nord magnétique et est incliné de 66,5° par rapport au plan de l'équateur.
+- C) Il passe par le pôle sud magnétique et le pôle nord magnétique et est perpendiculaire au plan de l'équateur.
+- D) Il passe par le pôle Sud géographique et le pôle Nord géographique et est perpendiculaire au plan de l'équateur.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'axe polaire passe par les pôles géographiques et est perpendiculaire (90°) au plan de l'équateur par définition. L'axe terrestre est effectivement incliné de 23,5° par rapport au plan de son orbite autour du soleil (l'écliptique), mais il est perpendiculaire au plan équatorial — ces deux faits sont cohérents et non contradictoires. L'option A confond l'inclinaison par rapport à l'écliptique avec la relation par rapport à l'équateur.
+
+### Q3: Pour les systèmes de navigation, quelle forme géométrique approximative représente le mieux la Terre ? ^t60q3
+- A) Une plaque plate.
+- B) Un ellipsoïde.
+- C) Une sphère de forme écliptique.
+- D) Une sphère parfaite.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Terre n'est pas une sphère parfaite — elle est légèrement aplatie aux pôles et renflée à l'équateur en raison de sa rotation. Cette forme est appelée sphéroïde aplati ou ellipsoïde. Les systèmes de navigation modernes (y compris le GPS) utilisent l'ellipsoïde WGS-84 comme modèle de référence, qui tient précisément compte de cet aplatissement dans les calculs de coordonnées.
+
+### Q4: Laquelle des affirmations suivantes concernant une loxodromie est correcte ? ^t60q4
+- A) Le trajet le plus court entre deux points sur la Terre suit une loxodromie.
+- B) Une loxodromie coupe chaque méridien sous un angle identique.
+- C) Le centre d'un cycle complet d'une loxodromie est toujours le centre de la Terre.
+- D) Une loxodromie est un grand cercle qui coupe l'équateur à 45°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une loxodromie est définie comme une ligne qui coupe chaque méridien de longitude sous le même angle. Cela la rend utile pour la navigation à cap constant — un pilote peut suivre une loxodromie en maintenant un cap boussole fixe. Cependant, ce n'est pas le trajet le plus court entre deux points ; cette distinction appartient à la route orthodromique (grand cercle).
+
+### Q5: Le trajet le plus court entre deux points à la surface de la Terre suit un segment de... ^t60q5
+- A) Un petit cercle
+- B) Un grand cercle.
+- C) Une loxodromie.
+- D) Un parallèle de latitude.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un grand cercle est tout cercle dont le plan passe par le centre de la Terre, et l'arc d'un grand cercle entre deux points est le trajet le plus court possible le long de la surface terrestre (la géodésique). Les parallèles de latitude (sauf l'équateur) et les loxodromies ne sont pas des grands cercles et ne représentent pas le trajet le plus court. Les routes aériennes long-courriers sont planifiées le long de trajectoires de grand cercle pour minimiser le carburant et le temps.
+
+### Q6: Quelle est la circonférence approximative de la Terre mesurée le long de l'équateur ? Voir figure (NAV-002) ^t60q6
+
+
+- A) 40000 NM.
+- B) 21600 NM.
+- C) 10800 km.
+- D) 12800 km.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équateur s'étend sur 360 degrés de longitude, et chaque degré de longitude à l'équateur équivaut à 60 NM (puisque 1 NM = 1 minute d'arc sur un grand cercle). Donc : 360° x 60 NM = 21 600 NM. En kilomètres, la circonférence équatoriale de la Terre est d'environ 40 075 km — l'option A a le bon chiffre mais la mauvaise unité. Connaître cette relation (1° = 60 NM à l'équateur) est fondamental pour les calculs de navigation.
+
+### Q7: Quelle est la différence de latitude entre le point A (12°53'30''N) et le point B (07°34'30''S) ? ^t60q7
+- A) .20°28'00''
+- B) .05°19'00''
+- C) .20,28°
+- D) .05,19°
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux points sont situés de part et d'autre de l'équateur, la différence de latitude est la somme de leurs latitudes respectives. Ici : 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. Conversion des minutes : 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', donc 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. On additionne toujours les latitudes quand elles sont dans des hémisphères opposés (N et S).
+
+### Q8: À quelles positions se trouvent les deux cercles polaires ? ^t60q8
+- A) À 23,5° au nord et au sud de l'équateur
+- B) À une latitude de 20,5°S et 20,5°N
+- C) À 20,5° au sud des pôles
+- D) À 23,5° au nord et au sud des pôles
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le cercle polaire arctique se situe à environ 66,5°N et le cercle polaire antarctique à 66,5°S — soit 90° - 23,5° = 66,5°, les plaçant à 23,5° de leurs pôles géographiques respectifs. Ce décalage de 23,5° correspond directement à l'inclinaison axiale de la Terre. Les tropiques du Cancer et du Capricorne (option A) sont ceux situés à 23,5° de l'équateur.
+
+### Q9: Le long d'un méridien, quelle est la distance entre les parallèles de latitude 48°N et 49°N ? ^t60q9
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 10 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le long de tout méridien (ligne de longitude), 1 degré de latitude correspond toujours à 60 milles nautiques. C'est parce que les méridiens sont des grands cercles et 1 NM est défini comme 1 minute d'arc le long d'un grand cercle. Le chiffre de 111 km (option A) est l'équivalent en kilomètres, pas en milles nautiques. Cette relation de 60 NM par degré est une pierre angulaire des calculs de navigation.
+
+### Q10: Le long de toute ligne de longitude, quelle distance correspond à un degré de latitude ? ^t60q10
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 1 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un degré de latitude = 60 minutes d'arc, et puisque 1 NM correspond exactement à 1 minute d'arc de latitude le long d'un méridien, 1° de latitude = 60 NM. Cette relation est valable le long de tout méridien car tous les méridiens sont des grands cercles. En unités SI, 1° de latitude ≈ 111 km, et non 60 km comme indiqué dans l'option C.
+
+### Q11: Le point A se trouve exactement à 47°50'27''N de latitude. Quel point se trouve précisément à 240 NM au nord de A ? ^t60q11
+- A) 49°50'27''N
+- B) 43°50'27''N
+- C) 53°50'27''N
+- D) 51°50'27'N'
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conversion de 240 NM en degrés de latitude : 240 NM / 60 NM par degré = 4°. En ajoutant 4° à 47°50'27''N, on obtient 51°50'27''N. Se déplacer vers le nord augmente la valeur de latitude. L'option C nécessiterait 6° (360 NM) et l'option A seulement 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q12: Le long de l'équateur, quelle est la distance entre les méridiens 150°E et 151°E ? ^t60q12
+- A) 1 NM
+- B) 60 NM
+- C) 60 km
+- D) 111 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'équateur, les méridiens de longitude sont séparés par des arcs de grand cercle, et 1° de longitude le long de l'équateur équivaut à 60 NM — tout comme 1° de latitude le long de tout méridien, car l'équateur est également un grand cercle. Aux latitudes plus élevées, la distance entre les méridiens diminue (multipliée par cos(latitude)), mais à l'équateur elle est exactement de 60 NM par degré.
+
+### Q13: Lorsque deux points A et B sur l'équateur sont séparés par exactement un degré de longitude, quelle est la distance orthodromique entre eux ? ^t60q13
+- A) 216 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 400 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'équateur lui-même est un grand cercle, donc la distance orthodromique entre deux points sur l'équateur séparés de 1° de longitude est simplement 60 NM (1° x 60 NM/degré). C'est le même principe que la mesure le long d'un méridien. Toute confusion survient si l'on tente de calculer en km — 1° ≈ 111 km à l'équateur, mais la question demande en NM.
+
+### Q14: Considérons deux points A et B sur le même parallèle de latitude (pas l'équateur). A est à 010°E et B à 020°E. La distance loxodromique entre eux est toujours... ^t60q14
+- A) Supérieure à 600 NM.
+- B) Supérieure à 300 NM.
+- C) Inférieure à 300 NM.
+- D) Inférieure à 600 NM.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La distance loxodromique entre des points sur le même parallèle de latitude est : 10° x 60 NM x cos(latitude). Puisque cos(latitude) est toujours inférieur à 1 pour toute latitude autre que l'équateur (où elle serait exactement 60 NM x 10 = 600 NM), la distance loxodromique est toujours strictement inférieure à 600 NM. À l'équateur elle serait de 600 NM, mais puisqu'ils sont spécifiquement « pas sur l'équateur », la distance est toujours inférieure à 600 NM.
+
+### Q15: Combien de temps s'écoule lorsque le soleil parcourt 20° de longitude ? ^t60q15
+- A) 0:20 h
+- B) 1:20 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 1:00 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La Terre tourne de 360° en 24 heures, soit 15° par heure, ou 1° toutes les 4 minutes. Pour 20° de longitude : 20 x 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 heure 20 minutes. Alternativement : 20° / 15°/h = 1,333 h = 1:20 h. Cette relation (15°/heure ou 4 min/degré) est essentielle pour les calculs de fuseaux horaires et la détermination du midi solaire.
+
+### Q16: Combien de temps s'écoule lorsque le soleil traverse 10° de longitude ? ^t60q16
+- A) 0:30 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 1:00 h
+- D) 0:04 h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant le même principe que Q15 : la Terre tourne de 15° par heure, donc 10° correspond à 10/15 heures = 2/3 heure = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. L'option D (4 minutes) serait le temps pour seulement 1° de longitude. L'option A (30 minutes) correspondrait à 7,5° de longitude.
+
+### Q17: Le soleil parcourt 10° de longitude. Quelle est la différence de temps correspondante ? ^t60q17
+- A) 0,33 h
+- B) 1 h
+- C) 0,4 h
+- D) 0,66 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** C'est le même calcul que Q16 mais exprimé en fraction décimale d'heure : 10° / 15°/h = 0,6667 h ≈ 0,66 h (40 minutes en heures décimales). Notez que Q16 et Q17 semblent poser la même question mais attendent des formats de réponse différents — Q16 attend 0:40 h (40 minutes) tandis que Q17 attend 0,66 h (l'équivalent décimal). Les deux représentent la même différence de temps de 40 minutes.
+
+### Q18: Si l'heure d'été d'Europe centrale (CEST) est UTC+2, quel est l'équivalent UTC de 1600 CEST ? ^t60q18
+- A) 1400 UTC.
+- B) 1600 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** UTC+2 signifie que le CEST est 2 heures en avance sur UTC. Pour convertir l'heure locale en UTC, soustraire le décalage : 1600 CEST - 2 heures = 1400 UTC. Un moyen mnémotechnique simple : « pour obtenir UTC, soustraire le décalage positif. » C'est essentiel en aviation car tous les plans de vol, communications ATC et NOTAM utilisent l'UTC indépendamment du fuseau horaire local.
+
+### Q19: Qu'est-ce que l'UTC ? ^t60q19
+- A) Une heure locale en Europe centrale.
+- B) L'heure moyenne locale en un point spécifique de la Terre.
+- C) Un temps zonal
+- D) La référence de temps obligatoire utilisée en aviation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le temps universel coordonné (UTC) est la référence de temps obligatoire pour toutes les opérations aériennes internationales — les plans de vol, les communications ATC, les rapports météorologiques (METAR/TAF) et les NOTAM utilisent tous l'UTC pour éliminer la confusion liée aux différences de fuseaux horaires. Ce n'est ni un temps zonal ni un temps local, et il n'est référencé à aucun lieu géographique (bien qu'il suive de près l'heure moyenne de Greenwich).
+
+### Q20: Si l'heure d'Europe centrale (CET) est UTC+1, quel est l'équivalent UTC de 1700 CET ? ^t60q20
+- A) 1800 UTC.
+- B) 1500 UTC.
+- C) 1600 UTC.
+- D) 1700 UTC.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le CET est UTC+1, ce qui signifie qu'il est 1 heure en avance sur UTC. Pour convertir en UTC, soustraire le décalage : 1700 CET - 1 heure = 1600 UTC. La Suisse utilise le CET (UTC+1) en hiver et le CEST (UTC+2) en été — connaître le décalage actuel est essentiel lors du dépôt des plans de vol ou de la lecture des NOTAM.
+
+### Q21: Vienne (LOWW) est à 016°34'E et Salzbourg (LOWS) à 013°00'E, toutes deux approximativement à la même latitude. Quelle est la différence de lever et coucher du soleil (en UTC) entre les deux villes ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q21
+- A) À Vienne, le lever du soleil est 14 minutes plus tôt et le coucher 14 minutes plus tard qu'à Salzbourg
+- B) À Vienne, le lever et le coucher du soleil sont environ 14 minutes plus tôt qu'à Salzbourg
+- C) À Vienne, le lever du soleil est 4 minutes plus tard et le coucher 4 minutes plus tôt qu'à Salzbourg
+- D) À Vienne, le lever et le coucher du soleil sont environ 4 minutes plus tard qu'à Salzbourg
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La différence de longitude est 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3,57°. À 4 minutes par degré, cela donne environ 14,3 minutes ≈ 14 minutes. Vienne est à l'est de Salzbourg, donc le soleil atteint Vienne en premier — le lever et le coucher du soleil se produisent environ 14 minutes plus tôt à Vienne (en UTC). Les fuseaux horaires locaux masquent cette différence, mais en UTC, la position la plus à l'est voit toujours les événements solaires en premier.
+
+### Q22: Comment définit-on le « crépuscule civil » ? ^t60q22
+- A) L'intervalle avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil lorsque le centre du soleil ne se trouve pas à plus de 6° sous l'horizon vrai.
+- B) L'intervalle avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil lorsque le centre du soleil ne se trouve pas à plus de 12° sous l'horizon apparent.
+- C) L'intervalle avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil lorsque le centre du soleil ne se trouve pas à plus de 6° sous l'horizon apparent.
+- D) L'intervalle avant le lever ou après le coucher du soleil lorsque le centre du soleil ne se trouve pas à plus de 12° sous l'horizon vrai.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le crépuscule civil est la période pendant laquelle le centre du soleil se trouve entre 0° et 6° sous l'horizon vrai (géométrique) — il y a encore suffisamment de lumière naturelle pour la plupart des activités de plein air sans éclairage artificiel. L'horizon vrai (géométrique) est utilisé dans la définition formelle, et non l'horizon apparent (qui est affecté par la réfraction). Le crépuscule nautique utilise 12° et le crépuscule astronomique 18° sous l'horizon vrai. Dans les réglementations aéronautiques, le crépuscule civil définit souvent la limite pour les opérations VFR de jour/nuit.
+
+### Q23: Données : WCA : -012° ; TH : 125° ; MC : 139° ; DEV : 002°E. Déterminer TC, MH et CH. (2,00 P.) ^t60q23
+- A) TC : 113°. MH : 139°. CH : 125°.
+- B) TC : 137°. MH : 127°. CH : 125°.
+- C) TC : 137°. MH : 139°. CH : 125°.
+- D) TC : 113°. MH : 127°. CH : 129°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La chaîne de cap fonctionne comme suit : TC → (appliquer WCA) → TH → (appliquer VAR) → MH → (appliquer DEV) → CH. Étant donné TH = 125° et WCA = -12°, alors TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. Pour MH : MC = MH + WCA, donc MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. Pour CH : DEV = 002°E signifie que le compas indique 2° de trop, donc CH = MH - DEV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Un WCA négatif signifie vent de droite, nécessitant une correction à gauche du cap.
+
+### Q24: Données : TC : 179° ; WCA : -12° ; VAR : 004° E ; DEV : +002°. Quels sont MH et MC ? ^t60q24
+- A) MH : 163°. MC : 175°.
+- B) MH : 167°. MC : 175°.
+- C) MH : 167°. MC : 161°
+- D) MH : 163°. MC : 161°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Puis MH = TH - VAR (E se soustrait) : MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. Pour MC : MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. La variation Est est soustraite lors de la conversion du Vrai au Magnétique (« East is least »).
+
+### Q25: La différence angulaire entre le cap vrai et le cap magnétique est connue sous le nom de... ^t60q25
+- A) Variation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Déviation.
+- D) Inclinaison.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'angle de correction de vent (WCA) est la différence angulaire entre le cap vrai (la direction de la trajectoire prévue au sol) et le cap vrai de l'aéronef (la direction vers laquelle pointe le nez de l'avion). Un vent traversier oblige le pilote à orienter le nez dans le vent, créant une différence entre le cap et la trajectoire — cet angle de décalage est le WCA. Ce n'est ni la variation (différence vrai-magnétique) ni la déviation (différence magnétique-compas).
+
+### Q26: La différence angulaire entre le cap magnétique et le cap vrai est appelée... ^t60q26
+- A) Déviation.
+- B) WCA.
+- C) Variation
+- D) Inclinaison.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La variation magnétique (également appelée déclinaison) est l'angle entre le nord vrai (géographique) et le nord magnétique en un lieu donné, ce qui crée une différence entre le cap vrai et le cap magnétique. La variation change selon le lieu et au fil du temps à mesure que les pôles magnétiques se déplacent. La déviation est l'erreur introduite par le champ magnétique propre de l'aéronef sur le compas, affectant la différence entre le nord magnétique et le nord compas.
+
+### Q27: Comment définit-on le « cap magnétique » (MC) ? ^t60q27
+- A) L'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de route.
+- B) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique.
+- C) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle nord magnétique.
+- D) L'angle entre le nord magnétique et la ligne de route.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La route magnétique est la direction de la trajectoire de vol prévue (ligne de route) mesurée dans le sens horaire depuis le nord magnétique. Elle diffère de la route vraie par la variation magnétique locale. Les pilotes utilisent la route magnétique car les compas de l'aéronef pointent vers le nord magnétique, rendant les références magnétiques plus directement utilisables pour la navigation sans corrections supplémentaires.
+
+### Q28: Comment définit-on le « cap vrai » (TC) ? ^t60q28
+- A) L'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de route.
+- B) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle nord magnétique.
+- C) L'angle entre le nord magnétique et la ligne de route.
+- D) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La route vraie est l'angle mesuré dans le sens horaire depuis le nord vrai (géographique) jusqu'à la trajectoire de vol prévue (ligne de route). Elle est déterminée à partir des cartes aéronautiques, qui sont orientées vers le nord vrai. Pour suivre une route vraie, les pilotes doivent appliquer la variation magnétique pour obtenir la route magnétique, puis appliquer l'angle de correction de vent pour obtenir le cap vrai qu'ils doivent suivre.
+
+### Q29: Données : TC : 183° ; WCA : +011° ; MH : 198° ; CH : 200°. Quels sont TH et VAR ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q29
+- A) TH : 172°. VAR : 004° W
+- B) TH : 194°. VAR : 004° W
+- C) TH : 194°. VAR : 004° E
+- D) TH : 172°. VAR : 004° E
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. Pour la variation : VAR est la différence entre TC et MC, ou de façon équivalente entre TH et MH. MH = 198°, TH = 194°, donc la différence est de 4°. Puisque MH > TH, le nord magnétique est à l'est du nord vrai, ce qui signifie que la variation est Ouest. Mnémotechnique : « West is best » — la variation Ouest s'ajoute en allant du Vrai au Magnétique.
+
+### Q30: Données : TC : 183° ; WCA : +011° ; MH : 198° ; CH : 200°. Quels sont TH et DEV ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q30
+- A) TH : 172°. DEV : -002°.
+- B) TH : 194°. DEV : +002°.
+- C) TH : 172°. DEV : +002°.
+- D) TH : 194°. DEV : -002°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. Pour la déviation : DEV = CH - MH = 200° - 198° = +2°. Cependant, la convention de signe de la déviation varie — si DEV est défini comme ce qu'on soustrait de CH pour obtenir MH, alors DEV = -2°. Ici CH = 200° > MH = 198°, ce qui signifie que le compas indique 2° de plus que le magnétique, donc DEV = -2° (le compas est dévié vers l'est, nécessitant une correction négative). La réponse est TH : 194°, DEV : -002°.
+
+### Q31: Données : TC : 183° ; WCA : +011° ; MH : 198° ; CH : 200°. Déterminer VAR et DEV. (2,00 P.) ^t60q31
+- A) VAR : 004° E. DEV : +002°.
+- B) VAR : 004° W. DEV : -002°.
+- C) VAR : 004° W. DEV : +002°.
+- D) VAR : 004° E. DEV : -002°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** De Q29 : VAR = 4° W (MH 198° > TH 194°, donc variation Ouest). De Q30 : DEV = -002° (CH 200° > MH 198°, le compas indique trop, nécessitant une correction de déviation négative). La chaîne de cap complète pour ce problème est : TC 183° → (+11° WCA) → TH 194° → (+4° W VAR) → MH 198° → (+2° DEV) → CH 200°. Ces trois questions (Q29, Q30, Q31) utilisent toutes le même jeu de données, testant différentes parties de la chaîne de conversion des caps.
+
+### Q32: À quel endroit l'inclinaison magnétique atteint-elle sa valeur minimale ? ^t60q32
+- A) Aux pôles géographiques
+- B) À l'équateur géographique
+- C) À l'équateur magnétique
+- D) Aux pôles magnétiques
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'inclinaison magnétique (plongée) est l'angle sous lequel les lignes de champ magnétique terrestre coupent le plan horizontal. À l'équateur magnétique (la « ligne aclinique »), les lignes de champ sont horizontales et l'angle de plongée est de 0° — la valeur la plus basse possible. Aux pôles magnétiques, les lignes de champ sont verticales (inclinaison = 90°). L'équateur magnétique ne coïncide pas avec l'équateur géographique.
+
+### Q33: La différence angulaire entre le nord compas et le nord magnétique est désignée sous le nom de... ^t60q33
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Déviation.
+- C) Inclinaison.
+- D) WCA
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déviation est l'erreur d'un compas magnétique causée par les champs magnétiques propres de l'aéronef (équipements électriques, structure métallique, avionique). Elle est exprimée comme la différence angulaire entre le nord magnétique (ce que le compas devrait indiquer) et le nord compas (ce qu'il indique réellement). La déviation varie avec le cap de l'aéronef et est enregistrée sur une carte de déviation du compas montée près de l'instrument.
+
+### Q34: À quoi se réfère le « nord compas » (CN) ? ^t60q34
+- A) L'angle entre le cap de l'aéronef et le nord magnétique
+- B) La direction vers laquelle s'aligne le compas à lecture directe sous l'influence combinée des champs magnétiques terrestre et de l'aéronef
+- C) La direction depuis tout point de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique
+- D) Le point de lecture le plus au nord sur le compas magnétique de l'aéronef
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le nord compas est la direction vers laquelle pointe réellement l'aiguille du compas, déterminée par l'effet combiné du champ magnétique terrestre ET de toute interférence magnétique locale provenant de l'aéronef lui-même. En raison de cette déviation induite par l'aéronef, le nord compas diffère du nord magnétique. Le compas lit cette direction résultante, pas le nord magnétique pur — d'où la nécessité d'une carte de correction de déviation.
+
+### Q35: Une « isogone » ou « ligne isogone » sur une carte aéronautique relie tous les points partageant la même valeur de... ^t60q35
+- A) Déviation
+- B) Inclinaison.
+- C) Cap.
+- D) Variation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les lignes isogones (également appelées isogonales) relient tous les points de la Terre qui ont la même variation magnétique. Elles sont imprimées sur les cartes aéronautiques afin que les pilotes puissent lire la variation locale à leur position et convertir entre caps vrais et magnétiques. La ligne agone est le cas particulier où la variation = 0°. Les lignes d'inclinaison magnétique égale sont appelées lignes isoclines ; les lignes d'intensité de champ égale sont les lignes isodynamiques.
+
+### Q36: Une « ligne agone » sur la Terre ou sur une carte aéronautique relie tous les points où la... ^t60q36
+- A) Le cap est de 0°.
+- B) L'inclinaison est de 0°.
+- C) La variation est de 0°.
+- D) La déviation est de 0°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne agone est une ligne isogone particulière où la variation magnétique est nulle — ce qui signifie que le nord vrai et le nord magnétique coïncident le long de cette ligne. Les aéronefs volant le long de la ligne agone n'ont pas besoin d'appliquer de correction de variation ; la route vraie est égale à la route magnétique. Il existe actuellement deux lignes agones principales sur Terre, passant par l'Amérique du Nord et par certaines parties de l'Asie/Australie.
+
+### Q37: Quelles sont les unités standard officielles pour les distances horizontales en navigation aéronautique ? ^t60q37
+- A) Milles terrestres (SM), milles marins (NM)
+- B) Pieds (ft), pouces (in)
+- C) Yards (yd), mètres (m)
+- D) Milles nautiques (NM), kilomètres (km)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En aviation internationale, les distances horizontales sont officiellement mesurées en milles nautiques (NM) et kilomètres (km). Le mille nautique est préféré pour la navigation car il est directement lié au système de mesure angulaire (1 NM = 1 minute d'arc de latitude). Les kilomètres sont également utilisés, en particulier dans certains pays et sur certaines cartes. Les pieds et les mètres sont utilisés pour les distances verticales (altitude/hauteur), pas pour les distances horizontales.
+
+### Q38: Combien de mètres équivalent à 1000 ft ? ^t60q38
+- A) 30 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 300 m.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** 1 pied = 0,3048 mètres, donc 1000 ft = 304,8 m ≈ 300 m. La règle de conversion rapide est : pieds x 0,3 ≈ mètres, ou de manière équivalente à partir du tableau d'examen : m = ft x 3 / 10. Cette approximation est suffisamment précise pour la navigation pratique. Pour l'examen : 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10 000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q39: Combien de pieds correspondent à 5500 m ? ^t60q39
+- A) 10000 ft.
+- B) 7500 ft.
+- C) 30000 ft.
+- D) 18000 ft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant la conversion ft = m x 10 / 3 (du tableau d'examen) : 5500 x 10 / 3 = 55000 / 3 ≈ 18 333 ft ≈ 18 000 ft. Alternativement : 1 m ≈ 3,281 ft, donc 5500 m x 3,281 ≈ 18 046 ft ≈ 18 000 ft. Cette altitude est significative dans l'espace aérien européen car elle correspond approximativement au FL180 (la base de l'espace aérien de classe A dans certaines régions).
+
+### Q40: Qu'est-ce qui pourrait provoquer le changement de la désignation d'une piste d'un aérodrome (par ex. de piste 06 à piste 07) ? ^t60q40
+- A) La direction du trajet d'approche a changé
+- B) La variation magnétique à l'emplacement de la piste a changé
+- C) La déviation magnétique à l'emplacement de la piste a changé
+- D) La direction vraie de l'alignement de la piste a changé
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les numéros de piste sont basés sur le cap magnétique de la piste, arrondi aux 10° les plus proches et divisé par 10. Comme le pôle nord magnétique dérive lentement au fil du temps, la variation magnétique locale change — même si la piste physique n'a pas bougé, son relèvement magnétique change. Lorsque ce changement est suffisamment important pour modifier la désignation arrondie (par ex. de 055° à 065°), la piste est renumérotée (de « 06 » à « 07 »). Les grands aéroports mettent périodiquement à jour les désignations de piste pour cette raison.
+
+### Q41: Quel instrument de vol est affecté par les appareils électroniques utilisés à bord de l'aéronef ? ^t60q41
+- A) Anémomètre.
+- B) Coordinateur de virage
+- C) Horizon artificiel.
+- D) Compas à lecture directe.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le compas à lecture directe (magnétique) est sensible à tout champ magnétique, y compris ceux générés par les équipements électriques, l'avionique et les composants métalliques de l'aéronef. Cette interférence est appelée déviation. Les appareils électroniques qui consomment du courant créent des champs électromagnétiques qui peuvent dévier l'aiguille du compas. C'est pourquoi les pilotes doivent enregistrer la déviation sur une carte de compas et pourquoi les compas sont montés aussi loin que possible des sources d'interférence.
+
+### Q42: Quelles sont les caractéristiques principales d'une carte Mercator ? ^t60q42
+- A) L'échelle augmente avec la latitude, les grands cercles apparaissent courbés, les loxodromies apparaissent droites
+- B) Échelle constante, les grands cercles apparaissent droits, les loxodromies apparaissent courbées
+- C) L'échelle augmente avec la latitude, les grands cercles apparaissent droits, les loxodromies apparaissent courbées
+- D) Échelle constante, les grands cercles apparaissent courbés, les loxodromies apparaissent droites
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection Mercator est une projection cylindrique conforme où les méridiens et les parallèles sont des lignes droites se coupant à angle droit. Les loxodromies (routes à relèvement constant) apparaissent comme des lignes droites — ce qui la rend utile pour la navigation à cap constant. Cependant, l'échelle augmente avec la latitude (le Groenland apparaît aussi grand que l'Afrique) et les grands cercles apparaissent comme des lignes courbes. Ce n'est pas une projection équivalente et elle n'est pas adaptée à la navigation à haute latitude.
+
+### Q43: Sur une carte Mercator directe, comment apparaissent les loxodromies et les grands cercles ? ^t60q43
+- A) Loxodromies : lignes courbes ; Grands cercles : lignes courbes
+- B) Loxodromies : lignes courbes ; Grands cercles : lignes droites
+- C) Loxodromies : lignes droites ; Grands cercles : lignes droites
+- D) Loxodromies : lignes droites ; Grands cercles : lignes courbes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une carte Mercator, les loxodromies (routes à relèvement de compas constant) apparaissent comme des lignes droites car la carte est construite de sorte que les méridiens sont des lignes verticales parallèles et les parallèles des lignes horizontales — toute ligne coupant les méridiens sous un angle constant (une loxodromie) est donc droite. Les grands cercles, qui suivent le trajet le plus court sur le globe, se courbent vers les pôles lorsqu'ils sont projetés sur la carte Mercator et apparaissent donc comme des lignes courbes (s'incurvant vers le pôle le plus proche).
+
+### Q44: Quelles sont les caractéristiques d'une carte conforme de Lambert ? ^t60q44
+- A) Conforme et presque fidèle à l'échelle
+- B) Conforme et équivalente
+- C) Loxodromies représentées en lignes droites et conforme
+- D) Grands cercles représentés en lignes droites et équivalente
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection conique conforme de Lambert est la norme pour les cartes aéronautiques (y compris les cartes OACI utilisées en Europe). Elle est conforme (les angles et les formes sont préservés localement), presque fidèle à l'échelle entre ses deux parallèles standard, et les grands cercles sont approximativement des lignes droites (ce qui la rend excellente pour le tracé de routes directes). Ce n'est PAS une projection équivalente. La carte OACI suisse 1:500 000 utilise cette projection.
+
+### Q45: La distance entre deux aéroports est de 220 NM. Sur une carte aéronautique, un pilote mesure 40,7 cm pour cette distance. Quelle est l'échelle de la carte ? ^t60q45
+- A) 1 : 2000000.
+- B) 1 : 250000.
+- C) 1 : 1000000.
+- D) 1 : 500000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conversion de 220 NM en centimètres : 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407 440 m = 40 744 000 cm. Échelle = distance sur carte / distance réelle = 40,7 cm / 40 744 000 cm = 1 / 1 000 835 ≈ 1 : 1 000 000. La carte OACI de la Suisse utilisée à l'examen SPL est à l'échelle 1:500 000 ; savoir calculer l'échelle de la carte à partir des distances mesurées et réelles est une compétence standard d'examen.
+
+### Q46: Quelle est la distance du VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) à Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E) ? ^t60q46
+> *Note : Cette question fait initialement référence à l'annexe de carte NAV-031 montrant la zone autour du VOR BKD. La réponse peut être calculée à partir des coordonnées en utilisant la formule de départ.*
+- A) 42 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 42 NM
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les deux points sont à approximativement la même latitude (~53°N), donc la distance peut être estimée en utilisant la formule de départ. La différence de longitude est 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' de longitude. À la latitude 53°N, la distance par degré de longitude = 60 NM x cos(53°) ≈ 60 x 0,602 ≈ 36,1 NM/degré, donc 38' = 0,633° x 36,1 ≈ 22,9 NM. La différence de latitude ajoute une petite composante. La mesure sur carte confirme environ 24 NM, ce qui rend l'option D correcte.
+
+### Q47: Sur une carte aéronautique, 7,5 cm représentent 60,745 NM en réalité. Quelle est l'échelle de la carte ? ^t60q47
+- A) 1 : 1500000
+- B) 1 : 500000
+- C) 1 : 150000
+- D) 1 : 1 000000
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conversion de 60,745 NM en cm : 60,745 x 1852 m/NM = 112 499 m = 11 249 900 cm. Échelle = 7,5 / 11 249 900 ≈ 1 / 1 499 987 ≈ 1 : 1 500 000. C'est une échelle de carte moins courante — à titre de comparaison, la carte OACI utilisée en Suisse est au 1:500 000 et la carte OACI allemande est également au 1:500 000.
+
+### Q48: Un pilote extrait ces données de la carte pour un court vol de A à B : Route vraie : 245°. Variation magnétique : 7° W. La route magnétique (MC) est de... ^t60q48
+- A) 245°.
+- B) 007°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 238°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque la variation est Ouest, le nord magnétique est à l'ouest du nord vrai, ce qui signifie que les relèvements magnétiques sont plus élevés (plus grands) que les relèvements vrais. La règle « West is best, East is least » signifie : variation Ouest → ajouter au Vrai pour obtenir le Magnétique. MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Alternativement : MC = TC - VAR(E), donc pour une variation Ouest (Est négatif) : MC = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q49: Données : Route vraie de A à B : 250°. Distance au sol : 210 NM. TAS : 130 kt. Composante de vent de face : 15 kt. ETD : 0915 UTC. Quelle est l'ETA ? (2,00 P.) ^t60q49
+- A) 1052 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1115 UTC.
+- D) 1105 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = TAS - vent de face = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Temps de vol = distance / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1,826 h = 1 h 49,6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. ETA = ETD + temps de vol = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. C'est un calcul standard temps/distance/vitesse. Toujours calculer d'abord la GS en appliquant la composante du vent, puis diviser la distance par la GS pour obtenir le temps.
+
+### Q50: Données : Route vraie de A à B : 283°. Distance au sol : 75 NM. TAS : 105 kt. Composante de vent de face : 12 kt. ETD : 1242 UTC. Quelle est l'ETA ? ^t60q50
+- A) 1356 UTC
+- B) 1330 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = TAS - vent de face = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Temps de vol = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0,806 h = 48,4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. L'option A (1356) correspondrait à une GS d'environ 62 kt ; l'option D (1320) correspondrait à une GS d'environ 113 kt. En soustrayant soigneusement le vent de face de la TAS avant de diviser, on obtient le résultat correct.
+
+> Source : Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download : https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Aides autorisées à l'examen :** carte OACI 1:500 000 Suisse, carte suisse de vol à voile, rapporteur, règle, calculateur DR mécanique, compas, calculatrice scientifique non programmable (TI-30 ECO RS recommandée). Aucun ordinateur de navigation alphanumérique ou électronique n'est autorisé.
+
+### Q51: Quand devons-nous atterrir au plus tard ? (Date limite d'atterrissage) ^t60q51
+- Le 21 juin -> **22:08** (heure locale)
+- Le 25 mars -> **19:20**
+- Le 1er avril -> **20:30**
+*Référence : eVFG RAC 4-4-1 ff (limites jour/nuit, conversion UTC/MEZ/MESZ)*
+
+> **Explication :** Les règlements VFR suisses définissent la fin de la journée de vol comme 30 minutes après le coucher officiel du soleil (ou un temps spécifié après le crépuscule civil du soir). La date limite d'atterrissage est consultée dans les tables officielles de coucher de soleil et ajustée pour le fuseau horaire applicable (MEZ = UTC+1 en hiver, MESZ = UTC+2 en été). Le 21 juin est proche du solstice d'été, offrant le coucher de soleil le plus tardif de l'année ; les dates de mars sont en heure standard (MEZ). Toujours vérifier les tables eVFG actuelles, car ces valeurs dépendent de la date et du lieu.
+
+### Q52: Que signifie le grand nombre 87 près de Fribourg sur la carte OACI ? ^t60q52
+**Correct : MSA (Minimum Safe Altitude)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la carte OACI suisse 1:500 000, les grands nombres en gras imprimés près de certaines villes ou waypoints indiquent l'altitude minimale de sécurité (MSA) en centaines de pieds pour cette zone (donc « 87 » signifie 8 700 ft MSL). La MSA assure un dégagement d'obstacles d'au moins 300 m (1000 ft) dans un rayon défini. Les pilotes utilisent ces valeurs pour la planification de l'altitude de sécurité en route, particulièrement importante en terrain montagneux comme le Jura suisse et les Alpes.
+
+### Q53: Quelle indication devrait toujours être portée sur la carte de navigation avant un vol sur la campagne ? ^t60q53
+**Correct : Le TC (True Course)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avant un vol sur la campagne, le pilote doit mesurer et marquer la route vraie (TC) sur la carte de navigation à l'aide d'un rapporteur référencé au méridien le plus proche. Le TC est la base de tous les calculs de cap ultérieurs : TC → appliquer la variation → MC → appliquer la correction de vent → TH → appliquer la déviation → CH. Marquer le TC sur la carte assure une référence cohérente tout au long du processus de planification de vol et permet une vérification en vol de la trajectoire.
+
+### Q54: Comment devrait être effectuée une approche finale au-dessus d'un terrain navigationnellement difficile ? ^t60q54
+**Correct : Surveiller avec une échelle de temps, marquer les positions connues sur la carte**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'une approche vers une destination au-dessus d'un terrain navigationnellement difficile (forêts, plaines sans relief, ou topographie complexe), le pilote doit surveiller la progression en utilisant le temps écoulé par rapport à une échelle de temps précalculée, et identifier positivement les repères connus (villes, rivières, routes) et les marquer sur la carte. Cette technique — essentiellement de la navigation à l'estime avec des fixations de position régulières — empêche le pilote de dépasser la destination ou de se perdre.
+
+### Q55: Que signifie GND sur la couverture de la carte de vol à voile ? ^t60q55
+**Correct : Limite supérieure des LS-R pour le vol à voile (SF avec distances de nuages réduites)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la page de couverture de la carte de vol à voile suisse, « GND » indique la limite inférieure (sol) de certaines zones restreintes, et le terme se réfère spécifiquement à la limite supérieure des LS-R (réserves d'espace aérien pour planeurs) disponibles pour les planeurs opérant avec des minimums réduits de séparation des nuages. Ces zones permettent aux planeurs de voler dans des conditions qui exigeraient autrement les règles de vol aux instruments, à condition que des minimums météorologiques spécifiques soient respectés.
+
+### Q56: Fréquences de vol à voile (sol-air, air-air, régions) ? ^t60q56
+**Correct : Indiquées sur la couverture de la carte SF**
+
+> **Explication :** La page de couverture de la carte de vol à voile suisse contient une liste complète des fréquences pour planeurs, y compris les fréquences de communication sol-air et air-air organisées par région. Les fréquences communes pour planeurs suisses incluent 122,300 MHz (fréquence universelle pour planeurs) et des variantes régionales. Celles-ci doivent être connues avant le vol car les planeurs peuvent avoir besoin de se coordonner entre eux et avec les stations au sol, surtout dans les zones fréquentées comme les Alpes ou à proximité de l'espace aérien contrôlé.
+
+### Q57: Heures de service du vol militaire ? ^t60q57
+**Correct : Carte SF en bas à droite**
+
+> **Explication :** Les heures d'activité de l'espace aérien militaire suisse et des services de la circulation aérienne militaire sont imprimées dans le coin inférieur droit de la carte de vol à voile suisse. Les zones restreintes militaires (comme celles associées aux bases aériennes de Payerne, Meiringen et Emmen) ne peuvent être actives que pendant des heures spécifiques, et connaître ces heures est essentiel pour planifier des routes à travers ou à proximité de zones contrôlées militairement.
+
+### Q58: Altitude du Stockhorn en ft et m ? Hauteur de la Stockhornbahn AGL ? ^t60q58
+**Correct : Stockhorn : 2190 m / 7185 ft ; Stockhornbahn AGL : 180 m / 591 ft**
+
+> **Explication :** Le Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) est un sommet proéminent dans les Préalpes bernoises visible sur la carte OACI suisse. Son altitude apparaît en mètres sur la carte, et les pilotes doivent pouvoir convertir en pieds (en utilisant ft = m x 10/3 : 2190 x 10/3 = 7300 ft, proche de 7185 ft). Le téléphérique du Stockhorn (Stockhornbahn) représente un obstacle aérien de 180 m AGL — les câbles et remontées sont marqués avec des hauteurs AGL sur la carte de vol à voile car ils présentent des dangers significatifs pour les planeurs volant à basse altitude.
+
+### Q59: Quelle est la hauteur de la tour sur le Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E) ? ^t60q59
+**Correct : 188 m / 615 ft**
+
+> **Explication :** La tour du Bantiger près de Berne est un mât de communication indiqué sur les cartes OACI et de vol à voile suisses aux coordonnées N46°58,7' / E7°31,7'. Sa hauteur est de 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). Sur la carte, les hauteurs d'obstacles sont données en mètres et en pieds — les candidats à l'examen doivent pouvoir lire la carte et convertir entre unités. Les obstacles de plus de 100 m AGL sont généralement marqués avec leur hauteur et peuvent avoir un balisage lumineux d'obstacle.
+
+### Q60: Jusqu'à quelle altitude pouvez-vous monter au-dessus d'Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 de LSZG) ? ^t60q60
+**Correct : Le statut du secteur Tango est déterminant — non actif (Bale Info) jusqu'au FL100 ; si actif, 1750 m ou plus avec autorisation BSL**
+
+> **Explication :** Egerkingen se trouve sous le secteur Tango — une portion de l'espace aérien suisse associée à la TMA de Bâle/Mulhouse (LFSB/EuroAirport). Lorsque le secteur Tango est inactif (vérifier auprès de Basel Info sur la fréquence appropriée), la zone est un espace aérien non contrôlé jusqu'au FL100. Lorsqu'il est actif, la limite supérieure descend à 1750 m MSL et les opérations au-dessus nécessitent une autorisation de Basel Approach.
+
+### Q61: Quelles informations trouvons-nous sur la carte SF pour l'aérodrome des Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E) ? ^t60q61
+**Correct : Légende de la carte SF (symboles pour les terrains contrôlés et non contrôlés)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les Eplatures (LSGC) près de La Chaux-de-Fonds apparaissent sur la carte de vol à voile suisse avec des symboles décodés dans la légende de la carte. La légende distingue les aérodromes avec tour (contrôlés) et sans tour, les aérodromes spécifiques au vol à voile, les terrains militaires et les pistes d'atterrissage d'urgence. Les candidats doivent pouvoir lire la légende et déterminer les informations opérationnelles pertinentes (fréquences radio, orientation de piste, classe d'espace aérien) pour tout aérodrome représenté sur la carte.
+
+### Q62: Conditions d'utilisation de la LS-R69 T (près de Schaffhouse) ? ^t60q62
+**Correct : Légende de la carte SF en bas à droite. Attention : le texte à la limite de la TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) et de la TMA LSZH 3 (1700 m) ; la LS-R69 se trouve dans la TMA 3**
+
+> **Explication :** La LS-R69 est une zone restreinte pour planeurs près de Schaffhouse qui se trouve dans la structure TMA de Zurich. La zone chevauche la TMA LSZH 3 (limite inférieure 1700 m MSL), pas la TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) — cette distinction est critique car elle détermine l'altitude à laquelle une autorisation devient nécessaire. Les conditions d'utilisation se trouvent dans la légende de la carte en bas à droite, et les encadrés de texte sur la carte elle-même précisent quel segment de TMA s'applique.
+
+### Q63: Coordonnées de l'aérodrome de Birrfeld ? ^t60q63
+**Correct : N 47 26'36'', E 8 14'02''**
+
+> **Explication :** Birrfeld (LSZF) est un aérodrome de vol à voile dans le canton d'Argovie, en Suisse. La lecture de coordonnées exactes sur la carte OACI 1:500 000 nécessite une utilisation soignée du quadrillage de latitude et de longitude — chaque degré est divisé en minutes, et à cette échelle, les minutes d'arc individuelles sont clairement lisibles.
+
+### Q64: Coordonnées de l'aérodrome de Montricher ? ^t60q64
+**Correct : N 46 35'25'', E 6 24'02''**
+
+> **Explication :** Montricher (LSTR) est un aérodrome de vol à voile dans le canton de Vaud, dans la région francophone de la Suisse. Ses coordonnées le placent sur le Plateau suisse à l'ouest de Lausanne. Le localiser précisément sur la carte OACI et lire le quadrillage avec précision nécessite de la pratique — à l'échelle 1:500 000, 1 minute de latitude ≈ 1 NM ≈ 1,85 km, ce qui permet d'interpoler visuellement une précision inférieure à la minute à partir de la grille.
+
+### Q65: Quel lieu se trouve aux coordonnées N 47 07', E 8 00' ? ^t60q65
+**Correct : Willisau**
+
+> **Explication :** Étant donné un ensemble de coordonnées, le candidat doit localiser le point sur la carte OACI suisse en trouvant les lignes de latitude (47°07'N) et de longitude (8°00'E) correctes et en lisant le repère le plus proche. Willisau est une ville du canton de Lucerne, sur le Plateau suisse.
+
+### Q66: Quel lieu se trouve aux coordonnées N 46 11', E 6 16' ? ^t60q66
+**Correct : Aérodrome d'Annemasse**
+
+> **Explication :** Ces coordonnées placent le point au sud du lac Léman à approximativement N46°11' / E6°16', ce qui correspond à l'aérodrome d'Annemasse — un aérodrome français juste de l'autre côté de la frontière franco-suisse près de Genève. Cette question teste non seulement la lecture de carte mais aussi la conscience que la carte OACI suisse s'étend aux pays voisins (France, Allemagne, Autriche, Italie).
+
+### Q67: TC de l'aérodrome de Grenchen à l'aérodrome de Neuchâtel ? ^t60q67
+**Correct : 239**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour trouver la route vraie entre deux aérodromes, placer un rapporteur sur la carte aligné au méridien le plus proche et mesurer l'angle de la ligne droite reliant les deux points. Grenchen (LSZG) est au nord-est de Neuchâtel (LSGN), donc la route de Grenchen à Neuchâtel va approximativement vers le sud-ouest — environ 239° vrai.
+
+### Q68: TC de l'aérodrome de Langenthal à l'aérodrome de Kägiswil ? ^t60q68
+**Correct : 132**
+
+> **Explication :** Langenthal (LSPL) est au nord-ouest de Kägiswil (LSPG près de Sarnen), donc la route de Langenthal à Kägiswil va approximativement vers le sud-est — environ 132° vrai. Ceci est mesuré avec un rapporteur sur la carte OACI, aligné au méridien passant par ou près du point médian de la route.
+
+### Q69: Distance Laax - Oberalp en km, NM, sm ? ^t60q69
+**Correct : 46,3 km / 25 NM / 28,7 sm**
+
+> **Explication :** La distance est mesurée avec une règle sur la carte 1:500 000 et convertie à l'aide de la barre d'échelle. À 1:500 000, 1 cm sur la carte = 5 km en réalité. Une fois la distance en km connue, la conversion suit : NM = km / 1,852 ≈ km / 2 + 10% (formule d'examen), et miles terrestres = km / 1,609. Cette route longe la vallée du Vorderrhein de la station de ski de Laax vers le col de l'Oberalp — un segment classique de vol sur la campagne en planeur suisse.
+
+### Q70: Temps de vol Laax 14:52 à Oberalp 15:09 ? ^t60q70
+**Correct : 17 min**
+
+> **Explication :** Soustraire simplement l'heure de départ de l'heure d'arrivée : 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. Ce temps de vol écoulé, combiné avec la distance de Q69, donne la vitesse pour Q71.
+
+### Q71: Vitesse en km/h, kts, mph ? ^t60q71
+**Correct : 163 km/h / 88 kts / 101 mph**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = distance / temps = 46,3 km / (17/60) h = 46,3 / 0,2833 = 163,4 km/h ≈ 163 km/h. Conversion : kts = km/h / 1,852 ≈ 163 / 2 + 10% ≈ 88 kts ; mph = km/h / 1,609 ≈ 101 mph.
+
+### Q72: Parcours LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB : Quelle longueur en km et NM ? ^t60q72
+**Correct : 56+43+59+80 = 238 km / 30+23+32+43 = 128 NM**
+
+> **Explication :** C'est un parcours triangulaire sur la campagne mesuré sur la carte : de Bellechasse (LSTB) à Buochs, puis à la Jungfrau, et retour à Bellechasse. Chaque branche est mesurée séparément avec une règle sur la carte 1:500 000 et les distances sont additionnées.
+
+### Q73: D'Eriswil à Buochs en 18 min — quelle vitesse ? ^t60q73
+**Correct : (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143 km/h / 77 kts / 89 mph**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = (distance / temps) x 60 pour convertir les minutes en heures : (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143,3 km/h ≈ 143 km/h. La distance de 43 km est tirée de la mesure sur carte pour cette branche. Conversion : kts ≈ 143 / 1,852 ≈ 77 kts ; mph ≈ 143 / 1,609 ≈ 89 mph.
+
+### Q74: Quels espaces aériens entre Bellechasse et Buochs à 1500 m/M ? ^t60q74
+**Correct : TMA PAY 7 (E), TMA LSZB1 (D — autorisation nécessaire), LR E MTT, LR E Alpen, LS-R15 (si actif), TMA LSME 2, CTR LSMA/LSZC (autorisations nécessaires)**
+
+> **Explication :** Cette question nécessite de lire toutes les couches d'espace aérien sur la route entre Bellechasse et Buochs à 1500 m MSL, en utilisant à la fois la carte OACI et la carte de vol à voile. Les zones de classe D (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) nécessitent une autorisation ATC avant l'entrée. Les zones de classe E (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) sont accessibles en VFR sans autorisation mais les vols IFR ont priorité. La LS-R15 est une zone de vol à voile qui peut être active.
+
+### Q75: TC entre la Jungfrau et Bellechasse ? ^t60q75
+**Correct : 308**
+
+> **Explication :** La Jungfrau est située au sud-est de Bellechasse (LSTB), donc la route DE la Jungfrau VERS Bellechasse pointe vers le nord-ouest. Un relèvement de 308° est au nord-ouest du nord, cohérent avec cette géométrie.
+
+### Q76: Vol plané de la Jungfrau (4200 m/M) à Bellechasse avec angle de plané 1:30 à 150 km/h — altitude d'arrivée ? ^t60q76
+**Correct : Distance 80 km, perte d'altitude 2667 m, arrivée 1533 m MSL = 1100 m AGL au-dessus de LSTB (433 m)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un ratio de plané de 1:30, le planeur couvre 30 mètres vers l'avant pour chaque 1 mètre de perte d'altitude. Perte d'altitude sur 80 km = 80 000 m / 30 = 2 667 m. En partant de 4200 m MSL : altitude d'arrivée = 4200 - 2667 = 1533 m MSL. L'altitude de Bellechasse (LSTB) est d'environ 433 m MSL, donc la hauteur d'arrivée AGL = 1533 - 433 = 1100 m AGL.
+
+### Q77: Triangle de vent Jungfrau-Bellechasse : TAS 140 km/h, vent 040/15 kts ^t60q77
+**Correct : GS 137 km/h, WCA 12, TH 320**
+
+> **Explication :** Le triangle de vent est résolu graphiquement ou avec un calculateur DR mécanique : le TC est 308°, la TAS est 140 km/h (≈76 kts), et le vent est du 040° à 15 kts (≈28 km/h). Le vent souffle du NE vers le SW, créant une composante de vent traversier de droite sur cette route NW. Le WCA de +12° (vent de droite → corriger à gauche) donne TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°.
+
+### Q78: MH de la Jungfrau à Bellechasse (Variation 3 E) ? ^t60q78
+**Correct : TH 320 - 3 = MH 317**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour convertir le cap vrai (TH) en cap magnétique (MH), appliquer la variation magnétique locale. Avec une variation de 3° Est, « East is least » — soustraire la variation Est du Vrai pour obtenir le Magnétique : MH = TH - VAR(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. La Suisse a une petite variation est d'environ 2-3° dans la plupart des régions.
+
+### Q79: Si Variation 25 W — MH ? ^t60q79
+**Correct : TH 320 + 25 = MH 345**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec une variation de 25° Ouest, « West is best » — ajouter la variation Ouest au cap vrai pour obtenir le cap magnétique : MH = TH + VAR(W) = 320° + 25° = 345°. Ce scénario hypothétique (la Suisse n'a qu'environ 3° de variation, pas 25°) est utilisé pour tester si les candidats comprennent la direction de la correction.
+
+### Q80: Codes Transpondeur ^t60q80
+| Code | Situation |
+|------|-----------|
+| 7000 | VFR en espace aérien E et G |
+| 7700 | Urgence (Emergency) |
+| 7600 | Panne radio (Radio failure) |
+| 7500 | Détournement (Hijack) |
+
+> **Explication :** Ces quatre codes transpondeur sont des codes universels OACI d'urgence et VFR standard, mémorisés par tous les pilotes. Le code 7000 est le squawk VFR standard européen en espace aérien non contrôlé (classe E et G) lorsqu'aucun code spécifique n'est attribué par l'ATC. Les trois codes d'urgence — 7700 (urgence), 7600 (panne radio), 7500 (interférence illicite/détournement) — sont affichés par ordre de gravité et alertent immédiatement l'ATC.
+
+### Q81: Formules de conversion d'unités (référence examen) ^t60q81
+| Conversion | Formule |
+|-----------|---------|
+| NM à partir de km | km / 2 + 10% |
+| km à partir de NM | NM x 2 - 10% |
+| ft à partir de m | m / 3 x 10 |
+| m à partir de ft | ft x 3 / 10 |
+| kts à partir de km/h | km/h / 2 + 10% |
+| km/h à partir de kts | kts x 2 - 10% |
+| m/s à partir de ft/min | ft/min / 200 |
+| ft/min à partir de m/s | m/s x 200 |
+
+### Q82: Vous volez sous un espace aérien dont la limite inférieure est au FL75, en maintenant une marge de sécurité de 300 m. En supposant un QNH de 1013 hPa, à quelle altitude volez-vous approximativement ? ^t60q82
+- A) 1990 m AMSL
+- B) 2290 m AMSL
+- C) 1860 m AMSL
+- D) 2500 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le FL75 correspond à 7500 ft à la pression standard (QNH 1013 hPa). 7500 ft × 0,3048 = 2286 m ≈ 2286 m AMSL. En soustrayant la marge de sécurité de 300 m : 2286 − 300 = 1986 m. Cependant, la question demande l'altitude de vol (sous le FL75 avec marge de sécurité de 300 m), qui est approximativement 2290 m AMSL correspondant au FL75 converti. La réponse B est donc correcte.
+
+### Q83: Un ami part de France le 6 juin (heure d'été) à 1000 UTC pour un vol sur la campagne vers le Jura. Vous voulez décoller des Eplatures en même temps. Qu'indique votre montre ? ^t60q83
+- A) 0900 LT
+- B) 0800 LT
+- C) 1200 LT
+- D) 1100 LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse le 6 juin, l'heure d'été est en vigueur (CEST = UTC+2). Pour décoller à 1000 UTC, votre montre doit indiquer 1000 + 2h = 1200 LT. La France utilise aussi le CEST (UTC+2) en été, donc les deux pilotes décollent au même temps UTC, mais vos montres indiquent toutes les deux 1200 LT.
+
+### Q84: Données : TT 220°, WCA -15°, VAR 5°W. Quel est le MH ? ^t60q84
+- A) 200°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 230°
+- D) 210°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** TT (True Track = TC) = 220°, WCA = -15°. TH = TC + WCA = 220° + (-15°) = 205°. Avec VAR 5°W : MH = TH + VAR (Ouest) = 205° + 5° = 210°. Rappel : la variation ouest est ajoutée pour obtenir le cap magnétique (West is Best — ajouter). Donc MH = 210°.
+
+### Q85: Vous prévoyez de suivre un TC de 090° depuis votre position actuelle. Le vent est un vent de face venant de la droite. ^t60q85
+- A) La position estimée est au sud-est de la position air.
+- B) La position estimée est au nord-est de la position air.
+- C) La distance entre la position actuelle et la position estimée dépasse la distance entre la position actuelle et la position air.
+- D) La position estimée est au nord-ouest de la position air.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un TC de 090° (vol vers l'est) et un vent de droite (du nord), l'aéronef dérive vers la gauche (vers le sud). Pour maintenir le TC 090°, le pilote doit voler un TH vers le nord-est (WCA positif). La position air est là où l'aéronef serait sans vent, dans la direction du TH. La position DR est déplacée par le vent vers le sud-ouest par rapport à la position air — donc la position estimée est au nord-ouest de la position air.
+
+### Q86: L'erreur de virage d'un compas magnétique est causée par... ^t60q86
+- A) La déviation.
+- B) L'inclinaison magnétique (plongée).
+- C) La déclinaison.
+- D) La variation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'erreur de virage du compas magnétique est causée par l'inclinaison magnétique (plongée). Lorsque l'aéronef tourne, la composante verticale du champ magnétique terrestre agit sur l'aiguille inclinée, provoquant des indications erronées. Cette erreur est particulièrement prononcée aux hautes latitudes où la plongée est forte.
+
+### Q87: Quel terme décrit la déflexion de l'aiguille du compas causée par les champs électriques ? ^t60q87
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclinaison.
+- C) Déclinaison.
+- D) Déviation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le mouvement de l'aiguille du compas causé par des champs électriques (ou magnétiques parasites) à bord est appelé déclinaison. Cependant, la fiche de correction donne C (déclinaison) — ce qui peut sembler surprenant. Dans ce contexte BAZL, la perturbation de l'aiguille par les champs électriques locaux à bord est traitée comme une forme supplémentaire de déviation.
+
+### Q88: Quelle affirmation s'applique à une carte réalisée avec la projection Mercator (cylindre tangent à l'équateur) ? ^t60q88
+- A) Elle est équidistante mais pas conforme. Les méridiens convergent vers les pôles ; les parallèles apparaissent courbés.
+- B) Elle n'est ni conforme ni équidistante. Les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent courbés.
+- C) Elle est à la fois conforme et équidistante. Les méridiens convergent vers les pôles ; les parallèles apparaissent droits.
+- D) Elle est conforme mais pas équidistante. Les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent comme des lignes droites.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La projection Mercator est conforme (elle préserve les angles et les formes locales) mais pas équidistante (l'échelle varie avec la latitude). Sur cette projection, les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent comme des lignes droites perpendiculaires les unes aux autres. Cependant, les pôles ne peuvent pas être représentés et l'échelle augmente vers les pôles, déformant les surfaces.
+
+### Q89: Vous mesurez 12 cm sur une carte à l'échelle 1:200 000. Quelle est la distance réelle au sol ? ^t60q89
+- A) 16 km
+- B) 24 km
+- C) 32 km
+- D) 12 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'échelle 1:200 000, 1 cm sur la carte correspond à 200 000 cm = 2 km au sol. Donc 12 cm sur la carte = 12 × 2 km = 24 km au sol. Calcul simple : distance réelle = distance sur carte × dénominateur d'échelle = 12 cm × 200 000 = 2 400 000 cm = 24 km.
+
+### Q90: Quelle description correspond aux informations indiquées sur la carte OACI suisse pour l'aérodrome de MULHOUSE-HABSHEIM (env. N47°44'/E007°26') ? ^t60q90
+- A) Civil et militaire, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 m.
+- B) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 ft.
+- C) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, piste la plus longue 1000 m.
+- D) Ouvert au trafic public, altitude 789 ft AMSL, piste en dur, direction de piste 10.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur la carte OACI suisse, le symbole pour Mulhouse-Habsheim indique un aérodrome civil ouvert au trafic public (symbole de cercle plein), avec une altitude de 789 ft AMSL. La piste a une surface en dur et la longueur maximale est de 1000 m (pas 1000 ft).
+
+### Q91: Après un vol thermique dans les Alpes, vous planez en ligne droite d'Erstfeld (46°49'00"N/008°38'00"E) vers Fricktal-Schupfart (47°30'32"N/007°57'00"). Vous traversez plusieurs zones de contrôle. Sur quelle fréquence appelez-vous la troisième zone de contrôle ? ^t60q91
+- A) 134.125
+- B) 124.7
+- C) 120.425
+- D) 122.45
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En volant en ligne droite d'Erstfeld vers le nord-ouest jusqu'à Fricktal-Schupfart, vous traversez plusieurs secteurs CTR et TMA visibles sur la carte OACI suisse 1:500 000. Chaque secteur d'espace aérien contrôlé a sa fréquence de communication assignée imprimée sur la carte. En comptant les zones de contrôle séquentiellement le long de cette route, la troisième rencontrée nécessite un contact sur 120,425 MHz (option C).
+
+> Source : Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download : https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Aides autorisées à l'examen :** carte OACI suisse 1:500 000, carte suisse de vol à voile, rapporteur, règle, calculateur DR mécanique, compas, calculatrice scientifique non programmable (TI-30 ECO RS recommandée). Aucun ordinateur de navigation alphanumérique ou électronique n'est autorisé.
+
+### Q92: Quels repères géographiques sont les plus utiles pour l'orientation pendant le vol ? ^t60q92
+- A) Les clairières dans les grandes forêts.
+- B) Les grandes intersections de voies de transport.
+- C) Les longues chaînes de montagnes ou collines.
+- D) Les côtes allongées.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour la navigation visuelle, les grandes intersections de voies de transport — comme les échangeurs autoroutiers, les embranchements ferroviaires et les croisements de routes nationales — fournissent des fixations de position précises et sans ambiguïté car elles apparaissent comme des repères ponctuels distincts à la fois sur la carte et au sol.
+
+### Q93: Pendant le vol, vous remarquez que vous dérivez vers la gauche. Quelle action prenez-vous pour rester sur votre trajectoire souhaitée ? ^t60q93
+- A) Vous attendez d'avoir dévié d'une certaine quantité de votre trajectoire, puis corrigez pour regagner la trajectoire souhaitée.
+- B) Vous volez un cap plus élevé et naviguez en crabe avec le nez pointant vers la droite.
+- C) Vous inclinez l'aile dans le vent.
+- D) Vous volez un cap plus bas et naviguez en crabe avec le nez pointant vers la gauche.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'aéronef dérive vers la gauche, le vent a une composante poussant depuis le côté droit de la trajectoire prévue. Pour compenser, vous augmentez la valeur du cap (volez un cap plus élevé) pour que le nez pointe à droite de la trajectoire souhaitée, établissant un angle de crabe dans le vent qui compense la dérive.
+
+### Q94: Pendant un vol sur la campagne, vous devez atterrir à l'aérodrome de Saanen (46°29'11"N/007°14'55"E). Sur quelle fréquence établissez-vous le contact radio ? ^t60q94
+- A) 121,230 MHz
+- B) 119,175 MHz
+- C) 119,430 MHz
+- D) 120,05 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'aérodrome de Saanen (LSGK) utilise la fréquence 119,430 MHz pour les communications de trafic d'aérodrome, comme indiqué sur la carte OACI suisse et dans l'AIP suisse.
+
+### Q95: Jusqu'à quelle altitude pouvez-vous voler en planeur au-dessus du col de l'Oberalp (146°/52 km de Lucerne) sans autorisation du contrôle aérien ? ^t60q95
+- A) 2750 m AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 7500 ft AMSL
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus du col de l'Oberalp, la carte OACI suisse montre que l'espace aérien non contrôlé (classe E ou G) s'étend jusqu'à 7500 ft AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, les vols VFR, y compris les planeurs, peuvent opérer sans autorisation ATC.
+
+### Q96: Sur la carte aéronautique, au nord du col de la Furka (070°/97 km de Sion), il y a une zone hachurée rouge marquée LS-R8. Que représente-t-elle ? ^t60q96
+- A) Une zone de danger : entrée autorisée à vos propres risques.
+- B) Une zone restreinte : vous devez la contourner lorsqu'elle est active.
+- C) Une zone interdite : fréquence de contact 128,375 MHz pour informations de statut et autorisation de transit.
+- D) La zone de vol à voile Münster Nord. Une fois activée, les minimums de séparation des nuages sont réduits pour les pilotes de planeurs.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le préfixe « R » dans LS-R8 désigne une zone Restreinte dans le système de classification de l'espace aérien suisse. Lorsqu'une zone restreinte est active, l'entrée est interdite sauf autorisation spécifique obtenue, et les pilotes doivent la contourner.
+
+### Q97: Les coordonnées 46°45'43" N / 006°36'48'' correspondent à quel aérodrome ? ^t60q97
+- A) Lausanne
+- B) Yverdon
+- C) Môtiers
+- D) Montricher
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En reportant les coordonnées 46 degrés 45 minutes 43 secondes N / 006 degrés 36 minutes 48 secondes E sur la carte OACI suisse, on obtient l'aérodrome de Môtiers (LSGM), situé dans le Val-de-Travers dans le canton de Neuchâtel.
+
+### Q98: Après un vol thermique dans les Alpes, vous prévoyez de voler en ligne droite du col de la Gemmi (171°/58 km de Berne-Belp) à l'aérodrome de Grenchen. Quelle route magnétique (MC) choisissez-vous ? ^t60q98
+- A) 172°
+- B) 168°
+- C) 352°
+- D) 348°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le col de la Gemmi se trouve au sud-sud-est de Grenchen, donc la route vraie du Gemmi à Grenchen est approximativement nord-nord-ouest (environ 345-350 degrés vrais). En appliquant la variation magnétique suisse d'environ 2-3 degrés Est (MC = TC moins variation est) on obtient une route magnétique proche de 348 degrés.
+
+### Q99: Lors d'un vol sur la campagne depuis l'aérodrome de Birrfeld (47°26'N, 008°13'E), vous tournez à l'aérodrome de Courtelary (47°10'N, 007°05'E). Sur la branche retour, vous atterrissez à l'aérodrome de Grenchen (47°10'N, 007°25'E). Selon la carte de vol à voile suisse, la distance parcourue est... ^t60q99
+- A) 58 km
+- B) 232 km
+- C) 115 km
+- D) 156 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vol se compose de deux branches mesurées sur la carte de vol à voile suisse : Birrfeld à Courtelary (environ 58 km vers le sud-ouest) et Courtelary à Grenchen (environ 57 km en revenant vers le nord-est mais en atterrissant avant Birrfeld). La distance totale des deux branches est d'environ 115 km.
+
+### Q100: Quel équipement de bord votre aéronef nécessite-t-il pour déterminer votre position à l'aide d'un relèvement VDF ? ^t60q100
+- A) Transpondeur.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Équipement VOR de bord.
+- D) Radio de bord.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VDF (VHF Direction Finding) est un service au sol dans lequel la station détermine le relèvement de la transmission radio de l'aéronef. Pour utiliser un relèvement VDF pour la détermination de position, l'aéronef a besoin d'un équipement VOR de bord (récepteur omnidirectionnel VHF) pour interpréter et afficher les informations de relèvement fournies par la station au sol.
+
+### Q101: Quel phénomène est le plus susceptible de dégrader les indications GPS ? ^t60q101
+- A) Des couches nuageuses denses et élevées.
+- B) Des zones d'orages.
+- C) Des changements de cap fréquents.
+- D) Voler à basse altitude en terrain montagneux.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les signaux GPS sont des transmissions hyperfréquences provenant de satellites en orbite qui nécessitent une ligne de vue dégagée entre le satellite et le récepteur. Lorsqu'on vole à basse altitude en terrain montagneux, les sommets et les crêtes environnants masquent des portions du ciel, réduisant le nombre de satellites visibles et dégradant la dilution géométrique de précision (GDOP). Cela peut entraîner des fixes de position imprécises ou une perte totale du signal. L'option A (couches nuageuses) n'affecte pas les signaux GPS hyperfréquences. L'option B (orages) ne bloque pas les signaux GPS. L'option C (changements de cap) n'a aucun effet sur la réception des signaux satellites.
+
+### Q102: Données : MC 225 degrés, déclinaison magnétique (variation) 5 degrés E. Quel est le TC ? ^t60q102
+- A) 225 degrés
+- B) Les paramètres sont insuffisants pour répondre à cette question.
+- C) 230 degrés
+- D) 220 degrés
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La route vraie (TC) est calculée à partir de la route magnétique (MC) en tenant compte de la déclinaison magnétique. Avec une déclinaison orientale, le nord magnétique est à l'est du nord vrai, donc le MC est supérieur au TC. La formule est TC = MC moins la déclinaison Est : 225 degrés moins 5 degrés = 220 degrés. L'option A ignore entièrement la variation. L'option B est incorrecte car le MC et la variation sont suffisants pour calculer le TC. L'option C ajoute la variation au lieu de la soustraire, ce qui s'appliquerait à une déclinaison occidentale.
+
+### Q103: Par mauvaise visibilité, vous volez de Gruyères (222°/46 km de Berne) vers Lausanne (051°/52 km de Genève). Quelle route vraie (TC) sélectionnez-vous ? ^t60q103
+- A) 282 degrés
+- B) 268 degrés
+- C) 082 degrés
+- D) 261 degrés
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En reportant les deux positions sur la carte OACI suisse à l'aide des références de radiale et distance — Gruyères à 222 degrés/46 km de Berne et Lausanne à 051 degrés/52 km de Genève — et en mesurant la route vraie entre elles avec un rapporteur, on obtient environ 261 degrés (approximativement ouest-sud-ouest). Les options A et B donnent des caps trop loin vers le nord-ouest. L'option C pointe vers l'est-nord-est, ce qui serait exactement la direction inverse.
+
+### Q104: Vous souhaitez déterminer votre position à l'aide d'un relèvement VDF, mais le contrôleur signale que les signaux sont trop faibles pour évaluation. Quelle est la raison probable ? ^t60q104
+- A) Votre transpondeur a une puissance d'émission trop faible.
+- B) Les interférences atmosphériques affaiblissent les signaux.
+- C) Vous volez trop bas et le lien quasi-optique (ligne de visée théorique) est insuffisant.
+- D) Le système de radiocommunication embarqué est défectueux.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VDF fonctionne sur des fréquences VHF qui se propagent de manière quasi-optique (ligne de visée). Si l'aéronef vole trop bas, la courbure de la Terre ou le terrain interposé bloque le trajet du signal entre l'aéronef et la station au sol, entraînant des signaux faibles ou indétectables. L'option A est sans rapport car les transpondeurs ne sont pas utilisés pour les relèvements VDF. L'option B surestime les effets atmosphériques, qui sont négligeables pour le VHF dans des conditions normales. L'option D (radio défectueuse) est possible mais moins probable que la limitation géométrique décrite dans l'option C.
+
+### Q105: Que signifie le terme « ligne agonique » ? ^t60q105
+- A) Une ligne le long de laquelle la déclinaison magnétique est de 0 degré.
+- B) Toutes les régions où la déclinaison magnétique est supérieure à 0 degré.
+- C) Toute ligne reliant des régions avec la même déclinaison magnétique.
+- D) Zones de perturbation où les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre sont fortement déviées (par exemple par des roches ferreuses), provoquant de grandes variations de déclinaison sur une petite surface.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** La ligne agonique est une ligne isogonique spécifique le long de laquelle la déclinaison magnétique (variation) est exactement zéro degré — ce qui signifie que le nord vrai et le nord magnétique sont alignés. Le long de cette ligne, un compas magnétique pointe directement vers le nord géographique sans aucune correction nécessaire. L'option B décrit une région, pas une ligne, et n'est pas un terme de navigation reconnu. L'option C définit la catégorie plus large des lignes isogoniques, dont la ligne agonique est un cas particulier. L'option D décrit des anomalies magnétiques locales, pas la ligne agonique.
+
+### Q106: Combien vaut 4572 m en pieds ? ^t60q106
+- A) 1500 ft
+- B) 15000 ft
+- C) 13935 ft
+- D) 1393 ft
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour convertir des mètres en pieds, multiplier par le facteur de conversion 3,2808 (car 1 mètre = 3,2808 pieds). Calcul : 4572 m multiplié par 3,2808 = 15 000 ft. Il s'agit d'une conversion d'altitude standard que les pilotes d'aviation doivent pouvoir effectuer rapidement. L'option A (1500 ft) et l'option D (1393 ft) sont d'un ordre de grandeur trop petites. L'option C (13 935 ft) résulte d'un facteur de conversion incorrect.
+
+### Q107: Laquelle des affirmations suivantes est correcte ? ^t60q107
+- A) La distance entre deux degrés de longitude ou de latitude est toujours égale à 60 NM (111 km).
+- B) La distance entre deux degrés de latitude est égale à 60 NM (111 km) à l'équateur et diminue régulièrement vers les pôles.
+- C) La distance entre deux degrés de longitude est toujours égale à 60 NM (111 km).
+- D) La distance entre deux degrés de longitude est égale à 60 NM (111 km) uniquement à l'équateur.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les lignes de longitude (méridiens) convergent vers les pôles, donc la distance entre deux degrés de longitude est maximale à l'équateur (60 NM ou 111 km) et diminue jusqu'à zéro aux pôles, suivant le cosinus de la latitude. Il s'agit d'une propriété fondamentale du système de coordonnées sphériques. L'option A est fausse car l'espacement des longitudes varie avec la latitude. L'option B décrit incorrectement la latitude : la distance entre deux degrés de latitude est approximativement constante à 60 NM partout, elle ne diminue pas vers les pôles. L'option C fait la même erreur que A pour la longitude seule.
+
+### Q108: Quelle valeur devez-vous noter sur la carte de navigation avant un vol en campagne ? ^t60q108
+- A) Cap vrai (TH)
+- B) Cap magnétique (MH)
+- C) Route vraie (TC)
+- D) Cap compas (CH)
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une carte de navigation, la ligne de route est tracée par rapport à la grille de la carte, qui est orientée vers le nord géographique (vrai). Par conséquent, la valeur mesurée et notée sur la carte est la route vraie (TC) — l'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de trajectoire prévue. Le cap magnétique (option B), le cap vrai (option A) et le cap compas (option D) intègrent tous des corrections de vent, de déclinaison magnétique ou de déviation du compas, qui sont calculées séparément lors de la planification de vol et non tracées sur la carte elle-même.
+
+### Q109: En vol, vous remarquez une dérive vers la droite. Comment corrigez-vous ? ^t60q109
+- A) En corrigeant le cap vers la droite
+- B) En volant plus lentement
+- C) En augmentant la valeur du cap
+- D) En diminuant la valeur du cap
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'aéronef dérive vers la droite, le vent a une composante poussant depuis le côté gauche. Pour contrecarrer cette dérive et maintenir la trajectoire souhaitée, vous devez tourner dans le vent en augmentant la valeur du cap (tourner le nez davantage vers la droite pour établir un angle de crabe dans la composante de vent). L'option A est vague mais pourrait être interprétée comme correcte — cependant, l'option C est plus précise dans la spécification de l'ajustement du cap. L'option B (voler plus lentement) augmenterait en fait l'angle de dérive. L'option D (diminuer le cap) tournerait à l'opposé du vent et aggraverait la dérive.
+
+### Q110: Jusqu'à quelle altitude maximale pouvez-vous piloter un planeur au-dessus de Lenzburg (255°/28 km de Zurich) sans notification ni autorisation ? ^t60q110
+- A) 5950 m AMSL
+- B) 2000 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 1700 m AMSL
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lenzburg se trouve sous la structure TMA de Zurich. Selon la carte OACI suisse, le secteur TMA le plus bas de cette zone a son plancher à 1700 m AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, l'espace aérien est non contrôlé (classe E ou G), et les planeurs peuvent voler sans notification ni autorisation ATC. Au-dessus de 1700 m AMSL, vous entrez dans l'espace aérien contrôlé nécessitant une autorisation. Les options A et B sont des valeurs d'altitude incorrectes. L'option C (4500 ft, environ 1370 m) est en dessous de la limite réelle et restreindrait inutilement votre vol.
+
+### Q111: Comment apparaît la grille de la carte dans une projection de Lambert (conique normale) ? ^t60q111
+- A) Les méridiens et les parallèles forment des lignes droites parallèles.
+- B) Les méridiens sont parallèles entre eux, les parallèles forment des lignes droites convergentes.
+- C) Les méridiens forment des lignes droites convergentes, les parallèles forment des courbes parallèles.
+- D) Les méridiens et les parallèles forment des courbes équidistantes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans une projection conique conforme de Lambert, le cône est placé sur le globe de sorte que les méridiens se projettent comme des lignes droites convergeant vers l'apex (le pôle), tandis que les parallèles de latitude apparaissent comme des arcs concentriques (courbes parallèles) centrés sur le pôle. Cette projection préserve les angles (conformité), ce qui la rend idéale pour les cartes aéronautiques. L'option A décrit une projection cylindrique comme Mercator. L'option B inverse les caractéristiques des méridiens et des parallèles. L'option D ne décrit aucune projection cartographique standard.
+
+### Q112: Vous partez de Berne le 10 juin (heure d'été) à 1030 LT. La durée de vol est de 80 minutes. À quelle heure UTC atterrissez-vous ? ^t60q112
+- A) 1050 UTC.
+- B) 1350 UTC.
+- C) 1250 UTC.
+- D) 0950 UTC.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le 10 juin, la Suisse observe l'heure d'été d'Europe centrale (CEST), soit UTC+2. Le départ à 1030 LT (CEST) équivaut à 0830 UTC. En ajoutant 80 minutes de vol : 0830 + 0080 = 0950 UTC. L'option A (1050 UTC) semble utiliser UTC+1 au lieu de UTC+2. L'option B (1350 UTC) ajoute le décalage horaire au lieu de le soustraire. L'option C (1250 UTC) n'applique probablement qu'un décalage d'une heure et arrondit incorrectement.
+
+### Q113: Quelles sont les coordonnées de l'aérodrome de Bellechasse (285°/28 km de Berne) ? ^t60q113
+- A) 47 degrés 22' N / 008 degrés 14' E
+- B) 47 degrés 11' S / 008 degrés 13' O
+- C) 46 degrés 59' S / 007 degrés 08' O
+- D) 46 degrés 59' N / 007 degrés 08' E
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'aérodrome de Bellechasse (LSGE) est situé à l'ouest-nord-ouest de Berne, près de la ville de Bellechasse dans le canton de Fribourg. En reportant la position à 285 degrés/28 km de Berne sur la carte OACI suisse, on obtient des coordonnées d'environ 46 degrés 59 minutes N / 007 degrés 08 minutes E. Les options B et C utilisent des désignations Sud et Ouest, qui sont impossibles pour des emplacements en Suisse (hémisphère nord, à l'est du méridien de Greenwich). L'option A place l'aérodrome trop au nord et à l'est.
+
+### Q114: Lors d'un vol en campagne, « POOR GPS COVERAGE » apparaît sur l'écran. Quelle pourrait en être la cause ? ^t60q114
+- A) La mauvaise couverture GPS est une conséquence de l'effet crépusculaire.
+- B) La position d'un satellite a changé significativement et nécessite une procédure de réajustement.
+- C) Votre appareil reçoit un nombre insuffisant de signaux satellites, possiblement dû à la configuration du terrain qui les bloque.
+- D) L'indication peut résulter d'orages intenses à proximité.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le message « POOR GPS COVERAGE » indique que le récepteur ne peut pas capter suffisamment de satellites avec une géométrie adéquate pour un fix de position fiable. La cause la plus fréquente lors des vols en campagne en planeur est le masquage par le terrain — vol dans des vallées profondes ou à proximité de faces de montagne abruptes qui bloquent la visibilité des signaux satellites. L'option A (effet crépusculaire) n'est pas un phénomène GPS reconnu. L'option B surestime comment fonctionne le repositionnement des satellites, car les récepteurs GPS mettent continuellement à jour les données orbitales sans intervention manuelle. L'option D (orages) n'affecte pas les signaux hyperfréquences GPS.
+
+### Q115: Le compas magnétique d'un aéronef est affecté par les pièces métalliques et les équipements électriques. Comment appelle-t-on cette influence ? ^t60q115
+- A) Variation
+- B) Déclinaison
+- C) Déviation
+- D) Inclinaison
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déviation est l'erreur dans un compas magnétique causée par les champs magnétiques locaux provenant de la propre structure métallique de l'aéronef, du câblage électrique et des équipements électroniques. Elle varie avec le cap et est enregistrée sur une table de déviation dans le cockpit. L'option A (variation) et l'option B (déclinaison) désignent toutes deux la différence angulaire entre le nord vrai et le nord magnétique, qui est une propriété du champ magnétique terrestre, pas de l'aéronef. L'option D (inclinaison ou plongée) est l'angle auquel les lignes du champ magnétique terrestre intersectent la surface, ce qui affecte le comportement du compas mais n'est pas la même chose que l'erreur induite par l'aéronef.
+
+### Q116: Vous planifiez un vol en campagne Courtelary (315°/43 km de Berne-Belp) - Dittingen (192°/18 km de Bâle-Mulhouse) - Birrfeld (265°/24 km de Zurich) - Courtelary. Quelle est la distance totale ? ^t60q116
+- A) 315 km
+- B) 97 km
+- C) 210 km
+- D) 189 km
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Il s'agit d'une route en campagne triangulaire fermée avec trois tronçons : Courtelary à Dittingen, Dittingen à Birrfeld, et Birrfeld à Courtelary. Chaque position est reportée sur la carte OACI suisse au 1:500 000 à l'aide des références de radiale/distance données depuis Berne-Belp et Zurich-Kloten, et les distances des tronçons sont mesurées avec une règle. La somme de tous les tronçons donne environ 189 km. L'option A (315 km) est beaucoup trop longue. L'option B (97 km) ne représente qu'environ la moitié de la route. L'option C (210 km) surestime d'environ 20 km.
+
+### Q117: Votre GPS affiche les hauteurs en mètres, mais vous avez besoin de pieds. Pouvez-vous le modifier ? ^t60q117
+- A) Non, seul l'atelier électronique d'une société de maintenance peut modifier les paramètres d'unité.
+- B) Oui, vous modifiez les unités de mesure de distance dans les options de paramétrage (SETTING MODE).
+- C) Oui, vous modifiez les unités de mesure dans la base de données aéronautique (DATA BASE).
+- D) Non, votre appareil est certifié M (métrique) et ne peut pas être modifié.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les unités GPS d'aviation modernes permettent aux pilotes de modifier les unités d'affichage (mètres, pieds, kilomètres, milles nautiques, etc.) via le menu de paramètres de l'appareil (SETTING MODE). Il s'agit d'un simple changement de configuration accessible à l'utilisateur qui ne nécessite aucune intervention de maintenance. L'option A suggère incorrectement qu'une visite en atelier est nécessaire. L'option C confond la base de données aéronautique (qui contient les waypoints et les données d'espace aérien) avec les paramètres d'affichage. L'option D invente une restriction de certification qui n'existe pas pour les paramètres d'unité des GPS.
+
+### Q118: Sur une carte, 5 cm correspondent à une distance de 10 km. Quelle est l'échelle ? ^t60q118
+- A) 1:100 000
+- B) 1:20 000
+- C) 1:500 000
+- D) 1:200 000
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour déterminer l'échelle de la carte, convertir les deux mesures dans la même unité : 10 km = 10 000 m = 1 000 000 cm. Le rapport de la distance sur la carte à la distance réelle est de 5 cm pour 1 000 000 cm, ce qui se simplifie à 1 cm représentant 200 000 cm, donnant une échelle de 1:200 000. L'option A (1:100 000) signifierait 5 cm = 5 km. L'option B (1:20 000) signifierait 5 cm = 1 km. L'option C (1:500 000) signifierait 5 cm = 25 km. Seul le 1:200 000 produit la relation correcte de 5 cm = 10 km.
+
+### Q119: Lors d'une longue approche au-dessus d'une zone de navigation difficile, quelle méthode est la plus efficace ? ^t60q119
+- A) Orienter la carte vers le nord.
+- B) Surveiller constamment le compas.
+- C) Surveiller le temps avec la règle de temps ; marquer les positions connues sur la carte.
+- D) Suivre votre position sur la carte avec votre pouce.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus d'une zone de navigation difficile lors d'une longue approche, la technique la plus efficace est d'utiliser l'estime basé sur le temps : surveiller le temps écoulé avec une règle de temps (en marquant les points de contrôle de temps planifiés le long de la route) et confirmer votre position en identifiant les éléments au sol à leur apparition, en marquant chaque position vérifiée sur la carte. Cette technique combine l'estimation du temps avec la confirmation visuelle pour une précision maximale. L'option A (orienter vers le nord) est une étape de base mais ne résout pas seule les difficultés de navigation. L'option B (surveiller le compas) maintient le cap mais ne fournit pas d'informations de position. L'option D (repérage par le pouce) fonctionne bien pour des tronçons plus courts mais est moins systématique pour les longues approches.
+
+### Q120: Si vous êtes au sud de la ligne Montreux - Thoune - Lucerne - Rapperswil, sur quelle fréquence communiquez-vous avec d'autres pilotes de planeurs ? ^t60q120
+- A) 123,450 MHz
+- B) 125,025 MHz
+- C) 122,475 MHz
+- D) 123,675 MHz
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En Suisse, les fréquences de communication planeur-planeur sont divisées géographiquement. Au sud de la ligne Montreux-Thoune-Lucerne-Rapperswil, la fréquence commune désignée pour les planeurs est 122,475 MHz. Cette fréquence est utilisée pour la conscience du trafic, le partage d'informations thermiques et la communication de sécurité entre les pilotes de planeurs opérant dans les Alpes suisses du sud et les environs. Les autres fréquences listées sont soit attribuées au secteur nord, soit servent à d'autres fins aéronautiques.
+
+### Q121: Que signifie la désignation LS-R6, représentée en zone hachurée rouge au nord de Grindelwald (127°/52 km de Berne) ? ^t60q121
+- A) Zone réglementée pour les planeurs. Une fois activée, les distances minimales de séparation aux nuages sont réduites pour les planeurs.
+- B) Zone dangereuse, transit interdit (hélicoptères SMUR et vols spéciaux exemptés).
+- C) Zone interdite ; informations d'activité et autorisation de transit sur la fréquence 135,475 MHz.
+- D) Zone réglementée ; entrée interdite lorsqu'elle est active (vols SMUR en hélicoptère exemptés).
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** LS-R6 est une zone réglementée (le « R » signifie Réglementée dans la classification suisse de l'espace aérien). Lorsqu'elle est active, l'entrée est interdite à tous les aéronefs, à l'exception des vols SMUR (service médical d'urgence par hélicoptère), qui sont exemptés en raison de leur mission de sauvetage de vies. L'option A décrit incorrectement la zone comme réduisant simplement les distances de séparation aux nuages. L'option B la classe erronément comme zone dangereuse (ce serait LS-D). L'option C décrit une zone interdite (LS-P), qui est une catégorie entièrement différente.
+
+### Q122: Comment trouvez-vous les valeurs de déclinaison magnétique (variation) pour un lieu donné ? ^t60q122
+- A) En calculant la différence entre la route mesurée sur la carte et le cap compas.
+- B) En utilisant la table de déclinaison figurant dans le manuel de vol du ballon (AFM).
+- C) En calculant l'angle entre le méridien local et le méridien de Greenwich.
+- D) En utilisant les lignes isogoniques représentées sur la carte aéronautique.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déclinaison magnétique (variation) est trouvée en lisant les lignes isogoniques imprimées sur les cartes aéronautiques telles que la carte OACI suisse au 1:500 000. Les lignes isogoniques relient des points de déclinaison magnétique égale et sont mises à jour périodiquement pour refléter la lente dérive du champ magnétique terrestre. L'option A décrit une méthode pour trouver la déviation, pas la déclinaison. L'option B fait référence à un manuel de vol de ballon, ce qui n'est pas pertinent pour les opérations de planeurs. L'option C décrit la définition de la longitude, pas la déclinaison magnétique.
+
+### Q123: En vol, vous remarquez une dérive vers la gauche. Comment corrigez-vous ? ^t60q123
+- A) En modifiant le cap vers la gauche
+- B) En augmentant la valeur du cap
+- C) En diminuant la valeur du cap
+- D) En volant plus vite
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'aéronef dérive vers la gauche, le vent le pousse depuis le côté droit de la trajectoire de vol. Pour corriger, le pilote doit tourner dans le vent en augmentant la valeur du cap (tourner à droite). Cela applique un angle de correction de vent qui compense la composante de vent traversier. Tourner à gauche (option A) ou diminuer le cap (option C) aggraverait la dérive. Voler plus vite (option D) réduit légèrement l'angle de dérive mais ne le corrige pas — le réglage de cap approprié est la technique correcte.
+
+### Q124: Que signifie l'indication GND sur la couverture de la carte de vol à voile (en haut à gauche, environ 15 NM à l'ouest de Saint-Gall-Altenrhein, 088°/75 km de Zurich-Kloten) ? ^t60q124
+- A) Les distances normales de séparation aux nuages s'appliquent toujours à l'intérieur des zones désignées GND.
+- B) Ne s'applique pas au vol à voile.
+- C) Des distances de séparation aux nuages réduites s'appliquent à l'intérieur des zones désignées GND pendant les heures de service du trafic aérien militaire.
+- D) Des distances de séparation aux nuages réduites s'appliquent à l'intérieur des zones désignées GND en dehors des heures de service du trafic aérien militaire.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La désignation GND sur la carte de vol à voile suisse indique que des distances de séparation aux nuages réduites sont autorisées à l'intérieur des zones désignées en dehors des heures de service du trafic aérien militaire. Lorsque l'armée n'est pas active, les pilotes de planeurs bénéficient de minima assouplis dans ces zones. L'option A est incorrecte car tout l'intérêt de la désignation est de permettre des distances réduites, pas normales. L'option B est fausse car elle s'applique spécifiquement aux opérations de vol à voile. L'option C inverse le timing — les distances réduites s'appliquent en dehors, et non pendant, les heures militaires.
+
+### Q125: Données : TC 180 degrés, MC 200 degrés. Quelle est la déclinaison magnétique (variation) ? ^t60q125
+- A) 20 degrés E.
+- B) 10 degrés en moyenne.
+- C) 20 degrés O.
+- D) Des paramètres supplémentaires sont manquants pour répondre à cette question.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La déclinaison magnétique (variation) est la différence entre la route vraie (TC) et la route magnétique (MC), calculée comme suit : Variation = TC - MC = 180° - 200° = -20°. Une valeur négative indique une déclinaison Ouest, donc la réponse est 20°O. Le moyen mnémotechnique « variation ouest, le magnétique est le meilleur » (le cap magnétique est plus grand) le confirme : lorsque le MC est supérieur au TC, la variation est Ouest. L'option A donne la mauvaise direction (Est). L'option B est une moyenne arbitraire. L'option D est incorrecte car le TC et le MC sont suffisants pour déterminer la variation.
+
+### Q126: Lors d'un vol triangulaire Grenchen (350°/31 km de Berne-Belp) - Kägiswil (090°/57 km de Berne-Belp) - Buttwil (221°/28 km de Zurich-Kloten) - Grenchen, sur le retour depuis Buttwil vous devez atterrir à Langenthal (032°/35 km de Berne-Belp). Quelle est la distance en ligne droite parcourue ? ^t60q126
+- A) 257 km
+- B) 154 km
+- C) 145 km
+- D) 178 km
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La distance totale est la somme des tronçons individuels : Grenchen à Kägiswil, Kägiswil à Buttwil, et Buttwil à Langenthal (puisque le pilote a dérouté au lieu de retourner à Grenchen). La mesure de ces tronçons sur la carte OACI au 1:500 000 à l'aide des références de radiale/distance données depuis Berne-Belp et Zurich-Kloten donne un total d'environ 178 km. L'option A (257 km) est trop longue et ajoute probablement un tronçon supplémentaire. Les options B (154 km) et C (145 km) sont trop courtes, omettant probablement un tronçon de la route.
+
+### Q127: Au sud de l'aérodrome de Gruyères se trouve une zone désignée LS-D7. Qu'est-ce que c'est ? ^t60q127
+- A) Une zone dangereuse avec une limite supérieure de 9000 ft au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer.
+- B) Une zone interdite avec une limite supérieure de 9000 ft au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer.
+- C) Une zone interdite avec une limite inférieure de 9000 ft au-dessus du niveau du sol.
+- D) Une zone dangereuse avec une limite inférieure de 9000 ft au-dessus du niveau du sol.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le préfixe « D » dans LS-D7 désigne une zone Dangereuse dans le système de classification de l'espace aérien suisse. La limite supérieure de cette zone est de 9000 ft AMSL (au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer). L'option B l'appelle incorrectement zone interdite (ce serait LS-P). Les options C et D font référence à une « limite inférieure » de 9000 ft, ce qui signifierait que la zone commence à 9000 ft plutôt que d'y finir — et les deux classifient également incorrectement le type de zone ou utilisent la mauvaise référence d'altitude (AGL contre AMSL).
+
+### Q128: Sur une carte, 4 cm correspondent à 10 km. Quelle est l'échelle ? ^t60q128
+- A) 1:25 000
+- B) 1:100 000
+- C) 1:400 000
+- D) 1:250 000
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour trouver l'échelle de la carte, convertir les deux mesures dans la même unité : 10 km = 10 000 m = 1 000 000 cm. Le rapport est de 4 cm sur la carte pour 1 000 000 cm en réalité, donc 1 cm représente 250 000 cm, donnant une échelle de 1:250 000. L'option A (1:25 000) signifierait 4 cm = 1 km. L'option B (1:100 000) signifierait 4 cm = 4 km. L'option C (1:400 000) signifierait 4 cm = 16 km. Seul le 1:250 000 donne la relation correcte de 4 cm = 10 km.
+
+### Q129: Jusqu'à quelle altitude s'étend le CTR de Locarno (352°/18 km de Lugano-Agno) ? ^t60q129
+- A) 3950 m AMSL.
+- B) 3950 ft AGL.
+- C) FL 125.
+- D) 3950 ft AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le CTR (zone de contrôle) de Locarno s'étend depuis la surface jusqu'à 3 950 ft AMSL (au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer), comme publié sur les cartes aéronautiques suisses. L'option A confond les pieds avec les mètres — 3 950 m représenteraient environ 12 960 ft, beaucoup trop élevé pour un CTR. L'option B utilise AGL (au-dessus du niveau du sol), ce qui n'est pas la façon dont la limite supérieure de ce CTR est définie. L'option C (FL 125) fait référence à un niveau de vol qui n'est pas lié à cette limite particulière de CTR.
+
+### Q130: Vous vous trouvez au-dessus de Fraubrunnen (au nord de l'aéroport de Berne-Belp), N47°05'/E007°32', à 4500 ft AMSL. Votre hauteur au-dessus du sol est d'environ 3000 ft. Dans quel espace aérien vous trouvez-vous ? ^t60q130
+- A) Espace aérien classe D, TMA BERNE 2.
+- B) Espace aérien classe G.
+- C) Espace aérien classe E.
+- D) Espace aérien classe D, CTR BERNE.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** À Fraubrunnen (au nord de Berne-Belp) à 4500 ft AMSL, l'aéronef est en dessous de la TMA BERNE 2, qui commence à 5500 ft AMSL dans cette zone, et au-dessus du CTR de Berne, qui ne s'étend qu'à une altitude inférieure. Cela place l'aéronef dans l'espace aérien de classe E. L'option A est fausse car le plancher de la TMA est au-dessus de l'aéronef. L'option D est incorrecte car le CTR de Berne ne s'étend pas aussi loin au nord ni aussi haut. L'option B (classe G) s'applique à l'espace aérien non contrôlé en dessous du plancher de la classe E, que l'aéronef dépasse.
+
+### Q131: Votre GPS affiche les distances en NM, mais vous avez besoin de km pour vos calculs. Pouvez-vous le modifier ? ^t60q131
+- A) Non, seul l'atelier électronique d'une société de maintenance peut modifier les paramètres d'unité.
+- B) Non, votre appareil n'est pas certifié M (métrique).
+- C) Oui, vous modifiez les unités de mesure de distance dans le mode de paramétrage (SETTING MODE).
+- D) Oui, vous modifiez les unités de mesure dans la base de données (AVIATION DATA BASE).
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les appareils GPS d'aviation modernes permettent au pilote de modifier les unités d'affichage des distances (NM en km ou vice versa) via le menu SETTING MODE de l'appareil. Il s'agit d'une simple préférence utilisateur et ne nécessite aucune intervention technique en atelier. L'option A est incorrecte car les changements d'unité sont accessibles à l'utilisateur. L'option B suggère incorrectement que les certifications bloquent la modification. L'option D confond la base de données aviation (qui contient les waypoints et les données d'espace aérien) avec le menu des paramètres d'affichage.
+
+### Q132: Vous partez de Berne le 5 juin (heure d'été) à 0945 UTC pour un vol en planeur d'une durée de 45 minutes. À quelle heure locale atterrissez-vous ? ^t60q132
+- A) 0930 LT.
+- B) 1130 LT.
+- C) 0830 LT.
+- D) 1230 LT.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le 5 juin, la Suisse observe l'heure d'été d'Europe centrale (CEST), soit UTC+2. Le départ est à 0945 UTC et le vol dure 45 minutes, donc l'atterrissage se produit à 0945 + 0045 = 1030 UTC. Conversion en heure locale : 1030 UTC + 2 heures = 1230 CEST. Cependant, la réponse correcte donnée est B (1130 LT), ce qui correspondrait à une conversion UTC+1. Cela suggère que la question utilise l'heure standard CET (UTC+1) ou une convention différente. Les options A et C donnent des heures antérieures au départ, ce qui est impossible, et l'option D dépasse le résultat.
+
+### Q133: 54 NM correspondent à : ^t60q133
+- A) 27,00 km.
+- B) 29,16 km.
+- C) 100,00 km.
+- D) 92,60 km.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le facteur de conversion est 1 NM = 1,852 km. Donc 54 NM x 1,852 km/NM = 100,008 km, ce qui s'arrondit à 100,00 km. L'option A (27 km) semble diviser par 2 au lieu de multiplier par 1,852. L'option B (29,16 km) utilise un facteur de conversion incorrect. L'option D (92,60 km) est proche de la valeur correcte mais utilise un ratio de conversion imprécis. Connaître le facteur de conversion NM-en-km de 1,852 est essentiel pour la planification de vol en campagne.
+
+### Q134: Quelle affirmation concernant le GPS est correcte ? ^t60q134
+- A) Le GPS a l'avantage de toujours fournir des indications précises, car il n'est pas affecté par les interférences.
+- B) Le GPS est un moyen très précis de détermination de position, mais des perturbations du signal satellite doivent être attendues. La position actuelle doit donc toujours être vérifiée par rapport à des repères au sol significatifs.
+- C) Grâce à sa précision, le GPS remplace la navigation terrestre et avertit contre l'entrée involontaire dans un espace aérien contrôlé.
+- D) Une fois allumé, le GPS reçoit automatiquement les informations actuelles sur la structure de l'espace aérien, les fréquences, etc. ; une base de données aéronautique à jour est donc toujours disponible.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le GPS est très précis pour la détermination de position, mais les signaux satellites peuvent être perturbés par le masquage du terrain, les conditions atmosphériques ou les interférences intentionnelles. Les pilotes doivent toujours recouper la position GPS par rapport aux repères visuels au sol. L'option A est fausse car le GPS est sensible aux interférences et aux pertes de signal. L'option C surestime les capacités du GPS — il ne remplace pas les compétences de pilotage de base, et les avertissements d'espace aérien dépendent de l'actualité de la base de données. L'option D est incorrecte car le GPS ne met pas automatiquement à jour sa base de données aviation ; cela nécessite des mises à jour manuelles par l'utilisateur.
+
+### Q135: Que signifie une « ligne isogonique » ? ^t60q135
+- A) Toute ligne reliant des régions avec la même température.
+- B) Toute ligne reliant des régions où la déclinaison magnétique est de 0 degré.
+- C) Toute ligne reliant des régions avec la même déclinaison magnétique.
+- D) Toute ligne reliant des régions avec la même pression atmosphérique.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une ligne isogonique relie tous les points d'une carte ayant la même déclinaison magnétique (variation). Ces lignes sont imprimées sur les cartes aéronautiques pour aider les pilotes à convertir entre les relèvements vrais et magnétiques. L'option A décrit une isotherme (température égale). L'option B décrit la ligne agonique, qui est le cas particulier où la déclinaison est nulle — un sous-ensemble, pas la définition générale. L'option D décrit une isobare (pression égale).
+
+### Q136: Par mauvaise visibilité, vous volez depuis le Säntis (110°/65 km de Zurich-Kloten) vers Amlikon (075°/40 km de Zurich-Kloten). Quelle route vraie (TC) sélectionnez-vous ? ^t60q136
+- A) 147 degrés
+- B) 227 degrés
+- C) 328 degrés
+- D) 318 degrés
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En reportant les deux positions par rapport à Zurich-Kloten sur la carte, le Säntis se trouve au sud-est (110°/65 km) et Amlikon à l'est-nord-est (075°/40 km). La route du Säntis à Amlikon se dirige vers le nord-ouest, donnant une route vraie d'environ 328°. L'option D (318°) est proche mais imprécise selon le report sur la carte. Les options A (147°) et B (227°) indiquent approximativement la direction opposée — sud-est et sud-ouest respectivement — ce qui éloignerait le pilote de la destination.
+
+### Q137: Quel équipement embarqué votre planeur doit-il avoir pour que vous puissiez déterminer votre position à l'aide d'un relèvement VDF ? ^t60q137
+- A) Un émetteur de détresse (ELT).
+- B) Un transpondeur.
+- C) Un système de radiocommunication embarqué.
+- D) Un GPS.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VDF (radiogoniométrie VHF) fonctionne par le biais d'une station au sol qui prend un relèvement sur la transmission radio du pilote. Le seul équipement dont l'aéronef a besoin est un système VHF de radiocommunication standard — le pilote transmet, et la station au sol détermine la direction. L'option A (ELT) sert à la localisation d'urgence, pas à la détermination de position courante. L'option B (transpondeur) sert à l'identification radar, pas au VDF. L'option D (GPS) détermine la position de manière indépendante et n'est pas liée aux relèvements VDF.
+
+### Q138: Comment apparaît la grille de la carte dans une projection cylindrique normale (projection de Mercator) ? ^t60q138
+- A) Les méridiens forment des lignes droites convergentes, les parallèles forment des courbes parallèles.
+- B) Les méridiens et les parallèles forment des courbes équidistantes.
+- C) Les méridiens et les parallèles forment des lignes droites parallèles.
+- D) Les méridiens sont parallèles entre eux, les parallèles forment des lignes droites convergentes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans une projection de Mercator (cylindrique normale), les méridiens et les parallèles apparaissent comme des lignes droites se coupant à angle droit, formant une grille rectangulaire. Les méridiens sont des lignes verticales régulièrement espacées et les parallèles sont des lignes horizontales (bien que leur espacement augmente vers les pôles). L'option A décrit une projection conique où les méridiens convergent. L'option B les appelle incorrectement des courbes. L'option D inverse la convergence — dans une projection de Mercator, ni les méridiens ni les parallèles ne convergent.
+
+### Q139: Jusqu'à quelle altitude maximale pouvez-vous piloter un planeur au-dessus de Burgdorf (035°/19 km de Berne-Belp) sans notification ni autorisation ? ^t60q139
+- A) 3050 m AMSL.
+- B) 5500 ft AGL.
+- C) 1700 m AGL.
+- D) 1700 m AMSL.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Au-dessus de Burgdorf, la limite inférieure de la TMA de Berne est à 1700 m AMSL. En dessous de cette altitude, un planeur peut voler librement sans notification ni autorisation dans un espace aérien de classe E ou G. L'option A (3050 m AMSL) représente une limite TMA plus élevée qui s'applique dans une autre zone. L'option B (5500 ft AGL) utilise une référence AGL qui est incorrecte pour cette limite d'espace aérien. L'option C (1700 m AGL) confond la référence — la limite est AMSL, pas au-dessus du niveau du sol.
+
+### Q140: Comment s'appelle le lieu aux coordonnées 46°29' N / 007°15' E ? ^t60q140
+- A) Le col du Sanetsch
+- B) L'aéroport de Sion
+- C) L'aérodrome de Saanen
+- D) L'héliport de Gstaad/Grund
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les coordonnées 46°29'N / 007°15'E correspondent à l'aérodrome de Saanen, qui dessert la région de Gstaad dans l'Oberland bernois. L'option B (aéroport de Sion) est situé plus au sud et légèrement à l'est, à environ 46°13'N / 007°20'E. L'option A (col du Sanetsch) est un col de montagne entre Sion et l'Oberland bernois à une position différente. L'option D (héliport de Gstaad/Grund) est à proximité mais a des coordonnées précises différentes.
+
+### Q141: Que signifie la « longitude géographique » d'un lieu ? ^t60q141
+- A) La distance depuis l'équateur, exprimée en kilomètres.
+- B) La distance depuis l'équateur, exprimée en degrés de longitude.
+- C) La distance depuis le pôle nord, exprimée en degrés de latitude.
+- D) La distance depuis le méridien 0 degré, exprimée en degrés de longitude.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La longitude géographique est la distance angulaire mesurée à l'est ou à l'ouest du méridien de Greenwich (0° à Greenwich) jusqu'au méridien local passant par le lieu donné, exprimée en degrés (0° à 180°E ou O). Les options A et B font incorrectement référence à l'équateur — la distance depuis l'équateur est la latitude, pas la longitude. L'option C décrit une mesure de co-latitude depuis le pôle nord, qui est également une forme de latitude. Seule l'option D identifie correctement la longitude comme mesure angulaire depuis le méridien de Greenwich.
+
+### Q142: Le terme « route magnétique » (MC) est défini comme… ^t60q142
+- A) La direction depuis un point quelconque de la Terre vers le pôle Nord géographique.
+- B) La direction depuis un point quelconque de la Terre vers le pôle nord magnétique.
+- C) L'angle entre le nord vrai et la ligne de route.
+- D) L'angle entre le nord magnétique et la ligne de route.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La route magnétique (MC) est définie comme l'angle mesuré dans le sens des aiguilles d'une montre depuis le nord magnétique jusqu'à la ligne de trajectoire prévue au sol. C'est la route référencée au champ magnétique terrestre plutôt qu'au nord vrai (géographique). L'option A décrit la direction du nord vrai. L'option B décrit la direction vers le pôle nord magnétique, pas un angle de route. L'option C définit la route vraie (TC), qui est référencée au nord géographique plutôt qu'au nord magnétique.
+
+### Q143: Un aéronef vole au FL 75 avec une température extérieure (OAT) de -9°C. L'altitude QNH est de 6500 ft. L'altitude vraie est égale à… ^t60q143
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altitude vraie tient compte des effets de température non standard sur l'altitude-pression. La température ISA à environ 6500 ft est d'environ +2°C (15° - 2°/1000 ft x 6,5). Avec une OAT de -9°C, l'air est environ 11°C plus froid que l'ISA. L'air froid est plus dense, ce qui signifie que les niveaux de pression sont comprimés plus près du sol, donc l'aéronef se trouve en réalité plus bas que l'altimètre ne l'indique. En utilisant la correction d'environ 4 ft par 1°C par 1000 ft : 11°C x 4 x 6,5 = environ 286 ft en dessous de l'altitude QNH, donnant environ 6250 ft d'altitude vraie. Les options A, B et D surestiment toutes l'altitude vraie.
+
+### Q144: Un aéronef vole à une altitude-pression de 7000 ft avec OAT +11°C. L'altitude QNH est de 6500 ft. L'altitude vraie est égale à… ^t60q144
+- A) 6750 ft.
+- B) 6500 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft
+- D) 6250 ft.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'altitude QNH de 6500 ft, la température ISA est d'environ +2°C. L'OAT de +11°C est environ 9-10°C plus chaude que l'ISA. Dans de l'air plus chaud que standard, l'atmosphère est dilatée, donc l'aéronef se trouve plus haut que l'altimètre ne l'indique. En appliquant la correction de température (environ +10°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6,5 = +260 ft) à l'altitude QNH, on obtient environ 6500 + 250 = 6750 ft d'altitude vraie. L'option B ignore entièrement la correction de température. Les options C et D surcorrigent ou corrigent dans la mauvaise direction.
+
+### Q145: Un aéronef vole à une altitude-pression de 7000 ft avec OAT +21°C. L'altitude QNH est de 6500 ft. L'altitude vraie est égale à… ^t60q145
+- A) 7000 ft.
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft.
+- D) 6500 ft
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** À l'altitude QNH de 6500 ft, la température ISA est d'environ +2°C. L'OAT de +21°C signifie que l'air est environ 19-20°C plus chaud que standard. L'air chaud se dilate, plaçant l'aéronef significativement plus haut qu'indiqué. La correction est d'environ +20°C x 4 ft/°C/1000 ft x 6,5 = +520 ft, donnant environ 6500 + 500 = 7000 ft d'altitude vraie. Cette grande correction due à l'air chaud amène l'altitude vraie à correspondre à l'altitude-pression. Les options B, C et D sous-estiment l'effet de la correction de l'air chaud.
+
+### Q146: Données : Route vraie : 255°. TAS : 100 kt. Vent : 200°/10 kt. Le cap vrai est égal à… ^t60q146
+- A) 275°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 245°.
+- D) 250°.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 255° et vent de 200°, le vent vient d'environ 55° à gauche de la ligne de route. Ce vent traversier pousse l'aéronef vers la droite de la trajectoire. Pour compenser, le pilote doit crabler dans le vent (tourner à gauche), réduisant le cap en dessous de la valeur de route. L'angle de correction de vent est d'environ sin⁻¹(10 x sin55° / 100) = sin⁻¹(0,082) = environ 5°. Cap vrai = 255° - 5° = 250°. Les options A (275°) et B (265°) ajoutent incorrectement au cap. L'option C (245°) surcorrige de 10°.
+
+### Q147: Données : Route vraie : 165°. TAS : 90 kt. Vent : 130°/20 kt. Distance : 153 NM. Le cap vrai est égal à… ^t60q147
+- A) 165°.
+- B) 126°.
+- C) 152°.
+- D) 158°.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vent de 130° sur une route de 165° vient d'environ 35° à gauche du nez, poussant l'aéronef vers la droite de la trajectoire. Le pilote doit crabler à gauche pour compenser. WCA = sin⁻¹(20 x sin35° / 90) = sin⁻¹(0,127) = environ 7°. Cap vrai = 165° - 7° = 158°. L'option A (165°) n'applique aucune correction de vent. L'option B (126°) surcorrige massivement. L'option C (152°) applique une correction trop grande de 13°. Seul 158° tient compte correctement de la composante de vent traversier.
+
+### Q148: Un aéronef suit une route vraie (TC) de 040° à un TAS constant de 180 kt. Le vecteur vent est 350°/30 kt. La vitesse sol (GS) est égale à… ^t60q148
+- A) 172 kt.
+- B) 155 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 040° et vent de 350°, l'angle du vent par rapport à la route est de 50° depuis le côté avant-gauche. La composante de vent de face est 30 x cos50° = environ 19 kt, et la composante traversière est 30 x sin50° = environ 23 kt. L'angle de correction de vent est d'environ 7°, et la vitesse sol est calculée à partir du triangle de navigation comme TAS moins la composante effective de vent de face, soit environ 180 - 21 = 159 kt. Les options A (172 kt) et C (168 kt) sous-estiment l'effet du vent de face. L'option B (155 kt) le surestime.
+
+### Q149: Données : Route vraie : 120°. TAS : 120 kt. Vent : 150°/12 kt. Le WCA est égal à… ^t60q149
+- A) 6° vers la gauche.
+- B) 3° vers la gauche.
+- C) 3° vers la droite.
+- D) 6° vers la droite.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 120° et vent de 150°, le vent vient de 30° à la droite et derrière la ligne de route. Cela pousse l'aéronef vers la gauche de la trajectoire, nécessitant de crabler vers la droite. WCA = sin⁻¹(12 x sin30° / 120) = sin⁻¹(6/120) = sin⁻¹(0,05) = environ 3° vers la droite. Les options A et B indiquent des corrections vers la gauche, ce qui aggraverait la dérive. L'option D (6° droite) double l'angle de correction réel nécessaire.
+
+### Q150: La distance de 'A' à 'B' est de 120 NM. À 55 NM de 'A', le pilote constate un écart de 7 NM vers la droite. Quel changement de cap approximatif est nécessaire pour atteindre 'B' directement ? ^t60q150
+- A) 8° vers la gauche
+- B) 6° vers la gauche
+- C) 15° vers la gauche
+- D) 14° vers la gauche
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant la règle du 1:60, l'angle d'ouverture (erreur de trajectoire depuis A) est (7/55) x 60 = environ 7,6° soit environ 8°. La distance restante jusqu'à B est 120 - 55 = 65 NM, donc l'angle de fermeture pour atteindre B est (7/65) x 60 = environ 6,5° soit environ 6°. La correction de cap totale nécessaire est la somme des deux angles : 8° + 6° = 14° vers la gauche (puisque l'aéronef est à droite de la trajectoire, il doit tourner à gauche). L'option C (15°) surestime légèrement. L'option A (8°) ne tient compte que de l'angle d'ouverture. L'option B (6°) ne tient compte que de l'angle de fermeture.
+
+### Q151: Combien de satellites sont nécessaires pour un fix de position tridimensionnel précis et vérifié ? ^t60q151
+- A) Cinq
+- B) Deux
+- C) Trois
+- D) Quatre
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un récepteur GPS a besoin de signaux provenant d'au moins quatre satellites pour un fix de position tridimensionnel (latitude, longitude et altitude). Trois satellites ne fourniraient qu'un fix bidimensionnel, et le quatrième est nécessaire pour résoudre l'erreur d'horloge du récepteur en plus des trois coordonnées spatiales. L'option A (cinq) décrit ce qui est nécessaire pour le RAIM (surveillance autonome de l'intégrité du récepteur), pas pour un fix 3D de base. Les options B (deux) et C (trois) sont insuffisantes pour un fix de position 3D complet avec correction d'horloge.
+
+### Q152: Quels éléments au sol devraient être préférés pour l'orientation lors du vol à vue ? ^t60q152
+- A) Chemins agricoles et ruisseaux
+- B) Lignes de frontière
+- C) Lignes électriques
+- D) Rivières, voies ferrées, autoroutes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les rivières, les voies ferrées et les autoroutes sont les références préférées pour la navigation visuelle car ce sont de grands éléments linéaires proéminents facilement identifiables depuis l'altitude et précisément représentés sur les cartes aéronautiques. L'option A (chemins agricoles et ruisseaux) sont trop petits et trop nombreux pour être distingués de manière fiable depuis les airs. L'option B (lignes de frontière) sont invisibles — il n'y a pas de marquages physiques au sol. L'option C (lignes électriques) sont extrêmement difficiles à voir depuis l'altitude et constituent un danger de collision lors du vol à basse altitude.
+
+### Q153: Quelle est la circumférence approximative de la Terre à l'équateur ? Voir figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t60q153
+- A) 40 000 NM.
+- B) 12 800 km.
+- C) 21 600 NM.
+- D) 10 800 km.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La circumférence équatoriale de la Terre est d'environ 21 600 NM. Cela découle de la relation fondamentale de navigation : 360° de longitude x 60 NM par degré = 21 600 NM, puisqu'un mille nautique correspond à une minute d'arc sur un grand cercle. En unités métriques, la circumférence est d'environ 40 075 km, mais cela ne correspond à aucune des autres options correctement. L'option A (40 000 NM) est presque le double de la valeur correcte en NM. Les options B (12 800 km) et D (10 800 km) sont toutes deux bien inférieures à la circumférence métrique réelle.
+
+### Q154: Données : Route vraie de A à B : 352°. Distance au sol : 100 NM. GS : 107 kt. ETD : 0933 UTC. L'ETA est… ^t60q154
+- A) 1146 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1045 UTC.
+- D) 1129 UTC.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le temps de vol est égal à la distance divisée par la vitesse sol : 100 NM / 107 kt = 0,935 heure = 56 minutes. En ajoutant 56 minutes à l'ETD de 0933 UTC, on obtient 0933 + 0056 = 1029 UTC. L'option A (1146 UTC) impliquerait un temps de vol de plus de 2 heures. L'option C (1045 UTC) implique 72 minutes, suggérant une vitesse sol d'environ 83 kt. L'option D (1129 UTC) implique près de 2 heures de vol. Seul 1029 UTC correspond au calcul de 56 minutes.
+
+### Q155: Un aéronef parcourt 100 km en 56 minutes. La vitesse sol (GS) est égale à… ^t60q155
+- A) 198 kt.
+- B) 93 kt
+- C) 58 km/h
+- D) 107 km/h.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = distance / temps = 100 km / (56/60 heures) = 100 x (60/56) = 107,1 km/h. Puisque la distance est donnée en kilomètres, le résultat est naturellement en km/h. L'option A (198 kt) est beaucoup trop élevée et semble être une erreur de conversion d'unités. L'option B (93 kt) serait correcte si la distance était en NM, pas en km. L'option C (58 km/h) résulte d'une division incorrecte de 56 par quelque chose. Seul 107 km/h applique correctement la formule de vitesse.
+
+### Q156: Un aéronef vole avec un TAS de 180 kt et une composante de vent de face de 25 kt pendant 2 heures et 25 minutes. La distance parcourue est égale à… ^t60q156
+- A) 435 NM.
+- B) 693 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 202 NM.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = TAS moins le vent de face = 180 - 25 = 155 kt. Temps de vol = 2 heures 25 minutes = 2,417 heures. Distance = GS x temps = 155 x 2,417 = 374,6 NM, soit environ 375 NM. L'option A (435 NM) utilise incorrectement le TAS (180 x 2,417 = 435) sans soustraire le vent de face. L'option B (693 NM) semble additionner le vent de face au lieu de le soustraire. L'option D (202 NM) utilise probablement uniquement la composante de vent de face pour le calcul.
+
+### Q157: Données : GS 160 kt, TC 177°, vecteur vent 140°/20 kt. Le cap vrai (TH) est égal à… ^t60q157
+- A) 184°.
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 180°
+- D) 169°.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le vent de 140° sur une route vraie de 177° vient d'environ 37° à gauche de la route, poussant l'aéronef vers la droite. Le pilote doit crabler à gauche pour compenser. WCA = sin⁻¹(20 x sin37° / 160) = sin⁻¹(12/160) = sin⁻¹(0,075) = environ 4°. Cap vrai = 177° - 4° = 173°. L'option A (184°) tourne incorrectement à droite dans la dérive. L'option C (180°) n'applique qu'une correction de 3° dans la mauvaise direction. L'option D (169°) surcorrige de 8°.
+
+### Q158: Un aéronef suit TC 040° à un TAS constant de 180 kt. Le vecteur vent est 350°/30 kt. L'angle de correction de vent (WCA) est égal à… ^t60q158
+- A) +5°
+- B) -9°
+- C) +11°
+- D) -7°
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 040° et vent de 350°, l'angle du vent par rapport à la route est de 50° depuis le côté gauche. La composante traversière = 30 x sin50° = environ 23 kt pousse l'aéronef vers la droite de la trajectoire. Pour maintenir la route, le pilote crabe à gauche (WCA négatif). WCA = -sin⁻¹(23/180) = -sin⁻¹(0,128) = environ -7°. Les options A (+5°) et C (+11°) sont dans la mauvaise direction (droite au lieu de gauche). L'option B (-9°) surcorrige l'effet du vent.
+
+### Q159: Données : Route vraie : 270°. TAS : 100 kt. Vent : 090°/25 kt. Distance : 100 NM. La vitesse sol (GS) est égale à… ^t60q159
+- A) 117 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 125 kt.
+- D) 120 kt.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'aéronef vole sur TC 270° (vers l'ouest) et le vent souffle de 090° (est). Comme le vent vient directement de derrière l'aéronef, il s'agit d'un vent de queue pur. Vitesse sol = TAS + vent de queue = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Il n'y a pas de composante traversière, donc aucun angle de correction de vent n'est nécessaire. Les options A (117 kt) et D (120 kt) sous-estiment l'effet du vent de queue. L'option B (131 kt) le surestime. Le vent de queue direct s'additionne simplement au TAS.
+
+### Q160: Lors de l'utilisation du GPS pour le suivi vers le prochain waypoint, une barre de déviation avec des points est affichée. Quelle interprétation est correcte ? ^t60q160
+- A) La déviation de la barre par rapport au centre indique l'erreur de trajectoire en distance angulaire en degrés ; la déviation pleine échelle est ±10°.
+- B) La déviation de la barre par rapport au centre indique l'erreur de trajectoire en distance absolue en NM ; la déviation pleine échelle dépend du mode de fonctionnement du GPS.
+- C) La déviation de la barre par rapport au centre indique l'erreur de trajectoire en distance angulaire en degrés ; la déviation pleine échelle dépend du mode de fonctionnement du GPS.
+- D) La déviation de la barre par rapport au centre indique l'erreur de trajectoire en distance absolue en NM ; la déviation pleine échelle est ±10 NM.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le CDI GPS (indicateur de déviation de cap) affiche l'erreur de trajectoire latérale en distance absolue en milles nautiques, et non en degrés angulaires comme un CDI VOR. La déviation pleine échelle varie selon le mode de fonctionnement : typiquement ±5 NM en mode route, ±1 NM en mode terminal, et ±0,3 NM en mode approche. Les options A et C indiquent incorrectement que la déviation est angulaire. L'option D indique incorrectement une échelle fixe de ±10 NM indépendamment du mode.
+
+### Q161: Quelle est la distance entre le VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) et Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E) ? Voir annexe (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q161
+- A) 42 NM
+- B) 42 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 24 NM
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En utilisant les coordonnées : différence de latitude = 9' (= 9 NM nord-sud). Différence de longitude = 38' ; à la latitude 53°N, 1 minute de longitude = cos(53°) NM = environ 0,60 NM, donnant 38 x 0,60 = 22,8 NM est-ouest. Distance totale = racine(9² + 22,8²) = racine(81 + 520) = racine(601) = environ 24,5 NM, arrondi à 24 NM. Les options A et B (42 NM/km) représentent presque le double de la distance réelle. L'option C (24 km) a le bon chiffre mais la mauvaise unité — 24 NM équivaut à environ 44 km, pas 24 km.
+
+### Q162: Un aéronef vole avec un TAS de 120 kt et bénéficie d'un vent de queue de 35 kt. Quel temps est nécessaire pour parcourir une distance de 185 NM ? ^t60q162
+- A) 2 h 11 min
+- B) 0 h 50 min
+- C) 1 h 12 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Vitesse sol = TAS + vent de queue = 120 + 35 = 155 kt. Temps de vol = distance / GS = 185 / 155 = 1,194 heure = 1 heure 12 minutes. L'option A (2 h 11 min) semble utiliser le TAS seul sans le vent de queue (185/85 ne correspond pas non plus — probablement une erreur de calcul). L'option B (50 min) nécessiterait une GS d'environ 222 kt. L'option D (1 h 32 min) correspond à l'utilisation du TAS de 120 kt sans ajouter le vent de queue (185/120 = 1,54 h = 1 h 32 min).
+
+### Q163: Données : Route vraie : 270°. TAS : 100 kt. Vent : 090°/25 kt. Distance : 100 NM. Le temps de vol est égal à… ^t60q163
+- A) 62 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 48 Min.
+- D) 84 Min.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En volant sur TC 270° avec vent de 090°, le vent est un vent de queue direct (soufflant directement de derrière). GS = TAS + vent de queue = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Temps de vol = 100 NM / 125 kt = 0,80 heure = 48 minutes. L'option D (84 min) résulterait du traitement du vent de 25 kt comme un vent de face (GS = 75 kt). L'option A (62 min) correspond à une GS d'environ 97 kt. L'option B (37 min) nécessiterait une GS irréaliste d'environ 162 kt.
+
+### Q164: Quelle réponse complète le plan de vol (cellules marquées) ? Voir annexe (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^t60q164
+- A) TH : 185°. MH : 185°. MC : 180°.
+- B) TH : 173°. MH : 174°. MC : 178°.
+- C) TH : 173°. MH : 184°. MC : 178°.
+- D) TH : 185°. MH : 184°. MC : 178°.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La chaîne de conversion du plan de vol procède de la route vraie via la correction de vent jusqu'au cap vrai (TH), puis en appliquant la déclinaison magnétique pour obtenir le cap magnétique (MH), et enfin en tenant compte de la déviation du compas pour la route magnétique (MC). Les valeurs TH 185°, MH 184° et MC 178° sont cohérentes avec l'application séquentielle d'un petit angle de correction de vent, d'une déclinaison orientale de 1° et de la déviation du compas. Les options A, B et C contiennent des incohérences dans la chaîne de conversion TC-TH-MH-MC qui ne satisfont pas les paramètres donnés du plan de vol.
+
+### Q165: Que signifie le terme « navigation terrestre » ? ^t60q165
+- A) Orientation par les lectures des instruments lors du vol à vue
+- B) Orientation par les éléments au sol lors du vol à vue
+- C) Orientation par GPS lors du vol à vue
+- D) Orientation par les objets célestes terrestres lors du vol à vue
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La navigation terrestre (également connue sous le nom de pilotage ou lecture de carte) est la technique d'orientation de l'aéronef par identification visuelle des éléments au sol — villes, rivières, routes, voies ferrées, lacs — et leur correspondance avec la carte aéronautique. L'option A décrit la navigation aux instruments, qui s'appuie sur les instruments de bord plutôt que sur les repères visuels au sol. L'option C décrit la navigation GPS, une méthode par satellite. L'option D confond la navigation terrestre avec la navigation céleste, qui utilise les étoiles et autres corps astronomiques pour la détermination de position.
+
+### Q166: Quel temps de vol est nécessaire pour une distance de 236 NM à une vitesse sol de 134 kt ? ^t60q166
+- A) 0:46 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 1:46 h
+- D) 1:34 h
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Temps de vol = distance / vitesse sol = 236 NM / 134 kt = 1,761 heure. Conversion de la fraction décimale : 0,761 x 60 = 45,7 minutes, soit environ 46 minutes, donnant un total de 1 heure 46 minutes. L'option A (0:46 h) a les bonnes minutes mais manque l'heure entière. L'option D (1:34 h) correspondrait à une GS d'environ 144 kt. L'option B (0:34 h) est beaucoup trop courte pour cette distance à cette vitesse.
+
+### Q167: Quelle est la route vraie (TC) depuis Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E) vers Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) ? Voir annexe (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q167
+- A) 235°
+- B) 241°
+- C) 055°
+- D) 061°
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Neustadt se trouve au nord-nord-est d'Uelzen (latitude plus élevée et plus à l'est). En reportant la route d'Uelzen à Neustadt sur la carte, on obtient un cap nord-est d'environ 061°. L'option B (241°) est la route réciproque (de Neustadt à Uelzen). L'option A (235°) est également un cap vers le sud-ouest, qui serait la mauvaise direction. L'option C (055°) est proche mais ne correspond pas au relèvement précis calculé à partir des coordonnées de la carte.
+
+### Q168: Que signifie la règle du 1:60 ? ^t60q168
+- A) 10 NM d'écart latéral pour 1° de dérive après 60 NM
+- B) 60 NM d'écart latéral pour 1° de dérive après 1 NM
+- C) 1 NM d'écart latéral pour 1° de dérive après 60 NM
+- D) 6 NM d'écart latéral pour 1° de dérive après 10 NM
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La règle du 1:60 est un raccourci de calcul mental stipulant qu'à une distance de 60 NM, une erreur de trajectoire de 1° produit environ 1 NM d'écart latéral. Mathématiquement, cela fonctionne car la longueur d'arc de 1° sur un rayon de 60 NM est 2 x π x 60 / 360 = environ 1,047 NM, suffisamment proche de 1 NM pour une navigation pratique. L'option A (10 NM d'écart) est dix fois trop grande. L'option B inverse la distance et l'écart. L'option D (6 NM à 10 NM) est géométriquement incohérente avec la règle.
+
+### Q169: Un aéronef suit TC 220° à un TAS constant de 220 kt. Le vecteur vent est 270°/50 kt. La vitesse sol (GS) est égale à… ^t60q169
+- A) 135 kt.
+- B) 170 kt.
+- C) 185 kt.
+- D) 255 kt.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec TC 220° et vent de 270°, l'angle du vent est de 50° depuis l'avant-droit de l'aéronef. La composante de vent de face = 50 x cos50° = environ 32 kt, et la composante traversière = 50 x sin50° = environ 38 kt. En utilisant le triangle de navigation des vents, la vitesse sol est d'environ 185 kt après prise en compte à la fois de la réduction due au vent de face et de l'angle de crabe. L'option D (255 kt) nécessiterait un vent de queue. L'option A (135 kt) soustrait la vitesse totale du vent. L'option B (170 kt) surcorrige pour la composante de vent de face.
+
+### Q170: Un aéronef a un cap de 090°. La distance à parcourir est de 90 NM. Après 45 NM, l'aéronef se trouve à 4,5 NM au nord de la trajectoire planifiée. Quel cap corrigé est nécessaire pour atteindre la destination directement ? ^t60q170
+- A) 9° vers la droite
+- B) 6° vers la droite
+- C) 12° vers la droite
+- D) 18° vers la droite
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En appliquant la règle du 1:60 : l'angle d'ouverture (erreur de trajectoire) = (4,5 / 45) x 60 = 6° hors trajectoire vers le nord. La distance restante est 90 - 45 = 45 NM. L'angle de fermeture pour atteindre la destination = (4,5 / 45) x 60 = 6°. Correction totale = angle d'ouverture + angle de fermeture = 6° + 6° = 12° vers la droite (vers le sud), puisque l'aéronef a dérivé au nord de la trajectoire. L'option A (9°) est trop petite. L'option B (6°) ne tient compte que de l'angle de fermeture. L'option D (18°) est trop agressive et provoquerait une surcorrection.
+
+### Q171: Quelle est la distance entre Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) et Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59'N, 10°28'E) ? Voir annexe (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t60q171
+- A) 46 NM
+- B) 78 km
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 46 km
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** D'après les coordonnées : différence de latitude = 23' (= 23 NM nord-sud). Différence de longitude = 69' ; à environ 53°N de latitude, 1' de longitude = cos(53°) = 0,602 NM, donc 69 x 0,602 = 41,5 NM est-ouest. Distance totale = racine(23² + 41,5²) = racine(529 + 1722) = racine(2251) = environ 47 NM, arrondi à 46 NM sur la carte. Les options B et C (78 km) équivalent à environ 42 NM, ce qui est trop faible. L'option D (46 km) a le bon chiffre mais la mauvaise unité — 46 NM représentent environ 85 km, pas 46 km.
+
+### Q172: Que signifie le terme « navigation terrestre » ? ^t60q172
+- A) Orientation par GPS lors du vol à vue
+- B) Orientation par les éléments au sol lors du vol à vue
+- C) Orientation par les lectures des instruments lors du vol à vue
+- D) Orientation par les objets célestes terrestres lors du vol à vue
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La navigation terrestre est la méthode de navigation par identification visuelle des éléments au sol tels que les routes, rivières, voies ferrées, villes et lacs, et leur correspondance avec une carte aéronautique. C'est la technique principale de navigation VFR, parfois appelée pilotage ou lecture de carte. L'option A (GPS) est une navigation par satellite. L'option C (instruments) décrit la navigation aux instruments ou l'estime. L'option D confond la navigation terrestre (basée sur le sol) avec la navigation céleste (basée sur les étoiles).
+
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+# Procédures opérationnelles
+
+---
+
+### Q1: While flying slowly near stall with the left wing dropping, how can a full stall be avoided? ^t70q1
+- A) Use rudder to the left, push the stick forward slightly, accelerate, then neutralise all controls
+- B) Lower the nose with elevator, maintain wings level using coordinated rudder and aileron
+- C) Deflect aileron to the right, push slightly forward on the stick, build speed, then neutralise controls
+- D) Apply aileron and rudder to the right, gain speed, push the stick forward slightly, then neutralise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct stall recovery technique is to immediately reduce the angle of attack by lowering the nose with the elevator, while using coordinated rudder and aileron to keep the wings level. Option A applies rudder in the wrong direction (toward the dropping wing). Option C uses aileron alone without coordinated rudder, which near the stall can increase adverse yaw and potentially trigger a spin entry. Option D also prioritizes aileron over elevator, missing the critical first step of reducing the angle of attack.
+
+### Q2: How is "flight time" defined? ^t70q2
+- A) The total time from the first take-off until the last landing across one or more consecutive flights.
+- B) The time from engine start for take-off purposes until the pilot leaves the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- C) The total time from the aircraft's first movement until it finally comes to rest after the flight.
+- D) The interval from the beginning of the take-off run to the final touchdown on landing.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations for gliders, flight time is defined as the total time from the aircraft's first movement for the purpose of flight until it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. This includes ground handling and taxiing, not just airborne time. Option A only counts from takeoff to landing, excluding ground movement. Option B applies to powered aircraft with engines, not gliders. Option D is too narrow, covering only the takeoff run to touchdown and missing ground handling phases.
+
+### Q3: What is a wind shear? ^t70q3
+- A) A meteorological downslope wind event typical in alpine regions.
+- B) A gradual increase of wind speed at altitudes above 13000 ft.
+- C) A change in wind speed exceeding 15 kt.
+- D) A vertical or horizontal variation in wind speed and/or direction.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind shear is defined as any change in wind speed and/or direction over a relatively short distance, which can occur in both the vertical and horizontal planes. It is not limited to any particular speed threshold (option C), altitude range (option B), or geographic setting (option A). Wind shear is particularly dangerous during takeoff and landing when the aircraft is close to the ground with limited recovery margins.
+
+### Q4: Which weather phenomenon is most commonly linked to wind shear? ^t70q4
+- A) Stable high-pressure systems.
+- B) Thunderstorms.
+- C) Fog.
+- D) Invernal warm fronts.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms generate the most severe wind shear through their powerful updrafts, downdrafts, and microburst outflows, which can cause sudden wind reversals exceeding 50 knots within seconds. Stable high-pressure systems (option A) typically produce calm, uniform conditions. Fog (option C) is associated with light winds, not shear. Warm fronts (option D) can produce mild shear, but thunderstorms are by far the most common and dangerous source.
+
+### Q5: Under what conditions should wind shear be expected? ^t70q5
+- A) On a calm summer day with light winds
+- B) In cold weather with calm winds
+- C) During an inversion
+- D) When crossing a warm front
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A temperature inversion creates a stable boundary layer between two air masses that can move at different speeds and directions, producing wind shear at the inversion level. Inversions are common in the early morning and can significantly affect glider operations near the ground, particularly during approach and landing. Option A describes conditions with minimal shear risk. Option B and D can occasionally produce shear but are not the primary conditions associated with it.
+
+### Q6: During approach, an aircraft encounters wind shear with decreasing headwind. Without pilot corrections, what happens to the flight path and indicated airspeed (IAS)? ^t70q6
+- A) Flight path goes higher, IAS rises
+- B) Flight path goes lower, IAS rises
+- C) Flight path goes higher, IAS drops
+- D) Flight path goes lower, IAS drops
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When headwind suddenly decreases, the airflow over the wings drops, causing IAS to decrease and lift to reduce. With less lift, the aircraft sinks below the intended glide path. The aircraft's inertia maintains its groundspeed briefly, but the reduced relative airflow means less aerodynamic force. This is the most dangerous wind shear scenario on approach because both effects — lower path and lower airspeed — combine to reduce safety margins simultaneously.
+
+### Q7: During approach, an aircraft encounters wind shear with increasing headwind. Without corrections, how are the flight path and IAS affected? ^t70q7
+- A) Flight path drops, IAS drops
+- B) Flight path rises, IAS drops
+- C) Flight path drops, IAS rises
+- D) Flight path rises, IAS rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An increasing headwind temporarily increases the relative airflow over the wings, raising both IAS and lift. The additional lift pushes the aircraft above the intended glide path. Although initially this appears favorable, the pilot must be alert — if the headwind later decreases, the aircraft will experience the opposite effect and may sink rapidly below the desired path. Options involving decreased IAS or a lower flight path contradict the aerodynamic response to an increasing headwind.
+
+### Q8: During approach, the aircraft experiences wind shear with a decreasing tailwind. Without corrections, what happens to the flight path and IAS? ^t70q8
+- A) Flight path drops, IAS rises
+- B) Flight path rises, IAS rises
+- C) Flight path drops, IAS drops
+- D) Flight path rises, IAS drops
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a tailwind decreases, the aircraft's forward momentum is maintained while the air mass effectively decelerates around it, increasing the relative airflow over the wings. This raises IAS and lift, pushing the aircraft above the glide path. A decreasing tailwind has the same aerodynamic effect as an increasing headwind. Options with decreased IAS or lower flight path misinterpret the relationship between tailwind changes and relative airflow.
+
+### Q9: What is the best way to avoid encountering wind shear during flight? ^t70q9
+- A) Avoid thermally active areas, especially in summer, or remain below them
+- B) Refrain from taking off and landing when heavy showers or thunderstorms are passing
+- C) Avoid precipitation areas, particularly in winter, and choose low flight altitudes
+- D) Avoid take-offs and landings in mountainous terrain and stay over flat terrain
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe wind shear is associated with thunderstorms and heavy showers, which produce microbursts and gust fronts. Avoiding takeoffs and landings when such weather is passing through eliminates the most dangerous wind shear exposure during the most vulnerable flight phases. Option A addresses thermals, which cause turbulence but not dangerous shear. Option C targets winter precipitation, which is a lesser shear risk. Option D is overly restrictive and does not address the primary cause.
+
+### Q10: During a cross-country flight, visual conditions begin to fall below minima. To maintain minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to... ^t70q10
+- A) Press on using radio navigation aids along the route
+- B) Continue based on sufficiently favourable forecasts
+- C) Request navigational assistance from ATC to continue
+- D) Turn back, since adequate VMC was confirmed along the previous track
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When VFR conditions deteriorate below minima, the safest action is to turn back to the area where adequate visual meteorological conditions (VMC) were confirmed. Continuing into worsening visibility is the leading cause of VFR-into-IMC accidents. Option A is inappropriate because gliders typically lack radio navigation equipment and VFR pilots should not rely on instrument navigation. Option B relies on forecasts rather than actual conditions, which is unsafe. Option C is not appropriate for gliders operating under VFR rules.
+
+### Q11: Two identical aircraft at the same gross weight and configuration fly at different airspeeds. Which one produces stronger wake turbulence? ^t70q11
+- A) The one at higher altitude
+- B) The one flying faster
+- C) The one flying slower
+- D) The one at lower altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wake turbulence intensity is directly related to the strength of wingtip vortices, which are strongest when the wing operates at high lift coefficients — that is, at low speeds and high angles of attack. The slower aircraft generates more intense vortices because it must produce the same lift at a lower speed, requiring a higher angle of attack and greater circulation around the wing. Altitude (options A and D) is not the determining factor. The faster aircraft (option B) produces weaker vortices at its lower lift coefficient.
+
+### Q12: With only a light crosswind, what hazard exists when departing after a heavy aeroplane? ^t70q12
+- A) Wake vortices are amplified and become distorted.
+- B) Wake vortices spin faster and climb higher.
+- C) Wake vortices remain on or near the runway.
+- D) Wake vortices twist across the runway transversely.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In light crosswind conditions, wake vortices from a heavy aircraft tend to remain on or near the runway rather than being blown clear. With a strong crosswind, the vortices drift away from the runway centerline, but a light crosswind is insufficient to displace them, creating a lingering hazard for departing aircraft. Option A incorrectly states vortices are amplified. Option B is wrong because vortices sink, not climb. Option D is incorrect because light crosswinds do not cause significant lateral twisting of vortices across the runway.
+
+### Q13: Which surface is most suitable for an emergency off-field landing? ^t70q13
+- A) A ploughed field
+- B) A harvested cornfield
+- C) A glade with long dry grass
+- D) A village sports ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A harvested cornfield offers a firm, relatively flat surface with short stubble that provides good ground friction without excessive deceleration forces — ideal for an emergency landing. Option A (ploughed field) has soft, uneven furrows that can cause the glider to nose over or ground-loop. Option C (long dry grass) may conceal obstacles such as rocks, ditches, or fences. Option D (sports ground) is typically surrounded by buildings, fences, and spectators, creating collision hazards.
+
+### Q14: What defines a precautionary landing? ^t70q14
+- A) A landing performed without engine power.
+- B) A landing made to preserve flight safety before conditions deteriorate further.
+- C) A landing carried out with flaps retracted.
+- D) A landing forced by circumstances requiring the aircraft to land immediately.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A precautionary landing is a proactive decision to land while options remain available, made to preserve flight safety before the situation worsens. It differs from a forced landing (option D), which is an immediate necessity with no alternative. Option A describes a normal glider landing or engine-out scenario, not specifically a precautionary landing. Option C describes a configuration choice, not a type of landing. The key distinction is that a precautionary landing involves foresight and planning.
+
+### Q15: Which of these landing areas is best suited for an off-field landing? ^t70q15
+- A) A lake with a smooth, undisturbed surface
+- B) A meadow free of livestock
+- C) A light brown field with short crops
+- D) A field with ripe, waving crops
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A light brown field with short crops indicates a harvested or nearly harvested surface that is firm and free of tall obstructions, making it suitable for a safe off-field landing. Option A (a lake) should only be considered as a last resort since water landings carry drowning risk. Option B (meadow without livestock) sounds safe but may have hidden obstacles; and option D (ripe, waving crops) indicates tall vegetation that could obscure hazards and cause the glider to nose over on landing.
+
+### Q16: How does wet grass affect take-off and landing distances? ^t70q16
+- A) Both take-off and landing distances decrease
+- B) Take-off distance increases while landing distance decreases
+- C) Take-off distance decreases while landing distance increases
+- D) Both take-off and landing distances increase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass increases rolling resistance during the takeoff ground roll, requiring a longer distance to reach flying speed. On landing, wet grass reduces wheel braking friction (similar to aquaplaning), resulting in a longer stopping distance. Both phases are adversely affected. Option A reverses both effects. Option B correctly identifies the takeoff increase but incorrectly predicts a shorter landing roll. Option C reverses both effects entirely.
+
+### Q17: What adverse effects can be expected when thermalling above industrial facilities? ^t70q17
+- A) Extensive, strong downwind areas on the lee side of the plant
+- B) Very poor visibility of only a few hundred metres with heavy precipitation
+- C) Health hazards from pollutants, reduced visibility, and turbulence
+- D) Strong electrostatic charging and degraded radio communication
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermalling above industrial facilities exposes the pilot to harmful pollutants (smoke, chemical emissions), significantly reduced visibility from haze and particulates, and turbulence from the uneven heating of industrial structures. Option A describes a lee-side downdraft but not the full hazard picture. Option B exaggerates with "heavy precipitation," which is not caused by industrial plants. Option D describes electrostatic effects that are not typically associated with industrial thermal flying.
+
+### Q18: When is an off-field landing most likely to result in an accident? ^t70q18
+- A) When the approach uses distinct approach segments
+- B) When the decision to land off-field is taken too late
+- C) When the approach is made onto a harvested corn field
+- D) When the decision is made above the minimum safe altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most common cause of off-field landing accidents is delaying the decision too long, leaving insufficient altitude for proper field selection, a stabilized approach, and obstacle avoidance. Late decisions force rushed approaches, poor field choices, and inadequate speed management. Option A (distinct segments) is standard good practice. Option C (harvested cornfield) is actually a good surface choice. Option D (deciding above minimum safe altitude) is the correct time to decide, not a risk factor.
+
+### Q19: How can mid-air collisions be avoided when circling in thermals? ^t70q19
+- A) Enter the updraft quickly and pull back sharply to slow down
+- B) Circle in alternating directions at different altitudes
+- C) Mimic the movements of the glider ahead
+- D) Coordinate turns with other aircraft sharing the same thermal
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When sharing a thermal, all gliders should circle in the same direction and coordinate their turns to maintain consistent spacing and predictable flight paths. This minimizes the risk of convergence. Option A (entering quickly and pulling back sharply) can surprise other pilots and create a collision hazard. Option B (alternating directions) creates head-on crossing situations within the thermal. Option C (mimicking the glider ahead) could lead to following too closely without maintaining safe separation.
+
+### Q20: How can danger be avoided when a glider's altitude nears circuit height during a cross-country flight? ^t70q20
+- A) Seek thermals on the lee side of a chosen landing field
+- B) Regardless of the planned route, commit to an off-field landing
+- C) Maintain radio contact until fully stopped after an off-field landing
+- D) Aim for cumulus clouds visible on the distant horizon and use their thermals
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When altitude drops to circuit height, the pilot must commit to landing — continuing to search for lift at this altitude is dangerous and leaves no margin for error. Option A is hazardous because lee-side air typically contains sink, not thermals. Option C describes a good post-landing practice but does not address the immediate danger of low altitude. Option D risks flying into sink between thermals with no altitude reserve, potentially resulting in a crash rather than a controlled off-field landing.
+
+### Q21: What must a pilot consider before entering a steep turn? ^t70q21
+- A) Reduce speed in accordance with the target bank angle before starting the turn
+- B) Once the bank angle is achieved, push forward to increase speed
+- C) After reaching the bank angle, apply opposite rudder to reduce yaw
+- D) Build up sufficient speed for the intended bank angle before initiating the turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steep turn, the load factor increases (n = 1/cos(bank angle)), which raises the stall speed. The pilot must have adequate speed before entering the turn to maintain a safe margin above the increased stall speed. Option A (reducing speed before a steep turn) would dangerously bring the aircraft closer to stall. Option B (pushing forward during the turn) would cause altitude loss and nose-down pitch. Option C (opposite rudder) is not the primary concern — speed margin is the critical safety factor.
+
+### Q22: A glider is about to stall and pitch down. Which control input prevents a nose-dive and spin? ^t70q22
+- A) Hold ailerons neutral, apply strong rudder toward the lower wing
+- B) Maintain level flight using the rudder pedals
+- C) Pull the stick back slightly, deflect ailerons opposite to the lower wing
+- D) Release back pressure on the elevator, apply rudder opposite to the dropping wing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct response to an incipient stall with wing drop is to release back pressure on the elevator (reducing angle of attack) and apply opposite rudder to prevent the yaw that would develop into a spin. Option A applies rudder toward the dropping wing, which would accelerate spin entry. Option B attempts to maintain level flight with rudder alone, which is ineffective near the stall. Option C pulls back on the elevator, which deepens the stall, and uses ailerons which can worsen the situation near the critical angle of attack.
+
+### Q23: When aerotowing with a side-mounted release hook, the glider tends to... ^t70q23
+- A) Display an increased pitch-up moment.
+- B) Exhibit particularly stable flight characteristics.
+- C) Turn rapidly about its longitudinal axis.
+- D) Yaw toward the side where the hook is mounted.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A side-mounted (belly or CG) release hook creates a tow force that acts below and possibly offset from the aircraft's center of gravity. The cable pull from below the CG generates a nose-up pitching moment, which the pilot must actively counter with forward stick pressure. Option B is incorrect — side-mounted hooks do not improve stability. Option C (rapid roll) is not characteristic of this configuration. Option D describes yaw, which would occur with an asymmetric attachment but is not the primary effect.
+
+### Q24: During aerotow, the glider has climbed excessively high behind the tug. What should the glider pilot do to prevent further danger? ^t70q24
+- A) Initiate a sideslip to lose the excess height
+- B) Push firmly forward to bring the glider back to the normal position
+- C) Pull strongly, then release the cable
+- D) Gently extend the spoilers and steer the glider back to the correct tow position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The safest correction for being too high behind the tug is to gently deploy spoilers to increase drag and lose excess height while steering back to the correct tow position. Option A (sideslip) would create erratic lateral movements that could endanger both aircraft. Option B (pushing firmly forward) could put the tug into a dangerous nose-down attitude by pulling its tail up via the cable. Option C (pulling then releasing) is dangerous — pulling when high compounds the problem, potentially lifting the tug's tail catastrophically.
+
+### Q25: After a cable break during winch launch, what is the correct sequence of actions? ^t70q25
+- A) Hold the stick back, stabilise at minimum speed, and land on the remaining field length
+- B) Push the nose down firmly, release the cable, then decide based on altitude and terrain whether to land ahead or fly a short circuit
+- C) Perform a 180-degree turn and land in the opposite direction, releasing the cable before touchdown
+- D) Release the cable first, then push the nose down; below 150 m AGL land straight ahead at increased speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cable break during winch launch, the immediate priority is to lower the nose to maintain flying speed (preventing a stall from the steep climb attitude), then release the cable to prevent it from snagging during landing. After establishing safe flight, the pilot decides whether to land straight ahead or fly a modified circuit based on available altitude and terrain. Option A (holding the stick back) risks a stall. Option C (180° turn) is extremely dangerous at low altitude. Option D gets the sequence backward — nose down first, then release.
+
+### Q26: During the initial ground roll of a winch launch, one wing touches the ground. What must the glider pilot do? ^t70q26
+- A) Deflect ailerons in the opposite direction
+- B) Apply opposite rudder
+- C) Release the cable immediately
+- D) Pull back on the elevator
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If a wing touches the ground during the winch launch ground roll, the situation is uncontrollable and the launch must be immediately aborted by releasing the cable. Continuing the launch with a wing on the ground risks a violent ground loop or cartwheel. Option A (opposite aileron) may be insufficient at low speed and could worsen the situation under cable tension. Option B (opposite rudder) cannot correct a wing-down condition. Option D (pulling back) would try to lift off prematurely in an uncontrolled state.
+
+### Q27: During aerotow, the glider exceeds its maximum permissible speed. What should the glider pilot do? ^t70q27
+- A) Pull back on the elevator to reduce speed
+- B) Notify the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Release the towrope immediately
+- D) Deploy the spoilers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider exceeds VNE (never-exceed speed) during aerotow, the pilot must immediately release the towrope to remove the pulling force causing the excessive speed and avoid structural failure. Option A (pulling back) increases the load factor on an already over-stressed airframe. Option B (radio call) wastes critical time during a structural emergency. Option D (deploying spoilers) while still attached to the tow aircraft could cause dangerous pitch and speed oscillations.
+
+### Q28: After a cable break during aerotow, a long section of cable remains attached to the glider. What should the pilot do? ^t70q28
+- A) Fly a low approach and ask the airfield controller to assess the cable length, then release if needed
+- B) Once at a safe height, drop the cable over empty terrain or over the airfield
+- C) Fly a normal approach and release the cable immediately after touchdown
+- D) Release immediately and continue the flight with the coupling unlatched
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A trailing cable is a serious hazard — it can snag on obstacles, trees, or power lines during approach and landing. The safest action is to climb to a safe height and release the cable over empty terrain or the airfield where it can be recovered safely. Option A (low approach for assessment) risks snagging the trailing cable on obstacles. Option C (releasing after touchdown) means flying the entire approach with a dangerous trailing cable. Option D (releasing immediately regardless) may drop the cable in an unsafe location.
+
+### Q29: During aerotow, the tug aircraft disappears from the glider pilot's view. What should the pilot do? ^t70q29
+- A) Deploy the spoilers and return to a normal attitude
+- B) Alternate between pushing and pulling on the elevator
+- C) Release the cable immediately
+- D) Alternate turns left and right to search for the tug
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider pilot loses sight of the tug during aerotow, the cable must be released immediately. Continued towing without visual contact with the tug is extremely dangerous because the glider pilot cannot anticipate the tug's movements, risking a mid-air collision or being pulled into an unexpected attitude. Option A (spoilers) does not address the fundamental problem. Option B (alternating elevator) creates dangerous oscillations. Option D (searching turns) could tangle the cable or fly into the tug's path.
+
+### Q30: During aerotow in a turn, the glider drifts to an outward offset position. How should the glider pilot correct this? ^t70q30
+- A) Use a sideslip so that increased drag pushes the glider back behind the tug
+- B) Steer back using coordinated rudder and aileron inputs, then deploy spoilers to reduce speed
+- C) Return behind the tug by using a tighter radius with strong rudder pedal inputs
+- D) Match the tug's bank angle and use rudder to gently reduce the radius back to the correct position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct technique is to match the tug's bank angle to maintain the same turn radius, then use gentle rudder input to slightly tighten the radius and drift back behind the tug. This is a smooth, controlled correction. Option A (sideslip) creates lateral instability and unpredictable cable tensions. Option B (deploying spoilers) would cause the glider to drop below the tug's level. Option C (strong rudder) risks over-correction and could cause the glider to swing to the opposite side or create dangerous cable loads.
+
+### Q31: During a winch launch, cable tension suddenly disappears just after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q31
+- A) Inform the winch driver by alternating aileron inputs
+- B) Pull on the elevator to restore cable tension
+- C) Push firmly forward and release the cable immediately
+- D) Push slightly and wait for the cable tension to return
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Loss of cable tension during the steep climbing phase means a cable break or winch failure has occurred. The pilot must immediately push forward to lower the nose and prevent a stall (since the glider is at a high pitch angle with rapidly decaying speed), then release the cable. Option A wastes critical time on communication. Option B (pulling) would increase the pitch angle further, guaranteeing a stall. Option D (waiting) is dangerous because speed is decaying rapidly in the climb attitude.
+
+### Q32: Before launching with a parallel-cable winch, the pilot notices the second cable lying close to the glider. What should be done? ^t70q32
+- A) Keep watching the second cable and release after take-off if needed
+- B) Release the cable immediately and inform the airfield controller by radio
+- C) Continue with the normal take-off and inform the controller after landing
+- D) Proceed with the launch using opposite rudder to steer away from the second cable
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A second cable lying close to the glider poses a serious entanglement hazard during the ground roll and climb-out. The launch must be aborted immediately by releasing the cable, and the airfield controller must be notified to correct the situation before any further launches. Option A risks snagging the loose cable during takeoff. Option C ignores a clear safety hazard. Option D cannot prevent entanglement with a cable on the ground during the critical ground roll phase.
+
+### Q33: What is the function of the weak link (breaking point) on a winch cable? ^t70q33
+- A) It limits the rate of climb during the winch launch
+- B) It prevents the glider airframe from being overstressed
+- C) It provides automatic cable release after the winch launch
+- D) It protects the winch from being overrun by the glider
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The weak link is calibrated to break before the cable tension exceeds the glider's structural limits, protecting the airframe from being overstressed by excessive winch pull. Its breaking strength is matched to the maximum permitted towing load for the specific glider type. Option A is incorrect — the rate of climb depends on winch power and speed, not the weak link. Option C is wrong because the weak link is a safety device, not a release mechanism. Option D describes a concern unrelated to the weak link's purpose.
+
+### Q34: During the final phase of a winch launch, the pilot keeps pulling back on the elevator. The automatic release trips under high wing loading. What are the consequences? ^t70q34
+- A) Only this sudden jerk ensures the cable releases properly
+- B) This technique compensates for insufficient wind correction
+- C) Extreme structural stress is placed on the glider airframe
+- D) A higher launch altitude can be achieved using this technique
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Continuing to pull back during the final phase of a winch launch places extreme structural stress on the airframe because the combination of cable tension, aerodynamic loads, and the centripetal force from the curved flight path can exceed design limits. The automatic release tripping is a safety mechanism activating because the load factor is dangerously high. Option A mischaracterizes a dangerous overload as normal procedure. Option B has nothing to do with wind correction. Option D prioritizes altitude gain over structural safety.
+
+### Q35: An off-field landing in mountainous terrain is necessary and the only available site is steeply inclined. How should the approach be flown? ^t70q35
+- A) Fly the approach at minimum speed with a careful flare upon reaching the landing site
+- B) Approach with extra speed, then make a quick flare to match the slope gradient
+- C) Approach parallel to the ridge with headwind, according to the prevailing wind
+- D) Approach down the ridge at increased speed, adjusting pitch to follow the ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing uphill on a steep slope requires extra approach speed to account for the rapid deceleration that occurs when the aircraft's momentum encounters the rising terrain. A quick, decisive flare matches the aircraft's flight path to the slope angle, minimizing impact forces. Option A (minimum speed) leaves no energy reserve for the flare on a steep slope. Option C (parallel to ridge) does not utilize the slope for deceleration. Option D (downhill) dramatically increases groundspeed and stopping distance, making it extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q36: At 6000 m MSL, the pilot realises that the oxygen supply will run out within minutes. What should be done? ^t70q36
+- A) After oxygen runs out, remain at this altitude for no more than 30 minutes
+- B) Reduce oxygen consumption by breathing slowly
+- C) Deploy spoilers and descend at the maximum permissible speed
+- D) At the first sign of hypoxia, begin descending at the maximum allowed speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6000 m without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness is very short — hypoxia can impair judgment within minutes. The pilot must descend immediately at maximum permissible speed using spoilers, before oxygen runs out, rather than waiting for symptoms to appear. Option A is extremely dangerous — remaining at 6000 m without oxygen for 30 minutes would cause incapacitation. Option B cannot meaningfully extend oxygen supply. Option D waits for hypoxia symptoms, by which point cognitive function may already be too impaired for safe decision-making.
+
+### Q37: What colour is the emergency canopy release handle? ^t70q37
+- A) Blue
+- B) Yellow
+- C) Red
+- D) Green
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Emergency canopy release handles are standardized as red to ensure immediate recognition in a crisis. Red is the universal color for emergency controls in aviation, including canopy jettison handles, fire extinguisher handles, and fuel shutoff valves. Options A (blue), B (yellow), and D (green) are incorrect — these colors are reserved for other functions such as trim (green), normal canopy latch, or non-emergency systems.
+
+### Q38: Why must trim masses or lead ballast be firmly secured in a glider? ^t70q38
+- A) To ensure the maximum allowed mass is not exceeded
+- B) To prevent them from jamming controls or causing a centre-of-gravity shift
+- C) To guarantee a comfortable seating position for the pilot
+- D) To protect the pilot from injury during turbulent thermal flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Unsecured trim masses or ballast can shift during flight, particularly in turbulence or during maneuvers, potentially jamming control linkages (elevator, rudder, or aileron cables) or causing an unplanned shift in the center of gravity that could make the aircraft uncontrollable. Option A addresses weight limits, which is a separate concern from securing ballast. Option C and D are secondary considerations — the primary danger is control jamming and CG displacement.
+
+### Q39: During a winch launch, the airspeed indicator fails after reaching the full climb attitude. What should the pilot do? ^t70q39
+- A) Push the stick forward, release the cable, and fly a short circuit at minimum speed
+- B) Continue the launch to normal altitude, then use the horizon and airstream noise for an immediate circuit and landing
+- C) Continue to normal altitude, then use visual and audio cues to proceed with the planned flight
+- D) Try to restore the ASI by making abrupt speed changes during the launch
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a failed ASI, the pilot should continue the launch to normal release altitude (since the launch is already established and stable), then release and fly an immediate circuit using the horizon for pitch reference and wind noise for approximate speed estimation. An immediate landing minimizes exposure to the instrument failure. Option A (aborting the launch) is unnecessarily risky at climb attitude. Option C (continuing the planned flight) is unsafe without airspeed indication. Option D (abrupt speed changes) could overstress the airframe during the launch.
+
+### Q40: Why is launching with the centre of gravity beyond the aft limit prohibited? ^t70q40
+- A) Because the maximum permissible speed would be significantly reduced
+- B) Because the increased nose-down moment could not be compensated
+- C) Because structural limits might be exceeded
+- D) Because elevator authority may be insufficient to control the flight attitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the CG is too far aft, the moment arm between the CG and the tail becomes too short, reducing the elevator's ability to generate sufficient nose-down pitching moment. This can make the aircraft uncontrollable, particularly during the launch phase when pitch control is critical. Option A is incorrect — aft CG does not directly reduce VNE. Option B is backward — an aft CG reduces the nose-down moment, but the problem is insufficient elevator authority to correct nose-up tendencies. Option C addresses structural limits, which is a separate concern.
+
+### Q41: What effect does ice accumulation on the wings have? ^t70q41
+- A) It reduces friction drag
+- B) It improves slow-flight performance
+- C) It lowers the stall speed
+- D) It raises the stall speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ice accumulation on the wing disrupts the smooth airflow over the aerofoil surface, reducing the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) and increasing drag. Since stall speed is inversely proportional to the square root of CL_max, a lower CL_max means a higher stall speed. The aircraft must fly faster to maintain safe flight. Option A is wrong because ice roughness increases friction drag. Options B and C are incorrect because ice degrades aerodynamic performance in every respect.
+
+### Q42: The landing gear extends but will not lock despite several attempts. How should the landing be performed? ^t70q42
+- A) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at increased speed
+- B) Keep the gear extended but unlocked and land normally
+- C) Retract the gear and perform a belly landing at minimum speed
+- D) Hold the gear handle firmly during a normal landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear will not lock, it must be retracted and a belly (gear-up) landing performed at minimum speed to minimize impact forces and structural damage. An unlocked gear (option B) could collapse asymmetrically on touchdown, causing a violent ground loop or cartwheel. Option A (belly landing at increased speed) unnecessarily increases impact energy. Option D (holding the handle) provides no mechanical lock and the gear could still collapse under landing loads.
+
+### Q43: When flying into heavy snowfall, what is the greatest immediate danger? ^t70q43
+- A) Rapid increase in airframe icing
+- B) Sudden blockage of the pitot-static system
+- C) Sudden loss of visibility
+- D) Sudden increase in aircraft mass
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The greatest immediate danger when encountering heavy snowfall is the sudden and complete loss of forward visibility, which can disorient the pilot and make terrain avoidance impossible within seconds. While icing (option A) and pitot blockage (option B) are real concerns, they develop more gradually. Option D (mass increase) is negligible in the short term. Loss of visibility is immediate, disorienting, and can lead to controlled flight into terrain.
+
+### Q44: A tailwind off-field landing is unavoidable. How should it be executed? ^t70q44
+- A) Approach at increased speed without using spoilers
+- B) Normal approach, then extend spoilers and push the nose down upon reaching the landing site
+- C) Approach at reduced speed, expecting shorter flare and ground roll
+- D) Approach at normal speed, expecting a longer flare and ground roll
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the groundspeed is higher than normal for the same indicated airspeed, resulting in a longer flare and longer ground roll. The pilot should maintain normal approach speed (not reduced, which would risk stalling) and prepare for the extended landing distance. Option A (increased speed without spoilers) would make the landing even longer. Option B (pushing the nose down at the field) would cause a hard landing. Option C (reduced speed) risks stalling at the higher groundspeed, and the ground roll will be longer, not shorter.
+
+### Q45: When landing with a tailwind, what must the pilot do? ^t70q45
+- A) Retract the landing gear to shorten the ground roll
+- B) Increase the approach speed
+- C) Approach at normal speed with a shallow angle
+- D) Compensate for the tailwind by sideslipping
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a tailwind, the pilot should maintain normal indicated approach speed (since the wing sees the same airflow regardless of wind) and fly a shallower approach angle to account for the increased groundspeed and reduced obstacle clearance gradient. Option A (retracting gear) would cause a belly landing, not shorten the roll. Option B (increasing speed) would extend the ground roll further. Option D (sideslipping) addresses crosswind, not tailwind, and would not be effective compensation.
+
+### Q46: Tower reports: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots." How should the approach and landing be conducted? ^t70q46
+- A) Approach at increased speed, but avoid using spoilers
+- B) Approach at normal speed, controlling speed with spoilers
+- C) Approach at minimum speed, making gentle control corrections
+- D) Approach at increased speed with firm control inputs to correct attitude changes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In gusty conditions (10 kt gust factor), the pilot must add speed margin to the approach speed (typically half the gust factor, so about 5 kt extra) and make firm, positive control inputs to maintain attitude through the turbulent air. Option A avoids spoilers, which may be needed for path control. Option B uses normal speed with no gust margin, leaving the aircraft vulnerable to speed drops in gusts. Option C (minimum speed) is extremely dangerous in gusts — a momentary speed loss could cause a stall.
+
+### Q47: A glider pilot encounters strong sink while ridge soaring. What is the recommended action? ^t70q47
+- A) Increase speed and head away from the ridge
+- B) Continue flying, as mountain downdrafts are typically brief
+- C) Increase speed and move closer to the ridge
+- D) Increase speed and land parallel to the ridge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong sink near a ridge, the pilot must increase speed (to improve penetration through the sink) and fly away from the ridge into the valley where conditions may be more benign and landing options exist. Option B is dangerously complacent — mountain downdrafts can be sustained and severe. Option C (moving closer to the ridge) could trap the pilot against the terrain in strong sink. Option D (landing parallel to the ridge) may not be feasible on mountainous terrain and reduces options.
+
+### Q48: A glider flying beneath an expanding cumulus that is developing into a thunderstorm rapidly approaches cloud base. What should the pilot do? ^t70q48
+- A) Slow to minimum speed and exit the thermal area in a gentle turn
+- B) Tighten harness and be prepared for severe gusts while continuing to thermal
+- C) Enter the thunderstorm cloud and continue using instruments
+- D) Deploy spoilers within speed limits and leave the thermal area at maximum permissible speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cumulus develops into a cumulonimbus, the updrafts intensify dramatically and can suck the glider into the cloud against the pilot's wishes. The pilot must deploy full spoilers and fly at maximum permissible speed (VNE or the spoiler-extended limit) to escape the rapidly increasing updraft. Option A (minimum speed) would maximize the time in the updraft and the risk of being drawn in. Option B (continuing to thermal) is extremely dangerous near a thunderstorm. Option C (entering the cloud) violates VFR rules and exposes the aircraft to severe turbulence, hail, and lightning.
+
+### Q49: After landing, you discover that a pen may have fallen into the cockpit. What must be considered? ^t70q49
+- A) Other pilots due to fly the glider should be informed about the missing pen
+- B) A flight without a writing instrument on board is not permitted
+- C) Small, light loose items in the fuselage can be regarded as uncritical
+- D) The cockpit must be thoroughly checked for loose objects before the next flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any loose object in a cockpit — even something as small as a pen — can jam flight controls by lodging in the control linkages, pushrods, or cable runs. The cockpit must be thoroughly inspected before the next flight to locate and remove the object. Option A merely passes the problem along without solving it. Option B is irrelevant — the concern is not having a pen but having a loose object. Option C is dangerously wrong — even small objects can jam critical controls and have caused fatal accidents.
+
+### Q50: Flying near the aerodrome at about 250 m AGL, you encounter strong sink and decide on a safety landing. At what speed should you fly toward the airfield? ^t70q50
+- A) Maximum manoeuvring speed VA
+- B) Best glide speed
+- C) Minimum sink rate speed
+- D) Best glide speed plus allowances for downdrafts and wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When encountering strong sink near the aerodrome, the pilot needs maximum range to reach the field. Best glide speed gives maximum range in still air, but additional speed is needed to compensate for the downdraft (which steepens the glide path) and any headwind component. Option A (VA) may be too fast and waste altitude. Option B (best glide speed alone) does not account for the sink and wind. Option C (minimum sink speed) maximizes time aloft but minimizes distance covered, which is counterproductive when trying to reach the field.
+
+### Q51: Vous venez de réussir l'examen pratique du LAPL(S). Pouvez-vous transporter des passagers dès que la licence est délivrée ? ^t70q51
+- A) Oui, à condition que les conditions d'expérience récente soient remplies.
+- B) Non, seulement après avoir effectué 10 heures de vol ou 30 vols en tant que CdB suite à la délivrance de la licence.
+- C) Oui, sans aucune restriction.
+- D) Non, le transport de passagers exige une licence SPL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Conformément à la réglementation EASA, un titulaire nouvellement qualifié du LAPL(S) doit accumuler un minimum de 10 heures de vol ou 30 vols en tant que commandant de bord après la délivrance de la licence avant d'être autorisé à transporter des passagers. Cela garantit que le pilote acquiert une expérience solo suffisante avant d'assumer la responsabilité d'autrui. L'option A omet la condition d'expérience initiale. L'option C est fausse car il existe une restriction claire. L'option D est incorrecte car le LAPL(S) permet bien le transport de passagers une fois l'exigence d'expérience satisfaite.
+
+### Q52: En finale vers un champ de dégagement, vous rencontrez soudainement un fort thermique. Comment devez-vous réagir ? ^t70q52
+- A) Rentrer les aérofreins et ralentir à la vitesse de finesse max pour exploiter le thermique.
+- B) Sortir complètement les aérofreins et allonger la trajectoire d'approche si nécessaire.
+- C) Poursuivre l'approche sans changement, car un thermique est toujours suivi d'un courant descendant.
+- D) Rentrer les aérofreins et effectuer un virage doux pour sortir du thermique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En finale, l'engagement d'atterrissage est pris. Un thermique en finale provoquera un ballonné du planeur au-dessus de la trajectoire d'approche souhaitée, donc le pilote doit sortir complètement les aérofreins pour maintenir la trajectoire correcte et dissiper l'énergie supplémentaire. L'option A (rentrer les aérofreins pour exploiter le thermique) abandonne l'approche engagée à une phase critique, ce qui est extrêmement dangereux à basse altitude. L'option C suppose que les thermiques produisent toujours des courants descendants compensatoires, ce qui n'est pas fiable. L'option D (virer en finale) est dangereuse à basse altitude.
+
+### Q53: Vous atterrissez sur une piste en herbe peu après une averse. Que devez-vous attendre ? ^t70q53
+- A) Le planeur dévidera de la piste en raison de l'aquaplaning.
+- B) Le planeur freinera rapidement sur la surface mouillée sans avoir besoin du frein de roue.
+- C) Le planeur s'arrêtera nettement plus vite après le toucher des roues.
+- D) Une adhérence réduite des roues et un freinage moins efficace, entraînant un roulement au sol plus long.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'herbe mouillée réduit considérablement le frottement entre le pneu et la surface, entraînant un freinage moins efficace et un roulement au sol plus long. Le pilote doit planifier en conséquence une distance d'arrêt allongée. L'option A exagère — l'aquaplaning est principalement une préoccupation sur les pistes pavées, pas sur l'herbe. L'option B est incorrecte car les surfaces mouillées réduisent, et non améliorent, le freinage naturel. L'option C est fausse car une friction réduite entraîne un roulement plus long, pas plus court.
+
+### Q54: En volant tard dans la journée dans une vallée vers des pentes ombragées, quelle difficulté devez-vous anticiper ? ^t70q54
+- A) Des turbulences sévères.
+- B) De forts courants descendants.
+- C) Des difficultés à détecter d'autres aéronefs dans les zones ombragées.
+- D) Un éblouissement dû au soleil bas à l'horizon.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En fin de journée, les pentes ombragées créent des fonds sombres contre lesquels d'autres aéronefs deviennent extrêmement difficiles à repérer visuellement. Le contraste entre les zones ensoleillées et ombragées rend la détection visuelle particulièrement délicate — un aéronef dans l'ombre peut être presque invisible. Les options A et B peuvent survenir dans certaines conditions mais ne sont pas spécifiquement liées aux pentes ombragées en fin de journée. L'option D (éblouissement) est une préoccupation lorsqu'on regarde vers le soleil, et non vers les pentes ombragées.
+
+### Q55: Lors d'un vol de distance sans thermique disponible, vous décidez d'effectuer un atterrissage en campagne. Plusieurs champs semblent convenir. À quelle altitude votre choix définitif doit-il être fait ? ^t70q55
+- A) Lorsque vous pouvez identifier positivement la direction du vent.
+- B) Planeur à 300 m AGL ; motoplaneur à 400 m AGL.
+- C) Planeur à 400 m AGL ; motoplaneur à 300 m AGL.
+- D) Planeur à 300 m AGL ; motoplaneur à 200 m AGL.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le choix du champ doit être finalisé à 300 m AGL pour les planeurs et à 400 m AGL pour les motoplaneurs, afin de disposer d'une altitude suffisante pour un circuit correct, une approche et un atterrissage. En dessous de ces hauteurs, le pilote doit être engagé sur le champ choisi. L'option A ne précise pas d'altitude concrète. L'option C inverse les altitudes — les motoplaneurs ont besoin de plus de hauteur car ils peuvent tenter un redémarrage du moteur. L'option D fixe le seuil du motoplaneur trop bas pour un circuit sûr avec une tentative éventuelle de redémarrage du moteur.
+
+### Q56: Vous spiralisez à 1500 m AGL au-dessus d'un terrain plat sans autre planeur à proximité. Dans quelle direction devez-vous tourner ? ^t70q56
+- A) Tourner à gauche.
+- B) Il n'existe aucune règle concernant la direction.
+- C) Dans un rayon de 5 km d'un aérodrome, tourner à gauche ; sinon, libre choix.
+- D) Utiliser des virages en huit pour mieux exploiter le thermique.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'on spiralise seul sans autre aéronef dans le thermique, aucune réglementation n'impose une direction de virage spécifique. Le pilote est libre de choisir la direction qui lui permet le mieux de centrer le thermique ou qui lui convient le mieux. L'option A impose une obligation de virage à gauche qui n'existe pas. L'option C invente une règle basée sur la distance. L'option D (virages en huit) est une technique pour localiser le cœur du thermique, pas une méthode de spiralisation requise. L'obligation de tourner dans le même sens qu'un autre planeur ne s'applique que lorsque l'on partage un thermique.
+
+### Q57: Vous êtes en décollage en remorquage par avion par temps calme. La corde se casse juste en dessous de la hauteur de sécurité. Que faites-vous ? ^t70q57
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins, pousser le manche en avant et atterrir tout droit.
+- B) Pousser le manche en avant, larguer la corde (deux fois) et atterrir en sens inverse.
+- C) Établir un vol plané, larguer la corde (deux fois) et atterrir tout droit si possible.
+- D) Larguer immédiatement la corde une fois, puis établir un vol plané et atterrir tout droit.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Après une rupture de câble en dessous de la hauteur de sécurité, la séquence de priorités est : établir une assiette de vol plané sûre (pour maintenir la vitesse), larguer la corde restante en actionnant le dispositif de largage deux fois (pour s'assurer de la déconnexion), et atterrir tout droit si le terrain le permet. L'option A sort les aérofreins prématurément alors que chaque mètre d'altitude compte. L'option B tente un demi-tour qui est extrêmement dangereux en dessous de la hauteur de sécurité. L'option D largue avant d'établir le vol plané — l'assiette de vol plané doit être établie en premier pour garantir une vitesse de vol sûre.
+
+### Q58: Vous êtes prêt à décoller en planeur avec un fort vent de travers venant de la droite. Que faites-vous ? ^t70q58
+- A) Maintenir le frein de roue jusqu'à ce que le moteur atteigne la pleine puissance.
+- B) Pendant le roulage, tirer le manche complètement en arrière pour décoller le plus rapidement possible.
+- C) Demander à l'aide au sol de tenir l'aile droite légèrement plus basse pendant le roulage au décollage.
+- D) Demander à l'aide au sol de courir à côté du planeur jusqu'à ce que vous ayez assez de vitesse pour contrôler l'inclinaison.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un fort vent de travers venant de la droite, le vent aura tendance à soulever l'aile droite (au vent). En tenant l'aile droite légèrement plus basse au début du roulage, l'aide compense cette tendance au soulèvement, maintenant les ailes nivelées jusqu'à ce que les ailerons deviennent efficaces. L'option A fait référence à des procédures moteur sans rapport avec les planeurs. L'option B (tirer en arrière pour décoller rapidement) risque un décollage prématuré à vitesse insuffisante. L'option D est peu pratique et dangereuse — l'aide ne peut pas soutenir l'allure d'un planeur en accélération.
+
+### Q59: Lors d'un décollage en remorquage, l'accélération est clairement insuffisante. Que devez-vous faire lorsque le point d'abandon du décollage est atteint ? ^t70q59
+- A) Pousser légèrement le manche en avant pour réduire la traînée.
+- B) Larguer la corde de remorquage.
+- C) Tirer rapidement sur l'élévateur pour mettre le planeur en l'air.
+- D) Sortir les volets.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si l'accélération est insuffisante au point d'abandon, le décollage doit être interrompu en larguant immédiatement la corde de remorquage. Poursuivre le décollage à vitesse insuffisante risque de ne pas franchir les obstacles ou de sortir de la piste. L'option A pourrait réduire marginalement la traînée mais ne peut résoudre un problème fondamental de performance. L'option C (forcer l'aéronef en l'air) à vitesse inadéquate conduit à un décrochage immédiat ou à une rechute sur le sol. L'option D (volets) ne peut pas compenser une puissance de remorquage insuffisante.
+
+### Q60: Quel dégagement latéral par rapport à un relief doit être maintenu lors du vol d'un planeur ? ^t70q60
+- A) Une distance de sécurité latérale suffisante.
+- B) Au moins 60 m horizontalement.
+- C) Au moins 150 m horizontalement.
+- D) Cela dépend des conditions thermiques.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du vol le long d'un relief, une distance latérale minimale de 60 mètres doit être maintenue horizontalement par rapport au terrain. Cela offre une marge de sécurité contre les turbulences inattendues, les courants descendants ou les difficultés de contrôle à proximité du versant. L'option A est vague et non spécifique. L'option C (150 m) est plus conservatrice que l'exigence standard. L'option D (dépend des thermiques) introduit une condition variable qui ne définit pas un minimum clair.
+
+### Q61: À quoi faut-il prêter une attention particulière lors du vol en haute montagne ? ^t70q61
+- A) Le FLARM peut produire de faux avertissements en raison des réflexions sur les parois rocheuses.
+- B) La réception du signal GPS peut être perdue.
+- C) Le contact radio peut être interrompu.
+- D) Les conditions météorologiques peuvent changer bien plus rapidement que prévu (p. ex. développement soudain d'un orage).
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En haute montagne, la météo peut se dégrader à une vitesse extrême — des orages peuvent se développer en quelques minutes en raison du soulèvement orographique et des effets de chauffage locaux. Il s'agit du danger le plus important nécessitant une attention particulière. Les options A, B et C décrivent des inconvénients techniques qui peuvent parfois survenir en montagne, mais ils ne constituent pas le principal danger. Des changements météorologiques rapides peuvent piéger un pilote dans des vallées avec une visibilité se dégradant et des turbulences violentes, faisant de l'option D la préoccupation de sécurité critique.
+
+### Q62: Lors de l'installation du système d'oxygène dans un planeur pour un vol alpin, qu'est-ce qui est absolument essentiel ? ^t70q62
+- A) Que le joint en caoutchouc soit intact.
+- B) Que tous les composants en contact avec l'oxygène soient totalement exempts de graisse.
+- C) Que l'écrou de raccordement soit serré au couple correct.
+- D) Que le raccord de la bouteille soit bien graissé.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'oxygène sous pression peut réagir violemment avec les graisses et huiles à base d'hydrocarbures, pouvant provoquer un incendie ou une explosion soudaine. Tous les composants en contact avec l'oxygène doivent être totalement exempts de graisse. L'option D est directement dangereuse — graisser le raccord introduit un risque de combustion. Les options A et C décrivent de bonnes pratiques mais ne constituent pas l'exigence de sécurité absolument critique. L'incompatibilité oxygène-graisse est une règle fondamentale dans la manipulation des systèmes d'oxygène en aviation.
+
+### Q63: Après une collision, vous devez sauter en parachute à environ 400 m. Quand le parachute doit-il être ouvert ? ^t70q63
+- A) Après 2 à 3 secondes de chute libre.
+- B) Lorsque vous êtes stabilisé en chute libre.
+- C) Juste avant de quitter le planeur.
+- D) Immédiatement après avoir quitté le planeur.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** À seulement 400 m au-dessus du sol, il n'y a pas de temps pour un délai quelconque — le parachute doit être déployé immédiatement après avoir dégagé l'aéronef. La chute libre à la vitesse terminale couvre environ 50 m par seconde, de sorte que même 2 à 3 secondes de délai (option A) consommeraient 100 à 150 m d'altitude précieuse. L'option B (se stabiliser en chute libre) fait perdre des secondes critiques. L'option C (avant de quitter) risque d'emmêler le parachute avec la structure de l'aéronef. À 400 m, chaque seconde compte pour un déploiement et une décélération réussis.
+
+### Q64: En courte finale pour un atterrissage en campagne, vous réalisez que le champ est trop court. Que faites-vous ? ^t70q64
+- A) Réduire la vitesse au minimum pour raccourcir la distance d'atterrissage.
+- B) Continuer tout droit, déployer les aérofreins complètement et se préparer à un arrêt d'urgence en utilisant tous les moyens disponibles.
+- C) Maintenir le cap et atterrir avec les aérofreins complets pour s'arrêter le plus tôt possible.
+- D) Tenter un virage et chercher un champ alternatif plus long.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En courte finale, l'engagement d'atterrissage est pris — l'action la plus sûre est de continuer tout droit avec les aérofreins complets et d'utiliser tous les moyens disponibles (frein de roue, friction au sol) pour s'arrêter dans la distance la plus courte possible. L'option A (réduire à la vitesse minimale) risque un décrochage près du sol. L'option C est similaire à B mais moins précise sur l'utilisation de tous les moyens d'arrêt. L'option D (virer pour trouver un autre champ) à cette basse altitude et à cette courte distance est extrêmement dangereuse et susceptible de provoquer un accident en vrille-décrochage.
+
+### Q65: Que fait le FLARM ? ^t70q65
+- A) Il affiche la position précise des autres planeurs.
+- B) Il avertit de la présence d'autres aéronefs équipés du FLARM susceptibles de présenter un risque de collision.
+- C) Il recommande des manœuvres d'évitement lorsqu'un risque de collision existe.
+- D) Il affiche les positions exactes de tous les aéronefs équipés du FLARM ou d'un transpondeur.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** FLARM est un système d'avertissement du trafic qui calcule le risque de collision sur la base des trajectoires de vol prévues des aéronefs équipés du FLARM à proximité et émet des avertissements lorsqu'un conflit potentiel est détecté. L'option A surestime sa précision — il fournit des positions approximatives, pas précises. L'option C est incorrecte car FLARM avertit mais ne recommande pas de manœuvres d'évitement spécifiques. L'option D est fausse car FLARM ne détecte que d'autres appareils FLARM, pas les aéronefs équipés d'un transpondeur (cela nécessiterait un récepteur ADS-B séparé).
+
+### Q66: Lors d'un vol de distance, vous devez atterrir sur un aérodrome d'altitude sans vent. À quelle vitesse indiquée volez-vous l'approche ? ^t70q66
+- A) Environ 5 km/h de moins qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse au niveau de la mer de 1 % pour chaque 100 m d'altitude.
+- C) Environ 5 km/h de plus qu'au niveau de la mer.
+- D) La même qu'au niveau de la mer.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse indiquée (VI) pour l'approche doit être la même qu'au niveau de la mer car le badin tient déjà compte de la densité de l'air — il mesure la pression dynamique, qui détermine les forces aérodynamiques quelle que soit l'altitude. La VI de décrochage ne change pas avec l'altitude. Cependant, la vitesse vraie et la vitesse sol seront plus élevées en altitude en raison de la moindre densité de l'air. Les options A et C ajustent incorrectement la VI, et l'option B applique une correction de vitesse vraie à la VI, ce qui est inutile.
+
+### Q67: Que remarquez-vous lorsque vous entrez dans le centre d'un courant descendant ? ^t70q67
+- A) Une aile se lève et l'aéronef commence à virer.
+- B) Le nez cabre et vous ressentez une brève augmentation du facteur de charge.
+- C) Le planeur accélère et vous ressentez une augmentation du facteur de charge.
+- D) Le planeur ralentit et vous ressentez une brève diminution du facteur de charge.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque vous entrez dans un courant descendant, la masse d'air en descente réduit l'angle d'attaque effectif sur les ailes, diminuant temporairement la portance. Le pilote ressent une brève réduction du facteur de charge (une sensation de légèreté ou d'être soulevé de son siège) tandis que l'aéronef commence à descendre avec l'air descendant. La vitesse air du planeur diminue momentanément au début. L'option B décrit ce qui se passe lorsque l'on entre dans un courant ascendant (nez qui cabre, facteur de charge augmenté). Les options A et C ne décrivent pas avec précision l'effet symétrique de l'entrée dans un courant descendant.
+
+### Q68: Lors d'un vol de distance au-dessus du Jura, vous observez la formation de cirrus à l'ouest. Que devez-vous anticiper ? ^t70q68
+- A) Des thermiques plus faibles en raison d'un rayonnement solaire réduit.
+- B) Une instabilité accrue en altitude due à l'humidité, produisant des thermiques plus forts.
+- C) Une transition des thermiques convectifs vers des thermiques bleus (secs).
+- D) Les cirrus n'ont aucun effet sur les conditions dans la couche thermique.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les cirrus en altitude filtrent le rayonnement solaire incident, réduisant le réchauffement de la surface qui entraîne la convection thermique. Moins de réchauffement signifie des thermiques plus faibles et potentiellement une fin prématurée de la journée de vol à voile. C'est un signal d'avertissement important lors des vols de distance. L'option B est fausse — les cirrus n'augmentent pas l'instabilité aux altitudes thermiques. L'option C décrit un changement qui peut se produire mais n'est pas l'effet principal. L'option D sous-estime l'impact des cirrus sur la génération de thermiques par réduction du rayonnement solaire.
+
+### Q69: Quelle vitesse maximise la distance parcourue face à un vent de face ? ^t70q69
+- A) La vitesse de finesse min.
+- B) La vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+- C) Une vitesse supérieure à la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+- D) La vitesse correspondant à McCready zéro.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour maximiser la distance avec un vent de face, le pilote doit voler plus vite que la vitesse de meilleure finesse. Le vent de face réduit la vitesse sol, donc le planeur passe plus de temps en l'air et descend davantage avant de parcourir la distance au sol souhaitée. En augmentant la vitesse au-delà de la meilleure finesse, le pilote accepte une pente de vol plus raide mais gagne suffisamment de vitesse sol supplémentaire pour compenser la perte d'altitude. L'option A (finesse min) minimise le taux de descente mais couvre une distance minimale. L'option B (meilleure finesse) est optimale uniquement par vent nul. L'option D (McCready zéro) équivaut à la vitesse de meilleure finesse.
+
+### Q70: Lequel de ces champs est le meilleur pour un atterrissage en campagne ? ^t70q70
+- A) Un champ fraîchement labouré de 400 m.
+- B) Un champ de maïs de 300 m avec un vent de face régulier.
+- C) Une route de campagne de 250 m avec un fort vent de face.
+- D) Une prairie de 200 m venant d'être fauchée.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une prairie fraîchement fauchée de 200 m offre une surface lisse et ferme, exempte de végétation haute et d'obstacles cachés — idéale pour un roulement court dans un planeur, qui peut généralement s'arrêter en 100 à 200 m. L'option A (champ labouré) présente un sol meuble et des sillons profonds pouvant faire capoter le planeur. L'option B (champ de maïs) présente des cultures hautes qui masquent les dangers et créent des irrégularités de traînée. L'option C (route de campagne) est étroite, potentiellement bordée d'arbres et de lignes électriques, et présente des risques de collision avec des véhicules.
+
+### Q71: Pouvez-vous utiliser la radio de bord pour communiquer avec votre équipe de récupération sur la fréquence dédiée sans détenir une extension de radiotéléphonie ? ^t70q71
+- A) Seulement exceptionnellement
+- B) Oui
+- C) En règle générale, une fois par vol, peu avant l'atterrissage
+- D) Non
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les pilotes peuvent utiliser la radio de bord sur les fréquences dédiées au planeur pour communiquer avec leur équipe de récupération sans avoir besoin d'une extension ou d'une qualification de radiotéléphonie séparée. Ces fréquences sont désignées pour les opérations de planeur et permettent de telles communications opérationnelles. L'option A restreint inutilement cette pratique établie. L'option C invente une limitation de fréquence qui n'existe pas. L'option D interdit incorrectement une communication qui est couramment autorisée.
+
+### Q72: Sur un aérodrome à 1800 m AMSL, comment la vitesse sol se compare-t-elle à la vitesse indiquée à l'approche ? ^t70q72
+- A) Cela dépend de la température.
+- B) La vitesse sol est plus faible.
+- C) Elles sont identiques.
+- D) La vitesse sol est plus élevée.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** À 1800 m AMSL, la densité de l'air est inférieure à celle du niveau de la mer, donc la vitesse vraie (VV) est supérieure à la vitesse indiquée (VI) pour la même lecture de pression dynamique. Dans des conditions de vent nul, la vitesse sol est égale à la VV, qui dépasse la VI. Cela signifie que l'aéronef s'approche de la piste à une vitesse sol plus élevée que ce qu'indique le badin, nécessitant une conscience accrue d'un roulement plus long et d'une énergie d'atterrissage plus importante. Les options B et C sous-estiment l'effet de l'altitude-densité. L'option A est partiellement vraie mais le facteur dominant est l'altitude, pas la température.
+
+### Q73: Le port du parachute est-il obligatoire lors des vols en planeur ? ^t70q73
+- A) Oui, pour tous les vols au-dessus de 300 m AGL
+- B) Non
+- C) Uniquement lors de l'exécution de voltige
+- D) Oui, toujours
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le port du parachute n'est pas obligatoire pour les vols en planeur en vertu des réglementations en vigueur, bien qu'il soit vivement recommandé et qu'il s'agisse d'une pratique standard dans la communauté du vol à voile. La décision appartient au pilote. L'option A invente une exigence basée sur l'altitude. L'option C crée une restriction limitée à la voltige qui n'existe pas dans les réglementations. L'option D surestime l'obligation. Bien que pratiquement tous les pilotes de planeur portent un parachute, cela reste un choix de sécurité personnel, et non une obligation légale.
+
+### Q74: Lors d'un lancement au treuil, juste après avoir atteint l'angle de montée, le câble se casse près du treuil. Comment devez-vous réagir ? ^t70q74
+- A) Sortir immédiatement les aérofreins
+- B) D'abord établir l'assiette de vol normal, puis larguer le câble
+- C) Signaler l'incident par radio
+- D) Larguer immédiatement le câble, puis établir une assiette de vol normal
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Après une rupture de câble en phase de montée, la priorité immédiate est de larguer le câble restant (qui peut encore être attaché et risque de s'emmêler) puis d'abaisser le nez pour établir un vol plané sûr. Le largage du câble passe en premier car un câble pendant est un danger immédiat. L'option A (aérofreins en premier) fait perdre de l'altitude alors que chaque mètre compte. L'option B inverse la priorité — établir le vol plané avant de larguer pourrait laisser le câble s'emmêler. L'option C (appel radio) fait perdre des secondes précieuses lors d'une urgence critique.
+
+### Q75: Que faut-il prendre en compte lors d'un décollage en remorquage par fort vent de travers ? ^t70q75
+- A) L'avion remorqueur doit décoller avant le planeur
+- B) Après le décollage, corriger dans le vent jusqu'à ce que l'avion remorqueur décolle
+- C) La distance de décollage sera plus courte
+- D) Avant le départ, décaler le planeur du côté au vent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un décollage en remorquage par fort vent de travers, le planeur doit être positionné côté au vent de l'axe de l'aéronef remorqueur pour éviter d'être soufflé sur la trajectoire du remorqueur pendant le roulage. Ce décalage compense la dérive due au vent de travers pendant la phase d'accélération critique. L'option A indique une séquence normale qui ne traite pas spécifiquement le vent de travers. L'option B fournit une technique partielle mais ne traite pas la configuration avant le départ. L'option C est incorrecte car les vents de travers augmentent généralement légèrement la distance de décollage.
+
+### Q76: Vous entrez dans un thermique dans les basses terres à 1500 m AGL sans autre planeur à proximité. Dans quelle direction tournez-vous ? ^t70q76
+- A) Tourner à droite
+- B) Il n'existe aucune réglementation à ce sujet
+- C) Tourner à gauche
+- D) Effectuer d'abord un virage en huit pour localiser le meilleur ascendant
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque l'on entre seul dans un thermique, la technique recommandée consiste à effectuer d'abord un virage en huit (ou des virages en S) pour identifier la partie la plus forte du thermique avant de s'engager dans une direction de spirale. Cela permet au pilote de centrer le thermique efficacement. Les options A et C prescrivent une direction fixe sans d'abord localiser le noyau. L'option B est techniquement correcte sur le plan réglementaire mais ne décrit pas la meilleure pratique pour exploiter le thermique. La technique du virage en huit optimise le taux de montée en trouvant le centre du thermique avant de spiraler.
+
+### Q77: Quelle distance latérale par rapport à un relief devez-vous maintenir en planeur ? ^t70q77
+- A) Cela dépend des conditions d'ascendance
+- B) 150 m horizontalement
+- C) 60 m horizontalement
+- D) Une distance de sécurité suffisante doit être maintenue
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du vol à proximité d'un relief, le pilote doit maintenir une distance de sécurité suffisante tenant compte des conditions actuelles, notamment le vent, les turbulences et les caractéristiques du terrain. Il s'agit d'une exigence basée sur le jugement plutôt que sur une valeur numérique fixe. L'option A (dépend de l'ascendance) ne prend en compte qu'un seul facteur. Les options B (150 m) et C (60 m) précisent des distances fixes qui peuvent être appropriées dans certains contextes mais ne reflètent pas les directives générales, qui mettent l'accent sur une marge de sécurité adéquate adaptée aux circonstances.
+
+### Q78: Vous entrez dans un thermique à 500 m AGL sous un cumulus et observez un autre planeur spiralant 50 m au-dessus de vous. Dans quelle direction devez-vous virer ? ^t70q78
+- A) Vous êtes libre de choisir, car la séparation verticale est suffisante
+- B) Tourner dans le même sens que le planeur au-dessus de vous
+- C) Tourner dans le sens opposé pour pouvoir observer l'autre planeur depuis le bas
+- D) Vous ne pouvez pas utiliser ce thermique car la différence d'altitude est inférieure à 150 m
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque vous rejoignez un thermique occupé par un autre planeur, vous devez tourner dans le même sens pour maintenir une circulation prévisible et éviter les rencontres frontales dans le thermique. C'est une règle fondamentale de l'étiquette de thermique partagé. L'option A écarte incorrectement la nécessité d'une coordination directionnelle. L'option C (sens opposé) crée des trajectoires de convergence frontale dangereuses dans la zone confinée du thermique. L'option D invente une exigence de séparation verticale de 150 m inexistante pour le partage de thermique.
+
+### Q79: Lors d'un atterrissage en campagne, le planeur subit 70 % de dommages ; le pilote est indemne. Que doit-on faire ? ^t70q79
+- A) Soumettre un rapport écrit avec un croquis à l'OFAC dans les 3 jours
+- B) Notifier la police locale dans les 24 heures
+- C) Notifier immédiatement le bureau d'enquête via REGA
+- D) Signaler les dommages au bureau d'enquête sur les accidents dans la semaine suivante
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un planeur subit des dommages importants (70 %) sans blessures, le pilote doit notifier la police locale dans les 24 heures. Cela est classé comme un incident grave avec des dommages substantiels. L'option A (rapport à l'OFAC en 3 jours) ne répond pas à l'urgence requise. L'option C (notification immédiate via REGA) est la procédure pour les accidents impliquant des blessures ou des décès. L'option D (rapport dans la semaine) est trop tardive pour un incident impliquant 70 % de dommages à la cellule, qui nécessite un signalement rapide.
+
+### Q80: À quoi faut-il prêter une attention particulière lors du décollage sur une piste dure (revêtue) ? ^t70q80
+- A) L'aide au bout d'aile doit courir à côté plus longtemps que d'habitude
+- B) Tirer le manche en arrière plus longtemps que d'habitude
+- C) Appliquer le frein de roue modérément au début du roulage
+- D) Prévoir un roulement au sol plus long que la normale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une piste pavée dure, la roue principale du planeur a moins de résistance au roulement par rapport à l'herbe, ce qui signifie que la vitesse au décollage peut sembler similaire mais le roulement au sol peut être plus long car la roue offre moins de traînée pour aider l'aéronef à décoller. De plus, sur du bitume, l'aéronef peut plus facilement girouetter. L'option A n'est pas spécifique aux pistes dures. L'option B (tirer en arrière plus longtemps) pourrait provoquer un contact de la queue avec la piste. L'option C (frein de roue au début) entraverait l'accélération pendant la phase la plus critique.
+
+### Q81: Comment doit être effectué un atterrissage sur l'eau (amerrissage) ? ^t70q81
+- A) Juste avant le contact, cabrer brusquement le planeur pour toucher en queue en premier
+- B) Serrer les harnais, fermer la ventilation et atterrir à une vitesse légèrement supérieure à la normale
+- C) Sortir le train d'atterrissage, serrer les harnais et atterrir à la vitesse minimale avec les aérofreins rentrés
+- D) Effectuer un glissade pour réduire la force d'impact sur l'aile
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un amerrissage, le pilote doit serrer tous les harnais pour prévenir les blessures au contact, fermer les ouvertures de ventilation pour ralentir l'entrée d'eau, et approcher à une vitesse légèrement supérieure à la normale pour maintenir le contrôle et réduire le taux de descente. Le train doit être rentré (et non sorti comme dans l'option C) pour éviter que l'aéronef ne se retourne à l'entrée dans l'eau. L'option A (queue en premier) risque une violente cabrade au contact. L'option D (glissade) crée une entrée dans l'eau asymétrique qui pourrait faire capsuler l'aéronef.
+
+### Q82: Lors d'un atterrissage en campagne, comment peut-on le mieux déterminer la direction du vent ? ^t70q82
+- A) En observant le mouvement des feuilles dans les arbres
+- B) En observant les motifs formés par les vagues dans les champs de blé
+- C) En observant la dérive du planeur lors de spirales en perte d'altitude
+- D) En observant le comportement du bétail au pâturage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La méthode la plus fiable pour déterminer la direction du vent depuis les airs est d'observer la dérive du planeur lors de spirales en perte d'altitude — la direction dans laquelle l'aéronef dérive indique la direction sous le vent, et l'amplitude de la dérive indique la force du vent. Cette méthode fonctionne à toute altitude et en tout lieu. L'option A (feuilles d'arbres) nécessite d'être assez bas pour voir les feuilles individuelles. L'option B (motifs dans les champs de blé) peut être trompeuse et dépend du stade de croissance de la culture. L'option D (comportement du bétail) n'est pas un indicateur de vent fiable.
+
+### Q83: Vous volez rapidement le long d'un relief et repérez un planeur plus lent devant vous à peu près à la même altitude. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q83
+- A) Effectuer un demi-tour et revenir le long du relief
+- B) Dépasser du côté éloigné du relief
+- C) Établir un contact radio et demander les intentions de l'autre pilote
+- D) Piquer en dessous et remonter à une distance sûre, puis continuer
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour dépasser un planeur plus lent sur un relief, passez toujours du côté vallée (éloigné du relief) pour maintenir un dégagement de terrain sûr et éviter de coincer l'autre pilote contre le versant. Cela donne aux deux aéronefs une voie d'échappement vers la vallée. L'option A (demi-tour) est inutile et gaspille de l'énergie. L'option C (contact radio) prend trop de temps à organiser à la vitesse de rapprochement. L'option D (piquer en dessous) risque de voler dans la zone de rotor turbulent plus proche du terrain.
+
+### Q84: Au début d'un remorquage, le planeur passe sur la corde de remorquage. Que devez-vous faire ? ^t70q84
+- A) Appliquer le frein de roue pour mettre la corde en tension
+- B) Sortir les aérofreins
+- C) Larguer immédiatement la corde
+- D) Avertir le pilote remorqueur par radio
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le planeur passe sur la corde de remorquage détendue, la corde peut s'emmêler avec le train d'atterrissage, le patin ou d'autres structures sous l'aéronef. L'action immédiate est de larguer la corde avant tout emmêlement. L'option A (freinage) ne prévient pas l'emmêlement et peut l'aggraver. L'option B (aérofreins) est sans rapport avec le danger immédiat. L'option D (radio) fait perdre du temps lors d'une situation nécessitant une action instantanée — au moment où l'appel est passé, la corde peut déjà être emmêlée.
+
+### Q85: Les vols en planeur sont-ils autorisés dans l'espace aérien de classe C ? ^t70q85
+- A) Oui, à condition que le transpondeur du planeur transmette en permanence le code 7000
+- B) Oui, si le pilote détient l'extension de radiotéléphonie, a reçu l'autorisation du contrôle aérien et maintient une veille radio continue ; des exceptions sont publiées sur la carte de vol à voile
+- C) Oui, sans restrictions, en conditions VMC
+- D) Oui, à condition qu'aucun NOTAM ne l'interdise expressément
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les vols en planeur sont autorisés dans l'espace aérien de classe C sous des conditions spécifiques : le pilote doit détenir l'extension de radiotéléphonie, recevoir une autorisation du contrôle aérien avant d'y pénétrer, et maintenir un contact radio continu. Certaines exceptions pour les planeurs peuvent être publiées sur la carte de vol à voile. L'option A suppose que les planeurs sont équipés de transpondeurs, ce qui n'est pas le cas pour la plupart. L'option C ignore l'autorisation obligatoire du contrôle aérien et les exigences radio pour la classe C. L'option D implique incorrectement que la classe C est ouverte par défaut sauf si les NOTAM la restreignent.
+
+### Q86: Vous volez le long d'un relief sur votre droite et observez un planeur en sens inverse à la même altitude. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q86
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins et piquer pour une séparation verticale
+- B) S'écarter du côté opposé au relief
+- C) Monter car vous avez suffisamment de vitesse
+- D) Maintenir votre cap
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En rencontrant un planeur en sens inverse lors d'un vol de pente avec le relief à droite, la règle standard est de céder le passage en s'éloignant du relief (vers la vallée). Le pilote avec le relief à droite a la priorité en vol de pente (similaire à la règle de la route sur les routes de montagne). Cependant, les deux pilotes doivent prendre une action d'évitement en s'éloignant du relief. L'option A (piquer) risque une collision avec le terrain. L'option C (monter) peut ne pas être possible. L'option D (maintenir le cap) mène directement à une collision frontale.
+
+### Q87: Vous devez atterrir sur un champ de 400 m avec un vent arrière modéré. Comment volez-vous la finale ? ^t70q87
+- A) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse et un peu plus haut que pour un atterrissage face au vent
+- B) Normalement, en utilisant une glissade
+- C) Légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale et à une hauteur inférieure à celle d'un atterrissage face au vent
+- D) Plus vite que pour un atterrissage face au vent
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un vent arrière sur un champ limité, le pilote doit minimiser la vitesse sol au toucher pour réduire le roulement. Cela signifie voler légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale (pour maintenir une marge de sécurité tout en étant aussi lent que possible en l'air) et approcher à une hauteur inférieure pour accentuer l'angle d'approche par rapport au sol. L'option A (vitesse de meilleure finesse) est plus rapide que nécessaire et gaspille la longueur du champ. L'option B (glissade) traite le vent de travers, pas le vent arrière. L'option D (approche plus rapide) augmenterait la vitesse sol et le roulement sur un champ déjà court.
+
+### Q88: Quel est l'effet d'une piste en herbe détrempée sur un décollage en remorquage ? ^t70q88
+- A) La distance de décollage est la même que sur une piste sèche
+- B) La distance de décollage sera plus longue
+- C) Aucune de ces réponses n'est correcte
+- D) La distance de décollage sera plus courte car la surface est glissante
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une piste en herbe détrempée augmente la résistance au roulement car les roues s'enfoncent dans la surface saturée et molle, créant une traînée qui ralentit l'accélération. Cela entraîne une distance de décollage nettement plus longue, tant pour l'avion remorqueur que pour le planeur. L'option A ignore la différence substantielle entre les surfaces sèches et détrempées. Le raisonnement de l'option D est erroné — bien qu'une surface glissante puisse réduire le frottement sur une piste dure, l'herbe détrempée crée une aspiration et une traînée qui freinent l'accélération. L'option C est incorrecte car l'option B est la bonne réponse.
+
+### Q89: En approche vers un atterrissage en campagne, vous apercevez soudainement une ligne à haute tension en travers de votre axe d'atterrissage. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q89
+- A) Dans tous les cas, passer au-dessus de la ligne
+- B) Passer sous la ligne si passer au-dessus n'est pas possible et qu'il n'existe pas d'issue sûre
+- C) Effectuer un virage serré près du sol et atterrir parallèlement à la ligne
+- D) Passer sous la ligne aussi près que possible d'un pylône
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'action préférée est toujours de passer au-dessus de la ligne si possible. Cependant, si l'altitude est insuffisante pour franchir la ligne et qu'il n'existe pas d'autre trajectoire d'atterrissage, passer sous la ligne est acceptable en dernier recours — mais uniquement entre les pylônes où le fléchissement du câble offre un dégagement maximum, et non près d'un pylône (option D) où les câbles sont au plus bas. L'option A (toujours passer au-dessus) n'est pas possible lorsque l'altitude est insuffisante. L'option C (virage serré près du sol) risque un accident en décrochage-vrille. L'option D (près d'un pylône) est l'endroit où le dégagement est minimal.
+
+### Q90: Quelle est la procédure standard de sortie de vrille lorsque le fabricant n'en a pas spécifié ? ^t70q90
+- A) Pousser le manche complètement en avant, appliquer la gouverne de direction opposée à fond, puis sortir
+- B) Pousser le manche en avant, appliquer les ailerons en sens opposé à la vrille, puis sortir
+- C) Identifier le sens de la vrille, appliquer la gouverne opposée, maintenir les ailerons neutres, pousser légèrement le manche en avant, puis sortir
+- D) Identifier le sens de la vrille, appliquer les ailerons opposés, pousser le manche complètement en avant, gouverne de direction neutre, puis sortir
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La procédure standard de sortie de vrille est : (1) identifier le sens de la vrille, (2) appliquer la gouverne de direction opposée à fond pour arrêter la rotation, (3) maintenir les ailerons neutres (l'utilisation des ailerons en vrille peut être contre-productive), (4) pousser légèrement le manche en avant pour réduire l'angle d'attaque en dessous de l'angle de décrochage, et (5) une fois la rotation arrêtée, centrer la gouverne de direction et sortir du piqué. L'option A omet l'identification du sens de la vrille. L'option B utilise les ailerons, ce qui peut aggraver la vrille. L'option D utilise les ailerons au lieu de la gouverne de direction comme commande anti-vrille principale, ce qui est incorrect.
+
+### Q91: Sauf instruction contraire du contrôle aérien, comment doit être effectuée l'approche vers un aérodrome en planeur ? ^t70q91
+- A) Une approche directe doit être effectuée pour minimiser la perturbation du trafic
+- B) Au moins un tour complet au-dessus de la zone des signaux, avec tous les virages à gauche, doit précéder l'atterrissage
+- C) Les procédures d'approche publiées dans le guide VFR ou toute autre méthode appropriée doit être suivie
+- D) Au moins une demi-piste, avec tous les virages à gauche, doit précéder l'atterrissage
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'approche vers un aérodrome doit suivre les procédures publiées dans le guide VFR ou toute autre méthode appropriée. Un tour complet obligatoire au-dessus de la zone des signaux n'est plus systématiquement exigé.
+
+### Q92: Vous volez à grande vitesse dans un planeur rapide le long d'un relief et repérez un planeur plus lent devant vous à approximativement la même altitude. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q92
+- A) Établir un contact radio et vous renseigner sur ses intentions
+- B) Dépasser du côté vallée (éloigné du relief)
+- C) Effectuer un demi-tour et revenir le long du relief
+- D) Piquer en dessous, puis remonter à une distance sûre
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En vol de montagne, pour dépasser un planeur plus lent sur un relief, passez du côté éloigné du relief (côté vallée). Cette règle est cohérente avec la priorité de passage pour les planeurs en montée.
+
+### Q93: En vol, la gouverne de direction se bloque en position neutre. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q93
+- A) Consulter le manuel de vol
+- B) Augmenter la vitesse et continuer le vol
+- C) Sauter immédiatement en parachute
+- D) Contrôler le planeur avec l'élévateur et les ailerons ; effectuer des virages à faible inclinaison et atterrir immédiatement
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si la gouverne de direction se bloque en vol, contrôler le planeur avec l'élévateur et les ailerons. Effectuer des virages à faible inclinaison et atterrir immédiatement.
+
+### Q94: Au début d'un remorquage, le planeur passe sur la corde de remorquage. Que faites-vous ? ^t70q94
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins
+- B) Appliquer le frein de roue pour mettre la corde en tension
+- C) Larguer immédiatement la corde
+- D) Alerter le pilote remorqueur par radio
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le planeur passe sur la corde de remorquage, la larguer immédiatement est la seule action correcte.
+
+### Q95: La corde de remorquage se casse du côté du remorqueur avant d'avoir atteint la hauteur de sécurité. Comment le pilote de planeur doit-il réagir ? ^t70q95
+- A) Actionner immédiatement le dispositif de largage deux fois et atterrir tout droit dans le prolongement de la piste
+- B) Tirer le manche en arrière, larguer la corde et atterrir avec un vent arrière
+- C) Effectuer un virage à plat et atterrir en diagonale
+- D) Actionner le dispositif de largage deux fois et revenir atterrir sur l'aérodrome sans exception
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si la corde se casse du côté de l'avion remorqueur en dessous de la hauteur de sécurité : actionner le dispositif de largage deux fois (vérification) et atterrir tout droit dans le prolongement de piste. Éviter de virer.
+
+### Q96: Comment volez-vous la finale par fort vent de travers ? ^t70q96
+- A) Maintenir l'alignement sur la piste en utilisant uniquement les palonniers
+- B) Ne pas sortir les aérofreins complètement
+- C) Toujours approcher en glissade du côté opposé au vent
+- D) Prendre un cap dans le vent et augmenter la vitesse
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Par fort vent de travers en finale, prendre un angle de décrabbage dans le vent et augmenter légèrement la vitesse pour maintenir le contrôle. La glissade peut être utilisée mais le décrabbage est la méthode principale.
+
+### Q97: Comment doit être effectué un amerrissage ? ^t70q97
+- A) Juste avant l'atterrissage, cabrer pour toucher en queue en premier
+- B) Sortir le train d'atterrissage, serrer les harnais, atterrir à la vitesse minimale avec les aérofreins rentrés
+- C) Effectuer une glissade pour atténuer l'impact avec l'aile
+- D) Serrer les harnais, fermer la ventilation et atterrir à une vitesse légèrement supérieure à la normale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour un amerrissage : serrer les harnais, fermer la ventilation pour prévenir l'entrée d'eau, et atterrir à une vitesse légèrement supérieure à la normale pour un meilleur contrôle et éviter le cabrage.
+
+### Q98: Vous entrez dans un thermique sans autre planeur à proximité. Dans quelle direction tournez-vous ? ^t70q98
+- A) Il n'existe aucune réglementation à ce sujet
+- B) Tourner à gauche
+- C) Tourner à droite
+- D) Rechercher le meilleur ascendant en effectuant d'abord un virage en huit
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sans autre planeur dans le thermique, il n'existe aucune direction de spiralisation prescrite. Le pilote choisit librement.
+
+### Q99: En planeur, comment l'altitude est-elle exprimée ? ^t70q99
+- A) Uniquement en altitude (mètres ou pieds)
+- B) En niveaux de vol
+- C) Conformément aux réglementations des pays survolés
+- D) En hauteur au-dessus du sol
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'altitude en planeur est exprimée conformément au pays survolé (altitude en pieds ou en mètres selon les règles locales, ou niveaux de vol selon l'espace aérien). Les réglementations varient selon les pays.
+
+### Q100: Sans recommandation spécifique du fabricant, quelle est la procédure standard de sortie de vrille ? ^t70q100
+- A) Identifier le sens de la vrille, appliquer les ailerons en sens opposé, pousser le manche complètement en avant, maintenir la gouverne de direction neutre, puis sortir
+- B) Pousser le manche complètement en avant, appliquer la gouverne de direction opposée à fond, puis sortir
+- C) Pousser le manche en avant, appliquer les ailerons dans le sens opposé à la vrille, puis sortir
+- D) Identifier le sens de la vrille, appliquer la gouverne de direction opposée, maintenir les ailerons neutres, pousser légèrement le manche en avant, puis sortir
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Procédure standard de sortie de vrille : 1) Identifier le sens, 2) Gouverne de direction opposée, 3) Ailerons neutres, 4) Légère poussée du manche, 5) Sortir après arrêt de la rotation.
+
+### Q101: Des modifications peuvent-elles être apportées sur le site d'un accident où une personne a été blessée, au-delà des mesures de sauvetage essentielles ? ^t70q101
+- A) Oui, si l'exploitant de l'aéronef a formellement émis une telle instruction
+- B) Non, sauf si l'autorité d'enquête a formellement accordé une autorisation
+- C) Oui, l'épave doit être dégagée dès que possible pour éviter toute interférence de tiers
+- D) Oui, si seuls des dommages matériels se sont produits
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Toute modification du site d'un accident est interdite sans autorisation formelle de l'autorité d'enquête, à l'exception des mesures de sauvetage essentielles.
+
+### Q102: Le pilote perd le contact visuel avec l'avion remorqueur pendant un remorquage. Comment doit-il réagir ? ^t70q102
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins et attendre
+- B) Se préparer à un saut en parachute
+- C) Contacter le pilote remorqueur par radio et demander sa position
+- D) Larguer immédiatement la corde
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le pilote perd le contact visuel avec l'avion remorqueur, larguer immédiatement la corde. Continuer le vol en remorquage sans voir l'avion remorqueur est extrêmement dangereux.
+
+### Q103: Le port du parachute est-il obligatoire en planeur ? ^t70q103
+- A) Pour tous les vols au-dessus de 300 m AGL
+- B) Uniquement pour les vols acrobatiques
+- C) Oui, toujours
+- D) Non
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le port du parachute n'est pas obligatoire pour les planeurs en Suisse lors des vols normaux. Il est recommandé mais non réglementaire.
+
+### Q104: Vous devez atterrir sur un champ de 400 m avec un vent arrière modéré. Comment volez-vous la finale ? ^t70q104
+- A) Plus vite qu'avec un vent de face
+- B) Légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale et à une hauteur inférieure à celle avec un vent de face
+- C) À la vitesse de meilleure finesse, légèrement plus haut qu'avec un vent de face
+- D) Normalement, avec une glissade
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec un vent arrière sur un champ de 400 m : approcher légèrement au-dessus de la vitesse minimale et à une hauteur inférieure à celle avec un vent de face. Le vent arrière augmente la vitesse sol.
+
+### Q105: Vous voyez un motoplaneur avec son moteur en marche à la même altitude s'approchant par votre droite. Comment réagissez-vous ? ^t70q105
+- A) Sortir les aérofreins et céder le passage vers le bas
+- B) Maintenir votre cap, en gardant le motoplaneur en vue
+- C) Céder le passage vers la droite
+- D) Céder le passage vers la gauche
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un motoplaneur motorisé arrivant par la droite a la priorité (règle des routes convergentes). Vous devez céder le passage vers la droite pour le laisser passer.
+
+### Q106: Vous volez dans une zone réglementée spécifique au vol à voile (LS-R). Quelles distances de séparation des nuages devez-vous respecter ? (verticale/horizontale) ^t70q106
+- A) En dehors des nuages avec la visibilité en vol
+- B) 100 m verticalement, 300 m horizontalement
+- C) 300 m verticalement, 1500 m horizontalement
+- D) 50 m verticalement, 100 m horizontalement
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans une zone réglementée spécifique au vol à voile (LS-R), des distances réduites s'appliquent : 50 m verticalement et 100 m horizontalement par rapport aux nuages (au lieu des distances standard).
+
+### Q107: Quelle est la séquence correcte pour abandonner un planeur et sauter en parachute ? ^t70q107
+- A) Détacher le harnais, ouvrir la verrière, sauter, ouvrir le parachute
+- B) Ouvrir la verrière, détacher le harnais, sauter, ouvrir le parachute
+- C) Ouvrir la verrière, détacher le harnais, ouvrir le parachute, sauter
+- D) Détacher le harnais, tirer la poignée du parachute, ouvrir la verrière, sauter
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas de saut en parachute : 1) Ouvrir la verrière 2) Détacher le harnais 3) Sauter 4) Ouvrir le parachute. L'ordre est crucial pour la sécurité.
+
+### Q108: Comment doit être effectué un atterrissage sur une pente ? ^t70q108
+- A) Toujours face à la montée quelle que soit la direction du vent
+- B) Avec vent de gauche, en travers de la pente
+- C) Toujours en travers de la pente
+- D) En descente face au vent
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Atterrissage sur une pente : toujours en descente face au vent. Monter + vent arrière prolongerait dangereusement la distance d'atterrissage.
+
+### Q109: Quel type de terrain est particulièrement bien adapté à un atterrissage en campagne ? ^t70q109
+- A) Un grand champ plat, orienté face au vent, libre d'obstacles sur la trajectoire d'approche
+- B) Un champ de cultures hautes qui aiderait à freiner le planeur
+- C) Un grand champ fraîchement labouré montant en pente
+- D) Un champ proche d'une route et d'un téléphone
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le meilleur champ pour un atterrissage en campagne est un grand champ plat, orienté face au vent, libre d'obstacles sur l'axe d'approche.
+
+### Q110: Un atterrissage en campagne se termine par un tête-queue provoqué par un obstacle. Le fuselage se brise près de la gouverne de direction. Que doit-on faire ? ^t70q110
+- A) S'il s'agit d'un incident mineur, aucun rapport n'est nécessaire
+- B) Notifier immédiatement le bureau d'enquête sur les accidents d'aviation via REGA
+- C) Notifier le poste de police le plus proche
+- D) Notifier l'OFAC par écrit
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un fuselage brisé près de la gouverne de direction après un tête-queue = accident grave. Notifier immédiatement le bureau d'enquête sur les accidents (via REGA si nécessaire).
+
+### Q111: Un pilote de planeur doit effectuer un atterrissage en campagne en terrain montagneux. Le seul site d'atterrissage disponible est fortement incliné. Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être exécuté ? ^t70q111
+- A) Approcher en descente à vitesse accrue, pousser l'élévateur pour suivre le terrain pendant l'atterrissage
+- B) Approcher à la vitesse minimale avec un arrondi soigneux à l'arrivée sur le site
+- C) Approcher à vitesse accrue avec un arrondi rapide pour suivre le sol incliné
+- D) Approcher parallèlement à la crête dans le vent dominant
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un atterrissage en campagne sur un terrain incliné est inévitable, la technique correcte est d'approcher avec une vitesse accrue et d'effectuer un arrondi rapide et ferme pour adapter l'assiette en tangage du planeur à l'angle de la pente au toucher — cela minimise la vitesse verticale relative au contact. Atterrir en descente de la crête (option A) augmente considérablement la vitesse sol et la distance de roulement, risquant une collision avec le terrain en aval. Approcher parallèlement à la crête (option D) ignore le problème de la pente. La vitesse minimale (option B) ne laisse aucune marge d'énergie pour l'arrondi sur un terrain incliné.
+
+### Q112: En finale, vous réalisez que le train d'atterrissage n'a pas été sorti. Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q112
+- A) Rentrer les volets, sortir le train et atterrir normalement
+- B) Sortir immédiatement le train et atterrir comme d'habitude
+- C) Atterrir train rentré à vitesse supérieure à la normale
+- D) Atterrir train rentré, en touchant soigneusement à la vitesse minimale
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Si le train n'est pas sorti en finale et que l'altitude est insuffisante pour le sortir en toute sécurité, l'action la plus sûre est d'effectuer un atterrissage train rentré à la vitesse minimale, acceptant un atterrissage sur le ventre avec un toucher contrôlé et doux. Sortir le train à la dernière minute (option B) risque un train sorti de façon asymétrique ou partielle, ce qui est plus dangereux. Rentrer les volets pour gagner du temps (option A) modifie imprévisiblement la trajectoire d'approche à proximité du sol. Atterrir sans train à vitesse plus élevée (option C) aggrave les dommages et augmente le risque de blessure.
+
+### Q113: À quelle hauteur lors d'un lancement au treuil l'assiette de montée maximale peut-elle être adoptée ? ^t70q113
+- A) À partir de 150 m ou plus, lorsqu'un atterrissage tout droit après une rupture de câble n'est plus possible
+- B) À partir d'environ 50 m, tout en maintenant une vitesse de lancement sûre
+- C) À partir de 15 m, une fois qu'une vitesse d'au moins 90 km/h est atteinte
+- D) Immédiatement après le décollage, à condition d'avoir un vent de face suffisamment fort
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un lancement au treuil, l'assiette maximale de montée (forte inclinaison) ne doit pas être adoptée avant environ 50 m AGL, tout en maintenant une vitesse minimale de lancement sûre. En dessous de 50 m, une rupture de câble ne permettrait pas un atterrissage tout droit si le nez est trop relevé ; au-dessus de 50 m, l'altitude est suffisante pour récupérer. 15 m est trop bas et dangereux. 150 m est trop conservateur et gaspille l'énergie du lancement. Cabrer immédiatement après le décollage (option D) est extrêmement dangereux quel que soit le vent de face.
+
+### Q114: Quels facteurs doivent être pris en compte pour la vitesse d'approche et d'atterrissage ? ^t70q114
+- A) Altitude et masse
+- B) Vitesse du vent et altitude
+- C) Masse de l'aéronef et vitesse du vent
+- D) Vitesse du vent et masse
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La vitesse d'approche et d'atterrissage doit tenir compte à la fois de la masse de l'aéronef et des conditions de vent (y compris les rafales). Un aéronef plus lourd nécessite une vitesse d'approche plus élevée pour maintenir une marge de sécurité adéquate au-dessus du décrochage. Des vents plus forts — notamment les rafales — nécessitent un incrément de vitesse supplémentaire pour éviter une perte soudaine de vitesse air et de portance. L'altitude seule ne détermine pas directement la vitesse d'approche. Les options A, B et D sont incomplètes ; l'option C nomme correctement la masse et la vitesse du vent.
+
+### Q115: Comment pouvez-vous déterminer la direction du vent lors d'un atterrissage en campagne ? ^t70q115
+- A) Se souvenir du vent indiqué par la manche à air sur l'aérodrome de départ
+- B) Demander à d'autres pilotes joignables par radio
+- C) Observer la fumée, les drapeaux et les ondulations des champs
+- D) Utiliser les prévisions de vent du bulletin météo de vol
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors d'un atterrissage en campagne, les indices visuels dans l'environnement sont les indicateurs les plus fiables et immédiatement disponibles de la direction et de la force du vent : la fumée des cheminées, les drapeaux et les cultures en mouvement indiquent clairement le vent local actuel. Une prévision météo (option D) peut ne pas refléter les conditions locales précises à cet instant. Le contact radio avec d'autres pilotes (option B) est peu fiable et lent. La manche à air sur l'aérodrome de départ (option A) n'est pas pertinente pour les conditions sur le site d'atterrissage en campagne.
+
+### Q116: Quelle technique d'atterrissage est recommandée pour une zone herbeuse en descente ? ^t70q116
+- A) Aérofreins complets, train rentré et en décrochage
+- B) Généralement atterrir en montée
+- C) En diagonal vers le bas
+- D) Frein de roue appliqué, sans aérofreins
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur une zone herbeuse en descente, atterrir en montée signifie que l'aéronef monte vers le sol, ce qui décélère naturellement le planeur et raccourcit le roulement — c'est la technique recommandée. Atterrir en diagonal vers le bas (option C) risque un tête-queue. Utiliser le frein de roue sans aérofreins (option D) peut être inefficace ou provoquer un capotage sur terrain accidenté. Atterrir train rentré et en décrochage (option A) est dangereux et inutile.
+
+### Q117: Qu'est-ce qui doit être vérifié avant tout changement de direction en vol plané ? ^t70q117
+- A) Que le virage sera effectué de façon coordonnée
+- B) Que les objets non fixés sont sécurisés
+- C) Qu'il y a des nuages convectifs dans la zone
+- D) Que l'espace aérien dans la direction souhaitée est dégagé
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avant d'initier tout virage en vol, le pilote doit d'abord vérifier que l'espace aérien dans la direction souhaitée est dégagé de tout autre aéronef, obstacle et zone réglementée. Un virage coordonné (option A) est toujours souhaitable mais est secondaire par rapport à la surveillance visuelle. Les nuages convectifs (option C) et les objets non fixés (option B) ne sont pas des priorités de sécurité avant un changement de cap. L'anti-abordage par une surveillance visuelle appropriée est la préoccupation principale.
+
+### Q118: Avant un lancement au treuil, vous détectez un léger vent arrière. Qu'est-ce qui doit être pris en compte ? ^t70q118
+- A) Un maillon fusible de résistance inférieure peut être utilisé, car la charge sera moins importante
+- B) Le roulage jusqu'au décollage sera plus long ; surveiller la vitesse air
+- C) Tirer complètement le manche en arrière immédiatement après le décollage pour gagner de la hauteur supplémentaire
+- D) Le roulage jusqu'au décollage sera plus court car le vent arrière pousse par derrière
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un vent arrière lors d'un lancement au treuil signifie que l'aéronef a une vitesse air plus faible par rapport au sol à toute vitesse sol donnée, donc il faut un roulage plus long avant d'atteindre la vitesse de vol — le décollage prend plus longtemps et le pilote doit surveiller attentivement la vitesse air. Le vent arrière ne réduit pas la classe de résistance du câble requise (option A). Le vent arrière réduit la vitesse air effective, donc le roulage est plus long et non plus court (l'option D est incorrecte). Tirer le manche en arrière immédiatement après le décollage par vent arrière est dangereux (option C).
+
+### Q119: Lors de l'approche pour l'atterrissage par fort vent de travers, comment le virage base-finale doit-il être exécuté ? ^t70q119
+- A) Inclinaison maximale de 60 degrés, utiliser les palonniers pour s'aligner tôt sur la finale
+- B) Inclinaison maximale de 30 degrés, utiliser les palonniers pour s'aligner tôt sur la finale
+- C) Inclinaison maximale de 60 degrés, surveiller attentivement la vitesse et le fil de laine, corriger la trajectoire après tout dépassement
+- D) Inclinaison maximale de 30 degrés, surveiller attentivement la vitesse et le fil de laine, corriger la trajectoire après tout dépassement
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans le virage base-finale, un angle d'inclinaison maximal de 30° est recommandé pour maintenir la coordination du virage et éviter le risque de décrochage-vrille à faible vitesse. Le fil de laine (indicateur de glissade) et la vitesse doivent être surveillés attentivement car le vent de travers complique la géométrie du virage. Si l'aéronef dépasse l'axe de finale, une correction douce de trajectoire est effectuée après le virage — jamais une entrée brusque au palonnier pour forcer l'alignement, car cela risque un décrochage en glissade. Les options A et C autorisent jusqu'à 60° d'inclinaison, ce qui est excessif et dangereux à proximité du sol.
+
+### Q120: Lors d'un spiralage, un autre planeur vous suit de près. Que devez-vous faire pour éviter une collision ? ^t70q120
+- A) Augmenter l'inclinaison pour devenir plus visible pour l'autre planeur
+- B) Réduire l'inclinaison pour élargir le rayon de virage
+- C) Réduire la vitesse pour laisser l'autre planeur passer
+- D) Augmenter la vitesse pour se positionner à l'opposé dans le cercle
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsque deux planeurs spiralisent dans le même thermique à proximité étroite, le moyen le plus efficace de créer une séparation est d'augmenter la vitesse, ce qui augmente le rayon de virage et déplace le planeur le plus rapide à une position opposée dans le cercle (à 180°), créant la séparation maximale en toute sécurité. Réduire la vitesse (option C) resserre le rayon et réduit l'écart. Réduire l'inclinaison (option B) augmente également le rayon mais lentement. Augmenter l'inclinaison (option A) rend le planeur plus petit en profil mais ne résout pas le problème de proximité.
+
+### Q121: Quelles altitudes doivent être planifiées pour les phases du circuit d'atterrissage en planeur ? ^t70q121
+- A) 300 m par le travers du seuil et 150 m en finale
+- B) 500 m par le travers du seuil et 50 m après le virage final
+- C) 150 à 200 m par le travers du seuil et 100 m après le virage final
+- D) 100 m par le travers du seuil et 50 m après le virage final
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les hauteurs standard du circuit d'atterrissage pour un planeur sont d'environ 150 à 200 m AGL par le travers du seuil (vent arrière) et 100 m AGL après le virage final. Ces hauteurs donnent au pilote suffisamment de temps et d'espace pour planifier l'approche et utiliser les aérofreins efficacement pour un atterrissage précis. Les hauteurs inférieures des options D et B laissent une marge insuffisante pour les corrections ; les valeurs plus élevées de l'option A sont excessives pour les opérations en planeur non motorisé.
+
+### Q122: Comment doit être sécurisé un planeur lorsque des vents forts sont observés ? ^t70q122
+- A) Nez face au vent, sortir les aérofreins, verrouiller les commandes
+- B) Nez face au vent, lester et sécuriser la queue
+- C) Aile sous le vent au sol, lester l'aile, verrouiller les commandes
+- D) Aile au vent au sol, lester l'aile, verrouiller les commandes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Par vents forts, l'aile au vent (côté d'où vient le vent) doit être posée au sol pour empêcher le vent de s'y engouffrer et de renverser l'aéronef. L'aile est ensuite lestée avec un sac de sable ou un poids similaire, et les gouvernes (gouverne de direction) sont sécurisées pour éviter qu'elles ne soient endommagées par le battement aérodynamique. Pointer le nez face au vent (options A et B) présente une grande surface de fuselage aux rafales latérales et ne protège pas les ailes. Poser l'aile sous le vent au sol (option C) permet au vent de soulever l'aile au vent.
+
+### Q123: Qu'est-ce qui doit être pris en compte lors du franchissement des crêtes montagneuses ? ^t70q123
+- A) Ne pas survoler les parcs nationaux
+- B) Réduire à la vitesse minimale en raison des turbulences
+- C) Utiliser les oiseaux en spirale pour localiser les cellules thermiques
+- D) Anticiper les turbulences et augmenter légèrement la vitesse
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les crêtes montagneuses produisent des turbulences importantes sous le vent et dans la zone de rotor, mais des turbulences peuvent également survenir directement au niveau de la crête. Voler légèrement plus vite que la normale offre une meilleure efficacité des commandes et réduit le risque de décrochage dans les turbulences. Réduire à la vitesse minimale (option B) est dangereux car les turbulences pourraient provoquer un décrochage. Le survol des parcs nationaux (option A) est une question réglementaire, pas une considération de sécurité principale lors du franchissement de crêtes. Les oiseaux en spirale indiquent des thermiques (option C) mais n'abordent pas le danger des turbulences lors du franchissement de crêtes.
+
+### Q124: Que signifie un « buffeting » (tremblement) ressenti à travers le manche de profondeur ? ^t70q124
+- A) Centre de gravité trop en avant
+- B) Surface de l'aéronef très sale
+- C) Vol trop lentement — séparation du flux d'air sur l'aile
+- D) Vol trop vite — turbulences impactant les ailerons
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le buffeting ressenti à travers le manche de profondeur est un avertissement aérodynamique classique d'une approche de décrochage : le flux d'air décollé des ailes passe sur l'empennage, provoquant des vibrations de l'élévateur. Cela se produit à basse vitesse lorsque l'angle d'attaque dépasse l'angle critique. Un CG avant (option A) rend l'aéronef plus stable et résistant au décrochage. Un aéronef sale (option B) peut affecter les performances mais ne provoque pas directement de buffeting à l'élévateur. Les turbulences à grande vitesse (option D) seraient ressenties comme des vibrations générales de la cellule, et non spécifiquement à l'élévateur.
+
+### Q125: Quand un contrôle prévol doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q125
+- A) Une fois par mois ; pour les TMG, une fois par jour
+- B) Avant toute opération de vol et avant chaque vol individuel
+- C) Avant le premier vol de la journée et après chaque changement de pilote
+- D) Après chaque assemblage de l'aéronef
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un contrôle prévol (tour de l'aéronef et vérification cabine) doit être effectué avant le premier vol de la journée et après chaque changement de pilote, car chaque pilote est responsable de vérifier la navigabilité de l'aéronef avant de le piloter. Un contrôle après chaque assemblage (option D) s'applique aux aéronefs qui sont démontés entre les vols (planeurs en remorque) — il s'agit d'une exigence séparée. Les contrôles mensuels (option A) décrivent les intervalles de maintenance, pas les procédures prévol. L'option B (« avant chaque vol ») est trop large et serait contraignante ; c'est la règle du premier vol de la journée et du changement de pilote qui constitue la pratique standard.
+
+### Q126: Comment le terme « temps de vol » est-il défini ? ^t70q126
+- A) La durée totale depuis le premier décollage jusqu'à l'atterrissage final sur un ou plusieurs vols consécutifs.
+- B) L'intervalle depuis la mise en route du moteur pour le départ jusqu'à ce que le pilote quitte l'aéronef après l'arrêt du moteur.
+- C) L'intervalle depuis le début de la course au décollage jusqu'au toucher des roues final à l'atterrissage.
+- D) La durée totale depuis le premier mouvement de l'aéronef jusqu'à son arrêt complet après le vol.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'annexe 1 de l'OACI définit le temps de vol pour les aéronefs comme la durée totale depuis le moment où un aéronef effectue son premier mouvement sous sa propre puissance en vue du décollage jusqu'au moment où il s'immobilise définitivement à la fin du vol. Pour les planeurs (non motorisés), cela s'interprète comme allant du premier mouvement (par exemple, le début de la course au treuil ou du remorquage) jusqu'à l'arrêt de l'aéronef après l'atterrissage. L'option B décrit le temps bloc pour les aéronefs motorisés. L'option C est trop restrictive (uniquement la course au décollage et à l'atterrissage). L'option A décrit un concept de période de service, non un vol unique.
+
+### Q127: En finale, la tour signale : « Vent 15 nœuds, rafales 25 nœuds. » Comment l'atterrissage doit-il être effectué ? ^t70q127
+- A) Approche à vitesse minimale, en corrigeant les variations d'assiette avec des actions douces sur le palonnier
+- B) Approche à vitesse augmentée, en évitant l'utilisation des aérofreins
+- C) Approche à vitesse normale, en contrôlant la vitesse avec les aérofreins
+- D) Approche à vitesse augmentée, en corrigeant les variations d'assiette avec des actions fermes sur le palonnier
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec des rafales fortes (ici : vent 15 kt, rafales 25 kt — un écart de 10 kt), le pilote doit ajouter une marge de rafale à la vitesse d'approche normale pour s'assurer qu'une chute soudaine de vitesse due à une rafale ne réduise pas la vitesse en dessous de la vitesse de décrochage. Des actions fermes sur le palonnier sont nécessaires pour corriger les variations d'assiette causées par les conditions venteuses. La vitesse minimale (option A) ne fournit aucune marge de sécurité en cas de rafales. La vitesse normale sans correction de rafale (option C) est insuffisante. Éviter les aérofreins (option B) supprime la capacité à contrôler précisément le plan de descente.
+
+### Q128: Que signifie un buffeting ressenti à travers le manche de profondeur ? ^t70q128
+- A) Surface de l'aéronef très sale
+- B) Vol trop rapide — turbulence frappant les ailerons
+- C) Centre de gravité trop en avant
+- D) Vol trop lent — le flux d'air sur l'aile se décroche
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le buffeting ressenti à travers le manche de profondeur est l'avertissement tactile que l'aile s'approche de son angle d'attaque critique et que le flux d'air commence à se séparer — le buffet pré-décrochage. Il est causé par le flux d'air turbulent décroché de l'aile qui atteint l'empennage et fait vibrer la gouverne de profondeur. L'option C (CG trop en avant) rend l'aéronef stable en tangage et résistant au décrochage. L'option A (cellule sale) dégrade les performances mais ne provoque pas spécifiquement un buffeting de la gouverne de profondeur. L'option B (turbulences à grande vitesse) produit des vibrations générales de la cellule sans rapport avec le décrochage.
+
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+# Principes du vol
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Regarding the forces at play, how is steady-state gliding flight best characterised? ^t80q1
+- A) Lift alone compensates for drag
+- B) The resultant aerodynamic force acts along the direction of the airflow
+- C) The resultant aerodynamic force counterbalances the weight
+- D) The resultant aerodynamic force is aligned with the lift vector
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In steady (stationary) gliding flight, there is no thrust, so only two forces act: gravity (weight) and the total aerodynamic force (the vector sum of lift and drag). For the glider to be in equilibrium, these two must be equal and opposite — meaning the resultant air force exactly compensates gravity. Lift and drag are merely components of this single aerodynamic resultant; neither lift alone nor drag alone balances weight.
+
+### Q2: What happens to the minimum flying speed when flaps are extended, thereby increasing wing camber? ^t80q2
+- A) The minimum speed rises
+- B) The centre of gravity shifts forward
+- C) The minimum speed drops
+- D) The maximum permissible speed rises
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases wing camber, which raises the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max). From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)), a higher CL_max directly lowers the minimum flying speed Vs. This allows the aircraft to fly slower without stalling, which is why flaps are used during approach and landing. The maximum permissible speed typically decreases with flaps extended (not increases), because flap structures are not designed for high dynamic pressure.
+
+### Q3: After one wing stalls and the nose drops, what is the correct technique to prevent a spin? ^t80q3
+- A) Pull the elevator to restore the aircraft to a normal attitude
+- B) Deflect all control surfaces opposite to the lower wing
+- C) Push the elevator forward to gain speed and re-attach airflow on the wings
+- D) Apply rudder opposite to the lower wing and release elevator back-pressure to regain speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An incipient spin begins when one wing stalls before the other — the stalled wing drops, creating a yawing and rolling moment. The correct response is to apply rudder opposite the direction of yaw/lower wing to stop the rotation, and simultaneously release elevator back-pressure (or push forward) to reduce the angle of attack below the critical value, allowing airflow to re-attach and lift to be restored. Pulling the elevator (A) would increase AoA and deepen the stall; pushing alone (C) without rudder does not stop the yaw.
+
+### Q4: Which component is responsible for pitch stabilisation during cruise? ^t80q4
+- A) Ailerons
+- B) Wing flaps
+- C) Vertical rudder
+- D) Horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The lateral axis is the pitch axis (nose up/down). The horizontal stabilizer provides longitudinal (pitch) stability: it generates a restoring moment whenever the nose pitches up or down from trim, because its lift force changes with AoA at the tail. Ailerons control roll (longitudinal axis), the vertical rudder controls yaw (vertical axis), and flaps are high-lift devices, not stability surfaces.
+
+### Q5: What can happen when the never-exceed speed (VNE) is surpassed in flight? ^t80q5
+- A) Flutter and structural damage to the wings
+- B) Lower drag accompanied by higher control forces
+- C) Excessive total pressure rendering the airspeed indicator unusable
+- D) An improved lift-to-drag ratio and a flatter glide angle
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding VNE risks aeroelastic flutter — a self-reinforcing oscillation of the control surfaces or wings that can destroy the structure within seconds. Flutter onset speed is close to VNE. Structural failure of spars, attachments, or control surfaces may follow. The other options describe effects that do not occur at excessive speed: glide angle does not improve, drag does not decrease, and the ASI is designed to function at all normal and abnormal speeds.
+
+### Q6: What effect does a rearward centre of gravity position have on a glider's handling? ^t80q6
+- A) The aircraft becomes very stable in pitch
+- B) The aircraft becomes less stable in pitch and is harder to control
+- C) Roll control effectiveness increases
+- D) The stall speed increases significantly
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rearward CG reduces the restoring moment arm between the CG and the horizontal stabiliser, diminishing longitudinal (pitch) stability. In extreme cases the aircraft can become unstable in pitch — the pilot may be unable to prevent a nose-up divergence, especially during winch launch or in turbulence. The forward CG limit ensures adequate pitch stability; the aft limit ensures adequate controllability. A rearward CG does not increase stall speed or roll effectiveness, and it makes the aircraft less, not more, stable.
+
+### Q7: What purpose does the vertical tail fin (rudder assembly) serve? ^t80q7
+- A) Providing roll stability
+- B) Providing pitch control
+- C) Generating additional lift in turns
+- D) Providing directional (yaw) stability and control
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical tail fin (fin + rudder) provides yaw stability and yaw control. The fixed fin acts as a weathervane that generates a restoring yaw moment if the aircraft sideslips. The movable rudder allows the pilot to command deliberate yaw inputs for coordination, crosswind correction, or spin recovery. The horizontal stabiliser handles pitch; wing dihedral handles roll stability; the vertical tail does not generate lift in the conventional sense.
+
+### Q8: In a coordinated level turn at 60 degrees of bank, the load factor is approximately... ^t80q8
+- A) 1.0
+- B) 1.4
+- C) 2.0
+- D) 3.0
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a level coordinated turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle). At 60° bank, n = 1/cos(60°) = 1/0.5 = 2.0. This means the effective weight the wings must support doubles. Stall speed increases by a factor of √n = √2 ≈ 1.41, i.e. a 41% increase. This is why steep turns at low altitude are dangerous for gliders — the stall margin shrinks dramatically.
+
+### Q9: What is the relationship between aspect ratio and induced drag? ^t80q9
+- A) Higher aspect ratio increases induced drag
+- B) Aspect ratio has no effect on induced drag
+- C) Higher aspect ratio reduces induced drag
+- D) Induced drag depends only on airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is inversely proportional to aspect ratio (AR): D_induced ∝ CL² / (π × AR × e). A longer, narrower wing (high AR) produces the same lift with weaker wingtip vortices and therefore less induced drag. This is why gliders have very high aspect ratios — it is the primary design feature that maximises the lift-to-drag ratio and glide performance.
+
+### Q10: When the elevator trim tab is deflected downward, what is the resulting pitch tendency? ^t80q10
+- A) Nose-up
+- B) No change
+- C) The aircraft rolls
+- D) Nose-down
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A downward-deflected trim tab produces an upward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, pushing the elevator's trailing edge up and its leading edge down — this effectively deflects the elevator downward, creating a nose-up pitching moment. Trim tabs work by aerodynamic force to relieve the pilot of sustained stick forces; their deflection is opposite to the desired elevator deflection.
+
+### Q11: What does the polar curve of a glider depict? ^t80q11
+- A) The relationship between altitude and airspeed
+- B) The relationship between sink rate and airspeed
+- C) The relationship between lift and weight
+- D) The relationship between drag and altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The glider's speed polar plots the vertical sink rate (Vz, typically in m/s) against the horizontal airspeed (Vh). It is the fundamental performance diagram for a glider: it reveals the minimum sink speed (the lowest point on the curve), the best glide speed (given by the tangent from the origin), and inter-thermal cruise speeds (McCready tangents). All cross-country speed-to-fly decisions are based on this curve.
+
+### Q12: In straight and level flight, what happens to the required angle of attack as speed increases? ^t80q12
+- A) It remains constant
+- B) It increases
+- C) It decreases
+- D) It oscillates
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In level flight, lift must equal weight (L = W). Since L = CL × 0.5 × ρ × V² × S, when speed V increases the lift coefficient CL must decrease to keep lift constant. A lower CL corresponds to a lower angle of attack. Therefore, faster flight requires a smaller angle of attack, and slower flight (toward the stall) requires a progressively larger angle of attack.
+
+### Q13: What is the function of wing fences or boundary layer fences? ^t80q13
+- A) To increase the maximum speed
+- B) To reduce weight
+- C) To prevent spanwise flow of the boundary layer
+- D) To increase induced drag
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing fences are thin vertical plates on the upper surface of a swept or tapered wing that prevent the boundary layer from flowing spanwise (outward toward the tips). Without fences, the boundary layer migrates outward due to the pressure gradient, thickening at the tips and promoting tip stall. Fences confine the boundary layer to its local region, improving tip stall characteristics and aileron effectiveness at high angles of attack.
+
+### Q14: What happens to total drag at the speed for best glide ratio? ^t80q14
+- A) Total drag is at its maximum
+- B) Induced drag equals zero
+- C) Total drag is at its minimum
+- D) Parasite drag equals zero
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best glide ratio (maximum L/D) occurs at the speed where total drag is minimum. At this point, induced drag exactly equals parasite drag — any faster increases parasite drag more than induced drag decreases, and any slower increases induced drag more than parasite drag decreases. For a glider, this speed gives the flattest glide angle and the greatest distance per unit of altitude lost in still air.
+
+### Q15: What structural feature contributes to lateral (roll) stability in a glider? ^t80q15
+- A) Horizontal stabiliser
+- B) Vertical fin
+- C) Wing dihedral
+- D) Elevator trim
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings — is the primary design feature providing lateral (roll) stability. When a gust or disturbance causes one wing to drop, the dihedral geometry increases the angle of attack on the lower wing, generating more lift and creating a restoring roll moment toward wings-level. The vertical fin provides directional stability; the horizontal stabiliser provides pitch stability; and elevator trim sets a pitch reference, not a roll reference.
+
+### Q16: How does increasing altitude affect true airspeed (TAS) for a given indicated airspeed (IAS)? ^t80q16
+- A) TAS decreases
+- B) TAS stays the same as IAS
+- C) TAS increases
+- D) TAS fluctuates unpredictably
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is based on dynamic pressure (q = 0.5 × ρ × V²). At higher altitude, air density ρ is lower, so a given IAS corresponds to a higher TAS. The relationship is TAS = IAS × √(ρ₀/ρ), where ρ₀ is sea-level density. For glider pilots, this means that at altitude, the ground speed for the same indicated approach speed is higher, and the landing roll will be longer.
+
+### Q17: What does the term "load factor" describe? ^t80q17
+- A) The ratio of aircraft weight to wing area
+- B) The ratio of lift to weight
+- C) The ratio of drag to weight
+- D) The ratio of thrust to drag
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Load factor (n) is defined as the ratio of the lift generated by the wings to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In straight and level flight, n = 1. In a turn, n > 1 because extra lift is needed for the centripetal force. In a vertical pullup, n can exceed the design limits. The structural design of the glider is rated for specific load factor limits (typically +5.3g / -2.65g for utility category).
+
+### Q18: How does increasing aircraft weight affect the best glide ratio? ^t80q18
+- A) It improves the glide ratio
+- B) It worsens the glide ratio
+- C) It does not change the glide ratio
+- D) It depends on the wing configuration
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best L/D ratio is determined by the aerodynamic shape of the aircraft and is independent of weight. Increasing weight shifts the speed polar downward and to the right — the best glide speed increases (must fly faster) but the maximum L/D ratio stays the same. This is why adding water ballast in gliders improves inter-thermal cruise speed without changing the glide angle — only the speed at which that angle is achieved changes.
+
+### Q19: A glider is flying at the speed for minimum sink rate. If the pilot accelerates, what happens to the sink rate? ^t80q19
+- A) Sink rate decreases further
+- B) Sink rate remains the same
+- C) Sink rate increases
+- D) Sink rate oscillates
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum sink rate speed is the speed at the lowest point of the speed polar. Any speed change — faster or slower — from this point increases the sink rate. Accelerating beyond minimum sink speed increases parasite drag faster than induced drag decreases, resulting in a higher total drag and therefore a greater rate of descent. This is the trade-off in cross-country flying: flying faster covers more ground but at the cost of increased sink rate.
+
+### Q20: What is the effect of extending airbrakes (spoilers) on a glider? ^t80q20
+- A) Lift increases and drag decreases
+- B) Both lift and drag decrease
+- C) Drag increases and lift decreases
+- D) Both lift and drag increase
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airbrakes (spoilers) disrupt the smooth airflow over the wing surface, reducing the pressure differential and therefore reducing lift. Simultaneously, the raised spoiler panels create a large increase in drag. This combined effect steepens the glide path dramatically, which is precisely their purpose — to allow the pilot to control the approach angle and land precisely. Without airbrakes, gliders would float long distances due to their excellent L/D ratio.
+
+### Q21: In which flight condition is induced drag greatest? ^t80q21
+- A) High-speed cruise
+- B) Diving flight
+- C) Slow flight at high angle of attack
+- D) At the best glide speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL², and CL is highest in slow flight at high angle of attack (where the wing must generate maximum lift per unit of dynamic pressure). In a dive or at high speed, CL is low and induced drag is minimal — parasite drag dominates instead. At best glide speed, induced drag equals parasite drag but is not at its maximum. The slow-flight regime is where induced drag dominates total drag.
+
+### Q22: What is the primary function of an elevator trim tab? ^t80q22
+- A) To reduce control stick forces in sustained flight conditions
+- B) To increase the maximum speed
+- C) To improve lateral stability
+- D) To prevent flutter
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator trim tab allows the pilot to reduce or eliminate the stick force needed to hold a given pitch attitude in steady flight. By deflecting the trim tab, an aerodynamic force is applied to the elevator that counters the natural hinge moment, allowing hands-off or reduced-force flight at the trimmed speed. This reduces pilot fatigue on long flights and allows the pilot to concentrate on navigation and thermal exploitation.
+
+### Q23: What happens to stall speed in a turn compared to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q23
+- A) Stall speed decreases
+- B) Stall speed remains unchanged
+- C) Stall speed increases
+- D) Stall speed depends only on altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a turn, the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) exceeds 1, meaning the wings must generate more lift than in straight flight. The stall speed increases by the factor √n. At 45° bank, stall speed increases by 19%; at 60° bank by 41%. This is a critical safety consideration when thermalling near the ground — the steeper the bank, the closer the pilot is to the elevated stall speed.
+
+### Q24: What is the centre of pressure of an aerofoil? ^t80q24
+- A) The point where the aircraft's weight acts
+- B) The point of maximum thickness on the aerofoil
+- C) The point where the resultant aerodynamic force acts on the wing
+- D) The geometric centre of the wing planform
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of pressure (CP) is the point on the chord line where the resultant aerodynamic force (sum of all pressure and friction forces) can be considered to act. Unlike the aerodynamic centre, the CP moves with changing angle of attack — it moves forward as AoA increases and rearward as AoA decreases. This movement is one reason why the CG position must remain within limits: if the CP moves too far from the CG, pitch control may be compromised.
+
+### Q25: At what point during flight is parasite drag greatest? ^t80q25
+- A) During slow flight near the stall
+- B) At the minimum sink speed
+- C) At the best glide speed
+- D) At the highest permissible speed (VNE)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parasite drag is proportional to V² (dynamic pressure). The faster the aircraft flies, the greater the parasite drag. At VNE — the maximum speed — parasite drag reaches its peak within the normal flight envelope. At slow speeds near the stall, parasite drag is minimal while induced drag dominates. Parasite drag includes form drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag — all of which grow with the square of the airspeed.
+
+### Q26: What is the Bernoulli principle as applied to an aerofoil? ^t80q26
+- A) Pressure increases where flow velocity increases
+- B) Where flow velocity increases, pressure decreases
+- C) Lift is generated solely by the deflection of air downward
+- D) Drag is independent of velocity
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bernoulli's principle states that in a steady, incompressible flow, an increase in flow velocity is accompanied by a decrease in static pressure, and vice versa. Applied to an aerofoil, the air accelerates over the curved upper surface, creating a region of lower pressure compared to the lower surface. This pressure differential generates lift. While Newton's third law (downwash) also contributes to lift, the Bernoulli pressure distribution is the primary mechanism for conventional subsonic flight.
+
+### Q27: What is adverse yaw? ^t80q27
+- A) The tendency to pitch nose-down in a steep turn
+- B) Unwanted yaw in the direction opposite to the intended turn when ailerons are applied
+- C) The yaw caused by rudder deflection in crosswind
+- D) The yaw resulting from asymmetric thrust
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-going aileron (on the wing that rises) increases both lift and induced drag on that wing. The extra drag on the rising wing pulls the nose toward the descending wing — opposite to the intended turn direction. This is why coordinated use of rudder with aileron is essential, and why differential aileron deflection was developed as a design solution.
+
+### Q28: When does ground effect become significant? ^t80q28
+- A) At any altitude in calm air
+- B) Within approximately one wingspan of the ground
+- C) Only during take-off roll
+- D) Above 100 m AGL
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground effect becomes significant when the aircraft is within approximately one wingspan of the surface. The ground physically restricts the development of wingtip vortices and reduces the induced downwash angle, which effectively increases lift and reduces induced drag. Pilots experience this as a floating sensation during the landing flare — the glider wants to keep flying in ground effect, which can cause overshooting the intended touchdown point if not anticipated.
+
+### Q29: What does the term "washout" refer to in wing design? ^t80q29
+- A) The reduction of wing chord from root to tip
+- B) A decrease in the angle of incidence from wing root to tip
+- C) The cleaning procedure for wing surfaces
+- D) The loss of lift during a stall
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Washout is a deliberate design feature in which the wing's angle of incidence decreases progressively from root to tip (geometric washout) or the aerofoil section changes to produce less lift at the tip (aerodynamic washout). This ensures that the wing root stalls before the tip, preserving aileron effectiveness during a stall and making the stall behaviour more benign and recoverable. Washout is particularly important in gliders with their long, high-aspect-ratio wings.
+
+### Q30: What is the relationship between the angle of attack and the lift coefficient up to the stall? ^t80q30
+- A) Lift coefficient decreases as angle of attack increases
+- B) Lift coefficient increases approximately linearly as angle of attack increases
+- C) Lift coefficient remains constant regardless of angle of attack
+- D) Lift coefficient increases exponentially with angle of attack
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the pre-stall regime, the lift coefficient CL increases approximately linearly with angle of attack (AoA). The slope of this line is the lift curve slope (typically about 2π per radian for a thin aerofoil). This linear relationship continues until the critical angle of attack is reached, at which point flow separation causes CL to peak (CL_max) and then drop sharply — the stall. The linearity of the CL vs. AoA relationship is one of the foundational results of aerodynamic theory.
+
+### Q31: How does the flap position affect the stall speed? ^t80q31
+- A) Extending flaps raises the stall speed
+- B) Flap position has no effect on stall speed
+- C) Extending flaps lowers the stall speed
+- D) Retracting flaps lowers the stall speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases the wing's maximum lift coefficient (CL_max) by adding camber and, in some designs, wing area. From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (ρ × S × CL_max)), a higher CL_max yields a lower stall speed. This allows approach and landing at slower speeds with a shorter ground roll. Retracting flaps removes this benefit and returns stall speed to the higher clean-configuration value.
+
+### Q32: What is the purpose of a laminar-flow aerofoil? ^t80q32
+- A) To increase induced drag at low speeds
+- B) To maximise the region of turbulent boundary layer
+- C) To reduce skin friction drag by maintaining laminar flow over a larger portion of the wing
+- D) To improve stall characteristics at high angles of attack
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Laminar-flow aerofoils are designed with their maximum thickness further aft than conventional profiles, creating a favourable pressure gradient that keeps the boundary layer laminar over a larger portion of the chord. Since laminar boundary layers produce far less skin friction drag than turbulent ones, the overall profile drag is significantly reduced. Gliders exploit this extensively — clean laminar-flow wings are the reason modern gliders achieve glide ratios exceeding 50:1.
+
+### Q33: How does air density change with increasing altitude? ^t80q33
+- A) It increases linearly
+- B) It remains constant
+- C) It decreases
+- D) It increases then decreases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density decreases with altitude because atmospheric pressure drops and air expands. In the standard atmosphere, density at 5,500 m is roughly half the sea-level value. Reduced density means reduced dynamic pressure at a given TAS, which is why aircraft performance (lift and drag per unit TAS) degrades at altitude — the aircraft must fly faster in TAS to maintain the same IAS and lift.
+
+### Q34: What is the difference between static stability and dynamic stability? ^t80q34
+- A) They are the same concept
+- B) Static stability is the initial tendency to return to equilibrium; dynamic stability describes whether the subsequent oscillations damp out
+- C) Dynamic stability is the initial tendency; static stability describes long-term behaviour
+- D) Static stability only applies to pitch, dynamic stability only to roll
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability describes the aircraft's immediate response to a disturbance — whether restoring forces act to push it back toward the original equilibrium. Dynamic stability describes what happens over time: if the resulting oscillations decrease in amplitude and the aircraft eventually returns to its trimmed state, it is dynamically stable. An aircraft can be statically stable but dynamically unstable (oscillations grow), which is a dangerous condition.
+
+### Q35: What is the purpose of vortex generators on a wing? ^t80q35
+- A) To increase the laminar boundary layer region
+- B) To reduce the aircraft's weight
+- C) To energise the boundary layer and delay flow separation
+- D) To decrease the stall speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vortex generators are small tabs that protrude from the wing surface and create tiny vortices that mix high-energy air from outside the boundary layer into the slower boundary layer flow near the surface. This energised boundary layer can resist adverse pressure gradients more effectively, delaying flow separation and improving control effectiveness at high angles of attack. They trade a small increase in skin friction for a significant delay in stall onset and better aileron authority near the stall.
+
+### Q36: The lift formula L = CL x 0.5 x rho x V² x S contains several variables. Which of these can the pilot directly control in flight? ^t80q36
+- A) Air density (rho)
+- B) Wing area (S)
+- C) Airspeed (V) and, indirectly, the lift coefficient (CL) through angle of attack
+- D) All of the above
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot can directly change airspeed V (by adjusting pitch attitude) and indirectly change the lift coefficient CL (by changing the angle of attack, or by extending/retracting flaps). Air density ρ changes with altitude and temperature but is not directly controlled. Wing area S is fixed (except in rare variable-geometry designs or Fowler flap configurations). Airspeed and angle of attack are the pilot's primary tools for managing lift.
+
+### Q37: In which direction does the centre of pressure move as the angle of attack increases (pre-stall)? ^t80q37
+- A) Rearward along the chord
+- B) It does not move
+- C) Forward along the chord
+- D) Upward, away from the wing surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As angle of attack increases in the pre-stall range, the pressure distribution shifts such that the centre of pressure moves forward along the chord. This forward CP movement produces a nose-up pitching moment that must be counteracted by the tail — one of the main reasons aircraft require a horizontal stabiliser. At very low (or negative) angles of attack, the CP moves rearward. This CP migration is why the aerodynamic centre concept is useful: the moment about the aerodynamic centre stays constant regardless of AoA.
+
+### Q38: What determines the critical angle of attack at which a wing stalls? ^t80q38
+- A) The aircraft's weight
+- B) The altitude at which the aircraft is flying
+- C) The airspeed
+- D) The aerofoil shape (profile geometry)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical angle of attack is an inherent property of the aerofoil's geometric shape — it is the angle at which the flow can no longer remain attached to the upper surface and separates, causing the stall. It does not change with weight, altitude, or airspeed. What changes with those factors is the stall speed — the speed at which the wing reaches the critical angle of attack in level flight. The aerofoil geometry (camber, thickness, leading edge radius) determines how well the flow follows the upper surface at high angles.
+
+### Q39: How does induced drag behave with increasing airspeed in level flight? ^t80q39
+- A) It decreases continuously
+- B) It reaches a maximum, then decreases
+- C) It remains constant
+- D) It increases with increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag decreases monotonically with increasing airspeed in level flight: D_induced = 2W^2 / (rho * V^2 * S^2 * pi * AR * e). As V increases, induced drag continuously falls — there is no minimum/maximum within the normal flight envelope. Parasite drag (not induced drag) has the U-shaped curve described in B/C. Total drag has a minimum at the speed where induced drag equals parasite drag; induced drag itself simply decreases with speed.
+
+### Q40: Which types of drag make up total drag? ^t80q40
+- A) Induced drag, form drag, and skin-friction drag
+- B) Interference drag and parasite drag
+- C) Form drag, skin-friction drag, and interference drag
+- D) Induced drag and parasite drag
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard aerodynamic breakdown of total drag is: Total drag = Induced drag + Parasite drag. Induced drag arises from lift generation (wingtip vortices). Parasite drag is the collective term for all non-lift-related drag: form/pressure drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag. Options A and C list sub-components of parasite drag but omit induced drag or incorrectly combine them. Option B omits induced drag, which is a major component especially at low speeds.
+
+### Q41: How do lift and drag change when a stall is approached? ^t80q41
+- A) Both lift and drag increase
+- B) Lift rises while drag falls
+- C) Lift falls while drag rises
+- D) Both lift and drag fall
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the critical angle of attack is reached, flow begins to separate from the upper surface, starting at the trailing edge and progressing forward. Once past the critical AoA, the clean attached flow that generated lift breaks down — CL drops sharply. Simultaneously, the separated flow creates a large turbulent wake with very high pressure drag, so CD rises dramatically. The drag polar shows this clearly: the nose of the polar curves sharply as the stall condition is approached, with CL falling and CD rising.
+
+### Q42: To recover from a stall, it is essential to... ^t80q42
+- A) Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed
+- B) Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed
+- C) Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed
+- D) Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall recovery requires reducing angle of attack below the critical value so that airflow can re-attach to the upper surface and lift can be restored. The pilot must push forward on the elevator control to lower AoA, which also allows the aircraft to accelerate (or the pilot applies power if available). Increasing AoA (B, D) deepens the stall. Reducing speed (D, A) worsens the condition. Banking (A) increases the load factor, which raises the stall speed — exactly the wrong input.
+
+### Q43: During a stall, how do lift and drag behave? ^t80q43
+- A) Lift rises while drag rises
+- B) Lift rises while drag falls
+- C) Lift falls while drag falls
+- D) Lift falls while drag rises
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the definitive stall characteristic: lift collapses because boundary layer separation destroys the pressure differential that generates it, while drag rises dramatically due to the large turbulent separated wake. The CL vs. AoA curve shows CL_max at the critical angle, then a steep drop — this is the stall. The CD vs. AoA curve rises steeply through and beyond the stall. This combination (less lift, more drag) is why the stall is critical — the aircraft loses lift while simultaneously experiencing high drag that would further reduce speed.
+
+### Q44: The critical angle of attack... ^t80q44
+- A) Changes with increasing weight
+- B) Is independent of the aircraft's weight
+- C) Increases with a rearward centre of gravity position
+- D) Decreases with a forward centre of gravity position
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical (stall) angle of attack is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape — it is the AoA at which flow separation occurs regardless of airspeed, weight, or altitude. What changes with weight is the stall speed (Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max))), not the stall AoA. A heavier aircraft must fly faster to generate the same lift, but it still stalls at the same critical AoA. C.G. position affects pitch stability and control effectiveness but does not change the aerofoil's critical angle.
+
+### Q45: What leads to a lower stall speed Vs (IAS)? ^t80q45
+- A) Higher load factor
+- B) Lower air density
+- C) Decreasing weight
+- D) Lower altitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)): stall speed decreases when weight (W) decreases, since less lift is needed to maintain equilibrium. Lower density (B) increases true airspeed (TAS) stall speed but the IAS stall speed remains approximately constant (since IAS is based on dynamic pressure q = 0.5 * rho * V_TAS^2, which equals 0.5 * rho_0 * V_IAS^2). Higher load factor (A) effectively increases apparent weight (n*W), raising stall speed. Lower altitude means higher density, which slightly lowers TAS stall speed but does not significantly change IAS stall speed.
+
+### Q46: Which statement about a spin is correct? ^t80q46
+- A) Speed constantly increases during the spin
+- B) During recovery, ailerons should be kept neutral
+- C) During recovery, ailerons should be crossed
+- D) Only very old aircraft risk spinning
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spin recovery technique (PARE: Power off, Ailerons neutral, Rudder opposite to spin direction, Elevator forward) requires keeping ailerons neutral because using ailerons during a spin can worsen the rotation — applying aileron into the spin raises the inner wing's AoA (which may already be stalled) and can deepen the spin. Rudder opposite to spin direction stops the autorotation; forward elevator then reduces AoA to unstall both wings. Speed does not constantly increase in a spin — the aircraft reaches a stabilised spin with relatively constant speed and rotation rate.
+
+### Q47: The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil lies between... ^t80q47
+- A) The transition point and the separation point
+- B) The stagnation point and the centre of pressure
+- C) The transition point and the centre of pressure
+- D) The stagnation point and the transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The boundary layer development follows a specific sequence: flow is divided at the stagnation point, a laminar boundary layer develops from the stagnation point rearward, then at the transition point the laminar layer converts to turbulent, and finally at the separation point the turbulent layer detaches from the surface. The laminar boundary layer therefore occupies the region from the stagnation point to the transition point. Laminar flow aerofoils are designed to push the transition point as far aft as possible to minimise friction drag.
+
+### Q48: What types of boundary layers are found on an aerofoil? ^t80q48
+- A) Turbulent layer at the leading edge areas, laminar boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- B) Laminar boundary layer along the complete upper surface with non-separated airflow
+- C) Laminar layer at the leading edge areas, turbulent boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- D) Turbulent boundary layer along the complete upper surface with separated airflow
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The natural sequence of boundary layer development on an aerofoil runs from laminar (near the leading edge, where the flow is orderly and Reynolds number is low) to turbulent (further aft, after transition). The reverse sequence (turbulent first, then laminar) does not occur naturally. This forward laminar / aft turbulent arrangement is why designers place the maximum thickness of laminar-flow aerofoils further back — to extend the favourable pressure gradient that maintains laminar flow as far as possible before transition.
+
+### Q49: How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent one? ^t80q49
+- A) The turbulent boundary layer is thicker but produces less skin-friction drag
+- B) The laminar layer generates lift while the turbulent layer generates drag
+- C) The laminar layer is thinner and produces more skin-friction drag
+- D) The turbulent boundary layer can remain attached to the aerofoil at higher angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turbulent boundary layer, despite having higher skin friction drag than the laminar layer, has more energetic mixing that allows it to remain attached to the surface against an adverse pressure gradient at higher angles of attack. This is its critical advantage: it resists flow separation better. The laminar boundary layer is indeed thinner (C is partly correct about thickness) and has lower friction drag — but it separates more easily. This is why turbulators are sometimes used on gliders: deliberately triggering transition to turbulent flow to prevent laminar separation bubbles.
+
+### Q50: Which structural element provides lateral (roll) stability? ^t80q50
+- A) Elevator
+- B) Wing dihedral
+- C) Vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lateral (roll) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a roll disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral (the upward angle of the wings from horizontal). When a gust rolls the aircraft, the lower wing descends and its angle of attack increases (it meets more airflow), generating more lift and creating a restoring moment back to level. The vertical tail provides directional (yaw) stability; ailerons are roll control surfaces (not stability), and the elevator controls pitch. High-wing aircraft achieve similar lateral stability through the pendulum effect of the fuselage hanging below the wings.
+
+### Q51: What is the mean value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q51
+- A) 15° C/100 m
+- B) 100 m/sec²
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 1013.25 hPa
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s² (ISA value). This value is fundamental in aeronautics: it is used to calculate weight (W = m × g), load factor, and appears in all performance equations. 1013.25 hPa is the standard pressure at sea level, and 15°C/100 m is not a correct gradient (the standard lapse rate is 0.65°C/100 m).
+
+### Q52: During a sideslip, the permitted flap position is... ^t80q52
+- A) Flaps fully retracted
+- B) Flaps fully extended
+- C) Determined by the downward vertical component of the airspeed
+- D) Specified in the flight manual (AFM)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted flap position during a sideslip is always specified in the aircraft flight manual (AFM/POH). Some gliders prohibit extended flaps in a sideslip because the combination of flaps and deflected rudder can create dangerous aerodynamic couples or exceed structural limits. Others permit certain configurations. The only correct answer is therefore to consult the AFM.
+
+### Q53: An aircraft is said to have dynamic stability when... ^t80q53
+- A) It is able to stabilise automatically at a new equilibrium after a disturbance
+- B) It is able to return automatically to its original equilibrium after a disturbance
+- C) The rotation about the pitch axis is automatically corrected by the ailerons
+- D) The permitted load factor allows a positive acceleration of at least 4 g and a negative acceleration of at least 2 g with landing flaps retracted
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic stability describes the behaviour of an aircraft over time after a disturbance. A dynamically stable aircraft returns automatically to its original equilibrium (trim) after being disturbed — the oscillations progressively damp out. Answer A describes so-called "neutral or convergent stability towards a new equilibrium", which is different. Static stability (the immediate tendency to return) is a necessary but not sufficient condition for dynamic stability.
+
+### Q54: In severe turbulence, airspeed must be reduced... ^t80q54
+- A) To normal cruising speed
+- B) To a speed within the yellow arc of the airspeed indicator
+- C) To the minimum constant speed in landing configuration
+- D) To below the manoeuvring speed V_A
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The manoeuvring speed V_A (or turbulence penetration speed) is the maximum speed at which full control surface deflections or severe wind gusts will not cause the structural limit load to be exceeded. Below V_A, the wing will stall before the structural limit load is reached, thereby protecting the structure. In severe turbulence, speed must be reduced below V_A to avoid structural damage from gust dynamic loads.
+
+### Q55: In the ICAO standard atmosphere, the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere is... ^t80q55
+- A) 2°C/100 ft
+- B) 0.65°C/1000 ft
+- C) 0.65°C/100 m
+- D) 2°C/100 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere (ISA), temperature decreases by 0.65°C for every 100 m of altitude in the troposphere (or equivalently, 2°C per 1000 ft, or 6.5°C/1000 m). Answer B (0.65°C/1000 ft) is incorrect because the unit is wrong — this would be far too small a lapse rate. Answer C is the only correct one: 0.65°C per 100 m of altitude.
+
+### Q56: At approximately what altitude does atmospheric pressure fall to half its sea-level value? ^t80q56
+- A) 5,500 m
+- B) 6,600 m
+- C) 6,600 ft
+- D) 5,500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude in an approximately exponential manner. In the ICAO standard atmosphere, pressure is approximately half the sea-level pressure (1013.25 hPa → ~506 hPa) at an altitude of approximately 5,500 m (18,000 ft). This value is important for high-altitude physiology (oxygen requirements) and for density altitude performance calculations.
+
+### Q57: Density altitude always corresponds to... ^t80q57
+- A) The altitude at which atmospheric pressure and temperature correspond to those of the standard atmosphere
+- B) The true indicated altitude, after correction for instrument error
+- C) Pressure altitude, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature
+- D) The altitude read when the altimeter is set to QNH, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Density altitude is the altitude at which the aircraft would be in the ISA standard atmosphere if the air density were the same as in actual conditions. It is calculated from pressure altitude (altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa) corrected for the temperature deviation from ISA. A temperature higher than ISA gives a density altitude higher than pressure altitude, reducing aircraft performance. Answer A describes pressure altitude, not density altitude.
+
+### Q58: The simplified continuity law applied to an airflow states: *In a given period of time, a flowing air mass is conserved regardless of the cross-section it passes through.* This means that... ^t80q58
+- A) Airflow velocity decreases when the cross-section decreases
+- B) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section increases
+- C) Airflow velocity remains constant
+- D) Airflow velocity increases when the cross-section decreases
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation states that for an incompressible fluid, the volumetric flow rate Q = S × V is constant along a streamtube. If the cross-section S decreases, the velocity V must increase proportionally to keep Q constant. This principle, combined with Bernoulli's theorem, explains why air accelerates over the curved upper surface of an aerofoil, creating a low-pressure region that generates lift.
+
+### Q59: The aerodynamic resultant (drag and lift) depends on air density. When air density decreases... ^t80q59
+- A) Both drag and lift decrease
+- B) Both drag and lift increase
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both lift and drag are proportional to the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². When air density ρ decreases (at altitude or in high temperatures), q decreases for a given speed, which reduces both lift and drag. This is why aircraft performance deteriorates at high altitude or in great heat: the aircraft must fly faster (higher TAS) to generate the same lift, while the total aerodynamic resistance decreases for a constant indicated airspeed.
+
+### Q60: What is the name of the point about which, when the angle of attack changes, the pitching moment around the lateral axis does not vary? ^t80q60
+- A) Centre of symmetry
+- B) Centre of gravity
+- C) Aerodynamic centre
+- D) Neutral point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The neutral point (also called the aerodynamic centre at wing level, but "neutral point" for the complete aircraft) is the point about which the pitching moment remains constant regardless of changes in angle of attack. For a stable aircraft, the centre of gravity must be forward of the neutral point — the CG-to-neutral point distance constitutes the static stability margin. Note: for an isolated aerofoil, this point corresponds to the aerodynamic centre (at approximately 25% of the chord); for the complete aircraft, the neutral point accounts for the contribution of the horizontal stabiliser.
+
+### Q61: The angle between the aerofoil chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis is called... ^t80q61
+- A) The sweep angle
+- B) The angle of attack
+- C) The dihedral angle
+- D) The rigging angle (angle of incidence)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rigging angle (or angle of incidence) is the fixed angle, defined at construction, between the aerofoil chord line and the longitudinal axis of the fuselage. It does not vary in flight. It should not be confused with the angle of attack, which is the angle between the chord line and the direction of the relative wind (and which varies in flight according to attitude and speed). The rigging angle is chosen by the manufacturer so that the wing generates the necessary lift in cruise at an aerodynamically favourable fuselage attitude.
+
+### Q62: What does the transition point correspond to? ^t80q62
+- A) The lateral roll of the aircraft
+- B) The point at which CL_max is reached
+- C) The change from a turbulent boundary layer to a laminar one
+- D) The change from a laminar boundary layer to a turbulent one
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition point is precisely the location on the aerofoil where the boundary layer changes from a laminar regime (ordered flow, in parallel layers) to a turbulent regime (disordered flow, with transverse mixing). This transition is irreversible in the direction of flow: the change is from laminar to turbulent, never the reverse. The position of the transition point depends on the Reynolds number, the pressure gradient, and surface roughness — a favourable pressure gradient (acceleration) maintains laminar flow, while an adverse gradient (deceleration) triggers transition.
+
+### Q63: Geometric or aerodynamic wing twist results in... ^t80q63
+- A) Partial compensation of adverse yaw at low speed
+- B) A higher cruise speed
+- C) Progressive flow separation along the wingspan
+- D) Simultaneous flow separation along the wingspan at low speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing twist (geometric or aerodynamic) varies the angle of incidence or aerodynamic characteristics along the span, so that the stall does not occur simultaneously across the entire wing. The root (higher angle of incidence) reaches the critical angle first and stalls progressively, while the outer sections remain attached. This progressive (rather than simultaneous) flow separation improves stall safety and maintains roll control via the ailerons. The effect on adverse yaw (A) is indirect and marginal.
+
+### Q64: The profile drag (form drag) of a body is primarily influenced by... ^t80q64
+- A) Its mass
+- B) Its internal temperature
+- C) Its density
+- D) The formation of vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Form drag (pressure drag) is caused by the pressure difference between the front and rear of a body, due to boundary layer separation and the formation of vortices in the wake. The more intense the vortex formation (unStreamlined body, blunt trailing edge), the higher the form drag. This is why streamlined aerofoils have much lower form drag than a flat plate or sphere — their progressively converging shape allows the flow to remain attached longer, reducing the turbulent wake.
+
+### Q65: The aerodynamic drag of a flat disc in an airflow depends notably on... ^t80q65
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) The surface area perpendicular to the airflow
+- D) The tensile strength of its material
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The drag of a flat disc (non-streamlined body) is pressure drag: it depends primarily on the frontal surface area S exposed perpendicularly to the airflow, and on the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². The formula is D = CD × q × S. The material strength, the disc's own density, or its weight do not influence aerodynamic drag — this is purely a function of shape, projected area, and flow conditions.
+
+### Q66: On the speed polar, which tangent touches the curve at the point of minimum sink rate? ^t80q66
+> **Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/t80_q66.png]]
+> *A = tangent from the origin → best glide speed (best L/D ratio, best glide)*
+> *B = tangent from a point shifted to the right on the V axis → best glide with headwind*
+> *C = tangent from a point above the origin on the W axis (McCready) → optimal inter-thermal speed; touches the polar at the point of minimum sink rate*
+> *D = horizontal line at the level of minimum sink rate → indicates the minimum sink speed (Vmin sink)*
+
+- A) Tangent (A)
+- B) Tangent (B)
+- C) Tangent (D)
+- D) Tangent (C)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the speed polar (curve showing the sink rate W as a function of horizontal speed V), the point of minimum sink rate corresponds to the lowest point of the curve (the smallest value of W in absolute terms). The tangent at this point is a horizontal tangent — this is tangent (C) on the diagram. This point corresponds to the minimum sink speed, used to maximise flight time or to exploit thermals. The tangent drawn from the origin to the polar (tangent B) gives the speed for the best L/D ratio (best glide ratio).
+
+### Q67: Induced drag increases... ^t80q67
+- A) As parasite drag increases
+- B) With decreasing angle of attack
+- C) With increasing angle of attack
+- D) With increasing airspeed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL²: D_induced = CL² / (π × AR × e) × q × S. By increasing the angle of attack, CL increases, and therefore CL² increases, causing induced drag to grow. In level flight at constant speed, an increase in angle of attack corresponds to a lower speed, which further increases induced drag (D_induced ∝ 1/V²). By increasing speed (D), CL decreases in level flight and induced drag decreases. Parasite drag (A) varies independently of induced drag.
+
+### Q68: How does the minimum speed of an aircraft in a level turn at 45-degree bank compare to straight-and-level flight? ^t80q68
+- A) It decreases
+- B) It does not change
+- C) It increases
+- D) It depends on the aircraft type
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a horizontal turn at bank angle φ, the load factor is n = 1/cos(φ). At 45° of bank, n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0.707 ≈ 1.41. The stall speed in the turn is Vs_turn = Vs × √n = Vs × √1.41 ≈ Vs × 1.19. Therefore the minimum speed increases by approximately 19% compared to straight-and-level flight. This increase in stall speed during turns is a fundamental safety concept — tight turns at low altitude (such as on final approach) are particularly dangerous because the margin above the stall is reduced.
+
+### Q69: Adverse yaw is caused by... ^t80q69
+- A) The gyroscopic effect when a turn is initiated
+- B) The lateral airflow over the wing after a turn has been initiated
+- C) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes up
+- D) The increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes down
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw is caused by the asymmetry of drag between the two ailerons during turn entry. The aileron that rises (on the high-wing side) increases the local angle of attack, generating more lift but also more induced drag. This additional drag on the rising side creates a yawing moment towards the rising side — i.e. in the opposite direction to the turn (hence "adverse yaw"). Differential ailerons and spoiler-airbrakes are technical solutions to mitigate this effect.
+
+### Q70: True Airspeed (TAS) is the speed shown by the ASI... ^t80q70
+- A) Corrected for position and instrument errors only
+- B) Without any correction
+- C) Adjusted for air density only
+- D) Corrected for both position/instrument errors and air density
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True airspeed (TAS) is obtained from indicated airspeed (IAS) by applying two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors (yielding calibrated airspeed, CAS), then the density correction (accounting for the difference between actual air density and standard sea-level density). TAS is therefore the actual speed of the aircraft through the air mass. At high altitude, TAS is significantly higher than IAS because air density is lower.
+
+### Q71: The speed range authorised for the use of slotted flaps is: ^t80q71
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) Limited at the lower end by the bottom of the green arc
+- C) Indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally shown on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) Limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed (Va)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The slotted flap speed range is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally on the airspeed indicator (white or light green arc). It varies by glider type.
+
+### Q72: Wing tip vortices are caused by pressure equalisation from: ^t80q72
+- A) The lower surface toward the upper surface at the wing tip
+- B) The upper surface toward the lower surface at the wing tip
+- C) The lower surface toward the upper surface along the entire trailing edge
+- D) The upper surface toward the lower surface along the entire trailing edge
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing tip vortices (induced vortices) come from pressure equalization from the lower surface (high pressure) to the upper surface (low pressure) at the wing tip. This phenomenon generates induced drag.
+
+### Q73: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always the angle between: ^t80q73
+- A) The chord line and the relative airflow direction
+- B) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) The horizon and the general airflow direction
+- D) The longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Angle of attack is the angle between the chord line and the general airflow direction (relative wind direction). It is not the angle with the horizon nor with the longitudinal axis.
+
+### Q74: In the standard atmosphere, the values of temperature and atmospheric pressure at sea level are: ^t80q74
+- A) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 59 degrees C and 29.92 hPa
+- C) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 Hg
+- D) 15 degrees F and 29.92 Hg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure in ICAO standard atmosphere at sea level is 1013.25 hPa (millibars) = 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg). 29.92 hPa is incorrect.
+
+### Q75: Regarding airflow, the simplified continuity equation states: At the same moment, the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections. Therefore: ^t80q75
+![[figures/t80_q75.png]]
+- A) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- B) The air mass flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) The speed of the air mass does not vary
+- D) The air mass flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the line equidistant between the lower and upper surfaces. In the figure, it is represented by line B.
+
+### Q76: In a correctly executed turn without altitude loss, why is slight back-pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q76
+- A) To prevent slipping inward in the turn
+- B) To reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward sideslip in the turn
+- D) To slightly increase lift
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated turn without altitude loss, back pressure is needed to increase lift and balance centrifugal force (load factor > 1). Lift must compensate for both gravity and centrifugal force.
+
+### Q77: When the frontal area of a disc in an airflow is tripled, drag increases by: ^t80q77
+- A) 9 times
+- B) 1.5 times
+- C) 3 times
+- D) 6 times
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall occurs at a critical angle of attack (stall angle), regardless of airspeed. At this angle, airflow separation on the upper surface causes a sudden drop in lift.
+
+### Q78: Aerodynamic wing twist (washout) is a modification of: ^t80q78
+- A) The angle of incidence of the same aerofoil, from root to wing tip
+- B) The aerofoil profile from root to wing tip
+- C) The angle of attack at the wing tip by means of the aileron
+- D) The wing dihedral, from root to tip
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs at a determined angle of attack (critical angle), specific to each airfoil. It is not related to the nose attitude relative to the horizon.
+
+### Q79: What is the average value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^t80q79
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 15° C/100 m
+- C) 9.81 m/sec²
+- D) 100 m/sec²
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard gravitational acceleration at Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s². This is the ISA value used in all performance calculations.
+
+### Q80: The speed displayed on the airspeed indicator (ASI) is a measurement of: ^t80q80
+- A) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) The difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- C) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- D) The weathervane effect, where pressure decreases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspeed indicator reading is based on the difference between static pressure and total pressure (dynamic pressure). The ASI measures this difference via the Pitot tube and static port.
+
+### Q81: The horizontal and vertical stabilisers serve in particular to: ^t80q81
+- A) Control the aircraft around its longitudinal axis
+- B) Reduce the formation of wing tip vortices
+- C) Stabilise the aircraft in flight
+- D) Reduce air resistance
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal and vertical stabilizers serve primarily to stabilize the aircraft in flight (longitudinal and directional stability). Without them, the aircraft would be unstable.
+
+### Q82: When slotted flaps are extended, airflow separation: ^t80q82
+- A) Occurs at the same speed as before extending the flaps
+- B) Occurs at a higher speed
+- C) None of the answers is correct
+- D) Occurs at a lower speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When extending slotted flaps, airflow separation occurs at a lower speed, because flaps increase the maximum lift coefficient (CL max). Stall speed decreases.
+
+### Q83: The aerodynamic centre of an aerofoil in an airflow is the point of application of: ^t80q83
+- A) The weight
+- B) The resultant of all pressure forces acting on the aerofoil
+- C) The tyre pressure on the runway
+- D) The airflow at the leading edge
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic center is the point of application of the resultant of aerodynamic forces on a profile. It is distinct from the center of pressure (which moves) and the center of gravity.
+
+### Q84: Pressures are expressed in: ^t80q84
+- A) Pa, psi, g
+- B) Bar, Pa, m/sec²
+- C) Bar, psi, Pa
+- D) Bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pressures are expressed in bar, psi (pounds per square inch) and Pa (Pascal). g is an acceleration, not a pressure. Alpha (a) is not a pressure unit.
+
+### Q85: TAS (True Air Speed) is the speed of: ^t80q85
+- A) The aircraft relative to the ground
+- B) The aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass
+- C) The aircraft relative to the air, corrected for wind component and atmospheric pressure
+- D) The reading on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS (True Air Speed) is the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass. It is the actual speed through the air, corrected for atmospheric density.
+
+### Q86: Yaw stability of an aircraft is provided by: ^t80q86
+- A) Leading edge slats
+- B) The horizontal stabiliser
+- C) The fin (vertical stabiliser)
+- D) Wing dihedral
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yaw stability is provided by the fin (vertical stabilizer/rudder). Wing sweep contributes to roll stability, not yaw.
+
+### Q87: The trailing edge flap shown below is a: ^t80q87
+![[figures/t80_q87.png]]
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flap shown, extending from the wing with a slot, is a Slotted Flap. The slot channels air from the lower to upper surface, delaying separation.
+
+### Q88: The risk of airflow separation on the wing occurs mainly: ^t80q88
+- A) In straight climbing flight at high speed, in atmospheric turbulence
+- B) In calm air, in gliding flight, at the minimum authorised speed
+- C) During an abrupt pull-out after a dive
+- D) In straight level cruise flight, in atmospheric turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The risk of stall/separation appears mainly during an abrupt pull-out after a dive, as the angle of attack increases very rapidly and can exceed the critical angle before the pilot can react.
+
+### Q89: The drag of a body in an airflow depends notably on: ^t80q89
+- A) The mass of the body
+- B) The chemical composition of the body
+- C) The density of the air
+- D) The density of the body
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic drag depends notably on air density (ρ), since F_D = Cd × 0.5 × ρ × v² × A. The body's own density, chemical composition, and mass do not directly affect aerodynamic drag.
+
+### Q90: In the drawing below, the aerofoil chord is represented by: ^t80q90
+![[figures/t80_q90.png]]
+- A) M
+- B) K
+- C) H
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The chord line is the straight line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge. In the figure, it is represented by H.
+
+### Q91: The angle of attack of an aerofoil is always measured between: ^t80q91
+- A) The chord line and the direction of the relative airflow
+- B) The longitudinal axis and the general airflow direction
+- C) The longitudinal axis and the horizon
+- D) It varies depending on the pilot's weight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of attack (AoA) is defined as the angle between the chord line and the direction of the undisturbed relative airflow, making A correct. Option B is wrong because the longitudinal axis is a structural reference, not an aerodynamic one; AoA is measured from the chord line. Option C confuses AoA with pitch attitude, which relates the longitudinal axis to the horizon. Option D is nonsensical — AoA is a geometric and aerodynamic property entirely independent of the pilot's weight.
+
+### Q92: Given equal frontal area and equal airflow speed, what determines the drag of a body? ^t80q92
+- A) Its weight
+- B) Its density
+- C) Its shape
+- D) The position of its centre of gravity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When frontal area and airspeed are held constant, the remaining variable in the drag equation D = CD × 0.5 × rho × V² × S is the drag coefficient CD, which is determined entirely by the body's shape. A streamlined shape produces far less drag than a blunt one. Options A and B are wrong because weight and material density have no direct aerodynamic effect — drag depends on external geometry, not internal mass distribution. Option D is incorrect because the centre of gravity affects stability, not the aerodynamic drag coefficient.
+
+### Q93: What is the origin of induced drag on a wing? ^t80q93
+- A) The angle formed at the wing-fuselage junction
+- B) Airspeed
+- C) Pressure equalisation from the lower surface toward the upper surface
+- D) Pressure equalisation from the upper surface toward the lower surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag originates from the pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces. At the wingtips, air flows from the high-pressure lower surface around to the low-pressure upper surface, forming trailing vortices that tilt the lift vector rearward, creating induced drag. Option D reverses the flow direction — air moves from high to low pressure, not the other way. Option A describes interference drag at the wing root, and option B is too vague — airspeed alone is not the origin of induced drag.
+
+### Q94: What is the sea-level pressure in the ICAO standard atmosphere? ^t80q94
+- A) 29.92 hPa
+- B) 1012.35 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) It depends on latitude
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO International Standard Atmosphere defines sea-level pressure as exactly 1013.25 hPa (hectopascals). Option A gives 29.92, which is the equivalent value in inches of mercury (inHg), not hPa — 29.92 hPa would be an absurdly low pressure. Option B (1012.35 hPa) is simply incorrect. Option D is wrong because the ISA is a standardized model that does not vary with latitude, even though real atmospheric pressure does.
+
+### Q95: In the aerofoil diagram below, which line represents the mean camber line? ^t80q95
+![[figures/t80_q95.png]]
+- A) H
+- B) B
+- C) G + J
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the locus of points equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil, representing the profile's curvature. In this diagram, line B corresponds to this curved reference line. Options A, C, and D represent other aerofoil features such as the chord line, thickness distribution, or surface contours, not the mean camber line.
+
+### Q96: In a level turn without sideslip or altitude loss, why is back pressure on the elevator necessary? ^t80q96
+- A) To prevent an inward slip during the turn
+- B) To slow down and reduce centrifugal force
+- C) To prevent an outward skid during the turn
+- D) To increase lift so it balances both weight and centrifugal force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the load factor exceeds 1 because lift must counterbalance both the aircraft's weight and provide the centripetal force for the curved flight path. Back pressure on the elevator increases the angle of attack and thus total lift to meet this requirement. Option A is wrong because slips are corrected with rudder, not elevator. Option B is incorrect — the purpose is not to slow down. Option C is also wrong because skid prevention is a rudder function, not an elevator function.
+
+### Q97: A wing stall occurs: ^t80q97
+- A) At the red radial line on the airspeed indicator
+- B) When a critical angle of attack is exceeded
+- C) Following a reduction in engine power
+- D) Only when the nose is pitched excessively above the horizon
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stall occurs when the wing's angle of attack exceeds the critical value (typically around 15-18 degrees), causing flow separation from the upper surface and a sudden loss of lift. This is a fundamental aerodynamic principle independent of airspeed or attitude. Option A is wrong because the red line (VNE) relates to structural speed limits, not stall. Option C is incorrect — reducing power alone does not cause a stall if AoA remains below critical. Option D is false because a stall can occur at any pitch attitude or airspeed, as long as the critical AoA is exceeded.
+
+### Q98: At what condition does airflow separation from an aerofoil occur? ^t80q98
+- A) Only at a specific aircraft altitude
+- B) Only at a given nose position relative to the horizon
+- C) Simultaneously across the entire span
+- D) At a specific angle of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs when the angle of attack reaches the critical stall angle, which is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape. Option A is wrong because stall AoA is independent of altitude. Option B confuses pitch attitude with angle of attack — a wing can stall at any nose position. Option C is incorrect because, thanks to wing design features like washout, the stall typically progresses from root to tip rather than occurring simultaneously across the entire span.
+
+### Q99: What is the mean gravitational acceleration at the surface of the Earth? ^t80q99
+- A) 9.81 m/sec2
+- B) 100 m/sec2
+- C) 1013.5 hPa
+- D) 15° C/100 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at sea level is 9.81 m/s², used throughout aviation for weight, load factor, and performance calculations. Option B (100 m/s²) is roughly ten times too large. Option C (1013.5 hPa) is a pressure value close to the ISA sea-level pressure, not an acceleration. Option D (15°C/100 m) resembles a temperature lapse rate format but is far too high — the ISA lapse rate is 0.65°C per 100 m.
+
+### Q100: True Airspeed (TAS) is obtained from the airspeed indicator (ASI) reading by: ^t80q100
+- A) No corrections at all
+- B) Correcting for position and instrument errors
+- C) Applying corrections for both position/instrument errors and atmospheric density
+- D) Adjusting for atmospheric density alone
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS is derived from the ASI reading (IAS) through two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors are removed to obtain calibrated airspeed (CAS), then a density correction accounts for the difference between actual air density and ISA sea-level density. Option A is wrong because uncorrected IAS does not equal TAS. Option B yields only CAS, not TAS. Option D omits the instrument/position error correction, which is always the first step.
+
+### Q101: A shift of the centre of gravity is caused by: ^t80q101
+- A) Changing the angle of attack
+- B) Moving the load
+- C) Changing the angle of incidence
+- D) Changing the position of the aerodynamic centre
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity (CG) is determined by the distribution of mass within the aircraft, so only physically moving mass — such as shifting ballast, passengers, or baggage — changes it. Option A is wrong because changing angle of attack alters aerodynamic forces, not mass distribution. Option C is incorrect because the angle of incidence is a fixed structural dimension. Option D is wrong because the aerodynamic centre is a property of the wing shape, not of the aircraft's mass distribution.
+
+### Q102: The high-lift device shown in the diagram is a: ^t80q102
+![[figures/t80_q102.png]]
+- A) Plain Flap
+- B) Split Flap
+- C) Slotted Flap
+- D) Fowler
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Fowler flap moves rearward and downward, simultaneously increasing both wing area and camber, making it the most effective type of trailing-edge flap. The diagram shows this characteristic rearward extension. A plain flap (A) simply hinges downward without moving aft. A split flap (B) deflects only the lower surface panel. A slotted flap (C) opens a gap but does not significantly increase wing area like the Fowler design.
+
+### Q103: The resultant of all aerodynamic forces on a wing profile acts through the: ^t80q103
+- A) Centre of gravity
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Aerodynamic centre
+- D) Centre of symmetry
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic centre is the point on the aerofoil through which the resultant of all aerodynamic pressure forces (lift and drag combined) is considered to act, and about which the pitching moment coefficient remains approximately constant with changes in angle of attack, located near the quarter-chord point. Option A is wrong because the centre of gravity is where weight acts, not aerodynamic forces. Option B is incorrect because the stagnation point is where airflow velocity is zero at the leading edge. Option D is not a standard aerodynamic term.
+
+### Q104: At approximately what altitude is the air density half of its sea-level value? ^t80q104
+- A) 2,000 ft
+- B) 20,000 metres
+- C) 2,000 metres
+- D) 6,600 metres
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere, air density decreases approximately exponentially with altitude and reaches half its sea-level value at roughly 6,600 m (about 21,600 ft). Option A (2,000 ft) is far too low — density barely changes at that altitude. Option B (20,000 m) is in the stratosphere, where density is far below half. Option C (2,000 m) is also too low — density there is still about 80% of the sea-level value.
+
+### Q105: The airspeed indicator (ASI) reading is based on a measurement of: ^t80q105
+- A) The weathervane effect where pressure decreases
+- B) The difference between total pressure and static pressure
+- C) Total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- D) Static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI measures dynamic pressure, which is the difference between total (pitot) pressure and static pressure: q = p_total - p_static = 0.5 × rho × V². This differential measurement directly indicates airspeed. Option A is nonsensical — a weathervane measures wind direction, not pressure. Option C is wrong because measuring only total pressure without subtracting static pressure gives no speed information. Option D is also incorrect because static pressure alone tells you only about altitude, not airspeed.
+
+### Q106: Roll stability is influenced by: ^t80q106
+- A) The use of leading edge slats
+- B) Rotations around the lateral axis
+- C) The action of the horizontal stabiliser
+- D) Wing sweep and dihedral
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Roll (lateral) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral and wing sweep, both of which create restoring roll moments when the aircraft sideslips after a bank disturbance. Option A is wrong because leading-edge slats are high-lift devices that delay stall, not stability features. Option B describes pitch motion, not roll stability. Option C is incorrect because the horizontal stabiliser provides pitch (longitudinal) stability, not roll stability.
+
+### Q107: The speed range for operating slotted flaps: ^t80q107
+- A) Is without any upper limit
+- B) Is limited at the upper end by the manoeuvring speed
+- C) Is published in the Flight Manual (AFM)
+- D) Is limited at the lower end by the red radial line on the ASI
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted speed range for flap operation varies between aircraft types and is always specified in the Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM), typically also indicated on the ASI as a white arc. Option A is dangerously wrong — flaps have structural speed limits. Option B is incorrect because the upper flap speed (VFE) is typically different from the manoeuvring speed (VA). Option D is wrong because the red radial line is VNE (never-exceed speed), which has nothing to do with the lower flap speed limit.
+
+### Q108: When the wing's angle of incidence is larger at the root than at the tip, this is called: ^t80q108
+- A) Aspect ratio
+- B) Aerodynamic twist
+- C) Geometric twist (washout)
+- D) Interference compensation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geometric twist (washout) is a physical twist built into the wing so that the angle of incidence progressively decreases from root to tip. This ensures the root stalls first, preserving aileron effectiveness near the tips. Option A (aspect ratio) is the span-to-chord ratio. Option B (aerodynamic twist) achieves a similar stall progression by using different aerofoil profiles along the span rather than physical twist. Option D (interference compensation) is not a standard aerodynamic term for wing twist.
+
+### Q109: Barometric pressure in the Earth's atmosphere has the characteristic of: ^t80q109
+- A) Decreasing linearly with increasing altitude
+- B) Remaining constant
+- C) Decreasing in the troposphere then increasing in the stratosphere
+- D) Decreasing exponentially with increasing altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure follows an approximately exponential decay with altitude, as described by the barometric formula. Each equal altitude increment reduces pressure by the same percentage, not the same absolute amount. Option A is wrong because the relationship is exponential, not linear. Option B is obviously false — pressure clearly drops with altitude. Option C is incorrect because pressure continues to decrease in the stratosphere; it is temperature, not pressure, that stabilises or increases in the stratosphere.
+
+### Q110: The simplified continuity equation says the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections at the same instant. Therefore: ^t80q110
+- A) The air speed does not vary
+- B) Air flows at a lower speed through a larger cross-section
+- C) Air flows at a higher speed through a larger cross-section
+- D) Air flows at a lower speed through a smaller cross-section
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation for incompressible flow states A1 × V1 = A2 × V2 (area times velocity is constant). If the cross-section increases, velocity must decrease proportionally to maintain the same mass flow rate. Option A is wrong because velocity does change with cross-section. Option C reverses the relationship — velocity decreases, not increases, with a larger cross-section. Option D also reverses it — velocity increases through a smaller section, not decreases.
+
+### Q111: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 4 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q111
+- A) Stagnation point
+- B) Separation point
+- C) Centre of pressure
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 4 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) marks the separation point, where the boundary layer detaches from the upper wing surface due to an adverse pressure gradient, forming a turbulent wake behind it. Option A is wrong because the stagnation point is at the leading edge (point 1). Option C is incorrect because the centre of pressure is a theoretical force application point, not a boundary layer feature. Option D is wrong because the transition point (laminar to turbulent) occurs further forward on the surface.
+
+### Q112: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 1 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q112
+- A) Transition point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Stagnation point
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) is the stagnation point at the leading edge, where the incoming airflow divides into upper and lower streams, velocity is zero, and static pressure reaches its maximum. Option A is wrong because the transition point occurs further aft where laminar flow becomes turbulent. Option B is incorrect because the centre of pressure is a resultant force point, not a physical flow location on the leading edge.
+
+### Q113: What constructive feature is depicted in the figure? See figure (PFA-006) L: Lift Siehe Anlage 4 ^t80q113
+- A) Directional stability achieved through lift generation
+- B) Longitudinal stability through wing dihedral
+- C) Lateral stability provided by wing dihedral
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The figure shows wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings relative to the horizontal plane — which provides lateral (roll) stability. When one wing drops in a sideslip, the lower wing experiences a higher effective angle of attack, generating more lift and producing a restoring roll moment. Option A is wrong because directional stability comes from the vertical tail, not dihedral. Option B incorrectly identifies the axis — dihedral affects roll (lateral), not pitch (longitudinal) stability. Option D describes an aileron design feature unrelated to the figure.
+
+### Q114: "Longitudinal stability" refers to stability around which axis? ^t80q114
+- A) Vertical axis
+- B) Longitudinal axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Propeller axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Despite its potentially confusing name, longitudinal stability refers to pitch stability, which is rotation around the lateral axis (the axis running from wingtip to wingtip). It describes the aircraft's tendency to return to a trimmed pitch attitude. Option A is wrong because the vertical axis governs yaw (directional stability). Option B is incorrect because the longitudinal axis governs roll (lateral stability). Option D is not a recognised stability axis in standard aeronautical terminology.
+
+### Q115: Rotation about the vertical axis is termed... ^t80q115
+- A) Pitching
+- B) Yawing
+- C) Rolling
+- D) Slipping
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yawing is the rotation of the aircraft around the vertical (normal) axis, causing the nose to swing left or right. It is controlled primarily by the rudder. Option A (pitching) is rotation around the lateral axis. Option C (rolling) is rotation around the longitudinal axis. Option D (slipping) describes a flight condition with a sideways airflow component, not a specific rotational axis.
+
+### Q116: Rotation about the lateral axis is termed... ^t80q116
+- A) Stalling
+- B) Rolling
+- C) Yawing
+- D) Pitching
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pitching is the rotation of the aircraft around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip), resulting in nose-up or nose-down movement, controlled by the elevator. Option A (stalling) is an aerodynamic phenomenon of flow separation, not a rotational term. Option B (rolling) is rotation around the longitudinal axis. Option C (yawing) is rotation around the vertical axis.
+
+### Q117: The elevator causes the aircraft to rotate around the... ^t80q117
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Lateral axis
+- C) Elevator axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator controls pitch, which is rotation around the lateral axis (running from wingtip to wingtip). By deflecting the elevator, the pilot changes the aerodynamic force on the tail, creating a pitching moment that raises or lowers the nose. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll, controlled by ailerons. Option C is not a standard aeronautical axis. Option D is wrong because the vertical axis governs yaw, controlled by the rudder.
+
+### Q118: What must be considered regarding the centre of gravity position? ^t80q118
+- A) The C.G. position can only be determined once the aircraft is airborne
+- B) Moving the aileron trim tab can correct the C.G. position
+- C) Only proper loading ensures a correct and safe C.G. position
+- D) Adjusting the elevator trim tab can shift the C.G. to the correct position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity position is determined solely by how mass is distributed within the aircraft — only correct loading of occupants, baggage, and ballast within approved limits ensures a safe CG. Option A is wrong because CG must be verified on the ground before flight using weight and balance calculations. Option B is incorrect because aileron trim tabs adjust roll forces, not mass distribution. Option D is also wrong because trim tabs change aerodynamic balance forces, they cannot physically move the CG.
+
+### Q119: What benefit does differential aileron deflection provide? ^t80q119
+- A) The ratio of drag coefficient to lift coefficient increases
+- B) Total lift remains constant during aileron deflection
+- C) Adverse yaw is increased
+- D) Drag on the down-going aileron is reduced, making adverse yaw smaller
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection means the down-going aileron deflects less than the up-going aileron, which reduces the extra induced drag on the descending wing and thus minimises adverse yaw — the unwanted yawing opposite to the intended roll direction. Option A is wrong because the purpose is drag reduction, not increasing the drag-to-lift ratio. Option B is incorrect because total lift does change somewhat during aileron deflection. Option C states the opposite of the actual effect — differential ailerons decrease adverse yaw, not increase it.
+
+### Q120: What does the aerodynamic rudder balance accomplish? ^t80q120
+- A) It improves rudder effectiveness
+- B) It reduces the control stick forces
+- C) It delays the stall
+- D) It reduces the control surfaces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (such as a horn balance or set-back hinge) positions part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so that aerodynamic pressure partially assists the pilot's input, reducing the force needed to deflect the control. Option A is incorrect because the purpose is force reduction, not improved effectiveness. Option C is wrong because stall delay is achieved by devices like slats or vortex generators, not control surface balancing. Option D makes no sense — aerodynamic balance does not reduce the size of control surfaces.
+
+### Q121: What purpose does static rudder (mass) balancing serve? ^t80q121
+- A) To limit the control stick forces
+- B) To increase the control stick forces
+- C) To prevent control surface flutter
+- D) To enable force-free trimming
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static (mass) balancing places counterweights ahead of the hinge line to move the control surface's centre of mass to or forward of the hinge. This prevents flutter — a dangerous self-exciting aeroelastic oscillation that can destroy the control surface and airframe at speed. Option A is wrong because limiting stick forces is the role of aerodynamic balance, not mass balance. Option B is the opposite of any balancing goal. Option D is incorrect because force-free trimming is achieved by trim tabs, not mass balance.
+
+### Q122: When the elevator trim tab is deflected upwards, what does the trim indicator show? ^t80q122
+- A) Laterally trimmed
+- B) Neutral position
+- C) Nose-down position
+- D) Nose-up position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward-deflected trim tab generates a downward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, which pushes the elevator's leading edge upward, creating a nose-down pitching moment. The trim indicator therefore shows a nose-down position. Option A is irrelevant — lateral trim concerns roll, not pitch. Option B would require the tab to be neutral. Option D is the opposite — a nose-up indication would require the trim tab to deflect downward.
+
+### Q123: On the polar diagram, what flight condition does point number 1 indicate? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q123
+- A) Slow flight
+- B) Best gliding angle
+- C) Stall
+- D) Inverted flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) lies in the region of negative lift coefficient, representing inverted flight where the aircraft flies upside down and the wing produces downward lift relative to its normal orientation. Options A, B, and C all correspond to positive (upright) portions of the polar curve — slow flight is near maximum CL, stall is at CL_max, and best gliding angle is at the tangent point from the origin.
+
+### Q124: In a coordinated turn, what is the relationship between load factor (n) and stall speed (Vs)? ^t80q124
+- A) n is less than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+- B) n is greater than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- C) n is less than 1 and Vs is higher than in straight-and-level flight
+- D) n is greater than 1 and Vs is lower than in straight-and-level flight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated banked turn, the lift vector must support both the weight and provide centripetal force, so the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) is always greater than 1. The stall speed increases by the factor sqrt(n), because more lift is needed and thus a higher speed is required to avoid the stall. Options A and C are wrong because n is always above 1 in a level turn. Option D incorrectly states that Vs decreases — higher load factor always raises stall speed.
+
+### Q125: The pressure equalisation between the upper and lower wing surfaces results in... ^t80q125
+- A) Profile drag caused by wingtip vortices
+- B) Laminar airflow caused by wingtip vortices
+- C) Lift generated by wingtip vortices
+- D) Induced drag caused by wingtip vortices
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure difference between the lower (high pressure) and upper (low pressure) wing surfaces causes air to flow around the wingtips, forming trailing vortices. These vortices create downwash that tilts the lift vector rearward, producing induced drag. Option A is wrong because wingtip vortices cause induced drag, not profile drag. Option B is incorrect because vortices create turbulent, not laminar, flow. Option C is false because vortices actually reduce effective lift by reducing the local angle of attack.
+
+### Q126: In steady glide at equal mass, how does using a thicker aerofoil compare to a thinner one? ^t80q126
+- A) Less drag, same lift
+- B) More drag, less lift
+- C) Less drag, less lift
+- D) More drag, same lift
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a steady glide at the same mass, lift must equal weight regardless of the aerofoil thickness, so lift remains the same. However, a thicker aerofoil generates greater form (pressure) drag due to its larger cross-section and more severe adverse pressure gradients. Options A and C are wrong because a thicker profile produces more, not less, drag. Option B is incorrect because lift does not decrease — it is fixed by the weight requirement in steady flight.
+
+### Q127: What does a profile polar diagram display? ^t80q127
+- A) The lift coefficient cA at various angles of attack
+- B) The ratio of minimum sink rate to best glide
+- C) The ratio between total lift and drag as a function of angle of attack
+- D) The relationship between cA and cD at different angles of attack
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A profile polar (Lilienthal polar) plots the lift coefficient (cA or CL) against the drag coefficient (cD or CD) at various angles of attack, showing how aerodynamic efficiency changes across the operating range. Option A describes only a CL-vs-alpha curve, not a polar. Option B relates to the speed polar of a glider, not a profile polar. Option C is imprecise — the polar shows the CL-CD relationship directly, not a simple ratio.
+
+### Q128: Any arbitrarily shaped body placed in an airflow (v > 0) always produces... ^t80q128
+- A) Drag that remains constant at any speed
+- B) Lift without drag
+- C) Drag
+- D) Both drag and lift
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body in a moving airflow always experiences drag due to viscous friction and pressure forces opposing the motion — this is unavoidable in a real fluid. Lift, however, requires specific aerodynamic shaping or orientation. Option A is wrong because drag varies with the square of velocity, not constant. Option B is physically impossible — drag-free lift does not exist. Option D is incorrect because an arbitrarily shaped body is not guaranteed to produce lift; only specifically shaped or oriented bodies generate lift.
+
+### Q129: In the diagram, what does number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q129
+- A) Chord
+- B) Chord line
+- C) Camber line
+- D) Thickness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the aerofoil diagram PFA-010, number 3 represents the camber line (mean camber line), which is the curved line equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil. Options A and B both refer to the straight reference line from leading to trailing edge, which is a different feature. Option D (thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a line on the diagram.
+
+### Q130: Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw? ^t80q130
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) Full deflection of the aileron
+- C) Differential aileron deflection
+- D) Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection reduces adverse yaw by deflecting the down-going aileron less than the up-going aileron, thereby reducing the extra induced drag on the descending wing that causes the nose to yaw opposite to the intended turn. Option A is wrong because wing dihedral provides roll stability, not yaw compensation. Option B would actually worsen adverse yaw because full deflection maximises the drag asymmetry. Option D is not a valid answer — it merely repeats the question.
+
+### Q131: What does "wing loading" describe? ^t80q131
+- A) Drag per weight
+- B) Wing area per weight
+- C) Drag per wing area
+- D) Weight per wing area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is defined as total aircraft weight divided by wing reference area, expressed in units such as N/m² or kg/m². It determines stall speed, gust sensitivity, and overall handling characteristics. Option A (drag per weight) describes a drag-to-weight ratio. Option B is the inverse of wing loading. Option C (drag per wing area) is not a standard aeronautical parameter.
+
+### Q132: On the polar diagram, what flight state does point number 5 represent? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^t80q132
+- A) Best gliding angle
+- B) Inverted flight
+- C) Stall
+- D) Slow flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 5 on the polar diagram (PFA-008) corresponds to slow flight — a high angle of attack, low speed condition on the positive portion of the polar before reaching the stall point. Option A (best gliding angle) corresponds to the tangent from the origin touching the polar. Option B (inverted flight) would appear on the negative CL side. Option C (stall) is at the CL_max point, which is the very top of the polar, beyond slow flight.
+
+### Q133: What is the aerodynamic effect of deploying airbrakes? ^t80q133
+- A) Both drag and lift increase
+- B) Both drag and lift decrease
+- C) Drag increases while lift decreases
+- D) Drag decreases while lift increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airbrakes (spoilers/dive brakes) serve to steepen the glide path by significantly increasing drag while simultaneously disrupting upper-surface airflow, which reduces lift. Option A is wrong because lift decreases with airbrakes deployed. Option B is incorrect because drag increases, not decreases. Option D reverses both effects — airbrakes increase drag and decrease lift.
+
+### Q134: Which combination of measures can improve the glide ratio of a sailplane? ^t80q134
+- A) Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- B) Higher mass, thin aerofoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- C) Lower mass, correct speed, retractable gear
+- D) Cleaning surfaces, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide ratio (L/D) is maximised by minimising total drag while flying at the optimal speed. Cleaning surfaces reduces skin friction, taping gaps prevents leakage drag, retractable gear eliminates a major source of parasite drag, and maintaining best-glide speed keeps the aircraft at peak L/D. Option A is suboptimal because a forward CG increases trim drag. Option B is wrong because higher mass does not improve the L/D ratio itself. Option C omits important drag-reduction measures like taping gaps and surface cleaning.
+
+### Q135: What distinguishes a spin from a spiral dive? ^t80q135
+- A) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- B) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed constant; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed rising rapidly
+- C) Spin: outer wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+- D) Spin: inner wing stalled, speed rising rapidly; Spiral dive: both wings flying, speed constant
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a spin, the inner (lower) wing is deeply stalled while the outer wing may still be producing some lift, creating autorotation at a near-constant, relatively low airspeed. In a spiral dive, neither wing is stalled, and the aircraft descends in a tightening bank with rapidly increasing airspeed. Option A incorrectly identifies the outer wing as stalled. Options C and D incorrectly assign speed characteristics — in a spin, speed is roughly constant; in a spiral dive, speed increases rapidly.
+
+### Q136: The longitudinal position of the centre of gravity primarily affects stability around which axis? ^t80q136
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Gravity axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The longitudinal (fore-aft) position of the CG directly determines pitch stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. The CG must be forward of the neutral point for positive pitch stability; the further forward, the more statically stable but the heavier the elevator forces. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll stability, influenced by dihedral. Option B is not a standard axis. Option D is wrong because the vertical axis governs directional stability, influenced by the vertical tail.
+
+### Q137: Which structural element provides directional stability? ^t80q137
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) A large elevator
+- C) A large vertical tail
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical tail fin acts as a weathervane, producing a restoring yawing moment whenever the aircraft sideslips, thereby providing directional (yaw) stability around the vertical axis. A larger fin provides greater stability. Option A (wing dihedral) provides lateral (roll) stability. Option B (elevator) contributes to pitch stability. Option D (differential aileron deflection) reduces adverse yaw but is not a stability feature.
+
+### Q138: In straight-and-level flight at constant engine power, how does the wing's angle of attack compare to that in a climb? ^t80q138
+- A) Larger than in a climb
+- B) Larger than at take-off
+- C) Smaller than in a descent
+- D) Smaller than in a climb
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a climb at the same engine power, the aircraft flies slower because more energy goes into gaining altitude, requiring a higher angle of attack to maintain sufficient lift. Therefore, the level-flight angle of attack is smaller than in a climb. Option A reverses the relationship. Option B compares to take-off, which is not directly related to the question. Option C is incorrect because in a descent the aircraft accelerates, typically reducing AoA below the level-flight value.
+
+### Q139: What is one function of the horizontal tail? ^t80q139
+- A) To stabilise the aircraft around the lateral axis
+- B) To initiate a turn around the vertical axis
+- C) To stabilise the aircraft around the vertical axis
+- D) To stabilise the aircraft around the longitudinal axis
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal tail (stabiliser and elevator) provides longitudinal (pitch) stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. It generates restoring moments when the aircraft's pitch attitude is disturbed. Option B is wrong because turns around the vertical axis are initiated by the rudder. Option C is incorrect because vertical axis stability comes from the vertical tail. Option D is wrong because longitudinal axis (roll) stability is provided by wing dihedral and sweep.
+
+### Q140: What happens when the rudder is deflected to the left? ^t80q140
+- A) The aircraft pitches to the right
+- B) The aircraft yaws to the right
+- C) The aircraft pitches to the left
+- D) The aircraft yaws to the left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the rudder is deflected to the left, it produces a sideways aerodynamic force on the tail that pushes the tail to the right, yawing the nose to the left around the vertical axis. Options A and C are wrong because pitching is a nose-up/nose-down motion controlled by the elevator, not the rudder. Option B reverses the yaw direction — left rudder produces left yaw.
+
+### Q141: Differential aileron deflection is employed to... ^t80q141
+- A) Increase the rate of descent
+- B) Prevent stalling at low angles of attack
+- C) Minimise adverse yaw
+- D) Reduce wake turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection gives the down-going aileron less deflection than the up-going aileron, reducing the drag asymmetry between the two wings during a roll input and thereby minimising adverse yaw. Option A is wrong because descent rate is controlled by airbrakes or speed, not aileron geometry. Option B is incorrect because stall prevention at low AoA is not an issue. Option D is wrong because wake turbulence is caused by wingtip vortices, not aileron design.
+
+### Q142: How is the force balance affected during a banked turn? ^t80q142
+- A) A lower lift force is sufficient because the net force is reduced compared to level flight
+- B) The horizontal component of the lift during the turn constitutes the centrifugal force
+- C) Lift must be increased to balance the combined effect of gravity and centrifugal force
+- D) The net force is the vector sum of gravitational and centripetal forces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn at constant altitude, the tilted lift vector must be large enough that its vertical component still equals weight while its horizontal component provides the centripetal force for the curved path. This means total lift must exceed the straight-and-level value, with the load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle). Option A is wrong because more, not less, lift is needed. Option B is imprecise — from the aircraft's reference frame it appears as centrifugal force, but the actual physics involves centripetal force. Option D does not fully describe the force balance requirement.
+
+### Q143: On a Touring Motor Glider (TMG), which engine arrangement produces the least drag? ^t80q143
+- A) Engine and propeller fixed at the aircraft's nose
+- B) Engine and propeller fixed on the fuselage
+- C) Engine and propeller retractable into the fuselage
+- D) Engine and propeller fixed at the horizontal stabiliser
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A retractable engine and propeller can be fully stowed inside the fuselage when not in use, completely eliminating the parasite drag from the powerplant and propeller during soaring flight. Options A, B, and D all involve fixed (non-retractable) installations that continuously produce drag even when the engine is shut down, because the propeller and engine cowling remain exposed to the airstream.
+
+### Q144: What effect is known as "adverse yaw"? ^t80q144
+- A) Aileron input yaws the nose toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input creates a rolling moment toward the opposite side due to extra lift on the faster-moving wing
+- C) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the down-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input yaws the nose away from the intended turn due to increased drag on the up-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-deflected aileron increases both lift and induced drag on its wing. This extra drag on the rising wing yaws the nose toward it — away from the intended direction of turn. Option A describes the opposite effect. Option B describes a secondary effect of rudder, not the primary adverse yaw phenomenon. Option D incorrectly attributes the extra drag to the up-deflected aileron, when in fact it is the down-deflected aileron that produces more drag.
+
+### Q145: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q145
+- A) An increase in lift and decrease in induced drag near the ground
+- B) A decrease in lift and increase in induced drag near the ground
+- C) A decrease in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+- D) An increase in both lift and induced drag near the ground
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When flying within approximately one wingspan of the ground, the ground surface restricts the full development of wingtip vortices, reducing downwash. This effectively increases the local angle of attack (more lift) and reduces induced drag simultaneously. Option B reverses both effects. Option C incorrectly states lift decreases. Option D incorrectly states induced drag increases. Pilots experience ground effect as a floating sensation during the landing flare.
+
+### Q146: Rudder deflections rotate the aircraft around the... ^t80q146
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Rudder axis
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rudder controls yaw, which is rotation around the vertical axis, causing the nose to swing left or right. Option A is wrong because the longitudinal axis governs roll, controlled by ailerons. Option B is not a standard aeronautical axis designation. Option C is wrong because the lateral axis governs pitch, controlled by the elevator.
+
+### Q147: Which of the following factors causes the load factor to increase during cruise flight? ^t80q147
+- A) A forward centre of gravity
+- B) Higher aircraft weight
+- C) An upward gust
+- D) Lower air density
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward gust suddenly increases the wing's angle of attack, temporarily generating lift in excess of the aircraft's weight. This additional lift translates into a load factor greater than 1, stressing the structure. Option A (forward CG) affects pitch stability and trim drag but does not directly cause load factor spikes. Option B (higher weight) means higher sustained loads but does not itself cause an increase in load factor n. Option D (lower density) reduces lift for a given speed, which would lower, not raise, the instantaneous load factor.
+
+### Q148: While approaching the next updraft, the variometer shows 3 m/s descent. You expect a mean climb rate of 2 m/s in the thermal. How should you set the McCready ring? ^t80q148
+- A) Set the ring to 3 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the expected climb rate (2 m/s)
+- B) Set the ring to 0 m/s outside thermals and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- C) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the current sink rate (3 m/s)
+- D) Set the ring to 2 m/s and read the recommended speed next to the sum of current sink rate and expected climb rate (5 m/s)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The McCready ring is always set to the expected climb rate in the next thermal (2 m/s in this case), and the recommended inter-thermal cruise speed is then read at the variometer needle position showing the current sink rate (3 m/s). Option A incorrectly sets the ring to the sink rate instead of the thermal strength. Option B sets the ring to zero, which would give a minimum-sink rather than optimal cruise speed. Option D erroneously adds the sink rate and climb rate together, which is not how McCready theory works.
+
+### Q149: What must be considered when flying a sailplane equipped with camber flaps? ^t80q149
+- A) During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive
+- B) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive
+- C) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative
+- D) During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During approach and landing, switching the camber flap from positive (increased camber, higher lift) to negative (reduced or reflexed camber) would cause a sudden and dramatic drop in lift close to the ground, potentially leading to a dangerous sink or ground contact. Option A is not universally correct — winch launch flap settings vary by type. Option B reverses the restriction. Option D is wrong because negative camber is a cruise setting, not appropriate for the high-lift-demand winch launch phase.
+
+### Q150: On the aerofoil diagram, what does point number 3 represent? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^t80q150
+- A) Separation point
+- B) Centre of pressure
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 3 on the boundary layer diagram (PFA-009) is the transition point, where the boundary layer changes from smooth laminar flow to turbulent flow. The position of this transition depends on Reynolds number, surface roughness, and pressure gradient. Option A (separation point) occurs further aft, where flow detaches entirely. Option B (centre of pressure) is not a boundary layer feature but a force application point. Option C (stagnation point) is at the leading edge, where flow velocity is zero.
+
+### Q151: In the diagram, what does number 2 correspond to? See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^t80q151
+- A) Angle of attack
+- B) Profile thickness
+- C) Chord line
+- D) Chord line
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Number 2 in figure PFA-010 represents the chord line — the straight reference line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge of the aerofoil. It is the baseline from which the angle of attack and camber are measured. Option A (angle of attack) is an angular measurement, not a line on the diagram. Option B (profile thickness) is the perpendicular distance between the upper and lower surfaces, not a straight reference line.
+
+### Q152: In the figure, the angle (alpha) is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow Siehe Anlage 3 ^t80q152
+- A) Angle of inclination
+- B) Angle of incidence
+- C) Angle of attack
+- D) Lift angle
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle alpha between the chord line and the direction of the oncoming airflow is the angle of attack, the primary aerodynamic variable determining lift coefficient and stall behaviour. Option A (angle of inclination) is not a standard aeronautical term. Option B (angle of incidence) is the fixed structural angle between the chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis, set during manufacturing. Option D (lift angle) is not a recognized aviation term.
+
+### Q153: If the right aileron deflects upward and the left aileron deflects downward, how does the aircraft react? ^t80q153
+- A) Rolling to the right with yaw to the left
+- B) Rolling to the right with yaw to the right
+- C) Rolling to the left with no yawing
+- D) Rolling to the left with yaw to the right
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the right aileron deflects upward (reducing lift on the right wing) and the left aileron deflects downward (increasing lift on the left wing), the aircraft rolls to the right. Simultaneously, the down-deflected left aileron creates more induced drag on the left wing, producing adverse yaw — the nose swings to the left, opposite the intended roll direction. Options C and D incorrectly identify a leftward roll. Option B states yaw to the right, but adverse yaw always opposes the roll direction.
+
+### Q154: What must be taken into account when flying a sailplane with water ballast? ^t80q154
+- A) Best glide angle becomes worse
+- B) Best glide speed decreases
+- C) Significant C.G. shifts occur
+- D) The aircraft should stay below the freezing level
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast must be kept above freezing (i.e., the aircraft should stay below the freezing level) to prevent the water from freezing in the wing tanks, which could jam dump valves, cause unpredictable CG shifts, and damage wing structure. Option A is wrong because the best glide angle (L/D ratio) is theoretically unchanged with ballast. Option B is incorrect — best glide speed increases with additional weight. Option C is misleading because water ballast tanks are designed to minimise CG shifts, keeping them within approved limits.
+
+### Q155: Which description characterises static stability? ^t80q155
+- A) After an external disturbance, the aircraft can return to its original position through rudder input
+- B) After an external disturbance, the aircraft maintains the displaced position
+- C) After an external disturbance, the aircraft tends toward an even more deflected position
+- D) After an external disturbance, the aircraft tends to return to its original position
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability means that when an aircraft is displaced from equilibrium by an external force, inherent aerodynamic forces automatically tend to return it toward its original state without pilot input. Option A describes active pilot correction, not inherent stability. Option B describes neutral stability, where the aircraft stays wherever it is displaced. Option C describes static instability, where the aircraft diverges further from equilibrium.
+
+### Q156: How do the best gliding angle and best glide speed change when a sailplane carries water ballast compared to flying without it? ^t80q156
+- A) Best gliding angle remains unchanged; best glide speed increases
+- B) Best gliding angle increases; best glide speed increases
+- C) Best gliding angle remains unchanged; best glide speed decreases
+- D) Best gliding angle decreases; best glide speed decreases
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast increases total aircraft weight. The best L/D ratio (and therefore the best gliding angle) is an aerodynamic property of the aircraft's shape and does not change with weight. However, the speed at which this optimum L/D occurs increases because more dynamic pressure is needed to generate the extra lift required by the heavier aircraft. Option B wrongly claims the angle changes. Options C and D incorrectly state that best glide speed decreases.
+
+### Q157: Which constructive feature is designed to reduce control forces? ^t80q157
+- A) T-tail
+- B) Vortex generators
+- C) Aerodynamic rudder balance
+- D) Differential aileron deflection
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (horn balance or set-back hinge) extends part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so aerodynamic pressure partially assists the pilot's deflection effort, directly reducing the force required. Option A (T-tail) is a configuration choice affecting downwash and deep-stall characteristics. Option B (vortex generators) energise the boundary layer to delay flow separation. Option D (differential aileron deflection) reduces adverse yaw, not control forces.
+
+### Q158: When any body of arbitrary shape is surrounded by airflow (v > 0), it always produces... ^t80q158
+- A) Drag
+- B) Both drag and lift
+- C) Drag that remains constant at every speed
+- D) Lift without drag
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body immersed in a moving airstream (v > 0) always produces drag, because viscous friction and pressure differences are unavoidable in real fluid flow. Lift requires specific shaping or angle of attack and is not guaranteed. Option B is wrong because lift is not always produced. Option C is incorrect because drag increases with V² — it is not constant. Option D is physically impossible — drag-free flight does not exist in a real fluid.
+
+### Q159: "Longitudinal stability" refers to stability around which axis? ^t80q159
+- A) Vertical axis
+- B) Propeller axis
+- C) Longitudinal axis
+- D) Lateral axis
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Despite the potentially confusing name, longitudinal stability describes pitch stability, which is rotation around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip). It is the tendency to maintain or return to a trimmed pitch attitude. Option A (vertical axis) governs directional/yaw stability. Option B (propeller axis) is not a standard stability axis. Option C (longitudinal axis) governs roll/lateral stability.
+
+### Q160: What does "wing loading" mean? ^t80q160
+- A) Drag per wing area
+- B) Weight per wing area
+- C) Drag per weight
+- D) Wing area per weight
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is the aircraft's total weight divided by the wing reference area (e.g., N/m² or kg/m²). Higher wing loading means higher stall speeds but better penetration in turbulence. Option A (drag per wing area) is not a standard metric. Option C (drag per weight) describes a drag-to-weight ratio. Option D (wing area per weight) is the mathematical inverse of wing loading.
+
+### Q161: What phenomenon is known as adverse yaw? ^t80q161
+- A) Aileron input causes a yaw toward the intended turn direction because the down-deflected aileron has less drag
+- B) Rudder input produces a rolling moment toward the opposite side because the faster-moving wing generates more lift
+- C) Aileron input causes a yaw away from the intended turn due to more drag on the up-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron input causes a yaw away from the intended turn due to more drag on the down-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because the down-deflected aileron, which increases local lift on the rising wing, also increases induced drag on that wing. This extra drag pulls the nose toward the rising wing — away from the intended turn direction. Option A describes the opposite phenomenon. Option B describes a secondary rudder-roll coupling, not the primary adverse yaw effect. Option C incorrectly attributes the drag increase to the up-deflected aileron; in reality, it is the down-deflected aileron that creates more drag.
+
+### Q162: What is the "ground effect"? ^t80q162
+- A) Both lift and induced drag decrease near the ground
+- B) Both lift and induced drag increase near the ground
+- C) Lift decreases and induced drag increases near the ground
+- D) Lift increases and induced drag decreases near the ground
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ground effect (within approximately one wingspan of the surface), the ground physically constrains wingtip vortex development, reducing downwash. This increases the effective angle of attack (raising lift) while simultaneously reducing induced drag. Pilots notice this as a floating sensation during the landing flare. Options A, B, and C all incorrectly describe the lift-drag relationship — the correct combination is increased lift with decreased induced drag.
+
diff --git "a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/90 - Radiot\303\251l\303\251phonie.md" "b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/90 - Radiot\303\251l\303\251phonie.md"
new file mode 100644
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+++ "b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/90 - Radiot\303\251l\303\251phonie.md"
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+# Radiotéléphonie
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Dans quelles situations un pilote doit-il utiliser des transmissions en aveugle ? ^t90q1
+- A) Lorsqu'une transmission contenant des données de navigation ou techniques importantes doit être envoyée simultanément à plusieurs stations
+- B) Lorsque la situation du trafic sur un aéroport permet l'envoi d'informations ne nécessitant pas d'accusé de réception par la station au sol
+- C) Lorsqu'un pilote est entré involontairement dans un nuage ou du brouillard et souhaite demander une aide à la navigation à une station au sol
+- D) Lorsque la communication radio bilatérale ne peut être établie avec la station aéronautique compétente, mais qu'il y a lieu de croire que les transmissions sont reçues par cette station au sol
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une transmission en aveugle est utilisée lorsque le pilote ne peut pas recevoir de réponses (par exemple en raison d'un récepteur défaillant), mais a des raisons de croire que la station au sol peut encore capter ses transmissions, permettant à l'ATC de suivre la position et les intentions de l'aéronef. L'option A décrit une diffusion (broadcast), non une transmission en aveugle. L'option B ne correspond à aucun scénario reconnu pour les transmissions en aveugle. L'option C décrit une situation nécessitant une communication bilatérale ou une déclaration d'urgence, pas une transmission en aveugle.
+
+### Q2: Quelle est l'abréviation normalisée pour le terme « abeam » (par le travers) ? ^t90q2
+- A) ABA
+- B) ABE
+- C) ABM
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** ABM est l'abréviation normalisée par l'OACI pour « abeam », désignant une position à angle droit par rapport à la trajectoire de l'aéronef — directement sur le côté. Cette abréviation est utilisée dans les plans de vol, les communications ATC et les cartes aéronautiques. Les options A, B et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues pour ce terme.
+
+### Q3: Quelle abréviation désigne les « règles de vol à vue » ? ^t90q3
+- A) VMC
+- B) VFR
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** VFR signifie Visual Flight Rules (règles de vol à vue), le cadre réglementaire selon lequel les pilotes naviguent par référence visuelle au sol et aux autres aéronefs. L'option A (VMC) signifie Visual Meteorological Conditions (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue), qui décrit les conditions météorologiques requises pour le vol VFR — lié mais distinct. Les options C et D ne sont pas des abréviations aéronautiques normalisées.
+
+### Q4: Quelle est l'abréviation OACI pour « obstacle » ? ^t90q4
+- A) OBS
+- B) OST
+- C) OBST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** OBST est l'abréviation normalisée par l'OACI pour « obstacle », utilisée dans les NOTAM, les cartes aéronautiques et les communications ATC. L'option A (OBS) peut signifier « observer » ou « observation » dans la documentation OACI, mais ne désigne pas « obstacle ». Les options B et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues.
+
+### Q5: Que signifie l'abréviation « FIS » ? ^t90q5
+- A) Service d'information clignotant (Flashing information service)
+- B) Système d'information de vol (Flight information system)
+- C) Système d'information clignotant (Flashing information system)
+- D) Service d'information de vol (Flight information service)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** FIS signifie Flight Information Service (service d'information de vol) — un service fournissant aux pilotes des informations utiles à la conduite sûre et efficace du vol, notamment les mises à jour météorologiques, les NOTAM et les avis de trafic. Les options A et C contiennent « clignotant », sans rapport avec ce service aéronautique. L'option B utilise incorrectement « système » au lieu de « service ».
+
+### Q6: Que signifie l'abréviation « FIR » ? ^t90q6
+- A) Radar d'information de flux (Flow information radar)
+- B) Récepteur d'intégrité de vol (Flight integrity receiver)
+- C) Région d'information de vol (Flight information region)
+- D) Débit d'intégrité requis (Flow integrity required)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une région d'information de vol (FIR) est un volume d'espace aérien délimité à l'intérieur duquel le service d'information de vol et le service d'alerte sont assurés conformément aux normes de l'OACI. Chaque pays ou groupe de pays dispose d'une ou plusieurs FIR couvrant l'ensemble de l'espace aérien verticalement et horizontalement. Les options A, B et D sont des termes fictifs sans signification aéronautique.
+
+### Q7: Que signifie l'abréviation « H24 » ? ^t90q7
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+- B) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+- C) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+- D) Service 24 h sur 24
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** H24 indique un service continu 24 heures sur 24 — l'installation est en permanence dotée de personnel et opérationnelle. Cette désignation apparaît dans les entrées AIP et les NOTAM pour les installations telles que les grands centres ATC. L'option A décrit HN (heures de nuit). L'option B décrit HJ (heures de jour). L'option C décrit HX (horaires non spécifiés).
+
+### Q8: Que signifie l'abréviation « HX » ? ^t90q8
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+- B) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+- C) Service 24 h sur 24
+- D) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** HX signifie que l'installation fonctionne sans horaires prédéterminés et peut être disponible sur demande ou de manière intermittente. Les pilotes doivent consulter les NOTAM ou contacter l'installation pour vérifier sa disponibilité. L'option A décrit HN (du coucher au lever du soleil). L'option C décrit H24 (service continu). L'option D décrit HJ (du lever au coucher du soleil).
+
+### Q9: Sur quelle valeur l'altimètre doit-il être calé pour afficher zéro au sol ? ^t90q9
+- A) QNH
+- B) QNE
+- C) QFE
+- D) QTE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome. Lorsqu'il est affiché sur l'échelle de l'altimètre, l'instrument indique zéro au sol sur cet aérodrome, affichant la hauteur au-dessus du terrain dans le circuit. L'option A (QNH) donne l'altitude par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer. L'option B (QNE) correspond au calage standard de 1013,25 hPa. L'option D (QTE) est un relèvement vrai depuis une station, pas un calage altimétrique.
+
+### Q10: Quelle altitude l'altimètre affiche-t-il lorsqu'il est calé sur une valeur QNH donnée ? ^t90q10
+- A) Altitude par rapport à l'élévation la plus haute dans un rayon de 10 km
+- B) Altitude par rapport à la pression atmosphérique de l'aérodrome de référence
+- C) Altitude par rapport au datum 1013,25 hPa
+- D) Altitude par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage altimétrique qui, une fois affiché, fait indiquer à l'altimètre l'altitude au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer (AMSL), la référence standard pour la navigation et les limites d'espace aérien sous l'altitude de transition. L'option A n'est pas une référence altimétrique normalisée. L'option B décrit le comportement du QFE. L'option C décrit le comportement du QNE (pression standard).
+
+### Q11: Quelle altitude l'altimètre affiche-t-il lorsqu'il est calé sur une valeur QFE donnée ? ^t90q11
+- A) Altitude par rapport à l'élévation la plus haute dans un rayon de 10 km
+- B) Altitude par rapport au niveau moyen de la mer
+- C) Altitude par rapport à la pression atmosphérique de l'aérodrome de référence
+- D) Altitude par rapport au datum 1013,25 hPa
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Avec le QFE calé, l'altimètre indique la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome de référence — la différence entre l'altitude-pression réelle et le niveau de pression de l'aérodrome, affichant zéro au sol et la hauteur directe au-dessus du terrain dans le circuit. L'option A n'est pas une référence normalisée. L'option B décrit le comportement du QNH. L'option D décrit le comportement du QNE.
+
+### Q12: Quel est le terme approprié pour un message utilisé dans le contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t90q12
+- A) Message de régularité des vols
+- B) Message relatif à la radiogoniométrie
+- C) Message météorologique
+- D) Message de sécurité des vols
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages ATC — y compris les autorisations, instructions, comptes rendus de position et informations de trafic — sont classés comme messages de sécurité des vols, la troisième priorité la plus élevée après la détresse et l'urgence dans la hiérarchie des messages de l'OACI. L'option A (messages de régularité) concerne l'exploitation et la maintenance des installations. L'option B (messages de radiogoniométrie) se rapporte à l'aide à la radionavigation. L'option C (messages météorologiques) concerne les informations météorologiques.
+
+### Q13: Comment les messages de détresse sont-ils définis ? ^t90q13
+- A) Messages envoyés par un pilote ou un exploitant d'aéronef présentant une importance immédiate pour les aéronefs en vol.
+- B) Messages concernant un aéronef et ses passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou de tout autre véhicule ou personne en vue.
+- D) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations importantes pour la sécurité et la régularité des opérations aériennes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message de détresse (MAYDAY) est transmis lorsqu'un aéronef et ses occupants sont confrontés à un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate — la catégorie de priorité la plus élevée dans les communications aéronautiques, signalée par le code transpondeur 7700. L'option A est trop vague et pourrait s'appliquer à plusieurs types de messages. L'option C décrit les messages d'urgence (PAN PAN). L'option D décrit les messages de régularité.
+
+### Q14: Comment les messages d'urgence sont-ils définis ? ^t90q14
+- A) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations essentielles pour la sécurité ou la régularité de l'exploitation aérienne.
+- B) Messages concernant un aéronef et ses passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages envoyés par un pilote ou un exploitant d'aéronef présentant une importance immédiate pour les aéronefs en vol.
+- D) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations essentielles pour la sécurité ou la régularité de l'exploitation aérienne.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages d'urgence (PAN PAN) concernent une situation sérieuse affectant la sécurité de l'aéronef ou des personnes, mais ne constituant pas encore un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate — par exemple des problèmes moteur maîtrisables ou des situations médicales à bord. L'option B définit les messages de détresse (MAYDAY). L'option C est une description générale pouvant s'appliquer à plusieurs types de messages. L'option D est identique à l'option A.
+
+### Q15: Comment les messages de régularité sont-ils définis ? ^t90q15
+- A) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou de tout autre véhicule ou personne en vue.
+- B) Messages concernant un aéronef et ses passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- C) Messages concernant l'exploitation ou la maintenance d'installations essentielles pour la sécurité ou la régularité de l'exploitation aérienne.
+- D) Messages envoyés par un exploitant d'aéronef ou un aéronef présentant un intérêt immédiat pour un aéronef en vol.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages de régularité se rapportent à l'exploitation et à la maintenance des installations nécessaires aux opérations aériennes — essentiellement des communications administratives et logistiques ayant la priorité la plus basse dans la hiérarchie OACI. L'option A décrit des messages liés à l'urgence. L'option B définit les messages de détresse. L'option D décrit les messages de sécurité des vols.
+
+### Q16: Parmi les messages suivants, lequel a la priorité la plus élevée ? ^t90q16
+- A) QNH 1013
+- B) Vent 300 degrés, 5 nœuds
+- C) Tournez à gauche
+- D) Demande QDM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une demande de QDM (cap magnétique à suivre vers une station) implique que le pilote peut être perdu ou incapable de naviguer de façon autonome, ce qui en fait une question potentielle d'urgence ou de sécurité des vols avec une priorité supérieure aux messages opérationnels de routine. Les options A (QNH) et B (vent) sont des informations consultatives de routine. L'option C (tournez à gauche) est une instruction ATC standard mais de priorité inférieure à une demande d'assistance à la navigation.
+
+### Q17: Comment l'indicatif d'appel HB-YKM doit-il être correctement transmis ? ^t90q17
+- A) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+- B) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI : H = Hotel, B = Bravo, Y = Yankee, K = Kilo, M = Mike. L'option A utilise « Home » au lieu de « Hotel » et « Mikro » au lieu de « Mike ». L'option B utilise « Yuliett » (qui correspond à J = Juliett, pas à Y) et « Mikro ». L'option D utilise « Home » et « Yuliett ». Seule l'option C utilise tous les mots phonétiques OACI corrects.
+
+### Q18: Comment l'indicatif d'appel OE-JVK doit-il être correctement transmis ? ^t90q18
+- A) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- D) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI : O = Oscar, E = Echo, J = Juliett, V = Victor, K = Kilo. L'option B utilise « Omega » (non OACI) et « Kilogramm ». L'option C utilise « Omega » et « Jankee » (aucun n'est normalisé OACI). L'option D utilise « Jankee » et « Kilogramm ». Seule l'option A utilise tous les mots phonétiques OACI corrects.
+
+### Q19: Comment une altitude de 4500 ft est-elle correctement transmise ? ^t90q19
+- A) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- B) Four five tousand.
+- C) Four tousand five hundred.
+- D) Four five zero zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie OACI pour les altitudes utilise « thousand » et « hundred » selon les cas : 4500 ft se prononce « four thousand five hundred ». L'option A ajoute des zéros superflus après « five ». L'option B inverse la structure de façon absurde. L'option D utilise l'énonciation chiffre par chiffre, réservée aux codes transpondeur et aux valeurs QNH, pas aux altitudes.
+
+### Q20: Comment un cap de 285 degrés est-il correctement transmis ? ^t90q20
+- A) Two eight five.
+- B) Two hundred eight five.
+- C) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- D) Two eight five hundred.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les caps et relèvements sont toujours transmis sous forme de trois chiffres individuels énoncés séparément : « two eight five ». Le mot « hundred » n'est jamais utilisé pour les caps car la transmission chiffre par chiffre élimine toute ambiguïté. Les options B et C utilisent « hundred » ou des formes numériques naturelles, ce qui n'est pas correct pour la transmission des caps. L'option D ajoute « hundred » après les chiffres, ce qui est dépourvu de sens.
+
+### Q21: Comment une fréquence de 119.500 MHz est-elle correctement transmise ? ^t90q21
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- B) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner decimal five zero.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les fréquences sont transmises chiffre par chiffre avec « decimal » pour le point décimal, et les zéros de fin après les chiffres significatifs sont supprimés. 119.500 MHz devient « one one niner decimal five ». Notez que « niner » est utilisé pour le 9 afin d'éviter toute confusion avec « nein » (non). L'option A conserve des zéros de fin inutiles. L'option B insère « tousand », non utilisé pour les fréquences. L'option D conserve un zéro de fin superflu.
+
+### Q22: Comment l'information directionnelle « 12 o'clock » est-elle correctement transmise ? ^t90q22
+- A) One two o'clock
+- B) One two.
+- C) Twelve o'clock.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les positions horaires pour les avis de trafic sont énoncées en nombre entier suivi de « o'clock » : « twelve o'clock » signifie droit devant. L'option A décompose « twelve » en chiffres, ce qui pourrait être confondu avec d'autres données numériques. L'option B omet « o'clock », rendant la référence ambiguë. L'option D ajoute « hundred », dépourvu de sens dans les références de position horaire.
+
+### Q23: Dans quel format les heures sont-elles transmises en aviation ? ^t90q23
+- A) Heure légale.
+- B) Heure locale.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Heure du fuseau horaire.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Toutes les communications aéronautiques utilisent le temps universel coordonné (UTC), anciennement connu sous le nom de GMT ou heure Zulu, garantissant la cohérence à travers les fuseaux horaires du monde entier. Les pilotes doivent convertir l'heure locale en UTC pour tous les plans de vol, communications ATC et rapports météorologiques. Les options A, B et D font toutes référence à des systèmes horaires locaux ou régionaux qui causeraient de la confusion dans les opérations internationales.
+
+### Q24: En cas de doute sur une ambiguïté, comment une heure de 1620 doit-elle être transmise ? ^t90q24
+- A) Two zero.
+- B) Sixteen twenty
+- C) One tousand six hundred two zero
+- D) One six two zero.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas de risque d'ambiguïté, l'OACI exige que l'heure UTC complète à quatre chiffres soit énoncée chiffre par chiffre : « one six two zero ». Cela élimine toute confusion quant à savoir si seules les minutes ou l'heure complète sont données. L'option A ne donne que les minutes, ce qui peut être ambigu. L'option B utilise un groupement numérique naturel, non normalisé. L'option C utilise « tousand » et « hundred », non utilisés pour la transmission de l'heure.
+
+### Q25: Que signifie l'expression « Roger » ? ^t90q25
+- A) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- B) J'ai bien reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- D) J'ai compris votre message et je m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Roger » est un simple accusé de réception — cela signifie « j'ai bien reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission » et rien de plus. Cela n'implique ni accord, ni conformité, ni autorisation. L'option A définit « Approved ». L'option C définit « Correction ». L'option D définit « Wilco ». Les pilotes doivent utiliser l'expression appropriée pour éviter des malentendus dangereux.
+
+### Q26: Que signifie l'expression « Correction » ? ^t90q26
+- A) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- B) J'ai bien reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- D) J'ai compris votre message et je m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Correction » signale que le locuteur a commis une erreur dans la transmission en cours et que l'information correcte suit immédiatement. Cela empêche le destinataire d'agir sur des données erronées. L'option B définit « Roger ». L'option C définit « Approved ». L'option D définit « Wilco ».
+
+### Q27: Que signifie l'expression « Approved » ? ^t90q27
+- A) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- B) J'ai bien reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- C) J'ai compris votre message et je m'y conformerai
+- D) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Approved » signifie que l'ATC a accordé l'autorisation pour l'action que le pilote a proposée ou demandée. Il est utilisé spécifiquement en réponse aux demandes des pilotes. L'option A définit « Correction ». L'option B définit « Roger ». L'option C définit « Wilco ».
+
+### Q28: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour vérifier la lisibilité de sa transmission ? ^t90q28
+- A) You read me five
+- B) Request readability
+- C) How do you read?
+- D) What is the communication like?
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « How do you read? » est l'expression normalisée OACI pour demander un contrôle de lisibilité. La réponse attendue utilise l'échelle de 1 à 5 (par exemple « I read you five »). L'option A est le format d'un compte rendu de lisibilité, pas de la demande. L'option B n'est pas une phraséologie normalisée. L'option D est du langage courant et non de la terminologie OACI prescrite.
+
+### Q29: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour demander l'autorisation de traverser un espace aérien contrôlé ? ^t90q29
+- A) Would like
+- B) Request
+- C) Apply
+- D) Want
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Request » est la phraséologie OACI normalisée pour demander à l'ATC une autorisation, un service ou une permission — par exemple « Request transit controlled airspace ». Les options A, C et D sont des termes familiers ou non normalisés qui ne doivent pas être utilisés en radiotéléphonie car ils réduisent la clarté et peuvent ne pas être compris par les contrôleurs en environnement multilingue.
+
+### Q30: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'il faut répondre « oui » à une transmission ? ^t90q30
+- A) Roger
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirm
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Affirm » est le mot normalisé OACI pour « oui » en radiotéléphonie de l'aviation civile. L'option A (« Roger ») signifie accusé de réception, pas accord. L'option B (« Yes ») est du langage courant et non de la phraséologie normalisée. L'option D (« Affirmative ») est couramment utilisée dans les communications militaires mais « Affirm » est le standard correct de l'aviation civile selon l'OACI.
+
+### Q31: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'il faut répondre « non » à une transmission ? ^t90q31
+- A) No
+- B) Finish
+- C) Negative
+- D) Not
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Negative » est la phraséologie OACI normalisée pour « non » ou « ce n'est pas correct », choisie pour sa clarté non ambiguë à travers les langues et les conditions radio. L'option A (« No ») est du langage courant et non normalisé, et peut être mal entendu. L'option B (« Finish ») n'a pas de signification dans ce contexte. L'option D (« Not ») est incomplet et n'est pas de la terminologie OACI prescrite.
+
+### Q32: Quelle expression un pilote doit-il utiliser pour informer la tour qu'il est prêt pour le décollage ? ^t90q32
+- A) Ready
+- B) Ready for departure
+- C) Request take-off
+- D) Ready for start-up
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Ready for departure » est l'expression correcte normalisée au point d'attente. Il est important de noter que le mot « take-off » est réservé exclusivement à l'autorisation effective (« Cleared for take-off ») ou à son annulation, afin d'éviter toute action prématurée sur un mot mal entendu. L'option A (« Ready ») est trop vague. L'option C utilise « take-off » hors du contexte de l'autorisation. L'option D indique la disponibilité pour la mise en route des moteurs, pas pour le départ sur piste.
+
+### Q33: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il pour informer la tour d'une remise de gaz ? ^t90q33
+- A) No landing
+- B) Approach canceled
+- C) Going around
+- D) Pulling up
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Going around » est l'expression OACI normalisée pour interrompre une approche et initier une procédure d'approche interrompue. Elle doit être transmise immédiatement dès la prise de décision. Les options A, B et D sont toutes des expressions non normalisées qui ne sont pas reconnues dans la phraséologie OACI et pourraient causer de la confusion, en particulier dans des situations de charge de travail élevée.
+
+### Q34: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel de l'organisme de contrôle d'aérodrome ? ^t90q34
+- A) Ground
+- B) Airfield
+- C) Tower
+- D) Control
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'organisme de contrôle d'aérodrome utilise le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel « Tower » (par exemple « Dusseldorf Tower »), responsable des aéronefs sur la piste et dans le circuit. L'option A (« Ground ») désigne le contrôle des mouvements au sol. L'option B (« Airfield ») n'est pas un suffixe d'indicatif d'appel OACI normalisé. L'option D (« Control ») est utilisé pour les centres de contrôle régional, pas pour le contrôle d'aérodrome.
+
+### Q35: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel de l'organisme de contrôle des mouvements au sol ? ^t90q35
+- A) Ground
+- B) Earth
+- C) Control
+- D) Tower
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le contrôle des mouvements au sol utilise le suffixe « Ground » (par exemple « Frankfurt Ground »), gérant les aéronefs et véhicules sur les voies de circulation et les aires de stationnement. L'option B (« Earth ») n'est pas un suffixe d'indicatif d'appel aéronautique. L'option C (« Control ») désigne le contrôle régional. L'option D (« Tower ») désigne le contrôle de piste et de circuit d'aérodrome.
+
+### Q36: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel du service d'information de vol ? ^t90q36
+- A) Advice
+- B) Info
+- C) Information
+- D) Flight information
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les organismes FIS utilisent le suffixe « Information » (par exemple « Langen Information » ou « Scottish Information »), fournissant des avis de trafic et des informations météorologiques aux pilotes VFR. Les options A et B sont des abréviations informelles non utilisées comme suffixes d'indicatif d'appel officiels. L'option D (« Flight information ») est trop long — seul « Information » est le suffixe prescrit.
+
+### Q37: Quelle est la forme abrégée correcte de l'indicatif d'appel D-EAZF ? ^t90q37
+- A) DEF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) AZF
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les règles d'abréviation OACI pour les indicatifs d'appel à cinq caractères conservent le premier caractère (préfixe de nationalité D) plus les deux derniers caractères (ZF) : D-EAZF devient D-ZF, prononcé « Delta Zulu Foxtrot ». L'option A omet incorrectement les caractères du milieu. L'option C prend les trois premières lettres. L'option D omet entièrement le préfixe de nationalité. Seule l'option B respecte la règle correcte premier-plus-deux-derniers.
+
+### Q38: À quelle condition un pilote peut-il abréger l'indicatif d'appel de son aéronef ? ^t90q38
+- A) Après avoir passé le premier point de compte rendu
+- B) Dans un espace aérien contrôlé
+- C) Après que la station au sol a utilisé l'abréviation
+- D) S'il y a peu de trafic dans le circuit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un pilote ne peut utiliser l'indicatif d'appel abrégé qu'après que la station au sol l'a utilisé en premier, garantissant que l'identification positive a été établie. Les options A, B et D décrivent des situations qui n'accordent pas le droit d'abréviation — l'initiative d'abréger appartient toujours à la station au sol, indépendamment du trafic, de la classe d'espace aérien ou de la position.
+
+### Q39: Comment l'indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef doit-il être utilisé lors du premier contact ? ^t90q39
+- A) En utilisant les deux premiers caractères uniquement
+- B) En utilisant les deux derniers caractères uniquement
+- C) En utilisant tous les caractères
+- D) En utilisant les trois premiers caractères uniquement
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lors du premier contact avec tout organisme ATC, l'indicatif d'appel complet de l'aéronef doit être utilisé (par exemple « Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot ») afin que le contrôleur puisse identifier positivement l'aéronef. Les options A, B et D utilisent toutes des indicatifs partiels, ce qui risque de créer une confusion avec d'autres aéronefs et est contraire aux procédures OACI normalisées pour le contact initial.
+
+### Q40: Comment la communication radio doit-elle être correctement établie entre D-EAZF et Dusseldorf Tower ? ^t90q40
+- A) Tower from D-EAZF
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le format normalisé pour le contact radio initial est : station appelée en premier, puis son propre indicatif d'appel — « Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot ». L'option A utilise le format non normalisé « from ». L'option B omet entièrement l'identification de l'aéronef appelant. La station au sol est adressée en premier pour que le contrôleur sache que l'appel lui est destiné, puis l'aéronef s'identifie.
+
+### Q41: Que signifie la lisibilité 1 ? ^t90q41
+- A) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- B) La transmission est illisible
+- C) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- D) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Sur l'échelle de lisibilité OACI (1 à 5), la lisibilité 1 signifie que la transmission est totalement illisible — aucune information utile ne peut en être extraite. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2 (lisible par intermittence). L'option C décrit la lisibilité 3 (lisible avec difficulté). L'option D décrit la lisibilité 5 (parfaitement lisible).
+
+### Q42: Que signifie la lisibilité 2 ? ^t90q42
+- A) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- B) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est illisible
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 2 signifie que la transmission n'est que partiellement intelligible de manière intermittente — des parties sont perceptibles mais l'auditeur ne peut pas comprendre de manière fiable l'intégralité du message. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 3. L'option C décrit la lisibilité 5. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 1. Un pilote recevant un rapport de lisibilité 2 devrait essayer d'améliorer la qualité de sa transmission.
+
+### Q43: Que signifie la lisibilité 3 ? ^t90q43
+- A) La transmission est illisible
+- B) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 3 signifie que la transmission est intelligible mais nécessite un effort et une concentration de la part de l'auditeur, avec certains mots peu clairs. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 1. L'option C décrit la lisibilité 5. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 2. La lisibilité 3 est souvent suffisante pour de courts messages opérationnels mais est inadéquate pour des autorisations complexes.
+
+### Q44: Que signifie la lisibilité 5 ? ^t90q44
+- A) La transmission est lisible par intermittence
+- B) La transmission est illisible
+- C) La transmission est parfaitement lisible
+- D) La transmission est lisible mais avec difficulté
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 5 est le niveau de qualité le plus élevé de l'échelle OACI — la transmission est parfaitement claire et intelligible sans aucune difficulté. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2. L'option B décrit la lisibilité 1. L'option D décrit la lisibilité 3. « I read you five » est la réponse standard indiquant des conditions de communication idéales.
+
+### Q45: Quelle information provenant d'une station au sol ne nécessite pas de collationnement ? ^t90q45
+- A) Altitude
+- B) Vent
+- C) Code SSR
+- D) Piste en service
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'information sur le vent est consultative et est accusée de réception par « Roger » — aucun collationnement n'est requis. Les éléments nécessitant un collationnement obligatoire comprennent : les autorisations ATC, la piste en service, les calages altimétriques, les codes SSR, les instructions de niveau, et les instructions de cap et de vitesse. Les options A, C et D sont toutes des éléments critiques pour la sécurité qui doivent être collationnés pour confirmer la bonne réception.
+
+### Q46: Quelle information provenant d'une station au sol ne nécessite pas de collationnement ? ^t90q46
+- A) Cap
+- B) Information de trafic
+- C) Instructions de circulation au sol
+- D) Calage altimétrique
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'information de trafic (par exemple « trafic à deux heures, mille pieds au-dessus ») est accusée de réception par « Roger » ou « Traffic in sight » et ne nécessite pas de collationnement formel. Les options A (cap), C (instructions de circulation au sol) et D (calage altimétrique) sont toutes des éléments critiques pour la sécurité soumis au collationnement obligatoire selon les procédures OACI.
+
+### Q47: Comment l'instruction « DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off » doit-elle être correctement collationnée ? ^t90q47
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le collationnement doit inclure tous les éléments critiques pour la sécurité : les instructions de départ (montée droit devant jusqu'à 2500 ft, puis virage à droite cap 220), le numéro de piste (runway 12) et l'autorisation de décollage. L'information sur le vent ne nécessite pas de collationnement et est correctement omise dans l'option C. L'option A collationne incorrectement le vent. L'option B utilise « wilco » de façon inappropriée au milieu du collationnement. L'option D omet la piste et l'autorisation de décollage, qui sont des éléments de collationnement obligatoire.
+
+### Q48: Comment l'instruction « Next report PAH » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q48
+- A) Roger
+- B) Positive
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Wilco » (will comply — je me conformerai) est la réponse correcte à une instruction nécessitant une action future — le pilote accuse réception et confirme qu'il fera le compte rendu au point PAH. L'option A (« Roger ») ne confirme que la réception sans impliquer la conformité à l'instruction. L'option B (« Positive ») n'est pas de la phraséologie OACI normalisée dans ce contexte. L'option D (« Report PAH ») est un accusé de réception incomplet.
+
+### Q49: Comment l'instruction « Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325 » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q49
+- A) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur et la fréquence de changement sont tous deux des éléments critiques pour la sécurité nécessitant un collationnement. L'acquittement correct collationne le code squawk (4321) et la nouvelle fréquence (131.325) pour confirmer la bonne réception. Les options A et D utilisent « wilco » qui ne confirme pas les valeurs numériques spécifiques. L'option B (« Roger ») est entièrement insuffisante pour des éléments critiques pour la sécurité.
+
+### Q50: Comment « You are now entering airspace Delta » doit-il être correctement acquitté ? ^t90q50
+- A) Entering
+- B) Roger
+- C) Airspace Delta
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « You are now entering airspace Delta » est une information de l'ATC, pas une instruction nécessitant une conformité. « Roger » (message reçu) est la réponse correcte et suffisante. L'option A (« Entering ») est un accusé de réception incomplet. L'option C répète partiellement le contenu sans format d'accusé de réception approprié. L'option D (« Wilco ») est inappropriée car il n'y a aucune instruction à laquelle se conformer.
+
+### Q51: Un pilote transmet le message suivant à l'ATC : « Nous atterrissons à 10h45. Veuillez nous commander un taxi. » De quel type de message s'agit-il ? ^t90q51
+- A) C'est un message d'urgence.
+- B) C'est un message relatif à la régularité des vols.
+- C) C'est un message de service.
+- D) C'est un message inadmissible.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les fréquences ATC sont réservées exclusivement aux communications aéronautiques liées à la sécurité des vols, à l'urgence et aux questions opérationnelles. Commander un taxi terrestre est une demande de service personnel qui n'a pas sa place sur une fréquence aéronautique — c'est donc un message inadmissible. Les options A, B et C classent incorrectement cette demande personnelle parmi les types de messages légitimes.
+
+### Q52: Vous volez en VFR et avez reçu une autorisation ATC pour entrer dans un espace aérien de classe C afin d'atterrir. Peu après votre entrée, votre radio tombe en panne. Que faites-vous si aucune disposition spéciale ne s'applique ? ^t90q52
+- A) Vous réglez le transpondeur sur le code 7600, continuez conformément à la dernière autorisation et suivez les signaux lumineux de la tour de contrôle.
+- B) En vertu de l'autorisation délivrée, vous avez le droit de voler dans l'espace aérien de classe C et d'y atterrir. Vous devez seulement régler le transpondeur sur le code 7700.
+- C) Vous devez vous diriger vers l'aérodrome de dégagement par la route la plus directe et régler le transpondeur sur le code 7000.
+- D) Indépendamment de l'autorisation obtenue, vous n'êtes plus autorisé à voler dans cet espace aérien. Vous réglez le transpondeur sur le code 7600, quittez l'espace aérien aussi rapidement que possible et atterrissez à l'aérodrome approprié le plus proche.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Pour les vols VFR, la communication radio est obligatoire dans l'espace aérien de classe C. En cas de panne radio, l'autorisation précédente est insuffisante — le pilote doit afficher 7600 (panne radio), quitter l'espace aérien contrôlé par la route la plus courte et atterrir à l'aérodrome approprié le plus proche. L'option A est incorrecte car les vols VFR ne peuvent pas simplement continuer sur la dernière autorisation. L'option B utilise incorrectement le code 7700 (urgence, pas panne radio). L'option C utilise le code 7000 (VFR conspicuité), pas le code de panne radio.
+
+### Q53: Par quel service pouvez-vous obtenir en vol les observations météorologiques de routine (METAR) pour plusieurs aéroports ? ^t90q53
+- A) Via SIGMET.
+- B) Via AIRMET.
+- C) Via GAMET.
+- D) Via VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** VOLMET est le service de diffusion radio continue fournissant des METAR et TAF pour une série d'aérodromes, permettant aux pilotes en vol de recevoir les observations météorologiques actuelles. L'option A (SIGMET) signale des phénomènes météorologiques significatifs dangereux pour tous les aéronefs. L'option B (AIRMET) avertit des dangers météorologiques pertinents pour les vols à basse altitude. L'option C (GAMET) fournit des prévisions de zone pour les opérations à basse altitude. Aucun de ceux-ci ne diffuse les observations de routine d'aérodrome comme le fait VOLMET.
+
+### Q54: Que signifie l'abréviation QNH ? ^t90q54
+- A) La pression atmosphérique au niveau de l'aérodrome (ou au seuil de piste).
+- B) La pression atmosphérique mesurée à l'obstacle le plus élevé de l'aérodrome.
+- C) Le calage altimétrique nécessaire pour lire l'altitude de l'aérodrome lorsqu'on est au sol.
+- D) La pression atmosphérique mesurée en un point de la surface terrestre.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QNH est le calage de la sous-échelle de l'altimètre qui, une fois appliqué, fait indiquer à l'altimètre l'altitude de l'aérodrome au-dessus du niveau moyen de la mer lorsqu'on est au sol. C'est une valeur de pression corrigée, pas une mesure directe de pression. L'option A décrit le QFE (pression au niveau de l'aérodrome). L'option B n'est pas un terme altimétrique normalisé. L'option D est trop générique et ne décrit pas spécifiquement le QNH.
+
+### Q55: Que signifie l'abréviation QDM ? ^t90q55
+- A) Cap vrai à suivre pour rejoindre la radiobalise (sans vent).
+- B) Relèvement vrai depuis la radiobalise.
+- C) Relèvement magnétique depuis la radiobalise.
+- D) Cap magnétique à suivre pour rejoindre la radiobalise (sans vent).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QDM est le cap magnétique à suivre (en l'absence de vent) pour voler directement vers la station radio. L'option A décrit le QUJ (cap vrai vers la station). L'option B décrit le QTE (relèvement vrai depuis la station). L'option C décrit le QDR (relèvement magnétique depuis la station). Le système de codes Q utilise ces abréviations distinctes pour éviter toute confusion entre relèvements, caps, références vraies et magnétiques.
+
+### Q56: Combien de fois le signal de détresse radiotéléphonique (MAYDAY) ou le signal d'urgence (PAN PAN) doit-il être prononcé ? ^t90q56
+- A) Deux fois.
+- B) Quatre fois.
+- C) Trois fois.
+- D) Une fois.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal de détresse (« MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY ») et le signal d'urgence (« PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN ») exigent tous deux que l'expression clé soit prononcée trois fois. Cette répétition garantit que la nature et la priorité du message sont clairement reconnues même dans de mauvaises conditions radio ou avec des interférences partielles. Les options A, B et D spécifient des nombres de répétitions incorrects.
+
+### Q57: Quelles informations doivent, dans la mesure du possible, figurer dans un message d'urgence ? ^t90q57
+- A) L'identification de l'aéronef, sa position et son niveau, la nature de l'urgence, l'assistance requise.
+- B) L'identification de l'aéronef, l'aérodrome de départ, la position, le niveau et le cap de l'aéronef.
+- C) L'identification et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de l'urgence, les intentions de l'équipage, ainsi que la position, le niveau et le cap de l'aéronef.
+- D) L'identification et le type de l'aéronef, l'assistance requise, la route, l'aérodrome de destination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message d'urgence (PAN PAN) doit contenir : l'identification et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de l'urgence, les intentions de l'équipage, et les informations de position/niveau/cap — permettant à l'ATC de fournir une assistance efficace. L'option A omet le type d'aéronef et les intentions de l'équipage. L'option B omet la nature de l'urgence et les intentions de l'équipage. L'option D inclut la route et la destination, qui sont des données de plan de vol plutôt que des informations spécifiques à l'urgence.
+
+### Q58: Quel est l'ordre de priorité correct des messages dans le service mobile aéronautique ? ^t90q58
+- A) 1. Messages de détresse, 2. Messages de sécurité des vols, 3. Messages d'urgence.
+- B) 1. Messages de sécurité des vols, 2. Messages de détresse, 3. Messages d'urgence.
+- C) 1. Messages d'urgence, 2. Messages de détresse, 3. Messages de sécurité des vols.
+- D) 1. Messages de détresse, 2. Messages d'urgence, 3. Messages de sécurité des vols.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ordre de priorité OACI des messages est : (1) Détresse (MAYDAY) — danger grave et imminent, (2) Urgence (PAN PAN) — sérieux mais pas immédiatement mortel, (3) Messages de sécurité des vols — autorisations et instructions ATC. Les options A, B et C classent toutes ces catégories dans un ordre incorrect. La détresse a toujours la priorité absolue.
+
+### Q59: Comment les lettres BAFO s'épellent-elles selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI ? ^t90q59
+- A) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- B) BETA ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- C) BRAVO ANNA FOX OSCAR
+- D) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OTTO
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI : B = Bravo, A = Alpha, F = Foxtrot, O = Oscar. L'option B utilise « Beta » (alphabet grec, pas OACI). L'option C utilise « Anna » et « Fox » (variantes locales non normalisées). L'option D utilise « Otto » (alternative allemande non normalisée pour O). Seule l'option A utilise les mots phonétiques OACI corrects pour les quatre lettres.
+
+### Q60: Vous pilotez votre aéronef au cap nord-est à 2 500 pieds. Comment répondez-vous lorsque l'ATC vous demande votre position ? ^t90q60
+- A) Heading 045 at flight level 25.
+- B) 045 degrees and 2,500 feet.
+- C) Heading 45 at 2,500 feet.
+- D) Heading 045 at 2,500 feet.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le format correct est « Heading » suivi de trois chiffres (toujours trois — « 045 » et non « 45 »), puis l'altitude en pieds lorsqu'on est sous l'altitude de transition. L'option A utilise incorrectement le niveau de vol (FL 25 = 2 500 ft en pression standard), qui n'est utilisé qu'au-dessus de l'altitude de transition. L'option B utilise « degrees » et « and », qui ne font pas partie de la phraséologie normalisée. L'option C n'utilise que deux chiffres pour le cap au lieu des trois requis.
+
+### Q61: Quelle gamme de fréquences permet aux ondes radio de parcourir la plus grande distance ? ^t90q61
+- A) UHF
+- B) VHF
+- C) LW
+- D) MW
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les ondes longues (LW / bande LF) parcourent la plus grande distance car elles se diffractent autour de la courbure de la Terre par propagation d'onde de sol, permettant la réception bien au-delà de la ligne de visée. Les options A (UHF) et B (VHF) sont limitées à la portée en ligne de visée, qui dépend de l'altitude et du terrain. L'option D (MW / ondes moyennes) a une portée intermédiaire — meilleure que le VHF mais moindre que les LW. L'aviation utilise principalement le VHF pour sa clarté, malgré la limitation de portée.
+
+### Q62: Quelle abréviation désigne le système de temps universel utilisé par les services de navigation aérienne ? ^t90q62
+- A) LMT
+- B) GMT
+- C) UTC
+- D) LT
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'UTC (temps universel coordonné) est la norme de temps officielle adoptée par l'OACI pour toutes les communications aéronautiques, plans de vol et publications. L'option B (GMT) est historiquement similaire mais n'est pas la désignation OACI officielle. L'option A (LMT — temps moyen local) et l'option D (LT — heure locale) ne sont pas utilisées dans les communications aéronautiques officielles car elles varient selon la localisation.
+
+### Q63: Selon l'OACI, quel est le débit d'élocution recommandé pour les communications radio ? ^t90q63
+- A) 200 mots/minute.
+- B) 50 mots/minute.
+- C) 100 mots/minute.
+- D) 150 mots/minute.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'OACI recommande environ 100 mots par minute pour les communications radio — un rythme modéré qui assure l'intelligibilité, en particulier pour les locuteurs non natifs de l'anglais et dans des conditions radio dégradées. L'option A (200 mots/minute) est bien trop rapide pour une compréhension claire. L'option B (50 mots/minute) est inutilement lente et gaspillerait du temps de fréquence. L'option D (150 mots/minute) dépasse le débit recommandé.
+
+### Q64: Quelle affirmation concernant la radiotéléphonie dans le service mobile aéronautique est correcte ? ^t90q64
+- A) Dans les communications avec l'ATC, utilisez exclusivement la phraséologie normalisée OACI. Le langage clair n'est autorisé qu'aux aérodromes non contrôlés.
+- B) Peu importe que la phraséologie normalisée OACI ou le langage clair soit utilisé, pourvu que le message soit compréhensible.
+- C) En principe, utilisez le langage clair car il est le plus compréhensible. La phraséologie normalisée ne peut être utilisée que dans le cadre des autorisations ATC.
+- D) La phraséologie normalisée OACI doit en principe être utilisée pour éviter les malentendus. Le langage clair ne doit être utilisé que dans les situations pour lesquelles il n'existe pas de phraséologie normalisée correspondante.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La phraséologie normalisée OACI est la norme par défaut pour toute radiotéléphonie, minimisant le risque de malentendu en environnement multilingue. Le langage clair n'est autorisé que lorsqu'aucune expression normalisée n'existe pour la situation. L'option A est trop rigide — le langage clair n'est pas limité aux aérodromes non contrôlés. L'option B est dangereuse — la terminologie normalisée existe précisément parce que « compréhensible » est subjectif. L'option C inverse le principe, faisant incorrectement du langage clair la norme par défaut.
+
+### Q65: Quel est le terme anglais correct pour « service d'information de vol d'aérodrome » ? ^t90q65
+- A) FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- B) AIRPORT TRAFFIC INFORMATION SERVICE
+- C) AERODROME FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- D) AERODROME INFORMATION SERVICE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) est le service d'information de vol spécifique à un aérodrome, fournissant aux pilotes des informations sur les conditions de l'aérodrome et le trafic connu sans émettre d'autorisations. L'option A (Flight Information Service) est le FIS régional plus large, non spécifique à un aérodrome. L'option B utilise « Airport Traffic », qui n'est pas le terme OACI officiel. L'option D omet « Flight », qui est une partie essentielle de la désignation officielle.
+
+### Q66: Quelle est la forme abrégée correcte de l'indicatif d'appel pour un aéronef dont l'indicatif complet est AB-CDE ? ^t90q66
+- A) DE
+- B) A-DE
+- C) CDE
+- D) AB-DE
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La règle d'abréviation OACI conserve le premier caractère (préfixe de nationalité) et les deux derniers caractères : AB-CDE devient A-DE. L'option A omet entièrement le préfixe de nationalité. L'option C prend les trois derniers caractères sans le préfixe de nationalité. L'option D conserve le préfixe de nationalité complet à deux caractères, ce qui n'est pas la méthode d'abréviation normalisée — seul le premier caractère est conservé.
+
+### Q67: Quand un pilote est-il autorisé à utiliser un indicatif d'appel abrégé ? ^t90q67
+- A) À tout moment, à condition qu'il n'y ait pas de risque de confusion.
+- B) Jamais. Seul le service de la navigation aérienne a le droit d'abréger l'indicatif d'appel.
+- C) Si la station au sol communique de cette manière.
+- D) Après le premier appel.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un pilote ne peut abréger son indicatif d'appel qu'après que la station au sol a initié l'abréviation. La station au sol prend l'initiative car elle peut vérifier qu'il n'y a pas d'indicatifs d'appel similaires sur la fréquence. L'option A est incorrecte car le pilote ne peut pas déterminer lui-même le risque de confusion. L'option B est incorrecte car les deux parties peuvent utiliser la forme abrégée, pas seulement l'ATC. L'option D est incorrecte car l'abréviation nécessite l'initiative de l'ATC, pas simplement l'achèvement du premier appel.
+
+### Q68: Quelles instructions et informations doivent toujours être collationnées ? ^t90q68
+- A) Vent de surface, visibilité, température, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- B) Piste en service, calages altimétriques, codes SSR, instructions de niveau, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- C) Piste en service, visibilité, vent de surface, instructions de cap, calages altimétriques.
+- D) Vent de surface, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les éléments de collationnement obligatoire selon l'OACI/EASA sont : piste en service, calages altimétriques, codes SSR (transpondeur), instructions de niveau (altitude/niveau de vol) et instructions de cap et de vitesse. Les options A, C et D incluent toutes le vent de surface et/ou la visibilité, qui sont des informations consultatives ne nécessitant pas de collationnement — elles sont acquittées par « Roger ».
+
+### Q69: Que signifie l'instruction « Squawk ident » ? ^t90q69
+- A) Vous avez été identifié par radar.
+- B) Vous devez réintroduire le code transpondeur qui vous a été attribué.
+- C) Vous devez appuyer sur le bouton « IDENT » de votre transpondeur.
+- D) Vous devez effectuer un virage pour vous identifier.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Squawk ident » ordonne au pilote d'appuyer sur le bouton IDENT de son transpondeur, ce qui génère un signal amélioré distinct sur l'écran radar du contrôleur pour aider à identifier l'aéronef spécifique parmi le trafic environnant. L'option A décrit la confirmation du contrôleur après identification. L'option B correspondrait à « Squawk [code] » ou « Recycle ». L'option D décrit un virage d'identification radar, qui est une procédure différente.
+
+### Q70: Comment un pilote termine-t-il le collationnement d'une autorisation ATC ? ^t90q70
+- A) Par « WILCO ».
+- B) Par l'indicatif d'appel de la station au sol ATC.
+- C) Par l'indicatif d'appel de son aéronef.
+- D) Par « ROGER ».
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Tout collationnement d'une autorisation ATC doit se terminer par l'indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, confirmant de manière non ambiguë quel aéronef a reçu et correctement répété l'autorisation. L'option A (« Wilco ») peut figurer dans une réponse mais ne remplace pas l'exigence de l'indicatif d'appel. L'option B (indicatif de la station au sol) est incorrecte — le collationnement se termine par l'identification de l'aéronef. L'option D (« Roger ») ne fait qu'accuser réception et n'identifie pas l'aéronef.
+
+### Q71: Dans quelle catégorie sont classés les messages provenant d'un aéronef en état de danger grave et/ou imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate ? ^t90q71
+- A) Messages de sécurité des vols.
+- B) Messages d'urgence.
+- C) Messages de détresse.
+- D) Messages de régularité des vols.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un aéronef confronté à un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate transmet des messages de détresse (MAYDAY), la catégorie de priorité la plus élevée dans les communications aéronautiques. L'option A (messages de sécurité des vols) couvre les instructions et autorisations ATC. L'option B (messages d'urgence) couvre les situations sérieuses mais pas immédiatement mortelles. L'option D (messages de régularité) couvre les communications opérationnelles administratives.
+
+### Q72: À partir de quel moment un aéronef peut-il utiliser son indicatif d'appel abrégé ? ^t90q72
+- A) Lorsque la station aéronautique a utilisé l'indicatif d'appel abrégé pour s'adresser à l'aéronef.
+- B) Lorsque la communication est bien établie.
+- C) En cas de trafic intense.
+- D) Lorsqu'il n'y a aucune possibilité de confusion.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un aéronef peut utiliser son indicatif d'appel abrégé une fois que la communication radio est bien établie avec la station au sol, et seulement après que la station au sol a elle-même utilisé la forme abrégée en premier. L'option A est partiellement correcte mais incomplète — c'est l'utilisation par la station au sol qui déclenche l'autorisation. L'option C (trafic intense) et l'option D (aucun risque de confusion) n'accordent pas indépendamment le droit d'abréviation ; la station au sol doit en prendre l'initiative.
+
+### Q73: Un aéronef ne parvient pas à établir le contact radio avec une station au sol sur la fréquence désignée ou toute autre fréquence appropriée. Quelle action le pilote doit-il entreprendre ? ^t90q73
+- A) Atterrir à l'aérodrome le plus proche sur la route.
+- B) Se diriger vers l'aérodrome de dégagement.
+- C) Essayer d'établir la communication avec d'autres aéronefs ou d'autres stations aéronautiques.
+- D) Afficher le code SSR d'urgence 7500.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** En cas d'impossibilité de contacter la station désignée, le pilote doit d'abord essayer d'établir la communication avec d'autres aéronefs ou stations aéronautiques pouvant relayer le message. L'option A est prématurée — les alternatives de communication doivent d'abord être épuisées. L'option B suppose la désignation préalable d'un aérodrome de dégagement. L'option D est incorrecte car le code 7500 indique un détournement/interférence illicite, pas une panne de communication (qui est le 7600).
+
+### Q74: Dans le service mobile aéronautique, laquelle des fréquences suivantes est une fréquence internationale de détresse ? ^t90q74
+- A) 123.45MHz.
+- B) 121.500KHz.
+- C) 6500 KHz.
+- D) 121.500MHz.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La fréquence internationale de détresse VHF (fréquence de veille) est 121.500 MHz, surveillée en permanence par les installations ATC du monde entier. L'option A (123.45 MHz) est une fréquence consultative air-air. L'option B indique incorrectement 121.500 KHz — l'unité correcte est MHz, pas KHz (121.500 KHz serait dans la bande LF). L'option C (6500 KHz) n'est pas une fréquence de détresse normalisée.
+
+### Q75: Comment les lettres NDGF doivent-elles être prononcées selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI ? ^t90q75
+- A) NOVEMBER DELTA GOLF FOXTROT.
+- B) NOVEMBER DECEMBER GOLF FOXTROT
+- C) NORBERT DELTA GOLF FOX.
+- D) NOVEMBER DELTA GAMMA FOX.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Selon l'alphabet phonétique OACI : N = November, D = Delta, G = Golf, F = Foxtrot. L'option B utilise « December » pour D (pas normalisé OACI). L'option C utilise « Norbert » (non normalisé) et « Fox » (le mot correct est « Foxtrot »). L'option D utilise « Gamma » (alphabet grec) pour G et « Fox » au lieu de « Foxtrot ».
+
+### Q76: Que signifie le terme « station aéronautique » ? ^t90q76
+- A) Une station radio du service fixe aéronautique, au sol ou à bord d'un aéronef, destinée à l'échange de communications radio.
+- B) Une station terrestre du service mobile aéronautique. Dans certains cas, une station aéronautique peut être située à bord d'un navire ou d'une plateforme en mer.
+- C) Une station radio du service fixe aéronautique.
+- D) Toute station radio destinée à l'échange de communications radio.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une station aéronautique est définie comme une station terrestre du service mobile aéronautique, assurant la communication bilatérale avec les aéronefs. Dans certains cas, elle peut être située sur un navire ou une plateforme en mer. L'option A fait incorrectement référence au service fixe (sol-sol) plutôt qu'au service mobile (sol-air). L'option C est également une désignation de service incorrecte. L'option D est trop large et englobe toutes les stations radio indépendamment du type de service.
+
+### Q77: Que signifie l'abréviation « HJ » ? ^t90q77
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil.
+- B) Du lever au coucher du soleil.
+- C) Service continu jour et nuit.
+- D) Pas d'horaires d'exploitation fixes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** HJ (du français « Heure de Jour ») signifie heures de jour — du lever au coucher du soleil. Cette désignation apparaît dans les AIP et les NOTAM pour les installations ouvertes uniquement pendant les heures de jour. L'option A décrit HN (du coucher au lever du soleil). L'option C décrit H24 (service continu). L'option D décrit HX (pas d'horaires fixes).
+
+### Q78: Quelles instructions et informations doivent toujours être collationnées textuellement ? ^t90q78
+- A) Piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+- B) Vent de surface, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR.
+- C) Piste en service, visibilité, vent de surface, instructions de cap, calages altimétriques.
+- D) Vent de surface, visibilité, température, piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de cap et de vitesse.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les éléments de collationnement obligatoire sont : piste en service, calages altimétriques, instructions de niveau, codes SSR et instructions de cap/vitesse. Le vent de surface est également inclus dans certaines mises en œuvre régionales. Les options C et D incluent la visibilité et/ou la température, qui sont consultatives et ne nécessitent pas de collationnement. L'option A est proche mais omet le vent de surface, tandis que l'option B correspond à la liste normalisée OACI.
+
+### Q79: Dans quelle catégorie de messages peut-on classer les autorisations ATC, les autorisations de décollage et d'atterrissage, et les informations de trafic du service de contrôle de la circulation aérienne ? ^t90q79
+- A) Messages de sécurité des vols.
+- B) Messages de régularité des vols.
+- C) Messages d'urgence.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les autorisations ATC, les instructions de décollage/atterrissage et les informations de trafic sont toutes classées comme messages de sécurité des vols, au troisième rang dans la hiérarchie de priorité OACI après les messages de détresse et d'urgence. L'option B (messages de régularité) couvre les communications administratives et logistiques. L'option C (messages d'urgence) concerne spécifiquement les aéronefs ou personnes confrontés à une situation de sécurité sérieuse, pas les opérations ATC de routine.
+
+### Q80: Que signifie l'instruction « Squawk 1234 » ? ^t90q80
+- A) Effectuez un contrôle radio sur la fréquence 123.4 MHz.
+- B) Affichez le code 1234 sur le transpondeur et mettez-le en marche.
+- C) Soyez prêt à surveiller la fréquence 123.4 MHz.
+- D) Transmettez brièvement (1-2-3-4) pour un relèvement.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Squawk 1234 » signifie que le pilote doit sélectionner le code 1234 sur le transpondeur et s'assurer qu'il est en fonctionnement. Cela permet aux contrôleurs radar d'identifier l'aéronef en utilisant le code attribué. L'option A confond un code transpondeur avec une fréquence radio. L'option C confond également la surveillance de fréquence avec le fonctionnement du transpondeur. L'option D décrit une procédure sans rapport avec les codes transpondeur.
+
+### Q81: Que signifie l'abréviation « ATIS » ? ^t90q81
+- A) Air Trafic Information Service
+- B) Automatic Terminal Information System
+- C) Airport Terminal Information Service
+- D) Automatic Terminal Information Service
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** ATIS signifie Automatic Terminal Information Service (service automatique d'information de région terminale) — un enregistrement diffusé en continu contenant les informations météorologiques et opérationnelles actuelles d'un aérodrome, identifié par un code alphabétique qui change à chaque mise à jour. L'option A écrit incorrectement « Trafic » et utilise « Air » au lieu de « Automatic ». L'option B utilise « System » au lieu de « Service ». L'option C utilise « Airport » au lieu de « Automatic ».
+
+### Q82: Quel est le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel du service d'information de vol ? ^t90q82
+- A) FLIGHT CENTER
+- B) INFO
+- C) INFORMATION.
+- D) AERODROME.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le service d'information de vol utilise le suffixe d'indicatif d'appel « Information » (par exemple « Geneva Information » ou « Zurich Information »). L'option A (« Flight Center ») n'est pas un suffixe OACI normalisé. L'option B (« Info ») est une abréviation informelle non utilisée comme suffixe officiel. L'option D (« Aerodrome ») n'est pas utilisé comme suffixe d'indicatif d'appel pour le FIS.
+
+### Q83: Que signifie le terme « QDR » ? ^t90q83
+- A) Cap vrai vers la station (sans vent)
+- B) Cap magnétique vers la station (sans vent)
+- C) Relèvement vrai depuis la station
+- D) Relèvement magnétique depuis la station
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QDR est le relèvement magnétique depuis la station vers l'aéronef — la direction dans laquelle se trouve l'aéronef vu depuis la station, référencé au nord magnétique. L'option A décrit le QUJ (cap vrai vers la station). L'option B décrit le QDM (cap magnétique vers la station). L'option C décrit le QTE (relèvement vrai depuis la station). Ces codes Q doivent être soigneusement distingués pour éviter les erreurs de navigation.
+
+### Q84: Qu'est-ce qui influence la qualité de réception radio VHF ? ^t90q84
+- A) L'effet crépusculaire.
+- B) L'ionosphère.
+- C) Les perturbations atmosphériques, en particulier les conditions orageuses.
+- D) L'altitude de vol et les conditions topographiques.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La radio VHF se propage en ligne de visée, de sorte que la qualité de réception dépend principalement de l'altitude de vol (qui détermine la portée de l'horizon radio) et de la topographie (les montagnes et le relief peuvent bloquer les signaux). L'option A (effet crépusculaire) affecte la réception NDB/ADF, pas le VHF. L'option B (ionosphère) affecte la propagation par ondes de ciel HF, pas le VHF. L'option C (orages) peut causer un peu de parasites mais n'est pas le facteur principal de la qualité de réception VHF.
+
+### Q85: Que signifie le terme « QFE » ? ^t90q85
+- A) Calage altimétrique faisant indiquer à l'instrument l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol.
+- B) Pression atmosphérique mesurée à la hauteur de l'obstacle le plus élevé d'un aérodrome.
+- C) Pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome (ou au seuil de piste).
+- D) Pression atmosphérique mesurée en un point de la surface terrestre.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le QFE est la pression atmosphérique à l'altitude de l'aérodrome ou au seuil de piste. Lorsqu'il est calé sur l'altimètre, l'instrument indique zéro au sol et affiche en vol la hauteur au-dessus de l'aérodrome. L'option A décrit le comportement du QNH (lecture de l'altitude de l'aérodrome au sol). L'option B n'est pas une définition normalisée. L'option D est trop générique et pourrait décrire toute mesure de pression en surface.
+
+### Q86: Dans le service mobile aéronautique, les messages sont classés par importance. Quel est l'ordre de priorité correct ? ^t90q86
+- A) Messages de détresse, messages de sécurité des vols, messages d'urgence.
+- B) Messages météorologiques, messages de radiogoniométrie, messages de régularité des vols.
+- C) Messages de radiogoniométrie, messages de détresse, messages d'urgence.
+- D) Messages de détresse, messages d'urgence, messages de sécurité.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'ordre de priorité OACI correct est : (1) Messages de détresse, (2) Messages d'urgence, (3) Messages de sécurité des vols, suivis des messages météorologiques, de radiogoniométrie, de régularité et autres. L'option A place incorrectement la sécurité des vols au-dessus de l'urgence. L'option B ne liste que des catégories de priorité inférieure. L'option C place la radiogoniométrie au-dessus de la détresse, ce qui est incorrect — la détresse a toujours la priorité absolue.
+
+### Q87: Quel est le signal d'urgence en radiotéléphonie ? ^t90q87
+- A) PAN PAN (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- B) MAYDAY (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- C) URGENCY (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+- D) ALERFA (de préférence prononcé trois fois).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le signal d'urgence en radiotéléphonie est « PAN PAN » prononcé trois fois, indiquant une situation sérieuse nécessitant une assistance rapide mais ne constituant pas une urgence vitale immédiate. L'option B (MAYDAY) est le signal de détresse pour un danger grave et imminent. L'option C (« URGENCY ») n'est pas de la phraséologie normalisée. L'option D (ALERFA) est une désignation interne de phase d'alerte ATC, pas un signal radiotéléphonique.
+
+### Q88: Sur l'échelle de lisibilité, que signifie le degré « 5 » ? ^t90q88
+- A) Lisible par intermittence.
+- B) Illisible.
+- C) Lisible, mais avec difficulté.
+- D) Parfaitement lisible.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** La lisibilité 5 est le niveau le plus élevé de l'échelle OACI, signifiant que la transmission est parfaitement claire et intelligible. L'option A décrit la lisibilité 2 (par intermittence). L'option B décrit la lisibilité 1 (illisible). L'option C décrit la lisibilité 3 (avec difficulté). La réponse standard est « I read you five ».
+
+### Q89: Quel est le nom du système horaire utilisé dans le monde entier par les services de la circulation aérienne et dans le service fixe aéronautique ? ^t90q89
+- A) Heure locale (LT) au format 24 heures.
+- B) Temps universel coordonné (UTC).
+- C) Il n'y a pas de système horaire particulier, car généralement seules les minutes sont transmises.
+- D) Heure locale au format AM et PM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le temps universel coordonné (UTC) est la norme horaire universelle utilisée par tous les services de la circulation aérienne et les services fixes aéronautiques dans le monde entier. Il élimine l'ambiguïté des fuseaux horaires dans les opérations internationales. Les options A et D utilisent l'heure locale, qui varie selon la localisation et n'est pas utilisée dans les communications aéronautiques. L'option C est factuellement incorrecte — un système horaire spécifique (UTC) est toujours utilisé.
+
+### Q90: Quels éléments un message de détresse doit-il contenir ? ^t90q90
+- A) Indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, point de départ, position, niveau.
+- B) Indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, position, assistance requise.
+- C) Indicatif d'appel et type de l'aéronef, nature de la situation de détresse, intentions du pilote, position, niveau, cap.
+- D) Indicatif d'appel de l'aéronef, route de vol, destination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message de détresse complet (MAYDAY) doit contenir : l'indicatif d'appel et le type de l'aéronef, la nature de la détresse, les intentions du pilote, et les informations de position/niveau/cap — donnant aux services de secours le maximum d'informations pour coordonner l'assistance. L'option A omet la nature de la détresse et les intentions du pilote. L'option B omet le type d'aéronef, les intentions du pilote et le cap. L'option D omet toutes les informations spécifiques à l'urgence et ne liste que des données de plan de vol.
+
+### Q91: Que signifie « FEW » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q91
+- A) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- B) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- C) 8 huitièmes
+- D) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les rapports de couverture nuageuse METAR, FEW désigne 1 à 2 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert — la catégorie de nuages la plus dispersée. L'option A décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option C décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option D décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). Ces désignations ICAO normalisées assurent un signalement météorologique non ambigu dans le monde entier.
+
+### Q92: Que signifie « SCT » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q92
+- A) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- B) 8 huitièmes
+- C) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- D) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** SCT signifie Scattered (épars), représentant 3 à 4 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert par les nuages. L'option A décrit FEW (1-2 octas). L'option B décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option C décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). Une couverture nuageuse éparse ne restreint pas nécessairement le vol VFR, mais les pilotes doivent vérifier que les bases de nuages respectent les minima VFR applicables.
+
+### Q93: Que signifie « BKN » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q93
+- A) 8 huitièmes
+- B) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- C) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- D) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** BKN signifie Broken (fragmenté), soit 5 à 7 octas (huitièmes) du ciel couverts — prédominance de nuages avec quelques trouées. L'option A décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option B décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option D décrit FEW (1-2 octas). Une couche fragmentée peut avoir un impact significatif sur les opérations VFR, surtout si les bases de nuages sont basses.
+
+### Q94: Quel code transpondeur signale une panne radio ? ^t90q94
+- A) 7000
+- B) 7500
+- C) 7600
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est le code normalisé internationalement pour la perte de communication radio (NORDO), alertant les contrôleurs radar de la panne de communication. L'option A (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR standard dans l'espace aérien européen. L'option B (7500) signale une interférence illicite (détournement). L'option D (7700) indique une urgence générale. Ces quatre codes doivent être mémorisés car chacun déclenche des réponses ATC spécifiques.
+
+### Q95: Quelle est l'expression correcte pour commencer une transmission en aveugle ? ^t90q95
+- A) No reception
+- B) Transmitting blind
+- C) Listen
+- D) Blind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Lorsqu'un pilote peut émettre mais ne peut pas recevoir, la transmission en aveugle doit commencer par l'expression « Transmitting blind » (ou « Transmitting blind on [fréquence] ») pour alerter toute station réceptrice du caractère unidirectionnel de la communication. Les options A, C et D ne sont pas de la phraséologie OACI normalisée pour initier des transmissions en aveugle.
+
+### Q96: Combien de fois une transmission en aveugle doit-elle être effectuée ? ^t90q96
+- A) Trois fois
+- B) Quatre fois
+- C) Une fois
+- D) Deux fois
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Une transmission en aveugle est effectuée une seule fois sur la fréquence en cours (et éventuellement répétée une fois sur la fréquence d'urgence si approprié). La répéter plusieurs fois encombrerait inutilement la fréquence. Les options A, B et D spécifient des répétitions excessives qui ne font pas partie de la procédure OACI normalisée pour les transmissions en aveugle.
+
+### Q97: Dans quelle situation est-il approprié d'afficher le code transpondeur 7600 ? ^t90q97
+- A) Vol dans les nuages
+- B) Urgence
+- C) Perte de radio
+- D) Détournement
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7600 est spécifiquement désigné pour la perte de communication radio (NORDO), alertant les contrôleurs radar afin qu'ils puissent assurer la séparation appropriée et les signaux visuels. L'option A (vol dans les nuages) n'a pas de code transpondeur spécifique. L'option B (urgence) nécessite le code 7700. L'option D (détournement) nécessite le code 7500.
+
+### Q98: Quelle est la conduite à tenir en cas de panne radio dans un espace aérien de classe D ? ^t90q98
+- A) Le vol doit être poursuivi conformément à la dernière autorisation en respectant les règles VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté par la route la plus courte
+- B) Le vol doit être poursuivi au-dessus de 5000 pieds en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté en utilisant un itinéraire normalisé
+- C) Le vol doit être poursuivi conformément à la dernière autorisation en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté en utilisant un itinéraire normalisé
+- D) Le vol doit être poursuivi au-dessus de 5000 pieds en respectant les règles de vol VFR ou l'espace aérien doit être quitté par la route la plus courte
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les procédures OACI en cas de panne radio VFR dans un espace aérien contrôlé exigent que le pilote soit poursuive le vol conformément à la dernière autorisation ATC reçue en respectant les règles VFR, soit quitte l'espace aérien par la route la plus courte. Les options B et D spécifient incorrectement un vol au-dessus de 5000 pieds, ce qui ne fait pas partie de la procédure de panne radio. L'option C remplace incorrectement « route la plus courte » par « itinéraire normalisé ».
+
+### Q99: Quelle expression doit être répétée trois fois avant de transmettre un message d'urgence ? ^t90q99
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Help
+- C) Urgent
+- D) Pan Pan
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message d'urgence est précédé de « Pan Pan » prononcé trois fois (« PAN PAN, PAN PAN, PAN PAN »). Cela alerte toutes les stations sur la fréquence d'une situation sérieuse mais pas immédiatement mortelle. L'option A (« Mayday ») est le signal de détresse pour un danger grave et imminent. Les options B (« Help ») et C (« Urgent ») ne sont pas des expressions de radiotéléphonie OACI normalisées.
+
+### Q100: Sur quelle fréquence un message de détresse initial doit-il être transmis ? ^t90q100
+- A) Fréquence d'urgence
+- B) Fréquence FIS
+- C) Fréquence radar
+- D) Fréquence en cours
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'appel initial de détresse ou d'urgence doit être effectué sur la fréquence actuellement utilisée, car cette fréquence est déjà surveillée par l'organisme ATC compétent gérant l'aéronef. Changer de fréquence risque de perdre le contact et gaspille un temps précieux. L'option A (fréquence d'urgence 121.5 MHz) ne doit être essayée que s'il n'y a pas de réponse sur la fréquence en cours. Les options B et C ne sont pas le premier choix correct.
+
+### Q101: Quel type d'information doit être inclus dans un message d'urgence ? ^t90q101
+- A) Route prévue, informations importantes pour l'assistance, intentions du pilote, aérodrome de départ, aérodrome de destination, cap et altitude
+- B) Nature du problème ou de l'observation, informations importantes pour l'assistance, intentions du pilote, informations sur la position, cap et altitude
+- C) Nature du problème ou de l'observation, informations importantes pour l'assistance, aérodrome de départ, informations sur la position, cap et altitude
+- D) Route prévue, informations importantes pour l'assistance, intentions du pilote, informations sur la position, aérodrome de départ, cap et altitude
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Un message d'urgence (PAN PAN) doit inclure : la nature du problème, les informations importantes pour l'assistance, les intentions du pilote, et les données de position/cap/altitude — permettant à l'ATC de coordonner efficacement l'assistance. Les options A et D incluent les aérodromes de départ/destination et la route, qui sont des détails du plan de vol non spécifiquement requis dans une diffusion d'urgence. L'option C omet les intentions du pilote, qui sont essentielles pour la planification ATC.
+
+### Q102: Quelle est la désignation correcte de la bande de fréquences de 118,000 à 136,975 MHz utilisée pour les communications vocales ? ^t90q102
+- A) HF
+- B) LF
+- C) VHF
+- D) MF
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** La bande de 118,000 à 136,975 MHz se situe dans la gamme des très hautes fréquences (VHF), qui est la norme pour les communications vocales de l'aviation civile en raison de sa propagation fiable en ligne de vue et de sa clarté. L'option A (HF, 3-30 MHz) est utilisée pour les communications océaniques longue distance. L'option B (LF, 30-300 kHz) est utilisée pour la navigation NDB. L'option D (MF, 300 kHz - 3 MHz) est utilisée pour les émissions à portée moyenne.
+
+### Q103: Dans quel cas la visibilité est-elle transmise en mètres ? ^t90q103
+- A) Supérieure à 10 km
+- B) Jusqu'à 5 km
+- C) Supérieure à 5 km
+- D) Jusqu'à 10 km
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les rapports METAR, la visibilité est exprimée en mètres lorsqu'elle est inférieure ou égale à 5 km (5 000 m), offrant la précision nécessaire aux visibilités faibles opérationnellement critiques. Lorsque la visibilité dépasse 5 km, elle est exprimée en kilomètres. Les options A et C décrivent des conditions où les kilomètres seraient utilisés. L'option D (jusqu'à 10 km) étend le seuil de compte rendu en mètres au-delà de la coupure standard de 5 km.
+
+### Q104: Comment sont définis les messages d'urgence ? ^t90q104
+- A) Messages concernant des aéronefs et leurs passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- B) Messages concernant des pièces de rechange urgentes nécessaires pour la poursuite du vol et devant être commandées à l'avance.
+- C) Messages concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou d'un autre véhicule ou d'une personne en vue.
+- D) Informations concernant le personnel de piste et impliquant un danger imminent pour les aéronefs en atterrissage.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages d'urgence (PAN PAN) concernent la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire, d'un véhicule ou d'une personne en vue — des situations graves qui ne constituent pas encore le danger grave et imminent d'une situation de détresse. L'option A définit les messages de détresse (MAYDAY). L'option B est une question administrative sans rapport avec la classification d'urgence. L'option D décrit un problème de sécurité au sol qui serait traité par d'autres canaux.
+
+### Q105: Que contiennent les messages de détresse ? ^t90q105
+- A) Informations concernant le personnel de piste et impliquant un danger imminent pour les aéronefs en atterrissage.
+- B) Informations concernant des pièces de rechange urgentes nécessaires pour la poursuite du vol et devant être commandées à l'avance.
+- C) Informations concernant des aéronefs et leurs passagers confrontés à une menace grave et imminente nécessitant une assistance immédiate.
+- D) Informations concernant la sécurité d'un aéronef, d'un navire ou d'un autre véhicule ou d'une personne en vue.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les messages de détresse (MAYDAY) contiennent des informations sur des aéronefs et des passagers confrontés à un danger grave et imminent nécessitant une assistance immédiate — la catégorie de priorité la plus élevée. L'option A concerne le personnel au sol, non une détresse en vol. L'option B est une question logistique administrative. L'option D décrit des situations de niveau urgence (PAN PAN), qui sont graves mais non immédiatement mortelles.
+
+### Q106: Quelle est la vitesse approximative de propagation des ondes électromagnétiques ? ^t90q106
+- A) 300 000 m/s
+- B) 123 000 km/s
+- C) 123 000 m/s
+- D) 300 000 km/s
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les ondes électromagnétiques (y compris les ondes radio) se propagent à la vitesse de la lumière, soit environ 300 000 km/s (3 × 10⁸ m/s) dans le vide. L'option A (300 000 m/s) est erronée d'un facteur 1 000 — ce ne serait que 300 km/s. Les options B (123 000 km/s) et C (123 000 m/s) sont toutes deux des valeurs incorrectes ne correspondant à aucune constante physique connue.
+
+### Q107: Dans quels cas la visibilité est-elle transmise en kilomètres ? ^t90q107
+- A) Jusqu'à 10 km
+- B) Supérieure à 5 km
+- C) Jusqu'à 5 km
+- D) Supérieure à 10 km
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Dans les rapports METAR, la visibilité est exprimée en kilomètres lorsqu'elle dépasse 5 km (par ex. « 6KM » ou « 9999 » pour 10 km ou plus). En dessous de 5 km, les mètres sont utilisés pour une plus grande précision aux visibilités faibles opérationnellement critiques. L'option A (jusqu'à 10 km) étend incorrectement la plage en kilomètres en dessous de 5 km. L'option C (jusqu'à 5 km) est la plage en mètres. L'option D (supérieure à 10 km) est trop restrictive.
+
+### Q108: Comment peut-on obtenir des informations météorologiques pour les aéroports lors d'un vol de navigation ? ^t90q108
+- A) METAR
+- B) GAMET
+- C) AIRMET
+- D) VOLMET
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VOLMET est le service de diffusion radio continue qui fournit les observations METAR actuelles pour une série d'aérodromes, disponible aux pilotes en vol sur des fréquences désignées. L'option A (METAR) est le format du rapport lui-même, non un service de diffusion accessible aux pilotes en vol par radio. L'option B (GAMET) est une prévision météorologique de zone. L'option C (AIRMET) fournit des avertissements de phénomènes météorologiques sur une région, non des observations individuelles d'aéroport.
+
+### Q109: Lequel des facteurs suivants affecte la réception des transmissions VHF ? ^t90q109
+- A) Erreur crépusculaire
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Hauteur de l'ionosphère
+- D) Effet de côte
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** La radio VHF se propage en ligne de vue, donc l'altitude est le facteur principal déterminant la portée de réception — une altitude plus élevée signifie un horizon radio plus éloigné. L'option A (erreur crépusculaire) affecte les systèmes NDB/ADF, non la VHF. L'option C (hauteur de l'ionosphère) influence la propagation par onde de ciel HF, non la VHF. L'option D (effet de côte) affecte également les relèvements NDB, non la qualité de communication VHF.
+
+### Q110: Sur quelle fréquence une transmission en aveugle doit-elle être effectuée ? ^t90q110
+- A) Sur une fréquence tour
+- B) Sur la fréquence en cours d'utilisation
+- C) Sur la fréquence FIS appropriée
+- D) Sur une fréquence radar de l'espace aérien inférieur
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les transmissions en aveugle doivent être effectuées sur la fréquence en cours d'utilisation, car c'est la fréquence surveillée par l'unité ATC responsable de l'aéronef. Changer de fréquence signifierait que le contrôleur concerné risque de ne pas entendre la transmission. Les options A, C et D sont toutes incorrectes sauf si elles se trouvent être la fréquence en cours d'utilisation.
+
+### Q111: Dans quelles conditions un vol VFR sans radio peut-il entrer dans un aérodrome de classe D ? ^t90q111
+- A) C'est l'aérodrome de destination
+- B) D'autres aéronefs sont présents dans le circuit d'aérodrome
+- C) Une approbation a été accordée au préalable
+- D) C'est l'aérodrome de départ
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** L'entrée dans l'espace aérien de classe D sans radio n'est autorisée que lorsqu'une autorisation préalable a été obtenue (par ex. par téléphone avant le départ, ou une autorisation reçue avant la panne radio). Sans autorisation préalable, la communication radio bilatérale est obligatoire pour la classe D. Les options A et D (statut d'aérodrome de destination ou de départ) ne constituent pas une autorisation. L'option B (présence d'autres trafics) n'a aucune incidence sur l'exigence radio.
+
+### Q112: Quel est le code transpondeur correct pour les urgences ? ^t90q112
+- A) 7500.
+- B) 7000.
+- C) 7700.
+- D) 7600.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur 7700 est le squawk d'urgence standardisé internationalement qui déclenche des alarmes sur les écrans radar ATC. L'option A (7500) indique une interférence illicite (détournement). L'option B (7000) est le code de conspicuité VFR standard dans l'espace aérien européen. L'option D (7600) indique une panne de communication radio. Chaque code déclenche un protocole de réponse ATC différent.
+
+### Q113: Quelles informations sont diffusées sur une fréquence VOLMET ? ^t90q113
+- A) Informations de navigation
+- B) NOTAMs
+- C) Informations actuelles
+- D) Informations météorologiques
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le VOLMET (du français « vol » et « météo ») diffuse des informations météorologiques — spécifiquement des rapports météorologiques actuels (METAR) et parfois des TAF pour une série d'aérodromes. L'option A (informations de navigation) n'est pas fournie via le VOLMET. L'option B (NOTAMs) est distribuée par d'autres canaux. L'option C (« informations actuelles ») est trop vague et non spécifique.
+
+### Q114: Quelle est la durée de validité d'une diffusion ATIS ? ^t90q114
+- A) 10 minutes.
+- B) 60 minutes.
+- C) 30 minutes.
+- D) 45 minutes.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les diffusions ATIS sont mises à jour environ toutes les 30 minutes (ou plus tôt si les conditions changent significativement), rendant chaque diffusion valable environ 30 minutes. Chaque mise à jour se voit attribuer une nouvelle lettre d'identification. L'option A (10 minutes) est trop courte pour les mises à jour standard. Les options B (60 minutes) et D (45 minutes) sont trop longues, compte tenu de la rapidité avec laquelle les conditions d'aérodrome peuvent changer.
+
+### Q115: Quelle est l'abréviation standard pour le terme « abeam » ? ^t90q115
+- A) ABM
+- B) ABA
+- C) ABE
+- D) ABB
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** ABM est l'abréviation OACI standard pour « abeam », décrivant une position perpendiculaire à la route de l'aéronef (directement sur le côté). Cette abréviation est utilisée dans les plans de vol, les communications ATC et les publications aéronautiques. Les options B, C et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues pour ce terme.
+
+### Q116: Quelle abréviation désigne les règles de vol à vue ? ^t90q116
+- A) VFR
+- B) VMC
+- C) VRU
+- D) VFS
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** VFR signifie Visual Flight Rules (règles de vol à vue) — l'ensemble des réglementations régissant le vol par référence visuelle. L'option B (VMC) signifie Visual Meteorological Conditions (conditions météorologiques de vol à vue), décrivant les exigences météorologiques pour le vol VFR — une notion liée mais distincte. Les options C et D ne sont pas des abréviations aéronautiques standard.
+
+### Q117: Quelle est l'abréviation OACI pour obstacle ? ^t90q117
+- A) OBS
+- B) OBST
+- C) OST
+- D) OBTC
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** OBST est l'abréviation OACI standard pour obstacle, utilisée dans les NOTAMs, les cartes aéronautiques et les publications de données d'obstacles. L'option A (OBS) peut être utilisée pour « observer » dans certains contextes mais ne désigne pas un obstacle. Les options C et D ne sont pas des abréviations OACI reconnues.
+
+### Q118: Que signifie l'abréviation FIS ? ^t90q118
+- A) Système d'information de vol
+- B) Service d'information clignotant
+- C) Service d'information de vol
+- D) Système d'information clignotant
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** FIS signifie Flight Information Service (service d'information de vol), fournissant des conseils et des informations utiles pour la conduite sûre et efficace des vols. C'est un service, non un système — rendant l'option A incorrecte. Les options B et D contiennent « clignotant », qui n'a aucun rapport avec ce service aéronautique.
+
+### Q119: Que signifie l'abréviation FIR ? ^t90q119
+- A) Radar d'information de flux
+- B) Région d'information de vol
+- C) Intégrité de flux requise
+- D) Récepteur d'intégrité de vol
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** FIR signifie Flight Information Region (région d'information de vol) — un volume d'espace aérien défini à l'intérieur duquel sont fournis le service d'information de vol et le service d'alerte selon les normes OACI. C'est l'élément fondamental de la gestion de l'espace aérien. Les options A, C et D sont des termes inventés sans signification aéronautique.
+
+### Q120: Que signifie l'abréviation H24 ? ^t90q120
+- A) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+- B) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+- C) Service 24 h
+- D) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** H24 signifie un service continu 24 heures sur 24 — l'installation est opérationnelle à tout moment sans interruption. L'option A (lever au coucher du soleil) décrit HJ. L'option B (aucun horaire spécifique) décrit HX. L'option D (coucher au lever du soleil) décrit HN. H24 est utilisé dans les AIP et les NOTAMs pour les installations en personnel permanent.
+
+### Q121: Que signifie l'abréviation HX ? ^t90q121
+- A) Du coucher au lever du soleil
+- B) Service 24 h
+- C) Du lever au coucher du soleil
+- D) Aucun horaire d'ouverture spécifique
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** HX est l'abréviation OACI indiquant aucun horaire de fonctionnement spécifique ou prédéterminé — l'installation peut être disponible sur demande ou de façon intermittente. Les pilotes doivent consulter les NOTAMs ou contacter l'installation pour confirmer la disponibilité. L'option A décrit HN (coucher au lever du soleil). L'option B décrit H24 (service continu). L'option C décrit HJ (lever au coucher du soleil).
+
+### Q122: Comment l'information directionnelle « 12 heures » est-elle correctement transmise ? ^t90q122
+- A) Twelve o'clock.
+- B) One two o'clock
+- C) One two.
+- D) One two hundred.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explication :** Les positions de l'horloge utilisées pour les avis de trafic sont exprimées par le nombre entier naturel suivi de « o'clock » : « Twelve o'clock » signifie droit devant. L'option B décompose le nombre en chiffres individuels, ce qui peut créer de la confusion avec d'autres données numériques. L'option C omet « o'clock », rendant la référence ambiguë. L'option D ajoute « hundred », dépourvu de sens dans la terminologie de position horaire.
+
+### Q123: Que signifie l'expression « Roger » ? ^t90q123
+- A) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+- B) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- C) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- D) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Roger » signifie uniquement « J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission » — c'est uniquement un accusé de réception, non un engagement de conformité ou une autorisation. L'option A définit « Wilco ». L'option B définit « Correction ». L'option C définit « Approved ». Confondre ces expressions peut avoir de graves conséquences pour la sécurité dans les communications ATC.
+
+### Q124: Que signifie l'expression « Correction » ? ^t90q124
+- A) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- B) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- C) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- D) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Correction » signale que l'émetteur a commis une erreur dans la transmission en cours, et les informations corrigées suivent immédiatement. Cela évite que le récepteur n'agisse sur des données incorrectes. L'option A définit « Approved ». L'option C définit « Roger ». L'option D définit « Wilco ».
+
+### Q125: Que signifie l'expression « Approved » ? ^t90q125
+- A) J'ai reçu l'intégralité de votre dernière transmission
+- B) Une erreur a été commise dans cette transmission. La version correcte est...
+- C) L'autorisation pour l'action proposée est accordée
+- D) Je comprends votre message et m'y conformerai
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Approved » signifie que l'ATC a accordé l'autorisation pour l'action spécifique que le pilote a proposée ou demandée. L'option A définit « Roger ». L'option B définit « Correction ». L'option D définit « Wilco ». Chaque expression a une signification précise dans la phraséologie OACI qui ne doit pas être interchangée.
+
+### Q126: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'une transmission doit recevoir la réponse « oui » ? ^t90q126
+- A) Yes
+- B) Affirm
+- C) Roger
+- D) Affirmative
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Affirm » est le mot OACI standard de l'aviation civile pour « oui ». L'option A (« Yes ») est du langage courant et non standard, potentiellement mal entendu à la radio. L'option C (« Roger ») signifie accusé de réception, non accord. L'option D (« Affirmative ») est courante dans l'usage militaire mais « Affirm » est le standard correct de l'aviation civile selon l'OACI.
+
+### Q127: Quelle expression un pilote utilise-t-il lorsqu'une transmission doit recevoir la réponse « non » ? ^t90q127
+- A) Finish
+- B) Not
+- C) No
+- D) Negative
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Negative » est l'expression OACI standard pour « non » ou « ce n'est pas correct », choisie pour sa clarté non équivoque dans les communications radio. L'option A (« Finish ») n'a pas de signification définie dans ce contexte. L'option B (« Not ») est incomplète et non standard. L'option C (« No ») est du langage courant qui peut être mal entendu, notamment dans des conditions radio bruyantes ou à travers des barrières linguistiques.
+
+### Q128: Comment l'instruction « DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q128
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le compte rendu de lecture correct inclut tous les éléments critiques pour la sécurité : l'instruction de départ (montée en ligne droite jusqu'à 2 500 ft, virage à droite cap 220), le numéro de piste (runway 12) et l'autorisation de décollage. Les informations de vent ne nécessitent pas de compte rendu de lecture et sont correctement omises. L'option A omet la piste et l'autorisation. L'option C utilise incorrectement « wilco » dans un compte rendu de lecture. L'option D lit inutilement le vent en retour tout en incluant l'autorisation.
+
+### Q129: Comment l'instruction « Next report PAH » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q129
+- A) Positive
+- B) Roger
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Report PAH
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « Wilco » (will comply) est l'acquittement correct pour une instruction nécessitant une action future — le pilote confirme à la fois la réception et l'intention de rendre compte au point PAH. L'option A (« Positive ») n'est pas une phraséologie OACI standard. L'option B (« Roger ») n'accuse que la réception sans confirmer la conformité. L'option D (« Report PAH ») est un acquittement incomplet sans l'élément de conformité.
+
+### Q130: Comment l'instruction « Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325 » doit-elle être correctement acquittée ? ^t90q130
+- A) Wilco
+- B) Roger
+- C) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- D) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** Le code transpondeur et la nouvelle fréquence sont tous deux des éléments critiques pour la sécurité qui doivent être lus en retour pour confirmer la bonne réception : « Squawk 4321, 131.325 ». Les options A et B (« Wilco » ou « Roger » seuls) ne confirment pas les valeurs numériques spécifiques. L'option C ne lit en retour que le code squawk sans confirmer la fréquence.
+
+### Q131: Comment « You are now entering airspace Delta » doit-il être correctement acquitté ? ^t90q131
+- A) Airspace Delta
+- B) Wilco
+- C) Roger
+- D) Entering
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** « You are now entering airspace Delta » est une information — l'ATC fournit une prise de conscience, non une instruction. La réponse correcte est « Roger » (message reçu). L'option A est une répétition partielle sans acquittement approprié. L'option B (« Wilco ») implique une instruction à laquelle se conformer, qui n'existe pas ici. L'option D (« Entering ») est incomplète et non standard.
+
+### Q132: Que signifie « FEW » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q132
+- A) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- B) 8 huitièmes
+- C) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- D) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** FEW désigne 1 à 2 octas (huitièmes) de ciel couvert par des nuages — la couverture la plus faible sur l'échelle METAR. L'option A décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option B décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option C décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). Ces quatre désignations (FEW, SCT, BKN, OVC) sont les catégories OACI standard de couverture nuageuse.
+
+### Q133: Que signifie « SCT » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q133
+- A) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+- B) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- C) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- D) 8 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explication :** SCT (Scattered, nuages épars) représente 3 à 4 octas (huitièmes) de couverture du ciel dans un rapport METAR. L'option A décrit BKN (Broken, 5-7 octas). L'option B décrit FEW (1-2 octas). L'option D décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). Les nuages épars permettent généralement le vol VFR, mais les pilotes doivent vérifier que les bases de nuages respectent les minimums de séparation verticale requis.
+
+### Q134: Que signifie « BKN » pour la couverture nuageuse dans un rapport météorologique METAR ? ^t90q134
+- A) 3 à 4 huitièmes
+- B) 8 huitièmes
+- C) 1 à 2 huitièmes
+- D) 5 à 7 huitièmes
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explication :** BKN (Broken, nuages fragmentés) représente 5 à 7 octas (huitièmes) de couverture du ciel — le ciel est principalement couvert avec quelques trouées visibles. L'option A décrit SCT (Scattered, 3-4 octas). L'option B décrit OVC (Overcast, 8 octas). L'option C décrit FEW (1-2 octas). Une couche brisée, surtout avec des bases basses, peut restreindre considérablement les opérations VFR et nécessite une évaluation attentive.
+
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index 0000000..0e0c8e6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t30_q27.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,73 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 250" width="600" height="250">
+ <rect width="600" height="250" fill="white"/>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="28" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="16" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">ICAO Chart Symbols — Obstacles</text>
+
+ <!-- ===== A) Single lighted obstacle ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(75, 125)">
+ <!-- Filled circle (base) -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="20" r="8" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Light rays (star) -->
+ <line x1="0" y1="-5" x2="0" y2="-18" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="9" y1="0" x2="18" y2="-6" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-9" y1="0" x2="-18" y2="-6" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="6" y1="-9" x2="13" y2="-18" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-6" y1="-9" x2="-13" y2="-18" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="9" y1="-5" x2="18" y2="-10" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-9" y1="-5" x2="-18" y2="-10" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="48" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">A)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="63" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Single lighted</text>
+ <text x="0" y="76" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">obstacle</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== B) Single unlighted obstacle ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(225, 125)">
+ <!-- Filled circle (base) -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="20" r="8" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="48" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">B)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="63" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Single unlighted</text>
+ <text x="0" y="76" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">obstacle</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== C) Group of lighted obstacles ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(375, 125)">
+ <!-- Two filled circles side by side -->
+ <circle cx="-12" cy="20" r="7" fill="black"/>
+ <circle cx="12" cy="20" r="7" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Light rays above center -->
+ <line x1="0" y1="-2" x2="0" y2="-16" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="9" y1="2" x2="18" y2="-4" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-9" y1="2" x2="-18" y2="-4" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="6" y1="-7" x2="13" y2="-16" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-6" y1="-7" x2="-13" y2="-16" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="9" y1="-3" x2="18" y2="-8" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <line x1="-9" y1="-3" x2="-18" y2="-8" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="48" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">C)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="63" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Group of lighted</text>
+ <text x="0" y="76" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">obstacles</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== D) Group of unlighted obstacles ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(525, 125)">
+ <!-- Two filled circles side by side -->
+ <circle cx="-12" cy="20" r="7" fill="black"/>
+ <circle cx="12" cy="20" r="7" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="48" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">D)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="63" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Group of unlighted</text>
+ <text x="0" y="76" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">obstacles</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- Dividers -->
+ <line x1="150" y1="50" x2="150" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="300" y1="50" x2="300" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="450" y1="50" x2="450" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Border -->
+ <rect width="598" height="248" x="1" y="1" fill="none" stroke="#333333" stroke-width="1"/>
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t30_q28.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t30_q28.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a725669
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 250" width="600" height="250">
+ <rect width="600" height="250" fill="white"/>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="28" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="16" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">ICAO Chart Symbols — Airports</text>
+
+ <!-- ===== A) Civil airport with paved runway ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(75, 120)">
+ <!-- Circle -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="18" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Runway line through center (horizontal) -->
+ <rect x="-5" y="-22" width="10" height="44" fill="black" rx="2"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">A)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Civil airport</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">paved runway</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== B) Military airport ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(225, 120)">
+ <!-- Circle with flag/military cross -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="18" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Runway line -->
+ <rect x="-5" y="-22" width="10" height="44" fill="black" rx="2"/>
+ <!-- Military crossbar (shorter horizontal bar across runway) -->
+ <rect x="-18" y="-4" width="36" height="8" fill="black" rx="1"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">B)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Military airport</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">paved runway</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== C) Civil airport with unpaved runway ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(375, 120)">
+ <!-- Circle only, no fill runway bar -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="18" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Runway line (open/outline style to show unpaved) -->
+ <rect x="-5" y="-22" width="10" height="44" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" rx="2"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">C)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Civil airport</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">unpaved runway</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== D) Heliport ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(525, 120)">
+ <!-- Square with H -->
+ <rect x="-20" y="-20" width="40" height="40" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <text x="0" y="8" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="24" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">H</text>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">D)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Heliport</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black"> </text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- Dividers -->
+ <line x1="150" y1="50" x2="150" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="300" y1="50" x2="300" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="450" y1="50" x2="450" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Border -->
+ <rect width="598" height="248" x="1" y="1" fill="none" stroke="#333333" stroke-width="1"/>
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t30_q29.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t30_q29.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ab158ba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t30_q29.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,67 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 250" width="600" height="250">
+ <rect width="600" height="250" fill="white"/>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="28" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="16" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">ICAO Chart Symbols — Spot Elevations</text>
+
+ <!-- ===== A) General spot elevation ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(75, 120)">
+ <!-- Small dot -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="3" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Elevation number next to dot -->
+ <text x="10" y="5" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="14" fill="black">1234</text>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="20" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">A)</text>
+ <text x="20" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">General spot</text>
+ <text x="20" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">elevation</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== B) Highest spot elevation on chart ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(225, 120)">
+ <!-- Larger bold dot -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="0" r="5" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Bold elevation number -->
+ <text x="10" y="6" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="16" font-weight="bold" fill="black">4808</text>
+ <!-- Underline to indicate highest -->
+ <line x1="10" y1="10" x2="54" y2="10" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="25" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">B)</text>
+ <text x="25" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Highest spot</text>
+ <text x="25" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">elevation on chart</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== C) Mountain peak / summit (filled triangle) ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(390, 120)">
+ <!-- Filled triangle pointing up -->
+ <polygon points="0,-22 -16,12 16,12" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Elevation number -->
+ <text x="22" y="-10" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" fill="black">2962</text>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">C)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Mountain peak</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">/ summit</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- ===== D) Trigonometric point ===== -->
+ <g transform="translate(530, 120)">
+ <!-- Open triangle -->
+ <polygon points="0,-22 -16,12 16,12" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Dot in center -->
+ <circle cx="0" cy="3" r="3" fill="black"/>
+ <!-- Elevation number -->
+ <text x="22" y="-10" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" fill="black">1543</text>
+ <!-- Label -->
+ <text x="0" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">D)</text>
+ <text x="0" y="53" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Trigonometric</text>
+ <text x="0" y="66" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">point</text>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- Dividers -->
+ <line x1="150" y1="50" x2="150" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="300" y1="50" x2="300" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+ <line x1="450" y1="50" x2="450" y2="220" stroke="#cccccc" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Border -->
+ <rect width="598" height="248" x="1" y="1" fill="none" stroke="#333333" stroke-width="1"/>
+</svg>
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 500 350" width="500" height="350" style="background:white; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
+
+ <defs>
+ <marker id="arrowAxis" markerWidth="10" markerHeight="7" refX="9" refY="3.5" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 10,3.5 0,7" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- Axes -->
+ <!-- Y axis (Performance) -->
+ <line x1="70" y1="290" x2="70" y2="30" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowAxis)"/>
+ <!-- X axis (Arousal) -->
+ <line x1="70" y1="290" x2="460" y2="290" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowAxis)"/>
+
+ <!-- Axis labels -->
+ <text x="250" y="325" text-anchor="middle" font-size="15" font-weight="bold" fill="black">A (Arousal / Stress)</text>
+ <!-- Y-axis label (rotated) -->
+ <text x="22" y="165" text-anchor="middle" font-size="15" font-weight="bold" fill="black"
+ transform="rotate(-90, 22, 165)">P (Performance)</text>
+
+ <!-- Inverted-U curve
+ X range: 70 to 450 (arousal: low to high)
+ Y range: 290 (low) to 50 (high performance)
+ Peak at arousal midpoint ~x=260, y=55
+ A: (90, 270) low arousal, low performance
+ B: (260, 55) peak
+ C: (360, 140) high arousal, declining
+ D: (430, 270) very high, very low
+
+ Bezier: from A(90,270) through B(260,55) to D(430,270)
+ Control points to create smooth inverted-U:
+ CP1: (155, 55) pulling curve up
+ CP2: (355, 55) holding it up then falling
+ -->
+ <path d="M 90,270 C 155,55 355,55 430,270"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="3"/>
+
+ <!-- Shaded zone around peak (optimal performance zone) -->
+ <!-- Light band between x=200 and x=320 -->
+ <path d="M 200,290 L 200,78 C 225,60 295,60 320,78 L 320,290 Z"
+ fill="#e8f0ff" stroke="none" opacity="0.5"/>
+
+ <!-- Point A: low arousal, low performance -->
+ <!-- On curve at x=90: y=270 -->
+ <circle cx="90" cy="270" r="7" fill="#c00" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="70" y="265" text-anchor="end" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="#c00">A</text>
+ <text x="55" y="248" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">Low arousal,</text>
+ <text x="55" y="261" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">low performance</text>
+
+ <!-- Point B: optimal, peak performance -->
+ <!-- On curve at x=260, peak: y ~ 55 + small deviation from bezier calc -->
+ <!-- At t=0.5 for cubic bezier A(90,270) CP1(155,55) CP2(355,55) D(430,270):
+ x = (1-t)^3*90 + 3(1-t)^2*t*155 + 3(1-t)*t^2*355 + t^3*430
+ = 0.125*90 + 0.375*155 + 0.375*355 + 0.125*430
+ = 11.25 + 58.125 + 133.125 + 53.75 = 256.25
+ y = 0.125*270 + 0.375*55 + 0.375*55 + 0.125*270
+ = 33.75 + 20.625 + 20.625 + 33.75 = 108.75
+ Hmm, mid-bezier y=109, not 55. The peak is NOT at t=0.5 for this bezier.
+ The actual peak (minimum y) is at the top of the curve.
+ Since CP1.y = CP2.y = 55, and A.y=D.y=270, the peak of the curve is AT y=55.
+ The x-midpoint of control points: (155+355)/2 = 255. So peak is around x=255, y close to 55. -->
+ <!-- Let's just use x=258, y=57 for point B (approximately correct) -->
+ <circle cx="258" cy="62" r="7" fill="#007700" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="258" y="50" text-anchor="middle" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="#007700">B</text>
+ <text x="258" y="35" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="#007700" font-weight="bold">Optimal</text>
+ <text x="258" y="18" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">Peak performance</text>
+
+ <!-- Point C: high arousal, declining -->
+ <!-- Approximate on curve: x=360 -->
+ <!-- t such that x=360:
+ 90(1-t)^3 + 3*155(1-t)^2*t + 3*355(1-t)*t^2 + 430*t^3 = 360
+ Rough estimate: t~0.73 gives x~360
+ y at t=0.73: 0.0219*270 + 3*0.0729*0.73*55 + 3*0.27*0.5329*55 + 0.389*270
+ = 5.9 + 8.8 + 23.8 + 105 = 143.5 ≈ 144 -->
+ <circle cx="362" cy="144" r="7" fill="#e87000" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="375" y="140" text-anchor="start" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="#e87000">C</text>
+ <text x="390" y="125" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">High arousal,</text>
+ <text x="390" y="138" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">declining</text>
+
+ <!-- Point D: very high arousal, very low performance -->
+ <circle cx="430" cy="270" r="7" fill="#c00" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="445" y="268" text-anchor="start" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="#c00">D</text>
+ <text x="445" y="285" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">Very low</text>
+ <text x="445" y="298" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">performance</text>
+
+ <!-- Axis tick labels -->
+ <text x="65" y="295" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">Low</text>
+ <text x="455" y="295" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">High</text>
+ <text x="65" y="295" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">Low</text>
+
+ <!-- Y axis: Low at bottom, High at top -->
+ <text x="65" y="290" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">Low</text>
+ <text x="65" y="50" text-anchor="end" font-size="11" fill="#666">High</text>
+
+ <!-- Optimal zone label -->
+ <text x="260" y="215" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#2255aa" font-style="italic">Optimal zone</text>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="250" y="345" text-anchor="middle" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="black">Yerkes-Dodson Curve</text>
+
+</svg>
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diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t60_q6.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t60_q6.svg
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index 0000000..706d4e1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t60_q6.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,82 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 400 400" width="400" height="400">
+ <rect width="400" height="400" fill="white"/>
+
+ <!-- Clip path for globe interior -->
+ <defs>
+ <clipPath id="globeClip">
+ <circle cx="200" cy="200" r="150"/>
+ </clipPath>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- Globe fill (light blue) -->
+ <circle cx="200" cy="200" r="150" fill="#e8f4fc" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude lines (clipped to globe) -->
+ <!-- 60N -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="125" rx="130" ry="20" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 30N -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="162" rx="150" ry="28" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- Equator (0) — drawn separately, bold -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="200" rx="150" ry="32" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 30S -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="238" rx="150" ry="28" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 60S -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="275" rx="130" ry="20" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+
+ <!-- Longitude lines (meridians) — vertical ellipses, clipped -->
+ <!-- Prime meridian (0°) -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="200" rx="10" ry="150" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 30W / 150E -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="200" rx="75" ry="150" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 60W / 120E -->
+ <ellipse cx="200" cy="200" rx="130" ry="150" fill="none" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+ <!-- 90W / 90E — just the axis line -->
+ <line x1="200" y1="50" x2="200" y2="350" stroke="#aaaaaa" stroke-width="0.8" clip-path="url(#globeClip)"/>
+
+ <!-- Globe outer border (drawn again on top to clean up edges) -->
+ <circle cx="200" cy="200" r="150" fill="none" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- North / South pole dots -->
+ <circle cx="200" cy="50" r="3" fill="black"/>
+ <circle cx="200" cy="350" r="3" fill="black"/>
+
+ <!-- Pole labels -->
+ <text x="200" y="38" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">North Pole</text>
+ <text x="200" y="370" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">South Pole</text>
+
+ <!-- Equator label -->
+ <text x="362" y="204" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="12" text-anchor="start" fill="black">Equator</text>
+ <line x1="350" y1="200" x2="362" y2="202" stroke="black" stroke-width="1"/>
+
+ <!-- Equator circumference annotation -->
+ <text x="200" y="245" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="#333333">≈ 40,075 km / ≈ 21,600 NM</text>
+
+ <!-- Axis line (N-S, dashed) -->
+ <line x1="200" y1="50" x2="200" y2="350" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="6,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude label 30N -->
+ <text x="356" y="165" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="start" fill="#555555">30°N</text>
+ <line x1="349" y1="162" x2="356" y2="163" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="0.8"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude label 60N -->
+ <text x="338" y="128" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="start" fill="#555555">60°N</text>
+ <line x1="330" y1="125" x2="338" y2="126" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="0.8"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude label 30S -->
+ <text x="356" y="241" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="start" fill="#555555">30°S</text>
+ <line x1="349" y1="238" x2="356" y2="239" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="0.8"/>
+
+ <!-- Latitude label 60S -->
+ <text x="338" y="278" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="start" fill="#555555">60°S</text>
+ <line x1="330" y1="275" x2="338" y2="276" stroke="#555555" stroke-width="0.8"/>
+
+ <!-- Prime meridian label -->
+ <text x="200" y="395" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="11" text-anchor="middle" fill="#555555">0° / Prime Meridian</text>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="200" y="20" font-family="Arial, sans-serif" font-size="15" font-weight="bold" text-anchor="middle" fill="black">Earth — Latitude and Longitude</text>
+
+ <!-- Border -->
+ <rect width="398" height="398" x="1" y="1" fill="none" stroke="#333333" stroke-width="1"/>
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q102.png b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q102.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8ba9d9c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q102.png
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diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q112_boundary_layer.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q112_boundary_layer.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3dc0a58
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q112_boundary_layer.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,111 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 350" width="600" height="350" style="background:white; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
+
+ <defs>
+ <marker id="arrowFlow" markerWidth="8" markerHeight="6" refX="7" refY="3" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 8,3 0,6" fill="#2255aa"/>
+ </marker>
+ <marker id="arrowBlack" markerWidth="8" markerHeight="6" refX="7" refY="3" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 8,3 0,6" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- Aerofoil shape — positioned so upper surface is well visible -->
+ <path d="
+ M 90,185
+ C 110,150 155,115 210,105
+ C 270,93 350,95 420,108
+ C 460,116 490,130 510,155
+ C 490,160 460,165 420,168
+ C 350,174 270,178 210,180
+ C 155,183 110,185 90,185
+ Z"
+ fill="#d8e8f0" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- Freestream flow arrows (far from surface, undisturbed) -->
+ <line x1="20" y1="80" x2="75" y2="80" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="65" x2="75" y2="65" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="50" x2="75" y2="50" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="200" x2="75" y2="185" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="215" x2="75" y2="200" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+
+ <!-- LAMINAR region: smooth parallel streamlines close to upper surface (x=90 to ~x=310) -->
+ <!-- Offset lines above upper surface, staying close and parallel -->
+ <!-- Upper surface approx: y = 105 at x=210, y=93 at x=270... let's parametrize simply -->
+
+ <!-- Laminar flow streamlines (smooth, parallel, close to surface) from ~x=105 to x=300 -->
+ <path d="M 105,170 C 140,138 180,120 220,110 C 260,101 290,97 310,97"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 105,162 C 140,131 180,113 220,103 C 260,94 290,90 310,90"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 105,155 C 140,124 180,107 220,96 C 260,87 290,83 310,83"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+
+ <!-- TURBULENT region: thicker, wavy streamlines from x=310 to x=460 -->
+ <!-- Wavy effect using sinusoidal-looking cubic beziers -->
+ <path d="M 310,97 C 325,92 335,101 350,96 C 365,91 375,103 390,97 C 405,91 415,100 430,95 C 445,90 453,97 460,103"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 310,90 C 325,84 335,94 350,88 C 365,82 375,95 390,88 C 405,81 415,92 430,86 C 445,80 453,89 460,96"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 310,83 C 325,76 335,87 350,80 C 365,73 375,86 390,79 C 405,72 415,84 430,77 C 445,70 453,81 460,88"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <!-- Extra turbulent line, more spread -->
+ <path d="M 310,75 C 330,67 340,80 360,71 C 378,62 388,78 410,69 C 428,62 440,75 460,81"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+
+ <!-- SEPARATION: flow leaving surface after x~465 -->
+ <path d="M 460,103 C 480,110 495,118 510,155"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="4,3"/>
+ <path d="M 460,96 C 485,105 505,130 510,155"
+ fill="none" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="4,3"/>
+ <!-- Separated wake -->
+ <path d="M 510,155 C 530,148 555,145 580,142" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" fill="none" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+ <path d="M 510,155 C 530,158 555,162 580,165" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="1.2" fill="none" marker-end="url(#arrowFlow)"/>
+
+ <!-- Point markers -->
+ <!-- 1: Stagnation point at leading edge -->
+ <circle cx="90" cy="185" r="5" fill="#c00" stroke="black" stroke-width="1"/>
+ <circle cx="35" cy="285" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="35" y="290" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">1</text>
+ <line x1="44" y1="282" x2="86" y2="188" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="35" y="310" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">Stagnation</text>
+ <text x="35" y="323" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">point</text>
+
+ <!-- 2: Laminar boundary layer label (at ~x=200) -->
+ <circle cx="170" cy="68" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="170" y="73" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">2</text>
+ <line x1="170" y1="80" x2="200" y2="100" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="130" y="48" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Laminar</text>
+ <text x="130" y="62" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">boundary layer</text>
+
+ <!-- 3: Transition point at x=310 -->
+ <circle cx="310" cy="97" r="5" fill="#e80" stroke="black" stroke-width="1"/>
+ <circle cx="315" cy="38" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="315" y="43" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">3</text>
+ <line x1="315" y1="50" x2="313" y2="90" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="315" y="26" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Transition</text>
+ <text x="315" y="14" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">point</text>
+
+ <!-- 4: Turbulent boundary layer label at ~x=390 -->
+ <circle cx="430" cy="52" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="430" y="57" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">4</text>
+ <line x1="430" y1="64" x2="400" y2="80" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="450" y="34" text-anchor="start" font-size="12" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Turbulent</text>
+ <text x="450" y="48" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="black">boundary layer</text>
+
+ <!-- 5: Separation point at x~465 -->
+ <circle cx="465" cy="103" r="5" fill="#c00" stroke="black" stroke-width="1"/>
+ <circle cx="555" cy="280" r="12" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="555" y="285" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">5</text>
+ <line x1="545" y1="275" x2="468" y2="110" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="555" y="305" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Separation</text>
+ <text x="555" y="318" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">point</text>
+
+ <!-- Boundary layer thickness indicator (brace/bracket) -->
+ <!-- Double-arrow showing thickness of turbulent layer at x=430 -->
+ <!-- Upper extent: ~y=62, surface: y=108 -->
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="340" text-anchor="middle" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="black">Boundary Layer Flow over an Aerofoil</text>
+
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q130_aerofoil_parts.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q130_aerofoil_parts.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f7405b5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q130_aerofoil_parts.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,88 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 600 300" width="600" height="300" style="background:white; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
+
+ <!-- Aerofoil shape: NACA-style symmetric-ish cambered foil, leading edge left, trailing edge right -->
+ <!-- Upper surface path -->
+ <path d="
+ M 80,150
+ C 95,120 130,85 180,78
+ C 240,70 320,72 400,85
+ C 450,93 490,108 520,130
+ L 520,130
+ C 490,135 450,140 400,142
+ C 320,148 240,152 180,155
+ C 130,158 95,158 80,150
+ Z"
+ fill="#d8e8f0" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- Chord line (dashed, from leading edge to trailing edge) -->
+ <line x1="80" y1="150" x2="520" y2="130" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="8,5"/>
+
+ <!-- Mean camber line (curved dashed, midway between upper and lower surfaces) -->
+ <!-- Approximated as a gentle curve between the chord and upper surface -->
+ <path d="M 80,150 C 160,118 280,111 400,114 C 450,115 490,121 520,130"
+ fill="none" stroke="#555" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="4,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Max thickness arrow (vertical double-arrow at ~x=280, between upper and lower) -->
+ <!-- Upper surface at x=280 is approximately y=74, lower surface approximately y=151 -->
+ <line x1="290" y1="75" x2="290" y2="150" stroke="#c00" stroke-width="1.5" marker-start="url(#arrowRed)" marker-end="url(#arrowRed)"/>
+
+ <!-- Max camber arrow (vertical double-arrow at ~x=230, between chord line and camber line) -->
+ <!-- Chord line at x=230: y = 150 + (130-150)*(230-80)/(520-80) = 150 - 20*150/440 ≈ 143.2 -->
+ <!-- Camber line at x=230: roughly y=118 -->
+ <!-- Arrow from chord to camber -->
+ <line x1="370" y1="113" x2="370" y2="127" stroke="#c00" stroke-width="1.5" marker-start="url(#arrowRed)" marker-end="url(#arrowRed)"/>
+
+ <!-- Arrow markers (red for measurement arrows) -->
+ <defs>
+ <marker id="arrowRed" markerWidth="8" markerHeight="8" refX="4" refY="4" orient="auto">
+ <path d="M0,1 L4,4 L0,7 L1,4 Z" fill="#c00"/>
+ </marker>
+ <marker id="arrowBlack" markerWidth="8" markerHeight="8" refX="4" refY="4" orient="auto">
+ <path d="M0,1 L4,4 L0,7 L1,4 Z" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- Label number circles -->
+ <!-- 1: Mean camber line - place label at x=200, y=105 with leader line -->
+ <circle cx="58" cy="105" r="11" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="58" y="110" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">1</text>
+ <line x1="69" y1="108" x2="160" y2="118" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="30" y="92" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Mean</text>
+ <text x="30" y="106" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">camber</text>
+ <text x="30" y="120" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">line</text>
+
+ <!-- 2: Chord line - label below chord at midpoint -->
+ <circle cx="300" cy="185" r="11" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="300" y="190" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">2</text>
+ <line x1="300" y1="174" x2="300" y2="141" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="300" y="205" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Chord line</text>
+
+ <!-- 3: Maximum thickness label to the right of the arrow -->
+ <circle cx="342" cy="68" r="11" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="342" y="73" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">3</text>
+ <line x1="331" y1="68" x2="292" y2="95" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="410" y="105" text-anchor="start" font-size="13" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Max</text>
+ <text x="410" y="120" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="black">thickness</text>
+ <line x1="353" y1="68" x2="405" y2="105" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+
+ <!-- 4: Maximum camber label -->
+ <circle cx="430" cy="92" r="11" fill="white" stroke="black" stroke-width="1.5"/>
+ <text x="430" y="97" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" font-weight="bold" fill="black">4</text>
+ <line x1="419" y1="95" x2="375" y2="120" stroke="black" stroke-width="1" stroke-dasharray="3,2"/>
+ <text x="425" y="57" text-anchor="middle" font-size="13" fill="black" font-weight="bold">Max</text>
+ <text x="425" y="72" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="black">camber</text>
+ <line x1="430" y1="81" x2="430" y2="57" stroke="black" stroke-width="0.5" stroke-dasharray="2,2"/>
+
+ <!-- Leading edge label -->
+ <text x="65" y="175" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">Leading</text>
+ <text x="65" y="188" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">edge</text>
+
+ <!-- Trailing edge label -->
+ <text x="535" y="125" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">Trailing</text>
+ <text x="535" y="138" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">edge</text>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="300" y="270" text-anchor="middle" font-size="15" font-weight="bold" fill="black">Aerofoil Cross-Section — Parts</text>
+
+</svg>
diff --git a/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q1_angle_of_attack.svg b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q1_angle_of_attack.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5cfa60a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/New Version/SPL Exam Questions FR/figures/t80_q1_angle_of_attack.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,90 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 500 300" width="500" height="300" style="background:white; font-family: Arial, sans-serif;">
+
+ <defs>
+ <marker id="arrowBlue" markerWidth="10" markerHeight="7" refX="9" refY="3.5" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 10,3.5 0,7" fill="#2255aa"/>
+ </marker>
+ <marker id="arrowBlack" markerWidth="10" markerHeight="7" refX="9" refY="3.5" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="0,0 10,3.5 0,7" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ <marker id="arrowBlackRev" markerWidth="10" markerHeight="7" refX="1" refY="3.5" orient="auto">
+ <polygon points="10,0 0,3.5 10,7" fill="black"/>
+ </marker>
+ </defs>
+
+ <!-- The aerofoil is pitched up ~8 degrees. The chord line runs from ~(90,185) to ~(410,145).
+ That's a rise of 40 over a run of 320, i.e. angle arctan(40/320) ~ 7.1 deg.
+ Leading edge at left, trailing edge at right. -->
+
+ <!-- Aerofoil transform: rotate -7 degrees around its center (250, 170) -->
+ <g transform="rotate(-7, 250, 170)">
+ <!-- Aerofoil shape centered at 250,170, chord from 90 to 410 -->
+ <path d="
+ M 90,170
+ C 110,140 155,115 205,108
+ C 255,100 315,102 370,115
+ C 390,121 402,133 410,150
+ C 395,155 380,160 370,162
+ C 315,170 255,174 205,176
+ C 155,178 110,178 90,170
+ Z"
+ fill="#d8e8f0" stroke="black" stroke-width="2"/>
+
+ <!-- Chord line (dashed) -->
+ <line x1="90" y1="170" x2="410" y2="150" stroke="#333" stroke-width="1.5" stroke-dasharray="8,5"/>
+ </g>
+
+ <!-- Relative wind (horizontal) arrow from left -->
+ <!-- Arrow going right at y=170 (the level of the leading edge before rotation) -->
+ <line x1="20" y1="188" x2="85" y2="188" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2.5" marker-end="url(#arrowBlue)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="175" x2="85" y2="175" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowBlue)"/>
+ <line x1="20" y1="162" x2="85" y2="162" stroke="#2255aa" stroke-width="2" marker-end="url(#arrowBlue)"/>
+ <text x="52" y="210" text-anchor="middle" font-size="12" fill="#2255aa" font-weight="bold">Relative Wind</text>
+ <text x="52" y="224" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#2255aa">(Direction of Airflow)</text>
+
+ <!-- Reference horizontal line for the angle (extended from leading edge, horizontal) -->
+ <!-- Leading edge is at approximately (90, 170) after the rotation offset.
+ With -7 deg rotation around (250,170), the leading edge moves to roughly:
+ x' = 250 + (90-250)*cos(-7) - (170-170)*sin(-7) = 250 - 160*0.9925 = 250 - 158.8 = 91.2
+ y' = 170 + (90-250)*sin(-7) + (170-170)*cos(-7) = 170 - 160*(-0.1219) = 170 + 19.5 = 189.5 ≈ 190
+ So leading edge ≈ (91, 190). -->
+
+ <!-- Horizontal dashed reference line from leading edge -->
+ <line x1="91" y1="190" x2="280" y2="190" stroke="#888" stroke-width="1.2" stroke-dasharray="6,4"/>
+
+ <!-- Arc for angle alpha: between horizontal (y=190 direction) and chord line direction
+ Chord direction after -7 rotation: angle = 180 - 7 = 173 deg from positive x ...
+ Actually the chord goes from LE(91,190) to TE. The angle is ~7 deg above horizontal.
+ We draw a small arc from 0 deg to -7 deg (upward) -->
+ <!-- Arc from horizontal direction (0 deg) curving up to chord direction (~-7 deg) -->
+ <!-- SVG arc: center at LE (91,190), radius 55 -->
+ <!-- Start angle 0 (east = right), end angle -7 deg (slightly above east) -->
+ <!-- In SVG: angles measured clockwise from east -->
+ <!-- Start point: (91+55, 190) = (146, 190) -->
+ <!-- End point: 91+55*cos(-7deg), 190+55*sin(-7deg) = 91+54.6, 190-6.7 = (145.6, 183.3) -->
+ <path d="M 146,190 A 55,55 0 0,0 145.5,183.2" fill="none" stroke="#c00" stroke-width="2"/>
+ <!-- Alpha label -->
+ <text x="155" y="191" text-anchor="start" font-size="16" fill="#c00" font-style="italic">α</text>
+ <text x="175" y="191" text-anchor="start" font-size="13" fill="#c00">(angle of attack)</text>
+
+ <!-- Labels -->
+ <!-- Chord line label -->
+ <!-- The chord line in the rotated aerofoil runs roughly from (91,190) to ~(408,167) -->
+ <!-- Label it near the middle -->
+ <text x="310" y="155" text-anchor="start" font-size="12" fill="#333" font-style="italic">Chord line</text>
+ <line x1="308" y1="158" x2="280" y2="169" stroke="#555" stroke-width="0.8" stroke-dasharray="2,2"/>
+
+ <!-- Leading edge label -->
+ <text x="75" y="240" text-anchor="middle" font-size="11" fill="#444">Leading edge</text>
+ <line x1="91" y1="227" x2="91" y2="193" stroke="#888" stroke-width="0.8" stroke-dasharray="2,2"/>
+
+ <!-- Trailing edge label -->
+ <!-- TE after rotation: x'=250+(410-250)*cos(-7)-(170-170)*sin(-7)=250+160*0.9925=408.8
+ y'=170+(410-250)*sin(-7)+(170-170)*cos(-7)=170+160*(-0.1219)=170-19.5=150.5 -->
+ <text x="415" y="148" text-anchor="start" font-size="11" fill="#444">Trailing edge</text>
+
+ <!-- Title -->
+ <text x="250" y="285" text-anchor="middle" font-size="14" font-weight="bold" fill="black">Angle of Attack (α)</text>
+
+</svg>
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+# 10 - Air Law
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (reformulated) | 84 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which type of airspace may be entered subject to specific conditions? ^q1
+- A) Prohibited area
+- B) Dangerous area
+- C) No-fly zone
+- D) Restricted area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A restricted area (designated "R" on charts) can be entered subject to specific conditions published in the AIP, such as obtaining prior clearance from the responsible authority or ATC unit. A prohibited area ("P") cannot be entered under any circumstances — flight within is absolutely forbidden. A dangerous area ("D") contains hazards to flight but has no entry restriction; pilots are warned but may enter at their own discretion. "No-fly zone" is not a standard ICAO airspace classification per Annex 11.
+
+### Q2: In which official publication can the details of a restriction for a restricted airspace be found? ^q2
+- A) NOTAM
+- B) AIC
+- C) AIP
+- D) ICAO chart 1:500000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) is the primary official document containing detailed and permanent information about airspace structure, including the conditions, times of activity, and authority contacts for restricted areas (ENR section). While NOTAMs may announce temporary changes and ICAO charts show boundaries graphically, the authoritative definition and restrictions are found in the AIP. AICs (Aeronautical Information Circulars) contain advisory or administrative information, not regulatory airspace details.
+
+### Q3: What legal status do EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL and Part-MED hold? ^q3
+- A) They require ratification by each individual EU member state to become binding
+- B) They are not legally binding and serve only as guidance
+- C) They are part of EU law and directly binding in all EU member states
+- D) They carry the same status as ICAO Annexes
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL (Commission Regulation (EU) 2018/1976) and Part-MED are published as EU Implementing Regulations or Delegated Regulations under the Basic Regulation (EU) 2018/1139. EU Regulations are directly applicable law in all member states without requiring national ratification — they are binding in their entirety. ICAO Annexes, by contrast, are standards and recommended practices (SARPs) that require national adoption and allow states to file differences; they do not have direct legislative force.
+
+### Q4: What does the abbreviation "ARC" stand for in aviation? ^q4
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- C) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- D) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, as defined in EU Regulation 1321/2014 (Part-M). It is issued after a periodic airworthiness review (typically annual) confirms that the aircraft's continuing airworthiness documentation and condition are in order. It accompanies the Certificate of Airworthiness and must be current for the aircraft to be legally flown. The other options are fabricated terms not used in EASA or ICAO aviation law.
+
+### Q5: By which state is the Certificate of Airworthiness issued? ^q5
+- A) The state in which the aircraft is constructed
+- B) The state of the owner's residence
+- C) The state in which the aircraft is registered
+- D) The state in which the airworthiness review is performed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 8 (Airworthiness of Aircraft) and Annex 7 (Aircraft Nationality and Registration Marks), the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state of registry — the country where the aircraft is registered. The state of registry is responsible for ensuring the aircraft meets applicable airworthiness standards. This is separate from the owner's residence, place of manufacture, or where maintenance is performed.
+
+### Q6: How long is a Class 2 medical certificate valid for a pilot who is 62 years old? ^q6
+- A) 60 months
+- B) 24 months
+- C) 12 months
+- D) 48 months
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-MED (Commission Regulation (EU) 1178/2011), a Class 2 medical certificate for pilots aged 40 and over is valid for 24 months — except for pilots exercising privileges to carry passengers, where validity is reduced. However, for pilots aged 50 and over (and particularly 60+), validity is reduced to 12 months regardless. At age 62, the Class 2 medical is valid for only 12 months. This reflects the increased medical scrutiny applied to older pilots.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "TRA" mean in the context of airspace? ^q7
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Transponder Area
+- C) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- D) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace — airspace of defined dimensions within which activities requiring reservation of airspace are conducted for a specified period. TRAs are used for military exercises, aerobatic displays, parachuting, or other temporary activities. They are published via NOTAM and activated as needed. They differ from TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) in that TRAs may be shared with other traffic under certain conditions when not active.
+
+### Q8: What obligation applies when a pilot intends to enter an RMZ? ^q8
+- A) A clearance must be obtained from the local aviation authority
+- B) A formal ATC clearance must be obtained prior to entry
+- C) The transponder must be set to Mode C and squawk 7000
+- D) The radio must be monitored continuously and contact established if possible
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) requires all aircraft to carry and operate a functioning radio, to monitor the designated frequency continuously, and to establish two-way radio contact with the responsible ATC unit before entry if possible. It does not require a formal ATC clearance (unlike a CTR). A transponder is not mandated by RMZ designation alone — that is required in a TMZ. This is defined in SERA.6005 and national AIP supplements.
+
+### Q9: What is the full meaning of the airspace designation "TMZ"? ^q9
+- A) Traffic Management Zone
+- B) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- C) Transportation Management Zone
+- D) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone — airspace within which all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a pressure-altitude reporting transponder (Mode C or Mode S). This allows ATC and other aircraft (via TCAS/FLARM) to identify and separate traffic. TMZs are often established around busy airports or in complex airspace. Glider pilots must be aware that many glider airfields and soaring areas are now overlaid with TMZs requiring transponder equipment.
+
+### Q10: Two engine-powered aircraft are converging at the same altitude. What action must both take? ^q10
+- A) Both must turn to the left
+- B) The lighter aircraft must climb
+- C) Both must turn to the right
+- D) The heavier aircraft must climb
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, when two aircraft are on converging courses at approximately the same altitude, each shall turn to the right. This creates a situation where both aircraft pass behind each other, avoiding a collision. Weight is irrelevant to right-of-way rules in crossing situations. The "give way to the right" rule applies to converging (not head-on) situations; in a head-on encounter, both aircraft also alter course to the right (SERA.3210(c)).
+
+### Q11: Two aeroplanes are approaching each other on crossing tracks. Which aircraft has the right of way? ^q11
+- A) Both must turn to the left
+- B) Both must turn to the right
+- C) The aircraft flying from left to right has priority
+- D) The aircraft flying from right to left has priority
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under SERA.3210(b), when two aircraft are converging at approximately the same altitude, the aircraft that has the other on its right must give way. This means the aircraft approaching from the right has right-of-way (i.e., it flies from right to left relative to the other aircraft). The aircraft that sees the other on its right must alter course — typically to the right — to avoid a collision. This is the "right-of-way" rule analogous to maritime rules.
+
+### Q12: What minimum flight visibility is required for VFR flight in airspace class E at FL75? ^q12
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 8000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class E at and above 3000 ft AMSL (or above 1000 ft AGL) and below FL100, the minimum flight visibility for VFR is 5000 m (5 km). FL75 is approximately 7500 ft, which is above 3000 ft AMSL but below FL100, so the 5000 m rule applies. The 8000 m minimum applies at and above FL100. The 1500 m minimum only applies at or below 3000 ft AMSL/1000 ft AGL in airspace F and G.
+
+### Q13: When flying VFR in class C airspace below FL 100, what is the required minimum flight visibility? ^q13
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 1.5 km
+- D) 5 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class C below FL100 (and above 3000 ft AMSL or 1000 ft AGL), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5000 m). The 8 km minimum only applies at and above FL100. The 1.5 km minimum applies in uncontrolled airspace at low altitudes. Glider pilots operating in class C below FL100 — for example crossing an airway — must ensure at least 5 km visibility.
+
+### Q14: What is the minimum flight visibility required for VFR operations in class C airspace at and above FL 100? ^q14
+- A) 10 km
+- B) 5 km
+- C) 8 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace (including class C), VFR flight requires a minimum flight visibility of 8 km. This higher threshold reflects the faster speeds and reduced manoeuvring margins at higher altitudes. The 10 km option is not a standard ICAO/SERA VMC minimum. The progression to remember is: low altitude uncontrolled = 1.5 km, controlled below FL100 = 5 km, at and above FL100 = 8 km.
+
+### Q15: How is the meteorological term "ceiling" defined? ^q15
+- A) The altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft
+- B) The height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft
+- C) The height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft
+- D) The height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Ceiling" is defined as the height (not altitude) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud covering more than half the sky (i.e., more than 4 oktas — BKN or OVC) below 20,000 ft. Option A is wrong because it uses "altitude" instead of "height". Option B is wrong because it refers to the "highest" layer (should be lowest). Option C is wrong because the threshold is 20,000 ft, not 10,000 ft. This definition is from ICAO Annex 2 and SERA.
+
+### Q16: Which type of transponder is capable of transmitting the current pressure altitude? ^q16
+- A) Mode A transponder
+- B) Pressure-decoder
+- C) Transponder approved for airspace B
+- D) Mode C or S transponder
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mode A transponders transmit only a 4-digit identity (squawk) code. Mode C transponders add pressure altitude reporting — they encode and transmit the pressure altitude from an encoding altimeter, allowing ATC secondary radar to display both identity and altitude. Mode S provides all Mode C capabilities plus selective interrogation, aircraft identification (callsign), and data link capabilities. Mode A alone cannot report altitude, so options A and C are incorrect. "Pressure-decoder" is not an aviation term.
+
+### Q17: What transponder code signals a loss of radio communication to ATC? ^q17
+- A) 7700
+- B) 2000
+- C) 7600
+- D) 7000
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard emergency transponder codes are: 7700 = General emergency, 7600 = Radio communication failure (loss of comms), 7500 = Unlawful interference (hijacking). Code 7000 is the VFR conspicuity code used in many European countries when no specific ATC code has been assigned. Code 2000 is used when entering controlled airspace from uncontrolled airspace without a prior assigned code. In a radio failure, squawking 7600 alerts ATC immediately to the communication problem.
+
+### Q18: When a light aircraft is following a heavier one, which standard phrase is used by ATC to warn about wake turbulence? ^q18
+- A) Attention propwash
+- B) Danger jet blast
+- C) Caution wake turbulence
+- D) Be careful wake winds
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO phraseology for wake turbulence warnings is "CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE" — this is the prescribed phrase used by ATC when issuing wake turbulence warnings to pilots following heavier aircraft. ICAO Doc 4444 (PANS-ATM) specifies standardised phraseology, and non-standard phrases like "wake winds," "jet blast," or "propwash" are not ICAO-approved terminology. Standardised phraseology reduces ambiguity and is mandatory in EASA airspace.
+
+### Q19: What content is found in the GEN section of the AIP? ^q19
+- A) Table of contents, aerodrome classifications with maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspace
+- B) Access restrictions for aerodromes, passenger controls, pilot requirements, licence samples and validity periods
+- C) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- D) Map symbols, list of radio navigation aids, sunrise/sunset tables, aerodrome fees, ATC fees
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP (Aeronautical Information Publication) is structured in three parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The GEN section contains general information including map icons/symbols, list of radio navigation aids, tables of sunrise/sunset, national regulations, fees, and administrative information. ENR contains en-route information including airspace, airways, and restricted areas. AD contains aerodrome-specific information including charts, procedures, and frequencies.
+
+### Q20: Into which parts is the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) divided? ^q20
+- A) GEN COM MET
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN ENR AD
+- D) GEN MET RAC
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 15 (Aeronautical Information Services), the AIP is divided into three standardised parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). GEN contains general administrative and regulatory information; ENR contains airspace structure, routes, and navigation aids; AD contains information specific to individual aerodromes. The other options (MET, RAC, AGA, COM) are abbreviations from older ICAO documentation structures no longer used in modern AIP organisation.
+
+### Q21: What is the function of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^q21
+- A) It is a designated area for dropping or picking up tow objects
+- B) It is an illuminated area where rescue and fire-fighting vehicles are stationed
+- C) Aircraft taxi there to receive light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- D) It displays visual symbols indicating current aerodrome conditions to overflying pilots
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal square (also called signals square or ground signals area) is a designated area at an aerodrome where ground signals are displayed using symbols, panels, or markings to communicate aerodrome conditions to pilots flying overhead who cannot receive radio communication. It is not a lighting area for emergency vehicles (B), not a location where aircraft receive light signals for taxi clearance (C) — that would be done by the control tower — and not a tow drop zone (A).
+
+### Q22: How are two parallel runways at an aerodrome designated? ^q22
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+- B) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- C) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway gets the suffix "R"
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 14 requires that when two parallel runways exist, both receive a suffix to distinguish them: 'L' for the left and 'R' for the right runway as seen from a pilot on final approach. Option D is wrong because the right runway also needs a suffix. Options A and B describe non-standard designations not used in ICAO procedures.
+
+### Q23: Which of the following correctly shows designators for two parallel runways? ^q23
+- A) "24" and "25"
+- B) "18" and "18-2"
+- C) "26" and "26R"
+- D) "06L" and "06R"
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For two parallel runways, ICAO requires both runways to carry suffixes 'L' and 'R', resulting in designators like '06L' and '06R'. Option C is wrong because '26' has no suffix. Option B uses a non-standard dash notation. Option A shows different numbers (24 and 25), which would indicate two separate non-parallel runways on slightly different magnetic headings, not parallel runways.
+
+### Q24: What is the meaning of the aerodrome ground signal shown in figure ALW-011? ^q24
+- A) Landing is prohibited for an extended period
+- B) All turns after take-off and before landing must be made to the right
+- C) Glider operations are in progress
+- D) Caution — the manoeuvring area is in poor condition
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ALW-011 figure shows the international ground signal for glider operations in progress — a double-headed arrow or specific panel displayed in the signal square. This warns pilots overflying the aerodrome that gliders may be operating, including tow-launching and soaring in the vicinity. The other options describe unrelated signals: right-hand circuit (B), poor manoeuvring area (D), and landing prohibited (A).
+
+### Q25: What emergency phase does the codeword "DETRESFA" correspond to? ^q25
+- A) Alerting phase
+- B) Rescue phase
+- C) Uncertainty phase
+- D) Distress phase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the most serious of the three emergency phases, declared when an aircraft is in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. ALERFA corresponds to the alerting phase (A), and INCERFA to the uncertainty phase (C). There is no phase called 'rescue phase' (B) as a formal ICAO designation.
+
+### Q26: Which organisations are responsible for providing search and rescue service? ^q26
+- A) Only military organisations
+- B) International approved organisations
+- C) Only civil organisations
+- D) Both military and civil organisations
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 12 defines Search and Rescue (SAR) as a service that may be provided by both military and civil organisations, depending on national arrangements. Many countries use military assets (aircraft, helicopters, ships) alongside civil emergency services. Limiting it to only civil (C) or only military (A) organisations, or requiring international approval (B), does not reflect the flexible, nationally-organised nature of SAR.
+
+### Q27: Into which three categories are aircraft occurrences classified in accident and incident investigation? ^q27
+- A) Happening, event, serious event
+- B) Event, serious event, accident
+- C) Incident, serious incident, accident
+- D) Event, crash, disaster
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, aircraft occurrences are classified into three categories: incident (an occurrence other than an accident which affects or could affect safety), serious incident (an incident involving circumstances where there was a high probability of an accident), and accident (an occurrence resulting in fatal or serious injury, or substantial aircraft damage). The other options use non-standard terminology not found in ICAO definitions.
+
+### Q28: While slope soaring with the hill on your left, another glider approaches head-on at the same altitude. What should you do? ^q28
+- A) Pull back on the elevator and climb
+- B) Expect the other glider to give way
+- C) Turn to the right
+- D) Turn to the right and expect the other glider to do the same
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO rules of the air and SERA regulations specify that during slope soaring, when two gliders approach each other head-on, the glider with the hill on its right must give way — but in this question the hill is on YOUR left, meaning the hill is on the other glider's right. Therefore YOU must give way by diverting to the right (turning away from the hill). Expecting the other glider to divert (B) is incorrect because the rule is based on which pilot has the hill on their right. Pulling upward (A) is impractical and dangerous.
+
+### Q29: When joining other gliders already circling in a thermal, who determines the direction of the circle? ^q29
+- A) The glider flying with the greatest bank angle
+- B) The glider at the highest altitude
+- C) Circling direction is always to the left
+- D) The glider that entered the thermal first
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA regulations state that when joining a thermal already occupied by other gliders, the newly joining pilot must circle in the same direction as the glider that first established the turn in that thermal. This ensures all pilots orbit in the same direction, preventing head-on conflicts. Circling is not fixed as left (C), the highest glider (B) or steepest bank (A) does not determine the direction.
+
+### Q30: Under what condition may a glider enter class C airspace? ^q30
+- A) Entry is not possible under any circumstances
+- B) Only with the transponder activated
+- C) Only with prior approval from the responsible ATC unit
+- D) When traffic density is low enough
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspace C is controlled airspace where ATC clearance is mandatory for all flights including VFR. A glider may enter Class C airspace only with an explicit clearance from the responsible ATC unit. A transponder alone (B) is not sufficient — clearance is the fundamental requirement. Option A (no entry at all) is too restrictive; entry is possible with proper clearance. Option D implies a discretionary traffic-density rule which does not exist.
+
+### Q31: A pilot holding an SPL or LAPL(S) licence has completed 9 winch launches, 4 aero-tow launches, and 2 bungee launches in the past 24 months. Which launch methods may this pilot use as PIC today? ^q31
+- A) Aero-tow and bungee
+- B) Winch and aero-tow
+- C) Winch, bungee, and aero-tow
+- D) Winch and bungee
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-SFCL (SFCL.010 and SFCL.160), a pilot must have completed at least 5 launches using a specific launch method within the preceding 24 months to act as PIC using that method. The pilot has 9 winch (qualifies) and 2 bungee launches (qualifies, threshold is met), but only 4 aero-tow launches — which is below the required 5. Therefore, aero-tow is not permitted without additional training or a check flight with an instructor.
+
+### Q32: Which of the following documents must be carried on board during an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^q32
+- A) A, b, e, g
+- B) D, f, g
+- C) A, b, c, e, f
+- D) B, c, d, e, f, g
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 6 and EU Regulation 965/2012, international flights require: Certificate of Airworthiness (b), Airworthiness Review Certificate (c), EASA Form-1 or equivalent release document (d), the aircraft logbook/journey log (e), licences and medical certificates for each crew member (f), and the technical/maintenance logbook (g). The Certificate of Registration (a) is technically required too under ICAO Annex 7, but the answer set B, c, d, e, f, g (option D) represents the standard EASA enumeration tested in this question context.
+
+### Q33: A VFR flight is conducted in class C airspace at FL110. What is the minimum required flight visibility? ^q33
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100, the minimum flight visibility for VFR flight in all controlled airspace classes (including class C) is 8000 m (8 km). This higher minimum is required at high altitudes because aircraft speeds are typically greater, reducing reaction time, and the increased altitude makes maintaining visual separation from IFR traffic more critical. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8000 m minimum applies.
+
+### Q34: What altimeter setting must a pilot use when flying at FL 80? ^q34
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) Local QFE
+- C) Local QNH
+- D) 1030.25 hPa
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels (FL) are defined relative to the standard atmosphere pressure of 1013.25 hPa (the International Standard Atmosphere setting, also called QNE or standard setting). When flying at or above the transition altitude (which varies by country but is typically between 3000 ft and 18,000 ft), pilots set their altimeter to 1013.25 hPa and read flight levels. QNH gives altitude above sea level, QFE gives height above a specific aerodrome — neither is used when referencing flight levels.
+
+### Q35: What is the primary purpose of the semi-circular (hemispherical) cruising level rule? ^q35
+- A) To allow safe climbing or descending within a holding pattern
+- B) To permit flight without a filed flight plan in designated zones published in the AIP
+- C) To prevent collisions by assigning different altitudes to opposite traffic directions
+- D) To avoid collisions by prohibiting turning manoeuvres
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The semi-circular (hemispherical) cruising level rule (SERA.5015) assigns specific altitude bands to specific magnetic tracks — eastbound flights use odd thousands of feet, westbound flights use even thousands. By separating aircraft flying in opposite directions onto different altitude levels, the probability of a head-on collision at the same altitude is greatly reduced. This is a passive separation tool requiring no ATC involvement, applicable primarily to en-route cruise flight above the transition altitude.
+
+### Q36: Which transponder code should a pilot set immediately upon experiencing a radio failure? ^q36
+- A) 7500
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Upon experiencing a radio communication failure, the pilot should immediately squawk 7600 (the international radio failure code) without waiting for any ATC request or instruction — since communication is by definition impossible. Code 7700 is for general emergencies, 7500 for unlawful interference, and 7000 is the general VFR code. Setting 7600 proactively informs ATC of the situation, triggering the loss-of-communications procedures defined in national AIPs and ICAO Annex 11.
+
+### Q37: Which transponder code must a pilot set immediately and without instruction in the event of an emergency? ^q37
+- A) 7600
+- B) 7000
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7500
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In any general emergency (engine failure, fire, medical emergency, severe structural damage, etc.), the pilot must set transponder code 7700 immediately and without waiting for ATC instruction. Code 7700 triggers an alarm on ATC radar displays and activates emergency procedures. Code 7500 is specifically for unlawful interference (hijacking) only — it should not be used for other emergencies. The phrase "unrequested" emphasises that the pilot must act autonomously without waiting for radio contact.
+
+### Q38: Which air traffic service bears responsibility for the safe conduct of flights? ^q38
+- A) FIS (flight information service)
+- B) ATC (air traffic control)
+- C) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- D) ALR (alerting service)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air Traffic Control (ATC) is specifically responsible for providing separation between aircraft and ensuring the safe, orderly, and expeditious flow of air traffic, including the safe conduct of flights in controlled airspace. FIS provides information useful for safe and efficient conduct of flights but does not control aircraft. ALR initiates search and rescue when aircraft are overdue or in distress. AIS provides aeronautical information publications but has no operational control role. Per ICAO Annex 11, ATC has the active separation and safety function.
+
+### Q39: Which air traffic services are provided throughout an entire FIR (flight information region)? ^q39
+- A) ATC (air traffic control) and AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service) and SAR (search and rescue)
+- C) ATC (air traffic control) and FIS (flight information service)
+- D) FIS (flight information service) and ALR (alerting service)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) is the basic organisational unit of airspace, within which two services are provided: FIS (Flight Information Service) — providing pilots with weather, NOTAM, and other relevant information — and ALR (Alerting Service) — notifying appropriate organisations when aircraft are in distress or overdue. ATC is only provided within designated controlled airspace (CTAs, CTRs, airways) that may exist within an FIR, not throughout the entire FIR. Per ICAO Annex 11, FIS and ALR are the universal FIR services.
+
+### Q40: Which of the following represents a correctly formatted position report? ^q40
+- A) DEABC over "N" at 35
+- B) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- C) DEABC reaching "N"
+- D) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A standard position report per ICAO Doc 4444 includes: aircraft callsign, position (fix or waypoint), and altitude/flight level. Option B (DEABC, "N", 2500 ft) provides all three elements concisely and correctly. Option C is incomplete (no altitude). Option D uses nonsensical terminology ("FL 2500 ft" — flight levels and feet are not combined this way). Option A lacks altitude and uses "at 35" without context. Correct position reporting is essential for ATC situational awareness.
+
+### Q41: The following NOTAM is shown: A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. Until when is this NOTAM valid? ^q41
+- A) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC
+- B) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC
+- C) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC
+- D) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM time codes use the format YYMMDDHHMM in UTC. The "C)" field in a NOTAM is the end time (the "until" time). The code 1305211400 is decoded as: Year 13 (2013), Month 05 (May), Day 21, Time 1400 UTC — giving 21 May 2013 at 14:00 UTC. The "B)" field (1305211200) is the start time: 21 May 2013 at 12:00 UTC. The NOTAM number A1024/13 confirms it is from 2013. Correct NOTAM decoding is a fundamental Air Law skill.
+
+### Q42: How is "aerodrome elevation" officially defined? ^q42
+- A) The average height of the manoeuvring area
+- B) The highest point of the apron
+- C) The lowest point of the landing area
+- D) The highest point of the landing area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is defined as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This definition ensures that the published elevation represents the most demanding terrain height that aircraft must clear during approach and departure from the landing surface. It is not the average, not the apron elevation, and not the lowest point. Aerodrome elevation is used to calculate QFE (the altimeter setting that causes the altimeter to read zero at the aerodrome) and for obstacle clearance calculations.
+
+### Q43: What shape is a landing direction indicator? ^q43
+- A) An angled arrow
+- B) L
+- C) A straight arrow
+- D) T
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, the landing direction indicator is T-shaped (commonly called a "landing T" or "signal T"). When displayed, the cross-bar of the T indicates the direction in which landings and take-offs should be made — aircraft land toward and take off away from the cross-bar. The T is white and should be clearly visible from the air. The L-shaped indicator is used for a different purpose (indicating a right-hand traffic circuit). Arrows are not the standard ICAO shape for a landing direction indicator.
+
+### Q44: A series of longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline indicates what to a landing pilot? ^q44
+- A) The point where the ILS glide path meets the runway surface
+- B) A position from which a ground roll may be initiated
+- C) The pilot must not touch down before this point
+- D) The pilot must not touch down beyond this point
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline are the runway threshold markings (specifically the threshold stripe pattern), which indicate the beginning of the runway available for landing. Pilots must not touch down before them. They do not mark an ILS glide path touchdown point (A), do not prohibit touching down behind them (D), and are not a ground roll starting position marker (B).
+
+### Q45: For how long is a Certificate of Airworthiness valid? ^q45
+- A) 12 months
+- B) 6 months
+- C) 12 years
+- D) Unlimited
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) itself has unlimited validity — once issued, it remains valid as long as the aircraft continues to meet its type design standards and is properly maintained. What is periodically renewed (typically annually) is the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which confirms that the aircraft's continuing airworthiness has been verified. The confusion between CofA and ARC is a common exam trap.
+
+### Q46: In which countries is a pilot licence issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 recognised as valid? ^q46
+- A) Only in the country where the licence was acquired
+- B) In all ICAO Contracting States
+- C) In those countries that have accepted it on application
+- D) Only in the country where the licence was issued
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 (Personnel Licensing) establishes international standards for pilot licences. A licence issued in full compliance with Annex 1 standards is recognised and valid in all 193 ICAO Contracting States without requiring individual acceptance. This mutual recognition is a cornerstone of international civil aviation — it allows pilots to operate across borders seamlessly. Options A and D are the same concept (country of issue) and are too restrictive; option C incorrectly implies case-by-case acceptance is required.
+
+### Q47: What topic is covered by ICAO Annex 1? ^q47
+- A) Operation of aircraft
+- B) Rules of the air
+- C) Air traffic services
+- D) Flight crew licensing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 covers Personnel Licensing, which includes standards for flight crew licences (PPL, CPL, ATPL), ratings, medical certificates, and instructor qualifications. Annex 2 covers Rules of the Air, Annex 11 covers Air Traffic Services, and Annex 6 covers Operation of Aircraft. Knowing the ICAO Annexes by number and subject is a standard Air Law exam requirement.
+
+### Q48: What minimum flight visibility applies for VFR flight in class C airspace at FL125? ^q48
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL125 is above FL100, so the SERA.5001 rule for high-altitude VFR applies: minimum flight visibility is 8000 m in all controlled airspace classes including class C. This is the same threshold as Q33 — both FL110 and FL125 are above FL100, so both require 8000 m. The 5000 m minimum applies below FL100 in most controlled airspace, and the 3000 m/1500 m minima apply only in lower uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q49: What are the minimum cloud separation distances for a VFR flight in class B airspace? ^q49
+- A) Horizontally 1000 m, vertically 1500 ft
+- B) Horizontally 1500 m, vertically 1000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1500 m, vertically 300 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace class B (and also A), VFR flights are generally not permitted unless specifically authorised. However, where VFR is permitted in class B, the cloud clearance minima per SERA.5001 are 1500 m horizontal and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertical. Note that option D states "300 m" vertically using the metre equivalent, while option B states "1000 m" vertically — the correct vertical minimum is 300 m (not 1000 m). The "1000 ft" vertical minimum translates to approximately 300 m.
+
+### Q50: During daytime interception, a military aircraft makes an abrupt heading change of 90 degrees or more and climbs away without crossing your track. What does this signal mean? ^q50
+- A) You have entered a prohibited area — prepare for a safety landing
+- B) You may continue your flight
+- C) Follow me — I will guide you to the nearest suitable aerodrome
+- D) You are entering a restricted area — leave immediately
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2, Appendix 1, Section 2, when an intercepting aircraft makes an abrupt break-away manoeuvre of 90 degrees or more and climbs away without crossing the intercepted aircraft's track, this signal means "You may proceed" — the intercept is complete and the intercepted aircraft is cleared to continue its flight. This is the standard release signal. The "follow me" signal involves the interceptor rocking wings and heading towards a destination. Pilots must study all ICAO interception signals as part of Air Law.
+
+### Q51: How does ATC handle VFR traffic operating in class E airspace? ^q51
+- A) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+- B) VFR traffic receives no separation from any other traffic
+- C) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In class E airspace, IFR traffic receives separation from other IFR traffic, but VFR traffic is not separated from anything — neither from other VFR traffic nor from IFR traffic. VFR flights in class E receive traffic information where possible (from FIS) but no ATC separation service. This is a key distinction for glider pilots who frequently operate in class E: they must maintain their own separation from all traffic using see-and-avoid principles. Class E is the lowest class of controlled airspace where IFR is permitted.
+
+### Q52: What is a Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB)? ^q52
+- A) A summary of AIP information of operational significance, prepared after the flight
+- B) A summary of ICAO information of operational significance, prepared after the flight
+- C) A summary of AIC information of operational significance, prepared prior to the flight
+- D) A summary of current NOTAM information of operational significance, prepared prior to the flight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) is a standardised summary of current NOTAMs relevant to a planned flight, prepared and issued prior to departure. It filters and presents the NOTAMs pertinent to the route, departure and destination aerodromes, and alternate aerodromes. It is based on NOTAM data (not AIP or AIC data), and is prepared before the flight (not after). PIBs are available from AIS offices, online briefing systems, and flight planning services. Per ICAO Annex 15, it is a key pre-flight planning tool.
+
+### Q53: How may a wind direction indicator be made more visible at an aerodrome? ^q53
+- A) It can be mounted on top of the control tower
+- B) It can be placed on a large black surface
+- C) It can be surrounded by a white circle
+- D) It can be made from green materials
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a wind direction indicator (windsock or wind tee) should be clearly visible and may be surrounded by a white circle to enhance its visibility against the aerodrome background. This white circle provides a high-contrast surround that makes the indicator easier to identify from the air. Mounting it on the control tower (option A) is not a standard visibility-enhancement method. Green materials (D) do not aid visibility. A black surface (B) is not specified as a standard method in ICAO Annex 14.
+
+### Q54: What cloud clearance distances must be maintained during a VFR flight in airspace classes C, D, and E? ^q54
+- A) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically
+- B) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically
+- C) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically
+- D) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace classes C, D, and E, VFR flights must maintain a horizontal separation of 1500 m from cloud and a vertical separation of 1000 ft (approximately 300 m) from cloud. The key distinction to remember is that the horizontal minimum is in metres (1500 m) and the vertical minimum is in feet (1000 ft) — mixing units is a common error. These minima apply above 3000 ft AMSL or above 1000 ft AGL, whichever is higher.
+
+### Q55: How does a pilot in flight confirm acknowledgement of a ground SAR signal? ^q55
+- A) By repeatedly deploying and retracting the landing flaps
+- B) By pushing the rudder in both directions several times
+- C) By rocking the wings
+- D) By flying a parabolic flight path several times
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 12 prescribes that a pilot in flight confirms acknowledgement of a ground SAR signal by rocking the wings (waggling the wings laterally). This is an internationally recognised visual signal. Rudder inputs (B) are not visible from the ground, a parabolic flight path (D) is not a defined SAR signal, and repeated flap deployment (A) is not a standard acknowledgement signal.
+
+### Q56: What does the abbreviation "SERA" stand for? ^q56
+- A) Specialized Radar Approach
+- B) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- C) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- D) Selective Radar Altimeter
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises the rules of the air across all EU member states, implementing ICAO Annex 2 provisions at European level and adding EU-specific rules. It covers right-of-way rules, VMC minima, altimeter settings, signals, and related procedures. The other options are invented abbreviations not used in aviation.
+
+### Q57: When is a flight classified as a "visual flight"? ^q57
+- A) When the flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions
+- B) When visibility during flight exceeds 8 km
+- C) When the flight is conducted under visual flight rules
+- D) When visibility during flight exceeds 5 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A "visual flight" (VFR flight) is defined by the rules under which it is conducted — specifically, Visual Flight Rules (VFR) — not simply by the prevailing visibility. A flight is VFR when the pilot navigates by external visual reference and complies with VFR separation minima and procedures. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) describes the weather minima required to conduct VFR flight; but a flight can be in VMC and still be flown under IFR. The distinction between the rule set and the conditions is important.
+
+### Q58: Which services make up the air traffic control service? ^q58
+- A) FIS (flight information service), AIS (aeronautical information service), AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)
+- B) ALR (alerting service), SAR (search and rescue service), TWR (aerodrome control service)
+- C) APP (approach control service), ACC (area control service), FIS (flight information service)
+- D) TWR (aerodrome control service), APP (approach control service), ACC (area control service)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 11, the three constituent units of Air Traffic Control service are: TWR (Aerodrome Control — controls traffic at and around the aerodrome), APP (Approach Control — handles departing and arriving traffic in the terminal area), and ACC (Area Control Centre — handles en-route traffic in control areas/airways). FIS is a separate service from ATC. ALR and SAR are emergency services, not ATC. AIS and AFS are information/communication services, not control services.
+
+### Q59: What is an aerodrome beacon (ABN)? ^q59
+- A) A fixed beacon at an aerodrome that helps pilots identify its location from the air
+- B) A rotating beacon at an aerodrome that helps pilots on the ground identify its location
+- C) A rotating beacon installed at the start of the final approach path
+- D) A rotating beacon at an aerodrome that helps pilots identify its location from the air
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is defined by ICAO as a ROTATING beacon (not fixed) installed at or near an airport to help pilots locate it from the air. It is located at the aerodrome itself, not at the beginning of final approach (C). It is intended to be seen from the air by pilots, not from the ground (B). Option A is wrong because the beacon rotates.
+
+### Q60: What is the primary objective of an aircraft accident investigation? ^q60
+- A) To identify the responsible party and pursue legal consequences
+- B) To support the public prosecutor in following up flight accidents
+- C) To identify causes and issue safety recommendations to prevent future occurrences
+- D) To resolve liability questions for passenger compensation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010 are explicit: the sole objective of an aircraft accident investigation is to prevent future accidents and incidents by identifying causal factors and issuing safety recommendations. It is not a judicial or liability process. Determining liability (D), assisting prosecutors (B), or establishing guilt (A) is explicitly outside the scope of a safety investigation.
+
+### Q61: How is the term "runway" officially defined? ^q61
+- A) A round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- B) A rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- C) A rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- D) A rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is defined as a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. The key elements are: rectangular (not round), land aerodrome (not water — water aerodromes have alighting areas, not runways), and aircraft in general (not specifically helicopters, which use helidecks or helipads). Option B is incorrect because runways are specific to land aerodromes. Option A is wrong (shape). Option D is wrong (specifies helicopters only).
+
+### Q62: Through which means can a pilot contact FIS (flight information service) while airborne? ^q62
+- A) Via telephone
+- B) Via radio communication
+- C) Via internet
+- D) By personal visit
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS (Flight Information Service) is an operational ATC service provided to airborne pilots in flight. The primary and essentially only operational means of contacting FIS during flight is via radio communication on the designated FIS frequency. While pre-flight briefing information may be obtained by telephone or online, the in-flight FIS service itself is radio-based. A personal visit is meaningless for an airborne pilot, and internet communication is not used for real-time in-flight FIS contact.
+
+### Q63: What does the abbreviation "VMC" stand for? ^q63
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Instrument flight conditions
+- C) Variable meteorological conditions
+- D) Visual meteorological conditions
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions — the specific weather minima of visibility and cloud clearance defined in SERA.5001 that must be met for VFR flight to be conducted. If conditions fall below VMC minima, the airspace is said to be in IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions) and VFR flight is not permitted unless special VFR clearance is granted. VMC minima vary by airspace class and altitude band.
+
+### Q64: What information does the AD section of the AIP contain? ^q64
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- B) Map symbols, list of radio navigation aids, sunrise/sunset times, aerodrome fees, ATC fees
+- C) Aerodrome classification, approach charts, taxi charts, and related aerodrome data
+- D) Aerodrome access restrictions, passenger controls, pilot requirements, licence validity periods
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains all aerodrome-specific information: aerodrome classification, runway data, lighting, frequencies, ground handling, approach and departure charts, taxi charts, obstacle data, operating hours, and special procedures. Option A describes ENR content. Option B describes GEN content. Option D contains a mix of items that do not correspond to a single AIP section. The AD section is what a pilot consults to prepare for operations at a specific aerodrome.
+
+### Q65: What is the validity period of a Certificate of Airworthiness? ^q65
+- A) 12 months
+- B) Unlimited
+- C) 12 years
+- D) 6 months
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) issued under ICAO Annex 8 and EASA regulations remains valid for an unlimited period as long as the aircraft is maintained in accordance with approved maintenance programmes and the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC) is kept current. The CofA itself has no fixed expiry date; it is the ARC (reviewed annually) that must be renewed periodically.
+
+### Q66: What does "ARC" stand for in the context of aircraft documentation? ^q66
+- A) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+- B) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- C) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- D) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, the document issued following a successful airworthiness review confirming that an aircraft meets the applicable airworthiness requirements at the time of review. It is valid for one year and must be renewed to allow continued operation. The other options (Airworthiness Recurring Control, Airspace Rulemaking Committee, Airspace Restriction Criteria) are not recognised EASA or ICAO abbreviations in this context.
+
+### Q67: Which state issues the Certificate of Airworthiness for an aircraft? ^q67
+- A) The state in which the aircraft is constructed
+- B) The state of the owner's residence
+- C) The state in which the aircraft is registered
+- D) The state in which the airworthiness review is carried out
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under the Chicago Convention (ICAO Annex 7) and EASA regulations, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the State of Registry — the country in which the aircraft is registered. The nationality of the owner (B), the country where the review was conducted (D), or the country of manufacture (A) are not the determining factors for issuing the CofA.
+
+### Q68: What is the full meaning of "SERA"? ^q68
+- A) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- B) Specialized Radar Approach
+- C) Selective Radar Altimeter
+- D) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, the EU regulation (Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012) that harmonises rules of the air across EASA member states. It is not an acronym for a radar device (C), a routing document (A), or a radar approach (B).
+
+### Q69: What is the full meaning of the airspace designation "TRA"? ^q69
+- A) Terminal Area
+- B) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- C) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+- D) Transponder Area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace, an airspace of defined dimensions temporarily reserved for specific uses (such as military exercises or parachute operations) and which other aircraft may not enter without permission. Transponder Area (D), Terminal Area (A), and Temporary Radar Routing Area (C) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q70: What is the full meaning of the airspace designation "TMZ"? ^q70
+- A) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- B) Traffic Management Zone
+- C) Transportation Management Zone
+- D) Touring Motorglider Zone
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone, an airspace designation indicating that aircraft must be equipped with and operate a functioning transponder when flying in that zone. Transportation Management Zone (C), Touring Motorglider Zone (D), and Traffic Management Zone (B) are not recognised aviation terms for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q71: Under what condition is a flight considered a visual flight? ^q71
+- A) When the flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions
+- B) When the in-flight visibility exceeds 8 km
+- C) When the in-flight visibility exceeds 5 km
+- D) When the flight is conducted under visual flight rules
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined as a flight conducted in accordance with Visual Flight Rules, as specified in ICAO Annex 2 and SERA. The definition is regulatory, not purely meteorological. Stating specific visibility values such as 5 km (C) or 8 km (B) conflates VFR with VMC minima but does not define the term. Option A (flight in VMC) describes a condition under which VFR is possible, not the definition of a VFR flight itself.
+
+### Q72: What does the abbreviation "VMC" mean? ^q72
+- A) Visual flight rules
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Variable meteorological conditions
+- D) Instrument flight conditions
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions, the meteorological visibility and cloud clearance conditions under which VFR flight can be conducted. It is not 'variable' conditions (C), instrument flight conditions (D), or Visual Flight Rules (A) — VFR is the set of rules followed in VMC, not the conditions themselves.
+
+### Q73: When flying VFR in class E airspace at FL75, what is the minimum required flight visibility? ^q73
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 8000 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace classification, airspace E is uncontrolled above Class G. VFR flights in Class E below FL100 require a minimum flight visibility of 5,000 m (5 km). FL75 is below FL100 so the 5 km rule applies. 8,000 m (C) applies at and above FL100, 1,500 m (A) is the minimum in some lower airspaces under certain conditions, and 3,000 m (D) does not correspond to any standard VFR minimum in this context.
+
+### Q74: What minimum flight visibility is required for VFR operations in class C airspace at FL110? ^q74
+- A) 5000 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 1500 m
+- D) 8000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In controlled airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8,000 m (8 km) in accordance with SERA. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km minimum applies. 1,500 m (C) and 3,000 m (B) are minima for lower airspaces. 5,000 m (A) applies below FL100.
+
+### Q75: What is the minimum flight visibility for a VFR flight in class C airspace at FL125? ^q75
+- A) 3000 m
+- B) 5000 m
+- C) 8000 m
+- D) 1500 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8,000 m. FL125 is above FL100, confirming the 8 km (8,000 m) minimum applies. The answer 5,000 m (B) applies below FL100 in Class C. 1,500 m (D) and 3,000 m (A) correspond to other airspace or altitude bands.
+
+### Q76: What cloud separation minima apply to a VFR flight in class B airspace? ^q76
+- A) Horizontally 1000 m, vertically 300 m
+- B) Horizontally 1500 m, vertically 300 m
+- C) Horizontally 1000 m, vertically 1500 ft
+- D) Horizontally 1500 m, vertically 1000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace Class B (and Classes C and D), the cloud separation minima for VFR flights are 1,500 m horizontally and 300 m (1,000 ft) vertically from cloud. Option D uses 1,000 m vertical separation which is too large. Option A uses 1,000 m horizontal which is insufficient. Option C mixes metres and feet incorrectly.
+
+### Q77: What is the minimum VFR flight visibility in class C airspace below FL 100? ^q77
+- A) 8 km
+- B) 10 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 1.5 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C below FL100, the SERA-prescribed minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5,000 m). 1.5 km (D) is for special VFR or certain lower-altitude situations. 8 km (A) applies at and above FL100 in Class C. 10 km (B) is not a standard SERA minimum.
+
+### Q78: What minimum flight visibility must a pilot have for VFR flight in class C airspace at and above FL 100? ^q78
+- A) 5 km
+- B) 1.5 km
+- C) 10 km
+- D) 8 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility required by SERA is 8 km (8,000 m). Below FL100 in Class C the minimum is 5 km. 1.5 km (B) applies to special VFR scenarios. 5 km (A) is the below-FL100 Class C minimum. 10 km (C) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum.
+
+### Q79: What is the correct definition of the term "ceiling"? ^q79
+- A) The height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 10000 ft
+- B) The altitude of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft
+- C) The height of the base of the lowest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft
+- D) The height of the base of the highest cloud layer covering more than half the sky below 20000 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO definition of ceiling is the height (not altitude) of the base of the lowest layer of clouds or obscuring phenomena covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, i.e., more than 4 oktas), below 20,000 ft. Option D uses 'highest layer' which is incorrect. Option A limits it to below 10,000 ft which is too restrictive. Option B uses 'altitude' (referenced to MSL) rather than 'height' (referenced to the surface), which is technically incorrect per ICAO definition.
+
+### Q80: What separation does ATC provide for VFR flights in class E airspace? ^q80
+- A) VFR traffic is separated from both VFR and IFR traffic
+- B) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic is not separated from any other traffic
+- D) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class E, ATC provides separation only for IFR flights. VFR flights in Class E receive no separation service from ATC — they are not separated from IFR traffic or from other VFR traffic. Pilots operating VFR in Class E rely on the see-and-avoid principle. Options D, A, and B incorrectly imply some form of ATC-provided separation for VFR flights.
+
+### Q81: What type of information is contained in the AD section of the AIP? ^q81
+- A) Map symbols, list of radio navigation aids, sunrise/sunset times, aerodrome and ATC fees
+- B) Aerodrome access restrictions, passenger controls, pilot requirements, licence validity periods
+- C) Aerodrome classification, approach charts, taxi charts, and related aerodrome data
+- D) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP is divided into three main parts: GEN (General), ENR (En Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The AD part contains information about individual aerodromes including their classification, aerodrome charts, approach charts, and taxi charts. Warnings, airspace, and restrictions (D) are in ENR. License and regulatory info (B) is in GEN. Map icons and radio nav aids (A) are also primarily in GEN or ENR.
+
+### Q82: How is aerodrome elevation defined? ^q82
+- A) The lowest point of the landing area
+- B) The average height of the manoeuvring area
+- C) The highest point of the apron
+- D) The highest point of the landing area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodrome elevation is defined by ICAO as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This is the point referenced for QFE settings and various aerodrome obstacle clearance calculations. The apron (C) is not the landing area. The lowest point (A) would understate the elevation relevant to operations. An average value (B) does not reflect the critical highest-point definition.
+
+### Q83: What is the correct ICAO definition of the term "runway"? ^q83
+- A) A rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- B) A rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- C) A round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- D) A rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 14 defines a runway as a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. It is specifically rectangular (not round), on land (not water — that would apply to seaplanes on water aerodromes), and for aircraft generally (not helicopters specifically — helicopter landing areas are called HELIPADs or FATO).
+
+### Q84: Which emergency phase does the codeword "DETRESFA" represent? ^q84
+- A) Uncertainty phase
+- B) Rescue phase
+- C) Alerting phase
+- D) Distress phase
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase — the most serious of the three emergency phases — declared when an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger and in need of immediate assistance. ALERFA corresponds to the alerting phase and INCERFA to the uncertainty phase. "Rescue phase" is not a recognised ICAO emergency phase designation.
+
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+# 20 - Aircraft General Knowledge
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (reformulated) | 77 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What term describes a tubular steel framework where the outer skin carries no structural load? ^q1
+- A) Monocoque construction
+- B) Semi-monocoque construction
+- C) Honeycomb structure
+- D) Grid construction
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A grid (or truss/lattice) construction uses a framework of tubes or members to carry all structural loads, with the skin serving only as a fairing — it does not contribute to structural strength. Monocoque construction (C) has the skin carrying all loads with no internal framework. Semi-monocoque (D) uses both a frame and a load-bearing skin. Honeycomb (B) is a core material used in sandwich structures, not a fuselage type.
+
+### Q2: What is the name for a structure built from frames and stringers combined with a load-bearing skin? ^q2
+- A) Grid construction
+- B) Semi-monocoque construction
+- C) Honeycomb structure
+- D) Wood- or mixed construction
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Semi-monocoque construction uses both an internal framework (frames and stringers) AND a skin that actively bears structural loads (tension, compression, shear). This is the most common modern aircraft fuselage design. Pure monocoque relies entirely on the skin with no internal structure. Grid construction (D) has a non-load-bearing skin. Honeycomb (A) is a material/sandwich type, not a fuselage structural concept.
+
+### Q3: Which two assemblies form the main structural groups of an aircraft's tail unit? ^q3
+- A) Ailerons and elevator
+- B) Rudder and ailerons
+- C) Steering wheel and pedals
+- D) Horizontal tail and vertical tail
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tail assembly (empennage) consists of the horizontal stabilizer (with elevator) and the vertical stabilizer (with rudder). These are the two major structural groups. Ailerons (A, B) are located on the wings, not the tail. Steering wheel and pedals (C) are cockpit controls, not aircraft structure. The empennage provides pitch and yaw stability and control.
+
+### Q4: Which structural members are responsible for defining a wing's airfoil cross-section? ^q4
+- A) Spar
+- B) Tip
+- C) Planking
+- D) Rips
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ribs (rips) are the chordwise structural members that define the airfoil cross-section shape of the wing. They run perpendicular to the spar and give the wing its characteristic profile. The spar (A) is the main spanwise load-bearing beam. Planking/skin (C) covers the structure but follows the shape set by the ribs. The wingtip (B) is the outer end of the wing, not a profile-shaping element.
+
+### Q5: What are the key benefits of sandwich structures in aircraft construction? ^q5
+- A) Good formability and high temperature durability
+- B) High strength and good formability
+- C) High temperature durability and low weight
+- D) Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Sandwich structures excel at combining low weight with high stiffness, stability, and strength — the ideal combination for aerospace applications. By spacing two stiff face sheets apart with a lightweight core, the structure achieves very high bending stiffness (proportional to the cube of thickness). Temperature durability (B, C) is not a primary advantage — most cores (foam, honeycomb) are temperature-sensitive. Good formability (A, B) is limited compared to single-material sheets.
+
+### Q6: What type of flight event can cause structural damage to the fuselage? ^q6
+- A) Stall after exceeding the maximum angle of attack
+- B) Neutralizing stick forces according to actual flight state
+- C) Exceeding the manoeuvering speed in heavy gusts
+- D) Airspeed decreasing below a certain value
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding maneuvering speed (VA) in turbulent/gusty conditions can cause structural damage because gusts apply sudden load factors that may exceed the aircraft's design limit load. VA is defined as the speed at which a full control deflection or a maximum gust will not exceed the structural limit. Stall (A) itself does not damage the structure. Low airspeed (D) and neutralizing stick forces (B) do not create damaging structural loads.
+
+### Q7: A pilot pulls the control stick rearward. What happens to the tail and nose of the aircraft? ^q7
+- A) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise
+- B) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop
+- C) The aircraft's tail will produce an decreased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop
+- D) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pulling back on the stick deflects the elevator upward. This increases the downward aerodynamic force on the tail (the horizontal stabilizer + elevator generate a downward lift force). With the tail pushed down, the nose pivots up around the lateral axis. This seems counterintuitive but is correct: the tail goes down, nose goes up. Option A incorrectly states the tail force direction as upward.
+
+### Q8: What is the role of secondary flight controls on an aircraft? ^q8
+- A) To enable the pilot to control the aircraft's movements about its three axes
+- B) To constitute a backup system for the primary flight controls
+- C) To improve the turn characteristics of an aircraft in the low speed regime during approach and landing
+- D) To improve the performance characteristics of an aircraft and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Secondary flight controls (trim tabs, flaps, speedbrakes, slats) serve to optimize performance and reduce pilot workload — they are not essential for basic flight control. Trim reduces stick forces for hands-off flight; flaps improve low-speed lift. Option A describes primary controls. Option B is wrong — secondary controls are not backups for primary controls. Option C is too narrow, applying only part of the secondary control function.
+
+### Q9: A pilot moves the trim wheel aft. What happens to the trim tab and the elevator? ^q9
+- A) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up
+- B) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down
+- C) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down
+- D) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the trim lever aft (back) commands a nose-up trim. The trim tab deflects downward — the aerodynamic force on the tab then pushes the elevator upward (floating up). The elevated elevator deflects the tail downward and raises the nose. Trim tabs always move opposite to the elevator: when the trim tab goes down, the elevator goes up, and vice versa (anti-servo tab principle).
+
+### Q10: What is the function of the Pitot/static system? ^q10
+- A) Correct the reading of the airspeed indicator to zero when the aircraft is static on the ground
+- B) Prevent icing of the Pitot tube
+- C) Measure total and static air pressure
+- D) Prevent potential static buildup on the aircraft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot-static system measures two types of air pressure: total pressure (measured by the Pitot tube, which captures both static and dynamic pressure) and static pressure (measured by the static port, sensing ambient atmospheric pressure). These pressures are fed to the ASI, altimeter, and VSI. Preventing static buildup (D) or icing (B) are operational concerns, not the system's purpose. The ASI reading at rest on the ground is a consequence of zero dynamic pressure, not a calibration function.
+
+### Q11: What type of pressure does the Pitot tube measure? ^q11
+- A) Static air pressure
+- B) Total air pressure
+- C) Cabin air pressure
+- D) Dynamic air pressure
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot tube faces into the airflow and measures total pressure (also called stagnation pressure), which is the sum of static pressure and dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²). It does not measure dynamic pressure alone (D) — that is derived by subtracting static pressure from total pressure in the ASI. Static pressure (A) is measured by the separate static port. Cabin pressure (C) is unrelated to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q12: What is the function of the altimeter subscale? ^q12
+- A) To adjust the altimeter reading for non-standard temperature
+- B) To set the reference level for the altitude decoder of the transponder
+- C) To correct the altimeter reading for system errors
+- D) To reference the altimeter reading to a predetermined level such as mean sea level, aerodrome level or pressure level 1013.25 hPa
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale (Kollsman window) allows the pilot to set a reference pressure (QNH, QFE, or 1013.25 hPa) so the altimeter reads altitude relative to that reference datum — sea level, airfield elevation, or the standard pressure surface for flight levels respectively. It does not correct for system errors (C), temperature errors (A — that requires a temperature correction calculation), or directly set the transponder (B).
+
+### Q13: How does an incorrectly set altimeter subscale (too high a pressure) affect the altitude reading and safety? ^q13
+- A) If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+- B) If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+- C) If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much greater heights above the ground than intended
+- D) If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If you set a higher pressure than the actual QNH, the altimeter "thinks" the reference pressure is higher, so it reads a higher altitude than your actual altitude — you are closer to the ground than the instrument shows. This is the dangerous scenario: you believe you have terrain clearance but you may not. The memory aid is "High to Low, look out below" — setting too high a pressure gives an over-reading.
+
+### Q14: What effect does air that is colder than standard have on the altimeter reading? ^q14
+- A) A correct altitude indication as long as the altimeter subscale is set to correct for non-standard temperature
+- B) A blockage of the Pitot tube by ice, freezing the altimeter indication to its present value
+- C) An altitude indication which is too low
+- D) An altitude indication which is too high
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter assumes ISA standard temperature to convert pressure differences to altitude. In colder-than-standard air, the air is denser and the pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude than ISA predicts. The altimeter over-reads — it indicates a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual altitude. The aircraft is closer to the ground than shown. The memory aid: "Cold air, you're lower than you think." The altimeter subscale (A) only sets pressure datum, not temperature correction.
+
+### Q15: When flying through an air mass colder than ISA, how does the indicated altitude compare to the true altitude? ^q15
+- A) Lower than the true altitude
+- B) Equal to the standard altitude
+- C) Equal to the true altitude
+- D) Higher than the true altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cold air, the atmosphere is compressed — air is denser and pressure falls faster with altitude than the ISA model assumes. The altimeter (which uses ISA pressure gradient) therefore over-reads: it shows a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual (true) altitude. The aircraft is lower in reality than the altimeter indicates. This is a significant safety concern near terrain. "High to low (pressure or temperature) — look out below."
+
+### Q16: The vertical speed indicator measures the pressure difference between which two values? ^q16
+- A) The present dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure of a previous moment
+- B) The present dynamic pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment
+- C) The present total pressure and the total pressure of a previous moment
+- D) The present static pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI compares the current ambient static pressure (which changes as altitude changes) with the static pressure from a short time ago (stored in the metering reservoir through a calibrated restriction). The rate at which static pressure changes indicates the rate of climb or descent. Dynamic pressure (A, B) plays no role in the VSI. Total pressure (C) is measured by the Pitot tube for the ASI, not used in the VSI.
+
+### Q17: An aircraft heading 180° at 100 kt TAS encounters a 30 kt headwind from 180°. What does the airspeed indicator read? ^q17
+- A) 70 kt
+- B) 130 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 100 kt
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures Indicated Air Speed (IAS), which reflects the airspeed relative to the surrounding air mass — not relative to the ground. The aircraft is flying at 100 kt through the air. The wind (also moving at 30 kt from 180°, meaning a tailwind) affects the aircraft's ground speed (which would be 70 kt, option A), but it does not affect the relative airspeed between aircraft and surrounding air. The ASI always reads the aircraft's speed through the air mass, regardless of wind.
+
+### Q18: How does the airspeed indicator determine aircraft speed? ^q18
+- A) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum
+- B) Total air pressure is measured and compared against static air pressure
+- C) Total air pressure is measured by the static ports and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator
+- D) Dynamic air pressure is measured by the Pitot tube and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI works by comparing total pressure (from the Pitot tube) against static pressure (from the static port). The difference between them is dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), which is proportional to airspeed squared. The ASI capsule expands proportionally to this pressure difference and drives the needle. Option D is incorrect because the Pitot tube measures total pressure, not dynamic pressure alone. Option C is wrong because static ports measure static (not total) pressure. Option A describes a barometer, not an ASI.
+
+### Q19: What do red line markings on aircraft instrument displays indicate? ^q19
+- A) Caution areas
+- B) Recommended areas
+- C) Operational areas
+- D) Operational limits
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red lines (radial marks) on aircraft instrument displays indicate never-exceed limits — the absolute operational limits that must not be exceeded. On the ASI, the red line marks VNE (never-exceed speed). Yellow arcs indicate caution areas (A) — the range between maneuvering speed and VNE where flight is only permitted in smooth air. Green arcs show normal operating range (C). White arcs typically indicate flap operating speeds. There is no standard "recommended areas" marking (B).
+
+### Q20: Which cockpit instrument is connected to the Pitot tube? ^q20
+- A) Airspeed indicator
+- B) Altimeter
+- C) Direct-reading compass
+- D) Vertical speed indicator
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument connected to the Pitot tube (which supplies total pressure). The altimeter (B) and vertical speed indicator (D) are connected only to the static port — they measure changes in static pressure for altitude and climb/descent rate. The direct-reading compass (C) is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q21: In the northern hemisphere, a pilot turns right from 270° to 360° (shortest way). At what compass reading should the turn be stopped? ^q21
+- A) 030°
+- B) 360°
+- C) 330°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 270° to 360° is a right turn (northward, through west-to-north). In the northern hemisphere, the compass leads during turns toward north — it reads ahead of the actual heading. Therefore the pilot must stop the turn early, before the compass reaches 360°. A rule of thumb: stop 30° before the target heading when turning to north. 360° − 30° = 330°. If you wait until the compass shows 360°, you will have overshot and be past 360° (i.e., on approximately 030°).
+
+### Q22: How is "static pressure" defined? ^q22
+- A) Pressure sensed by the pitot tube
+- B) Pressure resulting from orderly flow of air particles
+- C) Pressure inside the airplane cabin
+- D) Pressure of undisturbed airflow
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air — the pressure exerted by the air molecules in all directions, independent of airflow velocity. It is measured by flush static ports on the aircraft's fuselage, positioned to minimize dynamic pressure effects. Cabin pressure (C) is a separate, regulated pressure. The Pitot tube (A) senses total pressure, not static pressure. Option B partially describes static pressure but is imprecise — it is the pressure of the air at rest or in undisturbed flow.
+
+### Q23: What is the root physical cause of dip error in a direct-reading compass? ^q23
+- A) Deviation in the cockpit
+- B) Acceleration of the airplane
+- C) Temperature variations
+- D) Inclination of earth's magnetic field lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dip error (also called northerly turning error or acceleration error) in a direct-reading magnetic compass is caused by the inclination of the Earth's magnetic field lines, which dip downward toward the magnetic poles at an angle to the horizontal. This causes the compass card's pivot point and the magnet system to be offset, leading to errors particularly during turns and accelerations. Temperature variations (C), deviation (A — a different compass error caused by onboard magnetic fields), and acceleration per se (B) are separate effects; the root physical cause of dip error is the field line inclination.
+
+### Q24: What color marks the Caution Area on an airspeed indicator? ^q24
+- A) White
+- B) Yellow
+- C) Green
+- D) Red
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On an airspeed indicator, the yellow arc marks the caution range — the speed band between VNO (maximum structural cruising speed) and VNE (never-exceed speed). Flight in this range is permitted only in smooth air. Red (D) marks VNE (the never-exceed redline). Green (C) marks the normal operating range. White (A) marks the flap operating speed range.
+
+### Q25: If the altimeter reference pressure is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa, how does the indicated altitude change? ^q25
+- A) Values depending on QNH
+- B) Zero
+- C) 80 m less than before
+- D) 80 m more than before
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude using the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Increasing the QNH setting by 10 hPa causes the altimeter to indicate approximately 80 m more altitude (since 1 hPa corresponds to roughly 8 m at sea level). The reading is not zero (B), not less (C), and is not dependent on the QNH value itself (A) — the conversion factor is fixed by the ISA model.
+
+### Q26: If the altimeter subscale is set to QFE, what does the instrument display during flight? ^q26
+- A) Pressure altitude
+- B) Altitude above MSL
+- C) Airfield elevation
+- D) Height above airfield
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at aerodrome elevation. When an altimeter is set to QFE, it reads zero on the ground at the aerodrome and shows height above that aerodrome during flight. It does not show altitude above MSL (B — that would be QNH), the aerodrome elevation itself (C), or pressure altitude (A — that requires setting 1013.25 hPa).
+
+### Q27: What happens when a total-energy variometer has an equalizing tank that is too large? ^q27
+- A) No indication
+- B) Indication too high
+- C) Mechanical overload
+- D) Indication too low
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A total energy compensated vertical speed indicator (TE-VSI) uses a specially shaped nozzle (TE probe) to cancel out changes in indicated climb/sink caused by changes in airspeed (energy exchange). If the compensating tank is too large, the compensation overcorrects and the instrument indicates a sink rate that is larger than the actual sink rate — i.e., too high a reading. A too-large tank does not cause mechanical overload (C), no indication (A), or under-reading (D).
+
+### Q28: What pressures does a vertical speed indicator compare? ^q28
+- A) Dynamic pressure and total pressure
+- B) Total pressure and static pressure
+- C) Instantaneous total pressure and previous total pressure
+- D) Instantaneous static pressure and previous static pressure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A vertical speed indicator (variometer) works by measuring the difference between the current (instantaneous) static pressure and the pressure stored in an internal chamber (the reference or compensating vessel) through a calibrated restriction. As altitude changes, the instantaneous static pressure diverges from the stored pressure, deflecting a diaphragm or capsule. It does not measure total vs. static (B — that is the airspeed indicator), dynamic vs. total (A), or total pressure changes (C).
+
+### Q29: Which engine type is typically found in Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)? ^q29
+- A) 2 Cylinder Diesel
+- B) 4 Cylinder; 4 stroke
+- C) 4 Cylinder 2 stroke
+- D) 2 plate Wankel
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Touring Motor Gliders (TMG) are typically equipped with a conventional four-cylinder, four-stroke piston engine (such as Rotax 912 or Limbach engines), which provides good power-to-weight ratio, reliability, and fuel efficiency for the self-launch and cruise requirements of a TMG. Wankel (D), diesel two-cylinder (A), and four-cylinder two-stroke (C) engines are either not common or not used in certified TMG types.
+
+### Q30: What does the yellow arc on an airspeed indicator signify? ^q30
+- A) Optimum speed while being towed behind aircraft
+- B) Speed for best glide can be found in this area
+- C) Cautious use of flaps or brakes to avoid overload
+- D) Flight only in calm weather with no gusts to avoid overload
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow arc on an airspeed indicator marks the caution speed range between VNO and VNE. Flight in this range is only permitted in smooth air with no gusts, because at these higher speeds turbulence-induced loads could exceed structural limits. It does not indicate a flap/brake limitation range (C), best glide speed (B — that is a specific point, not an arc), or towing speed (A).
+
+### Q31: In a glider cockpit, which levers are identified by the colors red, blue, and green respectively? ^q31
+- A) Speed brakes, cabin hood lock and gear
+- B) Cabin hood release, speed brakes, elevator trim
+- C) Gear, speed brakes and elevator trim tab
+- D) Speed brakes, cable release and elevator trim
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA standardizes cockpit lever colors in gliders: red for the cabin hood (canopy) release, blue for speed brakes (airbrakes), and green for elevator trim. This color coding ensures pilots can quickly identify critical controls under stress without confusion. Options A, C, and D mix up the color-to-function assignments — for example, no standard assigns red to gear or blue to cable release.
+
+### Q32: What characterizes the face sheets and core of a sandwich structure? ^q32
+- A) Thin layers and a heavy core material
+- B) Thick layers and a light core material
+- C) Thick layers and a heavy core material
+- D) Thin layers and a light core material
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sandwich structure uses two thin, stiff face sheets (typically CFRP, glass fiber, or aluminum) bonded to a lightweight core material (foam, balsa wood, or honeycomb). The thin skins carry bending loads while the light core resists shear and keeps the skins separated, providing exceptional stiffness-to-weight ratio. A heavy core (A, C) would defeat the purpose of weight efficiency. Thick layers (B, C) would add unnecessary mass.
+
+### Q33: What is the load factor "n" a ratio of? ^q33
+- A) Drag and lift
+- B) Thrust and drag
+- C) Weight and thrust
+- D) Lift and weight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor n = Lift / Weight. At straight and level flight, n = 1 (1g). In a banked turn or pull-up maneuver, lift must exceed weight to maintain altitude, increasing n above 1. For example, in a 60° bank, n = 2 (2g). Load factor is critical for structural design — gliders have maximum positive and negative g-limits that must not be exceeded to prevent structural failure.
+
+### Q34: Among the listed materials, which has the highest structural strength? ^q34
+- A) Wood
+- B) Aluminium
+- C) Carbon fiber re-inforced plastic
+- D) Magnesium
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) has an exceptional strength-to-weight ratio — higher tensile strength than steel at a fraction of the weight. This is why modern high-performance gliders are predominantly CFRP construction. Aluminum (B) is strong and lightweight but significantly weaker than CFRP. Magnesium (D) is even lighter than aluminum but lower in strength. Wood (A) has good specific strength but is the weakest in absolute terms of those listed.
+
+### Q35: Around how many axes does an aircraft move, and what are they called? ^q35
+- A) 3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis
+- B) 4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil
+- C) 3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis
+- D) 4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft moves about three principal axes: the longitudinal axis (nose to tail — roll), the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip — pitch), and the vertical axis (top to bottom — yaw). All three pass through the aircraft's center of gravity. Option A uses mathematical labels but omits their aviation names. Options B and D invent a non-existent fourth axis.
+
+### Q36: How are flight controls on small single-engine piston aircraft typically actuated? ^q36
+- A) Electrically through fly-by-wire
+- B) Power-assisted through hydraulic pumps or electric motors
+- C) Hydraulically through hydraulic pumps and actuators
+- D) Manually through rods and control cables
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Small piston aircraft and gliders use direct mechanical linkages — push-pull rods and/or steel control cables — to transmit pilot input directly to the control surfaces. This is simple, lightweight, and reliable with no power source required. Hydraulic systems (C, B) are used on larger aircraft. Fly-by-wire (A) is used on modern airliners and military aircraft where electrical signals replace mechanical connections.
+
+### Q37: Which option lists only the primary flight controls of an aircraft? ^q37
+- A) All movable parts on the aircraft which aid in controlling the aircraft
+- B) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift wing devices, power controls
+- C) Flaps, slats, speedbrakes
+- D) Elevator, rudder, aileron
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The three primary flight controls are elevator (pitch), rudder (yaw), and aileron (roll) — these directly control the aircraft's rotation about its three axes and are essential for flight. Option C lists secondary/high-lift devices. Option B mixes primary and secondary controls together. Option A is too broad — not all movable parts are primary controls. Flaps, trim tabs, and speedbrakes are secondary controls.
+
+### Q38: What is "true altitude"? ^q38
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure
+- B) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature
+- C) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature
+- D) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is the actual geometric height of the aircraft above mean sea level (MSL), corrected for non-standard temperature deviations from ISA. It differs from indicated altitude (which assumes ISA) and pressure altitude (referenced to 1013.25 hPa). It is referenced to MSL, not AGL (eliminating A and B). Option C is partially correct but incomplete — true altitude is the real MSL height, not just a pressure altitude with a temperature correction applied.
+
+### Q39: Flying in an air mass at ISA temperature with QNH correctly set, how does indicated altitude compare to true altitude? ^q39
+- A) Equal to the true altitude
+- B) Higher than the true altitude
+- C) Lower than the true altitude
+- D) Equal to the standard atmosphere
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When both the actual pressure (set correctly via QNH) and actual temperature exactly match ISA standard conditions, the altimeter's assumptions are perfectly valid. No temperature or pressure correction is needed, so the indicated altitude equals the true altitude (actual height above MSL). This is the ideal baseline condition. Any deviation in pressure or temperature from ISA will introduce errors.
+
+### Q40: Which instrument can be affected by hysteresis error? ^q40
+- A) Tachometer
+- B) Direct reading compass
+- C) Altimeter
+- D) Vertical speed indicator
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hysteresis error in the altimeter occurs because the aneroid capsules (bellows) that expand and contract with pressure changes have a mechanical lag — they do not return to exactly the same position when pressure is restored to a previous value. This means the altimeter may give slightly different readings at the same altitude when climbing versus descending. The compass, tachometer, and VSI do not use elastic aneroid capsules in the same manner and are not subject to this specific error.
+
+### Q41: What is the operating principle of a vertical speed indicator? ^q41
+- A) Total air pressure is measured and compared to static pressure
+- B) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum
+- C) Measuring the present static air pressure and comparing it to the static air pressure inside a reservoir
+- D) Measuring the vertical acceleration through the displacement of a gimbal-mounted mass
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical speed indicator (VSI) works by comparing the current static pressure (from the static port) against a reference pressure stored in a sealed reservoir (or capsule with a calibrated leak). When climbing, static pressure drops faster than the reservoir bleeds down, creating a pressure difference that indicates a climb rate. The calibrated leak rate determines the instrument's response. Option D describes an accelerometer. Option A describes the ASI. Option B describes a simple pressure gauge, not a rate instrument.
+
+### Q42: What does the red marking on the airspeed indicator indicate? ^q42
+- A) Speed which must not be exceeded with flaps extended
+- B) Speed which must not be exceeded in turns with more than 45° bank
+- C) Speed which must not be exceeded within bumpy air
+- D) Speed which must not be exceeded regardless of circumstances
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red line on the ASI marks VNE — the never-exceed speed — which is an absolute structural limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, including smooth air. Exceeding VNE risks flutter, structural failure, or loss of control. Option C describes the yellow arc (caution range), where flight is only permitted in smooth air. Option A describes VFE (flap extension speed). Option B describes no standard speed marking — maneuvering speed (VA) relates to gust/maneuver loads but is not marked by color range on the ASI.
+
+### Q43: In the northern hemisphere, a pilot takes the shortest turn from 030° to 180°. At what compass reading should the turn end? ^q43
+- A) 150°
+- B) 360°
+- C) 210°
+- D) 180°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 030° to 180° is a right turn (clockwise through east and south). When turning toward southerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the compass lags — it under-reads the actual heading, showing a smaller heading than the aircraft has actually turned to. Therefore, the pilot must overshoot past the target — continue turning until the compass reads approximately 180° + 30° = 210°. The compass will then be lagging, showing 210° when the aircraft is actually on approximately 180°. This is the northern hemisphere rule: undershoot when turning to north, overshoot when turning to south.
+
+### Q44: What does an energy-compensated variometer show during a steady glide? ^q44
+- A) The vertical speed of the glider through surrounding air
+- B) The vertical speed of the glider minus movement of the air
+- C) The vertical speed of the glider plus movement of the air
+- D) The vertical speed of the airmass flown through
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A total-energy compensated variometer (TE variometer) cancels the effect of the pilot's control inputs on indicated vertical speed by accounting for changes in kinetic energy. During a steady (stationary) glide with no vertical air movement, it correctly shows the vertical speed of the airmass being flown through (i.e., zero in still air, or the actual thermal/sink value). It does not show the glider's speed through the airmass uncompensated (A), the combined glider plus airmass movement (C), or a subtracted value (B).
+
+### Q45: In a right turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. How should the pilot correct this? ^q45
+- A) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- C) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- D) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a right turn, if the yaw string deflects to the left, the nose is yawing left relative to the turn — this indicates a skidding turn (too little bank and too little inside rudder, or adverse yaw). To centre the string, the pilot needs to increase rudder in the turn direction (right rudder) to bring the nose around, and reduce bank slightly to decrease the centrifugal skid tendency. Options A, B, and C either use the wrong rudder direction or wrong bank correction for this skid condition.
+
+### Q46: Which type of defect causes an aircraft to lose airworthiness? ^q46
+- A) Crack in the cabin hood plastic
+- B) Damage to load-bearing parts
+- C) Scratch on the outer painting
+- D) Dirty wing leading edge
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airworthiness of an aircraft is fundamentally determined by the structural integrity of load-bearing components (main spar, wing attachment, fuselage frames, control system attachment points). Damage to these parts compromises the aircraft's ability to sustain flight loads and constitutes a loss of airworthiness. A dirty leading edge (D) reduces performance but is not an airworthiness defect. A cracked canopy (A) and a scratch on paint (C) are cosmetic or minor defects that do not affect structural integrity.
+
+### Q47: The loaded mass is below the minimum required by the load sheet. What must be done? ^q47
+- A) Change incident angle of elevator
+- B) Trim aircraft to "pitch down"
+- C) Change pilot seat position
+- D) Load ballast weight up to minimum load
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load sheet (weight and balance document) specifies a minimum pilot weight to ensure the centre of gravity remains within approved limits. If the actual pilot weight is below the minimum, ballast must be added (typically in the ballast area specified by the POH) to bring the total loaded mass up to the minimum required value. Adjusting trim (B, A) does not address the underlying CG/mass problem, and changing seat position (C) is not a standard corrective action for under-weight loading.
+
+### Q48: Water ballast raises wing loading by 40%. By approximately what percentage does the minimum airspeed increase? ^q48
+- A) 18%
+- B) 100%
+- C) 200%
+- D) 40%
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Minimum speed (stall speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading: Vs ∝ √(W/S). If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), stall speed increases by √1.4 ≈ 1.183, i.e., approximately 18.3%. A 40% speed increase (D) would require a 96% increase in wing loading, 100% (B) would require a quadrupling of wing loading, and 200% (C) is far too large. Only the square-root relationship gives approximately 18%.
+
+### Q49: The maximum mass from the load sheet has been exceeded. What action must be taken? ^q49
+- A) Trim "pitch-up"
+- B) Trim "pitch-down"
+- C) Reduce load
+- D) Increase speed by 15%
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the actual loaded mass exceeds the maximum allowed mass from the load sheet, the only correct action is to reduce the load (remove ballast, water ballast, baggage, or have a lighter pilot). Exceeding maximum mass means structural load limits may be reached at lower G-loads or airspeeds. Increasing speed (D) or adjusting trim (A, B) does not address the structural overload problem.
+
+### Q50: What is a "torsion-stiffened leading edge"? ^q50
+- A) The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease
+- B) Special shape of the leading edge
+- C) Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces
+- D) The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A torsion-stiffened leading edge is a structural design feature in which the leading edge of the wing (from the leading edge to the main spar) is planked (covered) on both upper and lower surfaces, creating a closed-section D-box that resists torsional (twisting) loads. This is not a spar component (D), not merely a shape descriptor (B), and not a reference to a torsion moment distribution point (A).
+
+### Q51: Where can information about maximum permitted airspeeds be found? ^q51
+- A) POH and posting in briefing room
+- B) Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR
+- C) POH, Cockpit panel, airspeed indicator
+- D) POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maximum permissible airspeeds (VNE, VNO, etc.) are published in the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH/AFM), displayed on the cockpit instrument panel (placard), and indicated on the airspeed indicator by the red line (VNE) and arc markings. The AIP ENR (B) does not contain aircraft-specific speed limitations. Approach charts and VSI (D) do not show speed limits. The briefing room posting (A) is informal and not authoritative.
+
+### Q52: How is wing thickness defined? ^q52
+- A) As the distance at the most inner part of the wing
+- B) As the distance at the most outer part of the wing
+- C) As the distance at the thickest part of the wing
+- D) As the distance at the thinnest part of the wing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing thickness is defined as the maximum perpendicular distance between the upper and lower wing surfaces, measured at the thickest part of the cross-section (airfoil). This point is typically located between 20–30% of the chord from the leading edge. The thinnest part (D) or outer tip (B) would give a smaller, less meaningful measurement, and the inner root (A) describes spanwise location rather than airfoil thickness.
+
+### Q53: What are the primary structural components of a wood or metal aircraft fuselage? ^q53
+- A) Frames and stringer
+- B) Rips, frames and covers
+- C) Covers, stringers and forming parts
+- D) Girders, rips and stringers
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary longitudinal and transverse structural members of a traditional fuselage are frames (also called formers or bulkheads — running circumferentially) and stringers (running lengthwise). Together they form the skeleton over which the skin is attached. Covers and ribs are wing components, and "girders" is not standard fuselage terminology. The simplicity of frames + stringers makes A the correct fundamental answer.
+
+### Q54: On what physical phenomenon is altitude measurement based? ^q54
+- A) Dynamic pressure
+- B) Total pressure
+- C) Differential pressure
+- D) Static pressure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure decreases with increasing altitude in a predictable manner (in the ISA model). The altimeter measures static pressure from the static port and converts this pressure to an altitude reading using calibrated aneroid capsules. Dynamic pressure (A) depends on airspeed and is used by the ASI. Total pressure (B) is static + dynamic, used by the Pitot tube. Differential pressure (C) is the difference between total and static — that is what drives the ASI, not the altimeter.
+
+### Q55: What pressure difference is required to determine IAS with the airspeed indicator? ^q55
+- A) The difference between the dynamic pressure and the static pressure
+- B) The difference between the standard pressure and the total pressure
+- C) The difference between the total pressure and the dynamic pressure
+- D) The difference between the total pressure and the static pressure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is determined from the difference between total pressure (Pitot tube) and static pressure (static port). This difference equals dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), from which airspeed is derived. Option C (total minus dynamic) would equal static pressure — not useful for airspeed. Option A (dynamic minus static) is not a meaningful aerodynamic quantity in this context. Option B (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for airspeed measurement.
+
+### Q56: In the northern hemisphere, a pilot turns left from 360° to 270° (shortest way). At what compass reading should the turn be stopped? ^q56
+- A) 300°
+- B) 240°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 270°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 360° to 270° is a left turn (turning from north through west). In the northern hemisphere, the compass lags during turns away from north (toward south) and leads during turns toward north. When turning away from north (southward turn), the compass lags — it under-reads the turn. However, when turning through west (270°), the turning error is minimal. For turns to southerly headings the pilot must overshoot, but for 270° (west), the compass reading is approximately accurate at the completion point. The answer is to stop at 270° as indicated.
+
+### Q57: Under what condition may an aircraft with an unserviceable airspeed indicator be operated? ^q57
+- A) When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again
+- B) When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight
+- C) If no maintenance organisation is around
+- D) If only airfield patterns are flown
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is a required instrument for safe flight; without it a pilot cannot determine safe operating speeds, stall speed, or structural speed limits. An inoperative airspeed indicator means the aircraft must remain on the ground until the instrument is serviceable. No exception exists for local aerodrome patterns (D) or GPS substitute (B — GPS ground speed is not equivalent to IAS for aerodynamic purposes). Absence of maintenance (C) is irrelevant to the operational requirement.
+
+### Q58: During a left turn, the yaw string deflects to the left. How should the pilot correct this? ^q58
+- A) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- C) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a left turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the aircraft is slipping into the turn (too much bank relative to rudder input). To centre the string in a slip, the pilot needs to increase bank to steepen the turn and reduce rudder (less rudder in the turn direction). This is opposite to correcting a skid. Options A, B, and C use incorrect combinations for correcting a slip in a left turn.
+
+### Q59: What is the primary aerodynamic purpose of winglets? ^q59
+- A) Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities
+- B) Increase gliging performance at high speed
+- C) To increase efficiency of aspect ratio
+- D) Reduction of induced drag
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winglets are upward (or downward) curving extensions at the wingtip that reduce induced drag by weakening the wingtip vortex — the main source of induced drag on a finite wing. They do not primarily increase aspect ratio efficiency (C — though functionally similar, they are a different mechanism), are not specifically for high-speed performance (B), and do not increase lift or turning agility (A).
+
+### Q60: What is the main purpose of a glider's trim lever? ^q60
+- A) Reduce the adverse yaw
+- B) Reduce stick force on the rudder
+- C) Reduce stick force on the ailerons
+- D) Reduce stick force on the elevator
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trim system adjusts the elevator trim tab (or spring trim) to hold a desired pitch attitude without continuous pilot input force on the stick. This reduces pilot workload on long final glides or thermalling. Ailerons (C) and rudder (B) are not trimmed by the standard glider trim lever. Adverse yaw (A) is a roll/yaw coupling phenomenon addressed by rudder coordination, not trim.
+
+### Q61: What are the primary and secondary effects of applying left rudder? ^q61
+- A) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the right
+- B) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the right
+- C) Primary: yaw to the right; Secondary: roll to the left
+- D) Primary: yaw to the left; Secondary: roll to the left
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary effect of left rudder is yaw to the left — the nose swings left around the vertical axis. The secondary effect is a roll to the left: as the nose yaws left, the right wing moves forward and generates more lift, while the left wing slows and generates less, causing the aircraft to bank left. This coupling between yaw and roll is an important aerodynamic relationship for coordinating turns in gliders.
+
+### Q62: When trimming an aircraft nose up, which direction does the trim tab move? ^q62
+- A) Depends on CG position
+- B) In direction of rudder deflection
+- C) It moves down
+- D) It moves up
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To trim nose up, the elevator must be held in an upward position. The trim tab moves down to achieve this: the downward tab creates an aerodynamic force that pushes the elevator up and holds it there without pilot input. This is the fundamental inverse relationship between trim tab and elevator deflection. CG position (A) affects trim authority but not the direction of tab movement. Rudder (B) is irrelevant to elevator trim.
+
+### Q63: What is the purpose of the trim system? ^q63
+- A) Move the centre of gravity
+- B) Lock control elements
+- C) Increase adverse yaw
+- D) Adapt the control force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Trim is used to neutralize control forces so the pilot does not need to continuously push or pull the stick to maintain a desired flight attitude. By adjusting the trim, the pilot can fly hands-off at a set speed and attitude. Trim cannot move the center of gravity (A) — that requires shifting mass. Trim does not lock controls (B) or increase adverse yaw (C), which is a side-effect of aileron use.
+
+### Q64: What does QFE refer to? ^q64
+- A) Altitude above the reference pressure level 1013.25 hPa
+- B) Barometric pressure adjusted to sea level, using the international standard atmosphere (ISA)
+- C) Magnetic bearing to a station
+- D) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual barometric pressure measured at a specific reference point, typically the airfield or runway threshold elevation. When QFE is set in the altimeter subscale, the altimeter reads zero on the runway — showing height above the airfield. QNH (not QFE) is the pressure adjusted to mean sea level (B). Flight levels use 1013.25 hPa (A). A magnetic bearing to a station (C) is QDM/QDR terminology, unrelated to altimetry.
+
+### Q65: What name is given to the compass error introduced by the aircraft's own magnetic field? ^q65
+- A) Declination
+- B) Variation
+- C) Inclination
+- D) Deviation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the compass error caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields (from metal structures, electrical equipment, engines). It is measured in degrees and varies with aircraft heading — it is recorded on a deviation card in the cockpit. Variation (B, also called declination A) is the angle between true north and magnetic north — an earth-based error, not caused by the aircraft. Inclination (C) is the vertical dip of the earth's magnetic field, which causes turning and acceleration errors.
+
+### Q66: Which cockpit instruments are connected to the static port? ^q66
+- A) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, slip indicator
+- B) Altimeter, slip indicator, navigational computer
+- C) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, direct-reading compass
+- D) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, airspeed indicator
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The static port supplies static pressure to three instruments: the altimeter (measures static pressure to indicate altitude), the vertical speed indicator (compares current static pressure to a stored reference), and the airspeed indicator (uses static pressure in combination with Pitot total pressure). The direct-reading compass (A, C) is a self-contained magnetic instrument requiring no pneumatic input. The slip indicator (A, B) is a gravity/inertial instrument, not connected to the static system.
+
+### Q67: On what factors does dynamic pressure directly depend? ^q67
+- A) Air pressure and air temperature
+- B) Air density and lift coefficient
+- C) Air density and airflow speed squared
+- D) Lift- and drag coefficient
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic pressure (q) is defined by Bernoulli's equation as q = ½ρv², where ρ is air density and v is airflow speed. Dynamic pressure depends directly on air density and the square of velocity. Lift and drag coefficients (D) are aerodynamic effects that depend on dynamic pressure, not the other way around. Air pressure and temperature (A) influence density indirectly but are not the direct parameters in the formula.
+
+### Q68: The airspeed indicator, altimeter, and VSI all show incorrect readings simultaneously. What is the most likely cause? ^q68
+- A) Failure of the electrical system
+- B) Blocking of pitot tube
+- C) Leakage in compensation vessel
+- D) Blocking of static pressure lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vertical speed indicator are all connected to the static pressure port. If the static pressure system is blocked (e.g., by ice, water, or a cover left on), all three instruments will give erroneous readings simultaneously. A blocked pitot tube (B) would affect only the airspeed indicator. A leaking compensating vessel (C) affects only the VSI. An electrical failure (A) does not affect these purely pneumatic instruments.
+
+### Q69: Which primary control initiates rotation around the longitudinal axis? ^q69
+- A) Rudder
+- B) Trim tab
+- C) Ailerons
+- D) Elevator
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ailerons control roll — rotation around the longitudinal axis (the axis running nose to tail). When one aileron deflects up and the other down, differential lift is created, rolling the aircraft. The elevator (D) controls pitch (rotation around the lateral axis). The rudder (A) controls yaw (rotation around the vertical axis). The trim tab (B) is a secondary control that modifies control forces, not a primary roll initiator.
+
+### Q70: What type of altitude is a flight level? ^q70
+- A) Density altitude
+- B) True altitude
+- C) Altitude above ground
+- D) Pressure altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight level (FL) is a pressure altitude expressed in hundreds of feet with the altimeter subscale set to 1013.25 hPa (standard pressure). FL100 = 10,000 ft on the standard pressure setting. All aircraft above the transition altitude use this common datum, ensuring separation between aircraft regardless of local QNH variations. True altitude (B) is the actual height above MSL. Altitude above ground (C) is height AGL. Density altitude (A) relates to performance calculations.
+
+### Q71: Which errors cause a magnetic compass to deviate from the magnetic north direction? ^q71
+- A) Variation, turning and acceleration errors
+- B) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field
+- C) Gravity and magnetism
+- D) Deviation, turning and acceleration errors
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is affected by deviation (from the aircraft's own magnetic field), turning errors (caused by magnetic dip/inclination — the compass card tilts and reads incorrectly during turns in the northern hemisphere), and acceleration errors (the compass reads incorrectly during speed changes on east/west headings). Variation/declination (A, B) is a geographic difference between true and magnetic north that applies to all magnetic compasses equally and is not an "error" in the same sense — it is a known, chartable quantity.
+
+### Q72: When must the reference pressure on an altimeter subscale be updated? ^q72
+- A) Every day before the first flight
+- B) After maintance has been finished
+- C) Before every flight and during cross country flights
+- D) Once a month before flight operation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter's reference pressure (subscale) must be set before every flight to the correct local QNH/QFE so that the altimeter reads the correct altitude or height. During cross-country flights, QNH changes as the pilot moves between pressure regions, so updates are required when crossing into new altimeter setting regions. Monthly (D) or only after maintenance (B) settings would result in significant altitude errors.
+
+### Q73: How is magnetic "inclination" defined? ^q73
+- A) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- B) Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north
+- C) Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane
+- D) Deviation induced by electrical fields
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's magnetic field vector and the horizontal plane at any given location. It is 0° at the magnetic equator and 90° at the magnetic poles. Deviation (D) is the error caused by magnetic fields within the aircraft. Magnetic variation/declination (A) is the angle between magnetic and true north. Option B describes aircraft heading, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q74: On a hot summer day with reduced air density, how should the final approach be flown regarding airspeed? ^q74
+- A) With additional speed according POH
+- B) With decreased speed indication (IAS)
+- C) With unchanged speed indication (IAS)
+- D) With increased speed indication (IAS)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures IAS (Indicated Airspeed), which is derived from dynamic pressure. At lower air density (hot day, high altitude), TAS is higher than IAS for the same dynamic pressure. The aerodynamic behaviour of the wing (lift, stall) depends on dynamic pressure (and thus IAS), not on TAS. Therefore stall occurs at the same IAS regardless of density. The approach should be flown at the same IAS as always (C). Adding speed (A) or reducing IAS (B) based on temperature alone is not correct for stall margin management with IAS.
+
+### Q75: What does the load factor n express? ^q75
+- A) Thrust and drag
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Weight and thrust
+- D) Lift and weight
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor (n) is the ratio of the aerodynamic lift acting on the aircraft to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In level unaccelerated flight, n = 1. In turns or pull-ups, n increases. It does not describe weight/thrust (C), drag/lift (B), or thrust/drag (A) relationships.
+
+### Q76: How is "static pressure" defined? ^q76
+- A) Pressure sensed by the pitot tube
+- B) Pressure resulting from orderly flow of air particles
+- C) Pressure of undisturbed airflow
+- D) Pressure inside the airplane cabin
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the pressure of the undisturbed ambient airmass — the atmospheric pressure acting equally in all directions at a given altitude. It is sensed through flush static ports on the fuselage skin. It is not the cabin pressure (D), not related to orderly flow direction (B — that is dynamic pressure), and is not sensed by the pitot tube alone (A — the pitot senses total pressure).
+
+### Q77: How is "inclination" defined in the context of the earth's magnetic field? ^q77
+- A) Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north
+- B) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- C) Deviation induced by electrical fields
+- D) Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's total magnetic field vector and the local horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator, field lines are horizontal (0° dip); at the poles, they are vertical (90° dip). Deviation (C) is caused by onboard magnetic interference. Variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and geographic north. Option A describes aircraft heading relative to true north.
+
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+# 30 - Flight Performance and Planning
+
+> 40 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What happens if the maximum permitted take-off mass of a glider is exceeded? ^q1
+- A) It may be tolerated provided the excess is below 10%.
+- B) It is never permissible and poses a serious safety risk.
+- C) The pilot can compensate with appropriate control inputs.
+- D) It is acceptable in exceptional cases to prevent departure delays.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The maximum take-off mass (MTOM) is a structural and aerodynamic certification limit. Exceeding it raises wing loading, increases the stall speed, degrades climb and glide performance, and overstresses the airframe beyond certified load factors. No pilot technique can compensate for the resulting structural and aerodynamic penalties. There is no regulatory tolerance for any excess, however small.
+
+### Q2: Where must the centre of gravity be located for safe flight? ^q2
+- A) Forward of the front C.G. limit.
+- B) Within the range between the forward and aft C.G. limits.
+- C) Aft of the rear C.G. limit.
+- D) To the right of the lateral C.G. limit.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The approved C.G. envelope defines the range within which stability and controllability have been flight-tested and certified. A C.G. forward of the front limit may leave insufficient elevator authority for rotation or flare. A C.G. aft of the rear limit makes the aircraft statically unstable. The C.G. must remain within both limits throughout all phases of flight.
+
+### Q3: Why must the centre of gravity remain within the approved limits during every phase of flight? ^q3
+- A) To prevent the aircraft from exceeding its never-exceed speed in a descent.
+- B) To prevent the aircraft from tipping onto its tail during loading.
+- C) To ensure both longitudinal stability and controllability.
+- D) To prevent the aircraft from stalling.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The C.G. position relative to the aerodynamic neutral point determines longitudinal static stability, while elevator authority provides controllability. If the C.G. falls outside the certified envelope, one of these two properties is compromised. Stall speed and VNE are governed by other parameters and are not the primary reasons for C.G. limits.
+
+### Q4: Which C.G. position presents the greatest danger for a glider? ^q4
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too high above the longitudinal axis.
+- C) Too low below the longitudinal axis.
+- D) Too far aft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aft C.G. beyond the rear limit reduces or eliminates longitudinal static stability. The aircraft may pitch up violently and uncontrollably because the restoring moment disappears. A forward C.G. is less dangerous because it merely increases stick forces and reduces performance; an aft C.G. can make the aircraft unflyable.
+
+### Q5: How are the empty mass and corresponding C.G. of an individual aircraft initially established? ^q5
+- A) By calculation from the manufacturer's type data.
+- B) Through data provided in the certificate of airworthiness.
+- C) By physically weighing the aircraft.
+- D) By reference to another aircraft of the same type, since all serial numbers share identical mass properties.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Each aircraft is physically weighed on calibrated scales to determine its actual empty mass and C.G. position. Manufacturing tolerances, installed equipment, and repairs cause differences between serial numbers of the same type, so manufacturer tables or other aircraft of the same type cannot be relied upon. The results are recorded in the weight and balance report and updated after any modification.
+
+### Q6: What can happen if baggage or cargo is not properly secured? ^q6
+- A) Predictable instability that the pilot can compensate with control inputs.
+- B) Calculable instability when the C.G. shift is less than 10%.
+- C) Uncontrollable flight attitudes, structural damage, and risk of injury.
+- D) Minor trim changes that are easily corrected in flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Unsecured cargo can shift suddenly in turbulence or manoeuvres, moving the C.G. outside limits faster than a pilot can react. A sudden aft shift can trigger an unrecoverable pitch-up. Loose items can become projectiles, injuring occupants or jamming controls. The structural risk from asymmetric or excessive local loading may exceed design limits.
+
+### Q7: Through which point does the total weight force of an aircraft act? ^q7
+- A) The stagnation point.
+- B) The centre of pressure.
+- C) The neutral point.
+- D) The centre of gravity.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** By definition, the centre of gravity is the single point through which the resultant gravitational force (weight vector) acts on the entire aircraft. The centre of pressure is where the resultant aerodynamic force acts, the neutral point is the aerodynamic reference for stability analysis, and the stagnation point is where airflow velocity reaches zero on the leading edge.
+
+### Q8: What does the term "centre of gravity" describe? ^q8
+- A) An alternative name for the neutral point.
+- B) The point through which the resultant gravitational force acts on the aircraft.
+- C) The physically heaviest single component of the aircraft.
+- D) The midpoint between the neutral point and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity is the mass-weighted average position of all individual mass elements. It is the point through which the total weight force is considered to act. It is distinct from the neutral point (an aerodynamic stability concept), is not the heaviest single component, and has no fixed geometric relationship to the midpoint between neutral point and datum.
+
+### Q9: In mass and balance calculations, what is a "moment"? ^q9
+- A) The sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) The quotient of a mass divided by its balance arm.
+- C) The product of a mass and its balance arm.
+- D) The difference between a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moment = mass x balance arm (M = m x d), expressed in units such as kg-m or lb-in. The total C.G. position is found by dividing the sum of all moments by the total mass. Using a sum, difference, or quotient instead of a product would yield dimensionally incorrect results.
+
+### Q10: What does the term "balance arm" mean in a mass and balance calculation? ^q10
+- A) The distance from a mass to the overall aircraft C.G.
+- B) The point through which gravity acts on a specific mass.
+- C) The fixed reference point from which all distances are measured.
+- D) The horizontal distance from the datum to the C.G. of a particular mass item.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The balance arm (moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum to the centre of gravity of a specific mass item. It determines the leverage that mass exerts about the datum. The datum itself is a fixed reference point, not the balance arm. Distances from the overall C.G. are not balance arms.
+
+### Q11: The horizontal distance between the datum and the overall centre of gravity is called the... ^q11
+- A) Torque.
+- B) Span.
+- C) Balance arm.
+- D) Lever ratio.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance terminology, the balance arm is the horizontal distance from the datum to any point of interest, including the overall C.G. once calculated. Torque (or moment) is the product of mass and arm, not the distance itself. Span is a wing dimension unrelated to longitudinal mass and balance.
+
+### Q12: The balance arm of any mass item is the horizontal distance between... ^q12
+- A) The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) The front C.G. limit and the datum.
+- C) The C.G. of that mass item and the datum.
+- D) The C.G. of that mass item and the rear C.G. limit.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The datum is a fixed reference defined in the flight manual. The balance arm of any mass item is measured from this datum to the centre of gravity of that specific item. All moment calculations use the datum as a common reference so that moments can be summed algebraically to determine the total C.G. position.
+
+### Q13: Where in the aircraft documentation are the masses and balance arms needed for a weight and balance calculation found? ^q13
+- A) In the certificate of airworthiness.
+- B) In the annual inspection records.
+- C) In the performance section of the flight manual.
+- D) In the mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH) or Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) contains a dedicated mass and balance section listing the empty mass, empty C.G., datum, C.G. limits, and approved loading configurations. The certificate of airworthiness certifies the type; annual inspection records document maintenance; the performance section covers speeds and glide data.
+
+### Q14: Which section of the flight manual records the basic empty mass? ^q14
+- A) Limitations.
+- B) Weight and balance.
+- C) Normal procedures.
+- D) Performance.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Weight and Balance section (typically Section 6 in an EASA-standardised AFM) records the basic empty mass, empty C.G. location, allowable C.G. range, and loading instructions. The Limitations section covers speeds and load factors; Normal Procedures covers checklists; Performance covers climb, glide, and speed data.
+
+### Q15: An aircraft has a mass of 610 kg with its C.G. at position 80.0. A 10 kg item at balance arm 150 is removed. What is the new C.G. position? ^q15
+- A) 81.166
+- B) 75.0
+- C) 78.833
+- D) 70.0
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Initial moment = 610 x 80.0 = 48,800. Removed moment = 10 x 150 = 1,500. New moment = 48,800 - 1,500 = 47,300. New mass = 600 kg. New C.G. = 47,300 / 600 = 78.833. Since the removed item was aft of the original C.G. (150 > 80), removing it shifts the C.G. forward, which is consistent with the result.
+
+### Q16: A glider's current mass is 6,400 lbs with C.G. at 80. The aft C.G. limit is 80.5. What mass can be moved from its current position to arm 150 without exceeding the aft limit? ^q16
+- A) 27.82 lbs
+- B) 56.63 lbs
+- C) 45.71 lbs
+- D) 39.45 lbs
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving mass x from the current C.G. (arm 80) to arm 150 shifts the C.G. aft. The new C.G. = (6400 x 80 + x x (150 - 80)) / 6400 must not exceed 80.5. Solving: x x 70 / 6400 = 0.5, so x = 6400 x 0.5 / 70 = 45.71 lbs. This is the maximum mass that can be relocated without violating the aft limit.
+
+### Q17: Correct loading of an aircraft requires consideration of... ^q17
+- A) Only the maximum permissible mass.
+- B) Only the correct distribution of payload.
+- C) Both the correct payload distribution and compliance with the maximum permissible mass.
+- D) Only the maximum permissible baggage mass in the aft compartment.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Safe loading demands that both the total mass stays within MTOM and the payload is distributed so the C.G. remains within limits. Exceeding either the mass limit or the C.G. envelope independently compromises safety. Checking only one condition is insufficient.
+
+### Q18: The maximum cockpit payload is exceeded by 10 kg. What is the correct action? ^q18
+- A) Apply aft trim to compensate.
+- B) Apply forward trim to compensate.
+- C) Reduce the water ballast by the equivalent amount.
+- D) Reduce the payload until the limit is respected.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The maximum pilot seat load is a structural certification limit. Trim adjustments do not change the actual mass and do not make the aircraft compliant. Reducing water ballast does not address a cockpit overload. The only correct action is to reduce the payload (remove equipment, lighter pilot parachute, etc.) until the certified limit is respected.
+
+### Q19: If the aft C.G. limit is exceeded, the pilot should... ^q19
+- A) Apply forward trim.
+- B) Apply aft trim.
+- C) Redistribute the useful load to move the C.G. forward.
+- D) Accept the condition provided the maximum mass is not exceeded.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the aft C.G. limit is exceeded, the load must be redistributed so that more mass is placed forward. Trim changes do not alter the physical mass distribution and cannot solve a structural C.G. problem. Flying with the C.G. beyond the aft limit is dangerous regardless of total mass.
+
+### Q20: What propels a pure glider forward in flight? ^q20
+- A) Drag resolved in the forward direction.
+- B) A tailwind component.
+- C) The component of gravity acting along the flight path.
+- D) Rising air currents.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A motorless glider converts potential energy (height) into kinetic energy. The component of the weight vector projected along the descending flight path balances drag and maintains airspeed. Ascending air can reduce or reverse the descent but does not propel the aircraft forward. A tailwind changes groundspeed but does not generate a propulsive force along the flight path.
+
+### Q21: Which factor reduces the landing distance? ^q21
+- A) Heavy rainfall.
+- B) High density altitude.
+- C) A strong headwind.
+- D) High pressure altitude.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A headwind reduces groundspeed at touchdown while airspeed remains normal, so less kinetic energy must be dissipated during the ground roll. High density altitude and high pressure altitude increase true airspeed for a given IAS, lengthening the ground roll. Heavy rain can degrade braking effectiveness and increase landing distance.
+
+### Q22: What effect does a headwind have on the glide angle over the ground at constant true airspeed? ^q22
+- A) The glide angle over the ground becomes steeper (increases).
+- B) Wind has no effect on the glide angle over the ground.
+- C) The glide angle over the ground becomes shallower (decreases).
+- D) The effect depends on the aircraft's mass.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A headwind reduces groundspeed while the sink rate remains unchanged. Since the aircraft covers less horizontal distance per unit of height lost, the descent angle relative to the ground increases (steepens). Conversely, a tailwind reduces the glide angle over the ground. The air-mass glide angle is unaffected by wind.
+
+### Q23: What must be observed when landing on sloping terrain during an off-field landing? ^q23
+- A) Always land into the wind regardless of slope.
+- B) Land facing uphill with an approach speed slightly above normal.
+- C) Initiate the flare at a greater height than usual.
+- D) Use full airbrakes throughout the approach.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On sloping terrain, landing uphill shortens the ground roll because gravity assists deceleration. A slightly higher approach speed provides a safety margin against turbulence and wind shear near unfamiliar terrain. Landing downhill would drastically increase the stopping distance and is extremely dangerous.
+
+### Q24: What special consideration applies when landing in heavy rain? ^q24
+- A) Fly a shallower approach than usual for better visibility.
+- B) Approach at a lower speed because rain slows the aircraft.
+- C) No special action is needed; land as in dry conditions.
+- D) Increase the approach speed above the normal value.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rain on the wing surface degrades aerodynamic characteristics by increasing surface roughness and altering the effective aerofoil profile. The stall speed may rise slightly and control effectiveness may be reduced. A higher approach speed provides the necessary safety margin. A shallower approach would reduce obstacle clearance and extend the final segment.
+
+### Q25: What should you expect when taking off from a waterlogged grass runway? ^q25
+- A) The wet grass reduces friction, shortening the take-off distance.
+- B) The glider may aquaplane, making directional control difficult.
+- C) The take-off distance is likely to be longer than on a dry surface.
+- D) The wet surface has no significant effect on take-off performance.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A waterlogged grass surface increases rolling resistance due to soft ground deformation and water drag. Rain-flattened grass adds further resistance. The take-off run is therefore longer compared with a dry grass runway. Aquaplaning is a concern on hard surfaces with standing water but does not apply in the same way to soft grass.
+
+### Q26: What effect does a waterlogged grass surface have on landing distance? ^q26
+- A) Landing distance increases because the wheel sinks into soft ground.
+- B) Landing distance decreases because wet grass reduces rolling friction.
+- C) No measurable effect on landing distance.
+- D) Landing distance increases due to aquaplaning.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On landing, wet grass reduces friction between the skid or wheel and the surface, causing the glider to slide more easily and decelerate over a shorter distance than on dry grass. This is the opposite effect to take-off, where the soft ground increases resistance during acceleration.
+
+### Q27: Why is it beneficial to increase wing loading (e.g. with water ballast) when thermal conditions are strong? ^q27
+- A) Because the stall speed decreases, allowing slower thermalling.
+- B) Because the glider achieves a better glide ratio at high inter-thermal speeds despite an increased minimum speed.
+- C) Because the glider climbs more efficiently at a lower circling speed.
+- D) Because the glider can fly more slowly, saving energy.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong thermal conditions, the glider flies fast between thermals to optimise average cross-country speed (MacCready theory). Higher wing loading shifts the speed polar to higher speeds, improving the achievable glide ratio at those speeds. The trade-off is a higher stall speed and higher best-glide speed, which is acceptable when thermals are strong enough to compensate for the increased sink rate during climbs.
+
+### Q28: Wing loading is increased by 40% through water ballast. By what percentage does the minimum speed increase? ^q28
+- A) 40%.
+- B) 0%.
+- C) Approximately 18%.
+- D) 100%.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall speed (and thus minimum speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading. With a 40% increase: new Vs = Vs x sqrt(1.40) = Vs x 1.183, an increase of approximately 18%. The relationship is non-linear, so doubling wing loading does not double the stall speed.
+
+### Q29: When a glider's mass increases, which parameter remains practically unchanged? ^q29
+- A) Wing loading.
+- B) Sink rate at a given speed.
+- C) Minimum flight speed.
+- D) Maximum glide ratio (apart from a minor Reynolds number effect).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The maximum glide ratio (best L/D) is essentially independent of mass because both lift and drag scale with mass in the same proportion. What changes: the speed for best L/D increases, the sink rate at any given speed increases, wing loading increases, and the minimum speed rises. Only the achievable L/D ratio itself remains virtually constant.
+
+### Q30: What information does the speed polar reveal about glide ratio and mass? ^q30
+- A) Both glide ratio and minimum speed are independent of mass.
+- B) Below 100 km/h, increasing mass reduces the sink rate.
+- C) Minimum speed is independent of mass.
+- D) Only the maximum glide ratio is independent of mass (apart from a minor Reynolds number effect).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Speed polar curves for different masses show that the tangent from the origin (which determines best L/D) touches each curve at the same slope. The maximum glide ratio is therefore the same regardless of mass. However, the speed at which best L/D occurs is higher for heavier configurations, and minimum speed increases with mass.
+
+### Q31: What distance can a glider with a glide ratio of 1:30 cover from a height of 1,500 m in still air? ^q31
+- A) 30 km
+- B) 45 NM
+- C) 81 NM
+- D) 45 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide distance = glide ratio x height = 30 x 1,500 m = 45,000 m = 45 km. Note that 45 NM would equal approximately 83 km, requiring a glide ratio of about 1:55. Always verify units: mixing nautical miles and metres is a common source of error.
+
+### Q32: You cover 150 km in 1 hour and 15 minutes. What is your ground speed? ^q32
+- A) 115 km/h
+- B) 110 km/h
+- C) 125 km/h
+- D) 120 km/h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 150 km / 1.25 h = 120 km/h. Convert 1 hour 15 minutes to decimal: 15 min = 0.25 h, so total = 1.25 h. A common error is to write 1.15 instead of 1.25.
+
+### Q33: At 6,000 m altitude, the airspeed indicator reads 160 km/h (IAS). How does the true airspeed (TAS) compare? ^q33
+- A) TAS is the same as IAS at any altitude.
+- B) TAS is lower than IAS.
+- C) TAS is higher than IAS.
+- D) TAS may be higher or lower depending on outside temperature alone.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which depends on air density. At 6,000 m the air density is significantly lower than at sea level, so a higher true speed is needed to produce the same dynamic pressure. In practice, TAS exceeds IAS by roughly 2% per 300 m of altitude. At 6,000 m, TAS is approximately 20-25% higher than IAS.
+
+### Q34: When flying in wave lift at 6,000 m, how should you determine the maximum permitted speed? ^q34
+- A) Fly up to the red VNE mark on the airspeed indicator, which is valid at all altitudes.
+- B) Fly faster than at sea level because the air is thinner.
+- C) Consult the speed-altitude table displayed in the cockpit and stay below the corrected VNE for that altitude.
+- D) Fly at the same IAS as at sea level since VNE is an absolute constant.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VNE on the ASI is set for low altitude. At high altitude, the same IAS corresponds to a much higher TAS, which can approach or exceed the structural flutter speed. Glider flight manuals provide a speed-altitude table giving the reduced IAS limit for each altitude. At 6,000 m the permissible IAS is significantly lower than the sea-level VNE marking.
+
+### Q35: At what indicated airspeed should you approach an aerodrome at 1,800 m elevation? ^q35
+- A) At a higher indicated speed than at sea level.
+- B) At the same indicated speed as at sea level.
+- C) At a lower indicated speed than at sea level.
+- D) At the speed for minimum sink rate.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic forces depend on dynamic pressure, which is what the airspeed indicator measures. The correct approach IAS is the same regardless of aerodrome elevation. The TAS will be higher at altitude due to lower air density, but the pilot reads and flies the same indicated speed on the ASI.
+
+### Q36: The angle of descent is defined as... ^q36
+- A) The ratio of height loss to horizontal distance, expressed as a percentage.
+- B) The angle between the horizontal and the flight path, expressed in degrees.
+- C) The angle between the horizontal and the flight path, expressed as a percentage.
+- D) The ratio of height loss to horizontal distance, expressed in degrees.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of descent (glide angle) is the geometric angle between the horizontal plane and the flight path vector, measured in degrees. The glide ratio is the inverse tangent relationship: glide ratio = 1 / tan(glide angle). A glide ratio of 1:30 corresponds to a glide angle of approximately 1.9 degrees. Expressing it as a percentage would make it a gradient, not an angle.
+
+### Q37: Which ground features should be avoided when planning a cross-country glider route? ^q37
+- A) Stone quarries and large sandy areas.
+- B) Areas with buildings, concrete, and asphalt.
+- C) Highways, railway lines, and canals.
+- D) Wetlands, large water surfaces, and marshy ground.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moist ground, water bodies, and marshes have high thermal inertia and absorb solar radiation without heating up quickly, suppressing thermal development above them. Flying over large stretches of such terrain means less lift and a higher risk of a forced landing in unsuitable terrain. Dry fields, rocky areas, and built-up surfaces generate stronger thermals.
+
+### Q38: How should a downwind turning point be approached during a cross-country flight? ^q38
+- A) As low as possible to save time.
+- B) As steeply as possible to minimise time in the turn.
+- C) With as little bank as possible.
+- D) As high as possible to maximise altitude reserve for the upwind leg.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After rounding a downwind turning point, the glider loses its tailwind advantage and faces a headwind that reduces groundspeed and shortens glide distance over the ground. Arriving high provides maximum altitude reserve for the upwind leg. Arriving low with an immediate turn into headwind leaves no margin for finding lift or selecting a landing field.
+
+### Q39: What should a pilot expect after rounding a turning point during a cross-country flight? ^q39
+- A) Weakening thermals due to the later time of day.
+- B) Lower cloud bases changing the horizontal view.
+- C) A visually different cloud picture because the sun's apparent position has changed relative to the new heading.
+- D) Increased cloud dissipation as the day progresses.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the glider turns through 90 or 180 degrees at a waypoint, the pilot's perspective of the sky shifts dramatically. The sun appears to have moved relative to the aircraft heading, and cumulus clouds that were behind or to one side now appear ahead. This perceptual change can make the sky look completely different even though objective conditions have not changed. Pilots must re-orient their thermal assessment to the new heading.
+
+### Q40: What is the purpose of "interception lines" in visual navigation? ^q40
+- A) They mark the range limitation from the departure aerodrome.
+- B) They allow continued flight when visibility drops below VFR minima.
+- C) They indicate the next available airport along the route.
+- D) They serve as easily recognisable linear features to help re-establish position if orientation is lost.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Interception lines are prominent linear ground features -- rivers, coastlines, railways, motorways -- selected during pre-flight planning that run roughly perpendicular to the planned route. If a pilot becomes disoriented, flying towards the nearest interception line produces an unmistakable landmark for position recovery. They do not extend VFR permissions, are not range indicators, and are not airport markers.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/40 - Human Performance.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/40 - Human Performance.md
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+# 40 - Human Performance
+
+> 56 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What is the primary contributing factor in the majority of aviation accidents? ^q1
+- A) Meteorological conditions
+- B) Equipment malfunction
+- C) Human error
+- D) Terrain-related hazards
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Research consistently indicates that roughly 70-80% of aviation accidents involve human error as a primary or contributing cause — errors in judgment, decision-making, situational awareness, and task management. Technical failures account for a far smaller share, which is why human factors training is a cornerstone of aviation safety.
+
+### Q2: James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model is used to illustrate the concept of the... ^q2
+- A) procedure for conducting an emergency landing.
+- B) pilot's state of operational readiness.
+- C) error chain leading to an accident.
+- D) optimal approach to problem-solving.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss Cheese Model shows how accidents result from an alignment of failures across multiple defence layers. Each slice represents a safety barrier with "holes" (weaknesses). When holes line up, a hazard passes through every layer, causing an accident. The model demonstrates that accidents are the product of an error chain, not a single isolated failure.
+
+### Q3: What is a latent error? ^q3
+- A) An error that only has consequences after landing
+- B) An error with an immediate effect on the controls
+- C) A mistake the pilot makes actively and consciously
+- D) An error that remains undetected in the system for a long time
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Reason's error model, latent errors are failures embedded in the system — poor design, inadequate procedures, organisational pressures — that remain dormant and undetected until they combine with an active error to cause an accident. Unlike active errors committed by front-line operators, latent errors originate at management and design levels and can lie dormant for years.
+
+### Q4: The atmosphere at sea level contains approximately 21% oxygen. What is the oxygen percentage at an altitude of 34,000 ft? ^q4
+- A) 10%
+- B) 5%
+- C) 15%
+- D) 21%
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The percentage composition of atmospheric gases remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen regardless of altitude up to the stratosphere. What changes with altitude is the partial pressure of oxygen: as total atmospheric pressure decreases, fewer oxygen molecules are available per breath, which is why hypoxia becomes a risk despite the unchanged percentage.
+
+### Q5: What is the approximate proportion of nitrogen in the atmosphere? ^q5
+- A) 1%
+- B) 78%
+- C) 21%
+- D) 0.1%
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nitrogen makes up approximately 78% of the atmosphere and is physiologically inert under normal conditions. However, at elevated ambient pressures (during scuba diving), nitrogen dissolves into body tissues, and rapid decompression can cause nitrogen bubbles to form — the mechanism behind decompression sickness, which is a concern for pilots who fly shortly after diving.
+
+### Q6: Apart from oxygen and nitrogen, what share of the atmosphere do other gases (argon, CO₂, etc.) represent? ^q6
+- A) 21%
+- B) 78%
+- C) 1%
+- D) 0.1%
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The remaining approximately 1% of the atmosphere is composed of trace gases, primarily argon (about 0.93%), plus small amounts of CO₂, neon, helium, and methane. Carbon dioxide plays an important role in the body's respiratory drive and acid-base balance, which is relevant to hyperventilation physiology.
+
+### Q7: At roughly which altitude does atmospheric pressure drop to half the standard sea-level value of 1013 hPa? ^q7
+- A) 22,000 ft
+- B) 18,000 ft
+- C) 10,000 ft
+- D) 5,000 ft
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 18,000 ft (approximately 5,500 m), atmospheric pressure is roughly 500 hPa — about half of the sea-level value. The partial pressure of oxygen is also halved, severely reducing the oxygen available to the body and making supplemental oxygen mandatory for unpressurised flight above this altitude.
+
+### Q8: Which of the following can cause carbon monoxide poisoning? ^q8
+- A) Insufficient sleep
+- B) Poor nutrition
+- C) Alcohol consumption
+- D) Smoking cigarettes
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) is produced by incomplete combustion and is present in cigarette smoke. CO binds to haemoglobin with approximately 200 times the affinity of oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and blocking oxygen transport. In aviation, CO poisoning is also a risk from exhaust fume ingestion via defective heating systems.
+
+### Q9: Which statement best describes carbon monoxide (CO)? ^q9
+- A) It has a noticeable sweet smell and is only harmful in very high concentrations.
+- B) It is a by-product of normal cellular metabolism released alongside CO₂.
+- C) It is toxic and arises from incomplete combustion, such as a leaking exhaust system.
+- D) It is one of the three major atmospheric gases alongside oxygen and nitrogen.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CO results from incomplete combustion and is colourless, odourless, and extremely toxic. Even at low concentrations, it binds to haemoglobin far more readily than oxygen, rapidly reducing the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity. In piston-engine aircraft, a leaking exhaust system is the most common and most dangerous source of CO in the cockpit.
+
+### Q10: What does the term "red-out" refer to? ^q10
+- A) A rash caused by decompression sickness
+- B) Distorted colour perception at sunrise and sunset
+- C) A red-tinged visual field during negative g-loads
+- D) Anaemia resulting from an injury
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (e.g., in a pushover manoeuvre), which force blood toward the head and eyes. The engorged capillaries in the retina produce a characteristic red tinge in the visual field. It is the opposite of grey-out and blackout, which result from positive g-forces draining blood away from the head.
+
+### Q11: Which symptom is NOT associated with hyperventilation? ^q11
+- A) Tingling in the extremities
+- B) Muscle spasms or tetany
+- C) Cyanosis (blue skin discolouration)
+- D) Disturbance of consciousness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation — excessively rapid breathing — expels too much CO₂, causing respiratory alkalosis. Symptoms include tingling, muscle spasms, dizziness, and altered consciousness. Cyanosis (blue discolouration from low blood oxygen) is a sign of hypoxia, not hyperventilation, and is therefore the exception here.
+
+### Q12: Which statement about hyperventilation is correct? ^q12
+- A) It always results from oxygen deficiency.
+- B) It causes excess carbon dioxide in the blood.
+- C) It can be triggered by stress and anxiety.
+- D) It causes a deficiency of carbon monoxide in the blood.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation can be triggered by stress, anxiety, or excessive conscious breathing. It leads to CO₂ deficiency (hypocapnia) — not an excess. Its symptoms can resemble hypoxia, making differential diagnosis important. Cyanosis reliably distinguishes the two: it appears only with hypoxia.
+
+### Q13: Blue discolouration of the lips and fingernails is a reliable indicator of... ^q13
+- A) hyperventilation.
+- B) hypoxia.
+- C) decompression sickness.
+- D) motion sickness.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cyanosis — blue discolouration of lips, fingertips, and nail beds — is a classic and reliable sign of hypoxia, caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin in peripheral blood. It is the one symptom that objectively distinguishes hypoxia from hyperventilation, since hyperventilation does not produce cyanosis.
+
+### Q14: Which human sense is most rapidly affected by oxygen deficiency? ^q14
+- A) Auditory perception (hearing)
+- B) Visual perception (vision)
+- C) Olfactory perception (smell)
+- D) Tactile perception (touch)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vision is the sense most sensitive to hypoxia because the retina has extremely high oxygen demands. Night vision degrades noticeably even at 5,000-8,000 ft in darkness. Peripheral vision loss and reduced colour discrimination follow at higher altitudes.
+
+### Q15: Can oxygen deficiency reduce visual acuity? ^q15
+- A) Only at night.
+- B) No, it has no measurable effect.
+- C) Yes, both by day and by night.
+- D) Only during the day.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Oxygen deficiency can reduce visual acuity in all lighting conditions, though night vision (rod function) is particularly sensitive. The retina's high metabolic demand makes it vulnerable to any reduction in oxygen supply, impairing contrast sensitivity, colour discrimination, and peripheral vision regardless of time of day.
+
+### Q16: At approximately what altitude does the body begin to compensate for reduced oxygen by increasing heart and breathing rates? ^q16
+- A) 2,000 ft
+- B) 10,000 ft
+- C) 6,000-7,000 ft
+- D) 12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The body begins measurable physiological compensation — increased respiratory and heart rates — at around 6,000-7,000 ft. Below this altitude, adequate oxygenation is maintained without significant effort.
+
+### Q17: Up to approximately what altitude can a healthy body fully compensate for oxygen deficiency? ^q17
+- A) 6,000-7,000 ft
+- B) 22,000 ft
+- C) 3,000 ft
+- D) 10,000-12,000 ft
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above approximately 10,000-12,000 ft, compensatory mechanisms are no longer sufficient to maintain adequate blood oxygen saturation. Hypoxic symptoms become progressively apparent. Regulations require supplemental oxygen above 10,000 ft for extended periods and above 13,000 ft at all times.
+
+### Q18: What symptom is most likely at 20,000 ft without supplemental oxygen? ^q18
+- A) Altitude sickness with pulmonary oedema
+- B) Fever
+- C) Dyspnoea (shortness of breath)
+- D) Loss of consciousness
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 20,000 ft without supplemental oxygen, the time of useful consciousness (TUC) is very short. Rapid loss of consciousness is the most probable and dangerous outcome. The insidious nature of hypoxia often prevents the pilot from recognising the danger in time.
+
+### Q19: What is the most dangerous effect of oxygen deficiency for a pilot? ^q19
+- A) Tingling sensations
+- B) Nausea
+- C) Blue discolouration of fingernails
+- D) Impairment of judgment and concentration
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Impaired judgment and concentration is the most dangerous effect because the pilot does not realise their cognitive capacity is degraded. Euphoria and a false sense of well-being often mask the deterioration. Physical signs such as cyanosis tend to appear later.
+
+### Q20: Signs of oxygen deficiency in smokers compared to non-smokers appear... ^q20
+- A) at the same altitude in both groups.
+- B) only above 15,000 ft in smokers.
+- C) at lower altitudes in smokers.
+- D) immediately and are clearly noticeable in everyone.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Smokers already have elevated carboxyhaemoglobin from inhaling CO in cigarette smoke, reducing the blood's effective oxygen-carrying capacity. Hypoxic symptoms therefore manifest at lower altitudes than in non-smokers.
+
+### Q21: Which of the following is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia at altitude? ^q21
+- A) Recent blood donation
+- B) Smoking
+- C) Scuba diving before the flight
+- D) Menstruation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Scuba diving is a risk factor for decompression sickness, not hypoxia. Blood donation reduces red blood cell count, smoking causes CO to occupy haemoglobin, and menstruation can cause mild anaemia — all increasing hypoxia susceptibility. Diving itself does not directly impair oxygen transport.
+
+### Q22: What is the primary function of red blood cells (erythrocytes)? ^q22
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Immune defence
+- C) Oxygen transport
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells contain haemoglobin, the iron-rich protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues. Anything that reduces erythrocyte number or function — anaemia, blood donation, or CO poisoning — directly impairs the blood's oxygen-carrying capacity.
+
+### Q23: Which blood component is responsible for clotting (haemostasis)? ^q23
+- A) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- B) Blood platelets (thrombocytes)
+- C) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+- D) Capillaries of the arteries
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thrombocytes (platelets) aggregate at sites of vascular injury and initiate the coagulation cascade, forming a platelet plug to stop bleeding. This is distinct from the oxygen transport role of erythrocytes and the immune function of leucocytes.
+
+### Q24: What is the primary role of white blood cells (leucocytes)? ^q24
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Immune defence
+- C) Oxygen transport
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** White blood cells defend the body against infections, foreign substances, and abnormal cells. A pilot suffering from an active infection — indicated by elevated leucocyte count — may experience impaired cognition and should not fly until recovered.
+
+### Q25: During cellular respiration, body cells absorb oxygen and release... ^q25
+- A) nitrogen.
+- B) carbon monoxide (CO).
+- C) carbon dioxide (CO₂).
+- D) more oxygen.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cellular metabolism, cells absorb O₂ and release CO₂ as a waste product. This gas exchange is the fundamental process of cellular respiration. CO₂ is transported back to the lungs and exhaled.
+
+### Q26: What is the passage connecting the middle ear to the nasopharynx called? ^q26
+- A) Inner ear
+- B) Eustachian tube
+- C) Cochlea
+- D) Eardrum
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Eustachian tube connects the middle ear to the nasopharynx, allowing pressure equalisation. During altitude changes, it opens — usually when swallowing or yawning — to prevent painful pressure differentials. Blockage due to congestion makes equalisation impossible and can cause severe pain or eardrum damage.
+
+### Q27: When are middle ear pressure equalisation problems most likely to occur? ^q27
+- A) During a rapid descent
+- B) During a prolonged climb
+- C) During a long cruise at constant altitude
+- D) During strong negative vertical accelerations
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pressure equalisation problems are most common during rapid descent, when external pressure increases quickly and the Eustachian tube must allow air into the middle ear. The tube opens more easily during ascent. A passenger with ear pain should be helped by stopping the descent, climbing until the pain subsides, then descending at a slower rate.
+
+### Q28: Flying with a severe head cold can cause sharp sinus pain. When does this pain typically occur? ^q28
+- A) During climb
+- B) During descent
+- C) During acceleration
+- D) During any significant altitude change
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During descent, external pressure increases and air cannot equalise within sinuses blocked by swollen mucous membranes. The resulting pressure differential causes sharp pain. Pilots should not fly while suffering from upper respiratory congestion.
+
+### Q29: A grey-out is caused by... ^q29
+- A) tiredness and fatigue.
+- B) positive g-forces.
+- C) hyperventilation.
+- D) hypoxia at altitude.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grey-out is a progressive loss of colour vision and peripheral vision caused by positive g-forces pulling blood away from the head. As retinal blood pressure drops, colour perception fades (grey-out), followed by total vision loss (blackout), and finally G-LOC. The retina is affected first because of its exceptionally high oxygen demand.
+
+### Q30: Which organ is primarily affected during grey-out under positive g-forces? ^q30
+- A) The brain
+- B) The lungs
+- C) The eyes
+- D) The muscles
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grey-out primarily affects the eyes (specifically the retina), as they are the most sensitive organ to reduced blood supply due to their very high oxygen consumption. The brain is affected later, leading to loss of consciousness (G-LOC).
+
+### Q31: With increasing positive g-loads, symptoms appear in which order? ^q31
+- A) Red-out, peripheral vision loss, total vision loss, unconsciousness
+- B) Peripheral vision loss, loss of colour vision, total vision loss, unconsciousness
+- C) Loss of colour vision, peripheral vision loss, total vision loss, unconsciousness
+- D) Loss of colour vision, peripheral vision loss, red-out, unconsciousness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct progression under increasing positive g-forces is: grey-out (loss of colour vision), tunnel vision (peripheral vision loss), blackout (total vision loss), and finally G-LOC (loss of consciousness). Red-out is associated with negative g-forces, not positive ones.
+
+### Q32: How can a pilot better withstand positive g-forces? ^q32
+- A) By tightening the harness straps as much as possible
+- B) By sitting as upright as possible
+- C) By relaxing the muscles and leaning forward
+- D) By contracting abdominal and leg muscles and performing forced breathing
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The anti-g straining manoeuvre (AGSM) involves tensing the abdominal and leg muscles while performing forced breathing. This increases abdominal and intrathoracic pressure, helping maintain blood flow to the brain and delaying grey-out and G-LOC.
+
+### Q33: After a prolonged coordinated turn, levelling the wings can create the false sensation of... ^q33
+- A) entering a descent.
+- B) continuing the same turn.
+- C) turning in the opposite direction.
+- D) entering a climb.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a prolonged coordinated turn, the semicircular canal fluid adapts and stops signalling the turn. When the pilot levels the wings, the canal detects this as a rotation in the opposite direction — the "leans" illusion — which can cause the pilot to instinctively re-enter the original bank.
+
+### Q34: When is the Coriolis illusion (vestibular vertigo) most likely to occur? ^q34
+- A) When moving the head during a descent
+- B) When moving the head during straight-and-level flight
+- C) When moving the head during a coordinated turn
+- D) When moving the head during a climb
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Coriolis illusion is most likely when the head is moved in a different plane during an ongoing turn. The semicircular canals already stimulated by the turn are joined by stimulation of a second canal set, creating an overwhelming tumbling sensation. Keeping the head still during turns is the best prevention.
+
+### Q35: What sensory illusion can a forward acceleration in level flight produce without visual references? ^q35
+- A) The impression of descending
+- B) The impression of being in a left turn
+- C) The impression of climbing
+- D) The impression of being in a right turn
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A linear forward acceleration is interpreted by the vestibular system as a climb — the somatogravic illusion. The otolith organs cannot distinguish between gravitational pull and inertial force, so the brain misinterprets the combined vector as a pitch-up attitude.
+
+### Q36: When visual references are lost, can proprioception alone maintain correct spatial orientation? ^q36
+- A) Yes, but only for experienced pilots
+- B) No, it is impossible
+- C) Yes, but only for a few minutes
+- D) Yes, with adequate training
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without visual references, spatial orientation using proprioception and cutaneous senses alone is impossible. These senses cannot reliably distinguish between gravitational and inertial forces. A VFR pilot entering IMC will lose spatial orientation within seconds, regardless of experience.
+
+### Q37: Which situation does NOT provoke motion sickness? ^q37
+- A) Head movements during turns
+- B) Turbulence during level flight
+- C) Steady, non-accelerated straight-and-level flight
+- D) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness is triggered by conflicting sensory signals between the visual and vestibular systems. Constant, non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no sensory conflict. Head movements during turns, turbulence, and alcohol (which alters endolymph density) all create or amplify conflicts.
+
+### Q38: What are the typical symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^q38
+- A) High fever, vomiting, headache
+- B) Dizziness, sweating, nausea
+- C) Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, headache
+- D) High fever, dizziness, watery diarrhoea
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness manifests as dizziness, sweating, nausea, and possibly vomiting. It results from conflicting signals between the visual and vestibular systems. Fever and diarrhoea are not symptoms of kinetosis.
+
+### Q39: Which measure best relieves the onset of motion sickness in a passenger? ^q39
+- A) Have them look through the windows
+- B) Provide fresh air and adjust cabin temperature
+- C) Encourage frequent head movements
+- D) Offer coffee
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Providing fresh air and adjusting cabin temperature is the most effective immediate measure. Minimising bank angle also helps. Head movements worsen symptoms. Fresh air stabilises the autonomic nervous system.
+
+### Q40: An upsloping runway on approach creates the visual impression that the aircraft is... ^q40
+- A) too slow on approach.
+- B) lower than the correct glide slope.
+- C) higher than the correct glide slope.
+- D) too fast on approach.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upsloping runway appears shorter and steeper, giving the impression of being higher than the actual glide slope. In response, the pilot may descend below the correct path, creating a dangerous undershoot risk — a well-documented cause of controlled flight into terrain.
+
+### Q41: A pilot trained mostly on narrow runways approaches a flat, wide runway. What illusion will they experience? ^q41
+- A) The impression of being higher than actual height
+- B) The impression of the runway sloping upward
+- C) The impression of being lower than actual height
+- D) The impression of the runway first sloping up then down
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A wider-than-expected runway makes the pilot perceive being lower than they actually are (height underestimation). This can lead the pilot to fly a higher approach than necessary, resulting in a flare that is too high.
+
+### Q42: Visual illusions in flight are primarily caused by... ^q42
+- A) colour blindness.
+- B) the brain's misinterpretation of ambiguous visual cues.
+- C) rapid involuntary eye movements.
+- D) binocular vision limitations.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Visual illusions occur because the brain actively constructs perception based on expectations and assumptions. When environmental cues are ambiguous — unfamiliar terrain, unusual lighting, featureless sky — the brain fills in gaps with incorrect "best guesses."
+
+### Q43: Why must pilots choose non-polarised sunglasses? ^q43
+- A) Polarised lenses block UV radiation needed for cockpit instruments
+- B) Non-polarised lenses are required to be unbreakable
+- C) Polarised lenses prevent adequate side vision
+- D) Polarised lenses can make LCD displays and reflective surfaces invisible or distorted
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Polarised lenses eliminate horizontally reflected light, which can render LCD displays, glass cockpit instruments, and certain reflective surfaces invisible or severely distorted. The non-polarised requirement is the safety-critical aviation-specific characteristic.
+
+### Q44: What causes parallax error when reading cockpit instruments? ^q44
+- A) Long-sightedness caused by ageing
+- B) A misreading caused by viewing the instrument from an angle
+- C) A communication error between crew members
+- D) Misperception of speed while taxiing
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parallax error occurs when an instrument is read from an angle rather than face-on, causing the line of sight to cross the pointer at an offset from the scale face. Pilots should always read instruments from directly in front.
+
+### Q45: Approximately how long does full dark adaptation of the human eye take? ^q45
+- A) About 15 minutes
+- B) About 5 minutes
+- C) About 30 minutes
+- D) About 1 hour
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Full dark adaptation (scotopic vision) takes approximately 30 minutes as rod cells gradually reach maximum sensitivity. Bright light resets this process. For night flying, pilots should use red cockpit lighting and off-centre viewing.
+
+### Q46: What is the correct technique for seeing at night? ^q46
+- A) Stare directly at objects as intensely as possible
+- B) Scan objects with rapid large eye movements
+- C) Look slightly to the side of the object rather than directly at it
+- D) Focus directly on distant, faintly lit objects
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct night vision technique is off-centre viewing — looking slightly to the side so the image falls on the rod-rich periphery of the retina. Rods provide much greater sensitivity in low light than the cone-dominated fovea.
+
+### Q47: When scanning the sky for other aircraft, a pilot should... ^q47
+- A) move the eyes as rapidly as possible across the widest field.
+- B) systematically scan sector by sector, pausing briefly on each.
+- C) try to take in the entire sky with large sweeping movements.
+- D) roll the eyes continuously across as wide a field as possible.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct lookout technique is a systematic sector-by-sector scan, pausing briefly on each sector to allow the eyes to focus. Rapid sweeping does not allow the retina sufficient time to register a small, distant aircraft.
+
+### Q48: The average rate at which blood alcohol decreases is approximately... ^q48
+- A) 0.5 per mille per hour
+- B) 1.0 per mille per hour
+- C) 0.1 per mille per hour
+- D) 0.3 per mille per hour
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The liver metabolises alcohol at approximately 0.1 per mille per hour, largely independent of body weight or drink type. Neither coffee, exercise, nor pure oxygen can significantly accelerate this process. The "8-hour bottle to throttle" rule is a minimum, not a guarantee of sobriety.
+
+### Q49: At high altitude, oxygen deficiency affects alcohol by... ^q49
+- A) causing it to be eliminated more slowly than at ground level.
+- B) reducing its psychological effects.
+- C) causing it to be eliminated more rapidly than at ground level.
+- D) amplifying its effects on the central nervous system.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, reduced oxygen partial pressure amplifies the effects of alcohol on the central nervous system. The combination of hypoxia and alcohol creates a multiplier effect: impaired judgment, slower reactions, and reduced cognitive function are significantly worse than either factor alone.
+
+### Q50: Short-term (working) memory can store approximately how many items, and for how long? ^q50
+- A) 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+- B) 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- C) 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- D) 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** George Miller's classic research established that working memory holds 7 ± 2 chunks of information for approximately 10-20 seconds without rehearsal. In aviation, ATC clearances and frequencies must be written down immediately because they will be lost from working memory within seconds.
+
+### Q51: The ongoing process of monitoring the current flight situation is called... ^q51
+- A) situational thinking.
+- B) constant flight check.
+- C) situational awareness.
+- D) anticipatory check procedure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Situational awareness (SA) — as defined by Mica Endsley — is the continuous perception of elements in the environment, comprehension of their meaning, and projection of their future status. Loss of SA is a primary factor in controlled flight into terrain, mid-air collisions, and spatial disorientation accidents.
+
+### Q52: In the communication model, how is the use of a common code ensured during radio transmissions? ^q52
+- A) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+- B) By proper headset equipment
+- C) By a specific frequency allocation
+- D) By standardised ICAO radio phraseology
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standardised ICAO radio telephony phraseology ensures that sender and receiver use identical, unambiguous codes with agreed meanings. In communication theory, this corresponds to ensuring transmitter and receiver share the same codebook. Radio communication errors are a well-documented factor in runway incursions and traffic conflicts.
+
+### Q53: What are the four standard strategies for handling risk? ^q53
+- A) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- B) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- C) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+- D) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The four risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the hazard), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift the risk, e.g., insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge residual risk within acceptable limits). Ignoring a risk is never an acceptable strategy in aviation.
+
+### Q54: Which hazardous attitudes are often found together? ^q54
+- A) Impulsivity and carefulness
+- B) Resignation and macho
+- C) Invulnerability and resignation
+- D) Macho and invulnerability
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The FAA identifies five hazardous attitudes: macho, invulnerability, impulsivity, resignation, and anti-authority. Macho ("I can do it") and invulnerability ("It won't happen to me") frequently co-occur because both stem from overconfidence and underestimation of risk.
+
+### Q55: Regarding hazardous attitudes, which statement is correct? ^q55
+- A) An anti-authority attitude is less dangerous than macho behaviour.
+- B) Inexperienced pilots are generally the only ones who behave dangerously.
+- C) Hazardous attitudes do not truly exist because flight safety depends solely on attention.
+- D) It is possible to recognise and correct one's own hazardous attitudes.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The five hazardous attitudes (anti-authority, macho, invulnerability, resignation, impulsivity) can be recognised through self-awareness and corrected using specific antidote thoughts. All pilots — regardless of experience level — can exhibit these attitudes, and ongoing self-assessment is a key element of aeronautical decision-making.
+
+### Q56: According to the Yerkes-Dodson law, which statement about stress and performance is correct? ^q56
+- A) Stress is only caused by brief overload.
+- B) Under-stimulation causes no stress and has no effect on performance.
+- C) There is an optimal level of stress that improves performance.
+- D) Stress in the cockpit always improves work rate.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law describes an inverted-U relationship between arousal (stress) and performance. At the peak of the curve, an optimal level of stress (eustress) maximises performance. Too little arousal leads to inattention, while too much causes cognitive overload and degraded performance. Both under- and over-stimulation impair a pilot's effectiveness.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_10.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_10.md
new file mode 100644
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+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Air Law
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 50 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The holder of an SPL license or LAPL(S) license completed a total of 9 winch launches, 4 launches in aero-tow and 2 bungee launches during the last 24 months. What launch methods may the pilot conduct as PIC today? ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q1)*
+- A) Winch and bungee.
+- B) Winch, bungee and aero-tow.
+- C) Winch and aero-tow.
+- D) Aero-tow and bungee.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-SFCL (SFCL.010 and SFCL.160), a pilot must have completed at least 5 launches using a specific launch method within the preceding 24 months to act as PIC using that method. The pilot has 9 winch (qualifies) and 2 bungee launches (qualifies, threshold is met), but only 4 aero-tow launches — which is below the required 5. Therefore, aero-tow is not permitted without additional training or a check flight with an instructor.
+
+### Q2: Which of the following documents have to be on board for an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q2)*
+- A) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- B) A, b, c, e, f
+- C) D, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 6 and EU Regulation 965/2012, international flights require: Certificate of Airworthiness (b), Airworthiness Review Certificate (c), EASA Form-1 or equivalent release document (d), the aircraft logbook/journey log (e), licences and medical certificates for each crew member (f), and the technical/maintenance logbook (g). The Certificate of Registration (a) is technically required too under ICAO Annex 7, but the answer set B, c, d, e, f, g (option A) represents the standard EASA enumeration tested in this question context.
+
+### Q3: Which area could be crossed with certain restrictions? ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q3)*
+- A) No-fly zone
+- B) Restricted area
+- C) Prohibited area
+- D) Dangerous area
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A restricted area (designated "R" on charts) can be entered subject to specific conditions published in the AIP, such as obtaining prior clearance from the responsible authority or ATC unit. A prohibited area ("P") cannot be entered under any circumstances — flight within is absolutely forbidden. A dangerous area ("D") contains hazards to flight but has no entry restriction; pilots are warned but may enter at their own discretion. "No-fly zone" is not a standard ICAO airspace classification per Annex 11.
+
+### Q4: Where can the type of restriction for a restricted airspace be found? ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q4)*
+- A) AIC
+- B) ICAO chart 1:500000
+- C) AIP
+- D) NOTAM
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) is the primary official document containing detailed and permanent information about airspace structure, including the conditions, times of activity, and authority contacts for restricted areas (ENR section). While NOTAMs may announce temporary changes and ICAO charts show boundaries graphically, the authoritative definition and restrictions are found in the AIP. AICs (Aeronautical Information Circulars) contain advisory or administrative information, not regulatory airspace details.
+
+### Q5: What is the status of the rules and procedures created by the EASA? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q5)*
+- A) They are not legally binding, they only serve as a guide
+- B) Only after a ratification by individual EU member states they are legally binding
+- C) They are part of the EU regulation and legally binding to all EU member states
+- D) They have the same status as ICAO Annexes
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL (Commission Regulation (EU) 2018/1976) and Part-MED are published as EU Implementing Regulations or Delegated Regulations under the Basic Regulation (EU) 2018/1139. EU Regulations are directly applicable law in all member states without requiring national ratification — they are binding in their entirety. ICAO Annexes, by contrast, are standards and recommended practices (SARPs) that require national adoption and allow states to file differences; they do not have direct legislative force.
+
+### Q6: Which validity does the "Certificate of Airworthiness" have? ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q6)*
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) 12 years
+- C) 6 months
+- D) 12 months
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) itself has unlimited validity — once issued, it remains valid as long as the aircraft continues to meet its type design standards and is properly maintained. What is periodically renewed (typically annually) is the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which confirms that the aircraft's continuing airworthiness has been verified. The confusion between CofA and ARC is a common exam trap.
+
+### Q7: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "ARC"? ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q7)*
+- A) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- B) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- C) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- D) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, as defined in EU Regulation 1321/2014 (Part-M). It is issued after a periodic airworthiness review (typically annual) confirms that the aircraft's continuing airworthiness documentation and condition are in order. It accompanies the Certificate of Airworthiness and must be current for the aircraft to be legally flown. The other options are fabricated terms not used in EASA or ICAO aviation law.
+
+### Q8: The "Certificate of Airworthiness" is issued by the state... ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q8)*
+- A) Of the residence of the owner
+- B) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- D) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 8 (Airworthiness of Aircraft) and Annex 7 (Aircraft Nationality and Registration Marks), the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state of registry — the country where the aircraft is registered. The state of registry is responsible for ensuring the aircraft meets applicable airworthiness standards. This is separate from the owner's residence, place of manufacture, or where maintenance is performed.
+
+### Q9: A pilot license issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is valid in... ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q9)*
+- A) Those countries that have accepted this license on application.
+- B) The country where the license was acquired.
+- C) All ICAO countries.
+- D) The country where the license was issued.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 (Personnel Licensing) establishes international standards for pilot licences. A licence issued in full compliance with Annex 1 standards is recognised and valid in all 193 ICAO Contracting States without requiring individual acceptance. This mutual recognition is a cornerstone of international civil aviation — it allows pilots to operate across borders seamlessly. Options B and D are the same concept (country of issue) and are too restrictive; option A incorrectly implies case-by-case acceptance is required.
+
+### Q10: What is the subject of ICAO Annex 1? ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q10)*
+- A) Flight crew licensing
+- B) Air traffic services
+- C) Rules of the air
+- D) Operation of aircraft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 covers Personnel Licensing, which includes standards for flight crew licences (PPL, CPL, ATPL), ratings, medical certificates, and instructor qualifications. Annex 2 covers Rules of the Air, Annex 11 covers Air Traffic Services, and Annex 6 covers Operation of Aircraft. Knowing the ICAO Annexes by number and subject is a standard Air Law exam requirement.
+
+### Q11: The validity of a medical examination certificate class 2 for a 62 years old pilot is... ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q11)*
+- A) 12 Months.
+- B) 48 Months.
+- C) 24 Months.
+- D) 60 Months.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-MED (Commission Regulation (EU) 1178/2011), a Class 2 medical certificate for pilots aged 40 and over is valid for 24 months — except for pilots exercising privileges to carry passengers, where validity is reduced. However, for pilots aged 50 and over (and particularly 60+), validity is reduced to 12 months regardless. At age 62, the Class 2 medical is valid for only 12 months. This reflects the increased medical scrutiny applied to older pilots.
+
+### Q12: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "SERA"? ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q12)*
+- A) Selective Radar Altimeter
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- D) Specialized Radar Approach
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises the rules of the air across all EU member states, implementing ICAO Annex 2 provisions at European level and adding EU-specific rules. It covers right-of-way rules, VMC minima, altimeter settings, signals, and related procedures. The other options are invented abbreviations not used in aviation.
+
+### Q13: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "TRA"? ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q13)*
+- A) Transponder Area
+- B) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- C) Terminal Area
+- D) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace — airspace of defined dimensions within which activities requiring reservation of airspace are conducted for a specified period. TRAs are used for military exercises, aerobatic displays, parachuting, or other temporary activities. They are published via NOTAM and activated as needed. They differ from TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) in that TRAs may be shared with other traffic under certain conditions when not active.
+
+### Q14: What has to be considered when entering an RMZ? ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q14)*
+- A) To obtain a clearance to enter this area
+- B) To permanently monitor the radio and if possible to establish radio contact
+- C) To obtain a clearance from the local aviation authority
+- D) The transponder has to be switched on Mode C and squawk 7000
+- **Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) requires all aircraft to carry and operate a functioning radio, to monitor the designated frequency continuously, and to establish two-way radio contact with the responsible ATC unit before entry if possible. It does not require a formal ATC clearance (unlike a CTR). A transponder is not mandated by RMZ designation alone — that is required in a TMZ. This is defined in SERA.6005 and national AIP supplements.
+
+### Q15: What is the meaning of an area marked as "TMZ"? ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q15)*
+- A) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Traffic Management Zone
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone — airspace within which all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a pressure-altitude reporting transponder (Mode C or Mode S). This allows ATC and other aircraft (via TCAS/FLARM) to identify and separate traffic. TMZs are often established around busy airports or in complex airspace. Glider pilots must be aware that many glider airfields and soaring areas are now overlaid with TMZs requiring transponder equipment.
+
+### Q16: A flight is called a "visual flight", if the... ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q16)*
+- A) Visibility in flight is more than 5 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- C) Visibility in flight is more than 8 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A "visual flight" (VFR flight) is defined by the rules under which it is conducted — specifically, Visual Flight Rules (VFR) — not simply by the prevailing visibility. A flight is VFR when the pilot navigates by external visual reference and complies with VFR separation minima and procedures. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) describes the weather minima required to conduct VFR flight; but a flight can be in VMC and still be flown under IFR. The distinction between the rule set and the conditions is important.
+
+### Q17: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "VMC"? ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q17)*
+- A) Variable meteorological conditions
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Visual flight rules
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions — the specific weather minima of visibility and cloud clearance defined in SERA.5001 that must be met for VFR flight to be conducted. If conditions fall below VMC minima, the airspace is said to be in IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions) and VFR flight is not permitted unless special VFR clearance is granted. VMC minima vary by airspace class and altitude band.
+
+### Q18: Two engine-driven aircraft are flying on crossing courses at the same altitude. Which one has to divert? ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q18)*
+- A) Both have to divert to the left
+- B) The lighter one has to climb
+- C) The heavier one has to climb
+- D) Both have to divert to the right
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, when two aircraft are on converging courses at approximately the same altitude, each shall turn to the right. This creates a situation where both aircraft pass behind each other, avoiding a collision. Weight is irrelevant to right-of-way rules in crossing situations. The "give way to the right" rule applies to converging (not head-on) situations; in a head-on encounter, both aircraft also alter course to the right (SERA.3210(c)).
+
+### Q19: Two aeroplanes are flying on crossing tracks. Which one has to divert? ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q19)*
+- A) Both have to divert to the lef
+- B) The aircraft which flies from left to right has the right of priority
+- C) Both have to divert to the right
+- D) The aircraft which flies from right to left has the right of priority
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under SERA.3210(b), when two aircraft are converging at approximately the same altitude, the aircraft that has the other on its right must give way. This means the aircraft approaching from the right has right-of-way (i.e., it flies from right to left relative to the other aircraft). The aircraft that sees the other on its right must alter course — typically to the right — to avoid a collision. This is the "right-of-way" rule analogous to maritime rules.
+
+### Q20: Which distances to clouds have to be maintained during a VFR flight in airpaces C, D and E? ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q20)*
+- A) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically
+- B) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically
+- C) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically
+- D) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace classes C, D, and E, VFR flights must maintain a horizontal separation of 1500 m from cloud and a vertical separation of 1000 ft (approximately 300 m) from cloud. The key distinction to remember is that the horizontal minimum is in metres (1500 m) and the vertical minimum is in feet (1000 ft) — mixing units is a common error. These minima apply above 3000 ft AMSL or above 1000 ft AGL, whichever is higher.
+
+### Q21: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "E" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL75? ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q21)*
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class E at and above 3000 ft AMSL (or above 1000 ft AGL) and below FL100, the minimum flight visibility for VFR is 5000 m (5 km). FL75 is approximately 7500 ft, which is above 3000 ft AMSL but below FL100, so the 5000 m rule applies. The 8000 m minimum applies at and above FL100. The 1500 m minimum only applies at or below 3000 ft AMSL/1000 ft AGL in airspace F and G.
+
+### Q22: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL110? ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q22)*
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 8000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100, the minimum flight visibility for VFR flight in all controlled airspace classes (including class C) is 8000 m (8 km). This higher minimum is required at high altitudes because aircraft speeds are typically greater, reducing reaction time, and the increased altitude makes maintaining visual separation from IFR traffic more critical. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8000 m minimum applies.
+
+### Q23: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL125? ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q23)*
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 3000 m
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL125 is above FL100, so the SERA.5001 rule for high-altitude VFR applies: minimum flight visibility is 8000 m in all controlled airspace classes including class C. This is the same threshold as Q22 — both FL110 and FL125 are above FL100, so both require 8000 m. The 5000 m minimum applies below FL100 in most controlled airspace, and the 3000 m/1500 m minima apply only in lower uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q24: What are the minimum distances to clouds for a VFR flight in airspace "B"? ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q24)*
+- A) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace class B (and also A), VFR flights are generally not permitted unless specifically authorised. However, where VFR is permitted in class B, the cloud clearance minima per SERA.5001 are 1500 m horizontal and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertical. Note that option A states "300 m" vertically using the metre equivalent, while option B states "1000 m" vertically — the correct vertical minimum is 300 m (not 1000 m). The "1000 ft" vertical minimum translates to approximately 300 m.
+
+### Q25: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" below FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q25)*
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 10 km
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class C below FL100 (and above 3000 ft AMSL or 1000 ft AGL), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5000 m). The 8 km minimum only applies at and above FL100. The 1.5 km minimum applies in uncontrolled airspace at low altitudes. Glider pilots operating in class C below FL100 — for example crossing an airway — must ensure at least 5 km visibility.
+
+### Q26: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" at and above FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q26)*
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 10 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 8 km
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace (including class C), VFR flight requires a minimum flight visibility of 8 km. This higher threshold reflects the faster speeds and reduced manoeuvring margins at higher altitudes. The 10 km option is not a standard ICAO/SERA VMC minimum. The progression to remember is: low altitude uncontrolled = 1.5 km, controlled below FL100 = 5 km, at and above FL100 = 8 km.
+
+### Q27: The term "ceiling" is defined as the... ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q27)*
+- A) Height of the base of the highest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 10000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Altitude of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Ceiling" is defined as the height (not altitude) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud covering more than half the sky (i.e., more than 4 oktas — BKN or OVC) below 20,000 ft. Option A is wrong because it refers to the "highest" layer (should be lowest). Option B is wrong because the threshold is 20,000 ft, not 10,000 ft. Option D is wrong because ceiling is expressed as height (above ground level) not altitude (above mean sea level). This definition is from ICAO Annex 2 and SERA.
+
+### Q28: Being intercepted by a military aircraft at daytime, what is the meaning of the following signal: A sudden heading change of 90 degrees or more and a pull-up of the aircraft without crossing the track of the intercepted aircraft? ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q28)*
+- A) Follow me, i will bring you to the next suitable airfield
+- B) You may continue your flight
+- C) Prepare for a safety landing, you have entered a prohibited area
+- D) You are entering a restricted area, leave the airspace immediately
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2, Appendix 1, Section 2, when an intercepting aircraft makes an abrupt break-away manoeuvre of 90 degrees or more and climbs away without crossing the intercepted aircraft's track, this signal means "You may proceed" — the intercept is complete and the intercepted aircraft is cleared to continue its flight. This is the standard release signal. The "follow me" signal involves the interceptor rocking wings and heading towards a destination. Pilots must study all ICAO interception signals as part of Air Law.
+
+### Q29: During a flight at FL 80, the altimeter setting has to be... ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q29)*
+- A) Local QFE.
+- B) Local QNH.
+- C) 1030.25 hPa.
+- D) 1013.25 hPa.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels (FL) are defined relative to the standard atmosphere pressure of 1013.25 hPa (the International Standard Atmosphere setting, also called QNE or standard setting). When flying at or above the transition altitude (which varies by country but is typically between 3000 ft and 18,000 ft), pilots set their altimeter to 1013.25 hPa and read flight levels. QNH gives altitude above sea level, QFE gives height above a specific aerodrome — neither is used when referencing flight levels.
+
+### Q30: What is the purpose of the semi-circular rule? ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q30)*
+- A) To fly without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP
+- B) To avoid collisions by suspending turning manoeuvres
+- C) To avoid collisions by reducing the probability of opposing traffic at the same altitude
+- D) To allow safe climbing or descending in a holding pattern
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The semi-circular (hemispherical) cruising level rule (SERA.5015) assigns specific altitude bands to specific magnetic tracks — eastbound flights use odd thousands of feet, westbound flights use even thousands. By separating aircraft flying in opposite directions onto different altitude levels, the probability of a head-on collision at the same altitude is greatly reduced. This is a passive separation tool requiring no ATC involvement, applicable primarily to en-route cruise flight above the transition altitude.
+
+### Q31: A transponder with the ability to send the current pressure level is a... ^q31
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q31)*
+- A) Transponder approved for airspace "B".
+- B) Mode C or S transponder.
+- C) Pressure-decoder.
+- D) Mode A transponder.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mode A transponders transmit only a 4-digit identity (squawk) code. Mode C transponders add pressure altitude reporting — they encode and transmit the pressure altitude from an encoding altimeter, allowing ATC secondary radar to display both identity and altitude. Mode S provides all Mode C capabilities plus selective interrogation, aircraft identification (callsign), and data link capabilities. Mode A alone cannot report altitude, so options A and D are incorrect. "Pressure-decoder" is not an aviation term.
+
+### Q32: Which transponder code indicates a loss of radio communication? ^q32
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q32)*
+- A) 2000
+- B) 7600
+- C) 7000
+- D) 7700
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard emergency transponder codes are: 7700 = General emergency, 7600 = Radio communication failure (loss of comms), 7500 = Unlawful interference (hijacking). Code 7000 is the VFR conspicuity code used in many European countries when no specific ATC code has been assigned. Code 2000 is used when entering controlled airspace from uncontrolled airspace without a prior assigned code. In a radio failure, squawking 7600 alerts ATC immediately to the communication problem.
+
+### Q33: Which transponder code should be set during a radio failure without any request? ^q33
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q33)*
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7600
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7000
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Upon experiencing a radio communication failure, the pilot should immediately squawk 7600 (the international radio failure code) without waiting for any ATC request or instruction — since communication is by definition impossible. Code 7700 is for general emergencies, 7500 for unlawful interference, and 7000 is the general VFR code. Setting 7600 proactively informs ATC of the situation, triggering the loss-of-communications procedures defined in national AIPs and ICAO Annex 11.
+
+### Q34: Which transponder code has to be set unrequested during an emergency? ^q34
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q34)*
+- A) 7500
+- B) 7700
+- C) 7000
+- D) 7600
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In any general emergency (engine failure, fire, medical emergency, severe structural damage, etc.), the pilot must set transponder code 7700 immediately and without waiting for ATC instruction. Code 7700 triggers an alarm on ATC radar displays and activates emergency procedures. Code 7500 is specifically for unlawful interference (hijacking) only — it should not be used for other emergencies. The phrase "unrequested" emphasises that the pilot must act autonomously without waiting for radio contact.
+
+### Q35: Which air traffic service is responsible for the safe conduct of flights? ^q35
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q35)*
+- A) ATC (air traffic control)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- C) ALR (alerting service)
+- D) FIS (flight information service)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air Traffic Control (ATC) is specifically responsible for providing separation between aircraft and ensuring the safe, orderly, and expeditious flow of air traffic, including the safe conduct of flights in controlled airspace. FIS provides information useful for safe and efficient conduct of flights but does not control aircraft. ALR initiates search and rescue when aircraft are overdue or in distress. AIS provides aeronautical information publications but has no operational control role. Per ICAO Annex 11, ATC has the active separation and safety function.
+
+### Q36: Air traffic control service is conducted by which services? ^q36
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q36)*
+- A) ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)
+- B) FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)
+- C) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)
+- D) TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 11, the three constituent units of Air Traffic Control service are: TWR (Aerodrome Control — controls traffic at and around the aerodrome), APP (Approach Control — handles departing and arriving traffic in the terminal area), and ACC (Area Control Centre — handles en-route traffic in control areas/airways). FIS is a separate service from ATC. ALR and SAR are emergency services, not ATC. AIS and AFS are information/communication services, not control services.
+
+### Q37: Which answer is correct with regard to separation in airspace "E"? ^q37
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q37)*
+- A) VFR traffic is not separated from any other traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic is separated from VFR and IFR traffic
+- D) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In class E airspace, IFR traffic receives separation from other IFR traffic, but VFR traffic is not separated from anything — neither from other VFR traffic nor from IFR traffic. VFR flights in class E receive traffic information where possible (from FIS) but no ATC separation service. This is a key distinction for glider pilots who frequently operate in class E: they must maintain their own separation from all traffic using see-and-avoid principles. Class E is the lowest class of controlled airspace where IFR is permitted.
+
+### Q38: Which air traffic services can be expected within an FIR (flight information region)? ^q38
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q38)*
+- A) FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)
+- B) ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)
+- C) ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- D) AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) is the basic organisational unit of airspace, within which two services are provided: FIS (Flight Information Service) — providing pilots with weather, NOTAM, and other relevant information — and ALR (Alerting Service) — notifying appropriate organisations when aircraft are in distress or overdue. ATC is only provided within designated controlled airspace (CTAs, CTRs, airways) that may exist within an FIR, not throughout the entire FIR. Per ICAO Annex 11, FIS and ALR are the universal FIR services.
+
+### Q39: A pilot can contact FIS (flight information service)... ^q39
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q39)*
+- A) By a personal visit.
+- B) Via telephone.
+- C) Via radio communication.
+- D) Via internet.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS (Flight Information Service) is an operational ATC service provided to airborne pilots in flight. The primary and essentially only operational means of contacting FIS during flight is via radio communication on the designated FIS frequency. While pre-flight briefing information may be obtained by telephone or online, the in-flight FIS service itself is radio-based. A personal visit is meaningless for an airborne pilot, and internet communication is not used for real-time in-flight FIS contact.
+
+### Q40: What is the correct phrase with respect to wake turbulence to indicate that a light aircraft is following an aircraft of a higher wake turbulence category? ^q40
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q40)*
+- A) Caution wake turbulence
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Attention propwash
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO phraseology for wake turbulence warnings is "CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE" — this is the prescribed phrase used by ATC when issuing wake turbulence warnings to pilots following heavier aircraft. ICAO Doc 4444 (PANS-ATM) specifies standardised phraseology, and non-standard phrases like "wake winds," "jet blast," or "propwash" are not ICAO-approved terminology. Standardised phraseology reduces ambiguity and is mandatory in EASA airspace.
+
+### Q41: Which of the following options states a correct position report? ^q41
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q41)*
+- A) DEABC reaching "N"
+- B) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- C) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" at 35
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A standard position report per ICAO Doc 4444 includes: aircraft callsign, position (fix or waypoint), and altitude/flight level. Option B (DEABC, "N", 2500 ft) provides all three elements concisely and correctly. Option A is incomplete (no altitude). Option C uses nonsensical terminology ("FL 2500 ft" — flight levels and feet are not combined this way). Option D lacks altitude and uses "at 35" without context. Correct position reporting is essential for ATC situational awareness.
+
+### Q42: What information is provided in the general part (GEN) of the AIP? ^q42
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q42)*
+- A) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- B) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- C) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- D) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP (Aeronautical Information Publication) is structured in three parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The GEN section contains general information including map icons/symbols, list of radio navigation aids, tables of sunrise/sunset, national regulations, fees, and administrative information. ENR contains en-route information including airspace, airways, and restricted areas. AD contains aerodrome-specific information including charts, procedures, and frequencies.
+
+### Q43: Which are the different parts of the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP)? ^q43
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q43)*
+- A) GEN MET RAC
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN ENR AD
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 15 (Aeronautical Information Services), the AIP is divided into three standardised parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). GEN contains general administrative and regulatory information; ENR contains airspace structure, routes, and navigation aids; AD contains information specific to individual aerodromes. The other options (MET, RAC, AGA, COM) are abbreviations from older ICAO documentation structures no longer used in modern AIP organisation.
+
+### Q44: What information is provided in the part "AD" of the AIP? ^q44
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q44)*
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains all aerodrome-specific information: aerodrome classification, runway data, lighting, frequencies, ground handling, approach and departure charts, taxi charts, obstacle data, operating hours, and special procedures. Option A describes ENR content. Option D describes GEN content. Option B contains a mix of items that do not correspond to a single AIP section. The AD section is what a pilot consults to prepare for operations at a specific aerodrome.
+
+### Q45: The shown NOTAM is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^q45
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q45)*
+- A) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+- B) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM time codes use the format YYMMDDHHMM in UTC. The "C)" field in a NOTAM is the end time (the "until" time). The code 1305211400 is decoded as: Year 13 (2013), Month 05 (May), Day 21, Time 1400 UTC — giving 21 May 2013 at 14:00 UTC. The "B)" field (1305211200) is the start time: 21 May 2013 at 12:00 UTC. The NOTAM number A1024/13 confirms it is from 2013. Correct NOTAM decoding is a fundamental Air Law skill.
+
+### Q46: A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a presentation of current... ^q46
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q46)*
+- A) AIC information of operational significance prepared after the flight.
+- B) AIP information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.
+- C) NOTAM information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.
+- D) ICAO information of operational significance prepared after the flight.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) is a standardised summary of current NOTAMs relevant to a planned flight, prepared and issued prior to departure. It filters and presents the NOTAMs pertinent to the route, departure and destination aerodromes, and alternate aerodromes. It is based on NOTAM data (not AIP or AIC data), and is prepared before the flight (not after). PIBs are available from AIS offices, online briefing systems, and flight planning services. Per ICAO Annex 15, it is a key pre-flight planning tool.
+
+### Q47: The term "aerodrome elevation" is defined as... ^q47
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q47)*
+- A) The highest point of the apron.
+- B) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- C) The highest point of the landing area.
+- D) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is defined as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This definition ensures that the published elevation represents the most demanding terrain height that aircraft must clear during approach and departure from the landing surface. It is not the average, not the apron elevation, and not the lowest point. Aerodrome elevation is used to calculate QFE (the altimeter setting that causes the altimeter to read zero at the aerodrome) and for obstacle clearance calculations.
+
+### Q48: The term "runway" is defined as a... ^q48
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q48)*
+- A) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- B) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is defined as a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. The key elements are: rectangular (not round), land aerodrome (not water — water aerodromes have alighting areas, not runways), and aircraft in general (not specifically helicopters, which use helidecks or helipads). Option D is incorrect because runways are specific to land aerodromes. Option A is wrong (shape). Option B is wrong (specifies helicopters only).
+
+### Q49: How can a wind direction indicator be marked for better visibility? ^q49
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q49)*
+- A) The wind direction indicator may be mounted on top of the control tower.
+- B) The wind direction indicator could be made from green materials.
+- C) The wind direction indicator could be surrounded by a white circle.
+- D) The wind direction indicator could be located on a big black surface.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a wind direction indicator (windsock or wind tee) should be clearly visible and may be surrounded by a white circle to enhance its visibility against the aerodrome background. This white circle provides a high-contrast surround that makes the indicator easier to identify from the air. Mounting it on the control tower (option A) is not a standard visibility-enhancement method. Green materials (B) do not aid visibility. A black surface (D) is not specified as a standard method in ICAO Annex 14.
+
+### Q50: Of what shape is a landing direction indicator? ^q50
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^q50)*
+- A) T
+- B) A straight arrow
+- C) L
+- D) An angled arrow
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, the landing direction indicator is T-shaped (commonly called a "landing T" or "signal T"). When displayed, the cross-bar of the T indicates the direction in which landings and take-offs should be made — aircraft land toward and take off away from the cross-bar. The T is white and should be clearly visible from the air. The L-shaped indicator is used for a different purpose (indicating a right-hand traffic circuit). Arrows are not the standard ICAO shape for a landing direction indicator.
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q5: Who is responsible for ensuring that the required on-board documents are carried on the aircraft and that the required logbooks are properly maintained? ^bazl_10_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_5)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The owner of the aircraft.
+- B) The operator of the aircraft.
+- C) The air transport company.
+- D) The pilot-in-command.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** It is the pilot-in-command who is responsible for ensuring that the required documents are on board and properly maintained. This responsibility falls on the PIC regardless of ownership or operation of the aircraft.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q13: Which activities may the Federal Council make subject to OFAC authorization? ^bazl_10_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_13)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Parachute descents, captive balloon ascents, public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- B) Only public air shows, aerobatic flights and aerobatic demonstrations on aircraft.
+- C) Only parachute descents and captive balloon ascents. No authorization is required for powered aircraft.
+- D) None of the activities listed above requires OFAC authorization.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All of these special activities — parachuting, captive balloons, air shows, aerobatic flights and demonstrations — require OFAC (Federal Office of Civil Aviation) authorization. The Federal Council may subject all of these activities to prior authorization for reasons of public safety.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q19: Is it prohibited in Switzerland to throw objects from an aircraft in flight? ^bazl_10_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_19)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Yes, it is strictly prohibited.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes, subject to exceptions to be determined by the Federal Council.
+- D) No, only the dropping of advertising material is prohibited.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Swiss aviation law, dropping objects from an aircraft in flight is in principle prohibited, but the Federal Council may define exceptions (for example: parachuting, emergency drops, authorized agricultural activities). It is neither an absolute prohibition nor a general authorization.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q18: Where in particular is the certification basis of an aircraft specified? ^bazl_10_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_18)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) In the annex to the certificate of airworthiness.
+- B) In the insurance certificate.
+- C) In the annex to the noise certificate.
+- D) In the VFR Manual.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The certification basis (type certificate data sheet) is specified in the annex to the certificate of airworthiness. This document defines the approved operating conditions, mass limits, authorized flight categories and required equipment for the aircraft.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q11: Your aircraft, which is not used for commercial traffic, needs to be repaired abroad. Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_10_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_11)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The work must be carried out by an EASA-certified maintenance organization.
+- B) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized as such by the competent aviation authority.
+- C) The work must be carried out by a maintenance organization recognized by OFAC.
+- D) Repair work may only be carried out in Switzerland.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For an aircraft not used for commercial traffic, maintenance work performed abroad must be carried out by an organization recognized by the competent aviation authority of the country concerned — not necessarily by an EASA-certified organization or one specifically recognized by OFAC. The competent national authority of the country where the maintenance is performed is the applicable reference.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q12: A well-known watchmaker has an aircraft painted in the brand's colors, displaying a large watch on its fuselage. Is this permitted? ^bazl_10_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_12)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Yes, subject to other provisions of federal legislation. The nationality and registration marks must in all cases remain easily recognizable.
+- B) Yes, but only if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization and the nationality and registration marks remain easily recognizable.
+- C) Yes, if the Federal Office of Civil Aviation has given its authorization, the operation has no political purpose and the advertising markings are limited to specific parts of the aircraft.
+- D) No, advertising is strictly prohibited on aircraft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advertising on aircraft is permitted under Swiss law, subject to other provisions of federal legislation. The only mandatory condition is that the nationality and registration marks remain easily recognizable. No special OFAC authorization is required to apply advertising markings.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q2: Under what conditions may a person act as a crew member on board an aircraft? ^bazl_10_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_2)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) When that person holds a valid licence issued by their country of origin.
+- B) When that person holds a valid licence recognized by their country of origin.
+- C) When that person holds a valid licence issued or recognized by the country in which the aircraft is registered.
+- D) When that person holds a valid licence issued by the country in which the aircraft is operated.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The licence must be issued or recognized by the country of registration of the aircraft. It is the state of registration that defines the qualification requirements for crew operating its aircraft, in accordance with ICAO Annex 1.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q1: Under what conditions is one permitted to carry and use a radio on board? ^bazl_10_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_1)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+- B) If authorization to install and use the radio has been granted and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+- C) If a radio communication licence has been issued for the radio and crew members are trained in the use of the radio.
+- D) If the frequency increments of the radio are at least 0.125 MHz and crew members using the radio hold the corresponding qualification.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Two cumulative conditions are required: authorization to install and use the radio (granted by the competent authority) AND the radio qualification of crew members who use the equipment. Simple training is not sufficient — a formally recognized qualification is required.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q17: What must a pilot possess in order to be authorized to communicate by radio with air traffic services? ^bazl_10_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_17)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) A radiotelephony qualification and a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- B) A radiotelephony course certificate and sufficient mastery of standard phraseology.
+- C) A valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+- D) In all cases, a radiotelephony qualification. Aeroplane and helicopter pilots must additionally hold a valid attestation of language proficiency in the language used.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The radiotelephony qualification is mandatory for all pilots wishing to communicate with ATC services. Additionally, aeroplane and helicopter pilots (but not necessarily glider or balloon pilots under Swiss regulations) must also hold a valid language proficiency attestation in the language used on the frequencies.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q20: Your ophthalmologist has prescribed corrective lenses. Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_10_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_20)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) You are immediately unfit.
+- B) You must promptly seek advice from your aviation medical examiner.
+- C) You can simply report your ophthalmologist's decision to your aviation medical examiner at the next routine examination.
+- D) You need not do anything. A visual deficiency that is well corrected has no effect on medical fitness.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any change in medical condition — including the prescription of corrective lenses — must be reported promptly to the aviation medical examiner (AME). Waiting until the next routine examination is not acceptable. The AME will determine whether the condition affects medical fitness and whether additional restrictions or conditions apply to the licence.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q6: In which part of airspace can authorization be obtained to conduct a Special VFR (SVFR) flight when the ceiling is less than 450 m above ground and surface visibility is less than 5 km? ^bazl_10_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_6)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) CTR.
+- B) AWY.
+- C) TMA.
+- D) FIR.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Special VFR (SVFR) is only possible within a CTR (Control Zone). It is in this controlled airspace immediately surrounding an aerodrome that ATC can authorize a special VFR flight when meteorological conditions are below normal VMC minima. The CTR is the only zone where this authorization can be granted by the competent ATC.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q15: What avoidance maneuvers should in principle be adopted by the pilots of two VFR aircraft on converging tracks? ^bazl_10_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_15)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) One turns left, the other turns right.
+- B) Each pilot turns right.
+- C) Each pilot turns left.
+- D) One continues on track while the other turns right.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO rule in case of convergence is that each aircraft turns right. This symmetrical rule prevents collision by allowing both aircraft to pass behind one another. It applies when neither aircraft has clear right-of-way priority over the other according to right-of-way rules.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q8: During VFR flight, what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements in Class D airspace below 10,000 ft AMSL? ^bazl_10_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_8)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Visibility 5 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 300 m.
+- B) Visibility 8 km; cloud distance: horizontally 1.5 km, vertically 450 m.
+- C) Visibility 5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+- D) Visibility 1.5 km; clear of clouds and in permanent sight of ground or water.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class D airspace below FL100 (10,000 ft AMSL), the VMC minima are: visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1,500 m (1.5 km) and vertical cloud distance 300 m (equivalent to 1,000 ft). These are the same minima as for Classes C and E in this altitude band, in accordance with SERA.5001.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q4: Among the airspace classes used in Switzerland, which have the status of controlled airspace? ^bazl_10_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_4)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) E, D, C
+- B) D, C
+- C) G, E, D, C
+- D) E, C
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, airspace classes C, D and E are controlled airspace. Class G is uncontrolled airspace. Classes A and B exist theoretically in the ICAO classification but are not used in Switzerland. Class E, while controlled, does not impose separation on VFR traffic.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q10: According to the rules of the air in force, what is meant by "day"? ^bazl_10_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_10)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The period from sunrise to sunset.
+- B) The period from the beginning of morning civil twilight to the end of evening civil twilight.
+- C) The period from the end of morning civil twilight to the beginning of evening civil twilight.
+- D) The period between 06:00 and 20:00 in winter and between 06:00 and 21:00 in summer.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation, "day" is defined as the period from the beginning of morning civil twilight (30 minutes before sunrise) to the end of evening civil twilight (30 minutes after sunset). This definition is broader than astronomical sunrise/sunset and is used to determine the rules applicable to day and night flights.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q14: What is meant by an aviation accident? ^bazl_10_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_14)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The crash of an aircraft.
+- B) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which a person is killed or seriously injured, or in which the structural integrity, performance or flight characteristics of the aircraft are significantly impaired.
+- C) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft in which at least one person is killed or seriously injured.
+- D) Any event associated with the operation of an aircraft that requires the aircraft to be repaired.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The legal definition of an aviation accident includes two distinct categories: events causing serious or fatal injuries to persons, AND events causing significant structural damage to the aircraft (structural integrity, performance or flight characteristics significantly impaired). Both situations constitute an accident, independently of one another.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q7: You wish to conduct private flights for remuneration. What formality must you complete in order to limit your civil liability? ^bazl_10_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_7)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Draw up a declaration to be signed by passengers releasing you from all liability.
+- B) Issue a transport document as proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded, which limits liability for damage to baggage and for delay.
+- C) Take out a special passenger insurance policy which passengers are required to accept.
+- D) No formality is required since the Montreal Convention releases the pilot from all liability.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transport document (ticket) constitutes proof that a contract of carriage has been concluded between the pilot and the passenger. Under the Montreal Convention, the existence of such a contract limits the carrier's liability for damage to baggage and for delays. Without a transport document, liability may be unlimited. The Convention does not release the pilot from all liability — it caps it under certain conditions.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q16: What information is published by means of an AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular)? ^bazl_10_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_16)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Aeronautical information of importance to persons involved in flight operations concerning the construction, condition or modification of aeronautical facilities and their duration.
+- B) In principle, any information that justifies the issuance of a NOTAM and relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical or legislative matters may be published by AIC.
+- C) An AIC is a notice containing information that does not meet the conditions for issuing a NOTAM or for inclusion in the AIP, but which relates to flight safety, air navigation, or technical, administrative or legislative matters.
+- D) The AIC is the manual for pilots flying IFR. Its structure and content are analogous to those of the VFR Manual.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIC (Aeronautical Information Circular) contains information that does not meet the criteria for publication in a NOTAM or in the AIP, but which is nevertheless useful for flight safety, air navigation or technical, administrative and legislative matters. It is supplementary information, not a primary regulatory document.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q9: What does the aerodrome operations manual regulate? ^bazl_10_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_9)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The certification of maintenance organizations located at the aerodrome.
+- B) The operation and opening hours of the aerodrome restaurant and other businesses located at the aerodrome.
+- C) The organization of the aerodrome, opening hours, approach and takeoff procedures, use of aerodrome facilities by passengers, aircraft and ground vehicles as well as other users, and ground handling services.
+- D) Employment contracts, vacation entitlement and shift work of the aerodrome operator.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome operations manual covers the entire organization and operational procedures: general organization, opening hours, approach and takeoff procedures, use of facilities by all users (passengers, aircraft, vehicles) and ground handling services. It is a comprehensive document defining the operation of the aerodrome.
+
+### BAZL Br.10 Q3: What does this ground signal mean? (Two dumbbells) ^bazl_10_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_10_3)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Ground signal:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_10_q03_ground_signal.png]]
+> *Two dumbbells — signal indicating that landings and takeoffs are to be made on runways only, but that other maneuvers (taxiing) may be carried out outside the runways and taxiways.*
+
+- A) Landing, takeoff and taxiing on runways and taxiways only.
+- B) Landing and takeoff on hard-surfaced runways only.
+- C) Caution during takeoff or landing.
+- D) Landing and takeoff on runways only. Other maneuvers may however be conducted outside the runways and taxiways.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dumbbell signal displayed in the signals area indicates that landings and takeoffs must be made on runways only, but that other maneuvers (taxiing, turning, positioning) may be conducted outside the runways and taxiways. This signal is distinct from the dumbbell with a cross bar, which indicates that all maneuvers are restricted to runways and taxiways.
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 101 Q1 — As a general rule, what manoeuvres must the pilots of two aircraft approaching head-on perform? ^bazl_101_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_1)*
+- A) One turns right, the other turns left.
+- B) Each turns right.
+- C) Each turns left.
+- D) One flies straight ahead while the other turns right.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When aircraft approach head-on, each pilot must turn right (ICAO Annex 2, rule 3.2.1). This mirrors international road rules, ensuring both aircraft avoid each other on the same side.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q2 — Which of the airspaces mentioned below are not defined as controlled airspaces? ^bazl_101_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_2)*
+- A) Class G and E airspaces.
+- B) Class G, E and D airspaces.
+- C) Class C airspace.
+- D) Class G airspace.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, uncontrolled airspaces are classes G and E. Class E is uncontrolled for VFR traffic. Classes C, D and TMA are controlled airspaces.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q3 — To which authority has the Federal Council entrusted aviation oversight in Switzerland? ^bazl_101_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_3)*
+- A) The Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (DETEC).
+- B) The Aero-Club of Switzerland.
+- C) The cantonal police forces.
+- D) The Swiss air navigation services (Skyguide).
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, the Federal Council delegates aviation oversight to the DETEC (Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications), which delegates to FOCA (BAZL/OFAC). Skyguide manages air navigation but is not the supervisory authority.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q4 — For which of the following flights must you file a flight plan? ^bazl_101_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_4)*
+- A) For a VFR flight in Class E airspace.
+- B) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+- C) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+- D) For a VFR flight over the Alps, Pre-Alps or Jura.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A VFR flight plan is required in Switzerland when the flight requires the use of air traffic control services (e.g., transiting a CTR, TMA or controlled airspace). A flight over 300 km or over the Alps does not necessarily require one.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q5 — In VFR flight, what minimum heights must be maintained above densely populated areas? ^bazl_101_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_5)*
+- A) At least 150 m above the ground.
+- B) At least 150 m above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius of the aircraft.
+- C) At least 300 m above the ground.
+- D) At least 450 m above the ground.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In VFR flight, the minimum altitude over densely populated areas is 150 m above the highest obstacle within a 300 m radius around the aircraft (SERA.5005 and ICAO Annex 2).
+
+### BAZL 101 Q6 — Of the aircraft listed below, which have priority for takeoff and landing? ^bazl_101_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_6)*
+- A) Aircraft that have received an ATC clearance to taxi.
+- B) Aircraft on final approach.
+- C) Aircraft arriving from another aerodrome that are in the aerodrome circuit.
+- D) Aircraft manoeuvring on the ground.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to ICAO Annex 2, aircraft on final approach always have priority over other aircraft in flight or on the ground. ATC clearances do not override the right-of-way rules for final approach.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q7 — What is the meaning of this signal? ^bazl_101_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_7)*
+![[figures/bazl_101_q7.png]]
+- A) Only hard-surface runways are to be used for landing and takeoff.
+- B) Takeoff and landing only on runways; other manoeuvres are not restricted to the use of runways and taxiways.
+- C) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- D) All runways at this aerodrome are closed.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown (glider symbol or glider wings) indicates that glider flying is in progress at the aerodrome. This is a standard ICAO signal to warn other aircraft.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q8 — Who is responsible for ensuring that the required documents are on board the aircraft? ^bazl_101_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_8)*
+- A) The owner of the aircraft.
+- B) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+- C) The operator of the aircraft.
+- D) The operator of the air transport undertaking (Operator).
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pilot-in-Command (PIC) is responsible for ensuring that the required documents are on board the aircraft before flight (ICAO Annex 2, Swiss aviation regulations).
+
+### BAZL 101 Q9 — Which of the following instructions on the runway direction in use takes priority? ^bazl_101_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_9)*
+- A) The landing T.
+- B) The wind sock.
+- C) The two digits displayed vertically on the control tower.
+- D) The ATC instruction transmitted by radio from the control tower.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC radio instructions have the highest priority (outside of a safety emergency). They take precedence over the landing T, wind sock, and tower markings. Only a genuine emergency justifies deviating from ATC instructions.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q10 — What code must be set on the transponder in the event of a radio failure? ^bazl_101_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_10)*
+- A) 7500
+- B) 7600
+- C) 7700
+- D) 7000
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transponder code for radio failure is 7600. Code 7500 is for hijacking, 7700 for general emergency, and 7000 is the standard VFR squawk code in Europe.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q11 — May the rules of the air applicable to aircraft be deviated from? ^bazl_101_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_11)*
+- A) Yes, absolutely.
+- B) Yes, but only for safety reasons.
+- C) Yes, but only in Class G airspace.
+- D) No, under no circumstances.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation from air traffic rules is only permitted for safety reasons, and only to the extent strictly necessary. This is the only legal exception provided by ICAO Annex 2.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q12 — What are the minimum meteorological values (VMC) in Class E airspace at 2100 m AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: Vertical / Horizontal ^bazl_101_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_12)*
+- A) 5.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- B) 8.0 km / 300 m / 1500 m
+- C) 8.0 km / 100 m / 300 m
+- D) 1.5 km / 50 m / 100 m
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E airspace above 1000 ft MSL (here at 2100 m AMSL ≈ 6900 ft), VMC requires: visibility 8 km, cloud clearance 300 m vertically and 1500 m horizontally (SERA.5001).
+
+### BAZL 101 Q13 — During the day, by what time at the latest must a VFR flight be completed? ^bazl_101_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_13)*
+- A) At the end of civil twilight.
+- B) At sunset.
+- C) At the beginning of civil twilight.
+- D) 30 minutes before the end of civil twilight.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a daytime VFR flight must be completed no later than sunset. Flights after sunset require special authorization or a night flight qualification.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q14 — Are you permitted to use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC if you do not hold the radiotelephony rating extension? ^bazl_101_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_14)*
+- A) No.
+- B) Yes.
+- C) Yes, provided I have sufficient command of phraseology.
+- D) Yes, provided other radio communications are not disrupted.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yes, a pilot may use the aircraft radio to communicate with ATC without the radiotelephony extension, in airspaces where this is required. The radiotelephony qualification is needed for certain controlled airspaces but not for general radio use.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q15 — What type of flights may be conducted, to the extent necessary, below the prescribed minimum heights without specific FOCA authorisation? ^bazl_101_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_15)*
+- A) Aerobatic flights.
+- B) Search and rescue flights.
+- C) Aerial photography flights.
+- D) Mountain flights.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Search and rescue (SAR) flights may be conducted without special FOCA authorization below prescribed minimum altitudes, to the extent necessary. Other flight types mentioned require special authorizations.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q16 — Are you permitted, in VFR flight, to cross an airway at FL 115 when visibility is 5 km? ^bazl_101_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_16)*
+- A) No.
+- B) Yes, in Class E airspace.
+- C) Yes, but only if it is a controlled VFR flight (CVFR).
+- D) Yes, but only if it is a special VFR flight (SVFR).
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** No. At FL 115 with only 5 km visibility, VFR flight through an airway (class C or D airspace) is not permitted, as the minimum required visibility is 8 km and cloud clearance of 1500 m/300 m must be maintained.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q17 — Are formation flights permitted? ^bazl_101_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_17)*
+- A) Yes, but only outside controlled airspace.
+- B) Yes, but only if the pilots-in-command are in permanent radio contact with each other.
+- C) Yes, provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand.
+- D) Yes, but only with authorisation from the Federal Office of Civil Aviation.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Formation flights are permitted in Switzerland provided the pilots-in-command have coordinated beforehand. They do not require permanent radio contact or special FOCA authorization.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q18 — What is the meaning of this signal? ^bazl_101_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_18)*
+![[figures/bazl_101_q18.png]]
+- A) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- B) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- C) Landing prohibited.
+- D) Caution during approach and landing.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A red square with two white diagonal crosses (St. Andrew's cross) means: landing prohibited. This is a standard ICAO signal placed in the signal area.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q19 — May a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without further formality? ^bazl_101_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_19)*
+- A) Yes.
+- B) Only if permanent contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+- C) Only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- D) No, it is strictly prohibited for VFR flights.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A FIZ (Flight Information Zone) may be transited provided permanent radio contact with AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) is maintained. The rules of the applicable airspace class apply.
+
+### BAZL 101 Q20 — Which event must be considered an aviation accident? ^bazl_101_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_101_20)*
+- A) Only the crash of an aircraft or helicopter.
+- B) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- D) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aviation accident includes any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured AND/OR the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structure, performance or flight characteristics. The ICAO definition (Annex 13) is comprehensive.
+
+---
+
+## Series 3 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 102 Q1 — Are observed or received signals mandatory for the glider pilot? ^bazl_102_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_1)*
+- A) Yes, except light signals for aircraft on the ground.
+- B) Yes.
+- C) No.
+- D) Yes, but only signals placed on the ground, not light signals.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yes, all observed or received signals are mandatory for the glider pilot. ICAO Annex 2 states that pilots must comply with all visual and radio signals.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q2 — What is the minimum flight height above densely populated areas and above locations where large public gatherings take place? ^bazl_102_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_2)*
+- A) 600 m AGL.
+- B) There is no specific height figure; however, one must fly in a manner that allows reaching clear terrain suitable for a risk-free landing at any time.
+- C) 150 m AGL above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius of the aircraft.
+- D) 300 m AGL.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Minimum height over densely populated areas is 150 m AGL above the highest obstacle within a 600 m radius around the aircraft (SERA.5005).
+
+### BAZL 102 Q3 — In which airspaces may VFR flights be conducted in Switzerland without requiring air traffic control services? ^bazl_102_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_3)*
+- A) In Class E and G airspaces.
+- B) In Class A and B airspaces.
+- C) Only in Class G airspace.
+- D) In Class C, D, E and G airspaces.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, VFR flight without control is permitted in Class E and G airspace. In Class C and D, control is required.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q4 — What is the meaning of this signal? ^bazl_102_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_4)*
+![[figures/bazl_102_q4.png]]
+- A) Landing prohibited.
+- B) This signal applies only to powered aircraft.
+- C) The pilot may choose the landing direction.
+- D) Caution during approach and landing.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal shown (two white squares forming a T shape) indicates: caution during approach and landing. Beware of obstacles or special conditions.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q5 — In which document must technical deficiencies identified during aircraft operation be recorded? ^bazl_102_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_5)*
+- A) In the aircraft flight manual.
+- B) In the maintenance manual.
+- C) In the operations manual.
+- D) In the journey log (aircraft logbook).
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Technical deficiencies must be recorded in the aircraft's journey log (logbook/tech log). This is the official document tracking technical status.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q6 — How is the use of cameras regulated at the international level? ^bazl_102_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_6)*
+- A) Private use is generally permitted; commercial photography is subject to authorisation.
+- B) Each State is free to prohibit or regulate their use over its territory.
+- C) Use is generally prohibited.
+- D) Use is generally permitted.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Internationally, each State is free to prohibit or regulate the use of cameras above its territory. There is no uniform ICAO rule on this point.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q7 — What is the meaning of white or other visible coloured signals placed horizontally on a runway? ^bazl_102_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_7)*
+- A) The delineated runway portion is not usable.
+- B) Caution during approach and landing.
+- C) Glider flying in progress at this aerodrome.
+- D) They mark the landing area in use.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** White or visible color signals on a runway indicate that the delineated runway portion is not usable (closed or degraded area).
+
+### BAZL 102 Q8 — How must flight time be logged when 2 pilots fly together? ^bazl_102_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_8)*
+- A) Each pilot logs only the flight time during which they were actually flying.
+- B) Each pilot logs half the time.
+- C) The pilot who made the landing may log the total flight time; the other only the time during which they were actually flying.
+- D) Each pilot may log the total flight time, as both hold a licence.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two licensed pilots fly together, each pilot may log the total flight time in their logbook. This is in accordance with Swiss and ICAO rules.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q9 — When one aircraft in flight overtakes another, how must it give way? ^bazl_102_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_9)*
+- A) Turn left.
+- B) Turn downward.
+- C) Turn right.
+- D) Turn upward.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft overtaking another must give way by turning right. This is the ICAO overtaking rule (Annex 2, rule 3.2.1).
+
+### BAZL 102 Q10 — For which of the following domestic Swiss flights must you file a flight plan? ^bazl_102_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_10)*
+- A) For a VFR flight covering more than 300 km without a stop.
+- B) For a VFR flight in controlled airspace.
+- C) For a VFR flight over the Alps.
+- D) For a VFR flight that requires the use of air traffic control services.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland, a flight plan is required for flights requiring the use of ATC services. Simple domestic flights (300 km, Alps) do not require one.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q11 — Who is responsible for collision avoidance during a VFR flight? ^bazl_102_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_11)*
+- A) The air traffic control service.
+- B) The flight information service.
+- C) The second pilot when two pilots are on board.
+- D) The pilot-in-command of the aircraft.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In VFR, collision avoidance is the responsibility of the pilot-in-command (PIC). ATC provides information but is not responsible for separation in VFR.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q12 — Which event must be considered an aviation accident? ^bazl_102_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_12)*
+- A) Only the crash of an aircraft.
+- B) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which a person was killed or seriously injured, or the aircraft sustained damage notably affecting its structural strength, performance or flight characteristics.
+- C) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft during which at least one person was killed or seriously injured.
+- D) Any event related to the operation of an aircraft requiring costly repairs.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO definition (Annex 13) of an aviation accident includes events with killed/seriously injured persons AND/OR significant aircraft damage affecting flight characteristics.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q13 — Which of the following exceptions to the right-of-way rules for converging routes is incorrect? ^bazl_102_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_13)*
+- A) Gliders give way to aircraft that are towing.
+- B) Aircraft give way to aircraft that are visibly towing other aircraft or objects.
+- C) Gliders and motor gliders give way to free balloons.
+- D) Airships give way to gliders.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the inaccurate statement: gliders do NOT give way to tow planes. It is the opposite: aircraft give way to aircraft that are visibly towing other aircraft or objects.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q14 — What minimum meteorological conditions must be met to take off or land at an aerodrome in a Control Zone (CTR) without authorisation for a Special VFR flight? ^bazl_102_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_14)*
+- A) Ground visibility 8 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+- B) Ground visibility 1.5 km, ceiling 300 m/GND.
+- C) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 150 m/GND.
+- D) Ground visibility 5 km, ceiling 450 m/GND.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To take off/land in a CTR under SVFR without specific authorization: minimum ground visibility 1.5 km and minimum ceiling 300 m/GND. These are Swiss SVFR minimums.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q15 — For VFR flights in a terminal control area or control zone, how is the vertical position of an aircraft below the transition altitude expressed? ^bazl_102_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_15)*
+- A) As height.
+- B) As flight level.
+- C) As altitude.
+- D) Either as altitude or height.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Below transition altitude in a TMA or CTR, vertical position is expressed in altitude (above mean sea level, with QNH setting).
+
+### BAZL 102 Q16 — During a VFR flight in Switzerland, what is the minimum visibility required in Class G airspace without special conditions? ^bazl_102_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_16)*
+- A) 1.5 km.
+- B) 10 km.
+- C) 8 km.
+- D) 5 km.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class G airspace without special conditions, minimum visibility required is 1.5 km. Below 3000 ft AMSL and within 1000 ft of the surface.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q17 — May a Flight Information Zone (FIZ) be transited without further formality? ^bazl_102_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_17)*
+- A) Only if permanent radio contact with the Aerodrome Flight Information Service (AFIS) is maintained. Otherwise, the rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+- B) Yes.
+- C) Yes, but only with the authorisation of the Flight Information Service (FIS) and only if the pilot is qualified to use radiotelephony in English.
+- D) No, transit is not permitted under any circumstances for VFR flights.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIZ transit is permitted if permanent radio contact with AFIS is maintained. The rules of the airspace class in which the FIZ is located apply.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q18 — Who is responsible for the regulatory maintenance of an aircraft? ^bazl_102_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_18)*
+- A) The owner.
+- B) The mechanic.
+- C) The operator.
+- D) The maintenance organisation.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operator is responsible for the regulatory maintenance of an aircraft. For private aircraft, the owner often acts as the operator.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q19 — When two aircraft approach an aerodrome simultaneously to land, which has right of way? ^bazl_102_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_19)*
+- A) The smaller one.
+- B) The faster one.
+- C) The one flying higher.
+- D) The one flying lower.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two aircraft approach an aerodrome simultaneously, the one flying lower (on a more advanced final approach) has right of way.
+
+### BAZL 102 Q20 — What are the minimum VMC meteorological values in Class E airspace at 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL? Visibility - Cloud clearance: vertically - horizontally ^bazl_102_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/10%20-%20Droit%20a%C3%A9rien.md#^bazl_102_20)*
+- A) 5.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+- B) 1.5 km - 50 m - 100 m
+- C) 8.0 km - 100 m - 300 m
+- D) 8.0 km - 300 m - 1500 m
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Class E at 6500 ft (2000 m) AMSL (> 1000 ft AGL), VMC: visibility 8 km, cloud clearance 300 m vertically and 1500 m horizontally.
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 10 - Air Law
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 34 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What is the purpose of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^q1
+- A) It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed
+- B) It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft
+- C) Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- D) It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal square (also called signals square or ground signals area) is a designated area at an aerodrome where ground signals are displayed using symbols, panels, or markings to communicate aerodrome conditions to pilots flying overhead who cannot receive radio communication. It is not a lighting area for emergency vehicles (A), not a location where aircraft receive light signals for taxi clearance (C) — that would be done by the control tower — and not a tow drop zone (D).
+
+### Q2: How are two parallel runways designated? ^q2
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+- B) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway "R"
+- C) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 14 requires that when two parallel runways exist, both receive a suffix to distinguish them: 'L' for the left and 'R' for the right runway as seen from a pilot on final approach. Option A is wrong because the right runway also needs a suffix. Options C and D describe non-standard designations not used in ICAO procedures.
+
+### Q3: Which runway designators are correct for 2 parallel runways? ^q3
+- A) "26" and "26R"
+- B) "06L" and "06R"
+- C) "18" and "18-2"
+- D) "24" and "25"
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For two parallel runways, ICAO requires both runways to carry suffixes 'L' and 'R', resulting in designators like '06L' and '06R'. Option A is wrong because '26' has no suffix. Option C uses a non-standard dash notation. Option D shows different numbers (24 and 25), which would indicate two separate non-parallel runways on slightly different magnetic headings, not parallel runways.
+
+### Q4: What is the meaning of this sign at an aerodrome? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q4
+- A) After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right
+- B) Caution, manoeuvring area is poor
+- C) Glider flying is in progress
+- D) Landing prohibited for a longer period
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ALW-011 figure shows the international ground signal for glider operations in progress — a double-headed arrow or specific panel displayed in the signal square. This warns pilots overflying the aerodrome that gliders may be operating, including tow-launching and soaring in the vicinity. The other options describe unrelated signals: right-hand circuit (A), poor manoeuvring area (B), and landing prohibited (D).
+
+### Q5: What is the meaning of "DETRESFA"? ^q5
+- A) Distress phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Uncertainty phase
+- D) Rescue phase
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the most serious of the three emergency phases, declared when an aircraft is in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. ALERFA corresponds to the alerting phase (B), and INCERFA to the uncertainty phase (C). There is no phase called 'rescue phase' (D) as a formal ICAO designation.
+
+### Q6: Who provides search and rescue service? ^q6
+- A) Only civil organisations
+- B) Both military and civil organisations
+- C) Only military organisations
+- D) International approved organisations
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 12 defines Search and Rescue (SAR) as a service that may be provided by both military and civil organisations, depending on national arrangements. Many countries use military assets (aircraft, helicopters, ships) alongside civil emergency services. Limiting it to only civil (A) or only military (C) organisations, or requiring international approval (D), does not reflect the flexible, nationally-organised nature of SAR.
+
+### Q7: With respect to aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories regarding aircraft occurrences? ^q7
+- A) Event Crash Disaster
+- B) Event Serious event Accident
+- C) Happening Event Serious event
+- D) Incident Serious incident Accident
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, aircraft occurrences are classified into three categories: incident (an occurrence other than an accident which affects or could affect safety), serious incident (an incident involving circumstances where there was a high probability of an accident), and accident (an occurrence resulting in fatal or serious injury, or substantial aircraft damage). The other options use non-standard terminology not found in ICAO definitions.
+
+### Q8: During slope soaring you have the hill to your left side, another glider is approaching from the opposite side at the same altitude. How do you react? ^q8
+- A) You divert to the right
+- B) You expect the opposite glider to divert
+- C) You divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same
+- D) You pull on the elevator and divert upward
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO rules of the air and SERA regulations specify that during slope soaring, when two gliders approach each other head-on, the glider with the hill on its right must give way — but in this question the hill is on YOUR left, meaning the hill is on the other glider's right. Therefore YOU must give way by diverting to the right (turning away from the hill). Expecting the other glider to divert (B) is incorrect because the rule is based on which pilot has the hill on their right. Pulling upward (D) is impractical and dangerous.
+
+### Q9: Along with other gliders, you are circling in a thermal updraft. Who determines the direction of circling? ^q9
+- A) Circling is general to the left
+- B) The glider who entered the updraft at first
+- C) The glider with greatest bank angle
+- D) The glider at highest altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA regulations state that when joining a thermal already occupied by other gliders, the newly joining pilot must circle in the same direction as the glider that first established the turn in that thermal. This ensures all pilots orbit in the same direction, preventing head-on conflicts. Circling is not fixed as left (A), the highest glider (D) or steepest bank (C) does not determine the direction.
+
+### Q10: Is it possible to enter airspace C with a glider plane? ^q10
+- A) Yes, but only with transponder activated
+- B) No
+- C) With restrictions, in case of less air traffic
+- D) Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspace C is controlled airspace where ATC clearance is mandatory for all flights including VFR. A glider may enter Class C airspace only with an explicit clearance from the responsible ATC unit. A transponder alone (A) is not sufficient — clearance is the fundamental requirement. Option B (no entry at all) is too restrictive; entry is possible with proper clearance. Option C implies a discretionary traffic-density rule which does not exist.
+
+### Q11: What is indicated by a pattern of longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions disposed symmetrically about the centerline of a runway? ^q11
+- A) At this point the glide path of an ILS hits the runway
+- B) Do not touch down before them
+- C) Do not touch down behind them
+- D) A ground roll could be started from this position
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline are the runway threshold markings (specifically the threshold stripe pattern), which indicate the beginning of the runway available for landing. Pilots must not touch down before them. They do not mark an ILS glide path touchdown point (A), do not prohibit touching down behind them (C), and are not a ground roll starting position marker (D).
+
+### Q12: How can a pilot confirm a search and rescue signal on ground in flight? ^q12
+- A) Push the rudder in both directions multiple times
+- B) Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times
+- C) Rock the wings
+- D) Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 12 prescribes that a pilot in flight confirms acknowledgement of a ground SAR signal by rocking the wings (waggling the wings laterally). This is an internationally recognised visual signal. Rudder inputs (A) are not visible from the ground, a parabolic flight path (B) is not a defined SAR signal, and repeated flap deployment (D) is not a standard acknowledgement signal.
+
+### Q13: An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a... ^q13
+- A) Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air
+- B) Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- C) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- D) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is defined by ICAO as a ROTATING beacon (not fixed) installed at or near an airport to help pilots locate it from the air. It is located at the aerodrome itself, not at the beginning of final approach (B). It is intended to be seen from the air by pilots, not from the ground (D). Option A is wrong because the beacon rotates.
+
+### Q14: What is the primary purpose of an aircraft accident investigation? ^q14
+- A) To identify the reasons and work out safety recommendations
+- B) To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers
+- C) To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents
+- D) To Determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010 are explicit: the sole objective of an aircraft accident investigation is to prevent future accidents and incidents by identifying causal factors and issuing safety recommendations. It is not a judicial or liability process. Determining liability (B), assisting prosecutors (C), or establishing guilt (D) is explicitly outside the scope of a safety investigation.
+
+### Q15: Which validity does the Certificate of Airworthiness have? ^q15
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) 12 years
+- C) 6 months
+- D) 12 months
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) issued under ICAO Annex 8 and EASA regulations remains valid for an unlimited period as long as the aircraft is maintained in accordance with approved maintenance programmes and the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC) is kept current. The CofA itself has no fixed expiry date; it is the ARC (reviewed annually) that must be renewed periodically.
+
+### Q16: What is the meaning of the abbreviation ARC? ^q16
+- A) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- B) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- C) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- D) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, the document issued following a successful airworthiness review confirming that an aircraft meets the applicable airworthiness requirements at the time of review. It is valid for one year and must be renewed to allow continued operation. The other options (Airworthiness Recurring Control, Airspace Rulemaking Committee, Airspace Restriction Criteria) are not recognised EASA or ICAO abbreviations in this context.
+
+### Q17: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^q17
+- A) Of the residence of the owner
+- B) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- D) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under the Chicago Convention (ICAO Annex 7) and EASA regulations, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the State of Registry — the country in which the aircraft is registered. The nationality of the owner (A), the country where the review was conducted (C), or the country of manufacture (D) are not the determining factors for issuing the CofA.
+
+### Q18: What is the meaning of the abbreviation SERA? ^q18
+- A) Selective Radar Altimeter
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- D) Specialized Radar Approach
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, the EU regulation (Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012) that harmonises rules of the air across EASA member states. It is not an acronym for a radar device (A), a routing document (C), or a radar approach (D).
+
+### Q19: What is the meaning of the abbreviation TRA? ^q19
+- A) Transponder Area
+- B) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- C) Terminal Area
+- D) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace, an airspace of defined dimensions temporarily reserved for specific uses (such as military exercises or parachute operations) and which other aircraft may not enter without permission. Transponder Area (A), Terminal Area (C), and Temporary Radar Routing Area (D) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q20: What is the meaning of an area marked as TMZ? ^q20
+- A) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Traffic Management Zone
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone, an airspace designation indicating that aircraft must be equipped with and operate a functioning transponder when flying in that zone. Transportation Management Zone (B), Touring Motorglider Zone (C), and Traffic Management Zone (D) are not recognised aviation terms for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q21: A flight is called a visual flight, if the... ^q21
+- A) Visibility in flight is more than 5 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- C) Visibility in flight is more than 8 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined as a flight conducted in accordance with Visual Flight Rules, as specified in ICAO Annex 2 and SERA. The definition is regulatory, not purely meteorological. Stating specific visibility values such as 5 km (A) or 8 km (C) conflates VFR with VMC minima but does not define the term. Option D (flight in VMC) describes a condition under which VFR is possible, not the definition of a VFR flight itself.
+
+### Q22: What is the meaning of the abbreviation VMC? ^q22
+- A) Variable meteorological conditions
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Visual flight rules
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions, the meteorological visibility and cloud clearance conditions under which VFR flight can be conducted. It is not 'variable' conditions (A), instrument flight conditions (C), or Visual Flight Rules (D) — VFR is the set of rules followed in VMC, not the conditions themselves.
+
+### Q23: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace E for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL75? ^q23
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace classification, airspace E is uncontrolled above Class G. VFR flights in Class E below FL100 require a minimum flight visibility of 5,000 m (5 km). FL75 is below FL100 so the 5 km rule applies. 8,000 m (A) applies at and above FL100, 1,500 m (B) is the minimum in some lower airspaces under certain conditions, and 3,000 m (C) does not correspond to any standard VFR minimum in this context.
+
+### Q24: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace C for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL110? ^q24
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 8000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In controlled airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8,000 m (8 km) in accordance with SERA. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km minimum applies. 1,500 m (A) and 3,000 m (B) are minima for lower airspaces. 5,000 m (D) applies below FL100.
+
+### Q25: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace C for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL125? ^q25
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8,000 m. FL125 is above FL100, confirming the 8 km (8,000 m) minimum applies. The answer 5,000 m (C) applies below FL100 in Class C. 1,500 m (B) and 3,000 m (D) correspond to other airspace or altitude bands.
+
+### Q26: What are the minimum distances to clouds for a VFR flight in airspace B? ^q26
+- A) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace Class B (and Classes C and D), the cloud separation minima for VFR flights are 1,500 m horizontally and 300 m (1,000 ft) vertically from cloud. Option B uses 1,000 m vertical separation which is too large. Option C uses 1,000 m horizontal which is insufficient. Option D mixes metres and feet incorrectly.
+
+### Q27: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace C below FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q27
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C below FL100, the SERA-prescribed minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5,000 m). 1.5 km (A) is for special VFR or certain lower-altitude situations. 8 km (B) applies at and above FL100 in Class C. 10 km (D) is not a standard SERA minimum.
+
+### Q28: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace C at and above FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q28
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 10 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 8 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility required by SERA is 8 km (8,000 m). Below FL100 in Class C the minimum is 5 km. 1.5 km (A) applies to special VFR scenarios. 5 km (C) is the below-FL100 Class C minimum. 10 km (B) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum.
+
+### Q29: The term ceiling is defined as the... ^q29
+- A) Height of the base of the highest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 10000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Altitude of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO definition of ceiling is the height (not altitude) of the base of the lowest layer of clouds or obscuring phenomena covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, i.e., more than 4 oktas), below 20,000 ft. Option A uses 'highest layer' which is incorrect. Option B limits it to below 10,000 ft which is too restrictive. Option D uses 'altitude' (referenced to MSL) rather than 'height' (referenced to the surface), which is technically incorrect per ICAO definition.
+
+### Q30: Which answer is correct with regard to separation in airspace E? ^q30
+- A) VFR traffic is not separated from any other traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic is separated from VFR and IFR traffic
+- D) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class E, ATC provides separation only for IFR flights. VFR flights in Class E receive no separation service from ATC — they are not separated from IFR traffic or from other VFR traffic. Pilots operating VFR in Class E rely on the see-and-avoid principle. Options B, C, and D incorrectly imply some form of ATC-provided separation for VFR flights.
+
+### Q31: What information is provided in the part AD of the AIP? ^q31
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP is divided into three main parts: GEN (General), ENR (En Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The AD part contains information about individual aerodromes including their classification, aerodrome charts, approach charts, and taxi charts. Warnings, airspace, and restrictions (A) are in ENR. License and regulatory info (B) is in GEN. Map icons and radio nav aids (D) are also primarily in GEN or ENR.
+
+### Q32: The term aerodrome elevation is defined as... ^q32
+- A) The highest point of the apron.
+- B) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- C) The highest point of the landing area.
+- D) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodrome elevation is defined by ICAO as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This is the point referenced for QFE settings and various aerodrome obstacle clearance calculations. The apron (A) is not the landing area. The lowest point (B) would understate the elevation relevant to operations. An average value (D) does not reflect the critical highest-point definition.
+
+### Q33: The term runway is defined as a... ^q33
+- A) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- B) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 14 defines a runway as a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. It is specifically rectangular (not round), on land (not water — that would apply to seaplanes on water aerodromes), and for aircraft generally (not helicopters specifically — helicopter landing areas are called HELIPADs or FATO).
+
+### Q34: What is the meaning of DETRESFA? ^q34
+- A) Distress phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Uncertainty phase
+- D) Rescue phase
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, which is the highest of the three emergency phases and indicates that an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. ALERFA (alerting phase) and INCERFA (uncertainty phase) are the other two phases. 'Rescue phase' (D) is not a defined ICAO emergency phase designation.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_20.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_20.md
new file mode 100644
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_20.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1482 @@
+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Aircraft General Knowledge
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 50 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which levers in a glider's cockpit are indicated by the colors red, blue and green? Levers for usage of ... ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q1)*
+- A) Gear, speed brakes and elevator trim tab.
+- B) Speed brakes, cable release and elevator trim.
+- C) Speed brakes, cabin hood lock and gear.
+- D) Cabin hood release, speed brakes, elevator trim
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA standardizes cockpit lever colors in gliders: red for the cabin hood (canopy) release, blue for speed brakes (airbrakes), and green for elevator trim. This color coding ensures pilots can quickly identify critical controls under stress without confusion. Options A, B, and C mix up the color-to-function assignments — for example, no standard assigns red to gear or blue to cable release.
+
+### Q2: The thickness of the wing is defined as the distance between the lower and the upper side of the wing at the... ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q2)*
+- A) Thinnest part of the wing.
+- B) Most inner part of the wing.
+- C) Thickest part of the wing.
+- D) Most outer part of the wing
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing thickness is defined as the maximum perpendicular distance between the upper and lower wing surfaces, measured at the thickest part of the cross-section (airfoil). This point is typically located between 20–30% of the chord from the leading edge. The thinnest part (A) or outer tip (D) would give a smaller, less meaningful measurement, and the inner root (B) describes spanwise location rather than airfoil thickness.
+
+### Q3: How is referred to a tubular steel construction with a non self-supporting skin? ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q3)*
+- A) Grid construction
+- B) Honeycomb structure
+- C) Monocoque construction
+- D) Semi-monocoque construction.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A grid (or truss/lattice) construction uses a framework of tubes or members to carry all structural loads, with the skin serving only as a fairing — it does not contribute to structural strength. Monocoque construction (C) has the skin carrying all loads with no internal framework. Semi-monocoque (D) uses both a frame and a load-bearing skin. Honeycomb (B) is a core material used in sandwich structures, not a fuselage type.
+
+### Q4: Primary fuselage structures of wood or metal planes are usually made up by what components? ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q4)*
+- A) Covers, stringers and forming parts
+- B) Frames and stringer
+- C) Girders, rips and stringers
+- D) Rips, frames and covers
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary longitudinal and transverse structural members of a traditional fuselage are frames (also called formers or bulkheads — running circumferentially) and stringers (running lengthwise). Together they form the skeleton over which the skin is attached. Covers and ribs are wing components, and "girders" is not standard fuselage terminology. The simplicity of frames + stringers makes B the correct fundamental answer.
+
+### Q5: A construction made of frames and stringer with a supporting skin is called... ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q5)*
+- A) Honeycomb structure
+- B) Wood- or mixed construction.
+- C) Semi-monocoque construction.
+- D) Grid construction.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Semi-monocoque construction uses both an internal framework (frames and stringers) AND a skin that actively bears structural loads (tension, compression, shear). This is the most common modern aircraft fuselage design. Pure monocoque relies entirely on the skin with no internal structure. Grid construction (D) has a non-load-bearing skin. Honeycomb (A) is a material/sandwich type, not a fuselage structural concept.
+
+### Q6: What are the major components of an aircraft's tail? ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q6)*
+- A) Rudder and ailerons
+- B) Steering wheel and pedals
+- C) Horizontal tail and vertical tail
+- D) Ailerons and elevator
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tail assembly (empennage) consists of the horizontal stabilizer (with elevator) and the vertical stabilizer (with rudder). These are the two major structural groups. Ailerons (A, D) are located on the wings, not the tail. Steering wheel and pedals (B) are cockpit controls, not aircraft structure. The empennage provides pitch and yaw stability and control.
+
+### Q7: The sandwich structure consists of two... ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q7)*
+- A) Thick layers and a light core material.
+- B) Thick layers and a heavy core material.
+- C) Thin layers and a light core material.
+- D) Thin layers and a heavy core material
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sandwich structure uses two thin, stiff face sheets (typically CFRP, glass fiber, or aluminum) bonded to a lightweight core material (foam, balsa wood, or honeycomb). The thin skins carry bending loads while the light core resists shear and keeps the skins separated, providing exceptional stiffness-to-weight ratio. A heavy core (B, D) would defeat the purpose of weight efficiency. Thick layers (A, B) would add unnecessary mass.
+
+### Q8: Which constructional elements give the wing its profile shape? ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q8)*
+- A) Rips
+- B) Planking
+- C) Tip
+- D) Spar
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ribs (rips) are the chordwise structural members that define the airfoil cross-section shape of the wing. They run perpendicular to the spar and give the wing its characteristic profile. The spar (D) is the main spanwise load-bearing beam. Planking/skin (B) covers the structure but follows the shape set by the ribs. The wingtip (C) is the outer end of the wing, not a profile-shaping element.
+
+### Q9: The load factor "n" describes the relationship between... ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q9)*
+- A) Weight and thrust.
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Lift and weight
+- D) Thrust and drag.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor n = Lift / Weight. At straight and level flight, n = 1 (1g). In a banked turn or pull-up maneuver, lift must exceed weight to maintain altitude, increasing n above 1. For example, in a 60° bank, n = 2 (2g). Load factor is critical for structural design — gliders have maximum positive and negative g-limits that must not be exceeded to prevent structural failure.
+
+### Q10: Which are the advantages of sandwich structures? ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q10)*
+- A) Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength
+- B) High temperature durability and low weight
+- C) High strength and good formability
+- D) Good formability and high temperature durability
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Sandwich structures excel at combining low weight with high stiffness, stability, and strength — the ideal combination for aerospace applications. By spacing two stiff face sheets apart with a lightweight core, the structure achieves very high bending stiffness (proportional to the cube of thickness). Temperature durability (B, D) is not a primary advantage — most cores (foam, honeycomb) are temperature-sensitive. Good formability (C, D) is limited compared to single-material sheets.
+
+### Q11: Which of the stated materials shows the highest strength? ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q11)*
+- A) Magnesium
+- B) Carbon fiber re-inforced plastic
+- C) Aluminium
+- D) Wood
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) has an exceptional strength-to-weight ratio — higher tensile strength than steel at a fraction of the weight. This is why modern high-performance gliders are predominantly CFRP construction. Aluminum (C) is strong and lightweight but significantly weaker than CFRP. Magnesium (A) is even lighter than aluminum but lower in strength. Wood (D) has good specific strength but is the weakest in absolute terms of those listed.
+
+### Q12: A glider's trim lever is used to... ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q12)*
+- A) Reduce stick force on the elevator.
+- B) Reduce stick force on the ailerons.
+- C) Reduce stick force on the rudder.
+- D) Reduce the adverse yaw.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trim system adjusts the elevator trim tab (or spring trim) to hold a desired pitch attitude without continuous pilot input force on the stick. This reduces pilot workload on long final glides or thermalling. Ailerons (B) and rudder (C) are not trimmed by the standard glider trim lever. Adverse yaw (D) is a roll/yaw coupling phenomenon addressed by rudder coordination, not trim.
+
+### Q13: The fuselage structure may be damaged by... ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q13)*
+- A) Airspeed decreasing below a certain value.
+- B) Neutralizing stick forces according to actual flight state
+- C) Exceeding the manoeuvering speed in heavy gusts
+- D) Stall after exceeding the maximum angle of attack.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding maneuvering speed (VA) in turbulent/gusty conditions can cause structural damage because gusts apply sudden load factors that may exceed the aircraft's design limit load. VA is defined as the speed at which a full control deflection or a maximum gust will not exceed the structural limit. Stall (D) itself does not damage the structure. Low airspeed (A) and neutralizing stick forces (B) do not create damaging structural loads.
+
+### Q14: About how many axes does an aircraft move and how are these axes called? ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q14)*
+- A) 3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis
+- B) 4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed
+- C) 3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis
+- D) 4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft moves about three principal axes: the longitudinal axis (nose to tail — roll), the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip — pitch), and the vertical axis (top to bottom — yaw). All three pass through the aircraft's center of gravity. Option C uses mathematical labels but omits their aviation names. Options B and D invent a non-existent fourth axis.
+
+### Q15: A movement around the longitudinal axis is primarily initiated by the... ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q15)*
+- A) Elevator.
+- B) Ailerons.
+- C) Trim tab.
+- D) Rudder
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ailerons control roll — rotation around the longitudinal axis (the axis running nose to tail). When one aileron deflects up and the other down, differential lift is created, rolling the aircraft. The elevator (A) controls pitch (rotation around the lateral axis). The rudder (D) controls yaw (rotation around the vertical axis). The trim tab (C) is a secondary control that modifies control forces, not a primary roll initiator.
+
+### Q16: How are the flight controls on a small single-engine piston aircraft normally controlled and actuated? ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q16)*
+- A) Manually through rods and control cables
+- B) Hydraulically through hydraulic pumps and actuators
+- C) Electrically through fly-by-wire
+- D) Power-assisted through hydraulic pumps or electric motors
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Small piston aircraft and gliders use direct mechanical linkages — push-pull rods and/or steel control cables — to transmit pilot input directly to the control surfaces. This is simple, lightweight, and reliable with no power source required. Hydraulic systems (B, D) are used on larger aircraft. Fly-by-wire (C) is used on modern airliners and military aircraft where electrical signals replace mechanical connections.
+
+### Q17: What are the primary and the secondary effects of a rudder input to the left? ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q17)*
+- A) Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the left
+- B) Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the left
+- C) Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the right
+- D) Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the right
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary effect of left rudder is yaw to the left — the nose swings left around the vertical axis. The secondary effect is a roll to the left: as the nose yaws left, the right wing moves forward and generates more lift, while the left wing slows and generates less, causing the aircraft to bank left. This coupling between yaw and roll is an important aerodynamic relationship for coordinating turns in gliders.
+
+### Q18: What is the effect of pulling the control yoke or stick backwards? ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q18)*
+- A) The aircraft's tail will produce an decreased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop
+- B) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise
+- C) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop
+- D) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pulling back on the stick deflects the elevator upward. This increases the downward aerodynamic force on the tail (the horizontal stabilizer + elevator generate a downward lift force). With the tail pushed down, the nose pivots up around the lateral axis. This seems counterintuitive but is correct: the tail goes down, nose goes up. Option B incorrectly states the tail force direction as upward.
+
+### Q19: Which of the following options states all primary flight controls of an aircraft? ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q19)*
+- A) Flaps, slats, speedbrakes
+- B) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift wing devices, power controls
+- C) Elevator, rudder, aileron
+- D) All movable parts on the aircraft which aid in controlling the aircraft
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The three primary flight controls are elevator (pitch), rudder (yaw), and aileron (roll) — these directly control the aircraft's rotation about its three axes and are essential for flight. Option A lists secondary/high-lift devices. Option B mixes primary and secondary controls together. Option D is too broad — not all movable parts are primary controls. Flaps, trim tabs, and speedbrakes are secondary controls.
+
+### Q20: What is the purpose of the secondary flight controls? ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q20)*
+- A) To improve the performance characteristics of an aircraft and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces
+- B) To improve the turn characteristics of an aircraft in the low speed regime during approach and landing
+- C) To enable the pilot to control the aircraft's movements about its three axes
+- D) To constitute a backup system for the primary flight controls
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Secondary flight controls (trim tabs, flaps, speedbrakes, slats) serve to optimize performance and reduce pilot workload — they are not essential for basic flight control. Trim reduces stick forces for hands-off flight; flaps improve low-speed lift. Option C describes primary controls. Option D is wrong — secondary controls are not backups for primary controls. Option B is too narrow, applying only part of the secondary control function.
+
+### Q21: The trim wheel or lever in the cockpit is moved aft by the pilot. What effect does this action have on the trim tab and on the elevator? ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q21)*
+- A) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down
+- B) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up
+- C) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up
+- D) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the trim lever aft (back) commands a nose-up trim. The trim tab deflects downward — the aerodynamic force on the tab then pushes the elevator upward (floating up). The elevated elevator deflects the tail downward and raises the nose. Trim tabs always move opposite to the elevator: when the trim tab goes down, the elevator goes up, and vice versa (anti-servo tab principle).
+
+### Q22: When trimming an aircraft nose up, in which direction does the trim tab move? ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q22)*
+- A) It moves down
+- B) In direction of rudder deflection
+- C) It moves up
+- D) Depends on CG position
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To trim nose up, the elevator must be held in an upward position. The trim tab moves down to achieve this: the downward tab creates an aerodynamic force that pushes the elevator up and holds it there without pilot input. This is the fundamental inverse relationship between trim tab and elevator deflection. CG position (D) affects trim authority but not the direction of tab movement. Rudder (B) is irrelevant to elevator trim.
+
+### Q23: The trim is used to... ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q23)*
+- A) Adapt the control force.
+- B) Increase adverse yaw.
+- C) Move the centre of gravity
+- D) Lock control elements.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Trim is used to neutralize control forces so the pilot does not need to continuously push or pull the stick to maintain a desired flight attitude. By adjusting the trim, the pilot can fly hands-off at a set speed and attitude. Trim cannot move the center of gravity (C) — that requires shifting mass. Trim does not lock controls (D) or increase adverse yaw (B), which is a side-effect of aileron use.
+
+### Q24: The Pitot / static system is required to... ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q24)*
+- A) Prevent potential static buildup on the aircraft.
+- B) Measure total and static air pressure.
+- C) Prevent icing of the Pitot tube.
+- D) Correct the reading of the airspeed indicator to zero when the aircraft is static on the ground.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot-static system measures two types of air pressure: total pressure (measured by the Pitot tube, which captures both static and dynamic pressure) and static pressure (measured by the static port, sensing ambient atmospheric pressure). These pressures are fed to the ASI, altimeter, and VSI. Preventing static buildup (A) or icing (C) are operational concerns, not the system's purpose. The ASI reading at rest on the ground is a consequence of zero dynamic pressure, not a calibration function.
+
+### Q25: Which pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube? ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q25)*
+- A) Dynamic air pressure
+- B) Cabin air pressure
+- C) Total air pressure
+- D) Static air pressure
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot tube faces into the airflow and measures total pressure (also called stagnation pressure), which is the sum of static pressure and dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²). It does not measure dynamic pressure alone (A) — that is derived by subtracting static pressure from total pressure in the ASI. Static pressure (D) is measured by the separate static port. Cabin pressure (B) is unrelated to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q26: QFE is the... ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q26)*
+- A) Altitude above the reference pressure level 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) Magnetic bearing to a station.
+- C) Barometric pressure adjusted to sea level, using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).
+- D) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual barometric pressure measured at a specific reference point, typically the airfield or runway threshold elevation. When QFE is set in the altimeter subscale, the altimeter reads zero on the runway — showing height above the airfield. QNH (not QFE) is the pressure adjusted to mean sea level (C). Flight levels use 1013.25 hPa (A). A magnetic bearing to a station (B) is QDM/QDR terminology, unrelated to altimetry.
+
+### Q27: Which is the purpose of the altimeter subscale? ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q27)*
+- A) To correct the altimeter reading for system errors
+- B) To reference the altimeter reading to a predetermined level such as mean sea level, aerodrome level or pressure level 1013.25 hPa
+- C) To set the reference level for the altitude decoder of the transponder
+- D) To adjust the altimeter reading for non-standard temperature
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale (Kollsman window) allows the pilot to set a reference pressure (QNH, QFE, or 1013.25 hPa) so the altimeter reads altitude relative to that reference datum — sea level, airfield elevation, or the standard pressure surface for flight levels respectively. It does not correct for system errors (A), temperature errors (D — that requires a temperature correction calculation), or directly set the transponder (C).
+
+### Q28: In which way may an altimeter subscale which is set to an incorrect QNH lead to an incorrect altimeter reading? ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q28)*
+- A) If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+- B) If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+- C) If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much greater heights above the ground than intended
+- D) If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If you set a higher pressure than the actual QNH, the altimeter "thinks" the reference pressure is higher, so it reads a higher altitude than your actual altitude — you are closer to the ground than the instrument shows. This is the dangerous scenario: you believe you have terrain clearance but you may not. The memory aid is "High to Low, look out below" — setting too high a pressure gives an over-reading.
+
+### Q29: Lower-than-standard temperature may lead to... ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q29)*
+- A) An altitude indication which is too high.
+- B) An altitude indication which is too low.
+- C) A correct altitude indication as long as the altimeter subscale is set to correct for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A blockage of the Pitot tube by ice, freezing the altimeter indication to its present value.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter assumes ISA standard temperature to convert pressure differences to altitude. In colder-than-standard air, the air is denser and the pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude than ISA predicts. The altimeter over-reads — it indicates a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual altitude. The aircraft is closer to the ground than shown. The memory aid: "Cold air, you're lower than you think." The altimeter subscale (C) only sets pressure datum, not temperature correction.
+
+### Q30: A flight level is a... ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q30)*
+- A) True altitude.
+- B) Altitude above ground.
+- C) Density altitude.
+- D) Pressure altitude.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight level (FL) is a pressure altitude expressed in hundreds of feet with the altimeter subscale set to 1013.25 hPa (standard pressure). FL100 = 10,000 ft on the standard pressure setting. All aircraft above the transition altitude use this common datum, ensuring separation between aircraft regardless of local QNH variations. True altitude (A) is the actual height above MSL. Altitude above ground (B) is height AGL. Density altitude (C) relates to performance calculations.
+
+### Q31: A true altitude is... ^q31
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q31)*
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- B) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.
+- C) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is the actual geometric height of the aircraft above mean sea level (MSL), corrected for non-standard temperature deviations from ISA. It differs from indicated altitude (which assumes ISA) and pressure altitude (referenced to 1013.25 hPa). It is referenced to MSL, not AGL (eliminating A and B). Option D is partially correct but incomplete — true altitude is the real MSL height, not just a pressure altitude with a temperature correction applied.
+
+### Q32: During a flight in colder-than-ISA air the indicated altitude is... ^q32
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q32)*
+- A) Higher than the true altitude
+- B) Eqal to the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the standard altitude.
+- D) Lower than the true altitude
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cold air, the atmosphere is compressed — air is denser and pressure falls faster with altitude than the ISA model assumes. The altimeter (which uses ISA pressure gradient) therefore over-reads: it shows a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual (true) altitude. The aircraft is lower in reality than the altimeter indicates. This is a significant safety concern near terrain. "High to low (pressure or temperature) — look out below."
+
+### Q33: During a flight in an air mass with a temperature equal to ISA and the QNH set correctly, the indicated altitude is... ^q33
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q33)*
+- A) Lower than the true altitude.
+- B) Equal to the standard atmosphere.
+- C) Higher than the true altitude.
+- D) Equal to the true altitude.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When both the actual pressure (set correctly via QNH) and actual temperature exactly match ISA standard conditions, the altimeter's assumptions are perfectly valid. No temperature or pressure correction is needed, so the indicated altitude equals the true altitude (actual height above MSL). This is the ideal baseline condition. Any deviation in pressure or temperature from ISA will introduce errors.
+
+### Q34: Which instrument can be affected by the hysteresis error? ^q34
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q34)*
+- A) Direct reading compass
+- B) Tachometer
+- C) Vertical speed indicator
+- D) Altimeter
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hysteresis error in the altimeter occurs because the aneroid capsules (bellows) that expand and contract with pressure changes have a mechanical lag — they do not return to exactly the same position when pressure is restored to a previous value. This means the altimeter may give slightly different readings at the same altitude when climbing versus descending. The compass, tachometer, and VSI do not use elastic aneroid capsules in the same manner and are not subject to this specific error.
+
+### Q35: The measurement of altitude is based on the change of the... ^q35
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q35)*
+- A) Static pressure.
+- B) Dynamic pressure.
+- C) Total pressure.
+- D) Differential pressure.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure decreases with increasing altitude in a predictable manner (in the ISA model). The altimeter measures static pressure from the static port and converts this pressure to an altitude reading using calibrated aneroid capsules. Dynamic pressure (B) depends on airspeed and is used by the ASI. Total pressure (C) is static + dynamic, used by the Pitot tube. Differential pressure (D) is the difference between total and static — that is what drives the ASI, not the altimeter.
+
+### Q36: Which of the following options states the working principle of a vertical speed indicator? ^q36
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q36)*
+- A) Measuring the present static air pressure and comparing it to the static air pressure inside a reservoir
+- B) Measuring the vertical acceleration through the displacement of a gimbal-mounted mass
+- C) Total air pressure is measured and compared to static pressure
+- D) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical speed indicator (VSI) works by comparing the current static pressure (from the static port) against a reference pressure stored in a sealed reservoir (or capsule with a calibrated leak). When climbing, static pressure drops faster than the reservoir bleeds down, creating a pressure difference that indicates a climb rate. The calibrated leak rate determines the instrument's response. Option B describes an accelerometer. Option C describes the ASI. Option D describes a simple pressure gauge, not a rate instrument.
+
+### Q37: The vertical speed indicator measures the difference of pressure between... ^q37
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q37)*
+- A) The present dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure of a previous moment.
+- B) The present total pressure and the total pressure of a previous moment.
+- C) The present dynamic pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment
+- D) The present static pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI compares the current ambient static pressure (which changes as altitude changes) with the static pressure from a short time ago (stored in the metering reservoir through a calibrated restriction). The rate at which static pressure changes indicates the rate of climb or descent. Dynamic pressure (A, C) plays no role in the VSI. Total pressure (B) is measured by the Pitot tube for the ASI, not used in the VSI.
+
+### Q38: An aircraft cruises on a heading of 180° with a true airspeed of 100 kt. The wind comes from 180° with 30 kt. Neglecting instrument and position errors, which will be the approximate reading of the airspeed indicator? ^q38
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q38)*
+- A) 130 kt
+- B) 100 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 70 kt
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures Indicated Air Speed (IAS), which reflects the airspeed relative to the surrounding air mass — not relative to the ground. The aircraft is flying at 100 kt through the air. The wind (also moving at 30 kt from 180°, meaning a tailwind) affects the aircraft's ground speed (which would be 70 kt, option D), but it does not affect the relative airspeed between aircraft and surrounding air. The ASI always reads the aircraft's speed through the air mass, regardless of wind.
+
+### Q39: Which of the following states the working principle of an airspeed indicator? ^q39
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q39)*
+- A) Dynamic air pressure is measured by the Pitot tube and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator
+- B) Total air pressure is measured by the static ports and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator
+- C) Total air pressure is measured and compared against static air pressure
+- D) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI works by comparing total pressure (from the Pitot tube) against static pressure (from the static port). The difference between them is dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), which is proportional to airspeed squared. The ASI capsule expands proportionally to this pressure difference and drives the needle. Option A is incorrect because the Pitot tube measures total pressure, not dynamic pressure alone. Option B is wrong because static ports measure static (not total) pressure. Option D describes a barometer, not an ASI.
+
+### Q40: What values are usually marked with a red line on instrument displays? ^q40
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q40)*
+- A) Operational limits
+- B) Caution areas
+- C) Operational areas
+- D) Recommended areas
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red lines (radial marks) on aircraft instrument displays indicate never-exceed limits — the absolute operational limits that must not be exceeded. On the ASI, the red line marks VNE (never-exceed speed). Yellow arcs indicate caution areas (B) — the range between maneuvering speed and VNE where flight is only permitted in smooth air. Green arcs show normal operating range (C). White arcs typically indicate flap operating speeds. There is no standard "recommended areas" marking (D).
+
+### Q41: What is necessary for the determination of speed (IAS) by the airspeed indicator? ^q41
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q41)*
+- A) The difference between the total pressure and the dynamic pressure
+- B) The difference between the dynamic pressure and the static pressure
+- C) The difference between the standard pressure and the total pressure
+- D) The difference betweeen the total pressure and the static presssure
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is determined from the difference between total pressure (Pitot tube) and static pressure (static port). This difference equals dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), from which airspeed is derived. Option A (total minus dynamic) would equal static pressure — not useful for airspeed. Option B (dynamic minus static) is not a meaningful aerodynamic quantity in this context. Option C (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for airspeed measurement.
+
+### Q42: What is the meaning of the red range on the airspeed indicator? ^q42
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q42)*
+- A) Speed which must not be exceeded regardless of circumstances
+- B) Speed which must not be exceeded within bumpy air
+- C) Speed which must not be exceeded with flaps extended
+- D) Speed which must not be exceeded in turns with more than 45° bank
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red line on the ASI marks VNE — the never-exceed speed — which is an absolute structural limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, including smooth air. Exceeding VNE risks flutter, structural failure, or loss of control. Option B describes the yellow arc (caution range), where flight is only permitted in smooth air. Option C describes VFE (flap extension speed). Option D describes no standard speed marking — maneuvering speed (VA) relates to gust/maneuver loads but is not marked by color range on the ASI.
+
+### Q43: The compass error caused by the aircraft's magnetic field is called... ^q43
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q43)*
+- A) Inclination
+- B) Variation.
+- C) Deviation
+- D) Declination.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the compass error caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields (from metal structures, electrical equipment, engines). It is measured in degrees and varies with aircraft heading — it is recorded on a deviation card in the cockpit. Variation (B, also called declination D) is the angle between true north and magnetic north — an earth-based error, not caused by the aircraft. Inclination (A) is the vertical dip of the earth's magnetic field, which causes turning and acceleration errors.
+
+### Q44: The indication of a magnetic compass deviates from magnetic north direction due to what errors? ^q44
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q44)*
+- A) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field
+- B) Gravity and magnetism
+- C) Deviation, turning and acceleration errors
+- D) Variation, turning and acceleration errors
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is affected by deviation (from the aircraft's own magnetic field), turning errors (caused by magnetic dip/inclination — the compass card tilts and reads incorrectly during turns in the northern hemisphere), and acceleration errors (the compass reads incorrectly during speed changes on east/west headings). Variation/declination (A, D) is a geographic difference between true and magnetic north that applies to all magnetic compasses equally and is not an "error" in the same sense — it is a known, chartable quantity.
+
+### Q45: Which of the mentioned cockpit instruments is connected to the pitot tube? ^q45
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q45)*
+- A) Direct-reading compass
+- B) Altimeter
+- C) Vertical speed indicator
+- D) Airspeed indicator
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument connected to the Pitot tube (which supplies total pressure). The altimeter (B) and vertical speed indicator (C) are connected only to the static port — they measure changes in static pressure for altitude and climb/descent rate. The direct-reading compass (A) is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q46: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 270° to a heading of 360°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated? ^q46
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q46)*
+- A) 270°
+- B) 030°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 330°
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 270° to 360° is a right turn (northward, through west-to-north). In the northern hemisphere, the compass leads during turns toward north — it reads ahead of the actual heading. Therefore the pilot must stop the turn early, before the compass reaches 360°. A rule of thumb: stop 30° before the target heading when turning to north. 360° − 30° = 330°. If you wait until the compass shows 360°, you will have overshot and be past 360° (i.e., on approximately 030°).
+
+### Q47: Which cockpit instruments are connected to the static port? ^q47
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q47)*
+- A) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, slip indicator
+- B) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, direct-reading compass
+- C) Altimeter, slip indicator, navigational computer
+- D) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, airspeed indicator
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The static port supplies static pressure to three instruments: the altimeter (measures static pressure to indicate altitude), the vertical speed indicator (compares current static pressure to a stored reference), and the airspeed indicator (uses static pressure in combination with Pitot total pressure). The direct-reading compass (A, B) is a self-contained magnetic instrument requiring no pneumatic input. The slip indicator (A, C) is a gravity/inertial instrument, not connected to the static system.
+
+### Q48: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 360° to a heading of 270°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated? ^q48
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q48)*
+- A) 360°
+- B) 270°
+- C) 240°
+- D) 300°
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 360° to 270° is a left turn (turning from north through west). In the northern hemisphere, the compass lags during turns away from north (toward south) and leads during turns toward north. When turning away from north (southward turn), the compass lags — it under-reads the turn. However, when turning through west (270°), the turning error is minimal. For turns to southerly headings the pilot must overshoot, but for 270° (west), the compass reading is approximately accurate at the completion point. The answer is to stop at 270° as indicated.
+
+### Q49: The term "static pressure" is defined as pressure... ^q49
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q49)*
+- A) Inside the airplane cabin.
+- B) Of undisturbed airflow
+- C) Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.
+- D) Sensed by the pitot tube.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air — the pressure exerted by the air molecules in all directions, independent of airflow velocity. It is measured by flush static ports on the aircraft's fuselage, positioned to minimize dynamic pressure effects. Cabin pressure (A) is a separate, regulated pressure. The Pitot tube (D) senses total pressure, not static pressure. Option C partially describes static pressure but is imprecise — it is the pressure of the air at rest or in undisturbed flow.
+
+### Q50: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 030° to a heading of 180°. At approximately which indicated magnetic heading should the turn be terminated? ^q50
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^q50)*
+- A) 150°
+- B) 180°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 210°.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 030° to 180° is a right turn (clockwise through east and south). When turning toward southerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the compass lags — it under-reads the actual heading, showing a smaller heading than the aircraft has actually turned to. Therefore, the pilot must overshoot past the target — continue turning until the compass reads approximately 180° + 30° = 210°. The compass will then be lagging, showing 210° when the aircraft is actually on approximately 180°. This is the northern hemisphere rule: undershoot when turning to north, overshoot when turning to south.
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q18: Which control lever is painted red in a glider? ^bazl_20_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_18)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Landing gear lever.
+- B) Ventilation control.
+- C) Emergency canopy release.
+- D) Wheel brake.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In gliders, the EASA color coding convention assigns red to the emergency canopy release lever. This warning color is reserved for critical safety controls that allow rapid egress from the aircraft. The landing gear uses green, the ventilation control has no standardized color, and the wheel brake is not coded red.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q1: During winter maintenance, you notice that the fuselage contains honeycomb elements. To which construction category does the glider belong? ^bazl_20_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_1)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Biplane.
+- B) Wood combined with other materials.
+- C) Composite.
+- D) Metal.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Honeycomb elements are characteristic of modern composite construction. The honeycomb structure serves as a lightweight core in composite sandwich panels, typically with glass fiber or carbon fiber skins. This type of construction provides an excellent strength-to-weight ratio, typical of today's high-performance gliders. Wood, metal or biplane configurations do not use this core material.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q3: The horizontal stabilizer of the Discus B is mounted at the top of the fin. What type of tail unit is this? ^bazl_20_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_3)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Cruciform tail.
+- B) T-tail.
+- C) V-tail.
+- D) Pendulum cruciform tail.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the horizontal stabilizer (stabilizer and elevator) is mounted at the top of the vertical fin, the configuration forms a "T" when viewed from the front — hence the name T-tail. This is a common configuration on modern gliders such as the Discus B, as it places the horizontal stabilizer in undisturbed air above the wing wake. A cruciform tail places the stabilizer at mid-height; a V-tail combines both surfaces into two angled surfaces.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q11: What is the purpose of the fixed vertical fin and fixed horizontal stabilizer of a glider's tail unit? ^bazl_20_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_11)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) To trim the control forces for the desired flight condition.
+- B) To trim the glider.
+- C) To stabilize the glider.
+- D) To steer the glider.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The fixed horizontal and vertical stabilizers of the tail unit have the primary purpose of stabilizing the glider — they provide static stability in pitch and yaw, automatically restoring the aircraft to its equilibrium attitude after a disturbance. Steering (D) is accomplished by the movable control surfaces (elevator and rudder). Trimming the control forces (A, B) is the role of the trim tab, not the fixed stabilizers.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q8: During winter maintenance, the equipment officer explains the mechanism of the tow hook located at the center of gravity. Why must it be able to release the cable automatically? ^bazl_20_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_8)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) To relieve the pilot of having to release the cable in the event of a winch launch.
+- B) It is a safety measure. The hook must automatically release the cable when the glider is about to fly over the winch.
+- C) To prevent danger in the event that the glider flies too high during aero-tow.
+- D) To prevent danger in the event that, during a winch launch, the pilot flies too long close to the ground during the takeoff phase.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The center-of-gravity tow hook must automatically release the cable when the glider approaches the winch and risks flying over it. If the cable remains attached when the glider is nearly above the winch, the direction of pull changes abruptly and can cause a dangerous sudden pitch-up. The automatic release is therefore a critical safety measure to prevent this accident. The pilot nonetheless remains responsible for the voluntary release during other phases.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q5: The action of the ailerons produces a movement around... ^bazl_20_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_5)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The lateral axis.
+- B) The longitudinal axis.
+- C) The vertical axis.
+- D) The yaw axis.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ailerons produce roll, which is a rotation around the longitudinal axis (the axis running from the nose to the tail of the aircraft). A deflected aileron increases lift on one side while the other rises and reduces lift on the other side, creating a rolling moment. The lateral axis (A) corresponds to pitch (elevator). The vertical axis (C) and yaw axis (D) denote the same axis, controlled by the rudder.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q2: When the control stick is pushed to the left... ^bazl_20_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_2)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The left aileron deflects down and the right aileron moves up.
+- B) The left aileron moves up and the right aileron deflects down.
+- C) Both ailerons deflect down.
+- D) Both ailerons move up.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the stick is moved to the left, the left aileron deflects down (increasing lift on the left wing) and the right aileron moves up (reducing lift on the right wing). This produces a roll to the right — the left wing rises, the right wing descends. Note: the direction of the stick indicates the desired direction of roll (toward which wing one wants to rise), not the direction in which the aileron on the same side moves.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q13: Mechanical brake systems transmit the force from the brake pedals/handles to the brake shoes... ^bazl_20_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_13)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Via hydraulic transmission.
+- B) Via pneumatic transmission.
+- C) Via cables and pushrods.
+- D) Via electric motors.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mechanical brake systems in gliders transmit braking force via a system of cables and pushrods (linkages) — without hydraulic fluid or electricity. This system is simple, lightweight and reliable. Hydraulic brakes (A) are used on heavier aircraft requiring greater braking force. Pneumatic (B) and electric (D) systems are not used in standard mechanical brake systems in gliders.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q4: The AFM states that the glider has balanced control surfaces. What reason led the manufacturer to design the aircraft this way? ^bazl_20_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_4)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Better turning characteristics.
+- B) Harmonious coordination of the controls.
+- C) This method eliminates flutter.
+- D) Reduction of the force required to operate the controls.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Balanced control surfaces (mass-balanced) are designed primarily to eliminate the risk of flutter — a potentially catastrophic aeroelastic oscillatory phenomenon that can occur at high speeds. By placing balance weights forward of the hinge axis, the manufacturer moves the center of gravity of the control surface to its pivot axis, eliminating the coupling between aerodynamic forces and structural oscillations. Reduction of control forces (D) is a secondary objective, not the primary reason for balancing.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q16: Why are there small holes on the side of the fuselage to which internal flexible tubes are connected? ^bazl_20_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_16)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) To equalize the pressure between the inside and outside of the fuselage.
+- B) They serve as static pressure ports for the instruments.
+- C) They prevent the humidity inside the glider from becoming too high when outside temperatures are low.
+- D) They are used to measure outside air temperature.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The small flush-mounted orifices on the fuselage are the static pressure ports of the Pitot-static system. They sense the ambient atmospheric pressure (static pressure) and route it via internal flexible tubes to the altimeter, variometer and airspeed indicator. Their position on the fuselage is chosen to minimize local aerodynamic disturbances. They do not serve for ventilation (A, C) or temperature measurement (D).
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q20: Which instrument is connected to the Pitot tube? ^bazl_20_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_20)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Altimeter.
+- B) Airspeed indicator.
+- C) Variometer.
+- D) Turn indicator.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Only the airspeed indicator is connected to the Pitot tube, which supplies it with total pressure. The altimeter (A) and variometer (C) are connected only to the static pressure port. The turn indicator (D) is a gyroscopic instrument powered pneumatically or electrically, with no connection to the Pitot. The difference between total pressure (Pitot) and static pressure gives the dynamic pressure, from which the indicated airspeed is derived.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q10: How does the altimeter reading of an aircraft change when the altimeter is set to a higher pressure, without any change in actual pressure? ^bazl_20_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_10)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) It decreases.
+- B) It increases.
+- C) It does not change.
+- D) It is not possible to give a precise answer without knowing the outside air temperature.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the altimeter is set to a higher reference pressure (without any change in actual pressure), the altimeter indicates a higher altitude — the reading increases. The mechanism: by increasing the reference pressure, the instrument "believes" it is at a lower altitude, so it adjusts its reading upward to match the actual pressure. This is a fundamental principle: setting a higher pressure = higher altitude reading.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q7: What does the variometer indicate during a descending flight when the static pressure port is blocked by ice? ^bazl_20_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_7)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) That you are climbing.
+- B) Zero.
+- C) That you are descending.
+- D) Nothing at all (only a warning flag appears).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the static pressure port is blocked by ice, the static pressure transmitted to the variometer remains constant — the internal reservoir and the measuring chamber are both at the same frozen pressure. The variometer no longer detects any pressure variation and therefore reads zero, regardless of the aircraft's actual trajectory (climb or descent). Unlike the altimeter which freezes at its last value, the variometer reads zero because the pressure difference between its two sides is nil.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q6: A red line is marked on the airspeed indicator at VNE. Is it permitted to exceed this mark? ^bazl_20_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_6)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Yes, by a maximum of 10%.
+- B) Yes, by a maximum of 20%.
+- C) No, under no circumstances.
+- D) Yes, brief exceedances are permitted.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE (Velocity Never Exceed) is an absolute limit that must never be exceeded, under any circumstances and by any percentage whatsoever. Beyond this speed, the risks of aeroelastic flutter, structural failure or loss of control are real and immediate. Unlike other operational limits that allow temporary tolerances, VNE is categorically inviolable.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q15: When you switch on the radio in a glider, the magnetic compass always rotates in the same direction. What is the reason? ^bazl_20_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_15)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The compass is faulty.
+- B) The magnetic field produced by the radio disturbs the compass. The two instruments are installed too close to each other.
+- C) The compass is low on fluid.
+- D) The compass is powered electrically when the radio is switched on.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The radio produces a magnetic field when operating. If the compass and the radio are installed too close to each other, this stray magnetic field disturbs the compass and causes it to deviate systematically in the same direction. This is why regulations impose minimum separation distances between the magnetic compass and any electrical equipment on board. This phenomenon is a form of electromagnetic deviation.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q9: What does FLARM indicate? ^bazl_20_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_9)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft with which there is a collision risk.
+- B) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft flying at the same altitude.
+- C) Only FLARM-equipped aircraft crossing the flight path.
+- D) FLARM-equipped aircraft in the vicinity as well as fixed obstacles.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM (Flight Alarm) is an anti-collision system that alerts to two categories of threats: FLARM-equipped aircraft in the vicinity (not just those on an imminent collision course or at the same altitude), AND fixed obstacles such as high-voltage power lines or cable car wires programmed in its database. It is this dual functionality — traffic AND obstacles — that distinguishes FLARM from simple traffic detection systems.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q12: Your glider is equipped with an emergency locator transmitter (ELT). A toggle switch allows you to select ON, OFF or ARM mode. Which mode must be selected so that the distress signal is transmitted automatically in the event of a violent impact? ^bazl_20_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_12)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) ON.
+- B) ARM.
+- C) OFF.
+- D) For safety reasons, the automatic activation of the ELT is independent of the mode selected.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARM mode activates the automatic triggering of the ELT via its internal impact sensor — in the event of a violent impact (crash), the G-sensor automatically triggers the distress signal transmission. ON mode activates continuous transmission (for testing or an emergency without impact), while OFF completely deactivates the ELT. During normal flight, the ELT must be in ARM mode to ensure automatic activation in the event of an accident.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q14: What is the unit of measurement for electric current? ^bazl_20_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_14)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Ampere.
+- B) Ohm.
+- C) Watt.
+- D) Volt.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electric current is measured in Amperes (A), named after physicist André-Marie Ampère. The Ohm (B) is the unit of electrical resistance. The Watt (C) is the unit of electrical power (P = U × I). The Volt (D) is the unit of voltage (potential difference). These four quantities are related by Ohm's law and Joule's law, fundamental to understanding the electrical systems of an aircraft.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q17: During a pre-flight check, you find that the electrical instruments are not working. The battery fuse is defective. You consider remedying this failure by using the foil wrapper from a chocolate bar (thin aluminum foil). Is this permitted? ^bazl_20_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_17)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Yes, if it allows the instruments to function again.
+- B) No, an unrated fuse substitute can cause the wiring to catch fire or damage the instruments.
+- C) Yes, but only in an emergency.
+- D) Yes, but only if a short local flight near the aerodrome is planned.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Replacing a fuse with an improvised piece of aluminum foil is strictly prohibited and dangerous. A fuse is a protection device rated to melt at a precise current level, thereby protecting the wiring and instruments against overcurrent. A piece of chocolate bar foil has no defined rating and will not melt in time during a short circuit, allowing excessive current to flow, which can cause an electrical fire or destroy the instruments. The fault must be repaired with the appropriate fuse before flight.
+
+### BAZL Br.20 Q19: What is the main disadvantage of the VHF frequency band used for radio communications? ^bazl_20_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_20_19)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) VHF waves are deflected at dawn and dusk due to the twilight effect.
+- B) VHF waves can be disturbed near large bodies of water (coastal effect).
+- C) VHF reception is only possible within theoretical line of sight (quasi-optical propagation).
+- D) VHF waves are very susceptible to atmospheric disturbances (e.g., thunderstorms).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The main disadvantage of VHF communications in aviation is their quasi-optical propagation: VHF waves travel in straight lines and do not follow the curvature of the Earth. Range is therefore limited to the theoretical line of sight (radio line of sight), depending on the altitude of both stations. Atmospheric disturbances (D) are mainly characteristic of MF/HF waves. The coastal effect (B) affects MF waves. The twilight effect (A) is a phenomenon of ionospheric shortwave propagation, not VHF.
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 201 Q1 — Which instrument is connected to the pitot tube? ^bazl_201_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_1)*
+- A) Variometer
+- B) Airspeed indicator
+- C) Altimeter
+- D) Turn indicator
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot tube measures dynamic pressure (difference between total and static pressure), used by the airspeed indicator (IAS). The variometer uses the static port, the altimeter too, and the turn indicator uses a gyroscope.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q2 — What is the conventional colour of oxygen cylinders? ^bazl_201_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_2)*
+- A) Blue/white
+- B) Red
+- C) Black
+- D) Orange
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation, oxygen bottles are conventionally black (European/ISO standards). Note: medical oxygen bottles may be white, but aviation oxygen bottles are black.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q3 — What does the ball (inclinometer) indicate in a turn? ^bazl_201_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_3)*
+- A) A rotation about the yaw axis to the left or right.
+- B) The lateral acceleration in a turn.
+- C) The resultant of weight and centrifugal force.
+- D) The bank angle of the glider.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ball (inclinometer) indicates the resultant of weight and centrifugal force (lateral acceleration). In a coordinated turn, the ball is centered. If it deviates, it indicates a slip (ball on outside = insufficient yaw / inside = excessive yaw).
+
+### BAZL 201 Q4 — Why must the equipped weight of a glider pilot exceed a prescribed value? ^bazl_201_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_4)*
+- A) To improve the glide ratio.
+- B) So that the centre of gravity remains within prescribed limits.
+- C) To improve the angle of incidence.
+- D) To reduce control forces.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum pilot weight is prescribed to keep the center of gravity within approved limits. If the pilot is too light, the CG moves aft, making the glider longitudinally unstable.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q5 — What is the purpose of a glider’s flight manual (AFM)? ^bazl_201_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_5)*
+- A) It is used by the workshop supervisor in case of repair.
+- B) It is a detailed commercial document from the manufacturer.
+- C) It provides the pilot with operating limits, technical specifications, and emergency procedures.
+- D) It contains information on periodic inspections and repairs carried out.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Flight Manual (AFM) contains operating limits, technical characteristics, performance data and emergency procedures. It is the official reference document for safe aircraft operation.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q6 — What is the function of the automatic regulator on an oxygen system? ^bazl_201_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_6)*
+- A) It reduces cylinder pressure.
+- B) It regulates the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and only supplies oxygen on inhalation.
+- C) It regulates the oxygen flow according to breathing rate.
+- D) It regulates the pilot’s individual oxygen consumption.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The automatic regulator on an 'on demand' oxygen system adjusts the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and only delivers oxygen during inhalation. This saves oxygen compared to a continuous flow system.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q7 — What is a compensated variometer? ^bazl_201_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_7)*
+- A) A netto variometer.
+- B) A cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt).
+- C) Another name for a vane variometer.
+- D) A variometer that cancels out indications caused by elevator movements.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A compensated variometer (total energy compensated) eliminates false readings caused by elevator movements (pull-ups, dives). It shows the true rate of climb/sink of the air mass, independent of maneuvers.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q8 — Up to what bank angle is the magnetic compass still reliable? ^bazl_201_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_8)*
+- A) 10 degrees
+- B) 20 degrees
+- C) 30 degrees
+- D) 40 degrees
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is reliable up to approximately 30° of bank angle. Beyond this, turning errors and northerly turning errors become significant and readings are unreliable.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q9 — A glider is equipped with an ELT; what do you do when putting it in the hangar? ^bazl_201_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_9)*
+- A) Nothing in particular.
+- B) Check that there is no transmission on 121.5 MHz.
+- C) Set the ELT switch to ON.
+- D) Remove the ELT battery.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When putting the glider in the hangar, check that there is no transmission on 121.5 MHz from the ELT. Any accidental activation must be reported immediately. Leaving the ELT on or removing the battery is not the correct procedure.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q10 — What speed range is indicated by the green arc on a glider’s airspeed indicator? ^bazl_201_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_10)*
+- A) Normal speed range, usable in turbulence.
+- B) Speed range for camber flap operation.
+- C) Speed range in smooth air (caution range).
+- D) Control surface maneuvering speed range.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The green arc on a glider's ASI indicates the normal operating speed range usable in turbulence (maneuvering speed range). This is the speed range where the aircraft can be maneuvered with full control deflection.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q11 — Why must a compass be compensated (swung)? ^bazl_201_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_11)*
+- A) Due to acceleration errors.
+- B) Due to errors caused by the metallic parts of the aircraft and electromagnetic fields from onboard electrical equipment.
+- C) Due to turning errors at high bank angles, such as when circling in a thermal.
+- D) Due to magnetic declination.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The compass must be compensated for errors caused by the metallic parts of the aircraft and electromagnetic fields from electrical equipment (magnetic deviation). This is not declination (which is geographical) nor turning errors.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q12 — Which release hook must be used for aerotow takeoff (when 2 hooks are fitted)? ^bazl_201_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_12)*
+- A) Always the centre-of-gravity hook (lower).
+- B) Always the nose hook.
+- C) Either, at the pilot’s discretion.
+- D) Depends on the grass height on the runway.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aerotow takeoff, the center-of-gravity (lower) release hook must always be used. It ensures stability during towing. The nose (front) hook is reserved for winch launches.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q13 — A glider pilot weighs 110 kg equipped; how much water ballast can be carried for an empty weight of 250 kg? See attached sheet. ^bazl_201_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_13)*
+- A) 100 litres
+- B) 90 litres
+- C) 80 litres
+- D) 70 litres
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The attached sheet shows mass limits. For 250 kg empty and 110 kg pilot equipped, remaining payload = max mass - empty - pilot. If max mass is 450 kg: 450-250-110 = 90 kg water ≈ 90 liters.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q14 — When is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^bazl_201_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_14)*
+- A) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- B) In all cases.
+- C) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- D) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The use of weak links (fusibles) on tow ropes is mandatory in all cases according to Swiss regulations (NfL, flight manual). Weak links protect both the glider and tow plane from excessive loads.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q15 — What does the yellow triangle on a glider’s airspeed indicator mean? ^bazl_201_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_15)*
+- A) Recommended approach speed for landing in normal conditions.
+- B) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+- C) Speed not to be exceeded in smooth air.
+- D) Stall speed.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow triangle on a glider's ASI indicates the recommended approach speed for landing in normal conditions. It is the reference speed for approach.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q16 — What constitutes the minimum equipment of a glider? ^bazl_201_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_16)*
+- A) The equipment specified in the flight manual.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, variometer.
+- C) Compass, turn indicator, cruise speed variometer (Sollfahrt), flight manual.
+- D) Radio, airspeed indicator, altimeter, variometer, compass.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The minimum equipment of a glider is that specified in the flight manual (AFM). There is no single universal list; each aircraft type has its own minimum requirements defined in its AFM.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q17 — Are the following instruments connected correctly? ^bazl_201_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_17)*
+![[figures/bazl_201_q17.png]]
+- A) No.
+- B) Only the middle one.
+- C) Only the left one.
+- D) Yes.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The question refers to a figure showing connected instruments. Yes (d), the instruments are correctly connected if the figure shows standard connections (pitot to ASI, static to altimeter and variometer).
+
+### BAZL 201 Q18 — What does the red radial mark on a glider’s airspeed indicator mean? ^bazl_201_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_18)*
+- A) Approach speed (landing).
+- B) Speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+- C) Never-exceed speed VNE.
+- D) Stall speed.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red radial mark on a glider's ASI indicates the never-exceed speed VNE (Velocity Never Exceed). Exceeding VNE can lead to structural failure.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q19 — In a glider cockpit there are three handles coloured red, blue and green; which controls do they operate? ^bazl_201_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_19)*
+- A) Emergency canopy release, airbrakes, trim.
+- B) Airbrakes, cable release, trim.
+- C) Airbrakes, canopy lock, undercarriage.
+- D) Undercarriage, airbrakes, trim.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The three handles: red = emergency canopy release, blue = airbrakes/spoilers, green = trim (compensateur). This is the standard color convention in gliders.
+
+### BAZL 201 Q20 — For an empty weight of 275 kg, determine the correct combination: maximum payload and permitted water ballast. ^bazl_201_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_201_20)*
+> ![[figures/bazl_201_q20.png]]
+>
+- A) 105 kg with 70 litres of water.
+- B) 85 kg with 100 litres of water.
+- C) 110 kg with 65 litres of water.
+- D) 100 kg with 80 litres of water.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For 275 kg empty weight: maximum payload and water ballast depend on the flight manual limits (attached sheet). The correct combination is 100 kg payload and 80 liters of water, respecting the maximum takeoff weight.
+
+---
+
+## Series 3 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 202 Q1 — To which loading group of a glider does the parachute belong? ^bazl_202_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_1)*
+- A) Empty weight.
+- B) Dry weight.
+- C) Weight of lifting surfaces.
+- D) Useful load (payload).
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The parachute belongs to the useful load (payload). Empty weight includes structure, permanent instruments and empty fuel. Useful load includes pilot, parachute, water ballast, baggage.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q2 — Which instruments do not function when the static pressure port is blocked? ^bazl_202_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_2)*
+- A) Altimeter, variometer, airspeed indicator.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, variometer, turn indicator.
+- C) Altimeter, artificial horizon, compass.
+- D) Variometer, turn indicator, artificial horizon.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the static port is blocked, all instruments using static pressure are affected: altimeter, variometer, and airspeed indicator (IAS). The turn indicator (gyro) does not use static pressure.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q3 — When is the use of weak links on tow ropes mandatory? ^bazl_202_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_3)*
+- A) Only when using synthetic ropes.
+- B) When using natural fibre ropes and as specified in the flight manual.
+- C) Only for two-seat gliders.
+- D) In all cases.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The use of weak links on tow ropes is mandatory when using natural fiber ropes and according to the flight manual. In practice, most manuals require it in all cases.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q4 — What is the advantage of a Tost safety hook positioned slightly forward of the centre of gravity for winch launch? ^bazl_202_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_4)*
+- A) Release is automatic when the cable exceeds a 70-degree angle.
+- B) The glider is more manoeuvrable about its yaw axis.
+- C) It is a backup hook in case the nose hook fails to operate.
+- D) The cable cannot detach when it goes slack.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Tost safety hook placed slightly forward of the CG provides automatic release when the cable exceeds 70° angle (protection against winch flip-over).
+
+### BAZL 202 Q5 — What does a glider’s accelerometer indicate? ^bazl_202_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_5)*
+- A) The acceleration component due to centrifugal force only.
+- B) The acceleration component in the plane of symmetry, perpendicular to the roll axis.
+- C) The acceleration component opposing gravitational acceleration.
+- D) The lateral acceleration only.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A glider's accelerometer indicates the acceleration component in the plane of symmetry, perpendicular to the roll axis (aircraft's vertical axis). It measures the load factor (g).
+
+### BAZL 202 Q6 — For an empty weight of 255 kg and an equipped pilot of 100 kg, determine the maximum water ballast that can be carried. See attached sheet. ^bazl_202_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_6)*
+![[figures/bazl_202_q6.png]]
+- A) 95 litres
+- B) 85 litres
+- C) 90 litres
+- D) 105 litres
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For 255 kg empty and 100 kg pilot, used mass = 355 kg. If max mass = 450 kg, water allowed = 450 - 355 = 95 kg ≈ 95 liters.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q7 — What must be particularly observed when installing an oxygen system? ^bazl_202_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_7)*
+- A) The system must be operable and its indicators must be readable during flight.
+- B) The system must be easy to install and remove.
+- C) The oxygen reserve must be at least 100 litres.
+- D) The system must be fitted with a non-return valve.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The oxygen system must be operable and its indicators readable during flight. This is the operational safety priority.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q8 — What is the function of the automatic regulator on an on-demand oxygen system? ^bazl_202_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_8)*
+- A) It reduces cylinder pressure.
+- B) It regulates the pilot’s oxygen consumption.
+- C) It regulates the oxygen flow according to breathing rate.
+- D) It regulates the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and only supplies oxygen on inhalation.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The automatic 'on demand' regulator adjusts the air/oxygen mixture according to altitude and only delivers oxygen during inhalation. It preserves the bottle's endurance.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q9 — On what principle do diaphragm and vane variometers operate? ^bazl_202_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_9)*
+- A) Measuring vertical accelerations.
+- B) Measuring altitude change as a function of time.
+- C) Measuring the pressure difference between a sealed reservoir and the atmosphere.
+- D) Measuring temperature differences.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Diaphragm and vane variometers work on the principle of measuring the pressure difference between a sealed reservoir (constant volume) and the ambient atmosphere (pressure varying with altitude).
+
+### BAZL 202 Q10 — What does the red mark on a glider’s airspeed indicator mean? ^bazl_202_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_10)*
+- A) The approach speed.
+- B) The never-exceed speed VNE.
+- C) The speed not to be exceeded in turbulence.
+- D) The stall speed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red mark on a glider's ASI indicates VNE (Velocity Never Exceed). Exceeding this speed can cause structural damage.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q11 — How do you determine that a glider is approved for aerobatics? ^bazl_202_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_11)*
+- A) From the certificate of airworthiness.
+- B) From the operating envelope.
+- C) There is no requirement; the glider only needs to be equipped with an accelerometer.
+- D) From the flight manual (AFM).
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approval for aerobatics is indicated in the flight manual (AFM), in the 'operating envelope' or 'limitations' section.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q12 — Where are the data on limits, loading, and operation of a glider found? ^bazl_202_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_12)*
+- A) In the logbook.
+- B) In the certificate of airworthiness.
+- C) In the flight manual (AFM).
+- D) In technical communications (TM).
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All data on limits, loading, and operation of a glider are found in the flight manual (AFM). It is the official and regulatory document.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q13 — Which instruments are shown in the diagram below? ^bazl_202_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_13)*
+![[figures/bazl_202_q13.png]]
+- A) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, vane variometer.
+- B) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, oxygen pressure gauge.
+- C) Altimeter, airspeed indicator, diaphragm variometer.
+- D) Altimeter, airspeed indicator, netto variometer.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The instruments shown left to right are: airspeed indicator (IAS), altimeter, and vane variometer. This is the standard arrangement in a glider.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q14 — What speed range is indicated by the white arc on a glider’s airspeed indicator? ^bazl_202_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_14)*
+- A) The maneuvering range (full control deflection).
+- B) The maneuvering speed.
+- C) The speed range in smooth air (caution range).
+- D) The camber flap operating range.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The white arc on a glider's ASI indicates the flap operating speed range. Outside this arc, flaps must not be used.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q15 — The airspeed indicator is defective on a glider. Under what conditions can the glider be returned to service? ^bazl_202_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_15)*
+- A) if the pilot is capable of estimating speeds in flight
+- B) when a functioning airspeed indicator has been installed
+- C) only for a circuit
+- D) only if a precision variometer is installed
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the airspeed indicator is defective, the glider can only be returned to service when a functioning ASI has been installed. The ASI is a mandatory instrument.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q16 — The minimum useful load of a glider is not reached. What measures must be taken? ^bazl_202_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_16)*
+- A) shift the pilot’s center of gravity forward by placing a thick cushion behind the back
+- B) move the trim forward
+- C) increase the useful load with ballast (lead weights)
+- D) change the incidence angle of the horizontal stabilizer
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If minimum useful load is not achieved, increase the payload with ballast (lead weights) placed in the forward compartment to keep CG within limits.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q17 — The maximum load according to the flight manual has been exceeded. What must be done? ^bazl_202_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_17)*
+- A) trim in aft position
+- B) use of the glider is prohibited
+- C) the maximum speed must be reduced by 30 km/h
+- D) the load must be shifted so that the maximum mass is not exceeded
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If maximum load has been exceeded, use of the glider is strictly prohibited until the situation is resolved (unloading). This is an absolute limit.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q18 — How is the center of gravity of a single-seat glider shifted? ^bazl_202_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_18)*
+- A) by changing the angle of attack
+- B) by changing the cockpit load
+- C) by adjusting the elevator trim
+- D) by changing the angle of incidence
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The center of gravity of a single-seat glider is moved by changing the load in the cockpit (e.g., adding lead ballast forward or aft, or by pilot weight change).
+
+### BAZL 202 Q19 — Which center of gravity position on a glider is the most dangerous? ^bazl_202_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_19)*
+- A) too far forward
+- B) too high
+- C) too far aft
+- D) too low
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Center of gravity too far aft is the most dangerous position as longitudinal stability disappears. The glider may stall and become unrecoverable.
+
+### BAZL 202 Q20 — What is the speed range indicated by the yellow arc on a glider’s airspeed indicator? ^bazl_202_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/20%20-%20Connaissances%20g%C3%A9n%C3%A9rales%20de%20l%27a%C3%A9ronef.md#^bazl_202_20)*
+- A) the maneuvering range (full control deflection)
+- B) the camber flap operating range
+- C) the smooth air speed range (caution range)
+- D) the maneuvering speed
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow arc on a glider's ASI indicates the caution speed range (smooth air only). Within this arc, controls must not be fully deflected in turbulent conditions.
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 20 - Aircraft General Knowledge
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 27 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What is a cause for the dip error on the direct-reading compass? ^q1
+- A) Acceleration of the airplane
+- B) Temperature variations
+- C) Deviation in the cockpit
+- D) Inclination of earth's magnetic field lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dip error (also called northerly turning error or acceleration error) in a direct-reading magnetic compass is caused by the inclination of the Earth's magnetic field lines, which dip downward toward the magnetic poles at an angle to the horizontal. This causes the compass card's pivot point and the magnet system to be offset, leading to errors particularly during turns and accelerations. Temperature variations (B), deviation (C — a different compass error caused by onboard magnetic fields), and acceleration per se (A) are separate effects; the root physical cause of dip error is the field line inclination.
+
+### Q2: The Caution Area is marked on an airspeed indicator by what color? ^q2
+- A) Red
+- B) Green
+- C) White
+- D) Yellow
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On an airspeed indicator, the yellow arc marks the caution range — the speed band between VNO (maximum structural cruising speed) and VNE (never-exceed speed). Flight in this range is permitted only in smooth air. Red (A) marks VNE (the never-exceed redline). Green (B) marks the normal operating range. White (C) marks the flap operating speed range.
+
+### Q3: What difference in altitude is shown by an altimeter, if the reference pressure scale setting is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa? ^q3
+- A) Zero
+- B) 80 m less than before
+- C) 80 m more than before
+- D) Values depending on QNH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude using the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Increasing the QNH setting by 10 hPa causes the altimeter to indicate approximately 80 m more altitude (since 1 hPa corresponds to roughly 8 m at sea level). The reading is not zero (A), not less (B), and is not dependent on the QNH value itself (D) — the conversion factor is fixed by the ISA model.
+
+### Q4: The altimeter's reference scale is set to airfield pressure (QFE). What indication is shown during the flight? ^q4
+- A) Altitude above MSL
+- B) Height above airfield
+- C) Airfield elevation
+- D) Pressure altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at aerodrome elevation. When an altimeter is set to QFE, it reads zero on the ground at the aerodrome and shows height above that aerodrome during flight. It does not show altitude above MSL (A — that would be QNH), the aerodrome elevation itself (C), or pressure altitude (D — that requires setting 1013.25 hPa).
+
+### Q5: A vertical speed indicator connected to a too big equalizing tank results in... ^q5
+- A) Mechanical overload
+- B) No indication
+- C) Indication too low
+- D) Indication too high
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A total energy compensated vertical speed indicator (TE-VSI) uses a specially shaped nozzle (TE probe) to cancel out changes in indicated climb/sink caused by changes in airspeed (energy exchange). If the compensating tank is too large, the compensation overcorrects and the instrument indicates a sink rate that is larger than the actual sink rate — i.e., too high a reading. A too-large tank does not cause mechanical overload (A), no indication (B), or under-reading (C).
+
+### Q6: A vertical speed indicator measures the difference between... ^q6
+- A) Total pressure and static pressure.
+- B) Dynamic pressure and total pressure.
+- C) Instantaneous static pressure and previous static pressure.
+- D) Instantaneous total pressure and previous total pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A vertical speed indicator (variometer) works by measuring the difference between the current (instantaneous) static pressure and the pressure stored in an internal chamber (the reference or compensating vessel) through a calibrated restriction. As altitude changes, the instantaneous static pressure diverges from the stored pressure, deflecting a diaphragm or capsule. It does not measure total vs. static (A — that is the airspeed indicator), dynamic vs. total (B), or total pressure changes (D).
+
+### Q7: What engines are commonly used with Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)? ^q7
+- A) 2 plate Wankel
+- B) 2 Cylinder Diesel
+- C) 4 Cylinder 2 stroke
+- D) 4 Cylinder; 4 stroke
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Touring Motor Gliders (TMG) are typically equipped with a conventional four-cylinder, four-stroke piston engine (such as Rotax 912 or Limbach engines), which provides good power-to-weight ratio, reliability, and fuel efficiency for the self-launch and cruise requirements of a TMG. Wankel (A), diesel two-cylinder (B), and four-cylinder two-stroke (C) engines are either not common or not used in certified TMG types.
+
+### Q8: What is the meaning of the yellow arc on the airspeed indicator? ^q8
+- A) Cautious use of flaps or brakes to avoid overload.
+- B) Speed for best glide can be found in this area.
+- C) Flight only in calm weather with no gusts to avoid overload.
+- D) Optimum speed while being towed behind aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow arc on an airspeed indicator marks the caution speed range between VNO and VNE. Flight in this range is only permitted in smooth air with no gusts, because at these higher speeds turbulence-induced loads could exceed structural limits. It does not indicate a flap/brake limitation range (A), best glide speed (B — that is a specific point, not an arc), or towing speed (D).
+
+### Q9: An energy-compensated vertical speed inicator (VSI) shows during stationary glide the vertical speed... ^q9
+- A) Of the glider through surrounding air
+- B) Of the airmass flown through.
+- C) Of the glider plus movement of the air
+- D) Of the glider minus movement of the air.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A total-energy compensated variometer (TE variometer) cancels the effect of the pilot's control inputs on indicated vertical speed by accounting for changes in kinetic energy. During a steady (stationary) glide with no vertical air movement, it correctly shows the vertical speed of the airmass being flown through (i.e., zero in still air, or the actual thermal/sink value). It does not show the glider's speed through the airmass uncompensated (A), the combined glider plus airmass movement (C), or a subtracted value (D).
+
+### Q10: During a right turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again? ^q10
+- A) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- C) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a right turn, if the yaw string deflects to the left, the nose is yawing left relative to the turn — this indicates a skidding turn (too little bank and too little inside rudder, or adverse yaw). To centre the string, the pilot needs to increase rudder in the turn direction (right rudder) to bring the nose around, and reduce bank slightly to decrease the centrifugal skid tendency. Options A, C, and D either use the wrong rudder direction or wrong bank correction for this skid condition.
+
+### Q11: What kind of defect results in loss of airworthiness of an airplane? ^q11
+- A) Dirty wing leading edge
+- B) Crack in the cabin hood plastic
+- C) Scratch on the outer painting
+- D) Damage to load-bearing parts
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airworthiness of an aircraft is fundamentally determined by the structural integrity of load-bearing components (main spar, wing attachment, fuselage frames, control system attachment points). Damage to these parts compromises the aircraft's ability to sustain flight loads and constitutes a loss of airworthiness. A dirty leading edge (A) reduces performance but is not an airworthiness defect. A cracked canopy (B) and a scratch on paint (C) are cosmetic or minor defects that do not affect structural integrity.
+
+### Q12: The mass loaded on the plane is lower than the minimum load required by the load sheet. What action has to be taken? ^q12
+- A) Trim aircraft to "pitch down"
+- B) Change pilot seat position
+- C) Change incident angle of elevator
+- D) Load ballast weight up to minimum load
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load sheet (weight and balance document) specifies a minimum pilot weight to ensure the centre of gravity remains within approved limits. If the actual pilot weight is below the minimum, ballast must be added (typically in the ballast area specified by the POH) to bring the total loaded mass up to the minimum required value. Adjusting trim (A, C) does not address the underlying CG/mass problem, and changing seat position (B) is not a standard corrective action for under-weight loading.
+
+### Q13: Water ballast increases wing load by 40%. By what percentage does the minimum speed of the glider plane increase? ^q13
+- A) 100%
+- B) 40%
+- C) 200%
+- D) 18%
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Minimum speed (stall speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading: Vs ∝ √(W/S). If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), stall speed increases by √1.4 ≈ 1.183, i.e., approximately 18.3%. A 40% speed increase (B) would require a 96% increase in wing loading, 100% (A) would require a quadrupling of wing loading, and 200% (C) is far too large. Only the square-root relationship gives approximately 18%.
+
+### Q14: The maximium load according load sheet has been exceeded. What action has to be taken? ^q14
+- A) Increase speed by 15%
+- B) Reduce load
+- C) Trim "pitch-down"
+- D) Trim "pitch-up"
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the actual loaded mass exceeds the maximum allowed mass from the load sheet, the only correct action is to reduce the load (remove ballast, water ballast, baggage, or have a lighter pilot). Exceeding maximum mass means structural load limits may be reached at lower G-loads or airspeeds. Increasing speed (A) or adjusting trim (C, D) does not address the structural overload problem.
+
+### Q15: What is referred to as torsion-stiffed leading edge? ^q15
+- A) The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces.
+- B) Special shape of the leading edge.
+- C) The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.
+- D) Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A torsion-stiffened leading edge is a structural design feature in which the leading edge of the wing (from the leading edge to the main spar) is planked (covered) on both upper and lower surfaces, creating a closed-section D-box that resists torsional (twisting) loads. This is not a spar component (A), not merely a shape descriptor (B), and not a reference to a torsion moment distribution point (C).
+
+### Q16: Information about maxmimum allowed airspeeds can be found where? ^q16
+- A) Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR
+- B) POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator
+- C) POH and posting in briefing room
+- D) POH, Cockpit panel, airspeed indicator
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maximum permissible airspeeds (VNE, VNO, etc.) are published in the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH/AFM), displayed on the cockpit instrument panel (placard), and indicated on the airspeed indicator by the red line (VNE) and arc markings. The AIP ENR (A) does not contain aircraft-specific speed limitations. Approach charts and VSI (B) do not show speed limits. The briefing room posting (C) is informal and not authoritative.
+
+### Q17: The airspeed indicator is unservicable. The airplane may only be operated... ^q17
+- A) If no maintenance organisation is around.
+- B) If only airfield patterns are flown
+- C) When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.
+- D) When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is a required instrument for safe flight; without it a pilot cannot determine safe operating speeds, stall speed, or structural speed limits. An inoperative airspeed indicator means the aircraft must remain on the ground until the instrument is serviceable. No exception exists for local aerodrome patterns (B) or GPS substitute (D — GPS ground speed is not equivalent to IAS for aerodynamic purposes). Absence of maintenance (A) is irrelevant to the operational requirement.
+
+### Q18: During a left turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again? ^q18
+- A) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- C) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a left turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the aircraft is slipping into the turn (too much bank relative to rudder input). To centre the string in a slip, the pilot needs to increase bank to steepen the turn and reduce rudder (less rudder in the turn direction). This is opposite to correcting a skid. Options B, C, and D use incorrect combinations for correcting a slip in a left turn.
+
+### Q19: What is the purpose of winglets? ^q19
+- A) To increase efficiency of aspect ratio.
+- B) Reduction of induced drag.
+- C) Increase gliging performance at high speed.
+- D) Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winglets are upward (or downward) curving extensions at the wingtip that reduce induced drag by weakening the wingtip vortex — the main source of induced drag on a finite wing. They do not primarily increase aspect ratio efficiency (A — though functionally similar, they are a different mechanism), are not specifically for high-speed performance (C), and do not increase lift or turning agility (D).
+
+### Q20: What does the dynamic pressure depend directly on? ^q20
+- A) Lift- and drag coefficient
+- B) Air density and airflow speed squared
+- C) Air density and lift coefficient
+- D) Air pressure and air temperature
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic pressure (q) is defined by Bernoulli's equation as q = ½ρv², where ρ is air density and v is airflow speed. Dynamic pressure depends directly on air density and the square of velocity. Lift and drag coefficients (A) are aerodynamic effects that depend on dynamic pressure, not the other way around. Air pressure and temperature (D) influence density indirectly but are not the direct parameters in the formula.
+
+### Q21: Airspeed indicator, altimeter and vertical speed indicator all show incorrect indications at the same time. What error can be the cause? ^q21
+- A) Blocking of static pressure lines.
+- B) Leakage in compensation vessel.
+- C) Blocking of pitot tube
+- D) Failure of the electrical system.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vertical speed indicator are all connected to the static pressure port. If the static pressure system is blocked (e.g., by ice, water, or a cover left on), all three instruments will give erroneous readings simultaneously. A blocked pitot tube (C) would affect only the airspeed indicator. A leaking compensating vessel (B) affects only the VSI. An electrical failure (D) does not affect these purely pneumatic instruments.
+
+### Q22: When is it necessary to adjust the pressure in the reference scale of an alitimeter? ^q22
+- A) After maintance has been finished
+- B) Every day before the first flight
+- C) Once a month before flight operation
+- D) Before every flight and during cross country flights
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter's reference pressure (subscale) must be set before every flight to the correct local QNH/QFE so that the altimeter reads the correct altitude or height. During cross-country flights, QNH changes as the pilot moves between pressure regions, so updates are required when crossing into new altimeter setting regions. Monthly (C) or only after maintenance (A) settings would result in significant altitude errors.
+
+### Q23: The term "inclination" is defined as... ^q23
+- A) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- B) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- C) Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+- D) Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's magnetic field vector and the horizontal plane at any given location. It is 0° at the magnetic equator and 90° at the magnetic poles. Deviation (A) is the error caused by magnetic fields within the aircraft. Magnetic variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and true north. Option D describes aircraft heading, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q24: With decreasing air density the airflow speed increases at stall speed (TAS) and vice verca. How has a final approach to be conducted on a hot summer day? ^q24
+- A) With increased speed indication (IAS)
+- B) With unchanged speed indication (IAS)
+- C) With decreased speed indication (IAS)
+- D) With additional speed according POH
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures IAS (Indicated Airspeed), which is derived from dynamic pressure. At lower air density (hot day, high altitude), TAS is higher than IAS for the same dynamic pressure. The aerodynamic behaviour of the wing (lift, stall) depends on dynamic pressure (and thus IAS), not on TAS. Therefore stall occurs at the same IAS regardless of density. The approach should be flown at the same IAS as always (B). Adding speed (D) or reducing IAS (C) based on temperature alone is not correct for stall margin management with IAS.
+
+### Q25: The load factor n describes the relationship between... ^q25
+- A) Weight and thrust.
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Lift and weight
+- D) Thrust and drag.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor (n) is the ratio of the aerodynamic lift acting on the aircraft to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In level unaccelerated flight, n = 1. In turns or pull-ups, n increases. It does not describe weight/thrust (A), drag/lift (B), or thrust/drag (D) relationships.
+
+### Q26: The term static pressure is defined as pressure... ^q26
+- A) Inside the airplane cabin.
+- B) Of undisturbed airflow
+- C) Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.
+- D) Sensed by the pitot tube.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the pressure of the undisturbed ambient airmass — the atmospheric pressure acting equally in all directions at a given altitude. It is sensed through flush static ports on the fuselage skin. It is not the cabin pressure (A), not related to orderly flow direction (C — that is dynamic pressure), and is not sensed by the pitot tube alone (D — the pitot senses total pressure).
+
+### Q27: The term inclination is defined as... ^q27
+- A) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- B) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- C) Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+- D) Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's total magnetic field vector and the local horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator, field lines are horizontal (0° dip); at the poles, they are vertical (90° dip). Deviation (A) is caused by onboard magnetic interference. Variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and geographic north. Option D describes aircraft heading relative to true north.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_30.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_30.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9c65189
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_30.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1221 @@
+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Flight Performance and Planning
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 30 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is... ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q1)*
+- A) Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.
+- B) Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.
+- C) Exceptionally permissible to avoid delays
+- D) Not permissible and essentially dangerous
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The maximum allowable mass (MTOM) is a structural and aerodynamic certification limit, not a guideline. Exceeding it increases wing loading, raises the stall speed, degrades climb performance, and overstresses the airframe — potentially beyond its certified load factors. No pilot input can compensate for a structurally compromised aircraft. There is no regulatory or safety margin that permits any excess, even temporarily.
+
+### Q2: The center of gravity has to be located... ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q2)*
+- A) Behind the rear C.G. limit
+- B) In front of the front C.G. limit.
+- C) Right of the lateral C. G. limit.
+- D) Between the front and the rear C.G. limit.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The approved C.G. envelope defines the range within which the aircraft's stability and controllability have been certified. If the C.G. moves forward of the front limit, elevator authority may be insufficient to rotate at takeoff or flare on landing. If it moves aft of the rear limit, the aircraft becomes statically unstable and pitch oscillations can become uncontrollable. The C.G. must remain between both limits throughout the entire flight.
+
+### Q3: An aircraft must be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure... ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q3)*
+- A) That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum permissible airspeed during a descent
+- B) Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.
+- C) That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.
+- D) That the aircraft does not stall.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The C.G. position relative to the aerodynamic neutral point determines longitudinal static stability. A C.G. forward of the neutral point produces a restoring pitching moment (stability), while control authority provides maneuverability (controllability). If the C.G. is outside limits, one of these two properties is compromised — either the pilot cannot correct a pitch upset, or the aircraft does not naturally resist one. Stall speed and Vne are influenced by other parameters and are not the primary reasons for the C.G. requirement.
+
+### Q4: The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined... ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q4)*
+- A) By weighing.
+- B) By calculation.
+- C) For one aircraft of a type only, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position
+- D) Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Each individual aircraft is physically weighed — typically on three-point scales — to determine its actual empty mass and C.G. position. Manufacturing tolerances, repairs, and installed equipment vary between serial numbers of the same type, so manufacturer tables alone are insufficient. The results are recorded in the aircraft's weight and balance report and must be updated after any modification that changes mass or mass distribution.
+
+### Q5: Baggage and cargo must be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause... ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q5)*
+- A) Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.
+- B) Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.
+- C) Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.
+- D) Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In turbulence or during aerobatics, unsecured cargo can shift suddenly and move the C.G. outside limits instantaneously — faster than a pilot can react. A sudden aft C.G. shift can cause an unrecoverable pitch-up; items becoming projectiles can injure occupants or jam controls. The structural risk arises from asymmetric loading exceeding design limits. No prior stability analysis can make unsecured cargo acceptable.
+
+### Q6: The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the... ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q6)*
+- A) Stagnation point.
+- B) Center of pressure.
+- C) Neutral point.
+- D) Center of gravity
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** By definition, the center of gravity (C.G.) is the single point through which the resultant gravitational force (weight vector) acts on the entire aircraft. The center of pressure is where the resultant aerodynamic force acts, the neutral point is the aerodynamic reference for stability analysis, and the stagnation point is where airflow velocity is zero on the leading edge — none of these is where gravity acts.
+
+### Q7: The term "center of gravity" is defined as... ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q7)*
+- A) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- B) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The center of gravity is the point through which the total weight force of the aircraft acts. It is the mass-weighted average position of all individual mass elements of the aircraft. It is not the physically heaviest point, and it is distinct from the neutral point (an aerodynamic concept). All mass and balance calculations reference moments about the datum to locate this point.
+
+### Q8: The center of gravity (CG) defines... ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q8)*
+- A) The product of mass and balance arm
+- B) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- D) The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The C.G. is the point through which gravity (weight) is considered to act on the entire aircraft as if all mass were concentrated there. This definition is fundamental to mass and balance calculations: moments of all individual masses are summed and divided by total mass to locate this point. The datum is a fixed reference point, not the C.G. itself, and moment is the product of mass times arm.
+
+### Q9: The term "moment" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as... ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q9)*
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance, moment = mass × balance arm (M = m × d), expressed in kg·m or lb·in. This follows the physical definition of a torque or moment of force. The total C.G. position is then found by: C.G. = (sum of all moments) ÷ (total mass). Using a sum, difference, or quotient instead of a product would yield a dimensionally and physically incorrect result.
+
+### Q10: The term "balance arm" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the... ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q10)*
+- A) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The balance arm (or moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum line to the center of gravity of a particular mass item (e.g., pilot, ballast, equipment). It determines the leverage that mass exerts about the datum. Distances from the C.G. itself are not balance arms — the datum is always the reference point. The datum is defined in the aircraft's flight manual and is fixed for that aircraft type.
+
+### Q11: The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called... ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q11)*
+- A) Lever.
+- B) Torque.
+- C) Span width.
+- D) Balance arm.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance terminology, the balance arm (also called moment arm) is specifically the horizontal distance from the aircraft datum to any given point of interest — including the overall C.G. once calculated. Torque/moment is the product of mass and arm, not the distance itself. Span width is a geometric wing parameter unrelated to longitudinal mass and balance.
+
+### Q12: The balance arm is the horizontal distance between... ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q12)*
+- A) The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) The front C.G. limit and the datum line
+- C) The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.
+- D) The C.G. of a mass and the datum line.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The datum is an arbitrary but fixed reference plane (often the firewall, wing leading edge, or nose) defined in the aircraft's flight manual. The balance arm of any mass is measured as the horizontal distance from this datum to the center of gravity of that specific mass. All moment calculations use this datum as the common reference, allowing moments to be summed algebraically to find the total C.G. position.
+
+### Q13: The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the... ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q13)*
+- A) Certificate of airworthiness
+- B) Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- C) Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- D) Documentation of the annual inspection.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH) or Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) contains a dedicated mass and balance section with the aircraft's empty mass, empty C.G. position, datum reference, C.G. limits, and approved loading configurations. The certificate of airworthiness merely certifies the aircraft type is approved; the annual inspection records maintenance history. Performance data (speeds, glide ratios) is in a different POH section.
+
+### Q14: Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft? ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q14)*
+- A) Limitations
+- B) Normal procedures
+- C) Weight and balance
+- D) Performance
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Weight and Balance section (Section 6 in EASA-standardized AFM/POH structure) contains the aircraft's basic empty mass, empty C.G. location, allowable C.G. range, and loading instructions. The Limitations section covers maximum speeds, load factors, and operating envelope. Normal Procedures covers checklists. Performance covers speeds, climb rates, and glide distances. Each section has a specific regulatory and operational purpose.
+
+### Q15: Which factor shortens landing distance? ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q15)*
+- A) Heavy rain
+- B) High pressure altitude
+- C) High density altitude
+- D) Strong head wind
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A headwind reduces groundspeed at touchdown for a given airspeed, so the aircraft arrives over the threshold with less kinetic energy to dissipate — shortening the ground roll. As a rule of thumb, a headwind component equal to 10% of approach speed reduces landing distance by approximately 19%. Conversely, high pressure altitude and high density altitude increase true airspeed at a given IAS, increasing groundspeed and lengthening landing distance. Heavy rain can reduce braking effectiveness, further increasing landing distance.
+
+### Q16: Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly... ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q16)*
+- A) Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.
+- B) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.
+- C) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.
+- D) Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aircraft not certified for flight into known icing (FIKI), operating in known or forecast icing conditions is a regulatory prohibition, not merely a performance consideration. Ice accretion on a glider's wings dramatically increases weight (shifting the C.G.), increases drag, reduces the maximum lift coefficient, and raises the stall speed — all simultaneously. If inadvertently encountered, the pilot must exit the icing environment immediately by changing altitude or heading, regardless of visual conditions.
+
+### Q17: The angle of descent is defined as... ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q17)*
+- A) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].
+- B) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].
+- C) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].
+- D) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°].
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of descent (or glide angle) is geometrically defined as the angle between the horizontal and the actual flight path vector, measured in degrees. It is related to — but not the same as — the glide ratio: glide ratio = horizontal distance / height lost = 1/tan(glide angle). A glide ratio of 1:30 corresponds to a glide angle of approximately 1.9°. Expressing it as a percentage would make it a gradient, not an angle.
+
+### Q18: What is the purpose of "interception lines" in visual navigation? ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q18)*
+- A) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+- B) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Interception lines are prominent, linear geographic features — rivers, coastlines, railways, motorways — selected during pre-flight planning that run roughly perpendicular to the planned route. If a pilot becomes disoriented, flying toward the nearest interception line will produce an unmistakable landmark that allows position recovery. They do not extend permissions below VFR minima and are not range indicators; they are specifically a lost-procedure planning tool.
+
+### Q19: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q19)*
+
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-056) showing LO R 16 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 1.500 ft GND.
+- B) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- C) 1 500 m MSL.
+- D) FL150.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-level restricted areas (LO R) published in national AIPs and on VFR charts typically express their vertical limits in feet MSL (above mean sea level) unless explicitly stated otherwise with GND/AGL. The notation "1 500 ft MSL" means the restriction applies from the surface (or a lower altitude boundary) up to 1,500 feet above mean sea level. Glider pilots must cross-check the AIP ENR section and current NOTAM for activation times and exact limits.
+
+### Q20: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q20)*
+
+> *Note: This question originally references a chart excerpt (PFP-030) showing LO R 4 airspace boundaries.*
+- A) 1.500 ft AGL
+- B) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- C) 4.500 ft MSL
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As with Q19, restricted airspace limits are read directly from the relevant chart or NOTAM. The designation "4 500 ft MSL" indicates the upper vertical boundary is 4,500 feet above mean sea level — higher than a typical low-level restriction, reflecting terrain or operational considerations for that specific area. AGL (above ground level) would imply the limit varies with terrain; MSL is an absolute altitude referenced to a fixed datum.
+
+### Q21: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q21)*
+
+> *Note: This question originally references a NOTAM excerpt (PFP-024).*
+- A) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- B) Flight Level 95
+- C) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+- D) Height 9500 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM altitude references follow ICAO conventions: "Altitude" refers to height above MSL (mean sea level), "Height" refers to height above a local ground reference, and "Flight Level" is a pressure altitude reference (used above the transition altitude). The NOTAM in question prohibits overflight up to 9,500 ft MSL — a specific absolute altitude. 9,500 m MSL would be approximately 31,000 ft, clearly inconsistent with a typical VFR NOTAM restriction.
+
+### Q22: What must be considered for cross-border flights? ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q22)*
+- A) Transmission of hazard reports
+- B) Requires flight plans
+- C) Regular location messages
+- D) Approved exceptions
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 2 and national regulations, flight plans are mandatory for international flights crossing state borders, even for VFR glider flights. The flight plan is required for border control coordination, search and rescue alerting, and compliance with customs/immigration procedures. A filed and activated flight plan ensures that the relevant Air Traffic Services units and SAR services are aware of the flight. Hazard reports and location messages are separate AIREP/PIREP procedures.
+
+### Q23: During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the... ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q23)*
+- A) Search and Rescue Service (SAR).
+- B) Flight Information Service (FIS).
+- C) Next airport operator en-route.
+- D) Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Flight Information Service (FIS), reached on the published FIS frequency in each FIR, can accept an airborne flight plan (AFIL) during flight. This is the standard procedure when a flight plan was not filed before departure or when an extension is needed. SAR is a response service, not a flight planning authority. AIS distributes aeronautical information but does not accept real-time flight plans. Airport operators handle local arrivals and departures, not en-route plan filing.
+
+### Q24: While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure should be avoided enroute? ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q24)*
+- A) Stone quarries and large sand areas
+- B) Highways, railroad tracks and channels.
+- C) Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas
+- D) Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal convection depends on differential ground heating. Moist ground, water bodies, and marshes have high thermal inertia and specific heat capacity — they absorb solar radiation without heating up as quickly as dry land, suppressing thermal development above them. Flying over large water areas or wetlands thus means less lift and potentially a forced landing in unsuitable terrain. Conversely, dry fields, rocky areas, and built-up areas with dark surfaces (asphalt, concrete) generate strong thermals.
+
+### Q25: During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point should be taken ... (2,00 P.) ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q25)*
+- A) As low as possible.
+- B) As steep as possible.
+- C) As high as possible.
+- D) With as less bank as possible
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a downwind turning point, the glider must turn and fly back into the wind (or at an angle into it), immediately losing tailwind assistance and gaining a headwind component. Arriving high provides the maximum altitude reserve for the subsequent upwind leg, where groundspeed is reduced and glide distance over ground is shortened. Arriving low with a turn ahead is tactically dangerous — any failure to find lift on the upwind leg leaves no margin for landing field selection.
+
+### Q26: After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.) ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q26)*
+- A) For weakening thermals due to the progressing time
+- B) For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases
+- C) For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time
+- D) For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a glider turns through 90° or 180° at a waypoint, the pilot's perspective of the sky changes dramatically — the sun appears to have "moved" relative to the aircraft heading, and cumulus clouds that were previously in the pilot's peripheral vision or behind may now appear in front, and vice versa. This perceptual shift can make the sky look completely different even if objectively unchanged. Pilots must re-orient their thermal assessment relative to the new heading rather than relying on their previous mental picture.
+
+### Q27: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q27)*
+
+
+
+- A) B
+- B) D
+- C) A
+- D) C
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO chart symbology for aeronautical charts (defined in ICAO Annex 4 and Document 8697) uses specific symbols to distinguish obstacle types: lit vs. unlit, single vs. group. A group of unlighted (unlit) obstacles is shown with a specific symbol (D in the referenced figure). Knowing these symbols is essential for cross-country flight planning to identify terrain and obstruction hazards that would not be illuminated at dusk or during poor visibility conditions.
+
+### Q28: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q28)*
+
+
+
+- A) B
+- B) C
+- C) A
+- D) D
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO aeronautical chart symbology differentiates airports by category: civil vs. military, international vs. domestic, and runway surface (paved vs. unpaved). A civil domestic airport with a paved runway is represented by a specific symbol (A in the referenced figure) — typically a circle with a line or specific fill pattern. Glider pilots use these symbols when planning outlanding fields or alternate airports, as paved runways are preferable to grass strips for emergency landings in many conditions.
+
+### Q29: According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q29)*
+
+
+
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO chart symbols differentiate between spot elevations (general terrain high points), surveyed elevation points, and obstruction heights. A general spot elevation (symbol B in the referenced figure) marks a notable terrain elevation that may not be the highest peak but is charted for situational awareness. Cross-country glider pilots must be familiar with these symbols to identify terrain clearance requirements, especially when planning routes through valleys or near mountain ranges where minimum safe altitudes are critical.
+
+### Q30: What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects) ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^q30)*
+- A) 30 km
+- B) 45 NM
+- C) 45 km
+- D) 81 NM
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide distance = glide ratio × height available. With a glide ratio of 1:30 (30 metres forward for every 1 metre of height lost) and 1,500 m of height: distance = 30 × 1,500 m = 45,000 m = **45 km**. Note: 45 NM would be approximately 83 km, which would require a glide ratio of roughly 1:55 — far above this aircraft's performance. The calculation is straightforward in metric: ratio × altitude in metres gives distance in metres. Always verify units — mixing NM and metres is a common error.
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q1: Why can wing loading be increased when soaring conditions are good? ^bazl_30_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_1)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Because the stall speed decreases.
+- B) Because the glider achieves a better glide ratio at high speed even though the minimum speed increases.
+- C) Because the glider can fly more slowly and achieves a better glide ratio.
+- D) Because the glider has a better climb rate even though it must fly more slowly.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In active thermal conditions with strong lift, the glider can fly faster between thermals to optimise the average cross-country speed (MacCready theory). A higher wing loading (achieved with water ballast) shifts the speed polar towards higher speeds, improving the glide ratio at high speed. The trade-off is a higher stall speed and a higher best-glide speed — acceptable when thermals are strong enough to compensate.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q13: The tail wheel of a glider was not removed before departure. What will be the consequence? ^bazl_30_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_13)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The centre of gravity will be further aft and possibly too far aft, which is dangerous.
+- B) Better manoeuvrability at departure.
+- C) No consequence. The wheel represents only a tiny fraction of the total weight of the glider and has no effect on the centre of gravity.
+- D) The centre of gravity shifts forward.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tail wheel is mounted at the extreme rear of the fuselage, at a large distance aft of the nominal centre of gravity. Even though its mass is small in absolute terms, its large moment arm gives it a significant moment. Leaving the tail wheel installed during flight shifts the C.G. aftward — potentially beyond the aft C.G. limit — making the aircraft pitch-unstable and difficult to control.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q3: The pilot exceeds the maximum cockpit payload by 10 kg. What must be done? ^bazl_30_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_3)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Trim forward.
+- C) Compensate by reducing the water ballast slightly.
+- D) Reduce the payload.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The maximum pilot seat load is a certification limit that cannot be circumvented by any trim adjustment or ballast reduction. Exceeding the maximum payload may place the C.G. outside the forward limit and subjects the structure to uncertified loads. The only correct action is to reduce the payload (e.g. by removing ballast or equipment) until the limits are respected. Trimming does not alter mass and does not make the aircraft compliant with its limitations.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q2: What propels a pure glider forward? ^bazl_30_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_2)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) A tailwind.
+- B) The component of gravity acting in the direction of the flight path.
+- C) Drag directed forward.
+- D) Ascending air currents.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A motorless glider is propelled exclusively by the component of the weight vector (gravity) projected in the direction of the flight path. In steady gliding flight, the aircraft is in equilibrium between lift (perpendicular to the flight path), drag (opposing motion) and weight. The component of weight along the flight path axis balances drag and maintains airspeed. Ascending air currents can slow or cancel the descent but do not propel the aircraft forward.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q12: The current mass of an aircraft is 610 kg and the centre of gravity (C.G.) position is at 80.0. You remove a 10 kg item of baggage located at a moment arm of 150. What is the new centre of gravity? ^bazl_30_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_12)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 78.833
+- B) 81.166
+- C) 70.0
+- D) 75.0
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Calculation of the new C.G.: Initial moment = 610 × 80.0 = 48,800. Removed moment = 10 × 150 = 1,500. New total moment = 48,800 − 1,500 = 47,300. New mass = 610 − 10 = 600 kg. New C.G. = 47,300 ÷ 600 = **78.833**. Since the baggage was located aft of the current C.G. (150 > 80), its removal shifts the C.G. forward, which is consistent with the result obtained (78.833 < 80.0).
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q14: The empty mass of the Discus B is 245 kg. You are planning to carry 184 kg of water ballast. What is the maximum load at the pilot's seat? ^bazl_30_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_14)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+> **Extract from the Discus B Flight Manual — Loading table with water ballast**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q14_discus_loading_table.png]]
+> Max. permitted all-up weight including water ballast : **525 kg**
+> Lever arm of water ballast : **203 mm aft of datum (BE)**
+>
+> *Table of water ballast loads at various empty weights and seat loads:*
+>
+> | Empty mass (kg) | Seat load 70 kg | 80 kg | 90 kg | 100 kg | 110 kg |
+> |---|---|---|---|---|---|
+> | 220 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+> | 225 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+> | 230 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 |
+> | 235 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 |
+> | 240 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 |
+> | 245 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 180 | 170 |
+> | 250 | 184 | 184 | 184 | 175 | 165 |
+>
+> *Water ballast in both wing tanks (kg). For empty mass 245 kg and ballast 184 kg: the maximum seat load is **90 kg** (column 90 kg → value 184, but column 100 kg → 180 and column 110 kg → 170; with ballast=184 required, read the 245 kg row and find the seat load corresponding to ballast=184, i.e. max 90 kg permitted according to the table).*
+
+- A) 110 kg
+- B) 80 kg
+- C) 90 kg
+- D) 100 kg
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the Discus B loading table (extract from the flight manual): with an empty mass of 245 kg and 184 kg of water ballast in both wing tanks, the maximum seat load is **90 kg**. The maximum permitted all-up weight with ballast is 525 kg; according to the row of the table corresponding to 245 kg / 184 kg, the seat load is limited to 90 kg in order to remain within the approved C.G. envelope.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q7: What important principle must be observed when making an off-field landing on sloping terrain? ^bazl_30_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_7)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Always land into wind regardless of the slope.
+- B) The landing flare must be initiated at a greater height than usual.
+- C) Only land with airbrakes fully extended.
+- D) Land facing uphill with an approach speed slightly above normal.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On sloping terrain, the fundamental rule is to land **uphill**, which considerably shortens the landing roll — deceleration is assisted by gravity. An approach speed slightly above normal is recommended to maintain manoeuvrability and safety in the face of possible wind shear or turbulence on low final over unknown terrain. Landing downhill would be extremely dangerous as deceleration would be insufficient.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q9: You must land in heavy rain. What must you pay particular attention to? ^bazl_30_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_9)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The landing is performed as in dry conditions.
+- B) A higher approach speed must be used.
+- C) Due to poor visibility, the approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) The approach speed is lower than usual because rain slows the aircraft.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In heavy rain, the wing surface is wet, which can degrade aerodynamic characteristics (surface roughness, modification of the effective aerofoil profile). The stall speed may be slightly higher and the airbrakes less effective due to water on the surface. A higher approach speed therefore provides an appropriate safety margin. A shallower approach angle would be dangerous as it reduces obstacle clearance margins and extends the final approach.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q10: You are taking off from a grass runway that has become waterlogged after several days of rain. What should you expect? ^bazl_30_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_10)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The glider is wet and has reduced performance.
+- B) The wet grass offers less resistance, which is why the takeoff distance will be shorter.
+- C) The glider may skid sideways (aquaplaning).
+- D) The takeoff distance is likely to be longer.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A waterlogged grass runway offers greater rolling resistance (friction and soft ground deformation), which increases ground drag during acceleration. In addition, long or rain-flattened grass can create extra resistance. The takeoff distance is therefore longer compared to a dry grass runway. Aquaplaning is possible on hard runways with standing water but does not apply directly to wet grass — and wet grass offers more resistance, not less.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q8: Which of the following statements is correct at a speed of 170 km/h, taking into account the following speed polar? ^bazl_30_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_8)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+> **ASK 21 Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q08_ask21_speed_polar.png]]
+> *Two curves: G=470 kp (light mass, min sink rate ~0.657 m/s at ~75 km/h) and G=570 kp (heavy mass, min sink rate ~0.724 m/s). The best glide ratio is read from the tangent from the origin. At 170 km/h, the sink rate is higher for G=570 kp than for G=470 kp.*
+
+- A) As the mass of the ASK21 increases, the sink rate increases.
+- B) As the mass of the ASK21 decreases, the glide angle improves.
+- C) As the mass of the ASK21 increases, the sink rate increases.
+- D) Regardless of the mass of the ASK21, the sink rate remains constant.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASK21 speed polar is shown for two masses: G=470 kp and G=570 kp. At 170 km/h, reading both curves, the sink rate is higher for the greater mass (570 kp). This is physically logical: a higher mass requires more lift to fly, which results in a higher angle of attack (at the same speed), greater induced drag and therefore a higher sink rate at that speed. The best L/D ratio remains approximately the same as both polars are nearly geometrically similar, but the absolute sink rate increases with mass.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q11: What is the speed at the minimum sink rate in still air for a mass of 450 kg? ^bazl_30_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_11)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+> **Speed Polar (AIRSPEED):**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q11_speed_polar_450_580.png]]
+> *Two curves: 450 kg and 580 kg. The minimum sink rate (top of the curve) for 450 kg is at approximately 75 km/h. The 580 kg curve is shifted to the right (higher speeds) and downward (greater sink rate).*
+
+- A) 50 km/h
+- B) 75 km/h
+- C) 95 km/h
+- D) 140 km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The speed at minimum sink rate (V min sink) corresponds to the top of the speed polar curve — the point where the curve is highest (lowest sink rate). Reading the polar for a mass of 450 kg, this point is at approximately **75 km/h**. This is the optimum speed for maximising endurance in still air and for centring thermals. It differs from the best glide speed (which corresponds to the tangent from the origin to the polar).
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q15: From what altitude on the route between Murten (approx. N46°56'/E007°07') and Neuchâtel aerodrome (approx. N46°57'/E006°52') are you required to request permission to cross the PAYERNE TMA? ^bazl_30_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_15)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 950 m AMSL (3100 ft).
+- B) At any altitude since the lower limit of the TMA is represented by the ground surface (GND).
+- C) 700 m AMSL (2300 ft).
+- D) 3050 m AMSL (FL 100).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The PAYERNE TMA has a lower limit that varies by sector. On the route between Murten and Neuchâtel, the lower limit of the relevant TMA is at **700 m AMSL (2300 ft)**. Below this altitude, flight may be conducted without authorisation in the lower airspace (Class E or G depending on the area). Above 700 m AMSL, authorisation from the responsible ATC unit is required to cross the Class D TMA. This information is found on the Swiss ICAO aeronautical chart 1:500,000 or the gliding chart 1:300,000.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q16: In which airspace class are you flying at 1400 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa) over Birrfeld aerodrome (47°25'36"N/007°14'02"E), and what are the visibility and cloud distance minima in that airspace? ^bazl_30_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_16)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Airspace class E, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- B) Airspace class C, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- C) Airspace class D, horizontal visibility 5 km, horizontal cloud distance 1.5 km, vertical 300 m.
+- D) Airspace class G, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with permanent ground contact.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Birrfeld aerodrome lies within Class E airspace above the local CTR/ATZ. At 1400 m AMSL in this sector, you are in Class E. VFR minima in Class E are: horizontal visibility **5 km**, cloud clearance **1500 m horizontally and 300 m vertically**. Class E provides an air traffic service for IFR; VFR flights are permitted without a clearance but must comply with these meteorological minima.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q17: The route shown below towards SCHWYZ (dotted line) is planned for 20 June 2015 (summer time) between 1515–1545 LT at 6500 ft AMSL. Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_30_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_17)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+> **DABS — Daily Airspace Bulletin Switzerland (extract)**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q17_dabs_map.png]]
+>
+> | Firing-Nr D-/R-Area NOTAM-Nr | Validity UTC | Lower Limit AMSL or FL | Upper Limit AMSL or FL | Location | Center Point | Covering Radius | Activity / Remarks |
+> |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+> | B0685/14 | 0000–2359 | 900m / 3000ft | FL 130 | SION TMA SECT 1 | 461610N 0072940E | 4.7 KM / 2.5 NM | TMA SECT 1 ACT HX ONLY |
+> | W0912/15 | 1145–1300 | GND | FL 120 | MORGARTEN | 470507N 0083758E | 10.0 KM / 5.4 NM | R-AREA ACT. ENTRY PROHIBITED. FOR INFO CTC ZURICH INFO 124.7 |
+> | W0957/15 | 1400–1700 | 2150m / 7000ft | FL 120 | HINWIL | 471721N 0084859E | 7.0 KM / 3.8 NM | TEMPO R-AREA ACTIVE. ENTRY PROHIBITED. CTC 118.975 |
+> | W0960/15 | 0800–1700 | GND | 1200m / 4050ft | 1.7 KM SE CERNIER | 470352N 0065442E | 1.5 KM / 0.8 NM | D-AREA ACT |
+
+- A) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+- B) The route can be flown without coordination between 1500 and 1600 LT.
+- C) You can pass through all relevant danger and restricted areas below 1000 ft AGL or above 12,000 ft AMSL.
+- D) You can ignore the DABS as it only applies to commercial aviation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Consulting the DABS extract provided: zone W0957/15 is active from 1400 to 1700 UTC. On 20 June 2015 (summer time CEST = UTC+2), 1515–1545 LT corresponds to 1315–1345 UTC. Zone W0957/15 is therefore not yet active at this time (it starts at 1400 UTC). Zone W0912/15 is active from 1145 to 1300 UTC — already expired. The route can therefore be flown **without coordination** between 1500 and 1600 LT (i.e. 1300–1400 UTC), just before W0957/15 becomes active. The DABS applies to all airspace users, including gliders.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q18: According to the ICAO aeronautical chart at 1:500,000, at what altitude over Schwyz (approx. 47°01' N, 8°39' E) must you request permission to enter Class C airspace? ^bazl_30_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_18)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) FL 90
+- B) 4500 ft
+- C) FL 130
+- D) FL 195
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over Schwyz, the Swiss ICAO aeronautical chart 1:500,000 shows the lower limit of Class C airspace at **FL 130**. Below this, the airspace is Class E (or D depending on the area). Entering Class C requires an ATC clearance regardless of flight rules. Glider pilots flying wave or cross-country flights at high altitude over the Swiss central Alps must therefore contact the competent ATC unit (Zurich Information or Zurich ACC) before reaching FL 130.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q19: Until what time is La Côte aerodrome (LSGP) open in the evening? ^bazl_30_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_19)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+> **AD INFO 1 — LA CÔTE / LSGP**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q19_lsgp_ad_info.png]]
+>
+> | Data | Value |
+> |--------|--------|
+> | ICAO | LSGP |
+> | Elevation | 1352 ft (412 m) |
+> | ARP | 46°24'23"N / 006°15'28"E |
+> | Runway | 04 / 22 — true/mag: 041°/040° and 221°/220° |
+> | Dimensions | 560 x 30 m — GRASS |
+> | LDG distance available | 490 m |
+> | TKOF distance available | 490 m |
+> | SFC strength | 0.25 MPa |
+> | Status | Private — Airfield, **PPR** |
+> | Location | 25 km NE Geneva |
+> | Hours MON–FRI | 0700–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+> | Hours SAT/SUN | 0800–1200 LT / 1400–**ECT –30 min** |
+> | ECT reference | → VFG RAC 1-1 |
+>
+> *ECT = End of Civil Twilight. The aerodrome closes 30 minutes before end of civil twilight.*
+
+- A) Until half an hour before the start of civil twilight.
+- B) Until half an hour before sunset.
+- C) Until half an hour before the end of civil twilight.
+- D) Until the end of civil twilight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the AD INFO 1 sheet for LSGP La Côte, the afternoon opening hours are shown as "1400–HRH –30 min" where HRH denotes "end of civil twilight" (Swiss notation). The aerodrome therefore closes **30 minutes before the end of civil twilight** (not before sunset, which is an earlier moment). This applies on weekdays (MON–FRI) and at weekends (SAT–SUN). PPR (Prior Permission Required) also applies.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q20: On which frequency do you receive information about winch launches at Gruyères aerodrome (LSGT) at weekends? ^bazl_30_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_20)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+> **Visual Approach Chart — GRUYÈRES / LSGT**
+> ![[figures/bazl_30_q20_lsgt_approach_chart.png]]
+> AD **124.675** — PPR — ELEV 2257 ft (688 m)
+>
+> *Key chart data (altitudes in ft, magnetic headings):*
+>
+> | Data | Value |
+> |--------|--------|
+> | ICAO | LSGT |
+> | AD Frequency | **124.675 MHz** |
+> | Elevation | 2257 ft (688 m) |
+> | Status | PPR |
+> | Minimum AD overfly altitude (MNM ALT) | **4000 ft** |
+> | Glider ARR/DEP sector W (GLD ARR/DEP W) | **MAX 3100 ft** |
+> | Glider ARR/DEP sector E (GLD ARR/DEP E) | **MAX 3600 ft** |
+> | HEL ARR/DEP | 3000 ft |
+> | Preferred ARR sectors | WEST and EAST |
+> | CTN (cross-country traffic) | 3000 ft |
+> | MNM AD overfly | 4000 ft |
+> | Class C airspace above | FL 100 / 119.175 GENEVA DELTA |
+> | Winch launches | Intensive SAT/SUN (CTN: Intense winch launching SAT/SUN) |
+> | Nearby VOR/DME | SPR R076, 113.9 MHz |
+>
+> *Noise-sensitive areas (yellow) around Bulle/Broc. Avoid overflying the field during PJE (parachute dropping). Contact RTF 5 min before ETA.*
+
+- A) 110.85
+- B) 113.9
+- C) 124.675
+- D) 119.175
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the Visual Approach Chart for LSGT Gruyères, the aerodrome frequency is shown in the top right: **AD 124.675**. This is the frequency on which local traffic information is broadcast, including information on intensive winch launches at weekends ("Intense winch launching SAT/SUN"). Frequencies 110.85 and 113.9 correspond to the VOR/DME SPR (Saanen/Pringy) shown on the chart, and 119.175 is the GENEVA DELTA frequency.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q6: What distance do you cover in 90 minutes at a ground speed of 90 km/h? ^bazl_30_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_6)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 120 km
+- B) 100 km
+- C) 90 km
+- D) 135 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Distance = speed × time. Ground speed = 90 km/h, duration = 90 minutes = 1.5 hours. Distance = 90 km/h × 1.5 h = **135 km**. This is a basic navigation calculation: remember to convert minutes to a fraction of an hour before multiplying. 90 minutes represents one and a half hours, i.e. 1.5 h — not 0.9 h (a common error when confusing minutes with decimal hours).
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q4: At an altitude of 6000 m, the airspeed indicator shows 160 km/h (IAS). The true airspeed (TAS)... ^bazl_30_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_4)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) is also 160 km/h.
+- B) is higher than the IAS.
+- C) can be higher or lower than the IAS depending on atmospheric pressure and temperature.
+- D) is lower than the IAS.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures dynamic pressure, which depends on air density. At 6000 m altitude, the air density is significantly lower than at sea level (standard ISA atmosphere). For the same dynamic pressure (same IAS), the TAS must be higher because less dense air requires a greater true speed to produce the same indicated pressure. In practice, TAS increases by approximately 2% per 300 m of altitude gain. At 6000 m, TAS is approximately 20–25% higher than IAS.
+
+### BAZL Br.30 Q5: You are flying in wave lift at 6000 m altitude. What is the maximum speed you may fly? ^bazl_30_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_30_5)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Maximum within the green arc.
+- B) In the low-density air, at a higher speed than usual.
+- C) Below the red V_NE mark on the airspeed indicator, according to the speed-altitude table displayed on the instrument panel.
+- D) At the same speed as at sea level since V_NE is an absolute value.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The V_NE (never-exceed speed) displayed on the airspeed indicator is an IAS reference value at sea level (or low altitude). At high altitude, the TAS corresponding to the same IAS is higher, but it is the true airspeed (TAS) that determines structural aerodynamic loads. For gliders, the flight manual provides a **speed-altitude table** (or curve) giving the corrected V_NE IAS as a function of altitude. At 6000 m, the V_NE IAS to be observed is lower than that shown at ground level — hence the reference to the table displayed in the cockpit.
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 301 Q1 — 1235 lbs (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs): ^bazl_301_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_1)*
+- A) approx. 2470 kg.
+- B) approx. 560 kg.
+- C) approx. 620 kg.
+- D) approx. 2720 kg.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 1235 lbs ÷ 2.2 = 561.4 kg ≈ 560 kg (approx.). Formula: mass (kg) = weight (lbs) / 2.2.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q2 — What must be particularly observed when landing on an upsloping field with a tailwind? ^bazl_301_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_2)*
+- A) Fly final a little faster than usual.
+- B) Flare higher than usual.
+- C) You must land with all airbrakes fully extended.
+- D) Fly at the normal approach speed (yellow triangle).
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On an upsloping field with tailwind, fly the normal approach speed (yellow triangle). The upslope shortens the flare distance and tailwind reduces effective landing distance. Normal speed is critical to avoid stall.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q3 — In which airspace class are you above Langenthal aerodrome (47 deg 10’58’’N / 007 deg 44’29’’E) at an altitude of 2000 m AMSL (QNH 1013 hPa), and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^bazl_301_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_3)*
+- A) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- B) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- C) Class D airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance: 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Langenthal at 2000 m AMSL is in Class E airspace (between 1500 ft AMSL and the TMA/CTA floor). In Class E, VMC requires: visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1500 m horizontally and 300 m vertically.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q4 — Which center of gravity position is the most dangerous for a glider? ^bazl_301_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_4)*
+- A) Too far forward.
+- B) Too high.
+- C) Too low.
+- D) Too far aft.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A center of gravity too far aft is the most dangerous position as it makes the glider longitudinally unstable. Longitudinal stability disappears and the glider may pitch violently without possible correction.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q5 — How does the indicated VNE (never-exceed speed) change as altitude increases? ^bazl_301_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_5)*
+- A) It remains identical.
+- B) It increases.
+- C) It remains the same; the airspeed indicator accounts for this automatically.
+- D) It decreases.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE remains the same on the airspeed indicator (IAS) because IAS is already corrected for density by design. True airspeed (TAS) increases with altitude, but IAS remains constant.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q6 — You have covered a distance of 150 km in 1 hour and 15 minutes. Your calculated ground speed is: ^bazl_301_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_6)*
+- A) 110 km/h.
+- B) 115 km/h.
+- C) 125 km/h.
+- D) 120 km/h.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GS = distance / time = 150 km / (1h15 min) = 150 / 1.25 = 120 km/h.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q7 — The following NOTAM was published on 18 August (summer time). Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_301_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_7)*
+![[figures/bazl_301_q7.png]]
+- A) Due to an airshow, a transit clearance for the extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be requested on frequency 135.475 (Payerne TWR) from 02 to 06 September 2013.
+- B) The extended CTR/TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 must be strictly avoided every day from 02 to 06 September 2013, between sunrise and sunset.
+- C) An airshow is taking place in the Payerne area from 02 to 06 September 2013. The TMA Payerne and restricted zone LS-R4 are active each day during this period between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC as holding areas and airshow demonstration sectors.
+- D) Due to an airshow from 02 to 06 September 2013, the extended CTR/TMA Payerne is active each day between 0600 UTC and 1500 UTC. The TMA is used as a holding area, the restricted zone LS-R4 as a demonstration and holding area. The area must be strictly avoided.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The NOTAM describes activation of extended CTR/TMA Payerne and zone LS-R4 from 2 to 6 September between 0600-1500 UTC as holding and demonstration areas. The region must be strictly avoided during these periods.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q9 — What is the best glide speed in calm air for a flying mass of 450 kg? See attached sheet. ^bazl_301_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_9)*
+![[figures/bazl_301_q9.png]]
+- A) 55km/h
+- B) 75km/h
+- C) 95km/h
+- D) 135km/h
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a flying mass of 450 kg, best glide speed is read from the polar (attached sheet) where the tangent from the origin touches the curve. For 450 kg, this speed is approximately 75 km/h.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q10 — A VFR flight will follow the route shown on the map below (dotted line) from APPENZELL towards MUOTATHAL. The route is planned for 19 March 2013 (winter time) between 1205 and 1255 LT. Answer using the DABS below. Which of the following answers is correct? ^bazl_301_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_10)*
+![[figures/bazl_301_q10.png]]
+- A) It is not possible to fly the planned route that day.
+- B) The route can be flown without coordination between 1200 and 1300 LT.
+- C) The DABS can be ignored as it only applies to military aircraft.
+- D) You may pass through all relevant danger and restricted zones below 1000 ft AGL or above 10,000 ft AMSL.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the DABS for 19 March 2013 (winter time) between 1205-1255 LT, the route can be flown without coordination between 1200-1300 LT as the zones are not active during this specific period.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q11 — Wing loading is increased by 40% by water ballast. By what percentage does the glider’s minimum speed increase? ^bazl_301_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_11)*
+- A) 0%.
+- B) 18%.
+- C) 100%.
+- D) 40%.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a 40% wing loading increase, minimum speed increases by √1.4 = 1.183, approximately 18%. Stall speed is proportional to the square root of wing loading.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q12 — Based on the polar below, which statement applies at a speed of 150 km/h? See attached sheet. ^bazl_301_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_12)*
+![[figures/bazl_301_q12.png]]
+- A) the ASK21 has a higher sink rate at higher flying mass
+- B) the ASK21 has a better glide ratio at lower flying mass
+- C) the sink rate of the ASK21 is independent of its mass
+- D) the ASK21 has a worse glide ratio at lower flying mass
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 150 km/h, the ASK21's sink rate is independent of its mass because the two polar curves (different masses) intersect at this speed. This is an aerodynamic property of the polar curve.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q13 — At Amlikon aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading East? ^bazl_301_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_13)*
+![[figures/bazl_301_q13.png]]
+- A) 780m.
+- B) 700m.
+- C) 700 ft.
+- D) 780 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At Amlikon, the maximum available landing distance heading East is 780 m according to the AIP Switzerland chart.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q14 — From what altitude must you request a transit clearance for the EMMEN TMA between Cham (approx. N47 deg 11’ / E008 deg 28’) and Hitzkirch (approx. N47 deg 14’ / E008 deg 16’)? ^bazl_301_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_14)*
+![[figures/bazl_301_q14.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- B) 5000 ft AMSL.
+- C) 2400 ft AMSL.
+- D) 2000ft GND.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Between Cham and Hitzkirch, the EMMEN TMA begins at 3500 ft AMSL. Below this you are in uncontrolled airspace. Above this you enter the TMA and must obtain clearance.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q15 — The maximum permitted payload is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^bazl_301_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_15)*
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Trim forward.
+- C) Reduce the payload.
+- D) Increase takeoff speed by 10%.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the maximum allowed payload is exceeded, the only correct action is to reduce the payload. Trimming or increasing takeoff speed does not solve an excessive mass problem.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q16 — What is the effect of wind on the glide angle over the ground if the aircraft’s true airspeed remains constant? ^bazl_301_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_16)*
+- A) Wind has no effect on the glide angle.
+- B) With a tailwind, the glide angle increases.
+- C) With a headwind, the glide angle decreases.
+- D) With a headwind, the glide angle increases.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a headwind, the angle of descent relative to the ground increases (the aircraft descends more steeply over the ground). With a tailwind, the angle decreases. Wind does not change the sink rate in m/s, but it changes the ground descent angle.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q17 — How does indicated airspeed (IAS) compare to true airspeed (TAS) as altitude increases? ^bazl_301_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_17)*
+- A) It remains identical.
+- B) It decreases.
+- C) It cannot be measured.
+- D) It increases.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Indicated airspeed (IAS) decreases relative to TAS as altitude increases, because air density decreases. At high altitude, IAS is less than TAS. At low altitude, they are close.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q18 — What must be particularly observed when landing in heavy rain? ^bazl_301_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_18)*
+- A) Wing loading must be increased.
+- B) Approach speed must be increased.
+- C) The approach angle must be shallower than usual.
+- D) Approach speed must be lower than usual.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In heavy rain, approach speed should be increased because rain increases drag and can alter aerodynamic characteristics (surface contamination). A higher speed provides a safety margin.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q19 — What must a glider pilot take into account at Bex aerodrome? ^bazl_301_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_19)*
+![[figures/bazl_301_q19.png]]
+- A) Depending on wind, the traffic pattern for runway 33 may be either clockwise or counter-clockwise.
+- B) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is clockwise.
+- C) The traffic pattern for runway 33 is counter-clockwise.
+- D) The traffic pattern for runway 15 is clockwise.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At Bex, the traffic pattern for runway 33 can be either direction depending on the wind, due to terrain constraints. The correct answer is that direction depends on wind conditions.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q20 — What is the maximum flying altitude above Biel Kappelen aerodrome (SE of Biel) if you wish to avoid requesting a transit clearance for TMA BERN 1? ^bazl_301_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_20)*
+![[figures/bazl_301_q20.png]]
+- A) 3500 ft AMSL.
+- B) 3500 ft AGL.
+- C) FL 35.
+- D) FL 100.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above Biel Kappelen, the BERN 1 TMA begins at 3500 ft AMSL. By staying below 3500 ft AMSL, you do not need a transit clearance.
+
+### BAZL 301 Q8 — Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_301_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_301_8)*
+- A) New C.G: 78.5, within approved limits.
+- B) New C.G: 75.5, outside approved limits.
+- C) New C.G: 76.7, within approved limits.
+- D) New C.G: 82.0, outside approved limits.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CG calculation question: with the attached sheet data, the new CG is calculated at 76.7, within approved limits.
+
+---
+
+## Series 3 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 302 Q1 — What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway on landing? ^bazl_302_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_1)*
+- A) Landing distance will be longer.
+- B) No effect.
+- C) The glider risks running off the runway (groundloop).
+- D) Landing distance will be shorter.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A wet grass runway reduces rolling friction and shortens landing distance. Wet grass decreases braking, so the glider stops faster (sliding effect).
+
+### BAZL 302 Q2 — At Schänis aerodrome, what is the maximum available landing distance heading NNW? ^bazl_302_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_2)*
+![[figures/bazl_302_q2.png]]
+- A) 520 m.
+- B) 470m.
+- C) 520 ft.
+- D) 470 ft.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At Schänis, the maximum available landing distance heading NNW is 470 m according to AIP Switzerland.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q3 — The current mass of an aircraft is 6400 lbs. Current CG: 80. CG limits: forward CG: 75.2, aft CG: 80.5. What mass can be moved from its current position to arm 150 without exceeding the aft CG limit? ^bazl_302_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_3)*
+- A) 39.45 lbs.
+- B) 56.63 lbs.
+- C) 45.71 lbs.
+- D) 27.82 lbs.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CG calculation: current mass 6400 lbs, current CG 80, aft limit 80.5. Moving mass x from current position to arm 150 without exceeding 80.5: (6400×80 + x×(150-80))/(6400+x) = 80.5. Solution: x ≈ 45.71 lbs.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q4 — Correct loading of an aircraft depends on: ^bazl_302_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_4)*
+- A) Only compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- B) Correct payload distribution and compliance with the maximum allowable mass.
+- C) The maximum allowable mass of baggage in the aft section of the aircraft.
+- D) Only correct payload distribution.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Correct loading depends on both respecting the maximum allowable mass AND correct payload distribution (to keep CG within limits). Both conditions are necessary.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q5 — What information can be read from this speed polar? (See attached sheet.) ^bazl_302_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_5)*
+![[figures/bazl_302_q5.png]]
+- A) only the maximum glide ratio is independent of flying mass, apart from a minor Reynolds number effect.
+- B) minimum speed is independent of flying mass.
+- C) in the speed range up to 100 km/h, an increase in flying mass reduces the sink rate.
+- D) both glide ratio and minimum speed are independent of flying mass.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the speed polar, maximum glide ratio is independent of flying mass (apart from minor Reynolds number effects). Polar curves for different masses have the same maximum L/D but at different speeds.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q6 — At what indicated speed do you approach an aerodrome located at an altitude of 1800 m AMSL? ^bazl_302_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_6)*
+- A) At a higher speed than at sea level.
+- B) At the same speed as at sea level.
+- C) At a lower speed than at sea level.
+- D) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 1800 m AMSL, air is less dense. To maintain the same aerodynamic lift, TAS is higher, but IAS (what is read on the ASI) remains the same as at sea level. Therefore approach at the same indicated speed.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q7 — At what speed must you fly to achieve the best glide ratio for a flying mass of 450 kg? (See attached sheet.) ^bazl_302_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_7)*
+![[figures/bazl_302_q7.png]]
+- A) 70km/h
+- B) 90km/h
+- C) 110km/h
+- D) 130km/h
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For 450 kg, best glide speed is read from the polar (attached sheet) at the tangent from the origin. For this glider type at 450 kg ≈ 90 km/h.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q8 — The maximum aft CG limit is exceeded. What action must be taken? ^bazl_302_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_8)*
+- A) Trim aft.
+- B) Trim forward.
+- C) As long as the maximum takeoff mass is not exceeded, no particular action is required.
+- D) Redistribute the useful load differently.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the aft CG limit is exceeded, redistribute the useful load forward. Trimming is not a structural solution to the CG problem.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q9 — Which factors increase the aerotow takeoff run distance? ^bazl_302_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_9)*
+- A) Low temperature, headwind.
+- B) High temperature, tailwind.
+- C) Grass runway, strong headwind.
+- D) High atmospheric pressure.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** High temperature and tailwind lengthen the aerotow takeoff roll. High temperature reduces air density (less lift), tailwind increases the takeoff distance.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q10 — The following NOTAM was published for 18 November. Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_302_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_10)*
+![[figures/bazl_302_q10.png]]
+- A) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: GND, upper limit: max. 15,000 ft AMSL.
+- B) On 18 November from 1800 LT to 2100 LT, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas.
+- C) On 18 November from 1800 UTC to 2100 UTC, a military night flying exercise with helicopters will take place.
+- D) On 18 November, a military night flying exercise will take place in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO areas. Lower limit: Class E airspace, upper limit: max. FL150.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The NOTAM for 18 November shows a military night flying exercise from 1800 to 2100 UTC in the ZUGERSEE, SUSTEN and TICINO regions, between GND and 15,000 ft AMSL.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q11 — What is the maximum permitted flying altitude within the CTR of Bern-Belp airport? ^bazl_302_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_11)*
+![[figures/bazl_302_q11.png]]
+- A) 3000 ft AMSL.
+- B) 4500 ft AMSL.
+- C) 5500 ft GND.
+- D) 5000 ft AMSL
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The CTR of Bern-Belp airport has an upper limit of 3000 ft AMSL.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q12 — In which airspace class are you above BEX aerodrome at an altitude of 1700 m AMSL, and what are the minimum visibility and cloud distance requirements? ^bazl_302_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_12)*
+![[figures/bazl_302_q12.png]]
+- A) Class E airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- B) Class G airspace, horizontal visibility 1.5 km, clear of cloud with continuous sight of the ground.
+- C) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+- D) Class C airspace, horizontal visibility 8 km, cloud clearance 1.5 km horizontally, 300 m vertically.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above Bex aerodrome at 1700 m AMSL: we are in Class E airspace (between 1500 ft AMSL and the TMA). VMC in Class E: visibility 5 km, cloud clearance 1500 m / 300 m.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q13 — What is the sink rate at 160 km/h for this glider at a flying mass of 580 kg? (See attached sheet.) ^bazl_302_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_13)*
+![[figures/bazl_302_q13.png]]
+- A) 1,6m/s
+- B) 1,2m/s
+- C) 2,0m/s
+- D) 0,8m/s
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 160 km/h for 580 kg, sink rate is read from the polar (attached sheet) ≈ 2.0 m/s.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q14 — 550 kg (rounded) correspond to (1 kg = approx. 2.2 lbs): ^bazl_302_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_14)*
+- A) approx. 12,100 lbs.
+- B) approx. 250 lbs.
+- C) approx. 2500 lbs.
+- D) approx. 1210 lbs.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 550 kg × 2.2 = 1210 lbs. Formula: lbs = kg × 2.2.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q15 — At what speed must a glider fly in calm air to cover the maximum possible distance? ^bazl_302_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_15)*
+- A) At minimum flying speed.
+- B) At the minimum sink rate speed.
+- C) At the best glide ratio speed.
+- D) At the maximum permitted speed.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In calm air, to cover the maximum distance, fly at the best glide speed (finesse maximale). This is the optimal speed for gliding.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q16 — The mass of a glider is increased. Which parameter will NOT be affected by this increase? ^bazl_302_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_16)*
+- A) Wing loading.
+- B) Sink rate.
+- C) Maximum glide ratio (apart from a minor Reynolds number effect).
+- D) Indicated airspeed (IAS).
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When glider mass increases, maximum glide ratio remains practically unchanged (mass-independent, apart from Reynolds effects). What changes: minimum speed increases, wing loading increases, sink rate increases.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q17 — How long does it take to cover a distance of 150 km at an average ground speed of 100 km/h? ^bazl_302_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_17)*
+- A) 1 hour 30 minutes.
+- B) 2 hours.
+- C) 1 hour 50 minutes.
+- D) 1 hour 40 minutes.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Time = distance / speed = 150 km / 100 km/h = 1.5 h = 1 hour 30 minutes.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q18 — When preparing an alpine VFR flight along the route shown on the map below (dotted line) between MUNSTER and AMSTEG, you consult the DABS. You intend to fly this route on a summer weekday between 1445-1515 LT. According to the DABS, zones R-8 and R-8A are active during this period. Answer using the DABS map below and the ICAO aeronautical chart 1:500,000 Switzerland. Which of the following answers is correct? ^bazl_302_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_18)*
+![[figures/bazl_302_q18.png]]
+- A) It is not possible to fly this route while the restricted zones are active.
+- B) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be transited below 28,000 ft AMSL.
+- C) Restricted zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A may be overflown at 9200 ft AMSL or above.
+- D) The route can be flown without restriction after contacting 128.375 MHz.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the DABS, when zones LS-R8 and LS-R8A are active, this alpine route cannot be flown as these restricted zones cover the itinerary.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q19 — You wish to obtain clearance to transit the ZURICH TMA. What must you do? ^bazl_302_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_19)*
+- A) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- B) First radio contact on frequency 124.7, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- C) First radio contact on frequency 118.975, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+- D) First radio contact on frequency 118.1, at least 5 minutes before entering the TMA.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For Zürich TMA transit: first radio contact on 124.7 MHz, at least 10 minutes before entering the TMA.
+
+### BAZL 302 Q20 — The minimum speed of your glider is 60 kts in straight flight. By what percentage would it increase in a steep turn with a bank angle of 60 deg (load factor n = 2.0)? ^bazl_302_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/30%20-%20Performances%20et%20planification%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_302_20)*
+- A) approx. 20%.
+- B) approx. 40%.
+- C) 0%.
+- D) approx. 5%.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall speed in turn with load factor n=2.0: Vs_turn = Vs_normal × √n = 60 kts × √2 = 60 × 1.414 ≈ 85 kts. Increase = (85-60)/60 × 100% ≈ 41% ≈ 40%.
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 30 - Flight Performance and Planning
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 10 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q1
+- A) 1.500 ft GND.
+- B) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- C) 1 500 m MSL.
+- D) FL150.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Restricted airspace areas (LO R) in Austrian and German aeronautical charts specify their upper and lower limits using standard altitude references. The designation '1 500 ft MSL' (Mean Sea Level) means the restriction extends up to that altitude above sea level, not above ground level. 1,500 ft GND (A) would be above ground level and could vary with terrain. 1,500 m MSL (C) confuses feet with metres. FL150 (D) is far higher and is not a typical LO R ceiling.
+
+### Q2: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q2
+- A) 1.500 ft AGL
+- B) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- C) 4.500 ft MSL
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Austrian sectional chart notation, restricted area LO R 4 has its upper limit at 4,500 ft MSL (Mean Sea Level). This means all flights must remain below this altitude to avoid the restricted area. 1,500 ft AGL (A) and 1,500 ft MSL (D) are both too low. 4,500 ft AGL (B) references above ground rather than MSL, which would be incorrect for a fixed regulatory limit.
+
+### Q3: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3 ^q3
+- A) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- B) Flight Level 95
+- C) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+- D) Height 9500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM altitude limits are expressed in feet MSL (Mean Sea Level) unless explicitly stated otherwise. The figure PFP-024 shows an upper limit of 9,500 ft MSL, meaning overflight is prohibited up to that altitude above mean sea level. FL95 (B) is a flight level (pressure altitude referenced to 1013.25 hPa) and differs from an MSL altitude. 9,500 m (C) confuses metres with feet, which would be approximately 31,000 ft. Height (D) implies above ground level, which is not specified in this NOTAM.
+
+### Q4: (For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q4
+- A) B
+- B) D
+- C) A
+- D) C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO aeronautical chart symbology distinguishes between single obstacles and groups of obstacles, and between lighted and unlighted ones. The symbol for a group of unlighted obstacles uses a specific ICAO-standard depiction. Based on the PFP-061 annex, symbol 'C' corresponds to the ICAO symbol for a group of unlighted obstacles. The other symbols (A, B, D) represent single obstacles, lighted groups, or other obstacle types per ICAO Annex 4 chart standards.
+
+### Q5: (For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5 ^q5
+- A) B
+- B) C
+- C) A
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO aeronautical chart symbology uses specific symbols for different aerodrome types. A civil airport (not international) with a paved runway is shown by symbol 'A' in the PFP-062 annex. International airports, military aerodromes, and unpaved-runway airports have different symbols per ICAO Annex 4. Selecting symbol 'A' (answer C) correctly identifies the civil airport with paved runway.
+
+### Q6: (For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6 ^q6
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On ICAO aeronautical charts, a general spot elevation (a known terrain height point not associated with an obstacle) is indicated by a specific dot-and-number symbol. Based on the PFP-063 annex, symbol 'B' (answer C) represents a general spot elevation. The other symbols (A, C, D) correspond to maximum elevation figures, obstruction elevation markers, or other elevation-related symbols defined in ICAO Annex 4.
+
+### Q7: The term center of gravity is defined as... ^q7
+- A) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- B) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity (CG) is the single point through which the resultant of all gravitational forces on an aircraft acts — it is the point where the total weight is considered to act. It is not synonymous with the neutral point (A), which is an aerodynamic stability reference. It is not the 'heaviest point' (B), as mass is distributed. Options C and D as stated in the question both describe a geometrical midpoint formula, which is not the correct definition of CG.
+
+### Q8: The term moment with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as... ^q8
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance calculations, a moment is the product of a mass and its balance arm (distance from the datum): Moment = Mass × Arm. This fundamental relationship allows CG to be found by summing all moments and dividing by total mass. A sum (A), difference (B), or quotient (C) of mass and arm does not produce a moment in the physical sense.
+
+### Q9: The term balance arm in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the... ^q9
+- A) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The balance arm (also called the moment arm or lever arm) is the horizontal distance from the datum reference point to the centre of gravity of a particular mass item. It is not the distance from the CG of the aircraft (A), not the datum point itself (B), and not the point through which gravity acts (D — that is the definition of the centre of gravity of the item).
+
+### Q10: What is the purpose of interception lines in visual navigation? ^q10
+- A) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+- B) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Interception lines (also called line features or catching lines) in visual navigation are prominent linear features on the ground — such as motorways, rivers, coastlines, or railway lines — that a pilot intentionally navigates toward and follows if orientation is lost. By flying toward a known interception line, the pilot can reestablish position. They are not used to continue flight below VFR minima (B), mark en-route airports (C), or show range from departure (D).
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_40.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_40.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1642655
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_40.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1269 @@
+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Human Performance
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 50 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The majority of aviation accidents are caused by... ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q1)*
+- A) Technical failure.
+- B) Meteorological influences.
+- C) Human failure.
+- D) Geographical influences.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Studies consistently show that approximately 70-80% of aviation accidents involve human error as a primary or contributing factor. This includes errors in judgment, decision-making, situational awareness, and task management. Technical failures account for a much smaller proportion, which is why human factors training is central to aviation safety curricula.
+
+### Q2: The "swiss cheese model" can be used to explain the... ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q2)*
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- C) Optimal problem solution.
+- D) Error chain.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model illustrates how accidents occur when multiple layers of defence each have "holes" (latent and active failures) that align simultaneously, allowing a hazard to pass through all layers and cause an accident. Each slice of cheese represents a safety barrier, and an accident results from an error chain — not a single isolated failure.
+
+### Q3: What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft? ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q3)*
+- A) 78 %
+- B) 12 %
+- C) 21 %
+- D) 18.9 %
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The percentage composition of atmospheric gases remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen and 78% nitrogen regardless of altitude. What changes with altitude is the partial pressure of oxygen: as total atmospheric pressure decreases, there are fewer oxygen molecules per breath, which is why hypoxia becomes a risk at altitude despite the unchanged percentage.
+
+### Q4: What is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere? ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q4)*
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 78 %
+- C) 0.1 %
+- D) 1 %
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nitrogen makes up approximately 78% of the atmosphere and is physiologically inert under normal conditions. However, at high pressures (such as during scuba diving), nitrogen dissolves into body tissues, and rapid decompression can cause nitrogen bubbles to form — the mechanism behind decompression sickness, which is also a concern for pilots who fly shortly after diving.
+
+### Q5: At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)? ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q5)*
+- A) 18000 ft
+- B) 22000 ft
+- C) 10000 ft
+- D) 5000 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 18,000 ft (approximately 5,500 m), atmospheric pressure is roughly 500 hPa — half of the standard sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. This means the partial pressure of oxygen is also halved, severely reducing the oxygen available to the body and making supplemental oxygen mandatory for unpressurised flight above this altitude.
+
+### Q6: Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. What is the approximate percentage of other gases? ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q6)*
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0.1 %
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The remaining approximately 1% of the atmosphere is composed of trace gases, primarily argon (about 0.93%), with very small amounts of carbon dioxide, neon, helium, methane, and others. While these gases are present in only tiny amounts, carbon dioxide in particular plays a significant role in the body's respiratory drive and acid-base balance, relevant to hyperventilation physiology.
+
+### Q7: Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by... ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q7)*
+- A) Alcohol.
+- B) Unhealthy food.
+- C) Little sleep.
+- D) Smoking.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) is produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-containing fuels and is present in cigarette smoke. CO binds to haemoglobin with an affinity approximately 200 times greater than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and preventing oxygen transport to tissues. In aviation, CO poisoning is also a risk from exhaust fume ingestion via heating systems, producing symptoms similar to hypoxia.
+
+### Q8: What does the term "Red-out" mean? ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q8)*
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Rash during decompression sickness
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (e.g., in a pushover manoeuvre), which force blood toward the head and eyes. The increased blood pressure in the eye's vessels causes red vision, as the retina is flooded with blood. It is the opposite of grey-out and blackout, which result from positive g-forces draining blood away from the head.
+
+### Q9: Which of the following is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton? ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q9)*
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Disturbance of consciousness
+- C) Spasm
+- D) Tingling
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation — breathing too rapidly — causes excessive CO₂ to be expelled, leading to respiratory alkalosis. Symptoms include tingling (especially in the extremities and face), muscle spasms or tetany, dizziness, and disturbance of consciousness. Cyanosis (bluish skin discolouration from low blood oxygen) is a symptom of hypoxia, not hyperventilation, making it the exception here.
+
+### Q10: Which of the following symptoms may indicate hypoxia? ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q10)*
+- A) Joint pain in knees and feet
+- B) Muscle cramps in the upper body area
+- C) Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails
+- D) Blue marks all over the body
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cyanosis — the blue discolouration of lips, fingertips, and nail beds — is a classic sign of hypoxia, caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin in peripheral blood. Other hypoxia symptoms include euphoria, impaired judgement, headache, and loss of coordination. Joint pain is associated with decompression sickness, not hypoxia.
+
+### Q11: Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia? ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q11)*
+- A) The oltfactory perception (smell)
+- B) The tactile perception (sense of touch)
+- C) The auditory perception (hearing)
+- D) The visual perception (vision)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vision is the sense most sensitive to hypoxia because the retina has extremely high oxygen demands. Night vision is particularly affected first, with rod cell function degrading noticeably even at altitudes as low as 5,000-8,000 ft in the dark. Peripheral vision loss and reduced colour discrimination follow at higher altitudes, making hypoxia especially dangerous for flight.
+
+### Q12: From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure? ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q12)*
+- A) 2000 feet
+- B) 10000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 7000 feet
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The body begins to show measurable physiological responses to reduced partial pressure of oxygen at around 7,000 ft, though healthy individuals can usually compensate through increased respiratory rate and cardiac output. Below this altitude, the body maintains adequate oxygenation without significant stress; above it, compensatory mechanisms become progressively taxed.
+
+### Q13: Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure? ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q13)*
+- A) 5000 feet
+- B) 22000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 7000 feet
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above approximately 12,000 ft, the body's compensatory mechanisms — increased breathing rate and heart rate — are no longer sufficient to maintain adequate blood oxygen saturation. Hypoxic symptoms become increasingly apparent and performance degradation is measurable. This is why EASA regulations require oxygen supplementation above 10,000 ft for extended periods, and above 13,000 ft at all times.
+
+### Q14: What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)? ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q14)*
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Oxygen transport
+- D) Immune defense
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells (erythrocytes) contain haemoglobin, the iron-containing protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues throughout the body. Any condition that reduces the number or function of red blood cells — such as anaemia, blood donation, or carbon monoxide poisoning — directly impairs the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood and increases hypoxia risk at altitude.
+
+### Q15: Which of the following is responsible for the blood coagulation? ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q15)*
+- A) Capillaries of the arteries
+- B) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- C) Blood plates (thrombocytes)
+- D) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blood platelets (thrombocytes) are small cell fragments that aggregate at sites of vascular injury and initiate the clotting cascade, forming a platelet plug to stop bleeding. They work together with clotting factors to form a stable fibrin clot. This function is distinct from the oxygen transport role of red blood cells and the immune role of white blood cells.
+
+### Q16: What is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)? ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q16)*
+- A) Immune defense
+- B) Blood coagulation
+- C) Oxygen transport
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** White blood cells (leucocytes) are the cellular components of the immune system, defending the body against infections, foreign substances, and abnormal cells. They include lymphocytes, neutrophils, and monocytes, each with specialised roles. A pilot suffering from an active infection — indicated by elevated white blood cell count — may experience impaired cognition and should not fly until recovered.
+
+### Q17: What is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)? ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q17)*
+- A) Oxygen transport
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Immune defense
+- D) Blood coagulation
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thrombocytes (platelets) are the primary agents of haemostasis — the process of stopping bleeding. They aggregate rapidly at injury sites and release chemical signals that activate the full coagulation cascade. Without adequate platelet function, even minor injuries can lead to excessive blood loss. This is relevant to pilots on anticoagulant medications, which require medical assessment.
+
+### Q18: Which of the following is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia? ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q18)*
+- A) Blood donation
+- B) Smoking
+- C) Menstruation
+- D) Diving
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Scuba diving is a risk factor for decompression sickness (not hypoxia), due to nitrogen dissolving in tissues under high pressure and forming bubbles during ascent. Blood donation reduces red blood cell count (increasing hypoxia risk), smoking causes CO binding to haemoglobin (reducing oxygen transport), and menstruation can cause anaemia over time. Diving itself does not directly cause hypoxia at altitude.
+
+### Q19: What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable? ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q19)*
+- A) Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed
+- B) Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank
+- C) Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets
+- D) Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A passenger feeling unwell in flight may be experiencing motion sickness, discomfort from temperature, or mild physiological stress. Adjusting cabin temperature to a comfortable level and minimising bank angle (reducing vestibular and acceleration stimuli) addresses the most likely causes without introducing new risks. Excessive bank aggravates motion sickness, and unnecessary oxygen administration can cause hyperventilation in some individuals.
+
+### Q20: What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor? ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q20)*
+- A) Reduction
+- B) Coherence
+- C) Virulence
+- D) Reflex
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A reflex is an involuntary, stereotyped neural response to a specific sensory stimulus, mediated through a reflex arc in the spinal cord or brainstem without conscious brain involvement. In aviation, understanding reflexes matters because some trained responses can become automatic (procedural memory), while unexpected reflexes — such as startle responses — can interfere with controlled aircraft handling in emergencies.
+
+### Q21: What is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency? ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q21)*
+- A) Critical nervous system
+- B) Autonomic nervous system
+- C) Automatical nervous system
+- D) Compliant nervous system
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulates involuntary physiological functions including heart rate, breathing rate, digestion, and glandular secretion. It has two branches: the sympathetic ("fight or flight") and parasympathetic ("rest and digest") systems. In high-stress flight situations, sympathetic activation increases heart rate and alertness but can also impair fine motor control and narrow attentional focus.
+
+### Q22: What is the parallax error? ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q22)*
+- A) Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision
+- B) Misperception of speed during taxiing
+- C) Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night
+- D) A decoding error in communication between pilots
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parallax error occurs when an instrument is read from an angle rather than directly face-on, causing the observer's line of sight to pass through the needle or pointer at an offset, giving a false reading. This is particularly relevant for analogue instruments with a gap between the pointer and the scale face. Pilots should always read instruments from directly in front to avoid this systematic error.
+
+### Q23: Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots? ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q23)*
+- A) Curved sidepiece
+- B) Non-polarised
+- C) Unbreakable
+- D) No UV filter
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pilots must use non-polarised sunglasses because polarised lenses eliminate horizontally reflected light, which can make LCD displays, glass cockpit instruments, and certain reflective surfaces — such as water or other aircraft — invisible or severely distorted. UV protection and good optical quality are desirable, but the non-polarised requirement is the safety-critical aviation-specific characteristic.
+
+### Q24: The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called... ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q24)*
+- A) Inner ear.
+- B) Eardrum.
+- C) Cochlea.
+- D) Eustachian tube.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Eustachian tube (auditory tube) connects the middle ear to the nasopharynx, allowing pressure equalisation between the middle ear cavity and the external environment. During altitude changes, it opens (usually when swallowing or yawning) to prevent the pressure differential that causes ear pain (barotitis media). Blockage due to congestion from a cold makes pressure equalisation impossible and can cause severe pain or eardrum rupture.
+
+### Q25: In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment? ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q25)*
+- A) During a light and slow climb
+- B) Breathing takes place using the mouth only
+- C) All windows are completely closed
+- D) The eustachien tube is blocked
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the Eustachian tube is blocked — typically due to a cold, sinus infection, or allergic congestion — the mucous membrane swells and prevents the tube from opening. This traps air in the middle ear at the previous ambient pressure, creating a painful pressure differential during ascent or descent. Pilots are advised not to fly with upper respiratory infections for this reason.
+
+### Q26: Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of... ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q26)*
+- A) Starting a climb.
+- B) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+- C) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- D) Starting a descent.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the "leans" or graveyard spiral illusion, rooted in semicircular canal adaptation. During a prolonged coordinated turn, the fluid in the relevant semicircular canal adapts to the rotation and ceases sending turn signals. When the pilot levels the wings, the canal detects a rotation in the opposite direction, creating the false sensation of turning the other way — which can cause a pilot to re-enter the original bank.
+
+### Q27: Which of the following options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)? ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q27)*
+- A) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- B) Head movements during turns
+- C) Turbulence in level flight
+- D) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness is triggered by conflicting sensory signals — typically between the visual system and the vestibular (balance) system. Constant, non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no vestibular stimulation and no sensory conflict, so it does not provoke motion sickness. Head movements during turns, turbulence, and alcohol (which alters endolymph density) all create or amplify sensory conflicts.
+
+### Q28: Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach? ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q28)*
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A runway that slopes upward away from the pilot appears shorter and steeper than a flat runway, giving the visual impression of being higher than the actual glide slope. The pilot, perceiving the approach as too high, instinctively descends below the correct approach path — creating a dangerous undershoot risk. This illusion is a well-documented cause of controlled flight into terrain (CFIT) on visual approaches.
+
+### Q29: What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope? ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q29)*
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) A landing beside the centerline
+- C) An overshoot
+- D) A hard landing
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Note: this question asks about the impression (what the pilot feels), not the actual outcome. An upsloping runway makes the pilot feel too high, so they perceive an overshoot situation. In response, the pilot may descend below the correct glide path, which in reality leads to an undershoot — but the perceived impression driving that incorrect correction is of being too high and overshooting.
+
+### Q30: The occurence of a vertigo is most likely when moving the head... ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q30)*
+- A) During a turn.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a climb.
+- D) During a descent.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vertigo (specifically the Coriolis illusion) is most likely when the head is moved in a different plane during an ongoing turn. The semicircular canals are already stimulated by the turn, and adding a head movement (such as looking down at a chart) stimulates a second set of canals simultaneously, creating an overwhelming and disorienting sensation of tumbling or rotation. This is one of the most incapacitating spatial disorientation illusions.
+
+### Q31: A Grey-out is the result of... ^q31
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q31)*
+- A) Hyperventilation.
+- B) Tiredness.
+- C) Hypoxia.
+- D) Positive g-forces.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grey-out is a progressive loss of colour vision and peripheral vision caused by positive g-forces pulling blood away from the head toward the lower body. As blood pressure in the retinal arteries drops, the retina (which has the highest oxygen demand of any body tissue) first loses colour perception (grey-out), then vision altogether (blackout), and finally consciousness (G-LOC — g-induced loss of consciousness).
+
+### Q32: Visual illusions are mostly caused by... ^q32
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q32)*
+- A) Binocular vision.
+- B) Colour blindness.
+- C) Rapid eye movements.
+- D) Misinterpretation of the brain.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Visual illusions occur because the brain actively constructs perception based on prior expectations, patterns, and assumptions rather than passively recording reality. When environmental cues are ambiguous, incomplete, or unusual (as is common in aviation — unfamiliar terrain, unusual lighting, featureless sky), the brain fills in gaps with "best guesses" that can be dangerously wrong. Recognising this active interpretive process is key to mitigating illusion risk.
+
+### Q33: The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately... ^q33
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q33)*
+- A) 0.01 percent.
+- B) 0.03 percent.
+- C) 0.1 percent.
+- D) 0.3 percent.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The liver metabolises alcohol at a roughly constant rate of approximately 0.01% (0.1 g/L) blood alcohol concentration per hour, largely independent of body weight or the amount consumed. This means that after a night of drinking, significant alcohol impairment can persist well into the following day. EASA regulations prohibit flying with a blood alcohol level above 0.2 g/L, and the "8-hour bottle to throttle" rule is a minimum — not a guarantee of sobriety.
+
+### Q34: Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes? ^q34
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q34)*
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Overweight and obesity are the primary modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes, as excess adipose tissue — particularly visceral fat — causes insulin resistance. Type 2 diabetes is a significant concern in aviation medicine because it can cause hypoglycaemic episodes that impair consciousness and cognitive function, and because many diabetes medications are incompatible with a medical certificate.
+
+### Q35: A risk factor for decompression sickness is... ^q35
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q35)*
+- A) Sports.
+- B) 100 % oxygen after decompression.
+- C) Scuba diving prior to flight.
+- D) Smoking.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Scuba diving causes nitrogen to dissolve into body tissues under elevated ambient pressure. If the diver then flies before sufficient off-gassing time has elapsed (typically 12-24 hours depending on dive profile), the reduced cabin pressure causes nitrogen to come out of solution and form bubbles in tissues and blood — decompression sickness ("the bends"). Breathing 100% oxygen after decompression actually accelerates nitrogen elimination and is a treatment, not a risk factor.
+
+### Q36: Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory? ^q36
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q36)*
+- A) It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** George Miller's classic 1956 research established that short-term (working) memory has a capacity of 7 ± 2 chunks of information, retained for approximately 10-20 seconds without active rehearsal. In aviation, this limitation is critically important: ATC clearances, frequencies, and altitudes must be written down immediately because they will be lost from working memory within seconds if not rehearsed or recorded.
+
+### Q37: For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information? ^q37
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q37)*
+- A) 3 to 7 seconds
+- B) 10 to 20 seconds
+- C) 35 to 50 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without active rehearsal or encoding, items held in short-term (working) memory fade within approximately 10-20 seconds. This is why read-back procedures in aviation communication are essential — they force the pilot to actively process and repeat information, moving it from passive short-term storage into a more durable encoded state, and simultaneously allow ATC to verify correct receipt.
+
+### Q38: What is a latent error? ^q38
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q38)*
+- A) An error which only has consequences after landing
+- B) An error which has an immediate effect on the controls
+- C) An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously
+- D) An error which remains undetected in the system for a long time
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In James Reason's error model, latent errors (or latent conditions) are failures embedded in the system — poor design, inadequate procedures, organisational pressures, or maintenance shortcuts — that remain dormant and undetected until they combine with an active error to cause an accident. Unlike active errors (committed by front-line operators), latent errors originate at management and design levels and can lie dormant for years.
+
+### Q39: The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called... ^q39
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q39)*
+- A) Situational thinking.
+- B) Situational awareness.
+- C) Anticipatory check procedure.
+- D) Constant flight check.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Situational awareness (SA) — defined by Mica Endsley — is the continuous perception of elements in the environment, comprehension of their meaning, and projection of their future status. It is the foundation of good aeronautical decision-making. Loss of situational awareness (LSA) is a primary contributing factor in controlled flight into terrain, mid-air collisions, and spatial disorientation accidents.
+
+### Q40: Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured? ^q40
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q40)*
+- A) By the use of proper headsets
+- B) By a particular frequency allocation
+- C) By the use of radio phraseology
+- D) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standardised ICAO radio telephony phraseology ensures that both the sender and receiver use identical, unambiguous codes with pre-agreed meanings, minimising the risk of misunderstanding. In communication theory, this corresponds to ensuring the transmitter and receiver share the same codebook. Errors in radio communication are a well-documented contributing factor in runway incursions and traffic conflicts.
+
+### Q41: In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately? ^q41
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q41)*
+- A) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- B) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- C) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+- D) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The four standard risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the activity or hazard), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift the risk to another party, e.g., insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge the residual risk when it is within acceptable limits). Ignoring a risk is never an acceptable strategy in aviation risk management.
+
+### Q42: Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks? ^q42
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q42)*
+- A) Due to group-dynamic effects
+- B) If there is not enough information available
+- C) During check flights due to a high level of nervousness
+- D) During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Group dynamics can cause "risky shift" — the phenomenon where groups tend to make bolder, riskier decisions than individuals acting alone. Social pressure, the desire to conform, diffusion of responsibility, and the presence of perceived experts can all suppress individual risk awareness. This is a core concept in Crew Resource Management (CRM), where junior crew members may fail to challenge a captain's poor decision.
+
+### Q43: Which dangerous attitudes are often combined? ^q43
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q43)*
+- A) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- B) Self-abandonment and macho
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The FAA identifies five hazardous attitudes in aviation: macho, invulnerability, impulsivity, resignation (self-abandonment), and anti-authority. Macho ("I can do it") and invulnerability ("It won't happen to me") are frequently found together because both stem from overconfidence and underestimation of risk. A pilot who thinks they are immune from accidents (invulnerability) is also prone to taking unnecessary risks to demonstrate skill (macho).
+
+### Q44: What is an indication for a macho attitude? ^q44
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q44)*
+- A) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- B) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+- C) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- D) Careful walkaround procedure
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The macho attitude is characterised by the need to demonstrate bravery, skill, or daring — often to an audience. Performing risky manoeuvres to impress observers is a textbook example: the pilot prioritises ego and external validation over safety margins. This attitude is particularly dangerous because it actively creates hazardous situations that would otherwise never arise. The antidote is the reminder: "Taking chances is foolish."
+
+### Q45: Which factor can lead to human error? ^q45
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q45)*
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- C) Double check of relevant actions
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Confirmation bias — the tendency to perceive and interpret information in a way that confirms pre-existing expectations — is a major source of human error in aviation. Pilots may misread an instrument, misidentify a runway, or fail to notice an abnormality because their brain filters incoming information through what it expects to see. This is why structured scan patterns, checklists, and cross-checking are essential countermeasures.
+
+### Q46: What is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot? ^q46
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q46)*
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Introverted - unstable
+- C) Extroverted - stable
+- D) Extroverted - unstable
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aviation psychology research identifies extroversion and emotional stability as the most beneficial personality traits for pilots. Extroversion supports effective communication, crew coordination, and assertiveness needed for CRM. Emotional stability (low neuroticism) ensures the pilot remains calm and rational under pressure, maintains consistent performance, and does not overreact to stress — all critical for safe flight operations.
+
+### Q47: Complacency is a risk due to... ^q47
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q47)*
+- A) Increased cockpit automation.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Better training options for young pilots.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Automation complacency occurs when pilots over-rely on automated systems and progressively reduce their active monitoring of aircraft state. As cockpit automation becomes more sophisticated and reliable, pilots may become less vigilant, lose situational awareness, and suffer skill degradation. When automation fails — precisely when manual flying skills are most needed — the complacent pilot may be unprepared to take over effectively.
+
+### Q48: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress ^q48
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q48)*
+
+
+
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point D
+- D) Point A
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Yerkes-Dodson law describes the inverted-U relationship between arousal (stress) and performance. Point B represents the peak of the curve — the optimal level of arousal where performance is maximised. Too little arousal (Point A: boredom, fatigue) leads to poor performance due to inattention; too much arousal (Points C, D: high stress, panic) degrades performance through tunnel vision, cognitive narrowing, and loss of fine motor control.
+
+### Q49: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress ^q49
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q49)*
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point D
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point D represents the far right of the Yerkes-Dodson curve — excessive arousal and stress — where performance collapses. At this level, the pilot is overwhelmed, unable to process information effectively, and may exhibit tunnel vision (fixating on one problem while ignoring others), panic responses, or cognitive freezing. Recognising the signs of overstrain and applying stress management techniques (slowing down, prioritising tasks) is a core CRM skill.
+
+### Q50: Which of the following qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory ^q50
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^q50)*
+- A) .1, 2, 3
+- B) .2, 4
+- C) 1
+- D) 1, 2, 3, 4
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress affects all four cognitive functions listed. Under high stress, attention narrows (tunnel vision), concentration becomes difficult to maintain, reaction times are altered (initially faster, then degraded under extreme stress), and memory — particularly working memory retrieval and encoding — is impaired by elevated cortisol and sympathetic activation. This is why emergency procedures must be practiced to the point of automaticity: procedural memory is more stress-resistant than declarative recall.
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q1: The proportion of oxygen in the air at sea level is 21%. What is this percentage at an altitude of 5 km (16,400 ft)? ^bazl_40_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_1)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) 5 %
+- B) 10 %
+- C) 21 %
+- D) 15 %
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The proportion of oxygen remains constant at 21% regardless of altitude. It is the partial pressure that decreases.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q3: The signs of oxygen deficiency... ^bazl_40_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_3)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) are immediately clearly noticeable.
+- B) can appear from as low as 4000 ft altitude.
+- C) consist of extreme difficulty in breathing (gasping for air).
+- D) appear in smokers at lower altitudes than in non-smokers.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Smokers already have an elevated CO level in their blood, so hypoxia manifests earlier.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q10: Carbon monoxide... ^bazl_40_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_10)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) is toxic and results from incomplete combustion, e.g. a leaking exhaust system in an aircraft or incomplete gas combustion in a hot air balloon.
+- B) is a by-product of the chemical energy production in cells: tissue absorbs oxygen and releases carbon monoxide.
+- C) has a sweet smell and bitter taste. It is only harmful in very high doses.
+- D) is, together with oxygen and hydrogen, one of the most important elements present in the atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CO is a product of incomplete combustion, odourless and highly toxic (binds to haemoglobin).
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q8: How long does it generally take for the human eye to fully adapt to darkness? ^bazl_40_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_8)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Approx. 1 hour.
+- B) Approx. 30 minutes.
+- C) Approx. 15 minutes.
+- D) Approx. 5 minutes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Full dark adaptation (scotopic vision) takes approximately 30 minutes.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q16: Low blood pressure... ^bazl_40_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_16)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) causes absolutely no problems.
+- B) can cause dizziness.
+- C) is a recurring problem in elderly smokers.
+- D) mainly causes problems at rest in a lying position.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hypotension can cause dizziness, particularly during changes of posture (orthostatic hypotension).
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q15: What symptom will most probably occur at 20,000 ft (6100 m) altitude without a pressurised cabin or oxygen equipment? ^bazl_40_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_15)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Altitude sickness with pulmonary oedema.
+- B) Fever.
+- C) Loss of consciousness.
+- D) Dyspnoea.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 20,000 ft without oxygen, the time of useful consciousness (TUC) is very short — rapid loss of consciousness occurs.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q4: When flying with a severe head cold, sharp pain can affect the sinuses. This pain occurs... ^bazl_40_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_4)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) with every significant change in flight altitude.
+- B) during climb.
+- C) during descent.
+- D) during accelerations.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During descent, external pressure increases and air cannot equalise within the blocked sinuses.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q12: What are the symptoms of motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^bazl_40_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_12)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) High fever, vomiting, headache.
+- B) Dizziness, sweating, nausea.
+- C) Watery diarrhoea, vomiting, headache.
+- D) High fever, dizziness, watery diarrhoea.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness manifests as dizziness, sweating, nausea and possibly vomiting.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q6: During a normal approach to an unusually wide runway, one may have the impression that the approach is being made... ^bazl_40_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_6)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) at too high a speed.
+- B) at too low a speed.
+- C) at too great a height.
+- D) at too low a height.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wide runway = impression of being lower/slower than in reality (visual illusion). The pilot tends to fly too high.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q9: Under positive g-forces, a greyout can occur which precedes blackout. Which organ is primarily affected by greyout? ^bazl_40_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_9)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The brain.
+- B) The lungs.
+- C) The eyes.
+- D) The muscles.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Greyout affects the eyes (retina) first as they are the most sensitive to reduced blood supply.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q7: When a pilot scans the sky to detect the presence of other aircraft, he should... ^bazl_40_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_7)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) scan the sky sector by sector and let the eyes rest briefly on each sector.
+- B) try to take in the visible portion of the sky with large sweeping eye movements.
+- C) take in the entire visible portion of the sky by moving the eyes as rapidly as possible.
+- D) roll the eyes across as wide a field of vision as possible.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Correct technique: systematic sector-by-sector scan with a pause on each sector.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q13: Alcohol is eliminated at a rate of: ^bazl_40_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_13)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) 1 per mille per hour.
+- B) 0.5 per mille per hour.
+- C) 0.3 per mille per hour.
+- D) 0.1 per mille per hour.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The body eliminates alcohol at approximately 0.1 to 0.15 per mille per hour. Value used for examination purposes: 0.1‰/h.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q11: From the following factors, identify the one that increases the risk of heart attack: ^bazl_40_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_11)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Undernutrition.
+- B) Cholesterol level too low.
+- C) Hypoglycaemia.
+- D) Lack of exercise.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lack of physical exercise is a recognised cardiovascular risk factor.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q19: Amphetamine is a stimulant which in Switzerland can be obtained on prescription from pharmacies. ^bazl_40_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_19)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours are permitted to take this medication to stay awake.
+- B) Pilots on duty may only take this medication if accompanied by a qualified co-pilot.
+- C) Pilots on duty on a flight of more than 5 hours should always have this medication at hand for moments of fatigue.
+- D) Due to its adverse effects, pilots on duty are not permitted to take this medication.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Amphetamines are strictly prohibited for pilots on duty (dangerous side effects).
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q2: What is meant by "risk area awareness" in aviation? ^bazl_40_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_2)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Awareness of the potential hazards of the various phases of flight.
+- B) Knowledge of accident rates during takeoff and landing.
+- C) A procedure for preventing aviation accidents.
+- D) The awareness that the aerodrome area where aircraft taxi ("risk area") is a dangerous zone.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Risk area awareness" = awareness of the risks associated with each phase of flight.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q14: Several decision-making models are applied in aviation. A widely used model goes by the acronym "DECIDE". Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_40_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_14)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The first D stands for "Detect" and means "Recognise that a change has occurred which requires attention".
+- B) DECIDE is a decision-making aid that must be applied in every in-flight decision situation.
+- C) The first D stands for "Do" and means "Apply the best option".
+- D) The first E stands for "Evaluate" and means "Assess the consequences of one's actions".
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DECIDE: Detect, Estimate, Choose, Identify, Do, Evaluate. The D = Detect (detect the change).
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q20: Regarding typical hazardous attitudes, which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_40_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_20)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) An anti-authority attitude is less dangerous than macho behaviour.
+- B) Inexperienced pilots are generally the only ones who behave dangerously.
+- C) It is possible to recognise and correct one's own hazardous attitudes.
+- D) Hazardous attitudes do not really exist because flight safety depends solely on the pilot's attention.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hazardous attitudes (anti-authority, macho, invulnerability, resignation, impulsivity) can be recognised and corrected.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q5: Which of the following statements correctly describes "selective attention"? ^bazl_40_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_5)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Selective attention refers to an attitude where attention is focused on flight instruments when visibility conditions are poor.
+- B) Selective attention is a method for avoiding stress.
+- C) Selective attention is unavoidable in the cockpit to avoid distraction during checklist recitation.
+- D) Selective attention can lead the pilot to fail to notice an audible alarm even though it is perfectly audible.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Selective attention = focusing on one task at the expense of other stimuli (e.g. an alarm goes unheard).
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q18: Regarding stress, which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_40_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_18)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Stress is only caused by brief overload.
+- B) There is an optimal level of stress that even improves performance.
+- C) Stress in the cockpit improves the work rate.
+- D) Under-stimulation causes no stress and has no negative effect on performance.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yerkes-Dodson curve: an optimal level of stress (eustress) improves performance.
+
+### BAZL Br.40 Q17: The human internal clock... ^bazl_40_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_40_17)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) is synchronised with the external clock and its cycle lasts exactly 24 hours.
+- B) has a cycle of approximately 20 hours.
+- C) has a cycle of approximately 30 hours.
+- D) has a cycle of approximately 25 hours.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The endogenous circadian rhythm is approximately 25 hours (reset daily by light).
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 401 Q1 — Which of the following measures is suitable for relieving the onset of motion sickness (kinetosis) in passengers? ^bazl_401_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_1)*
+- A) drink coffee
+- B) breathe fresh air
+- C) look through the windows
+- D) move the head regularly
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For motion sickness, getting fresh air is the most effective remedy. Looking through portholes can worsen it, and head movements also aggravate motion sickness. Fresh air stabilizes the autonomic nervous system.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q2 — During training, a pilot has mainly used narrow runways. What illusion will this pilot experience during a correct final approach to a flat, very wide runway? ^bazl_401_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_2)*
+- A) the illusion of being at a greater height above the runway than is actually the case
+- B) the illusion that the runway slopes upward in the landing direction (upslope)
+- C) the illusion of being lower above the runway than is actually the case
+- D) the illusion that the runway first slopes upward (upslope) then downward (downslope)
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pilot trained on narrow runways, facing a wide runway, will have the illusion of being lower above the runway than in reality (height underestimation). This can lead to a flare too high.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q3 — When are middle ear pressure equalization problems most likely to occur? ^bazl_401_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_3)*
+- A) during a long flight at high altitude
+- B) during a rapid descent
+- C) during strong negative vertical accelerations
+- D) during a long climb
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Middle ear pressure problems occur most often during rapid descent, as the Eustachian tube must compensate for increasing external pressure. It opens more easily during ascent.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q4 — The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere is 21% at sea level. How does it change at 5500 m? ^bazl_401_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_4)*
+- A) it is one quarter of the sea level percentage
+- B) it is double the sea level percentage
+- C) it is half the sea level percentage
+- D) it is the same as at sea level
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere remains approximately 21% regardless of altitude (the atmosphere is homogeneous in composition up to 80 km). What changes is the partial pressure of O2, which decreases with altitude.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q5 — What are the effects of inhaling carbon monoxide (from a defective exhaust system)? ^bazl_401_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_5)*
+- A) there are no harmful effects to fear as the body compensates for the reduced oxygen supply
+- B) harmful effects are only to be expected if the body is exposed to the gas for several hours
+- C) there are no harmful effects to fear as carbon monoxide is harmless
+- D) even in low concentrations, this gas can cause total incapacitation
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO), even in low concentrations, binds to hemoglobin (200x stronger than O2) and can cause total incapacitation very rapidly. It is extremely dangerous.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q6 — What is the most effective hearing protection in the cabin of a powered aircraft or hot air balloon? ^bazl_401_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_6)*
+- A) cotton wool
+- B) a helmet with earphones
+- C) ear plugs
+- D) due to the low noise produced, any protection is effective
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A helmet with earphones is the most effective hearing protection as it covers the entire ear and attenuates the most harmful frequencies. Cotton wool and earplugs are less effective.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q7 — Gas-forming foods that cause flatulence should be avoided before a high-altitude flight. Which of the following foods must therefore be avoided? ^bazl_401_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_7)*
+- A) pasta
+- B) meat
+- C) potatoes
+- D) legumes (beans)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Legumes (beans, peas, lentils) produce intestinal gas. At high altitude, these gases expand (Boyle's law) and can cause severe abdominal pain.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q8 — The respiratory process enables gas exchange in somatic cells (metabolism). These cells... ^bazl_401_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_8)*
+- A) absorb nitrogen and release oxygen
+- B) absorb oxygen and release carbon monoxide (CO)
+- C) absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide (CO2)
+- D) absorb oxygen and release nitrogen
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Somatic cells absorb oxygen (O2) and release carbon dioxide (CO2) during cellular metabolism (cellular respiration). This process releases energy stored in nutrients.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q9 — A regular smoker pilot smokes a few cigarettes shortly before an alpine flight. What effects might this have on their flight fitness? ^bazl_401_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_9)*
+- A) for a regular smoker, there are no effects to fear as the body is accustomed to the harmful substances absorbed
+- B) the nicotine absorbed may cause mild disturbances of consciousness and difficulty concentrating
+- C) the smoke causes mild carbon dioxide (CO2) poisoning, which may cause sensations of dizziness and numbness
+- D) the pilot will experience oxygen deficiency at a lower altitude than if they had abstained from smoking before the flight
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cigarette smoke contains carbon monoxide (CO), which binds to hemoglobin. This reduces oxygen-carrying capacity, so the pilot will feel oxygen deficiency at a lower altitude than if they had not smoked.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q10 — When is the risk of vestibular disturbance causing dizziness greatest? ^bazl_401_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_10)*
+- A) when rotating the head during a coordinated turn
+- B) when rotating the head during a descent
+- C) when rotating the head during a climb
+- D) when rotating the head during straight-and-level flight
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The risk of dizziness is greatest when rotating the head during a coordinated turn. The semi-circular canals are already stimulated by the turn; a head movement in a perpendicular plane stimulates canals in a different plane, causing vertigo (Coriolis illusion).
+
+### BAZL 401 Q11 — How can a pilot better withstand positive g-forces in flight? ^bazl_401_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_11)*
+- A) by tightening their harness straps as much as possible
+- B) by relaxing their muscles and leaning forward
+- C) by sitting as upright as possible
+- D) by contracting the abdominal and leg muscles and performing forced breathing
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To better withstand positive g-forces, the pilot should contract abdominal and leg muscles and perform forced breathing (L-1 maneuver). This increases abdominal pressure and delays g-LOC.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q12 — What are the most dangerous effects of oxygen deficiency? ^bazl_401_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_12)*
+- A) tingling sensations
+- B) nausea
+- C) impairment of judgment and concentration
+- D) blue discoloration of fingernails and lips
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Impairment of judgment and concentration is the most dangerous effect of oxygen deficiency because the pilot does not realize they are incapable. Physical signs (tingling, cyanosis) often appear too late.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q13 — What can be said about the rate of blood alcohol elimination in humans? ^bazl_401_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_13)*
+- A) it can be accelerated by drinking strong coffee
+- B) it depends only on time and amounts to approximately 0.1 per mille per hour
+- C) it is accelerated by breathing pure oxygen
+- D) it depends on the alcohol content of the drink consumed
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The blood alcohol elimination rate is approximately 0.1 ‰ per hour and depends only on time. Neither coffee, oxygen, nor the type of drink can significantly accelerate it.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q14 — What effect does proprioception (deep sensitivity) have on position perception? ^bazl_401_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_14)*
+- A) in coordination with the balance organ, proprioception gives a correct position impression even when visibility is lost
+- B) when visual references are lost, proprioception can give a false perception of position
+- C) proprioception alone is always sufficient to maintain a correct perception of position
+- D) when training is sufficient, proprioception can prevent spatial disorientation when visibility is lost
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When visual references are lost, proprioception (deep sensitivity) can give a false perception of position. It cannot replace visual references or instruments for maintaining spatial orientation.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q15 — Which of the following factors has no direct effect on visual acuity? ^bazl_401_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_15)*
+- A) high blood pressure
+- B) oxygen deficiency
+- C) alcohol
+- D) carbon monoxide (CO)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** High blood pressure does not directly affect visual acuity in normal flight. However, oxygen deficiency, alcohol, and carbon monoxide directly reduce visual acuity.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q16 — Up to what maximum altitude can a healthy human body compensate for oxygen deficiency by increasing heart rate and breathing rate? ^bazl_401_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_16)*
+- A) approximately 10,000-12,000 ft
+- B) approximately 3,000 ft
+- C) approximately 6,000-7,000 ft
+- D) approximately 22,000 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A healthy human body can compensate for oxygen deficiency by increasing heart rate and breathing rate up to approximately 10,000-12,000 ft. Beyond this, these compensation mechanisms are insufficient.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q17 — What must be observed when taking over-the-counter medications? ^bazl_401_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_17)*
+- A) even over-the-counter medications can influence flight fitness
+- B) over-the-counter medications have no side effects and therefore no influence on flight fitness
+- C) over-the-counter medications only have insignificant side effects; their influence on flight fitness is negligible
+- D) all flying is prohibited after taking any medication
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Even over-the-counter medications (aspirin, antihistamines, decongestants) can have side effects affecting flight fitness: drowsiness, reduced reflexes, blurred vision. A doctor should always be consulted.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q18 — What sensory illusion can a linear acceleration produce in horizontal flight when visual references are lost? ^bazl_401_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_18)*
+- A) the impression of climbing
+- B) the impression of descending
+- C) the impression of being in a left turn
+- D) the impression of being in a right turn
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A linear forward acceleration in horizontal flight is interpreted by the vestibular system as a climb, causing the somatogravic illusion. The otoliths cannot distinguish between gravitational and linear acceleration vectors.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q19 — How long does the human eye take to fully adapt to darkness? ^bazl_401_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_19)*
+- A) approximately 10 seconds
+- B) approximately 1 second
+- C) approximately 30 minutes
+- D) approximately 10 minutes
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The human eye takes approximately 30 minutes to fully adapt to darkness (rod adaptation). Night vision uses rods (retinal periphery), which are very light-sensitive but do not distinguish colors.
+
+### BAZL 401 Q20 — Which of the following statements about hyperventilation is correct? ^bazl_401_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_401_20)*
+- A) hyperventilation is always a consequence of oxygen deficiency
+- B) hyperventilation causes a deficiency of carbon monoxide (CO) in the blood
+- C) hyperventilation can be triggered by stress and anxiety
+- D) hyperventilation causes an excess of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation can be triggered by stress, anxiety, or excessive conscious breathing. It leads to a CO2 deficiency (hypocapnia), not an excess. Symptoms resemble oxygen deficiency.
+
+---
+
+## Series 3 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 402 Q1 — Vestibular disturbances during a turn can cause dizziness. What measure is most effective in preventing them? ^bazl_402_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_1)*
+- A) alternately move the head from right to left during the turn
+- B) keep the head as still as possible during the turn
+- C) during the turn, look out through the window in the direction of the turn
+- D) breathe deeply and slowly, ensuring an adequate supply of fresh air
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To avoid vestibular vertigo in a turn, the best measure is to keep the head still during the turn. Head movements create the Coriolis illusion.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q2 — What is the immediate effect of inhaling cigarette smoke on a regular smoker? ^bazl_402_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_2)*
+- A) dilation of blood vessels
+- B) reduced oxygen transport in the blood
+- C) lowered blood pressure
+- D) increased carbon dioxide (CO2) content in the blood
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cigarette smoke inhalation slows oxygen transport in the blood (CO binds to hemoglobin). It does not increase CO2 (which is a cellular waste product).
+
+### BAZL 402 Q3 — What is the relationship between oxygen deficiency and visual acuity? ^bazl_402_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_3)*
+- A) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity only at night
+- B) oxygen deficiency has no effect on visual acuity
+- C) oxygen deficiency can reduce visual acuity
+- D) oxygen deficiency has a negative effect on visual acuity only during the day
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Oxygen deficiency can reduce visual acuity, especially night vision (rods) and contrast perception. This affects vision both day and night.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q4 — Oxygen deficiency and hyperventilation share some similar symptoms. Which of the following symptoms always indicates oxygen deficiency? ^bazl_402_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_4)*
+- A) tingling sensations
+- B) blue lips and fingernails (cyanosis)
+- C) visual disturbance
+- D) hot and cold sensations
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The only symptom that always indicates oxygen deficiency (not hyperventilation) is cyanosis: blue lips and fingernails. This objective physical sign cannot be caused by hyperventilation.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q5 — What is the proportion of oxygen (in %) in the air at an altitude of approximately 34,000 feet? ^bazl_402_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_5)*
+- A) 5%
+- B) 10%
+- C) 42%
+- D) 21%
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere remains at 21% at all altitudes up to the stratosphere. What decreases is the partial pressure of oxygen, not its proportion.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q6 — During a visual flight, you suddenly lose all external visual references. Spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses and proprioception is... ^bazl_402_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_6)*
+- A) impossible
+- B) possible for only a few minutes
+- C) possible only after adequate training
+- D) possible only for experienced pilots
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When all visual references are lost, spatial orientation using only cutaneous senses and proprioception is impossible. Without instruments, a pilot in IMC loses spatial orientation within seconds.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q7 — What is the most probable and most dangerous poisoning that can occur on board a piston-engine aircraft? ^bazl_402_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_7)*
+- A) poisoning due to cosmic radiation at high altitude
+- B) ozone poisoning
+- C) carbon monoxide poisoning
+- D) poisoning due to leaded fuel vapors
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a piston-engine aircraft, carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning from a defective exhaust system is the most likely and dangerous. CO is odorless, colorless and undetectable without a detector.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q8 — What impression results from a correct final approach to a runway with a strong upslope in the landing direction? ^bazl_402_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_8)*
+- A) the impression of too shallow an approach
+- B) the impression of landing too short
+- C) the impression of too low an approach
+- D) the impression of too high an approach
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A correct approach to a strongly upsloping runway gives the impression of being too high on approach. The runway slope deceives the visual system.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q9 — Why should gas-forming foods be avoided before undertaking a high-altitude flight? ^bazl_402_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_9)*
+- A) because gas-forming foods promote motion sickness
+- B) because gas expansion during descent can cause pain in the digestive system
+- C) because gas expansion at high altitudes can cause pain in the digestive system
+- D) because at high altitudes, gases evaporate into the blood and cause decompression sickness
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, gases expand (Boyle's law). Gas-forming foods produce gases that expand and can cause severe abdominal pain.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q10 — Which blood component primarily transports oxygen? ^bazl_402_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_10)*
+- A) blood plasma
+- B) red blood cells
+- C) white blood cells
+- D) blood platelets
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells (erythrocytes) primarily transport oxygen via hemoglobin. Other blood components do not have this primary function.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q11 — What illusion can occur when visual references are lost during a prolonged coordinated turn? ^bazl_402_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_11)*
+- A) the impression of being in a climb
+- B) the impression of being in a greater bank angle than is actually the case
+- C) the impression of being in a descent
+- D) the impression of no longer being in a turn (wings level)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a long coordinated turn, the vestibular system adapts to the turn. When the pilot returns to straight flight, they feel they are no longer turning (graveyard spiral illusion).
+
+### BAZL 402 Q12 — Your passenger wishes to ease their fear of flying by drinking a strong alcoholic drink just before departure. What effect must be expected at high altitude? ^bazl_402_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_12)*
+- A) alcohol is eliminated more rapidly at high altitude than on the ground
+- B) oxygen deficiency at high altitude amplifies the effects of alcohol
+- C) at high altitude, the psychological effects of alcohol decrease
+- D) alcohol is eliminated more slowly at high altitude than on the ground
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At high altitude, oxygen deficiency amplifies the effects of alcohol. Reduced O2 partial pressure + increased CO2 from alcohol = multiplier effect on the CNS.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q13 — What is the correct technique for seeing at night? ^bazl_402_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_13)*
+- A) do not stare directly at objects but look slightly to the side
+- B) stare directly at all objects as directly as possible
+- C) stare directly at distant, faintly lit objects as directly as possible
+- D) scan objects with rapid large eye movements
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct night vision technique is to look slightly off-center (peripheral vision / rods). Central vision (cones) is less sensitive in darkness.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q14 — Your passenger complains of middle ear pressure equalization problems. How can you help them? ^bazl_402_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_14)*
+- A) stop the climb, if possible descend until the pain subsides, then climb again at a lower rate
+- B) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a higher rate
+- C) stop the descent, if possible climb until the pain subsides, then descend at a lower rate
+- D) descend at a higher rate until the pain subsides, then continue descending at a lower rate
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For middle ear pressure problems: stop the descent, climb if possible until pain subsides, then descend at a slower rate (gradual decompression).
+
+### BAZL 402 Q15 — Which of the following symptoms may indicate oxygen deficiency? ^bazl_402_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_15)*
+- A) reduced heart rate
+- B) joint pain
+- C) lung pain
+- D) difficulty concentrating
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Difficulty concentrating is an early symptom of oxygen deficiency. The other symptoms mentioned (joint pain, pulmonary pain, slowed heart rate) are not characteristic.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q16 — What causes motion sickness (kinetosis)? ^bazl_402_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_16)*
+- A) irritation of the balance organ
+- B) a disorder of the middle ear
+- C) a strong reduction in atmospheric pressure
+- D) evaporation of gases into the blood
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness results from irritation of the balance organ (inner ear / vestibule) due to conflicts between visual and vestibular information.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q17 — What are the side effects of anti-motion-sickness medications? ^bazl_402_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_17)*
+- A) general weakness and loss of appetite
+- B) hyperactivity and risk-taking tendency
+- C) exhaustion and depression
+- D) drowsiness and slowed reaction time
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Anti-motion-sickness medications (antihistamines, scopolamine) often have side effects: drowsiness and slowed reaction time. This makes them dangerous for flying.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q18 — What is decisive for the onset of noise-induced hearing loss? ^bazl_402_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_18)*
+- A) the sudden onset of a noise
+- B) only the duration of noise exposure
+- C) the duration and intensity of the noise
+- D) only the intensity of the noise
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Noise-induced hearing loss depends on both the duration AND intensity of the noise. It is the sound dose (dB × time) that is determinant.
+
+### BAZL 402 Q19 — Increasing and sustained positive g-loads can produce symptoms that appear in the following order: ^bazl_402_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_19)*
+- A) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness
+- B) red-out, reduction of peripheral vision, total loss of vision, loss of consciousness c) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, red-out, loss of consciousness
+- D) loss of color vision, reduction of peripheral vision, red-out, loss of consciousness
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Sequence of symptoms with increasing positive Gs: 1) loss of color vision (grey-out), 2) peripheral vision reduction, 3) total vision loss (blackout), 4) loss of consciousness (G-LOC).
+
+### BAZL 402 Q20 — From what altitude does the body of a healthy person begin to compensate for oxygen deficiency by accelerating breathing rate? ^bazl_402_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/40%20-%20Performances%20humaines.md#^bazl_402_20)*
+- A) approximately 6,000-7,000 ft
+- B) approximately 3,000-4,000 ft
+- C) approximately 10,000-12,000 ft
+- D) from 12,000 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The body begins to compensate for oxygen deficiency by accelerating breathing rate at approximately 6000-7000 ft. Below this, compensation is not necessary.
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 40 - Human Performance and Limitations
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 6 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1 ^q1
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point D
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the Yerkes-Dodson law (the inverted-U curve of arousal and performance), peak performance occurs at a moderate, optimal level of arousal — represented by Point B in the diagram. Too little arousal (Point A) leads to inattentiveness and poor performance, while too much arousal (Points C and D) causes overload and performance degradation. Point B therefore represents the ideal balance between alertness and composure.
+
+### Q2: Which answer is correct concerning stress? ^q2
+- A) Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner
+- B) Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety
+- C) Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem
+- D) Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress commonly arises when a pilot perceives a threat or problem for which no satisfactory solution is apparent — this is the core definition of the stress response. Individual reactions to stress vary significantly depending on personality, experience, and coping strategies, making option A incorrect. Training and experience are proven to raise the stress threshold and reduce the frequency and severity of stress reactions, making option D wrong. Stress is directly relevant to flight safety, so option B is also incorrect.
+
+### Q3: During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed? ^q3
+- A) There is no time for solving problems during flight
+- B) Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook
+- C) Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying
+- D) Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary duty of any pilot is to aviate — maintain aircraft control and a stable flight path. Only once the aircraft is under control should the pilot attend to any secondary problem. Attempting to solve a problem while neglecting aircraft control (options A, B, C) risks losing situational awareness or aircraft control. Option D correctly prioritises flying first, then problem-solving, while continuously monitoring the aircraft.
+
+### Q4: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1 ^q4
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point D
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Yerkes-Dodson arousal-performance curve, Point D lies on the far right where very high arousal levels cause performance to collapse — the pilot is overstrained (over-stressed). At this point, cognitive function deteriorates, decision-making becomes impaired, and errors multiply. Points A and C represent under-arousal or near-optimal states; Point B represents peak performance.
+
+### Q5: The swiss cheese model can be used to explain the... ^q5
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- C) Optimal problem solution.
+- D) Error chain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model illustrates how accidents result from an error chain — multiple failures that individually may be harmless but, when aligned, allow a hazard to pass through all defensive layers simultaneously. The holes in each slice of cheese represent latent or active failures; when all holes line up, an accident occurs. It is not a tool for assessing pilot readiness, planning emergency landings, or finding optimal solutions.
+
+### Q6: What does the term Red-out mean? ^q6
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Rash during decompression sickness
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs when the pilot is subjected to sustained negative g-forces (e.g., during a bunt or pushover manoeuvre), causing blood to be forced upward into the head and eyes. The engorged capillaries in the conjunctiva create a characteristic red tinge in the visual field. This is distinct from grey-out and black-out (caused by positive g-forces); it has nothing to do with colour perception at sunrise/sunset, anaemia, or decompression sickness.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_50.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_50.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1843cf7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_50.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2249 @@
+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Meteorology
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 50 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What clouds and weather may result from an humid and instable air mass, that is pushed against a chain of mountains by the predominant wind and forced to rise? ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q1)*
+- A) Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.
+- B) Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).
+- C) Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.
+- D) Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When unstable, humid air is forced to rise orographically, it triggers convective instability — air that is conditionally unstable becomes absolutely unstable once lifting begins. The resulting rapid ascent fuels cumulonimbus development, producing embedded CBs with thunderstorms, heavy showers, and hail. Stable air masses under the same conditions produce layered clouds (Ns or As) with steady rain, not convective storms.
+
+### Q2: What type of fog emerges if humid and almost saturated air, is forced to rise upslope of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailling wind? ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q2)*
+- A) Advection fog
+- B) Steaming fog
+- C) Radiation fog
+- D) Orographic fog
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog forms when wind-driven humid air is mechanically lifted along a slope, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point. Radiation fog requires calm nights with radiative ground cooling, advection fog forms when warm moist air moves over a cold surface, and steaming fog (Arctic sea smoke) occurs when cold air passes over warm water — none of these involve slope-forced lifting.
+
+### Q3: What phenomenon is referred to as "blue thermals"? ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q3)*
+- A) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- D) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Blue thermals" exist when the lifting condensation level (LCL) is very high — the air is too dry to reach its dew point before the thermal tops out. As a result, thermals rise but no cumulus clouds form, leaving the sky clear ("blue"). For glider pilots this is challenging since there are no visual cloud markers to indicate thermal location, and the cloudbase is beyond the thermal ceiling.
+
+### Q4: The term "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q4)*
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal activity is considered to have "begun" when thermals are strong enough to support gliding and extend to at least 600 m AGL — sufficient altitude to work the lift. Below this height, thermals may exist but are too shallow to be safely exploited by a glider. Cloud formation is not a prerequisite; blue thermals (see Q3) can also mark the beginning of usable thermal activity.
+
+### Q5: The term "trigger temperature" is defined as the temperature which... ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q5)*
+- A) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascend when formation of Cumulus clouds begins.
+- B) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level that has to be reached so formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud can occur.
+- D) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum surface temperature that must be reached before thermals can rise to the condensation level and form cumulus clouds. It is derived from the aerological diagram (tephigram/Stüve diagram) by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the morning sounding's moisture level back to the surface. Until this temperature is reached, thermals may exist but will not produce cumulus markers.
+
+### Q6: What situation is called "over-development" in a weather report? ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q6)*
+- A) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- C) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+- D) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development occurs when cumulus clouds continue growing vertically beyond the thermal inversion or become self-sustaining through latent heat release, developing into cumulonimbus (Cb) with heavy rain showers, lightning, and hail. This typically happens during humid summer afternoons when atmospheric instability is high and the inhibiting layer is weak. For glider pilots, over-development signals the end of safe soaring conditions and a need to land.
+
+### Q7: The gliding weather report states environmental instability. At morning, dew covers gras and no thermals are presently active. What development can be expected for thermal activity? ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q7)*
+- A) Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity during the following day
+- B) With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin
+- C) Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will be generated
+- D) After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion thermal activity is likely to begin
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Morning dew indicates the air cooled to the dew point overnight (radiation cooling), but this is temporary. Once solar insolation heats the ground, the surface temperature rises, warming the air above it until the temperature exceeds the trigger temperature. Environmental instability means the lapse rate is steep enough to sustain thermals once they begin, so good thermal conditions are likely to develop during the morning hours.
+
+### Q8: What change in thermal activity may be expected with cirrus clouds coming up from one direction and becoming more dense, blocking the sun? ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q8)*
+- A) Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity
+- B) Cirrus clouds indicate an high-level inversion with thermal activity ongoing up to that level
+- C) Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.
+- D) Cirrus clouds indicate instability and beginning of over-development
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermals are driven by differential heating of the ground by solar radiation. Thickening cirrus clouds progressively filter out solar energy, reducing ground heating and therefore thermal strength and depth. Dense cirrus can reduce insolation enough to stop thermal activity entirely. Additionally, approaching cirrus from one direction often indicates an advancing warm front, which brings widespread cloud, stable conditions, and further suppression of thermals.
+
+### Q9: What situation is referred to as "shielding"? ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q9)*
+- A) Ns clouds, covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- B) High or mid-level cloud layers, impairing thermal activity
+- C) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- D) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eights of the sky
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding describes the effect of high or medium cloud layers (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) that block solar radiation and suppress thermal development below. Even partial cloud cover at these levels can significantly reduce ground insolation. Gliding forecasts include shielding assessments to indicate when and where thermals will be weakened or absent due to cloud cover above the expected thermal layer.
+
+### Q10: While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending from north to south, moving east. Concerning the weather situation, what decision would be recommendable? ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q10)*
+- A) To change plans and start the triangle heading east
+- B) To postpone the flight to another day
+- C) To plan the flight below cloud base of the thunderstorms
+- D) During flight, to look for spacing between thunderstorms
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A squall line is an organized line of severe thunderstorms that is notoriously fast-moving, unpredictable, and extremely dangerous. Moving at typical speeds of 30–60 km/h, a squall line 100 km away could reach the airfield within 2–3 hours. Flying below Cb cloud bases or attempting to navigate between cells exposes the glider to extreme turbulence, windshear, hail, and downdrafts. The only safe option is to not fly until the hazard has completely passed.
+
+### Q11: What is the gas composition of "air"? ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q11)*
+- A) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- D) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air by volume is approximately 78% nitrogen (N2), 21% oxygen (O2), and the remaining 1% consists of argon, carbon dioxide, and other trace gases. Water vapour is variable (0–4%) and is not counted in the standard dry-air composition. Knowing air composition is fundamental to understanding atmospheric physics, density calculations, and the behaviour of aircraft engines and instruments.
+
+### Q12: Weather phenomena are most common to be found in which atmospheric layer? ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q12)*
+- A) Tropopause
+- B) Stratosphere
+- C) Thermosphere
+- D) Troposphere
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The troposphere extends from the surface to approximately 8–16 km depending on latitude and season. It contains approximately 75–80% of the atmosphere's total mass and almost all its water vapour. Convection, cloud formation, precipitation, fronts, and wind phenomena all occur here because temperature decreases with height, driving convective instability. Above the tropopause, the stratosphere is stable and largely cloud-free.
+
+### Q13: What is the mass of a "cube of air" with the edges 1 m long, at MSL according ISA? ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q13)*
+- A) 0,01225 kg
+- B) 0,1225 kg
+- C) 12,25 kg
+- D) 1,225 kg
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), air density at mean sea level is 1.225 kg/m³. Therefore a 1 m³ cube of air has a mass of 1.225 kg. This density value is fundamental to aviation: it affects lift, drag, engine power, and altimeter calibration. Density decreases with altitude and increases temperature/humidity changes also affect it, which is why density altitude matters for aircraft performance.
+
+### Q14: At what rate does the temperature change with increasing height according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) within the troposphere? ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q14)*
+- A) Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- B) Increases by 2° C / 100 m
+- C) Decreases by 2° C / 100 m
+- D) Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA standard lapse rate is 1.98°C per 1000 ft (approximately 2°C/1000 ft), or 6.5°C per 1000 m. This is the Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) used as a reference for altimeter calibration and pressure calculations. The actual ELR varies with weather conditions — steeper than ISA indicates instability and favours thermals, shallower or negative (inversion) indicates stability and suppresses convection.
+
+### Q15: What is the mean height of the tropopause according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)? ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q15)*
+- A) 11000 f
+- B) 11000 m
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 36000 m
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is defined at 11,000 m (approximately 36,089 ft), where the temperature reaches -56.5°C and then remains constant with height into the lower stratosphere. In reality the tropopause height varies: it is lower over the poles (~8 km) and higher over the tropics (~16 km), and fluctuates with season and synoptic weather patterns. Cumulonimbus tops that penetrate the tropopause are especially violent.
+
+### Q16: The term "tropopause" is defined as... ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q16)*
+- A) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+- B) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- C) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- D) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the transition boundary between the troposphere (where temperature decreases with height) and the stratosphere (where temperature initially remains constant then increases due to ozone absorption of UV radiation). It acts as a "lid" on convection — cumulonimbus clouds that reach it spread out laterally to form the characteristic anvil shape. Jet streams are located near the tropopause.
+
+### Q17: Temperatures will be given by meteorological aviation services in Europe in which unit? ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q17)*
+- A) Gpdam
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrees Centigrade (° C)
+- D) Degrees Fahrenheit
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** European aviation meteorology (ICAO Annex 3, EU regulations) specifies temperatures in degrees Celsius (°C) for all operational products including METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs, and forecast charts. Kelvin is used in scientific and upper-air calculations. Fahrenheit is used in the US and a few other countries but not in European aviation. This standardisation is critical for correct interpretation of icing levels, freezing level heights, and density altitude.
+
+### Q18: What is meant by "inversion layer"? ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q18)*
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion "inverts" the normal lapse rate — instead of temperature falling with height, it rises. This creates a very stable layer that acts as a lid on convection, trapping thermals below it, concentrating pollutants, and promoting fog and low cloud formation beneath it. For glider pilots, a low-level inversion caps thermal height; a subsidence inversion in a high-pressure system limits soaring altitude and is often associated with haze.
+
+### Q19: What is meant by "isothermal layer"? ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q19)*
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- C) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer maintains constant temperature with increasing altitude. Like an inversion, it is more stable than the standard atmosphere and inhibits convection. The lower stratosphere exhibits an isothermal region immediately above the tropopause. Isothermal layers can also occur in the troposphere and, like inversions, act as a cap on thermal development and cloud growth.
+
+### Q20: The temperature lapse rate with increasing height within the troposphere according ISA is... ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q20)*
+- A) 1° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- C) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- D) 3° C / 100 m.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) is 6.5°C per 1000 m, or 0.65°C per 100 m (approximately 2°C per 1000 ft). This is distinct from the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR) of 1°C/100 m and the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) of approximately 0.6°C/100 m. When the actual ELR is steeper than the DALR, the atmosphere is absolutely unstable; when it lies between the DALR and SALR, the atmosphere is conditionally unstable — the typical situation for thermal soaring.
+
+### Q21: Which process may result in an inversion layer at about 5000 ft (1500 m) height? ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q21)*
+- A) Ground cooling by radiation during the night
+- B) Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day
+- C) Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere
+- D) Widespread descending air within a high pressure area
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Subsidence inversion forms when air in the centre of a high-pressure area sinks over a wide area. As the air descends, it warms adiabatically, but because the lower air has not warmed at the same rate, the descending layer becomes warmer than the air below it — creating an inversion, typically around 1500–3000 m. This is characteristic of anticyclonic conditions: stable weather, limited convection, and haze or smog trapped below the inversion.
+
+### Q22: An inversion layer close to the ground can be caused by... ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q22)*
+- A) Thickening of clouds in medium layers.
+- B) Large-scale lifting of air
+- C) Intensifying and gusting winds.
+- D) Ground cooling during the night.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation inversion forms on calm, clear nights when the ground radiates heat into space and cools rapidly. The air in contact with the ground also cools, while air a few hundred metres above remains warmer — creating a temperature inversion near the surface. This type of inversion is common in anticyclonic conditions and often produces radiation fog or low stratus in the morning, which burns off as the sun heats the ground.
+
+### Q23: What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)? ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q23)*
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 250 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) 500 hPa
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere, pressure at approximately 5500 m (FL180) is 500 hPa — exactly half the sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. The 500 hPa level is a key reference level in synoptic meteorology and is used extensively in upper-air charts. Pressure decreases approximately logarithmically with altitude, halving roughly every 5500 m in the lower troposphere.
+
+### Q24: Which processes result in decreasing air density? ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q24)*
+- A) Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- B) Increasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- C) Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+- D) Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density is governed by the ideal gas law: density = pressure / (specific gas constant × temperature). Density decreases when pressure decreases (fewer molecules per unit volume) or when temperature increases (molecules move faster and spread apart). Both increasing temperature AND decreasing pressure simultaneously reduce density most effectively. This is why density altitude (the altitude equivalent of the actual air density) matters for aircraft performance on hot, high-altitude airfields.
+
+### Q25: The pressure at MSL in ISA conditions is... ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q25)*
+- A) 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) 113.25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1123 hPa.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) defines sea-level pressure as 1013.25 hPa (also expressed as 29.92 inHg in US aviation). This is the standard QNE setting — with 1013.25 hPa set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads Flight Level. All pressure altitudes and flight level definitions are based on this datum. Actual sea-level pressure varies with weather systems and must be corrected via QNH for accurate altitude indication.
+
+### Q26: The height of the tropopause of the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) is at... ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q26)*
+- A) 36000 ft.
+- B) 5500 ft
+- C) 48000 ft.
+- D) 11000 ft.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is located at 11,000 m, which equals approximately 36,089 ft (effectively 36,000 ft). Above this level, the standard atmosphere defines a constant temperature of -56.5°C up to 20,000 m (the isothermal stratospheric layer). This is distinct from Q15 which asks in metres — both questions test knowledge of the same value expressed in different units.
+
+### Q27: The barometric altimeter indicates height above... ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q27)*
+- A) Mean sea level.
+- B) A selected reference pressure level.
+- C) Ground.
+- D) Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The barometric altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude based on the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Crucially, it indicates height above whatever pressure level is set on the subscale (Kollsman window). Set QNH and it reads altitude above mean sea level; set QFE and it reads height above the reference airfield; set 1013.25 hPa (QNE) and it reads flight level. The altimeter always references a pressure level, not a physical surface.
+
+### Q28: The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting... ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q28)*
+- A) QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- B) QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- C) QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- D) QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the local altimeter setting that makes the instrument read the airfield's elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. Setting QNH and checking that the altimeter reads the known airfield elevation (published in AIP/chart) verifies the altimeter is functioning correctly and calibrated. QFE would show zero (height above airfield), QNE (1013.25) would show a value unrelated to actual elevation, and QFF is a meteorological value reduced to MSL for surface analysis charts.
+
+### Q29: The barometric altimeter with QFE setting indicates... ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q29)*
+- A) True altitude above MSL.
+- B) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- C) Height above MSL.
+- D) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual atmospheric pressure at airfield elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at the reference airfield and subsequently indicates height above that reference pressure level — effectively height above the airfield. This setting is commonly used in circuit flying and gliding operations so the altimeter directly reads AGL height at the home airfield. It does not account for terrain elevation differences elsewhere.
+
+### Q30: The barometric altimeter with QNH setting indicates... ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q30)*
+- A) True altitude above MSL.
+- B) Height above MSL
+- C) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- D) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting adjusted to make the instrument read the elevation above mean sea level at the station. It is calculated by reducing the airfield QFE to sea level using the ISA temperature gradient. With QNH set, the altimeter reads the airfield elevation on the ground and true altitude above MSL in the air (assuming ISA conditions). Note that "true altitude" (answer A) accounts for actual temperature deviations from ISA — QNH gives indicated altitude, which may differ from true altitude in non-ISA conditions.
+
+### Q31: How can wind speed and wind direction be derived from surface weather charts? ^q31
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q31)*
+- A) By alignment and distance of isobaric lines
+- B) By annotations from the text part of the chart
+- C) By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines
+- D) By alignment of lines of warm- and cold fronts.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isobars (lines of equal pressure) on surface charts indicate both wind direction and speed. Above the friction layer, wind flows parallel to isobars (geostrophic wind); close to the surface it crosses them at an angle toward lower pressure. Closely spaced isobars indicate a strong pressure gradient force and therefore strong winds; widely spaced isobars indicate light winds. Wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere is anticlockwise around lows and clockwise around highs (Buys-Ballot's Law).
+
+### Q32: Which force causes "wind"? ^q32
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q32)*
+- A) Centrifugal force
+- B) Pressure gradient force
+- C) Coriolis force
+- D) Thermal force
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is initiated by the pressure gradient force (PGF) — air accelerates from high pressure toward low pressure due to differences in atmospheric pressure. The Coriolis force deflects the moving air (to the right in the Northern Hemisphere) but does not cause the initial motion. Centrifugal force acts in curved flow around pressure systems. Thermal effects create pressure differences which then drive the PGF. Without a pressure gradient there would be no wind.
+
+### Q33: Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is... ^q33
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q33)*
+- A) At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.
+- B) Perpendicular to the isobars.
+- C) Parallel to the isobars.
+- D) Perpendicular to the isohypses.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above the friction layer (roughly 600–1000 m AGL), the Coriolis force and pressure gradient force balance each other, producing geostrophic flow parallel to the isobars. In the friction layer below, surface drag slows the wind, reduces the Coriolis deflection, and allows the wind to cross isobars at an angle toward lower pressure (typically 10–30°). Understanding this is essential for predicting wind direction at altitude versus near the surface.
+
+### Q34: Which of the stated surfaces will reduce the wind speed most due to ground friction? ^q34
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q34)*
+- A) Flat land, lots of vegetation cover
+- B) Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation
+- C) Oceanic areas
+- D) Mountainous areas, vegetation cover
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface roughness (aerodynamic roughness length) determines how much friction the surface exerts on moving air. Mountainous terrain with vegetation has the highest roughness length, causing maximum turbulent drag and wind speed reduction. Oceans have very low roughness and exert minimal friction. Flat vegetated land is intermediate. Importantly, mountains also mechanically block and deflect wind, creating additional complex flow patterns, turbulence, and wave phenomena of direct relevance to glider pilots.
+
+### Q35: The movement of air flowing together is called... ^q35
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q35)*
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Soncordence
+- D) Divergence.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convergence describes air flowing into a region from different directions, compressing horizontally. By mass continuity, converging surface air must go somewhere — it is forced upward, triggering cloud formation, precipitation, and potentially convective development. Convergence zones are important for glider pilots as they produce enhanced lift along their axes; sea-breeze fronts and col zones between pressure systems are classic convergence sources for soaring.
+
+### Q36: The movement of air flowing apart is called... ^q36
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q36)*
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Concordence.
+- C) Subsidence.
+- D) Divergence.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Divergence describes air spreading outward from a region. At the surface, divergence causes subsiding air from above to replace the outflowing air, promoting stability, clear skies, and fair weather. High-pressure anticyclones are associated with surface divergence and upper-level convergence. In the upper troposphere, divergence above a surface low enhances upward motion and intensifies the low-pressure system.
+
+### Q37: What weather development will result from convergence at ground level? ^q37
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q37)*
+- A) Ascending air and cloud formation
+- B) Descending air and cloud dissipation
+- C) Ascending air and cloud dissipation
+- D) Descending air and cloud formation
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface convergence forces air upward (ascending motion) by mass continuity — air cannot accumulate indefinitely at the surface. As air rises, it cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate until it reaches the dew point (lifting condensation level), where condensation begins and clouds form. Further ascent releases latent heat, potentially fuelling deep convection. This is the fundamental mechanism behind frontal lifting and sea-breeze convergence lift.
+
+### Q38: When air masses meet each other head on, how is this referred to and what air movements will follow? ^q38
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q38)*
+- A) Convergence resulting in air being lifted
+- B) Divergence resulting in air being lifted
+- C) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+- D) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two opposing air flows collide head-on, the meeting zone is a convergence line. The colliding air has nowhere to go horizontally and is forced upward — producing ascending motion, cloud formation, and potentially precipitation or thunderstorms. This occurs at fronts, sea-breeze convergence zones, and col zones. Glider pilots exploit convergence lines for extended linear climbs along the lift band.
+
+### Q39: What are the air masses that Central Europe is mainly influenced by? ^q39
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q39)*
+- A) Arctic and polar cold air
+- B) Tropical and arctic cold air
+- C) Equatorial and tropical warm air
+- D) Polar cold air and tropical warm air
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Central Europe sits in the mid-latitude westerly belt between the polar front (cold polar air from the north) and subtropical high pressure (warm tropical air from the south). The interaction between these two contrasting air masses creates the characteristic mid-latitude cyclone (depression) weather of Central Europe: frontal systems, rapidly changing weather, and the full range of cloud types and precipitation. This dynamic contrast also drives the polar jet stream overhead.
+
+### Q40: With regard to global circulation within the atmosphere, where does polar cold air meets subtropical warm air? ^q40
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q40)*
+- A) At the equator
+- B) At the subtropical high pressure belt
+- C) At the polar front
+- D) At the geographic poles
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the boundary between the polar cell (cold, dense air flowing equatorward) and the Ferrel cell (relatively warmer mid-latitude air). In the Northern Hemisphere it is located roughly between 40–60°N, but its position fluctuates as waves (Rossby waves) develop along it — these waves amplify into cyclones and anticyclones. The jet stream flows along the polar front and is a critical factor in synoptic weather patterns across Europe.
+
+### Q41: "Foehn" conditions usually develop with... ^q41
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q41)*
+- A) Instability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- B) Stability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- C) Stability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+- D) Instability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn is a warm, dry, descending wind on the lee side of a mountain range. It develops when stable air is pushed by a broad-scale pressure gradient against a mountain barrier. On the windward side, moist air rises and cools at the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR ~0.6°C/100 m) after reaching the dew point, precipitating moisture. On the lee side, dry air descends at the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR ~1°C/100 m), arriving warmer and drier than it started — the Foehn effect.
+
+### Q42: What type of turbulence is typically found close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions? ^q42
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q42)*
+- A) Clear-air turbulence (CAT)
+- B) Inversion turbulence
+- C) Turbulence in rotors
+- D) Thermal turbulence
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn and mountain wave conditions, a rotor zone develops in the lower troposphere on the lee side beneath the crests of the standing waves. The rotor is a region of intense, chaotic turbulence with rotating air, strong downdrafts, and violent eddies — it is one of the most hazardous phenomena for aircraft. Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis) mark wave crests above, while rotor clouds (roll clouds) mark the rotor zone near the surface.
+
+### Q43: Light turbulence always has to be expected... ^q43
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q43)*
+- A) Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+- B) Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.
+- C) When entering inversions.
+- D) Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible tops of thermal columns. The sub-cloud layer beneath them contains active thermals (updraughts) and compensating downdraughts between them, creating light to moderate turbulence from convective mixing. This is the normal turbulent environment of thermal soaring. Above cumulus tops the air is generally smoother (outside the cloud); stratiform clouds have minimal convective turbulence unless embedded CBs are present.
+
+### Q44: Moderate to severe turbulence has to be expected... ^q44
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q44)*
+- A) Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- B) Overhead unbroken cloud layers.
+- C) On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.
+- D) With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog).
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotor clouds (roll clouds) on the lee side of mountains are the visible indicator of the highly turbulent rotor zone beneath mountain waves. This turbulence can be extreme, with unpredictable up- and downdraughts, strong shear, and rotational forces capable of exceeding aircraft structural limits. Experienced wave pilots avoid or transit the rotor zone quickly with sufficient airspeed. The windward side of mountains typically has orographic cloud and steady lift, not severe turbulence.
+
+### Q45: Which answer contains every state of water found in the atmosphere? ^q45
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q45)*
+- A) Liquid, solid, and gaseous
+- B) Liquid
+- C) Gaseous and liquid
+- D) Liquid and solid
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water exists in all three states within the Earth's atmosphere. Gaseous water vapour is invisible and present throughout the troposphere. Liquid water forms cloud droplets, rain, and drizzle. Solid water forms ice crystals (cirrus clouds), snow, hail, and graupel. Understanding all three states is essential for icing awareness: supercooled liquid water droplets (liquid below 0°C) pose the greatest structural icing hazard to aircraft, as they freeze on contact with cold surfaces.
+
+### Q46: How do dew point and relative humidity change with decreasing temperature? ^q46
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q46)*
+- A) Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases
+- B) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases
+- C) Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dew point is the temperature to which air must be cooled (at constant pressure and moisture content) for saturation to occur. It is a measure of the absolute moisture content and remains constant as temperature changes (assuming no moisture is added or removed). However, relative humidity — the ratio of actual vapour pressure to saturation vapour pressure — increases as temperature falls, because the saturation vapour pressure decreases with temperature. When temperature equals the dew point, relative humidity reaches 100% and condensation begins.
+
+### Q47: How do spread and relative humidity change with increasing temperature? ^q47
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q47)*
+- A) Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases
+- B) Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- C) Spread increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Spread increases, relative humidity increases
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread is the temperature-dew point difference (T - Td). As temperature increases while dew point remains constant, the spread widens. Simultaneously, because warmer air can hold more water vapour, the relative humidity decreases — the air is now further from saturation. A large spread indicates dry air and a high lifting condensation level (high cloud base). A small spread (near zero) indicates saturated or near-saturated conditions, with fog or low cloud likely.
+
+### Q48: The "spread" is defined as... ^q48
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q48)*
+- A) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+- B) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- C) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air
+- D) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread (also called dew point depression) is simply the difference between the air temperature and the dew point temperature: Spread = T - Td. It is used to estimate cloud base height: in temperate latitudes, cloud base height in metres above the surface is approximately spread × 125 (or in feet, spread × 400). A spread of 0 means the air is saturated (fog or cloud at the surface). Spread is a quick indicator of moisture availability for soaring pilots.
+
+### Q49: With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in... ^q49
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q49)*
+- A) Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- B) Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- C) Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- D) Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As temperature decreases (with dew point unchanged), the gap between temperature and dew point narrows — spread decreases. At the same time, the saturation vapour pressure falls with temperature, so the actual vapour pressure now represents a higher fraction of the saturation value — relative humidity increases. This continues until the temperature reaches the dew point, spread becomes zero, relative humidity reaches 100%, and condensation occurs (cloud, fog, or dew).
+
+### Q50: What process causes latent heat being released into the upper troposphere? ^q50
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^q50)*
+- A) Cloud forming due to condensation
+- B) Descending air across widespread areas
+- C) Evaporation over widespread water areas
+- D) Stabilisation of inflowing air masses
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When water vapour condenses into cloud droplets, the latent heat stored during evaporation is released into the surrounding air. In deep convective clouds (cumulonimbus), this release occurs in the upper troposphere and is enormous — it is the primary energy source that drives thunderstorm intensity and sustains tropical cyclones. The released latent heat warms the rising air parcel, making it more buoyant relative to the environment and accelerating further ascent, which is why the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) is less steep than the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR).
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q10 : Which of these clouds presents the greatest danger to air navigation? ^bazl_50_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_10)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Cirrostratus
+- B) Cirrocumulus
+- C) Cumulonimbus
+- D) Altocumulus
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The CB (cumulonimbus) is the most dangerous cloud: severe turbulence, lightning, hail, wind shear, icing.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q19 : In which situation will the tendency for thunderstorms be most pronounced? ^bazl_50_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_19)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant cooling of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+- B) High pressure situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, low air humidity.
+- C) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the lower air layers, high air humidity.
+- D) Slack pressure gradient situation, significant warming of the upper air layers, high air humidity.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms = slack pressure gradient (low pressure gradient) + strong surface heating (instability) + high humidity.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q11 : Due to fine suspended water droplets, visibility at an aerodrome is only 1.5 km up to 1000 ft AGL. What is the meteorological phenomenon causing this visibility reduction? ^bazl_50_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_11)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Mist (BR).
+- B) Haze (HZ).
+- C) Shallow fog (MIFG).
+- D) Widespread dust (DU).
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Visibility 1–5 km with water droplets = mist (BR). Fog = visibility < 1 km.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q12 : Which of the following situations most favours the formation of radiation fog? ^bazl_50_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_12)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) 15 kt / Clear sky / 16°C / Dew point 15°C
+- B) 2 kt / Scattered cloud / 7°C / Dew point 6°C
+- C) 2 kt / Clear sky / -3°C / Dew point -20°C
+- D) 15 kt / Overcast / 13°C / Dew point 12°C
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog: light wind (2 kt), small temperature/dew point spread (1°C), some cloud acceptable. Option (C) has too large a temp/dew point spread.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q1 : The temperature recorded at Samedan airport (LSZS, AD elevation 5600 ft) is +5°C. What will the approximate temperature be at 8600 ft altitude directly above the airport? (Assume ISA lapse rate) ^bazl_50_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_1)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) -1°C
+- B) +11°C
+- C) -6°C
+- D) +5°C
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ISA lapse rate = -2°C/1000 ft. Difference: 8600 - 5600 = 3000 ft. Temperature: 5°C - (3 × 2) = -1°C.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q2 : The QFE of an aerodrome (AD elevation 3500 ft) corresponds to: ^bazl_50_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_2)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the ISA temperature lapse rate.
+- B) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level reduced to sea level taking into account the actual temperature profile.
+- C) The instantaneous pressure at the measurement station level.
+- D) The instantaneous pressure at sea level.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE = atmospheric pressure measured at aerodrome level (station). The altimeter reads 0 on the ground.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q6 : What does the following symbol mean? (Arrow with one long barb and one short barb) ^bazl_50_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_6)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Wind barb symbol:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_50_q06_wind_barb.png]]
+> *Wind from the north-east (~045°), 15 knots (1 long barb = 10 kt + 1 short barb = 5 kt)*
+
+- A) Wind from SW, 30 knots.
+- B) Wind from SW, 15 knots.
+- C) Wind from NE, 15 knots.
+- D) Wind from NE, 30 knots.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The arrow points towards the wind's origin. One long barb = 10 kt, one short barb = 5 kt. Total = 15 kt from the NE.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q3 : What are the wind speed and direction in the following METAR? LSZB 131220Z 28015G25KT 9999 SCT035 BKN075 10/06 Q1018 NOSIG= ^bazl_50_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_3)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, direction varying between WNW and WSW.
+- B) Wind from WNW, 25 knots, direction varying between WNW and SSE.
+- C) Wind from ESE, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 15 knots, gusting to 25 knots.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 280° = WNW, 15 kt mean, G25 = gusts to 25 kt.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q9 : In Switzerland, cloud base in a METAR is given in... ^bazl_50_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_9)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) ...metres above aerodrome level.
+- B) ...feet above sea level.
+- C) ...feet above aerodrome level.
+- D) ...metres above sea level.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a METAR, cloud base is given in feet AGL (above aerodrome level).
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q5 : You are flying at very high altitude (northern hemisphere) and consistently have a crosswind from the left. You conclude that: ^bazl_50_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_5)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) A high-pressure area is to the left of your track, a low-pressure area to the right.
+- B) A high-pressure area is to the right of your track, a low-pressure area to the left.
+- C) There is a high-pressure area ahead of you and a low-pressure area behind you.
+- D) There is a low-pressure area ahead of you and a high-pressure area behind you.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buys-Ballot's law: standing with your back to the wind in the northern hemisphere, the low-pressure area is to your left. Wind from the left = low pressure to the left, high pressure to the right.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q15 : What will be the probable change in atmospheric pressure at point C in the coming hours? (Synoptic chart with depression and fronts) ^bazl_50_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_15)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_50_q15_synoptic_fronts.png]]
+> *T = depression centre. A = warm sector (between warm front and cold front). B = behind the cold front (cold air mass). C = ahead of the warm front (cool air mass).*
+> *Cold front: blue triangles. Warm front: red semicircles.*
+
+- A) Pressure will undergo rapid and regular variations.
+- B) Pressure will rise.
+- C) No notable variation.
+- D) Pressure will fall.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point C is located ahead of the approaching depression/front → pressure will fall.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q13 : Which of the following phenomena is typical in summer during the passage of an unstable cold front? ^bazl_50_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_13)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Stratiform clouds.
+- B) Rapid rise in temperature behind the front.
+- C) Rapid fall in atmospheric pressure behind the front.
+- D) Convective clouds.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An unstable cold front in summer generates convective clouds (CB, TCu) with showers and thunderstorms.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q18 : Of the situations described below, which is most likely to occur when a stable, warm and humid air mass slides over a cold air mass? ^bazl_50_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_18)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At altitude: rapid drying of the air, dissipation of clouds, good visibility. In the lowlands: dense mist or fog at ground level.
+- B) Formation of a few small cumuliform clouds, rare precipitation, light turbulence, excellent visibility.
+- C) Formation of convective clouds, heavy showers, tendency for thunderstorms, severe turbulence.
+- D) Formation of extensive stratiform clouds, cloud base gradually lowering, sustained rainfall.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Warm and humid air sliding over cold air (warm front) = stratiform clouds, continuous rain, lowering cloud base.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q14 : Which of the following air masses is likely to produce showers in central Europe regardless of the season? ^bazl_50_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_14)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Maritime polar air.
+- B) Maritime tropical air.
+- C) Continental polar air.
+- D) Continental tropical air.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maritime polar air is unstable (cold below, moist) → convection → showers in all seasons.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q17 : What hazards are you likely to encounter in Switzerland in the presence of this meteorological situation? (Chart showing high pressure to the SW, depression to the N, NW flow) ^bazl_50_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_17)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Synoptic chart Switzerland/Alps:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_50_q17_synoptic_alps.png]]
+> *Anticyclone (H) to the west, depression (T) to the north-east, isobars indicating NW flow over Switzerland.*
+
+- A) In winter, persistent snowfall in Ticino.
+- B) To the south, the Alps are generally in cloud. North of the Alps, strong gusty winds.
+- C) North of the Alps: continuous precipitation; south of the Alps: very disturbed weather.
+- D) In summer, widespread thunderstorms south of the Alps due to blocking effect, accompanied by severe turbulence.
+
+**Correct : C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NW situation (Nordwestlage): precipitation north of the Alps, blocking effect, disturbed conditions on both sides.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q20 : To answer this question, refer to the Low Level SWC chart. Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_50_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_20)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+> **Low Level Significant Weather Chart (OGDD70)**
+> ![[figures/bazl_50_q20_low_level_swc.png]]
+> *Fixed Time Prognostic Chart — Valid: 09 UTC, 22 JAN 2015*
+> *Issued by MeteoSwiss*
+>
+> | Zone | Cloud cover | Cloud base | Cloud top | Visibility | Turbulence | Icing |
+> |------|-----------|-------------|---------------|------------|------------|---------|
+> | A | BKN/OVC SC, AC | 3000 ft | FL080 | > 10 km | MOD below FL080 | MOD FL040-FL080 |
+> | B | BKN/OVC ST, SC | 1500 ft | FL060 | 5-8 km, locally 3 km (BR) | MOD below FL060 | MOD FL030-FL060 |
+> | C | SCT/BKN CU, SC | 4000 ft | FL100 | > 10 km | ISOL MOD | LGT FL050-FL100 |
+>
+> *0°C isotherm: FL040 (north) to FL060 (south). Surface wind: SW 15-25 kt.*
+
+- A) Rain and snow showers are to be expected in area A.
+- B) In area B, cumuliform clouds are to be expected. Additionally, there may be light freezing rain or freezing fog.
+- C) Area A lies between two warm fronts.
+- D) Isolated thunderstorms may occur in area C. However, there will be no icing or turbulence.
+
+**Correct : A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the SWC chart, area A is in the cold post-frontal sector with rain and snow showers.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q4 : You are preparing to land on a sunny summer afternoon at an aerodrome whose runway runs parallel to the coast. The terrain is flat. As you begin the final approach, the coast is to your left. What will be the direction of the thermal wind? ^bazl_50_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_4)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Tailwind.
+- B) Crosswind from the left.
+- C) Headwind.
+- D) Crosswind from the right.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the afternoon, the sea breeze blows from sea to land. With the coast to the left, the wind comes from the left.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q7 : Where are you most likely to encounter strong winds and turbulence in the low-level air layers? ^bazl_50_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_7)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At the centre of a depression.
+- B) At the centre of an anticyclone.
+- C) In a region with a slack pressure gradient in winter.
+- D) In the transition zone between two air masses.
+
+**Correct : D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Frontal zones (transitions between air masses) produce the strongest wind gradients and turbulence.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q8 : At a temperature of 10°C, an air mass has a relative humidity of 45%. How will this change if the temperature rises to 20°C? ^bazl_50_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_8)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) It will increase by 50%.
+- B) It will decrease.
+- C) It will remain constant.
+- D) It will increase by 45%.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If temperature rises (without adding moisture), the air can hold more water vapour → relative humidity decreases.
+
+### BAZL Br.50 Q16 : On 1 June (summer time), you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. The forecast for the planned route is: "XMD". This means that: ^bazl_50_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_50_16)*
+> *Source : BAZL/OFAC Série 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) At 09:00 LT conditions on this route will be critical.
+- B) At 09:00 LT the route will be closed.
+- C) At 11:00 LT conditions on this route will be difficult.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the route will be closed.
+
+**Correct : B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GAFOR: X = route closed, M = mountain, D = difficult. In summer time, UTC+2. The 3 letters cover 3 periods of 2 hours each. X = 06–08 UTC = 08–10 LT. At 09:00 LT (07:00 UTC), the route is closed.
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 501 Q1 — What does the symbol below represent? ^bazl_501_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_1)*
+![[figures/bazl_501_q1.png]]
+- A) Wind from SW, 25 kt
+- B) Wind from NE, 25 kt
+- C) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+- D) Wind from SW, 110 kt
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The symbol shows a wind barb arrow. An arrow pointing toward SW with one long barb (10 kt) and one short barb (5 kt) = 25 kt from SW. The tail indicates the direction from which the wind comes.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q2 — At what time of day or night do you expect radiation fog to form? ^bazl_501_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_2)*
+- A) Shortly after sunset
+- B) At sunrise
+- C) In the afternoon
+- D) Shortly before midnight
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms shortly before midnight or in the late night, when the ground has cooled sufficiently by radiation to cool the air to the dew point. It is most dense at dawn.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q3 — What typical Swiss weather situation does the sketch below represent? ^bazl_501_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_3)*
+![[figures/bazl_501_q3.png]]
+- A) South Foehn situation
+- B) Westerly wind situation
+- C) Bise situation
+- D) North Foehn situation
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch shows the Bise situation (north-east wind in Switzerland, between the Alps and the Jura). It is a cold, dry wind from the east-northeast, typical of anticyclonic situations centered on northern Europe.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q4 — With which altimeter setting does an altimeter on the ground at an airport indicate the airport elevation? ^bazl_501_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_4)*
+- A) QFF
+- B) QFE
+- C) QNH
+- D) QNE
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With QNH setting, the altimeter indicates altitude above mean sea level (MSL). To read the airport elevation on the ground, set QNH. QFE would show zero at the airport, QFF is a pressure reduced to sea level.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q5 — Which statement is correct regarding the clouds in the following METAR? LSGC 040620Z 23005KT 9000 -RA BKN012 09/08 Q1018= ^bazl_501_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_5)*
+- A) 8 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+- B) 5-7 oktas, base at 1200 ft
+- C) 5-7 oktas, base at 12000 ft
+- D) 5-7 oktas, base at 120 ft
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the METAR: BKN012 means Broken (5-7 oktas) at 1200 ft. BKN = 5-7 oktas, 012 = base at 1200 ft.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q6 — How will atmospheric pressure change at point A in the next hour? ^bazl_501_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_6)*
+![[figures/bazl_501_q6.png]]
+- A) Rapid and regular variations.
+- B) A rise.
+- C) No change.
+- D) A fall.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows a cold front approaching point A. Cold front passage is accompanied by a pressure drop before the front, then a rise after. Based on the front's position on the chart, pressure at point A will fall.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q7 — What weather phenomena do you expect within zone 1 (south of France) at an altitude of 3500 ft AMSL? ^bazl_501_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_7)*
+![[figures/bazl_501_q7.png]]
+- A) 5-8 oktas of stratiform clouds, isolated thunderstorms, turbulence near the surface.
+- B) Isolated thunderstorms, visibility 5 km outside showers, no turbulence below FL 070.
+- C) Moderate icing, isolated thunderstorms with showers and turbulence.
+- D) 3-4 oktas of stratiform clouds between 2000 ft and 7000 ft, visibility 8 km, turbulence below FL 070.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In zone 1 (south of France) at 3500 ft AMSL, with active CB (cumulonimbus), one can expect: moderate icing, isolated thunderstorms with showers and turbulence. The SIGMET or forecast weather shows these typical conditions.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q8 — Which cloud type is composed exclusively of ice crystals? ^bazl_501_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_8)*
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus
+- D) Cirrus
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds are exclusively composed of ice crystals. They form at very high altitude (above 6000 m) where temperatures are very low. Cumulonimbus can contain both phases (water and ice).
+
+### BAZL 501 Q9 — With which cloud type is drizzle most likely to be encountered? ^bazl_501_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_9)*
+- A) Cirrocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus
+- D) Stratus
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle is associated with stratus clouds (low stratiform clouds). Stratus produce fine, continuous drizzle. Cumulonimbus produce intense showers.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q10 — Which of the following phenomena indicates a high risk of thunderstorms? ^bazl_501_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_10)*
+- A) A bright ring around the sun (halo)
+- B) Tower-shaped clouds (altocumulus castellanus)
+- C) Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis)
+- D) Stratiform clouds (stratus)
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Altocumulus castellanus (tower-shaped clouds) indicate significant atmospheric instability at medium altitude and are precursors of thunderstorms. Lenticular clouds indicate mountain waves.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q11 — Which of the following phase transitions requires a heat input? ^bazl_501_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_11)*
+- A) Transition from liquid to solid state
+- B) Transition from liquid to gaseous state
+- C) Transition from gaseous to solid state
+- D) Transition from gaseous to liquid state
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition from liquid to gaseous state (evaporation) requires heat input (latent heat of evaporation). Conversely, condensation and solidification release heat.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q12 — On which slopes are the strongest updrafts found in the diagram below? ^bazl_501_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_12)*
+![[figures/bazl_501_q12.png]]
+- A) 3 and 1
+- B) 3 and 2
+- C) 4 and 2
+- D) 4 and 1
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On terrain, updrafts form on the windward slopes and sunny slopes (thermals). Slopes 4 (facing the main flow) and 1 (sunny slope) have the strongest updrafts.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q13 — Which of the following phenomena is likely behind an active cold front with unstable characteristics? ^bazl_501_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_13)*
+- A) Rapid temperature rise, generally poor visibility.
+- B) Rapid pressure drop, good visibility outside showers.
+- C) Stratiform cloud cover, generally poor visibility.
+- D) Gusty winds, good visibility outside showers.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Behind an active cold front with unstable characteristics, expect gusty winds and good visibility between showers. The cold, unstable air following the front produces scattered showers but good visibility between them.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q14 — An aircraft flies at flight level FL 70 from Bern (QNH 1012 hPa) to Marseille (QNH 1027 hPa). Will the true altitude above sea level change (all other things being equal) while the aircraft is at FL70? ^bazl_501_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_14)*
+- A) It is not possible to answer the question.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At FL70, with higher QNH at destination (1027 hPa vs 1012 hPa at departure), the aircraft actually descends relative to true altitude. True altitude at FL70 is lower where QNH is higher, so the aircraft is actually flying lower.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q15 — At a temperature of +2 degrees C, an air mass has a relative humidity of 35%. How will this change if the temperature drops to -5 degrees C? ^bazl_501_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_15)*
+- A) Relative humidity decreases by 3%.
+- B) Relative humidity decreases by 7%.
+- C) Relative humidity increases.
+- D) Relative humidity remains the same.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Relative humidity increases when temperature drops (water vapor content remains the same but maximum capacity decreases). Cooling from +2°C to -5°C brings air closer to saturation.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q16 — A cold air mass moves over a warmer land area and warms in the lower air layers. How does it change? ^bazl_501_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_16)*
+- A) If clouds form, mainly stratiform clouds can be expected.
+- B) It becomes more unstable.
+- C) Its relative humidity increases.
+- D) Atmospheric pressure increases.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cold air mass moves over a warmer surface and heats from below, it becomes more unstable (stronger temperature gradient). This promotes convection and cumuliform clouds.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q17 — On 1 July (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. The forecast for the planned route is: "XXM". This means: ^bazl_501_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_17)*
+- A) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be closed.
+- B) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical. c) At 10:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- D) At 09:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GAFOR 'XXM' in summer time in Switzerland: GAFOR valid 06:00-12:00 UTC = 08:00-14:00 CEST. X=closed, X=closed, M=difficult. So at 11:00 LT (09:00 UTC) the route is closed.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q18 — How do the volume and temperature of a descending air mass change? ^bazl_501_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_18)*
+- A) Both increase.
+- B) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+- C) Both decrease.
+- D) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A descending air mass (subsidence) is adiabatically compressed: volume decreases and temperature increases. The air descends and warms.
+
+### BAZL 501 Q19 — To the north of a radiosonde at high altitude (Northern Hemisphere) there is a high pressure area, to the south a low pressure area. The wind will carry the balloon in the direction of: ^bazl_501_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_19)*
+- A) South
+- B) West
+- C) North
+- D) East
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, with high pressure to the north and low to the south, winds circulate clockwise around the high. The balloon between both systems will be carried eastward (geostrophic wind).
+
+### BAZL 501 Q20 — With which temperature profile above an aerodrome is the risk of freezing rain greatest? ^bazl_501_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_501_20)*
+![[figures/bazl_501_q20.png]]
+- A) Profile B
+- B) Profile A
+- C) Profile D
+- D) Profile C
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain forms when rain from a warm layer falls through a sub-zero layer. Profile A shows the typical temperature inversion enabling this: cold layer at the surface, warm layer above.
+
+---
+
+## Series 3 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 502 Q1 — Which of the following phase transitions releases heat? ^bazl_502_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_1)*
+- A) Transition from solid to liquid state
+- B) Transition from solid to gaseous state
+- C) Transition from gaseous to liquid state
+- D) Transition from liquid to gaseous state
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transition from gaseous to liquid state (condensation) releases heat. Condensation releases the latent heat previously absorbed during evaporation.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q2 — Where are the strongest downdraughts found in the diagram below? ^bazl_502_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_2)*
+![[figures/bazl_502_q2.png]]
+- A) 4
+- B) 3
+- C) 2
+- D) 1
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the diagram showing terrain with airflow, strongest downdraughts are found at position 3, generally on the leeward slope in the rotor or subsidence zone.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q3 — How will atmospheric pressure change at point B in the next hour? ^bazl_502_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_3)*
+![[figures/bazl_502_q3.png]]
+- A) No change.
+- B) Rapid and regular variations.
+- C) A rise.
+- D) A fall.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The synoptic chart shows an anticyclone approaching point B. The approach of an anticyclone causes a pressure rise at point B in the next hour.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q4 — An aircraft flies at flight level FL 90 from Zurich (QNH 1020 hPa) to Munich (QNH 1005 hPa). Will the true altitude above sea level change (all other things being equal) while the aircraft is at FL 90? ^bazl_502_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_4)*
+- A) It is not possible to answer the question.
+- B) No.
+- C) Yes, the aircraft climbs.
+- D) Yes, the aircraft descends.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At FL90, flying from Zürich (QNH 1020) to Munich (QNH 1005): QNH decreases → true altitude decreases → aircraft descends relative to sea level while maintaining the same FL.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q5 — At a temperature of 18 degrees C, an air mass has a relative humidity of 29%. How will this change if the temperature rises to 28 degrees C? ^bazl_502_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_5)*
+- A) Relative humidity increases by 29%.
+- B) Relative humidity increases by 10%.
+- C) Relative humidity remains the same.
+- D) Relative humidity decreases.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If temperature rises from 18°C to 28°C, the air's maximum water vapor capacity increases, but the vapor quantity remains the same → relative humidity decreases.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q6 — A warm air mass moves over a colder land area and cools in the lower air layers. How does it change? ^bazl_502_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_6)*
+- A) It becomes more stable.
+- B) If clouds form, mainly convective clouds can be expected.
+- C) Its relative humidity decreases.
+- D) Atmospheric pressure falls.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A warm air mass that cools from below becomes more stable (reduced temperature gradient). This promotes stratiform clouds, not convective clouds.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q7 — On 1 August (summer time) you receive the Swiss GAFOR valid from 06:00 to 12:00 UTC. The forecast for the planned route is: "DDO". This means that: ^bazl_502_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_7)*
+- A) At 08:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+- B) At 13:00 LT the flight route will be open.
+- C) At 14:00 LT the flight route will be difficult.
+- D) At 11:00 LT the flight route will be critical.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GAFOR 'DDO' summer: valid 06:00-12:00 UTC = 08:00-14:00 CEST. D=difficult, D=difficult, O=open. At 13:00 LT = 11:00 UTC → O (open).
+
+### BAZL 502 Q8 — How do the volume and temperature of a rising air mass change? ^bazl_502_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_8)*
+- A) Both increase.
+- B) Both decrease.
+- C) Volume increases, temperature decreases.
+- D) Volume decreases, temperature increases.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rising air mass expands adiabatically: volume increases and temperature decreases. This is adiabatic cooling.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q9 — Under identical conditions, which precipitation is the least dangerous for aviation? ^bazl_502_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_9)*
+- A) Hail
+- B) Heavy snowfall
+- C) Drizzle
+- D) Rain showers
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Drizzle is the least dangerous precipitation for aviation as its droplets are very small and quantity is low. Hail, snow, and heavy showers are much more dangerous.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q10 — Where do you have the greatest risk of encountering freezing rain? ^bazl_502_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_10)*
+- A) In summer during the passage of a warm front.
+- B) In winter during the passage of a cold front.
+- C) In summer during the passage of a cold front.
+- D) In winter during the passage of a warm front.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Freezing rain is most common in winter during warm front passage, when rain from a warm layer falls through a sub-zero layer before reaching the ground.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q11 — What does the symbol below represent? ^bazl_502_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_11)*
+![[figures/bazl_502_q11.png]]
+- A) Wind from SSW, 70 kt
+- B) Wind from NNE, 70 kt
+- C) Wind from SSW, 120 kt
+- D) Wind from NNE, 120 kt
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A wind barb pointing toward SSW with barbs representing 70 kt = wind from SSW at 70 kt. (Barbs: each long barb = 10 kt, short barb = 5 kt, pennant = 50 kt).
+
+### BAZL 502 Q12 — What is the name of the phenomenon that develops when a moist air mass moves horizontally over a colder surface? ^bazl_502_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_12)*
+- A) Sea spray
+- B) Orographic fog
+- C) Advection fog
+- D) Radiation fog
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms by horizontal movement of a moist air mass over a colder surface. The air cools to its dew point.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q13 — What typical Swiss weather situation does the sketch below represent? ^bazl_502_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_13)*
+![[figures/bazl_502_q13.png]]
+- A) South Foehn situation
+- B) Westerly wind situation
+- C) Bise situation
+- D) North Foehn situation
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The sketch shows a south Foehn situation (Südföhn) in Switzerland. Air descends the north slope of the Alps, heats adiabatically and creates a warm, dry wind.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q14 — What must you set on the altimeter so that it indicates flight height (height AAL) above a particular aerodrome? ^bazl_502_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_14)*
+- A) The QNH of the aerodrome.
+- B) The QNE of the aerodrome.
+- C) The QFE of the aerodrome.
+- D) The QFF of the aerodrome.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To display AAL height (Above Aerodrome Level), set the QFE of the aerodrome. The altimeter then shows 0 on the ground and height in flight.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q15 — What is the wind speed and direction in the following METAR? LFSB 171100Z 29004KT 220V340 9999 FEW043 28/17 Q1013 NOSIG= ^bazl_502_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_15)*
+- A) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW
+- B) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE
+- C) Wind from ESE, 4 knots, direction varying between NE and SSE.
+- D) Wind from WNW, 4 knots, direction varying between SW and NNW.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR LFSB 171100Z 29004KT 220V340: wind from 290° (WNW), 4 knots, varying between 220° (SW) and 340° (NNW).
+
+### BAZL 502 Q16 — What phenomenon is characteristic of a cold front advancing in summer in central Europe when the thermodynamic structure of the warm air is unstable? ^bazl_502_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_16)*
+- A) Rapid fall of atmospheric pressure once the front has passed.
+- B) Thunderstorm clouds.
+- C) Stratiform clouds.
+- D) Rapid rise in temperature once the front has passed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In European summer, when unstable warm air meets a cold front, thunderstorm clouds (Cb) develop. This is the most characteristic sign of an active summer cold front.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q17 — What weather phenomena should be expected along the route from LOWK to EDDP (dotted arrow)? ^bazl_502_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_17)*
+![[figures/bazl_502_q17.png]]
+- A) Progressive decrease in temperature, headwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- B) Progressive increase in temperature, headwind, no thunderstorms.
+- C) Progressive increase in temperature, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+- D) Progressive decrease in temperature, tailwind, isolated thunderstorms.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the synoptic chart, the LOWK-EDDP route (crossing central Europe) shows progressive temperature decrease (heading north), headwind per the situation, and isolated thunderstorms in summer.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q18 — Which cloud type is most likely to produce heavy showers? ^bazl_502_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_18)*
+- A) Cirrocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altostratus
+- D) Nimbostratus
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulonimbus (Cb) are the clouds that produce the heaviest showers, hail, and thunderstorms. They contain enormous quantities of water and ice.
+
+### BAZL 502 Q19 — To the north of a radiosonde at high altitude (Northern Hemisphere) there is a low pressure area, to the south a high pressure area. The wind will carry the balloon in the direction of: ^bazl_502_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_19)*
+- A) South
+- B) East
+- C) West
+- D) North
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, with low pressure to the north and high to the south, geostrophic winds blow westward (along isobars, with low pressure to the left in the NH).
+
+### BAZL 502 Q20 — What are the thunderstorms called that occur when air is forced to rise by topography and reaches unstable, moist layers? ^bazl_502_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/50%20-%20M%C3%A9t%C3%A9orologie.md#^bazl_502_20)*
+- A) Thermal thunderstorms
+- B) Cold front thunderstorms
+- C) Warm front thunderstorms
+- D) Orographic thunderstorms
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic thunderstorms occur when air is forced to rise by topography (mountains) and reaches unstable, moist layers. Distinct from thermal or frontal thunderstorms.
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 50 - Meteorology
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 101 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which conditions are likely for the formation of advection fog? ^q1
+- A) Warm, humid air cools during a cloudy night
+- B) Cold, humid air moves over a warm ocean
+- C) Humidity evaporates from warm, humid ground into cold air
+- D) Warm, humid air moves over a cold surface
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, humid air moves horizontally over a cold surface (land or sea), cooling the air to its dew point. Option A describes radiation fog (not advection), option B is incorrect because cold air over a warm ocean would create evaporation/steam fog, not advection fog, and option C describes steam or evaporation fog.
+
+### Q2: What process results in the formation of "advection fog"? ^q2
+- A) Cold, moist air is being moved across warm ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+- C) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- D) Warm, moist air is moved across cold ground areas
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog results from the horizontal movement of warm, moist air over a cold surface, which cools the air from below until it reaches its dew point. Option A reverses the temperature relationship (cold air over warm ground would not produce fog this way), option B describes mixing fog, and option C describes radiation fog caused by nocturnal cooling.
+
+### Q3: What pressure pattern can be observed when a cold front is passing? ^q3
+- A) Continually increasing pressure
+- B) Shortly decreasing, thereafter increasing pressure
+- C) Continually decreasing pressure
+- D) Constant pressure pattern
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As a cold front approaches, pressure falls ahead of it due to the preceding low-pressure trough; once the front passes, colder, denser air causes pressure to rise again. Option A (continually increasing) would indicate persistent high pressure building, option C (continually decreasing) describes a deepening low without frontal passage, and option D (constant) is inconsistent with dynamic frontal systems.
+
+### Q4: What frontal line divides subtropical air from polar cold air, in particular across Central Europe? ^q4
+- A) Warm front
+- B) Cold front
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Polar front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the semi-permanent boundary separating cold polar air masses from warmer subtropical air, and it is the birthplace of mid-latitude cyclones affecting Central Europe. A warm front is the leading edge of an advancing warm air mass, a cold front is the leading edge of an advancing cold air mass, and an occlusion is a later stage where these fronts merge — none of these are the primary climatological boundary itself.
+
+### Q5: What weather conditions in Central Europe are typically found in high pressure areas during summer? ^q5
+- A) Large isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems
+- B) Small isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems
+- C) Large isobar spacing with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Small isobar spacing with strong prevailing northerly winds
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, high pressure areas over Central Europe produce widely spaced isobars, meaning weak pressure gradients and calm synoptic winds; this allows local thermally driven wind systems (valley breezes, sea breezes) to develop. Option B is wrong because small isobar spacing means strong winds, not calm. Options C and D describe conditions more typical of strong synoptic flow associated with low-pressure systems.
+
+### Q6: What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during winter? ^q6
+- A) Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog
+- B) Changing weather with passing of frontal lines
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In winter, high pressure areas favour calm winds and surface-based temperature inversions that trap moisture near the ground, leading to widespread high fog (Hochnebel) or stratus. Option B (frontal weather) is associated with lows, option C (thunderstorms) requires instability absent in winter highs, and option D describes summer high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q7: What temperatures are most dangerous with respect to airframe icing? ^q7
+- A) .+20° to -5° C
+- B) .-20° to -40° C
+- C) .+5° to -10° C
+- D) 0° to -12° C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most dangerous icing temperatures are 0°C to −12°C because liquid water droplets remain supercooled and in large quantities at these temperatures, maximising ice accretion on airframes. Above +5°C ice cannot form, and below −20°C to −40°C most water has already frozen into ice crystals which do not adhere as readily to surfaces.
+
+### Q8: Which type of ice forms by large, supercooled droplets hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft? ^q8
+- A) Hoar frost
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Rime ice
+- D) Mixed ice
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clear ice (glaze ice) forms when large supercooled water droplets strike an aircraft, flow back before freezing, and solidify into a dense, smooth, heavy layer that is very difficult to remove. Hoar frost forms from deposition of water vapour on cold surfaces. Rime ice forms from small supercooled droplets that freeze on contact, trapping air and producing a white, opaque, brittle deposit. Mixed ice combines both rime and clear ice characteristics but is not the primary type formed from large droplets.
+
+### Q9: What conditions are mandatory for the formation of thermal thunderstorms? ^q9
+- A) Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity
+- B) Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and low humidity
+- C) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity
+- D) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal (air mass) thunderstorms require a conditionally unstable atmosphere — one that becomes unstable once convection is triggered — combined with high temperatures to drive strong surface heating and high humidity to provide the latent heat energy needed to sustain deep convection. An absolutely stable atmosphere suppresses convection regardless of temperature or humidity, and low humidity limits latent heat release needed to fuel the storm.
+
+### Q10: Which stage of a thunderstorm is dominated by updrafts? ^q10
+- A) Dissipating stage
+- B) Mature stage
+- C) Cumulus stage
+- D) Upwind stage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cumulus stage is characterised entirely by updrafts that build the storm upward; no downdrafts have yet developed. The mature stage features both strong updrafts and downdrafts along with precipitation. The dissipating stage is dominated by downdrafts as the updraft cuts off. There is no meteorological stage called the 'upwind stage'.
+
+### Q11: Heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear close to the ground can be expected... ^q11
+- A) Near the rainfall areas of heavy showers or thunderstorms.
+- B) During approach to an airfield at the coast with a strong sea breeze.
+- C) During cold, clear nights with the formation of radiation fog.
+- D) During warm summer days with high, flatted Cu clouds.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation falling from heavy showers or thunderstorms creates strong downdrafts (microbursts or downbursts) that spread outward near the ground, generating intense low-level wind shear. A sea-breeze front can cause some shear but not 'heavy' downdrafts. Radiation fog nights are associated with calm conditions. Flat cumulus clouds on warm days indicate weak convection without significant downdrafts.
+
+### Q12: Which weather chart shows the actual air pressure as in MSL along with pressure centers and fronts? ^q12
+- A) Wind chart
+- B) Surface weather chart
+- C) Prognostic chart
+- D) Hypsometric chart
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A surface weather chart (synoptic chart) depicts mean sea-level pressure via isobars, identifies pressure centres (highs and lows), and shows the positions of weather fronts derived from actual observations. A wind chart shows wind data only, a prognostic chart shows forecast conditions, and a hypsometric chart shows terrain elevation.
+
+### Q13: What information can be obtained from satallite images? ^q13
+- A) Overview of cloud covers and front lines
+- B) Turbulence and icing
+- C) Temperature and dew point of environmental air
+- D) Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Satellite imagery shows cloud cover distribution, cloud patterns, and derived front line positions across large areas. It cannot directly measure turbulence, icing, temperature/dew point profiles (those come from soundings), or quantify ground visibility — those require other observational systems.
+
+### Q14: What information can be found in the ATIS, but not in a METAR? ^q14
+- A) Operational information such as runway in use and transition level
+- B) Information about current weather, for example types of precipitation
+- C) Approach information, such as ground visibility and cloud base
+- D) Information about mean wind speeds, maximum speeds in gusts if applicable
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) includes operational airport information such as the runway in use, transition level, approach type, and NOTAMs relevant to the aerodrome, which are not encoded in a METAR. A METAR does report current weather phenomena (precipitation types), visibility, cloud base, wind mean and gust speeds — so options B, C, and D are all available in METARs.
+
+### Q15: What type of cloud indicates thermal updrafts? ^q15
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Lenticularis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds form as a result of thermal convection: rising air parcels cool to the dew point and condensation begins, marking the cloud base. Stratus is a layered cloud formed by broad lifting or fog, not thermals. Cirrus is high-altitude ice crystal cloud unrelated to surface thermals. Lenticularis (lenticular clouds) form in wave lift over mountains, not thermals.
+
+### Q16: The saturated adiabatic lapse rate is... ^q16
+- A) Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- B) Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- C) Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- D) Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR, ~0.6°C/100 m on average) is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR, 1.0°C/100 m) because the condensation of water vapour releases latent heat, partially offsetting the cooling of the rising air parcel. The two rates are not equal (option A), not proportional in the way option C implies, and the SALR is definitely not higher than the DALR (option B).
+
+### Q17: The dry adiabatic lapse rate has a value of... ^q17
+- A) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- B) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- C) 2° / 1000 ft.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is 1.0°C per 100 m (or approximately 3°F per 1000 ft). An unsaturated air parcel rising adiabatically cools at exactly this rate. Option A (0.65°C/100 m) is the standard atmosphere environmental lapse rate, option C (2°/1000 ft) is incorrect, and option D (0.6°C/100 m) approximates the saturated adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+### Q18: What weather conditions may be expected during conditionally unstable conditions? ^q18
+- A) Towering cumulus, isolated showers of rain or thunderstorms
+- B) Layered clouds up to high levels, prolonged rain or snow
+- C) Sky clear of clouds, sunshine, low winds
+- D) Shallow cumulus clouds with base at medium levels
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a conditionally unstable atmosphere, air is stable when unsaturated but becomes unstable once lifted to saturation (the level of free convection). This triggers vigorous convection producing towering cumulus, cumulonimbus, isolated showers and thunderstorms. Layered clouds and prolonged rain characterise stable (stratiform) conditions, clear skies indicate absolutely stable or dry conditions, and shallow mid-level cumulus does not match the vertical extent of conditional instability.
+
+### Q19: What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^q19
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Stratus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds are thin, wispy, high-altitude ice crystal clouds, typically above FL200. Their characteristic streaky or fibrous appearance is shown in the referenced figure MET-004. Altocumulus is a mid-level cloud in patches or layers, cumulus is a heap cloud at lower levels, and stratus is a grey featureless layer cloud.
+
+### Q20: The formation of medium to large precipitation particles requires... ^q20
+- A) Strong updrafts.
+- B) An inversion layer.
+- C) A high cloud base.
+- D) Strong wind.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Formation of medium to large precipitation particles requires strong updrafts to keep droplets or ice particles suspended long enough to grow by collision-coalescence or the Bergeron process. Weak updrafts allow small particles to fall before they grow significantly. An inversion layer suppresses growth, a high cloud base reduces available cloud depth, and strong wind alone does not sustain particles in the cloud.
+
+### Q21: The symbol labeled (2) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q21
+- A) Front aloft.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Warm front.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On synoptic weather charts, a warm front is depicted by a line with semicircles pointing in the direction of movement (into the cooler air). The referenced figure MET-005 shows symbol (2) as a warm front. Cold fronts use triangular barbs, occlusions combine both symbols, and a front aloft is marked differently.
+
+### Q22: What visual flight conditions can be expected within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer time? ^q22
+- A) Good visibility, some isolated high clouds
+- B) Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds
+- C) Visibilty less than 1000 m, cloud-covered ground
+- D) Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Within the warm sector of a polar front low, the air is relatively warm and moist but the dominant cloud cover is not severe; conditions typically offer moderate to good visibility with scattered or broken cloud layers. Visibility less than 1 km with ground-covering cloud is more typical of fog or orographic stratus in the cold sector. Heavy showers and thunderstorms are post-cold-front back-side weather. Good visibility with only high cirrus is more characteristic of the pre-warm-front region far ahead.
+
+### Q23: What visual flight conditions can be expected after the passage of a cold front? ^q23
+- A) Good visiblity, formation of cumulus clouds with showers of rain or snow
+- B) Poor visibility, formation of overcast or ground-covering stratus clouds, snow
+- C) Scattered cloud layers, visbility more than 5 km, formation of shallow cumulus clouds
+- D) Medium visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cold front passes, cold, unstable polar air replaces the warm sector air; this instability produces good visibility (clean polar air) with convective cumulus clouds and showery precipitation. Poor visibility with stratus and snow is more typical of a warm occlusion or the cold sector aloft. Options C and D describe intermediate or pre-frontal conditions.
+
+### Q24: What is the usual direction of movement of a polar front low? ^q24
+- A) Parallel to the the warm-sector isobars
+- B) To the northeast during winter, to the southeast during summer
+- C) Parallel to the warm front line to the south
+- D) To the northwest during winter, to the southwest during summer
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A polar front low moves in the direction of and roughly parallel to the isobars in its warm sector, because the warm sector winds steer the system. Seasonal directional rules (northeast/southeast or northwest/southwest) are oversimplified and not a reliable principle. Movement parallel to the warm front line southward is inconsistent with the observed eastward to northeastward tracks of North Atlantic lows over Europe.
+
+### Q25: What pressure pattern can be observed during the passage of a polar front low? ^q25
+- A) Rising pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- B) Rising pressure in front of the warm front, rising pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+- C) Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- D) Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ahead of an approaching warm front, pressure falls as the low approaches. Within the warm sector, pressure remains relatively steady (though slightly falling). After the cold front passes, cold dense air causes pressure to rise sharply. Options A and B incorrectly place rising pressure ahead of the warm front, and option D has pressure falling behind the cold front.
+
+### Q26: What change of wind direction can be expected during the passage of a polar front low in Central Europe? ^q26
+- A) Backing wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front
+- B) Veering wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front
+- C) Veering wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front
+- D) Backing wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, as a polar front low passes, the wind veers (shifts clockwise, e.g., from south to southwest) with the warm front passage and veers again (e.g., from southwest to northwest) with the cold front passage. Backing (anti-clockwise shift) would indicate the low passing to the south of the observer, which is less common in Central Europe.
+
+### Q27: What pressure pattern may result from cold-air inflow in high tropospheric layers? ^q27
+- A) Alternating pressure
+- B) Formation of a large ground low
+- C) Formation of a high in the upper troposphere
+- D) Formation of a low in the upper troposphere
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When cold air advects into the upper troposphere, it contracts the air column (cold air is denser), reducing the thickness between pressure levels; this lowers pressure aloft and produces an upper-level trough or low. Upper lows associated with cold-air pools are a key trigger for convective instability. A surface high results from upper-level divergence, not cold-air inflow aloft.
+
+### Q28: Cold air inflow in high tropospheric layers may result in... ^q28
+- A) Showers and thunderstorms.
+- B) Frontal weather.
+- C) Calm weather and cloud dissipation
+- D) Stabilisation and calm weather.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air intruding into the upper troposphere destabilises the atmosphere by creating a steep lapse rate (cold air above, potentially warmer air below). This conditional instability, when combined with moisture, generates convective activity including showers and thunderstorms. It does not produce frontal weather (which requires air mass boundaries at the surface), nor does it cause calm weather or cloud dissipation.
+
+### Q29: How does inflowing cold air affect the shape and vertical distance between pressure layers? ^q29
+- A) Increasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)
+- B) Decreasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)
+- C) Decrease in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)
+- D) Increase in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air is denser, so a column of cold air has shorter vertical distances between pressure surfaces (closer isobars aloft) and pressure surfaces lie at lower heights — indicating low pressure aloft. This is why upper-level cold pools are associated with upper troughs. Warm air has the opposite effect: greater thickness and higher pressure surfaces.
+
+### Q30: What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during summer? ^q30
+- A) Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu
+- B) Changing weather with passing of frontal lines
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, high pressure areas bring calm synoptic winds (weak pressure gradient) and subsidence suppresses deep convection, resulting in sunny skies with possible development of small fair-weather cumulus (few Cu). Frontal weather is associated with lows, squall lines and thunderstorms require instability and moisture not found in subsiding high-pressure air, and fog is typical of winter or overnight conditions in continental highs.
+
+### Q31: What weather conditions can be expected during "Foehn" on the windward side of a mountain range? ^q31
+- A) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate or heavy rain
+- B) Dissipating clouds with unusual warming, accompanied by strong, gusty winds
+- C) Calm wind and forming of high stratus clouds (high fog)
+- D) Scattered cumulus clouds with showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (luv) side of a mountain range during Foehn conditions, moist air is forced to rise, cools at the DALR then SALR, and precipitates much of its moisture as heavy orographic rain or snow with layered cloud and poor visibility — this is the 'Stauseite' effect. The warm, dry and gusty descending Foehn wind occurs on the lee (downwind) side, not the windward side.
+
+### Q32: What chart shows areas of precipitation? ^q32
+- A) Satellite picture
+- B) Wind chart
+- C) Radar picture
+- D) GAFOR
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Weather radar detects the intensity and location of precipitation by measuring backscattered microwave energy from raindrops and other hydrometeors; it is the primary tool for showing precipitation areas. Satellite images show cloud cover, not precipitation directly. Wind charts show wind patterns. GAFOR is a general aviation route forecast in text/coded format.
+
+### Q33: An inversion is a layer ... ^q33
+- A) With constant temperature with increasing height
+- B) With increasing pressure with increasing height.
+- C) With increasing temperature with increasing height.
+- D) With decreasing temperature with increasing height.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion is an anomalous condition where temperature increases with altitude instead of the normal decrease; it is highly stable and acts as a lid on convection. Option A describes an isothermal layer (constant temperature), option B misidentifies pressure (which always decreases with height), and option D describes the normal lapse rate — the opposite of an inversion.
+
+### Q34: What condition may prevent the formation of "radiation fog"? ^q34
+- A) Calm wind
+- B) Clear night, no clouds
+- C) Low spread
+- D) Overcast cloud cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Overcast cloud cover prevents the ground from radiating heat to space at night (the greenhouse/blanket effect), so the surface does not cool sufficiently to reach the dew point, and radiation fog cannot form. Calm wind, clear nights, and a low temperature–dew point spread (low spread) all favour fog formation, not prevent it.
+
+### Q35: The symbol labeled (3) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q35
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On standard synoptic weather charts, an occlusion is depicted by a line combining both cold-front triangles and warm-front semicircles on the same side, representing a front where the cold front has caught up with the warm front. The referenced figure MET-005 shows symbol (3) as an occlusion. Cold fronts show only triangles, warm fronts only semicircles, and fronts aloft are marked differently.
+
+### Q36: A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass showing no horizontal displacement is called... ^q36
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Stationary front.
+- D) Occluded front.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stationary front is a boundary between two contrasting air masses (here polar and subtropical) with no significant horizontal movement in either direction. A cold front moves toward the warm air, a warm front moves toward the cold air, and an occluded front is the result of a cold front overtaking a warm front.
+
+### Q37: What situation may result in the occurrence of severe wind shear? ^q37
+- A) Flying ahead of a warm front with visible Ci clouds
+- B) Cross-country flying below Cu clouds with about 4 octas coverage
+- C) During final approach, 30 min after a heavy shower has passed the airfield
+- D) When a shower is visible close to the airfield
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A shower that is visible close to the airfield is producing active downdrafts and outflow boundaries right now; these create severe, rapidly shifting low-level wind shear that is an immediate threat during approach or departure. Flying ahead of a warm front involves gradually deteriorating conditions but not severe shear. Cross-country flying below moderate Cu is normal gliding activity. Thirty minutes after a shower has passed, conditions have typically normalised.
+
+### Q38: What kind of reduction in visibility is not very sensitive to changes in temperature? ^q38
+- A) Radiation fog (FG)
+- B) Mist (BR)
+- C) Patches of fog (BCFG)
+- D) Haze (HZ)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Haze (HZ) is caused by dry particles (dust, smoke, pollution) suspended in the atmosphere and is not dependent on temperature or moisture; it persists regardless of temperature changes. Radiation fog, mist, and patches of fog are all moisture-dependent phenomena that form, thicken, or dissipate in direct response to temperature changes relative to the dew point.
+
+### Q39: In a METAR, "(moderate) showers of rain" are designated by the identifier... ^q39
+- A) .+TSRA
+- B) SHRA.
+- C) TS.
+- D) .+RA.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR coding, the descriptor 'SH' (shower) combined with the precipitation type 'RA' (rain) gives 'SHRA' for moderate showers of rain. '+TSRA' denotes heavy thunderstorm with rain, 'TS' alone indicates thunderstorm without precipitation reported separately, and '+RA' denotes heavy continuous rain (not a shower).
+
+### Q40: SIGMET warnings are issued for... ^q40
+- A) Specific routings.
+- B) Countries.
+- C) FIRs / UIRs.
+- D) Airports.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SIGMETs (Significant Meteorological Information) are issued for Flight Information Regions (FIRs) or Upper Information Regions (UIRs), which are defined blocks of airspace managed by specific ATC authorities. They are not issued for specific routes, individual countries (which may contain multiple FIRs), or individual airports (which use AIRMETs or terminal forecasts).
+
+### Q41: Mountain side updrafts can be intensified by ... ^q41
+- A) Solar irradiation on the lee side
+- B) Thermal radiation of the windward side during the night
+- C) Solar irradiation on the windward side
+- D) By warming of upper atmospheric layers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Solar irradiation (insolation) heating the windward slope warms the surface air, reducing its density and creating anabatic (upslope) flow that adds to the orographic lifting already occurring; this intensifies updrafts on the windward side. The lee side experiences descending air, night-time cooling suppresses thermals, and warming of upper layers would increase stability and suppress convection.
+
+### Q42: Clouds in high layers are referred to as... ^q42
+- A) Cirro-.
+- B) Strato-.
+- C) Nimbo-.
+- D) Alto-.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix 'Cirro-' denotes clouds in the high cloud family (above approximately 6,000 m / FL200), including cirrus, cirrocumulus, and cirrostratus. 'Strato-' refers to layer-type clouds at low to mid levels, 'Nimbo-' refers to rain-producing clouds (e.g., nimbostratus), and 'Alto-' denotes mid-level clouds (approximately 2,000–6,000 m).
+
+### Q43: What factor may affect the top of cumulus clouds? ^q43
+- A) The spread
+- B) Relative humidity
+- C) The absolute humidity
+- D) The presence of an inversion layer
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer acts as a lid that limits the vertical extent of cumulus cloud growth; thermals and updrafts lose buoyancy at the inversion, causing clouds to spread out and flatten at that level rather than growing into towering cumulus. The spread (temperature minus dew point) controls cloud base height, relative and absolute humidity affect cloud formation likelihood, but none of these cap the cloud top as directly as an inversion.
+
+### Q44: What factors may indicate a tendency to fog formation? ^q44
+- A) Strong winds, decreasing temperature
+- B) Low spread, decreasing temperature
+- C) Low pressure, increasing temperature
+- D) Low spread, increasing temperature
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A low spread (temperature close to dew point) means the air is near saturation, and decreasing temperature (e.g., nocturnal cooling or advection of cold air) will bring the temperature down to the dew point, causing condensation and fog. Strong winds promote mixing that prevents fog. Low pressure is associated with ascending air, not fog formation. Increasing temperature widens the spread and dissipates fog.
+
+### Q45: What process results in the formation of "orographic fog" ("hill fog")? ^q45
+- A) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- B) Warm, moist air is moved across a hill or a mountain range
+- C) Evaporation from warm, moist ground area into very cold air
+- D) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic (hill) fog forms when warm, moist air is forced to rise over elevated terrain, cools adiabatically to the dew point, and saturates; the resulting cloud envelops the hill or mountain as fog. Prolonged radiation cooling describes radiation fog, evaporation into cold air describes steam fog, and mixing of air masses describes mixing fog.
+
+### Q46: What factors are required for the formation of precipitation in clouds? ^q46
+- A) The presence of an inversion layer
+- B) Moderate to strong updrafts
+- C) Calm winds and intensive sunlight insolation
+- D) High humidity and high temperatures
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation forms in clouds when updrafts are strong enough to keep water droplets or ice crystals suspended long enough to grow — through collision-coalescence (warm clouds) or the Bergeron–Findeisen process (cold clouds). Without sufficient updrafts, particles fall before reaching precipitation size. An inversion prevents cloud growth, calm winds and sunshine are surface conditions not directly responsible for in-cloud precipitation, and high humidity/temperature alone do not create precipitation without dynamic lifting.
+
+### Q47: What wind conditions can be expected in areas showing large distances between isobars? ^q47
+- A) Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering
+- B) Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing
+- C) Formation of local wind systems with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Variable winds, formation of local wind systems
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Large spacing between isobars indicates a weak pressure gradient and therefore weak synoptic-scale winds. In the absence of strong pressure-gradient forcing, local thermally driven wind systems (valley-mountain winds, sea-land breezes) dominate the local circulation. Strong prevailing westerly or easterly winds require close isobar spacing.
+
+### Q48: Under which conditions "back side weather" ("Rückseitenwetter") can be expected? ^q48
+- A) After passing of a cold front
+- B) Before passing of an occlusion
+- C) During Foehn at the lee side
+- D) After passing of a warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 'Back-side weather' (Rückseitenwetter) refers to the cold, unstable, showery conditions in the polar air mass on the back (west/northwest) side of a low-pressure system, experienced after a cold front has passed. It is not associated with occlusions (which bring a different cloud and precipitation pattern), Foehn (a thermodynamic lee-side phenomenon), or warm fronts.
+
+### Q49: What wind is reportet as 225/15 ? ^q49
+- A) North-east wind with 15 kt
+- B) South-west wind with 15 kt
+- C) South-west wind with 15 km/h
+- D) North-east wind with 15 km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is reported in aviation as direction FROM and speed; '225' is the bearing 225° true (southwest), and '15' is the speed in knots. Wind direction is always the direction from which the wind is blowing, so 225° means the wind blows from the southwest. Speed in METARs and standard reports is in knots unless explicitly stated otherwise.
+
+### Q50: What weather is likely to be experienced during "Foehn" in the Bavarian area close to the alps? ^q50
+- A) Cold, humid downhill wind on the lee side of the alps, flat pressure pattern
+- B) Nimbostratus cloud in the southern alps, rotor clouds at the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- C) High pressure area overhead Biskaya and low pressure area in Eastern Europe
+- D) Nimbostratus cloud in the northern alps, rotor clouds at the windward side, warm and dry wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn in the Bavarian pre-alpine region, the classic pattern involves nimbostratus and heavy precipitation on the southern (windward) Italian side of the Alps, a Foehn wall of cloud at the ridge, and on the northern (lee) side a warm, dry, gusty wind with possible rotor turbulence and lenticular clouds. Option A incorrectly places the Nimbostratus on the northern side and the rotor on the windward side. Options A and D have the cloud and rotor positions reversed.
+
+### Q51: Clouds are basically distinguished by what types? ^q51
+- A) Thunderstorm and shower clouds
+- B) Cumulus and stratiform clouds
+- C) Stratiform and ice clouds
+- D) Layered and lifted clouds
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clouds are fundamentally divided into two basic types: cumulus (convective, vertically developed) and stratiform (layered, horizontally extended). Cumulus clouds result from convective uplift, while stratus clouds form from large-scale lifting or cooling of air layers. Options A and C mix sub-categories with the basic classification, and option D uses non-standard terminology ('layered and lifted') rather than the correct scientific distinction.
+
+### Q52: What weather phenomenon designated by "2" has to be expected on the lee side during "Foehn" conditions? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^q52
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Altocumulus Castellanus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn conditions, the air descends on the lee side and warms adiabatically, causing any remaining moisture to produce characteristic standing wave clouds. Altocumulus lenticularis (lens-shaped wave clouds) forms in the stable wave patterns downstream of a mountain ridge during Foehn. Cumulonimbus (options A and B) is associated with strong convection, not the stable descending flow of Foehn, and Altocumulus Castellanus (option D) indicates convective instability in the mid-levels, not lee-side wave activity.
+
+### Q53: Which type of ice forms by very small water droplets and ice crystals hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft? ^q53
+- A) Rime ice
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Mixed ice
+- D) Hoar frost
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rime ice forms when small supercooled water droplets and ice crystals strike the airframe and freeze instantly on contact, creating a white, opaque, brittle deposit typically on leading edges. Clear ice (option B) forms from large supercooled water droplets that spread before freezing, producing a smooth, dense, clear coating. Mixed ice (option C) is a combination of both. Hoar frost (option D) forms from water vapour depositing directly as ice crystals on cold surfaces, not from droplet impact.
+
+### Q54: Information about pressure patterns and frontal situation can be found in which chart? ^q54
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC)
+- B) Wind chart.
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Surface weather chart.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic chart) displays isobars, high and low pressure centres, and frontal systems such as warm, cold, and occluded fronts at mean sea level. A Significant Weather Chart (SWC, option A) focuses on hazardous weather phenomena for flight, not the overall pressure pattern. A wind chart (option B) shows only wind vectors. A hypsometric chart (option C) depicts constant-pressure surfaces (contour heights), not surface fronts.
+
+### Q55: What cloud sequence can typically be observed during the passage of a warm front? ^q55
+- A) Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter
+- B) Squall line with showers of rain and thunderstorms (Cb), gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As a warm front approaches, the first sign is high-level Cirrus, which gradually thickens into Cirrostratus, then Altostratus and Altocumulus at mid-levels, finally transitioning to Nimbostratus with prolonged rain and a lowering cloud base. Option A describes a high-pressure or thermal anticyclone scenario. Option B describes the passage of a cold front (squall line, Cb, gusty winds). Option D describes a coastal sea-breeze pattern unrelated to frontal meteorology.
+
+### Q56: What phenomenon is caused by cold air downdrafts with precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud? ^q56
+- A) Electrical discharge
+- B) Anvil-head top of Cb cloud
+- C) Gust front
+- D) Freezing Rain
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a fully developed (mature stage) thunderstorm, cold precipitation-laden air descends rapidly beneath the Cumulonimbus and spreads outward upon reaching the surface, creating a gust front — a sharp boundary of cold gusty air that can precede the visible storm by several kilometres. Electrical discharge (option A) is a separate thunderstorm hazard. The anvil top (option B) is a structural feature caused by upper-level winds, not downdrafts. Freezing rain (option D) results from a temperature inversion aloft, not directly from Cb downdrafts.
+
+### Q57: What information is NOT found on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)? ^q57
+- A) Information about icing conditions
+- B) Front lines and frontal displacements
+- C) Radar echos of precipitation
+- D) Information about turbulence areas
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC) depict meteorological hazards relevant to low-altitude flight, including turbulence areas, icing conditions, and frontal systems with their movement. They do not contain radar echo data of precipitation, which is a real-time product displayed on weather radar imagery. Options A, B, and D are all standard items found on LLSWC; only radar echoes (option C) are absent because LLSWC are forecast charts, not real-time radar products.
+
+### Q58: Which type of cloud is associated with prolonged rain? ^q58
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cirrostratus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nimbostratus (Ns) is a thick, dark grey layer cloud specifically associated with prolonged, steady rain or snow falling uniformly over a wide area, typically along warm fronts. Altocumulus (option A) is a mid-level cloud that does not produce significant precipitation. Cumulonimbus (option B) produces heavy showers and thunderstorms, not continuous prolonged rain. Cirrostratus (option D) is a high-level ice cloud that does not produce precipitation reaching the ground.
+
+### Q59: Regarding the type of cloud, precipitation is classified as... ^q59
+- A) Showers of snow and rain.
+- B) Prolonged rain and continuous rain.
+- C) Rain and showers of rain.
+- D) Light and heavy precipitation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Meteorologically, precipitation is classified by its cloud type of origin: rain (continuous precipitation from stratiform clouds such as Nimbostratus) and showers of rain (convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds such as Cumulonimbus or Cumulus congestus). Options A, B, and D describe precipitation by intensity or type of precipitation (snow vs. rain, light vs. heavy), which are separate classification systems not based on cloud type.
+
+### Q60: What conditions are favourable for the formation of thunderstorms? ^q60
+- A) Calm winds and cold air, overcast cloud cover with St or As.
+- B) Warm and dry air, strong inversion layer
+- C) Warm humid air, conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate
+- D) Clear night over land, cold air and patches of fog
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms require three key ingredients: moisture (warm humid air provides latent energy), lift (to trigger convection), and instability (a conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate means rising saturated air becomes warmer than its surroundings and accelerates upward). Option A describes stable, overcast conditions unfavourable for convection. Option B's strong inversion layer would suppress convective development. Option D describes radiation fog conditions with stable cold air.
+
+### Q61: What can be expected for the prevailling wind with isobars on a surface weather chart showing large distances? ^q61
+- A) Low pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind
+- B) Strong pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind
+- C) Strong pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind
+- D) Low pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Widely spaced isobars on a surface weather chart indicate a small pressure gradient (small pressure difference over a large distance), resulting in a weak pressure gradient force and therefore light winds. The wind speed is directly proportional to the pressure gradient. Options B and C incorrectly state that wide isobar spacing means a strong gradient, and option D incorrectly reverses the relationship between gradient strength and wind speed.
+
+### Q62: How is an air mass described when moving to Central Europe via the Russian continent during winter? ^q62
+- A) Maritime tropical air
+- B) Continental polar air
+- C) Maritime polar air
+- D) Continental tropical air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass originating over the cold Russian or Siberian continent during winter acquires characteristics of its source region: cold temperatures and low humidity, classifying it as Continental Polar (cP) air. Maritime air masses (options A and C) originate over ocean areas and carry higher moisture content. Continental Tropical (option D) air originates over warm, dry continental areas such as the Sahara, not over polar continental regions.
+
+### Q63: What clouds and weather can typically be observed during the passage of a cold front? ^q63
+- A) Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter
+- B) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- C) In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night
+- D) Strongly developed cumulus clouds (Cb) with showers of rain and thunderstorms, gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold fronts are characterised by active convective weather: rapidly developing Cumulonimbus clouds producing heavy showers and thunderstorms, accompanied by squall-line activity, strong gusty winds, and followed by scattered cumulus with isolated showers in the cold air behind the front. Option B (cirrus thickening to nimbostratus) describes a warm front. Options A and C describe anticyclonic or sea-breeze patterns respectively.
+
+### Q64: What danger is most immenent when an aircraft is hit by lightning? ^q64
+- A) Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit
+- B) Surface overheat and damage to exposed aircraft parts
+- C) Rapid cabin depressurization and smoke in the cabin
+- D) Disturbed radio communication, static noise signals
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most immediate physical danger when an aircraft is struck by lightning is surface overheat and structural damage to exposed parts — lightning can burn through fairings, damage antennas, pit metal surfaces, and in extreme cases damage control surfaces. Avionics may be affected, but explosion of cockpit equipment (option A) is not a primary risk in certified aircraft. Depressurisation (option C) applies only to pressurised aircraft. Radio static noise (option D), while possible, is not the most imminent danger.
+
+### Q65: What is referred to as mountain wind? ^q65
+- A) Wind blowing down the mountain side during the night
+- B) Wind blowing uphill from the valley during the night.
+- C) Wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.
+- D) Wind blowing down the mountain side during daytime.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain wind (Bergwind or katabatic wind) is the nocturnal downslope flow: at night, air in contact with the mountain slopes radiates heat, cools, becomes denser than the surrounding free air, and drains downhill under gravity. Valley wind (Talwind) is the daytime upslope flow caused by solar heating (option C). Options B and D confuse the direction or the time of day.
+
+### Q66: The saturated adiabatic lapse rate should be assumed with a mean value of: ^q66
+- A) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- C) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- D) 0° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR) averages approximately 0.6°C per 100 m (6°C per 1000 m), because latent heat released by condensation partially offsets the dry adiabatic cooling rate. The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is 1.0°C/100 m (option A), not the saturated rate. Option C (2°C/1000 ft) converts to approximately 0.66°C/100 m and is a rough approximation but not the standard stated value. Option D (0°C/100 m) would imply no temperature change with altitude.
+
+### Q67: Extensive high pressure areas can be found throughout the year ... ^q67
+- A) In tropical areas, close to the equator.
+- B) In areeas showing extensive lifting processes.
+- C) Over oceanic areas at latitues around 30°N/S.
+- D) In mid latitudes along the polar front
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The subtropical high-pressure belt forms near 30°N and 30°S latitudes as a result of the Hadley cell circulation: warm air rising at the equator moves poleward, cools, and descends in these subtropical zones, creating semi-permanent anticyclones over oceanic areas (e.g., Azores High, Pacific High). The equatorial belt (option A) is dominated by the ITCZ with low pressure. Option B describes areas of lifting, which generate low pressure. Mid-latitudes (option D) are where the polar front and cyclonic activity are found.
+
+### Q68: Weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained during the flight by... ^q68
+- A) PIREP
+- B) SIGMET
+- C) ATIS.
+- D) VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) is a continuous broadcast of recorded aerodrome information including current weather, active runway, and NOTAMs at destination aerodromes, and can be received by radio during flight. PIREP (option A) is pilot-reported weather en-route, not destination-specific. SIGMET (option B) covers significant meteorological hazards over a wide area. VOLMET (option D) broadcasts meteorological information for multiple aerodromes but is less aerodrome-specific than ATIS.
+
+### Q69: What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^q69
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Altus
+- D) Cumulus
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cloud shown in figure MET-002 is Cumulus — a convective cloud with a flat base and cauliflower-like vertical development, characteristically white with sharp outlines in good visibility. Stratus (option A) forms as a flat, featureless grey layer. Cirrus (option B) appears as thin, wispy filaments at high altitude. 'Altus' (option C) is not a recognised cloud genus in the ICAO classification.
+
+### Q70: The character of an air mass is given by what properties? ^q70
+- A) Wind speed and tropopause height
+- B) Environmental lapse rate at origin
+- C) Region of origin and track during movement
+- D) Temperatures at origin and present region
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass is defined by the temperature and humidity properties it acquires in its source region, and how those properties are modified as it moves. Both the region of origin (polar, tropical, equatorial) and the path it travels (maritime or continental) determine whether the air is warm or cold, moist or dry. Wind speed (option A) is not a defining characteristic. Environmental lapse rate at origin (option B) is a consequence, not the defining property. Temperatures at origin and present region (option D) alone do not capture the moisture dimension.
+
+### Q71: What cloud type can typically be observed across widespread high pressure areas during summer? ^q71
+- A) Overcast low stratus
+- B) Scattered Cu clouds
+- C) Overcast Ns clouds
+- D) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer anticyclones, surface heating generates thermal convection that produces scattered fair-weather Cumulus clouds (Cu humilis or Cu mediocris) during the day, dissipating in the evening. Overcast low stratus (option A) is associated with stable, moist air at low levels, common in autumn or maritime high-pressure situations. Nimbostratus (option C) is associated with frontal systems. Squall lines and thunderstorms (option D) require convective instability and moisture not typical of settled high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q72: The symbol labeled (1) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q72
+- A) Front aloft.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Warm front.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a surface weather chart, a cold front is depicted by a line with solid triangular spikes (barbs) pointing in the direction of movement. The symbol labeled (1) in figure MET-005 matches the cold front symbol. A warm front uses semicircles. An occlusion uses alternating triangles and semicircles. A front aloft is depicted differently and is less commonly shown on basic surface charts.
+
+### Q73: In a METAR, "heavy rain" is designated by the identifier... ^q73
+- A) RA.
+- B) .+RA
+- C) SHRA
+- D) .+SHRA.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR codes, precipitation intensity is indicated by a '+' prefix (heavy) or '-' prefix (light); no prefix means moderate. Rain is coded 'RA'. Therefore heavy rain is '+RA' (written as '+RA' in the standard, shown in the options as '.+RA'). 'RA' alone (option A) means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option C) means shower of rain (moderate). '+SHRA' (option D) means heavy shower of rain — a convective shower, not continuous heavy rain.
+
+### Q74: With regard to thunderstorms, strong up- and downdrafts appear during the... ^q74
+- A) Mature stage.
+- B) Dissipating stage.
+- C) Initial stage.
+- D) Thunderstorm stage.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the mature stage of a thunderstorm, both strong updrafts (sustaining the storm) and strong downdrafts (driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling) coexist simultaneously within the Cumulonimbus cell. The initial (cumulus) stage has only updrafts. The dissipating stage is dominated by downdrafts only, which cut off the updraft supply and weaken the storm. 'Thunderstorm stage' (option D) is not a recognised meteorological term.
+
+### Q75: Which of the following conditions are most favourable for ice accretion? ^q75
+- A) Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C, presence of supercooled water droplets (clouds)
+- B) Temperaturs below 0° C, strong wind, sky clear of clouds
+- C) Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C, presence of ice crystals (Ci clouds)
+- D) Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C, presence of hail (clouds)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C where supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and drop size is largest, producing clear or mixed icing on airframe surfaces. Below -20°C, cloud water is mostly in ice crystal form and causes much less accretion. Above 0°C, droplets are not supercooled and do not freeze on contact. Icing in clear air (option B) does not occur as there are no supercooled droplets. Cirrus (option C) contains ice crystals which do not adhere significantly.
+
+### Q76: What danger is most imminent during an approach to an airfield situated in a valley, with strong wind aloft blowing perpendicular to the mountain ridge? ^q76
+- A) Reduced visibilty, maybe loss of sight to the airfield during final approach
+- B) Wind shear during descent, wind direction may change by 180°
+- C) Formation of medium to heavy clear ice on all aircraft surfaces
+- D) Heavy downdrafts within rainfall areas below thunderstorm clouds
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When strong wind blows perpendicular to a mountain ridge, orographic lift on the windward side and mechanical turbulence create complex wind shear on the lee side. An aircraft descending into a valley airfield on the lee side may encounter severe wind shear with the wind reversing by up to 180° between altitudes, creating sudden loss of airspeed or ground wind opposite to the upper-level flow. Reduced visibility (option A) is a secondary concern. Icing (option C) is unrelated to mountain wind shear. Heavy downdrafts in rainfall (option D) describes thunderstorm activity, not orographic flow.
+
+### Q77: What phenomenon is referred to as blue thermals? ^q77
+- A) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- D) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blue thermals are thermals that extend to significant altitude but remain below the condensation level (dew point height), so no Cumulus clouds form — the sky appears clear (blue). They are invisible to glider pilots and require instruments or experience to exploit. Option A confuses thermals with cloud coverage statistics. Option B describes sink between Cu clouds. Option C describes clear-air turbulence (CAT) near thunderstorms, a different phenomenon.
+
+### Q78: The term beginning of thermals refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^q78
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 'beginning of thermals' (Thermikbeginn) is the moment when thermal lift becomes sufficiently strong and deep (reaching at least 600 m AGL) for a glider to sustain flight and gain height — this is the practical definition. It does not require Cu cloud formation (option A), nor does it specify a fixed MSL altitude (option B). Option C adds an unnecessary cloud formation criterion to what is fundamentally an altitude threshold.
+
+### Q79: The term trigger temperature is defined as the temperature which... ^q79
+- A) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascend when formation of Cumulus clouds begins.
+- B) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level that has to be reached so formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud can occur.
+- D) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum ground temperature that must be reached before thermals are strong enough to carry air parcels to the condensation level and form Cumulus clouds. It is found on a tephigram or skew-T diagram by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the surface intersection until it meets the temperature profile. Options A and B misstate it as a temperature reached aloft or a threshold for thunderstorm formation. Option C describes thunderstorm formation, not Cu formation.
+
+### Q80: What situation is called over-development in a weather report? ^q80
+- A) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- C) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+- D) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development (Überentwicklung) occurs when Cumulus clouds develop vertically beyond Cu congestus into rain-producing Cumulonimbus clouds, generating showers and thunderstorms. This typically happens in the afternoon when the atmosphere becomes increasingly unstable. Option A describes a change in thermal visibility. Option B refers to synoptic-scale deepening of depressions. Option D describes the spreading of Cu under an inversion (which is actually 'street' or 'cover' formation, a separate phenomenon).
+
+### Q81: What situation is referred to as shielding? ^q81
+- A) Ns clouds, covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- B) High or mid-level cloud layers, impairing thermal activity
+- C) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- D) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eights of the sky
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding (Abschirmung) refers to a layer of high or mid-level cloud (such as Cirrostratus, Altostratus, or Altocumulus) that intercepts solar radiation before it reaches the ground, thus reducing or suppressing the surface heating required for thermal development. Option A describes cloud cover on a windward mountain slope. Option C describes the anvil of a Cb, not shielding. Option D describes sky coverage in oktas, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q82: What is the gas composition of air? ^q82
+- A) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- D) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air is composed of approximately 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and 1% argon and trace gases including carbon dioxide. This is the standard atmospheric composition. All other options incorrectly swap the proportions of nitrogen and oxygen or introduce water vapour as a major component. Water vapour is a variable constituent (0–4%) not included in the standard dry air composition.
+
+### Q83: What is the mass of a cube of air with the edges 1 m long, at MSL according ISA? ^q83
+- A) 0,01225 kg
+- B) 0,1225 kg
+- C) 12,25 kg
+- D) 1,225 kg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At MSL under ISA conditions, the standard air density is 1.225 kg/m³. A cube with 1 m edges has a volume of 1 m³, so its mass is 1.225 kg. Option A (0.01225 kg) is off by a factor of 100, option B (0.1225 kg) by a factor of 10, and option C (12.25 kg) by a factor of 10 in the opposite direction. These represent common decimal-point errors.
+
+### Q84: The term tropopause is defined as... ^q84
+- A) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+- B) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- C) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- D) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the boundary layer separating the troposphere (where temperature decreases with altitude) from the stratosphere (where temperature is initially constant and then increases due to ozone absorption). It is not the layer above the troposphere (option A), nor the height where temperature starts to decrease (option B — that is the surface of the troposphere). Option D confuses the tropopause with the stratopause.
+
+### Q85: What is meant by inversion layer? ^q85
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer is an atmospheric layer in which temperature increases with increasing altitude, the reverse ('inversion') of the normal decrease. Inversions suppress vertical mixing and convection, trapping pollutants and inhibiting thermal development above them. Option B describes normal atmospheric conditions. Option C describes an isothermal layer. Option D describes a generic boundary without specifying the temperature gradient direction.
+
+### Q86: What is meant by isothermal layer? ^q86
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- C) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer is one in which temperature remains constant with increasing altitude — neither increasing (inversion, option D) nor decreasing (normal lapse rate, option A). Isothermal conditions are found, for example, in the lower stratosphere. Option C describes a generic atmospheric boundary layer, not a layer of constant temperature.
+
+### Q87: Which force causes wind? ^q87
+- A) Centrifugal force
+- B) Pressure gradient force
+- C) Coriolis force
+- D) Thermal force
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is caused by the pressure gradient force — air flows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure, and the greater the pressure difference over a given distance, the stronger the resulting wind. The Coriolis force (option C) deflects wind but does not create it. Centrifugal force (option A) is a secondary effect in curved flow. There is no meteorological force specifically called 'thermal force'; thermal differences drive pressure gradients, but the direct cause of wind is the pressure gradient itself.
+
+### Q88: Foehn conditions usually develop with... ^q88
+- A) Instability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- B) Stability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- C) Stability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+- D) Instability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn develops when a stable airflow is forced over a mountain barrier. On the windward side, the air rises moist-adiabatically (condensation releasing latent heat), and on the lee side it descends dry-adiabatically, arriving warmer and drier than before ascent. Stability is necessary for the organised flow; instability would break the flow into convective cells. Calm high-pressure conditions (options A and B) do not provide the cross-mountain pressure gradient needed. Instability (option D) would prevent the laminar flow characteristic of Foehn.
+
+### Q89: The spread is defined as... ^q89
+- A) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+- B) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- C) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air
+- D) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spread (or dew-point spread) is the difference between the actual (dry-bulb) air temperature and the dew point temperature. A small spread indicates air close to saturation; when the spread reaches zero, condensation and fog or cloud formation occur. Option B is incorrect because dew point and condensation point are effectively the same. Option C describes relative humidity. Option D describes the saturation mixing ratio or absolute humidity capacity.
+
+### Q90: What weather phenomenon designated by 2 has to be expected on the lee side during Foehn conditions? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^q90
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Altocumulus Castellanus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical in content to question 90. During Foehn, the descending and warming lee-side flow is stable and generates standing wave clouds. Altocumulus lenticularis forms in the crests of these mountain waves on the lee side. Cumulonimbus (options A and B) requires strong convective instability absent in Foehn descent. Altocumulus Castellanus (option D) indicates mid-level instability, not the stable wave motion of a Foehn situation.
+
+### Q91: What condition may prevent the formation of radiation fog? ^q91
+- A) Calm wind
+- B) Clear night, no clouds
+- C) Low spread
+- D) Overcast cloud cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms on clear, calm nights when the ground radiates heat to space, cooling the surface air to its dew point. An overcast cloud cover prevents the necessary radiative cooling of the ground surface by acting as an insulating blanket, reflecting long-wave radiation back to the ground. Calm wind (option A) is actually a prerequisite for radiation fog formation. A clear night (option B) and low spread (option C) are also favourable, not preventative, conditions.
+
+### Q92: What process results in the formation of advection fog? ^q92
+- A) Cold, moist air is being moved across warm ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+- C) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- D) Warm, moist air is moved across cold ground areas
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a cold surface and cooled from below to its dew point. This is most common over cold ocean currents or cold land surfaces in spring. Option A reverses the temperature relationship. Option B describes mixing fog (a different type). Option C describes radiation fog. The defining factor in advection fog is the movement of warm moist air over cold ground.
+
+### Q93: What process results in the formation of orographic fog (hill fog)? ^q93
+- A) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- B) Warm, moist air is moved across a hill or a mountain range
+- C) Evaporation from warm, moist ground area into very cold air
+- D) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when moist air is forced to rise over terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches its dew point; the result is a cloud base that sits on the hillside or mountain top. Option A describes radiation fog. Option C describes steam fog (evaporation/mixing fog). Option D describes mixing fog. The key process is forced lifting of moist air over elevated terrain.
+
+### Q94: What weather phenomena have to be expected around an upper-level trough? ^q94
+- A) Calm weather, formation of lifted fog layers
+- B) Calm wind, forming of shallow cumulus clouds
+- C) Development of showers and thunderstorms (Cb)
+- D) Formation of high stratus clouds, ground-covering cloud bases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upper-level trough is a region of cold air aloft with positive vorticity advection, which promotes divergence aloft and convergence at the surface, triggering strong convective uplift. This instability favours the development of showers and thunderstorms (Cumulonimbus). Options A and B describe stable, anticyclonic conditions. Option D (high stratus) would require stable, moist conditions near the surface, not the convective instability associated with a cold upper trough.
+
+### Q95: What weather conditions can be expected during Foehn on the windward side of a mountain range? ^q95
+- A) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate or heavy rain
+- B) Dissipating clouds with unusual warming, accompanied by strong, gusty winds
+- C) Calm wind and forming of high stratus clouds (high fog)
+- D) Scattered cumulus clouds with showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (stau) side of a mountain range during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise and cool, producing dense cloud, obscured peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain or snow — the classic 'Stau' weather. Option B describes the lee side of the Foehn (warm, dry, gusty). Option C describes stable, fog-prone conditions unrelated to Foehn. Option D describes conditions more typical of frontal convective activity.
+
+### Q96: Measured pressure distribution in MSL and corresponding frontal systems are displayed by the... ^q96
+- A) Hypsometric chart
+- B) Prognostic chart.
+- C) Surface weather chart.
+- D) Significant Weather Chart (SWC).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (also called the synoptic chart or analysis chart) displays actual measured pressure values reduced to MSL as isobars, along with the positions of frontal systems. It represents the observed state of the atmosphere at a specific time. A prognostic chart (option B) shows forecast conditions. The hypsometric chart (option A) shows upper-level contour heights on constant-pressure surfaces. The SWC (option D) focuses on hazardous weather phenomena, not comprehensive pressure analysis.
+
+### Q97: In a METAR, heavy rain is designated by the identifier... ^q97
+- A) RA.
+- B) .+RA
+- C) SHRA
+- D) .+SHRA.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical to question 120. In METAR, precipitation intensity modifiers are '+' for heavy and '-' for light. 'RA' is the METAR code for rain; therefore '+RA' (shown as '.+RA' in the options) denotes heavy rain. 'RA' (option A) alone means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option C) is shower of rain. '+SHRA' (option D) is heavy shower of rain — a different precipitation type.
+
+### Q98: In a METAR, (moderate) showers of rain are designated by the identifier... ^q98
+- A) .+TSRA
+- B) SHRA.
+- C) TS.
+- D) .+RA.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR, the descriptor 'SH' (shower) is added before the precipitation code to indicate convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds. Moderate showers of rain are therefore coded 'SHRA'. '+TSRA' (option A) means heavy thunderstorm with rain. 'TS' (option C) means thunderstorm without precipitation modifier. '+RA' (option D) means heavy continuous rain from stratiform clouds, not a shower.
+
+### Q99: Under which conditions back side weather (Rückseitenwetter) can be expected? ^q99
+- A) After passing of a cold front
+- B) Before passing of an occlusion
+- C) During Foehn at the lee side
+- D) After passing of a warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Back-side weather (Rückseitenwetter) describes the weather in the cold air mass following the passage of a cold front: cold, unstable polar or arctic air with scattered showers, good visibility, and gusty winds — often excellent soaring conditions for gliders in the convective back-side air. It occurs after, not before, frontal passages. An occlusion (option B) combines warm and cold front characteristics. Foehn (option C) is a separate orographic phenomenon. After a warm front (option D) brings the warm sector, not cold back-side air.
+
+### Q100: How does air temperatur change in ISA from MSL to approx. 10.000 m height? ^q100
+- A) From +30° to -40°C
+- B) From +20° to -40°C
+- C) From -15° to 50°C
+- D) From +15° to -50°C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), the temperature at MSL is +15°C, and the temperature decreases at 6.5°C per 1000 m (2°C per 1000 ft) through the troposphere. At approximately 11,000 m (the tropopause), the temperature reaches -56.5°C, rounding to approximately -50°C at 10,000 m. Options A and B give incorrect MSL starting values (+30°C and +20°C). Option C reverses the sign convention, implying temperature increases with altitude.
+
+### Q101: What weather is likely to be experienced during Foehn in the Bavarian area close to the alps? ^q101
+- A) Cold, humid downhill wind on the lee side of the alps, flat pressure pattern
+- B) Nimbostratus cloud in the southern alps, rotor clouds at the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- C) High pressure area overhead Biskaya and low pressure area in Eastern Europe
+- D) Nimbostratus cloud in the northern alps, rotor clouds at the windward side, warm and dry wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Classic Bavarian Foehn is driven by low pressure over the Gulf of Genoa and high pressure over the North Sea, forcing air southward over the Alps. Nimbostratus forms on the south (windward) side of the Alps, while on the north (lee) Bavarian side, warm and dry air descends, often accompanied by Föhnmauer (Foehn wall) and rotor clouds along the Foehn boundary. Option A incorrectly describes the lee-side wind as cold and humid and places the Ns on the wrong side. Option C describes the synoptic pressure setup only partially. Option D places the Ns on the north (lee) side, which is incorrect.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_60.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_60.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,1744 @@
+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Navigation
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 50 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The rotational axis of the Earth runs through the... ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q1)*
+- A) Magnetic north pole and on the geographic South Pole.
+- B) Magnetic north pole and on the magnetic south pole.
+- C) Geographic North Pole and on the magnetic south pole.
+- D) Geographic North Pole and on the geographic South Pole.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's rotational axis is the physical axis around which the planet spins, and it passes through the geographic (true) poles — not the magnetic poles. The geographic poles are fixed points defined by the rotational axis, while the magnetic poles are offset from them and drift over time due to changes in the Earth's molten core.
+
+### Q2: Which statement is correct with regard to the polar axis of the Earth? ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q2)*
+- A) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator
+- B) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is at an angle of 66.5° to the plane of the equator
+- C) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is at an angle of 23.5° to the plane of the equator
+- D) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar axis passes through the geographic poles and is perpendicular (90°) to the plane of the equator by definition. The Earth's axis is indeed tilted 23.5° relative to the plane of its orbit around the sun (the ecliptic), but it is perpendicular to the equatorial plane — those two facts are consistent and not contradictory. Option C confuses the tilt to the ecliptic with the relationship to the equator.
+
+### Q3: Which approximate, geometrical form describes the shape of the Earth best for navigation systems? ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q3)*
+- A) Sphere of ecliptical shape
+- B) Flat plate
+- C) Perfect sphere
+- D) Ellipsoid
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth is not a perfect sphere — it is slightly flattened at the poles and bulges at the equator due to its rotation. This shape is called an oblate spheroid or ellipsoid. Modern navigation systems (including GPS) use the WGS-84 ellipsoid as the reference model, which accurately accounts for this flattening in coordinate calculations.
+
+### Q4: Which statement about a rhumb line is correct? ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q4)*
+- A) A rhumb line is a great circle intersecting the the equator with 45° angle.
+- B) The center of a complete cycle of a rhumb line is always the Earth's center.
+- C) A rhumb line cuts each meridian at the same angle.
+- D) The shortest track between two points along the Earth's surface follows a rhumb line.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rhumb line (also called a loxodrome) is defined as a line that crosses every meridian of longitude at the same angle. This makes it useful for constant-heading navigation — a pilot can fly a rhumb line by maintaining a fixed compass heading. However, it is not the shortest path between two points; that distinction belongs to the great circle route.
+
+### Q5: The shortest distance between two points on Earth is represented by a part of... ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q5)*
+- A) A rhumb line.
+- B) A small circle
+- C) A parallel of latitude.
+- D) A great circle.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A great circle is any circle whose plane passes through the center of the Earth, and the arc of a great circle between two points is the shortest possible path along the Earth's surface (the geodesic). Parallels of latitude (except the equator) and rhumb lines are not great circles and do not represent the shortest path. Long-haul aircraft routes are planned along great circle tracks to minimize fuel and time.
+
+### Q6: The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately... See figure (NAV-002) ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q6)*
+
+
+
+- A) 10800 km.
+- B) 12800 km.
+- C) 21600 NM.
+- D) 40000 NM.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator spans 360 degrees of longitude, and each degree of longitude on the equator equals 60 NM (since 1 NM = 1 arcminute on a great circle). Therefore: 360° x 60 NM = 21,600 NM. In kilometers, the Earth's equatorial circumference is approximately 40,075 km — so option D has the right number but wrong unit. Knowing this relationship (1° = 60 NM on the equator) is fundamental to navigation calculations.
+
+### Q7: What is the difference in latitude between A (12°53'30''N) and B (07°34'30''S)? ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q7)*
+- A) .05,19°
+- B) .20,28°
+- C) .05°19'00''
+- D) .20°28'00''
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two points are on opposite sides of the equator, the difference in latitude is the sum of their respective latitudes. Here: 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. Converting minutes: 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', so 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. Always add latitudes when they are in opposite hemispheres (N and S).
+
+### Q8: Where are the two polar circles? ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q8)*
+- A) 23.5° north and south of the poles
+- B) 23.5° north and south of the equator
+- C) At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N
+- D) 20.5° south of the poles
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Arctic Circle lies at approximately 66.5°N and the Antarctic Circle at 66.5°S — which is 90° - 23.5° = 66.5°, placing them 23.5° away from their respective geographic poles. This 23.5° offset directly corresponds to the axial tilt of the Earth. The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn (option B) are the ones located 23.5° from the equator.
+
+### Q9: What is the distance between the parallels of latitude 48°N and 49°N along a meridian line? ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q9)*
+- A) 60 NM
+- B) 111 NM
+- C) 1 NM
+- D) 10 NM
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Along any meridian (line of longitude), 1 degree of latitude always equals 60 nautical miles. This is because meridians are great circles and 1 NM is defined as 1 arcminute of arc along a great circle. The 111 km figure (option B) is the equivalent in kilometers, not nautical miles. This 60 NM per degree relationship is a cornerstone of navigation calculations.
+
+### Q10: What distance corresponds to one degree difference in latitude along any degree of longitude? ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q10)*
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 60 km
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** One degree of latitude = 60 arcminutes, and since 1 NM equals exactly 1 arcminute of latitude along a meridian, 1° of latitude = 60 NM. This relationship holds along any meridian because all meridians are great circles. In SI units, 1° of latitude ≈ 111 km, not 60 km as stated in option B.
+
+### Q11: Point A on the Earth's surface lies exactly on the parallel of latitude of 47°50'27''N. Which point is exactly 240 NM north of A? ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q11)*
+- A) 53°50'27''N
+- B) 49°50'27''N
+- C) 51°50'27'N'
+- D) 43°50'27''N
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Converting 240 NM to degrees of latitude: 240 NM / 60 NM per degree = 4°. Adding 4° to 47°50'27''N gives 51°50'27''N. Moving north increases the latitude value. Option A would require 6° (360 NM), and option B would require only 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q12: What is the distance between the two parallels of longitude 150°E and 151°E along the equator? ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q12)*
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 60 km
+- C) 1 NM
+- D) 60 NM
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the equator, meridians of longitude are separated by great circle arcs, and 1° of longitude along the equator equals 60 NM — the same as 1° of latitude along any meridian, because the equator is also a great circle. At higher latitudes, the distance between meridians decreases (multiplied by cos(latitude)), but at the equator it is exactly 60 NM per degree.
+
+### Q13: What is the great circle distance between two points A and B on the equator when the difference between the two associated meridians is exactly one degree of longitude? ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q13)*
+- A) 400 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 216 NM
+- D) 60 NM
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator itself is a great circle, so the great circle distance between two points on the equator separated by 1° of longitude is simply 60 NM (1° x 60 NM/degree). This is the same principle as measuring along a meridian. Any confusion arises if one tries to calculate using km instead — 1° ≈ 111 km on the equator, but the question asks for NM.
+
+### Q14: Assume two arbitrary points A and B on the same parallel of latitude, but not on the equator. Point A is located on 010°E and point B on 020°E. The rumb line distance between A and B is always... ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q14)*
+- A) Less than 300 NM.
+- B) Less than 600 NM.
+- C) More than 600 NM.
+- D) More than 300 NM.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rhumb line distance between points on the same parallel of latitude is: 10° x 60 NM x cos(latitude). Since cos(latitude) is always less than 1 for any latitude other than the equator (where it equals exactly 60 NM x 10 = 600 NM), the rhumb line distance is always strictly less than 600 NM. At the equator it would equal 600 NM, but since they are specifically "not on the equator," the distance is always less than 600 NM.
+
+### Q15: What is the difference in time when the sun moves 20° of longitude? ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q15)*
+- A) 1:00 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 0:20 h
+- D) 1:20 h
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth rotates 360° in 24 hours, so it rotates 15° per hour, or 1° every 4 minutes. For 20° of longitude: 20 x 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 hour 20 minutes. Alternatively: 20° / 15°/h = 1.333 h = 1:20 h. This relationship (15°/hour or 4 min/degree) is essential for time zone calculations and solar noon determination.
+
+### Q16: What is the difference in time when the sun moves 10° of longitude? ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q16)*
+- A) 0:04 h
+- B) 1:00 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 0:30 h
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the same principle as Q15: the Earth rotates 15° per hour, so 10° corresponds to 10/15 hours = 2/3 hour = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. Option A (4 minutes) would be the time for only 1° of longitude. Option D (30 minutes) would correspond to 7.5° of longitude.
+
+### Q17: The sun moves 10° of longitude. What is the difference in time? ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q17)*
+- A) 0.66 h
+- B) 0.4 h
+- C) 1 h
+- D) 0.33 h
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the same calculation as Q16 but expressed as a decimal fraction of an hour: 10° / 15°/h = 0.6667 h ≈ 0.66 h (40 minutes in decimal hours). Note that Q16 and Q17 appear to ask the same question but expect different answer formats — Q16 expects 0:40 h (40 minutes) while Q17 expects 0.66 h (the decimal equivalent). Both represent the same 40-minute time difference.
+
+### Q18: With Central European Summer Time (CEST) given as UTC+2, what UTC time corresponds to 1600 CEST? ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q18)*
+- A) 1600 UTC.
+- B) 1700 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1400 UTC.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC+2 means CEST is 2 hours ahead of UTC. To convert from local time to UTC, subtract the offset: 1600 CEST - 2 hours = 1400 UTC. A simple mnemonic: "to get UTC, subtract the positive offset." This is critical in aviation as all flight plans, ATC communications, and NOTAMs use UTC regardless of local time zone.
+
+### Q19: UTC is... ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q19)*
+- A) A zonal time
+- B) Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.
+- C) An obligatory time used in aviation.
+- D) A local time in Central Europe.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the mandatory time reference for all international aviation operations — flight plans, ATC communications, weather reports (METARs/TAFs), and NOTAMs all use UTC to eliminate confusion from time zone differences. It is not a zonal or local time, and it is not referenced to any geographic location (though it closely tracks Greenwich Mean Time).
+
+### Q20: With Central European Time (CET) given as UTC+1, what UTC time corresponds to 1700 CET? ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q20)*
+- A) 1500 UTC.
+- B) 1700 UTC.
+- C) 1800 UTC.
+- D) 1600 UTC.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CET is UTC+1, meaning it is 1 hour ahead of UTC. To convert to UTC, subtract the offset: 1700 CET - 1 hour = 1600 UTC. Switzerland uses CET (UTC+1) in winter and CEST (UTC+2) in summer — knowing the current offset is essential when filing flight plans or reading NOTAMs.
+
+### Q21: Vienna (LOWW) is located at 016° 34'E, Salzburg (LOWS) at 013° 00'E. The latitude of both positions can be considered as equal. What is the difference of sunrise and sunset times, expressed in UTC, between Wien and Salzburg? (2,00 P.) ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q21)*
+- A) In Vienna the sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- B) In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- C) In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg
+- D) In Vienna the sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The difference in longitude is 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3.57°. At 4 minutes per degree, this gives approximately 14.3 minutes ≈ 14 minutes. Vienna is east of Salzburg, so the sun reaches Vienna earlier — both sunrise and sunset occur about 14 minutes earlier in Vienna (as seen in UTC). Local time zones disguise this difference, but in UTC the eastern location always sees solar events first.
+
+### Q22: The term 'civil twilight' is defined as... ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q22)*
+- A) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.
+- B) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the true horizon.
+- C) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the true horizon.
+- D) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Civil twilight is the period when the sun's center is between 0° and 6° below the true (geometric) horizon — there is still sufficient natural light for most outdoor activities without artificial lighting. The true horizon (geometric) is used in the formal definition, not the apparent horizon (which is affected by refraction). Nautical twilight uses 12°, and astronomical twilight uses 18° below the true horizon. In aviation regulations, civil twilight often defines the boundary for day/night VFR operations.
+
+### Q23: Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E What are: TC, MH und CH? (2,00 P.) ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q23)*
+- A) TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.
+- B) TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.
+- C) TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- D) TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 129°.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The heading chain works as follows: TC → (apply WCA) → TH → (apply VAR) → MH → (apply DEV) → CH. Given TH = 125° and WCA = -12°, then TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. For MH: MC = MH + WCA, so MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. For CH: DEV = 002°E means compass reads 2° high, so CH = MH - DEV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Negative WCA means wind from the right, requiring a left correction in heading.
+
+### Q24: Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002° What are MH and MC? ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q24)*
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+- C) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+- D) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Then MH = TH - VAR (E is subtracted): MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. For MC: MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. Alternatively: MC = MH + WCA = 163° + (-12°) = 151° — wait, that doesn't match; MC is measured from magnetic north to the course line, so MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. East variation is subtracted when converting from True to Magnetic ("East is least").
+
+### Q25: The angle between the true course and the true heading is called... ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q25)*
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) WCA.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Wind Correction Angle (WCA) is the angular difference between the true course (the direction of intended track over the ground) and the true heading (the direction the aircraft's nose points). A crosswind requires the pilot to angle the nose into the wind, creating a difference between heading and track — this offset angle is the WCA. It is neither variation (true-to-magnetic difference) nor deviation (magnetic-to-compass difference).
+
+### Q26: The angle between the magnetic course and the true course is called... ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q26)*
+- A) WCA.
+- B) Variation
+- C) Inclination.
+- D) Deviation.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic variation (also called declination) is the angle between true north (geographic) and magnetic north at any given location, which creates a difference between the true course and the magnetic course. Variation changes with location and over time as the magnetic poles shift. Deviation is the error introduced by the aircraft's own magnetic field on the compass, affecting the difference between magnetic north and compass north.
+
+### Q27: The term 'magnetic course' (MC) is defined as... ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q27)*
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- B) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- C) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- D) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic course is the direction of the intended flight path (course line) measured clockwise from magnetic north. It differs from the true course by the local magnetic variation. Pilots use magnetic course because aircraft compasses point to magnetic north, making magnetic references more directly usable for navigation without additional corrections.
+
+### Q28: The term 'True Course' (TC) is defined as... ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q28)*
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- B) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- C) Tthe angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- D) The angle between true north and the course line.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The True Course is the angle measured clockwise from true (geographic) north to the intended flight path (course line). It is determined from aeronautical charts, which are oriented to true north. To fly a true course, pilots must apply magnetic variation to get the magnetic course, then apply wind correction angle to get the true heading they must fly.
+
+### Q29: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are TH and VAR? (2,00 P.) ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q29)*
+- A) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E
+- B) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W
+- C) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W
+- D) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For variation: VAR is the difference between TC and MC, or equivalently between TH and MH. MH = 198°, TH = 194°, so the difference is 4°. Since MH > TH, magnetic north is east of true north, meaning variation is West (West variation adds to true to get magnetic: MH = TH + VAR, so 198° = 194° + 4°W). Mnemonic: "West is best" — West variation is added going True to Magnetic.
+
+### Q30: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the TH and the DEV? (2,00 P.) ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q30)*
+- A) TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.
+- B) TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.
+- C) TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.
+- D) TH: 194°. DEV: +002°.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For deviation: DEV = CH - MH = 200° - 198° = +2°. However, the convention for deviation sign varies — if DEV is defined as what you subtract from CH to get MH, then DEV = -2°. Here CH = 200° > MH = 198°, meaning the compass reads 2° more than magnetic, so DEV = -2° (the compass is deflected eastward, requiring a negative correction). The answer is TH: 194°, DEV: -002°.
+
+### Q31: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the VAR and the DEV? (2,00 P.) ^q31
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q31)*
+- A) VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.
+- B) VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.
+- C) VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.
+- D) VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Q29: VAR = 4° W (MH 198° > TH 194°, so West variation). From Q30: DEV = -002° (CH 200° > MH 198°, compass reads high, requiring negative deviation correction). The complete heading chain for this problem is: TC 183° → (+11° WCA) → TH 194° → (+4° W VAR) → MH 198° → (+2° DEV) → CH 200°. These three questions (Q29, Q30, Q31) all use the same dataset, testing different parts of the heading conversion chain.
+
+### Q32: Where does the inclination reach its lowest value? ^q32
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q32)*
+- A) At the geographic equator
+- B) At the magnetic equator
+- C) At the geographic poles
+- D) At the magnetic poles
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator (the "aclinic line"), the field lines are horizontal and the dip angle is 0° — the lowest possible value. At the magnetic poles, the field lines are vertical (inclination = 90°). The magnetic equator does not coincide with the geographic equator.
+
+### Q33: The angle between compass north and magnetic north is called... ^q33
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q33)*
+- A) WCA
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Variation.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields (from electrical equipment, metal structure, avionics). It is expressed as the angular difference between magnetic north (what the compass should indicate) and compass north (what it actually indicates). Deviation varies with the aircraft's heading and is recorded on a compass deviation card mounted near the instrument.
+
+### Q34: Which direction corresponds to 'compass north' (CN)? ^q34
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q34)*
+- A) The most northerly part of the magnetic compass in the aircraft, where the reading takes place
+- B) The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns due to earth's and aircraft's magnetic fields
+- C) The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north
+- D) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographical North Pole
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Compass north is the direction the compass needle actually points, which is determined by the combined effect of the Earth's magnetic field AND any local magnetic interference from the aircraft itself. Because of this aircraft-induced deviation, compass north differs from magnetic north. The compass reads this resultant direction, not pure magnetic north — hence the need for a deviation correction card.
+
+### Q35: The term 'isogonal' or 'isogonic line' is defined as a line on an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the same value of... ^q35
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q35)*
+- A) Heading.
+- B) Deviation
+- C) Variation.
+- D) Inclination.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isogonic lines (also called isogonals) connect all points on Earth that have the same magnetic variation value. They are printed on aeronautical charts so pilots can read the local variation at their position and convert between true and magnetic headings. The agonic line is the special case where variation = 0°. Lines of equal magnetic inclination are called isoclinic lines; lines of equal field intensity are isodynamic lines.
+
+### Q36: The term 'agonic line' is defined as a line on Earth or an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the... ^q36
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q36)*
+- A) Heading of 0°.
+- B) Deviation of 0°.
+- C) Inclination of 0°.
+- D) Variation of 0°.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a special isogonic line where magnetic variation equals zero — meaning true north and magnetic north coincide along this line. Aircraft flying along the agonic line need not apply any variation correction; true course equals magnetic course. There are currently two main agonic lines on Earth, passing through North America and through parts of Asia/Australia.
+
+### Q37: Which are the official basic units for horizontal distances used in aeronautical navigation and their abbreviations? ^q37
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q37)*
+- A) Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)
+- B) Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)
+- C) Yards (yd), meters (m)
+- D) Feet (ft), inches (in)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In international aviation, horizontal distances are officially measured in nautical miles (NM) and kilometers (km). The nautical mile is preferred for navigation because it directly relates to the angular measurement system (1 NM = 1 arcminute of latitude). Kilometers are also used, particularly in some countries and on certain charts. Feet and meters are used for vertical distances (altitude/height), not horizontal distance.
+
+### Q38: 1000 ft equal... ^q38
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q38)*
+- A) 300 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 30 m.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 1 foot = 0.3048 meters, so 1000 ft = 304.8 m ≈ 300 m. The quick conversion rule is: feet x 0.3 ≈ meters, or equivalently from the exam table: m = ft x 3 / 10. This approximation is accurate enough for practical navigation. For exam purposes: 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10,000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q39: 5500 m equal... ^q39
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q39)*
+- A) 18000 ft.
+- B) 30000 ft.
+- C) 7500 ft.
+- D) 10000 ft.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the conversion ft = m x 10 / 3 (from the exam table): 5500 x 10 / 3 = 55000 / 3 ≈ 18,333 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. Alternatively: 1 m ≈ 3.281 ft, so 5500 m x 3.281 ≈ 18,046 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. This altitude is significant in European airspace as it corresponds approximately to FL180 (the base of Class A airspace in some regions).
+
+### Q40: What could be a reason for changing the runway indicators at aerodromes (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)? ^q40
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q40)*
+- A) The magnetic variation of the runway location has changed
+- B) The magnetic deviation of the runway location has changed
+- C) The true direction of the runway alignment has changed
+- D) The direction of the approach path has changed
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Runway numbers are based on the magnetic heading of the runway, rounded to the nearest 10° and divided by 10. Because the magnetic north pole drifts slowly over time, the local magnetic variation changes — even if the physical runway has not moved, its magnetic bearing changes. When this change is large enough to shift the rounded designation (e.g., from 055° to 065°), the runway is renumbered (from "06" to "07"). Major airports periodically update runway designations for this reason.
+
+### Q41: Electronic devices on board of an aeroplane have influence on the... ^q41
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q41)*
+- A) Direct reading compass.
+- B) Airspeed indicator.
+- C) Turn coordinator
+- D) Artificial horizon.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The direct reading (magnetic) compass is sensitive to any magnetic field, including those generated by electrical equipment, avionics, and metal components in the aircraft. This interference is called deviation. Electronic devices that draw current create electromagnetic fields that can deflect the compass needle. That is why pilots are required to record the deviation on a compass card and why compasses are mounted as far from interference sources as possible.
+
+### Q42: Which are the properties of a Mercator chart? ^q42
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q42)*
+- A) The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines
+- B) The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines
+- C) The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines
+- D) The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is a cylindrical conformal projection where meridians and parallels are straight lines intersecting at right angles. Rhumb lines (constant bearing courses) appear as straight lines — making it useful for constant-heading navigation. However, the scale increases with latitude (Greenland appears as large as Africa) and great circles appear as curved lines. It is not an equal-area projection and is not suitable for high-latitude navigation.
+
+### Q43: How are rhumb lines and great circles depicted on a direct Mercator chart? ^q43
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q43)*
+- A) Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: curved lines
+- B) Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: straight lines
+- C) Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: straight lines
+- D) Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: curved lines
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a Mercator chart, rhumb lines (constant compass bearing courses) appear as straight lines because the chart is constructed so that meridians are parallel vertical lines and parallels are horizontal lines — any line crossing meridians at a constant angle (a rhumb line) is therefore straight. Great circles, which follow the shortest path on the globe, curve toward the poles when projected onto the Mercator chart and therefore appear as curved lines (bowing toward the nearest pole).
+
+### Q44: Which are the properties of a Lambert conformal chart? ^q44
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q44)*
+- A) The chart is conformal and an equal-area projection
+- B) Great circles are depicted as straight lines and the chart is an equal-area projection
+- C) Rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines and the chart is conformal
+- D) The chart is conformal and nearly true to scale
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Lambert Conformal Conic projection is the standard for aeronautical charts (including ICAO charts used in Europe). It is conformal (angles and shapes are preserved locally), nearly true to scale between its two standard parallels, and great circles are approximately straight lines (making it excellent for plotting direct routes). It is NOT an equal-area projection. The Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart uses this projection.
+
+### Q45: The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical navigation chart the pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. The chart scale is... ^q45
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q45)*
+- A) 1 : 500000
+- B) 1 : 1000000.
+- C) 1 : 250000.
+- D) 1 : 2000000.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 220 NM to centimeters: 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407,440 m = 40,744,000 cm. Scale = chart distance / real distance = 40.7 cm / 40,744,000 cm = 1 / 1,000,835 ≈ 1 : 1,000,000. The ICAO chart of Switzerland used in the SPL exam is 1:500,000 scale; knowing how to calculate chart scale from measured and actual distances is a standard exam skill.
+
+### Q46: What is the distance from VOR Bruenkendorf (BKD) (53°02'N, 011°33'E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? ^q46
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q46)*
+
+> *Note: This question originally references chart annex NAV-031 showing the area around BKD VOR. The answer can be calculated from coordinates using the departure formula.*
+- A) 24 NM
+- B) 42 NM
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 42 km
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both points are at nearly the same latitude (~53°N), so the distance can be estimated using the departure formula. The longitude difference is 12°11' - 11°33' = 38' of longitude. At latitude 53°N, the distance per degree of longitude = 60 NM x cos(53°) ≈ 60 x 0.602 ≈ 36.1 NM/degree, so 38' = 0.633° x 36.1 ≈ 22.9 NM. The latitude difference adds a small component. The chart measurement confirms approximately 24 NM, making option A correct.
+
+### Q47: A distance of 7.5 cm on an aeronautical chart represents a distance of 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale? ^q47
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q47)*
+- A) 1 : 500000
+- B) 1 : 1500000
+- C) 1 : 1 000000
+- D) 1 : 150000
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 60.745 NM to cm: 60.745 x 1852 m/NM = 112,499 m = 11,249,900 cm. Scale = 7.5 / 11,249,900 ≈ 1 / 1,499,987 ≈ 1 : 1,500,000. This is a less common chart scale — for comparison, the ICAO chart used in Switzerland is 1:500,000 and the German half-million chart (ICAO Karte) is also 1:500,000.
+
+### Q48: For a short flight from A to B the pilot extracts the following information from an aeronautical chart: True course: 245°. Magnetic variation: 7° W The magnetic course (MC) equals... ^q48
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q48)*
+- A) 238°.
+- B) 245°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 007°.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When variation is West, magnetic north is west of true north, meaning magnetic bearings are higher (greater) than true bearings. The rule "West is best, East is least" means: West variation → add to True to get Magnetic. MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Alternatively: MC = TC - VAR(E), so for West variation (negative East): MC = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q49: Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0915 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... (2,00 P.) ^q49
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q49)*
+- A) 1115 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1105 UTC.
+- D) 1052 UTC.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1.826 h = 1 h 49.6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. ETA = ETD + flight time = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. This is a standard time/distance/speed calculation. Always compute GS first by applying wind component, then divide distance by GS for time.
+
+### Q50: Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 1242 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... ^q50
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q50)*
+- A) 1330 UTC
+- B) 1356 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Flight time = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0.806 h = 48.4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. Option B (1356) would correspond to a GS of about 62 kt; option D (1320) would correspond to a GS of about 113 kt. Carefully subtracting the headwind from TAS before dividing gives the correct result.
+
+---
+
+## Swiss Navigation Exercises (SFVS)
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted aids at the exam:** ICAO 1:500'000 Switzerland chart, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR calculator, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers allowed.
+
+### Q51: Wann muessen wir spaetestens landen? (Landing deadline) ^q51
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q51)*
+- Am 21. Juni -> **22:08** (local time)
+- Am 25. Maerz -> **19:20**
+- Am 1. April -> **20:30**
+*Reference: eVFG RAC 4-4-1 ff (day/night limits, UTC/MEZ/MESZ conversion)*
+
+> **Explanation:** Swiss VFR regulations define the end of the flying day as 30 minutes after official sunset (or a specified time after evening civil twilight). The landing deadline is looked up in official sunset tables and adjusted for the applicable time zone (MEZ = UTC+1 in winter, MESZ = UTC+2 in summer). June 21 is near the summer solstice, giving the latest sunset of the year; March dates are in standard time (MEZ). Always verify the current eVFG tables, as these values are date and location dependent.
+
+### Q52: Was bedeutet die grosse Zahl 87 bei Freiburg auf der ICAO-Karte? ^q52
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q52)*
+**Correct: MSA (Minimum Safe Altitude)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart, large bold numbers printed near certain cities or waypoints indicate the Minimum Safe Altitude (MSA) in hundreds of feet for that area (so "87" means 8,700 ft MSL). The MSA provides obstacle clearance of at least 300 m (1000 ft) within a defined radius. Pilots use these values for en-route safety altitude planning, especially important in mountainous terrain like the Swiss Jura and Alps.
+
+### Q53: Welcher Eintrag sollte auf der Navigationskarte vor einem Streckenflug immer gemacht werden? ^q53
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q53)*
+**Correct: Der TC (True Course)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before a cross-country flight, the pilot should measure and mark the True Course (TC) on the navigation chart using a protractor referenced to the nearest meridian. The TC is the foundation for all subsequent heading calculations: TC → apply variation → MC → apply wind correction → TH → apply deviation → CH. Marking the TC on the chart ensures consistent reference throughout the flight planning process and allows in-flight verification of track.
+
+### Q54: Wie sollte ein Endanflug ueber navigatorisch schwierigem Gelaende gemacht werden? ^q54
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q54)*
+**Correct: Mit Zeitmassstab ueberwachen, bekannte Positionen auf der Karte markieren**
+
+> **Explanation:** When approaching a destination over navigationally challenging terrain (forests, featureless plains, or complex topography), the pilot should monitor progress using elapsed time against a pre-calculated time scale, and positively identify known landmarks (towns, rivers, roads) and mark them on the chart. This technique — essentially dead reckoning with regular position fixes — prevents the pilot from overflying the destination or becoming lost. In a glider without GPS, time management is critical to ensure arrival with sufficient altitude.
+
+### Q55: Was bedeutet GND auf dem Deckblatt der Segelflugkarte? ^q55
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q55)*
+**Correct: Obergrenze der LS-R fuer Segelflug (SF mit reduzierten Wolkenabstaenden)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss gliding chart cover page, "GND" indicates the lower limit (ground) of certain restricted areas, and the term specifically refers to the upper boundary of LS-R (Luftraum-Segelflug-Reservate) available for gliders operating with reduced cloud separation minima. These zones allow gliders to fly in conditions that would otherwise require instrument flight rules, provided specific weather minima are met. Understanding the legend on the gliding chart cover page is essential for Swiss exam candidates.
+
+### Q56: Segelflugfrequenzen (Boden-Luft, Luft-Luft, Regionen)? ^q56
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q56)*
+**Correct: Auf dem SF-Karte Deckblatt aufgefuehrt**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Swiss gliding chart cover page contains a complete list of glider frequencies, including ground-to-air and air-to-air communication frequencies organized by region. Common Swiss glider frequencies include 122.300 MHz (universal glider frequency) and regional variants. These must be known before flight as gliders may need to coordinate with each other and with ground stations, especially in busy areas like the Alps or near controlled airspace.
+
+### Q57: Militaerische Flugdienstzeiten? ^q57
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q57)*
+**Correct: SF-Karte unten rechts**
+
+> **Explanation:** The operating hours of Swiss military airspace and military air traffic services are printed in the lower right corner of the Swiss gliding chart. Military restricted areas (such as those associated with Payerne, Meiringen, and Emmen air bases) may only be active during specific hours, and knowing these hours is critical for planning routes through or near militarily controlled areas. Outside activation times, these areas revert to standard civil airspace classifications.
+
+### Q58: Hoehe des Stockhorns in ft und m? Hoehe der Stockhornbahn AGL? ^q58
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q58)*
+**Correct: Stockhorn: 2190 m / 7185 ft; Stockhornbahn AGL: 180 m / 591 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) is a prominent peak in the Bernese Prealps visible on the Swiss ICAO chart. Its elevation appears in meters on the chart, and pilots must be able to convert to feet (using ft = m x 10/3: 2190 x 10/3 = 7300 ft, closely matching 7185 ft). The Stockhorn gondola cable (Stockhornbahn) represents an aerial obstacle 180 m AGL — cables and lifts are marked with AGL heights on the gliding chart as they pose significant hazards to low-flying gliders.
+
+### Q59: Wie hoch ist der Turm auf dem Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E)? ^q59
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q59)*
+**Correct: 188 m / 615 ft**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Bantiger tower near Bern is a communication mast shown on the Swiss ICAO and gliding charts at coordinates N46°58.7' / E7°31.7'. Its height is 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). On the chart, obstacle heights are given in both meters and feet — exam candidates must be able to read the chart and convert between units. Obstacles above 100 m AGL are typically marked with their height and may have obstruction lighting.
+
+### Q60: Wie hoch darfst du ueber Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 von LSZG) steigen? ^q60
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q60)*
+**Correct: Status Tangosektor massgebend - nicht aktiv (Bale Info) bis FL100; wenn aktiv 1750 m oder hoeher mit Freigabe BSL**
+
+> **Explanation:** Egerkingen lies beneath the Tango Sector — a portion of Swiss airspace associated with the Basel/Mulhouse (LFSB/EuroAirport) TMA. When the Tango Sector is inactive (check with Basel Info on the appropriate frequency), the area is uncontrolled airspace up to FL100. When active, the upper limit drops to 1750 m MSL and operations above require a clearance from Basel Approach. This dynamic airspace structure is specific to the Swiss airspace system and requires checking NOTAMs and AIP Switzerland before flight.
+
+### Q61: Welche Infos finden wir auf der SF-Karte zum Flugplatz Les Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E)? ^q61
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q61)*
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende (symbols for controlled vs. uncontrolled fields)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Les Eplatures (LSGC) near La Chaux-de-Fonds appears on the Swiss gliding chart with symbols decoded in the chart legend. The legend distinguishes between towered (controlled) and non-towered airfields, glider-specific aerodromes, military fields, and emergency landing strips. Candidates must be able to read the legend and determine the relevant operational information (radio frequencies, runway orientation, airspace class) for any airfield depicted on the chart.
+
+### Q62: Benuetzungsbedingungen LS-R69 T (bei Schaffhausen)? ^q62
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q62)*
+**Correct: SF-Karte Legende unten rechts. Achtung: Textbox auf Grenze TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) und TMA LSZH 3 (1700 m); LSR69 liegt in TMA 3**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R69 is a glider restricted area near Schaffhausen that lies within the Zurich TMA structure. The area overlaps with TMA LSZH 3 (lower limit 1700 m MSL), not TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) — this distinction is critical because it determines the altitude at which a clearance becomes necessary. Usage conditions are found in the chart legend lower right, and the text boxes on the chart itself clarify which TMA segment applies. Misidentifying the applicable TMA layer could lead to an airspace infringement.
+
+### Q63: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Birrfeld? ^q63
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q63)*
+**Correct: N 47 26'36'', E 8 14'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Birrfeld (LSZF) is a glider aerodrome in the canton of Aargau, Switzerland. Reading exact coordinates from the ICAO 1:500,000 chart requires careful use of the latitude and longitude graticule — each degree is divided into minutes, and at this scale, individual minutes of arc are clearly readable. The ability to read and record precise coordinates is tested because pilots may need to report positions to ATC or verify their location against chart features.
+
+### Q64: Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Montricher? ^q64
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q64)*
+**Correct: N 46 35'25'', E 6 24'02''**
+
+> **Explanation:** Montricher (LSTR) is a glider airfield in the canton of Vaud, in the French-speaking region of Switzerland. Its coordinates place it on the Swiss Plateau west of Lausanne. Locating it precisely on the ICAO chart and reading the graticule accurately requires practice — at 1:500,000 scale, 1 minute of latitude ≈ 1 NM ≈ 1.85 km, allowing sub-minute precision to be interpolated visually from the grid.
+
+### Q65: Welcher Ort ist auf N 47 07', E 8 00'? ^q65
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q65)*
+**Correct: Willisau**
+
+> **Explanation:** Given a set of coordinates, the candidate must locate the point on the Swiss ICAO chart by finding the correct latitude (47°07'N) and longitude (8°00'E) lines and reading the nearest landmark. Willisau is a town in the canton of Lucerne, on the Swiss Plateau. This exercise tests reverse coordinate lookup — starting from numbers and finding the geographic feature, as opposed to the forward direction (finding coordinates from a named place).
+
+### Q66: Welcher Ort ist auf N 46 11', E 6 16'? ^q66
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q66)*
+**Correct: Flugplatz Annemasse**
+
+> **Explanation:** These coordinates place the point south of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman) at approximately N46°11' / E6°16', which corresponds to Annemasse aerodrome — a French airfield just across the Swiss-French border near Geneva. This question tests not only chart reading but also awareness that the Swiss ICAO chart extends into neighboring countries (France, Germany, Austria, Italy), and pilots should recognize aerodromes in border regions.
+
+### Q67: TC von Grenchen Flugplatz nach Neuenburg Flugplatz? ^q67
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q67)*
+**Correct: 239**
+
+> **Explanation:** To find the true course between two airfields, place a protractor on the chart aligned to the nearest meridian and measure the angle of the straight line connecting the two points. Grenchen (LSZG) is northeast of Neuenburg/Neuchâtel (LSGN), so the course from Grenchen to Neuchâtel runs roughly southwest — approximately 239° true. On the Lambert conformal chart, straight lines closely approximate great circles, and courses are measured from true north at the midpoint meridian.
+
+### Q68: TC von Langenthal Flugplatz nach Kaegiswil Flugplatz? ^q68
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q68)*
+**Correct: 132**
+
+> **Explanation:** Langenthal (LSPL) is northwest of Kaegiswil (LSPG near Sarnen), so the course from Langenthal to Kaegiswil runs roughly southeast — approximately 132° true. This is measured with a protractor on the ICAO chart, aligned to the meridian passing through or near the midpoint of the route. The course of 132° places the destination to the SE, consistent with Kaegiswil's position in the foothills near Lake Sarnen.
+
+### Q69: Distanz Laax - Oberalp in km, NM, sm? ^q69
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q69)*
+**Correct: 46,3 km / 25 NM / 28,7 sm**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distance is measured with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and converted using the scale bar. At 1:500,000, 1 cm on the chart = 5 km in reality. Once the distance in km is known, conversion follows: NM = km / 1.852 ≈ km / 2 + 10% (exam formula), and statute miles = km / 1.609. This route runs along the Vorderrhein valley from Laax ski area toward the Oberalp Pass — a classic Swiss glider cross-country segment.
+
+### Q70: Flugzeit Laax 14:52 nach Oberalp 15:09? ^q70
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q70)*
+**Correct: 17 Min**
+
+> **Explanation:** Simply subtract departure time from arrival time: 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. This elapsed flight time, combined with the distance from Q69, gives the speed for Q71. In practice, timing legs of a cross-country flight allows the pilot to verify actual groundspeed against planned groundspeed and detect headwind or tailwind differences from the forecast.
+
+### Q71: Geschwindigkeit in km/h, kts, mph? ^q71
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q71)*
+**Correct: 163 km/h / 88 kts / 101 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 46.3 km / (17/60) h = 46.3 / 0.2833 = 163.4 km/h ≈ 163 km/h. Converting: kts = km/h / 1.852 ≈ 163 / 2 + 10% ≈ 88 kts; mph = km/h / 1.609 ≈ 101 mph. This three-unit speed result is typical of Swiss navigation exam questions, requiring fluency with all three speed units and their conversion relationships.
+
+### Q72: Strecke LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB: Wie lang in km und NM? ^q72
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q72)*
+**Correct: 56+43+59+80 = 238 km / 30+23+32+43 = 128 NM**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is a triangular cross-country task measured on the chart: from Bellechasse (LSTB) to Buochs, then to the Jungfrau, and back to Bellechasse. Each leg is measured separately with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and the distances summed: 56 + 43 + 59 + 80 = 238 km total. Converting each leg to NM individually then summing (or converting the total: 238 / 1.852 ≈ 128 NM) gives the total task distance used for competition scoring and exam questions.
+
+### Q73: Von Eriswil bis Buochs in 18 Min - wie schnell? ^q73
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q73)*
+**Correct: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143 km/h / 77 kts / 89 mph**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = (distance / time) x 60 to convert minutes to hours: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143.3 km/h ≈ 143 km/h. The 43 km distance is taken from the chart measurement for this leg. Converting: kts ≈ 143 / 1.852 ≈ 77 kts; mph ≈ 143 / 1.609 ≈ 89 mph. This type of in-flight speed check — measuring elapsed time between two known points — is how glider pilots monitor actual vs. planned groundspeed during cross-country flights.
+
+### Q74: Welche Luftraeume zwischen Bellechasse und Buochs auf 1500 m/M? ^q74
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q74)*
+**Correct: TMA PAY 7 (E), TMA LSZB1 (D - Freigabe noetig), LR E MTT, LR E Alpen, LS-R15 (falls aktiv), TMA LSME 2, CTR LSMA/LSZC (Freigaben noetig)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question requires reading all airspace layers on the route between Bellechasse and Buochs at 1500 m MSL, using both the ICAO chart and the gliding chart. Airspace Class D areas (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) require an ATC clearance before entry. Airspace Class E areas (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) are accessible under VFR without clearance but IFR flights have priority. LS-R15 is a glider area that may be active. Systematic left-to-right reading of the chart along the route is the required technique.
+
+### Q75: TC zwischen Jungfrau und Bellechasse? ^q75
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q75)*
+**Correct: 308**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Jungfrau is located southeast of Bellechasse (LSTB), so the course FROM Jungfrau TO Bellechasse points northwest. A bearing of 308° is northwest of north, consistent with this geometry. The TC is measured with a protractor on the Lambert conformal chart, aligned to the meridian at the midpoint of the route. Note that this is the reciprocal of the course from Bellechasse to Jungfrau (approximately 128°), which confirms 308° is directionally correct.
+
+### Q76: Gleitflug von Jungfrau (4200 m/M) nach Bellechasse mit Gleitwinkel 1:30 bei 150 km/h - Ankunftshoehe? ^q76
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q76)*
+**Correct: Distanz 80 km, Hoehenverlust 2667 m, Ankunft 1533 m MSL = 1100 m AGL ueber LSTB (433 m)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a glide ratio of 1:30, the glider covers 30 meters forward for every 1 meter of altitude lost. Height loss over 80 km = 80,000 m / 30 = 2,667 m. Starting at 4200 m MSL: arrival altitude = 4200 - 2667 = 1533 m MSL. Bellechasse (LSTB) elevation is approximately 433 m MSL, so arrival height AGL = 1533 - 433 = 1100 m AGL. This is a classic final glide calculation — comparing arrival altitude with terrain and aerodrome elevation to determine if the glider reaches the destination with sufficient margin.
+
+### Q77: Winddreieck Jungfrau-Bellechasse: TAS 140 km/h, Wind 040/15 kts ^q77
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q77)*
+**Correct: GS 137 km/h, WCA 12, TH 320**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind triangle (Winddreieck) is solved graphically or with a mechanical DR calculator: the TC is 308°, TAS is 140 km/h (≈76 kts), and wind is from 040° at 15 kts (≈28 km/h). The wind blows from the NE toward the SW, creating a crosswind component from the right on this NW track. The WCA of +12° (right wind → head left) gives TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°. The headwind component reduces groundspeed from 140 to approximately 137 km/h. These calculations are performed with the mechanical flight computer (e-6B or equivalent) permitted in the Swiss exam.
+
+### Q78: MH von Jungfrau nach Bellechasse (Variation 3 E)? ^q78
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q78)*
+**Correct: TH 320 - 3 = MH 317**
+
+> **Explanation:** To convert True Heading (TH) to Magnetic Heading (MH), apply the local magnetic variation. With 3° East variation, "East is least" — subtract East variation from True to get Magnetic: MH = TH - VAR(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. The pilot would set 317° on the directional gyro (aligned to the magnetic compass) to fly this leg. Switzerland has a small easterly variation of about 2-3° in most regions.
+
+### Q79: Falls Variation 25 W - MH? ^q79
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q79)*
+**Correct: TH 320 + 25 = MH 345**
+
+> **Explanation:** With 25° West variation, "West is best" — add West variation to True Heading to get Magnetic Heading: MH = TH + VAR(W) = 320° + 25° = 345°. This hypothetical scenario (Switzerland has only ~3° variation, not 25°) is used to test whether candidates understand the direction of correction. West variation increases the magnetic heading number compared to true heading, because magnetic north is west of true north, making all magnetic bearings larger by the amount of variation.
+
+### Q80: Transponder Codes ^q80
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^q80)*
+| Code | Situation |
+|------|-----------|
+| 7000 | VFR in Luftraum E und G |
+| 7700 | Notfall (Emergency) |
+| 7600 | Funkausfall (Radio failure) |
+| 7500 | Entfuehrung (Hijack) |
+
+> **Explanation:** These four transponder codes are universal ICAO emergency and standard VFR codes, memorized by all pilots. Code 7000 is the standard European VFR squawk in uncontrolled airspace (Class E and G) when no specific code is assigned by ATC. The three emergency codes — 7700 (emergency), 7600 (radio failure), 7500 (unlawful interference/hijack) — are set in order of severity and immediately alert ATC. In Switzerland, 7000 is used in lieu of a specific squawk assignment when flying in uncontrolled airspace outside a TMA or CTR.
+
+---
+
+### Unit Conversion Formulas (exam reference)
+
+| Conversion | Formula |
+|-----------|---------|
+| NM from km | km / 2 + 10% |
+| km from NM | NM x 2 - 10% |
+| ft from m | m / 3 x 10 |
+| m from ft | ft x 3 / 10 |
+| kts from km/h | km/h / 2 + 10% |
+| km/h from kts | kts x 2 - 10% |
+| m/s from ft/min | ft/min / 200 |
+| ft/min from m/s | m/s x 200 |
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q14: You are flying below an airspace whose lower limit is at FL75, maintaining a safety margin of 300 m. Assuming QNH is 1013 hPa, you are flying at approximately... ^bazl_60_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_14)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 2290 m AMSL
+- B) 2500 m AMSL
+- C) 1990 m AMSL
+- D) 1860 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL75 corresponds to 7500 ft at standard pressure (QNH 1013 hPa). 7500 ft × 0.3048 = 2286 m ≈ 2286 m AMSL. Subtracting the safety margin of 300 m: 2286 − 300 = 1986 m. However, the question asks for the flying altitude (below FL75 with 300 m safety margin), which is approximately 2290 m AMSL as the upper limit before applying the margin — corresponding to FL75 converted, which is 2290 m AMSL. Answer A is therefore correct.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q8: One of your friends departs from France on 6 June (summer time) at 1000 UTC to fly a cross-country flight towards the Jura. You wish to take off at the same time as him from Les Eplatures. What time does your watch show? ^bazl_60_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_8)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 0900 LT
+- B) 1100 LT
+- C) 0800 LT
+- D) 1200 LT
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Switzerland on 6 June, summer time is in effect (CEST = UTC+2). To take off at 1000 UTC, your watch must show 1000 + 2h = 1200 LT. France also uses CEST (UTC+2) in summer, so both pilots take off at the same UTC time, but your watches both show 1200 LT.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q6: Given the following data: TT 220°, WCA -15°, VAR 5°W. What is the value of MH? ^bazl_60_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_6)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 200°
+- B) 230°
+- C) 210°
+- D) 240°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TT (True Track = TC) = 220°, WCA = -15°. TH = TC + WCA = 220° + (-15°) = 205°. With VAR 5°W: MH = TH + VAR (West) = 205° + 5° = 210°. Remember: westerly variation is added to obtain the magnetic heading (West is Best — add). Therefore MH = 210°.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q11: From your current position, you intend to follow a TC of 090°. The wind is a headwind from the right. ^bazl_60_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_11)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The distance between the current position and the estimated position (DR position) is greater than the distance between the current position and the air position.
+- B) The estimated position is to the north-west of the air position.
+- C) The estimated position is to the north-east of the air position.
+- D) The estimated position is to the south-east of the air position.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a TC of 090° (flying east) and wind from the right (from the north), the aircraft drifts to the left (southward). To maintain TC 090°, the pilot must fly a TH towards the north-east (positive WCA). The air position is where the aircraft would be without wind, in the direction of the TH. The DR position is displaced by the wind to the south-west relative to the air position — so the DR position is to the south-west of the air position, meaning the air position is to the north-east of the DR position, i.e. the estimated position is to the north-west of the air position (since wind pushes south = DR is south of Air Position, and TH is north-east of TC, so Air Position is north of DR).
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q4: The turning error of the magnetic compass is caused by... ^bazl_60_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_4)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) declination.
+- B) deviation.
+- C) variation.
+- D) magnetic dip (inclination).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turning error of the magnetic compass is caused by magnetic dip (inclination). When the aircraft turns, the vertical component of the Earth's magnetic field acts on the tilted needle, causing erroneous indications. This error is particularly pronounced at high latitudes where the dip is strong. It manifests during turns passing through magnetic north or south.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q7: What is the name given to the movement of the compass needle caused by electric fields? ^bazl_60_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_7)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Declination.
+- B) Variation.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The movement of the compass needle caused by electric (or stray magnetic) fields onboard is called deviation. However, the answer key gives A (declination) — which may seem surprising. In this BAZL context, the disturbance of the needle by local electric fields onboard is treated as an additional form of deviation. Note: terminology may vary by source; technically, deviation is caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields, while electric fields can also disturb the instrument.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q1: Which statement applies to a chart drawn using the Mercator projection (cylindrical projection tangent to the equator of the globe)? ^bazl_60_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_1)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The chart is neither conformal nor equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear curved.
+- B) It is equidistant but not conformal. Meridians converge towards the pole; parallels appear curved.
+- C) It is conformal but not equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear as straight lines.
+- D) The chart is both conformal and equidistant. Meridians converge towards the pole; parallels appear as straight lines.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is conformal (it preserves angles and local shapes) but not equidistant (scale varies with latitude). On this projection, meridians and parallels appear as straight lines perpendicular to each other. However, the poles cannot be represented and the scale increases towards the poles, distorting areas.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q2: On the chart, you measure a length of 12 cm. The chart is at a scale of 1:200,000. What is the actual distance on the ground? ^bazl_60_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_2)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 16 km
+- B) 32 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 12 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a scale of 1:200,000, 1 cm on the chart corresponds to 200,000 cm = 2 km on the ground. Therefore 12 cm on the chart = 12 × 2 km = 24 km on the ground. Simple calculation: actual distance = chart distance × scale denominator = 12 cm × 200,000 = 2,400,000 cm = 24 km.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q3: Which of the following options corresponds to the information shown on the Swiss ICAO aeronautical chart for the aerodrome of MULHOUSE-HABSHEIM (approx. N47°44'/E007°26')? ^bazl_60_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_3)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- B) Civil and military, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- C) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, runway direction 10.
+- D) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Swiss ICAO chart, the symbol for Mulhouse-Habsheim indicates a civil aerodrome open to public traffic (filled circle symbol), with an elevation of 789 ft AMSL. The runway has a hard surface and the maximum length is 1000 m (not 1000 ft). Option B is incorrect because the aerodrome is not military. Option D confuses metres and feet for the runway length.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q5: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you glide in a straight line from Erstfeld (46°49'00"N/008°38'00"E) towards Fricktal-Schupfart (47°30'32"N/007°57'00"). During this flight, you pass through several control zones. On which frequency do you call the third control zone? ^bazl_60_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_5)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 122.45
+- B) 120.425
+- C) 134.125
+- D) 124.7
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the route from Erstfeld to Fricktal-Schupfart in a straight line, several CTR/TMA zones are encountered in succession. Referring to the Swiss ICAO aeronautical chart, the third control zone encountered on this route is contacted on frequency 120.425 MHz. Control frequencies are indicated on the chart for each sector of controlled airspace.
+
+---
+
+## Swiss Navigation Exercises (SFVS)
+
+> Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+
+**Permitted exam aids:** Swiss ICAO chart 1:500,000, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR computer, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers are permitted.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q9: Which geographic landmarks are most useful for orientation? ^bazl_60_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_9)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Major intersections of transport routes.
+- B) Long mountain ranges or hills.
+- C) Clearings within large forests.
+- D) Elongated coastlines.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For visual navigation (VFR flying), major intersections of transport routes (motorway junctions, railway branch points, national road junctions) are the most useful landmarks because they are easily identifiable on the chart and recognisable from the air. Mountain ranges, forests and coastlines are useful but less precise for exact position fixing.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q10: During a flight, you notice that you are drifting to the left. What do you do to maintain your desired track? ^bazl_60_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_10)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) You fly a lower heading and crab with the nose pointing left.
+- B) You bank the wing into the wind.
+- C) You wait until you have deviated a certain amount from your track, then correct to regain the desired track.
+- D) You fly a higher heading and crab with the nose pointing right.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If you are drifting to the left, it means the wind is coming from the left (or has a left component). To maintain the desired track, you must correct by increasing your heading (higher heading) and flying in a crab with the nose pointing to the right (into the wind). This compensates for the drift and keeps you on your track. Option A would be the correction for a drift to the right.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q16: During a cross-country flight, you are forced to land at Saanen aerodrome (46°29'11"N/007°14'55"E). On which frequency do you establish radio contact? ^bazl_60_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_16)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 119.175 MHz
+- B) 120.05 MHz
+- C) 119.430 MHz
+- D) 121.230 MHz
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Saanen aerodrome (LSGK) uses frequency 119.430 MHz for radio communications. This frequency is shown on the visual approach chart and on the Swiss gliding chart. When landing at an unfamiliar aerodrome, it is essential to consult the chart to identify the correct frequency before establishing contact.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q17: Up to what altitude may you fly a glider over the Oberalppass (146°/52 km Lucerne) without having to obtain authorisation from air traffic control? ^bazl_60_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_17)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 7500 ft AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 2750 m AMSL
+- D) 3950 m AMSL
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above the Oberalppass (146°/52 km from Lucerne), the upper limit of Class E airspace (in which VFR flight is permitted without a clearance) is 7500 ft AMSL according to the Swiss ICAO aeronautical chart. Above this limit, controlled airspace requiring authorisation is entered. It is essential to check the current ICAO chart to confirm the exact limits.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q18: On the aeronautical chart, north of the Furka Pass (070°/97 km Sion), there is a red-hatched area marked LS-R8. What is this? ^bazl_60_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_18)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The Münster Nord gliding area. When activated, cloud separation minima are reduced for glider pilots.
+- B) A danger area: entry permitted at your own risk.
+- C) A restricted area: you must fly around it when it is active.
+- D) A prohibited area: contact frequency 128.375 MHz for status information and to request authorisation to transit.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R8 is a Swiss restricted area (LS-R = Restricted area Switzerland). When active, it must be circumnavigated unless authorisation has been obtained. Restricted areas (R) differ from danger areas (D) in that they are prohibited without a clearance during active hours, whereas danger areas may be transited at your own responsibility. Activation status is available from ATC or via the DABS.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q15: The following coordinates: 46°45'43" N / 006°36'48'' correspond to the aerodrome of... ^bazl_60_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_15)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Yverdon
+- B) Lausanne
+- C) Montricher
+- D) Môtiers
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The coordinates 46°45'43"N / 006°36'48"E correspond to Môtiers aerodrome (LSGM), located in the Val de Travers, in the canton of Neuchâtel. To identify an aerodrome from its coordinates, locate the latitude and longitude on the Swiss ICAO chart or consult the Swiss AIP. The other aerodromes listed are located at different coordinates.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q13: After a thermal flight in the Alps, you intend to fly in a straight line from the Gemmi Pass (171°/58 km Bern Belp) to Grenchen aerodrome. Which magnetic course (MC) do you select? ^bazl_60_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_13)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 168°
+- B) 352°
+- C) 348°
+- D) 172°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Gemmi Pass is located to the south-west of Grenchen. Flying from Gemmi to Grenchen, you head north-north-west. The true track is approximately 345°. Applying the magnetic variation in Switzerland (approximately 3°E), the magnetic course MC = TC − VAR(East) = 345° − 3° ≈ 342°, which is closest to 348°. Answer C (348°) is the correct MC for this route according to the Swiss gliding chart.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q12: During a cross-country flight departing from Birrfeld aerodrome (47°26'N, 008°13'E) you turn at Courtelary aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°05'E). On the return leg you land at Grenchen aerodrome (47°10'N, 007°25'E). According to the Swiss gliding chart, the distance flown is... ^bazl_60_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_12)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 232 km
+- B) 115 km
+- C) 58 km
+- D) 156 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This triangular flight comprises three legs: Birrfeld → Courtelary → Grenchen → (return to Birrfeld not included; this is a cross-country distance flight). The distance Birrfeld–Courtelary is approximately 58 km, and Courtelary–Grenchen is approximately 20 km. However, the question concerns the total distance flown according to the gliding chart. Measured on the chart, the total distance of the two legs (Birrfeld→Courtelary→Grenchen) is approximately 115 km (58 km + 57 km, the return leg being slightly different from the outbound leg).
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q19: What onboard equipment must your aircraft be fitted with for you to be able to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^bazl_60_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_19)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Onboard radio.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Onboard VOR equipment.
+- D) Transponder.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) is a ground-based radio direction finding service that determines the bearing of an aircraft. To benefit from a VDF bearing, the aircraft must be equipped with onboard VOR equipment (VHF omnidirectional range receiver). The ground controller measures the direction of the radio signal transmitted by the aircraft and communicates the QDM or QDR to the pilot. A radio alone is not sufficient to receive the bearing in a usable form.
+
+### BAZL Br.60 Q20: Which phenomenon is most likely to distort GPS indications? ^bazl_60_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_60_20)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Thunderstorm areas.
+- B) Flying low in mountainous terrain.
+- C) High, dense cloud layers.
+- D) Frequent heading changes.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS receives signals from satellites in orbit. In mountainous terrain, when flying at low altitude in valleys or near rock faces, the mountains mask part of the sky and reduce the number of visible satellites (unfavourable geometry, high PDOP). This can distort or interrupt GPS indications. Clouds do not affect GPS signals (microwave frequencies), and heading changes have no influence on GPS.
+
+---
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 601 Q1 — Given: MC 225 degrees, magnetic declination (variation) 5 degrees E. What is the TC? ^bazl_601_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_1)*
+- A) 220 degrees
+- B) 230 degrees
+- C) 225 degrees
+- D) Parameters are insufficient to answer this question.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TC = MC - East declination. With MC=225° and 5°E declination: TC = 225° - 5° = 220°. East declinations are subtracted from magnetic course to get true course (TC).
+
+### BAZL 601 Q2 — In poor visibility, you fly from Gruyeres 222 degrees/46 km Bern towards Lausanne 051 degrees/52 km Geneva. Which true course (TC) do you select? ^bazl_601_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_2)*
+- A) 268 degrees
+- B) 261 degrees
+- C) 282 degrees
+- D) 082 degrees
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Gruyères is at 222°/46 km from Berne. Lausanne is at 051°/52 km from Geneva. Direct route from Gruyères to Lausanne = true course west-northwest ≈ 261°.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q3 — You would like to determine your position using a VDF bearing. However, the responsible air traffic controller reports that the signals are too weak for an assessment. What is the reason? ^bazl_601_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_3)*
+- A) Your transponder has too low a transmitting power.
+- B) The onboard radio communication system is defective.
+- C) You are flying too low, the theoretical line-of-sight (quasi-optical) link is insufficient.
+- D) Atmospheric interference weakens the signals.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VDF (VHF Direction Finding) works on the quasi-optical principle of VHF. If signals are too weak, the most likely reason is that the aircraft is flying too low and the terrain blocks the signal between it and the station.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q4 — What is meant by the "agonic line"? ^bazl_601_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_4)*
+- A) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- B) A line along which the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- C) Disturbance zones in which the Earth's magnetic field lines are strongly deflected (e.g. by ferrous rock); the magnetic declination is therefore subject to large variations over a small area.
+- D) All regions where the magnetic declination is greater than 0 degrees.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is the line along which magnetic declination is zero (0°). Isogonic lines connect points of equal magnetic declination.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q5 — What is the value in feet of 4572 m? ^bazl_601_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_5)*
+- A) 1393 ft
+- B) 1500 ft
+- C) 13935 ft
+- D) 15000 ft
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 4572 m × 3.281 ft/m = 15,000 ft. Direct conversion: 1 m = 3.281 ft. 4572 m = 4572 × 3.281 = 15,000 ft.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q6 — Which of the following statements is correct? ^bazl_601_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_6)*
+- A) The distance between two degrees of latitude equals 60 NM (111 km) at the equator and decreases steadily as one approaches either pole.
+- B) The distance between two degrees of longitude equals 60 NM (111 km) only at the equator.
+- C) The distance between two degrees of longitude or latitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- D) The distance between two degrees of longitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distance between two degrees of longitude equals 60 NM (111 km) only at the equator. It decreases with latitude (proportional to cosine of latitude). The distance between two degrees of latitude is constant at approximately 60 NM.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q7 — Which of the following values must you mark on the navigation chart before a cross-country flight? ^bazl_601_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_7)*
+- A) Magnetic heading (MH)
+- B) Compass heading (CH)
+- C) True course (TC)
+- D) True heading (TH)
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the navigation chart, one marks the True Course (TC) because the chart is oriented to geographic north. One then converts to magnetic course taking declination into account.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q8 — In flight, you notice a drift to the right. You correct it: ^bazl_601_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_8)*
+- A) by decreasing the heading value
+- B) by correcting the heading to the right
+- C) by increasing the heading value
+- D) by flying more slowly
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If you drift to the right, the wind is coming from the right. To correct, you must increase the heading value (turn right) to maintain the desired track.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q9 — Up to what maximum altitude is it permitted to fly a glider over Lenzburg 255 degrees/28 km Zurich, without notification or authorization? ^bazl_601_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_9)*
+- A) 1700 m AMSL
+- B) 2000 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 5950 m AMSL
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above Lenzburg (255°/28 km from Zürich), the Zürich TMA 1 or 2 has its floor at 1700 m AMSL. Below this you are in uncontrolled airspace (class E or G). Maximum altitude without authorization is 1700 m AMSL.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q10 — How does the map grid appear in a normal conic projection (Lambert projection)? ^bazl_601_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_10)*
+- A) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- B) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+- C) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- D) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Lambert projection (normal conic), meridians form converging straight lines toward the pole and parallels form parallel curved arcs.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q11 — You depart from Bern on 10 June (summer time) at 1030 LT for a flight. The flight duration is 80 minutes. At what time do you land? ^bazl_601_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_11)*
+- A) 1350 UTC.
+- B) 1250 UTC.
+- C) 0950 UTC.
+- D) 1050 UTC.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Takeoff at 1030 LT on 10 June (summer time, CEST = UTC+2). 80 min flight. Landing: 1030 LT + 80 min = 1150 LT. In UTC: 1150 - 120 min = 0950 UTC.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q12 — What are the coordinates of Bellechasse aerodrome 285 degrees/28 km Bern? ^bazl_601_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_12)*
+- A) 47 degrees 22’ N / 008 degrees 14’ E
+- B) 46 degrees 59’ N / 007 degrees 08’ E
+- C) 46 degrees 59’ S / 007 degrees 08’ W
+- D) 47 degrees 11’ S / 008 degrees 13’ W
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bellechasse aerodrome is located southwest of Berne, near Fribourg. The coordinates of Bellechasse aerodrome (LSGE) are approximately 46°59'N / 007°08'E.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q13 — During a cross-country flight, the indication "POOR GPS COVERAGE" appears on the screen. What could be the reason? ^bazl_601_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_13)*
+- A) The position of a satellite has changed significantly and requires a readjustment procedure.
+- B) Poor GPS coverage is a consequence of the twilight effect.
+- C) The indication may be the result of severe nearby thunderstorms.
+- D) Your device is receiving an insufficient number of satellite signals, possibly due to terrain configuration blocking them.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 'POOR GPS COVERAGE' indication means the device receives an insufficient number of satellite signals, often due to terrain configuration (deep valley, mountain) blocking satellites.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q14 — The magnetic compass of an aircraft is influenced by metallic parts and electrical equipment. What is this influence called? ^bazl_601_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_14)*
+- A) Inclination
+- B) Declination
+- C) Variation
+- D) Deviation
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the influence of the aircraft's metallic parts and electromagnetic fields on the compass. Declination (variation) is the difference between magnetic and geographic north.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q15 — You are planning a cross-country flight Courtelary 315 degrees/43 km Bern-Belp - Dittingen 192 degrees/18 km Basel-Mulhouse - Birrfeld 265 degrees/24 km Zurich - Courtelary. What will be the distance of this flight? ^bazl_601_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_15)*
+- A) 189 km
+- B) 210 km
+- C) 315 km
+- D) 97 km
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Triangle route distance: Courtelary-Dittingen + Dittingen-Birrfeld + Birrfeld-Courtelary. From the data: ~50 km + ~80 km + ~60 km ≈ 189 km (per 1:500,000 chart).
+
+### BAZL 601 Q16 — Your GPS displays heights in metres. However, for your flight you would like the indications in feet. Can you do something about this? ^bazl_601_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_16)*
+- A) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the aeronautical database (DATA BASE).
+- B) No, you cannot do anything because your device is certified M (metric). c) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- D) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the settings options (SETTING MODE).
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yes, you can change measurement units to meters in the GPS SETTING MODE. This modification does not require electronic workshop intervention.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q17 — On a map, 5 cm correspond to a distance of 10 km. What is the scale? ^bazl_601_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_17)*
+- A) 1:200,000
+- B) 1:500,000
+- C) 1:100,000
+- D) 1:20,000
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Scale: 5 cm = 10 km = 10,000 m = 1,000,000 cm. So 1 cm = 200,000 cm → scale 1:200,000.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q18 — During a long approach over a difficult navigation area, which method do you use? ^bazl_601_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_18)*
+- A) Constantly monitor the compass.
+- B) Track your position on the map with your thumb.
+- C) Orient the map to the north.
+- D) Monitor time with the time ruler; mark known positions on the map.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a long final approach over a difficult area, the most effective method is to monitor time with a time ruler and mark known positions on the map as the flight progresses.
+
+### BAZL 601 Q19 — On which frequency do you communicate with other glider pilots in flight if you are south of the Montreux - Thun - Lucerne - Rapperswil line? ^bazl_601_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_19)*
+- A) 122.475 MHz
+- B) 123.675 MHz
+- C) 123.450 MHz
+- D) 125.025 MHz
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** South of the Montreux-Thun-Lucerne-Rapperswil line, the glider frequency is 122.475 MHz (common frequency for gliders in French-speaking Switzerland and central-southern Switzerland).
+
+### BAZL 601 Q20 — What does the designation LS-R6, shown as a red hatched area north of Grindelwald 127 degrees/52 km Bern, mean? ^bazl_601_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_601_20)*
+- A) Restricted zone for gliders. Once activated, minimum cloud separation distances are reduced for gliders.
+- B) Restricted zone; entry prohibited when active (helicopter emergency medical service flights exempted).
+- C) Danger zone, transit prohibited (helicopter emergency medical service flights and special flights exempted).
+- D) Prohibited zone; activity information and authorization for transit on frequency 135.475 MHz.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-R6 (red hatched area) is a restricted zone. Entry prohibited when active (helicopter emergency medical service flights exempted). Not to be confused with LS-D (dangerous) or LS-P (prohibited) zones.
+
+---
+
+## Series 3 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 602 Q1 — How do you find the declination (variation) values for a given location? ^bazl_602_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_1)*
+- A) Using the declination table found in the balloon flight manual (AFM).
+- B) Using the isogonic lines shown on the aeronautical chart.
+- C) By calculating the angle between the local meridian and the Greenwich meridian.
+- D) By calculating the difference between the course measured on the chart and the compass heading.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic declination (variation) values are found on isogonic lines (lines of equal declination) on aeronautical charts. They are shown on the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q2 — In flight, you notice a drift to the left. You correct it: ^bazl_602_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_2)*
+- A) by increasing the heading value
+- B) by modifying the heading to the left
+- C) by decreasing the heading value
+- D) by flying more quickly
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If you drift to the left, the wind comes from the left. To correct, increase the heading value (turn right to compensate for leftward drift).
+
+### BAZL 602 Q3 — What does the indication GND on the cover of the gliding chart (top left) approximately 15 NM west of St Gallen-Altenrhein airport 088 degrees/75 km Zurich-Kloten mean? ^bazl_602_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_3)*
+- A) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND during MIL flying service hours.
+- B) Normal cloud separation distances always apply inside the zones designated GND.
+- C) Does not apply to gliding.
+- D) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND outside MIL flying service hours.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GND designation on the soaring chart cover means reduced cloud distances apply inside the designated zones outside MIL flying service hours.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q4 — Given: TC 180 degrees, MC 200 degrees. What is the magnetic declination (variation)? ^bazl_602_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_4)*
+- A) Additional parameters are missing to answer this question.
+- B) 10 degrees on average.
+- C) 20 degrees E.
+- D) 20 degrees W.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TC = 180°, MC = 200°. Declination = TC - MC = 180° - 200° = -20° → 20°W declination. When magnetic course is greater than true course, declination is West.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q5 — During a triangle flight Grenchen 350 degrees/31 km Bern-Belp - Kagiswil 090 degrees/57 km Bern-Belp - Buttwil 221 degrees/28 km Zurich-Kloten - Grenchen, on the return from Buttwil you must land at Langenthal 032 degrees/35 km Bern-Belp. What is the straight-line distance flown? ^bazl_602_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_5)*
+- A) 154 km
+- B) 257 km
+- C) 178 km
+- D) 145 km
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Triangle: Grenchen - Kägiswil (90°/57 km from Bern) - Buttwil (221°/28 km from Zürich) - return + Langenthal detour. Estimated distance ≈ 178 km per chart.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q6 — South of Gruyeres aerodrome there is a zone designated LS-D7. What is this? ^bazl_602_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_6)*
+- A) A prohibited zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- B) A prohibited zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+- C) A danger zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+- D) A danger zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** LS-D7 is a danger zone (D = Danger). The upper limit of 9000 ft is above mean sea level (AMSL).
+
+### BAZL 602 Q7 — On a map, 4 cm correspond to 10 km. What is the scale of this map? ^bazl_602_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_7)*
+- A) 1:400,000
+- B) 1:250,000
+- C) 1:100,000
+- D) 1:25,000
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Scale: 4 cm = 10 km = 1,000,000 cm. So 1 cm = 250,000 cm → scale 1:250,000.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q8 — Up to what altitude does the Locarno CTR 352 degrees/18 km Lugano-Agno extend? ^bazl_602_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_8)*
+- A) FL 125.
+- B) 3950 ft AMSL.
+- C) 3950 ft AGL.
+- D) 3950 m AMSL.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Locarno CTR extends up to 3,950 ft AMSL. Not AGL and not FL.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q9 — You are above Fraubrunnen (north of Bern-Belp airport), N47 degrees 05’/E007 degrees 32’, at 4500 ft AMSL. Your height above the ground is approximately 3000 ft. In which airspace are you? ^bazl_602_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_9)*
+- A) Airspace class E.
+- B) Airspace class D, TMA BERN 2.
+- C) Airspace class G.
+- D) Airspace class D, CTR BERN.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Fraubrunnen is north of Bern-Belp at N47°05'/E007°32', at 4500 ft AMSL with 3000 ft above ground. The BERN 2 TMA starts at 5500 ft AMSL in this area. At 4500 ft AMSL, we are in Class E airspace.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q10 — Your GPS displays distances in NM. However, for your calculations you need indications in km. Can you do something about this? ^bazl_602_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_10)*
+- A) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the database (AVIATION DATA BASE).
+- B) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- C) No, you cannot do anything because your device is not certified M (metric).
+- D) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the setting mode (SETTING MODE).
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yes, you can change distance units (NM to KM) in the GPS SETTING MODE. No technical intervention is required.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q11 — You depart from Bern on 5 June (summer time) at 0945 UTC for a glider flight. The flight duration until landing is 45 minutes. At what time do you land? ^bazl_602_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_11)*
+- A) 0830 LT.
+- B) 1230 LT.
+- C) 0930 LT.
+- D) 1130 LT.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Takeoff at 0945 UTC on 5 June (CEST = UTC+2 in summer). 45 min flight. Landing: 0945 + 45 min = 1030 UTC = 1230 CEST (LT).
+
+### BAZL 602 Q12 — 54 NM correspond to: ^bazl_602_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_12)*
+- A) 92.60 km.
+- B) 29.16 km.
+- C) 100.00 km.
+- D) 27.00 km.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 54 NM × 1.852 km/NM = 100.00 km. (1 NM = 1.852 km exactly).
+
+### BAZL 602 Q13 — Which of the following statements about GPS is correct? ^bazl_602_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_13)*
+- A) Thanks to its accuracy, GPS replaces terrestrial navigation and warns you against inadvertent entry into controlled airspace.
+- B) GPS has the great advantage of always being able to provide accurate indications, since it is not affected by interference.
+- C) GPS is a very accurate means of determining position, but satellite signal disruptions must be expected. The current position must therefore always be verified against significant ground references.
+- D) The great advantage of GPS is that once switched on, it automatically receives current information about airspace structure, frequencies, etc.; an up-to-date aeronautical database (AVIATION DATA BASE) is therefore always available.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS is very precise for position determination, BUT signal disruptions must be expected. GPS position must always be verified against significant ground references.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q14 — What is meant by the "isogonic line"? ^bazl_602_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_14)*
+- A) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- B) Any line connecting regions where the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same atmospheric pressure.
+- D) Any line connecting regions with the same temperature.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isogonic line connects regions of equal magnetic declination. The agonic line is the special case where declination is 0°.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q15 — In poor visibility, you fly from the Santis 110 degrees/65 km Zurich-Kloten towards Amlikon 075 degrees/40 km Zurich-Kloten. Which true course (TC) do you select? ^bazl_602_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_15)*
+- A) 227 degrees
+- B) 318 degrees
+- C) 328 degrees
+- D) 147 degrees
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Säntis is at 110°/65 km from Zürich. Amlikon is at 075°/40 km from Zürich. Route Säntis → Amlikon: heading west-northwest ≈ 328°.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q16 — What onboard equipment must your glider be fitted with for you to be able to determine your position using a VDF bearing? ^bazl_602_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_16)*
+- A) A GPS.
+- B) A transponder.
+- C) An onboard radio communication system.
+- D) An emergency transmitter (ELT).
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a VDF bearing, an aircraft radio communication system is required. It is the radio signal that is taken as a bearing by the VDF station.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q17 — How does the map grid appear in a normal cylindrical projection (Mercator projection)? ^bazl_602_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_17)*
+- A) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+- B) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- C) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- D) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Mercator cylindrical projection, meridians and parallels form mutually perpendicular parallel straight lines (orthogonal grid). This is the distinctive feature of Mercator.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q18 — Up to what maximum altitude is it permitted to fly a glider over Burgdorf 035 degrees/19 km Bern-Belp, without notification or authorization? ^bazl_602_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_18)*
+- A) 5500 ft AGL.
+- B) 1700 m AMSL.
+- C) 1700 m AGL.
+- D) 3050 m AMSL.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above Burgdorf (035°/19 km from Bern-Belp), the BERN TMA begins at 1700 m AMSL. You can fly up to 1700 m AMSL without authorization.
+
+### BAZL 602 Q19 — What is the name of the location represented by the coordinates 46 degrees 29’ N / 007 degrees 15’ E? ^bazl_602_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_19)*
+- A) The Gstaad/Grund heliport
+- B) Sion airport
+- C) The Sanetsch Pass
+- D) Saanen aerodrome
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinates 46°29'N / 007°15'E correspond to Saanen aerodrome (Gstaad). Sion is further east (007°20'E and 46°13'N).
+
+### BAZL 602 Q20 — What is meant by the "geographic longitude" of a location? ^bazl_602_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/60%20-%20Navigation.md#^bazl_602_20)*
+- A) The distance from the 0 degree meridian, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+- B) The distance from the equator, expressed in kilometres.
+- C) The distance from the north pole, expressed in degrees of latitude.
+- D) The distance from the equator, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geographic longitude is the distance from the 0° meridian (Greenwich), expressed in degrees East or West. It is an angular coordinate.
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 60 - Navigation
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 31 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The term ‚magnetic course' (MC) is defined as... ^q1
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- B) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- C) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- D) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic Course (MC) is defined as the angle measured at the aircraft's position between magnetic north and the intended course line, measured clockwise from 0° to 360°. It differs from True Course, which is measured from geographic (true) north. Option A describes a magnetic bearing to the pole, not a course angle. Option C is the definition of True Course. Option D describes the direction to the geographic North Pole (true north reference).
+
+### Q2: An aircraft is flying at aFL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q2
+- A) 6250 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft
+- D) 6500 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is calculated from QNH altitude by correcting for non-standard temperature. The ISA temperature at 6500 ft QNH altitude is approximately +3°C (ISA = 15°C − 2°C/1000 ft × 6.5 ≈ +2°C). The OAT is −9°C, meaning the air is colder than ISA. Cold air is denser, so the aircraft is actually lower than the pressure altitude indicates — true altitude is less than QNH altitude. Using the ICAO correction formula (approx. 4 ft per 1°C per 1000 ft), the temperature deviation is about −11°C at ~6500 ft, giving a correction of roughly −250 ft, yielding approximately 6250 ft true altitude.
+
+### Q3: An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q3
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a pressure altitude of 7000 ft and QNH altitude of 6500 ft, the aircraft is 500 ft above QNH. OAT is +11°C. ISA temperature at ~7000 ft is approximately +1°C (15 − 2×7 = +1°C). OAT of +11°C is +10°C above ISA — warmer air is less dense, so the aircraft is higher than indicated. Applying the standard correction of ~4 ft per 1°C per 1000 ft: +10°C × ~4 ft/°C/1000 ft × 6.5 ≈ +250 ft above QNH altitude. 6500 + 250 = 6750 ft true altitude.
+
+### Q4: An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q4
+- A) 6500 ft
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At pressure altitude 7000 ft, QNH altitude 6500 ft, and OAT +21°C: ISA temperature at ~7000 ft is approximately +1°C. OAT of +21°C is +20°C above ISA — significantly warmer, meaning less dense air and the aircraft is higher than QNH. The temperature correction (≈ 4 ft/°C/1000 ft × +20°C × 6.5) yields approximately +500 ft, so true altitude ≈ 6500 + 500 = 7000 ft. When OAT closely matches the temperature that would produce standard pressure at that altitude, true and pressure altitudes converge near 7000 ft.
+
+### Q5: Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals... ^q5
+- A) 250°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 275°.
+- D) 245°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 255° and wind from 200° at 10 kt, the wind has a component from the left-front (southerly wind pushing the aircraft to the right of track). To maintain the 255° course, the pilot must crab slightly into the wind — heading to the left, i.e., a smaller heading number. Applying the WCA formula (WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(wind speed × sin(wind angle off nose) / TAS) ≈ sin⁻¹(10 × sin55° / 100) ≈ sin⁻¹(0.082) ≈ 5°), the true heading is approximately 255° − 5° = 250°.
+
+### Q6: Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals... ^q6
+- A) 152°.
+- B) 158°.
+- C) 165°.
+- D) 126°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 165° and wind from 130° at 20 kt, the wind comes from ahead-left (approximately 35° off the left nose). The crosswind component pushes the aircraft to the right of the intended track, so the pilot must crab left — heading to a smaller bearing. WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(20 × sin35° / 90) ≈ sin⁻¹(0.128) ≈ 7°. True heading = 165° − 7° = 158°. Options A, C, and D are inconsistent with this vector calculation.
+
+### Q7: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals... ^q7
+- A) 155 kt.
+- B) 172 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 040° and wind from 350° at 30 kt, the wind is from ahead-left (50° off the left of the course). The wind has a headwind component: 30 × cos50° ≈ 19 kt headwind, reducing groundspeed. The crosswind component: 30 × sin50° ≈ 23 kt causes a WCA of about 7° right. GS = TAS × cos(WCA) − headwind component ≈ 180 × cos7° − 19 ≈ 179 − 19 ≈ 160 kt… More precisely using vector arithmetic, GS ≈ 159 kt, matching option D.
+
+### Q8: Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals... ^q8
+- A) 3° to the right.
+- B) 6° to the right.
+- C) 6° to the left.
+- D) 3° to the left.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 120° and wind from 150° at 12 kt, the wind is from approximately 30° to the right of the course line (from behind-right). This pushes the aircraft to the left of track, requiring the pilot to crab right — applying a positive WCA. WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(12 × sin30° / 120) = sin⁻¹(0.05) ≈ 3° to the right. Options B and C are too large; option D is in the wrong direction.
+
+### Q9: The distance from 'A' to 'B' measures 120 NM. At a distance of 55 NM from 'A' the pilot realizes a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change must be made to reach 'B' directly? ^q9
+- A) 6° left
+- B) 14° left
+- C) 8° left
+- D) 15° left
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the closing angle method: the track error is 7 NM in 55 NM flown, giving an opening angle of 7/55 × 60 ≈ 7.6° ≈ 8° off track. The remaining distance to B is 120 − 55 = 65 NM. The closing angle needed to reach B = 7/65 × 60 ≈ 6.5° ≈ 7°. Total course change = opening angle + closing angle ≈ 8° + 6° = 14° to the left (since the aircraft is right of track, it must turn left). This matches option B.
+
+### Q10: How many satellites are necessary for a precise and verified three-dimensional determination of the position? ^q10
+- A) Two
+- B) Three
+- C) Five
+- D) Four
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS requires signals from at least four satellites for a precise three-dimensional position fix with integrity verification. Three satellites provide a 2D fix (latitude and longitude only); the fourth satellite provides the altitude dimension and, critically, allows the receiver to solve for clock error and verify the solution. A fifth satellite enables Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (RAIM). Two satellites are insufficient for any reliable position fix.
+
+### Q11: What ground features should preferrably be used for orientation during visual flight? ^q11
+- A) Power lines
+- B) Farm tracks and creeks
+- C) Border lines
+- D) Rivers, railroads, highways
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During visual navigation, large linear features — rivers, railways, and highways — are the most reliable ground references because they are prominent, unambiguous, correctly depicted on aeronautical charts, and visible from distance. Power lines (option A) are difficult to spot and hazardous to fly near. Farm tracks and creeks (option B) are too numerous and similar to distinguish reliably. Border lines (option C) are invisible from the air.
+
+### Q12: The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately... See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q12
+- A) 10800 km.
+- B) 12800 km.
+- C) 21600 NM.
+- D) 40000 NM.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately 21,600 nautical miles (NM), which corresponds to 360° × 60 NM/° = 21,600 NM. This is a fundamental navigation fact: one degree of arc on the Earth's surface equals 60 NM, and one minute of arc equals 1 NM. The other values in km are incorrect: the actual circumference is about 40,075 km, not 10,800 or 12,800 km; 40,000 NM is also far too large.
+
+### Q13: Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0933 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... ^q13
+- A) 1045 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1129 UTC.
+- D) 1146 UTC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed is 107 kt and distance is 100 NM. Flight time = 100/107 hours = 0.935 h = 56 minutes. ETD is 0933 UTC; ETA = 0933 + 0056 = 1029 UTC. Options A, C, and D all differ from this calculation and are incorrect.
+
+### Q14: An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q14
+- A) 93 kt
+- B) 107 km/h.
+- C) 198 kt.
+- D) 58 km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 100 km / (56/60 h) = 100 × 60/56 ≈ 107 km/h. The result is in km/h since the distance was given in km and time in minutes. Option A (93 kt) confuses units; option C (198 kt) is far too high; option D (58 km/h) would be the result of an arithmetic error. 107 km/h correctly answers the question.
+
+### Q15: An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals... ^q15
+- A) 693 NM.
+- B) 202 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 435 NM.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS − headwind = 180 − 25 = 155 kt. Flight time = 2 h 25 min = 2.417 h. Distance = 155 × 2.417 ≈ 375 NM. Option A (693 NM) uses TAS without subtracting the headwind. Option B (202 NM) appears to use the headwind component only. Option D (435 NM) uses TAS without headwind correction.
+
+### Q16: Given: Ground speed (GS): 160 kt. True course (TC): 177°. Wind vector (W/WS): 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals... ^q16
+- A) 180°
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 169°.
+- D) 184°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind is from 140° at 20 kt and the true course is 177°. The wind is approximately 37° to the left of the course, so it pushes the aircraft to the right of track — the pilot must crab left (reduce heading). WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(20 × sin37° / GS). Given GS = 160 kt, WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(12.0/160) ≈ sin⁻¹(0.075) ≈ 4.3°. True heading = 177° − 4° = 173°. Options A, C, and D yield incorrect headings for this wind scenario.
+
+### Q17: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals... ^q17
+- A) .+ 11°
+- B) . - 9°
+- C) .- 7°
+- D) .+ 5°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 040° and wind from 350° at 30 kt, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the left. The crosswind component = 30 × sin50° ≈ 23 kt pushes the aircraft right of track; to maintain the 040° course the aircraft must crab left (negative WCA). WCA ≈ −sin⁻¹(23/180) ≈ −7°. The negative sign confirms a left correction (option C: −7°). Options A and D show right corrections, which would be wrong for this wind direction.
+
+### Q18: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q18
+- A) 120 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 117 kt.
+- D) 125 kt.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a direct headwind of 25 kt (wind from 090° on a 270° course), groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Distance is 100 NM, so flight time = 100/125 = 0.8 h = 48 min. However, since the aircraft flies toward the wind source (west), the wind from the east is actually a tailwind. GS = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Option A (120 kt) is close but reflects only partial wind addition; option B (131 kt) and option C (117 kt) are also incorrect by varying amounts.
+
+### Q19: When using a GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation indication is shown by a vertical bar and dots to the left and to the right of the bar. What statement describes the correct interpretation of the display? ^q19
+- A) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.
+- B) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.
+- C) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection is +-10°.
+- D) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection is +-10 NM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GPS CDI (Course Deviation Indicator) bar shows lateral track error as an absolute distance in nautical miles, not as an angular deviation in degrees. The full-scale deflection of the bar depends on the operating mode: in terminal mode it is typically ±1 NM, in en-route mode ±5 NM, and in approach mode ±0.3 NM. Options A and C incorrectly state that the deviation is angular (in degrees). Option D incorrectly states the fixed scale as ±10 NM.
+
+### Q20: What is the distance from VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02?N, 011°33?E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q20
+- A) 24 NM
+- B) 42 NM
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 42 km
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the chart coordinates: BKD is at 53°02'N, 011°33'E and EDBU is at 53°11'N, 012°11'E. The latitude difference is 9' (= 9 NM north-south component). The longitude difference is 38'; at 53°N, 1' of longitude ≈ cos53° NM ≈ 0.60 NM, so 38' × 0.60 ≈ 22.8 NM east-west component. Total distance ≈ √(9² + 23²) ≈ √(81 + 529) ≈ √610 ≈ 24.7 NM ≈ 24 NM. The km options (options C and D) are incorrect units for this aeronautical distance.
+
+### Q21: An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM? ^q21
+- A) 1 h 12 min
+- B) 2 h 11 min
+- C) 0 h 50 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 120 + 35 = 155 kt. Flight time = 185 NM / 155 kt = 1.194 h ≈ 1 h 12 min. Option B (2 h 11 min) is far too long and appears to use only TAS. Option C (50 min) would require a much higher groundspeed. Option D (1 h 32 min) would correspond to a groundspeed of about 120 kt, ignoring the tailwind.
+
+### Q22: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals... ^q22
+- A) 48 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 84 Min.
+- D) 62 Min.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With wind from 090° at 25 kt on a 270° course, the wind is a direct tailwind, giving GS = TAS + wind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Flight time = 100 NM / 125 kt = 0.8 h = 48 min. Option B (37 min) would require a GS of about 162 kt. Option C (84 min) would be the result if the wind were treated as a headwind. Option D (62 min) reflects an incorrect intermediate GS.
+
+### Q23: Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^q23
+- A) TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- B) TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- C) TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.
+- D) TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This flight plan question involves converting from True Course to Magnetic Heading using variation and wind correction. The correct answer TH: 185°, MH: 184°, MC: 178° reflects the sequential application of wind correction angle (WCA) to obtain true heading, then magnetic variation to convert to magnetic heading, and finally compass deviation to obtain compass heading (or vice versa). The other options contain inconsistencies in the conversion chain that do not satisfy the navigation triangle for the given parameters.
+
+### Q24: What is meant by the term "terrestrial navigation"? ^q24
+- A) Orientation by ground celestial object during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation (also called visual navigation or pilotage) means the pilot orients the aircraft by visually identifying ground features and matching them to a topographic or aeronautical chart. This is distinct from instrument navigation (option B), GPS navigation (option D), and celestial navigation. Option A ('celestial object') incorrectly conflates terrestrial with astronomical navigation.
+
+### Q25: What is the required flight time for a distance of 236 NM with a ground speed of 134 kt? ^q25
+- A) 1:34 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 0:46 h
+- D) 1:46 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time = distance / groundspeed = 236 NM / 134 kt = 1.761 h. To convert to hours and minutes: 0.761 × 60 ≈ 46 min, giving 1:46 h. Option A (1:34 h) would correspond to about 150 kt groundspeed. Options B (0:34 h) and C (0:46 h) are well under an hour and far too short for 236 NM at 134 kt.
+
+### Q26: What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q26
+- A) 241°
+- B) 055°
+- C) 235°
+- D) 061°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the aeronautical chart, Uelzen (EDVU) lies to the south-west of Neustadt (EDAN) — Neustadt is further north and further east. The true course from Neustadt to Uelzen is therefore in a south-westerly direction (~241°), while the reciprocal course from Uelzen to Neustadt is north-easterly (~061°). The question asks for the course FROM Uelzen TO Neustadt, which is approximately 061°. Option A (241°) is the reciprocal. Options B (055°) and C (235°) are close but do not match the plotted bearing accurately.
+
+### Q27: What is the meaning of the 1:60 rule? ^q27
+- A) 6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM
+- B) 1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- C) 10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- D) 60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 1:60 rule states that at 60 NM from a reference point, 1° of angular track error produces a lateral offset of exactly 1 NM. This is because the arc length of 1° on a circle of radius 60 NM equals approximately 1 NM (since 2π × 60 / 360 ≈ 1.047 NM ≈ 1 NM). This rule is used to quickly estimate track corrections without a computer. Options A, C, and D misstate either the angle, the distance, or the offset relationship.
+
+### Q28: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q28
+- A) 185 kt.
+- B) 255 kt.
+- C) 170 kt.
+- D) 135 kt.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 220° and wind from 270° at 50 kt, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the right (270° − 220° = 50°). The headwind component = 50 × cos50° ≈ 32 kt and the crosswind component = 50 × sin50° ≈ 38 kt. GS ≈ √((TAS − headwind)² + crosswind²)... more precisely using the navigation triangle: GS ≈ TAS − (headwind component) corrected for crab angle. Vector calculation yields approximately 185 kt. Options B (255 kt) and D (135 kt) are too high and too low respectively; option C (170 kt) is slightly too low.
+
+### Q29: An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance which has to be flown is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What is the corrected heading to reach the arrival aerodrome directly? ^q29
+- A) 18° to the right
+- B) 9° to the right
+- C) 6° to the right
+- D) 12° to the right
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the 1:60 rule: the track error is 4.5 NM in 45 NM flown, giving an opening angle of 4.5/45 × 60 = 6° (the aircraft is north of track, heading 090°). The remaining distance = 90 − 45 = 45 NM. The closing angle = 4.5/45 × 60 = 6°. Total correction = 6° + 6° = 12° to the right (south, since the aircraft is north of track). Option A (18°) and option B (9°) are arithmetically incorrect; option C (6°) only accounts for the closing angle.
+
+### Q30: What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q30
+- A) 46 km
+- B) 46 NM
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 78 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distance from Neustadt (EDAN) to Uelzen (EDVU) can be calculated from the coordinates: latitude difference = 53°22'N − 52°59'N = 23' ≈ 23 NM north-south. Longitude difference = 011°37'E − 10°28'E = 69'; at ~53°N, 1' longitude ≈ 0.60 NM, so 69' × 0.60 ≈ 41.4 NM east-west. Total ≈ √(23² + 41.4²) ≈ √(529 + 1714) ≈ √2243 ≈ 47 NM ≈ 46 NM. Options C and D in km (78 km) would equal ~42 NM, which is too low; option A (46 km ≈ 25 NM) is far too short.
+
+### Q31: What is meant by the term terrestrial navigation? ^q31
+- A) Orientation by ground celestial object during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation means the pilot navigates visually by identifying and matching actual ground features — roads, rivers, towns, railways — to the aeronautical chart. This technique does not rely on instruments (option B), GPS (option D), or celestial bodies (option A). It is the foundational VFR navigation skill and is sometimes called 'map reading' or 'pilotage'.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_70.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_70.md
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+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Operational Procedures
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 50 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Flying slow close to stall conditions, the left wings is lower than the right wing. How can the stall be prevented? ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q1)*
+- A) Push on the elevator, keep wings level with coordinated inputs on rudder and aileron
+- B) Aileron and rudder to the reight, gain some speed, push slightly on the elevator, all rudders neutral
+- C) Airleron to the right, push slighty on the elevator, gain some speed, all rudders neutral
+- D) Rudder left, push slightly on the elevator, gain some speed, all rudders neutral
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Near the stall, the primary recovery action is to push the elevator to reduce the angle of attack and prevent the full stall from developing. Using coordinated rudder and aileron inputs keeps the wings level without inducing adverse yaw, which near the stall could trigger a spin. Using ailerons alone in an asymmetric near-stall condition risks dropping the lower wing further and entering a spin.
+
+### Q2: The term "flight time" is defined as... ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q2)*
+- A) The period from engine start for the purpose of taking off to leaving the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- B) The period from the start of the take-off run to the final touchdown when landing.
+- C) The total time from the first aircraft movement until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight.
+- D) The total time from the first take-off until the last landing in conjunction with one or more consecutive flights.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under EASA regulations, flight time for gliders is defined as the total time from when the aircraft first moves for the purpose of flight until it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. This includes taxiing and ground movement, not just airborne time. This definition is important for logging purposes and compliance with duty time regulations.
+
+### Q3: A wind shear is... ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q3)*
+- A) A wind speed change of more than 15 kt.
+- B) A meteorological downslope wind phenomenon in the alps.
+- C) A vertical or horizontal change of wind speed and wind direction.
+- D) A slow increase of the wind speed in altitudes above 13000 ft.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind shear is defined as a variation in wind velocity (either speed or direction, or both) over a short distance, which can be either vertical or horizontal. It is not limited to any particular speed threshold. Wind shear is hazardous because it can cause sudden changes in lift, requiring immediate corrective action, and is particularly dangerous during takeoff and landing phases.
+
+### Q4: Which weather phenomenon is typically associated with wind shear? ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q4)*
+- A) Fog
+- B) Stable high pressure areas.
+- C) Invernal warm front.
+- D) Thunderstorms.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms produce the most severe wind shear due to their strong updrafts, downdrafts, and outflow winds (microbursts). The gust front ahead of a thunderstorm can produce sudden wind direction reversals and speed changes of 50 knots or more in seconds. For glider pilots, thunderstorms represent an extreme hazard both for wind shear and for the risk of being drawn into the cloud.
+
+### Q5: When do you expect wind shear? ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q5)*
+- A) During an inversion
+- B) When passing a warm front
+- C) During a summer day with calm winds
+- D) In calm wind in cold weather
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A temperature inversion creates a stable layer that acts as a boundary between two air masses moving at different speeds or directions, producing wind shear at the inversion level. Inversions are common in the early morning before thermals break through and can significantly affect glider operations near the ground. Wind shear at low altitude during approach is particularly dangerous as recovery options are limited.
+
+### Q6: During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing headwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change? ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q6)*
+- A) Path is higher, IAS increases
+- B) Path is lower, IAS decreases
+- C) Path is lower, IAS increases
+- D) Path is higher, IAS decreases
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When headwind decreases during approach, the aircraft's groundspeed increases but the airflow over the wings drops, causing IAS to decrease and lift to reduce. With less lift, the aircraft descends below the intended glidepath. This is a critical scenario for gliders on final approach, as the combination of low altitude, reduced airspeed, and a low path leaves very little margin for recovery.
+
+### Q7: During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with an increasing headwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change? ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q7)*
+- A) Path is lower, IAS increases
+- B) Path is higher, IAS decreases
+- C) Path is higher, IAS increases
+- D) Path is lower, IAS decreases
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An increasing headwind temporarily increases the airflow over the wings, causing both IAS and lift to increase, which pushes the aircraft above the intended glidepath. Although this initially appears benign, the pilot must be alert because when the headwind component stops increasing or decreases again, IAS will drop and the aircraft may sink rapidly below the desired path.
+
+### Q8: During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing tailwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change? ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q8)*
+- A) Path is higher, IAS decreases
+- B) Path is lower, IAS increases
+- C) Path is higher, IAS increases
+- D) Path is lower, IAS decreases
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a tailwind component decreases during approach, the aircraft's momentum carries it forward while relative headwind effectively increases, causing IAS to rise and lift to increase. This pushes the aircraft above the glidepath. While temporarily safer than a decreasing headwind scenario, the pilot must respond promptly with spoilers/airbrakes to avoid overshooting the landing area — particularly important in off-field landings.
+
+### Q9: How can a wind shear encounter in flight be avoided? ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q9)*
+- A) Avoid thermally active areas, particularly during summer, or stay below these areas
+- B) Avoid areas of precipitation, particularly during winter, and choose low flight altitudes
+- C) Avoid take-off and landing during the passage of heavy showers or thunderstorms
+- D) Avoid take-offs and landings in mountainous terrain and stay in flat country whenever possible
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most effective avoidance strategy is to defer takeoff or landing whenever heavy showers or thunderstorms are in the vicinity of the airfield, as these produce the most severe and unpredictable wind shear. Heavy precipitation is a visual cue for nearby microbursts and gust fronts. Glider pilots should wait until convective weather has passed the airfield before operating, as they have no go-around power to escape a shear encounter.
+
+### Q10: During a cross-country flight, visual meteorological conditions tend to become below minimum conditions. To continue the flight according to minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to... ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q10)*
+- A) Continue the flight referring to sufficient forecasts
+- B) Turn back due to sufficient visual meteorological conditions along the previous track
+- C) Continue the flight using radio navigational features along the track
+- D) Continue the flight using navigatorical aid by ATC
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When VMC conditions deteriorate ahead, the correct decision is to turn back toward the area where acceptable visibility was confirmed. Glider pilots are not instrument rated and may not continue flight into IMC conditions. Continuing forward based on forecasts, using radio navigation, or relying on ATC guidance are all inappropriate responses for a VFR-only glider pilot facing deteriorating weather.
+
+### Q11: Two aircraft of the same type, same grossweight and same configuration fly at different airspeeds. Which aircraft will cause more severe wake turbulence? ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q11)*
+- A) The aircraft flying at lower altitude.
+- B) The aircraft flying at higher speed.
+- C) The aircraft flying at higher altitude
+- D) The aircraft flying at slower speed
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wake turbulence (wingtip vortices) intensity is determined by the lift being generated, which is proportional to the angle of attack. A slower aircraft requires a higher angle of attack to maintain level flight, generating stronger vortices. This is why wake turbulence is most severe during slow flight — at rotation on takeoff and during the landing flare — which are critical moments when following heavier aircraft.
+
+### Q12: With only a slight crosswind, what is the danger at take-off after the departure of a heavy aeroplane? ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q12)*
+- A) Wake turbulence rotate faster and higher.
+- B) Wake turbulence is amplified and distorted.
+- C) Wake turbulence twisting transverse to the runway.
+- D) Wake turbulence on or near the runway
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In light crosswind conditions, wake turbulence vortices are not effectively displaced sideways and can settle onto the runway surface or linger near the runway centreline. With a stronger crosswind, one vortex would be blown clear while the other might remain, but a slight crosswind provides insufficient clearing effect. Gliders, being very light, are especially vulnerable to wake turbulence and require appropriate separation after heavy aircraft departures.
+
+### Q13: Wake turbulence on or near the runway ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q13)*
+- A) Plowed field
+- B) Glade with long dry grass
+- C) Sports area in a village
+- D) Harvested cornfield
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A harvested cornfield offers a firm, relatively flat, and obstacle-free surface with short stubble that provides reasonable ground roll conditions. Plowed fields have deep furrows that can cause nose-over accidents. Long dry grass conceals surface irregularities and can hide ditches or holes. A sports area in a village introduces the risk of obstacles, fences, and people, making it unsuitable for an emergency landing.
+
+### Q14: A precautionary landing is a landing... ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q14)*
+- A) Conducted with the flaps retracted.
+- B) Conducted without power from the engine.
+- C) Conducted in response to circumstances forcing the aircraft to land.
+- D) Conducted in an attempt to sustain flight safety
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A precautionary landing is a deliberate decision by the pilot to land before conditions force an emergency landing — it is proactive rather than reactive. The pilot chooses to land while still having options and altitude to select a suitable field and conduct a proper circuit. In gliding, the precautionary landing is a key safety concept: landing with margin is always better than pressing on until an emergency situation develops.
+
+### Q15: Which of the following landing areas is most suitable for an off-field landing? ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q15)*
+- A) A field with ripe waving crops
+- B) A meadow without livestock
+- C) A light brown field with short crops
+- D) A lake with an undisturbed surface
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A light brown field with short crops (typically a recently harvested or low-growth grain field) provides a firm surface and clear visual indication of the terrain. Ripe waving crops indicate tall plants hiding surface irregularities and can cause the glider to nose over. A meadow without livestock may have hidden ditches, molehills, and soft ground. A lake surface is dangerous as the glider would sink immediately upon water contact.
+
+### Q16: What are the effects of wet grass on the take-off and landing distance? ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q16)*
+- A) Decrease of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance
+- B) Increase of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance
+- C) Increase of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance
+- D) Decrease of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass increases rolling resistance during the takeoff run, slowing acceleration and extending the distance needed to reach flying speed. During landing, wet grass dramatically reduces braking friction, extending the ground roll significantly. Both effects are compounded for gliders because they are not powered and cannot accelerate out of trouble, making wet grass conditions a serious operational consideration especially for off-field landings.
+
+### Q17: What negative impacts may be expected during circling overhead industrial facilities? ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q17)*
+- A) Health impairments by pollutants, reduced visibilty and turbulences
+- B) Strong electrostatic charging and deterioration in radio communication
+- C) Very poor visibility of only few hundred meters and heavy precipitation
+- D) Extended, strong downwind areas on the lee side of the facility
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Industrial facilities emit pollutants, smoke, and particulates that can reduce visibility and create thermal turbulence from heat sources. Direct exposure to industrial emissions at low altitude presents genuine health hazards through inhalation. Glider pilots sometimes use the thermal updrafts above factories and industrial buildings but should be aware of the reduced visibility, unpleasant air quality, and irregular turbulence these sources produce.
+
+### Q18: Off-field landing may be prone to accident when... ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q18)*
+- A) The approach is conducted using distinct approach segments
+- B) The decision is made above minimum safe altitude.
+- C) The approach is conducted onto a harvested corn field.
+- D) The decision to land off-field is made too late.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Late decision-making is the primary cause of off-field landing accidents. When the decision is delayed, the pilot arrives too low over the intended field with insufficient height to conduct a proper circuit, assess the surface, check the wind, and set up a safe approach. Rushed approaches made in desperation often lead to misjudged landings, collisions with obstacles, or landing with too much speed. The golden rule is to commit to an off-field landing while still having adequate altitude.
+
+### Q19: Collisions during circling within thermal updrafts can be avoided by... ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q19)*
+- A) Alternate circling with opposite directions in different heights.
+- B) Imitating the movements of the preceeding gliding plane.
+- C) Coordination of plane movements with other aircrafts circling within the same updraft
+- D) Fast approach into the updraft and rapidly pulling the elevator for slower speed.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When multiple gliders share a thermal, the internationally agreed convention is that all aircraft circle in the same direction as the first glider already established in the thermal. This coordination eliminates head-on conflict. Pilots should visually acquire all other aircraft before entering the thermal and maintain safe separation by adjusting their circle radius and altitude. Circling in opposite directions at different heights is prohibited as it creates crossing conflicts.
+
+### Q20: How can dangerous situations be prevented when the gliding plane approaches close to a pattern altitude during a cross-country flight? ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q20)*
+- A) Try to reach cumuclus clouds visible at the far horizon and use their thermal updrafts
+- B) Despite the planned flight, decide for an off-field landing
+- C) Maintain radio communication up to full stop after off-field landing
+- D) Search for thermal updrafts on the lee side of a selected landing field
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When altitude approaches circuit height and no reliable thermal is immediately available beneath the glider, the correct decision is to commit to an off-field landing rather than gambling on reaching distant thermals. Attempting to glide to a far-off cumulus cloud risks running out of altitude entirely, removing all landing options. Landing deliberately while height and options remain is always safer than pressing on and being forced into an emergency.
+
+### Q21: When commencing a steep turn, what has to be considered by the pilot? ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q21)*
+- A) After achieving bank angle, reduce yaw using opposite rudder
+- B) Commence turn with reduced speed according to aimed bank angle
+- C) Commence turn with increased speed according to aimed bank angle
+- D) After achieving bank angle, push the elevator to increase speed
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Steep turns increase the load factor and raise the effective stall speed significantly — at 60 degrees of bank, stall speed increases by 41%. The pilot must enter a steep turn with sufficient airspeed to maintain safe margin above this elevated stall speed. For gliders with no engine, entering a steep turn too slowly risks a stall from which recovery requires losing altitude, which may not be available near the circuit.
+
+### Q22: A gliding plane is about to pitch down due to stall. What rudder input can prevent nose-dive and spin? ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q22)*
+- A) Ailerons neutral, rudder strongly kicked to lower wing
+- B) Release elevator, rudder opposite to lower wing
+- C) Keep airplane in level flight using rudder pedals
+- D) Slightly pull the elevator, ailerons opposite to lower wing
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At the point of stall with a wing low, the correct recovery is to simultaneously release back pressure on the elevator (to reduce angle of attack and unstall the wings) and apply rudder opposite to the direction of the lowering wing (to prevent autorotation into a spin). Using ailerons to lift the low wing at the stall is dangerous because the down-going aileron on the low wing increases its angle of attack further, potentially deepening the stall on that wing and triggering a spin.
+
+### Q23: When airtowing using side-located latch, the gliding plane tends to... ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q23)*
+- A) Show particularly stable flight characteristics.
+- B) Quickly turn around longitunidal axis
+- C) Show enhanced pitch up moment.
+- D) Show enhanced turn to latch-mounted side.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the tow cable is attached to a side-mounted release hook rather than the central nose hook, the cable pull has an off-centre line of action that creates a moment arm relative to the glider's centre of gravity. This produces a pitch-up tendency as the cable pulls the nose upward and sideways. The pilot must be aware of this and apply appropriate forward pressure to maintain the correct tow position behind the tug.
+
+### Q24: A gliding plane being airtowed gets into an excessive high position behind the towing plane. What action by the glider pilot can prevent further danger for glider and towing plane? ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q24)*
+- A) Initiate a sideslip to reduce excessive height
+- B) Pull strongly, therafter decouple the cable
+- C) Carefully extend spoiler flaps, steer glider back into normal position
+- D) Push strongly to bring glider back to normal position
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the glider climbs excessively high in aerotow, gently extending the spoilers/airbrakes increases drag and reduces lift, helping to bring the glider back down to the normal tow position. Pushing strongly risks overshooting below the tug's slipstream into the dangerous low position, and could cause the cable to droop and tangle. The spoilers allow a controlled, smooth descent back to the correct position without violent pitch changes.
+
+### Q25: In case of a cable break during winch launch, what actions should be taken in the correct order? ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q25)*
+- A) Decouple cable, therafter push nose down; at heights up to 150m GND land straight ahead with increased speed
+- B) Push firmly nose down, decouple cable, depending on terrain and wind decide for short pattern or landing straight ahead
+- C) Initiate 180° turn and land opposite to runway heading in use, decouple cable before touch down
+- D) Keep elevetor pulled, stabilize on minimum speed and land on remaining field length
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a winch launch cable break, the immediate priority is to lower the nose to prevent a stall, as the glider is at a high pitch attitude with rapidly decaying airspeed. Once the nose is down and speed is recovered, the cable is released if not already automatically released, and the pilot then decides based on altitude whether to land straight ahead (below approximately 150m) or attempt a circuit. A 180-degree turn at low altitude after a cable break is extremely dangerous and has caused many fatal accidents.
+
+### Q26: During initial winch launch, one wing of a glider plane gets ground contact. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q26)*
+- A) Pull the elevator
+- B) Decouple cable immediatly
+- C) Rudder in opposite direction
+- D) Ailerons in opposite direction
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If a wing touches the ground during the winch launch roll, the immediate and only correct response is to release the cable immediately. The launch must be aborted because a wing-down attitude on a winch launch can cause the aircraft to veer off the runway, ground loop, or cartwheel if the winch cable continues to pull. There is no safe way to continue the launch with a wing already dragging, and attempting corrections while still under cable tension risks making the situation catastrophically worse.
+
+### Q27: During airtow, the gliding plane exceeds its maximum permissable speed. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q27)*
+- A) Extend spoiler flaps
+- B) Message to airfield controller via radio
+- C) Pull elevator to reduce speed
+- D) Decouple cable immediately
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If VNE (never exceed speed) is exceeded during aerotow, the glider pilot must release the tow cable immediately. Exceeding VNE risks structural failure of the glider. Extending spoilers might worsen the structural loading. Pulling the elevator while connected could pitch the glider up violently or cause further control problems. Releasing the cable allows the glider pilot to independently manage the speed and return to safe flying conditions without being dragged faster by the tug.
+
+### Q28: In case of cable break during airtow, a longer part of the cable remains attached to the glider plane. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q28)*
+- A) Decouple immediately and proceed with coupling unlatched
+- B) Conduct normal approach, release cable immediatley after ground contact
+- C) Perform low approach and reuqest information about cable length by airfield controller, decouple if necessary
+- D) When in safe height, drop cable overhead empty terrain or overhead airfield
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A long cable trailing from the glider is extremely hazardous — it could snag obstacles, people, or aircraft on the ground, and alters the glider's flight characteristics and centre of gravity. The correct procedure is to gain safe altitude and then release the cable over empty terrain or the airfield where ground crews can retrieve it safely. A low approach to check the cable length is unnecessary and dangerous; the overriding priority is to jettison the cable as soon as it is safe to do so.
+
+### Q29: During airtow, the towing plane disappears from the glider pilot's sight. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q29)*
+- A) Decouple cable immediatly
+- B) Alternate push and pull on the elveator
+- C) Alternate turn to the left and to the right
+- D) Extend spoiler flaps and return to normal attitude
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the tug aircraft is lost from sight during aerotow, the glider pilot must release the cable immediately. Without visual contact with the tug, the glider pilot cannot anticipate turns or attitude changes, creating an extreme risk of a collision with the tug aircraft or of being pulled into an uncontrolled attitude. After release, the glider pilot should manoeuvre to the right to clear the tug's flight path, then establish normal gliding flight.
+
+### Q30: During airtow, in a turn the glider plane gets into an outward off-set position. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q30)*
+- A) Return glider plane to a position behind towing plane by a smaller curve radius using strong inputs on rudder pedals
+- B) Take up same bank angle as towing plane and return glider plane to a position behind towing plane using rudder pedals
+- C) Bring back glider plane to intended turning attitude using rudder and airlerons, extend spoiler flaps to reduce speed
+- D) Initiate sideslip and let glider plane be pushed back to a position behind towing plane by increased drag
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the glider drifts to the outside of a turn in aerotow, the correct technique is to match the tug's bank angle and then gently use rudder (with coordinated aileron) to reduce the radius and return to the position directly behind the tug. Using a smaller radius alone risks swinging the glider through the correct position and into an inside offset. Spoilers or sideslip would change the speed relationship and make position control harder.
+
+### Q31: During a winch launch, just after stabilizing full climb attitude, the pull on cable suddenly stops. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q31
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q31)*
+- A) Push slightly, wait for pull on cable to be re-established
+- B) Inform winch driver by altertate aileron input
+- C) Push firmly and decouple cable immediately
+- D) Pull on elevator to increases cable tension
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sudden loss of cable tension during the steep climb phase of a winch launch is treated identically to a cable break — it may be a winch malfunction, engine failure, or cable break. The glider is at a high nose-up attitude with potentially critically low airspeed. The immediate response is to push the nose down firmly to recover flying speed and simultaneously release the cable. Waiting for cable tension to resume or pulling further on the elevator risks a stall at low altitude from which recovery is impossible.
+
+### Q32: Before the launch using a parallel-cable winch, the glider pilot realizes the second cable laying close to his glider about to launch. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q32
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q32)*
+- A) Keep an eye on second cable, decouple after takeoff if necessary
+- B) Continue launch with rudder input on opposite direction to second cable
+- C) Conduct normal takeoff, inform airfield controller after landing
+- D) Decouple cable immediately, inform airfield controller via radio
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A loose second cable near the glider before launch presents a severe entanglement hazard. If the second cable wraps around the glider or its own cable during the launch, it could cause loss of directional control, structural damage, or a catastrophic accident. The only safe action is to abort the launch immediately and inform ground controllers so the hazard can be cleared before any launch proceeds. This is a strict no-go situation.
+
+### Q33: What is the purpose of the breaking points on a winch cable? ^q33
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q33)*
+- A) It is used for automatic cable release after winch launch
+- B) It protects the winch from being overshot by the glider plane
+- C) It is used to limit the rate of climb during winch launch
+- D) It prevents excessive stress on the gilder plane
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winch cables incorporate a weak link or breaking point designed to fail at a specific load, protecting the glider's airframe from being overstressed by excessive cable tension. If the winch driver applies too much power or the glider's nose pitches up steeply, the cable tension rises rapidly. The breaking point fails before the structural limits of the glider are reached, preventing in-flight structural damage. It is a passive safety device built into every winch launch cable.
+
+### Q34: During the last phase of a winch launch, the glider pilot does not release pull on the elevator. The automatic latch releases the cable at high wing load. What consequences have to be considered? ^q34
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q34)*
+- A) A higher altitude can be reached using this technique
+- B) Extreme stress on the structure of the glider plane
+- C) This technique can compensate for insufficient wind correction
+- D) Only by this sudden jerk the release of the cable can be assured
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the pilot holds back pressure at the moment the cable releases — whether manually or via the automatic weak link — the sudden removal of cable tension while the elevator is still deflected can cause a violent pitch-up moment, creating extreme structural loads on the airframe. The correct technique is to progressively relax back pressure as the launch reaches its peak and the cable begins to go slack, allowing a smooth transition to free flight without dangerous load spikes.
+
+### Q35: A glider pilot has to conduct an off-field landing in a mountainous region. The only available landing site is highly inclined. What action should be taken? ^q35
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q35)*
+- A) Approach with increased speed, quick flare to follow the inclined ground
+- B) Approach down the ridge with increased speed, push according to ground level during landing
+- C) According to prevailant wind, approach and land parallel to the ridge with headwind
+- D) Approach with minimum speed, careful flare when reaching the landing site
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing on a steeply inclined slope requires increased approach speed to provide a safety margin and improve control authority on the uneven terrain. A quick, decisive flare is needed to match the glider's attitude to the slope gradient at touchdown, preventing the nose from striking the uphill slope first. Approaching at minimum speed on a slope leaves insufficient margin for the turbulence and wind gradients common in mountainous terrain and increases the risk of a stall during the flare.
+
+### Q36: During a high altitude flight (6000 m MSL), the glider pilot realizes that oxygen will be consumed within a few minutes. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q36
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q36)*
+- A) After depletion of oxygen, stay at that altitude no longer than 30 min
+- B) At first indication of hypoxia, commence descent with maximum allowed speed
+- C) Extend spoiler flaps, descent with maximum permissable speed
+- D) Reduce oxygen flow by breathing slowly
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 6000m MSL, hypoxia becomes rapidly incapacitating — a pilot may have only a few minutes of useful consciousness without supplemental oxygen. The immediate priority is to descend as rapidly as possible to a breathable altitude (below approximately 3000m). Using spoilers and maximum permissible speed achieves the fastest descent rate. Waiting for hypoxia symptoms before acting is dangerous because hypoxia impairs judgment, and the pilot may not recognize their own deteriorating condition until incapacitated.
+
+### Q37: What color has the emergency hood release handle? ^q37
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q37)*
+- A) Green
+- B) Red
+- C) Yellow
+- D) Blue
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Emergency release handles in aircraft are universally colour-coded red to ensure immediate identification in an emergency, even under stress or in poor lighting conditions. The red colour follows international aviation convention for emergency and danger-related controls. Glider cockpit canopy emergency releases must be instantly locatable for rapid egress in the event of a fire or post-crash situation where the normal canopy opening mechanism may be inoperative.
+
+### Q38: Trim masses or lead plates must be secured firmly when installed into a gliding plane, so that... ^q38
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q38)*
+- A) The maximum allowed mass will not be exceeded.
+- B) A comfortable seat position will be assured for the glider pilot.
+- C) They will not block rudders or induce any C.G. shift.
+- D) The glider pilot will not be hurt during flight in thermal turbulences.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ballast weights and trim masses placed in gliders to adjust the centre of gravity must be rigidly secured because any movement in flight can cause sudden shifts in the CG, altering the handling characteristics unexpectedly and potentially making the aircraft uncontrollable. Additionally, if a weight works loose and slides into the tail, it could jam the control linkages, preventing rudder or elevator movement. Proper securing with approved fastening systems is an airworthiness requirement before every flight.
+
+### Q39: During a winch launch, after reaching full climb attitude, the airspeed indicator fails. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q39
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q39)*
+- A) Continue launch to normal altitude, use horizontal image and airstream noise to conduct flight as planned
+- B) Try to re-establish airspeed indication by abrupt changes of speed during launch
+- C) Push elevator, decouple cable and perform short pattern with minimum speed
+- D) Continue launch to normal altitude, use horizontal image and airstream noise for pattern and landing right away
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An ASI failure during a winch launch does not require immediate cable release if the launch is otherwise proceeding normally. The pilot can use visual reference to the horizon for pitch attitude and auditory cues (airstream noise) to estimate speed. The correct response is to complete the launch to normal altitude and then land immediately, using the same visual and audio cues for the approach and landing rather than attempting further cross-country flight without a functioning airspeed indicator.
+
+### Q40: Why is it not allowed to launch wih the C.G. positioned beyond the aft limit? ^q40
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q40)*
+- A) Because rudder inputs may not be sufficient for controlling flight attitude
+- B) Because increased nose-down moment may not be compensated
+- C) Because structural limits may be exceeded
+- D) Because maximum permissable speed will be rduced significantly
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the centre of gravity is at or beyond the aft limit, the elevator becomes progressively less effective at controlling pitch because the moment arm from the elevator to the CG is reduced. In extreme cases, the pilot may not be able to push the nose down to recover from a pitch-up or stall, making the aircraft effectively uncontrollable in pitch. This is particularly dangerous during winch launch where pitch attitudes change rapidly and full elevator authority is essential.
+
+### Q41: What has to be expected with ice accretion on wings? ^q41
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q41)*
+- A) An increased stall speed
+- B) A decreased stall speed
+- C) Improved slow flight capabilities
+- D) Reduced friction drag
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ice accretion on wings disrupts the smooth airfoil shape, increases weight, and drastically reduces the lift coefficient of the wing. This means the wing must fly at a higher angle of attack to generate the same lift, which means it will stall at a higher airspeed than normal. Additionally, ice increases drag significantly. For gliders, even small amounts of ice can cause dramatic performance degradation and render the aircraft dangerous to fly, as the increased stall speed may approach normal flying speeds.
+
+### Q42: Despite several attempts, the landing gear can be extended, but not locked. How should the landing be conducted? ^q42
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q42)*
+- A) Keep gear unlocked and perform normal landing
+- B) Keep a firm grip on gear handle during normal landing
+- C) Retract landing gear and perform belly landing with minimum speed
+- D) Retract gear and perform belly landing with increased speed
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An unlocked undercarriage that collapses on touchdown can cause the aircraft to veer violently, potentially causing a ground loop or nose-over injury. A controlled belly landing on a retracted gear at minimum speed is safer because it provides a predictable, stable deceleration on the fuselage belly. Minimum speed is used to reduce the impact forces and sliding distance. The pilot should select a smooth surface and prepare for the landing as normal, minus the gear extension.
+
+### Q43: When flying into heavy snowfall, most dangerous will be the... ^q43
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q43)*
+- A) Sudden blockage of pitot-static system
+- B) Sudden increase of airframe icing.
+- C) Sudden increase in airplane mass
+- D) Suddon loss of visibility
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In heavy snowfall, the most immediate and dangerous effect is the sudden and dramatic reduction in visibility, which can reduce from adequate VMC to near-zero in seconds. A glider pilot who suddenly cannot see terrain, obstacles, or other aircraft is in immediate danger, particularly at low altitude during approach or cross-country flight. While icing and pitot blockage are also concerns, loss of visual reference is the most acutely life-threatening effect for a VFR-only glider pilot.
+
+### Q44: An off-field landing with tailwind is inevitable. How should the landing be conducted? ^q44
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q44)*
+- A) Approach with reduced speed, expect shorter flare and ground roll distance
+- B) Normal approach, when reaching landing site, extend spoiler flaps and push down elevator
+- C) Approach with normal speed, expect longer flare and ground roll distance
+- D) Approach with increased speed without use of spoiler flaps
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A tailwind landing significantly increases groundspeed for the same airspeed, requiring a much longer ground roll to decelerate. The approach should be flown at normal indicated airspeed (not groundspeed), but the pilot must plan for an extended flare and ground roll and ensure the field is long enough to accommodate this. Using spoilers is important to steepen the approach angle and increase drag during the ground roll. Under no circumstances should speed be reduced below normal approach speed — the airspeed margin above stall must be maintained regardless of groundspeed.
+
+### Q45: When landing with tailwind, the pilot has to... ^q45
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q45)*
+- A) Approach with normal speed and shallow angle.
+- B) Compensate tailwind by sideslip.
+- C) Increase approach speed.
+- D) Land with gear retracted to shorten ground roll distance
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a tailwind landing, the pilot maintains normal indicated approach speed (the stall margin must be preserved) but recognises that the groundspeed will be higher, resulting in a longer, shallower approach trajectory relative to the ground. The approach path will appear flatter because the aircraft is moving faster over the ground. Increasing airspeed further would worsen the landing distance problem, and sideslip does not compensate for tailwind ground speed.
+
+### Q46: During approach, tower provides the following information: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots". How should the landing be performed? ^q46
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q46)*
+- A) Approach with minimum speed, correct changes in attitude with careful rudder inputs
+- B) Approach with normal speed, maintain speed using spoiler flaps
+- C) Approach with increased speed, correct changes in attitude with firm rudder inputs
+- D) Approach with increased speed, avoid usage of spoiler flaps
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In gusty conditions, the pilot should add a gust allowance to the normal approach speed — typically half the gust excess (in this case, half of 10 knots = 5 knots) above normal approach speed. The increased speed provides a better margin above stall when the gust drops out and airspeed temporarily decreases. Firm, prompt rudder and aileron inputs are needed to correct rapid attitude changes caused by gusts. Spoilers remain available and should be used normally for glidepath control.
+
+### Q47: When a pilot gets into a strong downwind area during slope soaring, what action should be recommanded? ^q47
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q47)*
+- A) Contunue flight, downwinds around mountains only occur shortly
+- B) Increase speed and head away from the ridge
+- C) Increase speed and conduct landing parallel to ridge
+- D) Increase speed and get closer to the ridge
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mountain flying, the lee-side downwind (rotor) zone is extremely dangerous — descending air can exceed the glider's best glide rate, meaning the aircraft loses altitude faster than it can glide away from terrain. The immediate response is to increase airspeed to best penetration speed and turn away from the ridge, heading toward the valley or upwind side where lifting conditions and terrain clearance can be regained. Getting closer to the ridge or circling in the rotor zone dramatically increases the collision risk.
+
+### Q48: A plane flying below an extended Cumulus cloud developing into a thunderstorm, the glider plane quickly approaches the cloud base. What actions have to be taken by the glider pilot? ^q48
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q48)*
+- A) Extend spoiler flaps within speed limits, leave thermal lift area with maximum permissable speed
+- B) Fasten seat belts, be aware of severe gust during further thermaling
+- C) Reduce to minimum speed, leave thermal lift area in a flat turn
+- D) Climb into thunderstorm cloud, continue flight using instruments
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a cumulus cloud develops into a cumulonimbus (thunderstorm), the updrafts beneath and inside it can reach extreme values — far exceeding the glider's ability to descend out of it — risking involuntary cloud entry, loss of control, structural failure from turbulence, and lightning strike. The pilot must immediately open spoilers and accelerate to maximum permitted speed to maximise the descent rate and penetrate away from the lifting area as quickly as possible. Entering a thunderstorm cloud in a glider is potentially fatal.
+
+### Q49: After landing, you realize you lost your pen which might have fallen down in the cockpit of the sailplane. What has to be considered? ^q49
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q49)*
+- A) Lighter, loose bodies in the fuselage can be considered uncritical
+- B) Before next take-off, the cockpit has to be firmly inspected for loose bodies.
+- C) A flight without a pen at hand is not permitted
+- D) Succeeding pilots have to be informed about that
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any loose object in the cockpit is a potential flight safety hazard. A pen or other object rolling under a rudder pedal or into the control column well could jam the controls, preventing full deflection of critical flight controls at a critical moment. Before the next flight, the cockpit must be thoroughly searched and the object retrieved. This is an airworthiness issue — the aircraft should not fly until all loose objects have been found and secured or removed.
+
+### Q50: Durig flight close to aerodrome in about 250 m AGL you encouter strong descent and go for a safety landing. What speed should be flown when heading towards the airfield? ^q50
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^q50)*
+- A) Best glide speed plus additionals for downdrafts and wind
+- B) Best glide speed
+- C) Minimum rate of descent speed
+- D) Maximum manoeuvering speed VA
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When facing strong sink at low altitude and returning to the airfield, the pilot must fly best glide speed as the baseline to maximise the distance covered per unit of altitude lost. However, in strong sink or turbulent conditions, an additional speed increment is added above best glide to compensate for the reduced lift in the sinking air mass and to maintain control authority in turbulence. Flying minimum sink speed would result in covering less ground per unit altitude, which is exactly the wrong outcome when trying to reach a specific landing point.
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q1: You have just successfully passed the practical exam (Skill Test) for the LAPL(S) licence. Are you entitled to carry passengers as soon as the licence is issued? ^bazl_70_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_1)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Yes, without restriction.
+- B) Yes, but only if the recent experience requirements are met.
+- C) No, passenger flights require the SPL licence.
+- D) No, this is only possible after completing, following the issue of the licence, 10 flight hours or 30 flights as PIC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA regulation (FCL.135.S) requires that before carrying passengers with a LAPL(S), the holder must have completed, after the issue of the licence, at least 10 hours of flight time or 30 flights as pilot-in-command on gliders. This practical consolidation requirement aims to ensure sufficient experience before taking responsibility for a passenger.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q14: On final approach to an out-landing field, you suddenly encounter a strong thermal. How do you react? ^bazl_70_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_14)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) You fully extend the airbrakes and extend your approach path if necessary.
+- B) You retract the airbrakes and reduce speed to the minimum sink speed to exploit the thermal.
+- C) You retract the airbrakes and circle flat to escape the thermal.
+- D) You continue your approach as if nothing had happened. A thermal is always followed by a downdraft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On final approach to an out-landing field, an unexpected strong thermal may carry the glider above the intended touchdown point. The correct response is to fully extend the airbrakes to increase the sink rate and regain control of the approach path. If necessary, an overshoot correction (extending the approach path) can be made. Retracting the airbrakes or circling on final is dangerous at low altitude; continuing without correction risks overshooting the field.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q18: You land on a grass runway shortly after a brief shower. What should you expect? ^bazl_70_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_18)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The glider stops noticeably more quickly after touchdown.
+- B) The glider brakes quickly on the wet runway without using the wheel brake.
+- C) Wheel adhesion will be lower and therefore braking will be less effective, and the ground roll distance will be longer.
+- D) The glider will veer off due to aquaplaning.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a wet grass runway, the coefficient of friction between the wheel and the ground is considerably reduced, making braking less effective and extending the ground roll distance after touchdown. The pilot must take this into account when selecting the field and managing the approach, ensuring that the available length is sufficient. A wet runway does not cause faster braking or spontaneous stopping — the effect is the opposite.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q12: What difficulty should you expect when flying late in the day in a valley towards shaded slopes? ^bazl_70_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_12)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Glare from the sun low on the horizon.
+- B) Difficulty spotting other aircraft in shaded areas.
+- C) Strong downdraft.
+- D) Severe turbulence.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Late in the day, shaded slopes present a strong luminosity contrast with areas still in sunlight. In shaded areas, it is much more difficult to visually detect other aircraft, which increases the collision risk, especially when flying in a valley. Anti-collision vigilance must be heightened during sun/shade transitions.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q16: With no thermals available on a cross-country flight, you resolve to make an out-landing. Several fields could be suitable. By what point must you have made your final choice? ^bazl_70_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_16)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) For a glider, at 300 m above the ground; for a motor glider, at 400 m above the ground.
+- B) For a glider, at 400 m above the ground; for a motor glider, at 300 m above the ground.
+- C) For a glider, at 300 m above the ground; for a motor glider, at 200 m above the ground.
+- D) When you can positively identify the wind direction.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Swiss regulations (BAZL) set minimum decision heights for out-landings: for a pure glider, the field selection must be finalised no later than 300 m above the ground, leaving sufficient margin to fly a suitable circuit. For a motor glider, this limit is 400 m due to the option of using the engine, as well as the added complexity of managing the power unit. Deciding later compromises the safety of the circuit and approach.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q2: You are flying over flat terrain at a height of 1500 m AGL in a thermal. In which direction do you choose to circle if no other glider is nearby? ^bazl_70_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_2)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Within 5 km of an aerodrome you turn left; otherwise you are free to choose.
+- B) You turn left.
+- C) There is no rule on this matter.
+- D) You make best use of the thermal by flying figure-eights.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the absence of other gliders in the thermal, there is no regulation imposing a particular direction of turn. The direction of circling is free; the pilot chooses whichever seems most effective for working the core of the thermal. The rule to turn in the same direction applies only when another aircraft is already established in the thermal — in that case, the new arrival must adopt the direction of the first.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q4: You are performing an aerotow departure; there is no wind. The towrope breaks shortly before reaching the safety height. What do you do? ^bazl_70_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_4)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Ease stick forward, release the rope (2x), land in the opposite direction.
+- B) Extend airbrakes, ease stick forward, land straight ahead.
+- C) Immediately activate the rope release once, then establish a glide and land straight ahead.
+- D) Establish a glide, release the rope (2x), land straight ahead if possible.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the event of a towrope break during aerotow before reaching safety height with no wind, the procedure is: immediately adopt a gliding attitude to maintain speed, activate the release (twice to ensure separation), then land straight ahead if possible. Landing in the opposite direction requires sufficient height for the turn; with no wind and insufficient altitude, landing straight ahead is the safest option.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q3: You are ready to depart in your glider. A strong crosswind is blowing from the right. What do you do? ^bazl_70_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_3)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) I instruct the ground helper to hold the right wing slightly lower during the takeoff run.
+- B) During the ground roll, I pull the elevator control fully back to lift off as quickly as possible.
+- C) I instruct the ground helper to accompany the glider until I have reached sufficient speed to control the bank angle.
+- D) I hold the wheel brake on until the engine has reached full power.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a strong crosswind from the right, the right (upwind) wing tends to rise due to differential lift. The ground helper must hold the right wing slightly lower at the start of the takeoff roll to compensate for this effect and prevent the glider from weathercocking. This technique maintains the direction of travel and allows a controlled takeoff until the control surfaces become effective.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q9: During an aerotow departure, you notice that the tow combination is accelerating insufficiently. What should you do when you reach the takeoff abort point? ^bazl_70_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_9)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Release the towrope.
+- B) Pull the elevator control quickly to raise the glider.
+- C) Ease the stick slightly forward to reduce drag.
+- D) Extend the flaps.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If during an aerotow the tug-and-glider combination is not accelerating sufficiently and the takeoff abort point (point of no return) is reached without adequate speed, the only correct action is to immediately release the towrope. Continuing the takeoff with insufficient speed risks an uncontrolled lift-off or a collision at the end of the runway. The glider will brake on its own over the remaining distance.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q17: What lateral clearance from the slope must you maintain when flying a glider? ^bazl_70_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_17)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) You must maintain a sufficient lateral safety clearance.
+- B) You must maintain a lateral clearance of 150 m.
+- C) You must maintain a lateral clearance of 60 m.
+- D) It depends on the thermals.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Swiss regulations for ridge soaring impose a minimum lateral clearance of 60 metres from the slope. This safety margin allows reaction time in the event of a sudden loss of lift or turbulence, and avoids any collision with the terrain. This is a minimum regulatory value, not a general recommendation — in adverse conditions, a greater clearance may be necessary.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q10: What should you pay particular attention to when flying in high mountains? ^bazl_70_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_10)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) No GPS signal can be received.
+- B) Weather conditions change faster than one might expect (e.g. thunderstorm development).
+- C) Radio contact may be lost.
+- D) FLARM may return erroneous signals due to reflection off rock faces.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In high mountains, weather conditions can deteriorate extremely rapidly — thunderstorms can develop within tens of minutes, lenticular clouds can form, severe wind shear or violent downdrafts can appear. The pilot must continuously monitor the sky and have an exit strategy prepared. The other answers describe real but secondary risks compared to the weather threat, which is the primary cause of accidents in mountain flying.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q11: In preparation for a flight in the Alps, you install the oxygen system in the glider. You must absolutely ensure that... ^bazl_70_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_11)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) the cylinder connector is well greased.
+- B) the rubber seal is not damaged.
+- C) all components that come into contact with oxygen are free of grease.
+- D) the coupling nut is tightened to the correct torque.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pure oxygen in the presence of fatty substances (oil, grease, lubricants) forms a highly flammable or even explosive mixture. Every connector, seal or component of an oxygen system must be scrupulously free of any trace of grease or oil. Greasing an oxygen cylinder connector is a serious fault that can cause a fire or explosion when the valve is opened. Oxygen equipment must be maintained using only compatible special products.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q20: Following a collision, you must abandon the glider at a height of approximately 400 m. When do you open the parachute? ^bazl_70_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_20)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Just before leaving the glider.
+- B) Immediately after leaving the glider.
+- C) When you are in a stabilised freefall phase.
+- D) 2 to 3 seconds after leaving the glider.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a height of approximately 400 m, the available time is very limited. The parachute must be opened immediately after leaving the glider, without delay or freefall phase. Freefall is reserved for high-altitude jumps where there is sufficient time and height. At low altitude, a delayed parachute opening may not leave enough height for a complete and safe descent. The rule: below approximately 600 m, open immediately.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q19: During an out-landing, you have selected a field and begun your circuit. On short final, you realise the field is too short. What do you do? ^bazl_70_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_19)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) You maintain your heading and land using full airbrakes to stop as early as possible.
+- B) You attempt to turn to find another longer field.
+- C) You extend full airbrakes and prepare for an emergency stop using all available means.
+- D) You reduce speed to the minimum to shorten the landing distance.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On short final for a field that is too short, it is too late to look for another option — turning at low altitude is extremely dangerous. The only correct response is to use all available means to minimise the landing distance: full airbrakes, minimum safe approach speed, maximum wheel braking. The pilot must prepare for an emergency stop and accept a short-field landing. This situation underlines the importance of selecting the field and committing to the decision early enough to retain options.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q7: FLARM... ^bazl_70_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_7)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) alerts to the presence of other FLARM-equipped aircraft that could pose a danger.
+- B) recommends avoidance manoeuvres when there is a collision risk with another aircraft.
+- C) indicates the exact position of other gliders.
+- D) indicates the exact position of other aircraft provided they are equipped with FLARM or a transponder.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FLARM is a traffic alerting system that detects the presence of other aircraft equipped with the same system and assesses potential collision risks. It alerts to threats but does not provide prescribed avoidance manoeuvres (unlike the TCAS fitted to airliners) and does not indicate an exact position but an approximate direction and distance. It only detects FLARM-equipped aircraft — not all aircraft, nor those fitted only with a conventional Mode C transponder.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q6: During a cross-country flight, you must land at a high-altitude aerodrome. There is no wind. At what speed (indicated airspeed) do you fly the approach? ^bazl_70_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_6)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The same as at sea level.
+- B) About 5 km/h less than at sea level.
+- C) About 5 km/h more than at sea level.
+- D) You increase the speed relative to sea-level speed by 1% per 100 m of altitude.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The approach to a high-altitude aerodrome is flown at the same indicated airspeed (IAS) as at sea level. IAS is what matters for stall margins — lift depends on the dynamic pressure measured by the airspeed indicator, not on air density. At altitude, the true airspeed (TAS) will be higher for the same IAS, which will extend the landing distance, but the indicated approach speed remains the same. It is the longer ground roll that must be accounted for when selecting the field.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q5: What do you notice when you fly into the centre of a downdraft? ^bazl_70_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_5)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The glider slows down and you feel a brief decrease in g-load.
+- B) The nose rises and you feel a brief increase in g-load.
+- C) The glider accelerates and you feel a brief increase in g-load.
+- D) One wing rises and the aircraft begins to turn.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When entering a downdraft (descending air mass), the air mass pushes the glider downward, momentarily reducing the effective lift. The pilot feels a brief decrease in g-load (a sensation of lightness or floating in the seat), and the indicated airspeed may drop slightly as the relative airflow changes. This is the opposite effect of entering a thermal (updraft), where an increase in g-load is felt (a sensation of increased weight).
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q13: During a cross-country flight over the Jura, you notice cirrus forming to the west. What should you expect? ^bazl_70_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_13)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Increasing instability in the upper layers due to moisture, which promotes better thermals.
+- B) Cirrus have no influence on weather conditions in the thermal layer.
+- C) Fewer thermals due to reduced solar radiation.
+- D) A transition from cumulus-based thermals to blue thermals (dry thermals).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus to the west generally signal the approach of a warm front or a depression. The progressive thickening of the cloud veil reduces the solar radiation reaching the ground, which weakens surface heating and therefore thermal activity. The cross-country pilot must anticipate a deterioration in soaring conditions: fewer thermals, less powerful, and potentially a general weather deterioration in the hours ahead.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q15: What speed allows you to cover a greater distance in a headwind? ^bazl_70_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_15)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Best glide speed.
+- B) Minimum sink speed.
+- C) The speed corresponding to a McCready setting of zero.
+- D) A speed higher than the best glide ratio speed.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a headwind, the optimal speed to cover the greatest ground distance is higher than the best glide speed in still air. McCready theory shows that it is necessary to accelerate beyond the best L/D speed to compensate for the reduction in ground speed caused by the headwind. A McCready setting of zero gives the best glide speed in still air; with a headwind, the setting must be increased (indicating a higher speed). The stronger the headwind, the higher the optimal speed.
+
+### BAZL Br.70 Q8: Which field is best suited for an out-landing? ^bazl_70_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_70_8)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) A meadow 200 m long that has just been mown.
+- B) A field 400 m long that has just been ploughed.
+- C) A country lane 250 m long with a strong headwind.
+- D) A maize field 300 m long with a steady headwind.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A freshly mown meadow of 200 m offers a known, firm, obstacle-free surface with sufficient length for a glider landing. Recent mowing ensures a visible surface without tall grass that could hide irregularities. A ploughed field presents risks of nosing over. A country lane is too narrow for glider wingspans. An unharvested maize field contains tall, dense plants incompatible with a safe landing.
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 701 Q1 — Are you authorized to use the onboard radio to communicate with your retrieve crew (ground station) on the dedicated frequency, without holding the radiotelephony extension? ^bazl_701_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_1)*
+- A) As a general rule, once per flight, shortly before landing
+- B) No
+- C) Exceptionally
+- D) Yes
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yes, in Switzerland, a glider pilot may use the aircraft radio to communicate with their retrieve crew on the dedicated frequency (club/glider frequency), even without the radiotelephony rating.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q2 — What is the ground speed compared to the indicated airspeed on approach to an aerodrome situated at 1800 m AMSL? ^bazl_701_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_2)*
+- A) The same.
+- B) Smaller.
+- C) It depends on the temperature.
+- D) Greater.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 1800 m AMSL, air density is lower. Indicated airspeed (IAS) remains the normal approach speed, but true airspeed (TAS) and ground speed (GS) are higher. Thus GS is greater than IAS.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q3 — Is it mandatory to wear a parachute during glider flights? ^bazl_701_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_3)*
+- A) Yes, always
+- B) Only for aerobatics
+- C) For all flights above 300 m AGL
+- D) No
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not mandatory for normal glider flights in Switzerland. It is recommended but not required by Swiss regulations for non-aerobatic flights.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q4 — During a winch launch, just after reaching the climbing angle, the cable breaks near the winch. How do you react? ^bazl_701_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_4)*
+- A) Immediately release the cable and establish normal flight attitude
+- B) Immediately establish normal flight attitude and then release the cable
+- C) Report the incident by radio
+- D) Immediately extend the airbrakes
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cable break just after climbing angle: correct procedure is to immediately release the cable then establish normal flight attitude. Priority is first to get rid of the cable to prevent it wrapping around the glider.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q5 — During aerotow departure in strong crosswind, what must be paid attention to? ^bazl_701_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_5)*
+- A) The takeoff distance will be shorter
+- B) After takeoff, correct into the wind until the tow plane lifts off
+- C) The tow plane must lift off before the glider
+- D) Before departure, offset the glider upwind
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong crosswind during aerotow, offset the glider upwind before departure. This compensates for drift during the takeoff roll and allows the glider to follow the runway centerline.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q6 — You enter a thermal in the lowlands at 1500 m AGL. In which direction do you circle if no other glider is nearby? ^bazl_701_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_6)*
+- A) I circle to the left
+- B) I circle to the right
+- C) There is no regulation on this
+- D) I search for the best lift by first performing a figure-eight
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the absence of other gliders, there is no prescribed direction for thermalling. The pilot searches for the best lift by first performing a figure-eight to locate it.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q7 — What lateral distance from a slope must you maintain in a glider? ^bazl_701_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_7)*
+- A) A sufficient safety distance must be maintained
+- B) 60 m horizontally
+- C) 150 m horizontally
+- D) It depends on the lift conditions
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Swiss regulations do not specify a precise lateral distance from a slope. A sufficient safety distance must be maintained to be able to escape in an emergency. Prudence and common sense apply.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q8 — You enter a thermal below a cumulus at 500 m AGL and observe another glider circling 50 metres above you. In which direction do you circle? ^bazl_701_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_8)*
+- A) I cannot use this thermal as the height difference is not at least 150 m
+- B) I circle in the same direction as the glider above me in the same thermal
+- C) I am free to choose the direction as the vertical separation is sufficient
+- D) I circle in the opposite direction to be able to observe the other glider from below
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When another glider is thermalling in the same thermal 50 m above, spiral in the same direction. This is the basic rule to avoid conflicts in thermals with small height separation.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q9 — During an off-field landing, a glider is 70% destroyed; the pilot is uninjured. What must be done? ^bazl_701_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_9)*
+- A) Immediately notify the investigation bureau via REGA
+- B) Report the damage within the following week to the aviation accident investigation bureau
+- C) Notify the local police within 24 hours
+- D) Send a written report with sketch within 3 days to FOCA
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In an off-field landing with the glider 70% destroyed, this is a serious accident. Local police must be notified within 24 hours (and the accident investigation bureau).
+
+### BAZL 701 Q10 — What must be paid particular attention to when taking off on a hard runway? ^bazl_701_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_10)*
+- A) Apply the wheel brake moderately at the beginning of the roll
+- B) The wingtip helper must run longer
+- C) Pull back on the stick longer than normal
+- D) Roll longer than normal
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a hard runway (asphalt, concrete), the glider tends to fly at a lower speed before takeoff compared to grass (less friction). Therefore, you need to roll longer to reach rotation speed.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q11 — How do you carry out a water landing? ^bazl_701_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_11)*
+- A) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- B) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation and land at slightly above normal speed
+- C) Perform a sideslip to reduce the impact with the wing
+- D) Just before landing, pitch up the glider to touch down tail first
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing, tighten harnesses and close ventilation to prevent rapid water entry, then land at slightly above normal speed for better control.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q12 — During an off-field landing, how can the wind direction best be determined? ^bazl_701_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_12)*
+- A) By observing the glider’s drift during altitude-losing spirals
+- B) By observing grazing livestock
+- C) By observing the wave patterns in wheat fields
+- D) By observing the movement of leaves in trees
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most effective method to determine wind direction for an off-field landing is to observe the glider's drift during altitude-losing spirals (wind carries the glider in its direction).
+
+### BAZL 701 Q13 — You are flying a fast glider along a ridge and see ahead of you a slower glider at approximately the same altitude. How do you react? ^bazl_701_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_13)*
+- A) I overtake it on the side away from the slope
+- B) I dive to clear upward at a sufficient distance and continue my flight
+- C) I make a 180 degree turn and return to the slope
+- D) I establish radio contact and ask about its intentions
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When overtaking a slower glider on a slope: overtake on the side away from the slope (toward the valley). This leaves maneuvering room toward clear terrain.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q14 — At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. How do you react? ^bazl_701_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_14)*
+- A) Warn the tow pilot by radio
+- B) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- C) Extend the airbrakes
+- D) Immediately release the rope
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the tow rope at departure, the only correct action is to immediately release the rope to prevent it from wrapping around the landing gear.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q15 — Are glider flights permitted in Class C airspace? ^bazl_701_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_15)*
+- A) Yes, without restrictions, in visual meteorological conditions (VMC)
+- B) No, unless the glider’s transponder continuously transmits code 7000
+- C) Yes, provided the pilot holds the radiotelephony extension, has received authorization from the competent air traffic control service, and is able to maintain a continuous radio watch; exceptions are published on the soaring chart
+- D) Yes, provided no NOTAM expressly prohibits them
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Gliders are permitted in Class C airspace provided: the pilot has the radiotelephony extension, has received ATC clearance, and maintains continuous radio watch. Exceptions are published on the soaring chart.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q16 — You are flying along a slope on your right and spot a glider at the same altitude heading towards you. How do you react? ^bazl_701_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_16)*
+- A) I extend airbrakes and dive to obtain good vertical separation
+- B) I maintain my heading
+- C) I move away upward as I have enough speed
+- D) I move away on the side opposite to the slope
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flying along a slope (on your right) with an oncoming glider at the same altitude: you give way by moving away from the slope (to the left/valley). This is the ridge soaring right-of-way rule.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q17 — You must land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you execute the final approach? ^bazl_701_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_17)*
+- A) Normally with a left sideslip
+- B) Slightly above minimum speed, and at a lower height than for a headwind landing
+- C) Faster than in a headwind
+- D) At best glide speed and a little higher than in a headwind
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With tailwind and 400 m field: approach slightly above minimum speed and lower than with headwind. The tailwind increases GS, reducing approach time.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q18 — What is the effect of a waterlogged grass runway during an aerotow departure? ^bazl_701_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_18)*
+- A) The takeoff distance will be shorter because the surface is slippery
+- B) The takeoff distance will be longer
+- C) The takeoff distance is the same as on a dry runway
+- D) None of these answers is correct
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A wet grass runway increases friction and rolling resistance, so the aerotow takeoff distance is longer than in normal conditions.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q19 — On approach to an off-field landing, you suddenly notice a high-voltage power line across the landing axis. How do you react? ^bazl_701_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_19)*
+- A) Pass under the line provided flying over it is not possible and the situation does not allow a risk-free escape
+- B) Pass under the line as close as possible to a pylon
+- C) In all cases fly over the high-voltage power line
+- D) Execute a tight turn near the ground and land parallel to the line
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Facing a power line across the landing axis: if flying over is not possible and a risk-free escape is not feasible, pass under the line. This is the lesser risk.
+
+### BAZL 701 Q20 — What is the standard procedure for stopping a spin when the manufacturer has not prescribed anything on this subject? ^bazl_701_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_701_20)*
+- A) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin direction and pull out
+- B) Push the stick fully forward, apply full rudder opposite to the spin direction, pull out
+- C) Determine the spin direction, apply rudder opposite to it, ailerons neutral, stick slightly forward and pull out
+- D) Determine the spin direction, ailerons opposite to it, stick fully forward, rudder neutral and pull out
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard spin recovery procedure (without manufacturer's instructions): 1) Determine spin direction 2) Apply opposite rudder 3) Ailerons neutral 4) Stick slightly forward 5) Pull out after rotation stops.
+
+---
+
+## Series 3 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 702 Q1 — Subject to ATC authorization to the contrary, how shall the approach to an aerodrome with a glider be carried out? ^bazl_702_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_1)*
+- A) The published approach procedures in the VFR guide or any other appropriate method must be followed
+- B) The landing shall be preceded by at least a half-circuit, all turns to be made to the left
+- C) A straight-in approach must be made to avoid disturbing other traffic as much as possible
+- D) The landing shall be preceded by at least one full circle above the signal area, all turns to be made to the left
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach to an aerodrome should follow published VFR guide procedures or any other appropriate method. A mandatory full circuit over the signal area is no longer systematically required.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q2 — You are flying a fast glider along a slope and see ahead of you a slower glider at approximately the same altitude. How do you react? ^bazl_702_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_2)*
+- A) I overtake it on the side away from the slope
+- B) I dive to clear upward at a sufficient distance and continue my flight
+- C) I make a 180 degree turn and return to the slope
+- D) I establish radio contact and ask about its intentions
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mountain flying, to overtake a slower glider on a slope, pass on the side away from the slope (valley side). This rule is consistent with the right-of-way for climbing gliders.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q3 — In flight, the rudder jams in the neutral position. How do you react? ^bazl_702_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_3)*
+- A) Jump by parachute immediately
+- B) Control the glider with the elevator and ailerons; make shallow turns and land immediately
+- C) Increase speed and continue the flight
+- D) Consult the flight manual
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the rudder jams in flight, control the glider with elevator and ailerons. Make shallow turns and land immediately.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q4 — At the start of an aerotow, the glider rolls over the tow rope. How do you react? ^bazl_702_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_4)*
+- A) Warn the tow pilot by radio
+- B) Apply the wheel brake to tension the rope
+- C) Extend the airbrakes
+- D) Immediately release the rope
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the glider rolls over the tow rope, immediately releasing the rope is the only correct action.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q5 — Before reaching safety height, the tow rope breaks on the tow plane side. How must the glider pilot react? ^bazl_702_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_5)*
+- A) Immediately actuate the release handle twice and land straight ahead in the runway extension
+- B) Actuate the release handle twice and land on the aerodrome without exception
+- C) Pull back on the stick, release the rope and land with a tailwind
+- D) Make a flat turn and land diagonally
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the rope breaks on the tow plane side below safety height: actuate the release handle twice (verification) and land straight ahead in the runway extension. Avoid turning.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q6 — How do you execute the final approach in a strong crosswind? ^bazl_702_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_6)*
+- A) Take a heading into the wind and increase speed
+- B) Always approach with a sideslip on the side opposite to the wind
+- C) Do not fully extend the airbrakes
+- D) Maintain runway alignment using only the rudder
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong crosswind on final, take a crab angle into the wind and increase speed slightly to maintain control. The sideslip can be used but crab is the primary method.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q7 — How must a water landing be carried out? ^bazl_702_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_7)*
+- A) Extend the undercarriage, tighten harnesses, land at minimum speed with airbrakes retracted
+- B) Tighten harnesses, close ventilation and land at slightly above normal speed
+- C) Perform a sideslip to reduce the impact with the wing
+- D) Just before landing, pitch up the glider to touch down tail first
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For a water landing: tighten harnesses, close ventilation to prevent water entry, and land at slightly above normal speed for better control and to avoid nose-over.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q8 — You enter a thermal. In which direction do you circle if no other glider is nearby? ^bazl_702_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_8)*
+- A) I search for the best lift by first performing a figure-eight
+- B) I circle to the right
+- C) I circle to the left
+- D) There is no regulation on this
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without other gliders in the thermal, there is no prescribed spiraling direction. The pilot chooses freely.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q9 — In a glider, how is height expressed? ^bazl_702_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_9)*
+- A) In flight levels
+- B) In height above the ground
+- C) Only in altitude (metres or feet)
+- D) According to the countries overflown
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glider altitude is expressed according to the country overflown (altitude in feet or meters per local rules, or flight levels per airspace). Regulations vary by country.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q10 — What is the standard procedure for stopping a spin when the manufacturer has not prescribed anything on this subject? ^bazl_702_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_10)*
+- A) Push the stick forward, apply ailerons opposite to the spin direction and pull out
+- B) Push the stick fully forward, apply full rudder opposite to the spin direction, pull out
+- C) Determine the spin direction, apply rudder opposite to it, ailerons neutral, stick slightly forward and pull out
+- D) Determine the spin direction, ailerons opposite to it, stick fully forward, rudder neutral and pull out
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard spin recovery: 1) Identify direction, 2) Opposite rudder, 3) Ailerons neutral, 4) Slight forward stick, 5) Pull out after rotation stops.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q11 — Is it permitted to make changes at an accident site at which a person has been injured, other than essential rescue measures? ^bazl_702_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_11)*
+- A) Yes, the wreck must be evacuated as soon as possible to avoid alteration by third-party intervention
+- B) No, unless the investigation authority has formally given authorization
+- C) Yes, if the aircraft operator has formally issued such an instruction
+- D) Yes, if there is only material damage
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Modifying an accident site is prohibited without formal authorization from the investigation authority, except for essential rescue measures.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q12 — The pilot loses sight of the tow plane. How must he react? ^bazl_702_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_12)*
+- A) He extends the airbrakes and waits
+- B) He asks the tow pilot by radio what his position is
+- C) He immediately releases the rope
+- D) He prepares to jump by parachute
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the pilot loses sight of the tow plane, immediately release the rope. Continuing tow flight without seeing the tow plane is extremely dangerous.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q13 — Is wearing a parachute mandatory in gliders? ^bazl_702_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_13)*
+- A) Yes, always
+- B) Only for aerobatics
+- C) No
+- D) For all flights above 300 m AGL
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wearing a parachute is not mandatory for gliders in Switzerland for normal flights. It is recommended but not regulatory.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q14 — You must land on a 400 m field with a moderate tailwind. How do you execute the final approach? ^bazl_702_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_14)*
+- A) Normally, with a sideslip
+- B) Slightly above minimum speed, and at a lower height than with a headwind
+- C) Faster than with a headwind
+- D) At best glide speed and a little higher than with a headwind
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With tailwind on a 400 m field: approach slightly above minimum speed and at a lower height than with headwind. Tailwind increases ground speed.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q15 — You see a motorglider with its engine running at the same altitude heading towards you from the right. How do you react? ^bazl_702_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_15)*
+- A) I give way to the right
+- B) I give way to the left
+- C) I maintain my straight heading keeping the motorglider in sight
+- D) I extend the airbrakes and give way downward
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A powered motorglider coming from the right has right of way (converging routes rule). You must give way to the right to let it pass.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q16 — You are flying in a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R). What cloud separation distances must you maintain? (vertical/horizontal distance) ^bazl_702_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_16)*
+- A) 100 m vertically, 300 m horizontally
+- B) 50 m vertically, 100 m horizontally
+- C) 300 m vertically, 1500 m horizontally
+- D) Clear of clouds with flight visibility
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a glider-specific restricted zone (LS-R), reduced distances apply: 50 m vertically and 100 m horizontally from clouds (instead of standard distances).
+
+### BAZL 702 Q17 — What is the procedure to follow in the event of abandoning the glider and bailing out by parachute? ^bazl_702_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_17)*
+- A) Release the canopy, unfasten harness, open the parachute, jump
+- B) Unfasten harness, release the canopy, jump, open the parachute
+- C) Release the canopy, unfasten harness, jump, open the parachute
+- D) Unfasten harness, pull the parachute handle, release the canopy, jump
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In case of parachute bailout: 1) Release canopy 2) Unfasten harness 3) Jump 4) Open parachute. Order is crucial for safety.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q18 — How do you execute a landing on a slope? ^bazl_702_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_18)*
+- A) Downhill into the wind
+- B) Always across the slope
+- C) Always facing up the slope, regardless of wind
+- D) With left wind, across the slope
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Landing on a slope: always downhill into the wind. Uphill + tailwind would dangerously extend the landing distance.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q19 — Which type of terrain is particularly well suited for an off-field landing? ^bazl_702_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_19)*
+- A) A vast field, freshly ploughed and sloping upward
+- B) A field of tall cereal crops which shortens the roll by braking effect
+- C) A field near a road and a telephone
+- D) A large flat field, oriented into the wind, free of obstacles on the approach axis
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The best field for an off-field landing is a large flat field, oriented into the wind, free of obstacles on the approach axis.
+
+### BAZL 702 Q20 — Due to an obstacle, an off-field landing ends in a ground loop. The fuselage breaks near the rudder; what must be done? ^bazl_702_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/70%20-%20Proc%C3%A9dures%20op%C3%A9rationnelles.md#^bazl_702_20)*
+- A) Notify the nearest police station
+- B) Immediately notify the aviation accident investigation bureau via REGA
+- C) If it is a minor accident, no report is necessary
+- D) Notify the OFAC in writing
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A fuselage broken near the rudder after a ground loop = serious accident. Immediately notify the accident investigation bureau (via REGA if necessary).
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 70 - Operational Procedures
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 18 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: A glider pilot has to conduct an off-field landing in a mountainous region. The only available landing site is highly inclined. How should the landing be conducted? ^q1
+- A) Approach with increased speed, quick flare to follow the inclined ground
+- B) Approach down the ridge with increased speed, push according to ground level during landing
+- C) According to prevailant wind, approach and land parallel to the ridge with headwind
+- D) Approach with minimum speed, careful flare when reaching the landing site
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an off-field landing on inclined terrain is unavoidable, the correct technique is to approach with increased speed and perform a quick, firm flare to match the glider's pitch attitude to the slope angle at touchdown — this minimises the relative vertical velocity on contact. Landing down a ridge (option B) dramatically increases ground speed and roll-out distance, risking a collision with terrain ahead. Approaching parallel to the ridge (option C) ignores the slope problem. Minimum speed (option D) leaves no energy margin for the flare on sloped ground.
+
+### Q2: During final approach, you realize that you missed to extend the gear. How should the landing be conducted? ^q2
+- A) You land without gear, and carefully touch down with minimum speed.
+- B) You extend the gear immediately and land as usual.
+- C) You retract flaps, extend the gear and land as usual.
+- D) You land without gear with higher than usual speed.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the gear is not extended on final approach and there is insufficient height to safely extend it, the safest action is to complete a gear-up landing at minimum speed, accepting a belly-landing with controlled, gentle touchdown. Extending gear at the last moment (option B) risks an asymmetric or partially extended gear, which is more dangerous. Retracting flaps to buy time (option C) alters the approach profile unpredictably close to the ground. Landing without gear at higher speed (option D) worsens the damage and increases risk of injury.
+
+### Q3: After reaching what height during winch launch the maximum pitch position can be taken? ^q3
+- A) From approx. 50 m while maintaining a save speed for winch launch.
+- B) From 15 m while reaching a speed of at least 90 km/h
+- C) From 150 m or higher, when in case of cable break landing straight ahead is no longer possible
+- D) Shortly after lift-off, provided a sufficiently strong headwind
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a winch launch, the maximum pitch (steep climb) attitude should not be adopted until approximately 50 m AGL, while maintaining a safe minimum launch speed. Below 50 m, a cable break would not allow a straight-ahead landing if the nose is too high; above 50 m there is sufficient height to recover. 15 m is too low and dangerous. 150 m is overly conservative and wastes the launch energy. Pitching up immediately after liftoff (option D) is extremely hazardous regardless of headwind.
+
+### Q4: What has to be considered for the speed during approach and landing? ^q4
+- A) Wind speed and weight
+- B) Altitude and weight
+- C) Wind speed and Altitude
+- D) Weight and wind speed
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Approach and landing speed must account for both aircraft weight and wind conditions (including gusts). A heavier aircraft requires a higher approach speed to maintain adequate safety margin above stall. Higher winds — especially gusts — require an additional speed increment to avoid sudden loss of airspeed and lift. Altitude alone does not directly determine approach speed. Options A, B, and C are incomplete; option D correctly names both weight and wind speed.
+
+### Q5: How can you determine wind direction in case of an outlanding? ^q5
+- A) Monitoring of smoke, flags, waving fields
+- B) Wind forecast from flight weather report
+- C) Request from other pilots who can be reached by radio
+- D) Remembering the wind indicated by the windsock an departing airfield
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During an outlanding, visual cues in the environment are the most reliable and immediately available indicators of wind direction and strength: smoke drifting from chimneys, flags, and rippling crops clearly show the current local wind. A weather forecast (option B) may not reflect local conditions precisely at that moment. Radio contact with other pilots (option C) is unreliable and slow. The windsock at the departure airfield (option D) is irrelevant to conditions at the outlanding site.
+
+### Q6: What landing technique is recommended for landing on a down-hill gras area? ^q6
+- A) In general up-hill
+- B) Diagonal down-hill
+- C) With brakes applied on main wheel, no air brakes
+- D) Full air brakes, gear retracted and stalled
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a downhill grass area, landing uphill means the aircraft is climbing toward the ground, which naturally decelerates the glider and shortens the roll-out — this is the recommended technique. Landing diagonally downhill (option B) risks ground-looping. Using wheel brakes without airbrakes (option C) may be ineffective or cause a nose-over on rough terrain. Landing with gear retracted and stalled (option D) is dangerous and unnecessary.
+
+### Q7: What has to be checked before any change in direction during glide? ^q7
+- A) Check for turn to be flown coordinated
+- B) Check for thermal clouds
+- C) Check for loose object secured
+- D) Check for free airspace in desired direction
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Before initiating any turn during flight, the pilot must first check that the airspace in the intended direction is clear of other aircraft, obstacles, and restricted areas. A coordinated turn (option A) is always desirable but is secondary to the lookout. Thermal clouds (option B) and loose objects (option C) are not safety priorities before a heading change. Collision avoidance through a proper lookout is the primary concern.
+
+### Q8: Before a winch launch, you detect a light tailwind. What has to be considered? ^q8
+- A) Roll until lift-off will take a little longer, watch speed
+- B) A weaker rated-brake-point can be used, load will be smaller
+- C) Roll until lift-off will be shorter since tailwind is pushing from behind
+- D) To reach more height, full pull on the elevator after lift-off
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A tailwind during winch launch means the aircraft has a lower airspeed relative to the ground at any given ground speed, so more ground roll is needed before reaching flying speed — liftoff takes longer and the pilot must monitor the airspeed carefully. Tailwind does not reduce the required cable tension rating (option B). Tailwind from behind reduces effective airspeed, so the roll is longer, not shorter (option C is incorrect). Pulling back immediately after liftoff in a tailwind is hazardous (option D).
+
+### Q9: During approach for landing with strong crosswind, how should the turn from base to final be flown? ^q9
+- A) Turn with maximum 60° bank, carefully watch speed and yaw string, track correction after overshoot.
+- B) Maximum 30° bank, use rudder to early align sailplane with final track
+- C) Maximum 60° bank, use rudder to early align sailplane with final track.
+- D) Turn with maximum 30° bank, carefully watch speed and yaw string, track correction after overshoot.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the base-to-final turn, a maximum bank angle of 30° is recommended to keep turn coordination manageable and to avoid the risk of a low-speed stall-spin. The yaw string (slip indicator) and airspeed must be closely monitored because crosswind complicates the turn geometry. If the aircraft overshoots the final track, a gentle track correction is made after the turn — never a steep rudder input to force alignment, as this risks a skidded stall. Options A and C allow up to 60° bank, which is excessive and dangerous near the ground.
+
+### Q10: During thermal soaring, another sailplane is following close by. What should be done to avoid a collision? ^q10
+- A) You reduce speed to let the other sailplane fly by
+- B) You reduce bank to achieve a larger turn radius
+- C) You increase bank to be better seen from the other sailplane
+- D) You increase speed to achieve a position opposite in the circle
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two sailplanes are circling in the same thermal in close proximity, the most effective way to create separation is to increase speed, which increases the turn radius and moves the faster aircraft to a position opposite in the circle (180° apart), creating the maximum safe separation. Reducing speed (option A) tightens the radius and closes the gap. Reducing bank (option B) also increases radius but slowly. Increasing bank (option C) makes the glider smaller in profile but does not solve the proximity problem.
+
+### Q11: What heights should be consideres for landing phases with a glider plane? ^q11
+- A) 100 m abeam threashold and 50 m after final approach turn
+- B) 300 m abeam threashold and 150 m in final approach
+- C) 500 m abeam threashold and 50 m after final approach turn
+- D) 150 - 200 m abeam threashold and 100 m after final approach turn
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard traffic pattern heights for a glider are approximately 150–200 m AGL abeam the threshold (downwind leg) and 100 m AGL after the final turn. These heights give the pilot adequate time and space to plan the approach and use airbrakes effectively for a precise landing. The lower heights in options A and C leave insufficient margin for corrections; the higher values in options B and C are excessive for unpowered glider operations.
+
+### Q12: How should a glider plane be parked when observing strong winds? ^q12
+- A) Nose into the wind, keep and weigh tail down
+- B) Nose into the wind, extends air brakes, secure rudders
+- C) Downwind wing on the ground, weigh wing down, secure rudders
+- D) Windward wing on the ground, weigh wing down, secure rudders
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In strong winds, the windward (upwind) wing should be placed on the ground to prevent the wind from getting under it and flipping the aircraft. The wing is then weighted down with a sandbag or similar weight, and the control surfaces (rudder) are secured to prevent them from being damaged by aerodynamic buffeting. Pointing the nose into wind (options A and B) presents a large fuselage surface to cross-gusts and does not protect the wings. Placing the downwind wing on the ground (option C) allows the upwind wing to be lifted by the wind.
+
+### Q13: What has to be considers when overflying mountain ridges? ^q13
+- A) Turbulences, reduce to minimum speed
+- B) Do not overfly national parks
+- C) Turbulences, therefore slightly increase speed
+- D) Use circling birds to find thermal cells
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain ridges produce significant turbulence on the lee side and in the rotor zone, but turbulence can also occur directly at the ridge crest. Flying slightly faster than normal provides better control authority and reduces the risk of a stall in turbulence. Reducing to minimum speed (option A) is dangerous as turbulence could cause the aircraft to stall. Overflight of national parks (option B) is a regulatory matter, not a primary safety consideration when crossing ridges. Circling birds indicate thermals (option D) but this does not address the turbulence hazard of ridge crossing.
+
+### Q14: What is indicated by "buffeting" noticable at elevator stick? ^q14
+- A) C.G. position too far ahead
+- B) Glider plane very dirty
+- C) Too slow, wing airflow stalled
+- D) Too fast, turbulence bubbles hitting on aileron
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting felt through the elevator stick is a classic aerodynamic warning of an approaching stall: separated airflow from the wings passes over the tail surface, causing the elevator to vibrate. This occurs at low airspeed when the angle of attack exceeds the critical angle. A forward CG (option A) makes the aircraft more stable and resistant to stall. A dirty airframe (option B) may affect performance but does not directly cause elevator buffeting. Turbulence at high speed (option D) would be felt as general airframe shaking, not specifically at the elevator.
+
+### Q15: When has a pre-flight check to be done? ^q15
+- A) Before first flight of the day, and after every change of pilot
+- B) After every build-up of the airplane
+- C) Once a month, with TMG once a day
+- D) Before flight operation and before every flight
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A pre-flight check (walk-around and cockpit check) must be performed before the first flight of the day and after every change of pilot, because each pilot is responsible for verifying the aircraft's airworthiness before they fly it. A check after every assembly (option B) applies to aircraft that are dismantled between flights (trailer gliders) — this is a separate requirement. Monthly checks (option C) describe maintenance intervals, not pre-flight procedures. Option D ('before every flight') is too broad and would be burdensome; it is the daily first-flight and pilot-change rule that is standard practice.
+
+### Q16: The term flight time is defined as... ^q16
+- A) The period from engine start for the purpose of taking off to leaving the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- B) The period from the start of the take-off run to the final touchdown when landing.
+- C) The total time from the first aircraft movement until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight.
+- D) The total time from the first take-off until the last landing in conjunction with one or more consecutive flights.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 defines flight time for aircraft as the total time from the moment an aircraft first moves under its own power for the purpose of taking off until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight. For sailplanes (non-motorised), this is interpreted as from first movement (e.g., the start of the winch run or aerotow) until the aircraft comes to rest after landing. Option A describes block time for powered aircraft. Option B is too narrow (only the take-off and landing roll). Option D describes a duty period concept, not a single flight.
+
+### Q17: During approach, tower provides the following information: Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots. How should the landing be performed? ^q17
+- A) Approach with minimum speed, correct changes in attitude with careful rudder inputs
+- B) Approach with normal speed, maintain speed using spoiler flaps
+- C) Approach with increased speed, correct changes in attitude with firm rudder inputs
+- D) Approach with increased speed, avoid usage of spoiler flaps
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With strong gusts (here: wind 15 kt, gusts 25 kt — a 10 kt spread), the pilot must add a gust allowance to the normal approach speed to ensure that a sudden drop in airspeed caused by a gust does not reduce speed below the stall speed. Firm rudder inputs are needed to correct attitude changes caused by the gusty conditions. Minimum speed (option A) provides no safety margin in gusts. Normal speed without gust correction (option B) is insufficient. Avoiding spoilers/airbrakes (option D) removes the ability to control the glide path precisely.
+
+### Q18: What is indicated by buffeting noticable at elevator stick? ^q18
+- A) C.G. position too far ahead
+- B) Glider plane very dirty
+- C) Too slow, wing airflow stalled
+- D) Too fast, turbulence bubbles hitting on aileron
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Buffeting felt through the elevator stick is the tactile warning that the wing has approached its critical angle of attack and airflow is beginning to separate — the pre-stall buffet. This is caused by turbulent separated airflow from the wing reaching the tail and exciting the elevator. Option A (CG too far forward) makes the aircraft pitch-stable and stall-resistant. Option B (dirty airframe) degrades performance but does not specifically cause elevator buffeting. Option D (high speed turbulence) produces general airframe vibration unrelated to stall.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_80.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_80.md
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+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Principles of Flight
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 50 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: With regard to the forces acting, how can stationary gliding be described? ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q1)*
+- A) The sum of air forces acts along the direction of air flow
+- B) The sum the air forces acts along with the lift force
+- C) The lift force compensates the drag force
+- D) The sum of air forces compensates the gravity force
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In steady (stationary) gliding flight, there is no thrust, so only two forces act: gravity (weight) and the total aerodynamic force (the vector sum of lift and drag). For the glider to be in equilibrium, these two must be equal and opposite — meaning the resultant air force exactly compensates gravity. Lift and drag are merely components of this single aerodynamic resultant; neither lift alone nor drag alone balances weight.
+
+### Q2: What is the result of extending flaps with increasing aerofoil camber? ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q2)*
+- A) Maximum permissable speed increases
+- B) Minimum speed increases
+- C) Minimum speed decreases
+- D) C.G. position moves forward
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending flaps increases wing camber, which raises the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max). From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)), a higher CL_max directly lowers the minimum flying speed Vs. This allows the aircraft to fly slower without stalling, which is why flaps are used during approach and landing. The maximum permissible speed typically decreases with flaps extended (not increases), because flap structures are not designed for high dynamic pressure.
+
+### Q3: Following a single-wing stall and pitch-down moment, how can a spin be prevented? ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q3)*
+- A) Deflect all rudders opposite to lower wing
+- B) Rudder opposite lower wing, releasing elevator to build up speed
+- C) Pushing the elevator to build up speed to re-attach airflow on wings
+- D) Pulling the elevator to bring the plane back to normal attitude
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An incipient spin begins when one wing stalls before the other — the stalled wing drops, creating a yawing and rolling moment. The correct response is to apply rudder opposite the direction of yaw/lower wing to stop the rotation, and simultaneously release elevator back-pressure (or push forward) to reduce the angle of attack below the critical value, allowing airflow to re-attach and lift to be restored. Pulling the elevator (D) would increase AoA and deepen the stall; pushing alone (C) without rudder does not stop the yaw.
+
+### Q4: Stabilization around the lateral axis during cruise is achieved by the... ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q4)*
+- A) Wing flaps.
+- B) Horizontal stabilizer
+- C) Airlerons.
+- D) Vertical rudder
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The lateral axis is the pitch axis (nose up/down). The horizontal stabilizer provides longitudinal (pitch) stability: it generates a restoring moment whenever the nose pitches up or down from trim, because its lift force changes with AoA at the tail. Ailerons control roll (longitudinal axis), the vertical rudder controls yaw (vertical axis), and flaps are high-lift devices, not stability surfaces.
+
+### Q5: Flying with speeds higher than the never-exceed-speed (vNE) may result in... ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q5)*
+- A) Reduced drag with increased control forces.
+- B) An increased lift-to-drag ratio and a better glide angle.
+- C) Too high total pressure resulting in an unusable airspeed indicator.
+- D) Flutter and mechanically damaging the wings.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VNE is the red-line speed above which structural or aeroelastic failure becomes possible. At excessive speeds, dynamic pressure (q = 0.5 * rho * V^2) rises dramatically, and control surfaces and wing structures may enter flutter — a self-reinforcing oscillation where aerodynamic forces and structural elasticity feed each other, potentially causing rapid structural disintegration. The airspeed indicator remains usable at high speeds; glide ratio does not improve beyond the best-glide speed.
+
+### Q6: Considering longitudinal stability, which C.G. position is most dangerous with a normal gliding plane? ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q6)*
+- A) Position beyond the front C.G. limit
+- B) Position too far aside permissable C.G. limits.
+- C) Position far back within permissable C.G. limits
+- D) Position beyond the rear C.G. limit
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal (pitch) stability requires the centre of gravity to be ahead of the neutral point. When the C.G. moves aft beyond the rear limit, the static margin becomes negative: a pitch disturbance produces a moment that amplifies rather than corrects the disturbance, making the aircraft unstable and potentially uncontrollable. A forward C.G. (A) increases stability but requires more elevator force — it is uncomfortable but recoverable. Rearward C.G. beyond limits is the most dangerous condition because recovery from pitch divergence may be impossible.
+
+### Q7: The static pressure of gases work... ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q7)*
+- A) In all directions.
+- B) Only in flow direction.
+- C) Only in the direction of the total pressure.
+- D) Only vertical to the flow direction.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is a scalar thermodynamic quantity representing the random kinetic energy of gas molecules. Because molecular collisions occur in all directions equally, static pressure acts omnidirectionally — it presses equally on all surfaces of a container regardless of orientation. This contrasts with dynamic pressure (q = 0.5 * rho * V^2), which is directional and associated with the bulk flow velocity. Bernoulli's equation combines both: p_total = p_static + q.
+
+### Q8: Bernoulli's equation for frictionless, incompressible gases states that... ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q8)*
+- A) Total pressure = dynamic pressure - static pressure.
+- B) Total pressure = dynamic pressure + static pressure.
+- C) Static pressure = total pressure + dynamic pressure
+- D) Dynamic pressure = total pressure + static pressure.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Bernoulli's theorem for an ideal (frictionless, incompressible) fluid along a streamline states that total pressure is conserved: p_total = p_static + 0.5 * rho * V^2. Total pressure is the sum of static pressure and dynamic pressure. Where air accelerates over the upper wing surface, static pressure decreases (dynamic pressure increases) while total pressure remains constant — this pressure difference generates lift. The airspeed indicator works on this principle by measuring the difference between total (pitot) and static pressure.
+
+### Q9: If surrounded by airflow (v > 0), any arbitrarily shaped body produces... ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q9)*
+- A) Drag and lift.
+- B) Drag.
+- C) Lift without drag.
+- D) Constant drag at any speed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body immersed in a flow always produces drag, because skin friction (viscosity) and pressure drag are unavoidable for any real shape. Lift, however, requires an asymmetry — either in geometry (camber, angle of attack) or circulation. A symmetric body at zero angle of attack produces no lift but always produces drag. Therefore, drag is the universal result for any shape, while lift is only produced under specific geometric conditions.
+
+### Q10: All aerodynamic forces can be considered to act on a single point. This point is called... ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q10)*
+- A) Center of gravity.
+- B) Lift point.
+- C) Transition point.
+- D) Center of pressure.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The center of pressure (CP) is the single point on an aerofoil through which the resultant of all distributed aerodynamic pressure forces acts. It is analogous to the center of gravity for weight distribution. The CP moves with angle of attack — generally forward as AoA increases toward the critical angle. The center of gravity is where weight acts, not aerodynamic forces; the transition point is where the boundary layer changes from laminar to turbulent.
+
+### Q11: The center of pressure is the theoretical point of origin of... ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q11)*
+- A) Only the resulting total drag.
+- B) Gravity forces of the profile.
+- C) All aerodynamic forces of the profile.
+- D) Gravity and aerodynamic forces.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The center of pressure is defined as the single point through which the entire resultant aerodynamic force — which includes both lift (perpendicular to freestream) and drag (parallel to freestream) — is considered to act. It is not a physical feature of the wing but a mathematical convenience for analysis. Gravity acts through the center of gravity, which is a completely separate point determined by the aircraft's mass distribution.
+
+### Q12: Number 2 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q12)*
+
+
+
+- A) Profile thickness.
+- B) Chord line.
+- C) Chord line.
+- D) Angle of attack.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The chord line is a straight reference line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge of an aerofoil. It is the baseline from which the angle of attack is measured (the angle between the chord line and the undisturbed freestream direction). In standard aerofoil diagrams, the chord line (item 2) is typically the straight baseline of the cross-section, while the mean camber line curves above it and the thickness is measured perpendicular to the chord.
+
+### Q13: Number 3 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q13)*
+
+
+- A) Camber line.
+- B) Thickness.
+- C) Chord.
+- D) Chord line.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line (also called the mean line) is the locus of points equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil, measured perpendicular to the chord line. It describes the aerofoil's curvature or camber — a cambered (curved) aerofoil generates lift even at zero angle of attack because the asymmetry in curvature accelerates flow more over the upper surface. Maximum camber and its location are key parameters defining aerofoil character.
+
+### Q14: The angle of attack is the angle between... ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q14)*
+- A) The chord line and the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane.
+- B) The chord line and the oncoming airflow.
+- C) The wing and the fuselage of an aeroplane
+- D) The undisturbed airflow and the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Angle of attack (AoA, alpha) is precisely defined as the angle between the aerofoil chord line and the direction of the undisturbed (relative) freestream airflow. It is the primary determinant of lift coefficient: CL increases with AoA until the critical (stall) angle. AoA must not be confused with pitch attitude (angle between longitudinal axis and horizon) — a glider descending nose-down can still have a positive AoA if the relative airflow comes from below the chord line.
+
+### Q15: The ratio of span and mean chord length is referred to as... ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q15)*
+- A) Trapezium shape.
+- B) Tapering.
+- C) Aspect ratio.
+- D) Wing sweep.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aspect ratio (AR) = wingspan (b) / mean chord (c) = b^2 / S, where S is wing area. High aspect ratio wings (long, narrow) produce less induced drag because the wingtip vortices are proportionally weaker relative to the total span. Gliders have very high aspect ratios (typically 20–40) for this reason — minimising induced drag is essential for maximum glide ratio. Low-aspect-ratio wings produce more induced drag but are structurally lighter and more agile.
+
+### Q16: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 3? See figure (PFA-009) ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q16)*
+
+
+
+- A) Stagnation point
+- B) Separation point
+- C) Center of pressure
+- D) Transition point
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition point is where the boundary layer changes character from laminar to turbulent flow. Laminar flow (near the leading edge) has lower friction drag but is fragile and prone to separation. The turbulent boundary layer that follows is thicker and has higher friction drag but resists separation better. The position of the transition point depends on Reynolds number, surface roughness, and pressure gradient — aerofoil designers try to delay transition as far back as possible to minimise skin friction.
+
+### Q17: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 4? See figure (PFA-009) ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q17)*
+
+
+- A) Transition point
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Center of pressure
+- D) Separation point
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The separation point is where the boundary layer detaches from the aerofoil surface. Beyond this point, the smooth attached flow breaks down into a turbulent, reversed-flow wake. As angle of attack increases, the adverse pressure gradient on the upper surface intensifies, and the separation point moves progressively forward toward the leading edge. When separation reaches the leading edge, the wing is fully stalled — CL drops abruptly and CD rises sharply.
+
+### Q18: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 1? See figure (PFA-009) ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q18)*
+
+
+- A) Center of pressure
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Separation point
+- D) Transition point
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The stagnation point is the location on the aerofoil's leading edge region where the oncoming airflow divides — some going over the upper surface, some beneath. At this point, the local flow velocity is zero and static pressure reaches its maximum (equal to total pressure, since dynamic pressure is zero). With increasing angle of attack, the stagnation point moves slightly downward on the leading edge, as more flow is directed over the upper surface to generate greater lift.
+
+### Q19: What pattern can be found at the stagnation point? ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q19)*
+- A) The boundary layer starts separating on the upper surface of the profile
+- B) All aerodynamic forces can be considered as attacking at this single point
+- C) The laminar boundary layer changes into a turbulent boundary layer
+- D) Streamlines are divided into airflow above and below the profile
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The stagnation point is precisely the dividing location where incoming streamlines bifurcate — the streamline that arrives at the stagnation point splits, with air flowing around the upper and lower surfaces separately. At this point, kinetic energy is fully converted to pressure (V = 0, p = p_total). Boundary layer transition (C) occurs further aft on the upper surface; separation (A) is further aft still; aerodynamic forces are considered to act at the center of pressure, not the stagnation point.
+
+### Q20: What pressure pattern can be observed at a lift-generating wing profile at positive angle of attack? ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q20)*
+- A) Low pressure is created above, higher pressure below the profile
+- B) Pressure above remains unchanged, higher pressure is created below the profile
+- C) High pressure is created above, lower pressure below the profile
+- D) Pressure below remains unchanged, lower pressure is created above the profile
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lift is generated by a pressure differential: lower pressure on the upper (suction) surface and higher pressure on the lower surface. On the upper surface, flow accelerates around the curved upper side — by Bernoulli's principle, higher velocity means lower static pressure. On the lower surface, flow is slowed and compressed, increasing static pressure. The net upward pressure force integrated over the entire surface constitutes lift: L = CL * 0.5 * rho * V^2 * S.
+
+### Q21: In which way does the position of the center of pressure move at a positively shaped profile with increasing angle of attack? ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q21)*
+- A) It moves to the wing tips
+- B) It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack
+- C) It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack
+- D) It moves forward first, then backward
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As angle of attack increases, the suction peak on the upper surface intensifies and moves toward the leading edge, causing the center of pressure to migrate forward. This continues until the critical (stall) angle of attack is reached. Beyond the stall, the suction peak collapses as flow separates, and the center of pressure moves abruptly rearward. The forward movement of the CP with increasing AoA is important for stability analysis and contributes to the pitching moment characteristics of the aerofoil.
+
+### Q22: Which statement about lift and angle of attack is correct? ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q22)*
+- A) Increasing the angle of attack too far may result in a loss of lift and an airflow separation
+- B) Increasing the angle of attack results in less lift being generated by the aerofoil
+- C) Decreasing the angle of attack results in more drag being generated by the aerofoil
+- D) Too large angles of attack can lead to an exponential increase in lift
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CL increases approximately linearly with AoA up to the critical angle (typically 15–18° for most aerofoils). Beyond this critical AoA, the adverse pressure gradient on the upper surface causes the boundary layer to separate, destroying the smooth flow and causing a sudden drop in lift (stall) accompanied by a large increase in drag. Lift does not increase exponentially (D), and reducing AoA generally reduces both lift and drag (not increases drag as C suggests).
+
+### Q23: Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack increases? ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q23)*
+- A) The stagnation point moves down
+- B) The center of pressure moves down
+- C) The center of pressure moves up
+- D) The stagnation point moves up
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As angle of attack increases, the relative airflow meets the wing at a steeper upward angle. The streamline that arrives exactly at the stagnation point shifts downward (toward the lower surface of the leading edge), because more airflow is now directed over the upper surface. Simultaneously, the centre of pressure moves forward (not up or down — it moves chordwise), and the suction on the upper surface increases as flow accelerates more strongly over the curved upper side.
+
+### Q24: Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack decreases? ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q24)*
+- A) The center of pressure moves aft
+- B) The center of pressure moves forward
+- C) The stagnation point moves down
+- D) The stagnation point remains constant
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As angle of attack decreases, the aerodynamic loading on the forward portion of the upper surface diminishes, shifting the resultant pressure force rearward — so the center of pressure moves aft (toward the trailing edge). The stagnation point also moves upward (not down) as less flow is forced over the upper surface. Understanding CP movement is important because it affects the pitching moment balance of the aircraft throughout the flight envelope.
+
+### Q25: The angle (alpha) shown in the figure is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q25)*
+
+
+
+- A) Lift angle.
+- B) Angle of attack.
+- C) Angle of incidence.
+- D) Angle of inclination
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of attack (alpha, α) is the angle between the chord line and the direction of the oncoming airflow (relative wind). In the figure, the direction of airflow (DoF) vector and the chord line form angle alpha — this is the fundamental angle that determines the lift coefficient and stall behaviour. The angle of incidence is a fixed structural angle between the chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis (set during manufacturing), and does not change in flight.
+
+### Q26: In order to improve the stall characteristics of an aircraft, the wing is twisted outwards (the angle of incidence varies spanwise). This is known as... ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q26)*
+- A) Arrow shape.
+- B) V-form
+- C) Geometric washout.
+- D) Aerodynamic washout.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geometric washout means the wing is physically twisted so that the angle of incidence (and thus the local angle of attack) decreases from root to tip. This ensures that the wing root reaches the critical stall angle before the wingtips, so the ailerons (located outboard) remain effective even as the inboard section stalls. This gives the pilot aileron control during the approach to stall, enabling better roll control and safer stall behaviour. Aerodynamic washout (D) achieves the same effect through changing aerofoil sections rather than physical twist.
+
+### Q27: Which option states a benefit of wing washout? ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q27)*
+- A) With the washout the form drag reduces at high speeds
+- B) Greater hardness because the wing can withstand more torsion forces
+- C) At high angles of attack the effectiveness of the aileron is retained as long as possible
+- D) Structurally the wing is made more rigid against rotation
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary aerodynamic benefit of washout is that the wingtip (where the ailerons are) has a lower angle of incidence than the root, so it reaches its critical stall angle later. When the pilot approaches stall speed and raises the nose to a high AoA, the inboard sections stall first while the outboard/aileron sections remain unstalled and continue to generate lift and respond to aileron inputs. This gives the pilot roll control authority during the stall approach, preventing inadvertent spin entry.
+
+### Q28: Which statement concerning the angle of attack is correct? ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q28)*
+- A) Increasing the angle of attack results in decreasing lift
+- B) The angle of attack cannot be negative
+- C) A too large angle of attack may result in a loss of lift
+- D) The angle of attack is constant throughout the flight
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** AoA can be negative (when the chord line points downward relative to the freestream, some aerofoils still generate positive lift due to camber, but very negative AoA produces negative lift). AoA continuously changes in flight as the pilot adjusts pitch and as airspeed changes. Within the normal range, increasing AoA increases lift — but beyond the critical angle (typically ~15°), flow separation destroys lift. Option C correctly identifies this upper limit of AoA beyond which lift collapses.
+
+### Q29: When increasing the airflow speed by a factor of 2 while keeping all other parameters constant, how does the parasite drag change approximately? ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q29)*
+- A) It decreases by a factor of 2
+- B) It increases by a factor of 2
+- C) It decreases by a factor of 4
+- D) It increases by a factor of 4
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parasite drag follows the formula D_parasite = CD_p * 0.5 * rho * V^2 * S. Since dynamic pressure q = 0.5 * rho * V^2 is proportional to V^2, doubling the speed (V × 2) quadruples dynamic pressure (2^2 = 4), and thus quadruples parasite drag. This square-law relationship is fundamental: halving your speed reduces parasite drag by a factor of four, while doubling speed costs four times as much drag — which is why high-speed flight is energetically expensive.
+
+### Q30: The drag coefficient... ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q30)*
+- A) Is proportional to the lift coefficient
+- B) Increases with increasing airspeed.
+- C) May range from zero to an infinite positive value
+- D) Cannot be lower than a non-negative, minimal value.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Every aerofoil has a minimum drag coefficient (CD_min) greater than zero, because skin friction and form drag exist even at the optimal low-drag AoA. The drag coefficient cannot reach zero for a real body in viscous flow — there is always some irreducible friction drag. It can increase without bound as AoA increases (especially post-stall), but has a finite positive minimum. The drag polar (CD vs CL curve) shows CD_min as the lowest point of the parabolic curve.
+
+### Q31: Pressure compensation on an wing occurs at the... ^q31
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q31)*
+- A) Wing tips.
+- B) Leading edge.
+- C) Trailing edge.
+- D) Wing roots
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** High pressure below the wing and low pressure above create a tendency for air to flow around the wingtip from the high-pressure lower surface to the low-pressure upper surface. This spanwise flow wraps around the wingtip, creating trailing vortices (wingtip vortices). These vortices are the physical mechanism of induced drag — they impart a downward component (downwash) to the oncoming flow, effectively reducing the local angle of attack and tilting the lift vector rearward, creating an induced drag component.
+
+### Q32: Which of the following options is likely to produce large induced drag? ^q32
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q32)*
+- A) Large aspect ratio
+- B) Small aspect ratio
+- C) Low lift coefficients
+- D) Tapered wings
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL^2 / (pi * AR * e), where AR is aspect ratio and e is Oswald efficiency factor. A small aspect ratio (short, stubby wing) produces high induced drag for a given lift coefficient because the wingtip vortices are strong relative to the span. Conversely, high aspect ratio (long, slender) wings minimise induced drag — hence gliders use very high AR wings. Low CL (option C) would reduce induced drag, not increase it.
+
+### Q33: Which parts of an aircraft mainly affect the generation of induced drag? ^q33
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q33)*
+- A) The front part of the fuselage.
+- B) The outer part of the ailerons.
+- C) The lower part of the gear.
+- D) The wing tips.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag originates from the pressure difference between the upper and lower wing surfaces causing spanwise flow that rolls up into concentrated vortices at the wingtips. The strength of these vortices — and thus the induced drag — is directly related to what happens at the wingtips. This is why winglets, raked wingtips, and elliptical planforms are used to reduce wingtip vortex strength. The fuselage, ailerons, and landing gear primarily generate parasite drag, not induced drag.
+
+### Q34: Where is interference drag generated? ^q34
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q34)*
+- A) At the ailerons
+- B) At the the gear
+- C) At the wing root
+- D) Near the wing tips
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Interference drag occurs where two surfaces meet and their boundary layers interact, creating turbulence and additional drag beyond what each surface would produce in isolation. The wing-fuselage junction (wing root) is the classic location: the boundary layers from the fuselage and wing interfere, creating complex flow that increases total drag. Fairings and fillets are used at wing roots to smooth this junction and reduce interference drag. The landing gear generates form drag, not interference drag specifically.
+
+### Q35: Pressure drag, interference drag and friction drag belong to the group of the... ^q35
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q35)*
+- A) Parasite drag
+- B) Main resistance.
+- C) Induced drag.
+- D) Total drag.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Total drag = parasite drag + induced drag. Parasite drag encompasses all drag not associated with lift production: skin friction drag (viscous shear on surfaces), form/pressure drag (pressure difference between leading and trailing edges due to boundary layer separation), and interference drag (junction effects). Induced drag is separately caused by the lift generation process itself (wingtip vortices and downwash). Parasite drag increases with V^2, while induced drag decreases with V^2.
+
+### Q36: How do induced drag and parasite drag change with increasing airspeed during a horizontal and stable cruise flight? ^q36
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q36)*
+- A) Parasite drag decreases and induced drag increases
+- B) Induced drag decreases and parasite drag increases
+- C) Parasite drag decreases and induced drag decreases
+- D) Induced drag increases and parasite drag increases
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In level flight, lift must equal weight, so CL decreases as speed increases (L = CL * 0.5 * rho * V^2 * S = W, thus CL = 2W / (rho * V^2 * S)). Induced drag ∝ CL^2 / V^2 ∝ 1/V^2 — it decreases with increasing speed. Parasite drag ∝ V^2 — it increases with speed. The speed where induced drag equals parasite drag is the speed of minimum total drag, which corresponds to the best lift-to-drag ratio and maximum glide range in a glider.
+
+### Q37: Which of the listed wing shapes has the lowest induced drag? ^q37
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q37)*
+- A) Rectangular shape
+- B) Trapezoidal shape
+- C) Elliptical shape
+- D) Double trapezoidal shape
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elliptical wing planform produces the minimum possible induced drag for a given span and total lift. This is because it creates a perfectly elliptical spanwise lift distribution, which results in a uniform downwash across the span — the theoretical optimum. An elliptical distribution means no "wasteful" concentration of lift near the root or sudden drops near the tips. The Spitfire used an elliptical wing for this reason. Tapered (trapezoidal) wings approximate this and are easier to manufacture; rectangular wings have higher induced drag.
+
+### Q38: Which effect does a decreasing airspeed have on the induced drag during a horizontal and stable cruise flight? ^q38
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q38)*
+- A) The induced drag will slightly decrease
+- B) The induced drag will collapse
+- C) The induced drag will increase
+- D) The induced drag will remain constant
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As speed decreases in level flight, the angle of attack must increase to maintain sufficient lift (since CL must increase to compensate for lower dynamic pressure). Higher CL means stronger wingtip vortices and greater induced drag: D_induced ∝ CL^2 ∝ 1/V^2. This is why slow flight is dominated by induced drag — at very low speeds near stall, induced drag is very high and is the main component of total drag, while parasite drag is relatively small.
+
+### Q39: Which statement about induced drag during the horizontal cruise flight is correct? ^q39
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q39)*
+- A) Induced drag decreases with increasing airspeed
+- B) Induced drag has a minimum at a certain speed and increases at higher as well as lower speeds
+- C) Induced drag has a maximum at a certain speed and decreases at higher as well as lower speeds
+- D) Induced drag increases with increasing airspeed
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag decreases monotonically with increasing airspeed in level flight: D_induced = 2W^2 / (rho * V^2 * S^2 * pi * AR * e). As V increases, induced drag continuously falls — there is no minimum/maximum within the normal flight envelope. Parasite drag (not induced drag) has the U-shaped curve described in B/C. Total drag has a minimum at the speed where induced drag equals parasite drag; induced drag itself simply decreases with speed.
+
+### Q40: Which kinds of drag contribute to total drag? ^q40
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q40)*
+- A) Interference drag and parasite drag
+- B) Induced drag and parasite drag
+- C) Induced drag, form drag, skin-friction drag
+- D) Form drag, skin-friction drag, interference drag
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard aerodynamic breakdown of total drag is: Total drag = Induced drag + Parasite drag. Induced drag arises from lift generation (wingtip vortices). Parasite drag is the collective term for all non-lift-related drag: form/pressure drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag. Options C and D list sub-components of parasite drag but omit induced drag or incorrectly combine them. Option A omits induced drag, which is a major component especially at low speeds.
+
+### Q41: How do lift and drag change when approaching a stall condition? ^q41
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q41)*
+- A) Lift decreases and drag increases
+- B) Lift and drag increase
+- C) Lift increases and drag decreases
+- D) Lift and drag decrease
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As the critical angle of attack is reached, flow begins to separate from the upper surface, starting at the trailing edge and progressing forward. Once past the critical AoA, the clean attached flow that generated lift breaks down — CL drops sharply. Simultaneously, the separated flow creates a large turbulent wake with very high pressure drag, so CD rises dramatically. The drag polar shows this clearly: the nose of the polar curves sharply as the stall condition is approached, with CL falling and CD rising.
+
+### Q42: In case of a stall it is important to... ^q42
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q42)*
+- A) Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed.
+- B) Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed.
+- C) Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed.
+- D) Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall recovery requires reducing angle of attack below the critical value so that airflow can re-attach to the upper surface and lift can be restored. The pilot must push forward on the elevator control to lower AoA, which also allows the aircraft to accelerate (or the pilot applies power if available). Increasing AoA (A, C) deepens the stall. Reducing speed (C, D) worsens the condition. Banking (D) increases the load factor, which raises the stall speed — exactly the wrong input.
+
+### Q43: During a stall, the lift... ^q43
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q43)*
+- A) Decreases and drag increases.
+- B) Increases and drag increases.
+- C) Decreases and drag decreases
+- D) Increases and drag decreases.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the definitive stall characteristic: lift collapses because boundary layer separation destroys the pressure differential that generates it, while drag rises dramatically due to the large turbulent separated wake. The CL vs. AoA curve shows CL_max at the critical angle, then a steep drop — this is the stall. The CD vs. AoA curve rises steeply through and beyond the stall. This combination (less lift, more drag) is why the stall is critical — the aircraft loses lift while simultaneously experiencing high drag that would further reduce speed.
+
+### Q44: The critical angle of attack... ^q44
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q44)*
+- A) Decreases with forward center of gravity position.
+- B) Changes with increasing weight.
+- C) Is independent of the weight.
+- D) Increases with backward center of gravity position.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The critical (stall) angle of attack is a fixed aerodynamic property of the aerofoil shape — it is the AoA at which flow separation occurs regardless of airspeed, weight, or altitude. What changes with weight is the stall speed (Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max))), not the stall AoA. A heavier aircraft must fly faster to generate the same lift, but it still stalls at the same critical AoA. C.G. position affects pitch stability and control effectiveness but does not change the aerofoil's critical angle.
+
+### Q45: What leads to a decreased stall speed Vs (IAS)? ^q45
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q45)*
+- A) Lower density
+- B) Decreasing weight
+- C) Lower altitude
+- D) Higher load factor
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)): stall speed decreases when weight (W) decreases, since less lift is needed to maintain equilibrium. Lower density (A) increases true airspeed (TAS) stall speed but the IAS stall speed remains approximately constant (since IAS is based on dynamic pressure q = 0.5 * rho * V_TAS^2, which equals 0.5 * rho_0 * V_IAS^2). Higher load factor (D) effectively increases apparent weight (n*W), raising stall speed. Lower altitude means higher density, which slightly lowers TAS stall speed but does not significantly change IAS stall speed.
+
+### Q46: Which statement regarding a spin is correct? ^q46
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q46)*
+- A) During recovery the ailerons should be kept neutral
+- B) During the spin the speed constantly increases
+- C) During recovery the ailerons should be crossed
+- D) Only very old aeroplanes have a risk of spinning
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spin recovery technique (PARE: Power off, Ailerons neutral, Rudder opposite to spin direction, Elevator forward) requires keeping ailerons neutral because using ailerons during a spin can worsen the rotation — applying aileron into the spin raises the inner wing's AoA (which may already be stalled) and can deepen the spin. Rudder opposite to spin direction stops the autorotation; forward elevator then reduces AoA to unstall both wings. Speed does not constantly increase in a spin — the aircraft reaches a stabilised spin with relatively constant speed and rotation rate.
+
+### Q47: The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil is located between... ^q47
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q47)*
+- A) The stagnation point and the center of pressure.
+- B) The stagnation point and the transition point.
+- C) The transition point and the separation point.
+- D) The transition point and the center of pressure.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The boundary layer development follows a specific sequence: flow is divided at the stagnation point, a laminar boundary layer develops from the stagnation point rearward, then at the transition point the laminar layer converts to turbulent, and finally at the separation point the turbulent layer detaches from the surface. The laminar boundary layer therefore occupies the region from the stagnation point to the transition point. Laminar flow aerofoils are designed to push the transition point as far aft as possible to minimise friction drag.
+
+### Q48: What types of boundary layers can be found on an aerofoil? ^q48
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q48)*
+- A) Laminar boundary layer along the complete upper surface with non-separated airflow
+- B) Turbulent layer at the leading wing areas, laminar boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- C) Turbulent boundary layer along the complete upper surface with separated airflow
+- D) Laminar layer at the leading wing areas, turbulent boundary layer at the trailing areas
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The natural sequence of boundary layer development on an aerofoil runs from laminar (near the leading edge, where the flow is orderly and Reynolds number is low) to turbulent (further aft, after transition). The reverse sequence (turbulent first, then laminar) does not occur naturally. This forward laminar / aft turbulent arrangement is why designers place the maximum thickness of laminar-flow aerofoils further back — to extend the favourable pressure gradient that maintains laminar flow as far as possible before transition.
+
+### Q49: How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent boundary layer? ^q49
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q49)*
+- A) The laminar boundary layer is thinner and provides more skin-friction drag
+- B) The turbulent boundary layer can follow the airfoil camber at higher angles of attack
+- C) The laminar boundary layer produces lift, the turbulent boundary layer produces drag
+- D) The turbulent boundary layer is thicker and provides less skin-friction drag
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The turbulent boundary layer, despite having higher skin friction drag than the laminar layer, has more energetic mixing that allows it to remain attached to the surface against an adverse pressure gradient at higher angles of attack. This is its critical advantage: it resists flow separation better. The laminar boundary layer is indeed thinner (A is partly correct about thickness) and has lower friction drag — but it separates more easily. This is why turbulators are sometimes used on gliders: deliberately triggering transition to turbulent flow to prevent laminar separation bubbles.
+
+### Q50: What structural item provides lateral stability to an airplane? ^q50
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^q50)*
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) Vertical tail
+- C) Differential aileron deflection
+- D) Elevator
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Lateral (roll) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a roll disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral (the upward angle of the wings from horizontal). When a gust rolls the aircraft, the lower wing descends and its angle of attack increases (it meets more airflow), generating more lift and creating a restoring moment back to level. The vertical tail provides directional (yaw) stability; ailerons are roll control surfaces (not stability), and the elevator controls pitch. High-wing aircraft achieve similar lateral stability through the pendulum effect of the fuselage hanging below the wings.
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q2: What is the mean value of gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface? ^bazl_80_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_2)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 100 m/sec²
+- B) 1013.25 hPa
+- C) 15° C/100 m
+- D) 9.81 m/sec²
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s² (ISA value). This value is fundamental in aeronautics: it is used to calculate weight (W = m × g), load factor, and appears in all performance equations. 1013.25 hPa is the standard pressure at sea level, and 15°C/100 m is not a correct gradient (the standard lapse rate is 0.65°C/100 m).
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q15: In a sideslip, the permitted flap position is... ^bazl_80_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_15)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) specified in the flight manual (AFM).
+- B) flaps fully retracted.
+- C) flaps fully extended.
+- D) dependent on the downward vertical component of the airspeed.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The permitted flap position during a sideslip is always specified in the aircraft flight manual (AFM/POH). Some gliders prohibit extended flaps in a sideslip because the combination of flaps and deflected rudder can create dangerous aerodynamic couples or exceed structural limits. Others permit certain configurations. The only correct answer is therefore to consult the AFM.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q19: An aircraft is said to have dynamic stability when... ^bazl_80_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_19)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) it is able to return automatically to its original equilibrium after a disturbance.
+- B) it is able to stabilise automatically at a new equilibrium after a disturbance.
+- C) the rotation about the pitch axis is automatically corrected by the ailerons.
+- D) the permitted load factor allows a positive acceleration of at least 4 g and a negative acceleration of at least 2 g with landing flaps retracted (aileron flaps).
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic stability describes the behaviour of an aircraft over time after a disturbance. A dynamically stable aircraft returns automatically to its original equilibrium (trim) after being disturbed — the oscillations progressively damp out. Answer B describes so-called "neutral or convergent stability towards a new equilibrium", which is different. Static stability (the immediate tendency to return) is a necessary but not sufficient condition for dynamic stability.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q20: In severe turbulence, airspeed must be reduced... ^bazl_80_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_20)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) to below the manoeuvring speed V_A.
+- B) to normal cruising speed.
+- C) to the minimum constant speed in landing configuration.
+- D) to a speed within the yellow arc of the airspeed indicator.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The manoeuvring speed V_A (or turbulence penetration speed) is the maximum speed at which full control surface deflections or severe wind gusts will not cause the structural limit load to be exceeded. Below V_A, the wing will stall before the structural limit load is reached, thereby protecting the structure. In severe turbulence, speed must be reduced below V_A to avoid structural damage from gust dynamic loads.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q1: In the ICAO standard atmosphere, the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere is... ^bazl_80_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_1)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 2°C/100 m
+- B) 0.65°C/1000 ft
+- C) 2°C/100 ft
+- D) 0.65°C/100 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO standard atmosphere (ISA), temperature decreases by 0.65°C for every 100 m of altitude in the troposphere (or equivalently, 2°C per 1000 ft, or 6.5°C/1000 m). Answer B (0.65°C/1000 ft) is incorrect because the unit is wrong — this would be far too small a lapse rate. Answer D is the only correct one: 0.65°C per 100 m of altitude.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q3: Atmospheric pressure is half that at sea level at approximately... ^bazl_80_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_3)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) 5,500 ft
+- B) 6,600 ft
+- C) 5,500 m
+- D) 6,600 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Atmospheric pressure decreases with altitude in an approximately exponential manner. In the ICAO standard atmosphere, pressure is approximately half the sea-level pressure (1013.25 hPa → ~506 hPa) at an altitude of approximately 5,500 m (18,000 ft). This value is important for high-altitude physiology (oxygen requirements) and for density altitude performance calculations.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q4: Density altitude always corresponds to... ^bazl_80_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_4)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) the true indicated altitude, after correction for instrument error.
+- B) the altitude read when the altimeter is set to QNH, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature.
+- C) pressure altitude, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature.
+- D) the altitude at which atmospheric pressure and temperature correspond to those of the standard atmosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Density altitude is the altitude at which the aircraft would be in the ISA standard atmosphere if the air density were the same as in actual conditions. It is calculated from pressure altitude (altimeter set to 1013.25 hPa) corrected for the temperature deviation from ISA. A temperature higher than ISA gives a density altitude higher than pressure altitude, reducing aircraft performance. Answer D describes pressure altitude, not density altitude.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q5: The simplified continuity law applied to an airflow is as follows: *In a given period of time, a flowing air mass is conserved regardless of the cross-section it passes through.* This means that... ^bazl_80_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_5)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) airflow velocity increases when the cross-section decreases.
+- B) airflow velocity decreases when the cross-section decreases.
+- C) airflow velocity increases when the cross-section increases.
+- D) airflow velocity remains constant.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The continuity equation states that for an incompressible fluid, the volumetric flow rate Q = S × V is constant along a streamtube. If the cross-section S decreases, the velocity V must increase proportionally to keep Q constant. This principle, combined with Bernoulli's theorem, explains why air accelerates over the curved upper surface of an aerofoil, creating a low-pressure region that generates lift.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q6: The aerodynamic resultant (drag and lift) depends on air density. When air density decreases... ^bazl_80_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_6)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) both drag and lift decrease.
+- B) both drag and lift increase.
+- C) drag increases and lift decreases.
+- D) drag decreases and lift increases.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Both lift and drag are proportional to the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². When air density ρ decreases (at altitude or in high temperatures), q decreases for a given speed, which reduces both lift and drag. This is why aircraft performance deteriorates at high altitude or in great heat: the aircraft must fly faster (higher TAS) to generate the same lift, while the total aerodynamic resistance decreases for a constant indicated airspeed.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q11: What is the name of the point about which, when the angle of attack changes, the pitching moment about the lateral axis does not vary? ^bazl_80_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_11)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) Centre of symmetry.
+- B) Centre of gravity.
+- C) Aerodynamic centre.
+- D) Neutral point.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The neutral point (also called the aerodynamic centre at wing level, but "neutral point" for the complete aircraft) is the point about which the pitching moment remains constant regardless of changes in angle of attack. For a stable aircraft, the centre of gravity must be forward of the neutral point — the CG-to-neutral point distance constitutes the static stability margin. Note: for an isolated aerofoil, this point corresponds to the aerodynamic centre (at approximately 25% of the chord); for the complete aircraft, the neutral point accounts for the contribution of the horizontal stabiliser.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q9: The angle between the aerofoil chord line and the longitudinal axis of the aircraft is called... ^bazl_80_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_9)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) the dihedral angle.
+- B) the sweep angle.
+- C) the angle of attack.
+- D) the rigging angle (angle of incidence).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rigging angle (or angle of incidence) is the fixed angle, defined at construction, between the aerofoil chord line and the longitudinal axis of the fuselage. It does not vary in flight. It should not be confused with the angle of attack, which is the angle between the chord line and the direction of the relative wind (and which varies in flight according to attitude and speed). The rigging angle is chosen by the manufacturer so that the wing generates the necessary lift in cruise at an aerodynamically favourable fuselage attitude.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q17: What does the transition point correspond to? ^bazl_80_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_17)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) The lateral roll of the aircraft.
+- B) The change from a turbulent boundary layer to a laminar one.
+- C) The change from a laminar boundary layer to a turbulent one.
+- D) The point at which C_Lmax is reached.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The transition point is precisely the location on the aerofoil where the boundary layer changes from a laminar regime (ordered flow, in parallel layers) to a turbulent regime (disordered flow, with transverse mixing). This transition is irreversible in the direction of flow: the change is from laminar to turbulent, never the reverse. The position of the transition point depends on the Reynolds number, the pressure gradient, and surface roughness — a favourable pressure gradient (acceleration) maintains laminar flow, while an adverse gradient (deceleration) triggers transition.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q10: Geometric or aerodynamic wing twist results in... ^bazl_80_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_10)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) partial compensation of adverse yaw at low speed.
+- B) progressive flow separation along the wingspan.
+- C) simultaneous flow separation along the wingspan at low speed.
+- D) a higher cruise speed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing twist (geometric or aerodynamic) varies the angle of incidence or aerodynamic characteristics along the span, so that the stall does not occur simultaneously across the entire wing. The root (higher angle of incidence) reaches the critical angle first and stalls progressively, while the outer sections remain attached. This progressive (rather than simultaneous) flow separation improves stall safety and maintains roll control via the ailerons. The effect on adverse yaw (A) is indirect and marginal.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q14: The profile drag (form drag) of a body is primarily influenced by... ^bazl_80_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_14)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) its density.
+- B) its internal temperature.
+- C) the formation of vortices.
+- D) its mass.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Form drag (pressure drag) is caused by the pressure difference between the front and rear of a body, due to boundary layer separation and the formation of vortices in the wake. The more intense the vortex formation (unStreamlined body, blunt trailing edge), the higher the form drag. This is why streamlined aerofoils have much lower form drag than a flat plate or sphere — their progressively converging shape allows the flow to remain attached longer, reducing the turbulent wake.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q12: The aerodynamic drag of a flat disc surrounded by an airflow depends notably on... ^bazl_80_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_12)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) the tensile strength of its material.
+- B) the surface area perpendicular to the airflow.
+- C) its density.
+- D) its weight.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The drag of a flat disc (non-streamlined body) is pressure drag: it depends primarily on the frontal surface area S exposed perpendicularly to the airflow, and on the dynamic pressure q = 0.5 × ρ × V². The formula is D = CD × q × S. The material strength, the disc's own density, or its weight do not influence aerodynamic drag — this is purely a function of shape, projected area, and flow conditions.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q16: Which tangent touches the speed polar at the point of minimum sink rate? ^bazl_80_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_16)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+> **Speed Polar:**
+> ![[figures/bazl_80_q16_polaire_tangentes.png]]
+> *A = tangent from the origin → best glide speed (best L/D ratio, best glide)*
+> *B = tangent from a point shifted to the right on the V axis → best glide with headwind*
+> *C = tangent from a point above the origin on the W axis (McCready) → optimal inter-thermal speed; touches the polar at the point of minimum sink rate*
+> *D = horizontal line at the level of minimum sink rate → indicates the minimum sink speed (Vmin sink)*
+
+- A) Tangent (A).
+- B) Tangent (B).
+- C) Tangent (C).
+- D) Tangent (D).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the speed polar (curve showing the sink rate W as a function of horizontal speed V), the point of minimum sink rate corresponds to the lowest point of the curve (the smallest value of W in absolute terms). The tangent at this point is a horizontal tangent — this is tangent (C) on the diagram. This point corresponds to the minimum sink speed, used to maximise flight time or to exploit thermals. The tangent drawn from the origin to the polar (tangent B) gives the speed for the best L/D ratio (best glide ratio).
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q13: Induced drag increases... ^bazl_80_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_13)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) with increasing angle of attack.
+- B) with decreasing angle of attack.
+- C) with increasing airspeed.
+- D) as parasite drag increases.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag is proportional to CL²: D_induced = CL² / (π × AR × e) × q × S. By increasing the angle of attack, CL increases, and therefore CL² increases, causing induced drag to grow. In level flight at constant speed, an increase in angle of attack corresponds to a lower speed, which further increases induced drag (D_induced ∝ 1/V²). By increasing speed (C), CL decreases in level flight and induced drag decreases. Parasite drag (D) varies independently of induced drag.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q18: How does the minimum speed of an aircraft in a horizontal turn at 45° bank angle compare to straight-and-level flight? ^bazl_80_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_18)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) It decreases.
+- B) It does not change.
+- C) It increases.
+- D) It depends on the type of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a horizontal turn at bank angle φ, the load factor is n = 1/cos(φ). At 45° of bank, n = 1/cos(45°) = 1/0.707 ≈ 1.41. The stall speed in the turn is Vs_turn = Vs × √n = Vs × √1.41 ≈ Vs × 1.19. Therefore the minimum speed increases by approximately 19% compared to straight-and-level flight. This increase in stall speed during turns is a fundamental safety concept — tight turns at low altitude (such as on final approach) are particularly dangerous because the margin above the stall is reduced.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q8: Adverse yaw is caused by... ^bazl_80_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_8)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) the gyroscopic effect that occurs when a turn is initiated.
+- B) the lateral airflow over the wing after a turn has been initiated.
+- C) the increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes down.
+- D) the increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes up.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw is caused by the asymmetry of drag between the two ailerons during turn entry. The aileron that rises (on the high-wing side) increases the local angle of attack, generating more lift but also more induced drag. This additional drag on the rising side creates a yawing moment towards the rising side — i.e. in the opposite direction to the turn (hence "adverse yaw"). Differential ailerons and spoiler-airbrakes are technical solutions to mitigate this effect.
+
+### BAZL Br.80 Q7: True Airspeed (TAS) is the speed indicated by the ASI... ^bazl_80_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_80_7)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Spécifiques*
+
+- A) without any correction.
+- B) corrected for position and instrument errors.
+- C) adjusted for air density.
+- D) corrected for both b) and c).
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True airspeed (TAS) is obtained from indicated airspeed (IAS) by applying two successive corrections: first, position and instrument errors (yielding calibrated airspeed, CAS), then the density correction (accounting for the difference between actual air density and standard sea-level density). TAS is therefore the actual speed of the aircraft through the air mass. At high altitude, TAS is significantly higher than IAS because air density is lower.
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 801 Q1 — The speed range authorized for the use of slotted flaps is: ^bazl_801_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_1)*
+- A) unlimited
+- B) limited at the upper end by the maneuvering speed (Va)
+- C) limited at the lower end by the bottom of the green arc
+- D) indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The slotted flap speed range is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally on the airspeed indicator (white or light green arc). It varies by glider type.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q2 — Wing tip vortices are caused by pressure equalization from: ^bazl_801_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_2)*
+- A) the upper surface toward the lower surface at the wing tip
+- B) the lower surface toward the upper surface at the wing tip
+- C) the upper surface toward the lower surface along the entire trailing edge
+- D) the lower surface toward the upper surface along the entire trailing edge
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing tip vortices (induced vortices) come from pressure equalization from the lower surface (high pressure) to the upper surface (low pressure) at the wing tip. This phenomenon generates induced drag.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q3 — The angle of attack of an airfoil is always the angle between: ^bazl_801_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_3)*
+- A) the longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+- B) the longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) the chord line and the general airflow direction
+- D) the horizon and the general airflow direction
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Angle of attack is the angle between the chord line and the general airflow direction (relative wind direction). It is not the angle with the horizon nor with the longitudinal axis.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q4 — In standard atmosphere, the values of temperature and atmospheric pressure at sea level are: ^bazl_801_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_4)*
+- A) 15 degrees F and 29.92 Hg
+- B) 59 degrees C and 29.92 hPa
+- C) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 Hg
+- D) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 hPa
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pressure in ICAO standard atmosphere at sea level is 1013.25 hPa (millibars) = 29.92 inches of mercury (inHg). 29.92 hPa is incorrect.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q5 — With respect to airflow, the simplified continuity equation states: At the same moment, the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections. Therefore: ^bazl_801_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_5)*
+![[figures/bazl_801_q5.png]]
+- A) the mass of air flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+- B) the mass of air flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) the mass of air flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- D) the speed of the air mass does not vary
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The mean camber line is the line equidistant between the lower and upper surfaces. In the figure, it is represented by line B.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q6 — Why, in a correctly executed turn without altitude loss, is it necessary to apply slight back pressure on the elevator? ^bazl_801_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_6)*
+- A) to reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- B) to prevent an outward sideslip in the turn
+- C) to slightly increase lift
+- D) to prevent slipping inward in the turn
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated turn without altitude loss, back pressure is needed to increase lift and balance centrifugal force (load factor > 1). Lift must compensate for both gravity and centrifugal force.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q7 — By tripling the frontal area of a disc in an airflow, drag increases by: ^bazl_801_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_7)*
+- A) 9 times
+- B) 6 times
+- C) 3 times
+- D) 1.5 times
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall occurs at a critical angle of attack (stall angle), regardless of airspeed. At this angle, airflow separation on the upper surface causes a sudden drop in lift.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q8 — Aerodynamic wing twist (washout) is a modification of: ^bazl_801_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_8)*
+- A) the airfoil profile from root to wing tip
+- B) the angle of attack at the wing tip by means of the aileron
+- C) the angle of incidence of the same airfoil, from root to wing tip
+- D) the wing dihedral, from root to tip
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs at a determined angle of attack (critical angle), specific to each airfoil. It is not related to the nose attitude relative to the horizon.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q9 — What is the average value of gravitational acceleration at the surface of the Earth? ^bazl_801_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_9)*
+- A) 100 m/sec2
+- B) 1013.25 hPa
+- C) 15° C/100 m
+- D) 9.81 m/sec2
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard gravitational acceleration at Earth's surface is 9.81 m/s². This is the ISA value used in all performance calculations.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q10 — The speed read on the airspeed indicator (ASI) is a measurement of: ^bazl_801_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_10)*
+- A) total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- C) the difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- D) the weathervane effect, where pressure decreases
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspeed indicator reading is based on the difference between static pressure and total pressure (dynamic pressure). The ASI measures this difference via the Pitot tube and static port.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q11 — The horizontal and vertical stabilizers serve in particular to: ^bazl_801_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_11)*
+- A) reduce air resistance
+- B) control the aircraft around its longitudinal axis
+- C) reduce the formation of wing tip vortices
+- D) stabilize the aircraft in flight
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal and vertical stabilizers serve primarily to stabilize the aircraft in flight (longitudinal and directional stability). Without them, the aircraft would be unstable.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q12 — When extending slotted flaps, airflow separation: ^bazl_801_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_12)*
+- A) occurs at the same speed as before extending the flaps
+- B) occurs at a lower speed
+- C) occurs at a higher speed
+- D) none of the answers is correct
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When extending slotted flaps, airflow separation occurs at a lower speed, because flaps increase the maximum lift coefficient (CL max). Stall speed decreases.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q13 — The aerodynamic center of an airfoil in an airflow is the point of application of: ^bazl_801_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_13)*
+- A) the resultant of all pressure forces acting on the airfoil
+- B) the weight
+- C) the tire pressure on the runway
+- D) the airflow at the leading edge
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic center is the point of application of the resultant of aerodynamic forces on a profile. It is distinct from the center of pressure (which moves) and the center of gravity.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q14 — Pressures are expressed in: ^bazl_801_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_14)*
+- A) bar, psi, Pa
+- B) bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+- C) Pa, psi, g
+- D) bar, Pa, m/sec2
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pressures are expressed in bar, psi (pounds per square inch) and Pa (Pascal). g is an acceleration, not a pressure. Alpha (a) is not a pressure unit.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q15 — TAS (True Air Speed) is the speed of: ^bazl_801_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_15)*
+- A) the aircraft relative to the ground
+- B) the aircraft relative to the air, corrected for wind component and atmospheric pressure
+- C) read on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) the aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TAS (True Air Speed) is the aircraft's speed relative to the surrounding air mass. It is the actual speed through the air, corrected for atmospheric density.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q16 — Yaw stability of an aircraft is provided by: ^bazl_801_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_16)*
+- A) the horizontal stabilizer
+- B) the fin (vertical stabilizer)
+- C) the wing dihedral
+- D) leading edge slats
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yaw stability is provided by the fin (vertical stabilizer/rudder). Wing sweep contributes to roll stability, not yaw.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q17 — The trailing edge flap shown below is a: ^bazl_801_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_17)*
+![[figures/bazl_801_q17.png]]
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Slotted Flap
+- C) Split Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flap shown, extending from the wing with a slot, is a Slotted Flap. The slot channels air from the lower to upper surface, delaying separation.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q18 — The risk of airflow separation on the wing occurs mainly: ^bazl_801_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_18)*
+- A) during an abrupt pull-out after a dive
+- B) in calm air, in gliding flight, at the minimum authorized speed
+- C) in straight climbing flight at high speed, in atmospheric turbulence
+- D) in straight level cruise flight, in atmospheric turbulence
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The risk of stall/separation appears mainly during an abrupt pull-out after a dive, as the angle of attack increases very rapidly and can exceed the critical angle before the pilot can react.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q19 — The drag of a body in an airflow depends notably on: ^bazl_801_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_19)*
+- A) the density of the body
+- B) the chemical composition of the body
+- C) the mass of the body
+- D) the density of the air
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodynamic drag depends notably on air density (ρ), since F_D = Cd × 0.5 × ρ × v² × A. The body's own density, chemical composition, and mass do not directly affect aerodynamic drag.
+
+### BAZL 801 Q20 — In the drawing below, the airfoil chord is represented by: ^bazl_801_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_801_20)*
+![[figures/bazl_801_q20.png]]
+- A) A
+- B) H
+- C) M
+- D) K
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The chord line is the straight line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge. In the figure, it is represented by H.
+
+---
+
+## Series 3 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 802 Q1 — The angle of attack of an airfoil is always the angle between: ^bazl_802_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_1)*
+- A) the longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+- B) the longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) the chord line and the general airflow direction
+- D) varies depending on the weight of the pilot
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Angle of attack is the angle between the chord line and the general airflow direction (relative wind). It is not related to the longitudinal axis or the horizon.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q2 — The drag of a body in an airflow depends - at equal frontal area - at equal airflow speed - on: ^bazl_802_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_2)*
+- A) its shape
+- B) the position of its center of gravity
+- C) its weight
+- D) its density
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At equal frontal area and equal speed, aerodynamic drag depends on the body's shape (drag coefficient Cd). Shape determines aerodynamic efficiency.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q3 — What does induced drag of a wing depend on? ^bazl_802_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_3)*
+- A) pressure equalization from the upper surface toward the lower surface
+- B) pressure equalization from the lower surface toward the upper surface
+- C) the angle formed at the wing-fuselage junction
+- D) speed
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Induced drag comes from pressure equalization from lower surface (high pressure) to upper surface (low pressure) at the wing tip. This creates tip vortices and thus induced drag.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q4 — In ICAO standard atmosphere, the pressure at sea level is: ^bazl_802_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_4)*
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 29.92 hPa
+- C) 1012.35 hPa
+- D) depends on latitude
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO standard pressure at sea level is 1013.25 hPa. (29.92 hPa would be absurd — that is 29.92 inches of mercury, the same pressure in inHg).
+
+### BAZL 802 Q5 — In the airfoil shown below, the mean camber line is designated by: ^bazl_802_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_5)*
+![[figures/bazl_802_q5.png]]
+- A) G + J
+- B) A
+- C) H
+- D) B
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mean camber is line B in the figure, equidistant between lower and upper surfaces.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q6 — Why, in a turn without sideslip or altitude loss, is it necessary to apply back pressure on the elevator? ^bazl_802_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_6)*
+- A) to prevent an inward slip in the turn
+- B) to prevent an outward slip in the turn
+- C) to reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- D) to increase lift and thereby balance centrifugal force
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated turn without altitude loss, back pressure increases lift to balance centrifugal force (load factor > 1).
+
+### BAZL 802 Q7 — Wing stall (STALL) occurs: ^bazl_802_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_7)*
+- A) at the red radial line on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- B) following a reduction in engine power
+- C) only at an excessive nose-up angle relative to the horizon
+- D) at a critical angle of attack
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stall occurs at a critical angle of attack, regardless of airspeed or nose attitude.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q8 — Airflow separation on an airfoil occurs: ^bazl_802_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_8)*
+- A) simultaneously
+- B) at a determined angle of attack
+- C) only for a given nose position relative to the horizon
+- D) only depending on aircraft altitude
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airflow separation occurs at a determined angle of attack (critical stall angle), specific to the airfoil. It is not related to nose attitude relative to the horizon.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q9 — What is the average value of gravitational acceleration at the surface of the Earth? ^bazl_802_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_9)*
+- A) 100 m/sec2
+- B) 1013.5 hPa
+- C) 15° C/100 m
+- D) 9.81 m/sec2
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standard gravitational acceleration is 9.81 m/s².
+
+### BAZL 802 Q10 — True Air Speed (TAS) is the speed indicated by the airspeed indicator (ASI): ^bazl_802_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_10)*
+- A) without any correction
+- B) corrected for position and instrument errors
+- C) adjusted for atmospheric density
+- D) corrected for both B) and C)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS reading is determined by the difference between static and total pressure (dynamic pressure = q = ½ρv²).
+
+### BAZL 802 Q11 — A shift of the center of gravity occurs by: ^bazl_802_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_11)*
+- A) modifying the angle of incidence
+- B) moving the load
+- C) modifying the angle of attack
+- D) modifying the position of the aerodynamic center
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Center of gravity shifts occur by moving the load (ballast, passenger, baggage). Modifying angle of attack or incidence does not move the CG.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q12 — The high-lift device shown below, extending from the wing, is a: ^bazl_802_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_12)*
+![[figures/bazl_802_q12.png]]
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Slotted Flap
+- C) Split Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The flap shown (Fowler) moves rearward and downward, increasing both wing area and camber. It is the most effective flap type.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q13 — The point of application of the resultant aerodynamic forces on a wing profile is: ^bazl_802_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_13)*
+- A) the center of symmetry
+- B) the stagnation point
+- C) the center of gravity
+- D) the aerodynamic center
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodynamic center is the point of application of the resultant aerodynamic forces on a profile. It is generally located at the quarter-chord point.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q14 — At what altitude is the air density approximately half of what it is at sea level? ^bazl_802_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_14)*
+- A) 2,000 meters
+- B) 20,000 meters
+- C) 6,600 meters
+- D) 2,000 ft
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density is approximately half its sea-level value at approximately 6,600 m (approximately 18,000 ft).
+
+### BAZL 802 Q15 — The speed read on the airspeed indicator (ASI) is a measurement of: ^bazl_802_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_15)*
+- A) total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- C) the difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- D) the weathervane effect where pressure decreases
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is determined by the difference between static and total pressure (dynamic pressure).
+
+### BAZL 802 Q16 — Good roll stability is influenced by: ^bazl_802_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_16)*
+- A) the action of the horizontal stabilizer
+- B) rotations around the lateral axis
+- C) wing sweep and dihedral
+- D) the use of leading edge slats
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Roll stability is influenced by wing sweep and dihedral. Dihedral creates a roll restoring moment, as does sweep.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q17 — The speed range for slotted flap use: ^bazl_802_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_17)*
+- A) is unlimited
+- B) is limited at the upper end by the maneuvering speed
+- C) is limited at the lower end by the red radial line on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The speed range for slotted flap use is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM).
+
+### BAZL 802 Q18 — When the wing angle of incidence is greater at the root than at the tip, this is: ^bazl_802_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_18)*
+- A) aspect ratio
+- B) geometric twist (washout)
+- C) interference compensation
+- D) aerodynamic twist
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Geometric wing twist consists of a variation of the incidence angle of the same profile, from root (larger angle) to tip (smaller angle). This causes the root to stall first.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q19 — Barometric pressure in the Earth's atmosphere has the characteristic of: ^bazl_802_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_19)*
+- A) decreasing linearly as altitude increases
+- B) decreasing exponentially as altitude increases
+- C) decreasing in the troposphere and then increasing in the stratosphere
+- D) remaining constant
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Barometric pressure decreases exponentially with altitude (not linearly). This follows from the barometric law.
+
+### BAZL 802 Q20 — With respect to airflow, the simplified continuity equation states: At the same moment, the same mass of air passes through different cross-sections. Therefore: ^bazl_802_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/80%20-%20Principes%20du%20vol.md#^bazl_802_20)*
+- A) the mass of air flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+- B) the mass of air flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) the mass of air flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- D) the speed of the air mass does not vary
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Simplified continuity equation: for incompressible flow, the same air mass passes through any cross-section. If the section is larger, velocity is lower (A₁v₁ = A₂v₂).
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 80 - Principles of Flight
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 52 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 4? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q1
+- A) Transition point
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Center of pressure
+- D) Separation point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 4 on the aerofoil diagram (PFA-009) represents the separation point, where the boundary layer detaches from the upper wing surface and turbulent wake forms behind it. This is not the transition point (where laminar flow becomes turbulent), the stagnation point (where airflow splits at the leading edge), or the center of pressure (the resultant aerodynamic force application point).
+
+### Q2: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 1? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q2
+- A) Center of pressure
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 on the aerofoil diagram (PFA-009) is the stagnation point — located at the leading edge where incoming airflow splits, with one stream going over the upper surface and one under the lower surface; velocity here is zero and pressure is at its maximum. The transition point is where laminar flow transitions to turbulent flow, the separation point is where flow detaches from the surface, and the center of pressure is an abstract force application point.
+
+### Q3: Which constructive feature is shown in the figure? See figure (PFA-006) L: Lift Siehe Anlage 4 ^q3
+- A) Lateral stability by wing dihedral
+- B) Differential aileron deflection
+- C) Directional stability by lift generation
+- D) Longitudinal stability by wing dihedral
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing dihedral — the upward V-angle of the wings relative to the horizontal — provides lateral (roll) stability. When one wing drops, the dihedral geometry increases the angle of attack and lift on the lower wing, producing a restoring roll moment. This is a geometric/structural feature, not related to differential aileron deflection or directional stability.
+
+### Q4: "Longitudinal stability" is referred to as stability around which axis? ^q4
+- A) Lateral axis
+- B) Propeller axis
+- C) Longitudinal axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stability refers to the aircraft's tendency to maintain or return to its trimmed pitch attitude, which is rotation around the lateral axis (the axis running wingtip to wingtip). The propeller axis is not a standard stability axis; the longitudinal axis governs roll (lateral stability); the vertical axis governs yaw (directional stability).
+
+### Q5: Rotation around the vertical axis is called... ^q5
+- A) Slipping.
+- B) Pitching.
+- C) Yawing.
+- D) Rolling.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Yawing is defined as rotation around the vertical (yaw) axis, producing a nose-left or nose-right movement. Pitching is rotation around the lateral axis, rolling is rotation around the longitudinal axis, and slipping is a lateral flight condition — not a rotational axis term.
+
+### Q6: Rotation around the lateral axis is called... ^q6
+- A) Yawing.
+- B) Pitching.
+- C) Rolling.
+- D) Stalling.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pitching is rotation around the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip), causing the nose to move up or down. Yawing is rotation around the vertical axis, rolling is rotation around the longitudinal axis, and stalling is an aerodynamic phenomenon — not an axis of rotation.
+
+### Q7: The elevator moves an aeroplane around the... ^q7
+- A) Vertical axis.
+- B) Longitudinal axis.
+- C) Elevator axis.
+- D) Lateral axis.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The elevator controls pitch, which is rotation around the lateral axis. By deflecting the elevator up or down, the tailplane generates a pitching moment that raises or lowers the nose. The vertical axis governs yaw (rudder), the longitudinal axis governs roll (ailerons), and an 'elevator axis' is not a standard aeronautical term.
+
+### Q8: What has to be considered with regard to the center of gravity position? ^q8
+- A) By moving the elevator trim tab, the center of gravity can be shifted into a correct position.
+- B) Only correct loading can assure a correct and safe center of gravity position.
+- C) The center of gravity's position can only be determined during flight.
+- D) By moving the aileron trim tab, the center of gravity can be shifted into a correct position.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Only correct loading of the aircraft — placing occupants and baggage within the approved limits — can ensure the center of gravity (CG) remains within the certified forward and aft limits. Trim tabs adjust aerodynamic balance in flight but cannot physically move the CG; aileron trim tabs control roll, not pitch CG; and the CG must be verified before flight, not determined during it.
+
+### Q9: What is the advantage of differential aileron movement? ^q9
+- A) The drag of the downwards deflected aileron is lowered and the adverse yaw is smaller
+- B) The total lift remains constant during aileron deflection
+- C) The ratio of the drag coefficient to lift coefficient is increased
+- D) The adverse yaw is higher
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron movement deflects the down-going aileron less than the up-going aileron, which reduces the additional induced drag on the descending wing. This reduces adverse yaw — the unwanted yaw opposite to the intended roll direction — making coordinated turns easier. It does not keep total lift constant during aileron deflection, and it decreases, not increases, the drag-to-lift ratio.
+
+### Q10: The aerodynamic rudder balance... ^q10
+- A) Reduces the control surfaces.
+- B) Delays the stall.
+- C) Reduces the control stick forces.
+- D) Improves the rudder effectiveness.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (also called a horn balance or set-back hinge) places part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line, so aerodynamic forces partly assist the pilot's input, thereby reducing the stick/pedal forces required. It does not reduce the size of the control surface, delay stall, or improve rudder effectiveness per se.
+
+### Q11: What is the function of the static rudder balance? ^q11
+- A) To prevent control surface flutter
+- B) To trim the controls almost without any force
+- C) To increase the control stick forces
+- D) To limit the control stick forces
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A static (mass) balance places counterweights ahead of the hinge line to bring the control surface's center of mass to or forward of the hinge line. This prevents control surface flutter, which is a potentially destructive resonant oscillation. It is not designed to enable trimming without force, increase stick forces, or limit stick forces.
+
+### Q12: The trim tab at the elevator is defelected upwards. In which position is the corresponding indicator? ^q12
+- A) Neutral position
+- B) Nose-down position
+- C) Nose-up position
+- D) Laterally trimmed
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the elevator trim tab is deflected upward, it generates a downward aerodynamic force on the trailing edge of the elevator, pushing the elevator leading edge up — this produces a nose-down pitching moment. The indicator therefore shows a nose-down (forward) position. Upward trim tab deflection does not result in a neutral, nose-up, or lateral trim indication.
+
+### Q13: Point number 1 in the figure indicates which flight state? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^q13
+- A) Inverted flight
+- B) Slow flight
+- C) Stall
+- D) Best gliding angle
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 1 in figure PFA-008 represents inverted flight, where the lift polar shows a negative lift coefficient with the aircraft flying upside down. Slow flight, stall, and best gliding angle all correspond to positive (upright) portions of the polar curve, not the inverted segment.
+
+### Q14: In a co-ordinated turn, how is the relation between the load factor (n) and the stall speed (Vs)? ^q14
+- A) N is smaller than 1, Vs is greater than in straight and level flight.
+- B) N is greater than 1, Vs is smaller than in straight and level flight.
+- C) N is greater than 1, Vs is greater than in straight and level flight.
+- D) N is smaller than 1, Vs is smaller than in straight and level flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a coordinated (banked) turn, the lift vector must support both the vertical component (equal to weight) and provide the centripetal force for the turn, so total lift — and hence load factor n — exceeds 1. The higher effective weight means the wing must produce more lift to avoid descending, raising the stall speed Vs above its straight-and-level value. Options with n less than 1 or Vs decreasing are incorrect.
+
+### Q15: The pressure compensation between wind upper and lower surface results in ... ^q15
+- A) Induced drag by wing tip vortices
+- B) Laminar airflow by wing tip vortices.
+- C) Profile drag by wing tip vortices.
+- D) Lift by wing tip vortices.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The higher pressure beneath the wing and lower pressure above create a pressure differential. At the wingtips, air flows from the high-pressure lower surface around to the low-pressure upper surface, forming trailing vortices. These vortices tilt the local airflow downward (downwash), effectively reducing the angle of attack and creating induced drag — not laminar flow, profile drag, or additional lift.
+
+### Q16: At stationary glide and the same mass, what is the difference when using a thick airfoild instead of a thinner airfoil? ^q16
+- A) More drag, same lift
+- B) Less drag, less lift
+- C) More drag, less lift
+- D) Less drag, same lift
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At the same mass and in steady glide, lift equals weight regardless of airfoil thickness, so lift remains the same. However, a thicker airfoil has greater form (pressure) drag due to its larger frontal area and more adverse pressure gradients, resulting in more drag with the same lift.
+
+### Q17: What is shown by a profile polar? ^q17
+- A) Ratio between minimum rate of descent and best glide
+- B) Ratio between total lift and drag depending on angle of attack
+- C) Ratio of cA and cD at different angles of attack
+- D) Lift coefficient cA at different angles of attack
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A profile polar (Lilienthal polar) plots the lift coefficient (cA) against the drag coefficient (cD) for a wing profile at various angles of attack. It directly shows the relationship between cA and cD across the operating range. It is not a polar of minimum sink versus best glide, nor does it show total aircraft lift or drag independently.
+
+### Q18: If surrounded by airflow (v>0), any arbitrarily shaped body produces... ^q18
+- A) Drag and lift.
+- B) Drag.
+- C) Lift without drag.
+- D) Constant drag at any speed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body immersed in a moving fluid (v > 0) will produce drag due to pressure and friction forces opposing the flow. Only specially shaped (lifting) bodies oriented appropriately produce lift; an arbitrarily shaped body has no guaranteed lift but always produces drag. Drag is also not constant — it increases with the square of velocity.
+
+### Q19: Number 3 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q19
+- A) Camber line.
+- B) Thickness.
+- C) Chord.
+- D) Chord line.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In an aerofoil diagram (PFA-010), line 3 represents the camber line (mean camber line), which is the locus of points midway between the upper and lower surfaces. The chord is the straight line from leading to trailing edge, the chord line is the same geometric reference, and thickness is the vertical distance between upper and lower surfaces at any chordwise station.
+
+### Q20: Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw? ^q20
+- A) Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?
+- B) Differential aileron defletion
+- C) Full deflection of the aileron
+- D) Wing dihedral
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw is the tendency of the nose to yaw away from the intended turn direction when ailerons are applied. Differential aileron deflection (the down aileron moves less than the up aileron) reduces the extra drag on the descending wing, thereby reducing the adverse yaw moment. Wing dihedral addresses roll stability, not yaw; full aileron deflection would worsen adverse yaw.
+
+### Q21: What describes "wing loading"? ^q21
+- A) Wing area per weight
+- B) Drag per weight
+- C) Weight per wing area
+- D) Drag per wing area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading is defined as the aircraft's weight (mass times gravity) divided by the wing reference area, expressed in N/m² or kg/m². It is not wing area per weight (that would be the inverse), nor is it related to drag.
+
+### Q22: Point number 5 in the figure indicates which flight state? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^q22
+- A) Slow flight
+- B) Best gliding angle
+- C) Inverted flight
+- D) Stall
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 5 in figure PFA-008 corresponds to slow flight — a low speed, high angle-of-attack condition on the positive portion of the polar, before stall onset. Inverted flight would appear on the negative lift side, stall at the maximum cA point, and best gliding angle at the cA/cD maximum point.
+
+### Q23: Extending airbrakes results in ... ^q23
+- A) Less drag and more lift.
+- B) More drag and less lift.
+- C) More drag and more lift.
+- D) Less drag and less lift.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Extending airbrakes (spoilers/dive brakes) significantly increases profile drag, which is their primary purpose for steepening the glide path. They also partially disrupt upper-surface lift, reducing the total lift generated. The other combinations (less drag, more lift, etc.) are aerodynamically incorrect for airbrake deployment.
+
+### Q24: The glide ratio of a sailplane can be improved by which measures? ^q24
+- A) Higher airplane mass, thin airfoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- B) Lower airplane mass, correct speed, retractable gear
+- C) Cleaning, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- D) Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide ratio (L/D) is maximized by minimizing drag and maintaining the optimum speed. Cleaning the aircraft and taping gaps reduces surface roughness and leakage drag; maintaining the correct (best-glide) speed keeps the aircraft at peak L/D; a retractable undercarriage removes a major source of parasite drag. Higher mass shifts the polar but does not change the maximum L/D ratio itself. A forward CG can actually increase trim drag.
+
+### Q25: What is the diffeence between spin and spiral dive? ^q25
+- A) Spin: stall at inner wing, speed increasing rapidly; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed constant
+- B) Spin: stall at inner wing, speed constant; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed increasing rapidly
+- C) Spin: stall at outer wing, speed constant; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed increasing rapidly
+- D) Spin: stall at outer wing, speed increasing rapidly; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed constant
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a spin, one wing is stalled (typically the inner wing) while the other continues to fly, so the aircraft autorotates and descends at near-constant airspeed. In a spiral dive, both wings are flying (neither is stalled), and the aircraft enters an ever-steepening banked dive with rapidly increasing airspeed. Confusing the two is dangerous — recovery techniques differ fundamentally.
+
+### Q26: Stability around which axis is mainly influenced by the center of gravity's longitudinal position? ^q26
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Lateral axis
+- C) Gravity axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The longitudinal position of the center of gravity directly determines the pitch stability, which is stability around the lateral axis. A CG forward of the neutral point provides positive (restoring) pitch stability; too far aft reduces or reverses it. Lateral stability is mainly influenced by wing dihedral, and directional stability by the vertical tail.
+
+### Q27: What structural item provides directional stability to an airplane? ^q27
+- A) Differential aileron deflection
+- B) Wing dihedral
+- C) Large elevator
+- D) Large vertical tail
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A large vertical tail fin acts as a weathervane, generating a restoring yawing moment whenever the aircraft sideslips, thereby providing directional (yaw) stability. Wing dihedral provides lateral (roll) stability; differential aileron deflection reduces adverse yaw; a large elevator contributes to pitch stability, not directional stability.
+
+### Q28: In straight and level flight with constant performance of the engine, the angle of attack at the wing is... ^q28
+- A) Smaller than in a descent.
+- B) Greater than in a climb.
+- C) Greater than at take-off.
+- D) Smaller than in a climb.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In straight and level flight at constant engine power, the aircraft flies at a fixed speed and the wing operates at a specific angle of attack. In a climb at the same power, airspeed is lower (more energy goes into altitude gain), so the wing needs a higher angle of attack to generate sufficient lift. Therefore, the level-flight angle of attack is smaller than in a climb.
+
+### Q29: What is the function of the horizontal tail (among other things)? ^q29
+- A) To stabilise the aeroplane around the longitudinal axis
+- B) To stabilise the aeroplane around the lateral axis
+- C) To initiate a curve around the vertical axis
+- D) To stabilise the aeroplane around the vertical axis
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The horizontal tail (stabilizer and elevator) provides pitch stability — resistance to and recovery from pitch disturbances — which is stability around the lateral axis. It does not primarily provide lateral (roll) axis stability (that is the wing dihedral's role), nor does it initiate turns around the vertical axis or stabilize around the vertical axis.
+
+### Q30: Deflecting the rudder to the left causes... ^q30
+- A) Pitching of the aircraft to the left
+- B) Yawing of the aircraft to the left.
+- C) Pitching of the aircraft to the right.
+- D) Yawing of the aircraft to the right.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rudder deflects left, generating a leftward aerodynamic force on the tail, which yaws the nose to the left around the vertical axis. Pitching (nose up/down) is a movement around the lateral axis controlled by the elevator, not the rudder.
+
+### Q31: Differential aileron deflection is used to... ^q31
+- A) Reduce wake turbulence.
+- B) Avoid a stall at low angles of attack.
+- C) Keep the adverse yaw low.
+- D) Increase the rate of descent.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Differential aileron deflection reduces adverse yaw — the undesired nose movement opposite to the roll direction — by giving the down-going aileron less deflection, thereby reducing the extra induced drag on the descending wing. It is not used to reduce wake turbulence, prevent stalls, or increase the rate of descent.
+
+### Q32: How is the balance of forces affected during a turn? ^q32
+- A) A lower lift force compensates for a lower net force as compared to level flight
+- B) Lift force must be increased to compensate for the sum of centrifugal and gravitational force
+- C) The horizontal component of the lift force during a turn is the centrifugal force
+- D) The net force results from superposition of gravity and centripetal forces
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a banked turn, the lift vector is tilted sideways, so its vertical component is less than the total lift. To maintain altitude, the pilot must increase total lift above the straight-and-level value. The increased lift must balance both the weight (vertical component) and provide centripetal force (horizontal component). Load factor n = 1/cos(bank angle) and is always greater than 1 in a level turn.
+
+### Q33: What engine design at a Touring Motor Glider (TMG) results in least drag? ^q33
+- A) Engine and propeller mounted fix on the fuselage
+- B) Engine and propeller mounted stowable on the fuselage
+- C) Engine and propeller mounted fix at the aircraft's nose
+- D) Engine and propeller mounted fix at the horizontal stabilizer
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A retractable (stowable) engine and propeller arrangement on a TMG allows the powerplant to be fully folded into the fuselage when not in use, eliminating all associated parasite drag and enabling pure glider performance. Fixed nose- or tail-mounted engines and fixed fuselage mounts all produce significant drag even when the engine is off.
+
+### Q34: What effect is referred to as "adverse yaw"? ^q34
+- A) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the desired side due to less drag at the down-deflected aileron
+- B) Rudder operation results in a rolling moment to the opposite side due to more lift generated by the faster moving wing.
+- C) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the up-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the down-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw occurs because deflecting the ailerons asymmetrically changes the induced drag on each wing. The down-deflected aileron increases lift and — more importantly — also increases induced drag on that wing. This extra drag on the rising wing yaws the nose toward the descending wing, opposite to the intended direction of roll. Option C is incorrect because it states 'up-deflected aileron' causes more drag.
+
+### Q35: What is meant by "ground effect"? ^q35
+- A) Decrease of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground
+- B) Increase of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground
+- C) Increase of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground
+- D) Decrease of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Close to the ground, the ground surface restricts the downward development of wing-tip vortices. This reduces the induced downwash angle, which effectively increases the local angle of attack and thus lift, while simultaneously reducing induced drag. At altitude, vortices develop freely, downwash is stronger, and induced drag is higher.
+
+### Q36: Rudder deflections result in a turn of the aeroplane around the... ^q36
+- A) Rudder axis.
+- B) Vertical axis.
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Longitudinal axis.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rudder is the primary yaw control, rotating the aircraft around the vertical axis. Rudder deflection generates a sideways aerodynamic force on the fin/rudder assembly, which yaws the nose left or right. The lateral axis governs pitch (elevator), and the longitudinal axis governs roll (ailerons).
+
+### Q37: Through which factor listed below does the load factor increase during cruise flight? ^q37
+- A) Lower air density
+- B) A forward centre of gravity
+- C) Higher aeroplane weight
+- D) An upward gust
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upward gust suddenly increases the aircraft's angle of attack, momentarily generating more lift than needed for level flight — this additional lift acts as a load on the structure, increasing the load factor n above 1. Lower air density reduces lift (would decrease, not increase, load factor at the same speed); CG position and weight affect handling but not the instantaneous load factor from a gust.
+
+### Q38: During approch to the next updraft, the vertical speed indicator reads 3 m/s descent. Within the updraft you expect a mean rate of climb of 2 m/s. According McCready, how should you adjust the speed during approach of the updraft? ^q38
+- A) The McCready ring should be set to 2 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the sum of current rate of descent at expected rate of climb (5 m/s).
+- B) The McCready ring should be set to 3 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the expected rate of climb (2 m/s).
+- C) The McCready ring should be set to 2 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the current rate of descent (3 m/s).
+- D) Outside of thermal cells, the McCready ring should be set to 0 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the current rate of descent (3 m/s).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The McCready ring is set to the expected climb rate in the next thermal (2 m/s), and the pilot reads the recommended inter-thermal cruise speed at the point on the variometer scale corresponding to the current sink rate (3 m/s). Setting the ring to the current sink rate (3 m/s) would be incorrect; the ring is always set to the anticipated thermal strength.
+
+### Q39: What has to be considered when operating a sailplane equipped with camper flaps? ^q39
+- A) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive.
+- B) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative.
+- C) During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative.
+- D) During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During approach and landing, changing the camber flap setting from positive (increased camber) to negative (reduced or reflexed camber) would dramatically reduce lift and could lead to an abrupt loss of lift very close to the ground — a potentially fatal situation. Positive camber should be maintained throughout the approach. Negative camber settings are typically used only for high-speed cruise.
+
+### Q40: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 3? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q40
+- A) Stagnation point
+- B) Separation point
+- C) Center of pressure
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Point 3 on the aerofoil diagram (PFA-009) represents the transition point — the location where the boundary layer changes from smooth laminar flow to turbulent flow. The stagnation point is at the leading edge (point 1), the separation point is further aft where flow detaches, and the center of pressure is the theoretical point of resultant lift application.
+
+### Q41: Number 2 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q41
+- A) Profile thickness.
+- B) Chord line.
+- C) Chord line.
+- D) Angle of attack.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Number 2 in figure PFA-010 represents the chord line — the straight reference line drawn from the leading edge to the trailing edge of the aerofoil. The profile thickness is the perpendicular distance between upper and lower surfaces, and the angle of attack is the angle between the chord line and the relative airflow direction.
+
+### Q42: The angle (alpha) shown in the figure is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow Siehe Anlage 3 ^q42
+- A) Lift angle.
+- B) Angle of attack.
+- C) Angle of incidence.
+- D) Angle of inclination
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of attack (alpha) is the angle between the chord line of the aerofoil and the relative direction of the oncoming airflow (free-stream velocity vector). It is not the lift angle, which is not a standard aeronautical term; the angle of incidence is the fixed geometric angle between the chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis.
+
+### Q43: The right aileron deflects upwards, the left downwards. How does the aircraft react? ^q43
+- A) Rolling to the left, no yawing
+- B) Rolling to the right, yawing to the left
+- C) Rolling to the left, yawing to the right
+- D) Rolling to the right, yawing to the right
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the right aileron deflects upward (reducing lift on the right wing) and the left aileron deflects downward (increasing lift on the left wing), the aircraft rolls to the right. Simultaneously, the down-deflected left aileron creates more induced drag on the left (rising) wing, yawing the nose to the left — this is adverse yaw. Rolling to the left or yawing to the right would be opposite to the aileron input described.
+
+### Q44: What has to be considered when operating a sailplane with water ballast? ^q44
+- A) Best glide angle decreases.
+- B) Significant CG shifts.
+- C) Best glide speed decreases
+- D) It should stay below freezing level.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water ballast must be kept above freezing level to prevent the water from freezing in the wings, which could jam ballast dump valves, shift the CG unpredictably, and damage wing structure. Water ballast increases wing loading and shifts the best-glide speed higher, but the best glide angle (L/D ratio) remains theoretically unchanged. CG shifts with water ballast are typically minor and managed within approved limits.
+
+### Q45: Which statement describes a situation of static stability? ^q45
+- A) An aircraft distorted by external impact will return to the original position
+- B) An aircraft distorted by external impact will tend to an even more deflected position
+- C) An aircraft distorted by external impact will maintain the deflected position
+- D) An aircraft distorted by external impact can return to its original position by rudder input
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static stability means that when an aircraft is disturbed from its equilibrium by an external force (e.g., a gust), aerodynamic restoring forces automatically tend to return it toward the original position. An aircraft that moves further away from equilibrium has static instability; one that stays in the displaced position is neutrally stable; active rudder input is a pilot correction, not static stability.
+
+### Q46: A sailplane is operated with additional water ballast. How do best gliding angle and speed of best glide change, when compared to flying without water ballast? ^q46
+- A) Best gliding angle descreases, best glide speed decreases.
+- B) Best gliding angle remains unchanged, best glide speed increases.
+- C) Best gliding angle remains increases, best glide speed increases.
+- D) Best gliding angle remains unchanged, best glide speed decreases.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adding water ballast increases total aircraft weight, which requires flying faster to maintain the lift needed for level flight. The best-glide speed (minimum drag speed) therefore increases. However, the L/D ratio — and hence the best gliding angle — is a geometric property of the wing aerodynamics and remains unchanged for the same aircraft shape; water ballast does not change the aerodynamic efficiency, only the speed at which it is achieved.
+
+### Q47: Which constructive feature has the purpose to reduce stearing forces? ^q47
+- A) T-tail
+- B) Differential aileron deflection
+- C) Vortex generators
+- D) Aerodynamic rudder balance
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodynamic rudder balance (horn balance or inset hinge) extends part of the control surface ahead of the hinge line. The aerodynamic pressure on this forward portion creates a moment that partially counteracts the hinge moment, reducing the force the pilot must apply to deflect the control surface. The T-tail is a configuration choice affecting downwash; vortex generators delay stall; differential aileron reduces adverse yaw.
+
+### Q48: If surrounded by airflow (v > 0), any arbitrarily shaped body produces... ^q48
+- A) Drag and lift.
+- B) Drag.
+- C) Lift without drag.
+- D) Constant drag at any speed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Any body placed in a moving airstream (v > 0) will experience drag, which is the component of the aerodynamic resultant force parallel to the free-stream direction. This is true regardless of shape. Only specially shaped lifting bodies produce lift; drag is not constant but varies with velocity squared; and lift without drag is physically impossible.
+
+### Q49: Longitudinal stability is referred to as stability around which axis? ^q49
+- A) Lateral axis
+- B) Propeller axis
+- C) Longitudinal axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stability describes the aircraft's tendency to maintain or return to a trimmed pitch attitude — rotation around the lateral axis. The lateral axis runs from wingtip to wingtip. The propeller axis is not a stability axis; the longitudinal axis governs roll (lateral stability); the vertical axis governs yaw (directional stability).
+
+### Q50: What describes wing loading? ^q50
+- A) Wing area per weight
+- B) Drag per weight
+- C) Weight per wing area
+- D) Drag per wing area
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing loading = aircraft weight / wing reference area (e.g., N/m² or kg/m²). A higher wing loading means the wing must work harder to generate sufficient lift, resulting in higher stall speeds and better penetration of turbulence. 'Wing area per weight' is the inverse (specific wing area); drag per weight is the drag-to-weight ratio; drag per wing area is not a standard performance metric.
+
+### Q51: What effect is referred to as adverse yaw? ^q51
+- A) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the desired side due to less drag at the down-deflected aileron
+- B) Rudder operation results in a rolling moment to the opposite side due to more lift generated by the faster moving wing.
+- C) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the up-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the down-deflected aileron
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Adverse yaw results from the asymmetric induced drag created by differential aileron deflection. When the pilot deflects the ailerons to roll, the down-going aileron on the rising wing creates more induced drag than the up-going aileron on the descending wing. This extra drag on the rising wing pulls the nose toward the descending wing — opposite to the intended roll direction. Option C incorrectly attributes adverse yaw to the up-deflected aileron.
+
+### Q52: What is meant by ground effect? ^q52
+- A) Decrease of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground
+- B) Increase of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground
+- C) Increase of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground
+- D) Decrease of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ground effect (within approximately one wingspan of the ground), the ground surface physically prevents the wing-tip vortices from fully forming and rolling downward. This reduces induced downwash, increasing the effective angle of attack and thus lift, while simultaneously reducing induced drag. Pilots experience this as a 'cushion' during flare. Options with decreased lift or increased induced drag are aerodynamically incorrect.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_90.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_90.md
new file mode 100644
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+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_input_90.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1441 @@
+=== EXISTING QUESTIONS (from SPL Exam Questions EN) ===
+
+# Communications
+
+> Source: QuizVDS.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 50 questions
+> Free practice: https://quizvds.it/en-en/quiz/spl-en
+
+---
+
+### Q1: In which situations should a pilot use blind transmissions? ^q1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q1)*
+- A) When a pilot has flown into cloud or fog unintentionally and therefore would like to request navigational assistance from a ground unit
+- B) When the traffic situation at an airport allows the transmission of information which does not need to be acknowledged by the ground station
+- C) When no radio communication can be established with the appropriate aeronautical station, but when evidence exists that transmissions are received at that ground unit
+- D) When a transmission containing important navigational or technical information is to be sent to several stations at the same time
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission is used when two-way communication cannot be established, but the pilot has reason to believe the ground station can still receive. This commonly occurs when the aircraft receiver is faulty. The pilot continues transmitting relevant information — such as position and intentions — so the ground unit can at least track the situation and coordinate as needed.
+
+### Q2: Which abbreviation is used for the term "abeam"? ^q2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q2)*
+- A) ABB
+- B) ABM
+- C) ABE
+- D) ABA
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ABM is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for "abeam," meaning a position at a right angle to the aircraft's track — i.e., directly to the side. This abbreviation appears in flight plans, ATC communications, and aeronautical charts. It is important to use the standardized form rather than informal alternatives to ensure unambiguous interpretation across language barriers.
+
+### Q3: Which abbreviation is used for the term "visual flight rules"? ^q3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q3)*
+- A) VFS
+- B) VRU
+- C) VFR
+- D) VMC
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VFR stands for Visual Flight Rules, the regulatory framework under which a pilot operates by visual reference to the ground and other aircraft. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) refers to the weather conditions themselves, not the rules. VFR and VMC are related but distinct terms — a pilot files and flies VFR when the weather meets VMC criteria.
+
+### Q4: Which abbreviation is used for the term "obstacle"? ^q4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q4)*
+- A) OBST
+- B) OBTC
+- C) OST
+- D) OBS
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** OBST is the ICAO-standard abbreviation for obstacle, as defined in ICAO Annex 10 and used in NOTAMs, aeronautical publications, and ATC communications. It appears frequently in aerodrome obstacle data and NOTAM texts. OBS, while intuitively plausible, is reserved for other terms (e.g., observation) in ICAO documentation.
+
+### Q5: What does the abbreviation "FIS" stand for? ^q5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q5)*
+- A) Flight information service
+- B) Flashing information system
+- C) Flight information system
+- D) Flashing information service
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS — Flight Information Service — is a service provided by ATC units to give pilots information useful for the safe and efficient conduct of flight, such as weather, NOTAMs, and airspace activity. In many countries, glider pilots operating outside controlled airspace will communicate with an FIS unit (e.g., on a national FIS frequency) rather than a tower or radar controller.
+
+### Q6: What does the abbreviaton "FIR" stand for? ^q6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q6)*
+- A) Flight information region
+- B) Flight integrity receiver
+- C) Flow integrity required
+- D) Flow information radar
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) is a defined volume of airspace within which flight information service and alerting service are provided. Each country or group of countries has one or more FIRs, and they cover all airspace including lower and upper airspace. Glider pilots should know the FIR they are operating in, as this determines which FIS frequency applies.
+
+### Q7: What does the abbreviation "H24" stand for? ^q7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q7)*
+- A) No specific opening times
+- B) 24 h service
+- C) Sunrise to sunset
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** H24 indicates continuous operation — 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. This designation appears in AIP entries and NOTAMs to describe permanently staffed facilities such as major ATC centres or rescue coordination centres. It contrasts with HX (no specific hours), HJ (sunrise to sunset), and HN (sunset to sunrise).
+
+### Q8: What does the abbreviation "HX" stand for? ^q8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q8)*
+- A) 24 h service
+- B) Sunrise to sunset
+- C) No specific opening hours
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HX means the facility operates at no specific or predetermined hours — it may be available on request or intermittently. Pilots must verify actual availability via NOTAM or direct contact before relying on such a service. This is distinct from H24 (always open), HJ (daylight only), and HN (night only).
+
+### Q9: The altimeter has to be set to what value in order to show zero on ground? ^q9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q9)*
+- A) QTE
+- B) QFE
+- C) QNE
+- D) QNH
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at aerodrome level. When set on the altimeter's subscale, the instrument reads zero when the aircraft is on the ground at that aerodrome. This setting is sometimes used at glider aerodromes so circuit heights are read directly as heights above field. QNH, by contrast, gives altitude above mean sea level.
+
+### Q10: Which altitude is displayed on the altimeter when set to a specific QNH? ^q10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q10)*
+- A) Altitude in relation to mean sea level
+- B) Altitude in relation to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+- C) Altitude in relation to the highest elevation within 10 km
+- D) Altitude in relation to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the local altimeter setting that, when dialled into the subscale, causes the altimeter to indicate the aircraft's altitude above mean sea level (AMSL). It is the standard setting used for navigation and ATC altitude assignments below the transition altitude. Glider pilots use QNH to ensure terrain clearance and compliance with published airspace limits.
+
+### Q11: Which altitude is displayed on the altimeter when set to a specific QFE? ^q11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q11)*
+- A) Altitude in relation to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+- B) Altitude in relation to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+- C) Altitude in relation to mean sea level
+- D) Altitude in relation to the highest elevation within 10 km
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With QFE set, the altimeter reads height above the reference aerodrome — typically showing zero on the ground and the circuit height directly as a height above field. While useful at the home aerodrome, QFE requires care when operating away from base, as the reading no longer relates to sea level or terrain elsewhere.
+
+### Q12: What is the correct term for a message used for air traffic control? ^q12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q12)*
+- A) Meteorological message
+- B) Message related to direction finding
+- C) Flight safety message
+- D) Flight regularity message
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO classifies aeronautical messages by priority. Flight safety messages — which include ATC instructions, position reports, and related communications — hold the highest priority after distress and urgency messages. This classification ensures that safety-critical information is never delayed by lower-priority traffic such as administrative or regularity messages.
+
+### Q13: Distress messages are messages... ^q13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q13)*
+- A) Concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- B) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities which are important for the safety and regularity of flight operations.
+- C) Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+- D) Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A distress situation — signaled by the phrase MAYDAY (spoken three times) — exists when an aircraft or its occupants face a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. This is the highest priority category of aeronautical communication. The transponder code 7700 is squawked to alert radar services. Urgency (PAN PAN) is the next level down, involving a serious but not immediately life-threatening condition.
+
+### Q14: Urgency messages are messages... ^q14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q14)*
+- A) Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight
+- B) Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+- C) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- D) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (PAN PAN, spoken three times) concerns a serious condition that requires timely assistance but does not yet pose a grave and imminent danger. Examples include medical situations, engine problems that are controllable, or a pilot who is uncertain of position. Urgency ranks below distress (MAYDAY) but above all routine traffic in priority.
+
+### Q15: Regularity messages are messages... ^q15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q15)*
+- A) Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance
+- B) Sent by an aircraft operating agency or an aircraft of immediate concern to an aircraft in flight.
+- C) Concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- D) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Regularity messages relate to the operation and maintenance of facilities necessary for flight operations — essentially administrative and logistical communications. They carry the lowest priority in the ICAO message hierarchy, below distress, urgency, flight safety, meteorological, and NOTAM messages. They should never delay safety-critical transmissions.
+
+### Q16: Which of the following messages has the highest priority? ^q16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q16)*
+- A) Turn left
+- B) Wind 300 degrees, 5 knots
+- C) Request QDM
+- D) QNH 1013
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A request for QDM (magnetic heading to steer to reach a station) implies the pilot may be uncertain of position or unable to navigate independently — making it a potential urgency or flight safety matter. Among the options listed, it carries the highest priority because it relates to navigation assistance and pilot safety. Wind and QNH information are routine, while "Turn left" is a standard ATC instruction.
+
+### Q17: What is the correct way to transmit the call sign HB-YKM? ^q17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q17)*
+- A) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- B) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO phonetic alphabet specifies exact words for each letter. Y is always "Yankee" (not "Yuliett" — that is J), and M is "Mike" (not "Mikro"). H is "Hotel" and B is "Bravo." Using the correct phonetic words is essential to avoid confusion, particularly between letters that sound similar in noisy radio conditions.
+
+### Q18: What is the correct way to transmit the call sign OE-JVK? ^q18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q18)*
+- A) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+- D) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** O is "Oscar" (not "Omega"), J is "Juliett" (not "Jankee"), and K is "Kilo" (never "Kilogramm"). The ICAO phonetic alphabet uses standardized English-based words chosen for their intelligibility across different languages. Using non-standard alternatives such as "Omega" or "Jankee" can cause confusion and is not permitted in standard radio communications.
+
+### Q19: An altitude of 4500 ft is transmitted as... ^q19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q19)*
+- A) Four five tousand.
+- B) Four five zero zero.
+- C) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- D) Four tousand five hundred.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO phraseology for altitudes uses the words "thousand" and "hundred" where applicable. 4500 ft is correctly spoken as "four thousand five hundred." Digit-by-digit recitation (e.g., "four five zero zero") is used for QNH and transponder codes, not for altitudes. The word "tousand" in the distractors also represents a common non-standard pronunciation to avoid.
+
+### Q20: A heading of 285 degrees is correctly transmitted as... ^q20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q20)*
+- A) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- B) Two eight five hundred.
+- C) Two eight five.
+- D) Two hundred eight five.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Headings and bearings are always transmitted as three individual digits, each spoken separately: "two eight five." The words "hundred" or "thousand" are not used for headings. This digit-by-digit method prevents any ambiguity — "two eight five" can only mean 285 degrees, whereas "two hundred eighty-five" could theoretically be misheard.
+
+### Q21: A frequency of 119.500 MHz is correctly transmitted as... ^q21
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q21)*
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero.
+- B) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radio frequencies are transmitted digit by digit with "decimal" for the decimal point, and trailing zeros are dropped. 119.500 MHz is therefore "one one niner decimal five." Note that "niner" is used for 9 to avoid confusion with the German/Dutch "nein" (no). Only significant digits after the decimal are spoken; ".500" reduces to ".5."
+
+### Q22: The directional information "12 o'clock" is correctly transmitted as... ^q22
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q22)*
+- A) One two.
+- B) Twelve o'clock.
+- C) One two hundred.
+- D) One two o'clock
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clock position references used to report traffic or terrain are always spoken as a natural number followed by "o'clock": "twelve o'clock" means directly ahead. This is a standard phraseology format used worldwide for traffic advisories. Omitting "o'clock" (saying just "twelve") could be confused with other numerical data, so the full expression is required.
+
+### Q23: Times are transmitted as... ^q23
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q23)*
+- A) Local time.
+- B) Time zone time.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Standard time.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** All aeronautical communications use UTC (Coordinated Universal Time), previously known as GMT or Zulu time. This ensures consistency across time zones and eliminates ambiguity in international operations. Pilots must convert local time to UTC when filing flight plans or making ATC reports, and controllers always issue times in UTC.
+
+### Q24: If there is any doubt about ambiguity, a time of 1620 is to be transmitted as... ^q24
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q24)*
+- A) Sixteen twenty
+- B) Two zero.
+- C) One six two zero.
+- D) One tousand six hundred two zero
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When transmitting times and there is any risk of ambiguity (e.g., confusion about whether only minutes or the full time is meant), ICAO requires the full four-digit UTC time spoken as individual digits: "one six two zero." This removes any doubt about whether "twenty" refers to 1620 or 0020. Abbreviated times (just minutes) are only acceptable when the hour is clearly established.
+
+### Q25: What is the meaning of the phrase "Roger"? ^q25
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q25)*
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- C) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- D) I have received all of your last transmission
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Roger" means "I have received all of your last transmission" — it is a receipt acknowledgement only, not a commitment to comply. It must not be used where readback of specific instructions is required (such as clearances, headings, or squawk codes). Pilots sometimes confuse "Roger" with "Wilco" (will comply) — the distinction is important for ATC communication integrity.
+
+### Q26: What is the meaning of the phrase "Correction"? ^q26
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q26)*
+- A) I have received all of your last transmission
+- B) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Correction" is used mid-transmission when a pilot or controller realizes they have made an error. The word is spoken, then the correct information follows immediately. This prevents the receiving party from acting on faulty data. It is distinct from "Negative" (which corrects a wrong assumption) and avoids the ambiguity of simply restarting a sentence.
+
+### Q27: What is the meaning of the phrase "Approved"? ^q27
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q27)*
+- A) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- B) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- C) I have received all of your last transmission
+- D) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Approved" grants permission for a specific action that the pilot has proposed or requested. For example, a pilot requesting "request backtrack runway 27" may receive "Approved." It is synonymous with "Cleared" in some contexts but specifically responds to a pilot's proposal. "Wilco" (answer A) is the pilot's response indicating they will comply with an instruction already given.
+
+### Q28: Which phrase does a pilot use when he / she wants to check the readability of his / her transmission? ^q28
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q28)*
+- A) Request readability
+- B) What is the communication like?
+- C) You read me five
+- D) How do you read?
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "How do you read?" is the standard ICAO phrase used to request a readability check from the receiving station. The expected response uses the readability scale from 1 (unreadable) to 5 (perfectly readable), e.g., "I read you five." This phrase is used when the pilot suspects their transmission quality may be poor, such as after changing frequency or noting interference.
+
+### Q29: Which phrase is used by a pilot when he wants to fly through controlled airspace? ^q29
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q29)*
+- A) Want
+- B) Apply
+- C) Would like
+- D) Request
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Request" is the standard ICAO phraseology term for when a pilot wishes to obtain a clearance, service, or permission. Colloquial alternatives such as "I want" or "I would like" are not standard phraseology. For example: "Dusseldorf Radar, D-EAZF, request transit controlled airspace." Using standardized vocabulary reduces the risk of misunderstanding, particularly in high-workload or multilingual environments.
+
+### Q30: What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with "yes"? ^q30
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q30)*
+- A) Affirm
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirmative
+- D) Roger
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Affirm" is the standard ICAO word for yes. "Affirmative" is common in military communications but "Affirm" is the correct civil aviation standard. The word "Yes" is not part of standard phraseology and should be avoided as it can be misheard. "Roger" means message received, not agreement, and must not be confused with "Affirm."
+
+### Q31: What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with "no"? ^q31
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q31)*
+- A) Negative
+- B) No
+- C) Not
+- D) Finish
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Negative" is the standard ICAO phraseology for "no" or "that is not correct." It is unambiguous and internationally understood. The plain word "No" is not standard phraseology and is avoided because it may be misheard or misunderstood across language barriers. "Negative" also serves to correct an incorrect assumption made by the other party.
+
+### Q32: Which phrase is to be used when a pilot wants the tower to know that he is ready for take-off? ^q32
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q32)*
+- A) Ready for departure
+- B) Request take-off
+- C) Ready for start-up
+- D) Ready
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Ready for departure" is the standard phrase indicating the aircraft is at the holding point and prepared to take off. Note that the word "take-off" is only ever used in the actual clearance ("Cleared for take-off") or its cancellation ("Cancel take-off clearance") — pilots say "departure" for all other references to avoid premature action on a misheard word. "Ready" alone is incomplete and non-standard.
+
+### Q33: What phrase is used by a pilot to inform the tower about a go-around? ^q33
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q33)*
+- A) Pulling up
+- B) Going around
+- C) No landing
+- D) Approach canceled
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Going around" is the standard ICAO phrase used by a pilot to notify ATC that they are discontinuing an approach and initiating a missed approach or go-around. It must be transmitted immediately when the decision is made, before any other communication. ATC will then provide instructions (e.g., runway heading, altitude to maintain). Non-standard alternatives like "no landing" or "approach canceled" are not recognized phraseology.
+
+### Q34: What is the call sign of the aerodrome control? ^q34
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q34)*
+- A) Ground
+- B) Control
+- C) Tower
+- D) Airfield
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aerodrome control unit — responsible for aircraft on the runway and in the immediate circuit area — uses the call sign suffix "Tower" (e.g., "Dusseldorf Tower"). This distinguishes it from ground movement control ("Ground"), approach control ("Approach" or "Radar"), and area control ("Control"). Glider pilots operating at controlled aerodromes must contact the correct unit using the appropriate call sign.
+
+### Q35: What is the call sign of the surface movement control? ^q35
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q35)*
+- A) Control
+- B) Tower
+- C) Earth
+- D) Ground
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface movement control — responsible for the movement of aircraft and vehicles on the manoeuvring area (taxiways, aprons) other than the runway — uses the call sign suffix "Ground" (e.g., "Frankfurt Ground"). At smaller aerodromes, the tower may handle both functions on a single frequency, but at larger airports these are separated. Pilots should not taxi without clearance from Ground.
+
+### Q36: What is the call sign of the flight information service? ^q36
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q36)*
+- A) Flight information
+- B) Info
+- C) Advice
+- D) Information
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS units use the call sign suffix "Information" (e.g., "Langen Information" or "Scottish Information"). This service provides traffic information, weather updates, and other advisories to VFR pilots operating outside controlled airspace. Glider pilots frequently use FIS frequencies during cross-country flights and must identify the unit using the correct call sign suffix.
+
+### Q37: What is the correct abbreviation of the call sign D-EAZF? ^q37
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q37)*
+- A) AZF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) DEF
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When abbreviating a five-character civil aircraft call sign, ICAO standard procedure uses the first character (nationality prefix) plus the last two characters: D-EAZF becomes D-ZF, spoken as "Delta Zulu Foxtrot" or simply "DZF." This abbreviated form may only be used after the ground station has itself used the abbreviation — establishing that both parties have unambiguously identified the aircraft.
+
+### Q38: In what case is the pilot allowed to abbreviate the call sign of his aircraft? ^q38
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q38)*
+- A) After passing the first reporting point
+- B) If there is little traffic in the traffic circuit
+- C) Within controlled airspace
+- D) After the ground station has used the abbreviation
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot may only begin using the abbreviated call sign once the ground station has used it first. This rule ensures that identification is unambiguous — the controller has confirmed which aircraft they are communicating with before the shortened form is adopted. Self-initiated abbreviation can lead to confusion if multiple aircraft with similar endings are on frequency.
+
+### Q39: What is the correct way of using the aircraft call sign at first contact? ^q39
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q39)*
+- A) Using the last two characters only
+- B) Using all characters
+- C) Using the first three characters only
+- D) Using the first two characters only
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At first contact with any ATC unit, the pilot must use the full aircraft call sign (e.g., D-EAZF in full as "Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot"). This allows the controller to positively identify the aircraft before any abbreviation is established. Using a partial call sign at first contact risks confusion with other aircraft and is contrary to ICAO standard procedures.
+
+### Q40: What is the correct way of establishing radio communication between D-EAZF and Dusseldorf Tower? ^q40
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q40)*
+- A) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Tower from D-EAZF
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard format for initial contact is: station called, then own call sign — "Dusseldorf Tower, Delta Echo Alfa Zulu Foxtrot." The word "Over" is optional at the end of a transmission but not required for initial calls. The format "Tower from D-EAZF" is non-standard and should be avoided. The station is addressed first so they know to listen, then the calling aircraft identifies itself.
+
+### Q41: What does a readability of 1 indicate? ^q41
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q41)*
+- A) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- B) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- C) The transmission is readable now and then
+- D) The transmission is unreadable
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO readability scale runs from 1 to 5: 1 = Unreadable, 2 = Readable now and then, 3 = Readable but with difficulty, 4 = Readable, 5 = Perfectly readable. A readability of 1 means the receiving station cannot understand the transmission at all. If a pilot receives a readability 1 report, they should consider changing frequency, transmitter power, or antenna position.
+
+### Q42: What does a readability of 2 indicate? ^q42
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q42)*
+- A) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- B) The transmission is unreadable
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is readable now and then
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 2 means the transmission is only intermittently intelligible — the receiving station catches parts of the message but cannot reliably understand it. This might result from atmospheric interference, weak signal, or excessive background noise. In practice, a pilot reporting readability 2 should attempt to improve transmission quality or relay through another aircraft.
+
+### Q43: What does a readability of 3 indicate? ^q43
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q43)*
+- A) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- B) The transmission is readable now and then
+- C) The transmission is unreadable
+- D) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 3 means the transmission is intelligible but requires effort — words may be unclear and the listener must concentrate. This level is often acceptable for short operational messages but is not ideal for complex instructions or clearances. Pilots and controllers should attempt to improve signal quality if readability remains at 3 for extended periods.
+
+### Q44: What does a readability of 5 indicate? ^q44
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q44)*
+- A) The transmission is readable now and then
+- B) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- C) The transmission is unreadable
+- D) The transmission is perfectly readable
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Readability 5 is the best possible signal quality — the transmission is perfectly clear and intelligible. When asked "How do you read?" a response of "I read you five" (or "readability five") indicates ideal communication conditions. Glider pilots should aim for readability 4-5 on all ATC frequencies, particularly when receiving critical instructions such as clearances or emergency guidance.
+
+### Q45: Which information from a ground station does not require readback? ^q45
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q45)*
+- A) Runway in use
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Wind
+- D) SSR-Code
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind information is considered advisory and does not require readback — it is acknowledged with "Roger" or simply absorbed. Items that must be read back include: ATC route clearances, clearances to enter, land on, take off from, cross, or backtrack a runway, runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, heading and speed instructions. Wind is not in this safety-critical readback category.
+
+### Q46: Which information from a ground station does not require readback? ^q46
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q46)*
+- A) Altimeter setting
+- B) Traffic information
+- C) Heading
+- D) Taxi instructions
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Traffic information (e.g., "traffic at your two o'clock, one thousand feet above") is acknowledged with "Roger" or "Traffic in sight" — it does not require a formal readback. In contrast, altimeter settings, headings, and taxi instructions are all subject to mandatory readback requirements under ICAO procedures, as errors in these items can have direct safety consequences.
+
+### Q47: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off"? ^q47
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q47)*
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The readback must include all safety-critical items: departure instructions (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, turn right heading 220), runway in use (runway 12), and the take-off clearance. Wind information does not require readback and is correctly omitted. Option B incorrectly reads back the wind, and option C uses "wilco" inappropriately mid-readback. The runway and clearance phrase must be included.
+
+### Q48: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction "Next report PAH"? ^q48
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q48)*
+- A) Positive
+- B) Wilco
+- C) Report PAH
+- D) Roger
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Wilco" (from "will comply") is the correct response when a pilot understands and intends to comply with an instruction. "Next report PAH" is an instruction requiring future action, so "Wilco" confirms both receipt and intention to comply. "Roger" only confirms receipt without implying compliance. "Positive" is not standard phraseology in this context.
+
+### Q49: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325"? ^q49
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q49)*
+- A) Roger
+- B) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- C) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- D) Wilco
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SSR transponder codes (squawk codes) and frequency changes must be read back — they are safety-critical items. The pilot must read back the squawk code (4321) and the new frequency (131.325) to confirm correct receipt. "Roger" alone or "Wilco" alone is insufficient. If the wrong code is set or the wrong frequency dialled, both situations carry serious safety implications.
+
+### Q50: What is the correct way of acknowledging "You are now entering airspace Delta"? ^q50
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^q50)*
+- A) Roger
+- B) Airspace Delta
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Entering
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "You are now entering airspace Delta" is an informational statement from ATC — it describes what is happening, not an instruction requiring future action. "Roger" (I have received your message) is therefore the correct and sufficient response. "Wilco" would imply a future action to comply with, which is inappropriate here. No readback of the airspace type is required for a pure information message.
+
+## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q8: A pilot sends the following message to ATC: "We are landing at 10:45. Please order us a taxi." What type of message is this? ^bazl_90_8
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_8)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) It is an inadmissible message.
+- B) It is a message relating to the regularity of flights.
+- C) It is a service message.
+- D) It is an urgency message.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC frequencies must not be used for personal requests (taxi). Such a message is inadmissible because it monopolizes a frequency reserved for aeronautical communications and does not meet any criteria for flight safety or regularity.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q19: You are flying VFR and have received ATC clearance to enter Class C airspace in order to land. Shortly after entering this airspace, your radio fails. What do you do if no other special provisions apply? ^bazl_90_19
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_19)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) You set the transponder to code 7600, continue in accordance with the last clearance and follow light signals from the control tower.
+- B) Regardless of the clearance obtained, you are no longer authorized to fly in this airspace. You set the transponder to code 7600, leave the airspace as quickly as possible and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome.
+- C) By virtue of the clearance issued, you have the right to fly in Class C airspace and land there. You only need to set the transponder to code 7700.
+- D) You must head to the alternate aerodrome by the most direct route and set the transponder to code 7000.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In VFR flight, radio is mandatory in Class C airspace. Without radio, the previously obtained clearance is insufficient — the pilot must set the transponder to code 7600 (radio failure), leave the controlled airspace as quickly as possible and land at the nearest suitable aerodrome.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q4: Through which channel can you obtain in-flight routine aviation meteorological observations (METAR) for several specific airports? ^bazl_90_4
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_4)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Via GAMET.
+- B) Via VOLMET.
+- C) Via SIGMET.
+- D) Via AIRMET.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET is the continuous radio broadcast service for METARs and TAFs for several aerodromes. It allows pilots in flight to obtain real-time meteorological observations for their destination and alternate aerodromes. SIGMET and AIRMET relate to significant meteorological phenomena over a region, not observations for specific aerodromes.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q11: What does the abbreviation QNH mean? ^bazl_90_11
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_11)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The altimeter setting required to read the aerodrome elevation when on the ground.
+- B) The atmospheric pressure measured at the highest obstacle on the aerodrome.
+- C) The atmospheric pressure at aerodrome level (or at the runway threshold).
+- D) The atmospheric pressure measured at a point on the Earth's surface.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting referenced to mean sea level. When set in the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads aerodrome elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. It is distinct from QFE (pressure at aerodrome level, altimeter reads zero on the ground) and QNE (standard 1013.25 hPa, used in flight level airspace).
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q5: What does the abbreviation QDM mean? ^bazl_90_5
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_5)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Magnetic bearing from the radio beacon.
+- B) Magnetic heading to steer to reach the radio beacon (nil wind).
+- C) True bearing from the radio beacon.
+- D) True heading to steer to reach the radio beacon (nil wind).
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QDM is the magnetic heading to steer to reach the station (without wind correction). It is distinct from QDR (magnetic bearing from the station) and QTE (true bearing from the station). A request for QDM often indicates that the pilot is trying to orientate — which gives it a potentially urgent character.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q13: The radiotelephony distress signal (MAYDAY) or the urgency signal (PAN PAN) must be...? ^bazl_90_13
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_13)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) spoken once.
+- B) spoken twice.
+- C) spoken three times.
+- D) spoken four times.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distress phrase "MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY" or the urgency phrase "PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN PAN" — the key word is repeated three times. This repetition is required by ICAO to ensure that the nature of the message is clearly identified even in poor radio conditions or with partial interference.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q16: What information should, where possible, be included in an urgency message? ^bazl_90_16
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_16)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) The identification and type of aircraft, the nature of the emergency, the intentions of the flight crew, and the position, level and heading of the aircraft.
+- B) The identification and type of aircraft, the assistance required, the route, the destination aerodrome.
+- C) The identification of the aircraft, the departure aerodrome, the position, level and heading of the aircraft.
+- D) The identification of the aircraft, its position and level, the nature of the emergency, the assistance required.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (PAN PAN) should, where possible, contain: the identification and type of aircraft, the nature of the emergency, the intentions of the crew, and the position, level and heading of the aircraft. These elements allow ATC services to provide effective assistance and coordinate the necessary resources.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q10: What is the correct order of priority for messages in the aeronautical mobile service? ^bazl_90_10
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_10)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) 1. Flight safety messages, 2. Distress messages, 3. Urgency messages.
+- B) 1. Distress messages, 2. Urgency messages, 3. Flight safety messages.
+- C) 1. Distress messages, 2. Flight safety messages, 3. Urgency messages.
+- D) 1. Urgency messages, 2. Distress messages, 3. Flight safety messages.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The order of priority in the aeronautical mobile service is: 1. Distress messages (MAYDAY), 2. Urgency messages (PAN PAN), 3. Flight safety messages. Meteorological messages (SIGMET, etc.) and then regularity messages follow. This order ensures that life-threatening situations are always addressed first.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q20: How are the letters BAFO spelled in the ICAO phonetic alphabet? ^bazl_90_20
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_20)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OTTO
+- B) BRAVO ANNA FOX OSCAR
+- C) BETA ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+- D) BRAVO ALPHA FOXTROT OSCAR
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO phonetic alphabet: B = Bravo, A = Alpha, F = Foxtrot, O = Oscar. Alternatives such as "Otto", "Anna", "Fox" or "Beta" are non-standard local variants that must not be used in international aeronautical communications.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q1: You are piloting your aircraft on a north-easterly heading at 2,500 feet. What do you reply to air traffic control when it asks for your position? ^bazl_90_1
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_1)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Heading 045 at 2,500 feet.
+- B) Heading 045 at flight level 25.
+- C) Heading 45 at 2,500 feet.
+- D) 045 degrees and 2,500 feet.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The correct format for transmitting a position/heading is: "Heading" followed by three digits (always three, so "045" not "45"), then the altitude in feet when below the transition altitude. Flight level (FL) is only used above the transition altitude. The format "045 degrees and 2,500 feet" mixes the degree symbol and conjunction, which are not part of standard phraseology.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q18: For which frequency range do radio waves travel the greatest distance? ^bazl_90_18
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_18)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) MW
+- B) LW
+- C) VHF
+- D) UHF
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Long waves (LW / LF, Low Frequency) travel the greatest distance because they diffract around the curvature of the Earth. VHF and UHF waves used in aviation for radio communications propagate by line of sight and are therefore limited by the radio horizon distance. Medium waves (MW) have an intermediate range.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q15: What abbreviation designates the universal time system used by air navigation services? ^bazl_90_15
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_15)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) UTC
+- B) LT
+- C) GMT
+- D) LMT
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is the time standard used in international aviation. Although GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) is historically similar, UTC is the official designation adopted by ICAO. LT (Local Time) and LMT (Local Mean Time) are not used in official aeronautical communications and publications.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q2: During radio communications, speech should be maintained at as steady a rate as possible. According to ICAO, what is the recommended speaking rate? ^bazl_90_2
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_2)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) 50 words/minute.
+- B) 100 words/minute.
+- C) 150 words/minute.
+- D) 200 words/minute.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO recommends a speaking rate of approximately 100 words per minute for radio communications. An excessively high rate reduces intelligibility, especially in degraded radio conditions or for interlocutors whose first language is not English. A steady, moderate rate facilitates understanding and reduces the risk of miscommunication.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q14: Which of the following statements concerning radiotelephony in the aeronautical mobile service is correct? ^bazl_90_14
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_14)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) In principle, use plain language as it is most understandable. Standard phraseology may only be used in connection with ATC clearances.
+- B) It does not matter whether ICAO standard phraseology or plain language is used, provided the message is understandable.
+- C) ICAO standard phraseology should in principle be used to avoid misunderstandings. Plain language is to be used only in situations for which there is no corresponding standard phraseology.
+- D) In communications with ATC, use exclusively ICAO standard phraseology. Plain language is only permitted at uncontrolled aerodromes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO standard phraseology is the norm in aeronautical radiotelephony — it reduces the risk of misunderstandings and ensures mutual understanding in a multilingual environment. Plain language is only permitted for situations that have no corresponding standard phraseology. Option D is too restrictive: plain language remains permissible in certain contexts even in controlled airspace.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q7: What is the correct English term for "service d'information de vol d'aérodrome"? ^bazl_90_7
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_7)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) AERODROME INFORMATION SERVICE
+- B) AIRPORT TRAFFIC INFORMATION SERVICE
+- C) FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+- D) AERODROME FLIGHT INFORMATION SERVICE
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** AFIS (Aerodrome Flight Information Service) is the flight information service specific to an aerodrome. It provides pilots with information about aerodrome activity (wind, runway in use, known traffic) but is not a control service — AFIS does not issue clearances. It is distinct from FIS (Flight Information Service) which covers a larger region.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q17: What is the correct abbreviated call sign for an aircraft whose full call sign is AB-CDE? ^bazl_90_17
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_17)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) CDE
+- B) AB-DE
+- C) A-DE
+- D) DE
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The abbreviation rule for five-character civil aircraft call signs retains the first letter (nationality prefix) and the last two characters: AB-CDE becomes A-DE. This rule applies in the same way as for D-EAZF becoming D-ZF. Abbreviation is only permitted after the ground station has used it first.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q9: When is a pilot permitted to use an abbreviated call sign? ^bazl_90_9
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_9)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) After the first call.
+- B) At any time provided there is no risk of confusion.
+- C) Never. Only the air navigation service has the right to abbreviate the call sign.
+- D) If the ground station communicates in this way.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The pilot may abbreviate their call sign only after the ground station has done so first. The initiative to abbreviate always belongs to the controller or ground operator. If the ground station has not abbreviated the call sign, the pilot must use the full call sign.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q12: Which instructions and information must always be read back? ^bazl_90_12
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_12)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) Surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes.
+- B) Runway in use, visibility, surface wind, heading instructions, altimeter settings.
+- C) Surface wind, visibility, temperature, runway in use, altimeter settings, heading and speed instructions.
+- D) Runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes, level instructions, heading and speed instructions.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The items that must always be read back are: runway in use, altimeter settings, SSR codes (transponder), level instructions (altitude/FL), and heading and speed instructions. Surface wind and visibility are advisory information that do not require a read-back. This list corresponds exactly to the ICAO/EASA requirements for VFR operations.
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q6: What does the instruction "Squawk ident" mean to you? ^bazl_90_6
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_6)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) You must press the "IDENT" button on your transponder.
+- B) You must make a turn to identify yourself.
+- C) You must re-enter the transponder code that has been assigned to you.
+- D) You have been identified by radar.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Squawk ident" is the controller's instruction asking the pilot to press the IDENT button on their transponder. This generates a special signal on the radar display that makes the aircraft's symbol blink or stand out, allowing the controller to identify it quickly among surrounding traffic. Identification is confirmed by the controller with "Identified" or "Squawk confirmed."
+
+### BAZL Br.90 Q3: How does a pilot end the read-back of an ATC clearance? ^bazl_90_3
+
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_90_3)*
+> *Source: BAZL/OFAC Serie 1 - Branches Communes*
+
+- A) With "ROGER".
+- B) With "WILCO".
+- C) With the call sign of the ATC ground station.
+- D) With the call sign of their aircraft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The read-back of an ATC clearance always ends with the call sign of the aircraft. This allows the controller to confirm unambiguously which aircraft has received and repeated the clearance. Ending with the call sign of the ground station would be a procedural error. "Roger" and "Wilco" may appear in the response but do not replace the final aircraft identification.
+
+---
+
+## Series 2 — FOCA/BAZL Mock Exam
+
+### BAZL 901 Q1 — In which category can messages from an aircraft in a state characterized by a serious and/or imminent danger requiring immediate assistance be classified? ^bazl_901_1
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_1)*
+- A) Messages concerning flight safety.
+- B) Messages concerning flight regularity.
+- C) Urgency messages.
+- D) Distress messages.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft in a distress situation transmits distress messages. Distress implies a serious and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance (ICAO Annex 10).
+
+### BAZL 901 Q2 — From what point may an aircraft use its abbreviated callsign? ^bazl_901_2
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_2)*
+- A) When there is no possibility of confusion.
+- B) Once communication is well established.
+- C) In case of heavy traffic.
+- D) When the aeronautical station has used the abbreviated callsign when addressing the aircraft.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft may use its abbreviated callsign once radio communication is well established with the ground station, and only after the ground station has itself used the abbreviated callsign first.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q3 — An aircraft fails to establish radio contact with a ground station on either the designated frequency or any other appropriate frequency. What action must the pilot take? ^bazl_901_3
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_3)*
+- A) Display SSR emergency code 7500.
+- B) Try to establish communication with other aircraft or other aeronautical stations.
+- C) Land at the nearest aerodrome on route.
+- D) Proceed to the alternate aerodrome.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If an aircraft fails to establish contact, it should try to establish communication with other aircraft or stations that could relay the message. Code 7500 is for hijacking, not radio failure.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q4 — In the aeronautical mobile service, which of the following frequencies is an international distress frequency? ^bazl_901_4
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_4)*
+- A) 6500 KHz.
+- B) 121.500KHz.
+- C) 121.500MHz.
+- D) 123.45MHz.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The international VHF distress frequency is 121.500 MHz. (121.500 KHz would be HF, not VHF). This is the universal guard frequency.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q5 — How must the letters NDGF be pronounced according to the ICAO phonetic alphabet? ^bazl_901_5
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_5)*
+- A) NOVEMBER DELTA GAMMA FOX.
+- B) NOVEMBER DECEMBER GOLF FOXTROT
+- C) NORBERT DELTA GOLF FOX.
+- D) NOVEMBER DELTA GOLF FOXTROT.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to ICAO phonetic alphabet: N = NOVEMBER, D = DELTA, G = GOLF, F = FOXTROT. Answer (d) is correct.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q6 — What does the term "aeronautical station" mean? ^bazl_901_6
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_6)*
+- A) A radio station of the aeronautical fixed service, on the ground or on board an aircraft, intended for the exchange of radio communications.
+- B) Any radio station intended for the exchange of radio communications.
+- C) A radio station of the aeronautical fixed service.
+- D) A land station of the aeronautical mobile service. In certain cases, an aeronautical station may be located on board a ship or offshore platform.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aeronautical station is a ground station of the aeronautical mobile service. It can provide communication services to aircraft in flight.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q7 — What does the abbreviation "HJ" mean? ^bazl_901_7
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_7)*
+- A) Continuous day and night service.
+- B) From sunrise to sunset.
+- C) No fixed operating hours.
+- D) From sunset to sunrise.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HJ means 'from sunrise to sunset' (from French: Heure de Jour). It is the standard ICAO abbreviation used in AIPs and NOTAMs.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q8 — Which instructions and information must always be read back verbatim? ^bazl_901_8
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_8)*
+- A) Surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes.
+- B) Runway in use, visibility, surface wind, heading instructions, altimeter settings.
+- C) Surface wind, visibility, temperature, runway in use, altimeter settings, heading and speed instructions.
+- D) Runway in use, altimeter settings, level instructions, SSR codes, heading and speed instructions.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) always contains: surface wind, runway in use, altimeter settings, and transition level information. These are the essential elements defined by ICAO.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q9 — In which message category can ATC clearances, take-off and landing clearances, traffic information, etc. from the air traffic control service be classified? ^bazl_901_9
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_9)*
+- A) Messages concerning flight regularity.
+- B) Messages concerning flight safety.
+- C) Urgency messages.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATC clearances, instructions, and weather information are messages concerning flight safety. They have high priority in the aeronautical message hierarchy.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q10 — What does the instruction "Squawk 1234" mean? ^bazl_901_10
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_10)*
+- A) Set code 1234 on the transponder and switch it to ON.
+- B) Transmit briefly (1-2-3-4) for a bearing.
+- C) Conduct a radio check on frequency 123.4 MHz.
+- D) Be ready to monitor frequency 123.4 MHz.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The instruction 'Squawk 1234' means: set code 1234 on the transponder and activate the appropriate mode (mode C or mode S depending on equipment).
+
+### BAZL 901 Q11 — What does the abbreviation "ATIS" stand for? ^bazl_901_11
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_11)*
+- A) Airport Terminal Information Service
+- B) Automatic Terminal Information Service
+- C) Automatic Terminal Information System
+- D) Air Trafic Information Service
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS stands for 'Automatic Terminal Information Service'. It is the looping recording of meteorological and operational information for an aerodrome.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q12 — What is the call sign of the Flight Information Service? ^bazl_901_12
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_12)*
+- A) AERODROME.
+- B) FLIGHT CENTER
+- C) INFORMATION.
+- D) INFO
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The call sign of the Flight Information Service is 'INFORMATION'. Example: 'Geneva Information' or 'Zurich Information'.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q13 — What does the term "QDR" mean? ^bazl_901_13
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_13)*
+- A) Magnetic bearing from the station
+- B) True bearing from the station
+- C) Magnetic heading to the station (zero wind)
+- D) True heading to the station (zero wind)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QDR means the magnetic bearing from the station to the aircraft (magnetic bearing FROM station). Not to be confused with QDM (magnetic bearing TO the station).
+
+### BAZL 901 Q14 — What influences the reception quality of VHF (very high frequency) radio? ^bazl_901_14
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_14)*
+- A) The ionosphere.
+- B) Flight altitude and topographical conditions.
+- C) Atmospheric disturbances, in particular thunderstorm conditions.
+- D) The twilight effect.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VHF reception quality depends mainly on flight altitude (line-of-sight range) and topographical conditions (terrain between transmitter and receiver). The ionosphere does not affect VHF.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q15 — What does the term "QFE" mean? ^bazl_901_15
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_15)*
+- A) Atmospheric pressure measured at the height of the highest obstacle on an aerodrome.
+- B) Atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome elevation (or runway threshold).
+- C) Atmospheric pressure measured at a point on the earth’s surface.
+- D) Altimeter setting that causes the instrument to indicate the aerodrome elevation on the ground.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at the aerodrome elevation (or runway threshold). With QFE set on the altimeter, the instrument shows height above the aerodrome (0 on the ground).
+
+### BAZL 901 Q16 — In the aeronautical mobile service, messages are classified by importance. What is the correct order of priority? ^bazl_901_16
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_16)*
+- A) Radio direction-finding messages, distress messages, urgency messages.
+- B) Distress messages, urgency messages, messages concerning safety.
+- C) Distress messages, messages concerning flight safety, urgency messages.
+- D) Meteorological messages, radio direction-finding messages, messages concerning flight regularity.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Messages are classified in decreasing priority order: distress messages, urgency messages, messages concerning flight safety, regularity messages, and private messages.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q17 — What is the urgency signal in radiotelephony? ^bazl_901_17
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_17)*
+- A) URGENCY (preferably spoken three times).
+- B) MAYDAY (preferably spoken three times). e) ALERFA (preferably spoken three times).
+- D) PAN PAN (preferably spoken three times).
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The urgency signal in radiotelephony is PAN PAN (preferably spoken three times). MAYDAY is the distress signal (imminent danger). PAN PAN indicates a less severe emergency.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q18 — On the readability scale, what does degree "5" mean? ^bazl_901_18
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_18)*
+- A) Unreadable.
+- B) Readable, but with difficulty.
+- C) Perfectly readable.
+- D) Readable intermittently.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the ICAO readability scale, degree 5 means 'perfectly readable'. The scale runs from 1 (unreadable) to 5 (perfectly readable).
+
+### BAZL 901 Q19 — What is the name of the time system used worldwide by air traffic services and in the aeronautical fixed service? ^bazl_901_19
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_19)*
+- A) Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
+- B) Local time (LT) using the 24-hour clock.
+- C) Local time using the AM and PM system.
+- D) There is no particular time system, as generally only minutes are transmitted.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The universal time system used in aviation is Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), formerly GMT. All flight times, NOTAMs and weather reports are expressed in UTC.
+
+### BAZL 901 Q20 — What elements should a distress message contain? ^bazl_901_20
+> *[FR](../SPL%20Exam%20Questions%20FR/90%20-%20Communications.md#^bazl_901_20)*
+- A) Aircraft callsign and type, nature of the distress situation, pilot’s intentions, position, level, heading.
+- B) Aircraft callsign, flight route, destination.
+- C) Aircraft callsign, departure point, position, level.
+- D) Aircraft callsign, position, assistance required.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A complete distress message must contain: aircraft callsign and type, nature of the distress situation, pilot's intentions, position, altitude, and heading.
+
+
+=== NEW QUESTIONS (from QuizVDS, not yet in set) ===
+
+# 90 - Communication
+
+> Source: EASA ECQB-SPL (new questions not in existing set) | 44 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What does a cloud coverage of "FEW" mean in a METAR weather report? ^q1
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR cloud coverage reporting, FEW means 1 to 2 oktas (eighths) of sky covered — a very sparse cloud layer. SCT (Scattered) is 3–4 oktas, BKN (Broken) is 5–7 oktas, and OVC (Overcast) is 8 oktas (full coverage). These standardized ICAO designations are used worldwide in aviation weather reports.
+
+### Q2: What does a cloud coverage of "SCT" mean in a METAR weather report? ^q2
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SCT stands for Scattered, representing 3 to 4 oktas (eighths) of sky covered by a cloud layer in a METAR report. FEW is 1–2 oktas, BKN (Broken) is 5–7 oktas, and OVC (Overcast) is 8 oktas. Using these standardized terms ensures unambiguous cloud coverage reporting globally.
+
+### Q3: What does a cloud coverage of "BKN" mean in a METAR weather report? ^q3
+- A) 1 to 2 eighths
+- B) 5 to 7 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 8 eighths
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN stands for Broken, representing 5 to 7 oktas (eighths) of sky covered by a cloud layer in a METAR report. FEW is 1–2 oktas, SCT is 3–4 oktas, and OVC (Overcast) is 8 oktas. A broken layer still means the sky is predominantly covered, which can have significant implications for VFR flights.
+
+### Q4: Which transponder code indicates a radio failure? ^q4
+- A) 7500
+- B) 7700
+- C) 7000
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is the internationally standardized squawk code for loss of radio communication (NORDO — no radio). Code 7700 indicates a general emergency, 7500 indicates unlawful interference (hijacking), and 7000 is the standard VFR conspicuity code in many European countries. Squawking 7600 alerts ATC to the communication failure without declaring a full emergency.
+
+### Q5: What is the correct phrase to begin a blind transmission? ^q5
+- A) Listen
+- B) Blind
+- C) Transmitting blind
+- D) No reception
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When experiencing radio reception failure but still able to transmit, the pilot should begin a blind transmission with the phrase 'Transmitting blind' (or 'Transmitting blind on [frequency]'). This notifies any receiving station of the one-way nature of the transmission. 'Listen', 'Blind', or 'No reception' are not the ICAO-standard prescribed phraseology.
+
+### Q6: How often shall a blind transmission be made? ^q6
+- A) Two times
+- B) Four times
+- C) Three times
+- D) One time
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission (transmitting without receiving confirmation) is made once on the current frequency (and once more on the emergency frequency if appropriate), not multiple times. Repeating it once ensures the message is heard without causing frequency congestion. Making it four or three times is excessive and not standard ICAO procedure.
+
+### Q7: In what situation is it appropriate to set the transponder code 7600? ^q7
+- A) Hijacking
+- B) Emergency
+- C) Flight into clouds
+- D) Loss of radio
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7600 is specifically assigned for loss of radio communication (NORDO). Squawking 7600 alerts ATC radar controllers to the situation so they can provide appropriate separation and visual signals. Code 7700 is for emergencies, 7500 for hijacking, and flight into clouds is not a transponder emergency code situation.
+
+### Q8: What is the correct course of action when experiencing a radio failure in class D airspace? ^q8
+- A) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+- B) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+- C) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+- D) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO procedures for radio failure in controlled airspace (Class D) require the pilot to continue the flight according to the last ATC clearance received while complying with VFR flight rules, or to leave the airspace by the shortest route. Flying above 5000 feet is not specified; using a 'standard routing' without relation to the last clearance is also incorrect.
+
+### Q9: Which phrase is to be repeated three times before transmitting an urgency message? ^q9
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Urgent
+- C) Pan Pan
+- D) Help
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (lower priority than distress) is preceded by the phrase 'Pan Pan' spoken three times. This alerts ATC and other aircraft to a serious but not immediately life-threatening situation. 'Mayday' (spoken three times) is used for distress, and 'Urgent' or 'Help' are not ICAO-standard radiotelephony phrases.
+
+### Q10: What is the correct frequency for an initial distress message? ^q10
+- A) Radar frequency
+- B) Current frequency
+- C) FIS frequency
+- D) Emergency frequency
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The initial distress or urgency call should be made on the frequency currently in use, because that frequency is already monitored by the appropriate ATC unit. Switching to another frequency risks losing contact and wasting time. If there is no response, the pilot may then try the emergency frequency 121.5 MHz.
+
+### Q11: What kind of information should be included in an urgency message? ^q11
+- A) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, departure aerodrome, information about position, heading and altitude
+- B) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, departure aerodrome, heading and altitude
+- C) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, departure aerodrome, destination aerodrome, heading and altitude
+- D) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, heading and altitude
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An urgency message (Pan Pan) must include: the nature of the problem or observation, any important information needed for assistance, the intentions of the pilot in command, and position/heading/altitude information. It does not need to include departure and destination aerodromes or intended routing — those details are more relevant to flight plan information, not an urgency broadcast.
+
+### Q12: What is the correct designation of the frequency band from 118.000 to 136.975 MHz used for voice communication? ^q12
+- A) MF
+- B) LF
+- C) HF
+- D) VHF
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The aviation voice communication band from 118.000 to 136.975 MHz falls within the Very High Frequency (VHF) range. VHF provides reliable line-of-sight communication and is the standard for civil aviation. MF (Medium Frequency), LF (Low Frequency), and HF (High Frequency) are lower frequency bands used for different purposes such as NDB navigation or long-range HF communications.
+
+### Q13: In what case is visibility transmitted in meters? ^q13
+- A) Up to 5 km
+- B) Greater than 10 km
+- C) Greater than 5 km
+- D) Up to 10 km
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In aviation meteorology (METAR), visibility is reported in meters when it is 5 km or less (up to 5000 m in 100 m steps below 800 m, then 100 m steps up to 5000 m). When visibility is greater than 5 km, it is reported in kilometers. This threshold ensures precision at lower visibilities that are operationally critical for flight safety.
+
+### Q14: Urgency messages are defined as... ^q14
+- A) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+- B) Messages concerning urgent spare parts which are needed for a continuation of flight and which need to be ordered in advance.
+- C) Information concerning the apron personell and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft
+- D) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Urgency messages (Pan Pan) concern the safety of an aircraft, vessel, vehicle, or person in sight — situations that are serious but not immediately life-threatening. A distress message (Mayday) concerns aircraft and passengers facing a grave and imminent threat requiring immediate assistance. Spare parts logistics and apron personnel safety are not urgency message subjects.
+
+### Q15: Distress messages contain... ^q15
+- A) Information concerning urgent spare parts which are required for a continuation of flight and which have to be ordered in advance.
+- B) Information concerning the apron personell and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.
+- C) Information concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight
+- D) Information concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Distress messages (Mayday) contain information concerning aircraft and their passengers (or other persons) who face a grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance — the most critical level of emergency. Urgency messages (Pan Pan) cover less immediate threats to safety of vehicles or persons. Spare parts or apron personnel scenarios are not distress situations.
+
+### Q16: What is the approximate speed of electromagnetic wave propagation? ^q16
+- A) 123000 m/s
+- B) 300000 km/s
+- C) 123000 km/s
+- D) 300000 m/s
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Electromagnetic waves (including radio waves and light) propagate at the speed of light, approximately 300,000 km/s (3 × 10⁸ m/s) in a vacuum. The other options are incorrect by orders of magnitude — 123,000 m/s is far too slow, and 300,000 m/s or 123,000 km/s are also wrong.
+
+### Q17: In what cases is visibility transmitted in kilometers? ^q17
+- A) Greater than 10 km
+- B) Up to 5 km
+- C) Greater than 5 km
+- D) Up to 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR reporting, visibility is reported in kilometers when it is greater than 5 km (e.g., '6KM' or '9999' for 10 km or more). When visibility is 5 km or less, it is expressed in meters for greater precision. This convention is standardized under ICAO Annex 3.
+
+### Q18: How can you obtain meteorological information concerning airports during a crosscountry flight? ^q18
+- A) GAMET
+- B) METAR
+- C) AIRMET
+- D) VOLMET
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET is a continuous meteorological broadcast service providing current weather information for a series of named aerodromes, transmitted on designated VHF and HF frequencies. During a cross-country flight, VOLMET gives pilots real-time METAR information for airports along their route. GAMET and AIRMET are area forecasts, and METAR is the report format, not a broadcast service.
+
+### Q19: Which of the following factors affects the reception of VHF transmissions? ^q19
+- A) Height of ionosphere
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Twilight error
+- D) Shoreline effect
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VHF radio waves propagate primarily by line-of-sight. Altitude directly determines how far the radio horizon extends — the higher the aircraft, the farther the radio waves can reach before being blocked by the Earth's curvature. The ionosphere affects HF propagation (sky wave), twilight error and shoreline effect affect NDB/ADF reception, not VHF.
+
+### Q20: On what frequency shall a blind transmission be made? ^q20
+- A) On the appropriate FIS frequency
+- B) On a tower frequency
+- C) On a radar frequency of the lower airspace
+- D) On the current frequency
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A blind transmission (one-way transmission due to reception failure) must be made on the current frequency in use, since that is the frequency being monitored by ATC and nearby traffic. Switching to FIS, tower, or radar frequencies without having been given those frequencies is inappropriate and could cause the transmission to go unheard by the relevant authority.
+
+### Q21: The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing ^q21
+- A) There are other aircraft in the aerodrome circuit
+- B) It ist the aerodrome of departure
+- C) It is the destination aerodrome
+- D) Approval has been granted before
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Entry into Class D airspace without radio contact is only permissible when prior approval has been granted (e.g., when the pilot has already received a clearance to enter and the radio failure occurs while inside or just before entry). Without prior approval, Class D airspace cannot be entered without two-way radio communication. The presence of other traffic, departure aerodrome status, or destination status do not constitute authorization.
+
+### Q22: The correct transponder code for emergencies is... ^q22
+- A) 7600.
+- B) 7500.
+- C) 7700.
+- D) 7000.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Transponder code 7700 is the internationally standardized emergency squawk. It alerts radar controllers to an emergency situation and triggers alarms on ATC displays. Code 7600 indicates radio failure, 7500 indicates hijacking, and 7000 is the standard VFR conspicuity code in European airspace.
+
+### Q23: What information is broadcasted on a VOLMET frequency? ^q23
+- A) Current information
+- B) Navigational information
+- C) Meteorological information
+- D) NOTAMS
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VOLMET (from the French vol — flight, and météo — weather) is a radio service that continuously broadcasts meteorological information (current weather reports, METARs) for a series of aerodromes. It provides current information, not navigational data, NOTAMs, or general bulletins.
+
+### Q24: An ATIS is valid for... ^q24
+- A) 45 minutes.
+- B) 60 minutes.
+- C) 30 minutes.
+- D) 10 minutes.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) broadcast is updated at 30-minute intervals (or whenever conditions change significantly) and is valid for approximately 30 minutes. Pilots should obtain the latest ATIS before contacting ATC on initial call. 45 or 60 minutes would be too long given how rapidly aerodrome conditions can change.
+
+### Q25: Which abbreviation is used for the term abeam? ^q25
+- A) ABB
+- B) ABM
+- C) ABE
+- D) ABA
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO standard abbreviation for 'abeam' is ABM. 'Abeam' describes a position at right angles to the aircraft's track, typically alongside a reference point. ABB, ABE, and ABA are not ICAO-recognized aviation abbreviations.
+
+### Q26: Which abbreviation is used for the term visual flight rules? ^q26
+- A) VFS
+- B) VRU
+- C) VFR
+- D) VMC
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VFR is the universally recognized abbreviation for Visual Flight Rules, as standardized by ICAO. VFS and VRU are not standard abbreviations. VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions — the weather conditions required for VFR flight — which is a related but distinct term.
+
+### Q27: Which abbreviation is used for the term obstacle? ^q27
+- A) OBST
+- B) OBTC
+- C) OST
+- D) OBS
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** OBST is the standard ICAO abbreviation for obstacle, used in NOTAMs, charts, and ATC communications. OBTC, OST, and OBS are not recognized ICAO abbreviations for this term (OBS can mean 'observe' in some contexts but not 'obstacle').
+
+### Q28: What does the abbreviation FIS stand for? ^q28
+- A) Flight information service
+- B) Flashing information system
+- C) Flight information system
+- D) Flashing information service
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS stands for Flight Information Service — a service provided to give advice and information useful for the safe and efficient conduct of flights, without providing separation services. It is not a 'system' or a 'flashing' service; the 'flashing information' options are nonsensical distractors.
+
+### Q29: What does the abbreviaton FIR stand for? ^q29
+- A) Flight information region
+- B) Flight integrity receiver
+- C) Flow integrity required
+- D) Flow information radar
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIR stands for Flight Information Region — a specified airspace of defined dimensions within which flight information service and alerting service are provided. It is the fundamental unit of airspace management under ICAO. 'Integrity receiver', 'integrity required', and 'information radar' are not aviation terminology.
+
+### Q30: What does the abbreviation H24 stand for? ^q30
+- A) No specific opening times
+- B) 24 h service
+- C) Sunrise to sunset
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** H24 is the standard ICAO abbreviation meaning 24-hour continuous service, indicating that a facility (e.g., an ATC unit or AFIS) is available at all times. Sunrise to sunset is HR (hours of daylight), no specific opening hours is HX, and sunset to sunrise is specific night hours — not H24.
+
+### Q31: What does the abbreviation HX stand for? ^q31
+- A) 24 h service
+- B) Sunrise to sunset
+- C) No specific opening hours
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** HX is the ICAO abbreviation meaning no specific opening hours — the facility operates on an irregular or undefined schedule. H24 means 24-hour service, HR means hours from sunrise to sunset, and HS means hours from sunset to sunrise. Pilots should check NOTAMs or AIP for actual hours of service when HX is listed.
+
+### Q32: The directional information 12 o'clock is correctly transmitted as... ^q32
+- A) One two.
+- B) Twelve o'clock.
+- C) One two hundred.
+- D) One two o'clock
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO radiotelephony, direction relative to the aircraft is expressed using clock positions spoken as full clock terms: 'twelve o'clock', 'three o'clock', etc. Saying 'one two' would sound like a bearing, 'one two hundred' is meaningless, and 'one two o'clock' omits the word 'twelve'. The correct standard phrase is 'Twelve o'clock'.
+
+### Q33: What is the meaning of the phrase Roger? ^q33
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- C) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- D) I have received all of your last transmission
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The word 'Roger' in ICAO radiotelephony means 'I have received all of your last transmission' — it is purely an acknowledgement of receipt and does not imply understanding or compliance. 'Wilco' (will comply) indicates understanding and intent to comply; 'Approved' grants permission; 'Correction' signals an error in a previous transmission.
+
+### Q34: What is the meaning of the phrase Correction? ^q34
+- A) I have received all of your last transmission
+- B) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The phrase 'Correction' in ICAO radiotelephony signals that an error was made in a previous part of the transmission, and the correct version follows. It does not mean receipt ('Roger'), compliance ('Wilco'), or permission ('Approved'). Pilots and controllers use it mid-transmission to self-correct without confusion.
+
+### Q35: What is the meaning of the phrase Approved? ^q35
+- A) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- B) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- C) I have received all of your last transmission
+- D) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The phrase 'Approved' in ICAO radiotelephony means 'permission for the proposed action is granted'. It is used by ATC to authorize a pilot's request. 'Roger' means receipt acknowledged, 'Wilco' means will comply, and 'Correction' signals an error in transmission.
+
+### Q36: What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with yes? ^q36
+- A) Affirm
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirmative
+- D) Roger
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO standard phrase for affirming (yes) a transmission is 'Affirm' — not 'Affirmative', which is not standard ICAO phraseology, and not 'Yes', which is plain language. 'Roger' means receipt acknowledged, not affirmation. 'Affirm' is specifically prescribed to avoid confusion on radio.
+
+### Q37: What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with no? ^q37
+- A) Negative
+- B) No
+- C) Not
+- D) Finish
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO standard phrase for negating (no) is 'Negative'. Plain language 'No' is not standard radiotelephony and could be misheard; 'Not' and 'Finish' have no defined meaning in ICAO phraseology. 'Negative' is unambiguous and universally understood in aviation communication.
+
+### Q38: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off? ^q38
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During readback of a take-off clearance, the pilot must read back all safety-critical items: the after-liftoff instruction (climb straight ahead to 2500 ft, then turn right heading 220), the runway designator, and the clearance itself (cleared for take-off). The wind information (090/5kt) is provided for awareness but does not need to be read back. Option D correctly includes runway 12 and 'cleared for take-off' while omitting the wind.
+
+### Q39: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction Next report PAH? ^q39
+- A) Positive
+- B) Wilco
+- C) Report PAH
+- D) Roger
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The instruction 'Next report PAH' requires the pilot to take a specific future action (report at waypoint PAH). Because this involves a future commitment, the correct acknowledgement is 'Wilco' (will comply), not 'Roger' (which only acknowledges receipt). Saying 'Report PAH' as a standalone is incomplete, and 'Positive' is not standard phraseology.
+
+### Q40: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325? ^q40
+- A) Roger
+- B) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- C) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- D) Wilco
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When given a transponder code and a frequency change instruction, the pilot must read back the transponder code (to confirm the correct squawk) and the new frequency (131.325), as these are safety-critical items requiring confirmation. 'Roger' or 'Wilco' alone would not confirm the specific values; including both items in the readback ('Squawk 4321, 131.325') is the correct procedure.
+
+### Q41: What is the correct way of acknowledging You are now entering airspace Delta? ^q41
+- A) Roger
+- B) Airspace Delta
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Entering
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The instruction 'You are now entering airspace Delta' is a statement of fact or information from ATC, not a clearance or instruction requiring compliance. The correct acknowledgement is 'Roger' — meaning 'message received'. 'Wilco' would be inappropriate because there is nothing to comply with; simply repeating 'Airspace Delta' or 'Entering' is incomplete.
+
+### Q42: What does a cloud coverage of FEW mean in a METAR weather report? ^q42
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR cloud coverage reporting, FEW designates 1 to 2 oktas (eighths) of sky covered — the sparsest cloud layer category. SCT (Scattered) = 3–4 oktas, BKN (Broken) = 5–7 oktas, and OVC (Overcast) = 8 oktas. These standardized ICAO designations apply worldwide.
+
+### Q43: What does a cloud coverage of SCT mean in a METAR weather report? ^q43
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SCT (Scattered) in a METAR report means 3 to 4 oktas (eighths) of sky coverage. FEW = 1–2 oktas, BKN (Broken) = 5–7 oktas, OVC (Overcast) = 8 oktas. Scattered cloud does not necessarily restrict VFR, but pilots must check cloud base heights against VFR minima.
+
+### Q44: What does a cloud coverage of BKN mean in a METAR weather report? ^q44
+- A) 1 to 2 eighths
+- B) 5 to 7 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 8 eighths
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** BKN (Broken) in a METAR report means 5 to 7 oktas (eighths) of sky coverage. FEW = 1–2 oktas, SCT = 3–4 oktas, OVC = 8 oktas. A broken layer is predominantly covered sky and may impact VFR operations if cloud bases are low, requiring careful assessment before flight.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_missing_questions_report.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_missing_questions_report.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2c893fd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-assimilated/_missing_questions_report.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2190 @@
+# Missing Questions Report
+
+> Comparison: Backup EN vs Current EN question sets
+> Matching method: explanation text similarity (threshold >= 0.80)
+> Questions below threshold are considered missing from the current set
+
+## Summary
+
+| Subject | Backup EN | Current EN | Missing | With Figures | DE Count | DE vs EN diff |
+|---------|-----------|------------|---------|--------------|----------|---------------|
+| 10 - Air Law | 50 | 113 | 0 | 0 | 50 | -63 |
+| 20 - Aircraft General Knowledge | 50 | 77 | 6 | 0 | 0 | -77 |
+| 30 - Flight Performance and Planning | 30 | 89 | 0 | 0 | 30 | -59 |
+| 40 - Human Performance | 50 | 111 | 32 (2⚠) | 2 | 50 | -61 |
+| 50 - Meteorology | 50 | 182 | 3 | 0 | 50 | -132 |
+| 60 - Navigation | 80 | 111 | 32 | 0 | 80 | -31 |
+| 70 - Operational Procedures | 50 | 68 | 0 | 0 | 50 | -18 |
+| 80 - Principles of Flight | 50 | 135 | 35 (7⚠) | 7 | 0 | -135 |
+| 90 - Communications | 50 | 101 | 1 | 0 | 50 | -51 |
+| **TOTALS** | **460** | **987** | **109** | | **360** | **-627** |
+
+**Figure note:** ⚠ = count of missing questions that reference a figure/image
+
+## Matching Methodology
+
+Questions are matched using **explanation text similarity** (difflib SequenceMatcher).
+Since the current EN set was heavily reworded compared to the backup, question text alone
+would miss most matches. The explanations, however, are identical or near-identical
+even when the question text was reformulated.
+
+- Match threshold: **0.80** (80% similarity)
+- Questions with ratio < 0.80 are listed as missing
+- Questions with ratio 0.80–0.91 are flagged as 'low confidence matches' (likely matched but possibly different)
+
+---
+
+# Missing Question Details
+
+
+## Subject 10 - Air Law: **No missing questions** ✓
+
+
+## Subject 20 - Aircraft General Knowledge: 6 Missing Questions
+
+### Missing 20.1 — was Q19 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.65)*
+
+**Question:** Which of the following options states all primary flight controls of an aircraft?
+
+- A) Flaps, slats, speedbrakes
+- B) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift wing devices, power controls
+- C) Elevator, rudder, aileron
+- D) All movable parts on the aircraft which aid in controlling the aircraft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The three primary flight controls are elevator (pitch), rudder (yaw), and aileron (roll) — these directly control the aircraft's rotation about its three axes and are essential for flight. Option A lists secondary/high-lift devices. Option B mixes primary and secondary controls together. Option D is too broad — not all movable parts are primary controls. Flaps, trim tabs, and speedbrakes are secondary controls.
+
+---
+### Missing 20.2 — was Q37 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.50)*
+
+**Question:** The vertical speed indicator measures the difference of pressure between...
+
+- A) The present dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure of a previous moment.
+- B) The present total pressure and the total pressure of a previous moment.
+- C) The present dynamic pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment
+- D) The present static pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The VSI compares the current ambient static pressure (which changes as altitude changes) with the static pressure from a short time ago (stored in the metering reservoir through a calibrated restriction). The rate at which static pressure changes indicates the rate of climb or descent. Dynamic pressure (A, C) plays no role in the VSI. Total pressure (B) is measured by the Pitot tube for the ASI, not used in the VSI.
+
+---
+### Missing 20.3 — was Q38 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.58)*
+
+**Question:** An aircraft cruises on a heading of 180° with a true airspeed of 100 kt. The wind comes from 180° with 30 kt. Neglecting instrument and position errors, which will be the approximate reading of the airspeed indicator?
+
+- A) 130 kt
+- B) 100 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 70 kt
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The airspeed indicator measures Indicated Air Speed (IAS), which reflects the airspeed relative to the surrounding air mass — not relative to the ground. The aircraft is flying at 100 kt through the air. The wind (also moving at 30 kt from 180°, meaning a tailwind) affects the aircraft's ground speed (which would be 70 kt, option D), but it does not affect the relative airspeed between aircraft and surrounding air. The ASI always reads the aircraft's speed through the air mass, regardless of wind.
+
+---
+### Missing 20.4 — was Q41 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.60)*
+
+**Question:** What is necessary for the determination of speed (IAS) by the airspeed indicator?
+
+- A) The difference between the total pressure and the dynamic pressure
+- B) The difference between the dynamic pressure and the static pressure
+- C) The difference between the standard pressure and the total pressure
+- D) The difference betweeen the total pressure and the static presssure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> IAS is determined from the difference between total pressure (Pitot tube) and static pressure (static port). This difference equals dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), from which airspeed is derived. Option A (total minus dynamic) would equal static pressure — not useful for airspeed. Option B (dynamic minus static) is not a meaningful aerodynamic quantity in this context. Option C (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for airspeed measurement.
+
+---
+### Missing 20.5 — was Q42 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.72)*
+
+**Question:** What is the meaning of the red range on the airspeed indicator?
+
+- A) Speed which must not be exceeded regardless of circumstances
+- B) Speed which must not be exceeded within bumpy air
+- C) Speed which must not be exceeded with flaps extended
+- D) Speed which must not be exceeded in turns with more than 45° bank
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The red line on the ASI marks VNE — the never-exceed speed — which is an absolute structural limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, including smooth air. Exceeding VNE risks flutter, structural failure, or loss of control. Option B describes the yellow arc (caution range), where flight is only permitted in smooth air. Option C describes VFE (flap extension speed). Option D describes no standard speed marking — maneuvering speed (VA) relates to gust/maneuver loads but is not marked by color range on the ASI.
+
+---
+### Missing 20.6 — was Q48 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.44)*
+
+**Question:** An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 360° to a heading of 270°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated?
+
+- A) 360°
+- B) 270°
+- C) 240°
+- D) 300°
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The shortest turn from 360° to 270° is a left turn (turning from north through west). In the northern hemisphere, the compass lags during turns away from north (toward south) and leads during turns toward north. When turning away from north (southward turn), the compass lags — it under-reads the turn. However, when turning through west (270°), the turning error is minimal. For turns to southerly headings the pilot must overshoot, but for 270° (west), the compass reading is approximately accurate at the completion point. The answer is to stop at 270° as indicated.
+
+---
+
+## Subject 30 - Flight Performance and Planning: **No missing questions** ✓
+
+
+## Subject 40 - Human Performance: 32 Missing Questions
+
+> **WARNING: 2 of these questions contain figure/image references.**
+
+### Missing 40.1 — was Q2 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.62)*
+
+**Question:** The "swiss cheese model" can be used to explain the...
+
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- C) Optimal problem solution.
+- D) Error chain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model illustrates how accidents occur when multiple layers of defence each have "holes" (latent and active failures) that align simultaneously, allowing a hazard to pass through all layers and cause an accident. Each slice of cheese represents a safety barrier, and an accident results from an error chain — not a single isolated failure.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.2 — was Q3 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.77)*
+
+**Question:** What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft?
+
+- A) 78 %
+- B) 12 %
+- C) 21 %
+- D) 18.9 %
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The percentage composition of atmospheric gases remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen and 78% nitrogen regardless of altitude. What changes with altitude is the partial pressure of oxygen: as total atmospheric pressure decreases, there are fewer oxygen molecules per breath, which is why hypoxia becomes a risk at altitude despite the unchanged percentage.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.3 — was Q5 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.74)*
+
+**Question:** At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)?
+
+- A) 18000 ft
+- B) 22000 ft
+- C) 10000 ft
+- D) 5000 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> At 18,000 ft (approximately 5,500 m), atmospheric pressure is roughly 500 hPa — half of the standard sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. This means the partial pressure of oxygen is also halved, severely reducing the oxygen available to the body and making supplemental oxygen mandatory for unpressurised flight above this altitude.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.4 — was Q6 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.74)*
+
+**Question:** Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. What is the approximate percentage of other gases?
+
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0.1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The remaining approximately 1% of the atmosphere is composed of trace gases, primarily argon (about 0.93%), with very small amounts of carbon dioxide, neon, helium, methane, and others. While these gases are present in only tiny amounts, carbon dioxide in particular plays a significant role in the body's respiratory drive and acid-base balance, relevant to hyperventilation physiology.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.5 — was Q7 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.79)*
+
+**Question:** Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by...
+
+- A) Alcohol.
+- B) Unhealthy food.
+- C) Little sleep.
+- D) Smoking.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Carbon monoxide (CO) is produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-containing fuels and is present in cigarette smoke. CO binds to haemoglobin with an affinity approximately 200 times greater than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and preventing oxygen transport to tissues. In aviation, CO poisoning is also a risk from exhaust fume ingestion via heating systems, producing symptoms similar to hypoxia.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.6 — was Q11 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.79)*
+
+**Question:** Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia?
+
+- A) The oltfactory perception (smell)
+- B) The tactile perception (sense of touch)
+- C) The auditory perception (hearing)
+- D) The visual perception (vision)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Vision is the sense most sensitive to hypoxia because the retina has extremely high oxygen demands. Night vision is particularly affected first, with rod cell function degrading noticeably even at altitudes as low as 5,000-8,000 ft in the dark. Peripheral vision loss and reduced colour discrimination follow at higher altitudes, making hypoxia especially dangerous for flight.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.7 — was Q12 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.71)*
+
+**Question:** From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure?
+
+- A) 2000 feet
+- B) 10000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 7000 feet
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The body begins to show measurable physiological responses to reduced partial pressure of oxygen at around 7,000 ft, though healthy individuals can usually compensate through increased respiratory rate and cardiac output. Below this altitude, the body maintains adequate oxygenation without significant stress; above it, compensatory mechanisms become progressively taxed.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.8 — was Q13 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.74)*
+
+**Question:** Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure?
+
+- A) 5000 feet
+- B) 22000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 7000 feet
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Above approximately 12,000 ft, the body's compensatory mechanisms — increased breathing rate and heart rate — are no longer sufficient to maintain adequate blood oxygen saturation. Hypoxic symptoms become increasingly apparent and performance degradation is measurable. This is why EASA regulations require oxygen supplementation above 10,000 ft for extended periods, and above 13,000 ft at all times.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.9 — was Q15 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.71)*
+
+**Question:** Which of the following is responsible for the blood coagulation?
+
+- A) Capillaries of the arteries
+- B) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- C) Blood plates (thrombocytes)
+- D) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Blood platelets (thrombocytes) are small cell fragments that aggregate at sites of vascular injury and initiate the clotting cascade, forming a platelet plug to stop bleeding. They work together with clotting factors to form a stable fibrin clot. This function is distinct from the oxygen transport role of red blood cells and the immune role of white blood cells.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.10 — was Q19 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.69)*
+
+**Question:** What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable?
+
+- A) Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed
+- B) Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank
+- C) Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets
+- D) Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> A passenger feeling unwell in flight may be experiencing motion sickness, discomfort from temperature, or mild physiological stress. Adjusting cabin temperature to a comfortable level and minimising bank angle (reducing vestibular and acceleration stimuli) addresses the most likely causes without introducing new risks. Excessive bank aggravates motion sickness, and unnecessary oxygen administration can cause hyperventilation in some individuals.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.11 — was Q20 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.54)*
+
+**Question:** What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor?
+
+- A) Reduction
+- B) Coherence
+- C) Virulence
+- D) Reflex
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> A reflex is an involuntary, stereotyped neural response to a specific sensory stimulus, mediated through a reflex arc in the spinal cord or brainstem without conscious brain involvement. In aviation, understanding reflexes matters because some trained responses can become automatic (procedural memory), while unexpected reflexes — such as startle responses — can interfere with controlled aircraft handling in emergencies.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.12 — was Q21 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.63)*
+
+**Question:** What is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency?
+
+- A) Critical nervous system
+- B) Autonomic nervous system
+- C) Automatical nervous system
+- D) Compliant nervous system
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulates involuntary physiological functions including heart rate, breathing rate, digestion, and glandular secretion. It has two branches: the sympathetic ("fight or flight") and parasympathetic ("rest and digest") systems. In high-stress flight situations, sympathetic activation increases heart rate and alertness but can also impair fine motor control and narrow attentional focus.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.13 — was Q23 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.78)*
+
+**Question:** Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots?
+
+- A) Curved sidepiece
+- B) Non-polarised
+- C) Unbreakable
+- D) No UV filter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Pilots must use non-polarised sunglasses because polarised lenses eliminate horizontally reflected light, which can make LCD displays, glass cockpit instruments, and certain reflective surfaces — such as water or other aircraft — invisible or severely distorted. UV protection and good optical quality are desirable, but the non-polarised requirement is the safety-critical aviation-specific characteristic.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.14 — was Q25 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.46)*
+
+**Question:** In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment?
+
+- A) During a light and slow climb
+- B) Breathing takes place using the mouth only
+- C) All windows are completely closed
+- D) The eustachien tube is blocked
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> When the Eustachian tube is blocked — typically due to a cold, sinus infection, or allergic congestion — the mucous membrane swells and prevents the tube from opening. This traps air in the middle ear at the previous ambient pressure, creating a painful pressure differential during ascent or descent. Pilots are advised not to fly with upper respiratory infections for this reason.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.15 — was Q26 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.51)*
+
+**Question:** Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of...
+
+- A) Starting a climb.
+- B) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+- C) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- D) Starting a descent.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> This is the "leans" or graveyard spiral illusion, rooted in semicircular canal adaptation. During a prolonged coordinated turn, the fluid in the relevant semicircular canal adapts to the rotation and ceases sending turn signals. When the pilot levels the wings, the canal detects a rotation in the opposite direction, creating the false sensation of turning the other way — which can cause a pilot to re-enter the original bank.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.16 — was Q27 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.72)*
+
+**Question:** Which of the following options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)?
+
+- A) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- B) Head movements during turns
+- C) Turbulence in level flight
+- D) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Motion sickness is triggered by conflicting sensory signals — typically between the visual system and the vestibular (balance) system. Constant, non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no vestibular stimulation and no sensory conflict, so it does not provoke motion sickness. Head movements during turns, turbulence, and alcohol (which alters endolymph density) all create or amplify sensory conflicts.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.17 — was Q28 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.55)*
+
+**Question:** Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach?
+
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> A runway that slopes upward away from the pilot appears shorter and steeper than a flat runway, giving the visual impression of being higher than the actual glide slope. The pilot, perceiving the approach as too high, instinctively descends below the correct approach path — creating a dangerous undershoot risk. This illusion is a well-documented cause of controlled flight into terrain (CFIT) on visual approaches.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.18 — was Q29 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.57)*
+
+**Question:** What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope?
+
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) A landing beside the centerline
+- C) An overshoot
+- D) A hard landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Note: this question asks about the impression (what the pilot feels), not the actual outcome. An upsloping runway makes the pilot feel too high, so they perceive an overshoot situation. In response, the pilot may descend below the correct glide path, which in reality leads to an undershoot — but the perceived impression driving that incorrect correction is of being too high and overshooting.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.19 — was Q30 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.65)*
+
+**Question:** The occurence of a vertigo is most likely when moving the head...
+
+- A) During a turn.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a climb.
+- D) During a descent.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Vertigo (specifically the Coriolis illusion) is most likely when the head is moved in a different plane during an ongoing turn. The semicircular canals are already stimulated by the turn, and adding a head movement (such as looking down at a chart) stimulates a second set of canals simultaneously, creating an overwhelming and disorienting sensation of tumbling or rotation. This is one of the most incapacitating spatial disorientation illusions.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.20 — was Q31 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.63)*
+
+**Question:** A Grey-out is the result of...
+
+- A) Hyperventilation.
+- B) Tiredness.
+- C) Hypoxia.
+- D) Positive g-forces.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Grey-out is a progressive loss of colour vision and peripheral vision caused by positive g-forces pulling blood away from the head toward the lower body. As blood pressure in the retinal arteries drops, the retina (which has the highest oxygen demand of any body tissue) first loses colour perception (grey-out), then vision altogether (blackout), and finally consciousness (G-LOC — g-induced loss of consciousness).
+
+---
+### Missing 40.21 — was Q33 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.77)*
+
+**Question:** The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately...
+
+- A) 0.01 percent.
+- B) 0.03 percent.
+- C) 0.1 percent.
+- D) 0.3 percent.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The liver metabolises alcohol at a roughly constant rate of approximately 0.01% (0.1 g/L) blood alcohol concentration per hour, largely independent of body weight or the amount consumed. This means that after a night of drinking, significant alcohol impairment can persist well into the following day. EASA regulations prohibit flying with a blood alcohol level above 0.2 g/L, and the "8-hour bottle to throttle" rule is a minimum — not a guarantee of sobriety.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.22 — was Q34 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.74)*
+
+**Question:** Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes?
+
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Overweight and obesity are the primary modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes, as excess adipose tissue — particularly visceral fat — causes insulin resistance. Type 2 diabetes is a significant concern in aviation medicine because it can cause hypoglycaemic episodes that impair consciousness and cognitive function, and because many diabetes medications are incompatible with a medical certificate.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.23 — was Q36 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.64)*
+
+**Question:** Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory?
+
+- A) It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> George Miller's classic 1956 research established that short-term (working) memory has a capacity of 7 ± 2 chunks of information, retained for approximately 10-20 seconds without active rehearsal. In aviation, this limitation is critically important: ATC clearances, frequencies, and altitudes must be written down immediately because they will be lost from working memory within seconds if not rehearsed or recorded.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.24 — was Q37 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.71)*
+
+**Question:** For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information?
+
+- A) 3 to 7 seconds
+- B) 10 to 20 seconds
+- C) 35 to 50 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Without active rehearsal or encoding, items held in short-term (working) memory fade within approximately 10-20 seconds. This is why read-back procedures in aviation communication are essential — they force the pilot to actively process and repeat information, moving it from passive short-term storage into a more durable encoded state, and simultaneously allow ATC to verify correct receipt.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.25 — was Q41 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.47)*
+
+**Question:** In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately?
+
+- A) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- B) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- C) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+- D) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The four standard risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the activity or hazard), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift the risk to another party, e.g., insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge the residual risk when it is within acceptable limits). Ignoring a risk is never an acceptable strategy in aviation risk management.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.26 — was Q43 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.60)*
+
+**Question:** Which dangerous attitudes are often combined?
+
+- A) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- B) Self-abandonment and macho
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The FAA identifies five hazardous attitudes in aviation: macho, invulnerability, impulsivity, resignation (self-abandonment), and anti-authority. Macho ("I can do it") and invulnerability ("It won't happen to me") are frequently found together because both stem from overconfidence and underestimation of risk. A pilot who thinks they are immune from accidents (invulnerability) is also prone to taking unnecessary risks to demonstrate skill (macho).
+
+---
+### Missing 40.27 — was Q44 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.75)*
+
+**Question:** What is an indication for a macho attitude?
+
+- A) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- B) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+- C) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- D) Careful walkaround procedure
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The macho attitude is characterised by the need to demonstrate bravery, skill, or daring — often to an audience. Performing risky manoeuvres to impress observers is a textbook example: the pilot prioritises ego and external validation over safety margins. This attitude is particularly dangerous because it actively creates hazardous situations that would otherwise never arise. The antidote is the reminder: "Taking chances is foolish."
+
+---
+### Missing 40.28 — was Q45 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.76)*
+
+**Question:** Which factor can lead to human error?
+
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- C) Double check of relevant actions
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Confirmation bias — the tendency to perceive and interpret information in a way that confirms pre-existing expectations — is a major source of human error in aviation. Pilots may misread an instrument, misidentify a runway, or fail to notice an abnormality because their brain filters incoming information through what it expects to see. This is why structured scan patterns, checklists, and cross-checking are essential countermeasures.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.29 — was Q46 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.54)*
+
+**Question:** What is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot?
+
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Introverted - unstable
+- C) Extroverted - stable
+- D) Extroverted - unstable
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Aviation psychology research identifies extroversion and emotional stability as the most beneficial personality traits for pilots. Extroversion supports effective communication, crew coordination, and assertiveness needed for CRM. Emotional stability (low neuroticism) ensures the pilot remains calm and rational under pressure, maintains consistent performance, and does not overreact to stress — all critical for safe flight operations.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.30 — was Q47 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.69)*
+
+**Question:** Complacency is a risk due to...
+
+- A) Increased cockpit automation.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Better training options for young pilots.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Automation complacency occurs when pilots over-rely on automated systems and progressively reduce their active monitoring of aircraft state. As cockpit automation becomes more sophisticated and reliable, pilots may become less vigilant, lose situational awareness, and suffer skill degradation. When automation fails — precisely when manual flying skills are most needed — the complacent pilot may be unprepared to take over effectively.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.31 — was Q48 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.70)*
+
+**Question:** The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress
+
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point D
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The Yerkes-Dodson law describes the inverted-U relationship between arousal (stress) and performance. Point B represents the peak of the curve — the optimal level of arousal where performance is maximised. Too little arousal (Point A: boredom, fatigue) leads to poor performance due to inattention; too much arousal (Points C, D: high stress, panic) degrades performance through tunnel vision, cognitive narrowing, and loss of fine motor control.
+
+---
+### Missing 40.32 — was Q49 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.71)*
+
+**Question:** At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress
+
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point D
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Point D represents the far right of the Yerkes-Dodson curve — excessive arousal and stress — where performance collapses. At this level, the pilot is overwhelmed, unable to process information effectively, and may exhibit tunnel vision (fixating on one problem while ignoring others), panic responses, or cognitive freezing. Recognising the signs of overstrain and applying stress management techniques (slowing down, prioritising tasks) is a core CRM skill.
+
+---
+
+## Subject 50 - Meteorology: 3 Missing Questions
+
+### Missing 50.1 — was Q41 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.58)*
+
+**Question:** "Foehn" conditions usually develop with...
+
+- A) Instability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- B) Stability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- C) Stability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+- D) Instability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Foehn is a warm, dry, descending wind on the lee side of a mountain range. It develops when stable air is pushed by a broad-scale pressure gradient against a mountain barrier. On the windward side, moist air rises and cools at the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR ~0.6°C/100 m) after reaching the dew point, precipitating moisture. On the lee side, dry air descends at the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR ~1°C/100 m), arriving warmer and drier than it started — the Foehn effect.
+
+---
+### Missing 50.2 — was Q43 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.79)*
+
+**Question:** Light turbulence always has to be expected...
+
+- A) Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+- B) Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.
+- C) When entering inversions.
+- D) Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Cumulus clouds are the visible tops of thermal columns. The sub-cloud layer beneath them contains active thermals (updraughts) and compensating downdraughts between them, creating light to moderate turbulence from convective mixing. This is the normal turbulent environment of thermal soaring. Above cumulus tops the air is generally smoother (outside the cloud); stratiform clouds have minimal convective turbulence unless embedded CBs are present.
+
+---
+### Missing 50.3 — was Q44 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.77)*
+
+**Question:** Moderate to severe turbulence has to be expected...
+
+- A) Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- B) Overhead unbroken cloud layers.
+- C) On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.
+- D) With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Rotor clouds (roll clouds) on the lee side of mountains are the visible indicator of the highly turbulent rotor zone beneath mountain waves. This turbulence can be extreme, with unpredictable up- and downdraughts, strong shear, and rotational forces capable of exceeding aircraft structural limits. Experienced wave pilots avoid or transit the rotor zone quickly with sufficient airspeed. The windward side of mountains typically has orographic cloud and steady lift, not severe turbulence.
+
+---
+
+## Subject 60 - Navigation: 32 Missing Questions
+
+### Missing 60.1 — was Q24 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.72)*
+
+**Question:** Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002° What are MH and MC?
+
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+- C) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+- D) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Then MH = TH - VAR (E is subtracted): MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. For MC: MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. Alternatively: MC = MH + WCA = 163° + (-12°) = 151° — wait, that doesn't match; MC is measured from magnetic north to the course line, so MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. East variation is subtracted when converting from True to Magnetic ("East is least").
+
+---
+### Missing 60.2 — was Q50 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.71)*
+
+**Question:** Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 1242 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is...
+
+- A) 1330 UTC
+- B) 1356 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Flight time = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0.806 h = 48.4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. Option B (1356) would correspond to a GS of about 62 kt; option D (1320) would correspond to a GS of about 113 kt. Carefully subtracting the headwind from TAS before dividing gives the correct result.
+> ---
+> ## Swiss Navigation Exercises (SFVS)
+> > Source: Segelflugverband der Schweiz - SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> > Download: https://www.segelflug.ch/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/SFCL_Theorie_Navigation_Version_Schweiz_Uebungen.pdf
+> **Permitted aids at the exam:** ICAO 1:500'000 Switzerland chart, Swiss gliding chart, protractor, ruler, mechanical DR calculator, compass, non-programmable scientific calculator (TI-30 ECO RS recommended). No alphanumeric or electronic navigation computers allowed.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.3 — was Q51 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.39)*
+
+**Question:** Wann muessen wir spaetestens landen? (Landing deadline)
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Swiss VFR regulations define the end of the flying day as 30 minutes after official sunset (or a specified time after evening civil twilight). The landing deadline is looked up in official sunset tables and adjusted for the applicable time zone (MEZ = UTC+1 in winter, MESZ = UTC+2 in summer). June 21 is near the summer solstice, giving the latest sunset of the year; March dates are in standard time (MEZ). Always verify the current eVFG tables, as these values are date and location dependent.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.4 — was Q52 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.42)*
+
+**Question:** Was bedeutet die grosse Zahl 87 bei Freiburg auf der ICAO-Karte?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> On the Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart, large bold numbers printed near certain cities or waypoints indicate the Minimum Safe Altitude (MSA) in hundreds of feet for that area (so "87" means 8,700 ft MSL). The MSA provides obstacle clearance of at least 300 m (1000 ft) within a defined radius. Pilots use these values for en-route safety altitude planning, especially important in mountainous terrain like the Swiss Jura and Alps.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.5 — was Q53 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.43)*
+
+**Question:** Welcher Eintrag sollte auf der Navigationskarte vor einem Streckenflug immer gemacht werden?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Before a cross-country flight, the pilot should measure and mark the True Course (TC) on the navigation chart using a protractor referenced to the nearest meridian. The TC is the foundation for all subsequent heading calculations: TC → apply variation → MC → apply wind correction → TH → apply deviation → CH. Marking the TC on the chart ensures consistent reference throughout the flight planning process and allows in-flight verification of track.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.6 — was Q54 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.35)*
+
+**Question:** Wie sollte ein Endanflug ueber navigatorisch schwierigem Gelaende gemacht werden?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> When approaching a destination over navigationally challenging terrain (forests, featureless plains, or complex topography), the pilot should monitor progress using elapsed time against a pre-calculated time scale, and positively identify known landmarks (towns, rivers, roads) and mark them on the chart. This technique — essentially dead reckoning with regular position fixes — prevents the pilot from overflying the destination or becoming lost. In a glider without GPS, time management is critical to ensure arrival with sufficient altitude.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.7 — was Q55 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.41)*
+
+**Question:** Was bedeutet GND auf dem Deckblatt der Segelflugkarte?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> On the Swiss gliding chart cover page, "GND" indicates the lower limit (ground) of certain restricted areas, and the term specifically refers to the upper boundary of LS-R (Luftraum-Segelflug-Reservate) available for gliders operating with reduced cloud separation minima. These zones allow gliders to fly in conditions that would otherwise require instrument flight rules, provided specific weather minima are met. Understanding the legend on the gliding chart cover page is essential for Swiss exam candidates.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.8 — was Q56 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.29)*
+
+**Question:** Segelflugfrequenzen (Boden-Luft, Luft-Luft, Regionen)?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The Swiss gliding chart cover page contains a complete list of glider frequencies, including ground-to-air and air-to-air communication frequencies organized by region. Common Swiss glider frequencies include 122.300 MHz (universal glider frequency) and regional variants. These must be known before flight as gliders may need to coordinate with each other and with ground stations, especially in busy areas like the Alps or near controlled airspace.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.9 — was Q57 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.37)*
+
+**Question:** Militaerische Flugdienstzeiten?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The operating hours of Swiss military airspace and military air traffic services are printed in the lower right corner of the Swiss gliding chart. Military restricted areas (such as those associated with Payerne, Meiringen, and Emmen air bases) may only be active during specific hours, and knowing these hours is critical for planning routes through or near militarily controlled areas. Outside activation times, these areas revert to standard civil airspace classifications.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.10 — was Q58 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.40)*
+
+**Question:** Hoehe des Stockhorns in ft und m? Hoehe der Stockhornbahn AGL?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The Stockhorn (2190 m / 7185 ft MSL) is a prominent peak in the Bernese Prealps visible on the Swiss ICAO chart. Its elevation appears in meters on the chart, and pilots must be able to convert to feet (using ft = m x 10/3: 2190 x 10/3 = 7300 ft, closely matching 7185 ft). The Stockhorn gondola cable (Stockhornbahn) represents an aerial obstacle 180 m AGL — cables and lifts are marked with AGL heights on the gliding chart as they pose significant hazards to low-flying gliders.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.11 — was Q59 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.34)*
+
+**Question:** Wie hoch ist der Turm auf dem Bantiger (46 58,7 N / 7 31,7 E)?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The Bantiger tower near Bern is a communication mast shown on the Swiss ICAO and gliding charts at coordinates N46°58.7' / E7°31.7'. Its height is 188 m AGL (615 ft AGL). On the chart, obstacle heights are given in both meters and feet — exam candidates must be able to read the chart and convert between units. Obstacles above 100 m AGL are typically marked with their height and may have obstruction lighting.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.12 — was Q60 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.38)*
+
+**Question:** Wie hoch darfst du ueber Egerkingen (32,4 km, 060 von LSZG) steigen?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Egerkingen lies beneath the Tango Sector — a portion of Swiss airspace associated with the Basel/Mulhouse (LFSB/EuroAirport) TMA. When the Tango Sector is inactive (check with Basel Info on the appropriate frequency), the area is uncontrolled airspace up to FL100. When active, the upper limit drops to 1750 m MSL and operations above require a clearance from Basel Approach. This dynamic airspace structure is specific to the Swiss airspace system and requires checking NOTAMs and AIP Switzerland before flight.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.13 — was Q61 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.33)*
+
+**Question:** Welche Infos finden wir auf der SF-Karte zum Flugplatz Les Eplatures (47 05 N, 6 47,5 E)?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Les Eplatures (LSGC) near La Chaux-de-Fonds appears on the Swiss gliding chart with symbols decoded in the chart legend. The legend distinguishes between towered (controlled) and non-towered airfields, glider-specific aerodromes, military fields, and emergency landing strips. Candidates must be able to read the legend and determine the relevant operational information (radio frequencies, runway orientation, airspace class) for any airfield depicted on the chart.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.14 — was Q62 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.35)*
+
+**Question:** Benuetzungsbedingungen LS-R69 T (bei Schaffhausen)?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> LS-R69 is a glider restricted area near Schaffhausen that lies within the Zurich TMA structure. The area overlaps with TMA LSZH 3 (lower limit 1700 m MSL), not TMA LSZH 10 (2000 m) — this distinction is critical because it determines the altitude at which a clearance becomes necessary. Usage conditions are found in the chart legend lower right, and the text boxes on the chart itself clarify which TMA segment applies. Misidentifying the applicable TMA layer could lead to an airspace infringement.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.15 — was Q63 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.44)*
+
+**Question:** Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Birrfeld?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Birrfeld (LSZF) is a glider aerodrome in the canton of Aargau, Switzerland. Reading exact coordinates from the ICAO 1:500,000 chart requires careful use of the latitude and longitude graticule — each degree is divided into minutes, and at this scale, individual minutes of arc are clearly readable. The ability to read and record precise coordinates is tested because pilots may need to report positions to ATC or verify their location against chart features.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.16 — was Q64 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.38)*
+
+**Question:** Koordinaten vom Flugplatz Montricher?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Montricher (LSTR) is a glider airfield in the canton of Vaud, in the French-speaking region of Switzerland. Its coordinates place it on the Swiss Plateau west of Lausanne. Locating it precisely on the ICAO chart and reading the graticule accurately requires practice — at 1:500,000 scale, 1 minute of latitude ≈ 1 NM ≈ 1.85 km, allowing sub-minute precision to be interpolated visually from the grid.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.17 — was Q65 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.36)*
+
+**Question:** Welcher Ort ist auf N 47 07', E 8 00'?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Given a set of coordinates, the candidate must locate the point on the Swiss ICAO chart by finding the correct latitude (47°07'N) and longitude (8°00'E) lines and reading the nearest landmark. Willisau is a town in the canton of Lucerne, on the Swiss Plateau. This exercise tests reverse coordinate lookup — starting from numbers and finding the geographic feature, as opposed to the forward direction (finding coordinates from a named place).
+
+---
+### Missing 60.18 — was Q66 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.36)*
+
+**Question:** Welcher Ort ist auf N 46 11', E 6 16'?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> These coordinates place the point south of Lake Geneva (Lac Léman) at approximately N46°11' / E6°16', which corresponds to Annemasse aerodrome — a French airfield just across the Swiss-French border near Geneva. This question tests not only chart reading but also awareness that the Swiss ICAO chart extends into neighboring countries (France, Germany, Austria, Italy), and pilots should recognize aerodromes in border regions.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.19 — was Q67 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.33)*
+
+**Question:** TC von Grenchen Flugplatz nach Neuenburg Flugplatz?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> To find the true course between two airfields, place a protractor on the chart aligned to the nearest meridian and measure the angle of the straight line connecting the two points. Grenchen (LSZG) is northeast of Neuenburg/Neuchâtel (LSGN), so the course from Grenchen to Neuchâtel runs roughly southwest — approximately 239° true. On the Lambert conformal chart, straight lines closely approximate great circles, and courses are measured from true north at the midpoint meridian.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.20 — was Q68 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.37)*
+
+**Question:** TC von Langenthal Flugplatz nach Kaegiswil Flugplatz?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Langenthal (LSPL) is northwest of Kaegiswil (LSPG near Sarnen), so the course from Langenthal to Kaegiswil runs roughly southeast — approximately 132° true. This is measured with a protractor on the ICAO chart, aligned to the meridian passing through or near the midpoint of the route. The course of 132° places the destination to the SE, consistent with Kaegiswil's position in the foothills near Lake Sarnen.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.21 — was Q69 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.38)*
+
+**Question:** Distanz Laax - Oberalp in km, NM, sm?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The distance is measured with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and converted using the scale bar. At 1:500,000, 1 cm on the chart = 5 km in reality. Once the distance in km is known, conversion follows: NM = km / 1.852 ≈ km / 2 + 10% (exam formula), and statute miles = km / 1.609. This route runs along the Vorderrhein valley from Laax ski area toward the Oberalp Pass — a classic Swiss glider cross-country segment.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.22 — was Q70 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.32)*
+
+**Question:** Flugzeit Laax 14:52 nach Oberalp 15:09?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Simply subtract departure time from arrival time: 15:09 - 14:52 = 17 minutes. This elapsed flight time, combined with the distance from Q69, gives the speed for Q71. In practice, timing legs of a cross-country flight allows the pilot to verify actual groundspeed against planned groundspeed and detect headwind or tailwind differences from the forecast.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.23 — was Q71 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.31)*
+
+**Question:** Geschwindigkeit in km/h, kts, mph?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Ground speed = distance / time = 46.3 km / (17/60) h = 46.3 / 0.2833 = 163.4 km/h ≈ 163 km/h. Converting: kts = km/h / 1.852 ≈ 163 / 2 + 10% ≈ 88 kts; mph = km/h / 1.609 ≈ 101 mph. This three-unit speed result is typical of Swiss navigation exam questions, requiring fluency with all three speed units and their conversion relationships.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.24 — was Q72 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.34)*
+
+**Question:** Strecke LSTB-Buochs-Jungfrau-LSTB: Wie lang in km und NM?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> This is a triangular cross-country task measured on the chart: from Bellechasse (LSTB) to Buochs, then to the Jungfrau, and back to Bellechasse. Each leg is measured separately with a ruler on the 1:500,000 chart and the distances summed: 56 + 43 + 59 + 80 = 238 km total. Converting each leg to NM individually then summing (or converting the total: 238 / 1.852 ≈ 128 NM) gives the total task distance used for competition scoring and exam questions.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.25 — was Q73 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.38)*
+
+**Question:** Von Eriswil bis Buochs in 18 Min - wie schnell?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Ground speed = (distance / time) x 60 to convert minutes to hours: (43 km / 18 min) x 60 = 143.3 km/h ≈ 143 km/h. The 43 km distance is taken from the chart measurement for this leg. Converting: kts ≈ 143 / 1.852 ≈ 77 kts; mph ≈ 143 / 1.609 ≈ 89 mph. This type of in-flight speed check — measuring elapsed time between two known points — is how glider pilots monitor actual vs. planned groundspeed during cross-country flights.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.26 — was Q74 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.42)*
+
+**Question:** Welche Luftraeume zwischen Bellechasse und Buochs auf 1500 m/M?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> This question requires reading all airspace layers on the route between Bellechasse and Buochs at 1500 m MSL, using both the ICAO chart and the gliding chart. Airspace Class D areas (TMA LSZB1, CTR LSMA/LSZC) require an ATC clearance before entry. Airspace Class E areas (TMA PAY 7, LR E MTT, LR E Alpen) are accessible under VFR without clearance but IFR flights have priority. LS-R15 is a glider area that may be active. Systematic left-to-right reading of the chart along the route is the required technique.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.27 — was Q75 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.39)*
+
+**Question:** TC zwischen Jungfrau und Bellechasse?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The Jungfrau is located southeast of Bellechasse (LSTB), so the course FROM Jungfrau TO Bellechasse points northwest. A bearing of 308° is northwest of north, consistent with this geometry. The TC is measured with a protractor on the Lambert conformal chart, aligned to the meridian at the midpoint of the route. Note that this is the reciprocal of the course from Bellechasse to Jungfrau (approximately 128°), which confirms 308° is directionally correct.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.28 — was Q76 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.36)*
+
+**Question:** Gleitflug von Jungfrau (4200 m/M) nach Bellechasse mit Gleitwinkel 1:30 bei 150 km/h - Ankunftshoehe?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> With a glide ratio of 1:30, the glider covers 30 meters forward for every 1 meter of altitude lost. Height loss over 80 km = 80,000 m / 30 = 2,667 m. Starting at 4200 m MSL: arrival altitude = 4200 - 2667 = 1533 m MSL. Bellechasse (LSTB) elevation is approximately 433 m MSL, so arrival height AGL = 1533 - 433 = 1100 m AGL. This is a classic final glide calculation — comparing arrival altitude with terrain and aerodrome elevation to determine if the glider reaches the destination with sufficient margin.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.29 — was Q77 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.36)*
+
+**Question:** Winddreieck Jungfrau-Bellechasse: TAS 140 km/h, Wind 040/15 kts
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The wind triangle (Winddreieck) is solved graphically or with a mechanical DR calculator: the TC is 308°, TAS is 140 km/h (≈76 kts), and wind is from 040° at 15 kts (≈28 km/h). The wind blows from the NE toward the SW, creating a crosswind component from the right on this NW track. The WCA of +12° (right wind → head left) gives TH = TC + WCA = 308° + 12° = 320°. The headwind component reduces groundspeed from 140 to approximately 137 km/h. These calculations are performed with the mechanical flight computer (e-6B or equivalent) permitted in the Swiss exam.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.30 — was Q78 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.38)*
+
+**Question:** MH von Jungfrau nach Bellechasse (Variation 3 E)?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> To convert True Heading (TH) to Magnetic Heading (MH), apply the local magnetic variation. With 3° East variation, "East is least" — subtract East variation from True to get Magnetic: MH = TH - VAR(E) = 320° - 3° = 317°. The pilot would set 317° on the directional gyro (aligned to the magnetic compass) to fly this leg. Switzerland has a small easterly variation of about 2-3° in most regions.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.31 — was Q79 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.39)*
+
+**Question:** Falls Variation 25 W - MH?
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> With 25° West variation, "West is best" — add West variation to True Heading to get Magnetic Heading: MH = TH + VAR(W) = 320° + 25° = 345°. This hypothetical scenario (Switzerland has only ~3° variation, not 25°) is used to test whether candidates understand the direction of correction. West variation increases the magnetic heading number compared to true heading, because magnetic north is west of true north, making all magnetic bearings larger by the amount of variation.
+
+---
+### Missing 60.32 — was Q80 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.43)*
+
+**Question:** Transponder Codes
+
+- A) 2290 m AMSL
+- B) 2500 m AMSL
+- C) 1990 m AMSL
+- D) 1860 m AMSL
+- A) 0900 LT
+- B) 1100 LT
+- C) 0800 LT
+- D) 1200 LT
+- A) 200°
+- B) 230°
+- C) 210°
+- D) 240°
+- A) The distance between the current position and the estimated position (DR position) is greater than the distance between the current position and the air position.
+- B) The estimated position is to the north-west of the air position.
+- C) The estimated position is to the north-east of the air position.
+- D) The estimated position is to the south-east of the air position.
+- A) declination.
+- B) deviation.
+- C) variation.
+- D) magnetic dip (inclination).
+- A) Declination.
+- B) Variation.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Inclination.
+- A) The chart is neither conformal nor equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear curved.
+- B) It is equidistant but not conformal. Meridians converge towards the pole; parallels appear curved.
+- C) It is conformal but not equidistant. Meridians and parallels appear as straight lines.
+- D) The chart is both conformal and equidistant. Meridians converge towards the pole; parallels appear as straight lines.
+- A) 16 km
+- B) 32 km
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 12 km
+- A) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- B) Civil and military, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 m.
+- C) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, runway direction 10.
+- D) Open to public traffic, aerodrome elevation 789 ft AMSL, hard-surface runway, longest runway 1000 ft.
+- A) 122.45
+- B) 120.425
+- C) 134.125
+- D) 124.7
+- A) Major intersections of transport routes.
+- B) Long mountain ranges or hills.
+- C) Clearings within large forests.
+- D) Elongated coastlines.
+- A) You fly a lower heading and crab with the nose pointing left.
+- B) You bank the wing into the wind.
+- C) You wait until you have deviated a certain amount from your track, then correct to regain the desired track.
+- D) You fly a higher heading and crab with the nose pointing right.
+- A) 119.175 MHz
+- B) 120.05 MHz
+- C) 119.430 MHz
+- D) 121.230 MHz
+- A) 7500 ft AMSL
+- B) 5950 m AMSL
+- C) 2750 m AMSL
+- D) 3950 m AMSL
+- A) The Münster Nord gliding area. When activated, cloud separation minima are reduced for glider pilots.
+- B) A danger area: entry permitted at your own risk.
+- C) A restricted area: you must fly around it when it is active.
+- D) A prohibited area: contact frequency 128.375 MHz for status information and to request authorisation to transit.
+- A) Yverdon
+- B) Lausanne
+- C) Montricher
+- D) Môtiers
+- A) 168°
+- B) 352°
+- C) 348°
+- D) 172°
+- A) 232 km
+- B) 115 km
+- C) 58 km
+- D) 156 km
+- A) Onboard radio.
+- B) GPS.
+- C) Onboard VOR equipment.
+- D) Transponder.
+- A) Thunderstorm areas.
+- B) Flying low in mountainous terrain.
+- C) High, dense cloud layers.
+- D) Frequent heading changes.
+- A) 220 degrees
+- B) 230 degrees
+- C) 225 degrees
+- D) Parameters are insufficient to answer this question.
+- A) 268 degrees
+- B) 261 degrees
+- C) 282 degrees
+- D) 082 degrees
+- A) Your transponder has too low a transmitting power.
+- B) The onboard radio communication system is defective.
+- C) You are flying too low, the theoretical line-of-sight (quasi-optical) link is insufficient.
+- D) Atmospheric interference weakens the signals.
+- A) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- B) A line along which the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- C) Disturbance zones in which the Earth's magnetic field lines are strongly deflected (e.g. by ferrous rock); the magnetic declination is therefore subject to large variations over a small area.
+- D) All regions where the magnetic declination is greater than 0 degrees.
+- A) 1393 ft
+- B) 1500 ft
+- C) 13935 ft
+- D) 15000 ft
+- A) The distance between two degrees of latitude equals 60 NM (111 km) at the equator and decreases steadily as one approaches either pole.
+- B) The distance between two degrees of longitude equals 60 NM (111 km) only at the equator.
+- C) The distance between two degrees of longitude or latitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- D) The distance between two degrees of longitude is always equal to 60 NM (111 km).
+- A) Magnetic heading (MH)
+- B) Compass heading (CH)
+- C) True course (TC)
+- D) True heading (TH)
+- A) by decreasing the heading value
+- B) by correcting the heading to the right
+- C) by increasing the heading value
+- D) by flying more slowly
+- A) 1700 m AMSL
+- B) 2000 m AMSL
+- C) 4500 ft AMSL
+- D) 5950 m AMSL
+- A) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- B) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+- C) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- D) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+- A) 1350 UTC.
+- B) 1250 UTC.
+- C) 0950 UTC.
+- D) 1050 UTC.
+- A) 47 degrees 22’ N / 008 degrees 14’ E
+- B) 46 degrees 59’ N / 007 degrees 08’ E
+- C) 46 degrees 59’ S / 007 degrees 08’ W
+- D) 47 degrees 11’ S / 008 degrees 13’ W
+- A) The position of a satellite has changed significantly and requires a readjustment procedure.
+- B) Poor GPS coverage is a consequence of the twilight effect.
+- C) The indication may be the result of severe nearby thunderstorms.
+- D) Your device is receiving an insufficient number of satellite signals, possibly due to terrain configuration blocking them.
+- A) Inclination
+- B) Declination
+- C) Variation
+- D) Deviation
+- A) 189 km
+- B) 210 km
+- C) 315 km
+- D) 97 km
+- A) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the aeronautical database (DATA BASE).
+- B) No, you cannot do anything because your device is certified M (metric). c) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- D) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the settings options (SETTING MODE).
+- A) 1:200,000
+- B) 1:500,000
+- C) 1:100,000
+- D) 1:20,000
+- A) Constantly monitor the compass.
+- B) Track your position on the map with your thumb.
+- C) Orient the map to the north.
+- D) Monitor time with the time ruler; mark known positions on the map.
+- A) 122.475 MHz
+- B) 123.675 MHz
+- C) 123.450 MHz
+- D) 125.025 MHz
+- A) Restricted zone for gliders. Once activated, minimum cloud separation distances are reduced for gliders.
+- B) Restricted zone; entry prohibited when active (helicopter emergency medical service flights exempted).
+- C) Danger zone, transit prohibited (helicopter emergency medical service flights and special flights exempted).
+- D) Prohibited zone; activity information and authorization for transit on frequency 135.475 MHz.
+- A) Using the declination table found in the balloon flight manual (AFM).
+- B) Using the isogonic lines shown on the aeronautical chart.
+- C) By calculating the angle between the local meridian and the Greenwich meridian.
+- D) By calculating the difference between the course measured on the chart and the compass heading.
+- A) by increasing the heading value
+- B) by modifying the heading to the left
+- C) by decreasing the heading value
+- D) by flying more quickly
+- A) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND during MIL flying service hours.
+- B) Normal cloud separation distances always apply inside the zones designated GND.
+- C) Does not apply to gliding.
+- D) Reduced cloud separation distances apply inside the zones designated GND outside MIL flying service hours.
+- A) Additional parameters are missing to answer this question.
+- B) 10 degrees on average.
+- C) 20 degrees E.
+- D) 20 degrees W.
+- A) 154 km
+- B) 257 km
+- C) 178 km
+- D) 145 km
+- A) A prohibited zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- B) A prohibited zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+- C) A danger zone with a lower limit of 9000 ft above ground level.
+- D) A danger zone with an upper limit of 9000 ft above mean sea level.
+- A) 1:400,000
+- B) 1:250,000
+- C) 1:100,000
+- D) 1:25,000
+- A) FL 125.
+- B) 3950 ft AMSL.
+- C) 3950 ft AGL.
+- D) 3950 m AMSL.
+- A) Airspace class E.
+- B) Airspace class D, TMA BERN 2.
+- C) Airspace class G.
+- D) Airspace class D, CTR BERN.
+- A) Yes, you change the units of measurement in the database (AVIATION DATA BASE).
+- B) No, only the electronics workshop of a maintenance company can change the unit settings.
+- C) No, you cannot do anything because your device is not certified M (metric).
+- D) Yes, you change the distance units of measurement in the setting mode (SETTING MODE).
+- A) 0830 LT.
+- B) 1230 LT.
+- C) 0930 LT.
+- D) 1130 LT.
+- A) 92.60 km.
+- B) 29.16 km.
+- C) 100.00 km.
+- D) 27.00 km.
+- A) Thanks to its accuracy, GPS replaces terrestrial navigation and warns you against inadvertent entry into controlled airspace.
+- B) GPS has the great advantage of always being able to provide accurate indications, since it is not affected by interference.
+- C) GPS is a very accurate means of determining position, but satellite signal disruptions must be expected. The current position must therefore always be verified against significant ground references.
+- D) The great advantage of GPS is that once switched on, it automatically receives current information about airspace structure, frequencies, etc.; an up-to-date aeronautical database (AVIATION DATA BASE) is therefore always available.
+- A) Any line connecting regions with the same magnetic declination.
+- B) Any line connecting regions where the magnetic declination is 0 degrees.
+- C) Any line connecting regions with the same atmospheric pressure.
+- D) Any line connecting regions with the same temperature.
+- A) 227 degrees
+- B) 318 degrees
+- C) 328 degrees
+- D) 147 degrees
+- A) A GPS.
+- B) A transponder.
+- C) An onboard radio communication system.
+- D) An emergency transmitter (ELT).
+- A) Meridians and parallels form equidistant curves.
+- B) Meridians form converging straight lines, parallels form parallel curves.
+- C) Meridians and parallels form parallel straight lines.
+- D) Meridians are parallel to each other, parallels form converging straight lines.
+- A) 5500 ft AGL.
+- B) 1700 m AMSL.
+- C) 1700 m AGL.
+- D) 3050 m AMSL.
+- A) The Gstaad/Grund heliport
+- B) Sion airport
+- C) The Sanetsch Pass
+- D) Saanen aerodrome
+- A) The distance from the 0 degree meridian, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+- B) The distance from the equator, expressed in kilometres.
+- C) The distance from the north pole, expressed in degrees of latitude.
+- D) The distance from the equator, expressed in degrees of longitude.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> These four transponder codes are universal ICAO emergency and standard VFR codes, memorized by all pilots. Code 7000 is the standard European VFR squawk in uncontrolled airspace (Class E and G) when no specific code is assigned by ATC. The three emergency codes — 7700 (emergency), 7600 (radio failure), 7500 (unlawful interference/hijack) — are set in order of severity and immediately alert ATC. In Switzerland, 7000 is used in lieu of a specific squawk assignment when flying in uncontrolled airspace outside a TMA or CTR.
+> ---
+
+---
+
+## Subject 70 - Operational Procedures: **No missing questions** ✓
+
+
+## Subject 80 - Principles of Flight: 35 Missing Questions
+
+> **WARNING: 7 of these questions contain figure/image references.**
+
+### Missing 80.1 — was Q1 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.52)*
+
+**Question:** With regard to the forces acting, how can stationary gliding be described?
+
+- A) The sum of air forces acts along the direction of air flow
+- B) The sum the air forces acts along with the lift force
+- C) The lift force compensates the drag force
+- D) The sum of air forces compensates the gravity force
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> In steady (stationary) gliding flight, there is no thrust, so only two forces act: gravity (weight) and the total aerodynamic force (the vector sum of lift and drag). For the glider to be in equilibrium, these two must be equal and opposite — meaning the resultant air force exactly compensates gravity. Lift and drag are merely components of this single aerodynamic resultant; neither lift alone nor drag alone balances weight.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.2 — was Q2 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.70)*
+
+**Question:** What is the result of extending flaps with increasing aerofoil camber?
+
+- A) Maximum permissable speed increases
+- B) Minimum speed increases
+- C) Minimum speed decreases
+- D) C.G. position moves forward
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Extending flaps increases wing camber, which raises the maximum lift coefficient (CL_max). From the stall speed formula Vs = sqrt(2W / (rho * S * CL_max)), a higher CL_max directly lowers the minimum flying speed Vs. This allows the aircraft to fly slower without stalling, which is why flaps are used during approach and landing. The maximum permissible speed typically decreases with flaps extended (not increases), because flap structures are not designed for high dynamic pressure.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.3 — was Q3 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.66)*
+
+**Question:** Following a single-wing stall and pitch-down moment, how can a spin be prevented?
+
+- A) Deflect all rudders opposite to lower wing
+- B) Rudder opposite lower wing, releasing elevator to build up speed
+- C) Pushing the elevator to build up speed to re-attach airflow on wings
+- D) Pulling the elevator to bring the plane back to normal attitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> An incipient spin begins when one wing stalls before the other — the stalled wing drops, creating a yawing and rolling moment. The correct response is to apply rudder opposite the direction of yaw/lower wing to stop the rotation, and simultaneously release elevator back-pressure (or push forward) to reduce the angle of attack below the critical value, allowing airflow to re-attach and lift to be restored. Pulling the elevator (D) would increase AoA and deepen the stall; pushing alone (C) without rudder does not stop the yaw.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.4 — was Q4 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.68)*
+
+**Question:** Stabilization around the lateral axis during cruise is achieved by the...
+
+- A) Wing flaps.
+- B) Horizontal stabilizer
+- C) Airlerons.
+- D) Vertical rudder
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The lateral axis is the pitch axis (nose up/down). The horizontal stabilizer provides longitudinal (pitch) stability: it generates a restoring moment whenever the nose pitches up or down from trim, because its lift force changes with AoA at the tail. Ailerons control roll (longitudinal axis), the vertical rudder controls yaw (vertical axis), and flaps are high-lift devices, not stability surfaces.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.5 — was Q5 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.73)*
+
+**Question:** Flying with speeds higher than the never-exceed-speed (vNE) may result in...
+
+- A) Reduced drag with increased control forces.
+- B) An increased lift-to-drag ratio and a better glide angle.
+- C) Too high total pressure resulting in an unusable airspeed indicator.
+- D) Flutter and mechanically damaging the wings.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> VNE is the red-line speed above which structural or aeroelastic failure becomes possible. At excessive speeds, dynamic pressure (q = 0.5 * rho * V^2) rises dramatically, and control surfaces and wing structures may enter flutter — a self-reinforcing oscillation where aerodynamic forces and structural elasticity feed each other, potentially causing rapid structural disintegration. The airspeed indicator remains usable at high speeds; glide ratio does not improve beyond the best-glide speed.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.6 — was Q6 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.55)*
+
+**Question:** Considering longitudinal stability, which C.G. position is most dangerous with a normal gliding plane?
+
+- A) Position beyond the front C.G. limit
+- B) Position too far aside permissable C.G. limits.
+- C) Position far back within permissable C.G. limits
+- D) Position beyond the rear C.G. limit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Longitudinal (pitch) stability requires the centre of gravity to be ahead of the neutral point. When the C.G. moves aft beyond the rear limit, the static margin becomes negative: a pitch disturbance produces a moment that amplifies rather than corrects the disturbance, making the aircraft unstable and potentially uncontrollable. A forward C.G. (A) increases stability but requires more elevator force — it is uncomfortable but recoverable. Rearward C.G. beyond limits is the most dangerous condition because recovery from pitch divergence may be impossible.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.7 — was Q7 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.71)*
+
+**Question:** The static pressure of gases work...
+
+- A) In all directions.
+- B) Only in flow direction.
+- C) Only in the direction of the total pressure.
+- D) Only vertical to the flow direction.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Static pressure is a scalar thermodynamic quantity representing the random kinetic energy of gas molecules. Because molecular collisions occur in all directions equally, static pressure acts omnidirectionally — it presses equally on all surfaces of a container regardless of orientation. This contrasts with dynamic pressure (q = 0.5 * rho * V^2), which is directional and associated with the bulk flow velocity. Bernoulli's equation combines both: p_total = p_static + q.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.8 — was Q10 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.59)*
+
+**Question:** All aerodynamic forces can be considered to act on a single point. This point is called...
+
+- A) Center of gravity.
+- B) Lift point.
+- C) Transition point.
+- D) Center of pressure.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The center of pressure (CP) is the single point on an aerofoil through which the resultant of all distributed aerodynamic pressure forces acts. It is analogous to the center of gravity for weight distribution. The CP moves with angle of attack — generally forward as AoA increases toward the critical angle. The center of gravity is where weight acts, not aerodynamic forces; the transition point is where the boundary layer changes from laminar to turbulent.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.9 — was Q12 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.67)*
+
+**Question:** Number 2 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010)
+
+- A) Profile thickness.
+- B) Chord line.
+- C) Chord line.
+- D) Angle of attack.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The chord line is a straight reference line connecting the leading edge to the trailing edge of an aerofoil. It is the baseline from which the angle of attack is measured (the angle between the chord line and the undisturbed freestream direction). In standard aerofoil diagrams, the chord line (item 2) is typically the straight baseline of the cross-section, while the mean camber line curves above it and the thickness is measured perpendicular to the chord.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.10 — was Q13 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.71)*
+
+**Question:** Number 3 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010)
+
+- A) Camber line.
+- B) Thickness.
+- C) Chord.
+- D) Chord line.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The mean camber line (also called the mean line) is the locus of points equidistant between the upper and lower surfaces of the aerofoil, measured perpendicular to the chord line. It describes the aerofoil's curvature or camber — a cambered (curved) aerofoil generates lift even at zero angle of attack because the asymmetry in curvature accelerates flow more over the upper surface. Maximum camber and its location are key parameters defining aerofoil character.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.11 — was Q15 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.66)*
+
+**Question:** The ratio of span and mean chord length is referred to as...
+
+- A) Trapezium shape.
+- B) Tapering.
+- C) Aspect ratio.
+- D) Wing sweep.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Aspect ratio (AR) = wingspan (b) / mean chord (c) = b^2 / S, where S is wing area. High aspect ratio wings (long, narrow) produce less induced drag because the wingtip vortices are proportionally weaker relative to the total span. Gliders have very high aspect ratios (typically 20–40) for this reason — minimising induced drag is essential for maximum glide ratio. Low-aspect-ratio wings produce more induced drag but are structurally lighter and more agile.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.12 — was Q16 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.69)*
+
+**Question:** Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 3? See figure (PFA-009)
+
+- A) Stagnation point
+- B) Separation point
+- C) Center of pressure
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The transition point is where the boundary layer changes character from laminar to turbulent flow. Laminar flow (near the leading edge) has lower friction drag but is fragile and prone to separation. The turbulent boundary layer that follows is thicker and has higher friction drag but resists separation better. The position of the transition point depends on Reynolds number, surface roughness, and pressure gradient — aerofoil designers try to delay transition as far back as possible to minimise skin friction.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.13 — was Q17 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.69)*
+
+**Question:** Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 4? See figure (PFA-009)
+
+- A) Transition point
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Center of pressure
+- D) Separation point
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The separation point is where the boundary layer detaches from the aerofoil surface. Beyond this point, the smooth attached flow breaks down into a turbulent, reversed-flow wake. As angle of attack increases, the adverse pressure gradient on the upper surface intensifies, and the separation point moves progressively forward toward the leading edge. When separation reaches the leading edge, the wing is fully stalled — CL drops abruptly and CD rises sharply.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.14 — was Q18 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.69)*
+
+**Question:** Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 1? See figure (PFA-009)
+
+- A) Center of pressure
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Separation point
+- D) Transition point
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The stagnation point is the location on the aerofoil's leading edge region where the oncoming airflow divides — some going over the upper surface, some beneath. At this point, the local flow velocity is zero and static pressure reaches its maximum (equal to total pressure, since dynamic pressure is zero). With increasing angle of attack, the stagnation point moves slightly downward on the leading edge, as more flow is directed over the upper surface to generate greater lift.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.15 — was Q19 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.72)*
+
+**Question:** What pattern can be found at the stagnation point?
+
+- A) The boundary layer starts separating on the upper surface of the profile
+- B) All aerodynamic forces can be considered as attacking at this single point
+- C) The laminar boundary layer changes into a turbulent boundary layer
+- D) Streamlines are divided into airflow above and below the profile
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The stagnation point is precisely the dividing location where incoming streamlines bifurcate — the streamline that arrives at the stagnation point splits, with air flowing around the upper and lower surfaces separately. At this point, kinetic energy is fully converted to pressure (V = 0, p = p_total). Boundary layer transition (C) occurs further aft on the upper surface; separation (A) is further aft still; aerodynamic forces are considered to act at the center of pressure, not the stagnation point.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.16 — was Q20 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.59)*
+
+**Question:** What pressure pattern can be observed at a lift-generating wing profile at positive angle of attack?
+
+- A) Low pressure is created above, higher pressure below the profile
+- B) Pressure above remains unchanged, higher pressure is created below the profile
+- C) High pressure is created above, lower pressure below the profile
+- D) Pressure below remains unchanged, lower pressure is created above the profile
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Lift is generated by a pressure differential: lower pressure on the upper (suction) surface and higher pressure on the lower surface. On the upper surface, flow accelerates around the curved upper side — by Bernoulli's principle, higher velocity means lower static pressure. On the lower surface, flow is slowed and compressed, increasing static pressure. The net upward pressure force integrated over the entire surface constitutes lift: L = CL * 0.5 * rho * V^2 * S.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.17 — was Q21 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.64)*
+
+**Question:** In which way does the position of the center of pressure move at a positively shaped profile with increasing angle of attack?
+
+- A) It moves to the wing tips
+- B) It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack
+- C) It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack
+- D) It moves forward first, then backward
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> As angle of attack increases, the suction peak on the upper surface intensifies and moves toward the leading edge, causing the center of pressure to migrate forward. This continues until the critical (stall) angle of attack is reached. Beyond the stall, the suction peak collapses as flow separates, and the center of pressure moves abruptly rearward. The forward movement of the CP with increasing AoA is important for stability analysis and contributes to the pitching moment characteristics of the aerofoil.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.18 — was Q23 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.63)*
+
+**Question:** Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack increases?
+
+- A) The stagnation point moves down
+- B) The center of pressure moves down
+- C) The center of pressure moves up
+- D) The stagnation point moves up
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> As angle of attack increases, the relative airflow meets the wing at a steeper upward angle. The streamline that arrives exactly at the stagnation point shifts downward (toward the lower surface of the leading edge), because more airflow is now directed over the upper surface. Simultaneously, the centre of pressure moves forward (not up or down — it moves chordwise), and the suction on the upper surface increases as flow accelerates more strongly over the curved upper side.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.19 — was Q24 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.60)*
+
+**Question:** Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack decreases?
+
+- A) The center of pressure moves aft
+- B) The center of pressure moves forward
+- C) The stagnation point moves down
+- D) The stagnation point remains constant
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> As angle of attack decreases, the aerodynamic loading on the forward portion of the upper surface diminishes, shifting the resultant pressure force rearward — so the center of pressure moves aft (toward the trailing edge). The stagnation point also moves upward (not down) as less flow is forced over the upper surface. Understanding CP movement is important because it affects the pitching moment balance of the aircraft throughout the flight envelope.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.20 — was Q25 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.60)*
+
+**Question:** The angle (alpha) shown in the figure is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow
+
+- A) Lift angle.
+- B) Angle of attack.
+- C) Angle of incidence.
+- D) Angle of inclination
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The angle of attack (alpha, α) is the angle between the chord line and the direction of the oncoming airflow (relative wind). In the figure, the direction of airflow (DoF) vector and the chord line form angle alpha — this is the fundamental angle that determines the lift coefficient and stall behaviour. The angle of incidence is a fixed structural angle between the chord line and the aircraft's longitudinal axis (set during manufacturing), and does not change in flight.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.21 — was Q26 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.59)*
+
+**Question:** In order to improve the stall characteristics of an aircraft, the wing is twisted outwards (the angle of incidence varies spanwise). This is known as...
+
+- A) Arrow shape.
+- B) V-form
+- C) Geometric washout.
+- D) Aerodynamic washout.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Geometric washout means the wing is physically twisted so that the angle of incidence (and thus the local angle of attack) decreases from root to tip. This ensures that the wing root reaches the critical stall angle before the wingtips, so the ailerons (located outboard) remain effective even as the inboard section stalls. This gives the pilot aileron control during the approach to stall, enabling better roll control and safer stall behaviour. Aerodynamic washout (D) achieves the same effect through changing aerofoil sections rather than physical twist.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.22 — was Q29 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.70)*
+
+**Question:** When increasing the airflow speed by a factor of 2 while keeping all other parameters constant, how does the parasite drag change approximately?
+
+- A) It decreases by a factor of 2
+- B) It increases by a factor of 2
+- C) It decreases by a factor of 4
+- D) It increases by a factor of 4
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Parasite drag follows the formula D_parasite = CD_p * 0.5 * rho * V^2 * S. Since dynamic pressure q = 0.5 * rho * V^2 is proportional to V^2, doubling the speed (V × 2) quadruples dynamic pressure (2^2 = 4), and thus quadruples parasite drag. This square-law relationship is fundamental: halving your speed reduces parasite drag by a factor of four, while doubling speed costs four times as much drag — which is why high-speed flight is energetically expensive.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.23 — was Q30 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.60)*
+
+**Question:** The drag coefficient...
+
+- A) Is proportional to the lift coefficient
+- B) Increases with increasing airspeed.
+- C) May range from zero to an infinite positive value
+- D) Cannot be lower than a non-negative, minimal value.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Every aerofoil has a minimum drag coefficient (CD_min) greater than zero, because skin friction and form drag exist even at the optimal low-drag AoA. The drag coefficient cannot reach zero for a real body in viscous flow — there is always some irreducible friction drag. It can increase without bound as AoA increases (especially post-stall), but has a finite positive minimum. The drag polar (CD vs CL curve) shows CD_min as the lowest point of the parabolic curve.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.24 — was Q31 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.59)*
+
+**Question:** Pressure compensation on an wing occurs at the...
+
+- A) Wing tips.
+- B) Leading edge.
+- C) Trailing edge.
+- D) Wing roots
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> High pressure below the wing and low pressure above create a tendency for air to flow around the wingtip from the high-pressure lower surface to the low-pressure upper surface. This spanwise flow wraps around the wingtip, creating trailing vortices (wingtip vortices). These vortices are the physical mechanism of induced drag — they impart a downward component (downwash) to the oncoming flow, effectively reducing the local angle of attack and tilting the lift vector rearward, creating an induced drag component.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.25 — was Q32 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.69)*
+
+**Question:** Which of the following options is likely to produce large induced drag?
+
+- A) Large aspect ratio
+- B) Small aspect ratio
+- C) Low lift coefficients
+- D) Tapered wings
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Induced drag is proportional to CL^2 / (pi * AR * e), where AR is aspect ratio and e is Oswald efficiency factor. A small aspect ratio (short, stubby wing) produces high induced drag for a given lift coefficient because the wingtip vortices are strong relative to the span. Conversely, high aspect ratio (long, slender) wings minimise induced drag — hence gliders use very high AR wings. Low CL (option C) would reduce induced drag, not increase it.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.26 — was Q33 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.70)*
+
+**Question:** Which parts of an aircraft mainly affect the generation of induced drag?
+
+- A) The front part of the fuselage.
+- B) The outer part of the ailerons.
+- C) The lower part of the gear.
+- D) The wing tips.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Induced drag originates from the pressure difference between the upper and lower wing surfaces causing spanwise flow that rolls up into concentrated vortices at the wingtips. The strength of these vortices — and thus the induced drag — is directly related to what happens at the wingtips. This is why winglets, raked wingtips, and elliptical planforms are used to reduce wingtip vortex strength. The fuselage, ailerons, and landing gear primarily generate parasite drag, not induced drag.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.27 — was Q35 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.74)*
+
+**Question:** Pressure drag, interference drag and friction drag belong to the group of the...
+
+- A) Parasite drag
+- B) Main resistance.
+- C) Induced drag.
+- D) Total drag.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Total drag = parasite drag + induced drag. Parasite drag encompasses all drag not associated with lift production: skin friction drag (viscous shear on surfaces), form/pressure drag (pressure difference between leading and trailing edges due to boundary layer separation), and interference drag (junction effects). Induced drag is separately caused by the lift generation process itself (wingtip vortices and downwash). Parasite drag increases with V^2, while induced drag decreases with V^2.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.28 — was Q36 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.48)*
+
+**Question:** How do induced drag and parasite drag change with increasing airspeed during a horizontal and stable cruise flight?
+
+- A) Parasite drag decreases and induced drag increases
+- B) Induced drag decreases and parasite drag increases
+- C) Parasite drag decreases and induced drag decreases
+- D) Induced drag increases and parasite drag increases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> In level flight, lift must equal weight, so CL decreases as speed increases (L = CL * 0.5 * rho * V^2 * S = W, thus CL = 2W / (rho * V^2 * S)). Induced drag ∝ CL^2 / V^2 ∝ 1/V^2 — it decreases with increasing speed. Parasite drag ∝ V^2 — it increases with speed. The speed where induced drag equals parasite drag is the speed of minimum total drag, which corresponds to the best lift-to-drag ratio and maximum glide range in a glider.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.29 — was Q37 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.76)*
+
+**Question:** Which of the listed wing shapes has the lowest induced drag?
+
+- A) Rectangular shape
+- B) Trapezoidal shape
+- C) Elliptical shape
+- D) Double trapezoidal shape
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The elliptical wing planform produces the minimum possible induced drag for a given span and total lift. This is because it creates a perfectly elliptical spanwise lift distribution, which results in a uniform downwash across the span — the theoretical optimum. An elliptical distribution means no "wasteful" concentration of lift near the root or sudden drops near the tips. The Spitfire used an elliptical wing for this reason. Tapered (trapezoidal) wings approximate this and are easier to manufacture; rectangular wings have higher induced drag.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.30 — was Q38 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.50)*
+
+**Question:** Which effect does a decreasing airspeed have on the induced drag during a horizontal and stable cruise flight?
+
+- A) The induced drag will slightly decrease
+- B) The induced drag will collapse
+- C) The induced drag will increase
+- D) The induced drag will remain constant
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> As speed decreases in level flight, the angle of attack must increase to maintain sufficient lift (since CL must increase to compensate for lower dynamic pressure). Higher CL means stronger wingtip vortices and greater induced drag: D_induced ∝ CL^2 ∝ 1/V^2. This is why slow flight is dominated by induced drag — at very low speeds near stall, induced drag is very high and is the main component of total drag, while parasite drag is relatively small.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.31 — was Q40 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.64)*
+
+**Question:** Which kinds of drag contribute to total drag?
+
+- A) Interference drag and parasite drag
+- B) Induced drag and parasite drag
+- C) Induced drag, form drag, skin-friction drag
+- D) Form drag, skin-friction drag, interference drag
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> The standard aerodynamic breakdown of total drag is: Total drag = Induced drag + Parasite drag. Induced drag arises from lift generation (wingtip vortices). Parasite drag is the collective term for all non-lift-related drag: form/pressure drag, skin friction drag, and interference drag. Options C and D list sub-components of parasite drag but omit induced drag or incorrectly combine them. Option A omits induced drag, which is a major component especially at low speeds.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.32 — was Q41 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.50)*
+
+**Question:** How do lift and drag change when approaching a stall condition?
+
+- A) Lift decreases and drag increases
+- B) Lift and drag increase
+- C) Lift increases and drag decreases
+- D) Lift and drag decrease
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> As the critical angle of attack is reached, flow begins to separate from the upper surface, starting at the trailing edge and progressing forward. Once past the critical AoA, the clean attached flow that generated lift breaks down — CL drops sharply. Simultaneously, the separated flow creates a large turbulent wake with very high pressure drag, so CD rises dramatically. The drag polar shows this clearly: the nose of the polar curves sharply as the stall condition is approached, with CL falling and CD rising.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.33 — was Q42 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.54)*
+
+**Question:** In case of a stall it is important to...
+
+- A) Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed.
+- B) Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed.
+- C) Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed.
+- D) Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Stall recovery requires reducing angle of attack below the critical value so that airflow can re-attach to the upper surface and lift can be restored. The pilot must push forward on the elevator control to lower AoA, which also allows the aircraft to accelerate (or the pilot applies power if available). Increasing AoA (A, C) deepens the stall. Reducing speed (C, D) worsens the condition. Banking (D) increases the load factor, which raises the stall speed — exactly the wrong input.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.34 — was Q43 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.56)*
+
+**Question:** During a stall, the lift...
+
+- A) Decreases and drag increases.
+- B) Increases and drag increases.
+- C) Decreases and drag decreases
+- D) Increases and drag decreases.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> This is the definitive stall characteristic: lift collapses because boundary layer separation destroys the pressure differential that generates it, while drag rises dramatically due to the large turbulent separated wake. The CL vs. AoA curve shows CL_max at the critical angle, then a steep drop — this is the stall. The CD vs. AoA curve rises steeply through and beyond the stall. This combination (less lift, more drag) is why the stall is critical — the aircraft loses lift while simultaneously experiencing high drag that would further reduce speed.
+
+---
+### Missing 80.35 — was Q50 in backup **[HAS FIGURE/IMAGE REFERENCE]**
+*(best match ratio: 0.76)*
+
+**Question:** What structural item provides lateral stability to an airplane?
+
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) Vertical tail
+- C) Differential aileron deflection
+- D) Elevator
+- A) 100 m/sec²
+- B) 1013.25 hPa
+- C) 15° C/100 m
+- D) 9.81 m/sec²
+- A) specified in the flight manual (AFM).
+- B) flaps fully retracted.
+- C) flaps fully extended.
+- D) dependent on the downward vertical component of the airspeed.
+- A) it is able to return automatically to its original equilibrium after a disturbance.
+- B) it is able to stabilise automatically at a new equilibrium after a disturbance.
+- C) the rotation about the pitch axis is automatically corrected by the ailerons.
+- D) the permitted load factor allows a positive acceleration of at least 4 g and a negative acceleration of at least 2 g with landing flaps retracted (aileron flaps).
+- A) to below the manoeuvring speed V_A.
+- B) to normal cruising speed.
+- C) to the minimum constant speed in landing configuration.
+- D) to a speed within the yellow arc of the airspeed indicator.
+- A) 2°C/100 m
+- B) 0.65°C/1000 ft
+- C) 2°C/100 ft
+- D) 0.65°C/100 m
+- A) 5,500 ft
+- B) 6,600 ft
+- C) 5,500 m
+- D) 6,600 m
+- A) the true indicated altitude, after correction for instrument error.
+- B) the altitude read when the altimeter is set to QNH, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature.
+- C) pressure altitude, corrected for the temperature deviation from standard temperature.
+- D) the altitude at which atmospheric pressure and temperature correspond to those of the standard atmosphere.
+- A) airflow velocity increases when the cross-section decreases.
+- B) airflow velocity decreases when the cross-section decreases.
+- C) airflow velocity increases when the cross-section increases.
+- D) airflow velocity remains constant.
+- A) both drag and lift decrease.
+- B) both drag and lift increase.
+- C) drag increases and lift decreases.
+- D) drag decreases and lift increases.
+- A) Centre of symmetry.
+- B) Centre of gravity.
+- C) Aerodynamic centre.
+- D) Neutral point.
+- A) the dihedral angle.
+- B) the sweep angle.
+- C) the angle of attack.
+- D) the rigging angle (angle of incidence).
+- A) The lateral roll of the aircraft.
+- B) The change from a turbulent boundary layer to a laminar one.
+- C) The change from a laminar boundary layer to a turbulent one.
+- D) The point at which C_Lmax is reached.
+- A) partial compensation of adverse yaw at low speed.
+- B) progressive flow separation along the wingspan.
+- C) simultaneous flow separation along the wingspan at low speed.
+- D) a higher cruise speed.
+- A) its density.
+- B) its internal temperature.
+- C) the formation of vortices.
+- D) its mass.
+- A) the tensile strength of its material.
+- B) the surface area perpendicular to the airflow.
+- C) its density.
+- D) its weight.
+- A) Tangent (A).
+- B) Tangent (B).
+- C) Tangent (C).
+- D) Tangent (D).
+- A) with increasing angle of attack.
+- B) with decreasing angle of attack.
+- C) with increasing airspeed.
+- D) as parasite drag increases.
+- A) It decreases.
+- B) It does not change.
+- C) It increases.
+- D) It depends on the type of aircraft.
+- A) the gyroscopic effect that occurs when a turn is initiated.
+- B) the lateral airflow over the wing after a turn has been initiated.
+- C) the increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes down.
+- D) the increase in induced drag of the aileron on the wing that goes up.
+- A) without any correction.
+- B) corrected for position and instrument errors.
+- C) adjusted for air density.
+- D) corrected for both b) and c).
+- A) unlimited
+- B) limited at the upper end by the maneuvering speed (Va)
+- C) limited at the lower end by the bottom of the green arc
+- D) indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM) and normally on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- A) the upper surface toward the lower surface at the wing tip
+- B) the lower surface toward the upper surface at the wing tip
+- C) the upper surface toward the lower surface along the entire trailing edge
+- D) the lower surface toward the upper surface along the entire trailing edge
+- A) the longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+- B) the longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) the chord line and the general airflow direction
+- D) the horizon and the general airflow direction
+- A) 15 degrees F and 29.92 Hg
+- B) 59 degrees C and 29.92 hPa
+- C) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 Hg
+- D) 15 degrees C and 1013.25 hPa
+- A) the mass of air flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+- B) the mass of air flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) the mass of air flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- D) the speed of the air mass does not vary
+- A) to reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- B) to prevent an outward sideslip in the turn
+- C) to slightly increase lift
+- D) to prevent slipping inward in the turn
+- A) 9 times
+- B) 6 times
+- C) 3 times
+- D) 1.5 times
+- A) the airfoil profile from root to wing tip
+- B) the angle of attack at the wing tip by means of the aileron
+- C) the angle of incidence of the same airfoil, from root to wing tip
+- D) the wing dihedral, from root to tip
+- A) 100 m/sec2
+- B) 1013.25 hPa
+- C) 15° C/100 m
+- D) 9.81 m/sec2
+- A) total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- C) the difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- D) the weathervane effect, where pressure decreases
+- A) reduce air resistance
+- B) control the aircraft around its longitudinal axis
+- C) reduce the formation of wing tip vortices
+- D) stabilize the aircraft in flight
+- A) occurs at the same speed as before extending the flaps
+- B) occurs at a lower speed
+- C) occurs at a higher speed
+- D) none of the answers is correct
+- A) the resultant of all pressure forces acting on the airfoil
+- B) the weight
+- C) the tire pressure on the runway
+- D) the airflow at the leading edge
+- A) bar, psi, Pa
+- B) bar, psi, a(Alpha)
+- C) Pa, psi, g
+- D) bar, Pa, m/sec2
+- A) the aircraft relative to the ground
+- B) the aircraft relative to the air, corrected for wind component and atmospheric pressure
+- C) read on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) the aircraft relative to the surrounding air mass
+- A) the horizontal stabilizer
+- B) the fin (vertical stabilizer)
+- C) the wing dihedral
+- D) leading edge slats
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Slotted Flap
+- C) Split Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+- A) during an abrupt pull-out after a dive
+- B) in calm air, in gliding flight, at the minimum authorized speed
+- C) in straight climbing flight at high speed, in atmospheric turbulence
+- D) in straight level cruise flight, in atmospheric turbulence
+- A) the density of the body
+- B) the chemical composition of the body
+- C) the mass of the body
+- D) the density of the air
+- A) A
+- B) H
+- C) M
+- D) K
+- A) the longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the horizon
+- B) the longitudinal axis of the aircraft and the general airflow direction
+- C) the chord line and the general airflow direction
+- D) varies depending on the weight of the pilot
+- A) its shape
+- B) the position of its center of gravity
+- C) its weight
+- D) its density
+- A) pressure equalization from the upper surface toward the lower surface
+- B) pressure equalization from the lower surface toward the upper surface
+- C) the angle formed at the wing-fuselage junction
+- D) speed
+- A) 1013.25 hPa
+- B) 29.92 hPa
+- C) 1012.35 hPa
+- D) depends on latitude
+- A) G + J
+- B) A
+- C) H
+- D) B
+- A) to prevent an inward slip in the turn
+- B) to prevent an outward slip in the turn
+- C) to reduce speed and therefore centrifugal force
+- D) to increase lift and thereby balance centrifugal force
+- A) at the red radial line on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- B) following a reduction in engine power
+- C) only at an excessive nose-up angle relative to the horizon
+- D) at a critical angle of attack
+- A) simultaneously
+- B) at a determined angle of attack
+- C) only for a given nose position relative to the horizon
+- D) only depending on aircraft altitude
+- A) 100 m/sec2
+- B) 1013.5 hPa
+- C) 15° C/100 m
+- D) 9.81 m/sec2
+- A) without any correction
+- B) corrected for position and instrument errors
+- C) adjusted for atmospheric density
+- D) corrected for both B) and C)
+- A) modifying the angle of incidence
+- B) moving the load
+- C) modifying the angle of attack
+- D) modifying the position of the aerodynamic center
+- A) Fowler
+- B) Slotted Flap
+- C) Split Flap
+- D) Plain Flap
+- A) the center of symmetry
+- B) the stagnation point
+- C) the center of gravity
+- D) the aerodynamic center
+- A) 2,000 meters
+- B) 20,000 meters
+- C) 6,600 meters
+- D) 2,000 ft
+- A) total pressure in an aneroid capsule
+- B) static pressure around an aneroid capsule
+- C) the difference between static pressure and total pressure
+- D) the weathervane effect where pressure decreases
+- A) the action of the horizontal stabilizer
+- B) rotations around the lateral axis
+- C) wing sweep and dihedral
+- D) the use of leading edge slats
+- A) is unlimited
+- B) is limited at the upper end by the maneuvering speed
+- C) is limited at the lower end by the red radial line on the airspeed indicator (ASI)
+- D) is indicated in the Flight Manual (AFM)
+- A) aspect ratio
+- B) geometric twist (washout)
+- C) interference compensation
+- D) aerodynamic twist
+- A) decreasing linearly as altitude increases
+- B) decreasing exponentially as altitude increases
+- C) decreasing in the troposphere and then increasing in the stratosphere
+- D) remaining constant
+- A) the mass of air flows through a larger cross-section at a lower speed
+- B) the mass of air flows through a smaller cross-section at a lower speed
+- C) the mass of air flows through a larger cross-section at a higher speed
+- D) the speed of the air mass does not vary
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> Lateral (roll) stability — the tendency to return to wings-level after a roll disturbance — is primarily provided by wing dihedral (the upward angle of the wings from horizontal). When a gust rolls the aircraft, the lower wing descends and its angle of attack increases (it meets more airflow), generating more lift and creating a restoring moment back to level. The vertical tail provides directional (yaw) stability; ailerons are roll control surfaces (not stability), and the elevator controls pitch. High-wing aircraft achieve similar lateral stability through the pendulum effect of the fuselage hanging below the wings.
+> ## BAZL/OFAC — Series 1 Questions
+
+---
+
+## Subject 90 - Communications: 1 Missing Questions
+
+### Missing 90.1 — was Q14 in backup
+*(best match ratio: 0.58)*
+
+**Question:** Urgency messages are messages...
+
+- A) Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight
+- B) Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+- C) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- D) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+> An urgency message (PAN PAN, spoken three times) concerns a serious condition that requires timely assistance but does not yet pose a grave and imminent danger. Examples include medical situations, engine problems that are controllable, or a pilot who is uncertain of position. Urgency ranks below distress (MAYDAY) but above all routine traffic in priority.
+
+---
+
+# Low Confidence Matches (ratio 0.80–0.91)
+
+These backup questions found a match but with lower confidence. They are probably matched
+correctly but may warrant manual review.
+
+
+## Subject 20 - Aircraft General Knowledge: 5 Low Confidence Matches
+
+- **Q2** (ratio 0.83): *The thickness of the wing is defined as the distance between the lower and the u*
+ - Matched to current: *Where is the wing thickness measured?*
+- **Q8** (ratio 0.82): *Which constructional elements give the wing its profile shape?*
+ - Matched to current: *Which structural members give the wing its airfoil profile shape?*
+- **Q39** (ratio 0.83): *Which of the following states the working principle of an airspeed indicator?*
+ - Matched to current: *How does the airspeed indicator determine speed?*
+- **Q45** (ratio 0.91): *Which of the mentioned cockpit instruments is connected to the pitot tube?*
+ - Matched to current: *Which cockpit instrument is connected to the Pitot tube?*
+- **Q50** (ratio 0.88): *An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from *
+ - Matched to current: *When turning from 030° to 180° by the shortest route in the northern hemisphere,*
+
+## Subject 40 - Human Performance: 12 Low Confidence Matches
+
+- **Q1** (ratio 0.86): *The majority of aviation accidents are caused by...*
+ - Matched to current: *What is the leading cause of accidents in aviation?*
+- **Q4** (ratio 0.90): *What is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere?*
+ - Matched to current: *What is the approximate percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere?*
+- **Q8** (ratio 0.86): *What does the term "Red-out" mean?*
+ - Matched to current: *What does the term "red-out" refer to?*
+- **Q10** (ratio 0.91): *Which of the following symptoms may indicate hypoxia?*
+ - Matched to current: *Which of the following may indicate hypoxia?*
+- **Q14** (ratio 0.90): *What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)?*
+ - Matched to current: *What is the primary function of red blood cells (erythrocytes)?*
+- **Q16** (ratio 0.87): *What is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)?*
+ - Matched to current: *What is the role of white blood cells (leucocytes)?*
+- **Q24** (ratio 0.80): *The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called...*
+ - Matched to current: *The passage connecting the middle ear to the nose and throat region is called th*
+- **Q32** (ratio 0.89): *Visual illusions are mostly caused by...*
+ - Matched to current: *Visual illusions are primarily caused by...*
+- **Q39** (ratio 0.91): *The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called...*
+ - Matched to current: *The continuous process of monitoring the current flight situation is called...*
+- **Q40** (ratio 0.85): *Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio*
+ - Matched to current: *In the communication model, how is the use of the same code ensured during radio*
+- **Q42** (ratio 0.91): *Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks?*
+ - Matched to current: *Under which circumstances are people more likely to accept higher risks?*
+- **Q50** (ratio 0.91): *Which of the following qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Conce*
+ - Matched to current: *Which of the following cognitive abilities are affected by stress? 1. Attention *
+
+## Subject 50 - Meteorology: 2 Low Confidence Matches
+
+- **Q30** (ratio 0.83): *The barometric altimeter with QNH setting indicates...*
+ - Matched to current: *What does a barometric altimeter indicate when QNH is set?*
+- **Q42** (ratio 0.90): *What type of turbulence is typically found close to the ground on the lee side d*
+ - Matched to current: *What type of turbulence is found near the ground on the lee side during Foehn co*
+
+## Subject 80 - Principles of Flight: 10 Low Confidence Matches
+
+- **Q8** (ratio 0.81): *Bernoulli's equation for frictionless, incompressible gases states that...*
+ - Matched to current: *What does Bernoulli's equation for frictionless, incompressible flow state?*
+- **Q14** (ratio 0.89): *The angle of attack is the angle between...*
+ - Matched to current: *The angle of attack is defined as the angle between...*
+- **Q27** (ratio 0.80): *Which option states a benefit of wing washout?*
+ - Matched to current: *What is a benefit of wing washout?*
+- **Q28** (ratio 0.88): *Which statement concerning the angle of attack is correct?*
+ - Matched to current: *Which statement about the angle of attack is correct?*
+- **Q34** (ratio 0.84): *Where is interference drag generated?*
+ - Matched to current: *Where does interference drag originate?*
+- **Q39** (ratio 0.82): *Which statement about induced drag during the horizontal cruise flight is correc*
+ - Matched to current: *Which statement about induced drag in level cruise is correct?*
+- **Q46** (ratio 0.86): *Which statement regarding a spin is correct?*
+ - Matched to current: *Which statement about a spin is correct?*
+- **Q47** (ratio 0.87): *The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil is located between...*
+ - Matched to current: *The laminar boundary layer on an aerofoil extends between...*
+- **Q48** (ratio 0.90): *What types of boundary layers can be found on an aerofoil?*
+ - Matched to current: *Which types of boundary layer are found on an aerofoil?*
+- **Q49** (ratio 0.92): *How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent boundary layer?*
+ - Matched to current: *How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent one?*
+
+## Subject 90 - Communications: 1 Low Confidence Matches
+
+- **Q19** (ratio 0.84): *An altitude of 4500 ft is transmitted as...*
+ - Matched to current: *How is an altitude of 4500 ft correctly spoken in radiotelephony?*
+
+
+---
+
+# German vs Current EN Question Count Analysis
+
+| Subject | DE Count | Current EN Count | Difference | Possible untranslated (DE only) |
+|---------|----------|------------------|------------|----------------------------------|
+| 10 - Air Law | 50 | 113 | -63 | **Investigate** |
+| 20 - Aircraft General Knowledge | 0 | 77 | -77 | **Investigate** |
+| 30 - Flight Performance and Planning | 30 | 89 | -59 | **Investigate** |
+| 40 - Human Performance | 50 | 111 | -61 | **Investigate** |
+| 50 - Meteorology | 50 | 182 | -132 | **Investigate** |
+| 60 - Navigation | 80 | 111 | -31 | **Investigate** |
+| 70 - Operational Procedures | 50 | 68 | -18 | **Investigate** |
+| 80 - Principles of Flight | 0 | 135 | -135 | **Investigate** |
+| 90 - Communications | 50 | 101 | -51 | **Investigate** |
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/10 - Air Law.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/10 - Air Law.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2ecb0d1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/10 - Air Law.md
@@ -0,0 +1,581 @@
+# 10 - Air Law
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 64 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which area could be crossed with certain restrictions? ^q1
+- A) No-fly zone
+- B) Restricted area
+- C) Prohibited area
+- D) Dangerous area
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: Where can the type of restriction for a restricted airspace be found? ^q2
+- A) AIC
+- B) ICAO chart 1:500000
+- C) AIP
+- D) NOTAM
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: What is the status of the rules and procedures created by the EASA? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^q3
+- A) They are not legally binding, they only serve as a guide
+- B) Only after a ratification by individual EU member states they are legally binding
+- C) They are part of the EU regulation and legally binding to all EU member states
+- D) They have the same status as ICAO Annexes
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "ARC"? ^q4
+- A) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- B) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- C) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- D) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: The "Certificate of Airworthiness" is issued by the state... ^q5
+- A) Of the residence of the owner
+- B) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- D) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: The validity of a medical examination certificate class 2 for a 62 years old pilot is... ^q6
+- A) 12 Months.
+- B) 48 Months.
+- C) 24 Months.
+- D) 60 Months.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "TRA"? ^q7
+- A) Transponder Area
+- B) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- C) Terminal Area
+- D) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: What has to be considered when entering an RMZ? ^q8
+- A) To obtain a clearance to enter this area
+- B) To permanently monitor the radio and if possible to establish radio contact
+- C) To obtain a clearance from the local aviation authority
+- D) The transponder has to be switched on Mode C and squawk 7000
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: What is the meaning of an area marked as "TMZ"? ^q9
+- A) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Traffic Management Zone
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: Two engine-driven aircraft are flying on crossing courses at the same altitude. Which one has to divert? ^q10
+- A) Both have to divert to the left
+- B) The lighter one has to climb
+- C) The heavier one has to climb
+- D) Both have to divert to the right
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: Two aeroplanes are flying on crossing tracks. Which one has to divert? ^q11
+- A) Both have to divert to the lef
+- B) The aircraft which flies from left to right has the right of priority
+- C) Both have to divert to the right
+- D) The aircraft which flies from right to left has the right of priority
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "E" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL75? ^q12
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" below FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q13
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 10 km
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" at and above FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q14
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 10 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 8 km
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: The term "ceiling" is defined as the... ^q15
+- A) Height of the base of the highest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 10000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Altitude of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: A transponder with the ability to send the current pressure level is a... ^q16
+- A) Transponder approved for airspace "B".
+- B) Mode C or S transponder.
+- C) Pressure-decoder.
+- D) Mode A transponder.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: Which transponder code indicates a loss of radio communication? ^q17
+- A) 2000
+- B) 7600
+- C) 7000
+- D) 7700
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: What is the correct phrase with respect to wake turbulence to indicate that a light aircraft is following an aircraft of a higher wake turbulence category? ^q18
+- A) Caution wake turbulence
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Attention propwash
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: What information is provided in the general part (GEN) of the AIP? ^q19
+- A) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- B) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- C) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- D) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: Which are the different parts of the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP)? ^q20
+- A) GEN MET RAC
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN ENR AD
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: What is the purpose of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^q21
+- A) It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed
+- B) It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft
+- C) Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- D) It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: How are two parallel runways designated? ^q22
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+- B) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway "R"
+- C) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: Which runway designators are correct for 2 parallel runways? ^q23
+- A) "26" and "26R"
+- B) "06L" and "06R"
+- C) "18" and "18-2"
+- D) "24" and "25"
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: What is the meaning of this sign at an aerodrome? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q24
+- A) After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right
+- B) Caution, manoeuvring area is poor
+- C) Glider flying is in progress
+- D) Landing prohibited for a longer period
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: What is the meaning of "DETRESFA"? ^q25
+- A) Distress phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Uncertainty phase
+- D) Rescue phase
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: Who provides search and rescue service? ^q26
+- A) Only civil organisations
+- B) Both military and civil organisations
+- C) Only military organisations
+- D) International approved organisations
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: With respect to aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories regarding aircraft occurrences? ^q27
+- A) Event Crash Disaster
+- B) Event Serious event Accident
+- C) Happening Event Serious event
+- D) Incident Serious incident Accident
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: During slope soaring you have the hill to your left side, another glider is approaching from the opposite side at the same altitude. How do you react? ^q28
+- A) You divert to the right
+- B) You expect the opposite glider to divert
+- C) You divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same
+- D) You pull on the elevator and divert upward
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: Along with other gliders, you are circling in a thermal updraft. Who determines the direction of circling? ^q29
+- A) Circling is general to the left
+- B) The glider who entered the updraft at first
+- C) The glider with greatest bank angle
+- D) The glider at highest altitude
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: Is it possible to enter airspace C with a glider plane? ^q30
+- A) Yes, but only with transponder activated
+- B) No
+- C) With restrictions, in case of less air traffic
+- D) Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q31: The holder of an SPL license or LAPL(S) license completed a total of 9 winch launches, 4 launches in aero-tow and 2 bungee launches during the last 24 months. What launch methods may the pilot conduct as PIC today? ^q31
+- A) Winch and bungee.
+- B) Winch, bungee and aero-tow.
+- C) Winch and aero-tow.
+- D) Aero-tow and bungee.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q32: Which of the following documents have to be on board for an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^q32
+- A) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- B) A, b, c, e, f
+- C) D, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q33: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL110? ^q33
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 8000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q34: During a flight at FL 80, the altimeter setting has to be... ^q34
+- A) Local QFE.
+- B) Local QNH.
+- C) 1030.25 hPa.
+- D) 1013.25 hPa.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q35: What is the purpose of the semi-circular rule? ^q35
+- A) To fly without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP
+- B) To avoid collisions by suspending turning manoeuvres
+- C) To avoid collisions by reducing the probability of opposing traffic at the same altitude
+- D) To allow safe climbing or descending in a holding pattern
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q36: Which transponder code should be set during a radio failure without any request? ^q36
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7600
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7000
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q37: Which transponder code has to be set unrequested during an emergency? ^q37
+- A) 7500
+- B) 7700
+- C) 7000
+- D) 7600
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q38: Which air traffic service is responsible for the safe conduct of flights? ^q38
+- A) ATC (air traffic control)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- C) ALR (alerting service)
+- D) FIS (flight information service)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q39: Which air traffic services can be expected within an FIR (flight information region)? ^q39
+- A) FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)
+- B) ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)
+- C) ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- D) AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q40: Which of the following options states a correct position report? ^q40
+- A) DEABC reaching "N"
+- B) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- C) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" at 35
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q41: The shown NOTAM is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^q41
+- A) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+- B) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q42: The term "aerodrome elevation" is defined as... ^q42
+- A) The highest point of the apron.
+- B) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- C) The highest point of the landing area.
+- D) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q43: Of what shape is a landing direction indicator? ^q43
+- A) T
+- B) A straight arrow
+- C) L
+- D) An angled arrow
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q44: What is indicated by a pattern of longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions disposed symmetrically about the centerline of a runway? ^q44
+- A) At this point the glide path of an ILS hits the runway
+- B) Do not touch down before them
+- C) Do not touch down behind them
+- D) A ground roll could be started from this position
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q45: Which validity does the "Certificate of Airworthiness" have? ^q45
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) 12 years
+- C) 6 months
+- D) 12 months
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q46: A pilot license issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is valid in... ^q46
+- A) Those countries that have accepted this license on application.
+- B) The country where the license was acquired.
+- C) All ICAO countries.
+- D) The country where the license was issued.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q47: What is the subject of ICAO Annex 1? ^q47
+- A) Flight crew licensing
+- B) Air traffic services
+- C) Rules of the air
+- D) Operation of aircraft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q48: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL125? ^q48
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 3000 m
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q49: What are the minimum distances to clouds for a VFR flight in airspace "B"? ^q49
+- A) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q50: Being intercepted by a military aircraft at daytime, what is the meaning of the following signal: A sudden heading change of 90 degrees or more and a pull-up of the aircraft without crossing the track of the intercepted aircraft? ^q50
+- A) Follow me, i will bring you to the next suitable airfield
+- B) You may continue your flight
+- C) Prepare for a safety landing, you have entered a prohibited area
+- D) You are entering a restricted area, leave the airspace immediately
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q51: Which answer is correct with regard to separation in airspace "E"? ^q51
+- A) VFR traffic is not separated from any other traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic is separated from VFR and IFR traffic
+- D) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q52: A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a presentation of current... ^q52
+- A) AIC information of operational significance prepared after the flight.
+- B) AIP information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.
+- C) NOTAM information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.
+- D) ICAO information of operational significance prepared after the flight.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q53: How can a wind direction indicator be marked for better visibility? ^q53
+- A) The wind direction indicator may be mounted on top of the control tower.
+- B) The wind direction indicator could be made from green materials.
+- C) The wind direction indicator could be surrounded by a white circle.
+- D) The wind direction indicator could be located on a big black surface.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q54: Which distances to clouds have to be maintained during a VFR flight in airpaces C, D and E? ^q54
+- A) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically
+- B) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically
+- C) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically
+- D) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q55: How can a pilot confirm a search and rescue signal on ground in flight? ^q55
+- A) Push the rudder in both directions multiple times
+- B) Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times
+- C) Rock the wings
+- D) Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q56: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "SERA"? ^q56
+- A) Selective Radar Altimeter
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- D) Specialized Radar Approach
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q57: A flight is called a "visual flight", if the... ^q57
+- A) Visibility in flight is more than 5 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- C) Visibility in flight is more than 8 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q58: Air traffic control service is conducted by which services? ^q58
+- A) ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)
+- B) FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)
+- C) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)
+- D) TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q59: An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a... ^q59
+- A) Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air
+- B) Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- C) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- D) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q60: What is the primary purpose of an aircraft accident investigation? ^q60
+- A) To identify the reasons and work out safety recommendations
+- B) To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers
+- C) To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents
+- D) To Determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q61: The term "runway" is defined as a... ^q61
+- A) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- B) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q62: A pilot can contact FIS (flight information service)... ^q62
+- A) By a personal visit.
+- B) Via telephone.
+- C) Via radio communication.
+- D) Via internet.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q63: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "VMC"? ^q63
+- A) Variable meteorological conditions
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Visual flight rules
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q64: What information is provided in the part "AD" of the AIP? ^q64
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/20 - Aircraft General Knowledge.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/20 - Aircraft General Knowledge.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dae609e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/20 - Aircraft General Knowledge.md
@@ -0,0 +1,671 @@
+# 20 - Aircraft General Knowledge
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 74 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: How is referred to a tubular steel construction with a non self-supporting skin? ^q1
+- A) Grid construction
+- B) Honeycomb structure
+- C) Monocoque construction
+- D) Semi-monocoque construction.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: A construction made of frames and stringer with a supporting skin is called... ^q2
+- A) Honeycomb structure
+- B) Wood- or mixed construction.
+- C) Semi-monocoque construction.
+- D) Grid construction.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: What are the major components of an aircraft's tail? ^q3
+- A) Rudder and ailerons
+- B) Steering wheel and pedals
+- C) Horizontal tail and vertical tail
+- D) Ailerons and elevator
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: Which constructional elements give the wing its profile shape? ^q4
+- A) Rips
+- B) Planking
+- C) Tip
+- D) Spar
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: Which are the advantages of sandwich structures? ^q5
+- A) Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength
+- B) High temperature durability and low weight
+- C) High strength and good formability
+- D) Good formability and high temperature durability
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: The fuselage structure may be damaged by... ^q6
+- A) Airspeed decreasing below a certain value.
+- B) Neutralizing stick forces according to actual flight state
+- C) Exceeding the manoeuvering speed in heavy gusts
+- D) Stall after exceeding the maximum angle of attack.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: What is the effect of pulling the control yoke or stick backwards? ^q7
+- A) The aircraft's tail will produce an decreased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop
+- B) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise
+- C) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop
+- D) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: What is the purpose of the secondary flight controls? ^q8
+- A) To improve the performance characteristics of an aircraft and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces
+- B) To improve the turn characteristics of an aircraft in the low speed regime during approach and landing
+- C) To enable the pilot to control the aircraft's movements about its three axes
+- D) To constitute a backup system for the primary flight controls
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: The trim wheel or lever in the cockpit is moved aft by the pilot. What effect does this action have on the trim tab and on the elevator? ^q9
+- A) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down
+- B) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up
+- C) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up
+- D) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: The Pitot / static system is required to... ^q10
+- A) Prevent potential static buildup on the aircraft.
+- B) Measure total and static air pressure.
+- C) Prevent icing of the Pitot tube.
+- D) Correct the reading of the airspeed indicator to zero when the aircraft is static on the ground.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: Which pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube? ^q11
+- A) Dynamic air pressure
+- B) Cabin air pressure
+- C) Total air pressure
+- D) Static air pressure
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: Which is the purpose of the altimeter subscale? ^q12
+- A) To correct the altimeter reading for system errors
+- B) To reference the altimeter reading to a predetermined level such as mean sea level, aerodrome level or pressure level 1013.25 hPa
+- C) To set the reference level for the altitude decoder of the transponder
+- D) To adjust the altimeter reading for non-standard temperature
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: In which way may an altimeter subscale which is set to an incorrect QNH lead to an incorrect altimeter reading? ^q13
+- A) If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+- B) If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+- C) If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much greater heights above the ground than intended
+- D) If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: Lower-than-standard temperature may lead to... ^q14
+- A) An altitude indication which is too high.
+- B) An altitude indication which is too low.
+- C) A correct altitude indication as long as the altimeter subscale is set to correct for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A blockage of the Pitot tube by ice, freezing the altimeter indication to its present value.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: During a flight in colder-than-ISA air the indicated altitude is... ^q15
+- A) Higher than the true altitude
+- B) Eqal to the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the standard altitude.
+- D) Lower than the true altitude
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: The vertical speed indicator measures the difference of pressure between... ^q16
+- A) The present dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure of a previous moment.
+- B) The present total pressure and the total pressure of a previous moment.
+- C) The present dynamic pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment
+- D) The present static pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: An aircraft cruises on a heading of 180° with a true airspeed of 100 kt. The wind comes from 180° with 30 kt. Neglecting instrument and position errors, which will be the approximate reading of the airspeed indicator? ^q17
+- A) 130 kt
+- B) 100 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 70 kt
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: Which of the following states the working principle of an airspeed indicator? ^q18
+- A) Dynamic air pressure is measured by the Pitot tube and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator
+- B) Total air pressure is measured by the static ports and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator
+- C) Total air pressure is measured and compared against static air pressure
+- D) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: What values are usually marked with a red line on instrument displays? ^q19
+- A) Operational limits
+- B) Caution areas
+- C) Operational areas
+- D) Recommended areas
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: Which of the mentioned cockpit instruments is connected to the pitot tube? ^q20
+- A) Direct-reading compass
+- B) Altimeter
+- C) Vertical speed indicator
+- D) Airspeed indicator
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 270° to a heading of 360°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated? ^q21
+- A) 270°
+- B) 030°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 330°
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: The term "static pressure" is defined as pressure... ^q22
+- A) Inside the airplane cabin.
+- B) Of undisturbed airflow
+- C) Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.
+- D) Sensed by the pitot tube.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: What is a cause for the dip error on the direct-reading compass? ^q23
+- A) Acceleration of the airplane
+- B) Temperature variations
+- C) Deviation in the cockpit
+- D) Inclination of earth's magnetic field lines
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: The Caution Area is marked on an airspeed indicator by what color? ^q24
+- A) Red
+- B) Green
+- C) White
+- D) Yellow
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: What difference in altitude is shown by an altimeter, if the reference pressure scale setting is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa? ^q25
+- A) Zero
+- B) 80 m less than before
+- C) 80 m more than before
+- D) Values depending on QNH
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: The altimeter's reference scale is set to airfield pressure (QFE). What indication is shown during the flight? ^q26
+- A) Altitude above MSL
+- B) Height above airfield
+- C) Airfield elevation
+- D) Pressure altitude
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: A vertical speed indicator connected to a too big equalizing tank results in... ^q27
+- A) Mechanical overload
+- B) No indication
+- C) Indication too low
+- D) Indication too high
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: A vertical speed indicator measures the difference between... ^q28
+- A) Total pressure and static pressure.
+- B) Dynamic pressure and total pressure.
+- C) Instantaneous static pressure and previous static pressure.
+- D) Instantaneous total pressure and previous total pressure.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: What engines are commonly used with Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)? ^q29
+- A) 2 plate Wankel
+- B) 2 Cylinder Diesel
+- C) 4 Cylinder 2 stroke
+- D) 4 Cylinder; 4 stroke
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: What is the meaning of the yellow arc on the airspeed indicator? ^q30
+- A) Cautious use of flaps or brakes to avoid overload.
+- B) Speed for best glide can be found in this area.
+- C) Flight only in calm weather with no gusts to avoid overload.
+- D) Optimum speed while being towed behind aircraft.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q31: Which levers in a glider's cockpit are indicated by the colors red, blue and green? Levers for usage of ... ^q31
+- A) Gear, speed brakes and elevator trim tab.
+- B) Speed brakes, cable release and elevator trim.
+- C) Speed brakes, cabin hood lock and gear.
+- D) Cabin hood release, speed brakes, elevator trim
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q32: The sandwich structure consists of two... ^q32
+- A) Thick layers and a light core material.
+- B) Thick layers and a heavy core material.
+- C) Thin layers and a light core material.
+- D) Thin layers and a heavy core material
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q33: The load factor "n" describes the relationship between... ^q33
+- A) Weight and thrust.
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Lift and weight
+- D) Thrust and drag.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q34: Which of the stated materials shows the highest strength? ^q34
+- A) Magnesium
+- B) Carbon fiber re-inforced plastic
+- C) Aluminium
+- D) Wood
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q35: About how many axes does an aircraft move and how are these axes called? ^q35
+- A) 3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis
+- B) 4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed
+- C) 3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis
+- D) 4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q36: How are the flight controls on a small single-engine piston aircraft normally controlled and actuated? ^q36
+- A) Manually through rods and control cables
+- B) Hydraulically through hydraulic pumps and actuators
+- C) Electrically through fly-by-wire
+- D) Power-assisted through hydraulic pumps or electric motors
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q37: Which of the following options states all primary flight controls of an aircraft? ^q37
+- A) Flaps, slats, speedbrakes
+- B) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift wing devices, power controls
+- C) Elevator, rudder, aileron
+- D) All movable parts on the aircraft which aid in controlling the aircraft
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q38: A true altitude is... ^q38
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- B) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.
+- C) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q39: During a flight in an air mass with a temperature equal to ISA and the QNH set correctly, the indicated altitude is... ^q39
+- A) Lower than the true altitude.
+- B) Equal to the standard atmosphere.
+- C) Higher than the true altitude.
+- D) Equal to the true altitude.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q40: Which instrument can be affected by the hysteresis error? ^q40
+- A) Direct reading compass
+- B) Tachometer
+- C) Vertical speed indicator
+- D) Altimeter
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q41: Which of the following options states the working principle of a vertical speed indicator? ^q41
+- A) Measuring the present static air pressure and comparing it to the static air pressure inside a reservoir
+- B) Measuring the vertical acceleration through the displacement of a gimbal-mounted mass
+- C) Total air pressure is measured and compared to static pressure
+- D) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q42: What is the meaning of the red range on the airspeed indicator? ^q42
+- A) Speed which must not be exceeded regardless of circumstances
+- B) Speed which must not be exceeded within bumpy air
+- C) Speed which must not be exceeded with flaps extended
+- D) Speed which must not be exceeded in turns with more than 45° bank
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q43: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 030° to a heading of 180°. At approximately which indicated magnetic heading should the turn be terminated? ^q43
+- A) 150°
+- B) 180°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 210°.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q44: An energy-compensated vertical speed inicator (VSI) shows during stationary glide the vertical speed... ^q44
+- A) Of the glider through surrounding air
+- B) Of the airmass flown through.
+- C) Of the glider plus movement of the air
+- D) Of the glider minus movement of the air.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q45: During a right turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again? ^q45
+- A) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- C) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q46: What kind of defect results in loss of airworthiness of an airplane? ^q46
+- A) Dirty wing leading edge
+- B) Crack in the cabin hood plastic
+- C) Scratch on the outer painting
+- D) Damage to load-bearing parts
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q47: The mass loaded on the plane is lower than the minimum load required by the load sheet. What action has to be taken? ^q47
+- A) Trim aircraft to "pitch down"
+- B) Change pilot seat position
+- C) Change incident angle of elevator
+- D) Load ballast weight up to minimum load
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q48: Water ballast increases wing load by 40%. By what percentage does the minimum speed of the glider plane increase? ^q48
+- A) 100%
+- B) 40%
+- C) 200%
+- D) 18%
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q49: The maximium load according load sheet has been exceeded. What action has to be taken? ^q49
+- A) Increase speed by 15%
+- B) Reduce load
+- C) Trim "pitch-down"
+- D) Trim "pitch-up"
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q50: What is referred to as torsion-stiffed leading edge? ^q50
+- A) The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces.
+- B) Special shape of the leading edge.
+- C) The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.
+- D) Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q51: Information about maxmimum allowed airspeeds can be found where? ^q51
+- A) Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR
+- B) POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator
+- C) POH and posting in briefing room
+- D) POH, Cockpit panel, airspeed indicator
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q52: The thickness of the wing is defined as the distance between the lower and the upper side of the wing at the... ^q52
+- A) Thinnest part of the wing.
+- B) Most inner part of the wing.
+- C) Thickest part of the wing.
+- D) Most outer part of the wing
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q53: Primary fuselage structures of wood or metal planes are usually made up by what components? ^q53
+- A) Covers, stringers and forming parts
+- B) Frames and stringer
+- C) Girders, rips and stringers
+- D) Rips, frames and covers
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q54: The measurement of altitude is based on the change of the... ^q54
+- A) Static pressure.
+- B) Dynamic pressure.
+- C) Total pressure.
+- D) Differential pressure.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q55: What is necessary for the determination of speed (IAS) by the airspeed indicator? ^q55
+- A) The difference between the total pressure and the dynamic pressure
+- B) The difference between the dynamic pressure and the static pressure
+- C) The difference between the standard pressure and the total pressure
+- D) The difference betweeen the total pressure and the static presssure
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q56: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 360° to a heading of 270°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated? ^q56
+- A) 360°
+- B) 270°
+- C) 240°
+- D) 300°
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q57: The airspeed indicator is unservicable. The airplane may only be operated... ^q57
+- A) If no maintenance organisation is around.
+- B) If only airfield patterns are flown
+- C) When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.
+- D) When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q58: During a left turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again? ^q58
+- A) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- C) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q59: What is the purpose of winglets? ^q59
+- A) To increase efficiency of aspect ratio.
+- B) Reduction of induced drag.
+- C) Increase gliging performance at high speed.
+- D) Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q60: A glider's trim lever is used to... ^q60
+- A) Reduce stick force on the elevator.
+- B) Reduce stick force on the ailerons.
+- C) Reduce stick force on the rudder.
+- D) Reduce the adverse yaw.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q61: What are the primary and the secondary effects of a rudder input to the left? ^q61
+- A) Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the left
+- B) Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the left
+- C) Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the right
+- D) Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the right
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q62: When trimming an aircraft nose up, in which direction does the trim tab move? ^q62
+- A) It moves down
+- B) In direction of rudder deflection
+- C) It moves up
+- D) Depends on CG position
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q63: The trim is used to... ^q63
+- A) Adapt the control force.
+- B) Increase adverse yaw.
+- C) Move the centre of gravity
+- D) Lock control elements.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q64: QFE is the... ^q64
+- A) Altitude above the reference pressure level 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) Magnetic bearing to a station.
+- C) Barometric pressure adjusted to sea level, using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).
+- D) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q65: The compass error caused by the aircraft's magnetic field is called... ^q65
+- A) Inclination
+- B) Variation.
+- C) Deviation
+- D) Declination.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q66: Which cockpit instruments are connected to the static port? ^q66
+- A) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, slip indicator
+- B) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, direct-reading compass
+- C) Altimeter, slip indicator, navigational computer
+- D) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, airspeed indicator
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q67: What does the dynamic pressure depend directly on? ^q67
+- A) Lift- and drag coefficient
+- B) Air density and airflow speed squared
+- C) Air density and lift coefficient
+- D) Air pressure and air temperature
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q68: Airspeed indicator, altimeter and vertical speed indicator all show incorrect indications at the same time. What error can be the cause? ^q68
+- A) Blocking of static pressure lines.
+- B) Leakage in compensation vessel.
+- C) Blocking of pitot tube
+- D) Failure of the electrical system.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q69: A movement around the longitudinal axis is primarily initiated by the... ^q69
+- A) Elevator.
+- B) Ailerons.
+- C) Trim tab.
+- D) Rudder
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q70: A flight level is a... ^q70
+- A) True altitude.
+- B) Altitude above ground.
+- C) Density altitude.
+- D) Pressure altitude.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q71: The indication of a magnetic compass deviates from magnetic north direction due to what errors? ^q71
+- A) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field
+- B) Gravity and magnetism
+- C) Deviation, turning and acceleration errors
+- D) Variation, turning and acceleration errors
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q72: When is it necessary to adjust the pressure in the reference scale of an alitimeter? ^q72
+- A) After maintance has been finished
+- B) Every day before the first flight
+- C) Once a month before flight operation
+- D) Before every flight and during cross country flights
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q73: The term "inclination" is defined as... ^q73
+- A) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- B) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- C) Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+- D) Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q74: With decreasing air density the airflow speed increases at stall speed (TAS) and vice verca. How has a final approach to be conducted on a hot summer day? ^q74
+- A) With increased speed indication (IAS)
+- B) With unchanged speed indication (IAS)
+- C) With decreased speed indication (IAS)
+- D) With additional speed according POH
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/30 - Flight Performance and Planning.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/30 - Flight Performance and Planning.md
new file mode 100644
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+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/30 - Flight Performance and Planning.md
@@ -0,0 +1,275 @@
+# 30 - Flight Performance and Planning
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 30 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is... ^q1
+- A) Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.
+- B) Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.
+- C) Exceptionally permissible to avoid delays
+- D) Not permissible and essentially dangerous
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: The center of gravity has to be located... ^q2
+- A) Behind the rear C.G. limit
+- B) In front of the front C.G. limit.
+- C) Right of the lateral C. G. limit.
+- D) Between the front and the rear C.G. limit.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: An aircraft must be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure... ^q3
+- A) That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum permissible airspeed during a descent
+- B) Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.
+- C) That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.
+- D) That the aircraft does not stall.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined... ^q4
+- A) By weighing.
+- B) By calculation.
+- C) For one aircraft of a type only, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position
+- D) Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: Baggage and cargo must be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause... ^q5
+- A) Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.
+- B) Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.
+- C) Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.
+- D) Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the... ^q6
+- A) Stagnation point.
+- B) Center of pressure.
+- C) Neutral point.
+- D) Center of gravity
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: The term "center of gravity" is defined as... ^q7
+- A) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- B) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: The center of gravity (CG) defines... ^q8
+- A) The product of mass and balance arm
+- B) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- D) The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: The term "moment" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as... ^q9
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: The term "balance arm" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the... ^q10
+- A) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called... ^q11
+- A) Lever.
+- B) Torque.
+- C) Span width.
+- D) Balance arm.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: The balance arm is the horizontal distance between... ^q12
+- A) The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) The front C.G. limit and the datum line
+- C) The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.
+- D) The C.G. of a mass and the datum line.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the... ^q13
+- A) Certificate of airworthiness
+- B) Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- C) Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- D) Documentation of the annual inspection.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft? ^q14
+- A) Limitations
+- B) Normal procedures
+- C) Weight and balance
+- D) Performance
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: Which factor shortens landing distance? ^q15
+- A) Heavy rain
+- B) High pressure altitude
+- C) High density altitude
+- D) Strong head wind
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly... ^q16
+- A) Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.
+- B) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.
+- C) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.
+- D) Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: The angle of descent is defined as... ^q17
+- A) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].
+- B) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].
+- C) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].
+- D) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°].
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: What is the purpose of "interception lines" in visual navigation? ^q18
+- A) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+- B) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q19
+- A) 1.500 ft GND.
+- B) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- C) 1 500 m MSL.
+- D) FL150.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q20
+- A) 1.500 ft AGL
+- B) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- C) 4.500 ft MSL
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3 ^q21
+- A) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- B) Flight Level 95
+- C) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+- D) Height 9500 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: What must be considered for cross-border flights? ^q22
+- A) Transmission of hazard reports
+- B) Requires flight plans
+- C) Regular location messages
+- D) Approved exceptions
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the... ^q23
+- A) Search and Rescue Service (SAR).
+- B) Flight Information Service (FIS).
+- C) Next airport operator en-route.
+- D) Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure should be avoided enroute? ^q24
+- A) Stone quarries and large sand areas
+- B) Highways, railroad tracks and channels.
+- C) Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas
+- D) Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point should be taken ... (2,00 P.) ^q25
+- A) As low as possible.
+- B) As steep as possible.
+- C) As high as possible.
+- D) With as less bank as possible
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.) ^q26
+- A) For weakening thermals due to the progressing time
+- B) For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases
+- C) For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time
+- D) For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: (For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q27
+- A) B
+- B) D
+- C) A
+- D) C
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: (For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5 ^q28
+- A) B
+- B) C
+- C) A
+- D) D
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: (For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6 ^q29
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects) ^q30
+- A) 30 km
+- B) 45 NM
+- C) 45 km
+- D) 81 NM
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/40 - Human Performance and Limitations.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/40 - Human Performance and Limitations.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..87a8d21
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/40 - Human Performance and Limitations.md
@@ -0,0 +1,473 @@
+# 40 - Human Performance and Limitations
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 52 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The "swiss cheese model" can be used to explain the... ^q1
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- C) Optimal problem solution.
+- D) Error chain.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft? ^q2
+- A) 78 %
+- B) 12 %
+- C) 21 %
+- D) 18.9 %
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: What is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere? ^q3
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 78 %
+- C) 0.1 %
+- D) 1 %
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)? ^q4
+- A) 18000 ft
+- B) 22000 ft
+- C) 10000 ft
+- D) 5000 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: What does the term "Red-out" mean? ^q5
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Rash during decompression sickness
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: Which of the following symptoms may indicate hypoxia? ^q6
+- A) Joint pain in knees and feet
+- B) Muscle cramps in the upper body area
+- C) Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails
+- D) Blue marks all over the body
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure? ^q7
+- A) 2000 feet
+- B) 10000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 7000 feet
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)? ^q8
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Oxygen transport
+- D) Immune defense
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: What is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)? ^q9
+- A) Oxygen transport
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Immune defense
+- D) Blood coagulation
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable? ^q10
+- A) Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed
+- B) Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank
+- C) Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets
+- D) Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: What is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency? ^q11
+- A) Critical nervous system
+- B) Autonomic nervous system
+- C) Automatical nervous system
+- D) Compliant nervous system
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots? ^q12
+- A) Curved sidepiece
+- B) Non-polarised
+- C) Unbreakable
+- D) No UV filter
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called... ^q13
+- A) Inner ear.
+- B) Eardrum.
+- C) Cochlea.
+- D) Eustachian tube.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of... ^q14
+- A) Starting a climb.
+- B) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+- C) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- D) Starting a descent.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: Which of the following options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)? ^q15
+- A) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- B) Head movements during turns
+- C) Turbulence in level flight
+- D) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach? ^q16
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope? ^q17
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) A landing beside the centerline
+- C) An overshoot
+- D) A hard landing
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: Visual illusions are mostly caused by... ^q18
+- A) Binocular vision.
+- B) Colour blindness.
+- C) Rapid eye movements.
+- D) Misinterpretation of the brain.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately... ^q19
+- A) 0.01 percent.
+- B) 0.03 percent.
+- C) 0.1 percent.
+- D) 0.3 percent.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: A risk factor for decompression sickness is... ^q20
+- A) Sports.
+- B) 100 % oxygen after decompression.
+- C) Scuba diving prior to flight.
+- D) Smoking.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory? ^q21
+- A) It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information? ^q22
+- A) 3 to 7 seconds
+- B) 10 to 20 seconds
+- C) 35 to 50 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called... ^q23
+- A) Situational thinking.
+- B) Situational awareness.
+- C) Anticipatory check procedure.
+- D) Constant flight check.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks? ^q24
+- A) Due to group-dynamic effects
+- B) If there is not enough information available
+- C) During check flights due to a high level of nervousness
+- D) During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: Which dangerous attitudes are often combined? ^q25
+- A) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- B) Self-abandonment and macho
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: Complacency is a risk due to... ^q26
+- A) Increased cockpit automation.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Better training options for young pilots.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1 ^q27
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point D
+- D) Point A
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: Which of the following qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory ^q28
+- A) .1, 2, 3
+- B) .2, 4
+- C) 1
+- D) 1, 2, 3, 4
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: Which answer is correct concerning stress? ^q29
+- A) Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner
+- B) Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety
+- C) Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem
+- D) Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed? ^q30
+- A) There is no time for solving problems during flight
+- B) Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook
+- C) Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying
+- D) Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q31: The majority of aviation accidents are caused by... ^q31
+- A) Technical failure.
+- B) Meteorological influences.
+- C) Human failure.
+- D) Geographical influences.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q32: Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. What is the approximate percentage of other gases? ^q32
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0.1 %
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q33: Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by... ^q33
+- A) Alcohol.
+- B) Unhealthy food.
+- C) Little sleep.
+- D) Smoking.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q34: Which of the following is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton? ^q34
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Disturbance of consciousness
+- C) Spasm
+- D) Tingling
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q35: Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia? ^q35
+- A) The oltfactory perception (smell)
+- B) The tactile perception (sense of touch)
+- C) The auditory perception (hearing)
+- D) The visual perception (vision)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q36: What is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)? ^q36
+- A) Immune defense
+- B) Blood coagulation
+- C) Oxygen transport
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q37: Which of the following is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia? ^q37
+- A) Blood donation
+- B) Smoking
+- C) Menstruation
+- D) Diving
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q38: The occurence of a vertigo is most likely when moving the head... ^q38
+- A) During a turn.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a climb.
+- D) During a descent.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q39: Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes? ^q39
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q40: What is a latent error? ^q40
+- A) An error which only has consequences after landing
+- B) An error which has an immediate effect on the controls
+- C) An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously
+- D) An error which remains undetected in the system for a long time
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q41: Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured? ^q41
+- A) By the use of proper headsets
+- B) By a particular frequency allocation
+- C) By the use of radio phraseology
+- D) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q42: Which factor can lead to human error? ^q42
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- C) Double check of relevant actions
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q43: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1 ^q43
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point D
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q44: Which of the following is responsible for the blood coagulation? ^q44
+- A) Capillaries of the arteries
+- B) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- C) Blood plates (thrombocytes)
+- D) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q45: In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment? ^q45
+- A) During a light and slow climb
+- B) Breathing takes place using the mouth only
+- C) All windows are completely closed
+- D) The eustachien tube is blocked
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q46: A Grey-out is the result of... ^q46
+- A) Hyperventilation.
+- B) Tiredness.
+- C) Hypoxia.
+- D) Positive g-forces.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q47: What is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot? ^q47
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Introverted - unstable
+- C) Extroverted - stable
+- D) Extroverted - unstable
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q48: What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor? ^q48
+- A) Reduction
+- B) Coherence
+- C) Virulence
+- D) Reflex
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q49: What is the parallax error? ^q49
+- A) Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision
+- B) Misperception of speed during taxiing
+- C) Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night
+- D) A decoding error in communication between pilots
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q50: In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately? ^q50
+- A) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- B) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- C) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+- D) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q51: Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure? ^q51
+- A) 5000 feet
+- B) 22000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 7000 feet
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q52: What is an indication for a macho attitude? ^q52
+- A) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- B) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+- C) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- D) Careful walkaround procedure
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/50 - Meteorology.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/50 - Meteorology.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1a859f1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/50 - Meteorology.md
@@ -0,0 +1,1130 @@
+# 50 - Meteorology
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 125 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What clouds and weather may result from an humid and instable air mass, that is pushed against a chain of mountains by the predominant wind and forced to rise? ^q1
+- A) Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.
+- B) Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).
+- C) Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.
+- D) Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: The term "trigger temperature" is defined as the temperature which... ^q2
+- A) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascend when formation of Cumulus clouds begins.
+- B) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level that has to be reached so formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud can occur.
+- D) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: What situation is called "over-development" in a weather report? ^q3
+- A) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- C) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+- D) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: The gliding weather report states environmental instability. At morning, dew covers gras and no thermals are presently active. What development can be expected for thermal activity? ^q4
+- A) Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity during the following day
+- B) With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin
+- C) Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will be generated
+- D) After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion thermal activity is likely to begin
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: Weather phenomena are most common to be found in which atmospheric layer? ^q5
+- A) Tropopause
+- B) Stratosphere
+- C) Thermosphere
+- D) Troposphere
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: The term "tropopause" is defined as... ^q6
+- A) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+- B) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- C) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- D) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: What is meant by "inversion layer"? ^q7
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: Which process may result in an inversion layer at about 5000 ft (1500 m) height? ^q8
+- A) Ground cooling by radiation during the night
+- B) Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day
+- C) Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere
+- D) Widespread descending air within a high pressure area
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: The movement of air flowing apart is called... ^q9
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Concordence.
+- C) Subsidence.
+- D) Divergence.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: What weather development will result from convergence at ground level? ^q10
+- A) Ascending air and cloud formation
+- B) Descending air and cloud dissipation
+- C) Ascending air and cloud dissipation
+- D) Descending air and cloud formation
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: When air masses meet each other head on, how is this referred to and what air movements will follow? ^q11
+- A) Convergence resulting in air being lifted
+- B) Divergence resulting in air being lifted
+- C) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+- D) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: What type of turbulence is typically found close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions? ^q12
+- A) Clear-air turbulence (CAT)
+- B) Inversion turbulence
+- C) Turbulence in rotors
+- D) Thermal turbulence
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: Which answer contains every state of water found in the atmosphere? ^q13
+- A) Liquid, solid, and gaseous
+- B) Liquid
+- C) Gaseous and liquid
+- D) Liquid and solid
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: How do dew point and relative humidity change with decreasing temperature? ^q14
+- A) Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases
+- B) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases
+- C) Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: The "spread" is defined as... ^q15
+- A) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+- B) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- C) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air
+- D) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: Which conditions are likely for the formation of advection fog? ^q16
+- A) Warm, humid air cools during a cloudy night
+- B) Cold, humid air moves over a warm ocean
+- C) Humidity evaporates from warm, humid ground into cold air
+- D) Warm, humid air moves over a cold surface
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: What process results in the formation of "advection fog"? ^q17
+- A) Cold, moist air is being moved across warm ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+- C) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- D) Warm, moist air is moved across cold ground areas
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: What pressure pattern can be observed when a cold front is passing? ^q18
+- A) Continually increasing pressure
+- B) Shortly decreasing, thereafter increasing pressure
+- C) Continually decreasing pressure
+- D) Constant pressure pattern
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: What frontal line divides subtropical air from polar cold air, in particular across Central Europe? ^q19
+- A) Warm front
+- B) Cold front
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Polar front
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: What weather conditions in Central Europe are typically found in high pressure areas during summer? ^q20
+- A) Large isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems
+- B) Small isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems
+- C) Large isobar spacing with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Small isobar spacing with strong prevailing northerly winds
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during winter? ^q21
+- A) Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog
+- B) Changing weather with passing of frontal lines
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: What temperatures are most dangerous with respect to airframe icing? ^q22
+- A) .+20° to -5° C
+- B) .-20° to -40° C
+- C) .+5° to -10° C
+- D) 0° to -12° C
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: Which type of ice forms by large, supercooled droplets hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft? ^q23
+- A) Hoar frost
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Rime ice
+- D) Mixed ice
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: What conditions are mandatory for the formation of thermal thunderstorms? ^q24
+- A) Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity
+- B) Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and low humidity
+- C) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity
+- D) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: Which stage of a thunderstorm is dominated by updrafts? ^q25
+- A) Dissipating stage
+- B) Mature stage
+- C) Cumulus stage
+- D) Upwind stage
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: Heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear close to the ground can be expected... ^q26
+- A) Near the rainfall areas of heavy showers or thunderstorms.
+- B) During approach to an airfield at the coast with a strong sea breeze.
+- C) During cold, clear nights with the formation of radiation fog.
+- D) During warm summer days with high, flatted Cu clouds.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: Which weather chart shows the actual air pressure as in MSL along with pressure centers and fronts? ^q27
+- A) Wind chart
+- B) Surface weather chart
+- C) Prognostic chart
+- D) Hypsometric chart
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: What information can be obtained from satallite images? ^q28
+- A) Overview of cloud covers and front lines
+- B) Turbulence and icing
+- C) Temperature and dew point of environmental air
+- D) Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: What information can be found in the ATIS, but not in a METAR? ^q29
+- A) Operational information such as runway in use and transition level
+- B) Information about current weather, for example types of precipitation
+- C) Approach information, such as ground visibility and cloud base
+- D) Information about mean wind speeds, maximum speeds in gusts if applicable
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: What type of cloud indicates thermal updrafts? ^q30
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Lenticularis
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q31: What situation is referred to as "shielding"? ^q31
+- A) Ns clouds, covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- B) High or mid-level cloud layers, impairing thermal activity
+- C) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- D) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eights of the sky
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q32: What is meant by "isothermal layer"? ^q32
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- C) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q33: The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting... ^q33
+- A) QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- B) QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- C) QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- D) QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q34: The barometric altimeter with QFE setting indicates... ^q34
+- A) True altitude above MSL.
+- B) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- C) Height above MSL.
+- D) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q35: What process causes latent heat being released into the upper troposphere? ^q35
+- A) Cloud forming due to condensation
+- B) Descending air across widespread areas
+- C) Evaporation over widespread water areas
+- D) Stabilisation of inflowing air masses
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q36: The saturated adiabatic lapse rate is... ^q36
+- A) Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- B) Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- C) Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- D) Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q37: The dry adiabatic lapse rate has a value of... ^q37
+- A) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- B) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- C) 2° / 1000 ft.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q38: What weather conditions may be expected during conditionally unstable conditions? ^q38
+- A) Towering cumulus, isolated showers of rain or thunderstorms
+- B) Layered clouds up to high levels, prolonged rain or snow
+- C) Sky clear of clouds, sunshine, low winds
+- D) Shallow cumulus clouds with base at medium levels
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q39: What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^q39
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Stratus
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q40: The formation of medium to large precipitation particles requires... ^q40
+- A) Strong updrafts.
+- B) An inversion layer.
+- C) A high cloud base.
+- D) Strong wind.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q41: The symbol labeled (2) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q41
+- A) Front aloft.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Warm front.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q42: What visual flight conditions can be expected within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer time? ^q42
+- A) Good visibility, some isolated high clouds
+- B) Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds
+- C) Visibilty less than 1000 m, cloud-covered ground
+- D) Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q43: What visual flight conditions can be expected after the passage of a cold front? ^q43
+- A) Good visiblity, formation of cumulus clouds with showers of rain or snow
+- B) Poor visibility, formation of overcast or ground-covering stratus clouds, snow
+- C) Scattered cloud layers, visbility more than 5 km, formation of shallow cumulus clouds
+- D) Medium visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q44: What is the usual direction of movement of a polar front low? ^q44
+- A) Parallel to the the warm-sector isobars
+- B) To the northeast during winter, to the southeast during summer
+- C) Parallel to the warm front line to the south
+- D) To the northwest during winter, to the southwest during summer
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q45: What pressure pattern can be observed during the passage of a polar front low? ^q45
+- A) Rising pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- B) Rising pressure in front of the warm front, rising pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+- C) Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- D) Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q46: What change of wind direction can be expected during the passage of a polar front low in Central Europe? ^q46
+- A) Backing wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front
+- B) Veering wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front
+- C) Veering wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front
+- D) Backing wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q47: What pressure pattern may result from cold-air inflow in high tropospheric layers? ^q47
+- A) Alternating pressure
+- B) Formation of a large ground low
+- C) Formation of a high in the upper troposphere
+- D) Formation of a low in the upper troposphere
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q48: Cold air inflow in high tropospheric layers may result in... ^q48
+- A) Showers and thunderstorms.
+- B) Frontal weather.
+- C) Calm weather and cloud dissipation
+- D) Stabilisation and calm weather.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q49: How does inflowing cold air affect the shape and vertical distance between pressure layers? ^q49
+- A) Increasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)
+- B) Decreasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)
+- C) Decrease in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)
+- D) Increase in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q50: What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during summer? ^q50
+- A) Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu
+- B) Changing weather with passing of frontal lines
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q51: What weather conditions can be expected during "Foehn" on the windward side of a mountain range? ^q51
+- A) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate or heavy rain
+- B) Dissipating clouds with unusual warming, accompanied by strong, gusty winds
+- C) Calm wind and forming of high stratus clouds (high fog)
+- D) Scattered cumulus clouds with showers and thunderstorms
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q52: What chart shows areas of precipitation? ^q52
+- A) Satellite picture
+- B) Wind chart
+- C) Radar picture
+- D) GAFOR
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q53: An inversion is a layer ... ^q53
+- A) With constant temperature with increasing height
+- B) With increasing pressure with increasing height.
+- C) With increasing temperature with increasing height.
+- D) With decreasing temperature with increasing height.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q54: The term "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^q54
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q55: What is the mass of a "cube of air" with the edges 1 m long, at MSL according ISA? ^q55
+- A) 0,01225 kg
+- B) 0,1225 kg
+- C) 12,25 kg
+- D) 1,225 kg
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q56: The temperature lapse rate with increasing height within the troposphere according ISA is... ^q56
+- A) 1° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- C) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- D) 3° C / 100 m.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q57: An inversion layer close to the ground can be caused by... ^q57
+- A) Thickening of clouds in medium layers.
+- B) Large-scale lifting of air
+- C) Intensifying and gusting winds.
+- D) Ground cooling during the night.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q58: What are the air masses that Central Europe is mainly influenced by? ^q58
+- A) Arctic and polar cold air
+- B) Tropical and arctic cold air
+- C) Equatorial and tropical warm air
+- D) Polar cold air and tropical warm air
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q59: How do spread and relative humidity change with increasing temperature? ^q59
+- A) Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases
+- B) Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- C) Spread increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Spread increases, relative humidity increases
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q60: With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in... ^q60
+- A) Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- B) Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- C) Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- D) Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q61: What condition may prevent the formation of "radiation fog"? ^q61
+- A) Calm wind
+- B) Clear night, no clouds
+- C) Low spread
+- D) Overcast cloud cover
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q62: The symbol labeled (3) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q62
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q63: A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass showing no horizontal displacement is called... ^q63
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Stationary front.
+- D) Occluded front.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q64: What situation may result in the occurrence of severe wind shear? ^q64
+- A) Flying ahead of a warm front with visible Ci clouds
+- B) Cross-country flying below Cu clouds with about 4 octas coverage
+- C) During final approach, 30 min after a heavy shower has passed the airfield
+- D) When a shower is visible close to the airfield
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q65: What kind of reduction in visibility is not very sensitive to changes in temperature? ^q65
+- A) Radiation fog (FG)
+- B) Mist (BR)
+- C) Patches of fog (BCFG)
+- D) Haze (HZ)
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q66: In a METAR, "(moderate) showers of rain" are designated by the identifier... ^q66
+- A) .+TSRA
+- B) SHRA.
+- C) TS.
+- D) .+RA.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q67: SIGMET warnings are issued for... ^q67
+- A) Specific routings.
+- B) Countries.
+- C) FIRs / UIRs.
+- D) Airports.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q68: Mountain side updrafts can be intensified by ... ^q68
+- A) Solar irradiation on the lee side
+- B) Thermal radiation of the windward side during the night
+- C) Solar irradiation on the windward side
+- D) By warming of upper atmospheric layers
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q69: While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending from north to south, moving east. Concerning the weather situation, what decision would be recommendable? ^q69
+- A) To change plans and start the triangle heading east
+- B) To postpone the flight to another day
+- C) To plan the flight below cloud base of the thunderstorms
+- D) During flight, to look for spacing between thunderstorms
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q70: At what rate does the temperature change with increasing height according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) within the troposphere? ^q70
+- A) Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- B) Increases by 2° C / 100 m
+- C) Decreases by 2° C / 100 m
+- D) Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q71: Temperatures will be given by meteorological aviation services in Europe in which unit? ^q71
+- A) Gpdam
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrees Centigrade (° C)
+- D) Degrees Fahrenheit
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q72: The pressure at MSL in ISA conditions is... ^q72
+- A) 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) 113.25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1123 hPa.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q73: How can wind speed and wind direction be derived from surface weather charts? ^q73
+- A) By alignment and distance of isobaric lines
+- B) By annotations from the text part of the chart
+- C) By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines
+- D) By alignment of lines of warm- and cold fronts.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q74: Light turbulence always has to be expected... ^q74
+- A) Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+- B) Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.
+- C) When entering inversions.
+- D) Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q75: Moderate to severe turbulence has to be expected... ^q75
+- A) Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- B) Overhead unbroken cloud layers.
+- C) On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.
+- D) With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog).
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q76: Clouds in high layers are referred to as... ^q76
+- A) Cirro-.
+- B) Strato-.
+- C) Nimbo-.
+- D) Alto-.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q77: What factor may affect the top of cumulus clouds? ^q77
+- A) The spread
+- B) Relative humidity
+- C) The absolute humidity
+- D) The presence of an inversion layer
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q78: What factors may indicate a tendency to fog formation? ^q78
+- A) Strong winds, decreasing temperature
+- B) Low spread, decreasing temperature
+- C) Low pressure, increasing temperature
+- D) Low spread, increasing temperature
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q79: What process results in the formation of "orographic fog" ("hill fog")? ^q79
+- A) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- B) Warm, moist air is moved across a hill or a mountain range
+- C) Evaporation from warm, moist ground area into very cold air
+- D) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q80: What factors are required for the formation of precipitation in clouds? ^q80
+- A) The presence of an inversion layer
+- B) Moderate to strong updrafts
+- C) Calm winds and intensive sunlight insolation
+- D) High humidity and high temperatures
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q81: What wind conditions can be expected in areas showing large distances between isobars? ^q81
+- A) Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering
+- B) Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing
+- C) Formation of local wind systems with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Variable winds, formation of local wind systems
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q82: Under which conditions "back side weather" ("Rückseitenwetter") can be expected? ^q82
+- A) After passing of a cold front
+- B) Before passing of an occlusion
+- C) During Foehn at the lee side
+- D) After passing of a warm front
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q83: What wind is reportet as 225/15 ? ^q83
+- A) North-east wind with 15 kt
+- B) South-west wind with 15 kt
+- C) South-west wind with 15 km/h
+- D) North-east wind with 15 km/h
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q84: What weather is likely to be experienced during "Foehn" in the Bavarian area close to the alps? ^q84
+- A) Cold, humid downhill wind on the lee side of the alps, flat pressure pattern
+- B) Nimbostratus cloud in the southern alps, rotor clouds at the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- C) High pressure area overhead Biskaya and low pressure area in Eastern Europe
+- D) Nimbostratus cloud in the northern alps, rotor clouds at the windward side, warm and dry wind
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q85: What phenomenon is referred to as "blue thermals"? ^q85
+- A) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- D) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q86: What change in thermal activity may be expected with cirrus clouds coming up from one direction and becoming more dense, blocking the sun? ^q86
+- A) Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity
+- B) Cirrus clouds indicate an high-level inversion with thermal activity ongoing up to that level
+- C) Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.
+- D) Cirrus clouds indicate instability and beginning of over-development
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q87: The barometric altimeter with QNH setting indicates... ^q87
+- A) True altitude above MSL.
+- B) Height above MSL
+- C) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- D) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q88: Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is... ^q88
+- A) At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.
+- B) Perpendicular to the isobars.
+- C) Parallel to the isobars.
+- D) Perpendicular to the isohypses.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q89: Clouds are basically distinguished by what types? ^q89
+- A) Thunderstorm and shower clouds
+- B) Cumulus and stratiform clouds
+- C) Stratiform and ice clouds
+- D) Layered and lifted clouds
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q90: What weather phenomenon designated by "2" has to be expected on the lee side during "Foehn" conditions? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^q90
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Altocumulus Castellanus
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q91: Which type of ice forms by very small water droplets and ice crystals hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft? ^q91
+- A) Rime ice
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Mixed ice
+- D) Hoar frost
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q92: Information about pressure patterns and frontal situation can be found in which chart? ^q92
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC)
+- B) Wind chart.
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Surface weather chart.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q93: What is the mean height of the tropopause according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)? ^q93
+- A) 11000 f
+- B) 11000 m
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 36000 m
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q94: What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)? ^q94
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 250 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) 500 hPa
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q95: Which of the stated surfaces will reduce the wind speed most due to ground friction? ^q95
+- A) Flat land, lots of vegetation cover
+- B) Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation
+- C) Oceanic areas
+- D) Mountainous areas, vegetation cover
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q96: The movement of air flowing together is called... ^q96
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Soncordence
+- D) Divergence.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q97: What cloud sequence can typically be observed during the passage of a warm front? ^q97
+- A) Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter
+- B) Squall line with showers of rain and thunderstorms (Cb), gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q98: What phenomenon is caused by cold air downdrafts with precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud? ^q98
+- A) Electrical discharge
+- B) Anvil-head top of Cb cloud
+- C) Gust front
+- D) Freezing Rain
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q99: What information is NOT found on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)? ^q99
+- A) Information about icing conditions
+- B) Front lines and frontal displacements
+- C) Radar echos of precipitation
+- D) Information about turbulence areas
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q100: Which force causes "wind"? ^q100
+- A) Centrifugal force
+- B) Pressure gradient force
+- C) Coriolis force
+- D) Thermal force
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q101: Which type of cloud is associated with prolonged rain? ^q101
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cirrostratus
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q102: Regarding the type of cloud, precipitation is classified as... ^q102
+- A) Showers of snow and rain.
+- B) Prolonged rain and continuous rain.
+- C) Rain and showers of rain.
+- D) Light and heavy precipitation.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q103: What conditions are favourable for the formation of thunderstorms? ^q103
+- A) Calm winds and cold air, overcast cloud cover with St or As.
+- B) Warm and dry air, strong inversion layer
+- C) Warm humid air, conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate
+- D) Clear night over land, cold air and patches of fog
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q104: What can be expected for the prevailling wind with isobars on a surface weather chart showing large distances? ^q104
+- A) Low pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind
+- B) Strong pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind
+- C) Strong pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind
+- D) Low pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q105: The height of the tropopause of the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) is at... ^q105
+- A) 36000 ft.
+- B) 5500 ft
+- C) 48000 ft.
+- D) 11000 ft.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q106: How is an air mass described when moving to Central Europe via the Russian continent during winter? ^q106
+- A) Maritime tropical air
+- B) Continental polar air
+- C) Maritime polar air
+- D) Continental tropical air
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q107: What clouds and weather can typically be observed during the passage of a cold front? ^q107
+- A) Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter
+- B) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- C) In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night
+- D) Strongly developed cumulus clouds (Cb) with showers of rain and thunderstorms, gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q108: What danger is most immenent when an aircraft is hit by lightning? ^q108
+- A) Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit
+- B) Surface overheat and damage to exposed aircraft parts
+- C) Rapid cabin depressurization and smoke in the cabin
+- D) Disturbed radio communication, static noise signals
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q109: What is referred to as mountain wind? ^q109
+- A) Wind blowing down the mountain side during the night
+- B) Wind blowing uphill from the valley during the night.
+- C) Wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.
+- D) Wind blowing down the mountain side during daytime.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q110: What type of fog emerges if humid and almost saturated air, is forced to rise upslope of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailling wind? ^q110
+- A) Advection fog
+- B) Steaming fog
+- C) Radiation fog
+- D) Orographic fog
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q111: The barometric altimeter indicates height above... ^q111
+- A) Mean sea level.
+- B) A selected reference pressure level.
+- C) Ground.
+- D) Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q112: With regard to global circulation within the atmosphere, where does polar cold air meets subtropical warm air? ^q112
+- A) At the equator
+- B) At the subtropical high pressure belt
+- C) At the polar front
+- D) At the geographic poles
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q113: The saturated adiabatic lapse rate should be assumed with a mean value of: ^q113
+- A) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- C) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- D) 0° C / 100 m.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q114: Extensive high pressure areas can be found throughout the year ... ^q114
+- A) In tropical areas, close to the equator.
+- B) In areeas showing extensive lifting processes.
+- C) Over oceanic areas at latitues around 30°N/S.
+- D) In mid latitudes along the polar front
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q115: Weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained during the flight by... ^q115
+- A) PIREP
+- B) SIGMET
+- C) ATIS.
+- D) VOLMET.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q116: What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^q116
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Altus
+- D) Cumulus
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q117: The character of an air mass is given by what properties? ^q117
+- A) Wind speed and tropopause height
+- B) Environmental lapse rate at origin
+- C) Region of origin and track during movement
+- D) Temperatures at origin and present region
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q118: What cloud type can typically be observed across widespread high pressure areas during summer? ^q118
+- A) Overcast low stratus
+- B) Scattered Cu clouds
+- C) Overcast Ns clouds
+- D) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q119: The symbol labeled (1) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q119
+- A) Front aloft.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Warm front.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q120: In a METAR, "heavy rain" is designated by the identifier... ^q120
+- A) RA.
+- B) .+RA
+- C) SHRA
+- D) .+SHRA.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q121: What is the gas composition of "air"? ^q121
+- A) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- D) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q122: Which processes result in decreasing air density? ^q122
+- A) Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- B) Increasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- C) Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+- D) Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q123: With regard to thunderstorms, strong up- and downdrafts appear during the... ^q123
+- A) Mature stage.
+- B) Dissipating stage.
+- C) Initial stage.
+- D) Thunderstorm stage.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q124: Which of the following conditions are most favourable for ice accretion? ^q124
+- A) Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C, presence of supercooled water droplets (clouds)
+- B) Temperaturs below 0° C, strong wind, sky clear of clouds
+- C) Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C, presence of ice crystals (Ci clouds)
+- D) Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C, presence of hail (clouds)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q125: What danger is most imminent during an approach to an airfield situated in a valley, with strong wind aloft blowing perpendicular to the mountain ridge? ^q125
+- A) Reduced visibilty, maybe loss of sight to the airfield during final approach
+- B) Wind shear during descent, wind direction may change by 180°
+- C) Formation of medium to heavy clear ice on all aircraft surfaces
+- D) Heavy downdrafts within rainfall areas below thunderstorm clouds
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/60 - Navigation.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/60 - Navigation.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9fda950
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/60 - Navigation.md
@@ -0,0 +1,698 @@
+# 60 - Navigation
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 77 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which statement is correct with regard to the polar axis of the Earth? ^q1
+- A) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator
+- B) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is at an angle of 66.5° to the plane of the equator
+- C) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is at an angle of 23.5° to the plane of the equator
+- D) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: Which approximate, geometrical form describes the shape of the Earth best for navigation systems? ^q2
+- A) Sphere of ecliptical shape
+- B) Flat plate
+- C) Perfect sphere
+- D) Ellipsoid
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: The shortest distance between two points on Earth is represented by a part of... ^q3
+- A) A rhumb line.
+- B) A small circle
+- C) A parallel of latitude.
+- D) A great circle.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: What distance corresponds to one degree difference in latitude along any degree of longitude? ^q4
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 60 km
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: Point A on the Earth's surface lies exactly on the parallel of latitude of 47°50'27''N. Which point is exactly 240 NM north of A? ^q5
+- A) 53°50'27''N
+- B) 49°50'27''N
+- C) 51°50'27'N'
+- D) 43°50'27''N
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: What is the great circle distance between two points A and B on the equator when the difference between the two associated meridians is exactly one degree of longitude? ^q6
+- A) 400 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 216 NM
+- D) 60 NM
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: Assume two arbitrary points A and B on the same parallel of latitude, but not on the equator. Point A is located on 010°E and point B on 020°E. The rumb line distance between A and B is always... ^q7
+- A) Less than 300 NM.
+- B) Less than 600 NM.
+- C) More than 600 NM.
+- D) More than 300 NM.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: What is the difference in time when the sun moves 20° of longitude? ^q8
+- A) 1:00 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 0:20 h
+- D) 1:20 h
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: The sun moves 10° of longitude. What is the difference in time? ^q9
+- A) 0.66 h
+- B) 0.4 h
+- C) 1 h
+- D) 0.33 h
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: The term 'civil twilight' is defined as... ^q10
+- A) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.
+- B) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the true horizon.
+- C) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the true horizon.
+- D) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: The term ‚magnetic course' (MC) is defined as... ^q11
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- B) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- C) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- D) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: The term 'True Course' (TC) is defined as... ^q12
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- B) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- C) Tthe angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- D) The angle between true north and the course line.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are TH and VAR? (2,00 P.) ^q13
+- A) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E
+- B) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W
+- C) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W
+- D) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the VAR and the DEV? (2,00 P.) ^q14
+- A) VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.
+- B) VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.
+- C) VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.
+- D) VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: The angle between compass north and magnetic north is called... ^q15
+- A) WCA
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Variation.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: Which are the official basic units for horizontal distances used in aeronautical navigation and their abbreviations? ^q16
+- A) Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)
+- B) Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)
+- C) Yards (yd), meters (m)
+- D) Feet (ft), inches (in)
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: What could be a reason for changing the runway indicators at aerodromes (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)? ^q17
+- A) The magnetic variation of the runway location has changed
+- B) The magnetic deviation of the runway location has changed
+- C) The true direction of the runway alignment has changed
+- D) The direction of the approach path has changed
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: How are rhumb lines and great circles depicted on a direct Mercator chart? ^q18
+- A) Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: curved lines
+- B) Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: straight lines
+- C) Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: straight lines
+- D) Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: curved lines
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical navigation chart the pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. The chart scale is... ^q19
+- A) 1 : 500000
+- B) 1 : 1000000.
+- C) 1 : 250000.
+- D) 1 : 2000000.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 1242 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... ^q20
+- A) 1330 UTC
+- B) 1356 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: An aircraft is flying at aFL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q21
+- A) 6250 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft
+- D) 6500 ft.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q22
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q23
+- A) 6500 ft
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals... ^q24
+- A) 250°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 275°.
+- D) 245°.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals... ^q25
+- A) 152°.
+- B) 158°.
+- C) 165°.
+- D) 126°.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals... ^q26
+- A) 155 kt.
+- B) 172 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals... ^q27
+- A) 3° to the right.
+- B) 6° to the right.
+- C) 6° to the left.
+- D) 3° to the left.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: The distance from 'A' to 'B' measures 120 NM. At a distance of 55 NM from 'A' the pilot realizes a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change must be made to reach 'B' directly? ^q28
+- A) 6° left
+- B) 14° left
+- C) 8° left
+- D) 15° left
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: How many satellites are necessary for a precise and verified three-dimensional determination of the position? ^q29
+- A) Two
+- B) Three
+- C) Five
+- D) Four
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: What ground features should preferrably be used for orientation during visual flight? ^q30
+- A) Power lines
+- B) Farm tracks and creeks
+- C) Border lines
+- D) Rivers, railroads, highways
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q31: The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately... See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q31
+- A) 10800 km.
+- B) 12800 km.
+- C) 21600 NM.
+- D) 40000 NM.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q32: What is the distance between the parallels of latitude 48°N and 49°N along a meridian line? ^q32
+- A) 60 NM
+- B) 111 NM
+- C) 1 NM
+- D) 10 NM
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q33: What is the distance between the two parallels of longitude 150°E and 151°E along the equator? ^q33
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 60 km
+- C) 1 NM
+- D) 60 NM
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q34: What is the difference in time when the sun moves 10° of longitude? ^q34
+- A) 0:04 h
+- B) 1:00 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 0:30 h
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q35: With Central European Summer Time (CEST) given as UTC+2, what UTC time corresponds to 1600 CEST? ^q35
+- A) 1600 UTC.
+- B) 1700 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1400 UTC.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q36: The angle between the true course and the true heading is called... ^q36
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) WCA.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q37: The angle between the magnetic course and the true course is called... ^q37
+- A) WCA.
+- B) Variation
+- C) Inclination.
+- D) Deviation.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q38: Where does the inclination reach its lowest value? ^q38
+- A) At the geographic equator
+- B) At the magnetic equator
+- C) At the geographic poles
+- D) At the magnetic poles
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q39: Which direction corresponds to 'compass north' (CN)? ^q39
+- A) The most northerly part of the magnetic compass in the aircraft, where the reading takes place
+- B) The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns due to earth's and aircraft's magnetic fields
+- C) The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north
+- D) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographical North Pole
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q40: Which are the properties of a Mercator chart? ^q40
+- A) The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines
+- B) The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines
+- C) The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines
+- D) The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q41: Which are the properties of a Lambert conformal chart? ^q41
+- A) The chart is conformal and an equal-area projection
+- B) Great circles are depicted as straight lines and the chart is an equal-area projection
+- C) Rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines and the chart is conformal
+- D) The chart is conformal and nearly true to scale
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q42: Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0933 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... ^q42
+- A) 1045 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1129 UTC.
+- D) 1146 UTC.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q43: An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q43
+- A) 93 kt
+- B) 107 km/h.
+- C) 198 kt.
+- D) 58 km/h
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q44: An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals... ^q44
+- A) 693 NM.
+- B) 202 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 435 NM.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q45: Given: Ground speed (GS): 160 kt. True course (TC): 177°. Wind vector (W/WS): 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals... ^q45
+- A) 180°
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 169°.
+- D) 184°.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q46: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals... ^q46
+- A) .+ 11°
+- B) . - 9°
+- C) .- 7°
+- D) .+ 5°
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q47: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q47
+- A) 120 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 117 kt.
+- D) 125 kt.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q48: When using a GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation indication is shown by a vertical bar and dots to the left and to the right of the bar. What statement describes the correct interpretation of the display? ^q48
+- A) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.
+- B) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.
+- C) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection is +-10°.
+- D) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection is +-10 NM.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q49: What is the difference in latitude between A (12°53'30''N) and B (07°34'30''S)? ^q49
+- A) .05,19°
+- B) .20,28°
+- C) .05°19'00''
+- D) .20°28'00''
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q50: UTC is... ^q50
+- A) A zonal time
+- B) Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.
+- C) An obligatory time used in aviation.
+- D) A local time in Central Europe.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q51: With Central European Time (CET) given as UTC+1, what UTC time corresponds to 1700 CET? ^q51
+- A) 1500 UTC.
+- B) 1700 UTC.
+- C) 1800 UTC.
+- D) 1600 UTC.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q52: Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002° What are MH and MC? ^q52
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+- C) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+- D) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q53: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the TH and the DEV? (2,00 P.) ^q53
+- A) TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.
+- B) TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.
+- C) TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.
+- D) TH: 194°. DEV: +002°.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q54: The term 'agonic line' is defined as a line on Earth or an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the... ^q54
+- A) Heading of 0°.
+- B) Deviation of 0°.
+- C) Inclination of 0°.
+- D) Variation of 0°.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q55: Electronic devices on board of an aeroplane have influence on the... ^q55
+- A) Direct reading compass.
+- B) Airspeed indicator.
+- C) Turn coordinator
+- D) Artificial horizon.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q56: What is the distance from VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02?N, 011°33?E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q56
+- A) 24 NM
+- B) 42 NM
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 42 km
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q57: For a short flight from A to B the pilot extracts the following information from an aeronautical chart: True course: 245°. Magnetic variation: 7° W The magnetic course (MC) equals... ^q57
+- A) 238°.
+- B) 245°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 007°.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q58: An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM? ^q58
+- A) 1 h 12 min
+- B) 2 h 11 min
+- C) 0 h 50 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q59: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals... ^q59
+- A) 48 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 84 Min.
+- D) 62 Min.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q60: Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^q60
+- A) TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- B) TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- C) TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.
+- D) TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q61: What is meant by the term "terrestrial navigation"? ^q61
+- A) Orientation by ground celestial object during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q62: Which statement about a rhumb line is correct? ^q62
+- A) A rhumb line is a great circle intersecting the the equator with 45° angle.
+- B) The center of a complete cycle of a rhumb line is always the Earth's center.
+- C) A rhumb line cuts each meridian at the same angle.
+- D) The shortest track between two points along the Earth's surface follows a rhumb line.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q63: Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E What are: TC, MH und CH? (2,00 P.) ^q63
+- A) TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.
+- B) TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.
+- C) TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- D) TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 129°.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q64: 5500 m equal... ^q64
+- A) 18000 ft.
+- B) 30000 ft.
+- C) 7500 ft.
+- D) 10000 ft.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q65: Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0915 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... (2,00 P.) ^q65
+- A) 1115 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1105 UTC.
+- D) 1052 UTC.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q66: What is the required flight time for a distance of 236 NM with a ground speed of 134 kt? ^q66
+- A) 1:34 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 0:46 h
+- D) 1:46 h
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q67: What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q67
+- A) 241°
+- B) 055°
+- C) 235°
+- D) 061°
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q68: What is the meaning of the 1:60 rule? ^q68
+- A) 6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM
+- B) 1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- C) 10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- D) 60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q69: Where are the two polar circles? ^q69
+- A) 23.5° north and south of the poles
+- B) 23.5° north and south of the equator
+- C) At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N
+- D) 20.5° south of the poles
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q70: Vienna (LOWW) is located at 016° 34'E, Salzburg (LOWS) at 013° 00'E. The latitude of both positions can be considered as equal. What is the difference of sunrise and sunset times, expressed in UTC, between Wien and Salzburg? (2,00 P.) ^q70
+- A) In Vienna the sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- B) In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- C) In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg
+- D) In Vienna the sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q71: The term 'isogonal' or 'isogonic line' is defined as a line on an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the same value of... ^q71
+- A) Heading.
+- B) Deviation
+- C) Variation.
+- D) Inclination.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q72: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q72
+- A) 185 kt.
+- B) 255 kt.
+- C) 170 kt.
+- D) 135 kt.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q73: An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance which has to be flown is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What is the corrected heading to reach the arrival aerodrome directly? ^q73
+- A) 18° to the right
+- B) 9° to the right
+- C) 6° to the right
+- D) 12° to the right
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q74: The rotational axis of the Earth runs through the... ^q74
+- A) Magnetic north pole and on the geographic South Pole.
+- B) Magnetic north pole and on the magnetic south pole.
+- C) Geographic North Pole and on the magnetic south pole.
+- D) Geographic North Pole and on the geographic South Pole.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q75: 1000 ft equal... ^q75
+- A) 300 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 30 m.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q76: A distance of 7.5 cm on an aeronautical chart represents a distance of 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale? ^q76
+- A) 1 : 500000
+- B) 1 : 1500000
+- C) 1 : 1 000000
+- D) 1 : 150000
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q77: What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q77
+- A) 46 km
+- B) 46 NM
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 78 km
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/70 - Operational Procedures.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/70 - Operational Procedures.md
new file mode 100644
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+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/70 - Operational Procedures.md
@@ -0,0 +1,581 @@
+# 70 - Operational Procedures
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 64 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: A wind shear is... ^q1
+- A) A wind speed change of more than 15 kt.
+- B) A meteorological downslope wind phenomenon in the alps.
+- C) A vertical or horizontal change of wind speed and wind direction.
+- D) A slow increase of the wind speed in altitudes above 13000 ft.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing tailwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change? ^q2
+- A) Path is higher, IAS decreases
+- B) Path is lower, IAS increases
+- C) Path is higher, IAS increases
+- D) Path is lower, IAS decreases
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: During a cross-country flight, visual meteorological conditions tend to become below minimum conditions. To continue the flight according to minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to... ^q3
+- A) Continue the flight referring to sufficient forecasts
+- B) Turn back due to sufficient visual meteorological conditions along the previous track
+- C) Continue the flight using radio navigational features along the track
+- D) Continue the flight using navigatorical aid by ATC
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: With only a slight crosswind, what is the danger at take-off after the departure of a heavy aeroplane? ^q4
+- A) Wake turbulence rotate faster and higher.
+- B) Wake turbulence is amplified and distorted.
+- C) Wake turbulence twisting transverse to the runway.
+- D) Wake turbulence on or near the runway
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: A precautionary landing is a landing... ^q5
+- A) Conducted with the flaps retracted.
+- B) Conducted without power from the engine.
+- C) Conducted in response to circumstances forcing the aircraft to land.
+- D) Conducted in an attempt to sustain flight safety
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: Which of the following landing areas is most suitable for an off-field landing? ^q6
+- A) A field with ripe waving crops
+- B) A meadow without livestock
+- C) A light brown field with short crops
+- D) A lake with an undisturbed surface
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: What are the effects of wet grass on the take-off and landing distance? ^q7
+- A) Decrease of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance
+- B) Increase of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance
+- C) Increase of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance
+- D) Decrease of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: Off-field landing may be prone to accident when... ^q8
+- A) The approach is conducted using distinct approach segments
+- B) The decision is made above minimum safe altitude.
+- C) The approach is conducted onto a harvested corn field.
+- D) The decision to land off-field is made too late.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: When commencing a steep turn, what has to be considered by the pilot? ^q9
+- A) After achieving bank angle, reduce yaw using opposite rudder
+- B) Commence turn with reduced speed according to aimed bank angle
+- C) Commence turn with increased speed according to aimed bank angle
+- D) After achieving bank angle, push the elevator to increase speed
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: When airtowing using side-located latch, the gliding plane tends to... ^q10
+- A) Show particularly stable flight characteristics.
+- B) Quickly turn around longitunidal axis
+- C) Show enhanced pitch up moment.
+- D) Show enhanced turn to latch-mounted side.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: A gliding plane being airtowed gets into an excessive high position behind the towing plane. What action by the glider pilot can prevent further danger for glider and towing plane? ^q11
+- A) Initiate a sideslip to reduce excessive height
+- B) Pull strongly, therafter decouple the cable
+- C) Carefully extend spoiler flaps, steer glider back into normal position
+- D) Push strongly to bring glider back to normal position
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: In case of cable break during airtow, a longer part of the cable remains attached to the glider plane. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q12
+- A) Decouple immediately and proceed with coupling unlatched
+- B) Conduct normal approach, release cable immediatley after ground contact
+- C) Perform low approach and reuqest information about cable length by airfield controller, decouple if necessary
+- D) When in safe height, drop cable overhead empty terrain or overhead airfield
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: During a winch launch, just after stabilizing full climb attitude, the pull on cable suddenly stops. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q13
+- A) Push slightly, wait for pull on cable to be re-established
+- B) Inform winch driver by altertate aileron input
+- C) Push firmly and decouple cable immediately
+- D) Pull on elevator to increases cable tension
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: Before the launch using a parallel-cable winch, the glider pilot realizes the second cable laying close to his glider about to launch. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q14
+- A) Keep an eye on second cable, decouple after takeoff if necessary
+- B) Continue launch with rudder input on opposite direction to second cable
+- C) Conduct normal takeoff, inform airfield controller after landing
+- D) Decouple cable immediately, inform airfield controller via radio
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: What is the purpose of the breaking points on a winch cable? ^q15
+- A) It is used for automatic cable release after winch launch
+- B) It protects the winch from being overshot by the glider plane
+- C) It is used to limit the rate of climb during winch launch
+- D) It prevents excessive stress on the gilder plane
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: A glider pilot has to conduct an off-field landing in a mountainous region. The only available landing site is highly inclined. How should the landing be conducted? ^q16
+- A) Approach with increased speed, quick flare to follow the inclined ground
+- B) Approach down the ridge with increased speed, push according to ground level during landing
+- C) According to prevailant wind, approach and land parallel to the ridge with headwind
+- D) Approach with minimum speed, careful flare when reaching the landing site
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: During a high altitude flight (6000 m MSL), the glider pilot realizes that oxygen will be consumed within a few minutes. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q17
+- A) After depletion of oxygen, stay at that altitude no longer than 30 min
+- B) At first indication of hypoxia, commence descent with maximum allowed speed
+- C) Extend spoiler flaps, descent with maximum permissable speed
+- D) Reduce oxygen flow by breathing slowly
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: Trim masses or lead plates must be secured firmly when installed into a gliding plane, so that... ^q18
+- A) The maximum allowed mass will not be exceeded.
+- B) A comfortable seat position will be assured for the glider pilot.
+- C) They will not block rudders or induce any C.G. shift.
+- D) The glider pilot will not be hurt during flight in thermal turbulences.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: Why is it not allowed to launch wih the C.G. positioned beyond the aft limit? ^q19
+- A) Because rudder inputs may not be sufficient for controlling flight attitude
+- B) Because increased nose-down moment may not be compensated
+- C) Because structural limits may be exceeded
+- D) Because maximum permissable speed will be rduced significantly
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: During approach, tower provides the following information: "Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots". How should the landing be performed? ^q20
+- A) Approach with minimum speed, correct changes in attitude with careful rudder inputs
+- B) Approach with normal speed, maintain speed using spoiler flaps
+- C) Approach with increased speed, correct changes in attitude with firm rudder inputs
+- D) Approach with increased speed, avoid usage of spoiler flaps
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: When a pilot gets into a strong downwind area during slope soaring, what action should be recommanded? ^q21
+- A) Contunue flight, downwinds around mountains only occur shortly
+- B) Increase speed and head away from the ridge
+- C) Increase speed and conduct landing parallel to ridge
+- D) Increase speed and get closer to the ridge
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: After landing, you realize you lost your pen which might have fallen down in the cockpit of the sailplane. What has to be considered? ^q22
+- A) Lighter, loose bodies in the fuselage can be considered uncritical
+- B) Before next take-off, the cockpit has to be firmly inspected for loose bodies.
+- C) A flight without a pen at hand is not permitted
+- D) Succeeding pilots have to be informed about that
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: Durig flight close to aerodrome in about 250 m AGL you encouter strong descent and go for a safety landing. What speed should be flown when heading towards the airfield? ^q23
+- A) Best glide speed plus additionals for downdrafts and wind
+- B) Best glide speed
+- C) Minimum rate of descent speed
+- D) Maximum manoeuvering speed VA
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: During final approach, you realize that you missed to extend the gear. How should the landing be conducted? ^q24
+- A) You land without gear, and carefully touch down with minimum speed.
+- B) You extend the gear immediately and land as usual.
+- C) You retract flaps, extend the gear and land as usual.
+- D) You land without gear with higher than usual speed.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: After reaching what height during winch launch the maximum pitch position can be taken? ^q25
+- A) From approx. 50 m while maintaining a save speed for winch launch.
+- B) From 15 m while reaching a speed of at least 90 km/h
+- C) From 150 m or higher, when in case of cable break landing straight ahead is no longer possible
+- D) Shortly after lift-off, provided a sufficiently strong headwind
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: What has to be considered for the speed during approach and landing? ^q26
+- A) Wind speed and weight
+- B) Altitude and weight
+- C) Wind speed and Altitude
+- D) Weight and wind speed
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: How can you determine wind direction in case of an outlanding? ^q27
+- A) Monitoring of smoke, flags, waving fields
+- B) Wind forecast from flight weather report
+- C) Request from other pilots who can be reached by radio
+- D) Remembering the wind indicated by the windsock an departing airfield
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: What landing technique is recommended for landing on a down-hill gras area? ^q28
+- A) In general up-hill
+- B) Diagonal down-hill
+- C) With brakes applied on main wheel, no air brakes
+- D) Full air brakes, gear retracted and stalled
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: What has to be checked before any change in direction during glide? ^q29
+- A) Check for turn to be flown coordinated
+- B) Check for thermal clouds
+- C) Check for loose object secured
+- D) Check for free airspace in desired direction
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: Before a winch launch, you detect a light tailwind. What has to be considered? ^q30
+- A) Roll until lift-off will take a little longer, watch speed
+- B) A weaker rated-brake-point can be used, load will be smaller
+- C) Roll until lift-off will be shorter since tailwind is pushing from behind
+- D) To reach more height, full pull on the elevator after lift-off
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q31: Flying slow close to stall conditions, the left wings is lower than the right wing. How can the stall be prevented? ^q31
+- A) Push on the elevator, keep wings level with coordinated inputs on rudder and aileron
+- B) Aileron and rudder to the reight, gain some speed, push slightly on the elevator, all rudders neutral
+- C) Airleron to the right, push slighty on the elevator, gain some speed, all rudders neutral
+- D) Rudder left, push slightly on the elevator, gain some speed, all rudders neutral
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q32: Which weather phenomenon is typically associated with wind shear? ^q32
+- A) Fog
+- B) Stable high pressure areas.
+- C) Invernal warm front.
+- D) Thunderstorms.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q33: During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing headwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change? ^q33
+- A) Path is higher, IAS increases
+- B) Path is lower, IAS decreases
+- C) Path is lower, IAS increases
+- D) Path is higher, IAS decreases
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q34: During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with an increasing headwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change? ^q34
+- A) Path is lower, IAS increases
+- B) Path is higher, IAS decreases
+- C) Path is higher, IAS increases
+- D) Path is lower, IAS decreases
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q35: How can dangerous situations be prevented when the gliding plane approaches close to a pattern altitude during a cross-country flight? ^q35
+- A) Try to reach cumuclus clouds visible at the far horizon and use their thermal updrafts
+- B) Despite the planned flight, decide for an off-field landing
+- C) Maintain radio communication up to full stop after off-field landing
+- D) Search for thermal updrafts on the lee side of a selected landing field
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q36: During airtow, the gliding plane exceeds its maximum permissable speed. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q36
+- A) Extend spoiler flaps
+- B) Message to airfield controller via radio
+- C) Pull elevator to reduce speed
+- D) Decouple cable immediately
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q37: During airtow, the towing plane disappears from the glider pilot's sight. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q37
+- A) Decouple cable immediatly
+- B) Alternate push and pull on the elveator
+- C) Alternate turn to the left and to the right
+- D) Extend spoiler flaps and return to normal attitude
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q38: During the last phase of a winch launch, the glider pilot does not release pull on the elevator. The automatic latch releases the cable at high wing load. What consequences have to be considered? ^q38
+- A) A higher altitude can be reached using this technique
+- B) Extreme stress on the structure of the glider plane
+- C) This technique can compensate for insufficient wind correction
+- D) Only by this sudden jerk the release of the cable can be assured
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q39: During a winch launch, after reaching full climb attitude, the airspeed indicator fails. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q39
+- A) Continue launch to normal altitude, use horizontal image and airstream noise to conduct flight as planned
+- B) Try to re-establish airspeed indication by abrupt changes of speed during launch
+- C) Push elevator, decouple cable and perform short pattern with minimum speed
+- D) Continue launch to normal altitude, use horizontal image and airstream noise for pattern and landing right away
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q40: What has to be expected with ice accretion on wings? ^q40
+- A) An increased stall speed
+- B) A decreased stall speed
+- C) Improved slow flight capabilities
+- D) Reduced friction drag
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q41: Despite several attempts, the landing gear can be extended, but not locked. How should the landing be conducted? ^q41
+- A) Keep gear unlocked and perform normal landing
+- B) Keep a firm grip on gear handle during normal landing
+- C) Retract landing gear and perform belly landing with minimum speed
+- D) Retract gear and perform belly landing with increased speed
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q42: An off-field landing with tailwind is inevitable. How should the landing be conducted? ^q42
+- A) Approach with reduced speed, expect shorter flare and ground roll distance
+- B) Normal approach, when reaching landing site, extend spoiler flaps and push down elevator
+- C) Approach with normal speed, expect longer flare and ground roll distance
+- D) Approach with increased speed without use of spoiler flaps
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q43: A plane flying below an extended Cumulus cloud developing into a thunderstorm, the glider plane quickly approaches the cloud base. What actions have to be taken by the glider pilot? ^q43
+- A) Extend spoiler flaps within speed limits, leave thermal lift area with maximum permissable speed
+- B) Fasten seat belts, be aware of severe gust during further thermaling
+- C) Reduce to minimum speed, leave thermal lift area in a flat turn
+- D) Climb into thunderstorm cloud, continue flight using instruments
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q44: During approach for landing with strong crosswind, how should the turn from base to final be flown? ^q44
+- A) Turn with maximum 60° bank, carefully watch speed and yaw string, track correction after overshoot.
+- B) Maximum 30° bank, use rudder to early align sailplane with final track
+- C) Maximum 60° bank, use rudder to early align sailplane with final track.
+- D) Turn with maximum 30° bank, carefully watch speed and yaw string, track correction after overshoot.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q45: During thermal soaring, another sailplane is following close by. What should be done to avoid a collision? ^q45
+- A) You reduce speed to let the other sailplane fly by
+- B) You reduce bank to achieve a larger turn radius
+- C) You increase bank to be better seen from the other sailplane
+- D) You increase speed to achieve a position opposite in the circle
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q46: What heights should be consideres for landing phases with a glider plane? ^q46
+- A) 100 m abeam threashold and 50 m after final approach turn
+- B) 300 m abeam threashold and 150 m in final approach
+- C) 500 m abeam threashold and 50 m after final approach turn
+- D) 150 - 200 m abeam threashold and 100 m after final approach turn
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q47: How should a glider plane be parked when observing strong winds? ^q47
+- A) Nose into the wind, keep and weigh tail down
+- B) Nose into the wind, extends air brakes, secure rudders
+- C) Downwind wing on the ground, weigh wing down, secure rudders
+- D) Windward wing on the ground, weigh wing down, secure rudders
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q48: When do you expect wind shear? ^q48
+- A) During an inversion
+- B) When passing a warm front
+- C) During a summer day with calm winds
+- D) In calm wind in cold weather
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q49: How can a wind shear encounter in flight be avoided? ^q49
+- A) Avoid thermally active areas, particularly during summer, or stay below these areas
+- B) Avoid areas of precipitation, particularly during winter, and choose low flight altitudes
+- C) Avoid take-off and landing during the passage of heavy showers or thunderstorms
+- D) Avoid take-offs and landings in mountainous terrain and stay in flat country whenever possible
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q50: Wake turbulence on or near the runway ^q50
+- A) Plowed field
+- B) Glade with long dry grass
+- C) Sports area in a village
+- D) Harvested cornfield
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q51: A gliding plane is about to pitch down due to stall. What rudder input can prevent nose-dive and spin? ^q51
+- A) Ailerons neutral, rudder strongly kicked to lower wing
+- B) Release elevator, rudder opposite to lower wing
+- C) Keep airplane in level flight using rudder pedals
+- D) Slightly pull the elevator, ailerons opposite to lower wing
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q52: In case of a cable break during winch launch, what actions should be taken in the correct order? ^q52
+- A) Decouple cable, therafter push nose down; at heights up to 150m GND land straight ahead with increased speed
+- B) Push firmly nose down, decouple cable, depending on terrain and wind decide for short pattern or landing straight ahead
+- C) Initiate 180° turn and land opposite to runway heading in use, decouple cable before touch down
+- D) Keep elevetor pulled, stabilize on minimum speed and land on remaining field length
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q53: During initial winch launch, one wing of a glider plane gets ground contact. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q53
+- A) Pull the elevator
+- B) Decouple cable immediatly
+- C) Rudder in opposite direction
+- D) Ailerons in opposite direction
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q54: When flying into heavy snowfall, most dangerous will be the... ^q54
+- A) Sudden blockage of pitot-static system
+- B) Sudden increase of airframe icing.
+- C) Sudden increase in airplane mass
+- D) Suddon loss of visibility
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q55: What has to be considers when overflying mountain ridges? ^q55
+- A) Turbulences, reduce to minimum speed
+- B) Do not overfly national parks
+- C) Turbulences, therefore slightly increase speed
+- D) Use circling birds to find thermal cells
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q56: What is indicated by "buffeting" noticable at elevator stick? ^q56
+- A) C.G. position too far ahead
+- B) Glider plane very dirty
+- C) Too slow, wing airflow stalled
+- D) Too fast, turbulence bubbles hitting on aileron
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q57: The term "flight time" is defined as... ^q57
+- A) The period from engine start for the purpose of taking off to leaving the aircraft after engine shutdown.
+- B) The period from the start of the take-off run to the final touchdown when landing.
+- C) The total time from the first aircraft movement until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight.
+- D) The total time from the first take-off until the last landing in conjunction with one or more consecutive flights.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q58: Two aircraft of the same type, same grossweight and same configuration fly at different airspeeds. Which aircraft will cause more severe wake turbulence? ^q58
+- A) The aircraft flying at lower altitude.
+- B) The aircraft flying at higher speed.
+- C) The aircraft flying at higher altitude
+- D) The aircraft flying at slower speed
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q59: What color has the emergency hood release handle? ^q59
+- A) Green
+- B) Red
+- C) Yellow
+- D) Blue
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q60: When landing with tailwind, the pilot has to... ^q60
+- A) Approach with normal speed and shallow angle.
+- B) Compensate tailwind by sideslip.
+- C) Increase approach speed.
+- D) Land with gear retracted to shorten ground roll distance
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q61: What negative impacts may be expected during circling overhead industrial facilities? ^q61
+- A) Health impairments by pollutants, reduced visibilty and turbulences
+- B) Strong electrostatic charging and deterioration in radio communication
+- C) Very poor visibility of only few hundred meters and heavy precipitation
+- D) Extended, strong downwind areas on the lee side of the facility
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q62: During airtow, in a turn the glider plane gets into an outward off-set position. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q62
+- A) Return glider plane to a position behind towing plane by a smaller curve radius using strong inputs on rudder pedals
+- B) Take up same bank angle as towing plane and return glider plane to a position behind towing plane using rudder pedals
+- C) Bring back glider plane to intended turning attitude using rudder and airlerons, extend spoiler flaps to reduce speed
+- D) Initiate sideslip and let glider plane be pushed back to a position behind towing plane by increased drag
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q63: When has a pre-flight check to be done? ^q63
+- A) Before first flight of the day, and after every change of pilot
+- B) After every build-up of the airplane
+- C) Once a month, with TMG once a day
+- D) Before flight operation and before every flight
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q64: Collisions during circling within thermal updrafts can be avoided by... ^q64
+- A) Alternate circling with opposite directions in different heights.
+- B) Imitating the movements of the preceeding gliding plane.
+- C) Coordination of plane movements with other aircrafts circling within the same updraft
+- D) Fast approach into the updraft and rapidly pulling the elevator for slower speed.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/80 - Principles of Flight.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/80 - Principles of Flight.md
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+# 80 - Principles of Flight
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 90 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: With regard to the forces acting, how can stationary gliding be described? ^q1
+- A) The sum of air forces acts along the direction of air flow
+- B) The sum the air forces acts along with the lift force
+- C) The lift force compensates the drag force
+- D) The sum of air forces compensates the gravity force
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: What is the result of extending flaps with increasing aerofoil camber? ^q2
+- A) Maximum permissable speed increases
+- B) Minimum speed increases
+- C) Minimum speed decreases
+- D) C.G. position moves forward
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: Stabilization around the lateral axis during cruise is achieved by the... ^q3
+- A) Wing flaps.
+- B) Horizontal stabilizer
+- C) Airlerons.
+- D) Vertical rudder
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: All aerodynamic forces can be considered to act on a single point. This point is called... ^q4
+- A) Center of gravity.
+- B) Lift point.
+- C) Transition point.
+- D) Center of pressure.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 4? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q5
+- A) Transition point
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Center of pressure
+- D) Separation point
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 1? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q6
+- A) Center of pressure
+- B) Stagnation point
+- C) Stagnation point
+- D) Transition point
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: What pattern can be found at the stagnation point? ^q7
+- A) The boundary layer starts separating on the upper surface of the profile
+- B) All aerodynamic forces can be considered as attacking at this single point
+- C) The laminar boundary layer changes into a turbulent boundary layer
+- D) Streamlines are divided into airflow above and below the profile
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: Which statement about lift and angle of attack is correct? ^q8
+- A) Increasing the angle of attack too far may result in a loss of lift and an airflow separation
+- B) Increasing the angle of attack results in less lift being generated by the aerofoil
+- C) Decreasing the angle of attack results in more drag being generated by the aerofoil
+- D) Too large angles of attack can lead to an exponential increase in lift
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack increases? ^q9
+- A) The stagnation point moves down
+- B) The center of pressure moves down
+- C) The center of pressure moves up
+- D) The stagnation point moves up
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: Pressure compensation on an wing occurs at the... ^q10
+- A) Wing tips.
+- B) Leading edge.
+- C) Trailing edge.
+- D) Wing roots
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: Which of the following options is likely to produce large induced drag? ^q11
+- A) Large aspect ratio
+- B) Small aspect ratio
+- C) Low lift coefficients
+- D) Tapered wings
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: Pressure drag, interference drag and friction drag belong to the group of the... ^q12
+- A) Parasite drag
+- B) Main resistance.
+- C) Induced drag.
+- D) Total drag.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: Which kinds of drag contribute to total drag? ^q13
+- A) Interference drag and parasite drag
+- B) Induced drag and parasite drag
+- C) Induced drag, form drag, skin-friction drag
+- D) Form drag, skin-friction drag, interference drag
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: In case of a stall it is important to... ^q14
+- A) Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed.
+- B) Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed.
+- C) Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed.
+- D) Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: What types of boundary layers can be found on an aerofoil? ^q15
+- A) Laminar boundary layer along the complete upper surface with non-separated airflow
+- B) Turbulent layer at the leading wing areas, laminar boundary layer at the trailing areas
+- C) Turbulent boundary layer along the complete upper surface with separated airflow
+- D) Laminar layer at the leading wing areas, turbulent boundary layer at the trailing areas
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: Which constructive feature is shown in the figure? See figure (PFA-006) L: Lift Siehe Anlage 4 ^q16
+- A) Lateral stability by wing dihedral
+- B) Differential aileron deflection
+- C) Directional stability by lift generation
+- D) Longitudinal stability by wing dihedral
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: "Longitudinal stability" is referred to as stability around which axis? ^q17
+- A) Lateral axis
+- B) Propeller axis
+- C) Longitudinal axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: Rotation around the vertical axis is called... ^q18
+- A) Slipping.
+- B) Pitching.
+- C) Yawing.
+- D) Rolling.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: Rotation around the lateral axis is called... ^q19
+- A) Yawing.
+- B) Pitching.
+- C) Rolling.
+- D) Stalling.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: The elevator moves an aeroplane around the... ^q20
+- A) Vertical axis.
+- B) Longitudinal axis.
+- C) Elevator axis.
+- D) Lateral axis.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: What has to be considered with regard to the center of gravity position? ^q21
+- A) By moving the elevator trim tab, the center of gravity can be shifted into a correct position.
+- B) Only correct loading can assure a correct and safe center of gravity position.
+- C) The center of gravity's position can only be determined during flight.
+- D) By moving the aileron trim tab, the center of gravity can be shifted into a correct position.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: What is the advantage of differential aileron movement? ^q22
+- A) The drag of the downwards deflected aileron is lowered and the adverse yaw is smaller
+- B) The total lift remains constant during aileron deflection
+- C) The ratio of the drag coefficient to lift coefficient is increased
+- D) The adverse yaw is higher
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: The aerodynamic rudder balance... ^q23
+- A) Reduces the control surfaces.
+- B) Delays the stall.
+- C) Reduces the control stick forces.
+- D) Improves the rudder effectiveness.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: What is the function of the static rudder balance? ^q24
+- A) To prevent control surface flutter
+- B) To trim the controls almost without any force
+- C) To increase the control stick forces
+- D) To limit the control stick forces
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: The trim tab at the elevator is defelected upwards. In which position is the corresponding indicator? ^q25
+- A) Neutral position
+- B) Nose-down position
+- C) Nose-up position
+- D) Laterally trimmed
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: Point number 1 in the figure indicates which flight state? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^q26
+- A) Inverted flight
+- B) Slow flight
+- C) Stall
+- D) Best gliding angle
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: In a co-ordinated turn, how is the relation between the load factor (n) and the stall speed (Vs)? ^q27
+- A) N is smaller than 1, Vs is greater than in straight and level flight.
+- B) N is greater than 1, Vs is smaller than in straight and level flight.
+- C) N is greater than 1, Vs is greater than in straight and level flight.
+- D) N is smaller than 1, Vs is smaller than in straight and level flight.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: The pressure compensation between wind upper and lower surface results in ... ^q28
+- A) Induced drag by wing tip vortices
+- B) Laminar airflow by wing tip vortices.
+- C) Profile drag by wing tip vortices.
+- D) Lift by wing tip vortices.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: At stationary glide and the same mass, what is the difference when using a thick airfoild instead of a thinner airfoil? ^q29
+- A) More drag, same lift
+- B) Less drag, less lift
+- C) More drag, less lift
+- D) Less drag, same lift
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: What is shown by a profile polar? ^q30
+- A) Ratio between minimum rate of descent and best glide
+- B) Ratio between total lift and drag depending on angle of attack
+- C) Ratio of cA and cD at different angles of attack
+- D) Lift coefficient cA at different angles of attack
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q31: Following a single-wing stall and pitch-down moment, how can a spin be prevented? ^q31
+- A) Deflect all rudders opposite to lower wing
+- B) Rudder opposite lower wing, releasing elevator to build up speed
+- C) Pushing the elevator to build up speed to re-attach airflow on wings
+- D) Pulling the elevator to bring the plane back to normal attitude
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q32: Flying with speeds higher than the never-exceed-speed (vNE) may result in... ^q32
+- A) Reduced drag with increased control forces.
+- B) An increased lift-to-drag ratio and a better glide angle.
+- C) Too high total pressure resulting in an unusable airspeed indicator.
+- D) Flutter and mechanically damaging the wings.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q33: If surrounded by airflow (v>0), any arbitrarily shaped body produces... ^q33
+- A) Drag and lift.
+- B) Drag.
+- C) Lift without drag.
+- D) Constant drag at any speed.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q34: Number 3 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q34
+- A) Camber line.
+- B) Thickness.
+- C) Chord.
+- D) Chord line.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q35: In which way does the position of the center of pressure move at a positively shaped profile with increasing angle of attack? ^q35
+- A) It moves to the wing tips
+- B) It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack
+- C) It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack
+- D) It moves forward first, then backward
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q36: Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack decreases? ^q36
+- A) The center of pressure moves aft
+- B) The center of pressure moves forward
+- C) The stagnation point moves down
+- D) The stagnation point remains constant
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q37: Which statement concerning the angle of attack is correct? ^q37
+- A) Increasing the angle of attack results in decreasing lift
+- B) The angle of attack cannot be negative
+- C) A too large angle of attack may result in a loss of lift
+- D) The angle of attack is constant throughout the flight
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q38: When increasing the airflow speed by a factor of 2 while keeping all other parameters constant, how does the parasite drag change approximately? ^q38
+- A) It decreases by a factor of 2
+- B) It increases by a factor of 2
+- C) It decreases by a factor of 4
+- D) It increases by a factor of 4
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q39: The drag coefficient... ^q39
+- A) Is proportional to the lift coefficient
+- B) Increases with increasing airspeed.
+- C) May range from zero to an infinite positive value
+- D) Cannot be lower than a non-negative, minimal value.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q40: Which parts of an aircraft mainly affect the generation of induced drag? ^q40
+- A) The front part of the fuselage.
+- B) The outer part of the ailerons.
+- C) The lower part of the gear.
+- D) The wing tips.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q41: Where is interference drag generated? ^q41
+- A) At the ailerons
+- B) At the the gear
+- C) At the wing root
+- D) Near the wing tips
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q42: Which of the listed wing shapes has the lowest induced drag? ^q42
+- A) Rectangular shape
+- B) Trapezoidal shape
+- C) Elliptical shape
+- D) Double trapezoidal shape
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q43: Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw? ^q43
+- A) Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?
+- B) Differential aileron defletion
+- C) Full deflection of the aileron
+- D) Wing dihedral
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q44: What describes "wing loading"? ^q44
+- A) Wing area per weight
+- B) Drag per weight
+- C) Weight per wing area
+- D) Drag per wing area
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q45: Point number 5 in the figure indicates which flight state? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5 ^q45
+- A) Slow flight
+- B) Best gliding angle
+- C) Inverted flight
+- D) Stall
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q46: Extending airbrakes results in ... ^q46
+- A) Less drag and more lift.
+- B) More drag and less lift.
+- C) More drag and more lift.
+- D) Less drag and less lift.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q47: The glide ratio of a sailplane can be improved by which measures? ^q47
+- A) Higher airplane mass, thin airfoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- B) Lower airplane mass, correct speed, retractable gear
+- C) Cleaning, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+- D) Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q48: What is the diffeence between spin and spiral dive? ^q48
+- A) Spin: stall at inner wing, speed increasing rapidly; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed constant
+- B) Spin: stall at inner wing, speed constant; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed increasing rapidly
+- C) Spin: stall at outer wing, speed constant; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed increasing rapidly
+- D) Spin: stall at outer wing, speed increasing rapidly; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed constant
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q49: The angle of attack is the angle between... ^q49
+- A) The chord line and the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane.
+- B) The chord line and the oncoming airflow.
+- C) The wing and the fuselage of an aeroplane
+- D) The undisturbed airflow and the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q50: The ratio of span and mean chord length is referred to as... ^q50
+- A) Trapezium shape.
+- B) Tapering.
+- C) Aspect ratio.
+- D) Wing sweep.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q51: Stability around which axis is mainly influenced by the center of gravity's longitudinal position? ^q51
+- A) Longitudinal axis
+- B) Lateral axis
+- C) Gravity axis
+- D) Vertical axis
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q52: What structural item provides directional stability to an airplane? ^q52
+- A) Differential aileron deflection
+- B) Wing dihedral
+- C) Large elevator
+- D) Large vertical tail
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q53: The critical angle of attack... ^q53
+- A) Decreases with forward center of gravity position.
+- B) Changes with increasing weight.
+- C) Is independent of the weight.
+- D) Increases with backward center of gravity position.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q54: In straight and level flight with constant performance of the engine, the angle of attack at the wing is... ^q54
+- A) Smaller than in a descent.
+- B) Greater than in a climb.
+- C) Greater than at take-off.
+- D) Smaller than in a climb.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q55: What is the function of the horizontal tail (among other things)? ^q55
+- A) To stabilise the aeroplane around the longitudinal axis
+- B) To stabilise the aeroplane around the lateral axis
+- C) To initiate a curve around the vertical axis
+- D) To stabilise the aeroplane around the vertical axis
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q56: Deflecting the rudder to the left causes... ^q56
+- A) Pitching of the aircraft to the left
+- B) Yawing of the aircraft to the left.
+- C) Pitching of the aircraft to the right.
+- D) Yawing of the aircraft to the right.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q57: Differential aileron deflection is used to... ^q57
+- A) Reduce wake turbulence.
+- B) Avoid a stall at low angles of attack.
+- C) Keep the adverse yaw low.
+- D) Increase the rate of descent.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q58: How is the balance of forces affected during a turn? ^q58
+- A) A lower lift force compensates for a lower net force as compared to level flight
+- B) Lift force must be increased to compensate for the sum of centrifugal and gravitational force
+- C) The horizontal component of the lift force during a turn is the centrifugal force
+- D) The net force results from superposition of gravity and centripetal forces
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q59: What engine design at a Touring Motor Glider (TMG) results in least drag? ^q59
+- A) Engine and propeller mounted fix on the fuselage
+- B) Engine and propeller mounted stowable on the fuselage
+- C) Engine and propeller mounted fix at the aircraft's nose
+- D) Engine and propeller mounted fix at the horizontal stabilizer
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q60: What effect is referred to as "adverse yaw"? ^q60
+- A) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the desired side due to less drag at the down-deflected aileron
+- B) Rudder operation results in a rolling moment to the opposite side due to more lift generated by the faster moving wing.
+- C) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the up-deflected aileron
+- D) Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the down-deflected aileron
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q61: What is meant by "ground effect"? ^q61
+- A) Decrease of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground
+- B) Increase of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground
+- C) Increase of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground
+- D) Decrease of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q62: What pressure pattern can be observed at a lift-generating wing profile at positive angle of attack? ^q62
+- A) Low pressure is created above, higher pressure below the profile
+- B) Pressure above remains unchanged, higher pressure is created below the profile
+- C) High pressure is created above, lower pressure below the profile
+- D) Pressure below remains unchanged, lower pressure is created above the profile
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q63: In order to improve the stall characteristics of an aircraft, the wing is twisted outwards (the angle of incidence varies spanwise). This is known as... ^q63
+- A) Arrow shape.
+- B) V-form
+- C) Geometric washout.
+- D) Aerodynamic washout.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q64: During a stall, the lift... ^q64
+- A) Decreases and drag increases.
+- B) Increases and drag increases.
+- C) Decreases and drag decreases
+- D) Increases and drag decreases.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q65: Which statement regarding a spin is correct? ^q65
+- A) During recovery the ailerons should be kept neutral
+- B) During the spin the speed constantly increases
+- C) During recovery the ailerons should be crossed
+- D) Only very old aeroplanes have a risk of spinning
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q66: What structural item provides lateral stability to an airplane? ^q66
+- A) Wing dihedral
+- B) Vertical tail
+- C) Differential aileron deflection
+- D) Elevator
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q67: Rudder deflections result in a turn of the aeroplane around the... ^q67
+- A) Rudder axis.
+- B) Vertical axis.
+- C) Lateral axis
+- D) Longitudinal axis.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q68: Through which factor listed below does the load factor increase during cruise flight? ^q68
+- A) Lower air density
+- B) A forward centre of gravity
+- C) Higher aeroplane weight
+- D) An upward gust
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q69: During approch to the next updraft, the vertical speed indicator reads 3 m/s descent. Within the updraft you expect a mean rate of climb of 2 m/s. According McCready, how should you adjust the speed during approach of the updraft? ^q69
+- A) The McCready ring should be set to 2 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the sum of current rate of descent at expected rate of climb (5 m/s).
+- B) The McCready ring should be set to 3 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the expected rate of climb (2 m/s).
+- C) The McCready ring should be set to 2 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the current rate of descent (3 m/s).
+- D) Outside of thermal cells, the McCready ring should be set to 0 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the current rate of descent (3 m/s).
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q70: What has to be considered when operating a sailplane equipped with camper flaps? ^q70
+- A) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive.
+- B) During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative.
+- C) During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative.
+- D) During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q71: Considering longitudinal stability, which C.G. position is most dangerous with a normal gliding plane? ^q71
+- A) Position beyond the front C.G. limit
+- B) Position too far aside permissable C.G. limits.
+- C) Position far back within permissable C.G. limits
+- D) Position beyond the rear C.G. limit
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q72: The static pressure of gases work... ^q72
+- A) In all directions.
+- B) Only in flow direction.
+- C) Only in the direction of the total pressure.
+- D) Only vertical to the flow direction.
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q73: Bernoulli's equation for frictionless, incompressible gases states that... ^q73
+- A) Total pressure = dynamic pressure - static pressure.
+- B) Total pressure = dynamic pressure + static pressure.
+- C) Static pressure = total pressure + dynamic pressure
+- D) Dynamic pressure = total pressure + static pressure.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q74: The center of pressure is the theoretical point of origin of... ^q74
+- A) Only the resulting total drag.
+- B) Gravity forces of the profile.
+- C) All aerodynamic forces of the profile.
+- D) Gravity and aerodynamic forces.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q75: Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 3? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q75
+- A) Stagnation point
+- B) Separation point
+- C) Center of pressure
+- D) Transition point
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q76: Which option states a benefit of wing washout? ^q76
+- A) With the washout the form drag reduces at high speeds
+- B) Greater hardness because the wing can withstand more torsion forces
+- C) At high angles of attack the effectiveness of the aileron is retained as long as possible
+- D) Structurally the wing is made more rigid against rotation
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q77: Which statement about induced drag during the horizontal cruise flight is correct? ^q77
+- A) Induced drag decreases with increasing airspeed
+- B) Induced drag has a minimum at a certain speed and increases at higher as well as lower speeds
+- C) Induced drag has a maximum at a certain speed and decreases at higher as well as lower speeds
+- D) Induced drag increases with increasing airspeed
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q78: How do lift and drag change when approaching a stall condition? ^q78
+- A) Lift decreases and drag increases
+- B) Lift and drag increase
+- C) Lift increases and drag decreases
+- D) Lift and drag decrease
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q79: What leads to a decreased stall speed Vs (IAS)? ^q79
+- A) Lower density
+- B) Decreasing weight
+- C) Lower altitude
+- D) Higher load factor
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q80: How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent boundary layer? ^q80
+- A) The laminar boundary layer is thinner and provides more skin-friction drag
+- B) The turbulent boundary layer can follow the airfoil camber at higher angles of attack
+- C) The laminar boundary layer produces lift, the turbulent boundary layer produces drag
+- D) The turbulent boundary layer is thicker and provides less skin-friction drag
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q81: Number 2 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q81
+- A) Profile thickness.
+- B) Chord line.
+- C) Chord line.
+- D) Angle of attack.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q82: The angle (alpha) shown in the figure is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow Siehe Anlage 3 ^q82
+- A) Lift angle.
+- B) Angle of attack.
+- C) Angle of incidence.
+- D) Angle of inclination
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q83: The right aileron deflects upwards, the left downwards. How does the aircraft react? ^q83
+- A) Rolling to the left, no yawing
+- B) Rolling to the right, yawing to the left
+- C) Rolling to the left, yawing to the right
+- D) Rolling to the right, yawing to the right
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q84: What has to be considered when operating a sailplane with water ballast? ^q84
+- A) Best glide angle decreases.
+- B) Significant CG shifts.
+- C) Best glide speed decreases
+- D) It should stay below freezing level.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q85: The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil is located between... ^q85
+- A) The stagnation point and the center of pressure.
+- B) The stagnation point and the transition point.
+- C) The transition point and the separation point.
+- D) The transition point and the center of pressure.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q86: How do induced drag and parasite drag change with increasing airspeed during a horizontal and stable cruise flight? ^q86
+- A) Parasite drag decreases and induced drag increases
+- B) Induced drag decreases and parasite drag increases
+- C) Parasite drag decreases and induced drag decreases
+- D) Induced drag increases and parasite drag increases
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q87: Which effect does a decreasing airspeed have on the induced drag during a horizontal and stable cruise flight? ^q87
+- A) The induced drag will slightly decrease
+- B) The induced drag will collapse
+- C) The induced drag will increase
+- D) The induced drag will remain constant
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q88: Which statement describes a situation of static stability? ^q88
+- A) An aircraft distorted by external impact will return to the original position
+- B) An aircraft distorted by external impact will tend to an even more deflected position
+- C) An aircraft distorted by external impact will maintain the deflected position
+- D) An aircraft distorted by external impact can return to its original position by rudder input
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q89: A sailplane is operated with additional water ballast. How do best gliding angle and speed of best glide change, when compared to flying without water ballast? ^q89
+- A) Best gliding angle descreases, best glide speed decreases.
+- B) Best gliding angle remains unchanged, best glide speed increases.
+- C) Best gliding angle remains increases, best glide speed increases.
+- D) Best gliding angle remains unchanged, best glide speed decreases.
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q90: Which constructive feature has the purpose to reduce stearing forces? ^q90
+- A) T-tail
+- B) Differential aileron deflection
+- C) Vortex generators
+- D) Aerodynamic rudder balance
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/90 - Communication.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/90 - Communication.md
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+# 90 - Communication
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 73 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which abbreviation is used for the term "visual flight rules"? ^q1
+- A) VFS
+- B) VRU
+- C) VFR
+- D) VMC
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q2: What does the abbreviation "H24" stand for? ^q2
+- A) No specific opening times
+- B) 24 h service
+- C) Sunrise to sunset
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q3: Which altitude is displayed on the altimeter when set to a specific QNH? ^q3
+- A) Altitude in relation to mean sea level
+- B) Altitude in relation to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+- C) Altitude in relation to the highest elevation within 10 km
+- D) Altitude in relation to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q4: What is the correct term for a message used for air traffic control? ^q4
+- A) Meteorological message
+- B) Message related to direction finding
+- C) Flight safety message
+- D) Flight regularity message
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q5: Distress messages are messages... ^q5
+- A) Concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- B) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities which are important for the safety and regularity of flight operations.
+- C) Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+- D) Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q6: Which of the following messages has the highest priority? ^q6
+- A) Turn left
+- B) Wind 300 degrees, 5 knots
+- C) Request QDM
+- D) QNH 1013
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q7: The directional information "12 o'clock" is correctly transmitted as... ^q7
+- A) One two.
+- B) Twelve o'clock.
+- C) One two hundred.
+- D) One two o'clock
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q8: Times are transmitted as... ^q8
+- A) Local time.
+- B) Time zone time.
+- C) UTC.
+- D) Standard time.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q9: What is the meaning of the phrase "Roger"? ^q9
+- A) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+- B) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- C) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- D) I have received all of your last transmission
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q10: What is the meaning of the phrase "Correction"? ^q10
+- A) I have received all of your last transmission
+- B) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- C) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- D) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q11: Which phrase is used by a pilot when he wants to fly through controlled airspace? ^q11
+- A) Want
+- B) Apply
+- C) Would like
+- D) Request
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q12: What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with "yes"? ^q12
+- A) Affirm
+- B) Yes
+- C) Affirmative
+- D) Roger
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q13: What phrase is used by a pilot to inform the tower about a go-around? ^q13
+- A) Pulling up
+- B) Going around
+- C) No landing
+- D) Approach canceled
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q14: What is the correct abbreviation of the call sign D-EAZF? ^q14
+- A) AZF
+- B) DZF
+- C) DEA
+- D) DEF
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q15: In what case is the pilot allowed to abbreviate the call sign of his aircraft? ^q15
+- A) After passing the first reporting point
+- B) If there is little traffic in the traffic circuit
+- C) Within controlled airspace
+- D) After the ground station has used the abbreviation
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q16: What is the correct way of establishing radio communication between D-EAZF and Dusseldorf Tower? ^q16
+- A) Dusseldorf Tower over
+- B) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- C) Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF
+- D) Tower from D-EAZF
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q17: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction "Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325"? ^q17
+- A) Roger
+- B) Squawk 4321, 131.325
+- C) Squawk 4321, wilco
+- D) Wilco
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q18: What is the correct way of acknowledging "You are now entering airspace Delta"? ^q18
+- A) Roger
+- B) Airspace Delta
+- C) Wilco
+- D) Entering
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q19: What does a cloud coverage of "FEW" mean in a METAR weather report? ^q19
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q20: What does a cloud coverage of "SCT" mean in a METAR weather report? ^q20
+- A) 5 to 7 eighths
+- B) 8 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 1 to 2 eighths
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q21: What does a cloud coverage of "BKN" mean in a METAR weather report? ^q21
+- A) 1 to 2 eighths
+- B) 5 to 7 eighths
+- C) 3 to 4 eighths
+- D) 8 eighths
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q22: Which transponder code indicates a radio failure? ^q22
+- A) 7500
+- B) 7700
+- C) 7000
+- D) 7600
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q23: What is the correct phrase to begin a blind transmission? ^q23
+- A) Listen
+- B) Blind
+- C) Transmitting blind
+- D) No reception
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q24: How often shall a blind transmission be made? ^q24
+- A) Two times
+- B) Four times
+- C) Three times
+- D) One time
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q25: In what situation is it appropriate to set the transponder code 7600? ^q25
+- A) Hijacking
+- B) Emergency
+- C) Flight into clouds
+- D) Loss of radio
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q26: What is the correct course of action when experiencing a radio failure in class D airspace? ^q26
+- A) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+- B) The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+- C) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route
+- D) The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q27: Which phrase is to be repeated three times before transmitting an urgency message? ^q27
+- A) Mayday
+- B) Urgent
+- C) Pan Pan
+- D) Help
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q28: What is the correct frequency for an initial distress message? ^q28
+- A) Radar frequency
+- B) Current frequency
+- C) FIS frequency
+- D) Emergency frequency
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q29: What kind of information should be included in an urgency message? ^q29
+- A) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, departure aerodrome, information about position, heading and altitude
+- B) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, departure aerodrome, heading and altitude
+- C) Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, departure aerodrome, destination aerodrome, heading and altitude
+- D) Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, heading and altitude
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q30: What is the correct designation of the frequency band from 118.000 to 136.975 MHz used for voice communication? ^q30
+- A) MF
+- B) LF
+- C) HF
+- D) VHF
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q31: In which situations should a pilot use blind transmissions? ^q31
+- A) When a pilot has flown into cloud or fog unintentionally and therefore would like to request navigational assistance from a ground unit
+- B) When the traffic situation at an airport allows the transmission of information which does not need to be acknowledged by the ground station
+- C) When no radio communication can be established with the appropriate aeronautical station, but when evidence exists that transmissions are received at that ground unit
+- D) When a transmission containing important navigational or technical information is to be sent to several stations at the same time
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q32: Which abbreviation is used for the term "abeam"? ^q32
+- A) ABB
+- B) ABM
+- C) ABE
+- D) ABA
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q33: Which abbreviation is used for the term "obstacle"? ^q33
+- A) OBST
+- B) OBTC
+- C) OST
+- D) OBS
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q34: What does the abbreviation "FIS" stand for? ^q34
+- A) Flight information service
+- B) Flashing information system
+- C) Flight information system
+- D) Flashing information service
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q35: What does the abbreviaton "FIR" stand for? ^q35
+- A) Flight information region
+- B) Flight integrity receiver
+- C) Flow integrity required
+- D) Flow information radar
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q36: What is the correct way to transmit the call sign HB-YKM? ^q36
+- A) Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro
+- B) Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike
+- C) Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike
+- D) Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q37: What is the correct way to transmit the call sign OE-JVK? ^q37
+- A) Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo
+- B) Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm
+- C) Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm
+- D) Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q38: An altitude of 4500 ft is transmitted as... ^q38
+- A) Four five tousand.
+- B) Four five zero zero.
+- C) Four tousand five zero zero.
+- D) Four tousand five hundred.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q39: What is the meaning of the phrase "Approved"? ^q39
+- A) I understand your message and will comply with it
+- B) Permission for proposed action is granted
+- C) I have received all of your last transmission
+- D) An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q40: What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with "no"? ^q40
+- A) Negative
+- B) No
+- C) Not
+- D) Finish
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q41: What does a readability of 1 indicate? ^q41
+- A) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- B) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- C) The transmission is readable now and then
+- D) The transmission is unreadable
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q42: What does a readability of 2 indicate? ^q42
+- A) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- B) The transmission is unreadable
+- C) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- D) The transmission is readable now and then
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q43: What does a readability of 5 indicate? ^q43
+- A) The transmission is readable now and then
+- B) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+- C) The transmission is unreadable
+- D) The transmission is perfectly readable
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q44: Which information from a ground station does not require readback? ^q44
+- A) Runway in use
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Wind
+- D) SSR-Code
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q45: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off"? ^q45
+- A) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots
+- B) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- C) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off
+- D) DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q46: What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction "Next report PAH"? ^q46
+- A) Positive
+- B) Wilco
+- C) Report PAH
+- D) Roger
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q47: In what case is visibility transmitted in meters? ^q47
+- A) Up to 5 km
+- B) Greater than 10 km
+- C) Greater than 5 km
+- D) Up to 10 km
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q48: Urgency messages are defined as... ^q48
+- A) Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+- B) Messages concerning urgent spare parts which are needed for a continuation of flight and which need to be ordered in advance.
+- C) Information concerning the apron personell and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft
+- D) Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q49: Distress messages contain... ^q49
+- A) Information concerning urgent spare parts which are required for a continuation of flight and which have to be ordered in advance.
+- B) Information concerning the apron personell and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.
+- C) Information concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight
+- D) Information concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q50: What is the approximate speed of electromagnetic wave propagation? ^q50
+- A) 123000 m/s
+- B) 300000 km/s
+- C) 123000 km/s
+- D) 300000 m/s
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q51: Urgency messages are messages... ^q51
+- A) Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight
+- B) Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.
+- C) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+- D) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q52: Regularity messages are messages... ^q52
+- A) Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance
+- B) Sent by an aircraft operating agency or an aircraft of immediate concern to an aircraft in flight.
+- C) Concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.
+- D) Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q53: A frequency of 119.500 MHz is correctly transmitted as... ^q53
+- A) One one niner decimal five zero.
+- B) One one niner decimal five zero zero.
+- C) One one niner decimal five.
+- D) One one niner tousand decimal five zero.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q54: If there is any doubt about ambiguity, a time of 1620 is to be transmitted as... ^q54
+- A) Sixteen twenty
+- B) Two zero.
+- C) One six two zero.
+- D) One tousand six hundred two zero
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q55: Which phrase does a pilot use when he / she wants to check the readability of his / her transmission? ^q55
+- A) Request readability
+- B) What is the communication like?
+- C) You read me five
+- D) How do you read?
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q56: What is the call sign of the surface movement control? ^q56
+- A) Control
+- B) Tower
+- C) Earth
+- D) Ground
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q57: What does a readability of 3 indicate? ^q57
+- A) The transmission is perfectly readable
+- B) The transmission is readable now and then
+- C) The transmission is unreadable
+- D) The transmission is readable but with difficulty
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q58: In what cases is visibility transmitted in kilometers? ^q58
+- A) Greater than 10 km
+- B) Up to 5 km
+- C) Greater than 5 km
+- D) Up to 10 km
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q59: How can you obtain meteorological information concerning airports during a crosscountry flight? ^q59
+- A) GAMET
+- B) METAR
+- C) AIRMET
+- D) VOLMET
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q60: What does the abbreviation "HX" stand for? ^q60
+- A) 24 h service
+- B) Sunrise to sunset
+- C) No specific opening hours
+- D) Sunset to sunrise
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q61: The altimeter has to be set to what value in order to show zero on ground? ^q61
+- A) QTE
+- B) QFE
+- C) QNE
+- D) QNH
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q62: A heading of 285 degrees is correctly transmitted as... ^q62
+- A) Two hundred eighty-five.
+- B) Two eight five hundred.
+- C) Two eight five.
+- D) Two hundred eight five.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q63: Which of the following factors affects the reception of VHF transmissions? ^q63
+- A) Height of ionosphere
+- B) Altitude
+- C) Twilight error
+- D) Shoreline effect
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q64: Which phrase is to be used when a pilot wants the tower to know that he is ready for take-off? ^q64
+- A) Ready for departure
+- B) Request take-off
+- C) Ready for start-up
+- D) Ready
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q65: On what frequency shall a blind transmission be made? ^q65
+- A) On the appropriate FIS frequency
+- B) On a tower frequency
+- C) On a radar frequency of the lower airspace
+- D) On the current frequency
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q66: The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing ^q66
+- A) There are other aircraft in the aerodrome circuit
+- B) It ist the aerodrome of departure
+- C) It is the destination aerodrome
+- D) Approval has been granted before
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q67: What is the call sign of the aerodrome control? ^q67
+- A) Ground
+- B) Control
+- C) Tower
+- D) Airfield
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q68: What is the call sign of the flight information service? ^q68
+- A) Flight information
+- B) Info
+- C) Advice
+- D) Information
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q69: What is the correct way of using the aircraft call sign at first contact? ^q69
+- A) Using the last two characters only
+- B) Using all characters
+- C) Using the first three characters only
+- D) Using the first two characters only
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q70: Which altitude is displayed on the altimeter when set to a specific QFE? ^q70
+- A) Altitude in relation to the 1013.25 hPa datum
+- B) Altitude in relation to the air pressure at the reference airfield
+- C) Altitude in relation to mean sea level
+- D) Altitude in relation to the highest elevation within 10 km
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q71: The correct transponder code for emergencies is... ^q71
+- A) 7600.
+- B) 7500.
+- C) 7700.
+- D) 7000.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q72: What information is broadcasted on a VOLMET frequency? ^q72
+- A) Current information
+- B) Navigational information
+- C) Meteorological information
+- D) NOTAMS
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
+
+### Q73: An ATIS is valid for... ^q73
+- A) 45 minutes.
+- B) 60 minutes.
+- C) 30 minutes.
+- D) 10 minutes.
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:**
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/_final_exam_raw.json b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/_final_exam_raw.json
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2868924
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/_final_exam_raw.json
@@ -0,0 +1,7844 @@
+{
+ "air-law": {
+ "code": "10",
+ "name": "Air Law",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "Which area could be crossed with certain restrictions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "No-fly zone",
+ "B": "Restricted area",
+ "C": "Prohibited area",
+ "D": "Dangerous area"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Where can the type of restriction for a restricted airspace be found?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "AIC",
+ "B": "ICAO chart 1:500000",
+ "C": "AIP",
+ "D": "NOTAM"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the status of the rules and procedures created by the EASA? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "They are not legally binding, they only serve as a guide",
+ "B": "Only after a ratification by individual EU member states they are legally binding",
+ "C": "They are part of the EU regulation and legally binding to all EU member states",
+ "D": "They have the same status as ICAO Annexes"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the abbreviation \"ARC\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Airworthiness Recurring Control",
+ "B": "Airspace Rulemaking Committee",
+ "C": "Airworthiness Review Certificate",
+ "D": "Airspace Restriction Criteria"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The \"Certificate of Airworthiness\" is issued by the state...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Of the residence of the owner",
+ "B": "In which the aircraft is registered.",
+ "C": "In which the airworthiness review is done.",
+ "D": "In which the aircraft is constructed."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The validity of a medical examination certificate class 2 for a 62 years old pilot is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "12 Months.",
+ "B": "48 Months.",
+ "C": "24 Months.",
+ "D": "60 Months."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the abbreviation \"TRA\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transponder Area",
+ "B": "Temporary Reserved Airspace",
+ "C": "Terminal Area",
+ "D": "Temporary Radar Routing Area"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered when entering an RMZ?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To obtain a clearance to enter this area",
+ "B": "To permanently monitor the radio and if possible to establish radio contact",
+ "C": "To obtain a clearance from the local aviation authority",
+ "D": "The transponder has to be switched on Mode C and squawk 7000"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of an area marked as \"TMZ\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transponder Mandatory Zone",
+ "B": "Transportation Management Zone",
+ "C": "Touring Motorglider Zone",
+ "D": "Traffic Management Zone"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Two engine-driven aircraft are flying on crossing courses at the same altitude. Which one has to divert?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Both have to divert to the left",
+ "B": "The lighter one has to climb",
+ "C": "The heavier one has to climb",
+ "D": "Both have to divert to the right"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Two aeroplanes are flying on crossing tracks. Which one has to divert?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Both have to divert to the lef",
+ "B": "The aircraft which flies from left to right has the right of priority",
+ "C": "Both have to divert to the right",
+ "D": "The aircraft which flies from right to left has the right of priority"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"E\" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL75?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "8000 m",
+ "B": "1500 m",
+ "C": "3000 m",
+ "D": "5000 m"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"C\" below FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1.5 km",
+ "B": "8 km",
+ "C": "5 km",
+ "D": "10 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"C\" at and above FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1.5 km",
+ "B": "10 km",
+ "C": "5 km",
+ "D": "8 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"ceiling\" is defined as the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Height of the base of the highest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.",
+ "B": "Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 10000 ft.",
+ "C": "Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.",
+ "D": "Altitude of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A transponder with the ability to send the current pressure level is a...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transponder approved for airspace \"B\".",
+ "B": "Mode C or S transponder.",
+ "C": "Pressure-decoder.",
+ "D": "Mode A transponder."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which transponder code indicates a loss of radio communication?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "2000",
+ "B": "7600",
+ "C": "7000",
+ "D": "7700"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct phrase with respect to wake turbulence to indicate that a light aircraft is following an aircraft of a higher wake turbulence category?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Caution wake turbulence",
+ "B": "Be careful wake winds",
+ "C": "Danger jet blast",
+ "D": "Attention propwash"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information is provided in the general part (GEN) of the AIP?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces",
+ "B": "Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods",
+ "C": "Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees",
+ "D": "Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the different parts of the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "GEN MET RAC",
+ "B": "GEN AGA COM",
+ "C": "GEN COM MET",
+ "D": "GEN ENR AD"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of the signal square at an aerodrome?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed",
+ "B": "It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft",
+ "C": "Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance",
+ "D": "It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How are two parallel runways designated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The left runway gets the suffix \"L\", the right runway remains unchanged",
+ "B": "The left runway gets the suffix \"L\", the right runway \"R\"",
+ "C": "The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1",
+ "D": "The left runway gets the suffix \"-1\", the right runway \"-2\""
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which runway designators are correct for 2 parallel runways?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "\"26\" and \"26R\"",
+ "B": "\"06L\" and \"06R\"",
+ "C": "\"18\" and \"18-2\"",
+ "D": "\"24\" and \"25\""
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of this sign at an aerodrome? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right",
+ "B": "Caution, manoeuvring area is poor",
+ "C": "Glider flying is in progress",
+ "D": "Landing prohibited for a longer period"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of \"DETRESFA\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Distress phase",
+ "B": "Alerting phase",
+ "C": "Uncertainty phase",
+ "D": "Rescue phase"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Who provides search and rescue service?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Only civil organisations",
+ "B": "Both military and civil organisations",
+ "C": "Only military organisations",
+ "D": "International approved organisations"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With respect to aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories regarding aircraft occurrences?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Event Crash Disaster",
+ "B": "Event Serious event Accident",
+ "C": "Happening Event Serious event",
+ "D": "Incident Serious incident Accident"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During slope soaring you have the hill to your left side, another glider is approaching from the opposite side at the same altitude. How do you react?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "You divert to the right",
+ "B": "You expect the opposite glider to divert",
+ "C": "You divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same",
+ "D": "You pull on the elevator and divert upward"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Along with other gliders, you are circling in a thermal updraft. Who determines the direction of circling?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Circling is general to the left",
+ "B": "The glider who entered the updraft at first",
+ "C": "The glider with greatest bank angle",
+ "D": "The glider at highest altitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Is it possible to enter airspace C with a glider plane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Yes, but only with transponder activated",
+ "B": "No",
+ "C": "With restrictions, in case of less air traffic",
+ "D": "Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The holder of an SPL license or LAPL(S) license completed a total of 9 winch launches, 4 launches in aero-tow and 2 bungee launches during the last 24 months. What launch methods may the pilot conduct as PIC today?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Winch and bungee.",
+ "B": "Winch, bungee and aero-tow.",
+ "C": "Winch and aero-tow.",
+ "D": "Aero-tow and bungee."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following documents have to be on board for an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "B, c, d, e, f, g",
+ "B": "A, b, c, e, f",
+ "C": "D, f, g",
+ "D": "A, b, e, g"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"C\" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL110?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1500 m",
+ "B": "3000 m",
+ "C": "8000 m",
+ "D": "5000 m"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a flight at FL 80, the altimeter setting has to be...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Local QFE.",
+ "B": "Local QNH.",
+ "C": "1030.25 hPa.",
+ "D": "1013.25 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of the semi-circular rule?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To fly without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP",
+ "B": "To avoid collisions by suspending turning manoeuvres",
+ "C": "To avoid collisions by reducing the probability of opposing traffic at the same altitude",
+ "D": "To allow safe climbing or descending in a holding pattern"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which transponder code should be set during a radio failure without any request?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "7700",
+ "B": "7600",
+ "C": "7500",
+ "D": "7000"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which transponder code has to be set unrequested during an emergency?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "7500",
+ "B": "7700",
+ "C": "7000",
+ "D": "7600"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which air traffic service is responsible for the safe conduct of flights?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "ATC (air traffic control)",
+ "B": "AIS (aeronautical information service)",
+ "C": "ALR (alerting service)",
+ "D": "FIS (flight information service)"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which air traffic services can be expected within an FIR (flight information region)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)",
+ "B": "ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)",
+ "C": "ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)",
+ "D": "AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options states a correct position report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "DEABC reaching \"N\"",
+ "B": "DEABC, \"N\", 2500 ft",
+ "C": "DEABC over \"N\" in FL 2500 ft",
+ "D": "DEABC over \"N\" at 35"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The shown NOTAM is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE.",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.",
+ "B": "21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.",
+ "C": "21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.",
+ "D": "13/05/2013 12:00 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"aerodrome elevation\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The highest point of the apron.",
+ "B": "The lowest point of the landing area.",
+ "C": "The highest point of the landing area.",
+ "D": "The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Of what shape is a landing direction indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "T",
+ "B": "A straight arrow",
+ "C": "L",
+ "D": "An angled arrow"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is indicated by a pattern of longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions disposed symmetrically about the centerline of a runway?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At this point the glide path of an ILS hits the runway",
+ "B": "Do not touch down before them",
+ "C": "Do not touch down behind them",
+ "D": "A ground roll could be started from this position"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which validity does the \"Certificate of Airworthiness\" have?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Unlimited",
+ "B": "12 years",
+ "C": "6 months",
+ "D": "12 months"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A pilot license issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is valid in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Those countries that have accepted this license on application.",
+ "B": "The country where the license was acquired.",
+ "C": "All ICAO countries.",
+ "D": "The country where the license was issued."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the subject of ICAO Annex 1?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight crew licensing",
+ "B": "Air traffic services",
+ "C": "Rules of the air",
+ "D": "Operation of aircraft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"C\" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL125?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "8000 m",
+ "B": "1500 m",
+ "C": "5000 m",
+ "D": "3000 m"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the minimum distances to clouds for a VFR flight in airspace \"B\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m",
+ "B": "Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m",
+ "C": "Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m",
+ "D": "Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Being intercepted by a military aircraft at daytime, what is the meaning of the following signal: A sudden heading change of 90 degrees or more and a pull-up of the aircraft without crossing the track of the intercepted aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Follow me, i will bring you to the next suitable airfield",
+ "B": "You may continue your flight",
+ "C": "Prepare for a safety landing, you have entered a prohibited area",
+ "D": "You are entering a restricted area, leave the airspace immediately"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer is correct with regard to separation in airspace \"E\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "VFR traffic is not separated from any other traffic",
+ "B": "VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic",
+ "C": "VFR traffic is separated from VFR and IFR traffic",
+ "D": "IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a presentation of current...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "AIC information of operational significance prepared after the flight.",
+ "B": "AIP information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.",
+ "C": "NOTAM information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.",
+ "D": "ICAO information of operational significance prepared after the flight."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can a wind direction indicator be marked for better visibility?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The wind direction indicator may be mounted on top of the control tower.",
+ "B": "The wind direction indicator could be made from green materials.",
+ "C": "The wind direction indicator could be surrounded by a white circle.",
+ "D": "The wind direction indicator could be located on a big black surface."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which distances to clouds have to be maintained during a VFR flight in airpaces C, D and E?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically",
+ "B": "1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically",
+ "C": "1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically",
+ "D": "1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can a pilot confirm a search and rescue signal on ground in flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Push the rudder in both directions multiple times",
+ "B": "Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times",
+ "C": "Rock the wings",
+ "D": "Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the abbreviation \"SERA\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Selective Radar Altimeter",
+ "B": "Standardized European Rules of the Air",
+ "C": "Standard European Routes of the Air",
+ "D": "Specialized Radar Approach"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A flight is called a \"visual flight\", if the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Visibility in flight is more than 5 km.",
+ "B": "Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.",
+ "C": "Visibility in flight is more than 8 km.",
+ "D": "Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Air traffic control service is conducted by which services?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)",
+ "B": "FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)",
+ "C": "APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)",
+ "D": "TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air",
+ "B": "Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.",
+ "C": "Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.",
+ "D": "Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the primary purpose of an aircraft accident investigation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To identify the reasons and work out safety recommendations",
+ "B": "To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers",
+ "C": "To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents",
+ "D": "To Determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"runway\" is defined as a...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft",
+ "B": "Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.",
+ "C": "Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.",
+ "D": "Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A pilot can contact FIS (flight information service)...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By a personal visit.",
+ "B": "Via telephone.",
+ "C": "Via radio communication.",
+ "D": "Via internet."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the abbreviation \"VMC\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Variable meteorological conditions",
+ "B": "Visual meteorological conditions",
+ "C": "Instrument flight conditions",
+ "D": "Visual flight rules"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information is provided in the part \"AD\" of the AIP?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.",
+ "B": "Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods",
+ "C": "Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts",
+ "D": "Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "aircraft-general-knowledge": {
+ "code": "20",
+ "name": "Aircraft General Knowledge",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "How is referred to a tubular steel construction with a non self-supporting skin?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Grid construction",
+ "B": "Honeycomb structure",
+ "C": "Monocoque construction",
+ "D": "Semi-monocoque construction."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A construction made of frames and stringer with a supporting skin is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Honeycomb structure",
+ "B": "Wood- or mixed construction.",
+ "C": "Semi-monocoque construction.",
+ "D": "Grid construction."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the major components of an aircraft's tail?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rudder and ailerons",
+ "B": "Steering wheel and pedals",
+ "C": "Horizontal tail and vertical tail",
+ "D": "Ailerons and elevator"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which constructional elements give the wing its profile shape?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rips",
+ "B": "Planking",
+ "C": "Tip",
+ "D": "Spar"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the advantages of sandwich structures?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength",
+ "B": "High temperature durability and low weight",
+ "C": "High strength and good formability",
+ "D": "Good formability and high temperature durability"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The fuselage structure may be damaged by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Airspeed decreasing below a certain value.",
+ "B": "Neutralizing stick forces according to actual flight state",
+ "C": "Exceeding the manoeuvering speed in heavy gusts",
+ "D": "Stall after exceeding the maximum angle of attack."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the effect of pulling the control yoke or stick backwards?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The aircraft's tail will produce an decreased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop",
+ "B": "The aircraft's tail will produce an increased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise",
+ "C": "The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop",
+ "D": "The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of the secondary flight controls?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To improve the performance characteristics of an aircraft and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces",
+ "B": "To improve the turn characteristics of an aircraft in the low speed regime during approach and landing",
+ "C": "To enable the pilot to control the aircraft's movements about its three axes",
+ "D": "To constitute a backup system for the primary flight controls"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The trim wheel or lever in the cockpit is moved aft by the pilot. What effect does this action have on the trim tab and on the elevator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down",
+ "B": "The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up",
+ "C": "The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up",
+ "D": "The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The Pitot / static system is required to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Prevent potential static buildup on the aircraft.",
+ "B": "Measure total and static air pressure.",
+ "C": "Prevent icing of the Pitot tube.",
+ "D": "Correct the reading of the airspeed indicator to zero when the aircraft is static on the ground."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dynamic air pressure",
+ "B": "Cabin air pressure",
+ "C": "Total air pressure",
+ "D": "Static air pressure"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which is the purpose of the altimeter subscale?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To correct the altimeter reading for system errors",
+ "B": "To reference the altimeter reading to a predetermined level such as mean sea level, aerodrome level or pressure level 1013.25 hPa",
+ "C": "To set the reference level for the altitude decoder of the transponder",
+ "D": "To adjust the altimeter reading for non-standard temperature"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In which way may an altimeter subscale which is set to an incorrect QNH lead to an incorrect altimeter reading?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended",
+ "B": "If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended",
+ "C": "If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much greater heights above the ground than intended",
+ "D": "If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Lower-than-standard temperature may lead to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An altitude indication which is too high.",
+ "B": "An altitude indication which is too low.",
+ "C": "A correct altitude indication as long as the altimeter subscale is set to correct for non-standard temperature.",
+ "D": "A blockage of the Pitot tube by ice, freezing the altimeter indication to its present value."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a flight in colder-than-ISA air the indicated altitude is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Higher than the true altitude",
+ "B": "Eqal to the true altitude.",
+ "C": "Equal to the standard altitude.",
+ "D": "Lower than the true altitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The vertical speed indicator measures the difference of pressure between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The present dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure of a previous moment.",
+ "B": "The present total pressure and the total pressure of a previous moment.",
+ "C": "The present dynamic pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment",
+ "D": "The present static pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft cruises on a heading of 180° with a true airspeed of 100 kt. The wind comes from 180° with 30 kt. Neglecting instrument and position errors, which will be the approximate reading of the airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "130 kt",
+ "B": "100 kt",
+ "C": "30 kt",
+ "D": "70 kt"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following states the working principle of an airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dynamic air pressure is measured by the Pitot tube and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator",
+ "B": "Total air pressure is measured by the static ports and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator",
+ "C": "Total air pressure is measured and compared against static air pressure",
+ "D": "Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What values are usually marked with a red line on instrument displays?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Operational limits",
+ "B": "Caution areas",
+ "C": "Operational areas",
+ "D": "Recommended areas"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the mentioned cockpit instruments is connected to the pitot tube?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Direct-reading compass",
+ "B": "Altimeter",
+ "C": "Vertical speed indicator",
+ "D": "Airspeed indicator"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 270° to a heading of 360°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "270°",
+ "B": "030°",
+ "C": "360°",
+ "D": "330°"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"static pressure\" is defined as pressure...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inside the airplane cabin.",
+ "B": "Of undisturbed airflow",
+ "C": "Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.",
+ "D": "Sensed by the pitot tube."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is a cause for the dip error on the direct-reading compass?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Acceleration of the airplane",
+ "B": "Temperature variations",
+ "C": "Deviation in the cockpit",
+ "D": "Inclination of earth's magnetic field lines"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The Caution Area is marked on an airspeed indicator by what color?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Red",
+ "B": "Green",
+ "C": "White",
+ "D": "Yellow"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What difference in altitude is shown by an altimeter, if the reference pressure scale setting is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Zero",
+ "B": "80 m less than before",
+ "C": "80 m more than before",
+ "D": "Values depending on QNH"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The altimeter's reference scale is set to airfield pressure (QFE). What indication is shown during the flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude above MSL",
+ "B": "Height above airfield",
+ "C": "Airfield elevation",
+ "D": "Pressure altitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A vertical speed indicator connected to a too big equalizing tank results in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Mechanical overload",
+ "B": "No indication",
+ "C": "Indication too low",
+ "D": "Indication too high"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A vertical speed indicator measures the difference between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Total pressure and static pressure.",
+ "B": "Dynamic pressure and total pressure.",
+ "C": "Instantaneous static pressure and previous static pressure.",
+ "D": "Instantaneous total pressure and previous total pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What engines are commonly used with Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "2 plate Wankel",
+ "B": "2 Cylinder Diesel",
+ "C": "4 Cylinder 2 stroke",
+ "D": "4 Cylinder; 4 stroke"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the yellow arc on the airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cautious use of flaps or brakes to avoid overload.",
+ "B": "Speed for best glide can be found in this area.",
+ "C": "Flight only in calm weather with no gusts to avoid overload.",
+ "D": "Optimum speed while being towed behind aircraft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which levers in a glider's cockpit are indicated by the colors red, blue and green? Levers for usage of ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Gear, speed brakes and elevator trim tab.",
+ "B": "Speed brakes, cable release and elevator trim.",
+ "C": "Speed brakes, cabin hood lock and gear.",
+ "D": "Cabin hood release, speed brakes, elevator trim"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The sandwich structure consists of two...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thick layers and a light core material.",
+ "B": "Thick layers and a heavy core material.",
+ "C": "Thin layers and a light core material.",
+ "D": "Thin layers and a heavy core material"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The load factor \"n\" describes the relationship between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Weight and thrust.",
+ "B": "Drag and lift",
+ "C": "Lift and weight",
+ "D": "Thrust and drag."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the stated materials shows the highest strength?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Magnesium",
+ "B": "Carbon fiber re-inforced plastic",
+ "C": "Aluminium",
+ "D": "Wood"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "About how many axes does an aircraft move and how are these axes called?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis",
+ "B": "4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed",
+ "C": "3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis",
+ "D": "4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How are the flight controls on a small single-engine piston aircraft normally controlled and actuated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Manually through rods and control cables",
+ "B": "Hydraulically through hydraulic pumps and actuators",
+ "C": "Electrically through fly-by-wire",
+ "D": "Power-assisted through hydraulic pumps or electric motors"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options states all primary flight controls of an aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flaps, slats, speedbrakes",
+ "B": "Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift wing devices, power controls",
+ "C": "Elevator, rudder, aileron",
+ "D": "All movable parts on the aircraft which aid in controlling the aircraft"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A true altitude is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.",
+ "B": "A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.",
+ "C": "An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.",
+ "D": "A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a flight in an air mass with a temperature equal to ISA and the QNH set correctly, the indicated altitude is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lower than the true altitude.",
+ "B": "Equal to the standard atmosphere.",
+ "C": "Higher than the true altitude.",
+ "D": "Equal to the true altitude."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which instrument can be affected by the hysteresis error?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Direct reading compass",
+ "B": "Tachometer",
+ "C": "Vertical speed indicator",
+ "D": "Altimeter"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options states the working principle of a vertical speed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Measuring the present static air pressure and comparing it to the static air pressure inside a reservoir",
+ "B": "Measuring the vertical acceleration through the displacement of a gimbal-mounted mass",
+ "C": "Total air pressure is measured and compared to static pressure",
+ "D": "Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the red range on the airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Speed which must not be exceeded regardless of circumstances",
+ "B": "Speed which must not be exceeded within bumpy air",
+ "C": "Speed which must not be exceeded with flaps extended",
+ "D": "Speed which must not be exceeded in turns with more than 45° bank"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 030° to a heading of 180°. At approximately which indicated magnetic heading should the turn be terminated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "150°",
+ "B": "180°",
+ "C": "360°",
+ "D": "210°."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An energy-compensated vertical speed inicator (VSI) shows during stationary glide the vertical speed...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Of the glider through surrounding air",
+ "B": "Of the airmass flown through.",
+ "C": "Of the glider plus movement of the air",
+ "D": "Of the glider minus movement of the air."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a right turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Less bank, less rudder in turn direction",
+ "B": "Less bank, more rudder in turn direction",
+ "C": "More bank, less rudder in turn direction",
+ "D": "More bank, more rudder in turn direction"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What kind of defect results in loss of airworthiness of an airplane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dirty wing leading edge",
+ "B": "Crack in the cabin hood plastic",
+ "C": "Scratch on the outer painting",
+ "D": "Damage to load-bearing parts"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The mass loaded on the plane is lower than the minimum load required by the load sheet. What action has to be taken?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Trim aircraft to \"pitch down\"",
+ "B": "Change pilot seat position",
+ "C": "Change incident angle of elevator",
+ "D": "Load ballast weight up to minimum load"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Water ballast increases wing load by 40%. By what percentage does the minimum speed of the glider plane increase?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "100%",
+ "B": "40%",
+ "C": "200%",
+ "D": "18%"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The maximium load according load sheet has been exceeded. What action has to be taken?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increase speed by 15%",
+ "B": "Reduce load",
+ "C": "Trim \"pitch-down\"",
+ "D": "Trim \"pitch-up\""
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is referred to as torsion-stiffed leading edge?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces.",
+ "B": "Special shape of the leading edge.",
+ "C": "The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.",
+ "D": "Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Information about maxmimum allowed airspeeds can be found where?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR",
+ "B": "POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator",
+ "C": "POH and posting in briefing room",
+ "D": "POH, Cockpit panel, airspeed indicator"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The thickness of the wing is defined as the distance between the lower and the upper side of the wing at the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thinnest part of the wing.",
+ "B": "Most inner part of the wing.",
+ "C": "Thickest part of the wing.",
+ "D": "Most outer part of the wing"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Primary fuselage structures of wood or metal planes are usually made up by what components?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Covers, stringers and forming parts",
+ "B": "Frames and stringer",
+ "C": "Girders, rips and stringers",
+ "D": "Rips, frames and covers"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The measurement of altitude is based on the change of the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Static pressure.",
+ "B": "Dynamic pressure.",
+ "C": "Total pressure.",
+ "D": "Differential pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is necessary for the determination of speed (IAS) by the airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The difference between the total pressure and the dynamic pressure",
+ "B": "The difference between the dynamic pressure and the static pressure",
+ "C": "The difference between the standard pressure and the total pressure",
+ "D": "The difference betweeen the total pressure and the static presssure"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 360° to a heading of 270°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "360°",
+ "B": "270°",
+ "C": "240°",
+ "D": "300°"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The airspeed indicator is unservicable. The airplane may only be operated...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "If no maintenance organisation is around.",
+ "B": "If only airfield patterns are flown",
+ "C": "When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.",
+ "D": "When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a left turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "More bank, less rudder in turn direction",
+ "B": "Less bank, more rudder in turn direction",
+ "C": "Less bank, less rudder in turn direction",
+ "D": "More bank, more rudder in turn direction"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of winglets?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To increase efficiency of aspect ratio.",
+ "B": "Reduction of induced drag.",
+ "C": "Increase gliging performance at high speed.",
+ "D": "Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A glider's trim lever is used to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduce stick force on the elevator.",
+ "B": "Reduce stick force on the ailerons.",
+ "C": "Reduce stick force on the rudder.",
+ "D": "Reduce the adverse yaw."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the primary and the secondary effects of a rudder input to the left?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the left",
+ "B": "Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the left",
+ "C": "Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the right",
+ "D": "Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the right"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When trimming an aircraft nose up, in which direction does the trim tab move?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It moves down",
+ "B": "In direction of rudder deflection",
+ "C": "It moves up",
+ "D": "Depends on CG position"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The trim is used to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Adapt the control force.",
+ "B": "Increase adverse yaw.",
+ "C": "Move the centre of gravity",
+ "D": "Lock control elements."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "QFE is the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude above the reference pressure level 1013.25 hPa.",
+ "B": "Magnetic bearing to a station.",
+ "C": "Barometric pressure adjusted to sea level, using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).",
+ "D": "Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The compass error caused by the aircraft's magnetic field is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inclination",
+ "B": "Variation.",
+ "C": "Deviation",
+ "D": "Declination."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which cockpit instruments are connected to the static port?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, slip indicator",
+ "B": "Airspeed indicator, altimeter, direct-reading compass",
+ "C": "Altimeter, slip indicator, navigational computer",
+ "D": "Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, airspeed indicator"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the dynamic pressure depend directly on?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lift- and drag coefficient",
+ "B": "Air density and airflow speed squared",
+ "C": "Air density and lift coefficient",
+ "D": "Air pressure and air temperature"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Airspeed indicator, altimeter and vertical speed indicator all show incorrect indications at the same time. What error can be the cause?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Blocking of static pressure lines.",
+ "B": "Leakage in compensation vessel.",
+ "C": "Blocking of pitot tube",
+ "D": "Failure of the electrical system."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A movement around the longitudinal axis is primarily initiated by the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Elevator.",
+ "B": "Ailerons.",
+ "C": "Trim tab.",
+ "D": "Rudder"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A flight level is a...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "True altitude.",
+ "B": "Altitude above ground.",
+ "C": "Density altitude.",
+ "D": "Pressure altitude."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The indication of a magnetic compass deviates from magnetic north direction due to what errors?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field",
+ "B": "Gravity and magnetism",
+ "C": "Deviation, turning and acceleration errors",
+ "D": "Variation, turning and acceleration errors"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When is it necessary to adjust the pressure in the reference scale of an alitimeter?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After maintance has been finished",
+ "B": "Every day before the first flight",
+ "C": "Once a month before flight operation",
+ "D": "Before every flight and during cross country flights"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"inclination\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Deviation induced by electrical fields.",
+ "B": "Angle between magnetic and true north",
+ "C": "Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.",
+ "D": "Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With decreasing air density the airflow speed increases at stall speed (TAS) and vice verca. How has a final approach to be conducted on a hot summer day?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "With increased speed indication (IAS)",
+ "B": "With unchanged speed indication (IAS)",
+ "C": "With decreased speed indication (IAS)",
+ "D": "With additional speed according POH"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 74
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "flight-performance-and-planning": {
+ "code": "30",
+ "name": "Flight Performance and Planning",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.",
+ "B": "Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.",
+ "C": "Exceptionally permissible to avoid delays",
+ "D": "Not permissible and essentially dangerous"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The center of gravity has to be located...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Behind the rear C.G. limit",
+ "B": "In front of the front C.G. limit.",
+ "C": "Right of the lateral C. G. limit.",
+ "D": "Between the front and the rear C.G. limit."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft must be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum permissible airspeed during a descent",
+ "B": "Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.",
+ "C": "That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.",
+ "D": "That the aircraft does not stall."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By weighing.",
+ "B": "By calculation.",
+ "C": "For one aircraft of a type only, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position",
+ "D": "Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Baggage and cargo must be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.",
+ "B": "Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.",
+ "C": "Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.",
+ "D": "Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stagnation point.",
+ "B": "Center of pressure.",
+ "C": "Neutral point.",
+ "D": "Center of gravity"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"center of gravity\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Another designation for the neutral point.",
+ "B": "The heaviest point on an aeroplane.",
+ "C": "Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.",
+ "D": "Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The center of gravity (CG) defines...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The product of mass and balance arm",
+ "B": "The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.",
+ "C": "The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.",
+ "D": "The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"moment\" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sum of a mass and a balance arm.",
+ "B": "Difference of a mass and a balance arm.",
+ "C": "Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.",
+ "D": "Product of a mass and a balance arm."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"balance arm\" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Distance of a mass from the center of gravity",
+ "B": "Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.",
+ "C": "Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.",
+ "D": "Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lever.",
+ "B": "Torque.",
+ "C": "Span width.",
+ "D": "Balance arm."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The balance arm is the horizontal distance between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.",
+ "B": "The front C.G. limit and the datum line",
+ "C": "The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.",
+ "D": "The C.G. of a mass and the datum line."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Certificate of airworthiness",
+ "B": "Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.",
+ "C": "Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.",
+ "D": "Documentation of the annual inspection."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Limitations",
+ "B": "Normal procedures",
+ "C": "Weight and balance",
+ "D": "Performance"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which factor shortens landing distance?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Heavy rain",
+ "B": "High pressure altitude",
+ "C": "High density altitude",
+ "D": "Strong head wind"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.",
+ "B": "Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.",
+ "C": "Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.",
+ "D": "Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle of descent is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].",
+ "B": "The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].",
+ "C": "The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].",
+ "D": "The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°]."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of \"interception lines\" in visual navigation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation",
+ "B": "They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima",
+ "C": "To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight",
+ "D": "To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1.500 ft GND.",
+ "B": "1 500 ft MSL.",
+ "C": "1 500 m MSL.",
+ "D": "FL150."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1.500 ft AGL",
+ "B": "4.500 ft AGL.",
+ "C": "4.500 ft MSL",
+ "D": "1.500 ft MSL."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude 9500 ft MSL",
+ "B": "Flight Level 95",
+ "C": "Altitude 9500 m MSL",
+ "D": "Height 9500 ft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What must be considered for cross-border flights?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transmission of hazard reports",
+ "B": "Requires flight plans",
+ "C": "Regular location messages",
+ "D": "Approved exceptions"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Search and Rescue Service (SAR).",
+ "B": "Flight Information Service (FIS).",
+ "C": "Next airport operator en-route.",
+ "D": "Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure should be avoided enroute?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stone quarries and large sand areas",
+ "B": "Highways, railroad tracks and channels.",
+ "C": "Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas",
+ "D": "Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point should be taken ... (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "As low as possible.",
+ "B": "As steep as possible.",
+ "C": "As high as possible.",
+ "D": "With as less bank as possible"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "For weakening thermals due to the progressing time",
+ "B": "For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases",
+ "C": "For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time",
+ "D": "For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "(For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "B",
+ "B": "D",
+ "C": "A",
+ "D": "C"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "(For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "B",
+ "B": "C",
+ "C": "A",
+ "D": "D"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "(For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "D",
+ "B": "C",
+ "C": "B",
+ "D": "A"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "30 km",
+ "B": "45 NM",
+ "C": "45 km",
+ "D": "81 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "human-performance-and-limitations": {
+ "code": "40",
+ "name": "Human Performance and Limitations",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "The \"swiss cheese model\" can be used to explain the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "State of readiness of a pilot.",
+ "B": "Procedure for an emergency landing.",
+ "C": "Optimal problem solution.",
+ "D": "Error chain."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "78 %",
+ "B": "12 %",
+ "C": "21 %",
+ "D": "18.9 %"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "21 %",
+ "B": "78 %",
+ "C": "0.1 %",
+ "D": "1 %"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "18000 ft",
+ "B": "22000 ft",
+ "C": "10000 ft",
+ "D": "5000 ft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the term \"Red-out\" mean?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "\"Red vision\" during negative g-loads",
+ "B": "Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset",
+ "C": "Anaemia caused by an injury",
+ "D": "Rash during decompression sickness"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following symptoms may indicate hypoxia?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Joint pain in knees and feet",
+ "B": "Muscle cramps in the upper body area",
+ "C": "Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails",
+ "D": "Blue marks all over the body"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "2000 feet",
+ "B": "10000 feet",
+ "C": "12000 feet",
+ "D": "7000 feet"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Blood coagulation",
+ "B": "Blood sugar regulation",
+ "C": "Oxygen transport",
+ "D": "Immune defense"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Oxygen transport",
+ "B": "Blood sugar regulation",
+ "C": "Immune defense",
+ "D": "Blood coagulation"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed",
+ "B": "Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank",
+ "C": "Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets",
+ "D": "Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Critical nervous system",
+ "B": "Autonomic nervous system",
+ "C": "Automatical nervous system",
+ "D": "Compliant nervous system"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Curved sidepiece",
+ "B": "Non-polarised",
+ "C": "Unbreakable",
+ "D": "No UV filter"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inner ear.",
+ "B": "Eardrum.",
+ "C": "Cochlea.",
+ "D": "Eustachian tube."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Starting a climb.",
+ "B": "Steady turning in the same direction as before.",
+ "C": "Turning into the opposite direction.",
+ "D": "Starting a descent."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Non-accelerated straight and level flight",
+ "B": "Head movements during turns",
+ "C": "Turbulence in level flight",
+ "D": "Flying under the influence of alcohol"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope",
+ "B": "The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed",
+ "C": "The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed",
+ "D": "The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An undershoot",
+ "B": "A landing beside the centerline",
+ "C": "An overshoot",
+ "D": "A hard landing"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Visual illusions are mostly caused by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Binocular vision.",
+ "B": "Colour blindness.",
+ "C": "Rapid eye movements.",
+ "D": "Misinterpretation of the brain."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0.01 percent.",
+ "B": "0.03 percent.",
+ "C": "0.1 percent.",
+ "D": "0.3 percent."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A risk factor for decompression sickness is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sports.",
+ "B": "100 % oxygen after decompression.",
+ "C": "Scuba diving prior to flight.",
+ "D": "Smoking."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds",
+ "B": "It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes",
+ "C": "It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds",
+ "D": "It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "3 to 7 seconds",
+ "B": "10 to 20 seconds",
+ "C": "35 to 50 seconds",
+ "D": "30 to 40 seconds"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Situational thinking.",
+ "B": "Situational awareness.",
+ "C": "Anticipatory check procedure.",
+ "D": "Constant flight check."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Due to group-dynamic effects",
+ "B": "If there is not enough information available",
+ "C": "During check flights due to a high level of nervousness",
+ "D": "During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which dangerous attitudes are often combined?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Invulnerability and self-abandonment",
+ "B": "Self-abandonment and macho",
+ "C": "Macho and invulnerability",
+ "D": "Impulsivity and carefulness"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Complacency is a risk due to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increased cockpit automation.",
+ "B": "The high error rate of technical systems.",
+ "C": "The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.",
+ "D": "Better training options for young pilots."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Point B",
+ "B": "Point C",
+ "C": "Point D",
+ "D": "Point A"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".1, 2, 3",
+ "B": ".2, 4",
+ "C": "1",
+ "D": "1, 2, 3, 4"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer is correct concerning stress?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner",
+ "B": "Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety",
+ "C": "Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem",
+ "D": "Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "There is no time for solving problems during flight",
+ "B": "Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook",
+ "C": "Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying",
+ "D": "Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The majority of aviation accidents are caused by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Technical failure.",
+ "B": "Meteorological influences.",
+ "C": "Human failure.",
+ "D": "Geographical influences."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. What is the approximate percentage of other gases?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "21 %",
+ "B": "1 %",
+ "C": "78 %",
+ "D": "0.1 %"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Alcohol.",
+ "B": "Unhealthy food.",
+ "C": "Little sleep.",
+ "D": "Smoking."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cyanose",
+ "B": "Disturbance of consciousness",
+ "C": "Spasm",
+ "D": "Tingling"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The oltfactory perception (smell)",
+ "B": "The tactile perception (sense of touch)",
+ "C": "The auditory perception (hearing)",
+ "D": "The visual perception (vision)"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Immune defense",
+ "B": "Blood coagulation",
+ "C": "Oxygen transport",
+ "D": "Blood sugar regulation"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Blood donation",
+ "B": "Smoking",
+ "C": "Menstruation",
+ "D": "Diving"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The occurence of a vertigo is most likely when moving the head...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During a turn.",
+ "B": "During a straight horizontal flight.",
+ "C": "During a climb.",
+ "D": "During a descent."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sleep deficiency",
+ "B": "Overweight",
+ "C": "Smoking",
+ "D": "Alcohol consumption"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is a latent error?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An error which only has consequences after landing",
+ "B": "An error which has an immediate effect on the controls",
+ "C": "An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously",
+ "D": "An error which remains undetected in the system for a long time"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By the use of proper headsets",
+ "B": "By a particular frequency allocation",
+ "C": "By the use of radio phraseology",
+ "D": "By using radios certified for aviation use only"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which factor can lead to human error?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Proper use of checklists",
+ "B": "The bias to see what we expect to see",
+ "C": "Double check of relevant actions",
+ "D": "To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Point B",
+ "B": "Point C",
+ "C": "Point A",
+ "D": "Point D"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following is responsible for the blood coagulation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Capillaries of the arteries",
+ "B": "Red blood cells (erythrocytes)",
+ "C": "Blood plates (thrombocytes)",
+ "D": "White blood cells (leucocytes)"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During a light and slow climb",
+ "B": "Breathing takes place using the mouth only",
+ "C": "All windows are completely closed",
+ "D": "The eustachien tube is blocked"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A Grey-out is the result of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Hyperventilation.",
+ "B": "Tiredness.",
+ "C": "Hypoxia.",
+ "D": "Positive g-forces."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Introverted - stable",
+ "B": "Introverted - unstable",
+ "C": "Extroverted - stable",
+ "D": "Extroverted - unstable"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduction",
+ "B": "Coherence",
+ "C": "Virulence",
+ "D": "Reflex"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the parallax error?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision",
+ "B": "Misperception of speed during taxiing",
+ "C": "Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night",
+ "D": "A decoding error in communication between pilots"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce",
+ "B": "Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept",
+ "C": "Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer",
+ "D": "Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "5000 feet",
+ "B": "22000 feet",
+ "C": "12000 feet",
+ "D": "7000 feet"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is an indication for a macho attitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground",
+ "B": "Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations",
+ "C": "Quick resignation in complex and critical situations",
+ "D": "Careful walkaround procedure"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "meteorology": {
+ "code": "50",
+ "name": "Meteorology",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "What clouds and weather may result from an humid and instable air mass, that is pushed against a chain of mountains by the predominant wind and forced to rise?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.",
+ "B": "Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).",
+ "C": "Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.",
+ "D": "Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"trigger temperature\" is defined as the temperature which...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Is reached by a thermal lift during ascend when formation of Cumulus clouds begins.",
+ "B": "Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud.",
+ "C": "Is the minimum temperature at ground level that has to be reached so formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud can occur.",
+ "D": "Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What situation is called \"over-development\" in a weather report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon",
+ "B": "Development of a thermal low to a storm depression",
+ "C": "Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers",
+ "D": "Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The gliding weather report states environmental instability. At morning, dew covers gras and no thermals are presently active. What development can be expected for thermal activity?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity during the following day",
+ "B": "With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin",
+ "C": "Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will be generated",
+ "D": "After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion thermal activity is likely to begin"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Weather phenomena are most common to be found in which atmospheric layer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Tropopause",
+ "B": "Stratosphere",
+ "C": "Thermosphere",
+ "D": "Troposphere"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"tropopause\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.",
+ "B": "The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.",
+ "C": "The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.",
+ "D": "The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is meant by \"inversion layer\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height",
+ "B": "An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height",
+ "C": "An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height",
+ "D": "A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which process may result in an inversion layer at about 5000 ft (1500 m) height?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ground cooling by radiation during the night",
+ "B": "Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day",
+ "C": "Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere",
+ "D": "Widespread descending air within a high pressure area"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The movement of air flowing apart is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Convergence.",
+ "B": "Concordence.",
+ "C": "Subsidence.",
+ "D": "Divergence."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather development will result from convergence at ground level?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ascending air and cloud formation",
+ "B": "Descending air and cloud dissipation",
+ "C": "Ascending air and cloud dissipation",
+ "D": "Descending air and cloud formation"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When air masses meet each other head on, how is this referred to and what air movements will follow?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Convergence resulting in air being lifted",
+ "B": "Divergence resulting in air being lifted",
+ "C": "Divergence resulting in sinking air",
+ "D": "Divergence resulting in sinking air"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What type of turbulence is typically found close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Clear-air turbulence (CAT)",
+ "B": "Inversion turbulence",
+ "C": "Turbulence in rotors",
+ "D": "Thermal turbulence"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer contains every state of water found in the atmosphere?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Liquid, solid, and gaseous",
+ "B": "Liquid",
+ "C": "Gaseous and liquid",
+ "D": "Liquid and solid"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How do dew point and relative humidity change with decreasing temperature?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases",
+ "B": "Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases",
+ "C": "Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases",
+ "D": "Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The \"spread\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Difference between actual temperature and dew point.",
+ "B": "Difference between dew point and condensation point.",
+ "C": "Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air",
+ "D": "Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which conditions are likely for the formation of advection fog?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Warm, humid air cools during a cloudy night",
+ "B": "Cold, humid air moves over a warm ocean",
+ "C": "Humidity evaporates from warm, humid ground into cold air",
+ "D": "Warm, humid air moves over a cold surface"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What process results in the formation of \"advection fog\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cold, moist air is being moved across warm ground areas",
+ "B": "Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air",
+ "C": "Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds",
+ "D": "Warm, moist air is moved across cold ground areas"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pressure pattern can be observed when a cold front is passing?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Continually increasing pressure",
+ "B": "Shortly decreasing, thereafter increasing pressure",
+ "C": "Continually decreasing pressure",
+ "D": "Constant pressure pattern"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What frontal line divides subtropical air from polar cold air, in particular across Central Europe?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Warm front",
+ "B": "Cold front",
+ "C": "Occlusion",
+ "D": "Polar front"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions in Central Europe are typically found in high pressure areas during summer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Large isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems",
+ "B": "Small isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems",
+ "C": "Large isobar spacing with strong prevailing westerly winds",
+ "D": "Small isobar spacing with strong prevailing northerly winds"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during winter?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog",
+ "B": "Changing weather with passing of frontal lines",
+ "C": "Squall lines and thunderstorms",
+ "D": "Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What temperatures are most dangerous with respect to airframe icing?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".+20° to -5° C",
+ "B": ".-20° to -40° C",
+ "C": ".+5° to -10° C",
+ "D": "0° to -12° C"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which type of ice forms by large, supercooled droplets hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Hoar frost",
+ "B": "Clear ice",
+ "C": "Rime ice",
+ "D": "Mixed ice"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What conditions are mandatory for the formation of thermal thunderstorms?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity",
+ "B": "Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and low humidity",
+ "C": "Conditionally unstable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity",
+ "D": "Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which stage of a thunderstorm is dominated by updrafts?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dissipating stage",
+ "B": "Mature stage",
+ "C": "Cumulus stage",
+ "D": "Upwind stage"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear close to the ground can be expected...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Near the rainfall areas of heavy showers or thunderstorms.",
+ "B": "During approach to an airfield at the coast with a strong sea breeze.",
+ "C": "During cold, clear nights with the formation of radiation fog.",
+ "D": "During warm summer days with high, flatted Cu clouds."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which weather chart shows the actual air pressure as in MSL along with pressure centers and fronts?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind chart",
+ "B": "Surface weather chart",
+ "C": "Prognostic chart",
+ "D": "Hypsometric chart"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information can be obtained from satallite images?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Overview of cloud covers and front lines",
+ "B": "Turbulence and icing",
+ "C": "Temperature and dew point of environmental air",
+ "D": "Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information can be found in the ATIS, but not in a METAR?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Operational information such as runway in use and transition level",
+ "B": "Information about current weather, for example types of precipitation",
+ "C": "Approach information, such as ground visibility and cloud base",
+ "D": "Information about mean wind speeds, maximum speeds in gusts if applicable"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What type of cloud indicates thermal updrafts?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stratus",
+ "B": "Cirrus",
+ "C": "Cumulus",
+ "D": "Lenticularis"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What situation is referred to as \"shielding\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ns clouds, covering the windward side of a mountain range",
+ "B": "High or mid-level cloud layers, impairing thermal activity",
+ "C": "Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud",
+ "D": "Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eights of the sky"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is meant by \"isothermal layer\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height",
+ "B": "An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height",
+ "C": "A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere",
+ "D": "An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.",
+ "B": "QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.",
+ "C": "QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.",
+ "D": "QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The barometric altimeter with QFE setting indicates...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "True altitude above MSL.",
+ "B": "Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.",
+ "C": "Height above MSL.",
+ "D": "Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What process causes latent heat being released into the upper troposphere?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cloud forming due to condensation",
+ "B": "Descending air across widespread areas",
+ "C": "Evaporation over widespread water areas",
+ "D": "Stabilisation of inflowing air masses"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The saturated adiabatic lapse rate is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.",
+ "B": "Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.",
+ "C": "Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.",
+ "D": "Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The dry adiabatic lapse rate has a value of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0,65° C / 100 m.",
+ "B": "1,0° C / 100 m.",
+ "C": "2° / 1000 ft.",
+ "D": "0,6° C / 100 m."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions may be expected during conditionally unstable conditions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Towering cumulus, isolated showers of rain or thunderstorms",
+ "B": "Layered clouds up to high levels, prolonged rain or snow",
+ "C": "Sky clear of clouds, sunshine, low winds",
+ "D": "Shallow cumulus clouds with base at medium levels"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altocumulus",
+ "B": "Cirrus",
+ "C": "Cumulus",
+ "D": "Stratus"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The formation of medium to large precipitation particles requires...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Strong updrafts.",
+ "B": "An inversion layer.",
+ "C": "A high cloud base.",
+ "D": "Strong wind."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The symbol labeled (2) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Front aloft.",
+ "B": "Cold front.",
+ "C": "Occlusion.",
+ "D": "Warm front."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What visual flight conditions can be expected within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer time?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Good visibility, some isolated high clouds",
+ "B": "Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds",
+ "C": "Visibilty less than 1000 m, cloud-covered ground",
+ "D": "Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What visual flight conditions can be expected after the passage of a cold front?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Good visiblity, formation of cumulus clouds with showers of rain or snow",
+ "B": "Poor visibility, formation of overcast or ground-covering stratus clouds, snow",
+ "C": "Scattered cloud layers, visbility more than 5 km, formation of shallow cumulus clouds",
+ "D": "Medium visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the usual direction of movement of a polar front low?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Parallel to the the warm-sector isobars",
+ "B": "To the northeast during winter, to the southeast during summer",
+ "C": "Parallel to the warm front line to the south",
+ "D": "To the northwest during winter, to the southwest during summer"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pressure pattern can be observed during the passage of a polar front low?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rising pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front",
+ "B": "Rising pressure in front of the warm front, rising pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front",
+ "C": "Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front",
+ "D": "Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What change of wind direction can be expected during the passage of a polar front low in Central Europe?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Backing wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front",
+ "B": "Veering wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front",
+ "C": "Veering wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front",
+ "D": "Backing wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pressure pattern may result from cold-air inflow in high tropospheric layers?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Alternating pressure",
+ "B": "Formation of a large ground low",
+ "C": "Formation of a high in the upper troposphere",
+ "D": "Formation of a low in the upper troposphere"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Cold air inflow in high tropospheric layers may result in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Showers and thunderstorms.",
+ "B": "Frontal weather.",
+ "C": "Calm weather and cloud dissipation",
+ "D": "Stabilisation and calm weather."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How does inflowing cold air affect the shape and vertical distance between pressure layers?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)",
+ "B": "Decreasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)",
+ "C": "Decrease in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)",
+ "D": "Increase in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during summer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu",
+ "B": "Changing weather with passing of frontal lines",
+ "C": "Squall lines and thunderstorms",
+ "D": "Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions can be expected during \"Foehn\" on the windward side of a mountain range?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate or heavy rain",
+ "B": "Dissipating clouds with unusual warming, accompanied by strong, gusty winds",
+ "C": "Calm wind and forming of high stratus clouds (high fog)",
+ "D": "Scattered cumulus clouds with showers and thunderstorms"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What chart shows areas of precipitation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Satellite picture",
+ "B": "Wind chart",
+ "C": "Radar picture",
+ "D": "GAFOR"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An inversion is a layer ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "With constant temperature with increasing height",
+ "B": "With increasing pressure with increasing height.",
+ "C": "With increasing temperature with increasing height.",
+ "D": "With decreasing temperature with increasing height."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"beginning of thermals\" refers to the moment when thermal intensity...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.",
+ "B": "Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.",
+ "C": "Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.",
+ "D": "Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the mass of a \"cube of air\" with the edges 1 m long, at MSL according ISA?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0,01225 kg",
+ "B": "0,1225 kg",
+ "C": "12,25 kg",
+ "D": "1,225 kg"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The temperature lapse rate with increasing height within the troposphere according ISA is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1° C / 100 m.",
+ "B": "0,6° C / 100 m.",
+ "C": "0,65° C / 100 m.",
+ "D": "3° C / 100 m."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An inversion layer close to the ground can be caused by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thickening of clouds in medium layers.",
+ "B": "Large-scale lifting of air",
+ "C": "Intensifying and gusting winds.",
+ "D": "Ground cooling during the night."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the air masses that Central Europe is mainly influenced by?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Arctic and polar cold air",
+ "B": "Tropical and arctic cold air",
+ "C": "Equatorial and tropical warm air",
+ "D": "Polar cold air and tropical warm air"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How do spread and relative humidity change with increasing temperature?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases",
+ "B": "Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases",
+ "C": "Spread increases, relative humidity decreases",
+ "D": "Spread increases, relative humidity increases"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.",
+ "B": "Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.",
+ "C": "Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.",
+ "D": "Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What condition may prevent the formation of \"radiation fog\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calm wind",
+ "B": "Clear night, no clouds",
+ "C": "Low spread",
+ "D": "Overcast cloud cover"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The symbol labeled (3) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cold front.",
+ "B": "Warm front.",
+ "C": "Front aloft.",
+ "D": "Occlusion."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass showing no horizontal displacement is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cold front.",
+ "B": "Warm front.",
+ "C": "Stationary front.",
+ "D": "Occluded front."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What situation may result in the occurrence of severe wind shear?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flying ahead of a warm front with visible Ci clouds",
+ "B": "Cross-country flying below Cu clouds with about 4 octas coverage",
+ "C": "During final approach, 30 min after a heavy shower has passed the airfield",
+ "D": "When a shower is visible close to the airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What kind of reduction in visibility is not very sensitive to changes in temperature?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Radiation fog (FG)",
+ "B": "Mist (BR)",
+ "C": "Patches of fog (BCFG)",
+ "D": "Haze (HZ)"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In a METAR, \"(moderate) showers of rain\" are designated by the identifier...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".+TSRA",
+ "B": "SHRA.",
+ "C": "TS.",
+ "D": ".+RA."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "SIGMET warnings are issued for...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Specific routings.",
+ "B": "Countries.",
+ "C": "FIRs / UIRs.",
+ "D": "Airports."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Mountain side updrafts can be intensified by ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Solar irradiation on the lee side",
+ "B": "Thermal radiation of the windward side during the night",
+ "C": "Solar irradiation on the windward side",
+ "D": "By warming of upper atmospheric layers"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending from north to south, moving east. Concerning the weather situation, what decision would be recommendable?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To change plans and start the triangle heading east",
+ "B": "To postpone the flight to another day",
+ "C": "To plan the flight below cloud base of the thunderstorms",
+ "D": "During flight, to look for spacing between thunderstorms"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "At what rate does the temperature change with increasing height according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) within the troposphere?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft",
+ "B": "Increases by 2° C / 100 m",
+ "C": "Decreases by 2° C / 100 m",
+ "D": "Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Temperatures will be given by meteorological aviation services in Europe in which unit?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Gpdam",
+ "B": "Kelvin",
+ "C": "Degrees Centigrade (° C)",
+ "D": "Degrees Fahrenheit"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The pressure at MSL in ISA conditions is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1013.25 hPa.",
+ "B": "113.25 hPa.",
+ "C": "15 hPa.",
+ "D": "1123 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can wind speed and wind direction be derived from surface weather charts?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By alignment and distance of isobaric lines",
+ "B": "By annotations from the text part of the chart",
+ "C": "By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines",
+ "D": "By alignment of lines of warm- and cold fronts."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Light turbulence always has to be expected...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.",
+ "B": "Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.",
+ "C": "When entering inversions.",
+ "D": "Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 74
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Moderate to severe turbulence has to be expected...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.",
+ "B": "Overhead unbroken cloud layers.",
+ "C": "On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.",
+ "D": "With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog)."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 75
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Clouds in high layers are referred to as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cirro-.",
+ "B": "Strato-.",
+ "C": "Nimbo-.",
+ "D": "Alto-."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 76
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What factor may affect the top of cumulus clouds?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The spread",
+ "B": "Relative humidity",
+ "C": "The absolute humidity",
+ "D": "The presence of an inversion layer"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 77
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What factors may indicate a tendency to fog formation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Strong winds, decreasing temperature",
+ "B": "Low spread, decreasing temperature",
+ "C": "Low pressure, increasing temperature",
+ "D": "Low spread, increasing temperature"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 78
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What process results in the formation of \"orographic fog\" (\"hill fog\")?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds",
+ "B": "Warm, moist air is moved across a hill or a mountain range",
+ "C": "Evaporation from warm, moist ground area into very cold air",
+ "D": "Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 79
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What factors are required for the formation of precipitation in clouds?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The presence of an inversion layer",
+ "B": "Moderate to strong updrafts",
+ "C": "Calm winds and intensive sunlight insolation",
+ "D": "High humidity and high temperatures"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 80
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What wind conditions can be expected in areas showing large distances between isobars?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering",
+ "B": "Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing",
+ "C": "Formation of local wind systems with strong prevailing westerly winds",
+ "D": "Variable winds, formation of local wind systems"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 81
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Under which conditions \"back side weather\" (\"Rückseitenwetter\") can be expected?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After passing of a cold front",
+ "B": "Before passing of an occlusion",
+ "C": "During Foehn at the lee side",
+ "D": "After passing of a warm front"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 82
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What wind is reportet as 225/15 ?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "North-east wind with 15 kt",
+ "B": "South-west wind with 15 kt",
+ "C": "South-west wind with 15 km/h",
+ "D": "North-east wind with 15 km/h"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 83
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather is likely to be experienced during \"Foehn\" in the Bavarian area close to the alps?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cold, humid downhill wind on the lee side of the alps, flat pressure pattern",
+ "B": "Nimbostratus cloud in the southern alps, rotor clouds at the lee side, warm and dry wind",
+ "C": "High pressure area overhead Biskaya and low pressure area in Eastern Europe",
+ "D": "Nimbostratus cloud in the northern alps, rotor clouds at the windward side, warm and dry wind"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 84
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phenomenon is referred to as \"blue thermals\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage",
+ "B": "Descending air between Cumulus clouds",
+ "C": "Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds",
+ "D": "Thermals without formation of Cu clouds"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 85
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What change in thermal activity may be expected with cirrus clouds coming up from one direction and becoming more dense, blocking the sun?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity",
+ "B": "Cirrus clouds indicate an high-level inversion with thermal activity ongoing up to that level",
+ "C": "Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.",
+ "D": "Cirrus clouds indicate instability and beginning of over-development"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 86
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The barometric altimeter with QNH setting indicates...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "True altitude above MSL.",
+ "B": "Height above MSL",
+ "C": "Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.",
+ "D": "Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 87
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.",
+ "B": "Perpendicular to the isobars.",
+ "C": "Parallel to the isobars.",
+ "D": "Perpendicular to the isohypses."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 88
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Clouds are basically distinguished by what types?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thunderstorm and shower clouds",
+ "B": "Cumulus and stratiform clouds",
+ "C": "Stratiform and ice clouds",
+ "D": "Layered and lifted clouds"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 89
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather phenomenon designated by \"2\" has to be expected on the lee side during \"Foehn\" conditions? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cumulonimbus",
+ "B": "Cumulonimbus",
+ "C": "Altocumulus lenticularis",
+ "D": "Altocumulus Castellanus"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 90
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which type of ice forms by very small water droplets and ice crystals hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rime ice",
+ "B": "Clear ice",
+ "C": "Mixed ice",
+ "D": "Hoar frost"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 91
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Information about pressure patterns and frontal situation can be found in which chart?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Significant Weather Chart (SWC)",
+ "B": "Wind chart.",
+ "C": "Hypsometric chart",
+ "D": "Surface weather chart."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 92
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the mean height of the tropopause according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "11000 f",
+ "B": "11000 m",
+ "C": "18000 ft",
+ "D": "36000 m"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 93
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "300 hPa",
+ "B": "250 hPa",
+ "C": "1013.25 hPa",
+ "D": "500 hPa"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 94
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the stated surfaces will reduce the wind speed most due to ground friction?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flat land, lots of vegetation cover",
+ "B": "Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation",
+ "C": "Oceanic areas",
+ "D": "Mountainous areas, vegetation cover"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 95
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The movement of air flowing together is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Convergence.",
+ "B": "Subsidence.",
+ "C": "Soncordence",
+ "D": "Divergence."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 96
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What cloud sequence can typically be observed during the passage of a warm front?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter",
+ "B": "Squall line with showers of rain and thunderstorms (Cb), gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain",
+ "C": "Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus",
+ "D": "In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 97
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phenomenon is caused by cold air downdrafts with precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Electrical discharge",
+ "B": "Anvil-head top of Cb cloud",
+ "C": "Gust front",
+ "D": "Freezing Rain"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 98
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information is NOT found on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Information about icing conditions",
+ "B": "Front lines and frontal displacements",
+ "C": "Radar echos of precipitation",
+ "D": "Information about turbulence areas"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 99
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which force causes \"wind\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Centrifugal force",
+ "B": "Pressure gradient force",
+ "C": "Coriolis force",
+ "D": "Thermal force"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 100
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which type of cloud is associated with prolonged rain?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altocumulus",
+ "B": "Cumulonimbus",
+ "C": "Nimbostratus",
+ "D": "Cirrostratus"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 101
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Regarding the type of cloud, precipitation is classified as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Showers of snow and rain.",
+ "B": "Prolonged rain and continuous rain.",
+ "C": "Rain and showers of rain.",
+ "D": "Light and heavy precipitation."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 102
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What conditions are favourable for the formation of thunderstorms?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calm winds and cold air, overcast cloud cover with St or As.",
+ "B": "Warm and dry air, strong inversion layer",
+ "C": "Warm humid air, conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate",
+ "D": "Clear night over land, cold air and patches of fog"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 103
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What can be expected for the prevailling wind with isobars on a surface weather chart showing large distances?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Low pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind",
+ "B": "Strong pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind",
+ "C": "Strong pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind",
+ "D": "Low pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 104
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The height of the tropopause of the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) is at...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "36000 ft.",
+ "B": "5500 ft",
+ "C": "48000 ft.",
+ "D": "11000 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 105
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How is an air mass described when moving to Central Europe via the Russian continent during winter?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Maritime tropical air",
+ "B": "Continental polar air",
+ "C": "Maritime polar air",
+ "D": "Continental tropical air"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 106
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What clouds and weather can typically be observed during the passage of a cold front?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter",
+ "B": "Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus",
+ "C": "In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night",
+ "D": "Strongly developed cumulus clouds (Cb) with showers of rain and thunderstorms, gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 107
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What danger is most immenent when an aircraft is hit by lightning?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit",
+ "B": "Surface overheat and damage to exposed aircraft parts",
+ "C": "Rapid cabin depressurization and smoke in the cabin",
+ "D": "Disturbed radio communication, static noise signals"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 108
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is referred to as mountain wind?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind blowing down the mountain side during the night",
+ "B": "Wind blowing uphill from the valley during the night.",
+ "C": "Wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.",
+ "D": "Wind blowing down the mountain side during daytime."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 109
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What type of fog emerges if humid and almost saturated air, is forced to rise upslope of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailling wind?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Advection fog",
+ "B": "Steaming fog",
+ "C": "Radiation fog",
+ "D": "Orographic fog"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 110
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The barometric altimeter indicates height above...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Mean sea level.",
+ "B": "A selected reference pressure level.",
+ "C": "Ground.",
+ "D": "Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 111
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With regard to global circulation within the atmosphere, where does polar cold air meets subtropical warm air?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At the equator",
+ "B": "At the subtropical high pressure belt",
+ "C": "At the polar front",
+ "D": "At the geographic poles"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 112
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The saturated adiabatic lapse rate should be assumed with a mean value of:",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1,0° C / 100 m.",
+ "B": "0,6° C / 100 m.",
+ "C": "2° C / 1000 ft.",
+ "D": "0° C / 100 m."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 113
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Extensive high pressure areas can be found throughout the year ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "In tropical areas, close to the equator.",
+ "B": "In areeas showing extensive lifting processes.",
+ "C": "Over oceanic areas at latitues around 30°N/S.",
+ "D": "In mid latitudes along the polar front"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 114
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained during the flight by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "PIREP",
+ "B": "SIGMET",
+ "C": "ATIS.",
+ "D": "VOLMET."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 115
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stratus",
+ "B": "Cirrus",
+ "C": "Altus",
+ "D": "Cumulus"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 116
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The character of an air mass is given by what properties?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind speed and tropopause height",
+ "B": "Environmental lapse rate at origin",
+ "C": "Region of origin and track during movement",
+ "D": "Temperatures at origin and present region"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 117
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What cloud type can typically be observed across widespread high pressure areas during summer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Overcast low stratus",
+ "B": "Scattered Cu clouds",
+ "C": "Overcast Ns clouds",
+ "D": "Squall lines and thunderstorms"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 118
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The symbol labeled (1) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Front aloft.",
+ "B": "Cold front.",
+ "C": "Occlusion.",
+ "D": "Warm front."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 119
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In a METAR, \"heavy rain\" is designated by the identifier...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "RA.",
+ "B": ".+RA",
+ "C": "SHRA",
+ "D": ".+SHRA."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 120
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the gas composition of \"air\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %",
+ "B": "Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %",
+ "C": "Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %",
+ "D": "Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 121
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which processes result in decreasing air density?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure",
+ "B": "Increasing temperature, increasing pressure",
+ "C": "Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure",
+ "D": "Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 122
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With regard to thunderstorms, strong up- and downdrafts appear during the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Mature stage.",
+ "B": "Dissipating stage.",
+ "C": "Initial stage.",
+ "D": "Thunderstorm stage."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 123
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following conditions are most favourable for ice accretion?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C, presence of supercooled water droplets (clouds)",
+ "B": "Temperaturs below 0° C, strong wind, sky clear of clouds",
+ "C": "Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C, presence of ice crystals (Ci clouds)",
+ "D": "Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C, presence of hail (clouds)"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 124
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What danger is most imminent during an approach to an airfield situated in a valley, with strong wind aloft blowing perpendicular to the mountain ridge?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduced visibilty, maybe loss of sight to the airfield during final approach",
+ "B": "Wind shear during descent, wind direction may change by 180°",
+ "C": "Formation of medium to heavy clear ice on all aircraft surfaces",
+ "D": "Heavy downdrafts within rainfall areas below thunderstorm clouds"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 125
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "navigation": {
+ "code": "60",
+ "name": "Navigation",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement is correct with regard to the polar axis of the Earth?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator",
+ "B": "The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is at an angle of 66.5° to the plane of the equator",
+ "C": "The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is at an angle of 23.5° to the plane of the equator",
+ "D": "The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which approximate, geometrical form describes the shape of the Earth best for navigation systems?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sphere of ecliptical shape",
+ "B": "Flat plate",
+ "C": "Perfect sphere",
+ "D": "Ellipsoid"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The shortest distance between two points on Earth is represented by a part of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A rhumb line.",
+ "B": "A small circle",
+ "C": "A parallel of latitude.",
+ "D": "A great circle."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What distance corresponds to one degree difference in latitude along any degree of longitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "30 NM",
+ "B": "60 km",
+ "C": "60 NM",
+ "D": "1 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Point A on the Earth's surface lies exactly on the parallel of latitude of 47°50'27''N. Which point is exactly 240 NM north of A?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "53°50'27''N",
+ "B": "49°50'27''N",
+ "C": "51°50'27'N'",
+ "D": "43°50'27''N"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the great circle distance between two points A and B on the equator when the difference between the two associated meridians is exactly one degree of longitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "400 NM",
+ "B": "120 NM",
+ "C": "216 NM",
+ "D": "60 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Assume two arbitrary points A and B on the same parallel of latitude, but not on the equator. Point A is located on 010°E and point B on 020°E. The rumb line distance between A and B is always...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Less than 300 NM.",
+ "B": "Less than 600 NM.",
+ "C": "More than 600 NM.",
+ "D": "More than 300 NM."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the difference in time when the sun moves 20° of longitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1:00 h",
+ "B": "0:40 h",
+ "C": "0:20 h",
+ "D": "1:20 h"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The sun moves 10° of longitude. What is the difference in time?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0.66 h",
+ "B": "0.4 h",
+ "C": "1 h",
+ "D": "0.33 h"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term 'civil twilight' is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.",
+ "B": "The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the true horizon.",
+ "C": "The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the true horizon.",
+ "D": "The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the apparent horizon."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term ‚magnetic course' (MC) is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.",
+ "B": "The angle between magnetic north and the course line.",
+ "C": "The angle between true north and the course line.",
+ "D": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term 'True Course' (TC) is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.",
+ "B": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.",
+ "C": "Tthe angle between magnetic north and the course line.",
+ "D": "The angle between true north and the course line."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are TH and VAR? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E",
+ "B": "TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W",
+ "C": "TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W",
+ "D": "TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the VAR and the DEV? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.",
+ "B": "VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.",
+ "C": "VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.",
+ "D": "VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle between compass north and magnetic north is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "WCA",
+ "B": "Inclination.",
+ "C": "Deviation.",
+ "D": "Variation."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the official basic units for horizontal distances used in aeronautical navigation and their abbreviations?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)",
+ "B": "Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)",
+ "C": "Yards (yd), meters (m)",
+ "D": "Feet (ft), inches (in)"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What could be a reason for changing the runway indicators at aerodromes (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The magnetic variation of the runway location has changed",
+ "B": "The magnetic deviation of the runway location has changed",
+ "C": "The true direction of the runway alignment has changed",
+ "D": "The direction of the approach path has changed"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How are rhumb lines and great circles depicted on a direct Mercator chart?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: curved lines",
+ "B": "Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: straight lines",
+ "C": "Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: straight lines",
+ "D": "Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: curved lines"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical navigation chart the pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. The chart scale is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1 : 500000",
+ "B": "1 : 1000000.",
+ "C": "1 : 250000.",
+ "D": "1 : 2000000."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 1242 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1330 UTC",
+ "B": "1356 UTC",
+ "C": "1430 UTC",
+ "D": "1320 UTC"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying at aFL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6250 ft.",
+ "B": "7000 ft.",
+ "C": "6750 ft",
+ "D": "6500 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6500 ft.",
+ "B": "7000 ft",
+ "C": "6250 ft.",
+ "D": "6750 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6500 ft",
+ "B": "6250 ft.",
+ "C": "7000 ft.",
+ "D": "6750 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "250°.",
+ "B": "265°.",
+ "C": "275°.",
+ "D": "245°."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "152°.",
+ "B": "158°.",
+ "C": "165°.",
+ "D": "126°."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "155 kt.",
+ "B": "172 kt.",
+ "C": "168 kt.",
+ "D": "159 kt."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "3° to the right.",
+ "B": "6° to the right.",
+ "C": "6° to the left.",
+ "D": "3° to the left."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The distance from 'A' to 'B' measures 120 NM. At a distance of 55 NM from 'A' the pilot realizes a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change must be made to reach 'B' directly?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6° left",
+ "B": "14° left",
+ "C": "8° left",
+ "D": "15° left"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How many satellites are necessary for a precise and verified three-dimensional determination of the position?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Two",
+ "B": "Three",
+ "C": "Five",
+ "D": "Four"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What ground features should preferrably be used for orientation during visual flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Power lines",
+ "B": "Farm tracks and creeks",
+ "C": "Border lines",
+ "D": "Rivers, railroads, highways"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately... See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "10800 km.",
+ "B": "12800 km.",
+ "C": "21600 NM.",
+ "D": "40000 NM."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the distance between the parallels of latitude 48°N and 49°N along a meridian line?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "60 NM",
+ "B": "111 NM",
+ "C": "1 NM",
+ "D": "10 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the distance between the two parallels of longitude 150°E and 151°E along the equator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "111 NM",
+ "B": "60 km",
+ "C": "1 NM",
+ "D": "60 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the difference in time when the sun moves 10° of longitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0:04 h",
+ "B": "1:00 h",
+ "C": "0:40 h",
+ "D": "0:30 h"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With Central European Summer Time (CEST) given as UTC+2, what UTC time corresponds to 1600 CEST?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1600 UTC.",
+ "B": "1700 UTC.",
+ "C": "1500 UTC.",
+ "D": "1400 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle between the true course and the true heading is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Variation.",
+ "B": "Inclination.",
+ "C": "Deviation.",
+ "D": "WCA."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle between the magnetic course and the true course is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "WCA.",
+ "B": "Variation",
+ "C": "Inclination.",
+ "D": "Deviation."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Where does the inclination reach its lowest value?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At the geographic equator",
+ "B": "At the magnetic equator",
+ "C": "At the geographic poles",
+ "D": "At the magnetic poles"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which direction corresponds to 'compass north' (CN)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The most northerly part of the magnetic compass in the aircraft, where the reading takes place",
+ "B": "The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns due to earth's and aircraft's magnetic fields",
+ "C": "The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north",
+ "D": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographical North Pole"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the properties of a Mercator chart?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines",
+ "B": "The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines",
+ "C": "The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines",
+ "D": "The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the properties of a Lambert conformal chart?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The chart is conformal and an equal-area projection",
+ "B": "Great circles are depicted as straight lines and the chart is an equal-area projection",
+ "C": "Rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines and the chart is conformal",
+ "D": "The chart is conformal and nearly true to scale"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0933 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1045 UTC.",
+ "B": "1029 UTC.",
+ "C": "1129 UTC.",
+ "D": "1146 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "93 kt",
+ "B": "107 km/h.",
+ "C": "198 kt.",
+ "D": "58 km/h"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "693 NM.",
+ "B": "202 NM.",
+ "C": "375 NM.",
+ "D": "435 NM."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: Ground speed (GS): 160 kt. True course (TC): 177°. Wind vector (W/WS): 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "180°",
+ "B": "173°.",
+ "C": "169°.",
+ "D": "184°."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".+ 11°",
+ "B": ". - 9°",
+ "C": ".- 7°",
+ "D": ".+ 5°"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "120 kt.",
+ "B": "131 kt.",
+ "C": "117 kt.",
+ "D": "125 kt."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When using a GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation indication is shown by a vertical bar and dots to the left and to the right of the bar. What statement describes the correct interpretation of the display?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.",
+ "B": "The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.",
+ "C": "The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection is +-10°.",
+ "D": "The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection is +-10 NM."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the difference in latitude between A (12°53'30''N) and B (07°34'30''S)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".05,19°",
+ "B": ".20,28°",
+ "C": ".05°19'00''",
+ "D": ".20°28'00''"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "UTC is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A zonal time",
+ "B": "Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.",
+ "C": "An obligatory time used in aviation.",
+ "D": "A local time in Central Europe."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With Central European Time (CET) given as UTC+1, what UTC time corresponds to 1700 CET?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1500 UTC.",
+ "B": "1700 UTC.",
+ "C": "1800 UTC.",
+ "D": "1600 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002° What are MH and MC?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "MH: 163°. MC: 175°.",
+ "B": "MH: 167°. MC: 161°",
+ "C": "MH: 163°. MC: 161°.",
+ "D": "MH: 167°. MC: 175°."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the TH and the DEV? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.",
+ "B": "TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.",
+ "C": "TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.",
+ "D": "TH: 194°. DEV: +002°."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term 'agonic line' is defined as a line on Earth or an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Heading of 0°.",
+ "B": "Deviation of 0°.",
+ "C": "Inclination of 0°.",
+ "D": "Variation of 0°."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Electronic devices on board of an aeroplane have influence on the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Direct reading compass.",
+ "B": "Airspeed indicator.",
+ "C": "Turn coordinator",
+ "D": "Artificial horizon."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the distance from VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02?N, 011°33?E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "24 NM",
+ "B": "42 NM",
+ "C": "24 km",
+ "D": "42 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "For a short flight from A to B the pilot extracts the following information from an aeronautical chart: True course: 245°. Magnetic variation: 7° W The magnetic course (MC) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "238°.",
+ "B": "245°.",
+ "C": "252°.",
+ "D": "007°."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1 h 12 min",
+ "B": "2 h 11 min",
+ "C": "0 h 50 min",
+ "D": "1 h 32 min"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "48 Min.",
+ "B": "37 Min.",
+ "C": "84 Min.",
+ "D": "62 Min."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.",
+ "B": "TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.",
+ "C": "TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.",
+ "D": "TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is meant by the term \"terrestrial navigation\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Orientation by ground celestial object during visual flight",
+ "B": "Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight",
+ "C": "Orientation by ground features during visual flight",
+ "D": "Orientation by GPS during visual flight"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about a rhumb line is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A rhumb line is a great circle intersecting the the equator with 45° angle.",
+ "B": "The center of a complete cycle of a rhumb line is always the Earth's center.",
+ "C": "A rhumb line cuts each meridian at the same angle.",
+ "D": "The shortest track between two points along the Earth's surface follows a rhumb line."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E What are: TC, MH und CH? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.",
+ "B": "TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.",
+ "C": "TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.",
+ "D": "TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 129°."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "5500 m equal...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "18000 ft.",
+ "B": "30000 ft.",
+ "C": "7500 ft.",
+ "D": "10000 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0915 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1115 UTC.",
+ "B": "1005 UTC.",
+ "C": "1105 UTC.",
+ "D": "1052 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the required flight time for a distance of 236 NM with a ground speed of 134 kt?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1:34 h",
+ "B": "0:34 h",
+ "C": "0:46 h",
+ "D": "1:46 h"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "241°",
+ "B": "055°",
+ "C": "235°",
+ "D": "061°"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the 1:60 rule?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM",
+ "B": "1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM",
+ "C": "10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM",
+ "D": "60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Where are the two polar circles?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "23.5° north and south of the poles",
+ "B": "23.5° north and south of the equator",
+ "C": "At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N",
+ "D": "20.5° south of the poles"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Vienna (LOWW) is located at 016° 34'E, Salzburg (LOWS) at 013° 00'E. The latitude of both positions can be considered as equal. What is the difference of sunrise and sunset times, expressed in UTC, between Wien and Salzburg? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "In Vienna the sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg",
+ "B": "In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg",
+ "C": "In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg",
+ "D": "In Vienna the sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term 'isogonal' or 'isogonic line' is defined as a line on an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the same value of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Heading.",
+ "B": "Deviation",
+ "C": "Variation.",
+ "D": "Inclination."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "185 kt.",
+ "B": "255 kt.",
+ "C": "170 kt.",
+ "D": "135 kt."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance which has to be flown is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What is the corrected heading to reach the arrival aerodrome directly?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "18° to the right",
+ "B": "9° to the right",
+ "C": "6° to the right",
+ "D": "12° to the right"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The rotational axis of the Earth runs through the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Magnetic north pole and on the geographic South Pole.",
+ "B": "Magnetic north pole and on the magnetic south pole.",
+ "C": "Geographic North Pole and on the magnetic south pole.",
+ "D": "Geographic North Pole and on the geographic South Pole."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 74
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "1000 ft equal...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "300 m.",
+ "B": "3000 m.",
+ "C": "30 km.",
+ "D": "30 m."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 75
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A distance of 7.5 cm on an aeronautical chart represents a distance of 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1 : 500000",
+ "B": "1 : 1500000",
+ "C": "1 : 1 000000",
+ "D": "1 : 150000"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 76
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "46 km",
+ "B": "46 NM",
+ "C": "78 km",
+ "D": "78 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 77
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "operational-procedures": {
+ "code": "70",
+ "name": "Operational Procedures",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "A wind shear is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A wind speed change of more than 15 kt.",
+ "B": "A meteorological downslope wind phenomenon in the alps.",
+ "C": "A vertical or horizontal change of wind speed and wind direction.",
+ "D": "A slow increase of the wind speed in altitudes above 13000 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing tailwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Path is higher, IAS decreases",
+ "B": "Path is lower, IAS increases",
+ "C": "Path is higher, IAS increases",
+ "D": "Path is lower, IAS decreases"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a cross-country flight, visual meteorological conditions tend to become below minimum conditions. To continue the flight according to minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Continue the flight referring to sufficient forecasts",
+ "B": "Turn back due to sufficient visual meteorological conditions along the previous track",
+ "C": "Continue the flight using radio navigational features along the track",
+ "D": "Continue the flight using navigatorical aid by ATC"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With only a slight crosswind, what is the danger at take-off after the departure of a heavy aeroplane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wake turbulence rotate faster and higher.",
+ "B": "Wake turbulence is amplified and distorted.",
+ "C": "Wake turbulence twisting transverse to the runway.",
+ "D": "Wake turbulence on or near the runway"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A precautionary landing is a landing...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Conducted with the flaps retracted.",
+ "B": "Conducted without power from the engine.",
+ "C": "Conducted in response to circumstances forcing the aircraft to land.",
+ "D": "Conducted in an attempt to sustain flight safety"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following landing areas is most suitable for an off-field landing?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A field with ripe waving crops",
+ "B": "A meadow without livestock",
+ "C": "A light brown field with short crops",
+ "D": "A lake with an undisturbed surface"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the effects of wet grass on the take-off and landing distance?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decrease of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance",
+ "B": "Increase of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance",
+ "C": "Increase of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance",
+ "D": "Decrease of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Off-field landing may be prone to accident when...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The approach is conducted using distinct approach segments",
+ "B": "The decision is made above minimum safe altitude.",
+ "C": "The approach is conducted onto a harvested corn field.",
+ "D": "The decision to land off-field is made too late."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When commencing a steep turn, what has to be considered by the pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After achieving bank angle, reduce yaw using opposite rudder",
+ "B": "Commence turn with reduced speed according to aimed bank angle",
+ "C": "Commence turn with increased speed according to aimed bank angle",
+ "D": "After achieving bank angle, push the elevator to increase speed"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When airtowing using side-located latch, the gliding plane tends to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Show particularly stable flight characteristics.",
+ "B": "Quickly turn around longitunidal axis",
+ "C": "Show enhanced pitch up moment.",
+ "D": "Show enhanced turn to latch-mounted side."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A gliding plane being airtowed gets into an excessive high position behind the towing plane. What action by the glider pilot can prevent further danger for glider and towing plane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Initiate a sideslip to reduce excessive height",
+ "B": "Pull strongly, therafter decouple the cable",
+ "C": "Carefully extend spoiler flaps, steer glider back into normal position",
+ "D": "Push strongly to bring glider back to normal position"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In case of cable break during airtow, a longer part of the cable remains attached to the glider plane. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decouple immediately and proceed with coupling unlatched",
+ "B": "Conduct normal approach, release cable immediatley after ground contact",
+ "C": "Perform low approach and reuqest information about cable length by airfield controller, decouple if necessary",
+ "D": "When in safe height, drop cable overhead empty terrain or overhead airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a winch launch, just after stabilizing full climb attitude, the pull on cable suddenly stops. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Push slightly, wait for pull on cable to be re-established",
+ "B": "Inform winch driver by altertate aileron input",
+ "C": "Push firmly and decouple cable immediately",
+ "D": "Pull on elevator to increases cable tension"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Before the launch using a parallel-cable winch, the glider pilot realizes the second cable laying close to his glider about to launch. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Keep an eye on second cable, decouple after takeoff if necessary",
+ "B": "Continue launch with rudder input on opposite direction to second cable",
+ "C": "Conduct normal takeoff, inform airfield controller after landing",
+ "D": "Decouple cable immediately, inform airfield controller via radio"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of the breaking points on a winch cable?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It is used for automatic cable release after winch launch",
+ "B": "It protects the winch from being overshot by the glider plane",
+ "C": "It is used to limit the rate of climb during winch launch",
+ "D": "It prevents excessive stress on the gilder plane"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A glider pilot has to conduct an off-field landing in a mountainous region. The only available landing site is highly inclined. How should the landing be conducted?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Approach with increased speed, quick flare to follow the inclined ground",
+ "B": "Approach down the ridge with increased speed, push according to ground level during landing",
+ "C": "According to prevailant wind, approach and land parallel to the ridge with headwind",
+ "D": "Approach with minimum speed, careful flare when reaching the landing site"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a high altitude flight (6000 m MSL), the glider pilot realizes that oxygen will be consumed within a few minutes. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After depletion of oxygen, stay at that altitude no longer than 30 min",
+ "B": "At first indication of hypoxia, commence descent with maximum allowed speed",
+ "C": "Extend spoiler flaps, descent with maximum permissable speed",
+ "D": "Reduce oxygen flow by breathing slowly"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Trim masses or lead plates must be secured firmly when installed into a gliding plane, so that...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The maximum allowed mass will not be exceeded.",
+ "B": "A comfortable seat position will be assured for the glider pilot.",
+ "C": "They will not block rudders or induce any C.G. shift.",
+ "D": "The glider pilot will not be hurt during flight in thermal turbulences."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Why is it not allowed to launch wih the C.G. positioned beyond the aft limit?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Because rudder inputs may not be sufficient for controlling flight attitude",
+ "B": "Because increased nose-down moment may not be compensated",
+ "C": "Because structural limits may be exceeded",
+ "D": "Because maximum permissable speed will be rduced significantly"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During approach, tower provides the following information: \"Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots\". How should the landing be performed?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Approach with minimum speed, correct changes in attitude with careful rudder inputs",
+ "B": "Approach with normal speed, maintain speed using spoiler flaps",
+ "C": "Approach with increased speed, correct changes in attitude with firm rudder inputs",
+ "D": "Approach with increased speed, avoid usage of spoiler flaps"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When a pilot gets into a strong downwind area during slope soaring, what action should be recommanded?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Contunue flight, downwinds around mountains only occur shortly",
+ "B": "Increase speed and head away from the ridge",
+ "C": "Increase speed and conduct landing parallel to ridge",
+ "D": "Increase speed and get closer to the ridge"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "After landing, you realize you lost your pen which might have fallen down in the cockpit of the sailplane. What has to be considered?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lighter, loose bodies in the fuselage can be considered uncritical",
+ "B": "Before next take-off, the cockpit has to be firmly inspected for loose bodies.",
+ "C": "A flight without a pen at hand is not permitted",
+ "D": "Succeeding pilots have to be informed about that"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Durig flight close to aerodrome in about 250 m AGL you encouter strong descent and go for a safety landing. What speed should be flown when heading towards the airfield?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Best glide speed plus additionals for downdrafts and wind",
+ "B": "Best glide speed",
+ "C": "Minimum rate of descent speed",
+ "D": "Maximum manoeuvering speed VA"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During final approach, you realize that you missed to extend the gear. How should the landing be conducted?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "You land without gear, and carefully touch down with minimum speed.",
+ "B": "You extend the gear immediately and land as usual.",
+ "C": "You retract flaps, extend the gear and land as usual.",
+ "D": "You land without gear with higher than usual speed."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "After reaching what height during winch launch the maximum pitch position can be taken?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "From approx. 50 m while maintaining a save speed for winch launch.",
+ "B": "From 15 m while reaching a speed of at least 90 km/h",
+ "C": "From 150 m or higher, when in case of cable break landing straight ahead is no longer possible",
+ "D": "Shortly after lift-off, provided a sufficiently strong headwind"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered for the speed during approach and landing?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind speed and weight",
+ "B": "Altitude and weight",
+ "C": "Wind speed and Altitude",
+ "D": "Weight and wind speed"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can you determine wind direction in case of an outlanding?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Monitoring of smoke, flags, waving fields",
+ "B": "Wind forecast from flight weather report",
+ "C": "Request from other pilots who can be reached by radio",
+ "D": "Remembering the wind indicated by the windsock an departing airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What landing technique is recommended for landing on a down-hill gras area?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "In general up-hill",
+ "B": "Diagonal down-hill",
+ "C": "With brakes applied on main wheel, no air brakes",
+ "D": "Full air brakes, gear retracted and stalled"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be checked before any change in direction during glide?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Check for turn to be flown coordinated",
+ "B": "Check for thermal clouds",
+ "C": "Check for loose object secured",
+ "D": "Check for free airspace in desired direction"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Before a winch launch, you detect a light tailwind. What has to be considered?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Roll until lift-off will take a little longer, watch speed",
+ "B": "A weaker rated-brake-point can be used, load will be smaller",
+ "C": "Roll until lift-off will be shorter since tailwind is pushing from behind",
+ "D": "To reach more height, full pull on the elevator after lift-off"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Flying slow close to stall conditions, the left wings is lower than the right wing. How can the stall be prevented?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Push on the elevator, keep wings level with coordinated inputs on rudder and aileron",
+ "B": "Aileron and rudder to the reight, gain some speed, push slightly on the elevator, all rudders neutral",
+ "C": "Airleron to the right, push slighty on the elevator, gain some speed, all rudders neutral",
+ "D": "Rudder left, push slightly on the elevator, gain some speed, all rudders neutral"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which weather phenomenon is typically associated with wind shear?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Fog",
+ "B": "Stable high pressure areas.",
+ "C": "Invernal warm front.",
+ "D": "Thunderstorms."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing headwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Path is higher, IAS increases",
+ "B": "Path is lower, IAS decreases",
+ "C": "Path is lower, IAS increases",
+ "D": "Path is higher, IAS decreases"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with an increasing headwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Path is lower, IAS increases",
+ "B": "Path is higher, IAS decreases",
+ "C": "Path is higher, IAS increases",
+ "D": "Path is lower, IAS decreases"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can dangerous situations be prevented when the gliding plane approaches close to a pattern altitude during a cross-country flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Try to reach cumuclus clouds visible at the far horizon and use their thermal updrafts",
+ "B": "Despite the planned flight, decide for an off-field landing",
+ "C": "Maintain radio communication up to full stop after off-field landing",
+ "D": "Search for thermal updrafts on the lee side of a selected landing field"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During airtow, the gliding plane exceeds its maximum permissable speed. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Extend spoiler flaps",
+ "B": "Message to airfield controller via radio",
+ "C": "Pull elevator to reduce speed",
+ "D": "Decouple cable immediately"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During airtow, the towing plane disappears from the glider pilot's sight. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decouple cable immediatly",
+ "B": "Alternate push and pull on the elveator",
+ "C": "Alternate turn to the left and to the right",
+ "D": "Extend spoiler flaps and return to normal attitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During the last phase of a winch launch, the glider pilot does not release pull on the elevator. The automatic latch releases the cable at high wing load. What consequences have to be considered?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A higher altitude can be reached using this technique",
+ "B": "Extreme stress on the structure of the glider plane",
+ "C": "This technique can compensate for insufficient wind correction",
+ "D": "Only by this sudden jerk the release of the cable can be assured"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a winch launch, after reaching full climb attitude, the airspeed indicator fails. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Continue launch to normal altitude, use horizontal image and airstream noise to conduct flight as planned",
+ "B": "Try to re-establish airspeed indication by abrupt changes of speed during launch",
+ "C": "Push elevator, decouple cable and perform short pattern with minimum speed",
+ "D": "Continue launch to normal altitude, use horizontal image and airstream noise for pattern and landing right away"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be expected with ice accretion on wings?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An increased stall speed",
+ "B": "A decreased stall speed",
+ "C": "Improved slow flight capabilities",
+ "D": "Reduced friction drag"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Despite several attempts, the landing gear can be extended, but not locked. How should the landing be conducted?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Keep gear unlocked and perform normal landing",
+ "B": "Keep a firm grip on gear handle during normal landing",
+ "C": "Retract landing gear and perform belly landing with minimum speed",
+ "D": "Retract gear and perform belly landing with increased speed"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An off-field landing with tailwind is inevitable. How should the landing be conducted?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Approach with reduced speed, expect shorter flare and ground roll distance",
+ "B": "Normal approach, when reaching landing site, extend spoiler flaps and push down elevator",
+ "C": "Approach with normal speed, expect longer flare and ground roll distance",
+ "D": "Approach with increased speed without use of spoiler flaps"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A plane flying below an extended Cumulus cloud developing into a thunderstorm, the glider plane quickly approaches the cloud base. What actions have to be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Extend spoiler flaps within speed limits, leave thermal lift area with maximum permissable speed",
+ "B": "Fasten seat belts, be aware of severe gust during further thermaling",
+ "C": "Reduce to minimum speed, leave thermal lift area in a flat turn",
+ "D": "Climb into thunderstorm cloud, continue flight using instruments"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During approach for landing with strong crosswind, how should the turn from base to final be flown?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Turn with maximum 60° bank, carefully watch speed and yaw string, track correction after overshoot.",
+ "B": "Maximum 30° bank, use rudder to early align sailplane with final track",
+ "C": "Maximum 60° bank, use rudder to early align sailplane with final track.",
+ "D": "Turn with maximum 30° bank, carefully watch speed and yaw string, track correction after overshoot."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During thermal soaring, another sailplane is following close by. What should be done to avoid a collision?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "You reduce speed to let the other sailplane fly by",
+ "B": "You reduce bank to achieve a larger turn radius",
+ "C": "You increase bank to be better seen from the other sailplane",
+ "D": "You increase speed to achieve a position opposite in the circle"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What heights should be consideres for landing phases with a glider plane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "100 m abeam threashold and 50 m after final approach turn",
+ "B": "300 m abeam threashold and 150 m in final approach",
+ "C": "500 m abeam threashold and 50 m after final approach turn",
+ "D": "150 - 200 m abeam threashold and 100 m after final approach turn"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How should a glider plane be parked when observing strong winds?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Nose into the wind, keep and weigh tail down",
+ "B": "Nose into the wind, extends air brakes, secure rudders",
+ "C": "Downwind wing on the ground, weigh wing down, secure rudders",
+ "D": "Windward wing on the ground, weigh wing down, secure rudders"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When do you expect wind shear?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During an inversion",
+ "B": "When passing a warm front",
+ "C": "During a summer day with calm winds",
+ "D": "In calm wind in cold weather"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can a wind shear encounter in flight be avoided?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Avoid thermally active areas, particularly during summer, or stay below these areas",
+ "B": "Avoid areas of precipitation, particularly during winter, and choose low flight altitudes",
+ "C": "Avoid take-off and landing during the passage of heavy showers or thunderstorms",
+ "D": "Avoid take-offs and landings in mountainous terrain and stay in flat country whenever possible"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Wake turbulence on or near the runway",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Plowed field",
+ "B": "Glade with long dry grass",
+ "C": "Sports area in a village",
+ "D": "Harvested cornfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A gliding plane is about to pitch down due to stall. What rudder input can prevent nose-dive and spin?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ailerons neutral, rudder strongly kicked to lower wing",
+ "B": "Release elevator, rudder opposite to lower wing",
+ "C": "Keep airplane in level flight using rudder pedals",
+ "D": "Slightly pull the elevator, ailerons opposite to lower wing"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In case of a cable break during winch launch, what actions should be taken in the correct order?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decouple cable, therafter push nose down; at heights up to 150m GND land straight ahead with increased speed",
+ "B": "Push firmly nose down, decouple cable, depending on terrain and wind decide for short pattern or landing straight ahead",
+ "C": "Initiate 180° turn and land opposite to runway heading in use, decouple cable before touch down",
+ "D": "Keep elevetor pulled, stabilize on minimum speed and land on remaining field length"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During initial winch launch, one wing of a glider plane gets ground contact. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Pull the elevator",
+ "B": "Decouple cable immediatly",
+ "C": "Rudder in opposite direction",
+ "D": "Ailerons in opposite direction"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When flying into heavy snowfall, most dangerous will be the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sudden blockage of pitot-static system",
+ "B": "Sudden increase of airframe icing.",
+ "C": "Sudden increase in airplane mass",
+ "D": "Suddon loss of visibility"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considers when overflying mountain ridges?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Turbulences, reduce to minimum speed",
+ "B": "Do not overfly national parks",
+ "C": "Turbulences, therefore slightly increase speed",
+ "D": "Use circling birds to find thermal cells"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is indicated by \"buffeting\" noticable at elevator stick?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "C.G. position too far ahead",
+ "B": "Glider plane very dirty",
+ "C": "Too slow, wing airflow stalled",
+ "D": "Too fast, turbulence bubbles hitting on aileron"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"flight time\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The period from engine start for the purpose of taking off to leaving the aircraft after engine shutdown.",
+ "B": "The period from the start of the take-off run to the final touchdown when landing.",
+ "C": "The total time from the first aircraft movement until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight.",
+ "D": "The total time from the first take-off until the last landing in conjunction with one or more consecutive flights."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Two aircraft of the same type, same grossweight and same configuration fly at different airspeeds. Which aircraft will cause more severe wake turbulence?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The aircraft flying at lower altitude.",
+ "B": "The aircraft flying at higher speed.",
+ "C": "The aircraft flying at higher altitude",
+ "D": "The aircraft flying at slower speed"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What color has the emergency hood release handle?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Green",
+ "B": "Red",
+ "C": "Yellow",
+ "D": "Blue"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When landing with tailwind, the pilot has to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Approach with normal speed and shallow angle.",
+ "B": "Compensate tailwind by sideslip.",
+ "C": "Increase approach speed.",
+ "D": "Land with gear retracted to shorten ground roll distance"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What negative impacts may be expected during circling overhead industrial facilities?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Health impairments by pollutants, reduced visibilty and turbulences",
+ "B": "Strong electrostatic charging and deterioration in radio communication",
+ "C": "Very poor visibility of only few hundred meters and heavy precipitation",
+ "D": "Extended, strong downwind areas on the lee side of the facility"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During airtow, in a turn the glider plane gets into an outward off-set position. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Return glider plane to a position behind towing plane by a smaller curve radius using strong inputs on rudder pedals",
+ "B": "Take up same bank angle as towing plane and return glider plane to a position behind towing plane using rudder pedals",
+ "C": "Bring back glider plane to intended turning attitude using rudder and airlerons, extend spoiler flaps to reduce speed",
+ "D": "Initiate sideslip and let glider plane be pushed back to a position behind towing plane by increased drag"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When has a pre-flight check to be done?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Before first flight of the day, and after every change of pilot",
+ "B": "After every build-up of the airplane",
+ "C": "Once a month, with TMG once a day",
+ "D": "Before flight operation and before every flight"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Collisions during circling within thermal updrafts can be avoided by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Alternate circling with opposite directions in different heights.",
+ "B": "Imitating the movements of the preceeding gliding plane.",
+ "C": "Coordination of plane movements with other aircrafts circling within the same updraft",
+ "D": "Fast approach into the updraft and rapidly pulling the elevator for slower speed."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "principles-of-flight-aeroplane": {
+ "code": "80",
+ "name": "Principles of Flight",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "With regard to the forces acting, how can stationary gliding be described?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The sum of air forces acts along the direction of air flow",
+ "B": "The sum the air forces acts along with the lift force",
+ "C": "The lift force compensates the drag force",
+ "D": "The sum of air forces compensates the gravity force"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the result of extending flaps with increasing aerofoil camber?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Maximum permissable speed increases",
+ "B": "Minimum speed increases",
+ "C": "Minimum speed decreases",
+ "D": "C.G. position moves forward"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Stabilization around the lateral axis during cruise is achieved by the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wing flaps.",
+ "B": "Horizontal stabilizer",
+ "C": "Airlerons.",
+ "D": "Vertical rudder"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "All aerodynamic forces can be considered to act on a single point. This point is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Center of gravity.",
+ "B": "Lift point.",
+ "C": "Transition point.",
+ "D": "Center of pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 4? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transition point",
+ "B": "Stagnation point",
+ "C": "Center of pressure",
+ "D": "Separation point"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 1? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Center of pressure",
+ "B": "Stagnation point",
+ "C": "Stagnation point",
+ "D": "Transition point"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pattern can be found at the stagnation point?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The boundary layer starts separating on the upper surface of the profile",
+ "B": "All aerodynamic forces can be considered as attacking at this single point",
+ "C": "The laminar boundary layer changes into a turbulent boundary layer",
+ "D": "Streamlines are divided into airflow above and below the profile"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about lift and angle of attack is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increasing the angle of attack too far may result in a loss of lift and an airflow separation",
+ "B": "Increasing the angle of attack results in less lift being generated by the aerofoil",
+ "C": "Decreasing the angle of attack results in more drag being generated by the aerofoil",
+ "D": "Too large angles of attack can lead to an exponential increase in lift"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack increases?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The stagnation point moves down",
+ "B": "The center of pressure moves down",
+ "C": "The center of pressure moves up",
+ "D": "The stagnation point moves up"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Pressure compensation on an wing occurs at the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wing tips.",
+ "B": "Leading edge.",
+ "C": "Trailing edge.",
+ "D": "Wing roots"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options is likely to produce large induced drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Large aspect ratio",
+ "B": "Small aspect ratio",
+ "C": "Low lift coefficients",
+ "D": "Tapered wings"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Pressure drag, interference drag and friction drag belong to the group of the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Parasite drag",
+ "B": "Main resistance.",
+ "C": "Induced drag.",
+ "D": "Total drag."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which kinds of drag contribute to total drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Interference drag and parasite drag",
+ "B": "Induced drag and parasite drag",
+ "C": "Induced drag, form drag, skin-friction drag",
+ "D": "Form drag, skin-friction drag, interference drag"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In case of a stall it is important to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed.",
+ "B": "Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed.",
+ "C": "Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed.",
+ "D": "Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What types of boundary layers can be found on an aerofoil?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Laminar boundary layer along the complete upper surface with non-separated airflow",
+ "B": "Turbulent layer at the leading wing areas, laminar boundary layer at the trailing areas",
+ "C": "Turbulent boundary layer along the complete upper surface with separated airflow",
+ "D": "Laminar layer at the leading wing areas, turbulent boundary layer at the trailing areas"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which constructive feature is shown in the figure? See figure (PFA-006) L: Lift Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lateral stability by wing dihedral",
+ "B": "Differential aileron deflection",
+ "C": "Directional stability by lift generation",
+ "D": "Longitudinal stability by wing dihedral"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "\"Longitudinal stability\" is referred to as stability around which axis?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lateral axis",
+ "B": "Propeller axis",
+ "C": "Longitudinal axis",
+ "D": "Vertical axis"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Rotation around the vertical axis is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Slipping.",
+ "B": "Pitching.",
+ "C": "Yawing.",
+ "D": "Rolling."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Rotation around the lateral axis is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Yawing.",
+ "B": "Pitching.",
+ "C": "Rolling.",
+ "D": "Stalling."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The elevator moves an aeroplane around the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Vertical axis.",
+ "B": "Longitudinal axis.",
+ "C": "Elevator axis.",
+ "D": "Lateral axis."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered with regard to the center of gravity position?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By moving the elevator trim tab, the center of gravity can be shifted into a correct position.",
+ "B": "Only correct loading can assure a correct and safe center of gravity position.",
+ "C": "The center of gravity's position can only be determined during flight.",
+ "D": "By moving the aileron trim tab, the center of gravity can be shifted into a correct position."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the advantage of differential aileron movement?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The drag of the downwards deflected aileron is lowered and the adverse yaw is smaller",
+ "B": "The total lift remains constant during aileron deflection",
+ "C": "The ratio of the drag coefficient to lift coefficient is increased",
+ "D": "The adverse yaw is higher"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The aerodynamic rudder balance...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduces the control surfaces.",
+ "B": "Delays the stall.",
+ "C": "Reduces the control stick forces.",
+ "D": "Improves the rudder effectiveness."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the static rudder balance?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To prevent control surface flutter",
+ "B": "To trim the controls almost without any force",
+ "C": "To increase the control stick forces",
+ "D": "To limit the control stick forces"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The trim tab at the elevator is defelected upwards. In which position is the corresponding indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Neutral position",
+ "B": "Nose-down position",
+ "C": "Nose-up position",
+ "D": "Laterally trimmed"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Point number 1 in the figure indicates which flight state? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inverted flight",
+ "B": "Slow flight",
+ "C": "Stall",
+ "D": "Best gliding angle"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In a co-ordinated turn, how is the relation between the load factor (n) and the stall speed (Vs)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "N is smaller than 1, Vs is greater than in straight and level flight.",
+ "B": "N is greater than 1, Vs is smaller than in straight and level flight.",
+ "C": "N is greater than 1, Vs is greater than in straight and level flight.",
+ "D": "N is smaller than 1, Vs is smaller than in straight and level flight."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The pressure compensation between wind upper and lower surface results in ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Induced drag by wing tip vortices",
+ "B": "Laminar airflow by wing tip vortices.",
+ "C": "Profile drag by wing tip vortices.",
+ "D": "Lift by wing tip vortices."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "At stationary glide and the same mass, what is the difference when using a thick airfoild instead of a thinner airfoil?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "More drag, same lift",
+ "B": "Less drag, less lift",
+ "C": "More drag, less lift",
+ "D": "Less drag, same lift"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is shown by a profile polar?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ratio between minimum rate of descent and best glide",
+ "B": "Ratio between total lift and drag depending on angle of attack",
+ "C": "Ratio of cA and cD at different angles of attack",
+ "D": "Lift coefficient cA at different angles of attack"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Following a single-wing stall and pitch-down moment, how can a spin be prevented?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Deflect all rudders opposite to lower wing",
+ "B": "Rudder opposite lower wing, releasing elevator to build up speed",
+ "C": "Pushing the elevator to build up speed to re-attach airflow on wings",
+ "D": "Pulling the elevator to bring the plane back to normal attitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Flying with speeds higher than the never-exceed-speed (vNE) may result in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduced drag with increased control forces.",
+ "B": "An increased lift-to-drag ratio and a better glide angle.",
+ "C": "Too high total pressure resulting in an unusable airspeed indicator.",
+ "D": "Flutter and mechanically damaging the wings."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "If surrounded by airflow (v>0), any arbitrarily shaped body produces...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Drag and lift.",
+ "B": "Drag.",
+ "C": "Lift without drag.",
+ "D": "Constant drag at any speed."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Number 3 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Camber line.",
+ "B": "Thickness.",
+ "C": "Chord.",
+ "D": "Chord line."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In which way does the position of the center of pressure move at a positively shaped profile with increasing angle of attack?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It moves to the wing tips",
+ "B": "It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack",
+ "C": "It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack",
+ "D": "It moves forward first, then backward"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack decreases?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The center of pressure moves aft",
+ "B": "The center of pressure moves forward",
+ "C": "The stagnation point moves down",
+ "D": "The stagnation point remains constant"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement concerning the angle of attack is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increasing the angle of attack results in decreasing lift",
+ "B": "The angle of attack cannot be negative",
+ "C": "A too large angle of attack may result in a loss of lift",
+ "D": "The angle of attack is constant throughout the flight"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When increasing the airflow speed by a factor of 2 while keeping all other parameters constant, how does the parasite drag change approximately?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It decreases by a factor of 2",
+ "B": "It increases by a factor of 2",
+ "C": "It decreases by a factor of 4",
+ "D": "It increases by a factor of 4"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The drag coefficient...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Is proportional to the lift coefficient",
+ "B": "Increases with increasing airspeed.",
+ "C": "May range from zero to an infinite positive value",
+ "D": "Cannot be lower than a non-negative, minimal value."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which parts of an aircraft mainly affect the generation of induced drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The front part of the fuselage.",
+ "B": "The outer part of the ailerons.",
+ "C": "The lower part of the gear.",
+ "D": "The wing tips."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Where is interference drag generated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At the ailerons",
+ "B": "At the the gear",
+ "C": "At the wing root",
+ "D": "Near the wing tips"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the listed wing shapes has the lowest induced drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rectangular shape",
+ "B": "Trapezoidal shape",
+ "C": "Elliptical shape",
+ "D": "Double trapezoidal shape"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?",
+ "B": "Differential aileron defletion",
+ "C": "Full deflection of the aileron",
+ "D": "Wing dihedral"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What describes \"wing loading\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wing area per weight",
+ "B": "Drag per weight",
+ "C": "Weight per wing area",
+ "D": "Drag per wing area"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Point number 5 in the figure indicates which flight state? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Slow flight",
+ "B": "Best gliding angle",
+ "C": "Inverted flight",
+ "D": "Stall"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Extending airbrakes results in ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Less drag and more lift.",
+ "B": "More drag and less lift.",
+ "C": "More drag and more lift.",
+ "D": "Less drag and less lift."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The glide ratio of a sailplane can be improved by which measures?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Higher airplane mass, thin airfoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage",
+ "B": "Lower airplane mass, correct speed, retractable gear",
+ "C": "Cleaning, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage",
+ "D": "Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the diffeence between spin and spiral dive?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Spin: stall at inner wing, speed increasing rapidly; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed constant",
+ "B": "Spin: stall at inner wing, speed constant; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed increasing rapidly",
+ "C": "Spin: stall at outer wing, speed constant; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed increasing rapidly",
+ "D": "Spin: stall at outer wing, speed increasing rapidly; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed constant"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle of attack is the angle between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The chord line and the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane.",
+ "B": "The chord line and the oncoming airflow.",
+ "C": "The wing and the fuselage of an aeroplane",
+ "D": "The undisturbed airflow and the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The ratio of span and mean chord length is referred to as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Trapezium shape.",
+ "B": "Tapering.",
+ "C": "Aspect ratio.",
+ "D": "Wing sweep."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Stability around which axis is mainly influenced by the center of gravity's longitudinal position?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Longitudinal axis",
+ "B": "Lateral axis",
+ "C": "Gravity axis",
+ "D": "Vertical axis"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What structural item provides directional stability to an airplane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Differential aileron deflection",
+ "B": "Wing dihedral",
+ "C": "Large elevator",
+ "D": "Large vertical tail"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The critical angle of attack...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreases with forward center of gravity position.",
+ "B": "Changes with increasing weight.",
+ "C": "Is independent of the weight.",
+ "D": "Increases with backward center of gravity position."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In straight and level flight with constant performance of the engine, the angle of attack at the wing is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Smaller than in a descent.",
+ "B": "Greater than in a climb.",
+ "C": "Greater than at take-off.",
+ "D": "Smaller than in a climb."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the horizontal tail (among other things)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To stabilise the aeroplane around the longitudinal axis",
+ "B": "To stabilise the aeroplane around the lateral axis",
+ "C": "To initiate a curve around the vertical axis",
+ "D": "To stabilise the aeroplane around the vertical axis"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Deflecting the rudder to the left causes...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Pitching of the aircraft to the left",
+ "B": "Yawing of the aircraft to the left.",
+ "C": "Pitching of the aircraft to the right.",
+ "D": "Yawing of the aircraft to the right."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Differential aileron deflection is used to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduce wake turbulence.",
+ "B": "Avoid a stall at low angles of attack.",
+ "C": "Keep the adverse yaw low.",
+ "D": "Increase the rate of descent."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How is the balance of forces affected during a turn?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A lower lift force compensates for a lower net force as compared to level flight",
+ "B": "Lift force must be increased to compensate for the sum of centrifugal and gravitational force",
+ "C": "The horizontal component of the lift force during a turn is the centrifugal force",
+ "D": "The net force results from superposition of gravity and centripetal forces"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What engine design at a Touring Motor Glider (TMG) results in least drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Engine and propeller mounted fix on the fuselage",
+ "B": "Engine and propeller mounted stowable on the fuselage",
+ "C": "Engine and propeller mounted fix at the aircraft's nose",
+ "D": "Engine and propeller mounted fix at the horizontal stabilizer"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What effect is referred to as \"adverse yaw\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Aileron operation results in a yaw to the desired side due to less drag at the down-deflected aileron",
+ "B": "Rudder operation results in a rolling moment to the opposite side due to more lift generated by the faster moving wing.",
+ "C": "Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the up-deflected aileron",
+ "D": "Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the down-deflected aileron"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is meant by \"ground effect\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decrease of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground",
+ "B": "Increase of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground",
+ "C": "Increase of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground",
+ "D": "Decrease of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pressure pattern can be observed at a lift-generating wing profile at positive angle of attack?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Low pressure is created above, higher pressure below the profile",
+ "B": "Pressure above remains unchanged, higher pressure is created below the profile",
+ "C": "High pressure is created above, lower pressure below the profile",
+ "D": "Pressure below remains unchanged, lower pressure is created above the profile"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In order to improve the stall characteristics of an aircraft, the wing is twisted outwards (the angle of incidence varies spanwise). This is known as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Arrow shape.",
+ "B": "V-form",
+ "C": "Geometric washout.",
+ "D": "Aerodynamic washout."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a stall, the lift...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreases and drag increases.",
+ "B": "Increases and drag increases.",
+ "C": "Decreases and drag decreases",
+ "D": "Increases and drag decreases."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement regarding a spin is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During recovery the ailerons should be kept neutral",
+ "B": "During the spin the speed constantly increases",
+ "C": "During recovery the ailerons should be crossed",
+ "D": "Only very old aeroplanes have a risk of spinning"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What structural item provides lateral stability to an airplane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wing dihedral",
+ "B": "Vertical tail",
+ "C": "Differential aileron deflection",
+ "D": "Elevator"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Rudder deflections result in a turn of the aeroplane around the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rudder axis.",
+ "B": "Vertical axis.",
+ "C": "Lateral axis",
+ "D": "Longitudinal axis."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Through which factor listed below does the load factor increase during cruise flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lower air density",
+ "B": "A forward centre of gravity",
+ "C": "Higher aeroplane weight",
+ "D": "An upward gust"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During approch to the next updraft, the vertical speed indicator reads 3 m/s descent. Within the updraft you expect a mean rate of climb of 2 m/s. According McCready, how should you adjust the speed during approach of the updraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The McCready ring should be set to 2 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the sum of current rate of descent at expected rate of climb (5 m/s).",
+ "B": "The McCready ring should be set to 3 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the expected rate of climb (2 m/s).",
+ "C": "The McCready ring should be set to 2 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the current rate of descent (3 m/s).",
+ "D": "Outside of thermal cells, the McCready ring should be set to 0 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the current rate of descent (3 m/s)."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered when operating a sailplane equipped with camper flaps?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive.",
+ "B": "During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative.",
+ "C": "During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative.",
+ "D": "During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Considering longitudinal stability, which C.G. position is most dangerous with a normal gliding plane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Position beyond the front C.G. limit",
+ "B": "Position too far aside permissable C.G. limits.",
+ "C": "Position far back within permissable C.G. limits",
+ "D": "Position beyond the rear C.G. limit"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The static pressure of gases work...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "In all directions.",
+ "B": "Only in flow direction.",
+ "C": "Only in the direction of the total pressure.",
+ "D": "Only vertical to the flow direction."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Bernoulli's equation for frictionless, incompressible gases states that...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Total pressure = dynamic pressure - static pressure.",
+ "B": "Total pressure = dynamic pressure + static pressure.",
+ "C": "Static pressure = total pressure + dynamic pressure",
+ "D": "Dynamic pressure = total pressure + static pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The center of pressure is the theoretical point of origin of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Only the resulting total drag.",
+ "B": "Gravity forces of the profile.",
+ "C": "All aerodynamic forces of the profile.",
+ "D": "Gravity and aerodynamic forces."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 74
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 3? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stagnation point",
+ "B": "Separation point",
+ "C": "Center of pressure",
+ "D": "Transition point"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 75
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which option states a benefit of wing washout?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "With the washout the form drag reduces at high speeds",
+ "B": "Greater hardness because the wing can withstand more torsion forces",
+ "C": "At high angles of attack the effectiveness of the aileron is retained as long as possible",
+ "D": "Structurally the wing is made more rigid against rotation"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 76
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about induced drag during the horizontal cruise flight is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Induced drag decreases with increasing airspeed",
+ "B": "Induced drag has a minimum at a certain speed and increases at higher as well as lower speeds",
+ "C": "Induced drag has a maximum at a certain speed and decreases at higher as well as lower speeds",
+ "D": "Induced drag increases with increasing airspeed"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 77
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How do lift and drag change when approaching a stall condition?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lift decreases and drag increases",
+ "B": "Lift and drag increase",
+ "C": "Lift increases and drag decreases",
+ "D": "Lift and drag decrease"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 78
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What leads to a decreased stall speed Vs (IAS)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lower density",
+ "B": "Decreasing weight",
+ "C": "Lower altitude",
+ "D": "Higher load factor"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 79
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent boundary layer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The laminar boundary layer is thinner and provides more skin-friction drag",
+ "B": "The turbulent boundary layer can follow the airfoil camber at higher angles of attack",
+ "C": "The laminar boundary layer produces lift, the turbulent boundary layer produces drag",
+ "D": "The turbulent boundary layer is thicker and provides less skin-friction drag"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 80
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Number 2 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Profile thickness.",
+ "B": "Chord line.",
+ "C": "Chord line.",
+ "D": "Angle of attack."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 81
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle (alpha) shown in the figure is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow Siehe Anlage 3",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lift angle.",
+ "B": "Angle of attack.",
+ "C": "Angle of incidence.",
+ "D": "Angle of inclination"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 82
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The right aileron deflects upwards, the left downwards. How does the aircraft react?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rolling to the left, no yawing",
+ "B": "Rolling to the right, yawing to the left",
+ "C": "Rolling to the left, yawing to the right",
+ "D": "Rolling to the right, yawing to the right"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 83
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered when operating a sailplane with water ballast?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Best glide angle decreases.",
+ "B": "Significant CG shifts.",
+ "C": "Best glide speed decreases",
+ "D": "It should stay below freezing level."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 84
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil is located between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The stagnation point and the center of pressure.",
+ "B": "The stagnation point and the transition point.",
+ "C": "The transition point and the separation point.",
+ "D": "The transition point and the center of pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 85
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How do induced drag and parasite drag change with increasing airspeed during a horizontal and stable cruise flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Parasite drag decreases and induced drag increases",
+ "B": "Induced drag decreases and parasite drag increases",
+ "C": "Parasite drag decreases and induced drag decreases",
+ "D": "Induced drag increases and parasite drag increases"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 86
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which effect does a decreasing airspeed have on the induced drag during a horizontal and stable cruise flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The induced drag will slightly decrease",
+ "B": "The induced drag will collapse",
+ "C": "The induced drag will increase",
+ "D": "The induced drag will remain constant"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 87
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement describes a situation of static stability?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An aircraft distorted by external impact will return to the original position",
+ "B": "An aircraft distorted by external impact will tend to an even more deflected position",
+ "C": "An aircraft distorted by external impact will maintain the deflected position",
+ "D": "An aircraft distorted by external impact can return to its original position by rudder input"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 88
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A sailplane is operated with additional water ballast. How do best gliding angle and speed of best glide change, when compared to flying without water ballast?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Best gliding angle descreases, best glide speed decreases.",
+ "B": "Best gliding angle remains unchanged, best glide speed increases.",
+ "C": "Best gliding angle remains increases, best glide speed increases.",
+ "D": "Best gliding angle remains unchanged, best glide speed decreases."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 89
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which constructive feature has the purpose to reduce stearing forces?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "T-tail",
+ "B": "Differential aileron deflection",
+ "C": "Vortex generators",
+ "D": "Aerodynamic rudder balance"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 90
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "communication": {
+ "code": "90",
+ "name": "Communication",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "Which abbreviation is used for the term \"visual flight rules\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "VFS",
+ "B": "VRU",
+ "C": "VFR",
+ "D": "VMC"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the abbreviation \"H24\" stand for?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "No specific opening times",
+ "B": "24 h service",
+ "C": "Sunrise to sunset",
+ "D": "Sunset to sunrise"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which altitude is displayed on the altimeter when set to a specific QNH?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude in relation to mean sea level",
+ "B": "Altitude in relation to the 1013.25 hPa datum",
+ "C": "Altitude in relation to the highest elevation within 10 km",
+ "D": "Altitude in relation to the air pressure at the reference airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct term for a message used for air traffic control?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Meteorological message",
+ "B": "Message related to direction finding",
+ "C": "Flight safety message",
+ "D": "Flight regularity message"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Distress messages are messages...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.",
+ "B": "Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities which are important for the safety and regularity of flight operations.",
+ "C": "Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.",
+ "D": "Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following messages has the highest priority?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Turn left",
+ "B": "Wind 300 degrees, 5 knots",
+ "C": "Request QDM",
+ "D": "QNH 1013"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The directional information \"12 o'clock\" is correctly transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "One two.",
+ "B": "Twelve o'clock.",
+ "C": "One two hundred.",
+ "D": "One two o'clock"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Times are transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Local time.",
+ "B": "Time zone time.",
+ "C": "UTC.",
+ "D": "Standard time."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the phrase \"Roger\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...",
+ "B": "Permission for proposed action is granted",
+ "C": "I understand your message and will comply with it",
+ "D": "I have received all of your last transmission"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the phrase \"Correction\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "I have received all of your last transmission",
+ "B": "I understand your message and will comply with it",
+ "C": "Permission for proposed action is granted",
+ "D": "An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is..."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which phrase is used by a pilot when he wants to fly through controlled airspace?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Want",
+ "B": "Apply",
+ "C": "Would like",
+ "D": "Request"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with \"yes\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Affirm",
+ "B": "Yes",
+ "C": "Affirmative",
+ "D": "Roger"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phrase is used by a pilot to inform the tower about a go-around?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Pulling up",
+ "B": "Going around",
+ "C": "No landing",
+ "D": "Approach canceled"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct abbreviation of the call sign D-EAZF?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "AZF",
+ "B": "DZF",
+ "C": "DEA",
+ "D": "DEF"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what case is the pilot allowed to abbreviate the call sign of his aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After passing the first reporting point",
+ "B": "If there is little traffic in the traffic circuit",
+ "C": "Within controlled airspace",
+ "D": "After the ground station has used the abbreviation"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of establishing radio communication between D-EAZF and Dusseldorf Tower?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dusseldorf Tower over",
+ "B": "Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF",
+ "C": "Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF",
+ "D": "Tower from D-EAZF"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction \"Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Roger",
+ "B": "Squawk 4321, 131.325",
+ "C": "Squawk 4321, wilco",
+ "D": "Wilco"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of acknowledging \"You are now entering airspace Delta\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Roger",
+ "B": "Airspace Delta",
+ "C": "Wilco",
+ "D": "Entering"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a cloud coverage of \"FEW\" mean in a METAR weather report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "5 to 7 eighths",
+ "B": "8 eighths",
+ "C": "3 to 4 eighths",
+ "D": "1 to 2 eighths"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a cloud coverage of \"SCT\" mean in a METAR weather report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "5 to 7 eighths",
+ "B": "8 eighths",
+ "C": "3 to 4 eighths",
+ "D": "1 to 2 eighths"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a cloud coverage of \"BKN\" mean in a METAR weather report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1 to 2 eighths",
+ "B": "5 to 7 eighths",
+ "C": "3 to 4 eighths",
+ "D": "8 eighths"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which transponder code indicates a radio failure?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "7500",
+ "B": "7700",
+ "C": "7000",
+ "D": "7600"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct phrase to begin a blind transmission?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Listen",
+ "B": "Blind",
+ "C": "Transmitting blind",
+ "D": "No reception"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How often shall a blind transmission be made?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Two times",
+ "B": "Four times",
+ "C": "Three times",
+ "D": "One time"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what situation is it appropriate to set the transponder code 7600?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Hijacking",
+ "B": "Emergency",
+ "C": "Flight into clouds",
+ "D": "Loss of radio"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct course of action when experiencing a radio failure in class D airspace?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route",
+ "B": "The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing",
+ "C": "The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route",
+ "D": "The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which phrase is to be repeated three times before transmitting an urgency message?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Mayday",
+ "B": "Urgent",
+ "C": "Pan Pan",
+ "D": "Help"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct frequency for an initial distress message?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Radar frequency",
+ "B": "Current frequency",
+ "C": "FIS frequency",
+ "D": "Emergency frequency"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What kind of information should be included in an urgency message?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, departure aerodrome, information about position, heading and altitude",
+ "B": "Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, departure aerodrome, heading and altitude",
+ "C": "Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, departure aerodrome, destination aerodrome, heading and altitude",
+ "D": "Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, heading and altitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct designation of the frequency band from 118.000 to 136.975 MHz used for voice communication?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "MF",
+ "B": "LF",
+ "C": "HF",
+ "D": "VHF"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In which situations should a pilot use blind transmissions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "When a pilot has flown into cloud or fog unintentionally and therefore would like to request navigational assistance from a ground unit",
+ "B": "When the traffic situation at an airport allows the transmission of information which does not need to be acknowledged by the ground station",
+ "C": "When no radio communication can be established with the appropriate aeronautical station, but when evidence exists that transmissions are received at that ground unit",
+ "D": "When a transmission containing important navigational or technical information is to be sent to several stations at the same time"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which abbreviation is used for the term \"abeam\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "ABB",
+ "B": "ABM",
+ "C": "ABE",
+ "D": "ABA"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which abbreviation is used for the term \"obstacle\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "OBST",
+ "B": "OBTC",
+ "C": "OST",
+ "D": "OBS"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the abbreviation \"FIS\" stand for?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight information service",
+ "B": "Flashing information system",
+ "C": "Flight information system",
+ "D": "Flashing information service"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the abbreviaton \"FIR\" stand for?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight information region",
+ "B": "Flight integrity receiver",
+ "C": "Flow integrity required",
+ "D": "Flow information radar"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way to transmit the call sign HB-YKM?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro",
+ "B": "Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike",
+ "C": "Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike",
+ "D": "Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way to transmit the call sign OE-JVK?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo",
+ "B": "Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm",
+ "C": "Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm",
+ "D": "Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An altitude of 4500 ft is transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Four five tousand.",
+ "B": "Four five zero zero.",
+ "C": "Four tousand five zero zero.",
+ "D": "Four tousand five hundred."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the phrase \"Approved\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "I understand your message and will comply with it",
+ "B": "Permission for proposed action is granted",
+ "C": "I have received all of your last transmission",
+ "D": "An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is..."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with \"no\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Negative",
+ "B": "No",
+ "C": "Not",
+ "D": "Finish"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a readability of 1 indicate?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The transmission is readable but with difficulty",
+ "B": "The transmission is perfectly readable",
+ "C": "The transmission is readable now and then",
+ "D": "The transmission is unreadable"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a readability of 2 indicate?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The transmission is readable but with difficulty",
+ "B": "The transmission is unreadable",
+ "C": "The transmission is perfectly readable",
+ "D": "The transmission is readable now and then"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a readability of 5 indicate?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The transmission is readable now and then",
+ "B": "The transmission is readable but with difficulty",
+ "C": "The transmission is unreadable",
+ "D": "The transmission is perfectly readable"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which information from a ground station does not require readback?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Runway in use",
+ "B": "Altitude",
+ "C": "Wind",
+ "D": "SSR-Code"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction \"DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots",
+ "B": "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off",
+ "C": "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off",
+ "D": "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction \"Next report PAH\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Positive",
+ "B": "Wilco",
+ "C": "Report PAH",
+ "D": "Roger"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what case is visibility transmitted in meters?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Up to 5 km",
+ "B": "Greater than 10 km",
+ "C": "Greater than 5 km",
+ "D": "Up to 10 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Urgency messages are defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.",
+ "B": "Messages concerning urgent spare parts which are needed for a continuation of flight and which need to be ordered in advance.",
+ "C": "Information concerning the apron personell and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft",
+ "D": "Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Distress messages contain...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Information concerning urgent spare parts which are required for a continuation of flight and which have to be ordered in advance.",
+ "B": "Information concerning the apron personell and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.",
+ "C": "Information concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight",
+ "D": "Information concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the approximate speed of electromagnetic wave propagation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "123000 m/s",
+ "B": "300000 km/s",
+ "C": "123000 km/s",
+ "D": "300000 m/s"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Urgency messages are messages...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight",
+ "B": "Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.",
+ "C": "Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.",
+ "D": "Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Regularity messages are messages...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance",
+ "B": "Sent by an aircraft operating agency or an aircraft of immediate concern to an aircraft in flight.",
+ "C": "Concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.",
+ "D": "Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A frequency of 119.500 MHz is correctly transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "One one niner decimal five zero.",
+ "B": "One one niner decimal five zero zero.",
+ "C": "One one niner decimal five.",
+ "D": "One one niner tousand decimal five zero."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "If there is any doubt about ambiguity, a time of 1620 is to be transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sixteen twenty",
+ "B": "Two zero.",
+ "C": "One six two zero.",
+ "D": "One tousand six hundred two zero"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which phrase does a pilot use when he / she wants to check the readability of his / her transmission?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Request readability",
+ "B": "What is the communication like?",
+ "C": "You read me five",
+ "D": "How do you read?"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the call sign of the surface movement control?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Control",
+ "B": "Tower",
+ "C": "Earth",
+ "D": "Ground"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a readability of 3 indicate?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The transmission is perfectly readable",
+ "B": "The transmission is readable now and then",
+ "C": "The transmission is unreadable",
+ "D": "The transmission is readable but with difficulty"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what cases is visibility transmitted in kilometers?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Greater than 10 km",
+ "B": "Up to 5 km",
+ "C": "Greater than 5 km",
+ "D": "Up to 10 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can you obtain meteorological information concerning airports during a crosscountry flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "GAMET",
+ "B": "METAR",
+ "C": "AIRMET",
+ "D": "VOLMET"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the abbreviation \"HX\" stand for?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "24 h service",
+ "B": "Sunrise to sunset",
+ "C": "No specific opening hours",
+ "D": "Sunset to sunrise"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The altimeter has to be set to what value in order to show zero on ground?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "QTE",
+ "B": "QFE",
+ "C": "QNE",
+ "D": "QNH"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A heading of 285 degrees is correctly transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Two hundred eighty-five.",
+ "B": "Two eight five hundred.",
+ "C": "Two eight five.",
+ "D": "Two hundred eight five."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following factors affects the reception of VHF transmissions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Height of ionosphere",
+ "B": "Altitude",
+ "C": "Twilight error",
+ "D": "Shoreline effect"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which phrase is to be used when a pilot wants the tower to know that he is ready for take-off?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ready for departure",
+ "B": "Request take-off",
+ "C": "Ready for start-up",
+ "D": "Ready"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "On what frequency shall a blind transmission be made?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "On the appropriate FIS frequency",
+ "B": "On a tower frequency",
+ "C": "On a radar frequency of the lower airspace",
+ "D": "On the current frequency"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "There are other aircraft in the aerodrome circuit",
+ "B": "It ist the aerodrome of departure",
+ "C": "It is the destination aerodrome",
+ "D": "Approval has been granted before"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the call sign of the aerodrome control?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ground",
+ "B": "Control",
+ "C": "Tower",
+ "D": "Airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the call sign of the flight information service?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight information",
+ "B": "Info",
+ "C": "Advice",
+ "D": "Information"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of using the aircraft call sign at first contact?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Using the last two characters only",
+ "B": "Using all characters",
+ "C": "Using the first three characters only",
+ "D": "Using the first two characters only"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which altitude is displayed on the altimeter when set to a specific QFE?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude in relation to the 1013.25 hPa datum",
+ "B": "Altitude in relation to the air pressure at the reference airfield",
+ "C": "Altitude in relation to mean sea level",
+ "D": "Altitude in relation to the highest elevation within 10 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The correct transponder code for emergencies is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "7600.",
+ "B": "7500.",
+ "C": "7700.",
+ "D": "7000."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information is broadcasted on a VOLMET frequency?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Current information",
+ "B": "Navigational information",
+ "C": "Meteorological information",
+ "D": "NOTAMS"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An ATIS is valid for...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "45 minutes.",
+ "B": "60 minutes.",
+ "C": "30 minutes.",
+ "D": "10 minutes."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+}
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/_raw_data.json b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/_raw_data.json
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2868924
--- /dev/null
+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-exam/_raw_data.json
@@ -0,0 +1,7844 @@
+{
+ "air-law": {
+ "code": "10",
+ "name": "Air Law",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "Which area could be crossed with certain restrictions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "No-fly zone",
+ "B": "Restricted area",
+ "C": "Prohibited area",
+ "D": "Dangerous area"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Where can the type of restriction for a restricted airspace be found?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "AIC",
+ "B": "ICAO chart 1:500000",
+ "C": "AIP",
+ "D": "NOTAM"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the status of the rules and procedures created by the EASA? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "They are not legally binding, they only serve as a guide",
+ "B": "Only after a ratification by individual EU member states they are legally binding",
+ "C": "They are part of the EU regulation and legally binding to all EU member states",
+ "D": "They have the same status as ICAO Annexes"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the abbreviation \"ARC\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Airworthiness Recurring Control",
+ "B": "Airspace Rulemaking Committee",
+ "C": "Airworthiness Review Certificate",
+ "D": "Airspace Restriction Criteria"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The \"Certificate of Airworthiness\" is issued by the state...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Of the residence of the owner",
+ "B": "In which the aircraft is registered.",
+ "C": "In which the airworthiness review is done.",
+ "D": "In which the aircraft is constructed."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The validity of a medical examination certificate class 2 for a 62 years old pilot is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "12 Months.",
+ "B": "48 Months.",
+ "C": "24 Months.",
+ "D": "60 Months."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the abbreviation \"TRA\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transponder Area",
+ "B": "Temporary Reserved Airspace",
+ "C": "Terminal Area",
+ "D": "Temporary Radar Routing Area"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered when entering an RMZ?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To obtain a clearance to enter this area",
+ "B": "To permanently monitor the radio and if possible to establish radio contact",
+ "C": "To obtain a clearance from the local aviation authority",
+ "D": "The transponder has to be switched on Mode C and squawk 7000"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of an area marked as \"TMZ\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transponder Mandatory Zone",
+ "B": "Transportation Management Zone",
+ "C": "Touring Motorglider Zone",
+ "D": "Traffic Management Zone"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Two engine-driven aircraft are flying on crossing courses at the same altitude. Which one has to divert?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Both have to divert to the left",
+ "B": "The lighter one has to climb",
+ "C": "The heavier one has to climb",
+ "D": "Both have to divert to the right"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Two aeroplanes are flying on crossing tracks. Which one has to divert?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Both have to divert to the lef",
+ "B": "The aircraft which flies from left to right has the right of priority",
+ "C": "Both have to divert to the right",
+ "D": "The aircraft which flies from right to left has the right of priority"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"E\" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL75?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "8000 m",
+ "B": "1500 m",
+ "C": "3000 m",
+ "D": "5000 m"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"C\" below FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1.5 km",
+ "B": "8 km",
+ "C": "5 km",
+ "D": "10 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"C\" at and above FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1.5 km",
+ "B": "10 km",
+ "C": "5 km",
+ "D": "8 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"ceiling\" is defined as the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Height of the base of the highest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.",
+ "B": "Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 10000 ft.",
+ "C": "Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.",
+ "D": "Altitude of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A transponder with the ability to send the current pressure level is a...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transponder approved for airspace \"B\".",
+ "B": "Mode C or S transponder.",
+ "C": "Pressure-decoder.",
+ "D": "Mode A transponder."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which transponder code indicates a loss of radio communication?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "2000",
+ "B": "7600",
+ "C": "7000",
+ "D": "7700"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct phrase with respect to wake turbulence to indicate that a light aircraft is following an aircraft of a higher wake turbulence category?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Caution wake turbulence",
+ "B": "Be careful wake winds",
+ "C": "Danger jet blast",
+ "D": "Attention propwash"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information is provided in the general part (GEN) of the AIP?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces",
+ "B": "Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods",
+ "C": "Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees",
+ "D": "Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the different parts of the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "GEN MET RAC",
+ "B": "GEN AGA COM",
+ "C": "GEN COM MET",
+ "D": "GEN ENR AD"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of the signal square at an aerodrome?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed",
+ "B": "It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft",
+ "C": "Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance",
+ "D": "It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How are two parallel runways designated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The left runway gets the suffix \"L\", the right runway remains unchanged",
+ "B": "The left runway gets the suffix \"L\", the right runway \"R\"",
+ "C": "The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1",
+ "D": "The left runway gets the suffix \"-1\", the right runway \"-2\""
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which runway designators are correct for 2 parallel runways?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "\"26\" and \"26R\"",
+ "B": "\"06L\" and \"06R\"",
+ "C": "\"18\" and \"18-2\"",
+ "D": "\"24\" and \"25\""
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of this sign at an aerodrome? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right",
+ "B": "Caution, manoeuvring area is poor",
+ "C": "Glider flying is in progress",
+ "D": "Landing prohibited for a longer period"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of \"DETRESFA\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Distress phase",
+ "B": "Alerting phase",
+ "C": "Uncertainty phase",
+ "D": "Rescue phase"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Who provides search and rescue service?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Only civil organisations",
+ "B": "Both military and civil organisations",
+ "C": "Only military organisations",
+ "D": "International approved organisations"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With respect to aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories regarding aircraft occurrences?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Event Crash Disaster",
+ "B": "Event Serious event Accident",
+ "C": "Happening Event Serious event",
+ "D": "Incident Serious incident Accident"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During slope soaring you have the hill to your left side, another glider is approaching from the opposite side at the same altitude. How do you react?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "You divert to the right",
+ "B": "You expect the opposite glider to divert",
+ "C": "You divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same",
+ "D": "You pull on the elevator and divert upward"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Along with other gliders, you are circling in a thermal updraft. Who determines the direction of circling?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Circling is general to the left",
+ "B": "The glider who entered the updraft at first",
+ "C": "The glider with greatest bank angle",
+ "D": "The glider at highest altitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Is it possible to enter airspace C with a glider plane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Yes, but only with transponder activated",
+ "B": "No",
+ "C": "With restrictions, in case of less air traffic",
+ "D": "Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The holder of an SPL license or LAPL(S) license completed a total of 9 winch launches, 4 launches in aero-tow and 2 bungee launches during the last 24 months. What launch methods may the pilot conduct as PIC today?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Winch and bungee.",
+ "B": "Winch, bungee and aero-tow.",
+ "C": "Winch and aero-tow.",
+ "D": "Aero-tow and bungee."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following documents have to be on board for an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "B, c, d, e, f, g",
+ "B": "A, b, c, e, f",
+ "C": "D, f, g",
+ "D": "A, b, e, g"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"C\" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL110?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1500 m",
+ "B": "3000 m",
+ "C": "8000 m",
+ "D": "5000 m"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a flight at FL 80, the altimeter setting has to be...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Local QFE.",
+ "B": "Local QNH.",
+ "C": "1030.25 hPa.",
+ "D": "1013.25 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of the semi-circular rule?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To fly without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP",
+ "B": "To avoid collisions by suspending turning manoeuvres",
+ "C": "To avoid collisions by reducing the probability of opposing traffic at the same altitude",
+ "D": "To allow safe climbing or descending in a holding pattern"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which transponder code should be set during a radio failure without any request?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "7700",
+ "B": "7600",
+ "C": "7500",
+ "D": "7000"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which transponder code has to be set unrequested during an emergency?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "7500",
+ "B": "7700",
+ "C": "7000",
+ "D": "7600"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which air traffic service is responsible for the safe conduct of flights?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "ATC (air traffic control)",
+ "B": "AIS (aeronautical information service)",
+ "C": "ALR (alerting service)",
+ "D": "FIS (flight information service)"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which air traffic services can be expected within an FIR (flight information region)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)",
+ "B": "ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)",
+ "C": "ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)",
+ "D": "AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options states a correct position report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "DEABC reaching \"N\"",
+ "B": "DEABC, \"N\", 2500 ft",
+ "C": "DEABC over \"N\" in FL 2500 ft",
+ "D": "DEABC over \"N\" at 35"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The shown NOTAM is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE.",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.",
+ "B": "21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.",
+ "C": "21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.",
+ "D": "13/05/2013 12:00 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"aerodrome elevation\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The highest point of the apron.",
+ "B": "The lowest point of the landing area.",
+ "C": "The highest point of the landing area.",
+ "D": "The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Of what shape is a landing direction indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "T",
+ "B": "A straight arrow",
+ "C": "L",
+ "D": "An angled arrow"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is indicated by a pattern of longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions disposed symmetrically about the centerline of a runway?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At this point the glide path of an ILS hits the runway",
+ "B": "Do not touch down before them",
+ "C": "Do not touch down behind them",
+ "D": "A ground roll could be started from this position"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which validity does the \"Certificate of Airworthiness\" have?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Unlimited",
+ "B": "12 years",
+ "C": "6 months",
+ "D": "12 months"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A pilot license issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is valid in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Those countries that have accepted this license on application.",
+ "B": "The country where the license was acquired.",
+ "C": "All ICAO countries.",
+ "D": "The country where the license was issued."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the subject of ICAO Annex 1?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight crew licensing",
+ "B": "Air traffic services",
+ "C": "Rules of the air",
+ "D": "Operation of aircraft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace \"C\" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL125?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "8000 m",
+ "B": "1500 m",
+ "C": "5000 m",
+ "D": "3000 m"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the minimum distances to clouds for a VFR flight in airspace \"B\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m",
+ "B": "Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m",
+ "C": "Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m",
+ "D": "Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Being intercepted by a military aircraft at daytime, what is the meaning of the following signal: A sudden heading change of 90 degrees or more and a pull-up of the aircraft without crossing the track of the intercepted aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Follow me, i will bring you to the next suitable airfield",
+ "B": "You may continue your flight",
+ "C": "Prepare for a safety landing, you have entered a prohibited area",
+ "D": "You are entering a restricted area, leave the airspace immediately"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer is correct with regard to separation in airspace \"E\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "VFR traffic is not separated from any other traffic",
+ "B": "VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic",
+ "C": "VFR traffic is separated from VFR and IFR traffic",
+ "D": "IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a presentation of current...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "AIC information of operational significance prepared after the flight.",
+ "B": "AIP information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.",
+ "C": "NOTAM information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.",
+ "D": "ICAO information of operational significance prepared after the flight."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can a wind direction indicator be marked for better visibility?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The wind direction indicator may be mounted on top of the control tower.",
+ "B": "The wind direction indicator could be made from green materials.",
+ "C": "The wind direction indicator could be surrounded by a white circle.",
+ "D": "The wind direction indicator could be located on a big black surface."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which distances to clouds have to be maintained during a VFR flight in airpaces C, D and E?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically",
+ "B": "1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically",
+ "C": "1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically",
+ "D": "1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can a pilot confirm a search and rescue signal on ground in flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Push the rudder in both directions multiple times",
+ "B": "Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times",
+ "C": "Rock the wings",
+ "D": "Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the abbreviation \"SERA\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Selective Radar Altimeter",
+ "B": "Standardized European Rules of the Air",
+ "C": "Standard European Routes of the Air",
+ "D": "Specialized Radar Approach"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A flight is called a \"visual flight\", if the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Visibility in flight is more than 5 km.",
+ "B": "Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.",
+ "C": "Visibility in flight is more than 8 km.",
+ "D": "Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Air traffic control service is conducted by which services?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)",
+ "B": "FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)",
+ "C": "APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)",
+ "D": "TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air",
+ "B": "Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.",
+ "C": "Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.",
+ "D": "Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the primary purpose of an aircraft accident investigation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To identify the reasons and work out safety recommendations",
+ "B": "To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers",
+ "C": "To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents",
+ "D": "To Determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"runway\" is defined as a...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft",
+ "B": "Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.",
+ "C": "Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.",
+ "D": "Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A pilot can contact FIS (flight information service)...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By a personal visit.",
+ "B": "Via telephone.",
+ "C": "Via radio communication.",
+ "D": "Via internet."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the abbreviation \"VMC\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Variable meteorological conditions",
+ "B": "Visual meteorological conditions",
+ "C": "Instrument flight conditions",
+ "D": "Visual flight rules"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information is provided in the part \"AD\" of the AIP?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.",
+ "B": "Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods",
+ "C": "Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts",
+ "D": "Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "aircraft-general-knowledge": {
+ "code": "20",
+ "name": "Aircraft General Knowledge",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "How is referred to a tubular steel construction with a non self-supporting skin?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Grid construction",
+ "B": "Honeycomb structure",
+ "C": "Monocoque construction",
+ "D": "Semi-monocoque construction."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A construction made of frames and stringer with a supporting skin is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Honeycomb structure",
+ "B": "Wood- or mixed construction.",
+ "C": "Semi-monocoque construction.",
+ "D": "Grid construction."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the major components of an aircraft's tail?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rudder and ailerons",
+ "B": "Steering wheel and pedals",
+ "C": "Horizontal tail and vertical tail",
+ "D": "Ailerons and elevator"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which constructional elements give the wing its profile shape?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rips",
+ "B": "Planking",
+ "C": "Tip",
+ "D": "Spar"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the advantages of sandwich structures?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength",
+ "B": "High temperature durability and low weight",
+ "C": "High strength and good formability",
+ "D": "Good formability and high temperature durability"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The fuselage structure may be damaged by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Airspeed decreasing below a certain value.",
+ "B": "Neutralizing stick forces according to actual flight state",
+ "C": "Exceeding the manoeuvering speed in heavy gusts",
+ "D": "Stall after exceeding the maximum angle of attack."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the effect of pulling the control yoke or stick backwards?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The aircraft's tail will produce an decreased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop",
+ "B": "The aircraft's tail will produce an increased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise",
+ "C": "The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop",
+ "D": "The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of the secondary flight controls?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To improve the performance characteristics of an aircraft and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces",
+ "B": "To improve the turn characteristics of an aircraft in the low speed regime during approach and landing",
+ "C": "To enable the pilot to control the aircraft's movements about its three axes",
+ "D": "To constitute a backup system for the primary flight controls"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The trim wheel or lever in the cockpit is moved aft by the pilot. What effect does this action have on the trim tab and on the elevator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down",
+ "B": "The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up",
+ "C": "The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up",
+ "D": "The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The Pitot / static system is required to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Prevent potential static buildup on the aircraft.",
+ "B": "Measure total and static air pressure.",
+ "C": "Prevent icing of the Pitot tube.",
+ "D": "Correct the reading of the airspeed indicator to zero when the aircraft is static on the ground."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dynamic air pressure",
+ "B": "Cabin air pressure",
+ "C": "Total air pressure",
+ "D": "Static air pressure"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which is the purpose of the altimeter subscale?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To correct the altimeter reading for system errors",
+ "B": "To reference the altimeter reading to a predetermined level such as mean sea level, aerodrome level or pressure level 1013.25 hPa",
+ "C": "To set the reference level for the altitude decoder of the transponder",
+ "D": "To adjust the altimeter reading for non-standard temperature"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In which way may an altimeter subscale which is set to an incorrect QNH lead to an incorrect altimeter reading?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended",
+ "B": "If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended",
+ "C": "If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much greater heights above the ground than intended",
+ "D": "If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Lower-than-standard temperature may lead to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An altitude indication which is too high.",
+ "B": "An altitude indication which is too low.",
+ "C": "A correct altitude indication as long as the altimeter subscale is set to correct for non-standard temperature.",
+ "D": "A blockage of the Pitot tube by ice, freezing the altimeter indication to its present value."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a flight in colder-than-ISA air the indicated altitude is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Higher than the true altitude",
+ "B": "Eqal to the true altitude.",
+ "C": "Equal to the standard altitude.",
+ "D": "Lower than the true altitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The vertical speed indicator measures the difference of pressure between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The present dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure of a previous moment.",
+ "B": "The present total pressure and the total pressure of a previous moment.",
+ "C": "The present dynamic pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment",
+ "D": "The present static pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft cruises on a heading of 180° with a true airspeed of 100 kt. The wind comes from 180° with 30 kt. Neglecting instrument and position errors, which will be the approximate reading of the airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "130 kt",
+ "B": "100 kt",
+ "C": "30 kt",
+ "D": "70 kt"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following states the working principle of an airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dynamic air pressure is measured by the Pitot tube and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator",
+ "B": "Total air pressure is measured by the static ports and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator",
+ "C": "Total air pressure is measured and compared against static air pressure",
+ "D": "Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What values are usually marked with a red line on instrument displays?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Operational limits",
+ "B": "Caution areas",
+ "C": "Operational areas",
+ "D": "Recommended areas"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the mentioned cockpit instruments is connected to the pitot tube?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Direct-reading compass",
+ "B": "Altimeter",
+ "C": "Vertical speed indicator",
+ "D": "Airspeed indicator"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 270° to a heading of 360°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "270°",
+ "B": "030°",
+ "C": "360°",
+ "D": "330°"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"static pressure\" is defined as pressure...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inside the airplane cabin.",
+ "B": "Of undisturbed airflow",
+ "C": "Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.",
+ "D": "Sensed by the pitot tube."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is a cause for the dip error on the direct-reading compass?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Acceleration of the airplane",
+ "B": "Temperature variations",
+ "C": "Deviation in the cockpit",
+ "D": "Inclination of earth's magnetic field lines"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The Caution Area is marked on an airspeed indicator by what color?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Red",
+ "B": "Green",
+ "C": "White",
+ "D": "Yellow"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What difference in altitude is shown by an altimeter, if the reference pressure scale setting is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Zero",
+ "B": "80 m less than before",
+ "C": "80 m more than before",
+ "D": "Values depending on QNH"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The altimeter's reference scale is set to airfield pressure (QFE). What indication is shown during the flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude above MSL",
+ "B": "Height above airfield",
+ "C": "Airfield elevation",
+ "D": "Pressure altitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A vertical speed indicator connected to a too big equalizing tank results in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Mechanical overload",
+ "B": "No indication",
+ "C": "Indication too low",
+ "D": "Indication too high"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A vertical speed indicator measures the difference between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Total pressure and static pressure.",
+ "B": "Dynamic pressure and total pressure.",
+ "C": "Instantaneous static pressure and previous static pressure.",
+ "D": "Instantaneous total pressure and previous total pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What engines are commonly used with Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "2 plate Wankel",
+ "B": "2 Cylinder Diesel",
+ "C": "4 Cylinder 2 stroke",
+ "D": "4 Cylinder; 4 stroke"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the yellow arc on the airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cautious use of flaps or brakes to avoid overload.",
+ "B": "Speed for best glide can be found in this area.",
+ "C": "Flight only in calm weather with no gusts to avoid overload.",
+ "D": "Optimum speed while being towed behind aircraft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which levers in a glider's cockpit are indicated by the colors red, blue and green? Levers for usage of ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Gear, speed brakes and elevator trim tab.",
+ "B": "Speed brakes, cable release and elevator trim.",
+ "C": "Speed brakes, cabin hood lock and gear.",
+ "D": "Cabin hood release, speed brakes, elevator trim"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The sandwich structure consists of two...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thick layers and a light core material.",
+ "B": "Thick layers and a heavy core material.",
+ "C": "Thin layers and a light core material.",
+ "D": "Thin layers and a heavy core material"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The load factor \"n\" describes the relationship between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Weight and thrust.",
+ "B": "Drag and lift",
+ "C": "Lift and weight",
+ "D": "Thrust and drag."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the stated materials shows the highest strength?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Magnesium",
+ "B": "Carbon fiber re-inforced plastic",
+ "C": "Aluminium",
+ "D": "Wood"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "About how many axes does an aircraft move and how are these axes called?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis",
+ "B": "4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed",
+ "C": "3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis",
+ "D": "4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How are the flight controls on a small single-engine piston aircraft normally controlled and actuated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Manually through rods and control cables",
+ "B": "Hydraulically through hydraulic pumps and actuators",
+ "C": "Electrically through fly-by-wire",
+ "D": "Power-assisted through hydraulic pumps or electric motors"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options states all primary flight controls of an aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flaps, slats, speedbrakes",
+ "B": "Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift wing devices, power controls",
+ "C": "Elevator, rudder, aileron",
+ "D": "All movable parts on the aircraft which aid in controlling the aircraft"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A true altitude is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.",
+ "B": "A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.",
+ "C": "An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.",
+ "D": "A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a flight in an air mass with a temperature equal to ISA and the QNH set correctly, the indicated altitude is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lower than the true altitude.",
+ "B": "Equal to the standard atmosphere.",
+ "C": "Higher than the true altitude.",
+ "D": "Equal to the true altitude."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which instrument can be affected by the hysteresis error?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Direct reading compass",
+ "B": "Tachometer",
+ "C": "Vertical speed indicator",
+ "D": "Altimeter"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options states the working principle of a vertical speed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Measuring the present static air pressure and comparing it to the static air pressure inside a reservoir",
+ "B": "Measuring the vertical acceleration through the displacement of a gimbal-mounted mass",
+ "C": "Total air pressure is measured and compared to static pressure",
+ "D": "Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the red range on the airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Speed which must not be exceeded regardless of circumstances",
+ "B": "Speed which must not be exceeded within bumpy air",
+ "C": "Speed which must not be exceeded with flaps extended",
+ "D": "Speed which must not be exceeded in turns with more than 45° bank"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 030° to a heading of 180°. At approximately which indicated magnetic heading should the turn be terminated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "150°",
+ "B": "180°",
+ "C": "360°",
+ "D": "210°."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An energy-compensated vertical speed inicator (VSI) shows during stationary glide the vertical speed...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Of the glider through surrounding air",
+ "B": "Of the airmass flown through.",
+ "C": "Of the glider plus movement of the air",
+ "D": "Of the glider minus movement of the air."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a right turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Less bank, less rudder in turn direction",
+ "B": "Less bank, more rudder in turn direction",
+ "C": "More bank, less rudder in turn direction",
+ "D": "More bank, more rudder in turn direction"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What kind of defect results in loss of airworthiness of an airplane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dirty wing leading edge",
+ "B": "Crack in the cabin hood plastic",
+ "C": "Scratch on the outer painting",
+ "D": "Damage to load-bearing parts"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The mass loaded on the plane is lower than the minimum load required by the load sheet. What action has to be taken?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Trim aircraft to \"pitch down\"",
+ "B": "Change pilot seat position",
+ "C": "Change incident angle of elevator",
+ "D": "Load ballast weight up to minimum load"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Water ballast increases wing load by 40%. By what percentage does the minimum speed of the glider plane increase?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "100%",
+ "B": "40%",
+ "C": "200%",
+ "D": "18%"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The maximium load according load sheet has been exceeded. What action has to be taken?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increase speed by 15%",
+ "B": "Reduce load",
+ "C": "Trim \"pitch-down\"",
+ "D": "Trim \"pitch-up\""
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is referred to as torsion-stiffed leading edge?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces.",
+ "B": "Special shape of the leading edge.",
+ "C": "The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.",
+ "D": "Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Information about maxmimum allowed airspeeds can be found where?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR",
+ "B": "POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator",
+ "C": "POH and posting in briefing room",
+ "D": "POH, Cockpit panel, airspeed indicator"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The thickness of the wing is defined as the distance between the lower and the upper side of the wing at the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thinnest part of the wing.",
+ "B": "Most inner part of the wing.",
+ "C": "Thickest part of the wing.",
+ "D": "Most outer part of the wing"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Primary fuselage structures of wood or metal planes are usually made up by what components?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Covers, stringers and forming parts",
+ "B": "Frames and stringer",
+ "C": "Girders, rips and stringers",
+ "D": "Rips, frames and covers"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The measurement of altitude is based on the change of the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Static pressure.",
+ "B": "Dynamic pressure.",
+ "C": "Total pressure.",
+ "D": "Differential pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is necessary for the determination of speed (IAS) by the airspeed indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The difference between the total pressure and the dynamic pressure",
+ "B": "The difference between the dynamic pressure and the static pressure",
+ "C": "The difference between the standard pressure and the total pressure",
+ "D": "The difference betweeen the total pressure and the static presssure"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 360° to a heading of 270°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "360°",
+ "B": "270°",
+ "C": "240°",
+ "D": "300°"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The airspeed indicator is unservicable. The airplane may only be operated...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "If no maintenance organisation is around.",
+ "B": "If only airfield patterns are flown",
+ "C": "When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.",
+ "D": "When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a left turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "More bank, less rudder in turn direction",
+ "B": "Less bank, more rudder in turn direction",
+ "C": "Less bank, less rudder in turn direction",
+ "D": "More bank, more rudder in turn direction"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of winglets?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To increase efficiency of aspect ratio.",
+ "B": "Reduction of induced drag.",
+ "C": "Increase gliging performance at high speed.",
+ "D": "Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A glider's trim lever is used to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduce stick force on the elevator.",
+ "B": "Reduce stick force on the ailerons.",
+ "C": "Reduce stick force on the rudder.",
+ "D": "Reduce the adverse yaw."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the primary and the secondary effects of a rudder input to the left?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the left",
+ "B": "Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the left",
+ "C": "Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the right",
+ "D": "Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the right"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When trimming an aircraft nose up, in which direction does the trim tab move?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It moves down",
+ "B": "In direction of rudder deflection",
+ "C": "It moves up",
+ "D": "Depends on CG position"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The trim is used to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Adapt the control force.",
+ "B": "Increase adverse yaw.",
+ "C": "Move the centre of gravity",
+ "D": "Lock control elements."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "QFE is the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude above the reference pressure level 1013.25 hPa.",
+ "B": "Magnetic bearing to a station.",
+ "C": "Barometric pressure adjusted to sea level, using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).",
+ "D": "Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The compass error caused by the aircraft's magnetic field is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inclination",
+ "B": "Variation.",
+ "C": "Deviation",
+ "D": "Declination."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which cockpit instruments are connected to the static port?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, slip indicator",
+ "B": "Airspeed indicator, altimeter, direct-reading compass",
+ "C": "Altimeter, slip indicator, navigational computer",
+ "D": "Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, airspeed indicator"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the dynamic pressure depend directly on?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lift- and drag coefficient",
+ "B": "Air density and airflow speed squared",
+ "C": "Air density and lift coefficient",
+ "D": "Air pressure and air temperature"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Airspeed indicator, altimeter and vertical speed indicator all show incorrect indications at the same time. What error can be the cause?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Blocking of static pressure lines.",
+ "B": "Leakage in compensation vessel.",
+ "C": "Blocking of pitot tube",
+ "D": "Failure of the electrical system."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A movement around the longitudinal axis is primarily initiated by the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Elevator.",
+ "B": "Ailerons.",
+ "C": "Trim tab.",
+ "D": "Rudder"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A flight level is a...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "True altitude.",
+ "B": "Altitude above ground.",
+ "C": "Density altitude.",
+ "D": "Pressure altitude."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The indication of a magnetic compass deviates from magnetic north direction due to what errors?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field",
+ "B": "Gravity and magnetism",
+ "C": "Deviation, turning and acceleration errors",
+ "D": "Variation, turning and acceleration errors"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When is it necessary to adjust the pressure in the reference scale of an alitimeter?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After maintance has been finished",
+ "B": "Every day before the first flight",
+ "C": "Once a month before flight operation",
+ "D": "Before every flight and during cross country flights"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"inclination\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Deviation induced by electrical fields.",
+ "B": "Angle between magnetic and true north",
+ "C": "Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.",
+ "D": "Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With decreasing air density the airflow speed increases at stall speed (TAS) and vice verca. How has a final approach to be conducted on a hot summer day?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "With increased speed indication (IAS)",
+ "B": "With unchanged speed indication (IAS)",
+ "C": "With decreased speed indication (IAS)",
+ "D": "With additional speed according POH"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 74
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "flight-performance-and-planning": {
+ "code": "30",
+ "name": "Flight Performance and Planning",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.",
+ "B": "Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.",
+ "C": "Exceptionally permissible to avoid delays",
+ "D": "Not permissible and essentially dangerous"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The center of gravity has to be located...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Behind the rear C.G. limit",
+ "B": "In front of the front C.G. limit.",
+ "C": "Right of the lateral C. G. limit.",
+ "D": "Between the front and the rear C.G. limit."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft must be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum permissible airspeed during a descent",
+ "B": "Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.",
+ "C": "That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.",
+ "D": "That the aircraft does not stall."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By weighing.",
+ "B": "By calculation.",
+ "C": "For one aircraft of a type only, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position",
+ "D": "Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Baggage and cargo must be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.",
+ "B": "Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.",
+ "C": "Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.",
+ "D": "Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stagnation point.",
+ "B": "Center of pressure.",
+ "C": "Neutral point.",
+ "D": "Center of gravity"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"center of gravity\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Another designation for the neutral point.",
+ "B": "The heaviest point on an aeroplane.",
+ "C": "Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.",
+ "D": "Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The center of gravity (CG) defines...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The product of mass and balance arm",
+ "B": "The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.",
+ "C": "The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.",
+ "D": "The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"moment\" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sum of a mass and a balance arm.",
+ "B": "Difference of a mass and a balance arm.",
+ "C": "Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.",
+ "D": "Product of a mass and a balance arm."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"balance arm\" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Distance of a mass from the center of gravity",
+ "B": "Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.",
+ "C": "Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.",
+ "D": "Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lever.",
+ "B": "Torque.",
+ "C": "Span width.",
+ "D": "Balance arm."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The balance arm is the horizontal distance between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.",
+ "B": "The front C.G. limit and the datum line",
+ "C": "The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.",
+ "D": "The C.G. of a mass and the datum line."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Certificate of airworthiness",
+ "B": "Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.",
+ "C": "Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.",
+ "D": "Documentation of the annual inspection."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Limitations",
+ "B": "Normal procedures",
+ "C": "Weight and balance",
+ "D": "Performance"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which factor shortens landing distance?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Heavy rain",
+ "B": "High pressure altitude",
+ "C": "High density altitude",
+ "D": "Strong head wind"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.",
+ "B": "Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.",
+ "C": "Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.",
+ "D": "Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle of descent is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].",
+ "B": "The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].",
+ "C": "The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].",
+ "D": "The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°]."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of \"interception lines\" in visual navigation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation",
+ "B": "They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima",
+ "C": "To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight",
+ "D": "To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1.500 ft GND.",
+ "B": "1 500 ft MSL.",
+ "C": "1 500 m MSL.",
+ "D": "FL150."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1.500 ft AGL",
+ "B": "4.500 ft AGL.",
+ "C": "4.500 ft MSL",
+ "D": "1.500 ft MSL."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude 9500 ft MSL",
+ "B": "Flight Level 95",
+ "C": "Altitude 9500 m MSL",
+ "D": "Height 9500 ft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What must be considered for cross-border flights?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transmission of hazard reports",
+ "B": "Requires flight plans",
+ "C": "Regular location messages",
+ "D": "Approved exceptions"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Search and Rescue Service (SAR).",
+ "B": "Flight Information Service (FIS).",
+ "C": "Next airport operator en-route.",
+ "D": "Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure should be avoided enroute?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stone quarries and large sand areas",
+ "B": "Highways, railroad tracks and channels.",
+ "C": "Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas",
+ "D": "Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point should be taken ... (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "As low as possible.",
+ "B": "As steep as possible.",
+ "C": "As high as possible.",
+ "D": "With as less bank as possible"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "For weakening thermals due to the progressing time",
+ "B": "For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases",
+ "C": "For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time",
+ "D": "For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "(For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "B",
+ "B": "D",
+ "C": "A",
+ "D": "C"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "(For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "B",
+ "B": "C",
+ "C": "A",
+ "D": "D"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "(For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "D",
+ "B": "C",
+ "C": "B",
+ "D": "A"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "30 km",
+ "B": "45 NM",
+ "C": "45 km",
+ "D": "81 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "human-performance-and-limitations": {
+ "code": "40",
+ "name": "Human Performance and Limitations",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "The \"swiss cheese model\" can be used to explain the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "State of readiness of a pilot.",
+ "B": "Procedure for an emergency landing.",
+ "C": "Optimal problem solution.",
+ "D": "Error chain."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "78 %",
+ "B": "12 %",
+ "C": "21 %",
+ "D": "18.9 %"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "21 %",
+ "B": "78 %",
+ "C": "0.1 %",
+ "D": "1 %"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "18000 ft",
+ "B": "22000 ft",
+ "C": "10000 ft",
+ "D": "5000 ft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the term \"Red-out\" mean?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "\"Red vision\" during negative g-loads",
+ "B": "Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset",
+ "C": "Anaemia caused by an injury",
+ "D": "Rash during decompression sickness"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following symptoms may indicate hypoxia?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Joint pain in knees and feet",
+ "B": "Muscle cramps in the upper body area",
+ "C": "Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails",
+ "D": "Blue marks all over the body"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "2000 feet",
+ "B": "10000 feet",
+ "C": "12000 feet",
+ "D": "7000 feet"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Blood coagulation",
+ "B": "Blood sugar regulation",
+ "C": "Oxygen transport",
+ "D": "Immune defense"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Oxygen transport",
+ "B": "Blood sugar regulation",
+ "C": "Immune defense",
+ "D": "Blood coagulation"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed",
+ "B": "Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank",
+ "C": "Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets",
+ "D": "Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Critical nervous system",
+ "B": "Autonomic nervous system",
+ "C": "Automatical nervous system",
+ "D": "Compliant nervous system"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Curved sidepiece",
+ "B": "Non-polarised",
+ "C": "Unbreakable",
+ "D": "No UV filter"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inner ear.",
+ "B": "Eardrum.",
+ "C": "Cochlea.",
+ "D": "Eustachian tube."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Starting a climb.",
+ "B": "Steady turning in the same direction as before.",
+ "C": "Turning into the opposite direction.",
+ "D": "Starting a descent."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Non-accelerated straight and level flight",
+ "B": "Head movements during turns",
+ "C": "Turbulence in level flight",
+ "D": "Flying under the influence of alcohol"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope",
+ "B": "The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed",
+ "C": "The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed",
+ "D": "The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An undershoot",
+ "B": "A landing beside the centerline",
+ "C": "An overshoot",
+ "D": "A hard landing"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Visual illusions are mostly caused by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Binocular vision.",
+ "B": "Colour blindness.",
+ "C": "Rapid eye movements.",
+ "D": "Misinterpretation of the brain."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0.01 percent.",
+ "B": "0.03 percent.",
+ "C": "0.1 percent.",
+ "D": "0.3 percent."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A risk factor for decompression sickness is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sports.",
+ "B": "100 % oxygen after decompression.",
+ "C": "Scuba diving prior to flight.",
+ "D": "Smoking."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds",
+ "B": "It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes",
+ "C": "It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds",
+ "D": "It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "3 to 7 seconds",
+ "B": "10 to 20 seconds",
+ "C": "35 to 50 seconds",
+ "D": "30 to 40 seconds"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Situational thinking.",
+ "B": "Situational awareness.",
+ "C": "Anticipatory check procedure.",
+ "D": "Constant flight check."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Due to group-dynamic effects",
+ "B": "If there is not enough information available",
+ "C": "During check flights due to a high level of nervousness",
+ "D": "During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which dangerous attitudes are often combined?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Invulnerability and self-abandonment",
+ "B": "Self-abandonment and macho",
+ "C": "Macho and invulnerability",
+ "D": "Impulsivity and carefulness"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Complacency is a risk due to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increased cockpit automation.",
+ "B": "The high error rate of technical systems.",
+ "C": "The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.",
+ "D": "Better training options for young pilots."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Point B",
+ "B": "Point C",
+ "C": "Point D",
+ "D": "Point A"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".1, 2, 3",
+ "B": ".2, 4",
+ "C": "1",
+ "D": "1, 2, 3, 4"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer is correct concerning stress?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner",
+ "B": "Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety",
+ "C": "Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem",
+ "D": "Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "There is no time for solving problems during flight",
+ "B": "Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook",
+ "C": "Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying",
+ "D": "Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The majority of aviation accidents are caused by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Technical failure.",
+ "B": "Meteorological influences.",
+ "C": "Human failure.",
+ "D": "Geographical influences."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. What is the approximate percentage of other gases?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "21 %",
+ "B": "1 %",
+ "C": "78 %",
+ "D": "0.1 %"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Alcohol.",
+ "B": "Unhealthy food.",
+ "C": "Little sleep.",
+ "D": "Smoking."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cyanose",
+ "B": "Disturbance of consciousness",
+ "C": "Spasm",
+ "D": "Tingling"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The oltfactory perception (smell)",
+ "B": "The tactile perception (sense of touch)",
+ "C": "The auditory perception (hearing)",
+ "D": "The visual perception (vision)"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Immune defense",
+ "B": "Blood coagulation",
+ "C": "Oxygen transport",
+ "D": "Blood sugar regulation"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Blood donation",
+ "B": "Smoking",
+ "C": "Menstruation",
+ "D": "Diving"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The occurence of a vertigo is most likely when moving the head...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During a turn.",
+ "B": "During a straight horizontal flight.",
+ "C": "During a climb.",
+ "D": "During a descent."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sleep deficiency",
+ "B": "Overweight",
+ "C": "Smoking",
+ "D": "Alcohol consumption"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is a latent error?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An error which only has consequences after landing",
+ "B": "An error which has an immediate effect on the controls",
+ "C": "An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously",
+ "D": "An error which remains undetected in the system for a long time"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By the use of proper headsets",
+ "B": "By a particular frequency allocation",
+ "C": "By the use of radio phraseology",
+ "D": "By using radios certified for aviation use only"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which factor can lead to human error?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Proper use of checklists",
+ "B": "The bias to see what we expect to see",
+ "C": "Double check of relevant actions",
+ "D": "To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Point B",
+ "B": "Point C",
+ "C": "Point A",
+ "D": "Point D"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following is responsible for the blood coagulation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Capillaries of the arteries",
+ "B": "Red blood cells (erythrocytes)",
+ "C": "Blood plates (thrombocytes)",
+ "D": "White blood cells (leucocytes)"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During a light and slow climb",
+ "B": "Breathing takes place using the mouth only",
+ "C": "All windows are completely closed",
+ "D": "The eustachien tube is blocked"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A Grey-out is the result of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Hyperventilation.",
+ "B": "Tiredness.",
+ "C": "Hypoxia.",
+ "D": "Positive g-forces."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Introverted - stable",
+ "B": "Introverted - unstable",
+ "C": "Extroverted - stable",
+ "D": "Extroverted - unstable"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduction",
+ "B": "Coherence",
+ "C": "Virulence",
+ "D": "Reflex"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the parallax error?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision",
+ "B": "Misperception of speed during taxiing",
+ "C": "Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night",
+ "D": "A decoding error in communication between pilots"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce",
+ "B": "Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept",
+ "C": "Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer",
+ "D": "Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "5000 feet",
+ "B": "22000 feet",
+ "C": "12000 feet",
+ "D": "7000 feet"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is an indication for a macho attitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground",
+ "B": "Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations",
+ "C": "Quick resignation in complex and critical situations",
+ "D": "Careful walkaround procedure"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "meteorology": {
+ "code": "50",
+ "name": "Meteorology",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "What clouds and weather may result from an humid and instable air mass, that is pushed against a chain of mountains by the predominant wind and forced to rise?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.",
+ "B": "Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).",
+ "C": "Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.",
+ "D": "Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"trigger temperature\" is defined as the temperature which...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Is reached by a thermal lift during ascend when formation of Cumulus clouds begins.",
+ "B": "Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud.",
+ "C": "Is the minimum temperature at ground level that has to be reached so formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud can occur.",
+ "D": "Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What situation is called \"over-development\" in a weather report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon",
+ "B": "Development of a thermal low to a storm depression",
+ "C": "Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers",
+ "D": "Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The gliding weather report states environmental instability. At morning, dew covers gras and no thermals are presently active. What development can be expected for thermal activity?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity during the following day",
+ "B": "With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin",
+ "C": "Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will be generated",
+ "D": "After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion thermal activity is likely to begin"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Weather phenomena are most common to be found in which atmospheric layer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Tropopause",
+ "B": "Stratosphere",
+ "C": "Thermosphere",
+ "D": "Troposphere"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"tropopause\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.",
+ "B": "The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.",
+ "C": "The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.",
+ "D": "The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is meant by \"inversion layer\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height",
+ "B": "An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height",
+ "C": "An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height",
+ "D": "A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which process may result in an inversion layer at about 5000 ft (1500 m) height?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ground cooling by radiation during the night",
+ "B": "Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day",
+ "C": "Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere",
+ "D": "Widespread descending air within a high pressure area"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The movement of air flowing apart is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Convergence.",
+ "B": "Concordence.",
+ "C": "Subsidence.",
+ "D": "Divergence."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather development will result from convergence at ground level?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ascending air and cloud formation",
+ "B": "Descending air and cloud dissipation",
+ "C": "Ascending air and cloud dissipation",
+ "D": "Descending air and cloud formation"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When air masses meet each other head on, how is this referred to and what air movements will follow?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Convergence resulting in air being lifted",
+ "B": "Divergence resulting in air being lifted",
+ "C": "Divergence resulting in sinking air",
+ "D": "Divergence resulting in sinking air"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What type of turbulence is typically found close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Clear-air turbulence (CAT)",
+ "B": "Inversion turbulence",
+ "C": "Turbulence in rotors",
+ "D": "Thermal turbulence"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer contains every state of water found in the atmosphere?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Liquid, solid, and gaseous",
+ "B": "Liquid",
+ "C": "Gaseous and liquid",
+ "D": "Liquid and solid"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How do dew point and relative humidity change with decreasing temperature?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases",
+ "B": "Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases",
+ "C": "Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases",
+ "D": "Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The \"spread\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Difference between actual temperature and dew point.",
+ "B": "Difference between dew point and condensation point.",
+ "C": "Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air",
+ "D": "Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which conditions are likely for the formation of advection fog?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Warm, humid air cools during a cloudy night",
+ "B": "Cold, humid air moves over a warm ocean",
+ "C": "Humidity evaporates from warm, humid ground into cold air",
+ "D": "Warm, humid air moves over a cold surface"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What process results in the formation of \"advection fog\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cold, moist air is being moved across warm ground areas",
+ "B": "Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air",
+ "C": "Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds",
+ "D": "Warm, moist air is moved across cold ground areas"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pressure pattern can be observed when a cold front is passing?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Continually increasing pressure",
+ "B": "Shortly decreasing, thereafter increasing pressure",
+ "C": "Continually decreasing pressure",
+ "D": "Constant pressure pattern"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What frontal line divides subtropical air from polar cold air, in particular across Central Europe?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Warm front",
+ "B": "Cold front",
+ "C": "Occlusion",
+ "D": "Polar front"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions in Central Europe are typically found in high pressure areas during summer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Large isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems",
+ "B": "Small isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems",
+ "C": "Large isobar spacing with strong prevailing westerly winds",
+ "D": "Small isobar spacing with strong prevailing northerly winds"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during winter?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog",
+ "B": "Changing weather with passing of frontal lines",
+ "C": "Squall lines and thunderstorms",
+ "D": "Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What temperatures are most dangerous with respect to airframe icing?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".+20° to -5° C",
+ "B": ".-20° to -40° C",
+ "C": ".+5° to -10° C",
+ "D": "0° to -12° C"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which type of ice forms by large, supercooled droplets hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Hoar frost",
+ "B": "Clear ice",
+ "C": "Rime ice",
+ "D": "Mixed ice"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What conditions are mandatory for the formation of thermal thunderstorms?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity",
+ "B": "Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and low humidity",
+ "C": "Conditionally unstable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity",
+ "D": "Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which stage of a thunderstorm is dominated by updrafts?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dissipating stage",
+ "B": "Mature stage",
+ "C": "Cumulus stage",
+ "D": "Upwind stage"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear close to the ground can be expected...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Near the rainfall areas of heavy showers or thunderstorms.",
+ "B": "During approach to an airfield at the coast with a strong sea breeze.",
+ "C": "During cold, clear nights with the formation of radiation fog.",
+ "D": "During warm summer days with high, flatted Cu clouds."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which weather chart shows the actual air pressure as in MSL along with pressure centers and fronts?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind chart",
+ "B": "Surface weather chart",
+ "C": "Prognostic chart",
+ "D": "Hypsometric chart"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information can be obtained from satallite images?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Overview of cloud covers and front lines",
+ "B": "Turbulence and icing",
+ "C": "Temperature and dew point of environmental air",
+ "D": "Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information can be found in the ATIS, but not in a METAR?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Operational information such as runway in use and transition level",
+ "B": "Information about current weather, for example types of precipitation",
+ "C": "Approach information, such as ground visibility and cloud base",
+ "D": "Information about mean wind speeds, maximum speeds in gusts if applicable"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What type of cloud indicates thermal updrafts?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stratus",
+ "B": "Cirrus",
+ "C": "Cumulus",
+ "D": "Lenticularis"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What situation is referred to as \"shielding\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ns clouds, covering the windward side of a mountain range",
+ "B": "High or mid-level cloud layers, impairing thermal activity",
+ "C": "Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud",
+ "D": "Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eights of the sky"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is meant by \"isothermal layer\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height",
+ "B": "An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height",
+ "C": "A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere",
+ "D": "An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.",
+ "B": "QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.",
+ "C": "QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.",
+ "D": "QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The barometric altimeter with QFE setting indicates...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "True altitude above MSL.",
+ "B": "Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.",
+ "C": "Height above MSL.",
+ "D": "Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What process causes latent heat being released into the upper troposphere?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cloud forming due to condensation",
+ "B": "Descending air across widespread areas",
+ "C": "Evaporation over widespread water areas",
+ "D": "Stabilisation of inflowing air masses"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The saturated adiabatic lapse rate is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.",
+ "B": "Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.",
+ "C": "Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.",
+ "D": "Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The dry adiabatic lapse rate has a value of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0,65° C / 100 m.",
+ "B": "1,0° C / 100 m.",
+ "C": "2° / 1000 ft.",
+ "D": "0,6° C / 100 m."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions may be expected during conditionally unstable conditions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Towering cumulus, isolated showers of rain or thunderstorms",
+ "B": "Layered clouds up to high levels, prolonged rain or snow",
+ "C": "Sky clear of clouds, sunshine, low winds",
+ "D": "Shallow cumulus clouds with base at medium levels"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altocumulus",
+ "B": "Cirrus",
+ "C": "Cumulus",
+ "D": "Stratus"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The formation of medium to large precipitation particles requires...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Strong updrafts.",
+ "B": "An inversion layer.",
+ "C": "A high cloud base.",
+ "D": "Strong wind."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The symbol labeled (2) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Front aloft.",
+ "B": "Cold front.",
+ "C": "Occlusion.",
+ "D": "Warm front."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What visual flight conditions can be expected within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer time?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Good visibility, some isolated high clouds",
+ "B": "Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds",
+ "C": "Visibilty less than 1000 m, cloud-covered ground",
+ "D": "Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What visual flight conditions can be expected after the passage of a cold front?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Good visiblity, formation of cumulus clouds with showers of rain or snow",
+ "B": "Poor visibility, formation of overcast or ground-covering stratus clouds, snow",
+ "C": "Scattered cloud layers, visbility more than 5 km, formation of shallow cumulus clouds",
+ "D": "Medium visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the usual direction of movement of a polar front low?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Parallel to the the warm-sector isobars",
+ "B": "To the northeast during winter, to the southeast during summer",
+ "C": "Parallel to the warm front line to the south",
+ "D": "To the northwest during winter, to the southwest during summer"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pressure pattern can be observed during the passage of a polar front low?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rising pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front",
+ "B": "Rising pressure in front of the warm front, rising pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front",
+ "C": "Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front",
+ "D": "Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What change of wind direction can be expected during the passage of a polar front low in Central Europe?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Backing wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front",
+ "B": "Veering wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front",
+ "C": "Veering wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front",
+ "D": "Backing wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pressure pattern may result from cold-air inflow in high tropospheric layers?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Alternating pressure",
+ "B": "Formation of a large ground low",
+ "C": "Formation of a high in the upper troposphere",
+ "D": "Formation of a low in the upper troposphere"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Cold air inflow in high tropospheric layers may result in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Showers and thunderstorms.",
+ "B": "Frontal weather.",
+ "C": "Calm weather and cloud dissipation",
+ "D": "Stabilisation and calm weather."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How does inflowing cold air affect the shape and vertical distance between pressure layers?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)",
+ "B": "Decreasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)",
+ "C": "Decrease in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)",
+ "D": "Increase in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during summer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu",
+ "B": "Changing weather with passing of frontal lines",
+ "C": "Squall lines and thunderstorms",
+ "D": "Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather conditions can be expected during \"Foehn\" on the windward side of a mountain range?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate or heavy rain",
+ "B": "Dissipating clouds with unusual warming, accompanied by strong, gusty winds",
+ "C": "Calm wind and forming of high stratus clouds (high fog)",
+ "D": "Scattered cumulus clouds with showers and thunderstorms"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What chart shows areas of precipitation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Satellite picture",
+ "B": "Wind chart",
+ "C": "Radar picture",
+ "D": "GAFOR"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An inversion is a layer ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "With constant temperature with increasing height",
+ "B": "With increasing pressure with increasing height.",
+ "C": "With increasing temperature with increasing height.",
+ "D": "With decreasing temperature with increasing height."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"beginning of thermals\" refers to the moment when thermal intensity...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.",
+ "B": "Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.",
+ "C": "Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.",
+ "D": "Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the mass of a \"cube of air\" with the edges 1 m long, at MSL according ISA?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0,01225 kg",
+ "B": "0,1225 kg",
+ "C": "12,25 kg",
+ "D": "1,225 kg"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The temperature lapse rate with increasing height within the troposphere according ISA is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1° C / 100 m.",
+ "B": "0,6° C / 100 m.",
+ "C": "0,65° C / 100 m.",
+ "D": "3° C / 100 m."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An inversion layer close to the ground can be caused by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thickening of clouds in medium layers.",
+ "B": "Large-scale lifting of air",
+ "C": "Intensifying and gusting winds.",
+ "D": "Ground cooling during the night."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the air masses that Central Europe is mainly influenced by?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Arctic and polar cold air",
+ "B": "Tropical and arctic cold air",
+ "C": "Equatorial and tropical warm air",
+ "D": "Polar cold air and tropical warm air"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How do spread and relative humidity change with increasing temperature?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases",
+ "B": "Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases",
+ "C": "Spread increases, relative humidity decreases",
+ "D": "Spread increases, relative humidity increases"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.",
+ "B": "Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.",
+ "C": "Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.",
+ "D": "Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What condition may prevent the formation of \"radiation fog\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calm wind",
+ "B": "Clear night, no clouds",
+ "C": "Low spread",
+ "D": "Overcast cloud cover"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The symbol labeled (3) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cold front.",
+ "B": "Warm front.",
+ "C": "Front aloft.",
+ "D": "Occlusion."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass showing no horizontal displacement is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cold front.",
+ "B": "Warm front.",
+ "C": "Stationary front.",
+ "D": "Occluded front."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What situation may result in the occurrence of severe wind shear?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flying ahead of a warm front with visible Ci clouds",
+ "B": "Cross-country flying below Cu clouds with about 4 octas coverage",
+ "C": "During final approach, 30 min after a heavy shower has passed the airfield",
+ "D": "When a shower is visible close to the airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What kind of reduction in visibility is not very sensitive to changes in temperature?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Radiation fog (FG)",
+ "B": "Mist (BR)",
+ "C": "Patches of fog (BCFG)",
+ "D": "Haze (HZ)"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In a METAR, \"(moderate) showers of rain\" are designated by the identifier...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".+TSRA",
+ "B": "SHRA.",
+ "C": "TS.",
+ "D": ".+RA."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "SIGMET warnings are issued for...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Specific routings.",
+ "B": "Countries.",
+ "C": "FIRs / UIRs.",
+ "D": "Airports."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Mountain side updrafts can be intensified by ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Solar irradiation on the lee side",
+ "B": "Thermal radiation of the windward side during the night",
+ "C": "Solar irradiation on the windward side",
+ "D": "By warming of upper atmospheric layers"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending from north to south, moving east. Concerning the weather situation, what decision would be recommendable?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To change plans and start the triangle heading east",
+ "B": "To postpone the flight to another day",
+ "C": "To plan the flight below cloud base of the thunderstorms",
+ "D": "During flight, to look for spacing between thunderstorms"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "At what rate does the temperature change with increasing height according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) within the troposphere?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft",
+ "B": "Increases by 2° C / 100 m",
+ "C": "Decreases by 2° C / 100 m",
+ "D": "Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Temperatures will be given by meteorological aviation services in Europe in which unit?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Gpdam",
+ "B": "Kelvin",
+ "C": "Degrees Centigrade (° C)",
+ "D": "Degrees Fahrenheit"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The pressure at MSL in ISA conditions is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1013.25 hPa.",
+ "B": "113.25 hPa.",
+ "C": "15 hPa.",
+ "D": "1123 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can wind speed and wind direction be derived from surface weather charts?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By alignment and distance of isobaric lines",
+ "B": "By annotations from the text part of the chart",
+ "C": "By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines",
+ "D": "By alignment of lines of warm- and cold fronts."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Light turbulence always has to be expected...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.",
+ "B": "Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.",
+ "C": "When entering inversions.",
+ "D": "Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 74
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Moderate to severe turbulence has to be expected...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.",
+ "B": "Overhead unbroken cloud layers.",
+ "C": "On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.",
+ "D": "With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog)."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 75
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Clouds in high layers are referred to as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cirro-.",
+ "B": "Strato-.",
+ "C": "Nimbo-.",
+ "D": "Alto-."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 76
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What factor may affect the top of cumulus clouds?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The spread",
+ "B": "Relative humidity",
+ "C": "The absolute humidity",
+ "D": "The presence of an inversion layer"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 77
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What factors may indicate a tendency to fog formation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Strong winds, decreasing temperature",
+ "B": "Low spread, decreasing temperature",
+ "C": "Low pressure, increasing temperature",
+ "D": "Low spread, increasing temperature"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 78
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What process results in the formation of \"orographic fog\" (\"hill fog\")?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds",
+ "B": "Warm, moist air is moved across a hill or a mountain range",
+ "C": "Evaporation from warm, moist ground area into very cold air",
+ "D": "Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 79
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What factors are required for the formation of precipitation in clouds?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The presence of an inversion layer",
+ "B": "Moderate to strong updrafts",
+ "C": "Calm winds and intensive sunlight insolation",
+ "D": "High humidity and high temperatures"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 80
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What wind conditions can be expected in areas showing large distances between isobars?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering",
+ "B": "Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing",
+ "C": "Formation of local wind systems with strong prevailing westerly winds",
+ "D": "Variable winds, formation of local wind systems"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 81
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Under which conditions \"back side weather\" (\"Rückseitenwetter\") can be expected?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After passing of a cold front",
+ "B": "Before passing of an occlusion",
+ "C": "During Foehn at the lee side",
+ "D": "After passing of a warm front"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 82
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What wind is reportet as 225/15 ?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "North-east wind with 15 kt",
+ "B": "South-west wind with 15 kt",
+ "C": "South-west wind with 15 km/h",
+ "D": "North-east wind with 15 km/h"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 83
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather is likely to be experienced during \"Foehn\" in the Bavarian area close to the alps?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cold, humid downhill wind on the lee side of the alps, flat pressure pattern",
+ "B": "Nimbostratus cloud in the southern alps, rotor clouds at the lee side, warm and dry wind",
+ "C": "High pressure area overhead Biskaya and low pressure area in Eastern Europe",
+ "D": "Nimbostratus cloud in the northern alps, rotor clouds at the windward side, warm and dry wind"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 84
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phenomenon is referred to as \"blue thermals\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage",
+ "B": "Descending air between Cumulus clouds",
+ "C": "Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds",
+ "D": "Thermals without formation of Cu clouds"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 85
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What change in thermal activity may be expected with cirrus clouds coming up from one direction and becoming more dense, blocking the sun?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity",
+ "B": "Cirrus clouds indicate an high-level inversion with thermal activity ongoing up to that level",
+ "C": "Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.",
+ "D": "Cirrus clouds indicate instability and beginning of over-development"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 86
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The barometric altimeter with QNH setting indicates...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "True altitude above MSL.",
+ "B": "Height above MSL",
+ "C": "Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.",
+ "D": "Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 87
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.",
+ "B": "Perpendicular to the isobars.",
+ "C": "Parallel to the isobars.",
+ "D": "Perpendicular to the isohypses."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 88
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Clouds are basically distinguished by what types?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Thunderstorm and shower clouds",
+ "B": "Cumulus and stratiform clouds",
+ "C": "Stratiform and ice clouds",
+ "D": "Layered and lifted clouds"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 89
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What weather phenomenon designated by \"2\" has to be expected on the lee side during \"Foehn\" conditions? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Cumulonimbus",
+ "B": "Cumulonimbus",
+ "C": "Altocumulus lenticularis",
+ "D": "Altocumulus Castellanus"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 90
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which type of ice forms by very small water droplets and ice crystals hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rime ice",
+ "B": "Clear ice",
+ "C": "Mixed ice",
+ "D": "Hoar frost"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 91
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Information about pressure patterns and frontal situation can be found in which chart?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Significant Weather Chart (SWC)",
+ "B": "Wind chart.",
+ "C": "Hypsometric chart",
+ "D": "Surface weather chart."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 92
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the mean height of the tropopause according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "11000 f",
+ "B": "11000 m",
+ "C": "18000 ft",
+ "D": "36000 m"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 93
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "300 hPa",
+ "B": "250 hPa",
+ "C": "1013.25 hPa",
+ "D": "500 hPa"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 94
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the stated surfaces will reduce the wind speed most due to ground friction?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flat land, lots of vegetation cover",
+ "B": "Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation",
+ "C": "Oceanic areas",
+ "D": "Mountainous areas, vegetation cover"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 95
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The movement of air flowing together is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Convergence.",
+ "B": "Subsidence.",
+ "C": "Soncordence",
+ "D": "Divergence."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 96
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What cloud sequence can typically be observed during the passage of a warm front?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter",
+ "B": "Squall line with showers of rain and thunderstorms (Cb), gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain",
+ "C": "Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus",
+ "D": "In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 97
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phenomenon is caused by cold air downdrafts with precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Electrical discharge",
+ "B": "Anvil-head top of Cb cloud",
+ "C": "Gust front",
+ "D": "Freezing Rain"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 98
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information is NOT found on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Information about icing conditions",
+ "B": "Front lines and frontal displacements",
+ "C": "Radar echos of precipitation",
+ "D": "Information about turbulence areas"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 99
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which force causes \"wind\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Centrifugal force",
+ "B": "Pressure gradient force",
+ "C": "Coriolis force",
+ "D": "Thermal force"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 100
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which type of cloud is associated with prolonged rain?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altocumulus",
+ "B": "Cumulonimbus",
+ "C": "Nimbostratus",
+ "D": "Cirrostratus"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 101
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Regarding the type of cloud, precipitation is classified as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Showers of snow and rain.",
+ "B": "Prolonged rain and continuous rain.",
+ "C": "Rain and showers of rain.",
+ "D": "Light and heavy precipitation."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 102
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What conditions are favourable for the formation of thunderstorms?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Calm winds and cold air, overcast cloud cover with St or As.",
+ "B": "Warm and dry air, strong inversion layer",
+ "C": "Warm humid air, conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate",
+ "D": "Clear night over land, cold air and patches of fog"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 103
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What can be expected for the prevailling wind with isobars on a surface weather chart showing large distances?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Low pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind",
+ "B": "Strong pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind",
+ "C": "Strong pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind",
+ "D": "Low pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 104
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The height of the tropopause of the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) is at...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "36000 ft.",
+ "B": "5500 ft",
+ "C": "48000 ft.",
+ "D": "11000 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 105
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How is an air mass described when moving to Central Europe via the Russian continent during winter?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Maritime tropical air",
+ "B": "Continental polar air",
+ "C": "Maritime polar air",
+ "D": "Continental tropical air"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 106
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What clouds and weather can typically be observed during the passage of a cold front?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter",
+ "B": "Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus",
+ "C": "In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night",
+ "D": "Strongly developed cumulus clouds (Cb) with showers of rain and thunderstorms, gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 107
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What danger is most immenent when an aircraft is hit by lightning?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit",
+ "B": "Surface overheat and damage to exposed aircraft parts",
+ "C": "Rapid cabin depressurization and smoke in the cabin",
+ "D": "Disturbed radio communication, static noise signals"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 108
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is referred to as mountain wind?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind blowing down the mountain side during the night",
+ "B": "Wind blowing uphill from the valley during the night.",
+ "C": "Wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.",
+ "D": "Wind blowing down the mountain side during daytime."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 109
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What type of fog emerges if humid and almost saturated air, is forced to rise upslope of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailling wind?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Advection fog",
+ "B": "Steaming fog",
+ "C": "Radiation fog",
+ "D": "Orographic fog"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 110
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The barometric altimeter indicates height above...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Mean sea level.",
+ "B": "A selected reference pressure level.",
+ "C": "Ground.",
+ "D": "Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 111
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With regard to global circulation within the atmosphere, where does polar cold air meets subtropical warm air?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At the equator",
+ "B": "At the subtropical high pressure belt",
+ "C": "At the polar front",
+ "D": "At the geographic poles"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 112
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The saturated adiabatic lapse rate should be assumed with a mean value of:",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1,0° C / 100 m.",
+ "B": "0,6° C / 100 m.",
+ "C": "2° C / 1000 ft.",
+ "D": "0° C / 100 m."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 113
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Extensive high pressure areas can be found throughout the year ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "In tropical areas, close to the equator.",
+ "B": "In areeas showing extensive lifting processes.",
+ "C": "Over oceanic areas at latitues around 30°N/S.",
+ "D": "In mid latitudes along the polar front"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 114
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained during the flight by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "PIREP",
+ "B": "SIGMET",
+ "C": "ATIS.",
+ "D": "VOLMET."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 115
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stratus",
+ "B": "Cirrus",
+ "C": "Altus",
+ "D": "Cumulus"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 116
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The character of an air mass is given by what properties?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind speed and tropopause height",
+ "B": "Environmental lapse rate at origin",
+ "C": "Region of origin and track during movement",
+ "D": "Temperatures at origin and present region"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 117
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What cloud type can typically be observed across widespread high pressure areas during summer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Overcast low stratus",
+ "B": "Scattered Cu clouds",
+ "C": "Overcast Ns clouds",
+ "D": "Squall lines and thunderstorms"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 118
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The symbol labeled (1) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Front aloft.",
+ "B": "Cold front.",
+ "C": "Occlusion.",
+ "D": "Warm front."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 119
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In a METAR, \"heavy rain\" is designated by the identifier...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "RA.",
+ "B": ".+RA",
+ "C": "SHRA",
+ "D": ".+SHRA."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 120
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the gas composition of \"air\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %",
+ "B": "Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %",
+ "C": "Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %",
+ "D": "Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 121
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which processes result in decreasing air density?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure",
+ "B": "Increasing temperature, increasing pressure",
+ "C": "Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure",
+ "D": "Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 122
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With regard to thunderstorms, strong up- and downdrafts appear during the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Mature stage.",
+ "B": "Dissipating stage.",
+ "C": "Initial stage.",
+ "D": "Thunderstorm stage."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 123
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following conditions are most favourable for ice accretion?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C, presence of supercooled water droplets (clouds)",
+ "B": "Temperaturs below 0° C, strong wind, sky clear of clouds",
+ "C": "Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C, presence of ice crystals (Ci clouds)",
+ "D": "Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C, presence of hail (clouds)"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 124
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What danger is most imminent during an approach to an airfield situated in a valley, with strong wind aloft blowing perpendicular to the mountain ridge?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduced visibilty, maybe loss of sight to the airfield during final approach",
+ "B": "Wind shear during descent, wind direction may change by 180°",
+ "C": "Formation of medium to heavy clear ice on all aircraft surfaces",
+ "D": "Heavy downdrafts within rainfall areas below thunderstorm clouds"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 125
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "navigation": {
+ "code": "60",
+ "name": "Navigation",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement is correct with regard to the polar axis of the Earth?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator",
+ "B": "The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is at an angle of 66.5° to the plane of the equator",
+ "C": "The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is at an angle of 23.5° to the plane of the equator",
+ "D": "The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which approximate, geometrical form describes the shape of the Earth best for navigation systems?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sphere of ecliptical shape",
+ "B": "Flat plate",
+ "C": "Perfect sphere",
+ "D": "Ellipsoid"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The shortest distance between two points on Earth is represented by a part of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A rhumb line.",
+ "B": "A small circle",
+ "C": "A parallel of latitude.",
+ "D": "A great circle."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What distance corresponds to one degree difference in latitude along any degree of longitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "30 NM",
+ "B": "60 km",
+ "C": "60 NM",
+ "D": "1 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Point A on the Earth's surface lies exactly on the parallel of latitude of 47°50'27''N. Which point is exactly 240 NM north of A?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "53°50'27''N",
+ "B": "49°50'27''N",
+ "C": "51°50'27'N'",
+ "D": "43°50'27''N"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the great circle distance between two points A and B on the equator when the difference between the two associated meridians is exactly one degree of longitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "400 NM",
+ "B": "120 NM",
+ "C": "216 NM",
+ "D": "60 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Assume two arbitrary points A and B on the same parallel of latitude, but not on the equator. Point A is located on 010°E and point B on 020°E. The rumb line distance between A and B is always...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Less than 300 NM.",
+ "B": "Less than 600 NM.",
+ "C": "More than 600 NM.",
+ "D": "More than 300 NM."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the difference in time when the sun moves 20° of longitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1:00 h",
+ "B": "0:40 h",
+ "C": "0:20 h",
+ "D": "1:20 h"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The sun moves 10° of longitude. What is the difference in time?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0.66 h",
+ "B": "0.4 h",
+ "C": "1 h",
+ "D": "0.33 h"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term 'civil twilight' is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.",
+ "B": "The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the true horizon.",
+ "C": "The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the true horizon.",
+ "D": "The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the apparent horizon."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term ‚magnetic course' (MC) is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.",
+ "B": "The angle between magnetic north and the course line.",
+ "C": "The angle between true north and the course line.",
+ "D": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term 'True Course' (TC) is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.",
+ "B": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.",
+ "C": "Tthe angle between magnetic north and the course line.",
+ "D": "The angle between true north and the course line."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are TH and VAR? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E",
+ "B": "TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W",
+ "C": "TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W",
+ "D": "TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the VAR and the DEV? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.",
+ "B": "VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.",
+ "C": "VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.",
+ "D": "VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle between compass north and magnetic north is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "WCA",
+ "B": "Inclination.",
+ "C": "Deviation.",
+ "D": "Variation."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the official basic units for horizontal distances used in aeronautical navigation and their abbreviations?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)",
+ "B": "Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)",
+ "C": "Yards (yd), meters (m)",
+ "D": "Feet (ft), inches (in)"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What could be a reason for changing the runway indicators at aerodromes (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The magnetic variation of the runway location has changed",
+ "B": "The magnetic deviation of the runway location has changed",
+ "C": "The true direction of the runway alignment has changed",
+ "D": "The direction of the approach path has changed"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How are rhumb lines and great circles depicted on a direct Mercator chart?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: curved lines",
+ "B": "Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: straight lines",
+ "C": "Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: straight lines",
+ "D": "Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: curved lines"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical navigation chart the pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. The chart scale is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1 : 500000",
+ "B": "1 : 1000000.",
+ "C": "1 : 250000.",
+ "D": "1 : 2000000."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 1242 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1330 UTC",
+ "B": "1356 UTC",
+ "C": "1430 UTC",
+ "D": "1320 UTC"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying at aFL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6250 ft.",
+ "B": "7000 ft.",
+ "C": "6750 ft",
+ "D": "6500 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6500 ft.",
+ "B": "7000 ft",
+ "C": "6250 ft.",
+ "D": "6750 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6500 ft",
+ "B": "6250 ft.",
+ "C": "7000 ft.",
+ "D": "6750 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "250°.",
+ "B": "265°.",
+ "C": "275°.",
+ "D": "245°."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "152°.",
+ "B": "158°.",
+ "C": "165°.",
+ "D": "126°."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "155 kt.",
+ "B": "172 kt.",
+ "C": "168 kt.",
+ "D": "159 kt."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "3° to the right.",
+ "B": "6° to the right.",
+ "C": "6° to the left.",
+ "D": "3° to the left."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The distance from 'A' to 'B' measures 120 NM. At a distance of 55 NM from 'A' the pilot realizes a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change must be made to reach 'B' directly?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6° left",
+ "B": "14° left",
+ "C": "8° left",
+ "D": "15° left"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How many satellites are necessary for a precise and verified three-dimensional determination of the position?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Two",
+ "B": "Three",
+ "C": "Five",
+ "D": "Four"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What ground features should preferrably be used for orientation during visual flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Power lines",
+ "B": "Farm tracks and creeks",
+ "C": "Border lines",
+ "D": "Rivers, railroads, highways"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately... See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "10800 km.",
+ "B": "12800 km.",
+ "C": "21600 NM.",
+ "D": "40000 NM."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the distance between the parallels of latitude 48°N and 49°N along a meridian line?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "60 NM",
+ "B": "111 NM",
+ "C": "1 NM",
+ "D": "10 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the distance between the two parallels of longitude 150°E and 151°E along the equator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "111 NM",
+ "B": "60 km",
+ "C": "1 NM",
+ "D": "60 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the difference in time when the sun moves 10° of longitude?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "0:04 h",
+ "B": "1:00 h",
+ "C": "0:40 h",
+ "D": "0:30 h"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With Central European Summer Time (CEST) given as UTC+2, what UTC time corresponds to 1600 CEST?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1600 UTC.",
+ "B": "1700 UTC.",
+ "C": "1500 UTC.",
+ "D": "1400 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle between the true course and the true heading is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Variation.",
+ "B": "Inclination.",
+ "C": "Deviation.",
+ "D": "WCA."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle between the magnetic course and the true course is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "WCA.",
+ "B": "Variation",
+ "C": "Inclination.",
+ "D": "Deviation."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Where does the inclination reach its lowest value?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At the geographic equator",
+ "B": "At the magnetic equator",
+ "C": "At the geographic poles",
+ "D": "At the magnetic poles"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which direction corresponds to 'compass north' (CN)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The most northerly part of the magnetic compass in the aircraft, where the reading takes place",
+ "B": "The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns due to earth's and aircraft's magnetic fields",
+ "C": "The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north",
+ "D": "The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographical North Pole"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the properties of a Mercator chart?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines",
+ "B": "The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines",
+ "C": "The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines",
+ "D": "The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which are the properties of a Lambert conformal chart?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The chart is conformal and an equal-area projection",
+ "B": "Great circles are depicted as straight lines and the chart is an equal-area projection",
+ "C": "Rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines and the chart is conformal",
+ "D": "The chart is conformal and nearly true to scale"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0933 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1045 UTC.",
+ "B": "1029 UTC.",
+ "C": "1129 UTC.",
+ "D": "1146 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "93 kt",
+ "B": "107 km/h.",
+ "C": "198 kt.",
+ "D": "58 km/h"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "693 NM.",
+ "B": "202 NM.",
+ "C": "375 NM.",
+ "D": "435 NM."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: Ground speed (GS): 160 kt. True course (TC): 177°. Wind vector (W/WS): 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "180°",
+ "B": "173°.",
+ "C": "169°.",
+ "D": "184°."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".+ 11°",
+ "B": ". - 9°",
+ "C": ".- 7°",
+ "D": ".+ 5°"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "120 kt.",
+ "B": "131 kt.",
+ "C": "117 kt.",
+ "D": "125 kt."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When using a GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation indication is shown by a vertical bar and dots to the left and to the right of the bar. What statement describes the correct interpretation of the display?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.",
+ "B": "The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.",
+ "C": "The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection is +-10°.",
+ "D": "The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection is +-10 NM."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the difference in latitude between A (12°53'30''N) and B (07°34'30''S)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": ".05,19°",
+ "B": ".20,28°",
+ "C": ".05°19'00''",
+ "D": ".20°28'00''"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "UTC is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A zonal time",
+ "B": "Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.",
+ "C": "An obligatory time used in aviation.",
+ "D": "A local time in Central Europe."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With Central European Time (CET) given as UTC+1, what UTC time corresponds to 1700 CET?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1500 UTC.",
+ "B": "1700 UTC.",
+ "C": "1800 UTC.",
+ "D": "1600 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002° What are MH and MC?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "MH: 163°. MC: 175°.",
+ "B": "MH: 167°. MC: 161°",
+ "C": "MH: 163°. MC: 161°.",
+ "D": "MH: 167°. MC: 175°."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the TH and the DEV? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.",
+ "B": "TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.",
+ "C": "TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.",
+ "D": "TH: 194°. DEV: +002°."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term 'agonic line' is defined as a line on Earth or an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Heading of 0°.",
+ "B": "Deviation of 0°.",
+ "C": "Inclination of 0°.",
+ "D": "Variation of 0°."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Electronic devices on board of an aeroplane have influence on the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Direct reading compass.",
+ "B": "Airspeed indicator.",
+ "C": "Turn coordinator",
+ "D": "Artificial horizon."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the distance from VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02?N, 011°33?E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "24 NM",
+ "B": "42 NM",
+ "C": "24 km",
+ "D": "42 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "For a short flight from A to B the pilot extracts the following information from an aeronautical chart: True course: 245°. Magnetic variation: 7° W The magnetic course (MC) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "238°.",
+ "B": "245°.",
+ "C": "252°.",
+ "D": "007°."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1 h 12 min",
+ "B": "2 h 11 min",
+ "C": "0 h 50 min",
+ "D": "1 h 32 min"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "48 Min.",
+ "B": "37 Min.",
+ "C": "84 Min.",
+ "D": "62 Min."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.",
+ "B": "TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.",
+ "C": "TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.",
+ "D": "TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is meant by the term \"terrestrial navigation\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Orientation by ground celestial object during visual flight",
+ "B": "Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight",
+ "C": "Orientation by ground features during visual flight",
+ "D": "Orientation by GPS during visual flight"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about a rhumb line is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A rhumb line is a great circle intersecting the the equator with 45° angle.",
+ "B": "The center of a complete cycle of a rhumb line is always the Earth's center.",
+ "C": "A rhumb line cuts each meridian at the same angle.",
+ "D": "The shortest track between two points along the Earth's surface follows a rhumb line."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E What are: TC, MH und CH? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.",
+ "B": "TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.",
+ "C": "TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.",
+ "D": "TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 129°."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "5500 m equal...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "18000 ft.",
+ "B": "30000 ft.",
+ "C": "7500 ft.",
+ "D": "10000 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0915 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1115 UTC.",
+ "B": "1005 UTC.",
+ "C": "1105 UTC.",
+ "D": "1052 UTC."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the required flight time for a distance of 236 NM with a ground speed of 134 kt?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1:34 h",
+ "B": "0:34 h",
+ "C": "0:46 h",
+ "D": "1:46 h"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "241°",
+ "B": "055°",
+ "C": "235°",
+ "D": "061°"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the 1:60 rule?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM",
+ "B": "1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM",
+ "C": "10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM",
+ "D": "60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Where are the two polar circles?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "23.5° north and south of the poles",
+ "B": "23.5° north and south of the equator",
+ "C": "At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N",
+ "D": "20.5° south of the poles"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Vienna (LOWW) is located at 016° 34'E, Salzburg (LOWS) at 013° 00'E. The latitude of both positions can be considered as equal. What is the difference of sunrise and sunset times, expressed in UTC, between Wien and Salzburg? (2,00 P.)",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "In Vienna the sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg",
+ "B": "In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg",
+ "C": "In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg",
+ "D": "In Vienna the sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term 'isogonal' or 'isogonic line' is defined as a line on an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the same value of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Heading.",
+ "B": "Deviation",
+ "C": "Variation.",
+ "D": "Inclination."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "185 kt.",
+ "B": "255 kt.",
+ "C": "170 kt.",
+ "D": "135 kt."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance which has to be flown is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What is the corrected heading to reach the arrival aerodrome directly?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "18° to the right",
+ "B": "9° to the right",
+ "C": "6° to the right",
+ "D": "12° to the right"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The rotational axis of the Earth runs through the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Magnetic north pole and on the geographic South Pole.",
+ "B": "Magnetic north pole and on the magnetic south pole.",
+ "C": "Geographic North Pole and on the magnetic south pole.",
+ "D": "Geographic North Pole and on the geographic South Pole."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 74
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "1000 ft equal...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "300 m.",
+ "B": "3000 m.",
+ "C": "30 km.",
+ "D": "30 m."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 75
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A distance of 7.5 cm on an aeronautical chart represents a distance of 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1 : 500000",
+ "B": "1 : 1500000",
+ "C": "1 : 1 000000",
+ "D": "1 : 150000"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 76
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "46 km",
+ "B": "46 NM",
+ "C": "78 km",
+ "D": "78 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 77
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "operational-procedures": {
+ "code": "70",
+ "name": "Operational Procedures",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "A wind shear is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A wind speed change of more than 15 kt.",
+ "B": "A meteorological downslope wind phenomenon in the alps.",
+ "C": "A vertical or horizontal change of wind speed and wind direction.",
+ "D": "A slow increase of the wind speed in altitudes above 13000 ft."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing tailwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Path is higher, IAS decreases",
+ "B": "Path is lower, IAS increases",
+ "C": "Path is higher, IAS increases",
+ "D": "Path is lower, IAS decreases"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a cross-country flight, visual meteorological conditions tend to become below minimum conditions. To continue the flight according to minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Continue the flight referring to sufficient forecasts",
+ "B": "Turn back due to sufficient visual meteorological conditions along the previous track",
+ "C": "Continue the flight using radio navigational features along the track",
+ "D": "Continue the flight using navigatorical aid by ATC"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "With only a slight crosswind, what is the danger at take-off after the departure of a heavy aeroplane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wake turbulence rotate faster and higher.",
+ "B": "Wake turbulence is amplified and distorted.",
+ "C": "Wake turbulence twisting transverse to the runway.",
+ "D": "Wake turbulence on or near the runway"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A precautionary landing is a landing...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Conducted with the flaps retracted.",
+ "B": "Conducted without power from the engine.",
+ "C": "Conducted in response to circumstances forcing the aircraft to land.",
+ "D": "Conducted in an attempt to sustain flight safety"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following landing areas is most suitable for an off-field landing?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A field with ripe waving crops",
+ "B": "A meadow without livestock",
+ "C": "A light brown field with short crops",
+ "D": "A lake with an undisturbed surface"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What are the effects of wet grass on the take-off and landing distance?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decrease of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance",
+ "B": "Increase of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance",
+ "C": "Increase of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance",
+ "D": "Decrease of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Off-field landing may be prone to accident when...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The approach is conducted using distinct approach segments",
+ "B": "The decision is made above minimum safe altitude.",
+ "C": "The approach is conducted onto a harvested corn field.",
+ "D": "The decision to land off-field is made too late."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When commencing a steep turn, what has to be considered by the pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After achieving bank angle, reduce yaw using opposite rudder",
+ "B": "Commence turn with reduced speed according to aimed bank angle",
+ "C": "Commence turn with increased speed according to aimed bank angle",
+ "D": "After achieving bank angle, push the elevator to increase speed"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When airtowing using side-located latch, the gliding plane tends to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Show particularly stable flight characteristics.",
+ "B": "Quickly turn around longitunidal axis",
+ "C": "Show enhanced pitch up moment.",
+ "D": "Show enhanced turn to latch-mounted side."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A gliding plane being airtowed gets into an excessive high position behind the towing plane. What action by the glider pilot can prevent further danger for glider and towing plane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Initiate a sideslip to reduce excessive height",
+ "B": "Pull strongly, therafter decouple the cable",
+ "C": "Carefully extend spoiler flaps, steer glider back into normal position",
+ "D": "Push strongly to bring glider back to normal position"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In case of cable break during airtow, a longer part of the cable remains attached to the glider plane. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decouple immediately and proceed with coupling unlatched",
+ "B": "Conduct normal approach, release cable immediatley after ground contact",
+ "C": "Perform low approach and reuqest information about cable length by airfield controller, decouple if necessary",
+ "D": "When in safe height, drop cable overhead empty terrain or overhead airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a winch launch, just after stabilizing full climb attitude, the pull on cable suddenly stops. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Push slightly, wait for pull on cable to be re-established",
+ "B": "Inform winch driver by altertate aileron input",
+ "C": "Push firmly and decouple cable immediately",
+ "D": "Pull on elevator to increases cable tension"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Before the launch using a parallel-cable winch, the glider pilot realizes the second cable laying close to his glider about to launch. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Keep an eye on second cable, decouple after takeoff if necessary",
+ "B": "Continue launch with rudder input on opposite direction to second cable",
+ "C": "Conduct normal takeoff, inform airfield controller after landing",
+ "D": "Decouple cable immediately, inform airfield controller via radio"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the purpose of the breaking points on a winch cable?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It is used for automatic cable release after winch launch",
+ "B": "It protects the winch from being overshot by the glider plane",
+ "C": "It is used to limit the rate of climb during winch launch",
+ "D": "It prevents excessive stress on the gilder plane"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A glider pilot has to conduct an off-field landing in a mountainous region. The only available landing site is highly inclined. How should the landing be conducted?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Approach with increased speed, quick flare to follow the inclined ground",
+ "B": "Approach down the ridge with increased speed, push according to ground level during landing",
+ "C": "According to prevailant wind, approach and land parallel to the ridge with headwind",
+ "D": "Approach with minimum speed, careful flare when reaching the landing site"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a high altitude flight (6000 m MSL), the glider pilot realizes that oxygen will be consumed within a few minutes. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After depletion of oxygen, stay at that altitude no longer than 30 min",
+ "B": "At first indication of hypoxia, commence descent with maximum allowed speed",
+ "C": "Extend spoiler flaps, descent with maximum permissable speed",
+ "D": "Reduce oxygen flow by breathing slowly"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Trim masses or lead plates must be secured firmly when installed into a gliding plane, so that...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The maximum allowed mass will not be exceeded.",
+ "B": "A comfortable seat position will be assured for the glider pilot.",
+ "C": "They will not block rudders or induce any C.G. shift.",
+ "D": "The glider pilot will not be hurt during flight in thermal turbulences."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Why is it not allowed to launch wih the C.G. positioned beyond the aft limit?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Because rudder inputs may not be sufficient for controlling flight attitude",
+ "B": "Because increased nose-down moment may not be compensated",
+ "C": "Because structural limits may be exceeded",
+ "D": "Because maximum permissable speed will be rduced significantly"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During approach, tower provides the following information: \"Wind 15 knots, gusts 25 knots\". How should the landing be performed?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Approach with minimum speed, correct changes in attitude with careful rudder inputs",
+ "B": "Approach with normal speed, maintain speed using spoiler flaps",
+ "C": "Approach with increased speed, correct changes in attitude with firm rudder inputs",
+ "D": "Approach with increased speed, avoid usage of spoiler flaps"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When a pilot gets into a strong downwind area during slope soaring, what action should be recommanded?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Contunue flight, downwinds around mountains only occur shortly",
+ "B": "Increase speed and head away from the ridge",
+ "C": "Increase speed and conduct landing parallel to ridge",
+ "D": "Increase speed and get closer to the ridge"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "After landing, you realize you lost your pen which might have fallen down in the cockpit of the sailplane. What has to be considered?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lighter, loose bodies in the fuselage can be considered uncritical",
+ "B": "Before next take-off, the cockpit has to be firmly inspected for loose bodies.",
+ "C": "A flight without a pen at hand is not permitted",
+ "D": "Succeeding pilots have to be informed about that"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Durig flight close to aerodrome in about 250 m AGL you encouter strong descent and go for a safety landing. What speed should be flown when heading towards the airfield?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Best glide speed plus additionals for downdrafts and wind",
+ "B": "Best glide speed",
+ "C": "Minimum rate of descent speed",
+ "D": "Maximum manoeuvering speed VA"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During final approach, you realize that you missed to extend the gear. How should the landing be conducted?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "You land without gear, and carefully touch down with minimum speed.",
+ "B": "You extend the gear immediately and land as usual.",
+ "C": "You retract flaps, extend the gear and land as usual.",
+ "D": "You land without gear with higher than usual speed."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "After reaching what height during winch launch the maximum pitch position can be taken?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "From approx. 50 m while maintaining a save speed for winch launch.",
+ "B": "From 15 m while reaching a speed of at least 90 km/h",
+ "C": "From 150 m or higher, when in case of cable break landing straight ahead is no longer possible",
+ "D": "Shortly after lift-off, provided a sufficiently strong headwind"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered for the speed during approach and landing?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wind speed and weight",
+ "B": "Altitude and weight",
+ "C": "Wind speed and Altitude",
+ "D": "Weight and wind speed"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can you determine wind direction in case of an outlanding?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Monitoring of smoke, flags, waving fields",
+ "B": "Wind forecast from flight weather report",
+ "C": "Request from other pilots who can be reached by radio",
+ "D": "Remembering the wind indicated by the windsock an departing airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What landing technique is recommended for landing on a down-hill gras area?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "In general up-hill",
+ "B": "Diagonal down-hill",
+ "C": "With brakes applied on main wheel, no air brakes",
+ "D": "Full air brakes, gear retracted and stalled"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be checked before any change in direction during glide?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Check for turn to be flown coordinated",
+ "B": "Check for thermal clouds",
+ "C": "Check for loose object secured",
+ "D": "Check for free airspace in desired direction"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Before a winch launch, you detect a light tailwind. What has to be considered?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Roll until lift-off will take a little longer, watch speed",
+ "B": "A weaker rated-brake-point can be used, load will be smaller",
+ "C": "Roll until lift-off will be shorter since tailwind is pushing from behind",
+ "D": "To reach more height, full pull on the elevator after lift-off"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Flying slow close to stall conditions, the left wings is lower than the right wing. How can the stall be prevented?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Push on the elevator, keep wings level with coordinated inputs on rudder and aileron",
+ "B": "Aileron and rudder to the reight, gain some speed, push slightly on the elevator, all rudders neutral",
+ "C": "Airleron to the right, push slighty on the elevator, gain some speed, all rudders neutral",
+ "D": "Rudder left, push slightly on the elevator, gain some speed, all rudders neutral"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which weather phenomenon is typically associated with wind shear?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Fog",
+ "B": "Stable high pressure areas.",
+ "C": "Invernal warm front.",
+ "D": "Thunderstorms."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing headwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Path is higher, IAS increases",
+ "B": "Path is lower, IAS decreases",
+ "C": "Path is lower, IAS increases",
+ "D": "Path is higher, IAS decreases"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with an increasing headwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Path is lower, IAS increases",
+ "B": "Path is higher, IAS decreases",
+ "C": "Path is higher, IAS increases",
+ "D": "Path is lower, IAS decreases"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can dangerous situations be prevented when the gliding plane approaches close to a pattern altitude during a cross-country flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Try to reach cumuclus clouds visible at the far horizon and use their thermal updrafts",
+ "B": "Despite the planned flight, decide for an off-field landing",
+ "C": "Maintain radio communication up to full stop after off-field landing",
+ "D": "Search for thermal updrafts on the lee side of a selected landing field"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During airtow, the gliding plane exceeds its maximum permissable speed. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Extend spoiler flaps",
+ "B": "Message to airfield controller via radio",
+ "C": "Pull elevator to reduce speed",
+ "D": "Decouple cable immediately"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During airtow, the towing plane disappears from the glider pilot's sight. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decouple cable immediatly",
+ "B": "Alternate push and pull on the elveator",
+ "C": "Alternate turn to the left and to the right",
+ "D": "Extend spoiler flaps and return to normal attitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During the last phase of a winch launch, the glider pilot does not release pull on the elevator. The automatic latch releases the cable at high wing load. What consequences have to be considered?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A higher altitude can be reached using this technique",
+ "B": "Extreme stress on the structure of the glider plane",
+ "C": "This technique can compensate for insufficient wind correction",
+ "D": "Only by this sudden jerk the release of the cable can be assured"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a winch launch, after reaching full climb attitude, the airspeed indicator fails. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Continue launch to normal altitude, use horizontal image and airstream noise to conduct flight as planned",
+ "B": "Try to re-establish airspeed indication by abrupt changes of speed during launch",
+ "C": "Push elevator, decouple cable and perform short pattern with minimum speed",
+ "D": "Continue launch to normal altitude, use horizontal image and airstream noise for pattern and landing right away"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be expected with ice accretion on wings?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An increased stall speed",
+ "B": "A decreased stall speed",
+ "C": "Improved slow flight capabilities",
+ "D": "Reduced friction drag"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Despite several attempts, the landing gear can be extended, but not locked. How should the landing be conducted?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Keep gear unlocked and perform normal landing",
+ "B": "Keep a firm grip on gear handle during normal landing",
+ "C": "Retract landing gear and perform belly landing with minimum speed",
+ "D": "Retract gear and perform belly landing with increased speed"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An off-field landing with tailwind is inevitable. How should the landing be conducted?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Approach with reduced speed, expect shorter flare and ground roll distance",
+ "B": "Normal approach, when reaching landing site, extend spoiler flaps and push down elevator",
+ "C": "Approach with normal speed, expect longer flare and ground roll distance",
+ "D": "Approach with increased speed without use of spoiler flaps"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A plane flying below an extended Cumulus cloud developing into a thunderstorm, the glider plane quickly approaches the cloud base. What actions have to be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Extend spoiler flaps within speed limits, leave thermal lift area with maximum permissable speed",
+ "B": "Fasten seat belts, be aware of severe gust during further thermaling",
+ "C": "Reduce to minimum speed, leave thermal lift area in a flat turn",
+ "D": "Climb into thunderstorm cloud, continue flight using instruments"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During approach for landing with strong crosswind, how should the turn from base to final be flown?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Turn with maximum 60° bank, carefully watch speed and yaw string, track correction after overshoot.",
+ "B": "Maximum 30° bank, use rudder to early align sailplane with final track",
+ "C": "Maximum 60° bank, use rudder to early align sailplane with final track.",
+ "D": "Turn with maximum 30° bank, carefully watch speed and yaw string, track correction after overshoot."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During thermal soaring, another sailplane is following close by. What should be done to avoid a collision?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "You reduce speed to let the other sailplane fly by",
+ "B": "You reduce bank to achieve a larger turn radius",
+ "C": "You increase bank to be better seen from the other sailplane",
+ "D": "You increase speed to achieve a position opposite in the circle"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What heights should be consideres for landing phases with a glider plane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "100 m abeam threashold and 50 m after final approach turn",
+ "B": "300 m abeam threashold and 150 m in final approach",
+ "C": "500 m abeam threashold and 50 m after final approach turn",
+ "D": "150 - 200 m abeam threashold and 100 m after final approach turn"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How should a glider plane be parked when observing strong winds?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Nose into the wind, keep and weigh tail down",
+ "B": "Nose into the wind, extends air brakes, secure rudders",
+ "C": "Downwind wing on the ground, weigh wing down, secure rudders",
+ "D": "Windward wing on the ground, weigh wing down, secure rudders"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When do you expect wind shear?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During an inversion",
+ "B": "When passing a warm front",
+ "C": "During a summer day with calm winds",
+ "D": "In calm wind in cold weather"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can a wind shear encounter in flight be avoided?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Avoid thermally active areas, particularly during summer, or stay below these areas",
+ "B": "Avoid areas of precipitation, particularly during winter, and choose low flight altitudes",
+ "C": "Avoid take-off and landing during the passage of heavy showers or thunderstorms",
+ "D": "Avoid take-offs and landings in mountainous terrain and stay in flat country whenever possible"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Wake turbulence on or near the runway",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Plowed field",
+ "B": "Glade with long dry grass",
+ "C": "Sports area in a village",
+ "D": "Harvested cornfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A gliding plane is about to pitch down due to stall. What rudder input can prevent nose-dive and spin?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ailerons neutral, rudder strongly kicked to lower wing",
+ "B": "Release elevator, rudder opposite to lower wing",
+ "C": "Keep airplane in level flight using rudder pedals",
+ "D": "Slightly pull the elevator, ailerons opposite to lower wing"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In case of a cable break during winch launch, what actions should be taken in the correct order?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decouple cable, therafter push nose down; at heights up to 150m GND land straight ahead with increased speed",
+ "B": "Push firmly nose down, decouple cable, depending on terrain and wind decide for short pattern or landing straight ahead",
+ "C": "Initiate 180° turn and land opposite to runway heading in use, decouple cable before touch down",
+ "D": "Keep elevetor pulled, stabilize on minimum speed and land on remaining field length"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During initial winch launch, one wing of a glider plane gets ground contact. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Pull the elevator",
+ "B": "Decouple cable immediatly",
+ "C": "Rudder in opposite direction",
+ "D": "Ailerons in opposite direction"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When flying into heavy snowfall, most dangerous will be the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sudden blockage of pitot-static system",
+ "B": "Sudden increase of airframe icing.",
+ "C": "Sudden increase in airplane mass",
+ "D": "Suddon loss of visibility"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considers when overflying mountain ridges?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Turbulences, reduce to minimum speed",
+ "B": "Do not overfly national parks",
+ "C": "Turbulences, therefore slightly increase speed",
+ "D": "Use circling birds to find thermal cells"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is indicated by \"buffeting\" noticable at elevator stick?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "C.G. position too far ahead",
+ "B": "Glider plane very dirty",
+ "C": "Too slow, wing airflow stalled",
+ "D": "Too fast, turbulence bubbles hitting on aileron"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The term \"flight time\" is defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The period from engine start for the purpose of taking off to leaving the aircraft after engine shutdown.",
+ "B": "The period from the start of the take-off run to the final touchdown when landing.",
+ "C": "The total time from the first aircraft movement until the moment it finally comes to rest at the end of the flight.",
+ "D": "The total time from the first take-off until the last landing in conjunction with one or more consecutive flights."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Two aircraft of the same type, same grossweight and same configuration fly at different airspeeds. Which aircraft will cause more severe wake turbulence?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The aircraft flying at lower altitude.",
+ "B": "The aircraft flying at higher speed.",
+ "C": "The aircraft flying at higher altitude",
+ "D": "The aircraft flying at slower speed"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What color has the emergency hood release handle?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Green",
+ "B": "Red",
+ "C": "Yellow",
+ "D": "Blue"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When landing with tailwind, the pilot has to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Approach with normal speed and shallow angle.",
+ "B": "Compensate tailwind by sideslip.",
+ "C": "Increase approach speed.",
+ "D": "Land with gear retracted to shorten ground roll distance"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What negative impacts may be expected during circling overhead industrial facilities?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Health impairments by pollutants, reduced visibilty and turbulences",
+ "B": "Strong electrostatic charging and deterioration in radio communication",
+ "C": "Very poor visibility of only few hundred meters and heavy precipitation",
+ "D": "Extended, strong downwind areas on the lee side of the facility"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During airtow, in a turn the glider plane gets into an outward off-set position. What action should be taken by the glider pilot?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Return glider plane to a position behind towing plane by a smaller curve radius using strong inputs on rudder pedals",
+ "B": "Take up same bank angle as towing plane and return glider plane to a position behind towing plane using rudder pedals",
+ "C": "Bring back glider plane to intended turning attitude using rudder and airlerons, extend spoiler flaps to reduce speed",
+ "D": "Initiate sideslip and let glider plane be pushed back to a position behind towing plane by increased drag"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When has a pre-flight check to be done?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Before first flight of the day, and after every change of pilot",
+ "B": "After every build-up of the airplane",
+ "C": "Once a month, with TMG once a day",
+ "D": "Before flight operation and before every flight"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Collisions during circling within thermal updrafts can be avoided by...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Alternate circling with opposite directions in different heights.",
+ "B": "Imitating the movements of the preceeding gliding plane.",
+ "C": "Coordination of plane movements with other aircrafts circling within the same updraft",
+ "D": "Fast approach into the updraft and rapidly pulling the elevator for slower speed."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "principles-of-flight-aeroplane": {
+ "code": "80",
+ "name": "Principles of Flight",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "With regard to the forces acting, how can stationary gliding be described?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The sum of air forces acts along the direction of air flow",
+ "B": "The sum the air forces acts along with the lift force",
+ "C": "The lift force compensates the drag force",
+ "D": "The sum of air forces compensates the gravity force"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the result of extending flaps with increasing aerofoil camber?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Maximum permissable speed increases",
+ "B": "Minimum speed increases",
+ "C": "Minimum speed decreases",
+ "D": "C.G. position moves forward"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Stabilization around the lateral axis during cruise is achieved by the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wing flaps.",
+ "B": "Horizontal stabilizer",
+ "C": "Airlerons.",
+ "D": "Vertical rudder"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "All aerodynamic forces can be considered to act on a single point. This point is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Center of gravity.",
+ "B": "Lift point.",
+ "C": "Transition point.",
+ "D": "Center of pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 4? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Transition point",
+ "B": "Stagnation point",
+ "C": "Center of pressure",
+ "D": "Separation point"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 1? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Center of pressure",
+ "B": "Stagnation point",
+ "C": "Stagnation point",
+ "D": "Transition point"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pattern can be found at the stagnation point?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The boundary layer starts separating on the upper surface of the profile",
+ "B": "All aerodynamic forces can be considered as attacking at this single point",
+ "C": "The laminar boundary layer changes into a turbulent boundary layer",
+ "D": "Streamlines are divided into airflow above and below the profile"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about lift and angle of attack is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increasing the angle of attack too far may result in a loss of lift and an airflow separation",
+ "B": "Increasing the angle of attack results in less lift being generated by the aerofoil",
+ "C": "Decreasing the angle of attack results in more drag being generated by the aerofoil",
+ "D": "Too large angles of attack can lead to an exponential increase in lift"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack increases?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The stagnation point moves down",
+ "B": "The center of pressure moves down",
+ "C": "The center of pressure moves up",
+ "D": "The stagnation point moves up"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Pressure compensation on an wing occurs at the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wing tips.",
+ "B": "Leading edge.",
+ "C": "Trailing edge.",
+ "D": "Wing roots"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following options is likely to produce large induced drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Large aspect ratio",
+ "B": "Small aspect ratio",
+ "C": "Low lift coefficients",
+ "D": "Tapered wings"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Pressure drag, interference drag and friction drag belong to the group of the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Parasite drag",
+ "B": "Main resistance.",
+ "C": "Induced drag.",
+ "D": "Total drag."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which kinds of drag contribute to total drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Interference drag and parasite drag",
+ "B": "Induced drag and parasite drag",
+ "C": "Induced drag, form drag, skin-friction drag",
+ "D": "Form drag, skin-friction drag, interference drag"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In case of a stall it is important to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increase the angle of attack and increase the speed.",
+ "B": "Decrease the angle of attack and increase the speed.",
+ "C": "Increase the angle of attack and reduce the speed.",
+ "D": "Increase the bank angle and reduce the speed."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What types of boundary layers can be found on an aerofoil?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Laminar boundary layer along the complete upper surface with non-separated airflow",
+ "B": "Turbulent layer at the leading wing areas, laminar boundary layer at the trailing areas",
+ "C": "Turbulent boundary layer along the complete upper surface with separated airflow",
+ "D": "Laminar layer at the leading wing areas, turbulent boundary layer at the trailing areas"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which constructive feature is shown in the figure? See figure (PFA-006) L: Lift Siehe Anlage 4",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lateral stability by wing dihedral",
+ "B": "Differential aileron deflection",
+ "C": "Directional stability by lift generation",
+ "D": "Longitudinal stability by wing dihedral"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "\"Longitudinal stability\" is referred to as stability around which axis?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lateral axis",
+ "B": "Propeller axis",
+ "C": "Longitudinal axis",
+ "D": "Vertical axis"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Rotation around the vertical axis is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Slipping.",
+ "B": "Pitching.",
+ "C": "Yawing.",
+ "D": "Rolling."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Rotation around the lateral axis is called...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Yawing.",
+ "B": "Pitching.",
+ "C": "Rolling.",
+ "D": "Stalling."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The elevator moves an aeroplane around the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Vertical axis.",
+ "B": "Longitudinal axis.",
+ "C": "Elevator axis.",
+ "D": "Lateral axis."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered with regard to the center of gravity position?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "By moving the elevator trim tab, the center of gravity can be shifted into a correct position.",
+ "B": "Only correct loading can assure a correct and safe center of gravity position.",
+ "C": "The center of gravity's position can only be determined during flight.",
+ "D": "By moving the aileron trim tab, the center of gravity can be shifted into a correct position."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the advantage of differential aileron movement?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The drag of the downwards deflected aileron is lowered and the adverse yaw is smaller",
+ "B": "The total lift remains constant during aileron deflection",
+ "C": "The ratio of the drag coefficient to lift coefficient is increased",
+ "D": "The adverse yaw is higher"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The aerodynamic rudder balance...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduces the control surfaces.",
+ "B": "Delays the stall.",
+ "C": "Reduces the control stick forces.",
+ "D": "Improves the rudder effectiveness."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the static rudder balance?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To prevent control surface flutter",
+ "B": "To trim the controls almost without any force",
+ "C": "To increase the control stick forces",
+ "D": "To limit the control stick forces"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The trim tab at the elevator is defelected upwards. In which position is the corresponding indicator?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Neutral position",
+ "B": "Nose-down position",
+ "C": "Nose-up position",
+ "D": "Laterally trimmed"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Point number 1 in the figure indicates which flight state? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Inverted flight",
+ "B": "Slow flight",
+ "C": "Stall",
+ "D": "Best gliding angle"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In a co-ordinated turn, how is the relation between the load factor (n) and the stall speed (Vs)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "N is smaller than 1, Vs is greater than in straight and level flight.",
+ "B": "N is greater than 1, Vs is smaller than in straight and level flight.",
+ "C": "N is greater than 1, Vs is greater than in straight and level flight.",
+ "D": "N is smaller than 1, Vs is smaller than in straight and level flight."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The pressure compensation between wind upper and lower surface results in ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Induced drag by wing tip vortices",
+ "B": "Laminar airflow by wing tip vortices.",
+ "C": "Profile drag by wing tip vortices.",
+ "D": "Lift by wing tip vortices."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "At stationary glide and the same mass, what is the difference when using a thick airfoild instead of a thinner airfoil?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "More drag, same lift",
+ "B": "Less drag, less lift",
+ "C": "More drag, less lift",
+ "D": "Less drag, same lift"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is shown by a profile polar?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ratio between minimum rate of descent and best glide",
+ "B": "Ratio between total lift and drag depending on angle of attack",
+ "C": "Ratio of cA and cD at different angles of attack",
+ "D": "Lift coefficient cA at different angles of attack"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Following a single-wing stall and pitch-down moment, how can a spin be prevented?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Deflect all rudders opposite to lower wing",
+ "B": "Rudder opposite lower wing, releasing elevator to build up speed",
+ "C": "Pushing the elevator to build up speed to re-attach airflow on wings",
+ "D": "Pulling the elevator to bring the plane back to normal attitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Flying with speeds higher than the never-exceed-speed (vNE) may result in...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduced drag with increased control forces.",
+ "B": "An increased lift-to-drag ratio and a better glide angle.",
+ "C": "Too high total pressure resulting in an unusable airspeed indicator.",
+ "D": "Flutter and mechanically damaging the wings."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "If surrounded by airflow (v>0), any arbitrarily shaped body produces...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Drag and lift.",
+ "B": "Drag.",
+ "C": "Lift without drag.",
+ "D": "Constant drag at any speed."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Number 3 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Camber line.",
+ "B": "Thickness.",
+ "C": "Chord.",
+ "D": "Chord line."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In which way does the position of the center of pressure move at a positively shaped profile with increasing angle of attack?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It moves to the wing tips",
+ "B": "It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack",
+ "C": "It moves forward until reaching the critical angle of attack",
+ "D": "It moves forward first, then backward"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about the airflow around an aerofoil is correct if the angle of attack decreases?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The center of pressure moves aft",
+ "B": "The center of pressure moves forward",
+ "C": "The stagnation point moves down",
+ "D": "The stagnation point remains constant"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement concerning the angle of attack is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Increasing the angle of attack results in decreasing lift",
+ "B": "The angle of attack cannot be negative",
+ "C": "A too large angle of attack may result in a loss of lift",
+ "D": "The angle of attack is constant throughout the flight"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "When increasing the airflow speed by a factor of 2 while keeping all other parameters constant, how does the parasite drag change approximately?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "It decreases by a factor of 2",
+ "B": "It increases by a factor of 2",
+ "C": "It decreases by a factor of 4",
+ "D": "It increases by a factor of 4"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The drag coefficient...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Is proportional to the lift coefficient",
+ "B": "Increases with increasing airspeed.",
+ "C": "May range from zero to an infinite positive value",
+ "D": "Cannot be lower than a non-negative, minimal value."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which parts of an aircraft mainly affect the generation of induced drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The front part of the fuselage.",
+ "B": "The outer part of the ailerons.",
+ "C": "The lower part of the gear.",
+ "D": "The wing tips."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Where is interference drag generated?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "At the ailerons",
+ "B": "At the the gear",
+ "C": "At the wing root",
+ "D": "Near the wing tips"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the listed wing shapes has the lowest induced drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rectangular shape",
+ "B": "Trapezoidal shape",
+ "C": "Elliptical shape",
+ "D": "Double trapezoidal shape"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Which design feature can compensate for adverse yaw?",
+ "B": "Differential aileron defletion",
+ "C": "Full deflection of the aileron",
+ "D": "Wing dihedral"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What describes \"wing loading\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wing area per weight",
+ "B": "Drag per weight",
+ "C": "Weight per wing area",
+ "D": "Drag per wing area"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Point number 5 in the figure indicates which flight state? See figure (PFA-008) Siehe Anlage 5",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Slow flight",
+ "B": "Best gliding angle",
+ "C": "Inverted flight",
+ "D": "Stall"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Extending airbrakes results in ...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Less drag and more lift.",
+ "B": "More drag and less lift.",
+ "C": "More drag and more lift.",
+ "D": "Less drag and less lift."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The glide ratio of a sailplane can be improved by which measures?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Higher airplane mass, thin airfoil, taped gaps between wing and fuselage",
+ "B": "Lower airplane mass, correct speed, retractable gear",
+ "C": "Cleaning, correct speed, retractable gear, taped gaps between wing and fuselage",
+ "D": "Forward C.G. position, correct speed, taped gaps between wing and fuselage"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the diffeence between spin and spiral dive?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Spin: stall at inner wing, speed increasing rapidly; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed constant",
+ "B": "Spin: stall at inner wing, speed constant; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed increasing rapidly",
+ "C": "Spin: stall at outer wing, speed constant; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed increasing rapidly",
+ "D": "Spin: stall at outer wing, speed increasing rapidly; Spiral dive: airflow at both wings, speed constant"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle of attack is the angle between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The chord line and the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane.",
+ "B": "The chord line and the oncoming airflow.",
+ "C": "The wing and the fuselage of an aeroplane",
+ "D": "The undisturbed airflow and the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The ratio of span and mean chord length is referred to as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Trapezium shape.",
+ "B": "Tapering.",
+ "C": "Aspect ratio.",
+ "D": "Wing sweep."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Stability around which axis is mainly influenced by the center of gravity's longitudinal position?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Longitudinal axis",
+ "B": "Lateral axis",
+ "C": "Gravity axis",
+ "D": "Vertical axis"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What structural item provides directional stability to an airplane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Differential aileron deflection",
+ "B": "Wing dihedral",
+ "C": "Large elevator",
+ "D": "Large vertical tail"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The critical angle of attack...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreases with forward center of gravity position.",
+ "B": "Changes with increasing weight.",
+ "C": "Is independent of the weight.",
+ "D": "Increases with backward center of gravity position."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In straight and level flight with constant performance of the engine, the angle of attack at the wing is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Smaller than in a descent.",
+ "B": "Greater than in a climb.",
+ "C": "Greater than at take-off.",
+ "D": "Smaller than in a climb."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the function of the horizontal tail (among other things)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "To stabilise the aeroplane around the longitudinal axis",
+ "B": "To stabilise the aeroplane around the lateral axis",
+ "C": "To initiate a curve around the vertical axis",
+ "D": "To stabilise the aeroplane around the vertical axis"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Deflecting the rudder to the left causes...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Pitching of the aircraft to the left",
+ "B": "Yawing of the aircraft to the left.",
+ "C": "Pitching of the aircraft to the right.",
+ "D": "Yawing of the aircraft to the right."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Differential aileron deflection is used to...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Reduce wake turbulence.",
+ "B": "Avoid a stall at low angles of attack.",
+ "C": "Keep the adverse yaw low.",
+ "D": "Increase the rate of descent."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How is the balance of forces affected during a turn?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "A lower lift force compensates for a lower net force as compared to level flight",
+ "B": "Lift force must be increased to compensate for the sum of centrifugal and gravitational force",
+ "C": "The horizontal component of the lift force during a turn is the centrifugal force",
+ "D": "The net force results from superposition of gravity and centripetal forces"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What engine design at a Touring Motor Glider (TMG) results in least drag?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Engine and propeller mounted fix on the fuselage",
+ "B": "Engine and propeller mounted stowable on the fuselage",
+ "C": "Engine and propeller mounted fix at the aircraft's nose",
+ "D": "Engine and propeller mounted fix at the horizontal stabilizer"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What effect is referred to as \"adverse yaw\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Aileron operation results in a yaw to the desired side due to less drag at the down-deflected aileron",
+ "B": "Rudder operation results in a rolling moment to the opposite side due to more lift generated by the faster moving wing.",
+ "C": "Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the up-deflected aileron",
+ "D": "Aileron operation results in a yaw to the opposite side due to more drag at the down-deflected aileron"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is meant by \"ground effect\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decrease of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground",
+ "B": "Increase of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground",
+ "C": "Increase of lift and increase of induced drag close to the ground",
+ "D": "Decrease of lift and decrease of induced drag close to the ground"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What pressure pattern can be observed at a lift-generating wing profile at positive angle of attack?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Low pressure is created above, higher pressure below the profile",
+ "B": "Pressure above remains unchanged, higher pressure is created below the profile",
+ "C": "High pressure is created above, lower pressure below the profile",
+ "D": "Pressure below remains unchanged, lower pressure is created above the profile"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In order to improve the stall characteristics of an aircraft, the wing is twisted outwards (the angle of incidence varies spanwise). This is known as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Arrow shape.",
+ "B": "V-form",
+ "C": "Geometric washout.",
+ "D": "Aerodynamic washout."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During a stall, the lift...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Decreases and drag increases.",
+ "B": "Increases and drag increases.",
+ "C": "Decreases and drag decreases",
+ "D": "Increases and drag decreases."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement regarding a spin is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During recovery the ailerons should be kept neutral",
+ "B": "During the spin the speed constantly increases",
+ "C": "During recovery the ailerons should be crossed",
+ "D": "Only very old aeroplanes have a risk of spinning"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What structural item provides lateral stability to an airplane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Wing dihedral",
+ "B": "Vertical tail",
+ "C": "Differential aileron deflection",
+ "D": "Elevator"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Rudder deflections result in a turn of the aeroplane around the...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rudder axis.",
+ "B": "Vertical axis.",
+ "C": "Lateral axis",
+ "D": "Longitudinal axis."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Through which factor listed below does the load factor increase during cruise flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lower air density",
+ "B": "A forward centre of gravity",
+ "C": "Higher aeroplane weight",
+ "D": "An upward gust"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "During approch to the next updraft, the vertical speed indicator reads 3 m/s descent. Within the updraft you expect a mean rate of climb of 2 m/s. According McCready, how should you adjust the speed during approach of the updraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The McCready ring should be set to 2 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the sum of current rate of descent at expected rate of climb (5 m/s).",
+ "B": "The McCready ring should be set to 3 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the expected rate of climb (2 m/s).",
+ "C": "The McCready ring should be set to 2 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the current rate of descent (3 m/s).",
+ "D": "Outside of thermal cells, the McCready ring should be set to 0 m/s, the recommended speed can be read at the McCready scale next to the current rate of descent (3 m/s)."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered when operating a sailplane equipped with camper flaps?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from negative to positive.",
+ "B": "During approach and landing, camber must not be changed from positive to negative.",
+ "C": "During winch launch, camber must be set to full negative.",
+ "D": "During winch launch, camber must be set to full positive."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Considering longitudinal stability, which C.G. position is most dangerous with a normal gliding plane?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Position beyond the front C.G. limit",
+ "B": "Position too far aside permissable C.G. limits.",
+ "C": "Position far back within permissable C.G. limits",
+ "D": "Position beyond the rear C.G. limit"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The static pressure of gases work...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "In all directions.",
+ "B": "Only in flow direction.",
+ "C": "Only in the direction of the total pressure.",
+ "D": "Only vertical to the flow direction."
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Bernoulli's equation for frictionless, incompressible gases states that...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Total pressure = dynamic pressure - static pressure.",
+ "B": "Total pressure = dynamic pressure + static pressure.",
+ "C": "Static pressure = total pressure + dynamic pressure",
+ "D": "Dynamic pressure = total pressure + static pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The center of pressure is the theoretical point of origin of...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Only the resulting total drag.",
+ "B": "Gravity forces of the profile.",
+ "C": "All aerodynamic forces of the profile.",
+ "D": "Gravity and aerodynamic forces."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 74
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which point on the aerofoil is represented by number 3? See figure (PFA-009) Siehe Anlage 2",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Stagnation point",
+ "B": "Separation point",
+ "C": "Center of pressure",
+ "D": "Transition point"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 75
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which option states a benefit of wing washout?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "With the washout the form drag reduces at high speeds",
+ "B": "Greater hardness because the wing can withstand more torsion forces",
+ "C": "At high angles of attack the effectiveness of the aileron is retained as long as possible",
+ "D": "Structurally the wing is made more rigid against rotation"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 76
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement about induced drag during the horizontal cruise flight is correct?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Induced drag decreases with increasing airspeed",
+ "B": "Induced drag has a minimum at a certain speed and increases at higher as well as lower speeds",
+ "C": "Induced drag has a maximum at a certain speed and decreases at higher as well as lower speeds",
+ "D": "Induced drag increases with increasing airspeed"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 77
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How do lift and drag change when approaching a stall condition?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lift decreases and drag increases",
+ "B": "Lift and drag increase",
+ "C": "Lift increases and drag decreases",
+ "D": "Lift and drag decrease"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 78
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What leads to a decreased stall speed Vs (IAS)?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lower density",
+ "B": "Decreasing weight",
+ "C": "Lower altitude",
+ "D": "Higher load factor"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 79
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How does a laminar boundary layer differ from a turbulent boundary layer?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The laminar boundary layer is thinner and provides more skin-friction drag",
+ "B": "The turbulent boundary layer can follow the airfoil camber at higher angles of attack",
+ "C": "The laminar boundary layer produces lift, the turbulent boundary layer produces drag",
+ "D": "The turbulent boundary layer is thicker and provides less skin-friction drag"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 80
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Number 2 in the drawing corresponds to the... See figure (PFA-010) Siehe Anlage 1",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Profile thickness.",
+ "B": "Chord line.",
+ "C": "Chord line.",
+ "D": "Angle of attack."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 81
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The angle (alpha) shown in the figure is referred to as... See figure (PFA-003) DoF: direction of airflow Siehe Anlage 3",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Lift angle.",
+ "B": "Angle of attack.",
+ "C": "Angle of incidence.",
+ "D": "Angle of inclination"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 82
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The right aileron deflects upwards, the left downwards. How does the aircraft react?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Rolling to the left, no yawing",
+ "B": "Rolling to the right, yawing to the left",
+ "C": "Rolling to the left, yawing to the right",
+ "D": "Rolling to the right, yawing to the right"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 83
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What has to be considered when operating a sailplane with water ballast?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Best glide angle decreases.",
+ "B": "Significant CG shifts.",
+ "C": "Best glide speed decreases",
+ "D": "It should stay below freezing level."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 84
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The laminar boundary layer on the aerofoil is located between...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The stagnation point and the center of pressure.",
+ "B": "The stagnation point and the transition point.",
+ "C": "The transition point and the separation point.",
+ "D": "The transition point and the center of pressure."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 85
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How do induced drag and parasite drag change with increasing airspeed during a horizontal and stable cruise flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Parasite drag decreases and induced drag increases",
+ "B": "Induced drag decreases and parasite drag increases",
+ "C": "Parasite drag decreases and induced drag decreases",
+ "D": "Induced drag increases and parasite drag increases"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 86
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which effect does a decreasing airspeed have on the induced drag during a horizontal and stable cruise flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The induced drag will slightly decrease",
+ "B": "The induced drag will collapse",
+ "C": "The induced drag will increase",
+ "D": "The induced drag will remain constant"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 87
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which statement describes a situation of static stability?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An aircraft distorted by external impact will return to the original position",
+ "B": "An aircraft distorted by external impact will tend to an even more deflected position",
+ "C": "An aircraft distorted by external impact will maintain the deflected position",
+ "D": "An aircraft distorted by external impact can return to its original position by rudder input"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 88
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A sailplane is operated with additional water ballast. How do best gliding angle and speed of best glide change, when compared to flying without water ballast?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Best gliding angle descreases, best glide speed decreases.",
+ "B": "Best gliding angle remains unchanged, best glide speed increases.",
+ "C": "Best gliding angle remains increases, best glide speed increases.",
+ "D": "Best gliding angle remains unchanged, best glide speed decreases."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 89
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which constructive feature has the purpose to reduce stearing forces?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "T-tail",
+ "B": "Differential aileron deflection",
+ "C": "Vortex generators",
+ "D": "Aerodynamic rudder balance"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 90
+ }
+ ]
+ },
+ "communication": {
+ "code": "90",
+ "name": "Communication",
+ "questions": [
+ {
+ "text": "Which abbreviation is used for the term \"visual flight rules\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "VFS",
+ "B": "VRU",
+ "C": "VFR",
+ "D": "VMC"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 1
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the abbreviation \"H24\" stand for?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "No specific opening times",
+ "B": "24 h service",
+ "C": "Sunrise to sunset",
+ "D": "Sunset to sunrise"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 2
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which altitude is displayed on the altimeter when set to a specific QNH?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude in relation to mean sea level",
+ "B": "Altitude in relation to the 1013.25 hPa datum",
+ "C": "Altitude in relation to the highest elevation within 10 km",
+ "D": "Altitude in relation to the air pressure at the reference airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 3
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct term for a message used for air traffic control?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Meteorological message",
+ "B": "Message related to direction finding",
+ "C": "Flight safety message",
+ "D": "Flight regularity message"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 4
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Distress messages are messages...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.",
+ "B": "Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities which are important for the safety and regularity of flight operations.",
+ "C": "Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.",
+ "D": "Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 5
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following messages has the highest priority?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Turn left",
+ "B": "Wind 300 degrees, 5 knots",
+ "C": "Request QDM",
+ "D": "QNH 1013"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 6
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The directional information \"12 o'clock\" is correctly transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "One two.",
+ "B": "Twelve o'clock.",
+ "C": "One two hundred.",
+ "D": "One two o'clock"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 7
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Times are transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Local time.",
+ "B": "Time zone time.",
+ "C": "UTC.",
+ "D": "Standard time."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 8
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the phrase \"Roger\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is...",
+ "B": "Permission for proposed action is granted",
+ "C": "I understand your message and will comply with it",
+ "D": "I have received all of your last transmission"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 9
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the phrase \"Correction\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "I have received all of your last transmission",
+ "B": "I understand your message and will comply with it",
+ "C": "Permission for proposed action is granted",
+ "D": "An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is..."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 10
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which phrase is used by a pilot when he wants to fly through controlled airspace?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Want",
+ "B": "Apply",
+ "C": "Would like",
+ "D": "Request"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 11
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with \"yes\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Affirm",
+ "B": "Yes",
+ "C": "Affirmative",
+ "D": "Roger"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 12
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phrase is used by a pilot to inform the tower about a go-around?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Pulling up",
+ "B": "Going around",
+ "C": "No landing",
+ "D": "Approach canceled"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 13
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct abbreviation of the call sign D-EAZF?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "AZF",
+ "B": "DZF",
+ "C": "DEA",
+ "D": "DEF"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 14
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what case is the pilot allowed to abbreviate the call sign of his aircraft?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "After passing the first reporting point",
+ "B": "If there is little traffic in the traffic circuit",
+ "C": "Within controlled airspace",
+ "D": "After the ground station has used the abbreviation"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 15
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of establishing radio communication between D-EAZF and Dusseldorf Tower?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Dusseldorf Tower over",
+ "B": "Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF",
+ "C": "Dusseldorf Tower D-EAZF",
+ "D": "Tower from D-EAZF"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 16
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction \"Squawk 4321, Call Bremen Radar on 131.325\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Roger",
+ "B": "Squawk 4321, 131.325",
+ "C": "Squawk 4321, wilco",
+ "D": "Wilco"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 17
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of acknowledging \"You are now entering airspace Delta\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Roger",
+ "B": "Airspace Delta",
+ "C": "Wilco",
+ "D": "Entering"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 18
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a cloud coverage of \"FEW\" mean in a METAR weather report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "5 to 7 eighths",
+ "B": "8 eighths",
+ "C": "3 to 4 eighths",
+ "D": "1 to 2 eighths"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 19
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a cloud coverage of \"SCT\" mean in a METAR weather report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "5 to 7 eighths",
+ "B": "8 eighths",
+ "C": "3 to 4 eighths",
+ "D": "1 to 2 eighths"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 20
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a cloud coverage of \"BKN\" mean in a METAR weather report?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "1 to 2 eighths",
+ "B": "5 to 7 eighths",
+ "C": "3 to 4 eighths",
+ "D": "8 eighths"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 21
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which transponder code indicates a radio failure?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "7500",
+ "B": "7700",
+ "C": "7000",
+ "D": "7600"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 22
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct phrase to begin a blind transmission?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Listen",
+ "B": "Blind",
+ "C": "Transmitting blind",
+ "D": "No reception"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 23
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How often shall a blind transmission be made?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Two times",
+ "B": "Four times",
+ "C": "Three times",
+ "D": "One time"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 24
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what situation is it appropriate to set the transponder code 7600?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Hijacking",
+ "B": "Emergency",
+ "C": "Flight into clouds",
+ "D": "Loss of radio"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 25
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct course of action when experiencing a radio failure in class D airspace?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route",
+ "B": "The flight has to be continued above 5000 feet complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing",
+ "C": "The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR rules or the airspace has to be left by the shortest route",
+ "D": "The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 26
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which phrase is to be repeated three times before transmitting an urgency message?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Mayday",
+ "B": "Urgent",
+ "C": "Pan Pan",
+ "D": "Help"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 27
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct frequency for an initial distress message?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Radar frequency",
+ "B": "Current frequency",
+ "C": "FIS frequency",
+ "D": "Emergency frequency"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 28
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What kind of information should be included in an urgency message?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, departure aerodrome, information about position, heading and altitude",
+ "B": "Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, departure aerodrome, heading and altitude",
+ "C": "Intended routing, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, departure aerodrome, destination aerodrome, heading and altitude",
+ "D": "Nature of problem or observation, important information for support, intentions of the pilot, information about position, heading and altitude"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 29
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct designation of the frequency band from 118.000 to 136.975 MHz used for voice communication?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "MF",
+ "B": "LF",
+ "C": "HF",
+ "D": "VHF"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 30
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In which situations should a pilot use blind transmissions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "When a pilot has flown into cloud or fog unintentionally and therefore would like to request navigational assistance from a ground unit",
+ "B": "When the traffic situation at an airport allows the transmission of information which does not need to be acknowledged by the ground station",
+ "C": "When no radio communication can be established with the appropriate aeronautical station, but when evidence exists that transmissions are received at that ground unit",
+ "D": "When a transmission containing important navigational or technical information is to be sent to several stations at the same time"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 31
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which abbreviation is used for the term \"abeam\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "ABB",
+ "B": "ABM",
+ "C": "ABE",
+ "D": "ABA"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 32
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which abbreviation is used for the term \"obstacle\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "OBST",
+ "B": "OBTC",
+ "C": "OST",
+ "D": "OBS"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 33
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the abbreviation \"FIS\" stand for?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight information service",
+ "B": "Flashing information system",
+ "C": "Flight information system",
+ "D": "Flashing information service"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 34
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the abbreviaton \"FIR\" stand for?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight information region",
+ "B": "Flight integrity receiver",
+ "C": "Flow integrity required",
+ "D": "Flow information radar"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 35
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way to transmit the call sign HB-YKM?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Hotel Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mikro",
+ "B": "Home Bravo Yuliett Kilo Mike",
+ "C": "Hotel Bravo Yankee Kilo Mike",
+ "D": "Home Bravo Yankee Kilo Mikro"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 36
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way to transmit the call sign OE-JVK?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Omega Echo Jankee Victor Kilo",
+ "B": "Omega Echo Juliett Victor Kilogramm",
+ "C": "Oscar Echo Jankee Victor Kilogramm",
+ "D": "Oscar Echo Juliett Victor Kilo"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 37
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An altitude of 4500 ft is transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Four five tousand.",
+ "B": "Four five zero zero.",
+ "C": "Four tousand five zero zero.",
+ "D": "Four tousand five hundred."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 38
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the meaning of the phrase \"Approved\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "I understand your message and will comply with it",
+ "B": "Permission for proposed action is granted",
+ "C": "I have received all of your last transmission",
+ "D": "An error has been made in this transmission. The correct version is..."
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 39
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What phrase is used by a pilot if a transmission is to be answered with \"no\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Negative",
+ "B": "No",
+ "C": "Not",
+ "D": "Finish"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 40
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a readability of 1 indicate?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The transmission is readable but with difficulty",
+ "B": "The transmission is perfectly readable",
+ "C": "The transmission is readable now and then",
+ "D": "The transmission is unreadable"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 41
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a readability of 2 indicate?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The transmission is readable but with difficulty",
+ "B": "The transmission is unreadable",
+ "C": "The transmission is perfectly readable",
+ "D": "The transmission is readable now and then"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 42
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a readability of 5 indicate?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The transmission is readable now and then",
+ "B": "The transmission is readable but with difficulty",
+ "C": "The transmission is unreadable",
+ "D": "The transmission is perfectly readable"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 43
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which information from a ground station does not require readback?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Runway in use",
+ "B": "Altitude",
+ "C": "Wind",
+ "D": "SSR-Code"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 44
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction \"DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead until 2500 feet before turning right heading 220 degrees, wind 090 degrees, 5 knots, runway 12, cleared for take-off\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots",
+ "B": "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off",
+ "C": "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, wilco, heading 220 degrees, 090 degrees, 5 knots, cleared for take-off",
+ "D": "DZF after lift-off climb straight ahead 2500 feet, then turn right heading 220, runway 12, cleared for take-off"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 45
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of acknowledging the instruction \"Next report PAH\"?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Positive",
+ "B": "Wilco",
+ "C": "Report PAH",
+ "D": "Roger"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 46
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what case is visibility transmitted in meters?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Up to 5 km",
+ "B": "Greater than 10 km",
+ "C": "Greater than 5 km",
+ "D": "Up to 10 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 47
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Urgency messages are defined as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Messages concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.",
+ "B": "Messages concerning urgent spare parts which are needed for a continuation of flight and which need to be ordered in advance.",
+ "C": "Information concerning the apron personell and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft",
+ "D": "Messages concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 48
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Distress messages contain...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Information concerning urgent spare parts which are required for a continuation of flight and which have to be ordered in advance.",
+ "B": "Information concerning the apron personell and which imply an imminent danger to landing aircraft.",
+ "C": "Information concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight",
+ "D": "Information concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 49
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the approximate speed of electromagnetic wave propagation?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "123000 m/s",
+ "B": "300000 km/s",
+ "C": "123000 km/s",
+ "D": "300000 m/s"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 50
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Urgency messages are messages...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sent by a pilot or an aircraft operating agency which have an imminent meaning for aircraft in flight",
+ "B": "Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance.",
+ "C": "Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation.",
+ "D": "Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 51
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Regularity messages are messages...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Concerning aircraft and their passengers which face a grave and imminent threat and require immediate assistance",
+ "B": "Sent by an aircraft operating agency or an aircraft of immediate concern to an aircraft in flight.",
+ "C": "Concerning the safety of an aircraft, a watercraft or some other vehicle or person in sight.",
+ "D": "Concerning the operation or maintenance of facilities essential for the safety or regularity of aircraft operation."
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 52
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A frequency of 119.500 MHz is correctly transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "One one niner decimal five zero.",
+ "B": "One one niner decimal five zero zero.",
+ "C": "One one niner decimal five.",
+ "D": "One one niner tousand decimal five zero."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 53
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "If there is any doubt about ambiguity, a time of 1620 is to be transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Sixteen twenty",
+ "B": "Two zero.",
+ "C": "One six two zero.",
+ "D": "One tousand six hundred two zero"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 54
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which phrase does a pilot use when he / she wants to check the readability of his / her transmission?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Request readability",
+ "B": "What is the communication like?",
+ "C": "You read me five",
+ "D": "How do you read?"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 55
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the call sign of the surface movement control?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Control",
+ "B": "Tower",
+ "C": "Earth",
+ "D": "Ground"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 56
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does a readability of 3 indicate?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "The transmission is perfectly readable",
+ "B": "The transmission is readable now and then",
+ "C": "The transmission is unreadable",
+ "D": "The transmission is readable but with difficulty"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 57
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "In what cases is visibility transmitted in kilometers?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Greater than 10 km",
+ "B": "Up to 5 km",
+ "C": "Greater than 5 km",
+ "D": "Up to 10 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 58
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "How can you obtain meteorological information concerning airports during a crosscountry flight?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "GAMET",
+ "B": "METAR",
+ "C": "AIRMET",
+ "D": "VOLMET"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 59
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What does the abbreviation \"HX\" stand for?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "24 h service",
+ "B": "Sunrise to sunset",
+ "C": "No specific opening hours",
+ "D": "Sunset to sunrise"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 60
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The altimeter has to be set to what value in order to show zero on ground?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "QTE",
+ "B": "QFE",
+ "C": "QNE",
+ "D": "QNH"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 61
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "A heading of 285 degrees is correctly transmitted as...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Two hundred eighty-five.",
+ "B": "Two eight five hundred.",
+ "C": "Two eight five.",
+ "D": "Two hundred eight five."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 62
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which of the following factors affects the reception of VHF transmissions?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Height of ionosphere",
+ "B": "Altitude",
+ "C": "Twilight error",
+ "D": "Shoreline effect"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 63
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which phrase is to be used when a pilot wants the tower to know that he is ready for take-off?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ready for departure",
+ "B": "Request take-off",
+ "C": "Ready for start-up",
+ "D": "Ready"
+ },
+ "correct": "A",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 64
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "On what frequency shall a blind transmission be made?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "On the appropriate FIS frequency",
+ "B": "On a tower frequency",
+ "C": "On a radar frequency of the lower airspace",
+ "D": "On the current frequency"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 65
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The flight has to be continued according to the last clearance complying with VFR flight rules or the airspace has to be left using a standard routing",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "There are other aircraft in the aerodrome circuit",
+ "B": "It ist the aerodrome of departure",
+ "C": "It is the destination aerodrome",
+ "D": "Approval has been granted before"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 66
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the call sign of the aerodrome control?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Ground",
+ "B": "Control",
+ "C": "Tower",
+ "D": "Airfield"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 67
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the call sign of the flight information service?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Flight information",
+ "B": "Info",
+ "C": "Advice",
+ "D": "Information"
+ },
+ "correct": "D",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 68
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What is the correct way of using the aircraft call sign at first contact?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Using the last two characters only",
+ "B": "Using all characters",
+ "C": "Using the first three characters only",
+ "D": "Using the first two characters only"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 69
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "Which altitude is displayed on the altimeter when set to a specific QFE?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Altitude in relation to the 1013.25 hPa datum",
+ "B": "Altitude in relation to the air pressure at the reference airfield",
+ "C": "Altitude in relation to mean sea level",
+ "D": "Altitude in relation to the highest elevation within 10 km"
+ },
+ "correct": "B",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 70
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "The correct transponder code for emergencies is...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "7600.",
+ "B": "7500.",
+ "C": "7700.",
+ "D": "7000."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 71
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "What information is broadcasted on a VOLMET frequency?",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "Current information",
+ "B": "Navigational information",
+ "C": "Meteorological information",
+ "D": "NOTAMS"
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 72
+ },
+ {
+ "text": "An ATIS is valid for...",
+ "options": {
+ "A": "45 minutes.",
+ "B": "60 minutes.",
+ "C": "30 minutes.",
+ "D": "10 minutes."
+ },
+ "correct": "C",
+ "imgSrc": null,
+ "num": 73
+ }
+ ]
+ }
+}
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/10 - Air Law.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/10 - Air Law.md
new file mode 100644
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@@ -0,0 +1,845 @@
+# 10 - Air Law
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 84 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which area could be crossed with certain restrictions? ^q1
+- A) No-fly zone
+- B) Restricted area
+- C) Prohibited area
+- D) Dangerous area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A restricted area (designated "R" on charts) can be entered subject to specific conditions published in the AIP, such as obtaining prior clearance from the responsible authority or ATC unit. A prohibited area ("P") cannot be entered under any circumstances — flight within is absolutely forbidden. A dangerous area ("D") contains hazards to flight but has no entry restriction; pilots are warned but may enter at their own discretion. "No-fly zone" is not a standard ICAO airspace classification per Annex 11.
+
+### Q2: Where can the type of restriction for a restricted airspace be found? ^q2
+- A) AIC
+- B) ICAO chart 1:500000
+- C) AIP
+- D) NOTAM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) is the primary official document containing detailed and permanent information about airspace structure, including the conditions, times of activity, and authority contacts for restricted areas (ENR section). While NOTAMs may announce temporary changes and ICAO charts show boundaries graphically, the authoritative definition and restrictions are found in the AIP. AICs (Aeronautical Information Circulars) contain advisory or administrative information, not regulatory airspace details.
+
+### Q3: What is the status of the rules and procedures created by the EASA? (e.g. Part-SFCL, Part-MED) ^q3
+- A) They are not legally binding, they only serve as a guide
+- B) Only after a ratification by individual EU member states they are legally binding
+- C) They are part of the EU regulation and legally binding to all EU member states
+- D) They have the same status as ICAO Annexes
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA regulations such as Part-SFCL (Commission Regulation (EU) 2018/1976) and Part-MED are published as EU Implementing Regulations or Delegated Regulations under the Basic Regulation (EU) 2018/1139. EU Regulations are directly applicable law in all member states without requiring national ratification — they are binding in their entirety. ICAO Annexes, by contrast, are standards and recommended practices (SARPs) that require national adoption and allow states to file differences; they do not have direct legislative force.
+
+### Q4: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "ARC"? ^q4
+- A) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- B) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- C) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- D) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, as defined in EU Regulation 1321/2014 (Part-M). It is issued after a periodic airworthiness review (typically annual) confirms that the aircraft's continuing airworthiness documentation and condition are in order. It accompanies the Certificate of Airworthiness and must be current for the aircraft to be legally flown. The other options are fabricated terms not used in EASA or ICAO aviation law.
+
+### Q5: The "Certificate of Airworthiness" is issued by the state... ^q5
+- A) Of the residence of the owner
+- B) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- D) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 8 (Airworthiness of Aircraft) and Annex 7 (Aircraft Nationality and Registration Marks), the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state of registry — the country where the aircraft is registered. The state of registry is responsible for ensuring the aircraft meets applicable airworthiness standards. This is separate from the owner's residence, place of manufacture, or where maintenance is performed.
+
+### Q6: The validity of a medical examination certificate class 2 for a 62 years old pilot is... ^q6
+- A) 12 Months.
+- B) 48 Months.
+- C) 24 Months.
+- D) 60 Months.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-MED (Commission Regulation (EU) 1178/2011), a Class 2 medical certificate for pilots aged 40 and over is valid for 24 months — except for pilots exercising privileges to carry passengers, where validity is reduced. However, for pilots aged 50 and over (and particularly 60+), validity is reduced to 12 months regardless. At age 62, the Class 2 medical is valid for only 12 months. This reflects the increased medical scrutiny applied to older pilots.
+
+### Q7: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "TRA"? ^q7
+- A) Transponder Area
+- B) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- C) Terminal Area
+- D) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace — airspace of defined dimensions within which activities requiring reservation of airspace are conducted for a specified period. TRAs are used for military exercises, aerobatic displays, parachuting, or other temporary activities. They are published via NOTAM and activated as needed. They differ from TSAs (Temporary Segregated Areas) in that TRAs may be shared with other traffic under certain conditions when not active.
+
+### Q8: What has to be considered when entering an RMZ? ^q8
+- A) To obtain a clearance to enter this area
+- B) To permanently monitor the radio and if possible to establish radio contact
+- C) To obtain a clearance from the local aviation authority
+- D) The transponder has to be switched on Mode C and squawk 7000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An RMZ (Radio Mandatory Zone) requires all aircraft to carry and operate a functioning radio, to monitor the designated frequency continuously, and to establish two-way radio contact with the responsible ATC unit before entry if possible. It does not require a formal ATC clearance (unlike a CTR). A transponder is not mandated by RMZ designation alone — that is required in a TMZ. This is defined in SERA.6005 and national AIP supplements.
+
+### Q9: What is the meaning of an area marked as "TMZ"? ^q9
+- A) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Traffic Management Zone
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone — airspace within which all aircraft must be equipped with and operate a pressure-altitude reporting transponder (Mode C or Mode S). This allows ATC and other aircraft (via TCAS/FLARM) to identify and separate traffic. TMZs are often established around busy airports or in complex airspace. Glider pilots must be aware that many glider airfields and soaring areas are now overlaid with TMZs requiring transponder equipment.
+
+### Q10: Two engine-driven aircraft are flying on crossing courses at the same altitude. Which one has to divert? ^q10
+- A) Both have to divert to the left
+- B) The lighter one has to climb
+- C) The heavier one has to climb
+- D) Both have to divert to the right
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.3210, when two aircraft are on converging courses at approximately the same altitude, each shall turn to the right. This creates a situation where both aircraft pass behind each other, avoiding a collision. Weight is irrelevant to right-of-way rules in crossing situations. The "give way to the right" rule applies to converging (not head-on) situations; in a head-on encounter, both aircraft also alter course to the right (SERA.3210(c)).
+
+### Q11: Two aeroplanes are flying on crossing tracks. Which one has to divert? ^q11
+- A) Both have to divert to the lef
+- B) The aircraft which flies from left to right has the right of priority
+- C) Both have to divert to the right
+- D) The aircraft which flies from right to left has the right of priority
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under SERA.3210(b), when two aircraft are converging at approximately the same altitude, the aircraft that has the other on its right must give way. This means the aircraft approaching from the right has right-of-way (i.e., it flies from right to left relative to the other aircraft). The aircraft that sees the other on its right must alter course — typically to the right — to avoid a collision. This is the "right-of-way" rule analogous to maritime rules.
+
+### Q12: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "E" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL75? ^q12
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class E at and above 3000 ft AMSL (or above 1000 ft AGL) and below FL100, the minimum flight visibility for VFR is 5000 m (5 km). FL75 is approximately 7500 ft, which is above 3000 ft AMSL but below FL100, so the 5000 m rule applies. The 8000 m minimum applies at and above FL100. The 1500 m minimum only applies at or below 3000 ft AMSL/1000 ft AGL in airspace F and G.
+
+### Q13: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" below FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q13
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace class C below FL100 (and above 3000 ft AMSL or 1000 ft AGL), the minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5000 m). The 8 km minimum only applies at and above FL100. The 1.5 km minimum applies in uncontrolled airspace at low altitudes. Glider pilots operating in class C below FL100 — for example crossing an airway — must ensure at least 5 km visibility.
+
+### Q14: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" at and above FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q14
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 10 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 8 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100 in controlled airspace (including class C), VFR flight requires a minimum flight visibility of 8 km. This higher threshold reflects the faster speeds and reduced manoeuvring margins at higher altitudes. The 10 km option is not a standard ICAO/SERA VMC minimum. The progression to remember is: low altitude uncontrolled = 1.5 km, controlled below FL100 = 5 km, at and above FL100 = 8 km.
+
+### Q15: The term "ceiling" is defined as the... ^q15
+- A) Height of the base of the highest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 10000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Altitude of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Ceiling" is defined as the height (not altitude) of the base of the lowest layer of cloud covering more than half the sky (i.e., more than 4 oktas — BKN or OVC) below 20,000 ft. Option A is wrong because it refers to the "highest" layer (should be lowest). Option B is wrong because the threshold is 20,000 ft, not 10,000 ft. Option D is wrong because ceiling is expressed as height (above ground level) not altitude (above mean sea level). This definition is from ICAO Annex 2 and SERA.
+
+### Q16: A transponder with the ability to send the current pressure level is a... ^q16
+- A) Transponder approved for airspace "B".
+- B) Mode C or S transponder.
+- C) Pressure-decoder.
+- D) Mode A transponder.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mode A transponders transmit only a 4-digit identity (squawk) code. Mode C transponders add pressure altitude reporting — they encode and transmit the pressure altitude from an encoding altimeter, allowing ATC secondary radar to display both identity and altitude. Mode S provides all Mode C capabilities plus selective interrogation, aircraft identification (callsign), and data link capabilities. Mode A alone cannot report altitude, so options A and D are incorrect. "Pressure-decoder" is not an aviation term.
+
+### Q17: Which transponder code indicates a loss of radio communication? ^q17
+- A) 2000
+- B) 7600
+- C) 7000
+- D) 7700
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard emergency transponder codes are: 7700 = General emergency, 7600 = Radio communication failure (loss of comms), 7500 = Unlawful interference (hijacking). Code 7000 is the VFR conspicuity code used in many European countries when no specific ATC code has been assigned. Code 2000 is used when entering controlled airspace from uncontrolled airspace without a prior assigned code. In a radio failure, squawking 7600 alerts ATC immediately to the communication problem.
+
+### Q18: What is the correct phrase with respect to wake turbulence to indicate that a light aircraft is following an aircraft of a higher wake turbulence category? ^q18
+- A) Caution wake turbulence
+- B) Be careful wake winds
+- C) Danger jet blast
+- D) Attention propwash
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The standard ICAO phraseology for wake turbulence warnings is "CAUTION WAKE TURBULENCE" — this is the prescribed phrase used by ATC when issuing wake turbulence warnings to pilots following heavier aircraft. ICAO Doc 4444 (PANS-ATM) specifies standardised phraseology, and non-standard phrases like "wake winds," "jet blast," or "propwash" are not ICAO-approved terminology. Standardised phraseology reduces ambiguity and is mandatory in EASA airspace.
+
+### Q19: What information is provided in the general part (GEN) of the AIP? ^q19
+- A) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+- B) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- C) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+- D) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP (Aeronautical Information Publication) is structured in three parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The GEN section contains general information including map icons/symbols, list of radio navigation aids, tables of sunrise/sunset, national regulations, fees, and administrative information. ENR contains en-route information including airspace, airways, and restricted areas. AD contains aerodrome-specific information including charts, procedures, and frequencies.
+
+### Q20: Which are the different parts of the Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP)? ^q20
+- A) GEN MET RAC
+- B) GEN AGA COM
+- C) GEN COM MET
+- D) GEN ENR AD
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 15 (Aeronautical Information Services), the AIP is divided into three standardised parts: GEN (General), ENR (En-Route), and AD (Aerodromes). GEN contains general administrative and regulatory information; ENR contains airspace structure, routes, and navigation aids; AD contains information specific to individual aerodromes. The other options (MET, RAC, AGA, COM) are abbreviations from older ICAO documentation structures no longer used in modern AIP organisation.
+
+### Q21: What is the purpose of the signal square at an aerodrome? ^q21
+- A) It is an illuminated area on which search and rescue and fire fighting vehicles are placed
+- B) It contains special symbols to indicate the conditions at the aerodrome visually to over-flying aircraft
+- C) Aircraft taxi to this square to get light signals for taxi and take-off clearance
+- D) It is a specially marked area to pick up or drop towing objects
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The signal square (also called signals square or ground signals area) is a designated area at an aerodrome where ground signals are displayed using symbols, panels, or markings to communicate aerodrome conditions to pilots flying overhead who cannot receive radio communication. It is not a lighting area for emergency vehicles (A), not a location where aircraft receive light signals for taxi clearance (C) — that would be done by the control tower — and not a tow drop zone (D).
+
+### Q22: How are two parallel runways designated? ^q22
+- A) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway remains unchanged
+- B) The left runway gets the suffix "L", the right runway "R"
+- C) The left runway remains unchanged, the right runway designator is increased by 1
+- D) The left runway gets the suffix "-1", the right runway "-2"
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 14 requires that when two parallel runways exist, both receive a suffix to distinguish them: 'L' for the left and 'R' for the right runway as seen from a pilot on final approach. Option A is wrong because the right runway also needs a suffix. Options C and D describe non-standard designations not used in ICAO procedures.
+
+### Q23: Which runway designators are correct for 2 parallel runways? ^q23
+- A) "26" and "26R"
+- B) "06L" and "06R"
+- C) "18" and "18-2"
+- D) "24" and "25"
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For two parallel runways, ICAO requires both runways to carry suffixes 'L' and 'R', resulting in designators like '06L' and '06R'. Option A is wrong because '26' has no suffix. Option C uses a non-standard dash notation. Option D shows different numbers (24 and 25), which would indicate two separate non-parallel runways on slightly different magnetic headings, not parallel runways.
+
+### Q24: What is the meaning of this sign at an aerodrome? See figure (ALW-011) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q24
+- A) After take-off and before landing all turns have to be made to the right
+- B) Caution, manoeuvring area is poor
+- C) Glider flying is in progress
+- D) Landing prohibited for a longer period
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ALW-011 figure shows the international ground signal for glider operations in progress — a double-headed arrow or specific panel displayed in the signal square. This warns pilots overflying the aerodrome that gliders may be operating, including tow-launching and soaring in the vicinity. The other options describe unrelated signals: right-hand circuit (A), poor manoeuvring area (B), and landing prohibited (D).
+
+### Q25: What is the meaning of "DETRESFA"? ^q25
+- A) Distress phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Uncertainty phase
+- D) Rescue phase
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, the most serious of the three emergency phases, declared when an aircraft is in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. ALERFA corresponds to the alerting phase (B), and INCERFA to the uncertainty phase (C). There is no phase called 'rescue phase' (D) as a formal ICAO designation.
+
+### Q26: Who provides search and rescue service? ^q26
+- A) Only civil organisations
+- B) Both military and civil organisations
+- C) Only military organisations
+- D) International approved organisations
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 12 defines Search and Rescue (SAR) as a service that may be provided by both military and civil organisations, depending on national arrangements. Many countries use military assets (aircraft, helicopters, ships) alongside civil emergency services. Limiting it to only civil (A) or only military (C) organisations, or requiring international approval (D), does not reflect the flexible, nationally-organised nature of SAR.
+
+### Q27: With respect to aircraft accident and incident investigation, what are the three categories regarding aircraft occurrences? ^q27
+- A) Event Crash Disaster
+- B) Event Serious event Accident
+- C) Happening Event Serious event
+- D) Incident Serious incident Accident
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010, aircraft occurrences are classified into three categories: incident (an occurrence other than an accident which affects or could affect safety), serious incident (an incident involving circumstances where there was a high probability of an accident), and accident (an occurrence resulting in fatal or serious injury, or substantial aircraft damage). The other options use non-standard terminology not found in ICAO definitions.
+
+### Q28: During slope soaring you have the hill to your left side, another glider is approaching from the opposite side at the same altitude. How do you react? ^q28
+- A) You divert to the right
+- B) You expect the opposite glider to divert
+- C) You divert to the right and expect the opposite glider to do the same
+- D) You pull on the elevator and divert upward
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO rules of the air and SERA regulations specify that during slope soaring, when two gliders approach each other head-on, the glider with the hill on its right must give way — but in this question the hill is on YOUR left, meaning the hill is on the other glider's right. Therefore YOU must give way by diverting to the right (turning away from the hill). Expecting the other glider to divert (B) is incorrect because the rule is based on which pilot has the hill on their right. Pulling upward (D) is impractical and dangerous.
+
+### Q29: Along with other gliders, you are circling in a thermal updraft. Who determines the direction of circling? ^q29
+- A) Circling is general to the left
+- B) The glider who entered the updraft at first
+- C) The glider with greatest bank angle
+- D) The glider at highest altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA regulations state that when joining a thermal already occupied by other gliders, the newly joining pilot must circle in the same direction as the glider that first established the turn in that thermal. This ensures all pilots orbit in the same direction, preventing head-on conflicts. Circling is not fixed as left (A), the highest glider (D) or steepest bank (C) does not determine the direction.
+
+### Q30: Is it possible to enter airspace C with a glider plane? ^q30
+- A) Yes, but only with transponder activated
+- B) No
+- C) With restrictions, in case of less air traffic
+- D) Yes, but only with approval of the respective ATC unit
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airspace C is controlled airspace where ATC clearance is mandatory for all flights including VFR. A glider may enter Class C airspace only with an explicit clearance from the responsible ATC unit. A transponder alone (A) is not sufficient — clearance is the fundamental requirement. Option B (no entry at all) is too restrictive; entry is possible with proper clearance. Option C implies a discretionary traffic-density rule which does not exist.
+
+### Q31: The holder of an SPL license or LAPL(S) license completed a total of 9 winch launches, 4 launches in aero-tow and 2 bungee launches during the last 24 months. What launch methods may the pilot conduct as PIC today? ^q31
+- A) Winch and bungee.
+- B) Winch, bungee and aero-tow.
+- C) Winch and aero-tow.
+- D) Aero-tow and bungee.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under Part-SFCL (SFCL.010 and SFCL.160), a pilot must have completed at least 5 launches using a specific launch method within the preceding 24 months to act as PIC using that method. The pilot has 9 winch (qualifies) and 2 bungee launches (qualifies, threshold is met), but only 4 aero-tow launches — which is below the required 5. Therefore, aero-tow is not permitted without additional training or a check flight with an instructor.
+
+### Q32: Which of the following documents have to be on board for an international flight? a) Certificate of aircraft registration b) Certificate of airworthiness c) Airworthiness review certificate d) EASA Form-1 e) Airplane logbook f) Appropriate papers for every crew member g) Technical logbook ^q32
+- A) B, c, d, e, f, g
+- B) A, b, c, e, f
+- C) D, f, g
+- D) A, b, e, g
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 6 and EU Regulation 965/2012, international flights require: Certificate of Airworthiness (b), Airworthiness Review Certificate (c), EASA Form-1 or equivalent release document (d), the aircraft logbook/journey log (e), licences and medical certificates for each crew member (f), and the technical/maintenance logbook (g). The Certificate of Registration (a) is technically required too under ICAO Annex 7, but the answer set B, c, d, e, f, g (option A) represents the standard EASA enumeration tested in this question context.
+
+### Q33: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL110? ^q33
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 8000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, at and above FL100, the minimum flight visibility for VFR flight in all controlled airspace classes (including class C) is 8000 m (8 km). This higher minimum is required at high altitudes because aircraft speeds are typically greater, reducing reaction time, and the increased altitude makes maintaining visual separation from IFR traffic more critical. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8000 m minimum applies.
+
+### Q34: During a flight at FL 80, the altimeter setting has to be... ^q34
+- A) Local QFE.
+- B) Local QNH.
+- C) 1030.25 hPa.
+- D) 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight levels (FL) are defined relative to the standard atmosphere pressure of 1013.25 hPa (the International Standard Atmosphere setting, also called QNE or standard setting). When flying at or above the transition altitude (which varies by country but is typically between 3000 ft and 18,000 ft), pilots set their altimeter to 1013.25 hPa and read flight levels. QNH gives altitude above sea level, QFE gives height above a specific aerodrome — neither is used when referencing flight levels.
+
+### Q35: What is the purpose of the semi-circular rule? ^q35
+- A) To fly without a filed flight plan in prescribed zones published in the AIP
+- B) To avoid collisions by suspending turning manoeuvres
+- C) To avoid collisions by reducing the probability of opposing traffic at the same altitude
+- D) To allow safe climbing or descending in a holding pattern
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The semi-circular (hemispherical) cruising level rule (SERA.5015) assigns specific altitude bands to specific magnetic tracks — eastbound flights use odd thousands of feet, westbound flights use even thousands. By separating aircraft flying in opposite directions onto different altitude levels, the probability of a head-on collision at the same altitude is greatly reduced. This is a passive separation tool requiring no ATC involvement, applicable primarily to en-route cruise flight above the transition altitude.
+
+### Q36: Which transponder code should be set during a radio failure without any request? ^q36
+- A) 7700
+- B) 7600
+- C) 7500
+- D) 7000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Upon experiencing a radio communication failure, the pilot should immediately squawk 7600 (the international radio failure code) without waiting for any ATC request or instruction — since communication is by definition impossible. Code 7700 is for general emergencies, 7500 for unlawful interference, and 7000 is the general VFR code. Setting 7600 proactively informs ATC of the situation, triggering the loss-of-communications procedures defined in national AIPs and ICAO Annex 11.
+
+### Q37: Which transponder code has to be set unrequested during an emergency? ^q37
+- A) 7500
+- B) 7700
+- C) 7000
+- D) 7600
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In any general emergency (engine failure, fire, medical emergency, severe structural damage, etc.), the pilot must set transponder code 7700 immediately and without waiting for ATC instruction. Code 7700 triggers an alarm on ATC radar displays and activates emergency procedures. Code 7500 is specifically for unlawful interference (hijacking) only — it should not be used for other emergencies. The phrase "unrequested" emphasises that the pilot must act autonomously without waiting for radio contact.
+
+### Q38: Which air traffic service is responsible for the safe conduct of flights? ^q38
+- A) ATC (air traffic control)
+- B) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- C) ALR (alerting service)
+- D) FIS (flight information service)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air Traffic Control (ATC) is specifically responsible for providing separation between aircraft and ensuring the safe, orderly, and expeditious flow of air traffic, including the safe conduct of flights in controlled airspace. FIS provides information useful for safe and efficient conduct of flights but does not control aircraft. ALR initiates search and rescue when aircraft are overdue or in distress. AIS provides aeronautical information publications but has no operational control role. Per ICAO Annex 11, ATC has the active separation and safety function.
+
+### Q39: Which air traffic services can be expected within an FIR (flight information region)? ^q39
+- A) FIS (flight information service) ALR (alerting service)
+- B) ATC (air traffic control) FIS (flight information service)
+- C) ATC (air traffic control) AIS (aeronautical information service)
+- D) AIS (aeronautical information service) SAR (search and rescue)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Flight Information Region (FIR) is the basic organisational unit of airspace, within which two services are provided: FIS (Flight Information Service) — providing pilots with weather, NOTAM, and other relevant information — and ALR (Alerting Service) — notifying appropriate organisations when aircraft are in distress or overdue. ATC is only provided within designated controlled airspace (CTAs, CTRs, airways) that may exist within an FIR, not throughout the entire FIR. Per ICAO Annex 11, FIS and ALR are the universal FIR services.
+
+### Q40: Which of the following options states a correct position report? ^q40
+- A) DEABC reaching "N"
+- B) DEABC, "N", 2500 ft
+- C) DEABC over "N" in FL 2500 ft
+- D) DEABC over "N" at 35
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A standard position report per ICAO Doc 4444 includes: aircraft callsign, position (fix or waypoint), and altitude/flight level. Option B (DEABC, "N", 2500 ft) provides all three elements concisely and correctly. Option A is incomplete (no altitude). Option C uses nonsensical terminology ("FL 2500 ft" — flight levels and feet are not combined this way). Option D lacks altitude and uses "at 35" without context. Correct position reporting is essential for ATC situational awareness.
+
+### Q41: The shown NOTAM is valid until... A1024/13 A) LOWW B) 1305211200 C) 1305211400 E) STOCKERAU VOR STO 113.00 UNSERVICEABLE. ^q41
+- A) 13/10/2013 00:00 UTC.
+- B) 21/05/2014 13:00 UTC.
+- C) 21/05/2013 14:00 UTC.
+- D) 13/05/2013 12:00 UTC.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM time codes use the format YYMMDDHHMM in UTC. The "C)" field in a NOTAM is the end time (the "until" time). The code 1305211400 is decoded as: Year 13 (2013), Month 05 (May), Day 21, Time 1400 UTC — giving 21 May 2013 at 14:00 UTC. The "B)" field (1305211200) is the start time: 21 May 2013 at 12:00 UTC. The NOTAM number A1024/13 confirms it is from 2013. Correct NOTAM decoding is a fundamental Air Law skill.
+
+### Q42: The term "aerodrome elevation" is defined as... ^q42
+- A) The highest point of the apron.
+- B) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- C) The highest point of the landing area.
+- D) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, aerodrome elevation is defined as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This definition ensures that the published elevation represents the most demanding terrain height that aircraft must clear during approach and departure from the landing surface. It is not the average, not the apron elevation, and not the lowest point. Aerodrome elevation is used to calculate QFE (the altimeter setting that causes the altimeter to read zero at the aerodrome) and for obstacle clearance calculations.
+
+### Q43: Of what shape is a landing direction indicator? ^q43
+- A) T
+- B) A straight arrow
+- C) L
+- D) An angled arrow
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, the landing direction indicator is T-shaped (commonly called a "landing T" or "signal T"). When displayed, the cross-bar of the T indicates the direction in which landings and take-offs should be made — aircraft land toward and take off away from the cross-bar. The T is white and should be clearly visible from the air. The L-shaped indicator is used for a different purpose (indicating a right-hand traffic circuit). Arrows are not the standard ICAO shape for a landing direction indicator.
+
+### Q44: What is indicated by a pattern of longitudinal stripes of uniform dimensions disposed symmetrically about the centerline of a runway? ^q44
+- A) At this point the glide path of an ILS hits the runway
+- B) Do not touch down before them
+- C) Do not touch down behind them
+- D) A ground roll could be started from this position
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Longitudinal stripes arranged symmetrically about the runway centreline are the runway threshold markings (specifically the threshold stripe pattern), which indicate the beginning of the runway available for landing. Pilots must not touch down before them. They do not mark an ILS glide path touchdown point (A), do not prohibit touching down behind them (C), and are not a ground roll starting position marker (D).
+
+### Q45: Which validity does the "Certificate of Airworthiness" have? ^q45
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) 12 years
+- C) 6 months
+- D) 12 months
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) itself has unlimited validity — once issued, it remains valid as long as the aircraft continues to meet its type design standards and is properly maintained. What is periodically renewed (typically annually) is the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC), which confirms that the aircraft's continuing airworthiness has been verified. The confusion between CofA and ARC is a common exam trap.
+
+### Q46: A pilot license issued in accordance with ICAO Annex 1 is valid in... ^q46
+- A) Those countries that have accepted this license on application.
+- B) The country where the license was acquired.
+- C) All ICAO countries.
+- D) The country where the license was issued.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 (Personnel Licensing) establishes international standards for pilot licences. A licence issued in full compliance with Annex 1 standards is recognised and valid in all 193 ICAO Contracting States without requiring individual acceptance. This mutual recognition is a cornerstone of international civil aviation — it allows pilots to operate across borders seamlessly. Options B and D are the same concept (country of issue) and are too restrictive; option A incorrectly implies case-by-case acceptance is required.
+
+### Q47: What is the subject of ICAO Annex 1? ^q47
+- A) Flight crew licensing
+- B) Air traffic services
+- C) Rules of the air
+- D) Operation of aircraft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 1 covers Personnel Licensing, which includes standards for flight crew licences (PPL, CPL, ATPL), ratings, medical certificates, and instructor qualifications. Annex 2 covers Rules of the Air, Annex 11 covers Air Traffic Services, and Annex 6 covers Operation of Aircraft. Knowing the ICAO Annexes by number and subject is a standard Air Law exam requirement.
+
+### Q48: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace "C" for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL125? ^q48
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FL125 is above FL100, so the SERA.5001 rule for high-altitude VFR applies: minimum flight visibility is 8000 m in all controlled airspace classes including class C. This is the same threshold as Q22 — both FL110 and FL125 are above FL100, so both require 8000 m. The 5000 m minimum applies below FL100 in most controlled airspace, and the 3000 m/1500 m minima apply only in lower uncontrolled airspace.
+
+### Q49: What are the minimum distances to clouds for a VFR flight in airspace "B"? ^q49
+- A) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace class B (and also A), VFR flights are generally not permitted unless specifically authorised. However, where VFR is permitted in class B, the cloud clearance minima per SERA.5001 are 1500 m horizontal and 300 m (approximately 1000 ft) vertical. Note that option A states "300 m" vertically using the metre equivalent, while option B states "1000 m" vertically — the correct vertical minimum is 300 m (not 1000 m). The "1000 ft" vertical minimum translates to approximately 300 m.
+
+### Q50: Being intercepted by a military aircraft at daytime, what is the meaning of the following signal: A sudden heading change of 90 degrees or more and a pull-up of the aircraft without crossing the track of the intercepted aircraft? ^q50
+- A) Follow me, i will bring you to the next suitable airfield
+- B) You may continue your flight
+- C) Prepare for a safety landing, you have entered a prohibited area
+- D) You are entering a restricted area, leave the airspace immediately
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 2, Appendix 1, Section 2, when an intercepting aircraft makes an abrupt break-away manoeuvre of 90 degrees or more and climbs away without crossing the intercepted aircraft's track, this signal means "You may proceed" — the intercept is complete and the intercepted aircraft is cleared to continue its flight. This is the standard release signal. The "follow me" signal involves the interceptor rocking wings and heading towards a destination. Pilots must study all ICAO interception signals as part of Air Law.
+
+### Q51: Which answer is correct with regard to separation in airspace "E"? ^q51
+- A) VFR traffic is not separated from any other traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic is separated from VFR and IFR traffic
+- D) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In class E airspace, IFR traffic receives separation from other IFR traffic, but VFR traffic is not separated from anything — neither from other VFR traffic nor from IFR traffic. VFR flights in class E receive traffic information where possible (from FIS) but no ATC separation service. This is a key distinction for glider pilots who frequently operate in class E: they must maintain their own separation from all traffic using see-and-avoid principles. Class E is the lowest class of controlled airspace where IFR is permitted.
+
+### Q52: A Pre-Flight Information Bulletin (PIB) is a presentation of current... ^q52
+- A) AIC information of operational significance prepared after the flight.
+- B) AIP information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.
+- C) NOTAM information of operational significance prepared prior to flight.
+- D) ICAO information of operational significance prepared after the flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A PIB (Pre-Flight Information Bulletin) is a standardised summary of current NOTAMs relevant to a planned flight, prepared and issued prior to departure. It filters and presents the NOTAMs pertinent to the route, departure and destination aerodromes, and alternate aerodromes. It is based on NOTAM data (not AIP or AIC data), and is prepared before the flight (not after). PIBs are available from AIS offices, online briefing systems, and flight planning services. Per ICAO Annex 15, it is a key pre-flight planning tool.
+
+### Q53: How can a wind direction indicator be marked for better visibility? ^q53
+- A) The wind direction indicator may be mounted on top of the control tower.
+- B) The wind direction indicator could be made from green materials.
+- C) The wind direction indicator could be surrounded by a white circle.
+- D) The wind direction indicator could be located on a big black surface.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a wind direction indicator (windsock or wind tee) should be clearly visible and may be surrounded by a white circle to enhance its visibility against the aerodrome background. This white circle provides a high-contrast surround that makes the indicator easier to identify from the air. Mounting it on the control tower (option A) is not a standard visibility-enhancement method. Green materials (B) do not aid visibility. A black surface (D) is not specified as a standard method in ICAO Annex 14.
+
+### Q54: Which distances to clouds have to be maintained during a VFR flight in airpaces C, D and E? ^q54
+- A) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 ft vertically
+- B) 1000 m horizontally, 1500 ft vertically
+- C) 1000 m horizontally, 300 m vertically
+- D) 1500 m horizontally, 1000 m vertically
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per SERA.5001, in airspace classes C, D, and E, VFR flights must maintain a horizontal separation of 1500 m from cloud and a vertical separation of 1000 ft (approximately 300 m) from cloud. The key distinction to remember is that the horizontal minimum is in metres (1500 m) and the vertical minimum is in feet (1000 ft) — mixing units is a common error. These minima apply above 3000 ft AMSL or above 1000 ft AGL, whichever is higher.
+
+### Q55: How can a pilot confirm a search and rescue signal on ground in flight? ^q55
+- A) Push the rudder in both directions multiple times
+- B) Fly in a parabolic flight path multiple times
+- C) Rock the wings
+- D) Deploy and retract the landing flaps multiple times
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 12 prescribes that a pilot in flight confirms acknowledgement of a ground SAR signal by rocking the wings (waggling the wings laterally). This is an internationally recognised visual signal. Rudder inputs (A) are not visible from the ground, a parabolic flight path (B) is not a defined SAR signal, and repeated flap deployment (D) is not a standard acknowledgement signal.
+
+### Q56: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "SERA"? ^q56
+- A) Selective Radar Altimeter
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- D) Specialized Radar Approach
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, established by Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012. SERA harmonises the rules of the air across all EU member states, implementing ICAO Annex 2 provisions at European level and adding EU-specific rules. It covers right-of-way rules, VMC minima, altimeter settings, signals, and related procedures. The other options are invented abbreviations not used in aviation.
+
+### Q57: A flight is called a "visual flight", if the... ^q57
+- A) Visibility in flight is more than 5 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- C) Visibility in flight is more than 8 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A "visual flight" (VFR flight) is defined by the rules under which it is conducted — specifically, Visual Flight Rules (VFR) — not simply by the prevailing visibility. A flight is VFR when the pilot navigates by external visual reference and complies with VFR separation minima and procedures. VMC (Visual Meteorological Conditions) describes the weather minima required to conduct VFR flight; but a flight can be in VMC and still be flown under IFR. The distinction between the rule set and the conditions is important.
+
+### Q58: Air traffic control service is conducted by which services? ^q58
+- A) ALR (alerting service) SAR (search and rescue service) TWR (aerodrome control service)
+- B) FIS (flight information service) AIS (aeronautical information service) AFS (aeronautical fixed telecommunication service)
+- C) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service) FIS (flight information service)
+- D) TWR (aerodrome control service) APP (approach control service) ACC (area control service)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 11, the three constituent units of Air Traffic Control service are: TWR (Aerodrome Control — controls traffic at and around the aerodrome), APP (Approach Control — handles departing and arriving traffic in the terminal area), and ACC (Area Control Centre — handles en-route traffic in control areas/airways). FIS is a separate service from ATC. ALR and SAR are emergency services, not ATC. AIS and AFS are information/communication services, not control services.
+
+### Q59: An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is a... ^q59
+- A) Fixed beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air
+- B) Rotating beacon installed at the beginning of the final approach to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- C) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the air.
+- D) Rotating beacon installed at an airport or aerodrome to indicate its location to aircraft pilots from the ground.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aerodrome beacon (ABN) is defined by ICAO as a ROTATING beacon (not fixed) installed at or near an airport to help pilots locate it from the air. It is located at the aerodrome itself, not at the beginning of final approach (B). It is intended to be seen from the air by pilots, not from the ground (D). Option A is wrong because the beacon rotates.
+
+### Q60: What is the primary purpose of an aircraft accident investigation? ^q60
+- A) To identify the reasons and work out safety recommendations
+- B) To clarify questions of liability within the meaning of compensation for passengers
+- C) To work for the public prosecutor and help to follow-up flight accidents
+- D) To Determine the guilty party and draw legal consequences
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 13 and EU Regulation 996/2010 are explicit: the sole objective of an aircraft accident investigation is to prevent future accidents and incidents by identifying causal factors and issuing safety recommendations. It is not a judicial or liability process. Determining liability (B), assisting prosecutors (C), or establishing guilt (D) is explicitly outside the scope of a safety investigation.
+
+### Q61: The term "runway" is defined as a... ^q61
+- A) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- B) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Per ICAO Annex 14, a runway is defined as a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. The key elements are: rectangular (not round), land aerodrome (not water — water aerodromes have alighting areas, not runways), and aircraft in general (not specifically helicopters, which use helidecks or helipads). Option D is incorrect because runways are specific to land aerodromes. Option A is wrong (shape). Option B is wrong (specifies helicopters only).
+
+### Q62: A pilot can contact FIS (flight information service)... ^q62
+- A) By a personal visit.
+- B) Via telephone.
+- C) Via radio communication.
+- D) Via internet.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** FIS (Flight Information Service) is an operational ATC service provided to airborne pilots in flight. The primary and essentially only operational means of contacting FIS during flight is via radio communication on the designated FIS frequency. While pre-flight briefing information may be obtained by telephone or online, the in-flight FIS service itself is radio-based. A personal visit is meaningless for an airborne pilot, and internet communication is not used for real-time in-flight FIS contact.
+
+### Q63: What is the meaning of the abbreviation "VMC"? ^q63
+- A) Variable meteorological conditions
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Visual flight rules
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions — the specific weather minima of visibility and cloud clearance defined in SERA.5001 that must be met for VFR flight to be conducted. If conditions fall below VMC minima, the airspace is said to be in IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions) and VFR flight is not permitted unless special VFR clearance is granted. VMC minima vary by airspace class and altitude band.
+
+### Q64: What information is provided in the part "AD" of the AIP? ^q64
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AD (Aerodromes) section of the AIP contains all aerodrome-specific information: aerodrome classification, runway data, lighting, frequencies, ground handling, approach and departure charts, taxi charts, obstacle data, operating hours, and special procedures. Option A describes ENR content. Option D describes GEN content. Option B contains a mix of items that do not correspond to a single AIP section. The AD section is what a pilot consults to prepare for operations at a specific aerodrome.
+
+### Q65: Which validity does the Certificate of Airworthiness have? ^q65
+- A) Unlimited
+- B) 12 years
+- C) 6 months
+- D) 12 months
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A Certificate of Airworthiness (CofA) issued under ICAO Annex 8 and EASA regulations remains valid for an unlimited period as long as the aircraft is maintained in accordance with approved maintenance programmes and the Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC) is kept current. The CofA itself has no fixed expiry date; it is the ARC (reviewed annually) that must be renewed periodically.
+
+### Q66: What is the meaning of the abbreviation ARC? ^q66
+- A) Airworthiness Recurring Control
+- B) Airspace Rulemaking Committee
+- C) Airworthiness Review Certificate
+- D) Airspace Restriction Criteria
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ARC stands for Airworthiness Review Certificate, the document issued following a successful airworthiness review confirming that an aircraft meets the applicable airworthiness requirements at the time of review. It is valid for one year and must be renewed to allow continued operation. The other options (Airworthiness Recurring Control, Airspace Rulemaking Committee, Airspace Restriction Criteria) are not recognised EASA or ICAO abbreviations in this context.
+
+### Q67: The Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the state... ^q67
+- A) Of the residence of the owner
+- B) In which the aircraft is registered.
+- C) In which the airworthiness review is done.
+- D) In which the aircraft is constructed.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under the Chicago Convention (ICAO Annex 7) and EASA regulations, the Certificate of Airworthiness is issued by the State of Registry — the country in which the aircraft is registered. The nationality of the owner (A), the country where the review was conducted (C), or the country of manufacture (D) are not the determining factors for issuing the CofA.
+
+### Q68: What is the meaning of the abbreviation SERA? ^q68
+- A) Selective Radar Altimeter
+- B) Standardized European Rules of the Air
+- C) Standard European Routes of the Air
+- D) Specialized Radar Approach
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SERA stands for Standardised European Rules of the Air, the EU regulation (Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 923/2012) that harmonises rules of the air across EASA member states. It is not an acronym for a radar device (A), a routing document (C), or a radar approach (D).
+
+### Q69: What is the meaning of the abbreviation TRA? ^q69
+- A) Transponder Area
+- B) Temporary Reserved Airspace
+- C) Terminal Area
+- D) Temporary Radar Routing Area
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TRA stands for Temporary Reserved Airspace, an airspace of defined dimensions temporarily reserved for specific uses (such as military exercises or parachute operations) and which other aircraft may not enter without permission. Transponder Area (A), Terminal Area (C), and Temporary Radar Routing Area (D) are not standard ICAO or EASA designations for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q70: What is the meaning of an area marked as TMZ? ^q70
+- A) Transponder Mandatory Zone
+- B) Transportation Management Zone
+- C) Touring Motorglider Zone
+- D) Traffic Management Zone
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TMZ stands for Transponder Mandatory Zone, an airspace designation indicating that aircraft must be equipped with and operate a functioning transponder when flying in that zone. Transportation Management Zone (B), Touring Motorglider Zone (C), and Traffic Management Zone (D) are not recognised aviation terms for this abbreviation.
+
+### Q71: A flight is called a visual flight, if the... ^q71
+- A) Visibility in flight is more than 5 km.
+- B) Flight is conducted under visual flight rules.
+- C) Visibility in flight is more than 8 km.
+- D) Flight is conducted in visual meteorological conditions.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A visual flight (VFR flight) is defined as a flight conducted in accordance with Visual Flight Rules, as specified in ICAO Annex 2 and SERA. The definition is regulatory, not purely meteorological. Stating specific visibility values such as 5 km (A) or 8 km (C) conflates VFR with VMC minima but does not define the term. Option D (flight in VMC) describes a condition under which VFR is possible, not the definition of a VFR flight itself.
+
+### Q72: What is the meaning of the abbreviation VMC? ^q72
+- A) Variable meteorological conditions
+- B) Visual meteorological conditions
+- C) Instrument flight conditions
+- D) Visual flight rules
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** VMC stands for Visual Meteorological Conditions, the meteorological visibility and cloud clearance conditions under which VFR flight can be conducted. It is not 'variable' conditions (A), instrument flight conditions (C), or Visual Flight Rules (D) — VFR is the set of rules followed in VMC, not the conditions themselves.
+
+### Q73: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace E for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL75? ^q73
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 3000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace classification, airspace E is uncontrolled above Class G. VFR flights in Class E below FL100 require a minimum flight visibility of 5,000 m (5 km). FL75 is below FL100 so the 5 km rule applies. 8,000 m (A) applies at and above FL100, 1,500 m (B) is the minimum in some lower airspaces under certain conditions, and 3,000 m (C) does not correspond to any standard VFR minimum in this context.
+
+### Q74: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace C for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL110? ^q74
+- A) 1500 m
+- B) 3000 m
+- C) 8000 m
+- D) 5000 m
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In controlled airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8,000 m (8 km) in accordance with SERA. FL110 is above FL100, so the 8 km minimum applies. 1,500 m (A) and 3,000 m (B) are minima for lower airspaces. 5,000 m (D) applies below FL100.
+
+### Q75: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace C for an aircraft operating under VFR at FL125? ^q75
+- A) 8000 m
+- B) 1500 m
+- C) 5000 m
+- D) 3000 m
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility is 8,000 m. FL125 is above FL100, confirming the 8 km (8,000 m) minimum applies. The answer 5,000 m (C) applies below FL100 in Class C. 1,500 m (B) and 3,000 m (D) correspond to other airspace or altitude bands.
+
+### Q76: What are the minimum distances to clouds for a VFR flight in airspace B? ^q76
+- A) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 300 m
+- B) Horizontally 1.500 m, vertically 1.000 m
+- C) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 300 m
+- D) Horizontally 1.000 m, vertically 1.500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In ICAO airspace Class B (and Classes C and D), the cloud separation minima for VFR flights are 1,500 m horizontally and 300 m (1,000 ft) vertically from cloud. Option B uses 1,000 m vertical separation which is too large. Option C uses 1,000 m horizontal which is insufficient. Option D mixes metres and feet incorrectly.
+
+### Q77: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace C below FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q77
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 8 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 10 km
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C below FL100, the SERA-prescribed minimum VFR flight visibility is 5 km (5,000 m). 1.5 km (A) is for special VFR or certain lower-altitude situations. 8 km (B) applies at and above FL100 in Class C. 10 km (D) is not a standard SERA minimum.
+
+### Q78: What is the minimum flight visibility in airspace C at and above FL 100 for an aircraft operating under VFR? ^q78
+- A) 1.5 km
+- B) 10 km
+- C) 5 km
+- D) 8 km
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class C at and above FL100, the minimum VFR flight visibility required by SERA is 8 km (8,000 m). Below FL100 in Class C the minimum is 5 km. 1.5 km (A) applies to special VFR scenarios. 5 km (C) is the below-FL100 Class C minimum. 10 km (B) is not a standard SERA VFR minimum.
+
+### Q79: The term ceiling is defined as the... ^q79
+- A) Height of the base of the highest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- B) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 10000 ft.
+- C) Height of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+- D) Altitude of the base of the lowest layer of clouds covering more than half of the sky below 20000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ICAO definition of ceiling is the height (not altitude) of the base of the lowest layer of clouds or obscuring phenomena covering more than half the sky (BKN or OVC, i.e., more than 4 oktas), below 20,000 ft. Option A uses 'highest layer' which is incorrect. Option B limits it to below 10,000 ft which is too restrictive. Option D uses 'altitude' (referenced to MSL) rather than 'height' (referenced to the surface), which is technically incorrect per ICAO definition.
+
+### Q80: Which answer is correct with regard to separation in airspace E? ^q80
+- A) VFR traffic is not separated from any other traffic
+- B) VFR traffic is separated only from IFR traffic
+- C) VFR traffic is separated from VFR and IFR traffic
+- D) IFR traffic is separated only from VFR traffic
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In airspace Class E, ATC provides separation only for IFR flights. VFR flights in Class E receive no separation service from ATC — they are not separated from IFR traffic or from other VFR traffic. Pilots operating VFR in Class E rely on the see-and-avoid principle. Options B, C, and D incorrectly imply some form of ATC-provided separation for VFR flights.
+
+### Q81: What information is provided in the part AD of the AIP? ^q81
+- A) Warnings for aviation, ATS airspaces and routes, restricted and dangerous airspaces.
+- B) Access restrictions for airfields, passenger controls, requirements for pilots, license samples and validity periods
+- C) Table of content, classification of airfields with corresponding maps, approach charts, taxi charts
+- D) Map icons, list of radio nav aids, time for sunrise and sunset, airport fees, air traffic control fees
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The AIP is divided into three main parts: GEN (General), ENR (En Route), and AD (Aerodromes). The AD part contains information about individual aerodromes including their classification, aerodrome charts, approach charts, and taxi charts. Warnings, airspace, and restrictions (A) are in ENR. License and regulatory info (B) is in GEN. Map icons and radio nav aids (D) are also primarily in GEN or ENR.
+
+### Q82: The term aerodrome elevation is defined as... ^q82
+- A) The highest point of the apron.
+- B) The lowest point of the landing area.
+- C) The highest point of the landing area.
+- D) The average value of the height of the manoeuvring area.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aerodrome elevation is defined by ICAO as the elevation of the highest point of the landing area. This is the point referenced for QFE settings and various aerodrome obstacle clearance calculations. The apron (A) is not the landing area. The lowest point (B) would understate the elevation relevant to operations. An average value (D) does not reflect the critical highest-point definition.
+
+### Q83: The term runway is defined as a... ^q83
+- A) Round area on an aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft
+- B) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of helicopters.
+- C) Rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+- D) Rectangular area on a land or water aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO Annex 14 defines a runway as a rectangular area on a land aerodrome prepared for the landing and take-off of aircraft. It is specifically rectangular (not round), on land (not water — that would apply to seaplanes on water aerodromes), and for aircraft generally (not helicopters specifically — helicopter landing areas are called HELIPADs or FATO).
+
+### Q84: What is the meaning of DETRESFA? ^q84
+- A) Distress phase
+- B) Alerting phase
+- C) Uncertainty phase
+- D) Rescue phase
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** DETRESFA is the ICAO codeword for the distress phase, which is the highest of the three emergency phases and indicates that an aircraft is believed to be in grave and imminent danger requiring immediate assistance. ALERFA (alerting phase) and INCERFA (uncertainty phase) are the other two phases. 'Rescue phase' (D) is not a defined ICAO emergency phase designation.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/20 - Aircraft General Knowledge.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/20 - Aircraft General Knowledge.md
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+# 20 - Aircraft General Knowledge
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 77 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: How is referred to a tubular steel construction with a non self-supporting skin? ^q1
+- A) Grid construction
+- B) Honeycomb structure
+- C) Monocoque construction
+- D) Semi-monocoque construction.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A grid (or truss/lattice) construction uses a framework of tubes or members to carry all structural loads, with the skin serving only as a fairing — it does not contribute to structural strength. Monocoque construction (C) has the skin carrying all loads with no internal framework. Semi-monocoque (D) uses both a frame and a load-bearing skin. Honeycomb (B) is a core material used in sandwich structures, not a fuselage type.
+
+### Q2: A construction made of frames and stringer with a supporting skin is called... ^q2
+- A) Honeycomb structure
+- B) Wood- or mixed construction.
+- C) Semi-monocoque construction.
+- D) Grid construction.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Semi-monocoque construction uses both an internal framework (frames and stringers) AND a skin that actively bears structural loads (tension, compression, shear). This is the most common modern aircraft fuselage design. Pure monocoque relies entirely on the skin with no internal structure. Grid construction (D) has a non-load-bearing skin. Honeycomb (A) is a material/sandwich type, not a fuselage structural concept.
+
+### Q3: What are the major components of an aircraft's tail? ^q3
+- A) Rudder and ailerons
+- B) Steering wheel and pedals
+- C) Horizontal tail and vertical tail
+- D) Ailerons and elevator
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tail assembly (empennage) consists of the horizontal stabilizer (with elevator) and the vertical stabilizer (with rudder). These are the two major structural groups. Ailerons (A, D) are located on the wings, not the tail. Steering wheel and pedals (B) are cockpit controls, not aircraft structure. The empennage provides pitch and yaw stability and control.
+
+### Q4: Which constructional elements give the wing its profile shape? ^q4
+- A) Rips
+- B) Planking
+- C) Tip
+- D) Spar
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ribs (rips) are the chordwise structural members that define the airfoil cross-section shape of the wing. They run perpendicular to the spar and give the wing its characteristic profile. The spar (D) is the main spanwise load-bearing beam. Planking/skin (B) covers the structure but follows the shape set by the ribs. The wingtip (C) is the outer end of the wing, not a profile-shaping element.
+
+### Q5: Which are the advantages of sandwich structures? ^q5
+- A) Low weight, high stiffness, high stability, and high strength
+- B) High temperature durability and low weight
+- C) High strength and good formability
+- D) Good formability and high temperature durability
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Sandwich structures excel at combining low weight with high stiffness, stability, and strength — the ideal combination for aerospace applications. By spacing two stiff face sheets apart with a lightweight core, the structure achieves very high bending stiffness (proportional to the cube of thickness). Temperature durability (B, D) is not a primary advantage — most cores (foam, honeycomb) are temperature-sensitive. Good formability (C, D) is limited compared to single-material sheets.
+
+### Q6: The fuselage structure may be damaged by... ^q6
+- A) Airspeed decreasing below a certain value.
+- B) Neutralizing stick forces according to actual flight state
+- C) Exceeding the manoeuvering speed in heavy gusts
+- D) Stall after exceeding the maximum angle of attack.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Exceeding maneuvering speed (VA) in turbulent/gusty conditions can cause structural damage because gusts apply sudden load factors that may exceed the aircraft's design limit load. VA is defined as the speed at which a full control deflection or a maximum gust will not exceed the structural limit. Stall (D) itself does not damage the structure. Low airspeed (A) and neutralizing stick forces (B) do not create damaging structural loads.
+
+### Q7: What is the effect of pulling the control yoke or stick backwards? ^q7
+- A) The aircraft's tail will produce an decreased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop
+- B) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased upward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise
+- C) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to drop
+- D) The aircraft's tail will produce an increased downward force, causing the aircraft's nose to rise
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pulling back on the stick deflects the elevator upward. This increases the downward aerodynamic force on the tail (the horizontal stabilizer + elevator generate a downward lift force). With the tail pushed down, the nose pivots up around the lateral axis. This seems counterintuitive but is correct: the tail goes down, nose goes up. Option B incorrectly states the tail force direction as upward.
+
+### Q8: What is the purpose of the secondary flight controls? ^q8
+- A) To improve the performance characteristics of an aircraft and relieve the pilot of excessive control forces
+- B) To improve the turn characteristics of an aircraft in the low speed regime during approach and landing
+- C) To enable the pilot to control the aircraft's movements about its three axes
+- D) To constitute a backup system for the primary flight controls
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Secondary flight controls (trim tabs, flaps, speedbrakes, slats) serve to optimize performance and reduce pilot workload — they are not essential for basic flight control. Trim reduces stick forces for hands-off flight; flaps improve low-speed lift. Option C describes primary controls. Option D is wrong — secondary controls are not backups for primary controls. Option B is too narrow, applying only part of the secondary control function.
+
+### Q9: The trim wheel or lever in the cockpit is moved aft by the pilot. What effect does this action have on the trim tab and on the elevator? ^q9
+- A) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves down
+- B) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves up
+- C) The trim tab moves up, the elevator moves up
+- D) The trim tab moves down, the elevator moves down
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Moving the trim lever aft (back) commands a nose-up trim. The trim tab deflects downward — the aerodynamic force on the tab then pushes the elevator upward (floating up). The elevated elevator deflects the tail downward and raises the nose. Trim tabs always move opposite to the elevator: when the trim tab goes down, the elevator goes up, and vice versa (anti-servo tab principle).
+
+### Q10: The Pitot / static system is required to... ^q10
+- A) Prevent potential static buildup on the aircraft.
+- B) Measure total and static air pressure.
+- C) Prevent icing of the Pitot tube.
+- D) Correct the reading of the airspeed indicator to zero when the aircraft is static on the ground.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot-static system measures two types of air pressure: total pressure (measured by the Pitot tube, which captures both static and dynamic pressure) and static pressure (measured by the static port, sensing ambient atmospheric pressure). These pressures are fed to the ASI, altimeter, and VSI. Preventing static buildup (A) or icing (C) are operational concerns, not the system's purpose. The ASI reading at rest on the ground is a consequence of zero dynamic pressure, not a calibration function.
+
+### Q11: Which pressure is sensed by the Pitot tube? ^q11
+- A) Dynamic air pressure
+- B) Cabin air pressure
+- C) Total air pressure
+- D) Static air pressure
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pitot tube faces into the airflow and measures total pressure (also called stagnation pressure), which is the sum of static pressure and dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²). It does not measure dynamic pressure alone (A) — that is derived by subtracting static pressure from total pressure in the ASI. Static pressure (D) is measured by the separate static port. Cabin pressure (B) is unrelated to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q12: Which is the purpose of the altimeter subscale? ^q12
+- A) To correct the altimeter reading for system errors
+- B) To reference the altimeter reading to a predetermined level such as mean sea level, aerodrome level or pressure level 1013.25 hPa
+- C) To set the reference level for the altitude decoder of the transponder
+- D) To adjust the altimeter reading for non-standard temperature
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter subscale (Kollsman window) allows the pilot to set a reference pressure (QNH, QFE, or 1013.25 hPa) so the altimeter reads altitude relative to that reference datum — sea level, airfield elevation, or the standard pressure surface for flight levels respectively. It does not correct for system errors (A), temperature errors (D — that requires a temperature correction calculation), or directly set the transponder (C).
+
+### Q13: In which way may an altimeter subscale which is set to an incorrect QNH lead to an incorrect altimeter reading? ^q13
+- A) If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+- B) If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+- C) If the subscale is set to a higher than actual pressure, the indication is too low. This may lead to much greater heights above the ground than intended
+- D) If the subscale is set to a lower than actual pressure, the indication is too high. This may lead to much closer proximity to the ground than intended
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If you set a higher pressure than the actual QNH, the altimeter "thinks" the reference pressure is higher, so it reads a higher altitude than your actual altitude — you are closer to the ground than the instrument shows. This is the dangerous scenario: you believe you have terrain clearance but you may not. The memory aid is "High to Low, look out below" — setting too high a pressure gives an over-reading.
+
+### Q14: Lower-than-standard temperature may lead to... ^q14
+- A) An altitude indication which is too high.
+- B) An altitude indication which is too low.
+- C) A correct altitude indication as long as the altimeter subscale is set to correct for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A blockage of the Pitot tube by ice, freezing the altimeter indication to its present value.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter assumes ISA standard temperature to convert pressure differences to altitude. In colder-than-standard air, the air is denser and the pressure decreases more rapidly with altitude than ISA predicts. The altimeter over-reads — it indicates a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual altitude. The aircraft is closer to the ground than shown. The memory aid: "Cold air, you're lower than you think." The altimeter subscale (C) only sets pressure datum, not temperature correction.
+
+### Q15: During a flight in colder-than-ISA air the indicated altitude is... ^q15
+- A) Higher than the true altitude
+- B) Eqal to the true altitude.
+- C) Equal to the standard altitude.
+- D) Lower than the true altitude
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In cold air, the atmosphere is compressed — air is denser and pressure falls faster with altitude than the ISA model assumes. The altimeter (which uses ISA pressure gradient) therefore over-reads: it shows a higher altitude than the aircraft's actual (true) altitude. The aircraft is lower in reality than the altimeter indicates. This is a significant safety concern near terrain. "High to low (pressure or temperature) — look out below."
+
+### Q16: The vertical speed indicator measures the difference of pressure between... ^q16
+- A) The present dynamic pressure and the dynamic pressure of a previous moment.
+- B) The present total pressure and the total pressure of a previous moment.
+- C) The present dynamic pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment
+- D) The present static pressure and the static pressure of a previous moment.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The VSI compares the current ambient static pressure (which changes as altitude changes) with the static pressure from a short time ago (stored in the metering reservoir through a calibrated restriction). The rate at which static pressure changes indicates the rate of climb or descent. Dynamic pressure (A, C) plays no role in the VSI. Total pressure (B) is measured by the Pitot tube for the ASI, not used in the VSI.
+
+### Q17: An aircraft cruises on a heading of 180° with a true airspeed of 100 kt. The wind comes from 180° with 30 kt. Neglecting instrument and position errors, which will be the approximate reading of the airspeed indicator? ^q17
+- A) 130 kt
+- B) 100 kt
+- C) 30 kt
+- D) 70 kt
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures Indicated Air Speed (IAS), which reflects the airspeed relative to the surrounding air mass — not relative to the ground. The aircraft is flying at 100 kt through the air. The wind (also moving at 30 kt from 180°, meaning a tailwind) affects the aircraft's ground speed (which would be 70 kt, option D), but it does not affect the relative airspeed between aircraft and surrounding air. The ASI always reads the aircraft's speed through the air mass, regardless of wind.
+
+### Q18: Which of the following states the working principle of an airspeed indicator? ^q18
+- A) Dynamic air pressure is measured by the Pitot tube and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator
+- B) Total air pressure is measured by the static ports and converted into a speed indication by the airspeed indicator
+- C) Total air pressure is measured and compared against static air pressure
+- D) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ASI works by comparing total pressure (from the Pitot tube) against static pressure (from the static port). The difference between them is dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), which is proportional to airspeed squared. The ASI capsule expands proportionally to this pressure difference and drives the needle. Option A is incorrect because the Pitot tube measures total pressure, not dynamic pressure alone. Option B is wrong because static ports measure static (not total) pressure. Option D describes a barometer, not an ASI.
+
+### Q19: What values are usually marked with a red line on instrument displays? ^q19
+- A) Operational limits
+- B) Caution areas
+- C) Operational areas
+- D) Recommended areas
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red lines (radial marks) on aircraft instrument displays indicate never-exceed limits — the absolute operational limits that must not be exceeded. On the ASI, the red line marks VNE (never-exceed speed). Yellow arcs indicate caution areas (B) — the range between maneuvering speed and VNE where flight is only permitted in smooth air. Green arcs show normal operating range (C). White arcs typically indicate flap operating speeds. There is no standard "recommended areas" marking (D).
+
+### Q20: Which of the mentioned cockpit instruments is connected to the pitot tube? ^q20
+- A) Direct-reading compass
+- B) Altimeter
+- C) Vertical speed indicator
+- D) Airspeed indicator
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is the only instrument connected to the Pitot tube (which supplies total pressure). The altimeter (B) and vertical speed indicator (C) are connected only to the static port — they measure changes in static pressure for altitude and climb/descent rate. The direct-reading compass (A) is a self-contained magnetic instrument with no connection to the Pitot-static system.
+
+### Q21: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 270° to a heading of 360°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated? ^q21
+- A) 270°
+- B) 030°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 330°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 270° to 360° is a right turn (northward, through west-to-north). In the northern hemisphere, the compass leads during turns toward north — it reads ahead of the actual heading. Therefore the pilot must stop the turn early, before the compass reaches 360°. A rule of thumb: stop 30° before the target heading when turning to north. 360° − 30° = 330°. If you wait until the compass shows 360°, you will have overshot and be past 360° (i.e., on approximately 030°).
+
+### Q22: The term "static pressure" is defined as pressure... ^q22
+- A) Inside the airplane cabin.
+- B) Of undisturbed airflow
+- C) Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.
+- D) Sensed by the pitot tube.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the ambient atmospheric pressure of undisturbed air — the pressure exerted by the air molecules in all directions, independent of airflow velocity. It is measured by flush static ports on the aircraft's fuselage, positioned to minimize dynamic pressure effects. Cabin pressure (A) is a separate, regulated pressure. The Pitot tube (D) senses total pressure, not static pressure. Option C partially describes static pressure but is imprecise — it is the pressure of the air at rest or in undisturbed flow.
+
+### Q23: What is a cause for the dip error on the direct-reading compass? ^q23
+- A) Acceleration of the airplane
+- B) Temperature variations
+- C) Deviation in the cockpit
+- D) Inclination of earth's magnetic field lines
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dip error (also called northerly turning error or acceleration error) in a direct-reading magnetic compass is caused by the inclination of the Earth's magnetic field lines, which dip downward toward the magnetic poles at an angle to the horizontal. This causes the compass card's pivot point and the magnet system to be offset, leading to errors particularly during turns and accelerations. Temperature variations (B), deviation (C — a different compass error caused by onboard magnetic fields), and acceleration per se (A) are separate effects; the root physical cause of dip error is the field line inclination.
+
+### Q24: The Caution Area is marked on an airspeed indicator by what color? ^q24
+- A) Red
+- B) Green
+- C) White
+- D) Yellow
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On an airspeed indicator, the yellow arc marks the caution range — the speed band between VNO (maximum structural cruising speed) and VNE (never-exceed speed). Flight in this range is permitted only in smooth air. Red (A) marks VNE (the never-exceed redline). Green (B) marks the normal operating range. White (C) marks the flap operating speed range.
+
+### Q25: What difference in altitude is shown by an altimeter, if the reference pressure scale setting is changed from 1000 hPa to 1010 hPa? ^q25
+- A) Zero
+- B) 80 m less than before
+- C) 80 m more than before
+- D) Values depending on QNH
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude using the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Increasing the QNH setting by 10 hPa causes the altimeter to indicate approximately 80 m more altitude (since 1 hPa corresponds to roughly 8 m at sea level). The reading is not zero (A), not less (B), and is not dependent on the QNH value itself (D) — the conversion factor is fixed by the ISA model.
+
+### Q26: The altimeter's reference scale is set to airfield pressure (QFE). What indication is shown during the flight? ^q26
+- A) Altitude above MSL
+- B) Height above airfield
+- C) Airfield elevation
+- D) Pressure altitude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the atmospheric pressure at aerodrome elevation. When an altimeter is set to QFE, it reads zero on the ground at the aerodrome and shows height above that aerodrome during flight. It does not show altitude above MSL (A — that would be QNH), the aerodrome elevation itself (C), or pressure altitude (D — that requires setting 1013.25 hPa).
+
+### Q27: A vertical speed indicator connected to a too big equalizing tank results in... ^q27
+- A) Mechanical overload
+- B) No indication
+- C) Indication too low
+- D) Indication too high
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A total energy compensated vertical speed indicator (TE-VSI) uses a specially shaped nozzle (TE probe) to cancel out changes in indicated climb/sink caused by changes in airspeed (energy exchange). If the compensating tank is too large, the compensation overcorrects and the instrument indicates a sink rate that is larger than the actual sink rate — i.e., too high a reading. A too-large tank does not cause mechanical overload (A), no indication (B), or under-reading (C).
+
+### Q28: A vertical speed indicator measures the difference between... ^q28
+- A) Total pressure and static pressure.
+- B) Dynamic pressure and total pressure.
+- C) Instantaneous static pressure and previous static pressure.
+- D) Instantaneous total pressure and previous total pressure.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A vertical speed indicator (variometer) works by measuring the difference between the current (instantaneous) static pressure and the pressure stored in an internal chamber (the reference or compensating vessel) through a calibrated restriction. As altitude changes, the instantaneous static pressure diverges from the stored pressure, deflecting a diaphragm or capsule. It does not measure total vs. static (A — that is the airspeed indicator), dynamic vs. total (B), or total pressure changes (D).
+
+### Q29: What engines are commonly used with Touring Motor Gliders (TMG)? ^q29
+- A) 2 plate Wankel
+- B) 2 Cylinder Diesel
+- C) 4 Cylinder 2 stroke
+- D) 4 Cylinder; 4 stroke
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Touring Motor Gliders (TMG) are typically equipped with a conventional four-cylinder, four-stroke piston engine (such as Rotax 912 or Limbach engines), which provides good power-to-weight ratio, reliability, and fuel efficiency for the self-launch and cruise requirements of a TMG. Wankel (A), diesel two-cylinder (B), and four-cylinder two-stroke (C) engines are either not common or not used in certified TMG types.
+
+### Q30: What is the meaning of the yellow arc on the airspeed indicator? ^q30
+- A) Cautious use of flaps or brakes to avoid overload.
+- B) Speed for best glide can be found in this area.
+- C) Flight only in calm weather with no gusts to avoid overload.
+- D) Optimum speed while being towed behind aircraft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The yellow arc on an airspeed indicator marks the caution speed range between VNO and VNE. Flight in this range is only permitted in smooth air with no gusts, because at these higher speeds turbulence-induced loads could exceed structural limits. It does not indicate a flap/brake limitation range (A), best glide speed (B — that is a specific point, not an arc), or towing speed (D).
+
+### Q31: Which levers in a glider's cockpit are indicated by the colors red, blue and green? Levers for usage of ... ^q31
+- A) Gear, speed brakes and elevator trim tab.
+- B) Speed brakes, cable release and elevator trim.
+- C) Speed brakes, cabin hood lock and gear.
+- D) Cabin hood release, speed brakes, elevator trim
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** EASA standardizes cockpit lever colors in gliders: red for the cabin hood (canopy) release, blue for speed brakes (airbrakes), and green for elevator trim. This color coding ensures pilots can quickly identify critical controls under stress without confusion. Options A, B, and C mix up the color-to-function assignments — for example, no standard assigns red to gear or blue to cable release.
+
+### Q32: The sandwich structure consists of two... ^q32
+- A) Thick layers and a light core material.
+- B) Thick layers and a heavy core material.
+- C) Thin layers and a light core material.
+- D) Thin layers and a heavy core material
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sandwich structure uses two thin, stiff face sheets (typically CFRP, glass fiber, or aluminum) bonded to a lightweight core material (foam, balsa wood, or honeycomb). The thin skins carry bending loads while the light core resists shear and keeps the skins separated, providing exceptional stiffness-to-weight ratio. A heavy core (B, D) would defeat the purpose of weight efficiency. Thick layers (A, B) would add unnecessary mass.
+
+### Q33: The load factor "n" describes the relationship between... ^q33
+- A) Weight and thrust.
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Lift and weight
+- D) Thrust and drag.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor n = Lift / Weight. At straight and level flight, n = 1 (1g). In a banked turn or pull-up maneuver, lift must exceed weight to maintain altitude, increasing n above 1. For example, in a 60° bank, n = 2 (2g). Load factor is critical for structural design — gliders have maximum positive and negative g-limits that must not be exceeded to prevent structural failure.
+
+### Q34: Which of the stated materials shows the highest strength? ^q34
+- A) Magnesium
+- B) Carbon fiber re-inforced plastic
+- C) Aluminium
+- D) Wood
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) has an exceptional strength-to-weight ratio — higher tensile strength than steel at a fraction of the weight. This is why modern high-performance gliders are predominantly CFRP construction. Aluminum (C) is strong and lightweight but significantly weaker than CFRP. Magnesium (A) is even lighter than aluminum but lower in strength. Wood (D) has good specific strength but is the weakest in absolute terms of those listed.
+
+### Q35: About how many axes does an aircraft move and how are these axes called? ^q35
+- A) 3; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis
+- B) 4; vertical axis, lateral axis, longitudinal axis, axis of speed
+- C) 3; x-axis, y-axis, z-axis
+- D) 4; optical axis, imaginary axis, sagged axis, axis of evil
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An aircraft moves about three principal axes: the longitudinal axis (nose to tail — roll), the lateral axis (wingtip to wingtip — pitch), and the vertical axis (top to bottom — yaw). All three pass through the aircraft's center of gravity. Option C uses mathematical labels but omits their aviation names. Options B and D invent a non-existent fourth axis.
+
+### Q36: How are the flight controls on a small single-engine piston aircraft normally controlled and actuated? ^q36
+- A) Manually through rods and control cables
+- B) Hydraulically through hydraulic pumps and actuators
+- C) Electrically through fly-by-wire
+- D) Power-assisted through hydraulic pumps or electric motors
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Small piston aircraft and gliders use direct mechanical linkages — push-pull rods and/or steel control cables — to transmit pilot input directly to the control surfaces. This is simple, lightweight, and reliable with no power source required. Hydraulic systems (B, D) are used on larger aircraft. Fly-by-wire (C) is used on modern airliners and military aircraft where electrical signals replace mechanical connections.
+
+### Q37: Which of the following options states all primary flight controls of an aircraft? ^q37
+- A) Flaps, slats, speedbrakes
+- B) Elevator, rudder, aileron, trim tabs, high-lift wing devices, power controls
+- C) Elevator, rudder, aileron
+- D) All movable parts on the aircraft which aid in controlling the aircraft
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The three primary flight controls are elevator (pitch), rudder (yaw), and aileron (roll) — these directly control the aircraft's rotation about its three axes and are essential for flight. Option A lists secondary/high-lift devices. Option B mixes primary and secondary controls together. Option D is too broad — not all movable parts are primary controls. Flaps, trim tabs, and speedbrakes are secondary controls.
+
+### Q38: A true altitude is... ^q38
+- A) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- B) A height above ground level corrected for non-standard pressure.
+- C) An altitude above mean sea level corrected for non-standard temperature.
+- D) A pressure altitude corrected for non-standard temperature.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is the actual geometric height of the aircraft above mean sea level (MSL), corrected for non-standard temperature deviations from ISA. It differs from indicated altitude (which assumes ISA) and pressure altitude (referenced to 1013.25 hPa). It is referenced to MSL, not AGL (eliminating A and B). Option D is partially correct but incomplete — true altitude is the real MSL height, not just a pressure altitude with a temperature correction applied.
+
+### Q39: During a flight in an air mass with a temperature equal to ISA and the QNH set correctly, the indicated altitude is... ^q39
+- A) Lower than the true altitude.
+- B) Equal to the standard atmosphere.
+- C) Higher than the true altitude.
+- D) Equal to the true altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When both the actual pressure (set correctly via QNH) and actual temperature exactly match ISA standard conditions, the altimeter's assumptions are perfectly valid. No temperature or pressure correction is needed, so the indicated altitude equals the true altitude (actual height above MSL). This is the ideal baseline condition. Any deviation in pressure or temperature from ISA will introduce errors.
+
+### Q40: Which instrument can be affected by the hysteresis error? ^q40
+- A) Direct reading compass
+- B) Tachometer
+- C) Vertical speed indicator
+- D) Altimeter
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hysteresis error in the altimeter occurs because the aneroid capsules (bellows) that expand and contract with pressure changes have a mechanical lag — they do not return to exactly the same position when pressure is restored to a previous value. This means the altimeter may give slightly different readings at the same altitude when climbing versus descending. The compass, tachometer, and VSI do not use elastic aneroid capsules in the same manner and are not subject to this specific error.
+
+### Q41: Which of the following options states the working principle of a vertical speed indicator? ^q41
+- A) Measuring the present static air pressure and comparing it to the static air pressure inside a reservoir
+- B) Measuring the vertical acceleration through the displacement of a gimbal-mounted mass
+- C) Total air pressure is measured and compared to static pressure
+- D) Static air pressure is measured and compared against a vacuum
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The vertical speed indicator (VSI) works by comparing the current static pressure (from the static port) against a reference pressure stored in a sealed reservoir (or capsule with a calibrated leak). When climbing, static pressure drops faster than the reservoir bleeds down, creating a pressure difference that indicates a climb rate. The calibrated leak rate determines the instrument's response. Option B describes an accelerometer. Option C describes the ASI. Option D describes a simple pressure gauge, not a rate instrument.
+
+### Q42: What is the meaning of the red range on the airspeed indicator? ^q42
+- A) Speed which must not be exceeded regardless of circumstances
+- B) Speed which must not be exceeded within bumpy air
+- C) Speed which must not be exceeded with flaps extended
+- D) Speed which must not be exceeded in turns with more than 45° bank
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The red line on the ASI marks VNE — the never-exceed speed — which is an absolute structural limit that must not be exceeded under any circumstances, including smooth air. Exceeding VNE risks flutter, structural failure, or loss of control. Option B describes the yellow arc (caution range), where flight is only permitted in smooth air. Option C describes VFE (flap extension speed). Option D describes no standard speed marking — maneuvering speed (VA) relates to gust/maneuver loads but is not marked by color range on the ASI.
+
+### Q43: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 030° to a heading of 180°. At approximately which indicated magnetic heading should the turn be terminated? ^q43
+- A) 150°
+- B) 180°
+- C) 360°
+- D) 210°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 030° to 180° is a right turn (clockwise through east and south). When turning toward southerly headings in the northern hemisphere, the compass lags — it under-reads the actual heading, showing a smaller heading than the aircraft has actually turned to. Therefore, the pilot must overshoot past the target — continue turning until the compass reads approximately 180° + 30° = 210°. The compass will then be lagging, showing 210° when the aircraft is actually on approximately 180°. This is the northern hemisphere rule: undershoot when turning to north, overshoot when turning to south.
+
+### Q44: An energy-compensated vertical speed inicator (VSI) shows during stationary glide the vertical speed... ^q44
+- A) Of the glider through surrounding air
+- B) Of the airmass flown through.
+- C) Of the glider plus movement of the air
+- D) Of the glider minus movement of the air.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A total-energy compensated variometer (TE variometer) cancels the effect of the pilot's control inputs on indicated vertical speed by accounting for changes in kinetic energy. During a steady (stationary) glide with no vertical air movement, it correctly shows the vertical speed of the airmass being flown through (i.e., zero in still air, or the actual thermal/sink value). It does not show the glider's speed through the airmass uncompensated (A), the combined glider plus airmass movement (C), or a subtracted value (D).
+
+### Q45: During a right turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again? ^q45
+- A) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- C) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a right turn, if the yaw string deflects to the left, the nose is yawing left relative to the turn — this indicates a skidding turn (too little bank and too little inside rudder, or adverse yaw). To centre the string, the pilot needs to increase rudder in the turn direction (right rudder) to bring the nose around, and reduce bank slightly to decrease the centrifugal skid tendency. Options A, C, and D either use the wrong rudder direction or wrong bank correction for this skid condition.
+
+### Q46: What kind of defect results in loss of airworthiness of an airplane? ^q46
+- A) Dirty wing leading edge
+- B) Crack in the cabin hood plastic
+- C) Scratch on the outer painting
+- D) Damage to load-bearing parts
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Airworthiness of an aircraft is fundamentally determined by the structural integrity of load-bearing components (main spar, wing attachment, fuselage frames, control system attachment points). Damage to these parts compromises the aircraft's ability to sustain flight loads and constitutes a loss of airworthiness. A dirty leading edge (A) reduces performance but is not an airworthiness defect. A cracked canopy (B) and a scratch on paint (C) are cosmetic or minor defects that do not affect structural integrity.
+
+### Q47: The mass loaded on the plane is lower than the minimum load required by the load sheet. What action has to be taken? ^q47
+- A) Trim aircraft to "pitch down"
+- B) Change pilot seat position
+- C) Change incident angle of elevator
+- D) Load ballast weight up to minimum load
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load sheet (weight and balance document) specifies a minimum pilot weight to ensure the centre of gravity remains within approved limits. If the actual pilot weight is below the minimum, ballast must be added (typically in the ballast area specified by the POH) to bring the total loaded mass up to the minimum required value. Adjusting trim (A, C) does not address the underlying CG/mass problem, and changing seat position (B) is not a standard corrective action for under-weight loading.
+
+### Q48: Water ballast increases wing load by 40%. By what percentage does the minimum speed of the glider plane increase? ^q48
+- A) 100%
+- B) 40%
+- C) 200%
+- D) 18%
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Minimum speed (stall speed) is proportional to the square root of wing loading: Vs ∝ √(W/S). If wing loading increases by 40% (factor 1.4), stall speed increases by √1.4 ≈ 1.183, i.e., approximately 18.3%. A 40% speed increase (B) would require a 96% increase in wing loading, 100% (A) would require a quadrupling of wing loading, and 200% (C) is far too large. Only the square-root relationship gives approximately 18%.
+
+### Q49: The maximium load according load sheet has been exceeded. What action has to be taken? ^q49
+- A) Increase speed by 15%
+- B) Reduce load
+- C) Trim "pitch-down"
+- D) Trim "pitch-up"
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** If the actual loaded mass exceeds the maximum allowed mass from the load sheet, the only correct action is to reduce the load (remove ballast, water ballast, baggage, or have a lighter pilot). Exceeding maximum mass means structural load limits may be reached at lower G-loads or airspeeds. Increasing speed (A) or adjusting trim (C, D) does not address the structural overload problem.
+
+### Q50: What is referred to as torsion-stiffed leading edge? ^q50
+- A) The part of the main cross-beam to support torsion forces.
+- B) Special shape of the leading edge.
+- C) The point where the torsion moment on a wing begins to decrease.
+- D) Both-side planked leading edge (from edge to cross-beam) to support torsion forces.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A torsion-stiffened leading edge is a structural design feature in which the leading edge of the wing (from the leading edge to the main spar) is planked (covered) on both upper and lower surfaces, creating a closed-section D-box that resists torsional (twisting) loads. This is not a spar component (A), not merely a shape descriptor (B), and not a reference to a torsion moment distribution point (C).
+
+### Q51: Information about maxmimum allowed airspeeds can be found where? ^q51
+- A) Airspeed indicator, cockpit panel and AIP part ENR
+- B) POH, approach chart, vertical speed indicator
+- C) POH and posting in briefing room
+- D) POH, Cockpit panel, airspeed indicator
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Maximum permissible airspeeds (VNE, VNO, etc.) are published in the Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH/AFM), displayed on the cockpit instrument panel (placard), and indicated on the airspeed indicator by the red line (VNE) and arc markings. The AIP ENR (A) does not contain aircraft-specific speed limitations. Approach charts and VSI (B) do not show speed limits. The briefing room posting (C) is informal and not authoritative.
+
+### Q52: The thickness of the wing is defined as the distance between the lower and the upper side of the wing at the... ^q52
+- A) Thinnest part of the wing.
+- B) Most inner part of the wing.
+- C) Thickest part of the wing.
+- D) Most outer part of the wing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wing thickness is defined as the maximum perpendicular distance between the upper and lower wing surfaces, measured at the thickest part of the cross-section (airfoil). This point is typically located between 20–30% of the chord from the leading edge. The thinnest part (A) or outer tip (D) would give a smaller, less meaningful measurement, and the inner root (B) describes spanwise location rather than airfoil thickness.
+
+### Q53: Primary fuselage structures of wood or metal planes are usually made up by what components? ^q53
+- A) Covers, stringers and forming parts
+- B) Frames and stringer
+- C) Girders, rips and stringers
+- D) Rips, frames and covers
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary longitudinal and transverse structural members of a traditional fuselage are frames (also called formers or bulkheads — running circumferentially) and stringers (running lengthwise). Together they form the skeleton over which the skin is attached. Covers and ribs are wing components, and "girders" is not standard fuselage terminology. The simplicity of frames + stringers makes B the correct fundamental answer.
+
+### Q54: The measurement of altitude is based on the change of the... ^q54
+- A) Static pressure.
+- B) Dynamic pressure.
+- C) Total pressure.
+- D) Differential pressure.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure decreases with increasing altitude in a predictable manner (in the ISA model). The altimeter measures static pressure from the static port and converts this pressure to an altitude reading using calibrated aneroid capsules. Dynamic pressure (B) depends on airspeed and is used by the ASI. Total pressure (C) is static + dynamic, used by the Pitot tube. Differential pressure (D) is the difference between total and static — that is what drives the ASI, not the altimeter.
+
+### Q55: What is necessary for the determination of speed (IAS) by the airspeed indicator? ^q55
+- A) The difference between the total pressure and the dynamic pressure
+- B) The difference between the dynamic pressure and the static pressure
+- C) The difference between the standard pressure and the total pressure
+- D) The difference betweeen the total pressure and the static presssure
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** IAS is determined from the difference between total pressure (Pitot tube) and static pressure (static port). This difference equals dynamic pressure (q = ½ρv²), from which airspeed is derived. Option A (total minus dynamic) would equal static pressure — not useful for airspeed. Option B (dynamic minus static) is not a meaningful aerodynamic quantity in this context. Option C (standard minus total) has no aerodynamic significance for airspeed measurement.
+
+### Q56: An aircraft in the northern hemisphere intends to turn on the shortest way from a heading of 360° to a heading of 270°. At approximately which indication of the magnetic compass should the turn be terminated? ^q56
+- A) 360°
+- B) 270°
+- C) 240°
+- D) 300°
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The shortest turn from 360° to 270° is a left turn (turning from north through west). In the northern hemisphere, the compass lags during turns away from north (toward south) and leads during turns toward north. When turning away from north (southward turn), the compass lags — it under-reads the turn. However, when turning through west (270°), the turning error is minimal. For turns to southerly headings the pilot must overshoot, but for 270° (west), the compass reading is approximately accurate at the completion point. The answer is to stop at 270° as indicated.
+
+### Q57: The airspeed indicator is unservicable. The airplane may only be operated... ^q57
+- A) If no maintenance organisation is around.
+- B) If only airfield patterns are flown
+- C) When the airspeed indicator is fully functional again.
+- D) When a GPS with speed indication is used during flight.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator is a required instrument for safe flight; without it a pilot cannot determine safe operating speeds, stall speed, or structural speed limits. An inoperative airspeed indicator means the aircraft must remain on the ground until the instrument is serviceable. No exception exists for local aerodrome patterns (B) or GPS substitute (D — GPS ground speed is not equivalent to IAS for aerodynamic purposes). Absence of maintenance (A) is irrelevant to the operational requirement.
+
+### Q58: During a left turn, the yaw string is drawn to the left from center position. By what rudder input can the string be centered again? ^q58
+- A) More bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- B) Less bank, more rudder in turn direction
+- C) Less bank, less rudder in turn direction
+- D) More bank, more rudder in turn direction
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a left turn, a yaw string deflecting to the left indicates the aircraft is slipping into the turn (too much bank relative to rudder input). To centre the string in a slip, the pilot needs to increase bank to steepen the turn and reduce rudder (less rudder in the turn direction). This is opposite to correcting a skid. Options B, C, and D use incorrect combinations for correcting a slip in a left turn.
+
+### Q59: What is the purpose of winglets? ^q59
+- A) To increase efficiency of aspect ratio.
+- B) Reduction of induced drag.
+- C) Increase gliging performance at high speed.
+- D) Increase of lift and turning manoeuvering capabilities.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winglets are upward (or downward) curving extensions at the wingtip that reduce induced drag by weakening the wingtip vortex — the main source of induced drag on a finite wing. They do not primarily increase aspect ratio efficiency (A — though functionally similar, they are a different mechanism), are not specifically for high-speed performance (C), and do not increase lift or turning agility (D).
+
+### Q60: A glider's trim lever is used to... ^q60
+- A) Reduce stick force on the elevator.
+- B) Reduce stick force on the ailerons.
+- C) Reduce stick force on the rudder.
+- D) Reduce the adverse yaw.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trim system adjusts the elevator trim tab (or spring trim) to hold a desired pitch attitude without continuous pilot input force on the stick. This reduces pilot workload on long final glides or thermalling. Ailerons (B) and rudder (C) are not trimmed by the standard glider trim lever. Adverse yaw (D) is a roll/yaw coupling phenomenon addressed by rudder coordination, not trim.
+
+### Q61: What are the primary and the secondary effects of a rudder input to the left? ^q61
+- A) Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the left
+- B) Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the left
+- C) Primary: yaw to the right Secondary: roll to the right
+- D) Primary: yaw to the left Secondary: roll to the right
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary effect of left rudder is yaw to the left — the nose swings left around the vertical axis. The secondary effect is a roll to the left: as the nose yaws left, the right wing moves forward and generates more lift, while the left wing slows and generates less, causing the aircraft to bank left. This coupling between yaw and roll is an important aerodynamic relationship for coordinating turns in gliders.
+
+### Q62: When trimming an aircraft nose up, in which direction does the trim tab move? ^q62
+- A) It moves down
+- B) In direction of rudder deflection
+- C) It moves up
+- D) Depends on CG position
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** To trim nose up, the elevator must be held in an upward position. The trim tab moves down to achieve this: the downward tab creates an aerodynamic force that pushes the elevator up and holds it there without pilot input. This is the fundamental inverse relationship between trim tab and elevator deflection. CG position (D) affects trim authority but not the direction of tab movement. Rudder (B) is irrelevant to elevator trim.
+
+### Q63: The trim is used to... ^q63
+- A) Adapt the control force.
+- B) Increase adverse yaw.
+- C) Move the centre of gravity
+- D) Lock control elements.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Trim is used to neutralize control forces so the pilot does not need to continuously push or pull the stick to maintain a desired flight attitude. By adjusting the trim, the pilot can fly hands-off at a set speed and attitude. Trim cannot move the center of gravity (C) — that requires shifting mass. Trim does not lock controls (D) or increase adverse yaw (B), which is a side-effect of aileron use.
+
+### Q64: QFE is the... ^q64
+- A) Altitude above the reference pressure level 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) Magnetic bearing to a station.
+- C) Barometric pressure adjusted to sea level, using the international standard atmosphere (ISA).
+- D) Barometric pressure at a reference datum, typically the runway threshold of an airfield.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual barometric pressure measured at a specific reference point, typically the airfield or runway threshold elevation. When QFE is set in the altimeter subscale, the altimeter reads zero on the runway — showing height above the airfield. QNH (not QFE) is the pressure adjusted to mean sea level (C). Flight levels use 1013.25 hPa (A). A magnetic bearing to a station (B) is QDM/QDR terminology, unrelated to altimetry.
+
+### Q65: The compass error caused by the aircraft's magnetic field is called... ^q65
+- A) Inclination
+- B) Variation.
+- C) Deviation
+- D) Declination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the compass error caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields (from metal structures, electrical equipment, engines). It is measured in degrees and varies with aircraft heading — it is recorded on a deviation card in the cockpit. Variation (B, also called declination D) is the angle between true north and magnetic north — an earth-based error, not caused by the aircraft. Inclination (A) is the vertical dip of the earth's magnetic field, which causes turning and acceleration errors.
+
+### Q66: Which cockpit instruments are connected to the static port? ^q66
+- A) Airspeed indicator, direct-reading compass, slip indicator
+- B) Airspeed indicator, altimeter, direct-reading compass
+- C) Altimeter, slip indicator, navigational computer
+- D) Altimeter, vertical speed indicator, airspeed indicator
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The static port supplies static pressure to three instruments: the altimeter (measures static pressure to indicate altitude), the vertical speed indicator (compares current static pressure to a stored reference), and the airspeed indicator (uses static pressure in combination with Pitot total pressure). The direct-reading compass (A, B) is a self-contained magnetic instrument requiring no pneumatic input. The slip indicator (A, C) is a gravity/inertial instrument, not connected to the static system.
+
+### Q67: What does the dynamic pressure depend directly on? ^q67
+- A) Lift- and drag coefficient
+- B) Air density and airflow speed squared
+- C) Air density and lift coefficient
+- D) Air pressure and air temperature
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dynamic pressure (q) is defined by Bernoulli's equation as q = ½ρv², where ρ is air density and v is airflow speed. Dynamic pressure depends directly on air density and the square of velocity. Lift and drag coefficients (A) are aerodynamic effects that depend on dynamic pressure, not the other way around. Air pressure and temperature (D) influence density indirectly but are not the direct parameters in the formula.
+
+### Q68: Airspeed indicator, altimeter and vertical speed indicator all show incorrect indications at the same time. What error can be the cause? ^q68
+- A) Blocking of static pressure lines.
+- B) Leakage in compensation vessel.
+- C) Blocking of pitot tube
+- D) Failure of the electrical system.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator, altimeter, and vertical speed indicator are all connected to the static pressure port. If the static pressure system is blocked (e.g., by ice, water, or a cover left on), all three instruments will give erroneous readings simultaneously. A blocked pitot tube (C) would affect only the airspeed indicator. A leaking compensating vessel (B) affects only the VSI. An electrical failure (D) does not affect these purely pneumatic instruments.
+
+### Q69: A movement around the longitudinal axis is primarily initiated by the... ^q69
+- A) Elevator.
+- B) Ailerons.
+- C) Trim tab.
+- D) Rudder
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ailerons control roll — rotation around the longitudinal axis (the axis running nose to tail). When one aileron deflects up and the other down, differential lift is created, rolling the aircraft. The elevator (A) controls pitch (rotation around the lateral axis). The rudder (D) controls yaw (rotation around the vertical axis). The trim tab (C) is a secondary control that modifies control forces, not a primary roll initiator.
+
+### Q70: A flight level is a... ^q70
+- A) True altitude.
+- B) Altitude above ground.
+- C) Density altitude.
+- D) Pressure altitude.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A flight level (FL) is a pressure altitude expressed in hundreds of feet with the altimeter subscale set to 1013.25 hPa (standard pressure). FL100 = 10,000 ft on the standard pressure setting. All aircraft above the transition altitude use this common datum, ensuring separation between aircraft regardless of local QNH variations. True altitude (A) is the actual height above MSL. Altitude above ground (B) is height AGL. Density altitude (C) relates to performance calculations.
+
+### Q71: The indication of a magnetic compass deviates from magnetic north direction due to what errors? ^q71
+- A) Inclination and declination of the earth's magnetic field
+- B) Gravity and magnetism
+- C) Deviation, turning and acceleration errors
+- D) Variation, turning and acceleration errors
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The magnetic compass is affected by deviation (from the aircraft's own magnetic field), turning errors (caused by magnetic dip/inclination — the compass card tilts and reads incorrectly during turns in the northern hemisphere), and acceleration errors (the compass reads incorrectly during speed changes on east/west headings). Variation/declination (A, D) is a geographic difference between true and magnetic north that applies to all magnetic compasses equally and is not an "error" in the same sense — it is a known, chartable quantity.
+
+### Q72: When is it necessary to adjust the pressure in the reference scale of an alitimeter? ^q72
+- A) After maintance has been finished
+- B) Every day before the first flight
+- C) Once a month before flight operation
+- D) Before every flight and during cross country flights
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The altimeter's reference pressure (subscale) must be set before every flight to the correct local QNH/QFE so that the altimeter reads the correct altitude or height. During cross-country flights, QNH changes as the pilot moves between pressure regions, so updates are required when crossing into new altimeter setting regions. Monthly (C) or only after maintenance (A) settings would result in significant altitude errors.
+
+### Q73: The term "inclination" is defined as... ^q73
+- A) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- B) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- C) Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+- D) Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's magnetic field vector and the horizontal plane at any given location. It is 0° at the magnetic equator and 90° at the magnetic poles. Deviation (A) is the error caused by magnetic fields within the aircraft. Magnetic variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and true north. Option D describes aircraft heading, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q74: With decreasing air density the airflow speed increases at stall speed (TAS) and vice verca. How has a final approach to be conducted on a hot summer day? ^q74
+- A) With increased speed indication (IAS)
+- B) With unchanged speed indication (IAS)
+- C) With decreased speed indication (IAS)
+- D) With additional speed according POH
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The airspeed indicator measures IAS (Indicated Airspeed), which is derived from dynamic pressure. At lower air density (hot day, high altitude), TAS is higher than IAS for the same dynamic pressure. The aerodynamic behaviour of the wing (lift, stall) depends on dynamic pressure (and thus IAS), not on TAS. Therefore stall occurs at the same IAS regardless of density. The approach should be flown at the same IAS as always (B). Adding speed (D) or reducing IAS (C) based on temperature alone is not correct for stall margin management with IAS.
+
+### Q75: The load factor n describes the relationship between... ^q75
+- A) Weight and thrust.
+- B) Drag and lift
+- C) Lift and weight
+- D) Thrust and drag.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The load factor (n) is the ratio of the aerodynamic lift acting on the aircraft to the aircraft's weight: n = L/W. In level unaccelerated flight, n = 1. In turns or pull-ups, n increases. It does not describe weight/thrust (A), drag/lift (B), or thrust/drag (D) relationships.
+
+### Q76: The term static pressure is defined as pressure... ^q76
+- A) Inside the airplane cabin.
+- B) Of undisturbed airflow
+- C) Resulting from orderly flow of air particles.
+- D) Sensed by the pitot tube.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Static pressure is the pressure of the undisturbed ambient airmass — the atmospheric pressure acting equally in all directions at a given altitude. It is sensed through flush static ports on the fuselage skin. It is not the cabin pressure (A), not related to orderly flow direction (C — that is dynamic pressure), and is not sensed by the pitot tube alone (D — the pitot senses total pressure).
+
+### Q77: The term inclination is defined as... ^q77
+- A) Deviation induced by electrical fields.
+- B) Angle between magnetic and true north
+- C) Angle between earth's magnetic field lines and horizontal plane.
+- D) Angle between airplane's longitudinal axis and true north.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle between the Earth's total magnetic field vector and the local horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator, field lines are horizontal (0° dip); at the poles, they are vertical (90° dip). Deviation (A) is caused by onboard magnetic interference. Variation/declination (B) is the angle between magnetic and geographic north. Option D describes aircraft heading relative to true north.
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+# 30 - Flight Performance and Planning
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 34 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Exceeding the maximum allowed aircraft mass is... ^q1
+- A) Compensated by the pilot's control inputs.
+- B) Only relevant if the excess is more than 10 %.
+- C) Exceptionally permissible to avoid delays
+- D) Not permissible and essentially dangerous
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The maximum allowable mass (MTOM) is a structural and aerodynamic certification limit, not a guideline. Exceeding it increases wing loading, raises the stall speed, degrades climb performance, and overstresses the airframe — potentially beyond its certified load factors. No pilot input can compensate for a structurally compromised aircraft. There is no regulatory or safety margin that permits any excess, even temporarily.
+
+### Q2: The center of gravity has to be located... ^q2
+- A) Behind the rear C.G. limit
+- B) In front of the front C.G. limit.
+- C) Right of the lateral C. G. limit.
+- D) Between the front and the rear C.G. limit.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The approved C.G. envelope defines the range within which the aircraft's stability and controllability have been certified. If the C.G. moves forward of the front limit, elevator authority may be insufficient to rotate at takeoff or flare on landing. If it moves aft of the rear limit, the aircraft becomes statically unstable and pitch oscillations can become uncontrollable. The C.G. must remain between both limits throughout the entire flight.
+
+### Q3: An aircraft must be loaded and operated in such a way that the center of gravity (CG) stays within the approved limits during all phases of flight. This is done to ensure... ^q3
+- A) That the aircraft does not exceed the maximum permissible airspeed during a descent
+- B) Both stability and controllability of the aircraft.
+- C) That the aircraft does not tip over on its tail while it is being loaded.
+- D) That the aircraft does not stall.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The C.G. position relative to the aerodynamic neutral point determines longitudinal static stability. A C.G. forward of the neutral point produces a restoring pitching moment (stability), while control authority provides maneuverability (controllability). If the C.G. is outside limits, one of these two properties is compromised — either the pilot cannot correct a pitch upset, or the aircraft does not naturally resist one. Stall speed and Vne are influenced by other parameters and are not the primary reasons for the C.G. requirement.
+
+### Q4: The empty weight and the corresponding center of gravity (CG) of an aircraft are initially determined... ^q4
+- A) By weighing.
+- B) By calculation.
+- C) For one aircraft of a type only, since all aircraft of the same type have the same mass and CG position
+- D) Through data provided by the aircraft manufacturer.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Each individual aircraft is physically weighed — typically on three-point scales — to determine its actual empty mass and C.G. position. Manufacturing tolerances, repairs, and installed equipment vary between serial numbers of the same type, so manufacturer tables alone are insufficient. The results are recorded in the aircraft's weight and balance report and must be updated after any modification that changes mass or mass distribution.
+
+### Q5: Baggage and cargo must be properly stowed and fastened, otherwise a shift of the cargo may cause... ^q5
+- A) Calculable instability if the C.G. is shifting by less than 10 %.
+- B) Continuous attitudes which can be corrected by the pilot using the flight controls.
+- C) Structural damage, angle of attack stability, velocity stability.
+- D) Uncontrollable attitudes, structural damage, risk of injuries.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In turbulence or during aerobatics, unsecured cargo can shift suddenly and move the C.G. outside limits instantaneously — faster than a pilot can react. A sudden aft C.G. shift can cause an unrecoverable pitch-up; items becoming projectiles can injure occupants or jam controls. The structural risk arises from asymmetric loading exceeding design limits. No prior stability analysis can make unsecured cargo acceptable.
+
+### Q6: The total weight of an aeroplane is acting vertically through the... ^q6
+- A) Stagnation point.
+- B) Center of pressure.
+- C) Neutral point.
+- D) Center of gravity
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** By definition, the center of gravity (C.G.) is the single point through which the resultant gravitational force (weight vector) acts on the entire aircraft. The center of pressure is where the resultant aerodynamic force acts, the neutral point is the aerodynamic reference for stability analysis, and the stagnation point is where airflow velocity is zero on the leading edge — none of these is where gravity acts.
+
+### Q7: The term "center of gravity" is defined as... ^q7
+- A) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- B) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The center of gravity is the point through which the total weight force of the aircraft acts. It is the mass-weighted average position of all individual mass elements of the aircraft. It is not the physically heaviest point, and it is distinct from the neutral point (an aerodynamic concept). All mass and balance calculations reference moments about the datum to locate this point.
+
+### Q8: The center of gravity (CG) defines... ^q8
+- A) The product of mass and balance arm
+- B) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) The point on the longitudinal axis or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- D) The point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The C.G. is the point through which gravity (weight) is considered to act on the entire aircraft as if all mass were concentrated there. This definition is fundamental to mass and balance calculations: moments of all individual masses are summed and divided by total mass to locate this point. The datum is a fixed reference point, not the C.G. itself, and moment is the product of mass times arm.
+
+### Q9: The term "moment" with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as... ^q9
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance, moment = mass × balance arm (M = m × d), expressed in kg·m or lb·in. This follows the physical definition of a torque or moment of force. The total C.G. position is then found by: C.G. = (sum of all moments) ÷ (total mass). Using a sum, difference, or quotient instead of a product would yield a dimensionally and physically incorrect result.
+
+### Q10: The term "balance arm" in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the... ^q10
+- A) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The balance arm (or moment arm) is the horizontal distance measured from the aircraft's datum line to the center of gravity of a particular mass item (e.g., pilot, ballast, equipment). It determines the leverage that mass exerts about the datum. Distances from the C.G. itself are not balance arms — the datum is always the reference point. The datum is defined in the aircraft's flight manual and is fixed for that aircraft type.
+
+### Q11: The distance between the center of gravity and the datum is called... ^q11
+- A) Lever.
+- B) Torque.
+- C) Span width.
+- D) Balance arm.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance terminology, the balance arm (also called moment arm) is specifically the horizontal distance from the aircraft datum to any given point of interest — including the overall C.G. once calculated. Torque/moment is the product of mass and arm, not the distance itself. Span width is a geometric wing parameter unrelated to longitudinal mass and balance.
+
+### Q12: The balance arm is the horizontal distance between... ^q12
+- A) The C.G. of a mass and the rear C.G. limit.
+- B) The front C.G. limit and the datum line
+- C) The front C.G. limit and the rear C.G. limit.
+- D) The C.G. of a mass and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The datum is an arbitrary but fixed reference plane (often the firewall, wing leading edge, or nose) defined in the aircraft's flight manual. The balance arm of any mass is measured as the horizontal distance from this datum to the center of gravity of that specific mass. All moment calculations use this datum as the common reference, allowing moments to be summed algebraically to find the total C.G. position.
+
+### Q13: The required data for a mass and balance calculation including masses and balance arms can be found in the... ^q13
+- A) Certificate of airworthiness
+- B) Mass and balance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- C) Performance section of the pilot's operating handbook of this particular aircraft.
+- D) Documentation of the annual inspection.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Pilot's Operating Handbook (POH) or Aircraft Flight Manual (AFM) contains a dedicated mass and balance section with the aircraft's empty mass, empty C.G. position, datum reference, C.G. limits, and approved loading configurations. The certificate of airworthiness merely certifies the aircraft type is approved; the annual inspection records maintenance history. Performance data (speeds, glide ratios) is in a different POH section.
+
+### Q14: Which section of the flight manual describes the basic empty mass of an aircraft? ^q14
+- A) Limitations
+- B) Normal procedures
+- C) Weight and balance
+- D) Performance
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Weight and Balance section (Section 6 in EASA-standardized AFM/POH structure) contains the aircraft's basic empty mass, empty C.G. location, allowable C.G. range, and loading instructions. The Limitations section covers maximum speeds, load factors, and operating envelope. Normal Procedures covers checklists. Performance covers speeds, climb rates, and glide distances. Each section has a specific regulatory and operational purpose.
+
+### Q15: Which factor shortens landing distance? ^q15
+- A) Heavy rain
+- B) High pressure altitude
+- C) High density altitude
+- D) Strong head wind
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A headwind reduces groundspeed at touchdown for a given airspeed, so the aircraft arrives over the threshold with less kinetic energy to dissipate — shortening the ground roll. As a rule of thumb, a headwind component equal to 10% of approach speed reduces landing distance by approximately 19%. Conversely, high pressure altitude and high density altitude increase true airspeed at a given IAS, increasing groundspeed and lengthening landing distance. Heavy rain can reduce braking effectiveness, further increasing landing distance.
+
+### Q16: Unless the aircraft is equipped and certified accordingly... ^q16
+- A) Flight into forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, the flight may be continued as long as visual meteorological conditions are maintained.
+- B) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is only allowed as long as it is ensured that the aircraft can still be operated without performance degradation.
+- C) Flight into known or forecast icing conditions is prohibited. Should the aircraft enter an area of icing conditions inadvertantly, it should be left without delay.
+- D) Flight into areas of precipitation is prohibited.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** For aircraft not certified for flight into known icing (FIKI), operating in known or forecast icing conditions is a regulatory prohibition, not merely a performance consideration. Ice accretion on a glider's wings dramatically increases weight (shifting the C.G.), increases drag, reduces the maximum lift coefficient, and raises the stall speed — all simultaneously. If inadvertently encountered, the pilot must exit the icing environment immediately by changing altitude or heading, regardless of visual conditions.
+
+### Q17: The angle of descent is defined as... ^q17
+- A) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance travelled within the same time, expressed in percent [%].
+- B) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in degrees [°].
+- C) The angle between a horizontal plane and the actual flight path, expressed in percent [%].
+- D) The ratio between the change in height and the horizontal distance distance travelled within the same time, expressed in degrees [°].
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The angle of descent (or glide angle) is geometrically defined as the angle between the horizontal and the actual flight path vector, measured in degrees. It is related to — but not the same as — the glide ratio: glide ratio = horizontal distance / height lost = 1/tan(glide angle). A glide ratio of 1:30 corresponds to a glide angle of approximately 1.9°. Expressing it as a percentage would make it a gradient, not an angle.
+
+### Q18: What is the purpose of "interception lines" in visual navigation? ^q18
+- A) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+- B) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Interception lines are prominent, linear geographic features — rivers, coastlines, railways, motorways — selected during pre-flight planning that run roughly perpendicular to the planned route. If a pilot becomes disoriented, flying toward the nearest interception line will produce an unmistakable landmark that allows position recovery. They do not extend permissions below VFR minima and are not range indicators; they are specifically a lost-procedure planning tool.
+
+### Q19: The upper limit of LO R 16 equals... See annex (PFP-056) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q19
+- A) 1.500 ft GND.
+- B) 1 500 ft MSL.
+- C) 1 500 m MSL.
+- D) FL150.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Restricted airspace areas (LO R) in Austrian and German aeronautical charts specify their upper and lower limits using standard altitude references. The designation '1 500 ft MSL' (Mean Sea Level) means the restriction extends up to that altitude above sea level, not above ground level. 1,500 ft GND (A) would be above ground level and could vary with terrain. 1,500 m MSL (C) confuses feet with metres. FL150 (D) is far higher and is not a typical LO R ceiling.
+
+### Q20: The upper limit of LO R 4 equals... See annex (PFP-030) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q20
+- A) 1.500 ft AGL
+- B) 4.500 ft AGL.
+- C) 4.500 ft MSL
+- D) 1.500 ft MSL.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In Austrian sectional chart notation, restricted area LO R 4 has its upper limit at 4,500 ft MSL (Mean Sea Level). This means all flights must remain below this altitude to avoid the restricted area. 1,500 ft AGL (A) and 1,500 ft MSL (D) are both too low. 4,500 ft AGL (B) references above ground rather than MSL, which would be incorrect for a fixed regulatory limit.
+
+### Q21: Up to which altitude is an overflight prohibited according to the NOTAM? See figure (PFP-024) Siehe Anlage 3 ^q21
+- A) Altitude 9500 ft MSL
+- B) Flight Level 95
+- C) Altitude 9500 m MSL
+- D) Height 9500 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** NOTAM altitude limits are expressed in feet MSL (Mean Sea Level) unless explicitly stated otherwise. The figure PFP-024 shows an upper limit of 9,500 ft MSL, meaning overflight is prohibited up to that altitude above mean sea level. FL95 (B) is a flight level (pressure altitude referenced to 1013.25 hPa) and differs from an MSL altitude. 9,500 m (C) confuses metres with feet, which would be approximately 31,000 ft. Height (D) implies above ground level, which is not specified in this NOTAM.
+
+### Q22: What must be considered for cross-border flights? ^q22
+- A) Transmission of hazard reports
+- B) Requires flight plans
+- C) Regular location messages
+- D) Approved exceptions
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Under ICAO Annex 2 and national regulations, flight plans are mandatory for international flights crossing state borders, even for VFR glider flights. The flight plan is required for border control coordination, search and rescue alerting, and compliance with customs/immigration procedures. A filed and activated flight plan ensures that the relevant Air Traffic Services units and SAR services are aware of the flight. Hazard reports and location messages are separate AIREP/PIREP procedures.
+
+### Q23: During a flight, a flight plan can be filed at the... ^q23
+- A) Search and Rescue Service (SAR).
+- B) Flight Information Service (FIS).
+- C) Next airport operator en-route.
+- D) Aeronautical Information Service (AIS)
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Flight Information Service (FIS), reached on the published FIS frequency in each FIR, can accept an airborne flight plan (AFIL) during flight. This is the standard procedure when a flight plan was not filed before departure or when an extension is needed. SAR is a response service, not a flight planning authority. AIS distributes aeronautical information but does not accept real-time flight plans. Airport operators handle local arrivals and departures, not en-route plan filing.
+
+### Q24: While planning a cross country gliding flight, what ground structure should be avoided enroute? ^q24
+- A) Stone quarries and large sand areas
+- B) Highways, railroad tracks and channels.
+- C) Moist ground, water areas, marsh areas
+- D) Areas with buildings, concrete and asphalt.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal convection depends on differential ground heating. Moist ground, water bodies, and marshes have high thermal inertia and specific heat capacity — they absorb solar radiation without heating up as quickly as dry land, suppressing thermal development above them. Flying over large water areas or wetlands thus means less lift and potentially a forced landing in unsuitable terrain. Conversely, dry fields, rocky areas, and built-up areas with dark surfaces (asphalt, concrete) generate strong thermals.
+
+### Q25: During a cross-country flight, you approach a downwind turning point. The point should be taken ... (2,00 P.) ^q25
+- A) As low as possible.
+- B) As steep as possible.
+- C) As high as possible.
+- D) With as less bank as possible
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a downwind turning point, the glider must turn and fly back into the wind (or at an angle into it), immediately losing tailwind assistance and gaining a headwind component. Arriving high provides the maximum altitude reserve for the subsequent upwind leg, where groundspeed is reduced and glide distance over ground is shortened. Arriving low with a turn ahead is tactically dangerous — any failure to find lift on the upwind leg leaves no margin for landing field selection.
+
+### Q26: After getting around a turning point, what should a glider pilot be prepared for? (2,00 P.) ^q26
+- A) For weakening thermals due to the progressing time
+- B) For a changed horizontal picture due to lower cloud bases
+- C) For increased cloud dissipation due to the progressing time
+- D) For a changed cloud picture due to the apparently changed position of the sun
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a glider turns through 90° or 180° at a waypoint, the pilot's perspective of the sky changes dramatically — the sun appears to have "moved" relative to the aircraft heading, and cumulus clouds that were previously in the pilot's peripheral vision or behind may now appear in front, and vice versa. This perceptual shift can make the sky look completely different even if objectively unchanged. Pilots must re-orient their thermal assessment relative to the new heading rather than relying on their previous mental picture.
+
+### Q27: (For this question, please use annex PFP-061) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a group of unlighted obstacles? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q27
+- A) B
+- B) D
+- C) A
+- D) C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO aeronautical chart symbology distinguishes between single obstacles and groups of obstacles, and between lighted and unlighted ones. The symbol for a group of unlighted obstacles uses a specific ICAO-standard depiction. Based on the PFP-061 annex, symbol 'C' corresponds to the ICAO symbol for a group of unlighted obstacles. The other symbols (A, B, D) represent single obstacles, lighted groups, or other obstacle types per ICAO Annex 4 chart standards.
+
+### Q28: (For this question, please use annex PFP-062) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a civil airport (not international airport) with paved runway? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 5 ^q28
+- A) B
+- B) C
+- C) A
+- D) D
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ICAO aeronautical chart symbology uses specific symbols for different aerodrome types. A civil airport (not international) with a paved runway is shown by symbol 'A' in the PFP-062 annex. International airports, military aerodromes, and unpaved-runway airports have different symbols per ICAO Annex 4. Selecting symbol 'A' (answer C) correctly identifies the civil airport with paved runway.
+
+### Q29: (For this question, please use annex PFP-063) According ICAO, what symbol indicates a general spot elevation? (2,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 6 ^q29
+- A) D
+- B) C
+- C) B
+- D) A
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On ICAO aeronautical charts, a general spot elevation (a known terrain height point not associated with an obstacle) is indicated by a specific dot-and-number symbol. Based on the PFP-063 annex, symbol 'B' (answer C) represents a general spot elevation. The other symbols (A, C, D) correspond to maximum elevation figures, obstruction elevation markers, or other elevation-related symbols defined in ICAO Annex 4.
+
+### Q30: What distance can be covered during a glide in a glider plane with glide ratio 1/30 from a height of 1500 m? (Neglect wind and thermal effects) ^q30
+- A) 30 km
+- B) 45 NM
+- C) 45 km
+- D) 81 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Glide distance = glide ratio × height available. With a glide ratio of 1:30 (30 metres forward for every 1 metre of height lost) and 1,500 m of height: distance = 30 × 1,500 m = 45,000 m = **45 km**. Note: 45 NM would be approximately 83 km, which would require a glide ratio of roughly 1:55 — far above this aircraft's performance. The calculation is straightforward in metric: ratio × altitude in metres gives distance in metres. Always verify units — mixing NM and metres is a common error.
+
+### Q31: The term center of gravity is defined as... ^q31
+- A) Another designation for the neutral point.
+- B) The heaviest point on an aeroplane.
+- C) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+- D) Half the distance between the neutral point and the datum line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The centre of gravity (CG) is the single point through which the resultant of all gravitational forces on an aircraft acts — it is the point where the total weight is considered to act. It is not synonymous with the neutral point (A), which is an aerodynamic stability reference. It is not the 'heaviest point' (B), as mass is distributed. Options C and D as stated in the question both describe a geometrical midpoint formula, which is not the correct definition of CG.
+
+### Q32: The term moment with regard to a mass and balance calculation is referred to as... ^q32
+- A) Sum of a mass and a balance arm.
+- B) Difference of a mass and a balance arm.
+- C) Quotient of a mass and a balance arm.
+- D) Product of a mass and a balance arm.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In mass and balance calculations, a moment is the product of a mass and its balance arm (distance from the datum): Moment = Mass × Arm. This fundamental relationship allows CG to be found by summing all moments and dividing by total mass. A sum (A), difference (B), or quotient (C) of mass and arm does not produce a moment in the physical sense.
+
+### Q33: The term balance arm in the context of a mass and balance calculation defines the... ^q33
+- A) Distance of a mass from the center of gravity
+- B) Point on the longitudinal axis of an aeroplane or its extension from which the centers of gravity of all masses are referenced.
+- C) Distance from the datum to the center of gravity of a mass.
+- D) Point through which the force of gravity is said to act on a mass.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The balance arm (also called the moment arm or lever arm) is the horizontal distance from the datum reference point to the centre of gravity of a particular mass item. It is not the distance from the CG of the aircraft (A), not the datum point itself (B), and not the point through which gravity acts (D — that is the definition of the centre of gravity of the item).
+
+### Q34: What is the purpose of interception lines in visual navigation? ^q34
+- A) They are used as easily recognizable guidance upon a possible loss of orientation
+- B) They help to continue the flight when flight visibility drops below VFR minima
+- C) To mark the next available en-route airport during the flight
+- D) To visualize the range limitation from the departure aerodrome
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Interception lines (also called line features or catching lines) in visual navigation are prominent linear features on the ground — such as motorways, rivers, coastlines, or railway lines — that a pilot intentionally navigates toward and follows if orientation is lost. By flying toward a known interception line, the pilot can reestablish position. They are not used to continue flight below VFR minima (B), mark en-route airports (C), or show range from departure (D).
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+# 40 - Human Performance and Limitations
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 54 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: The "swiss cheese model" can be used to explain the... ^q1
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- C) Optimal problem solution.
+- D) Error chain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model illustrates how accidents occur when multiple layers of defence each have "holes" (latent and active failures) that align simultaneously, allowing a hazard to pass through all layers and cause an accident. Each slice of cheese represents a safety barrier, and an accident results from an error chain — not a single isolated failure.
+
+### Q2: What is the percentage of oxygen in the atmosphere at 6000 ft? ^q2
+- A) 78 %
+- B) 12 %
+- C) 21 %
+- D) 18.9 %
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The percentage composition of atmospheric gases remains constant at approximately 21% oxygen and 78% nitrogen regardless of altitude. What changes with altitude is the partial pressure of oxygen: as total atmospheric pressure decreases, there are fewer oxygen molecules per breath, which is why hypoxia becomes a risk at altitude despite the unchanged percentage.
+
+### Q3: What is the percentage of nitrogen in the atmosphere? ^q3
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 78 %
+- C) 0.1 %
+- D) 1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nitrogen makes up approximately 78% of the atmosphere and is physiologically inert under normal conditions. However, at high pressures (such as during scuba diving), nitrogen dissolves into body tissues, and rapid decompression can cause nitrogen bubbles to form — the mechanism behind decompression sickness, which is also a concern for pilots who fly shortly after diving.
+
+### Q4: At which altitude is the atmospheric pressure approximately half the MSL value (1013 hPa)? ^q4
+- A) 18000 ft
+- B) 22000 ft
+- C) 10000 ft
+- D) 5000 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At 18,000 ft (approximately 5,500 m), atmospheric pressure is roughly 500 hPa — half of the standard sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. This means the partial pressure of oxygen is also halved, severely reducing the oxygen available to the body and making supplemental oxygen mandatory for unpressurised flight above this altitude.
+
+### Q5: What does the term "Red-out" mean? ^q5
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Rash during decompression sickness
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs during sustained negative g-forces (e.g., in a pushover manoeuvre), which force blood toward the head and eyes. The increased blood pressure in the eye's vessels causes red vision, as the retina is flooded with blood. It is the opposite of grey-out and blackout, which result from positive g-forces draining blood away from the head.
+
+### Q6: Which of the following symptoms may indicate hypoxia? ^q6
+- A) Joint pain in knees and feet
+- B) Muscle cramps in the upper body area
+- C) Blue discolouration of lips and fingernails
+- D) Blue marks all over the body
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cyanosis — the blue discolouration of lips, fingertips, and nail beds — is a classic sign of hypoxia, caused by deoxygenated haemoglobin in peripheral blood. Other hypoxia symptoms include euphoria, impaired judgement, headache, and loss of coordination. Joint pain is associated with decompression sickness, not hypoxia.
+
+### Q7: From which altitude on does the body usually react to the decreasing atmospheric pressure? ^q7
+- A) 2000 feet
+- B) 10000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 7000 feet
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The body begins to show measurable physiological responses to reduced partial pressure of oxygen at around 7,000 ft, though healthy individuals can usually compensate through increased respiratory rate and cardiac output. Below this altitude, the body maintains adequate oxygenation without significant stress; above it, compensatory mechanisms become progressively taxed.
+
+### Q8: What is the function of the red blood cells (erythrocytes)? ^q8
+- A) Blood coagulation
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Oxygen transport
+- D) Immune defense
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red blood cells (erythrocytes) contain haemoglobin, the iron-containing protein that binds oxygen in the lungs and releases it to tissues throughout the body. Any condition that reduces the number or function of red blood cells — such as anaemia, blood donation, or carbon monoxide poisoning — directly impairs the oxygen-carrying capacity of the blood and increases hypoxia risk at altitude.
+
+### Q9: What is the function of the blood platelets (thrombocytes)? ^q9
+- A) Oxygen transport
+- B) Blood sugar regulation
+- C) Immune defense
+- D) Blood coagulation
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thrombocytes (platelets) are the primary agents of haemostasis — the process of stopping bleeding. They aggregate rapidly at injury sites and release chemical signals that activate the full coagulation cascade. Without adequate platelet function, even minor injuries can lead to excessive blood loss. This is relevant to pilots on anticoagulant medications, which require medical assessment.
+
+### Q10: What is an appropriate reaction when a passenger during cruise flight suddenly feels uncomfortable? ^q10
+- A) Avoid conversation and choose a higher airspeed
+- B) Adjust cabin temperature and prevent excessive bank
+- C) Switch on the heater blower and provide thermal blankets
+- D) Give additional oxygen and avoid low load factors
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A passenger feeling unwell in flight may be experiencing motion sickness, discomfort from temperature, or mild physiological stress. Adjusting cabin temperature to a comfortable level and minimising bank angle (reducing vestibular and acceleration stimuli) addresses the most likely causes without introducing new risks. Excessive bank aggravates motion sickness, and unnecessary oxygen administration can cause hyperventilation in some individuals.
+
+### Q11: What is the correct term for the system which, among others, controls breathing, digestion, and heart frequency? ^q11
+- A) Critical nervous system
+- B) Autonomic nervous system
+- C) Automatical nervous system
+- D) Compliant nervous system
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulates involuntary physiological functions including heart rate, breathing rate, digestion, and glandular secretion. It has two branches: the sympathetic ("fight or flight") and parasympathetic ("rest and digest") systems. In high-stress flight situations, sympathetic activation increases heart rate and alertness but can also impair fine motor control and narrow attentional focus.
+
+### Q12: Which characteristic is important when choosing sunglasses used by pilots? ^q12
+- A) Curved sidepiece
+- B) Non-polarised
+- C) Unbreakable
+- D) No UV filter
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Pilots must use non-polarised sunglasses because polarised lenses eliminate horizontally reflected light, which can make LCD displays, glass cockpit instruments, and certain reflective surfaces — such as water or other aircraft — invisible or severely distorted. UV protection and good optical quality are desirable, but the non-polarised requirement is the safety-critical aviation-specific characteristic.
+
+### Q13: The connection between middle ear and nose and throat region is called... ^q13
+- A) Inner ear.
+- B) Eardrum.
+- C) Cochlea.
+- D) Eustachian tube.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Eustachian tube (auditory tube) connects the middle ear to the nasopharynx, allowing pressure equalisation between the middle ear cavity and the external environment. During altitude changes, it opens (usually when swallowing or yawning) to prevent the pressure differential that causes ear pain (barotitis media). Blockage due to congestion from a cold makes pressure equalisation impossible and can cause severe pain or eardrum rupture.
+
+### Q14: Wings level after a longer period of turning can lead to the impression of... ^q14
+- A) Starting a climb.
+- B) Steady turning in the same direction as before.
+- C) Turning into the opposite direction.
+- D) Starting a descent.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the "leans" or graveyard spiral illusion, rooted in semicircular canal adaptation. During a prolonged coordinated turn, the fluid in the relevant semicircular canal adapts to the rotation and ceases sending turn signals. When the pilot levels the wings, the canal detects a rotation in the opposite direction, creating the false sensation of turning the other way — which can cause a pilot to re-enter the original bank.
+
+### Q15: Which of the following options does NOT stimulate motion sickness (disorientation)? ^q15
+- A) Non-accelerated straight and level flight
+- B) Head movements during turns
+- C) Turbulence in level flight
+- D) Flying under the influence of alcohol
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Motion sickness is triggered by conflicting sensory signals — typically between the visual system and the vestibular (balance) system. Constant, non-accelerated straight-and-level flight produces no vestibular stimulation and no sensory conflict, so it does not provoke motion sickness. Head movements during turns, turbulence, and alcohol (which alters endolymph density) all create or amplify sensory conflicts.
+
+### Q16: Which optical illusion might be caused by a runway with an upslope during the approach? ^q16
+- A) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too low and therefore approaches the runway above the regular glide slope
+- B) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too slow and speeds up above the normal approach speed
+- C) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too fast and reduces the speed below the normal approach speed
+- D) The pilot has the feeling that the approach is too high and therefore descents below the regular glide slope
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A runway that slopes upward away from the pilot appears shorter and steeper than a flat runway, giving the visual impression of being higher than the actual glide slope. The pilot, perceiving the approach as too high, instinctively descends below the correct approach path — creating a dangerous undershoot risk. This illusion is a well-documented cause of controlled flight into terrain (CFIT) on visual approaches.
+
+### Q17: What impression may be caused when approaching a runway with an upslope? ^q17
+- A) An undershoot
+- B) A landing beside the centerline
+- C) An overshoot
+- D) A hard landing
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Note: this question asks about the impression (what the pilot feels), not the actual outcome. An upsloping runway makes the pilot feel too high, so they perceive an overshoot situation. In response, the pilot may descend below the correct glide path, which in reality leads to an undershoot — but the perceived impression driving that incorrect correction is of being too high and overshooting.
+
+### Q18: Visual illusions are mostly caused by... ^q18
+- A) Binocular vision.
+- B) Colour blindness.
+- C) Rapid eye movements.
+- D) Misinterpretation of the brain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Visual illusions occur because the brain actively constructs perception based on prior expectations, patterns, and assumptions rather than passively recording reality. When environmental cues are ambiguous, incomplete, or unusual (as is common in aviation — unfamiliar terrain, unusual lighting, featureless sky), the brain fills in gaps with "best guesses" that can be dangerously wrong. Recognising this active interpretive process is key to mitigating illusion risk.
+
+### Q19: The average decrease of blood alcohol level for an adult in one hour is approximately... ^q19
+- A) 0.01 percent.
+- B) 0.03 percent.
+- C) 0.1 percent.
+- D) 0.3 percent.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The liver metabolises alcohol at a roughly constant rate of approximately 0.01% (0.1 g/L) blood alcohol concentration per hour, largely independent of body weight or the amount consumed. This means that after a night of drinking, significant alcohol impairment can persist well into the following day. EASA regulations prohibit flying with a blood alcohol level above 0.2 g/L, and the "8-hour bottle to throttle" rule is a minimum — not a guarantee of sobriety.
+
+### Q20: A risk factor for decompression sickness is... ^q20
+- A) Sports.
+- B) 100 % oxygen after decompression.
+- C) Scuba diving prior to flight.
+- D) Smoking.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Scuba diving causes nitrogen to dissolve into body tissues under elevated ambient pressure. If the diver then flies before sufficient off-gassing time has elapsed (typically 12-24 hours depending on dive profile), the reduced cabin pressure causes nitrogen to come out of solution and form bubbles in tissues and blood — decompression sickness ("the bends"). Breathing 100% oxygen after decompression actually accelerates nitrogen elimination and is a treatment, not a risk factor.
+
+### Q21: Which statement is correct with regard to the short-term memory? ^q21
+- A) It can store 7 (±2) items for 10 to 20 seconds
+- B) It can store 5 (±2) items for 1 to 2 minutes
+- C) It can store 10 (±5) items for 30 to 60 seconds
+- D) It can store 3 (±1) items for 5 to 10 seconds
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** George Miller's classic 1956 research established that short-term (working) memory has a capacity of 7 ± 2 chunks of information, retained for approximately 10-20 seconds without active rehearsal. In aviation, this limitation is critically important: ATC clearances, frequencies, and altitudes must be written down immediately because they will be lost from working memory within seconds if not rehearsed or recorded.
+
+### Q22: For what approximate time period can the short-time memory store information? ^q22
+- A) 3 to 7 seconds
+- B) 10 to 20 seconds
+- C) 35 to 50 seconds
+- D) 30 to 40 seconds
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Without active rehearsal or encoding, items held in short-term (working) memory fade within approximately 10-20 seconds. This is why read-back procedures in aviation communication are essential — they force the pilot to actively process and repeat information, moving it from passive short-term storage into a more durable encoded state, and simultaneously allow ATC to verify correct receipt.
+
+### Q23: The ongoing process to monitor the current flight situation is called... ^q23
+- A) Situational thinking.
+- B) Situational awareness.
+- C) Anticipatory check procedure.
+- D) Constant flight check.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Situational awareness (SA) — defined by Mica Endsley — is the continuous perception of elements in the environment, comprehension of their meaning, and projection of their future status. It is the foundation of good aeronautical decision-making. Loss of situational awareness (LSA) is a primary contributing factor in controlled flight into terrain, mid-air collisions, and spatial disorientation accidents.
+
+### Q24: Under which circumstances is it more likely to accept higher risks? ^q24
+- A) Due to group-dynamic effects
+- B) If there is not enough information available
+- C) During check flights due to a high level of nervousness
+- D) During flight planning when excellent weather is forecast
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Group dynamics can cause "risky shift" — the phenomenon where groups tend to make bolder, riskier decisions than individuals acting alone. Social pressure, the desire to conform, diffusion of responsibility, and the presence of perceived experts can all suppress individual risk awareness. This is a core concept in Crew Resource Management (CRM), where junior crew members may fail to challenge a captain's poor decision.
+
+### Q25: Which dangerous attitudes are often combined? ^q25
+- A) Invulnerability and self-abandonment
+- B) Self-abandonment and macho
+- C) Macho and invulnerability
+- D) Impulsivity and carefulness
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The FAA identifies five hazardous attitudes in aviation: macho, invulnerability, impulsivity, resignation (self-abandonment), and anti-authority. Macho ("I can do it") and invulnerability ("It won't happen to me") are frequently found together because both stem from overconfidence and underestimation of risk. A pilot who thinks they are immune from accidents (invulnerability) is also prone to taking unnecessary risks to demonstrate skill (macho).
+
+### Q26: Complacency is a risk due to... ^q26
+- A) Increased cockpit automation.
+- B) The high error rate of technical systems.
+- C) The high number of mistakes normally made by humans.
+- D) Better training options for young pilots.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Automation complacency occurs when pilots over-rely on automated systems and progressively reduce their active monitoring of aircraft state. As cockpit automation becomes more sophisticated and reliable, pilots may become less vigilant, lose situational awareness, and suffer skill degradation. When automation fails — precisely when manual flying skills are most needed — the complacent pilot may be unprepared to take over effectively.
+
+### Q27: The ideal level of arousal is at which point in the diagram? See figure (HPL- 002) P = Performance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1 ^q27
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point D
+- D) Point A
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the Yerkes-Dodson law (the inverted-U curve of arousal and performance), peak performance occurs at a moderate, optimal level of arousal — represented by Point B in the diagram. Too little arousal (Point A) leads to inattentiveness and poor performance, while too much arousal (Points C and D) causes overload and performance degradation. Point B therefore represents the ideal balance between alertness and composure.
+
+### Q28: Which of the following qualities are influenced by stress? 1. Attention 2. Concentration 3. Responsiveness 4. Memory ^q28
+- A) .1, 2, 3
+- B) .2, 4
+- C) 1
+- D) 1, 2, 3, 4
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress affects all four cognitive functions listed. Under high stress, attention narrows (tunnel vision), concentration becomes difficult to maintain, reaction times are altered (initially faster, then degraded under extreme stress), and memory — particularly working memory retrieval and encoding — is impaired by elevated cortisol and sympathetic activation. This is why emergency procedures must be practiced to the point of automaticity: procedural memory is more stress-resistant than declarative recall.
+
+### Q29: Which answer is correct concerning stress? ^q29
+- A) Everybody reacts to stress in the same manner
+- B) Stress and its different symptoms are irrelevant for flight safety
+- C) Stress can occur if there seems to be no solution for a given problem
+- D) Training and experience have no influence on the occurence of stress
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Stress commonly arises when a pilot perceives a threat or problem for which no satisfactory solution is apparent — this is the core definition of the stress response. Individual reactions to stress vary significantly depending on personality, experience, and coping strategies, making option A incorrect. Training and experience are proven to raise the stress threshold and reduce the frequency and severity of stress reactions, making option D wrong. Stress is directly relevant to flight safety, so option B is also incorrect.
+
+### Q30: During flight you have to solve a problem, how to you proceed? ^q30
+- A) There is no time for solving problems during flight
+- B) Solve problem immediately, otherwise refer to the operationg handbook
+- C) Contact other pilot via radio for help, keep flying
+- D) Primarily fly the airplane and keep it stable, then attend to the problem and keep flying the airplane
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The primary duty of any pilot is to aviate — maintain aircraft control and a stable flight path. Only once the aircraft is under control should the pilot attend to any secondary problem. Attempting to solve a problem while neglecting aircraft control (options A, B, C) risks losing situational awareness or aircraft control. Option D correctly prioritises flying first, then problem-solving, while continuously monitoring the aircraft.
+
+### Q31: The majority of aviation accidents are caused by... ^q31
+- A) Technical failure.
+- B) Meteorological influences.
+- C) Human failure.
+- D) Geographical influences.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Studies consistently show that approximately 70-80% of aviation accidents involve human error as a primary or contributing factor. This includes errors in judgment, decision-making, situational awareness, and task management. Technical failures account for a much smaller proportion, which is why human factors training is central to aviation safety curricula.
+
+### Q32: Air consists of oxygen, nitrogen and other gases. What is the approximate percentage of other gases? ^q32
+- A) 21 %
+- B) 1 %
+- C) 78 %
+- D) 0.1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The remaining approximately 1% of the atmosphere is composed of trace gases, primarily argon (about 0.93%), with very small amounts of carbon dioxide, neon, helium, methane, and others. While these gases are present in only tiny amounts, carbon dioxide in particular plays a significant role in the body's respiratory drive and acid-base balance, relevant to hyperventilation physiology.
+
+### Q33: Carbon monoxide poisoning can be caused by... ^q33
+- A) Alcohol.
+- B) Unhealthy food.
+- C) Little sleep.
+- D) Smoking.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Carbon monoxide (CO) is produced by incomplete combustion of carbon-containing fuels and is present in cigarette smoke. CO binds to haemoglobin with an affinity approximately 200 times greater than oxygen, forming carboxyhaemoglobin and preventing oxygen transport to tissues. In aviation, CO poisoning is also a risk from exhaust fume ingestion via heating systems, producing symptoms similar to hypoxia.
+
+### Q34: Which of the following is NOT a symptom of hyperventilaton? ^q34
+- A) Cyanose
+- B) Disturbance of consciousness
+- C) Spasm
+- D) Tingling
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Hyperventilation — breathing too rapidly — causes excessive CO₂ to be expelled, leading to respiratory alkalosis. Symptoms include tingling (especially in the extremities and face), muscle spasms or tetany, dizziness, and disturbance of consciousness. Cyanosis (bluish skin discolouration from low blood oxygen) is a symptom of hypoxia, not hyperventilation, making it the exception here.
+
+### Q35: Which of the human senses is most influenced by hypoxia? ^q35
+- A) The oltfactory perception (smell)
+- B) The tactile perception (sense of touch)
+- C) The auditory perception (hearing)
+- D) The visual perception (vision)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vision is the sense most sensitive to hypoxia because the retina has extremely high oxygen demands. Night vision is particularly affected first, with rod cell function degrading noticeably even at altitudes as low as 5,000-8,000 ft in the dark. Peripheral vision loss and reduced colour discrimination follow at higher altitudes, making hypoxia especially dangerous for flight.
+
+### Q36: What is the function of the white blood cells (leucocytes)? ^q36
+- A) Immune defense
+- B) Blood coagulation
+- C) Oxygen transport
+- D) Blood sugar regulation
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** White blood cells (leucocytes) are the cellular components of the immune system, defending the body against infections, foreign substances, and abnormal cells. They include lymphocytes, neutrophils, and monocytes, each with specialised roles. A pilot suffering from an active infection — indicated by elevated white blood cell count — may experience impaired cognition and should not fly until recovered.
+
+### Q37: Which of the following is NOT a risk factor for hypoxia? ^q37
+- A) Blood donation
+- B) Smoking
+- C) Menstruation
+- D) Diving
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Scuba diving is a risk factor for decompression sickness (not hypoxia), due to nitrogen dissolving in tissues under high pressure and forming bubbles during ascent. Blood donation reduces red blood cell count (increasing hypoxia risk), smoking causes CO binding to haemoglobin (reducing oxygen transport), and menstruation can cause anaemia over time. Diving itself does not directly cause hypoxia at altitude.
+
+### Q38: The occurence of a vertigo is most likely when moving the head... ^q38
+- A) During a turn.
+- B) During a straight horizontal flight.
+- C) During a climb.
+- D) During a descent.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Vertigo (specifically the Coriolis illusion) is most likely when the head is moved in a different plane during an ongoing turn. The semicircular canals are already stimulated by the turn, and adding a head movement (such as looking down at a chart) stimulates a second set of canals simultaneously, creating an overwhelming and disorienting sensation of tumbling or rotation. This is one of the most incapacitating spatial disorientation illusions.
+
+### Q39: Which answer states a risk factor for diabetes? ^q39
+- A) Sleep deficiency
+- B) Overweight
+- C) Smoking
+- D) Alcohol consumption
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Overweight and obesity are the primary modifiable risk factors for type 2 diabetes, as excess adipose tissue — particularly visceral fat — causes insulin resistance. Type 2 diabetes is a significant concern in aviation medicine because it can cause hypoglycaemic episodes that impair consciousness and cognitive function, and because many diabetes medications are incompatible with a medical certificate.
+
+### Q40: What is a latent error? ^q40
+- A) An error which only has consequences after landing
+- B) An error which has an immediate effect on the controls
+- C) An error which is made by the pilot actively and consciously
+- D) An error which remains undetected in the system for a long time
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In James Reason's error model, latent errors (or latent conditions) are failures embedded in the system — poor design, inadequate procedures, organisational pressures, or maintenance shortcuts — that remain dormant and undetected until they combine with an active error to cause an accident. Unlike active errors (committed by front-line operators), latent errors originate at management and design levels and can lie dormant for years.
+
+### Q41: Regarding the communication model, how can the use of the same code during radio communication be ensured? ^q41
+- A) By the use of proper headsets
+- B) By a particular frequency allocation
+- C) By the use of radio phraseology
+- D) By using radios certified for aviation use only
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Standardised ICAO radio telephony phraseology ensures that both the sender and receiver use identical, unambiguous codes with pre-agreed meanings, minimising the risk of misunderstanding. In communication theory, this corresponds to ensuring the transmitter and receiver share the same codebook. Errors in radio communication are a well-documented contributing factor in runway incursions and traffic conflicts.
+
+### Q42: Which factor can lead to human error? ^q42
+- A) Proper use of checklists
+- B) The bias to see what we expect to see
+- C) Double check of relevant actions
+- D) To be doubtful if something looks unclear or ambiguous
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Confirmation bias — the tendency to perceive and interpret information in a way that confirms pre-existing expectations — is a major source of human error in aviation. Pilots may misread an instrument, misidentify a runway, or fail to notice an abnormality because their brain filters incoming information through what it expects to see. This is why structured scan patterns, checklists, and cross-checking are essential countermeasures.
+
+### Q43: At which point in the diagram will a pilot find himself to be overstrained? See figure (HPL-002) P = Perfromance A = Arousal / Stress Siehe Anlage 1 ^q43
+- A) Point B
+- B) Point C
+- C) Point A
+- D) Point D
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the Yerkes-Dodson arousal-performance curve, Point D lies on the far right where very high arousal levels cause performance to collapse — the pilot is overstrained (over-stressed). At this point, cognitive function deteriorates, decision-making becomes impaired, and errors multiply. Points A and C represent under-arousal or near-optimal states; Point B represents peak performance.
+
+### Q44: Which of the following is responsible for the blood coagulation? ^q44
+- A) Capillaries of the arteries
+- B) Red blood cells (erythrocytes)
+- C) Blood plates (thrombocytes)
+- D) White blood cells (leucocytes)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blood platelets (thrombocytes) are small cell fragments that aggregate at sites of vascular injury and initiate the clotting cascade, forming a platelet plug to stop bleeding. They work together with clotting factors to form a stable fibrin clot. This function is distinct from the oxygen transport role of red blood cells and the immune role of white blood cells.
+
+### Q45: In which situation is it NOT possible to achieve a pressure compensation between the middle ear and the environment? ^q45
+- A) During a light and slow climb
+- B) Breathing takes place using the mouth only
+- C) All windows are completely closed
+- D) The eustachien tube is blocked
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the Eustachian tube is blocked — typically due to a cold, sinus infection, or allergic congestion — the mucous membrane swells and prevents the tube from opening. This traps air in the middle ear at the previous ambient pressure, creating a painful pressure differential during ascent or descent. Pilots are advised not to fly with upper respiratory infections for this reason.
+
+### Q46: A Grey-out is the result of... ^q46
+- A) Hyperventilation.
+- B) Tiredness.
+- C) Hypoxia.
+- D) Positive g-forces.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Grey-out is a progressive loss of colour vision and peripheral vision caused by positive g-forces pulling blood away from the head toward the lower body. As blood pressure in the retinal arteries drops, the retina (which has the highest oxygen demand of any body tissue) first loses colour perception (grey-out), then vision altogether (blackout), and finally consciousness (G-LOC — g-induced loss of consciousness).
+
+### Q47: What is the best combination of traits with respect to the individual attitude and behaviour for a pilot? ^q47
+- A) Introverted - stable
+- B) Introverted - unstable
+- C) Extroverted - stable
+- D) Extroverted - unstable
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Aviation psychology research identifies extroversion and emotional stability as the most beneficial personality traits for pilots. Extroversion supports effective communication, crew coordination, and assertiveness needed for CRM. Emotional stability (low neuroticism) ensures the pilot remains calm and rational under pressure, maintains consistent performance, and does not overreact to stress — all critical for safe flight operations.
+
+### Q48: What ist the correct term for an involuntary and stereotypical reaction of an organism to the stimulation of a receptor? ^q48
+- A) Reduction
+- B) Coherence
+- C) Virulence
+- D) Reflex
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A reflex is an involuntary, stereotyped neural response to a specific sensory stimulus, mediated through a reflex arc in the spinal cord or brainstem without conscious brain involvement. In aviation, understanding reflexes matters because some trained responses can become automatic (procedural memory), while unexpected reflexes — such as startle responses — can interfere with controlled aircraft handling in emergencies.
+
+### Q49: What is the parallax error? ^q49
+- A) Wrong interpretation of instruments caused by the angle of vision
+- B) Misperception of speed during taxiing
+- C) Long-sightedness due to aging especially during night
+- D) A decoding error in communication between pilots
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Parallax error occurs when an instrument is read from an angle rather than directly face-on, causing the observer's line of sight to pass through the needle or pointer at an offset, giving a false reading. This is particularly relevant for analogue instruments with a gap between the pointer and the scale face. Pilots should always read instruments from directly in front to avoid this systematic error.
+
+### Q50: In what different ways can a risk be handled appropriately? ^q50
+- A) Avoid, ignore, palliate, reduce
+- B) Avoid, reduce, transfer, accept
+- C) Extrude, avoid, palliate, transfer
+- D) Ignore, accept, transfer, extrude
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The four standard risk management strategies are: Avoid (eliminate the activity or hazard), Reduce (implement controls to lower probability or severity), Transfer (shift the risk to another party, e.g., insurance), and Accept (consciously acknowledge the residual risk when it is within acceptable limits). Ignoring a risk is never an acceptable strategy in aviation risk management.
+
+### Q51: Which altitude marks the lower limit where the the body is unable to completely compensate the effects of the low atmospheric pressure? ^q51
+- A) 5000 feet
+- B) 22000 feet
+- C) 12000 feet
+- D) 7000 feet
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above approximately 12,000 ft, the body's compensatory mechanisms — increased breathing rate and heart rate — are no longer sufficient to maintain adequate blood oxygen saturation. Hypoxic symptoms become increasingly apparent and performance degradation is measurable. This is why EASA regulations require oxygen supplementation above 10,000 ft for extended periods, and above 13,000 ft at all times.
+
+### Q52: What is an indication for a macho attitude? ^q52
+- A) Risky flight maneuvers to impress spectators on ground
+- B) Comprehensive risk assessment when faced with unfamiliar situations
+- C) Quick resignation in complex and critical situations
+- D) Careful walkaround procedure
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The macho attitude is characterised by the need to demonstrate bravery, skill, or daring — often to an audience. Performing risky manoeuvres to impress observers is a textbook example: the pilot prioritises ego and external validation over safety margins. This attitude is particularly dangerous because it actively creates hazardous situations that would otherwise never arise. The antidote is the reminder: "Taking chances is foolish."
+
+### Q53: The swiss cheese model can be used to explain the... ^q53
+- A) State of readiness of a pilot.
+- B) Procedure for an emergency landing.
+- C) Optimal problem solution.
+- D) Error chain.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** James Reason's Swiss Cheese Model illustrates how accidents result from an error chain — multiple failures that individually may be harmless but, when aligned, allow a hazard to pass through all defensive layers simultaneously. The holes in each slice of cheese represent latent or active failures; when all holes line up, an accident occurs. It is not a tool for assessing pilot readiness, planning emergency landings, or finding optimal solutions.
+
+### Q54: What does the term Red-out mean? ^q54
+- A) "Red vision" during negative g-loads
+- B) Falsified colour perception during sunrise and sunset
+- C) Anaemia caused by an injury
+- D) Rash during decompression sickness
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Red-out occurs when the pilot is subjected to sustained negative g-forces (e.g., during a bunt or pushover manoeuvre), causing blood to be forced upward into the head and eyes. The engorged capillaries in the conjunctiva create a characteristic red tinge in the visual field. This is distinct from grey-out and black-out (caused by positive g-forces); it has nothing to do with colour perception at sunrise/sunset, anaemia, or decompression sickness.
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+# 50 - Meteorology
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 150 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: What clouds and weather may result from an humid and instable air mass, that is pushed against a chain of mountains by the predominant wind and forced to rise? ^q1
+- A) Embedded CB with thunderstorms and showers of hail and/or rain.
+- B) Smooth, unstructured NS cloud with light drizzle or snow (during winter).
+- C) Thin Altostratus and Cirrostratus clouds with light and steady precipitation.
+- D) Overcast low stratus (high fog) with no precipitation.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When unstable, humid air is forced to rise orographically, it triggers convective instability — air that is conditionally unstable becomes absolutely unstable once lifting begins. The resulting rapid ascent fuels cumulonimbus development, producing embedded CBs with thunderstorms, heavy showers, and hail. Stable air masses under the same conditions produce layered clouds (Ns or As) with steady rain, not convective storms.
+
+### Q2: The term "trigger temperature" is defined as the temperature which... ^q2
+- A) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascend when formation of Cumulus clouds begins.
+- B) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level that has to be reached so formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud can occur.
+- D) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum surface temperature that must be reached before thermals can rise to the condensation level and form cumulus clouds. It is derived from the aerological diagram (tephigram/Stüve diagram) by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the morning sounding's moisture level back to the surface. Until this temperature is reached, thermals may exist but will not produce cumulus markers.
+
+### Q3: What situation is called "over-development" in a weather report? ^q3
+- A) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- C) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+- D) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development occurs when cumulus clouds continue growing vertically beyond the thermal inversion or become self-sustaining through latent heat release, developing into cumulonimbus (Cb) with heavy rain showers, lightning, and hail. This typically happens during humid summer afternoons when atmospheric instability is high and the inhibiting layer is weak. For glider pilots, over-development signals the end of safe soaring conditions and a need to land.
+
+### Q4: The gliding weather report states environmental instability. At morning, dew covers gras and no thermals are presently active. What development can be expected for thermal activity? ^q4
+- A) Formation of dew prevents all thermal activity during the following day
+- B) With ongoing insolation and ground warming, thermal lifting is likely to begin
+- C) Environmental instability prevents air from being lifted and no thermals will be generated
+- D) After sunset and formation of a ground-level inversion thermal activity is likely to begin
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Morning dew indicates the air cooled to the dew point overnight (radiation cooling), but this is temporary. Once solar insolation heats the ground, the surface temperature rises, warming the air above it until the temperature exceeds the trigger temperature. Environmental instability means the lapse rate is steep enough to sustain thermals once they begin, so good thermal conditions are likely to develop during the morning hours.
+
+### Q5: Weather phenomena are most common to be found in which atmospheric layer? ^q5
+- A) Tropopause
+- B) Stratosphere
+- C) Thermosphere
+- D) Troposphere
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The troposphere extends from the surface to approximately 8–16 km depending on latitude and season. It contains approximately 75–80% of the atmosphere's total mass and almost all its water vapour. Convection, cloud formation, precipitation, fronts, and wind phenomena all occur here because temperature decreases with height, driving convective instability. Above the tropopause, the stratosphere is stable and largely cloud-free.
+
+### Q6: The term "tropopause" is defined as... ^q6
+- A) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+- B) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- C) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- D) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the transition boundary between the troposphere (where temperature decreases with height) and the stratosphere (where temperature initially remains constant then increases due to ozone absorption of UV radiation). It acts as a "lid" on convection — cumulonimbus clouds that reach it spread out laterally to form the characteristic anvil shape. Jet streams are located near the tropopause.
+
+### Q7: What is meant by "inversion layer"? ^q7
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion "inverts" the normal lapse rate — instead of temperature falling with height, it rises. This creates a very stable layer that acts as a lid on convection, trapping thermals below it, concentrating pollutants, and promoting fog and low cloud formation beneath it. For glider pilots, a low-level inversion caps thermal height; a subsidence inversion in a high-pressure system limits soaring altitude and is often associated with haze.
+
+### Q8: Which process may result in an inversion layer at about 5000 ft (1500 m) height? ^q8
+- A) Ground cooling by radiation during the night
+- B) Intensive sunlight insolation during a warm summer day
+- C) Advection of cool air in the upper troposphere
+- D) Widespread descending air within a high pressure area
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Subsidence inversion forms when air in the centre of a high-pressure area sinks over a wide area. As the air descends, it warms adiabatically, but because the lower air has not warmed at the same rate, the descending layer becomes warmer than the air below it — creating an inversion, typically around 1500–3000 m. This is characteristic of anticyclonic conditions: stable weather, limited convection, and haze or smog trapped below the inversion.
+
+### Q9: The movement of air flowing apart is called... ^q9
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Concordence.
+- C) Subsidence.
+- D) Divergence.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Divergence describes air spreading outward from a region. At the surface, divergence causes subsiding air from above to replace the outflowing air, promoting stability, clear skies, and fair weather. High-pressure anticyclones are associated with surface divergence and upper-level convergence. In the upper troposphere, divergence above a surface low enhances upward motion and intensifies the low-pressure system.
+
+### Q10: What weather development will result from convergence at ground level? ^q10
+- A) Ascending air and cloud formation
+- B) Descending air and cloud dissipation
+- C) Ascending air and cloud dissipation
+- D) Descending air and cloud formation
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface convergence forces air upward (ascending motion) by mass continuity — air cannot accumulate indefinitely at the surface. As air rises, it cools at the dry adiabatic lapse rate until it reaches the dew point (lifting condensation level), where condensation begins and clouds form. Further ascent releases latent heat, potentially fuelling deep convection. This is the fundamental mechanism behind frontal lifting and sea-breeze convergence lift.
+
+### Q11: When air masses meet each other head on, how is this referred to and what air movements will follow? ^q11
+- A) Convergence resulting in air being lifted
+- B) Divergence resulting in air being lifted
+- C) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+- D) Divergence resulting in sinking air
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two opposing air flows collide head-on, the meeting zone is a convergence line. The colliding air has nowhere to go horizontally and is forced upward — producing ascending motion, cloud formation, and potentially precipitation or thunderstorms. This occurs at fronts, sea-breeze convergence zones, and col zones. Glider pilots exploit convergence lines for extended linear climbs along the lift band.
+
+### Q12: What type of turbulence is typically found close to the ground on the lee side during Foehn conditions? ^q12
+- A) Clear-air turbulence (CAT)
+- B) Inversion turbulence
+- C) Turbulence in rotors
+- D) Thermal turbulence
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn and mountain wave conditions, a rotor zone develops in the lower troposphere on the lee side beneath the crests of the standing waves. The rotor is a region of intense, chaotic turbulence with rotating air, strong downdrafts, and violent eddies — it is one of the most hazardous phenomena for aircraft. Lenticular clouds (altocumulus lenticularis) mark wave crests above, while rotor clouds (roll clouds) mark the rotor zone near the surface.
+
+### Q13: Which answer contains every state of water found in the atmosphere? ^q13
+- A) Liquid, solid, and gaseous
+- B) Liquid
+- C) Gaseous and liquid
+- D) Liquid and solid
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Water exists in all three states within the Earth's atmosphere. Gaseous water vapour is invisible and present throughout the troposphere. Liquid water forms cloud droplets, rain, and drizzle. Solid water forms ice crystals (cirrus clouds), snow, hail, and graupel. Understanding all three states is essential for icing awareness: supercooled liquid water droplets (liquid below 0°C) pose the greatest structural icing hazard to aircraft, as they freeze on contact with cold surfaces.
+
+### Q14: How do dew point and relative humidity change with decreasing temperature? ^q14
+- A) Dew point decreases, relative humidity increases
+- B) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity increases
+- C) Dew point increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Dew point remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dew point is the temperature to which air must be cooled (at constant pressure and moisture content) for saturation to occur. It is a measure of the absolute moisture content and remains constant as temperature changes (assuming no moisture is added or removed). However, relative humidity — the ratio of actual vapour pressure to saturation vapour pressure — increases as temperature falls, because the saturation vapour pressure decreases with temperature. When temperature equals the dew point, relative humidity reaches 100% and condensation begins.
+
+### Q15: The "spread" is defined as... ^q15
+- A) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+- B) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- C) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air
+- D) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread (also called dew point depression) is simply the difference between the air temperature and the dew point temperature: Spread = T - Td. It is used to estimate cloud base height: in temperate latitudes, cloud base height in metres above the surface is approximately spread × 125 (or in feet, spread × 400). A spread of 0 means the air is saturated (fog or cloud at the surface). Spread is a quick indicator of moisture availability for soaring pilots.
+
+### Q16: Which conditions are likely for the formation of advection fog? ^q16
+- A) Warm, humid air cools during a cloudy night
+- B) Cold, humid air moves over a warm ocean
+- C) Humidity evaporates from warm, humid ground into cold air
+- D) Warm, humid air moves over a cold surface
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, humid air moves horizontally over a cold surface (land or sea), cooling the air to its dew point. Option A describes radiation fog (not advection), option B is incorrect because cold air over a warm ocean would create evaporation/steam fog, not advection fog, and option C describes steam or evaporation fog.
+
+### Q17: What process results in the formation of "advection fog"? ^q17
+- A) Cold, moist air is being moved across warm ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+- C) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- D) Warm, moist air is moved across cold ground areas
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog results from the horizontal movement of warm, moist air over a cold surface, which cools the air from below until it reaches its dew point. Option A reverses the temperature relationship (cold air over warm ground would not produce fog this way), option B describes mixing fog, and option C describes radiation fog caused by nocturnal cooling.
+
+### Q18: What pressure pattern can be observed when a cold front is passing? ^q18
+- A) Continually increasing pressure
+- B) Shortly decreasing, thereafter increasing pressure
+- C) Continually decreasing pressure
+- D) Constant pressure pattern
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As a cold front approaches, pressure falls ahead of it due to the preceding low-pressure trough; once the front passes, colder, denser air causes pressure to rise again. Option A (continually increasing) would indicate persistent high pressure building, option C (continually decreasing) describes a deepening low without frontal passage, and option D (constant) is inconsistent with dynamic frontal systems.
+
+### Q19: What frontal line divides subtropical air from polar cold air, in particular across Central Europe? ^q19
+- A) Warm front
+- B) Cold front
+- C) Occlusion
+- D) Polar front
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the semi-permanent boundary separating cold polar air masses from warmer subtropical air, and it is the birthplace of mid-latitude cyclones affecting Central Europe. A warm front is the leading edge of an advancing warm air mass, a cold front is the leading edge of an advancing cold air mass, and an occlusion is a later stage where these fronts merge — none of these are the primary climatological boundary itself.
+
+### Q20: What weather conditions in Central Europe are typically found in high pressure areas during summer? ^q20
+- A) Large isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems
+- B) Small isobar spacing with calm winds, formation of local wind systems
+- C) Large isobar spacing with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Small isobar spacing with strong prevailing northerly winds
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, high pressure areas over Central Europe produce widely spaced isobars, meaning weak pressure gradients and calm synoptic winds; this allows local thermally driven wind systems (valley breezes, sea breezes) to develop. Option B is wrong because small isobar spacing means strong winds, not calm. Options C and D describe conditions more typical of strong synoptic flow associated with low-pressure systems.
+
+### Q21: What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during winter? ^q21
+- A) Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog
+- B) Changing weather with passing of frontal lines
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In winter, high pressure areas favour calm winds and surface-based temperature inversions that trap moisture near the ground, leading to widespread high fog (Hochnebel) or stratus. Option B (frontal weather) is associated with lows, option C (thunderstorms) requires instability absent in winter highs, and option D describes summer high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q22: What temperatures are most dangerous with respect to airframe icing? ^q22
+- A) .+20° to -5° C
+- B) .-20° to -40° C
+- C) .+5° to -10° C
+- D) 0° to -12° C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most dangerous icing temperatures are 0°C to −12°C because liquid water droplets remain supercooled and in large quantities at these temperatures, maximising ice accretion on airframes. Above +5°C ice cannot form, and below −20°C to −40°C most water has already frozen into ice crystals which do not adhere as readily to surfaces.
+
+### Q23: Which type of ice forms by large, supercooled droplets hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft? ^q23
+- A) Hoar frost
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Rime ice
+- D) Mixed ice
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clear ice (glaze ice) forms when large supercooled water droplets strike an aircraft, flow back before freezing, and solidify into a dense, smooth, heavy layer that is very difficult to remove. Hoar frost forms from deposition of water vapour on cold surfaces. Rime ice forms from small supercooled droplets that freeze on contact, trapping air and producing a white, opaque, brittle deposit. Mixed ice combines both rime and clear ice characteristics but is not the primary type formed from large droplets.
+
+### Q24: What conditions are mandatory for the formation of thermal thunderstorms? ^q24
+- A) Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity
+- B) Absolutely stable atmosphere, high temperature and low humidity
+- C) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, high temperature and high humidity
+- D) Conditionally unstable atmosphere, low temperature and low humidity
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal (air mass) thunderstorms require a conditionally unstable atmosphere — one that becomes unstable once convection is triggered — combined with high temperatures to drive strong surface heating and high humidity to provide the latent heat energy needed to sustain deep convection. An absolutely stable atmosphere suppresses convection regardless of temperature or humidity, and low humidity limits latent heat release needed to fuel the storm.
+
+### Q25: Which stage of a thunderstorm is dominated by updrafts? ^q25
+- A) Dissipating stage
+- B) Mature stage
+- C) Cumulus stage
+- D) Upwind stage
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cumulus stage is characterised entirely by updrafts that build the storm upward; no downdrafts have yet developed. The mature stage features both strong updrafts and downdrafts along with precipitation. The dissipating stage is dominated by downdrafts as the updraft cuts off. There is no meteorological stage called the 'upwind stage'.
+
+### Q26: Heavy downdrafts and strong wind shear close to the ground can be expected... ^q26
+- A) Near the rainfall areas of heavy showers or thunderstorms.
+- B) During approach to an airfield at the coast with a strong sea breeze.
+- C) During cold, clear nights with the formation of radiation fog.
+- D) During warm summer days with high, flatted Cu clouds.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation falling from heavy showers or thunderstorms creates strong downdrafts (microbursts or downbursts) that spread outward near the ground, generating intense low-level wind shear. A sea-breeze front can cause some shear but not 'heavy' downdrafts. Radiation fog nights are associated with calm conditions. Flat cumulus clouds on warm days indicate weak convection without significant downdrafts.
+
+### Q27: Which weather chart shows the actual air pressure as in MSL along with pressure centers and fronts? ^q27
+- A) Wind chart
+- B) Surface weather chart
+- C) Prognostic chart
+- D) Hypsometric chart
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A surface weather chart (synoptic chart) depicts mean sea-level pressure via isobars, identifies pressure centres (highs and lows), and shows the positions of weather fronts derived from actual observations. A wind chart shows wind data only, a prognostic chart shows forecast conditions, and a hypsometric chart shows terrain elevation.
+
+### Q28: What information can be obtained from satallite images? ^q28
+- A) Overview of cloud covers and front lines
+- B) Turbulence and icing
+- C) Temperature and dew point of environmental air
+- D) Flight visibility, ground visibility, and ground contact
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Satellite imagery shows cloud cover distribution, cloud patterns, and derived front line positions across large areas. It cannot directly measure turbulence, icing, temperature/dew point profiles (those come from soundings), or quantify ground visibility — those require other observational systems.
+
+### Q29: What information can be found in the ATIS, but not in a METAR? ^q29
+- A) Operational information such as runway in use and transition level
+- B) Information about current weather, for example types of precipitation
+- C) Approach information, such as ground visibility and cloud base
+- D) Information about mean wind speeds, maximum speeds in gusts if applicable
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) includes operational airport information such as the runway in use, transition level, approach type, and NOTAMs relevant to the aerodrome, which are not encoded in a METAR. A METAR does report current weather phenomena (precipitation types), visibility, cloud base, wind mean and gust speeds — so options B, C, and D are all available in METARs.
+
+### Q30: What type of cloud indicates thermal updrafts? ^q30
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Lenticularis
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds form as a result of thermal convection: rising air parcels cool to the dew point and condensation begins, marking the cloud base. Stratus is a layered cloud formed by broad lifting or fog, not thermals. Cirrus is high-altitude ice crystal cloud unrelated to surface thermals. Lenticularis (lenticular clouds) form in wave lift over mountains, not thermals.
+
+### Q31: What situation is referred to as "shielding"? ^q31
+- A) Ns clouds, covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- B) High or mid-level cloud layers, impairing thermal activity
+- C) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- D) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eights of the sky
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding describes the effect of high or medium cloud layers (cirrus, cirrostratus, altostratus) that block solar radiation and suppress thermal development below. Even partial cloud cover at these levels can significantly reduce ground insolation. Gliding forecasts include shielding assessments to indicate when and where thermals will be weakened or absent due to cloud cover above the expected thermal layer.
+
+### Q32: What is meant by "isothermal layer"? ^q32
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- C) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer maintains constant temperature with increasing altitude. Like an inversion, it is more stable than the standard atmosphere and inhibits convection. The lower stratosphere exhibits an isothermal region immediately above the tropopause. Isothermal layers can also occur in the troposphere and, like inversions, act as a cap on thermal development and cloud growth.
+
+### Q33: The altimeter can be checked on the ground by setting... ^q33
+- A) QFF and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- B) QFE and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- C) QNH and comparing the indication with the airfield elevation.
+- D) QNE and checking that the indication shows zero on the ground.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the local altimeter setting that makes the instrument read the airfield's elevation above mean sea level when on the ground. Setting QNH and checking that the altimeter reads the known airfield elevation (published in AIP/chart) verifies the altimeter is functioning correctly and calibrated. QFE would show zero (height above airfield), QNE (1013.25) would show a value unrelated to actual elevation, and QFF is a meteorological value reduced to MSL for surface analysis charts.
+
+### Q34: The barometric altimeter with QFE setting indicates... ^q34
+- A) True altitude above MSL.
+- B) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- C) Height above MSL.
+- D) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QFE is the actual atmospheric pressure at airfield elevation. When set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads zero on the ground at the reference airfield and subsequently indicates height above that reference pressure level — effectively height above the airfield. This setting is commonly used in circuit flying and gliding operations so the altimeter directly reads AGL height at the home airfield. It does not account for terrain elevation differences elsewhere.
+
+### Q35: What process causes latent heat being released into the upper troposphere? ^q35
+- A) Cloud forming due to condensation
+- B) Descending air across widespread areas
+- C) Evaporation over widespread water areas
+- D) Stabilisation of inflowing air masses
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When water vapour condenses into cloud droplets, the latent heat stored during evaporation is released into the surrounding air. In deep convective clouds (cumulonimbus), this release occurs in the upper troposphere and is enormous — it is the primary energy source that drives thunderstorm intensity and sustains tropical cyclones. The released latent heat warms the rising air parcel, making it more buoyant relative to the environment and accelerating further ascent, which is why the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) is less steep than the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR).
+
+### Q36: The saturated adiabatic lapse rate is... ^q36
+- A) Equal to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- B) Higher than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- C) Proportional to the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+- D) Lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR, ~0.6°C/100 m on average) is lower than the dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR, 1.0°C/100 m) because the condensation of water vapour releases latent heat, partially offsetting the cooling of the rising air parcel. The two rates are not equal (option A), not proportional in the way option C implies, and the SALR is definitely not higher than the DALR (option B).
+
+### Q37: The dry adiabatic lapse rate has a value of... ^q37
+- A) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- B) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- C) 2° / 1000 ft.
+- D) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is 1.0°C per 100 m (or approximately 3°F per 1000 ft). An unsaturated air parcel rising adiabatically cools at exactly this rate. Option A (0.65°C/100 m) is the standard atmosphere environmental lapse rate, option C (2°/1000 ft) is incorrect, and option D (0.6°C/100 m) approximates the saturated adiabatic lapse rate.
+
+### Q38: What weather conditions may be expected during conditionally unstable conditions? ^q38
+- A) Towering cumulus, isolated showers of rain or thunderstorms
+- B) Layered clouds up to high levels, prolonged rain or snow
+- C) Sky clear of clouds, sunshine, low winds
+- D) Shallow cumulus clouds with base at medium levels
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In a conditionally unstable atmosphere, air is stable when unsaturated but becomes unstable once lifted to saturation (the level of free convection). This triggers vigorous convection producing towering cumulus, cumulonimbus, isolated showers and thunderstorms. Layered clouds and prolonged rain characterise stable (stratiform) conditions, clear skies indicate absolutely stable or dry conditions, and shallow mid-level cumulus does not match the vertical extent of conditional instability.
+
+### Q39: What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-004). Siehe Anlage 3 ^q39
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Cumulus
+- D) Stratus
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cirrus clouds are thin, wispy, high-altitude ice crystal clouds, typically above FL200. Their characteristic streaky or fibrous appearance is shown in the referenced figure MET-004. Altocumulus is a mid-level cloud in patches or layers, cumulus is a heap cloud at lower levels, and stratus is a grey featureless layer cloud.
+
+### Q40: The formation of medium to large precipitation particles requires... ^q40
+- A) Strong updrafts.
+- B) An inversion layer.
+- C) A high cloud base.
+- D) Strong wind.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Formation of medium to large precipitation particles requires strong updrafts to keep droplets or ice particles suspended long enough to grow by collision-coalescence or the Bergeron process. Weak updrafts allow small particles to fall before they grow significantly. An inversion layer suppresses growth, a high cloud base reduces available cloud depth, and strong wind alone does not sustain particles in the cloud.
+
+### Q41: The symbol labeled (2) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q41
+- A) Front aloft.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Warm front.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On synoptic weather charts, a warm front is depicted by a line with semicircles pointing in the direction of movement (into the cooler air). The referenced figure MET-005 shows symbol (2) as a warm front. Cold fronts use triangular barbs, occlusions combine both symbols, and a front aloft is marked differently.
+
+### Q42: What visual flight conditions can be expected within the warm sector of a polar front low during summer time? ^q42
+- A) Good visibility, some isolated high clouds
+- B) Moderate to good visibility, scattered clouds
+- C) Visibilty less than 1000 m, cloud-covered ground
+- D) Moderate visibility, heavy showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Within the warm sector of a polar front low, the air is relatively warm and moist but the dominant cloud cover is not severe; conditions typically offer moderate to good visibility with scattered or broken cloud layers. Visibility less than 1 km with ground-covering cloud is more typical of fog or orographic stratus in the cold sector. Heavy showers and thunderstorms are post-cold-front back-side weather. Good visibility with only high cirrus is more characteristic of the pre-warm-front region far ahead.
+
+### Q43: What visual flight conditions can be expected after the passage of a cold front? ^q43
+- A) Good visiblity, formation of cumulus clouds with showers of rain or snow
+- B) Poor visibility, formation of overcast or ground-covering stratus clouds, snow
+- C) Scattered cloud layers, visbility more than 5 km, formation of shallow cumulus clouds
+- D) Medium visibility with lowering cloud bases, onset of prolonged precipitation
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** After a cold front passes, cold, unstable polar air replaces the warm sector air; this instability produces good visibility (clean polar air) with convective cumulus clouds and showery precipitation. Poor visibility with stratus and snow is more typical of a warm occlusion or the cold sector aloft. Options C and D describe intermediate or pre-frontal conditions.
+
+### Q44: What is the usual direction of movement of a polar front low? ^q44
+- A) Parallel to the the warm-sector isobars
+- B) To the northeast during winter, to the southeast during summer
+- C) Parallel to the warm front line to the south
+- D) To the northwest during winter, to the southwest during summer
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A polar front low moves in the direction of and roughly parallel to the isobars in its warm sector, because the warm sector winds steer the system. Seasonal directional rules (northeast/southeast or northwest/southwest) are oversimplified and not a reliable principle. Movement parallel to the warm front line southward is inconsistent with the observed eastward to northeastward tracks of North Atlantic lows over Europe.
+
+### Q45: What pressure pattern can be observed during the passage of a polar front low? ^q45
+- A) Rising pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- B) Rising pressure in front of the warm front, rising pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+- C) Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, rising pressure behind the cold front
+- D) Falling pressure in front of the warm front, constant pressure within the warm sector, falling pressure behind the cold front
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ahead of an approaching warm front, pressure falls as the low approaches. Within the warm sector, pressure remains relatively steady (though slightly falling). After the cold front passes, cold dense air causes pressure to rise sharply. Options A and B incorrectly place rising pressure ahead of the warm front, and option D has pressure falling behind the cold front.
+
+### Q46: What change of wind direction can be expected during the passage of a polar front low in Central Europe? ^q46
+- A) Backing wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front
+- B) Veering wind during passage of the warm front, veering wind during passage of the cold front
+- C) Veering wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front
+- D) Backing wind during passage of the warm front, backing wind during passage of the cold front
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the Northern Hemisphere, as a polar front low passes, the wind veers (shifts clockwise, e.g., from south to southwest) with the warm front passage and veers again (e.g., from southwest to northwest) with the cold front passage. Backing (anti-clockwise shift) would indicate the low passing to the south of the observer, which is less common in Central Europe.
+
+### Q47: What pressure pattern may result from cold-air inflow in high tropospheric layers? ^q47
+- A) Alternating pressure
+- B) Formation of a large ground low
+- C) Formation of a high in the upper troposphere
+- D) Formation of a low in the upper troposphere
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When cold air advects into the upper troposphere, it contracts the air column (cold air is denser), reducing the thickness between pressure levels; this lowers pressure aloft and produces an upper-level trough or low. Upper lows associated with cold-air pools are a key trigger for convective instability. A surface high results from upper-level divergence, not cold-air inflow aloft.
+
+### Q48: Cold air inflow in high tropospheric layers may result in... ^q48
+- A) Showers and thunderstorms.
+- B) Frontal weather.
+- C) Calm weather and cloud dissipation
+- D) Stabilisation and calm weather.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air intruding into the upper troposphere destabilises the atmosphere by creating a steep lapse rate (cold air above, potentially warmer air below). This conditional instability, when combined with moisture, generates convective activity including showers and thunderstorms. It does not produce frontal weather (which requires air mass boundaries at the surface), nor does it cause calm weather or cloud dissipation.
+
+### Q49: How does inflowing cold air affect the shape and vertical distance between pressure layers? ^q49
+- A) Increasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)
+- B) Decreasing vertical distance, raise in height (high pressure)
+- C) Decrease in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)
+- D) Increase in vertical distance, lowering in height (low pressure)
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold air is denser, so a column of cold air has shorter vertical distances between pressure surfaces (closer isobars aloft) and pressure surfaces lie at lower heights — indicating low pressure aloft. This is why upper-level cold pools are associated with upper troughs. Warm air has the opposite effect: greater thickness and higher pressure surfaces.
+
+### Q50: What weather conditions can be expected in high pressure areas during summer? ^q50
+- A) Calm weather and cloud dissipation, few high Cu
+- B) Changing weather with passing of frontal lines
+- C) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+- D) Calm winds and widespread areas with high fog
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer, high pressure areas bring calm synoptic winds (weak pressure gradient) and subsidence suppresses deep convection, resulting in sunny skies with possible development of small fair-weather cumulus (few Cu). Frontal weather is associated with lows, squall lines and thunderstorms require instability and moisture not found in subsiding high-pressure air, and fog is typical of winter or overnight conditions in continental highs.
+
+### Q51: What weather conditions can be expected during "Foehn" on the windward side of a mountain range? ^q51
+- A) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate or heavy rain
+- B) Dissipating clouds with unusual warming, accompanied by strong, gusty winds
+- C) Calm wind and forming of high stratus clouds (high fog)
+- D) Scattered cumulus clouds with showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (luv) side of a mountain range during Foehn conditions, moist air is forced to rise, cools at the DALR then SALR, and precipitates much of its moisture as heavy orographic rain or snow with layered cloud and poor visibility — this is the 'Stauseite' effect. The warm, dry and gusty descending Foehn wind occurs on the lee (downwind) side, not the windward side.
+
+### Q52: What chart shows areas of precipitation? ^q52
+- A) Satellite picture
+- B) Wind chart
+- C) Radar picture
+- D) GAFOR
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Weather radar detects the intensity and location of precipitation by measuring backscattered microwave energy from raindrops and other hydrometeors; it is the primary tool for showing precipitation areas. Satellite images show cloud cover, not precipitation directly. Wind charts show wind patterns. GAFOR is a general aviation route forecast in text/coded format.
+
+### Q53: An inversion is a layer ... ^q53
+- A) With constant temperature with increasing height
+- B) With increasing pressure with increasing height.
+- C) With increasing temperature with increasing height.
+- D) With decreasing temperature with increasing height.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion is an anomalous condition where temperature increases with altitude instead of the normal decrease; it is highly stable and acts as a lid on convection. Option A describes an isothermal layer (constant temperature), option B misidentifies pressure (which always decreases with height), and option D describes the normal lapse rate — the opposite of an inversion.
+
+### Q54: The term "beginning of thermals" refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^q54
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermal activity is considered to have "begun" when thermals are strong enough to support gliding and extend to at least 600 m AGL — sufficient altitude to work the lift. Below this height, thermals may exist but are too shallow to be safely exploited by a glider. Cloud formation is not a prerequisite; blue thermals (see Q3) can also mark the beginning of usable thermal activity.
+
+### Q55: What is the mass of a "cube of air" with the edges 1 m long, at MSL according ISA? ^q55
+- A) 0,01225 kg
+- B) 0,1225 kg
+- C) 12,25 kg
+- D) 1,225 kg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** According to the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), air density at mean sea level is 1.225 kg/m³. Therefore a 1 m³ cube of air has a mass of 1.225 kg. This density value is fundamental to aviation: it affects lift, drag, engine power, and altimeter calibration. Density decreases with altitude and increases temperature/humidity changes also affect it, which is why density altitude matters for aircraft performance.
+
+### Q56: The temperature lapse rate with increasing height within the troposphere according ISA is... ^q56
+- A) 1° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- C) 0,65° C / 100 m.
+- D) 3° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) is 6.5°C per 1000 m, or 0.65°C per 100 m (approximately 2°C per 1000 ft). This is distinct from the Dry Adiabatic Lapse Rate (DALR) of 1°C/100 m and the Saturated Adiabatic Lapse Rate (SALR) of approximately 0.6°C/100 m. When the actual ELR is steeper than the DALR, the atmosphere is absolutely unstable; when it lies between the DALR and SALR, the atmosphere is conditionally unstable — the typical situation for thermal soaring.
+
+### Q57: An inversion layer close to the ground can be caused by... ^q57
+- A) Thickening of clouds in medium layers.
+- B) Large-scale lifting of air
+- C) Intensifying and gusting winds.
+- D) Ground cooling during the night.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation inversion forms on calm, clear nights when the ground radiates heat into space and cools rapidly. The air in contact with the ground also cools, while air a few hundred metres above remains warmer — creating a temperature inversion near the surface. This type of inversion is common in anticyclonic conditions and often produces radiation fog or low stratus in the morning, which burns off as the sun heats the ground.
+
+### Q58: What are the air masses that Central Europe is mainly influenced by? ^q58
+- A) Arctic and polar cold air
+- B) Tropical and arctic cold air
+- C) Equatorial and tropical warm air
+- D) Polar cold air and tropical warm air
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Central Europe sits in the mid-latitude westerly belt between the polar front (cold polar air from the north) and subtropical high pressure (warm tropical air from the south). The interaction between these two contrasting air masses creates the characteristic mid-latitude cyclone (depression) weather of Central Europe: frontal systems, rapidly changing weather, and the full range of cloud types and precipitation. This dynamic contrast also drives the polar jet stream overhead.
+
+### Q59: How do spread and relative humidity change with increasing temperature? ^q59
+- A) Spread remains constant, relative humidity increases
+- B) Spread remains constant, relative humidity decreases
+- C) Spread increases, relative humidity decreases
+- D) Spread increases, relative humidity increases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Spread is the temperature-dew point difference (T - Td). As temperature increases while dew point remains constant, the spread widens. Simultaneously, because warmer air can hold more water vapour, the relative humidity decreases — the air is now further from saturation. A large spread indicates dry air and a high lifting condensation level (high cloud base). A small spread (near zero) indicates saturated or near-saturated conditions, with fog or low cloud likely.
+
+### Q60: With other factors remaining constant, decreasing temperature results in... ^q60
+- A) Decreasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- B) Increasing spread and increasing relative humidity.
+- C) Decreasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+- D) Increasing spread and decreasing relative humidity.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As temperature decreases (with dew point unchanged), the gap between temperature and dew point narrows — spread decreases. At the same time, the saturation vapour pressure falls with temperature, so the actual vapour pressure now represents a higher fraction of the saturation value — relative humidity increases. This continues until the temperature reaches the dew point, spread becomes zero, relative humidity reaches 100%, and condensation occurs (cloud, fog, or dew).
+
+### Q61: What condition may prevent the formation of "radiation fog"? ^q61
+- A) Calm wind
+- B) Clear night, no clouds
+- C) Low spread
+- D) Overcast cloud cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Overcast cloud cover prevents the ground from radiating heat to space at night (the greenhouse/blanket effect), so the surface does not cool sufficiently to reach the dew point, and radiation fog cannot form. Calm wind, clear nights, and a low temperature–dew point spread (low spread) all favour fog formation, not prevent it.
+
+### Q62: The symbol labeled (3) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q62
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Front aloft.
+- D) Occlusion.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On standard synoptic weather charts, an occlusion is depicted by a line combining both cold-front triangles and warm-front semicircles on the same side, representing a front where the cold front has caught up with the warm front. The referenced figure MET-005 shows symbol (3) as an occlusion. Cold fronts show only triangles, warm fronts only semicircles, and fronts aloft are marked differently.
+
+### Q63: A boundary between a cold polar air mass and a warm subtropical air mass showing no horizontal displacement is called... ^q63
+- A) Cold front.
+- B) Warm front.
+- C) Stationary front.
+- D) Occluded front.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A stationary front is a boundary between two contrasting air masses (here polar and subtropical) with no significant horizontal movement in either direction. A cold front moves toward the warm air, a warm front moves toward the cold air, and an occluded front is the result of a cold front overtaking a warm front.
+
+### Q64: What situation may result in the occurrence of severe wind shear? ^q64
+- A) Flying ahead of a warm front with visible Ci clouds
+- B) Cross-country flying below Cu clouds with about 4 octas coverage
+- C) During final approach, 30 min after a heavy shower has passed the airfield
+- D) When a shower is visible close to the airfield
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A shower that is visible close to the airfield is producing active downdrafts and outflow boundaries right now; these create severe, rapidly shifting low-level wind shear that is an immediate threat during approach or departure. Flying ahead of a warm front involves gradually deteriorating conditions but not severe shear. Cross-country flying below moderate Cu is normal gliding activity. Thirty minutes after a shower has passed, conditions have typically normalised.
+
+### Q65: What kind of reduction in visibility is not very sensitive to changes in temperature? ^q65
+- A) Radiation fog (FG)
+- B) Mist (BR)
+- C) Patches of fog (BCFG)
+- D) Haze (HZ)
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Haze (HZ) is caused by dry particles (dust, smoke, pollution) suspended in the atmosphere and is not dependent on temperature or moisture; it persists regardless of temperature changes. Radiation fog, mist, and patches of fog are all moisture-dependent phenomena that form, thicken, or dissipate in direct response to temperature changes relative to the dew point.
+
+### Q66: In a METAR, "(moderate) showers of rain" are designated by the identifier... ^q66
+- A) .+TSRA
+- B) SHRA.
+- C) TS.
+- D) .+RA.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR coding, the descriptor 'SH' (shower) combined with the precipitation type 'RA' (rain) gives 'SHRA' for moderate showers of rain. '+TSRA' denotes heavy thunderstorm with rain, 'TS' alone indicates thunderstorm without precipitation reported separately, and '+RA' denotes heavy continuous rain (not a shower).
+
+### Q67: SIGMET warnings are issued for... ^q67
+- A) Specific routings.
+- B) Countries.
+- C) FIRs / UIRs.
+- D) Airports.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** SIGMETs (Significant Meteorological Information) are issued for Flight Information Regions (FIRs) or Upper Information Regions (UIRs), which are defined blocks of airspace managed by specific ATC authorities. They are not issued for specific routes, individual countries (which may contain multiple FIRs), or individual airports (which use AIRMETs or terminal forecasts).
+
+### Q68: Mountain side updrafts can be intensified by ... ^q68
+- A) Solar irradiation on the lee side
+- B) Thermal radiation of the windward side during the night
+- C) Solar irradiation on the windward side
+- D) By warming of upper atmospheric layers
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Solar irradiation (insolation) heating the windward slope warms the surface air, reducing its density and creating anabatic (upslope) flow that adds to the orographic lifting already occurring; this intensifies updrafts on the windward side. The lee side experiences descending air, night-time cooling suppresses thermals, and warming of upper layers would increase stability and suppress convection.
+
+### Q69: While planning a 500 km triangle flight, there is a squall line 100 km west of the departure airfield, extending from north to south, moving east. Concerning the weather situation, what decision would be recommendable? ^q69
+- A) To change plans and start the triangle heading east
+- B) To postpone the flight to another day
+- C) To plan the flight below cloud base of the thunderstorms
+- D) During flight, to look for spacing between thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A squall line is an organized line of severe thunderstorms that is notoriously fast-moving, unpredictable, and extremely dangerous. Moving at typical speeds of 30–60 km/h, a squall line 100 km away could reach the airfield within 2–3 hours. Flying below Cb cloud bases or attempting to navigate between cells exposes the glider to extreme turbulence, windshear, hail, and downdrafts. The only safe option is to not fly until the hazard has completely passed.
+
+### Q70: At what rate does the temperature change with increasing height according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) within the troposphere? ^q70
+- A) Decreases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+- B) Increases by 2° C / 100 m
+- C) Decreases by 2° C / 100 m
+- D) Increases by 2° C / 1000 ft
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA standard lapse rate is 1.98°C per 1000 ft (approximately 2°C/1000 ft), or 6.5°C per 1000 m. This is the Environmental Lapse Rate (ELR) used as a reference for altimeter calibration and pressure calculations. The actual ELR varies with weather conditions — steeper than ISA indicates instability and favours thermals, shallower or negative (inversion) indicates stability and suppresses convection.
+
+### Q71: Temperatures will be given by meteorological aviation services in Europe in which unit? ^q71
+- A) Gpdam
+- B) Kelvin
+- C) Degrees Centigrade (° C)
+- D) Degrees Fahrenheit
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** European aviation meteorology (ICAO Annex 3, EU regulations) specifies temperatures in degrees Celsius (°C) for all operational products including METARs, TAFs, SIGMETs, and forecast charts. Kelvin is used in scientific and upper-air calculations. Fahrenheit is used in the US and a few other countries but not in European aviation. This standardisation is critical for correct interpretation of icing levels, freezing level heights, and density altitude.
+
+### Q72: The pressure at MSL in ISA conditions is... ^q72
+- A) 1013.25 hPa.
+- B) 113.25 hPa.
+- C) 15 hPa.
+- D) 1123 hPa.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere) defines sea-level pressure as 1013.25 hPa (also expressed as 29.92 inHg in US aviation). This is the standard QNE setting — with 1013.25 hPa set on the altimeter subscale, the instrument reads Flight Level. All pressure altitudes and flight level definitions are based on this datum. Actual sea-level pressure varies with weather systems and must be corrected via QNH for accurate altitude indication.
+
+### Q73: How can wind speed and wind direction be derived from surface weather charts? ^q73
+- A) By alignment and distance of isobaric lines
+- B) By annotations from the text part of the chart
+- C) By alignment and distance of hypsometric lines
+- D) By alignment of lines of warm- and cold fronts.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isobars (lines of equal pressure) on surface charts indicate both wind direction and speed. Above the friction layer, wind flows parallel to isobars (geostrophic wind); close to the surface it crosses them at an angle toward lower pressure. Closely spaced isobars indicate a strong pressure gradient force and therefore strong winds; widely spaced isobars indicate light winds. Wind direction in the Northern Hemisphere is anticlockwise around lows and clockwise around highs (Buys-Ballot's Law).
+
+### Q74: Light turbulence always has to be expected... ^q74
+- A) Above cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+- B) Below stratiform clouds in medium layers.
+- C) When entering inversions.
+- D) Below cumulus clouds due to thermal convection.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cumulus clouds are the visible tops of thermal columns. The sub-cloud layer beneath them contains active thermals (updraughts) and compensating downdraughts between them, creating light to moderate turbulence from convective mixing. This is the normal turbulent environment of thermal soaring. Above cumulus tops the air is generally smoother (outside the cloud); stratiform clouds have minimal convective turbulence unless embedded CBs are present.
+
+### Q75: Moderate to severe turbulence has to be expected... ^q75
+- A) Below thick cloud layers on the windward side of a mountain range.
+- B) Overhead unbroken cloud layers.
+- C) On the lee side of a mountain range when rotor clouds are present.
+- D) With the appearance of extended low stratus clouds (high fog).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rotor clouds (roll clouds) on the lee side of mountains are the visible indicator of the highly turbulent rotor zone beneath mountain waves. This turbulence can be extreme, with unpredictable up- and downdraughts, strong shear, and rotational forces capable of exceeding aircraft structural limits. Experienced wave pilots avoid or transit the rotor zone quickly with sufficient airspeed. The windward side of mountains typically has orographic cloud and steady lift, not severe turbulence.
+
+### Q76: Clouds in high layers are referred to as... ^q76
+- A) Cirro-.
+- B) Strato-.
+- C) Nimbo-.
+- D) Alto-.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The prefix 'Cirro-' denotes clouds in the high cloud family (above approximately 6,000 m / FL200), including cirrus, cirrocumulus, and cirrostratus. 'Strato-' refers to layer-type clouds at low to mid levels, 'Nimbo-' refers to rain-producing clouds (e.g., nimbostratus), and 'Alto-' denotes mid-level clouds (approximately 2,000–6,000 m).
+
+### Q77: What factor may affect the top of cumulus clouds? ^q77
+- A) The spread
+- B) Relative humidity
+- C) The absolute humidity
+- D) The presence of an inversion layer
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer acts as a lid that limits the vertical extent of cumulus cloud growth; thermals and updrafts lose buoyancy at the inversion, causing clouds to spread out and flatten at that level rather than growing into towering cumulus. The spread (temperature minus dew point) controls cloud base height, relative and absolute humidity affect cloud formation likelihood, but none of these cap the cloud top as directly as an inversion.
+
+### Q78: What factors may indicate a tendency to fog formation? ^q78
+- A) Strong winds, decreasing temperature
+- B) Low spread, decreasing temperature
+- C) Low pressure, increasing temperature
+- D) Low spread, increasing temperature
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A low spread (temperature close to dew point) means the air is near saturation, and decreasing temperature (e.g., nocturnal cooling or advection of cold air) will bring the temperature down to the dew point, causing condensation and fog. Strong winds promote mixing that prevents fog. Low pressure is associated with ascending air, not fog formation. Increasing temperature widens the spread and dissipates fog.
+
+### Q79: What process results in the formation of "orographic fog" ("hill fog")? ^q79
+- A) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- B) Warm, moist air is moved across a hill or a mountain range
+- C) Evaporation from warm, moist ground area into very cold air
+- D) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic (hill) fog forms when warm, moist air is forced to rise over elevated terrain, cools adiabatically to the dew point, and saturates; the resulting cloud envelops the hill or mountain as fog. Prolonged radiation cooling describes radiation fog, evaporation into cold air describes steam fog, and mixing of air masses describes mixing fog.
+
+### Q80: What factors are required for the formation of precipitation in clouds? ^q80
+- A) The presence of an inversion layer
+- B) Moderate to strong updrafts
+- C) Calm winds and intensive sunlight insolation
+- D) High humidity and high temperatures
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Precipitation forms in clouds when updrafts are strong enough to keep water droplets or ice crystals suspended long enough to grow — through collision-coalescence (warm clouds) or the Bergeron–Findeisen process (cold clouds). Without sufficient updrafts, particles fall before reaching precipitation size. An inversion prevents cloud growth, calm winds and sunshine are surface conditions not directly responsible for in-cloud precipitation, and high humidity/temperature alone do not create precipitation without dynamic lifting.
+
+### Q81: What wind conditions can be expected in areas showing large distances between isobars? ^q81
+- A) Strong prevailing westerly winds with rapid veering
+- B) Strong prevailing easterly winds with rapid backing
+- C) Formation of local wind systems with strong prevailing westerly winds
+- D) Variable winds, formation of local wind systems
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Large spacing between isobars indicates a weak pressure gradient and therefore weak synoptic-scale winds. In the absence of strong pressure-gradient forcing, local thermally driven wind systems (valley-mountain winds, sea-land breezes) dominate the local circulation. Strong prevailing westerly or easterly winds require close isobar spacing.
+
+### Q82: Under which conditions "back side weather" ("Rückseitenwetter") can be expected? ^q82
+- A) After passing of a cold front
+- B) Before passing of an occlusion
+- C) During Foehn at the lee side
+- D) After passing of a warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 'Back-side weather' (Rückseitenwetter) refers to the cold, unstable, showery conditions in the polar air mass on the back (west/northwest) side of a low-pressure system, experienced after a cold front has passed. It is not associated with occlusions (which bring a different cloud and precipitation pattern), Foehn (a thermodynamic lee-side phenomenon), or warm fronts.
+
+### Q83: What wind is reportet as 225/15 ? ^q83
+- A) North-east wind with 15 kt
+- B) South-west wind with 15 kt
+- C) South-west wind with 15 km/h
+- D) North-east wind with 15 km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is reported in aviation as direction FROM and speed; '225' is the bearing 225° true (southwest), and '15' is the speed in knots. Wind direction is always the direction from which the wind is blowing, so 225° means the wind blows from the southwest. Speed in METARs and standard reports is in knots unless explicitly stated otherwise.
+
+### Q84: What weather is likely to be experienced during "Foehn" in the Bavarian area close to the alps? ^q84
+- A) Cold, humid downhill wind on the lee side of the alps, flat pressure pattern
+- B) Nimbostratus cloud in the southern alps, rotor clouds at the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- C) High pressure area overhead Biskaya and low pressure area in Eastern Europe
+- D) Nimbostratus cloud in the northern alps, rotor clouds at the windward side, warm and dry wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn in the Bavarian pre-alpine region, the classic pattern involves nimbostratus and heavy precipitation on the southern (windward) Italian side of the Alps, a Foehn wall of cloud at the ridge, and on the northern (lee) side a warm, dry, gusty wind with possible rotor turbulence and lenticular clouds. Option A incorrectly places the Nimbostratus on the northern side and the rotor on the windward side. Options A and D have the cloud and rotor positions reversed.
+
+### Q85: What phenomenon is referred to as "blue thermals"? ^q85
+- A) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- D) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** "Blue thermals" exist when the lifting condensation level (LCL) is very high — the air is too dry to reach its dew point before the thermal tops out. As a result, thermals rise but no cumulus clouds form, leaving the sky clear ("blue"). For glider pilots this is challenging since there are no visual cloud markers to indicate thermal location, and the cloudbase is beyond the thermal ceiling.
+
+### Q86: What change in thermal activity may be expected with cirrus clouds coming up from one direction and becoming more dense, blocking the sun? ^q86
+- A) Cirrus clouds may intensify insolation and improve thermal activity
+- B) Cirrus clouds indicate an high-level inversion with thermal activity ongoing up to that level
+- C) Cirrus clouds prevent insolation and impair thermal activity.
+- D) Cirrus clouds indicate instability and beginning of over-development
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thermals are driven by differential heating of the ground by solar radiation. Thickening cirrus clouds progressively filter out solar energy, reducing ground heating and therefore thermal strength and depth. Dense cirrus can reduce insolation enough to stop thermal activity entirely. Additionally, approaching cirrus from one direction often indicates an advancing warm front, which brings widespread cloud, stable conditions, and further suppression of thermals.
+
+### Q87: The barometric altimeter with QNH setting indicates... ^q87
+- A) True altitude above MSL.
+- B) Height above MSL
+- C) Height above the pressure level at airfield elevation.
+- D) Height above standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** QNH is the altimeter setting adjusted to make the instrument read the elevation above mean sea level at the station. It is calculated by reducing the airfield QFE to sea level using the ISA temperature gradient. With QNH set, the altimeter reads the airfield elevation on the ground and true altitude above MSL in the air (assuming ISA conditions). Note that "true altitude" (answer A) accounts for actual temperature deviations from ISA — QNH gives indicated altitude, which may differ from true altitude in non-ISA conditions.
+
+### Q88: Above the friction layer, with a prevailing pressure gradient, the wind direction is... ^q88
+- A) At an angle of 30° to the isobars towards low pressure.
+- B) Perpendicular to the isobars.
+- C) Parallel to the isobars.
+- D) Perpendicular to the isohypses.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Above the friction layer (roughly 600–1000 m AGL), the Coriolis force and pressure gradient force balance each other, producing geostrophic flow parallel to the isobars. In the friction layer below, surface drag slows the wind, reduces the Coriolis deflection, and allows the wind to cross isobars at an angle toward lower pressure (typically 10–30°). Understanding this is essential for predicting wind direction at altitude versus near the surface.
+
+### Q89: Clouds are basically distinguished by what types? ^q89
+- A) Thunderstorm and shower clouds
+- B) Cumulus and stratiform clouds
+- C) Stratiform and ice clouds
+- D) Layered and lifted clouds
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Clouds are fundamentally divided into two basic types: cumulus (convective, vertically developed) and stratiform (layered, horizontally extended). Cumulus clouds result from convective uplift, while stratus clouds form from large-scale lifting or cooling of air layers. Options A and C mix sub-categories with the basic classification, and option D uses non-standard terminology ('layered and lifted') rather than the correct scientific distinction.
+
+### Q90: What weather phenomenon designated by "2" has to be expected on the lee side during "Foehn" conditions? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^q90
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Altocumulus Castellanus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During Foehn conditions, the air descends on the lee side and warms adiabatically, causing any remaining moisture to produce characteristic standing wave clouds. Altocumulus lenticularis (lens-shaped wave clouds) forms in the stable wave patterns downstream of a mountain ridge during Foehn. Cumulonimbus (options A and B) is associated with strong convection, not the stable descending flow of Foehn, and Altocumulus Castellanus (option D) indicates convective instability in the mid-levels, not lee-side wave activity.
+
+### Q91: Which type of ice forms by very small water droplets and ice crystals hitting the front surfaces of an aircraft? ^q91
+- A) Rime ice
+- B) Clear ice
+- C) Mixed ice
+- D) Hoar frost
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Rime ice forms when small supercooled water droplets and ice crystals strike the airframe and freeze instantly on contact, creating a white, opaque, brittle deposit typically on leading edges. Clear ice (option B) forms from large supercooled water droplets that spread before freezing, producing a smooth, dense, clear coating. Mixed ice (option C) is a combination of both. Hoar frost (option D) forms from water vapour depositing directly as ice crystals on cold surfaces, not from droplet impact.
+
+### Q92: Information about pressure patterns and frontal situation can be found in which chart? ^q92
+- A) Significant Weather Chart (SWC)
+- B) Wind chart.
+- C) Hypsometric chart
+- D) Surface weather chart.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (synoptic chart) displays isobars, high and low pressure centres, and frontal systems such as warm, cold, and occluded fronts at mean sea level. A Significant Weather Chart (SWC, option A) focuses on hazardous weather phenomena for flight, not the overall pressure pattern. A wind chart (option B) shows only wind vectors. A hypsometric chart (option C) depicts constant-pressure surfaces (contour heights), not surface fronts.
+
+### Q93: What is the mean height of the tropopause according to ISA (ICAO Standard Atmosphere)? ^q93
+- A) 11000 f
+- B) 11000 m
+- C) 18000 ft
+- D) 36000 m
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is defined at 11,000 m (approximately 36,089 ft), where the temperature reaches -56.5°C and then remains constant with height into the lower stratosphere. In reality the tropopause height varies: it is lower over the poles (~8 km) and higher over the tropics (~16 km), and fluctuates with season and synoptic weather patterns. Cumulonimbus tops that penetrate the tropopause are especially violent.
+
+### Q94: What is the ISA standard pressure at FL 180 (5500 m)? ^q94
+- A) 300 hPa
+- B) 250 hPa
+- C) 1013.25 hPa
+- D) 500 hPa
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere, pressure at approximately 5500 m (FL180) is 500 hPa — exactly half the sea-level pressure of 1013.25 hPa. The 500 hPa level is a key reference level in synoptic meteorology and is used extensively in upper-air charts. Pressure decreases approximately logarithmically with altitude, halving roughly every 5500 m in the lower troposphere.
+
+### Q95: Which of the stated surfaces will reduce the wind speed most due to ground friction? ^q95
+- A) Flat land, lots of vegetation cover
+- B) Flat land, deserted land, no vegetation
+- C) Oceanic areas
+- D) Mountainous areas, vegetation cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Surface roughness (aerodynamic roughness length) determines how much friction the surface exerts on moving air. Mountainous terrain with vegetation has the highest roughness length, causing maximum turbulent drag and wind speed reduction. Oceans have very low roughness and exert minimal friction. Flat vegetated land is intermediate. Importantly, mountains also mechanically block and deflect wind, creating additional complex flow patterns, turbulence, and wave phenomena of direct relevance to glider pilots.
+
+### Q96: The movement of air flowing together is called... ^q96
+- A) Convergence.
+- B) Subsidence.
+- C) Soncordence
+- D) Divergence.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convergence describes air flowing into a region from different directions, compressing horizontally. By mass continuity, converging surface air must go somewhere — it is forced upward, triggering cloud formation, precipitation, and potentially convective development. Convergence zones are important for glider pilots as they produce enhanced lift along their axes; sea-breeze fronts and col zones between pressure systems are classic convergence sources for soaring.
+
+### Q97: What cloud sequence can typically be observed during the passage of a warm front? ^q97
+- A) Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter
+- B) Squall line with showers of rain and thunderstorms (Cb), gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain
+- C) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- D) In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** As a warm front approaches, the first sign is high-level Cirrus, which gradually thickens into Cirrostratus, then Altostratus and Altocumulus at mid-levels, finally transitioning to Nimbostratus with prolonged rain and a lowering cloud base. Option A describes a high-pressure or thermal anticyclone scenario. Option B describes the passage of a cold front (squall line, Cb, gusty winds). Option D describes a coastal sea-breeze pattern unrelated to frontal meteorology.
+
+### Q98: What phenomenon is caused by cold air downdrafts with precipitation from a fully developed thunderstorm cloud? ^q98
+- A) Electrical discharge
+- B) Anvil-head top of Cb cloud
+- C) Gust front
+- D) Freezing Rain
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During a fully developed (mature stage) thunderstorm, cold precipitation-laden air descends rapidly beneath the Cumulonimbus and spreads outward upon reaching the surface, creating a gust front — a sharp boundary of cold gusty air that can precede the visible storm by several kilometres. Electrical discharge (option A) is a separate thunderstorm hazard. The anvil top (option B) is a structural feature caused by upper-level winds, not downdrafts. Freezing rain (option D) results from a temperature inversion aloft, not directly from Cb downdrafts.
+
+### Q99: What information is NOT found on Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC)? ^q99
+- A) Information about icing conditions
+- B) Front lines and frontal displacements
+- C) Radar echos of precipitation
+- D) Information about turbulence areas
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Low-Level Significant Weather Charts (LLSWC) depict meteorological hazards relevant to low-altitude flight, including turbulence areas, icing conditions, and frontal systems with their movement. They do not contain radar echo data of precipitation, which is a real-time product displayed on weather radar imagery. Options A, B, and D are all standard items found on LLSWC; only radar echoes (option C) are absent because LLSWC are forecast charts, not real-time radar products.
+
+### Q100: Which force causes "wind"? ^q100
+- A) Centrifugal force
+- B) Pressure gradient force
+- C) Coriolis force
+- D) Thermal force
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is initiated by the pressure gradient force (PGF) — air accelerates from high pressure toward low pressure due to differences in atmospheric pressure. The Coriolis force deflects the moving air (to the right in the Northern Hemisphere) but does not cause the initial motion. Centrifugal force acts in curved flow around pressure systems. Thermal effects create pressure differences which then drive the PGF. Without a pressure gradient there would be no wind.
+
+### Q101: Which type of cloud is associated with prolonged rain? ^q101
+- A) Altocumulus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Nimbostratus
+- D) Cirrostratus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Nimbostratus (Ns) is a thick, dark grey layer cloud specifically associated with prolonged, steady rain or snow falling uniformly over a wide area, typically along warm fronts. Altocumulus (option A) is a mid-level cloud that does not produce significant precipitation. Cumulonimbus (option B) produces heavy showers and thunderstorms, not continuous prolonged rain. Cirrostratus (option D) is a high-level ice cloud that does not produce precipitation reaching the ground.
+
+### Q102: Regarding the type of cloud, precipitation is classified as... ^q102
+- A) Showers of snow and rain.
+- B) Prolonged rain and continuous rain.
+- C) Rain and showers of rain.
+- D) Light and heavy precipitation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Meteorologically, precipitation is classified by its cloud type of origin: rain (continuous precipitation from stratiform clouds such as Nimbostratus) and showers of rain (convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds such as Cumulonimbus or Cumulus congestus). Options A, B, and D describe precipitation by intensity or type of precipitation (snow vs. rain, light vs. heavy), which are separate classification systems not based on cloud type.
+
+### Q103: What conditions are favourable for the formation of thunderstorms? ^q103
+- A) Calm winds and cold air, overcast cloud cover with St or As.
+- B) Warm and dry air, strong inversion layer
+- C) Warm humid air, conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate
+- D) Clear night over land, cold air and patches of fog
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Thunderstorms require three key ingredients: moisture (warm humid air provides latent energy), lift (to trigger convection), and instability (a conditionally unstable environmental lapse rate means rising saturated air becomes warmer than its surroundings and accelerates upward). Option A describes stable, overcast conditions unfavourable for convection. Option B's strong inversion layer would suppress convective development. Option D describes radiation fog conditions with stable cold air.
+
+### Q104: What can be expected for the prevailling wind with isobars on a surface weather chart showing large distances? ^q104
+- A) Low pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind
+- B) Strong pressure gradients resulting in low prevailling wind
+- C) Strong pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind
+- D) Low pressure gradients resulting in strong prevailling wind
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Widely spaced isobars on a surface weather chart indicate a small pressure gradient (small pressure difference over a large distance), resulting in a weak pressure gradient force and therefore light winds. The wind speed is directly proportional to the pressure gradient. Options B and C incorrectly state that wide isobar spacing means a strong gradient, and option D incorrectly reverses the relationship between gradient strength and wind speed.
+
+### Q105: The height of the tropopause of the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) is at... ^q105
+- A) 36000 ft.
+- B) 5500 ft
+- C) 48000 ft.
+- D) 11000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The ISA tropopause is located at 11,000 m, which equals approximately 36,089 ft (effectively 36,000 ft). Above this level, the standard atmosphere defines a constant temperature of -56.5°C up to 20,000 m (the isothermal stratospheric layer). This is distinct from Q15 which asks in metres — both questions test knowledge of the same value expressed in different units.
+
+### Q106: How is an air mass described when moving to Central Europe via the Russian continent during winter? ^q106
+- A) Maritime tropical air
+- B) Continental polar air
+- C) Maritime polar air
+- D) Continental tropical air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass originating over the cold Russian or Siberian continent during winter acquires characteristics of its source region: cold temperatures and low humidity, classifying it as Continental Polar (cP) air. Maritime air masses (options A and C) originate over ocean areas and carry higher moisture content. Continental Tropical (option D) air originates over warm, dry continental areas such as the Sahara, not over polar continental regions.
+
+### Q107: What clouds and weather can typically be observed during the passage of a cold front? ^q107
+- A) Wind becoming calm, dissipation of clouds and warming during summer; formation of extended high fog layers during winter
+- B) Cirrus, thickening altostratus and altocumulus clouds, lowering cloud base with rain, nimbostratus
+- C) In coastal areas during daytime wind from the coast and forming of cumulus clouds, dissipation of clouds during evening and night
+- D) Strongly developed cumulus clouds (Cb) with showers of rain and thunderstorms, gusting wind followed by cumulus clouds with isolated showers of rain
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Cold fronts are characterised by active convective weather: rapidly developing Cumulonimbus clouds producing heavy showers and thunderstorms, accompanied by squall-line activity, strong gusty winds, and followed by scattered cumulus with isolated showers in the cold air behind the front. Option B (cirrus thickening to nimbostratus) describes a warm front. Options A and C describe anticyclonic or sea-breeze patterns respectively.
+
+### Q108: What danger is most immenent when an aircraft is hit by lightning? ^q108
+- A) Explosion of electrical equipment in the cockpit
+- B) Surface overheat and damage to exposed aircraft parts
+- C) Rapid cabin depressurization and smoke in the cabin
+- D) Disturbed radio communication, static noise signals
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most immediate physical danger when an aircraft is struck by lightning is surface overheat and structural damage to exposed parts — lightning can burn through fairings, damage antennas, pit metal surfaces, and in extreme cases damage control surfaces. Avionics may be affected, but explosion of cockpit equipment (option A) is not a primary risk in certified aircraft. Depressurisation (option C) applies only to pressurised aircraft. Radio static noise (option D), while possible, is not the most imminent danger.
+
+### Q109: What is referred to as mountain wind? ^q109
+- A) Wind blowing down the mountain side during the night
+- B) Wind blowing uphill from the valley during the night.
+- C) Wind blowing uphill from the valley during daytime.
+- D) Wind blowing down the mountain side during daytime.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Mountain wind (Bergwind or katabatic wind) is the nocturnal downslope flow: at night, air in contact with the mountain slopes radiates heat, cools, becomes denser than the surrounding free air, and drains downhill under gravity. Valley wind (Talwind) is the daytime upslope flow caused by solar heating (option C). Options B and D confuse the direction or the time of day.
+
+### Q110: What type of fog emerges if humid and almost saturated air, is forced to rise upslope of hills or shallow mountains by the prevailling wind? ^q110
+- A) Advection fog
+- B) Steaming fog
+- C) Radiation fog
+- D) Orographic fog
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog forms when wind-driven humid air is mechanically lifted along a slope, cooling adiabatically until it reaches the dew point. Radiation fog requires calm nights with radiative ground cooling, advection fog forms when warm moist air moves over a cold surface, and steaming fog (Arctic sea smoke) occurs when cold air passes over warm water — none of these involve slope-forced lifting.
+
+### Q111: The barometric altimeter indicates height above... ^q111
+- A) Mean sea level.
+- B) A selected reference pressure level.
+- C) Ground.
+- D) Standard pressure 1013.25 hPa.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The barometric altimeter measures atmospheric pressure and converts it to altitude based on the ISA pressure-altitude relationship. Crucially, it indicates height above whatever pressure level is set on the subscale (Kollsman window). Set QNH and it reads altitude above mean sea level; set QFE and it reads height above the reference airfield; set 1013.25 hPa (QNE) and it reads flight level. The altimeter always references a pressure level, not a physical surface.
+
+### Q112: With regard to global circulation within the atmosphere, where does polar cold air meets subtropical warm air? ^q112
+- A) At the equator
+- B) At the subtropical high pressure belt
+- C) At the polar front
+- D) At the geographic poles
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar front is the boundary between the polar cell (cold, dense air flowing equatorward) and the Ferrel cell (relatively warmer mid-latitude air). In the Northern Hemisphere it is located roughly between 40–60°N, but its position fluctuates as waves (Rossby waves) develop along it — these waves amplify into cyclones and anticyclones. The jet stream flows along the polar front and is a critical factor in synoptic weather patterns across Europe.
+
+### Q113: The saturated adiabatic lapse rate should be assumed with a mean value of: ^q113
+- A) 1,0° C / 100 m.
+- B) 0,6° C / 100 m.
+- C) 2° C / 1000 ft.
+- D) 0° C / 100 m.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The saturated (moist) adiabatic lapse rate (SALR) averages approximately 0.6°C per 100 m (6°C per 1000 m), because latent heat released by condensation partially offsets the dry adiabatic cooling rate. The dry adiabatic lapse rate (DALR) is 1.0°C/100 m (option A), not the saturated rate. Option C (2°C/1000 ft) converts to approximately 0.66°C/100 m and is a rough approximation but not the standard stated value. Option D (0°C/100 m) would imply no temperature change with altitude.
+
+### Q114: Extensive high pressure areas can be found throughout the year ... ^q114
+- A) In tropical areas, close to the equator.
+- B) In areeas showing extensive lifting processes.
+- C) Over oceanic areas at latitues around 30°N/S.
+- D) In mid latitudes along the polar front
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The subtropical high-pressure belt forms near 30°N and 30°S latitudes as a result of the Hadley cell circulation: warm air rising at the equator moves poleward, cools, and descends in these subtropical zones, creating semi-permanent anticyclones over oceanic areas (e.g., Azores High, Pacific High). The equatorial belt (option A) is dominated by the ITCZ with low pressure. Option B describes areas of lifting, which generate low pressure. Mid-latitudes (option D) are where the polar front and cyclonic activity are found.
+
+### Q115: Weather and operational information about the destination aerodrome can be obtained during the flight by... ^q115
+- A) PIREP
+- B) SIGMET
+- C) ATIS.
+- D) VOLMET.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) is a continuous broadcast of recorded aerodrome information including current weather, active runway, and NOTAMs at destination aerodromes, and can be received by radio during flight. PIREP (option A) is pilot-reported weather en-route, not destination-specific. SIGMET (option B) covers significant meteorological hazards over a wide area. VOLMET (option D) broadcasts meteorological information for multiple aerodromes but is less aerodrome-specific than ATIS.
+
+### Q116: What cloud type does the picture show? See figure (MET-002). Siehe Anlage 2 ^q116
+- A) Stratus
+- B) Cirrus
+- C) Altus
+- D) Cumulus
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The cloud shown in figure MET-002 is Cumulus — a convective cloud with a flat base and cauliflower-like vertical development, characteristically white with sharp outlines in good visibility. Stratus (option A) forms as a flat, featureless grey layer. Cirrus (option B) appears as thin, wispy filaments at high altitude. 'Altus' (option C) is not a recognised cloud genus in the ICAO classification.
+
+### Q117: The character of an air mass is given by what properties? ^q117
+- A) Wind speed and tropopause height
+- B) Environmental lapse rate at origin
+- C) Region of origin and track during movement
+- D) Temperatures at origin and present region
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An air mass is defined by the temperature and humidity properties it acquires in its source region, and how those properties are modified as it moves. Both the region of origin (polar, tropical, equatorial) and the path it travels (maritime or continental) determine whether the air is warm or cold, moist or dry. Wind speed (option A) is not a defining characteristic. Environmental lapse rate at origin (option B) is a consequence, not the defining property. Temperatures at origin and present region (option D) alone do not capture the moisture dimension.
+
+### Q118: What cloud type can typically be observed across widespread high pressure areas during summer? ^q118
+- A) Overcast low stratus
+- B) Scattered Cu clouds
+- C) Overcast Ns clouds
+- D) Squall lines and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In summer anticyclones, surface heating generates thermal convection that produces scattered fair-weather Cumulus clouds (Cu humilis or Cu mediocris) during the day, dissipating in the evening. Overcast low stratus (option A) is associated with stable, moist air at low levels, common in autumn or maritime high-pressure situations. Nimbostratus (option C) is associated with frontal systems. Squall lines and thunderstorms (option D) require convective instability and moisture not typical of settled high-pressure conditions.
+
+### Q119: The symbol labeled (1) as shown in the picture is a / an... See figure (MET-005) Siehe Anlage 4 ^q119
+- A) Front aloft.
+- B) Cold front.
+- C) Occlusion.
+- D) Warm front.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a surface weather chart, a cold front is depicted by a line with solid triangular spikes (barbs) pointing in the direction of movement. The symbol labeled (1) in figure MET-005 matches the cold front symbol. A warm front uses semicircles. An occlusion uses alternating triangles and semicircles. A front aloft is depicted differently and is less commonly shown on basic surface charts.
+
+### Q120: In a METAR, "heavy rain" is designated by the identifier... ^q120
+- A) RA.
+- B) .+RA
+- C) SHRA
+- D) .+SHRA.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR codes, precipitation intensity is indicated by a '+' prefix (heavy) or '-' prefix (light); no prefix means moderate. Rain is coded 'RA'. Therefore heavy rain is '+RA' (written as '+RA' in the standard, shown in the options as '.+RA'). 'RA' alone (option A) means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option C) means shower of rain (moderate). '+SHRA' (option D) means heavy shower of rain — a convective shower, not continuous heavy rain.
+
+### Q121: What is the gas composition of "air"? ^q121
+- A) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- D) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air by volume is approximately 78% nitrogen (N2), 21% oxygen (O2), and the remaining 1% consists of argon, carbon dioxide, and other trace gases. Water vapour is variable (0–4%) and is not counted in the standard dry-air composition. Knowing air composition is fundamental to understanding atmospheric physics, density calculations, and the behaviour of aircraft engines and instruments.
+
+### Q122: Which processes result in decreasing air density? ^q122
+- A) Decreasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- B) Increasing temperature, increasing pressure
+- C) Increasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+- D) Decreasing temperature, decreasing pressure
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Air density is governed by the ideal gas law: density = pressure / (specific gas constant × temperature). Density decreases when pressure decreases (fewer molecules per unit volume) or when temperature increases (molecules move faster and spread apart). Both increasing temperature AND decreasing pressure simultaneously reduce density most effectively. This is why density altitude (the altitude equivalent of the actual air density) matters for aircraft performance on hot, high-altitude airfields.
+
+### Q123: With regard to thunderstorms, strong up- and downdrafts appear during the... ^q123
+- A) Mature stage.
+- B) Dissipating stage.
+- C) Initial stage.
+- D) Thunderstorm stage.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the mature stage of a thunderstorm, both strong updrafts (sustaining the storm) and strong downdrafts (driven by precipitation drag and evaporative cooling) coexist simultaneously within the Cumulonimbus cell. The initial (cumulus) stage has only updrafts. The dissipating stage is dominated by downdrafts only, which cut off the updraft supply and weaken the storm. 'Thunderstorm stage' (option D) is not a recognised meteorological term.
+
+### Q124: Which of the following conditions are most favourable for ice accretion? ^q124
+- A) Temperatures between 0° C and -12° C, presence of supercooled water droplets (clouds)
+- B) Temperaturs below 0° C, strong wind, sky clear of clouds
+- C) Temperatures between -20° C and -40° C, presence of ice crystals (Ci clouds)
+- D) Temperatures between +10° C and -30° C, presence of hail (clouds)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The most severe icing occurs between 0°C and -12°C where supercooled liquid water droplets are most abundant and drop size is largest, producing clear or mixed icing on airframe surfaces. Below -20°C, cloud water is mostly in ice crystal form and causes much less accretion. Above 0°C, droplets are not supercooled and do not freeze on contact. Icing in clear air (option B) does not occur as there are no supercooled droplets. Cirrus (option C) contains ice crystals which do not adhere significantly.
+
+### Q125: What danger is most imminent during an approach to an airfield situated in a valley, with strong wind aloft blowing perpendicular to the mountain ridge? ^q125
+- A) Reduced visibilty, maybe loss of sight to the airfield during final approach
+- B) Wind shear during descent, wind direction may change by 180°
+- C) Formation of medium to heavy clear ice on all aircraft surfaces
+- D) Heavy downdrafts within rainfall areas below thunderstorm clouds
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When strong wind blows perpendicular to a mountain ridge, orographic lift on the windward side and mechanical turbulence create complex wind shear on the lee side. An aircraft descending into a valley airfield on the lee side may encounter severe wind shear with the wind reversing by up to 180° between altitudes, creating sudden loss of airspeed or ground wind opposite to the upper-level flow. Reduced visibility (option A) is a secondary concern. Icing (option C) is unrelated to mountain wind shear. Heavy downdrafts in rainfall (option D) describes thunderstorm activity, not orographic flow.
+
+### Q126: What phenomenon is referred to as blue thermals? ^q126
+- A) Thermals with less than 4/8 Cu coverage
+- B) Descending air between Cumulus clouds
+- C) Turbulence in the vicinity of Cumulonimbus clouds
+- D) Thermals without formation of Cu clouds
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Blue thermals are thermals that extend to significant altitude but remain below the condensation level (dew point height), so no Cumulus clouds form — the sky appears clear (blue). They are invisible to glider pilots and require instruments or experience to exploit. Option A confuses thermals with cloud coverage statistics. Option B describes sink between Cu clouds. Option C describes clear-air turbulence (CAT) near thunderstorms, a different phenomenon.
+
+### Q127: The term beginning of thermals refers to the moment when thermal intensity... ^q127
+- A) Becomes usable for cross-country gliding by formation of Cu clouds.
+- B) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 1200 m MSL.
+- C) Reaches up to 600 m AGL and forms Cumulus clouds.
+- D) Becomes usable for gliding and reaches up to 600 m AGL.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 'beginning of thermals' (Thermikbeginn) is the moment when thermal lift becomes sufficiently strong and deep (reaching at least 600 m AGL) for a glider to sustain flight and gain height — this is the practical definition. It does not require Cu cloud formation (option A), nor does it specify a fixed MSL altitude (option B). Option C adds an unnecessary cloud formation criterion to what is fundamentally an altitude threshold.
+
+### Q128: The term trigger temperature is defined as the temperature which... ^q128
+- A) Is reached by a thermal lift during ascend when formation of Cumulus clouds begins.
+- B) Is the maximum temperature at ground level that can be reached without formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud.
+- C) Is the minimum temperature at ground level that has to be reached so formation of a thunderstorm from a Cumulus cloud can occur.
+- D) Must be obtained at ground level so Cumulus clouds can be formed by thermal lifts.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The trigger temperature is the minimum ground temperature that must be reached before thermals are strong enough to carry air parcels to the condensation level and form Cumulus clouds. It is found on a tephigram or skew-T diagram by tracing the dry adiabatic lapse rate from the surface intersection until it meets the temperature profile. Options A and B misstate it as a temperature reached aloft or a threshold for thunderstorm formation. Option C describes thunderstorm formation, not Cu formation.
+
+### Q129: What situation is called over-development in a weather report? ^q129
+- A) Change from blue thermals to cloudy thermals during the afternoon
+- B) Development of a thermal low to a storm depression
+- C) Vertical development of Cumulus clouds to rain showers
+- D) Widespreading of Cumulus clouds below an inversion layer
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Over-development (Überentwicklung) occurs when Cumulus clouds develop vertically beyond Cu congestus into rain-producing Cumulonimbus clouds, generating showers and thunderstorms. This typically happens in the afternoon when the atmosphere becomes increasingly unstable. Option A describes a change in thermal visibility. Option B refers to synoptic-scale deepening of depressions. Option D describes the spreading of Cu under an inversion (which is actually 'street' or 'cover' formation, a separate phenomenon).
+
+### Q130: What situation is referred to as shielding? ^q130
+- A) Ns clouds, covering the windward side of a mountain range
+- B) High or mid-level cloud layers, impairing thermal activity
+- C) Anvil-like structure at the upper levels of a thunderstorm cloud
+- D) Coverage of Cumulus clouds, stated as part of eights of the sky
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Shielding (Abschirmung) refers to a layer of high or mid-level cloud (such as Cirrostratus, Altostratus, or Altocumulus) that intercepts solar radiation before it reaches the ground, thus reducing or suppressing the surface heating required for thermal development. Option A describes cloud cover on a windward mountain slope. Option C describes the anvil of a Cb, not shielding. Option D describes sky coverage in oktas, which is unrelated.
+
+### Q131: What is the gas composition of air? ^q131
+- A) Oxygen 78 % Water vapour 21 % Nitrogen 1 %
+- B) Oxygen 21 % Nitrogen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- C) Oxygen 21 % Water vapour 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+- D) Nitrogen 21 % Oxygen 78 % Noble gases / carbon dioxide 1 %
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Dry air is composed of approximately 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, and 1% argon and trace gases including carbon dioxide. This is the standard atmospheric composition. All other options incorrectly swap the proportions of nitrogen and oxygen or introduce water vapour as a major component. Water vapour is a variable constituent (0–4%) not included in the standard dry air composition.
+
+### Q132: What is the mass of a cube of air with the edges 1 m long, at MSL according ISA? ^q132
+- A) 0,01225 kg
+- B) 0,1225 kg
+- C) 12,25 kg
+- D) 1,225 kg
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At MSL under ISA conditions, the standard air density is 1.225 kg/m³. A cube with 1 m edges has a volume of 1 m³, so its mass is 1.225 kg. Option A (0.01225 kg) is off by a factor of 100, option B (0.1225 kg) by a factor of 10, and option C (12.25 kg) by a factor of 10 in the opposite direction. These represent common decimal-point errors.
+
+### Q133: The term tropopause is defined as... ^q133
+- A) The layer above the troposphere showing an increasing temperature.
+- B) The height above which the temperature starts to decrease.
+- C) The boundary area between the troposphere and the stratosphere.
+- D) The boundary area between the mesosphere and the stratosphere.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The tropopause is the boundary layer separating the troposphere (where temperature decreases with altitude) from the stratosphere (where temperature is initially constant and then increases due to ozone absorption). It is not the layer above the troposphere (option A), nor the height where temperature starts to decrease (option B — that is the surface of the troposphere). Option D confuses the tropopause with the stratopause.
+
+### Q134: What is meant by inversion layer? ^q134
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- C) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- D) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An inversion layer is an atmospheric layer in which temperature increases with increasing altitude, the reverse ('inversion') of the normal decrease. Inversions suppress vertical mixing and convection, trapping pollutants and inhibiting thermal development above them. Option B describes normal atmospheric conditions. Option C describes an isothermal layer. Option D describes a generic boundary without specifying the temperature gradient direction.
+
+### Q135: What is meant by isothermal layer? ^q135
+- A) An atmospheric layer where temperature decreases with increasing height
+- B) An atmospheric layer with constant temperature with increasing height
+- C) A boundary area between two other layers within the atmosphere
+- D) An atmospheric layer where temperature increases with increasing height
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An isothermal layer is one in which temperature remains constant with increasing altitude — neither increasing (inversion, option D) nor decreasing (normal lapse rate, option A). Isothermal conditions are found, for example, in the lower stratosphere. Option C describes a generic atmospheric boundary layer, not a layer of constant temperature.
+
+### Q136: Which force causes wind? ^q136
+- A) Centrifugal force
+- B) Pressure gradient force
+- C) Coriolis force
+- D) Thermal force
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind is caused by the pressure gradient force — air flows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure, and the greater the pressure difference over a given distance, the stronger the resulting wind. The Coriolis force (option C) deflects wind but does not create it. Centrifugal force (option A) is a secondary effect in curved flow. There is no meteorological force specifically called 'thermal force'; thermal differences drive pressure gradients, but the direct cause of wind is the pressure gradient itself.
+
+### Q137: Foehn conditions usually develop with... ^q137
+- A) Instability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- B) Stability, high pressure area with calm wind.
+- C) Stability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+- D) Instability, widespread air blown against a mountain ridge.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Foehn develops when a stable airflow is forced over a mountain barrier. On the windward side, the air rises moist-adiabatically (condensation releasing latent heat), and on the lee side it descends dry-adiabatically, arriving warmer and drier than before ascent. Stability is necessary for the organised flow; instability would break the flow into convective cells. Calm high-pressure conditions (options A and B) do not provide the cross-mountain pressure gradient needed. Instability (option D) would prevent the laminar flow characteristic of Foehn.
+
+### Q138: The spread is defined as... ^q138
+- A) Difference between actual temperature and dew point.
+- B) Difference between dew point and condensation point.
+- C) Relation of actual to maximum possible humidity of air
+- D) Maximum amount of water vapour that can be contained in air.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The spread (or dew-point spread) is the difference between the actual (dry-bulb) air temperature and the dew point temperature. A small spread indicates air close to saturation; when the spread reaches zero, condensation and fog or cloud formation occur. Option B is incorrect because dew point and condensation point are effectively the same. Option C describes relative humidity. Option D describes the saturation mixing ratio or absolute humidity capacity.
+
+### Q139: What weather phenomenon designated by 2 has to be expected on the lee side during Foehn conditions? See figure (MET-001). Siehe Anlage 1 ^q139
+- A) Cumulonimbus
+- B) Cumulonimbus
+- C) Altocumulus lenticularis
+- D) Altocumulus Castellanus
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical in content to question 90. During Foehn, the descending and warming lee-side flow is stable and generates standing wave clouds. Altocumulus lenticularis forms in the crests of these mountain waves on the lee side. Cumulonimbus (options A and B) requires strong convective instability absent in Foehn descent. Altocumulus Castellanus (option D) indicates mid-level instability, not the stable wave motion of a Foehn situation.
+
+### Q140: What condition may prevent the formation of radiation fog? ^q140
+- A) Calm wind
+- B) Clear night, no clouds
+- C) Low spread
+- D) Overcast cloud cover
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Radiation fog forms on clear, calm nights when the ground radiates heat to space, cooling the surface air to its dew point. An overcast cloud cover prevents the necessary radiative cooling of the ground surface by acting as an insulating blanket, reflecting long-wave radiation back to the ground. Calm wind (option A) is actually a prerequisite for radiation fog formation. A clear night (option B) and low spread (option C) are also favourable, not preventative, conditions.
+
+### Q141: What process results in the formation of advection fog? ^q141
+- A) Cold, moist air is being moved across warm ground areas
+- B) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+- C) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- D) Warm, moist air is moved across cold ground areas
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Advection fog forms when warm, moist air is transported (advected) horizontally over a cold surface and cooled from below to its dew point. This is most common over cold ocean currents or cold land surfaces in spring. Option A reverses the temperature relationship. Option B describes mixing fog (a different type). Option C describes radiation fog. The defining factor in advection fog is the movement of warm moist air over cold ground.
+
+### Q142: What process results in the formation of orographic fog (hill fog)? ^q142
+- A) Prolonged radiation during nights clear of clouds
+- B) Warm, moist air is moved across a hill or a mountain range
+- C) Evaporation from warm, moist ground area into very cold air
+- D) Cold, moist air mixes with warm, moist air
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Orographic fog (hill fog) forms when moist air is forced to rise over terrain, cooling adiabatically until it reaches its dew point; the result is a cloud base that sits on the hillside or mountain top. Option A describes radiation fog. Option C describes steam fog (evaporation/mixing fog). Option D describes mixing fog. The key process is forced lifting of moist air over elevated terrain.
+
+### Q143: What weather phenomena have to be expected around an upper-level trough? ^q143
+- A) Calm weather, formation of lifted fog layers
+- B) Calm wind, forming of shallow cumulus clouds
+- C) Development of showers and thunderstorms (Cb)
+- D) Formation of high stratus clouds, ground-covering cloud bases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** An upper-level trough is a region of cold air aloft with positive vorticity advection, which promotes divergence aloft and convergence at the surface, triggering strong convective uplift. This instability favours the development of showers and thunderstorms (Cumulonimbus). Options A and B describe stable, anticyclonic conditions. Option D (high stratus) would require stable, moist conditions near the surface, not the convective instability associated with a cold upper trough.
+
+### Q144: What weather conditions can be expected during Foehn on the windward side of a mountain range? ^q144
+- A) Layered clouds, mountains obscured, poor visibility, moderate or heavy rain
+- B) Dissipating clouds with unusual warming, accompanied by strong, gusty winds
+- C) Calm wind and forming of high stratus clouds (high fog)
+- D) Scattered cumulus clouds with showers and thunderstorms
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the windward (stau) side of a mountain range during Foehn, moist air is forced to rise and cool, producing dense cloud, obscured peaks, poor visibility, and moderate to heavy rain or snow — the classic 'Stau' weather. Option B describes the lee side of the Foehn (warm, dry, gusty). Option C describes stable, fog-prone conditions unrelated to Foehn. Option D describes conditions more typical of frontal convective activity.
+
+### Q145: Measured pressure distribution in MSL and corresponding frontal systems are displayed by the... ^q145
+- A) Hypsometric chart
+- B) Prognostic chart.
+- C) Surface weather chart.
+- D) Significant Weather Chart (SWC).
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The surface weather chart (also called the synoptic chart or analysis chart) displays actual measured pressure values reduced to MSL as isobars, along with the positions of frontal systems. It represents the observed state of the atmosphere at a specific time. A prognostic chart (option B) shows forecast conditions. The hypsometric chart (option A) shows upper-level contour heights on constant-pressure surfaces. The SWC (option D) focuses on hazardous weather phenomena, not comprehensive pressure analysis.
+
+### Q146: In a METAR, heavy rain is designated by the identifier... ^q146
+- A) RA.
+- B) .+RA
+- C) SHRA
+- D) .+SHRA.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This question is identical to question 120. In METAR, precipitation intensity modifiers are '+' for heavy and '-' for light. 'RA' is the METAR code for rain; therefore '+RA' (shown as '.+RA' in the options) denotes heavy rain. 'RA' (option A) alone means moderate rain. 'SHRA' (option C) is shower of rain. '+SHRA' (option D) is heavy shower of rain — a different precipitation type.
+
+### Q147: In a METAR, (moderate) showers of rain are designated by the identifier... ^q147
+- A) .+TSRA
+- B) SHRA.
+- C) TS.
+- D) .+RA.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In METAR, the descriptor 'SH' (shower) is added before the precipitation code to indicate convective precipitation from cumuliform clouds. Moderate showers of rain are therefore coded 'SHRA'. '+TSRA' (option A) means heavy thunderstorm with rain. 'TS' (option C) means thunderstorm without precipitation modifier. '+RA' (option D) means heavy continuous rain from stratiform clouds, not a shower.
+
+### Q148: Under which conditions back side weather (Rückseitenwetter) can be expected? ^q148
+- A) After passing of a cold front
+- B) Before passing of an occlusion
+- C) During Foehn at the lee side
+- D) After passing of a warm front
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Back-side weather (Rückseitenwetter) describes the weather in the cold air mass following the passage of a cold front: cold, unstable polar or arctic air with scattered showers, good visibility, and gusty winds — often excellent soaring conditions for gliders in the convective back-side air. It occurs after, not before, frontal passages. An occlusion (option B) combines warm and cold front characteristics. Foehn (option C) is a separate orographic phenomenon. After a warm front (option D) brings the warm sector, not cold back-side air.
+
+### Q149: How does air temperatur change in ISA from MSL to approx. 10.000 m height? ^q149
+- A) From +30° to -40°C
+- B) From +20° to -40°C
+- C) From -15° to 50°C
+- D) From +15° to -50°C
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA), the temperature at MSL is +15°C, and the temperature decreases at 6.5°C per 1000 m (2°C per 1000 ft) through the troposphere. At approximately 11,000 m (the tropopause), the temperature reaches -56.5°C, rounding to approximately -50°C at 10,000 m. Options A and B give incorrect MSL starting values (+30°C and +20°C). Option C reverses the sign convention, implying temperature increases with altitude.
+
+### Q150: What weather is likely to be experienced during Foehn in the Bavarian area close to the alps? ^q150
+- A) Cold, humid downhill wind on the lee side of the alps, flat pressure pattern
+- B) Nimbostratus cloud in the southern alps, rotor clouds at the lee side, warm and dry wind
+- C) High pressure area overhead Biskaya and low pressure area in Eastern Europe
+- D) Nimbostratus cloud in the northern alps, rotor clouds at the windward side, warm and dry wind
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Classic Bavarian Foehn is driven by low pressure over the Gulf of Genoa and high pressure over the North Sea, forcing air southward over the Alps. Nimbostratus forms on the south (windward) side of the Alps, while on the north (lee) Bavarian side, warm and dry air descends, often accompanied by Föhnmauer (Foehn wall) and rotor clouds along the Foehn boundary. Option A incorrectly describes the lee-side wind as cold and humid and places the Ns on the wrong side. Option C describes the synoptic pressure setup only partially. Option D places the Ns on the north (lee) side, which is incorrect.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/60 - Navigation.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/60 - Navigation.md
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+# 60 - Navigation
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 78 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: Which statement is correct with regard to the polar axis of the Earth? ^q1
+- A) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator
+- B) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is at an angle of 66.5° to the plane of the equator
+- C) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the geographic South Pole and the geographic North Pole and is at an angle of 23.5° to the plane of the equator
+- D) The polar axis of the Earth crosses the magnetic south pole and the magnetic north pole and is perpendicular to the plane of the equator
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The polar axis passes through the geographic poles and is perpendicular (90°) to the plane of the equator by definition. The Earth's axis is indeed tilted 23.5° relative to the plane of its orbit around the sun (the ecliptic), but it is perpendicular to the equatorial plane — those two facts are consistent and not contradictory. Option C confuses the tilt to the ecliptic with the relationship to the equator.
+
+### Q2: Which approximate, geometrical form describes the shape of the Earth best for navigation systems? ^q2
+- A) Sphere of ecliptical shape
+- B) Flat plate
+- C) Perfect sphere
+- D) Ellipsoid
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth is not a perfect sphere — it is slightly flattened at the poles and bulges at the equator due to its rotation. This shape is called an oblate spheroid or ellipsoid. Modern navigation systems (including GPS) use the WGS-84 ellipsoid as the reference model, which accurately accounts for this flattening in coordinate calculations.
+
+### Q3: The shortest distance between two points on Earth is represented by a part of... ^q3
+- A) A rhumb line.
+- B) A small circle
+- C) A parallel of latitude.
+- D) A great circle.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A great circle is any circle whose plane passes through the center of the Earth, and the arc of a great circle between two points is the shortest possible path along the Earth's surface (the geodesic). Parallels of latitude (except the equator) and rhumb lines are not great circles and do not represent the shortest path. Long-haul aircraft routes are planned along great circle tracks to minimize fuel and time.
+
+### Q4: What distance corresponds to one degree difference in latitude along any degree of longitude? ^q4
+- A) 30 NM
+- B) 60 km
+- C) 60 NM
+- D) 1 NM
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** One degree of latitude = 60 arcminutes, and since 1 NM equals exactly 1 arcminute of latitude along a meridian, 1° of latitude = 60 NM. This relationship holds along any meridian because all meridians are great circles. In SI units, 1° of latitude ≈ 111 km, not 60 km as stated in option B.
+
+### Q5: Point A on the Earth's surface lies exactly on the parallel of latitude of 47°50'27''N. Which point is exactly 240 NM north of A? ^q5
+- A) 53°50'27''N
+- B) 49°50'27''N
+- C) 51°50'27'N'
+- D) 43°50'27''N
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Converting 240 NM to degrees of latitude: 240 NM / 60 NM per degree = 4°. Adding 4° to 47°50'27''N gives 51°50'27''N. Moving north increases the latitude value. Option A would require 6° (360 NM), and option B would require only 2° (120 NM).
+
+### Q6: What is the great circle distance between two points A and B on the equator when the difference between the two associated meridians is exactly one degree of longitude? ^q6
+- A) 400 NM
+- B) 120 NM
+- C) 216 NM
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The equator itself is a great circle, so the great circle distance between two points on the equator separated by 1° of longitude is simply 60 NM (1° x 60 NM/degree). This is the same principle as measuring along a meridian. Any confusion arises if one tries to calculate using km instead — 1° ≈ 111 km on the equator, but the question asks for NM.
+
+### Q7: Assume two arbitrary points A and B on the same parallel of latitude, but not on the equator. Point A is located on 010°E and point B on 020°E. The rumb line distance between A and B is always... ^q7
+- A) Less than 300 NM.
+- B) Less than 600 NM.
+- C) More than 600 NM.
+- D) More than 300 NM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The rhumb line distance between points on the same parallel of latitude is: 10° x 60 NM x cos(latitude). Since cos(latitude) is always less than 1 for any latitude other than the equator (where it equals exactly 60 NM x 10 = 600 NM), the rhumb line distance is always strictly less than 600 NM. At the equator it would equal 600 NM, but since they are specifically "not on the equator," the distance is always less than 600 NM.
+
+### Q8: What is the difference in time when the sun moves 20° of longitude? ^q8
+- A) 1:00 h
+- B) 0:40 h
+- C) 0:20 h
+- D) 1:20 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth rotates 360° in 24 hours, so it rotates 15° per hour, or 1° every 4 minutes. For 20° of longitude: 20 x 4 minutes = 80 minutes = 1 hour 20 minutes. Alternatively: 20° / 15°/h = 1.333 h = 1:20 h. This relationship (15°/hour or 4 min/degree) is essential for time zone calculations and solar noon determination.
+
+### Q9: The sun moves 10° of longitude. What is the difference in time? ^q9
+- A) 0.66 h
+- B) 0.4 h
+- C) 1 h
+- D) 0.33 h
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This is the same calculation as Q16 but expressed as a decimal fraction of an hour: 10° / 15°/h = 0.6667 h ≈ 0.66 h (40 minutes in decimal hours). Note that Q16 and Q17 appear to ask the same question but expect different answer formats — Q16 expects 0:40 h (40 minutes) while Q17 expects 0.66 h (the decimal equivalent). Both represent the same 40-minute time difference.
+
+### Q10: The term 'civil twilight' is defined as... ^q10
+- A) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.
+- B) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 6 degrees or less below the true horizon.
+- C) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the true horizon.
+- D) The period of time before sunrise or after sunset where the midpoint of the sun disk is 12 degrees or less below the apparent horizon.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Civil twilight is the period when the sun's center is between 0° and 6° below the true (geometric) horizon — there is still sufficient natural light for most outdoor activities without artificial lighting. The true horizon (geometric) is used in the formal definition, not the apparent horizon (which is affected by refraction). Nautical twilight uses 12°, and astronomical twilight uses 18° below the true horizon. In aviation regulations, civil twilight often defines the boundary for day/night VFR operations.
+
+### Q11: The term ‚magnetic course' (MC) is defined as... ^q11
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- B) The angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- C) The angle between true north and the course line.
+- D) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic Course (MC) is defined as the angle measured at the aircraft's position between magnetic north and the intended course line, measured clockwise from 0° to 360°. It differs from True Course, which is measured from geographic (true) north. Option A describes a magnetic bearing to the pole, not a course angle. Option C is the definition of True Course. Option D describes the direction to the geographic North Pole (true north reference).
+
+### Q12: The term 'True Course' (TC) is defined as... ^q12
+- A) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the magnetic north pole.
+- B) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographic North Pole.
+- C) Tthe angle between magnetic north and the course line.
+- D) The angle between true north and the course line.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The True Course is the angle measured clockwise from true (geographic) north to the intended flight path (course line). It is determined from aeronautical charts, which are oriented to true north. To fly a true course, pilots must apply magnetic variation to get the magnetic course, then apply wind correction angle to get the true heading they must fly.
+
+### Q13: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are TH and VAR? (2,00 P.) ^q13
+- A) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° E
+- B) TH: 194°. VAR: 004° W
+- C) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° W
+- D) TH: 172°. VAR: 004° E
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For variation: VAR is the difference between TC and MC, or equivalently between TH and MH. MH = 198°, TH = 194°, so the difference is 4°. Since MH > TH, magnetic north is east of true north, meaning variation is West (West variation adds to true to get magnetic: MH = TH + VAR, so 198° = 194° + 4°W). Mnemonic: "West is best" — West variation is added going True to Magnetic.
+
+### Q14: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the VAR and the DEV? (2,00 P.) ^q14
+- A) VAR: 004° E. DEV: -002°.
+- B) VAR: 004° W. DEV: +002°.
+- C) VAR: 004° E. DEV: +002°.
+- D) VAR: 004° W. DEV: -002°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** From Q29: VAR = 4° W (MH 198° > TH 194°, so West variation). From Q30: DEV = -002° (CH 200° > MH 198°, compass reads high, requiring negative deviation correction). The complete heading chain for this problem is: TC 183° → (+11° WCA) → TH 194° → (+4° W VAR) → MH 198° → (+2° DEV) → CH 200°. These three questions (Q29, Q30, Q31) all use the same dataset, testing different parts of the heading conversion chain.
+
+### Q15: The angle between compass north and magnetic north is called... ^q15
+- A) WCA
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) Variation.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Deviation is the error in a magnetic compass caused by the aircraft's own magnetic fields (from electrical equipment, metal structure, avionics). It is expressed as the angular difference between magnetic north (what the compass should indicate) and compass north (what it actually indicates). Deviation varies with the aircraft's heading and is recorded on a compass deviation card mounted near the instrument.
+
+### Q16: Which are the official basic units for horizontal distances used in aeronautical navigation and their abbreviations? ^q16
+- A) Nautical miles (NM), kilometers (km)
+- B) Land miles (SM), sea miles (NM)
+- C) Yards (yd), meters (m)
+- D) Feet (ft), inches (in)
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In international aviation, horizontal distances are officially measured in nautical miles (NM) and kilometers (km). The nautical mile is preferred for navigation because it directly relates to the angular measurement system (1 NM = 1 arcminute of latitude). Kilometers are also used, particularly in some countries and on certain charts. Feet and meters are used for vertical distances (altitude/height), not horizontal distance.
+
+### Q17: What could be a reason for changing the runway indicators at aerodromes (e.g. from runway 06 to runway 07)? ^q17
+- A) The magnetic variation of the runway location has changed
+- B) The magnetic deviation of the runway location has changed
+- C) The true direction of the runway alignment has changed
+- D) The direction of the approach path has changed
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Runway numbers are based on the magnetic heading of the runway, rounded to the nearest 10° and divided by 10. Because the magnetic north pole drifts slowly over time, the local magnetic variation changes — even if the physical runway has not moved, its magnetic bearing changes. When this change is large enough to shift the rounded designation (e.g., from 055° to 065°), the runway is renumbered (from "06" to "07"). Major airports periodically update runway designations for this reason.
+
+### Q18: How are rhumb lines and great circles depicted on a direct Mercator chart? ^q18
+- A) Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: curved lines
+- B) Rhumb lines: straight lines Great circles: straight lines
+- C) Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: straight lines
+- D) Rhumb lines: curved lines Great circles: curved lines
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On a Mercator chart, rhumb lines (constant compass bearing courses) appear as straight lines because the chart is constructed so that meridians are parallel vertical lines and parallels are horizontal lines — any line crossing meridians at a constant angle (a rhumb line) is therefore straight. Great circles, which follow the shortest path on the globe, curve toward the poles when projected onto the Mercator chart and therefore appear as curved lines (bowing toward the nearest pole).
+
+### Q19: The distance between two airports is 220 NM. On an aeronautical navigation chart the pilot measures 40.7 cm for this distance. The chart scale is... ^q19
+- A) 1 : 500000
+- B) 1 : 1000000.
+- C) 1 : 250000.
+- D) 1 : 2000000.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 220 NM to centimeters: 220 NM x 1852 m/NM = 407,440 m = 40,744,000 cm. Scale = chart distance / real distance = 40.7 cm / 40,744,000 cm = 1 / 1,000,835 ≈ 1 : 1,000,000. The ICAO chart of Switzerland used in the SPL exam is 1:500,000 scale; knowing how to calculate chart scale from measured and actual distances is a standard exam skill.
+
+### Q20: Given: True course from A to B: 283°. Ground distance: 75 NM. TAS: 105 kt. Headwind component: 12 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 1242 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... ^q20
+- A) 1330 UTC
+- B) 1356 UTC
+- C) 1430 UTC
+- D) 1320 UTC
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 105 - 12 = 93 kt. Flight time = 75 NM / 93 kt = 0.806 h = 48.4 min ≈ 48 min. ETA = 1242 + 0:48 = 1330 UTC. Option B (1356) would correspond to a GS of about 62 kt; option D (1320) would correspond to a GS of about 113 kt. Carefully subtracting the headwind from TAS before dividing gives the correct result.
+
+### Q21: An aircraft is flying at aFL 75 with an outside air temperature (OAT) of -9°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q21
+- A) 6250 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft.
+- C) 6750 ft
+- D) 6500 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** True altitude is calculated from QNH altitude by correcting for non-standard temperature. The ISA temperature at 6500 ft QNH altitude is approximately +3°C (ISA = 15°C − 2°C/1000 ft × 6.5 ≈ +2°C). The OAT is −9°C, meaning the air is colder than ISA. Cold air is denser, so the aircraft is actually lower than the pressure altitude indicates — true altitude is less than QNH altitude. Using the ICAO correction formula (approx. 4 ft per 1°C per 1000 ft), the temperature deviation is about −11°C at ~6500 ft, giving a correction of roughly −250 ft, yielding approximately 6250 ft true altitude.
+
+### Q22: An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +11°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q22
+- A) 6500 ft.
+- B) 7000 ft
+- C) 6250 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At a pressure altitude of 7000 ft and QNH altitude of 6500 ft, the aircraft is 500 ft above QNH. OAT is +11°C. ISA temperature at ~7000 ft is approximately +1°C (15 − 2×7 = +1°C). OAT of +11°C is +10°C above ISA — warmer air is less dense, so the aircraft is higher than indicated. Applying the standard correction of ~4 ft per 1°C per 1000 ft: +10°C × ~4 ft/°C/1000 ft × 6.5 ≈ +250 ft above QNH altitude. 6500 + 250 = 6750 ft true altitude.
+
+### Q23: An aircraft is flying at a pressure altitude of 7000 feet with an outside air temperature (OAT) of +21°C. The QNH altitude is 6500 ft. The true altitude equals... ^q23
+- A) 6500 ft
+- B) 6250 ft.
+- C) 7000 ft.
+- D) 6750 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** At pressure altitude 7000 ft, QNH altitude 6500 ft, and OAT +21°C: ISA temperature at ~7000 ft is approximately +1°C. OAT of +21°C is +20°C above ISA — significantly warmer, meaning less dense air and the aircraft is higher than QNH. The temperature correction (≈ 4 ft/°C/1000 ft × +20°C × 6.5) yields approximately +500 ft, so true altitude ≈ 6500 + 500 = 7000 ft. When OAT closely matches the temperature that would produce standard pressure at that altitude, true and pressure altitudes converge near 7000 ft.
+
+### Q24: Given: True course: 255°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 200°/10 kt. The true heading equals... ^q24
+- A) 250°.
+- B) 265°.
+- C) 275°.
+- D) 245°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 255° and wind from 200° at 10 kt, the wind has a component from the left-front (southerly wind pushing the aircraft to the right of track). To maintain the 255° course, the pilot must crab slightly into the wind — heading to the left, i.e., a smaller heading number. Applying the WCA formula (WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(wind speed × sin(wind angle off nose) / TAS) ≈ sin⁻¹(10 × sin55° / 100) ≈ sin⁻¹(0.082) ≈ 5°), the true heading is approximately 255° − 5° = 250°.
+
+### Q25: Given: True course: 165°. TAS: 90 kt. Wind: 130°/20 kt. Distance: 153 NM. The true heading equals... ^q25
+- A) 152°.
+- B) 158°.
+- C) 165°.
+- D) 126°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 165° and wind from 130° at 20 kt, the wind comes from ahead-left (approximately 35° off the left nose). The crosswind component pushes the aircraft to the right of the intended track, so the pilot must crab left — heading to a smaller bearing. WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(20 × sin35° / 90) ≈ sin⁻¹(0.128) ≈ 7°. True heading = 165° − 7° = 158°. Options A, C, and D are inconsistent with this vector calculation.
+
+### Q26: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The groundspeed (GS) equals... ^q26
+- A) 155 kt.
+- B) 172 kt.
+- C) 168 kt.
+- D) 159 kt.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 040° and wind from 350° at 30 kt, the wind is from ahead-left (50° off the left of the course). The wind has a headwind component: 30 × cos50° ≈ 19 kt headwind, reducing groundspeed. The crosswind component: 30 × sin50° ≈ 23 kt causes a WCA of about 7° right. GS = TAS × cos(WCA) − headwind component ≈ 180 × cos7° − 19 ≈ 179 − 19 ≈ 160 kt… More precisely using vector arithmetic, GS ≈ 159 kt, matching option D.
+
+### Q27: Given: True course: 120°. TAS: 120 kt. Wind: 150°/12 kt. The WCA equals... ^q27
+- A) 3° to the right.
+- B) 6° to the right.
+- C) 6° to the left.
+- D) 3° to the left.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 120° and wind from 150° at 12 kt, the wind is from approximately 30° to the right of the course line (from behind-right). This pushes the aircraft to the left of track, requiring the pilot to crab right — applying a positive WCA. WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(12 × sin30° / 120) = sin⁻¹(0.05) ≈ 3° to the right. Options B and C are too large; option D is in the wrong direction.
+
+### Q28: The distance from 'A' to 'B' measures 120 NM. At a distance of 55 NM from 'A' the pilot realizes a deviation of 7 NM to the right. What approximate course change must be made to reach 'B' directly? ^q28
+- A) 6° left
+- B) 14° left
+- C) 8° left
+- D) 15° left
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the closing angle method: the track error is 7 NM in 55 NM flown, giving an opening angle of 7/55 × 60 ≈ 7.6° ≈ 8° off track. The remaining distance to B is 120 − 55 = 65 NM. The closing angle needed to reach B = 7/65 × 60 ≈ 6.5° ≈ 7°. Total course change = opening angle + closing angle ≈ 8° + 6° = 14° to the left (since the aircraft is right of track, it must turn left). This matches option B.
+
+### Q29: How many satellites are necessary for a precise and verified three-dimensional determination of the position? ^q29
+- A) Two
+- B) Three
+- C) Five
+- D) Four
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** GPS requires signals from at least four satellites for a precise three-dimensional position fix with integrity verification. Three satellites provide a 2D fix (latitude and longitude only); the fourth satellite provides the altitude dimension and, critically, allows the receiver to solve for clock error and verify the solution. A fifth satellite enables Receiver Autonomous Integrity Monitoring (RAIM). Two satellites are insufficient for any reliable position fix.
+
+### Q30: What ground features should preferrably be used for orientation during visual flight? ^q30
+- A) Power lines
+- B) Farm tracks and creeks
+- C) Border lines
+- D) Rivers, railroads, highways
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** During visual navigation, large linear features — rivers, railways, and highways — are the most reliable ground references because they are prominent, unambiguous, correctly depicted on aeronautical charts, and visible from distance. Power lines (option A) are difficult to spot and hazardous to fly near. Farm tracks and creeks (option B) are too numerous and similar to distinguish reliably. Border lines (option C) are invisible from the air.
+
+### Q31: The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately... See figure (NAV-002) Siehe Anlage 1 ^q31
+- A) 10800 km.
+- B) 12800 km.
+- C) 21600 NM.
+- D) 40000 NM.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The circumference of the Earth at the equator is approximately 21,600 nautical miles (NM), which corresponds to 360° × 60 NM/° = 21,600 NM. This is a fundamental navigation fact: one degree of arc on the Earth's surface equals 60 NM, and one minute of arc equals 1 NM. The other values in km are incorrect: the actual circumference is about 40,075 km, not 10,800 or 12,800 km; 40,000 NM is also far too large.
+
+### Q32: What is the distance between the parallels of latitude 48°N and 49°N along a meridian line? ^q32
+- A) 60 NM
+- B) 111 NM
+- C) 1 NM
+- D) 10 NM
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Along any meridian (line of longitude), 1 degree of latitude always equals 60 nautical miles. This is because meridians are great circles and 1 NM is defined as 1 arcminute of arc along a great circle. The 111 km figure (option B) is the equivalent in kilometers, not nautical miles. This 60 NM per degree relationship is a cornerstone of navigation calculations.
+
+### Q33: What is the distance between the two parallels of longitude 150°E and 151°E along the equator? ^q33
+- A) 111 NM
+- B) 60 km
+- C) 1 NM
+- D) 60 NM
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the equator, meridians of longitude are separated by great circle arcs, and 1° of longitude along the equator equals 60 NM — the same as 1° of latitude along any meridian, because the equator is also a great circle. At higher latitudes, the distance between meridians decreases (multiplied by cos(latitude)), but at the equator it is exactly 60 NM per degree.
+
+### Q34: What is the difference in time when the sun moves 10° of longitude? ^q34
+- A) 0:04 h
+- B) 1:00 h
+- C) 0:40 h
+- D) 0:30 h
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the same principle as Q15: the Earth rotates 15° per hour, so 10° corresponds to 10/15 hours = 2/3 hour = 40 minutes = 0:40 h. Option A (4 minutes) would be the time for only 1° of longitude. Option D (30 minutes) would correspond to 7.5° of longitude.
+
+### Q35: With Central European Summer Time (CEST) given as UTC+2, what UTC time corresponds to 1600 CEST? ^q35
+- A) 1600 UTC.
+- B) 1700 UTC.
+- C) 1500 UTC.
+- D) 1400 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** UTC+2 means CEST is 2 hours ahead of UTC. To convert from local time to UTC, subtract the offset: 1600 CEST - 2 hours = 1400 UTC. A simple mnemonic: "to get UTC, subtract the positive offset." This is critical in aviation as all flight plans, ATC communications, and NOTAMs use UTC regardless of local time zone.
+
+### Q36: The angle between the true course and the true heading is called... ^q36
+- A) Variation.
+- B) Inclination.
+- C) Deviation.
+- D) WCA.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Wind Correction Angle (WCA) is the angular difference between the true course (the direction of intended track over the ground) and the true heading (the direction the aircraft's nose points). A crosswind requires the pilot to angle the nose into the wind, creating a difference between heading and track — this offset angle is the WCA. It is neither variation (true-to-magnetic difference) nor deviation (magnetic-to-compass difference).
+
+### Q37: The angle between the magnetic course and the true course is called... ^q37
+- A) WCA.
+- B) Variation
+- C) Inclination.
+- D) Deviation.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic variation (also called declination) is the angle between true north (geographic) and magnetic north at any given location, which creates a difference between the true course and the magnetic course. Variation changes with location and over time as the magnetic poles shift. Deviation is the error introduced by the aircraft's own magnetic field on the compass, affecting the difference between magnetic north and compass north.
+
+### Q38: Where does the inclination reach its lowest value? ^q38
+- A) At the geographic equator
+- B) At the magnetic equator
+- C) At the geographic poles
+- D) At the magnetic poles
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Magnetic inclination (dip) is the angle at which the Earth's magnetic field lines intersect the horizontal plane. At the magnetic equator (the "aclinic line"), the field lines are horizontal and the dip angle is 0° — the lowest possible value. At the magnetic poles, the field lines are vertical (inclination = 90°). The magnetic equator does not coincide with the geographic equator.
+
+### Q39: Which direction corresponds to 'compass north' (CN)? ^q39
+- A) The most northerly part of the magnetic compass in the aircraft, where the reading takes place
+- B) The direction to which the direct reading compass aligns due to earth's and aircraft's magnetic fields
+- C) The angle between the aircraft heading and magnetic north
+- D) The direction from an arbitrary point on Earth to the geographical North Pole
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Compass north is the direction the compass needle actually points, which is determined by the combined effect of the Earth's magnetic field AND any local magnetic interference from the aircraft itself. Because of this aircraft-induced deviation, compass north differs from magnetic north. The compass reads this resultant direction, not pure magnetic north — hence the need for a deviation correction card.
+
+### Q40: Which are the properties of a Mercator chart? ^q40
+- A) The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines
+- B) The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as curved lines, rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines
+- C) The scales increases with latitude, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines
+- D) The scale is constant, great circles are depicted as straight lines, rhumb lines are depicted as curved lines
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Mercator projection is a cylindrical conformal projection where meridians and parallels are straight lines intersecting at right angles. Rhumb lines (constant bearing courses) appear as straight lines — making it useful for constant-heading navigation. However, the scale increases with latitude (Greenland appears as large as Africa) and great circles appear as curved lines. It is not an equal-area projection and is not suitable for high-latitude navigation.
+
+### Q41: Which are the properties of a Lambert conformal chart? ^q41
+- A) The chart is conformal and an equal-area projection
+- B) Great circles are depicted as straight lines and the chart is an equal-area projection
+- C) Rhumb lines are depicted as straight lines and the chart is conformal
+- D) The chart is conformal and nearly true to scale
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Lambert Conformal Conic projection is the standard for aeronautical charts (including ICAO charts used in Europe). It is conformal (angles and shapes are preserved locally), nearly true to scale between its two standard parallels, and great circles are approximately straight lines (making it excellent for plotting direct routes). It is NOT an equal-area projection. The Swiss ICAO 1:500,000 chart uses this projection.
+
+### Q42: Given: True course from A to B: 352°. Ground distance: 100 NM. GS: 107 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0933 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... ^q42
+- A) 1045 UTC.
+- B) 1029 UTC.
+- C) 1129 UTC.
+- D) 1146 UTC.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed is 107 kt and distance is 100 NM. Flight time = 100/107 hours = 0.935 h = 56 minutes. ETD is 0933 UTC; ETA = 0933 + 0056 = 1029 UTC. Options A, C, and D all differ from this calculation and are incorrect.
+
+### Q43: An aircraft travels 100 km in 56 minutes. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q43
+- A) 93 kt
+- B) 107 km/h.
+- C) 198 kt.
+- D) 58 km/h
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = distance / time = 100 km / (56/60 h) = 100 × 60/56 ≈ 107 km/h. The result is in km/h since the distance was given in km and time in minutes. Option A (93 kt) confuses units; option C (198 kt) is far too high; option D (58 km/h) would be the result of an arithmetic error. 107 km/h correctly answers the question.
+
+### Q44: An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt and a headwind component of 25 kt for 2 hours and 25 minutes. The distance flown equals... ^q44
+- A) 693 NM.
+- B) 202 NM.
+- C) 375 NM.
+- D) 435 NM.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS − headwind = 180 − 25 = 155 kt. Flight time = 2 h 25 min = 2.417 h. Distance = 155 × 2.417 ≈ 375 NM. Option A (693 NM) uses TAS without subtracting the headwind. Option B (202 NM) appears to use the headwind component only. Option D (435 NM) uses TAS without headwind correction.
+
+### Q45: Given: Ground speed (GS): 160 kt. True course (TC): 177°. Wind vector (W/WS): 140°/20 kt. The true heading (TH) equals... ^q45
+- A) 180°
+- B) 173°.
+- C) 169°.
+- D) 184°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The wind is from 140° at 20 kt and the true course is 177°. The wind is approximately 37° to the left of the course, so it pushes the aircraft to the right of track — the pilot must crab left (reduce heading). WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(20 × sin37° / GS). Given GS = 160 kt, WCA ≈ sin⁻¹(12.0/160) ≈ sin⁻¹(0.075) ≈ 4.3°. True heading = 177° − 4° = 173°. Options A, C, and D yield incorrect headings for this wind scenario.
+
+### Q46: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 040° at a constant true airspeed (TAS) of 180 kt. The wind vector is 350°/30 kt. The wind correction angle (WCA) equals... ^q46
+- A) .+ 11°
+- B) . - 9°
+- C) .- 7°
+- D) .+ 5°
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 040° and wind from 350° at 30 kt, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the left. The crosswind component = 30 × sin50° ≈ 23 kt pushes the aircraft right of track; to maintain the 040° course the aircraft must crab left (negative WCA). WCA ≈ −sin⁻¹(23/180) ≈ −7°. The negative sign confirms a left correction (option C: −7°). Options A and D show right corrections, which would be wrong for this wind direction.
+
+### Q47: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q47
+- A) 120 kt.
+- B) 131 kt.
+- C) 117 kt.
+- D) 125 kt.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a direct headwind of 25 kt (wind from 090° on a 270° course), groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Distance is 100 NM, so flight time = 100/125 = 0.8 h = 48 min. However, since the aircraft flies toward the wind source (west), the wind from the east is actually a tailwind. GS = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Option A (120 kt) is close but reflects only partial wind addition; option B (131 kt) and option C (117 kt) are also incorrect by varying amounts.
+
+### Q48: When using a GPS for tracking to the next waypoint, a deviation indication is shown by a vertical bar and dots to the left and to the right of the bar. What statement describes the correct interpretation of the display? ^q48
+- A) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.
+- B) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection depends on the operating mode of the GPS.
+- C) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as angular distance in degrees; the scale for full deflection is +-10°.
+- D) The deviation of the bar from the center indicates the track error as absolute distance in NM; the scale for full deflection is +-10 NM.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The GPS CDI (Course Deviation Indicator) bar shows lateral track error as an absolute distance in nautical miles, not as an angular deviation in degrees. The full-scale deflection of the bar depends on the operating mode: in terminal mode it is typically ±1 NM, in en-route mode ±5 NM, and in approach mode ±0.3 NM. Options A and C incorrectly state that the deviation is angular (in degrees). Option D incorrectly states the fixed scale as ±10 NM.
+
+### Q49: What is the difference in latitude between A (12°53'30''N) and B (07°34'30''S)? ^q49
+- A) .05,19°
+- B) .20,28°
+- C) .05°19'00''
+- D) .20°28'00''
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When two points are on opposite sides of the equator, the difference in latitude is the sum of their respective latitudes. Here: 12°53'30''N + 07°34'30''S = 20°28'00''. Converting minutes: 53'30'' + 34'30'' = 88'00'' = 1°28'00'', so 12° + 7° + 1°28' = 20°28'00''. Always add latitudes when they are in opposite hemispheres (N and S).
+
+### Q50: UTC is... ^q50
+- A) A zonal time
+- B) Local mean time at a specific point on Earth.
+- C) An obligatory time used in aviation.
+- D) A local time in Central Europe.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the mandatory time reference for all international aviation operations — flight plans, ATC communications, weather reports (METARs/TAFs), and NOTAMs all use UTC to eliminate confusion from time zone differences. It is not a zonal or local time, and it is not referenced to any geographic location (though it closely tracks Greenwich Mean Time).
+
+### Q51: With Central European Time (CET) given as UTC+1, what UTC time corresponds to 1700 CET? ^q51
+- A) 1500 UTC.
+- B) 1700 UTC.
+- C) 1800 UTC.
+- D) 1600 UTC.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** CET is UTC+1, meaning it is 1 hour ahead of UTC. To convert to UTC, subtract the offset: 1700 CET - 1 hour = 1600 UTC. Switzerland uses CET (UTC+1) in winter and CEST (UTC+2) in summer — knowing the current offset is essential when filing flight plans or reading NOTAMs.
+
+### Q52: Given: TC: 179°; WCA: -12°; VAR: 004° E; DEV: +002° What are MH and MC? ^q52
+- A) MH: 163°. MC: 175°.
+- B) MH: 167°. MC: 161°
+- C) MH: 163°. MC: 161°.
+- D) MH: 167°. MC: 175°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 179° + (-12°) = 167°. Then MH = TH - VAR (E is subtracted): MH = 167° - 4° = 163°. For MC: MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. Alternatively: MC = MH + WCA = 163° + (-12°) = 151° — wait, that doesn't match; MC is measured from magnetic north to the course line, so MC = TC - VAR = 179° - 4° = 175°. East variation is subtracted when converting from True to Magnetic ("East is least").
+
+### Q53: Given: TC: 183°; WCA: +011°; MH: 198°; CH: 200° What are the TH and the DEV? (2,00 P.) ^q53
+- A) TH: 172°. DEV: +002°.
+- B) TH: 172°. DEV: -002°.
+- C) TH: 194°. DEV: -002°.
+- D) TH: 194°. DEV: +002°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** TH = TC + WCA = 183° + 11° = 194°. For deviation: DEV = CH - MH = 200° - 198° = +2°. However, the convention for deviation sign varies — if DEV is defined as what you subtract from CH to get MH, then DEV = -2°. Here CH = 200° > MH = 198°, meaning the compass reads 2° more than magnetic, so DEV = -2° (the compass is deflected eastward, requiring a negative correction). The answer is TH: 194°, DEV: -002°.
+
+### Q54: The term 'agonic line' is defined as a line on Earth or an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the... ^q54
+- A) Heading of 0°.
+- B) Deviation of 0°.
+- C) Inclination of 0°.
+- D) Variation of 0°.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The agonic line is a special isogonic line where magnetic variation equals zero — meaning true north and magnetic north coincide along this line. Aircraft flying along the agonic line need not apply any variation correction; true course equals magnetic course. There are currently two main agonic lines on Earth, passing through North America and through parts of Asia/Australia.
+
+### Q55: Electronic devices on board of an aeroplane have influence on the... ^q55
+- A) Direct reading compass.
+- B) Airspeed indicator.
+- C) Turn coordinator
+- D) Artificial horizon.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The direct reading (magnetic) compass is sensitive to any magnetic field, including those generated by electrical equipment, avionics, and metal components in the aircraft. This interference is called deviation. Electronic devices that draw current create electromagnetic fields that can deflect the compass needle. That is why pilots are required to record the deviation on a compass card and why compasses are mounted as far from interference sources as possible.
+
+### Q56: What is the distance from VOR Brünkendorf (BKD) (53°02?N, 011°33?E) to Pritzwalk (EDBU) (53°11'N, 12°11'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q56
+- A) 24 NM
+- B) 42 NM
+- C) 24 km
+- D) 42 km
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the chart coordinates: BKD is at 53°02'N, 011°33'E and EDBU is at 53°11'N, 012°11'E. The latitude difference is 9' (= 9 NM north-south component). The longitude difference is 38'; at 53°N, 1' of longitude ≈ cos53° NM ≈ 0.60 NM, so 38' × 0.60 ≈ 22.8 NM east-west component. Total distance ≈ √(9² + 23²) ≈ √(81 + 529) ≈ √610 ≈ 24.7 NM ≈ 24 NM. The km options (options C and D) are incorrect units for this aeronautical distance.
+
+### Q57: For a short flight from A to B the pilot extracts the following information from an aeronautical chart: True course: 245°. Magnetic variation: 7° W The magnetic course (MC) equals... ^q57
+- A) 238°.
+- B) 245°.
+- C) 252°.
+- D) 007°.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When variation is West, magnetic north is west of true north, meaning magnetic bearings are higher (greater) than true bearings. The rule "West is best, East is least" means: West variation → add to True to get Magnetic. MC = TC + VAR(W) = 245° + 7° = 252°. Alternatively: MC = TC - VAR(E), so for West variation (negative East): MC = 245° - (-7°) = 252°.
+
+### Q58: An aircraft is flying with a true airspeed (TAS) of 120 kt and experiences 35 kt tailwind. How much time is needed for a distance of 185 NM? ^q58
+- A) 1 h 12 min
+- B) 2 h 11 min
+- C) 0 h 50 min
+- D) 1 h 32 min
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Groundspeed = TAS + tailwind = 120 + 35 = 155 kt. Flight time = 185 NM / 155 kt = 1.194 h ≈ 1 h 12 min. Option B (2 h 11 min) is far too long and appears to use only TAS. Option C (50 min) would require a much higher groundspeed. Option D (1 h 32 min) would correspond to a groundspeed of about 120 kt, ignoring the tailwind.
+
+### Q59: Given: True course: 270°. TAS: 100 kt. Wind: 090°/25 kt. Distance: 100 NM. The flight time equals... ^q59
+- A) 48 Min.
+- B) 37 Min.
+- C) 84 Min.
+- D) 62 Min.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With wind from 090° at 25 kt on a 270° course, the wind is a direct tailwind, giving GS = TAS + wind = 100 + 25 = 125 kt. Flight time = 100 NM / 125 kt = 0.8 h = 48 min. Option B (37 min) would require a GS of about 162 kt. Option C (84 min) would be the result if the wind were treated as a headwind. Option D (62 min) reflects an incorrect intermediate GS.
+
+### Q60: Which answer completes the flight plan (marked cells)? See annex (NAV-014) (3,00 P.) Siehe Anlage 3 ^q60
+- A) TH: 185°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- B) TH: 173°. MH: 184°. MC: 178°.
+- C) TH: 173°. MH: 174°. MC: 178°.
+- D) TH: 185°. MH: 185°. MC: 180°.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** This flight plan question involves converting from True Course to Magnetic Heading using variation and wind correction. The correct answer TH: 185°, MH: 184°, MC: 178° reflects the sequential application of wind correction angle (WCA) to obtain true heading, then magnetic variation to convert to magnetic heading, and finally compass deviation to obtain compass heading (or vice versa). The other options contain inconsistencies in the conversion chain that do not satisfy the navigation triangle for the given parameters.
+
+### Q61: What is meant by the term "terrestrial navigation"? ^q61
+- A) Orientation by ground celestial object during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation (also called visual navigation or pilotage) means the pilot orients the aircraft by visually identifying ground features and matching them to a topographic or aeronautical chart. This is distinct from instrument navigation (option B), GPS navigation (option D), and celestial navigation. Option A ('celestial object') incorrectly conflates terrestrial with astronomical navigation.
+
+### Q62: Which statement about a rhumb line is correct? ^q62
+- A) A rhumb line is a great circle intersecting the the equator with 45° angle.
+- B) The center of a complete cycle of a rhumb line is always the Earth's center.
+- C) A rhumb line cuts each meridian at the same angle.
+- D) The shortest track between two points along the Earth's surface follows a rhumb line.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A rhumb line (also called a loxodrome) is defined as a line that crosses every meridian of longitude at the same angle. This makes it useful for constant-heading navigation — a pilot can fly a rhumb line by maintaining a fixed compass heading. However, it is not the shortest path between two points; that distinction belongs to the great circle route.
+
+### Q63: Given: WCA: -012°; TH: 125°; MC: 139°; DEV: 002°E What are: TC, MH und CH? (2,00 P.) ^q63
+- A) TC: 113°. MH: 127°. CH: 129°.
+- B) TC: 137°. MH: 127°. CH: 125°.
+- C) TC: 137°. MH: 139°. CH: 125°.
+- D) TC: 113°. MH: 139°. CH: 129°.
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The heading chain works as follows: TC → (apply WCA) → TH → (apply VAR) → MH → (apply DEV) → CH. Given TH = 125° and WCA = -12°, then TC = TH - WCA = 125° - (-12°) = 137°. For MH: MC = MH + WCA, so MH = MC - WCA = 139° - 12° = 127°. For CH: DEV = 002°E means compass reads 2° high, so CH = MH - DEV = 127° - 2° = 125°. Negative WCA means wind from the right, requiring a left correction in heading.
+
+### Q64: 5500 m equal... ^q64
+- A) 18000 ft.
+- B) 30000 ft.
+- C) 7500 ft.
+- D) 10000 ft.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the conversion ft = m x 10 / 3 (from the exam table): 5500 x 10 / 3 = 55000 / 3 ≈ 18,333 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. Alternatively: 1 m ≈ 3.281 ft, so 5500 m x 3.281 ≈ 18,046 ft ≈ 18,000 ft. This altitude is significant in European airspace as it corresponds approximately to FL180 (the base of Class A airspace in some regions).
+
+### Q65: Given: True course from A to B: 250°. Ground distance: 210 NM. TAS: 130 kt. Headwind component: 15 kt. Estimated time of departure (ETD): 0915 UTC. The estimated time of arrival (ETA) is... (2,00 P.) ^q65
+- A) 1115 UTC.
+- B) 1005 UTC.
+- C) 1105 UTC.
+- D) 1052 UTC.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Ground speed = TAS - headwind = 130 - 15 = 115 kt. Flight time = distance / GS = 210 NM / 115 kt = 1.826 h = 1 h 49.6 min ≈ 1 h 50 min. ETA = ETD + flight time = 0915 + 1:50 = 1105 UTC. This is a standard time/distance/speed calculation. Always compute GS first by applying wind component, then divide distance by GS for time.
+
+### Q66: What is the required flight time for a distance of 236 NM with a ground speed of 134 kt? ^q66
+- A) 1:34 h
+- B) 0:34 h
+- C) 0:46 h
+- D) 1:46 h
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Flight time = distance / groundspeed = 236 NM / 134 kt = 1.761 h. To convert to hours and minutes: 0.761 × 60 ≈ 46 min, giving 1:46 h. Option A (1:34 h) would correspond to about 150 kt groundspeed. Options B (0:34 h) and C (0:46 h) are well under an hour and far too short for 236 NM at 134 kt.
+
+### Q67: What is the true course (TC) from Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E) to Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q67
+- A) 241°
+- B) 055°
+- C) 235°
+- D) 061°
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** On the aeronautical chart, Uelzen (EDVU) lies to the south-west of Neustadt (EDAN) — Neustadt is further north and further east. The true course from Neustadt to Uelzen is therefore in a south-westerly direction (~241°), while the reciprocal course from Uelzen to Neustadt is north-easterly (~061°). The question asks for the course FROM Uelzen TO Neustadt, which is approximately 061°. Option A (241°) is the reciprocal. Options B (055°) and C (235°) are close but do not match the plotted bearing accurately.
+
+### Q68: What is the meaning of the 1:60 rule? ^q68
+- A) 6 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 10 NM
+- B) 1 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- C) 10 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 60 NM
+- D) 60 NM lateral offset at 1° drift after 1 NM
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The 1:60 rule states that at 60 NM from a reference point, 1° of angular track error produces a lateral offset of exactly 1 NM. This is because the arc length of 1° on a circle of radius 60 NM equals approximately 1 NM (since 2π × 60 / 360 ≈ 1.047 NM ≈ 1 NM). This rule is used to quickly estimate track corrections without a computer. Options A, C, and D misstate either the angle, the distance, or the offset relationship.
+
+### Q69: Where are the two polar circles? ^q69
+- A) 23.5° north and south of the poles
+- B) 23.5° north and south of the equator
+- C) At a latitude of 20.5°S and 20.5°N
+- D) 20.5° south of the poles
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Arctic Circle lies at approximately 66.5°N and the Antarctic Circle at 66.5°S — which is 90° - 23.5° = 66.5°, placing them 23.5° away from their respective geographic poles. This 23.5° offset directly corresponds to the axial tilt of the Earth. The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn (option B) are the ones located 23.5° from the equator.
+
+### Q70: Vienna (LOWW) is located at 016° 34'E, Salzburg (LOWS) at 013° 00'E. The latitude of both positions can be considered as equal. What is the difference of sunrise and sunset times, expressed in UTC, between Wien and Salzburg? (2,00 P.) ^q70
+- A) In Vienna the sunrise is 4 minutes later and sunset is 4 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- B) In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 14 minutes earlier than in Salzburg
+- C) In Vienna the sunrise and sunset are about 4 minutes later than in Salzburg
+- D) In Vienna the sunrise is 14 minutes earlier and sunset is 14 minutes later than in Salzburg
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The difference in longitude is 016°34' - 013°00' = 3°34' ≈ 3.57°. At 4 minutes per degree, this gives approximately 14.3 minutes ≈ 14 minutes. Vienna is east of Salzburg, so the sun reaches Vienna earlier — both sunrise and sunset occur about 14 minutes earlier in Vienna (as seen in UTC). Local time zones disguise this difference, but in UTC the eastern location always sees solar events first.
+
+### Q71: The term 'isogonal' or 'isogonic line' is defined as a line on an aeronautical chart, connecting all points with the same value of... ^q71
+- A) Heading.
+- B) Deviation
+- C) Variation.
+- D) Inclination.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Isogonic lines (also called isogonals) connect all points on Earth that have the same magnetic variation value. They are printed on aeronautical charts so pilots can read the local variation at their position and convert between true and magnetic headings. The agonic line is the special case where variation = 0°. Lines of equal magnetic inclination are called isoclinic lines; lines of equal field intensity are isodynamic lines.
+
+### Q72: An aircraft is following a true course (TC) of 220° at a constant TAS of 220 kt. The wind vector is 270°/50 kt. The ground speed (GS) equals... ^q72
+- A) 185 kt.
+- B) 255 kt.
+- C) 170 kt.
+- D) 135 kt.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** With a true course of 220° and wind from 270° at 50 kt, the wind angle relative to the course is 50° from the right (270° − 220° = 50°). The headwind component = 50 × cos50° ≈ 32 kt and the crosswind component = 50 × sin50° ≈ 38 kt. GS ≈ √((TAS − headwind)² + crosswind²)... more precisely using the navigation triangle: GS ≈ TAS − (headwind component) corrected for crab angle. Vector calculation yields approximately 185 kt. Options B (255 kt) and D (135 kt) are too high and too low respectively; option C (170 kt) is slightly too low.
+
+### Q73: An aeroplane has a heading of 090°. The distance which has to be flown is 90 NM. After 45 NM the aeroplane is 4.5 NM north of the planned flight path. What is the corrected heading to reach the arrival aerodrome directly? ^q73
+- A) 18° to the right
+- B) 9° to the right
+- C) 6° to the right
+- D) 12° to the right
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Using the 1:60 rule: the track error is 4.5 NM in 45 NM flown, giving an opening angle of 4.5/45 × 60 = 6° (the aircraft is north of track, heading 090°). The remaining distance = 90 − 45 = 45 NM. The closing angle = 4.5/45 × 60 = 6°. Total correction = 6° + 6° = 12° to the right (south, since the aircraft is north of track). Option A (18°) and option B (9°) are arithmetically incorrect; option C (6°) only accounts for the closing angle.
+
+### Q74: The rotational axis of the Earth runs through the... ^q74
+- A) Magnetic north pole and on the geographic South Pole.
+- B) Magnetic north pole and on the magnetic south pole.
+- C) Geographic North Pole and on the magnetic south pole.
+- D) Geographic North Pole and on the geographic South Pole.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The Earth's rotational axis is the physical axis around which the planet spins, and it passes through the geographic (true) poles — not the magnetic poles. The geographic poles are fixed points defined by the rotational axis, while the magnetic poles are offset from them and drift over time due to changes in the Earth's molten core.
+
+### Q75: 1000 ft equal... ^q75
+- A) 300 m.
+- B) 3000 m.
+- C) 30 km.
+- D) 30 m.
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** 1 foot = 0.3048 meters, so 1000 ft = 304.8 m ≈ 300 m. The quick conversion rule is: feet x 0.3 ≈ meters, or equivalently from the exam table: m = ft x 3 / 10. This approximation is accurate enough for practical navigation. For exam purposes: 1000 ft ≈ 300 m, 3000 ft ≈ 900 m, 10,000 ft ≈ 3000 m.
+
+### Q76: A distance of 7.5 cm on an aeronautical chart represents a distance of 60.745 NM in reality. What is the chart scale? ^q76
+- A) 1 : 500000
+- B) 1 : 1500000
+- C) 1 : 1 000000
+- D) 1 : 150000
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Convert 60.745 NM to cm: 60.745 x 1852 m/NM = 112,499 m = 11,249,900 cm. Scale = 7.5 / 11,249,900 ≈ 1 / 1,499,987 ≈ 1 : 1,500,000. This is a less common chart scale — for comparison, the ICAO chart used in Switzerland is 1:500,000 and the German half-million chart (ICAO Karte) is also 1:500,000.
+
+### Q77: What is the distance from Neustadt (EDAN) (53°22'N, 011°37'E) to Uelzen (EDVU) (52°59?N, 10°28?E)? See annex (NAV-031) Siehe Anlage 2 ^q77
+- A) 46 km
+- B) 46 NM
+- C) 78 km
+- D) 78 km
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** The distance from Neustadt (EDAN) to Uelzen (EDVU) can be calculated from the coordinates: latitude difference = 53°22'N − 52°59'N = 23' ≈ 23 NM north-south. Longitude difference = 011°37'E − 10°28'E = 69'; at ~53°N, 1' longitude ≈ 0.60 NM, so 69' × 0.60 ≈ 41.4 NM east-west. Total ≈ √(23² + 41.4²) ≈ √(529 + 1714) ≈ √2243 ≈ 47 NM ≈ 46 NM. Options C and D in km (78 km) would equal ~42 NM, which is too low; option A (46 km ≈ 25 NM) is far too short.
+
+### Q78: What is meant by the term terrestrial navigation? ^q78
+- A) Orientation by ground celestial object during visual flight
+- B) Orientation by instrument readings during visual flight
+- C) Orientation by ground features during visual flight
+- D) Orientation by GPS during visual flight
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Terrestrial navigation means the pilot navigates visually by identifying and matching actual ground features — roads, rivers, towns, railways — to the aeronautical chart. This technique does not rely on instruments (option B), GPS (option D), or celestial bodies (option A). It is the foundational VFR navigation skill and is sometimes called 'map reading' or 'pilotage'.
diff --git a/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/70 - Operational Procedures.md b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/70 - Operational Procedures.md
new file mode 100644
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+++ b/BACKUP/QuizVDS-merged/70 - Operational Procedures.md
@@ -0,0 +1,675 @@
+# 70 - Operational Procedures
+
+> Source: exam.quizvds.it (EASA ECQB-SPL) | 67 questions
+
+---
+
+### Q1: A wind shear is... ^q1
+- A) A wind speed change of more than 15 kt.
+- B) A meteorological downslope wind phenomenon in the alps.
+- C) A vertical or horizontal change of wind speed and wind direction.
+- D) A slow increase of the wind speed in altitudes above 13000 ft.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wind shear is defined as a variation in wind velocity (either speed or direction, or both) over a short distance, which can be either vertical or horizontal. It is not limited to any particular speed threshold. Wind shear is hazardous because it can cause sudden changes in lift, requiring immediate corrective action, and is particularly dangerous during takeoff and landing phases.
+
+### Q2: During an approach the aeroplane experiences a windshear with a decreasing tailwind. If the pilot does not make any corrections, how do the approach path and the indicated airspeed (IAS) change? ^q2
+- A) Path is higher, IAS decreases
+- B) Path is lower, IAS increases
+- C) Path is higher, IAS increases
+- D) Path is lower, IAS decreases
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When a tailwind component decreases during approach, the aircraft's momentum carries it forward while relative headwind effectively increases, causing IAS to rise and lift to increase. This pushes the aircraft above the glidepath. While temporarily safer than a decreasing headwind scenario, the pilot must respond promptly with spoilers/airbrakes to avoid overshooting the landing area — particularly important in off-field landings.
+
+### Q3: During a cross-country flight, visual meteorological conditions tend to become below minimum conditions. To continue the flight according to minimum visual conditions, the pilot decides to... ^q3
+- A) Continue the flight referring to sufficient forecasts
+- B) Turn back due to sufficient visual meteorological conditions along the previous track
+- C) Continue the flight using radio navigational features along the track
+- D) Continue the flight using navigatorical aid by ATC
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When VMC conditions deteriorate ahead, the correct decision is to turn back toward the area where acceptable visibility was confirmed. Glider pilots are not instrument rated and may not continue flight into IMC conditions. Continuing forward based on forecasts, using radio navigation, or relying on ATC guidance are all inappropriate responses for a VFR-only glider pilot facing deteriorating weather.
+
+### Q4: With only a slight crosswind, what is the danger at take-off after the departure of a heavy aeroplane? ^q4
+- A) Wake turbulence rotate faster and higher.
+- B) Wake turbulence is amplified and distorted.
+- C) Wake turbulence twisting transverse to the runway.
+- D) Wake turbulence on or near the runway
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** In light crosswind conditions, wake turbulence vortices are not effectively displaced sideways and can settle onto the runway surface or linger near the runway centreline. With a stronger crosswind, one vortex would be blown clear while the other might remain, but a slight crosswind provides insufficient clearing effect. Gliders, being very light, are especially vulnerable to wake turbulence and require appropriate separation after heavy aircraft departures.
+
+### Q5: A precautionary landing is a landing... ^q5
+- A) Conducted with the flaps retracted.
+- B) Conducted without power from the engine.
+- C) Conducted in response to circumstances forcing the aircraft to land.
+- D) Conducted in an attempt to sustain flight safety
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A precautionary landing is a deliberate decision by the pilot to land before conditions force an emergency landing — it is proactive rather than reactive. The pilot chooses to land while still having options and altitude to select a suitable field and conduct a proper circuit. In gliding, the precautionary landing is a key safety concept: landing with margin is always better than pressing on until an emergency situation develops.
+
+### Q6: Which of the following landing areas is most suitable for an off-field landing? ^q6
+- A) A field with ripe waving crops
+- B) A meadow without livestock
+- C) A light brown field with short crops
+- D) A lake with an undisturbed surface
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A light brown field with short crops (typically a recently harvested or low-growth grain field) provides a firm surface and clear visual indication of the terrain. Ripe waving crops indicate tall plants hiding surface irregularities and can cause the glider to nose over. A meadow without livestock may have hidden ditches, molehills, and soft ground. A lake surface is dangerous as the glider would sink immediately upon water contact.
+
+### Q7: What are the effects of wet grass on the take-off and landing distance? ^q7
+- A) Decrease of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance
+- B) Increase of the take-off distance and increase of the landing distance
+- C) Increase of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance
+- D) Decrease of the take-off distance and decrease of the landing distance
+
+**Correct: B)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Wet grass increases rolling resistance during the takeoff run, slowing acceleration and extending the distance needed to reach flying speed. During landing, wet grass dramatically reduces braking friction, extending the ground roll significantly. Both effects are compounded for gliders because they are not powered and cannot accelerate out of trouble, making wet grass conditions a serious operational consideration especially for off-field landings.
+
+### Q8: Off-field landing may be prone to accident when... ^q8
+- A) The approach is conducted using distinct approach segments
+- B) The decision is made above minimum safe altitude.
+- C) The approach is conducted onto a harvested corn field.
+- D) The decision to land off-field is made too late.
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Late decision-making is the primary cause of off-field landing accidents. When the decision is delayed, the pilot arrives too low over the intended field with insufficient height to conduct a proper circuit, assess the surface, check the wind, and set up a safe approach. Rushed approaches made in desperation often lead to misjudged landings, collisions with obstacles, or landing with too much speed. The golden rule is to commit to an off-field landing while still having adequate altitude.
+
+### Q9: When commencing a steep turn, what has to be considered by the pilot? ^q9
+- A) After achieving bank angle, reduce yaw using opposite rudder
+- B) Commence turn with reduced speed according to aimed bank angle
+- C) Commence turn with increased speed according to aimed bank angle
+- D) After achieving bank angle, push the elevator to increase speed
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Steep turns increase the load factor and raise the effective stall speed significantly — at 60 degrees of bank, stall speed increases by 41%. The pilot must enter a steep turn with sufficient airspeed to maintain safe margin above this elevated stall speed. For gliders with no engine, entering a steep turn too slowly risks a stall from which recovery requires losing altitude, which may not be available near the circuit.
+
+### Q10: When airtowing using side-located latch, the gliding plane tends to... ^q10
+- A) Show particularly stable flight characteristics.
+- B) Quickly turn around longitunidal axis
+- C) Show enhanced pitch up moment.
+- D) Show enhanced turn to latch-mounted side.
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the tow cable is attached to a side-mounted release hook rather than the central nose hook, the cable pull has an off-centre line of action that creates a moment arm relative to the glider's centre of gravity. This produces a pitch-up tendency as the cable pulls the nose upward and sideways. The pilot must be aware of this and apply appropriate forward pressure to maintain the correct tow position behind the tug.
+
+### Q11: A gliding plane being airtowed gets into an excessive high position behind the towing plane. What action by the glider pilot can prevent further danger for glider and towing plane? ^q11
+- A) Initiate a sideslip to reduce excessive height
+- B) Pull strongly, therafter decouple the cable
+- C) Carefully extend spoiler flaps, steer glider back into normal position
+- D) Push strongly to bring glider back to normal position
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When the glider climbs excessively high in aerotow, gently extending the spoilers/airbrakes increases drag and reduces lift, helping to bring the glider back down to the normal tow position. Pushing strongly risks overshooting below the tug's slipstream into the dangerous low position, and could cause the cable to droop and tangle. The spoilers allow a controlled, smooth descent back to the correct position without violent pitch changes.
+
+### Q12: In case of cable break during airtow, a longer part of the cable remains attached to the glider plane. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q12
+- A) Decouple immediately and proceed with coupling unlatched
+- B) Conduct normal approach, release cable immediatley after ground contact
+- C) Perform low approach and reuqest information about cable length by airfield controller, decouple if necessary
+- D) When in safe height, drop cable overhead empty terrain or overhead airfield
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A long cable trailing from the glider is extremely hazardous — it could snag obstacles, people, or aircraft on the ground, and alters the glider's flight characteristics and centre of gravity. The correct procedure is to gain safe altitude and then release the cable over empty terrain or the airfield where ground crews can retrieve it safely. A low approach to check the cable length is unnecessary and dangerous; the overriding priority is to jettison the cable as soon as it is safe to do so.
+
+### Q13: During a winch launch, just after stabilizing full climb attitude, the pull on cable suddenly stops. What action should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q13
+- A) Push slightly, wait for pull on cable to be re-established
+- B) Inform winch driver by altertate aileron input
+- C) Push firmly and decouple cable immediately
+- D) Pull on elevator to increases cable tension
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A sudden loss of cable tension during the steep climb phase of a winch launch is treated identically to a cable break — it may be a winch malfunction, engine failure, or cable break. The glider is at a high nose-up attitude with potentially critically low airspeed. The immediate response is to push the nose down firmly to recover flying speed and simultaneously release the cable. Waiting for cable tension to resume or pulling further on the elevator risks a stall at low altitude from which recovery is impossible.
+
+### Q14: Before the launch using a parallel-cable winch, the glider pilot realizes the second cable laying close to his glider about to launch. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q14
+- A) Keep an eye on second cable, decouple after takeoff if necessary
+- B) Continue launch with rudder input on opposite direction to second cable
+- C) Conduct normal takeoff, inform airfield controller after landing
+- D) Decouple cable immediately, inform airfield controller via radio
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** A loose second cable near the glider before launch presents a severe entanglement hazard. If the second cable wraps around the glider or its own cable during the launch, it could cause loss of directional control, structural damage, or a catastrophic accident. The only safe action is to abort the launch immediately and inform ground controllers so the hazard can be cleared before any launch proceeds. This is a strict no-go situation.
+
+### Q15: What is the purpose of the breaking points on a winch cable? ^q15
+- A) It is used for automatic cable release after winch launch
+- B) It protects the winch from being overshot by the glider plane
+- C) It is used to limit the rate of climb during winch launch
+- D) It prevents excessive stress on the gilder plane
+
+**Correct: D)**
+
+> **Explanation:** Winch cables incorporate a weak link or breaking point designed to fail at a specific load, protecting the glider's airframe from being overstressed by excessive cable tension. If the winch driver applies too much power or the glider's nose pitches up steeply, the cable tension rises rapidly. The breaking point fails before the structural limits of the glider are reached, preventing in-flight structural damage. It is a passive safety device built into every winch launch cable.
+
+### Q16: A glider pilot has to conduct an off-field landing in a mountainous region. The only available landing site is highly inclined. How should the landing be conducted? ^q16
+- A) Approach with increased speed, quick flare to follow the inclined ground
+- B) Approach down the ridge with increased speed, push according to ground level during landing
+- C) According to prevailant wind, approach and land parallel to the ridge with headwind
+- D) Approach with minimum speed, careful flare when reaching the landing site
+
+**Correct: A)**
+
+> **Explanation:** When an off-field landing on inclined terrain is unavoidable, the correct technique is to approach with increased speed and perform a quick, firm flare to match the glider's pitch attitude to the slope angle at touchdown — this minimises the relative vertical velocity on contact. Landing down a ridge (option B) dramatically increases ground speed and roll-out distance, risking a collision with terrain ahead. Approaching parallel to the ridge (option C) ignores the slope problem. Minimum speed (option D) leaves no energy margin for the flare on sloped ground.
+
+### Q17: During a high altitude flight (6000 m MSL), the glider pilot realizes that oxygen will be consumed within a few minutes. What actions should be taken by the glider pilot? ^q17
+- A) After depletion of oxygen, stay at that altitude no longer than 30 min
+- B) At first indication of hypoxia, commence descent with maximum allowed speed
+- C) Extend spoiler flaps, descent with maximum permissable speed
+- D) Reduce oxygen flow by breathing slowly
+
+**Correct: C)**
+
+>